“So, you’re a tithe! That’s great. You don’t even know how great that is!”
“What now?” asks Lev. “Am I in, or not?”
The others become quiet. Serious. He feels some sort of ritual is about to begin.
“Tell me, Lev,” says Cleaver. “How much do you hate the people who were going to unwind you?”
“A lot.”
“Sorry, that’s not good enough.”
Lev closes his eyes, digs down, and thinks about his parents. He thinks about what they planned to do to him, and how they made him actually want it.
“How much do you hate them?” Cleaver asks again.
“Totally and completely,” answers Lev.
“And how much do you hate the people who would take parts of you and make them parts of themselves?”
“Totally and completely.”
“And how much do you want to make them, and everyone else in the world, pay?”
“Totally and completely.” Someone has to pay for the unfairness of it all.
Everyone has to pay. He’ll make them.
“Good,” says Cleaver.
Lev is amazed by the depth of his own fury—but he’s becoming less and less frightened of it. He tells himself that’s a good thing.
“Maybe he’s for real,” says Blaine.
If Lev makes this commitment, he knows there’s no turning back. “One thing I need to know,” Lev asks, “because Julie-Ann . . . she wasn’t very clear about it. I want to know what you believe.”
“What we believe?” says Mai. She looks at Blaine, and Blaine laughs.
Cleaver, however, puts his hand up to quiet him. “No—no, it’s a good question. A real question. It deserves a real answer. If you’re asking if we have a cause, we don’t, so get that out of your head.” Cleaver gestures broadly, his hands and arms filling the space around him. “Causes are old news. We believe in randomness. Earthquakes! Tornados! We believe in forces of nature—and we are forces of nature. We are havoc. We’re chaos. We mess with the world.”
“And we messed pretty good with the Admiral, didn’t we,” says Blaine slyly.
Cleaver throws him a sharp gaze, and Mai actually looks scared. It’s almost enough to give Lev second thoughts.
“How did you mess with the Admiral?”
“It’s done,” says Mai, her body language both anxious and angry. “We messed, and now it’s done. We don’t talk about things that are done. Right?”
Cleaver gives her a nod, and she seems to relax a bit. “The point is,” says Cleaver, “it doesn’t matter who or what we mess with, just as long as we mess. The way we see it, the world doesn’t move if things don’t get shaken up—am I right?”
“I guess.”
“Well, then, we are the movers and shakers.” Cleaver smiles and points a finger at Lev. “The question is, are you one too? Do you have what it takes to be one of us?”
Lev takes a long look at these three. These are the kinds of people his parents would hate. He could join them just out of spite, but that’s not enough—not this time. There must be more. Yet, as he stands there, Lev realizes that there is more. It’s invisible, but it’s there, like the deadly charge lurking in a downed power line. Anger, but not just anger: a will to act on it as well.
“All right, I’m in.” Back at home Lev always felt part of something larger than himself. Until now, he hadn’t realized how much he missed that feeling.
“Welcome to the family,” says Cleaver, and gives him a slap on the back so painful, he sees stars.
36. Risa
Risa is the first to notice something’s wrong with Connor. Risa is the first to care that something’s wrong with Lev.
In a moment of selfishness, she finds herself aggravated by it, because things are going so well for her now. She finally has a place to be. She wishes this could remain her sanctuary beyond her eighteenth birthday, because in the outside world she’d never be able to do the things she’s doing now. It would be practicing medicine without a license—fine when you’re in survival mode, but not in the civilized world. Perhaps, after she turned eighteen, she could go to college, and medical school—but that takes money, connections, and she’d have to face even more competition than in her music classes. She wonders if maybe she could join the military and become an Army medic. You don’t have to be a boeuf to be in a medical unit. Whatever her choice ends up being, the important thing is that there could be a choice. For the first time in a long time she can see a future for herself. With all these good thoughts in her life, the last thing she wants is something that will shoot it all down.
This is what fills Risa’s mind as she makes her way to one of the study jets.
The Admiral has three of his most accessible and well-appointed jets set aside as study spaces, complete with libraries, computers, and the resources to learn anything you want to learn. “This is not a school,” the Admiral told them shortly after they arrived. “There are no teachers, there are no exams.” Oddly, it’s precisely that lack of expectation that keeps the study jets full most of the time.
Risa’s duties start shortly after dawn, and it has become her habit to begin her day at one of the study jets, since at that time of the morning she’s usually the only one there. She likes it that way, because the things she wants to learn make other kids uncomfortable. It’s not the subject matter that bothers them, it’s the fact that Risa’s the one studying it. Anatomy and medical texts, mostly. Kids assume that just because she works in the medical jet, she knows all there is to know. It disturbs them to see her actually having to learn it.
When she arrives today, however, she discovers Connor already there. She stops at the hatch, surprised. He’s so absorbed in whatever he’s reading that he doesn’t hear her come in. She takes a moment to look at him. She’s never seen him so tired—not even when they were on the run. Still, she’s thrilled to see him.
They have both been so busy, there hasn’t been much time to spend together.
“Hi, Connor.”
Startled, he looks up quickly and slams his book closed. When he realizes who it is, he relaxes. “Hi, Risa.” By the time she sits down beside him, he’s smiling, and doesn’t seem quite so tired. She’s glad she can have that kind of effect on him.
“You’re up early.”
“No, I’m up late,” he says. “I couldn’t sleep, so I came here. He glances out one of the little round windows. “Is it morning already?”
“Just about. What are you reading?”
He tries to push it out of view, but it’s too late for that. He has two books out. The bottom volume is a book on engineering. That’s no surprise, considering the interest he’s taken in the way things work. It’s the book on top—the one his nose was in when she arrived—that catches her by surprise, almost making her laugh.
“Criminology for Morons?”
“Yeah, well, everyone needs a hobby.”
She tries to take a long look into him, but he looks away. “There’s something wrong, isn’t there?” she asks. “I don’t need to read Connor for Morons to know that you’re in some kind of trouble.”
He looks everywhere but into her eyes. “It isn’t trouble. At least not for me. Or maybe it is in some ways, I don’t know.”
“Want to talk about it?”