17 - VALE
Spring 8, SA 106, 10h10
Gregorian Calendar: March 27
At the conclusion of the meeting, we’d told Luis and Rose’s friends to lay low for now, and spread the word, if possible, about what they’d learned.
“We’ll tell you our plan as soon as we can,” Remy said. “We need to get more food, untainted, wholesome, for you to eat and share with your friends.” I noted she didn’t tell them not to eat their MealPaks, hoping, I supposed, that the placebo would kick into effect sooner than later.
“You know,” Eli says as we trudge back, “the chemicals in the MealPaks are only half the equation. Soren’s right. We need to get seeds from the LOTUS database in production.”
“I realize that,” she says. “You and Soren can head back and lead that effort any time. I’m not stopping you, and I didn’t ask you to come rescue me.”
Eli starts to protest, but Remy stops and turns to him, her hand resting lightly on his chest.
“Eli, I know you want to protect me. I know you love me like a sister and I love you like a brother, but you don’t have to stay. LOTUS is important. I know that. Vale could stay with Bear and me. We could go Farm to Farm talking to the people and the rest of you can go back and lead the raid to get the seed printer. Maybe that’s the best thing.”
I don’t say a word and neither one of them ask for my input. I’m heartened by the idea that we could work together on the Farms, that we’ve reached that point, but now that I feel like I’m truly a part of this team, I don’t want to break it up so soon.
Eli doesn’t say anything, but he nods and grabs her hand, and we head back to the cave. It’s around one in the morning before we finally crawl under our blankets. Remy, I note with satisfied relief, snuggles in at Eli’s side instead of Soren’s.
The next morning, I roll over on the hard ground and push myself up on my elbows. Everyone is still asleep, or at least still tucked into their bedrolls. There’s only one thing missing: Jahnu’s head, usually pressed close to Kenzie’s bright red hair.
I stand up and stretch. I look outside and note that Jahnu’s got a gas stove out and is heating some water. I walk outside and he smiles up at me.
“Hey,” he says.
“Morning. You been up for a while?”
“Yeah. I couldn’t sleep. Everything happening has set my mind on edge.”
This is more than he usually says to just about anyone other than Kenzie or Remy, so I sit down to savor the experience.
“I know what you mean,” I say. “It’s like listening to thunder rumble across the lake before a storm breaks over the city. Something big is building and all we can really do is wait and be ready when it comes.”
He nods. “It is like that, isn’t it. I miss watching those storms roll in over Lake Okaria. It’s not the same when you’re surrounded by trees.”
I glance around us. “Though being surrounded by trees has its perks, too. Like, say, taking cover when the storm does roll through.”
“You’re not so bad, Vale, you know that? I knew all those years there had to be a reason Remy liked you so much, why she just couldn’t let go, but I could never figure it out.”
“Hell of a compliment, Jahnu,” I grin, teasing him, even though the little tingle starting in my belly tells me just how nice of a compliment it really was.
He laughs. “It was, wasn’t it? There’s a reason I keep my mouth shut most of the time. If I get started, I tend to rattle on or say things best left unsaid.”
I hear a rustling behind me, and turn to see Kenzie standing over me.
“Hey, love,” she says to Jahnu, dropping down beside him. She rubs the sleep out of her eyes, her frizzy hair a chaotic swirl of red and gold. “Morning, Vale.”
In a few moments, the encroaching daylight has opened everyone’s eyes, and Jahnu’s pouring tin cups of tea out for everyone.
“I’ll get a new message to the Director first thing,” Eli says. “Let her know we need reinforcements and a lot more food.”
“So how did she take the news that we weren’t coming back?” Kenzie asks. “You never said.”
“Not well,” Eli says with a glint in his eye. “But she gave credit where it was due. When I told her what Remy and Bear had done at the Dietician’s lab, she grudgingly admitted that ‘that wasn’t completely idiotic.’ I think she’s willing to work with us.”
“Damn. That’s high praise, coming from her,” Soren acknowledges.
“Do you think they’ll be able to get food here today?” Remy asks.
“Tomorrow morning at the latest,” Eli responds. “They might have a lot of cooking to do.”
“Damn Farm workers ate all our food,” Firestone mutters. Eli rolls his eyes.
“They did not,” he retorts. “We’ve got boar to spare. And we only gave them what Remy and Bear brought. There’s enough left on our airship to get us through the day with leftovers.”
Firestone growls under his breath, and I remember from our weeks in the woods together that mornings are by no means his favorite part of the day. “That scrawny pig is tougher than shoe leather. Must have been the oldest pig in the whole damn Wilds. Certainly the rangiest.”
“So what’s next?” Miah asks. “Are we just waiting around, for now?”
“Waiting for the reinforcements,” Eli responds. “Oh, I forgot to tell you. Guess who’s leading the reinforcement team?”
“Who?” Miah looks wary.
“Your dad. Ezekiel.” Miah just blinks at him, unable to process this information. “Apparently he leads a raid team at Teutoburg, which isn’t far from here. He’ll be flying in with several others and a shipload of food.”
“My dad? Coming here?” Miah finally responds.
“Yeah,” Eli says, with a bit of a laugh. “Tomorrow morning.”
Miah and his dad didn’t always have the best relationship while we were in the Academy, but since we’ve left the Sector, I sense that Miah’s willing to re-evaluate a lot of things. And that includes his estranged father, the man who abandoned him and his mother to join some group of crazed conspiracy theorists who’d all gone off the deep end. Also known as The Resistance.
Remy stands, taking the rest of us by surprise.
“I need to head back to the Farm.”
Eli stares at her.
“Now? In broad daylight? Why?”
Remy shakes her head. “Not now. Tonight. There’s an enormous building on the campus, and no one I’ve talked to has a clue what goes on in there. I want to find out what it is. Maybe there are weapons we could use, or equipment, or seeds we can confiscate. It must be important, so we should find out what it is before the others get here.”
“Why not wait until we’ve got backup,” Eli says, his voice almost pleading. “The Dietician’s lab was risky enough.”
“The more people we’ve got milling around here, the more likely it is a drone will sight us. We need to go in tonight before backup arrives. We need to know what’s in there.” There’s an edge to Remy’s voice, a threat in her eyes, that reminds me of the tone Eli took when he held a Bolt to my head and a knife to my throat when he found me and Miah out in the Wilds. “What if it’s something they could use against us?”
“What’s the rush?” Soren ask. “Tomorrow we’ll have more manpower, additional food, and the workers will have had one more day on untainted MealPaks. Let’s give it all a rest today.”
“The rush,” she says, glaring at Soren, “is that there could be weapons in there that we could use, or they could use against us or against the Farm workers. If we know what’s going on in there, we could avoid a lot of trouble down the road. If we don’t, we could be blindsided by something they’re hiding for a reason.” Remy pauses before her next statement, and her eyes meet mine as she speaks.
“Vale, what do you think? You willing to rush into this with me?”
“Drone,” Remy whispers. “Take it out. Now.”
I turn my Bolt up to the sky and aim carefully. Now is not the time to stun them—we can’t risk them sending any photographs or evidence of our presence back to the guard stations. I press my finger to the trigger, exhale, squeeze. The flash of blue light is concealed from open view by the surrounding trees, and I’m grateful we’re not into the Farm proper yet. The drone plummets like a dropped rock, crashing into the ground about thirty meters off.
The fight that ensued when Remy told everyone she wanted me to accompany her on this adventure was spectacular, but short-lived. Eli sat quietly, looking unsurprised but a little disappointed. Sad, even, as though he’d been the last chosen for a game of football back at the Academy. Soren, by contrast, flipped into an altogether different kind of anger than I’d seen before. It took Miah slapping a hand on his mouth and telling him to shut the fuck up unless he wanted to just go ahead and broadcast our location to the whole fucking Sector for him to quiet down. When Miah finally got Soren to shut up, Remy just stared at him.
“Look, Soren, it’s only rational. If Vale comes with me, and we get caught, there’s a possibility we’ll make it out alive. If you come with me, and we get caught, they’ll shoot us on sight. And even though I don’t think we’ll get caught, I’d like to live through the night on the off-chance that we do.”
I try to leave that memory in the distance, wishfully replacing it with one where Remy wanted me along not because of my name but because I’m a good soldier, because I don’t shout at her when I disagree with her, and maybe, just maybe, because she wants to be near me.
Thinking of the drone, I turn to Remy. “We should make sure it’s disabled. Don’t want it coming back to life and relaying crash data to HQ.”
“Let’s do it,” Remy agrees.
We jog a little out of our way and spot the collapsed drone caught in the bramble of two bushes. The circular, formerly hovering robot has four cameras and two low-powered Bolts attached—about what I expected for Farm security. I prise open the panel to the nanocircuitry and disable the connections with a few quick movements.
“We’re good,” I say.
“I’ve never been able to master those circuits. I usually find a rock and smash it. Not very elegant, but it works.”
I shake my head and laugh as we start off again. This time, we’re not going through the hole in the fence Bear showed us. We’ve been relying on it too heavily, Remy decided, worried that someone would eventually catch on. Since we’re dressed for mobility, we’re going up and over the fence at the point of shortest distance between the perimeter and the mystery building Remy wants to investigate.
Remy slaps the charge on her set of magnetic gloves, and begins climbing. The fencing material is too slick to climb any other way, and there’s nothing for a hook or line of rope to catch on at the top. The magnetic gloves work fine, although the climb is anything but easy. We’re hauling ourselves up using upper body strength alone. I’m grateful I’ve been keeping up on Aulion’s training routine, even at Normandy. The man might have been a first-rate bastard, but he sure knew how to work a strength routine.
Luckily the climb is short, as the fence is only five meters high. We’re up and over in a matter of minutes, dropping silently to the ground.
“Any guards?” she asks.
“None visible.”
“Shoot to stun, if you have to shoot at all.”
“Remy,” I say, glancing down at her, tense and alert at my side, “they won’t return the favor.”
“That doesn’t mean we should kill them,” she says. “Not all the Enforcers are bad people. They might not deserve our pity, but they don’t deserve to die.”
“Death is inevitable in war,” I respond, so quietly I almost can’t hear myself.
“You think I don’t know that?” Her voice is harsh. “But I have my list, and these men and women aren’t on it.”
I ponder these words for a second, trying not to think about the people who undoubtedly are on her list. “Okay. For tonight,” I say and follow her lead as we jog into the Farm, staying low to the ground.
As we draw closer, I blink three times to switch out of infrared into visible spectrum. The night is so dark I can’t even see the building she’s talking about until we almost run into it. Remy slows her jog and heads directly for a piping and air duct system on the exterior.
“Hand,” she says, as soon as we’ve reached it. She meets my eyes for half a second as I cup my hands in a stirrup. Then she puts her boot into my laced fingers, and clasps my shoulders. With an enormous effort, I heave her as high as I can, and with a quick motion she grabs onto the frame below two large exhaust fans.
Remy grabs at a pipe coupling and begins to pull herself up toward the roof, three stories high. She looks like a spider crawling up a web. And then she disappears.
I press my body up against the wall and wait. Not five minutes later, I hear Remy’s voice whisper in my earpiece.
“Here it comes.” I look up to see a rope tumbling down toward me, and I catch it before it can swing wide. I hated rope climbing back when Aulion stood at the bottom timing me, yelling at me no matter how fast or slow I went. Even with no Aulion, I still hate it. At least now I can use the side of the building to propel myself upward instead of swinging like a pendulum in the middle of the gymnasium. I jump and get a good handhold and start climbing. Once I’m over the edge, Remy unties the rope from around the base of a section of solar harvesters and motions me to follow her.
We crouch low and make our way through rows of panels. Except for the dim reflection of starlight, everything is shadowed and silent. At the far end there’s a door and we head toward it, careful to stay low so we cast no shadows. Remy tries the door, but it’s locked, unsurprisingly. It doesn’t take me long to fish out a lock pick and open the door.
“Simple, really,” I whisper. “Not much security up here.”
“Why would there be?” Remy responds.
Remy opens the door just a crack and we peek inside. The closeness of her body distracts me for a second, and I have to tell myself to keep my mind on the task at hand. Focus, Vale!
Inside, there’s nothing but darkness and a few dim red lights indicating the power to the facility is still on. She pushes the door open enough to slip through, and I follow suit, shutting it carefully. I check to make sure it’s auto-locked behind us—we want to leave everything exactly as we found it in case we don’t leave by this door—then we slink onto the inside balcony, scanning the expansive space for sensors, monitors, or cameras we need to disarm, but there’s nothing obvious.
We walk through a darkened hallway to a flight of metal stairs, which leads onto a large open platform that overlooks the ground floor. I blink back to infrared and, from this perspective, we can almost see the entire space of the building.
Remy, in her heat-cloaking gear, is now just a floating face at my side, a hovering blur of heat from her exposed skin. I look around. Stricken by the sight in front of me, I suck in a breath.
“Remy,” I whisper, awed. “Are you on infrared?”
There’s a pause as she activates her infrared contacts and then she gasps, and together we stand there for a moment, taking in the size and scale and weirdness of what we’re seeing. There are enormous, two-story high towers of heat, pulsing gently, probably twenty of them, spaced evenly throughout the facility. As I look more closely, I realize they are slatted, sheets stacked upon sheets inside round containers. The tall vats are surrounded on our level by a wraparound balcony. Right in front of us, a walkway leads to a small elevator spanning this level and the ground level. Although what moonlight there is filters through the domed glass ceiling, the place is still shrouded in deep shadow.
“What is this?” Remy says, hushed.
“No idea,” I respond.
We continue along the platform, which leads right up alongside the blocks of heat. There’s a powerful scent of antiseptic, and something else I don’t quite recognize, something fresh and heavy but off-putting somehow, not a little revolting. Remy leans closer, but I keep my head up, trying not to get too close.
“Should we risk a light?” she asks, peering down into the containers.
“We should confirm there’s no additional security, first,” I whisper. “Nothing that might trigger as we start poking around.”
Remy nods in assent.
“Let’s do a quick sweep, then. Disable anything you see.”
I follow her down the stairs at the end of the suspended walkway. We split up and scan the area. I keep my eye out for cameras or internal security, but there is none. No guards. Doesn’t even look like there’s a guard station. The strangeness of this place has set me completely on edge.
“Looks like the puppet masters never imagined the puppets would cut their strings and go exploring,” she says, her eyes gleaming, her thoughts echoing my own. “No security at all.”
“I don’t like it,” I respond. “This is the largest building at the Farm, with minimal exterior security and none on the inside. They obviously don’t think anyone would ever come in here. But why?”
“Rose mentioned once that she thought this was a greenhouse, but that made no sense since there are no windows. But if that’s what the workers are told, and they believe it, no questions, why would they try to break in?”
“Wouldn’t some of the workers work here? Unless the place is automated. Maybe whatever’s going on in here doesn’t require a lot of manpower.”
“Let’s flip on a light and see what they’re keeping so quiet,” she responds, her voice conspiratorial, almost eager. I wish I shared her enthusiasm. The whiff I got earlier unsettled me and almost turned my stomach.
Remy pulls a biolight out of her pocket and flips it on. We both blink back into visible spectrum. She turns to the nearest vat and moves right up to the edge. She presses her gloved fingertips against the glass, staring into the large container.
It’s one of the strangest things I’ve ever seen.
There are thin slats of some sort of bioplastic film layered horizontally all the way up the glass container. At the top, the slats are mostly empty, but as the slats go down, they are fuller, loaded with gelatinous material, some almost honeycombed, some more liquified than anything. At ground level—waist heigh for us—the material is fully solidified and, from my perspective, utterly revolting.
We stand and stare at it, stunned at the weirdness, and then it hits me. I remember back to one of my history classes at the Academy: As the population spiraled out of control in the Old world, raising animals naturally became not only an insufficient method of production, but impractical because of clear-cutting of forests for grazing and subsequent soil degradation and mineral depletion. When scientists discovered it was possible to grow protein tissue in petri, a new industry arose, one that replaced the unethical and unhygienic industrial animal processing facilities. But these protein companies, too, succumbed to the profit motive as they expanded too rapidly, competing for market share in the race to displace conventional industrial animal farms. To undercut competitors, businesses grew meat products with little to no nutritional value leading to rampant vitamin deficiency. Lax regulation coupled with poor oversight resulted in routine outbreaks of illness from Salmonella, E. coli, and listeria monocytogene poisoning.
I pull back from the glass and fight the temptation to retch. Remy, however, doesn’t seem to have quite caught on.
“Remy,” I say, my voice louder than it should be, “it’s a protein lab. They’re growing meat.”
She turns to stare at me, and then quickly turns back to the vats.
“Oh my god,” she whispers. “I thought this was illegal?”
“It is illegal. The third tenet of the OAC’s incorporation doctrine was that they would never grow meat laboratory style, like the protein industries of the Old World.”
“So why is this here? Surely they don’t put this in the MealPaks?” Remy doesn’t seem to share my revulsion, her fingers still pressed up against the glass, leaning forward and staring into the vat like a child seeing a new animal for the first time.
“What else would they do with it?” I swallow my disgust and step up to the glass next to her. I point upwards. “I’m just guessing, but I think this is how it works. Up there is where the protein starts, for lack of a better word, gestating. The sheets are moved slowly downward as the protein develops until down here, it’s fully formed. At this point,” I point to the handles that pull out to open the vat, “whoever’s working here can pull out the bioplastic, cut the meat off, and prepare it for serving. The plastic probably gets cleaned somewhere nearby and then reused. Or maybe it’s recycled. In the old days, the lattices were made from organic material and actually became a part of the meat. Like cartilage.”
Remy wrinkles her nose.
“Gross.”
I pull out my own little light, and point it around us. Off in the corner, I see a door that leads into a closed-off space.
“Over there,” I say, pointing to the door. Half of my desire to move is motivated by curiosity, a need to understand this place; the other half is pure revulsion, the twist in my stomach telling me to back away before I get sick.
“It’s gruesome,” Remy says, as she follows me to the corner, “but so weird I want to keep looking at it.”
I shudder, aghast at the thought that I’ve probably been eating that stuff for the vast majority of my life, now more thankful than ever for the Resistance food.
We try the door which is locked and secured with a palm and retinal scanner. Still no cameras.
“I guess they don’t want people in here,” Remy says.
“But they also don’t think anyone would try to break in,” I respond. “If they did, they’d have something more than just entry identifiers.”
“There’s a window,” Remy says, pointing. She walks over to it and presses her biolight up against the glass. “Hard to see in, though.”
Through the glass, I can just make out a few plasma screens, pulsing a soft red light that indicates they’re in sleep mode. There’s also a series of microscopes, a laser scope, as well as a mass spectrometer. Beyond that, it’s hard to identify any of the equipment.
“This must be where they monitor the protein growth,” I say.
“I suppose it’s easier to customize the chemical components in the meat when you’re growing it in a lab than when you’re growing it on the bones of a living animal,” Remy says. “It’s just another step in the OAC’s control over the food chain. And they’re breaking their own law to do it. In a twisted way, it makes sense. Why raise real animals when you can grow meat in a lab?”
“Especially since the demand for meat in the Old World and the clear-cutting of rainforests for grazing was a major contributor to global warming. It also contaminated the groundwater with the effluent from the meat farms. Lab meat was seen as an ecologically sound practice.”
“Makes sense in theory. Except then they went and screwed it up. When all the meat a population eats comes from just a few huge laboratories, the chance for contamination is high, and that’s exactly what happened. I don’t remember the details, but a huge industrial accident, a major contamination and leak of some sort, led to thousands of deaths.”
“But the Sector Assembly blamed the outbreak on the Southwestern Confederation and declared it an Act of War—industrial sabotage, murder. At least that’s why I remember from my history classes.”
Remy nods. “Yeah. The Sector accused them of purposefully introducing the disease into our food supply and so banned in-vitro meat production. It was a big deal. Since then, the Sector has been talking the talk about all the ‘back-to-the-earth’ farming practices. But really they’re cooking up these globs in a lab.” She shakes her head and shudders. “At least I’ve been off it for three and a half years. I feel bad for you and Miah.”
“And Bear,” I respond, and the smile fades off her face. “And everyone here at the Farm who still eats it, every day. And they have no idea that—”
“It’s a farce.” She’s quiet for a moment, her almond eyes narrowed to uncompromising slits, staring into the darkened lab. “Everything is a lie,” she says.
I hold my breath, move my hand a half-inch closer to hers, pressed against the glass pane.
“Not everything,” I whisper.
Remy looks up at me, and for a second, I think I see something like admiration, or tenderness. My heart leaps as a wire-thin smile plays around her lips. But then her eyes narrow again, and her tentative smile settles into something harder.
“I know what we need to do,” she says, her voice full of determination.
“What?” I ask, almost afraid of the answer.
“Cut off the power supply to this building.” I stare down at her, amazed at her temerity, her courage. “Without power, their monitoring systems won’t work, their heating systems won’t work, the air ducts won’t work. The meat will rot. Quickly. They’ll be forced to turn elsewhere for protein. Just when we’re flying in loads of supplies from our own stores.”
I turn to face her. “We’d have to make it look like an accident, and—”
“Now,” she says. “We need to do it now. While we’re here. We know where their power source is—we passed it on the way in. The solar harvesters, on the roof.”
“It’s not as simple as just cutting the wires, Remy, we’ll have to—”
“I know,” she cuts me off again, and places her hand on mine, now resting on the railing. “We’re going to do it anyway.” She squeezes my hand and then turns and hurries back toward the stairs, her biolight swaying as she walks. I follow her, wondering what I’ve gotten myself into, what Remy’s getting us into. If we cut off the power supply, they’ll know as early as tomorrow morning that something wrong, and it won’t be long after that that they’ll discovered it was tampered with. They’ll call in OAC guards. They’ll crack down on security. They’ll suspect it was us. They’ll hunt us down. They’ll punish the workers. They’ll—
“Let’s get the harvesters,” Remy says, stopping the run of paranoid thoughts in my head. We’re standing at the door to the roof, where we entered earlier. Remy pushes it open a crack.
“Wait!” I put my hand on the door. “You sure? If we do this, there’s no going back. We can’t undo it.” I look down at her, the glow of the biolight wrapping us in an unearthly aura. She is beautiful, fierce, like something out of a fairy tale.
“You sound like Soren.”
“I’m not Soren. I’m just saying—”
“There is no going back, Vale. Not for me.” She looks up, her eyes searching my face, waiting. Expectant. “What about you? Any going back for Valerian Orleán?”
I’m surprised Farm security can’t hear the thudding in my chest. I meet her gaze and shake my head. “No, Remy. No going back for me.”
There are no words to fill the silence as I hold her gaze a moment longer. Then I push open the door, and she steps out onto the roof.
“Wait,” I say. “Why don’t we just cut the main power supply and get out of here?”
“Won’t they notice that? If we steal the harvester films, it will take them longer to discover the cause of the outage.”
“Won’t take them that much longer.” We head over to where the solar arrays tie into the main power line, and I stop and look out over the farm. “You know what?”
“What?” she says.
“I like your idea better. Besides, the Resistance can probably find a good use for the harvesters.”
Her face lights up. “Let’s get to work.”
She cuts off to the right, following the conduits of power cords, encased in bioplastic for protection from the elements, while I walk straight ahead to the solar arrays.
At the first solar cell, I stop and drop my pack, digging out a small screwdriver and a pair of tweezers. I pry off the clear, protective layer of plastic, and then start to unscrew the photovoltaic panel from the rest of the array. The tricky part is getting the voltaic fibers to pull apart from the metal that supports them and conducts the electricity to the main system. Using the tweezers and the screwdriver in conjunction, I try to wedge the screwdriver in between the fiber panel and the metal supports.
After a few seconds, I’ve got it, and I use my fingers to pry the rest of the panel off the support. These are wafer-thin sheets of fibers, a combination of plant material and rare earth metals salvaged from the vast, decrepit solar arrays of the Old World, refashioned into much more efficient solar harvesters. They’re thin but sturdy, so thin I can roll this one up into a tight little scroll and stuff it in my pack.
Working quickly, I move from cell to cell, first removing the plastic cover, and then peeling off the voltaic fiber panel, rolling it up, and jamming it in my bag. By the time Remy rejoins me, I’m halfway through the panels.
“They are all fairly new,” I respond. “Probably deployed within the last year. My dad said these new ones have a ninety-percent conversion and retention rate. It’s the thermotunnelling that makes them so efficient.”
She lets out a breath, long and low. “Wow,” she says. “I didn’t even know that was possible.”
As much as I’d love to explain the physics, there’s no time. Instead, I show her how to disassemble the units, and soon she’s deftly peeling the fiber panels away at my side. Working in tandem, we’re able to finish the second half of the harvesters in about a half-hour.
“Okay,” Remy says, looking at our packed bags. “Let’s get out of here. It’s going to be a lot harder on the way out, carrying all this stuff with us.”
I nod, sling my pack over my shoulders, and follow her as we walk through the now-destroyed solar array and back towards the air duct system she climbed to get up here. Remy goes first, climbing back down the pipes and fans, and I follow. We can’t risk the rope, as we’ll have no way to untie it, and leaving it would be pretty clear evidence.
“I want them to think that maybe, just maybe, someone on the inside did this,” she says, as she goes over the edge. “After all, they don’t know we’re here. They’ll first suspect the Farm workers, but why would they do something like this? Their next step will be to turn inwards, to go after anyone who has access to this building. The longer we can keep them guessing, the better.”
By the time I hit the ground, I’m giddy with adrenaline and a sense of rebellious accomplishment. Remy’s enthusiasm is contagious. Together we’ve done something that will make a difference. That will set the ball of rebellion rolling. When the Farm Enforcers and Dieticians find out that the MealPak formulas have been tampered with and the solar harvesters have been removed, they’ll pull the plug on the Farm worker’s food supply until reinforcements arrive. When that happens, the workers will either go hungry or come to us.
We creep along the edges of the buildings, keeping to the shadows until we’re far enough from the buildings to pick up the pace. Then we jog toward the perimeter through the stillness, the peaceful beauty of the landscape shrouded in darkness. We go up and over the fence with a little more difficulty than the first time, now that our packs are full of fiber panels.
On the other side, Remy pauses for breath, panting a little from the exertion of hauling herself over the fence.
“I’d love to see their faces in the morning,” she says, almost gleefully, with a light in her eyes that speaks of both danger and promise. “The fire has been lit, Vale. Now, we just have to carry the torch.”