“Don’t let her close that door!”
The second kid is met by an aerosol burst of bactine right to his eyes. The pain is excruciating. He stumbles backward into the other kids coming up the stairs, and they tumble like dominos. Risa grabs the hatch, swings it closed, and seals it from the inside.
Kids are on the wings now, finding every piece of loose metal and prying it up. It’s amazing how much of a plane can be shredded by bare-handed fury.
“Break the windows! Pull them out!”
Kids on the ground throw rocks that hit their comrades as often as they hit the jet. On the inside it sounds like a hailstorm. The Admiral blanches at the scene outside the windows. His heart races. His shoulder and arm ache. “How did this happen? How did I let this happen?”
The barrage of stones batters the fuselage, but nothing breaks the armored steel, nothing cracks the bulletproof glass of the former Air Force One. Then someone tears out the power line connecting the jet to its generator. The lights go out, the air-conditioning shuts down, and the entire jet quickly begins to bake in the broiling sun.
44. Connor
“You murdered Amp, Jeeves, and the rest of the Goldens.”
“You’re crazy!”
Connor sits outside crate 2933, wiping his brow in the heat. Roland’s voice comes from inside, muffled, but loud enough to hear.
“You got rid of them so you could take their place,” Connor says.
“I swear, when I get out of here, I’ll—”
“You’ll what? You’ll kill me like you killed them? Like you killed Emby?”
No response from Roland.
“I said I’d make you a deal,” says Connor, “and I will. If you confess, I’ll make sure the Admiral spares your life.”
In response, Roland suggests Connor perform a physical impossibility.
“Confess, Roland. It’s the only way I’m letting you out of there.” Connor is sure that, if put under enough pressure, Roland will confess to what he’s done.
The Admiral needs evidence, and what better evidence than a full confession.
“I have nothing to confess to!”
“Fine,” says Connor. “I can wait. I have all day.”
45. Mob
The fortress of the Admiral’s jet is impenetrable. The temperature inside is soaring past one hundred. Risa’s handling the heat, but the Admiral doesn’t look too good. She still can’t open the door, because the mob is relentlessly trying to get in.
Outside, whatever kids aren’t swarming over the Admiral’s jet are spreading out. If they can’t get to the Admiral, then they’ll destroy everything else. The study jets, the dormitory jets, even the recreation jet—everything is being torn apart, and whatever can burn is set aflame. They are filled with an insatiable fury, and beneath it is a strange joy that the anger can finally be released. And beneath the joy is more fury.
From halfway across the Graveyard, Cleaver sees the smoke rising in the distance, beckoning him. Cleaver is drawn to mayhem. He must be a witness to it!
He gets into his helicopter and flies toward the angry mob.
He sets down as close to the chaos as he dares to get. Have his deeds in any way led to this? He hopes so. He turns off the engine, letting the blades slow, so he can hear the wonderful sounds of havoc. . . . Then the angry Unwinds turn toward him.
“It’s Cleaver! He works for the Admiral.”
Suddenly, Cleaver is the center of attention. He can’t help but feel this is a good thing.
46. Connor
Roland is slowly breaking. He confesses to many things, petty acts of vandalism and theft, that Connor couldn’t care less about. But this is going to work. It has to work. Connor has no other plan to bring him to justice—it has to work.
“I’ve done a lot of things,” Roland tells him through the three bullet holes in the crate. “But I never killed anybody!”
Connor just listens. He barely speaks to him anymore. Connor finds the less he speaks, the more Roland does.
“How do you know they’re even dead?”
“Because I buried them. Me and the Admiral.”
“Then you did it!” says Roland. “You did it, and you’re trying to make me take the blame!”
Now Connor begins to see the flaw in his plan. If he lets Roland out without a confession, then he’s a dead man. But he can’t keep him in there forever. His options are now narrower than the spaces between the crates.
Then a voice calls to them from outside. “Is anyone there? Connor? Roland? Anybody?” It’s Hayden.
“Help!” screams Roland at the top of his lungs. “Help, he’s crazy! Come in here and let me out!” But his screams don’t make it out of the hold. Connor gets up and makes his way to the entrance. Hayden looks up at him. He’s not his usual cool self, and there’s a nasty bruise on his forehead, like he was hit by something.
“Thank God! Connor, you’ve got to get back there! It’s nuts—you’ve gotta stop it—they’ll listen to you!”
“What are you talking about?”
“The Admiral killed the Goldens—and then everyone thought he’d killed you. . . .”
“The Admiral didn’t kill anybody!”
“Well, try telling them that!”
“Them who?”
“Everybody! They’re tearing the place apart!”
Connor sees the far-off smoke, and he takes a quick glance back into the hold, deciding that, for the moment, Roland can wait. He hops down to the ground and races off with Hayden. “Tell me everything, from the beginning.”
When Connor arrives at the scene, his mind keeps trying to reject what his eyes are telling him. He stares, part of him hoping the vision will go away. It’s like the aftermath of some natural disaster. Broken bits of metal, glass, and wood are everywhere. Pages torn from books flutter past smashed electronics. Bonfires burn, and kids hurl in more wreckage to feed the flames.
“My God!”
There’s a group of jeering kids near the helicopter, gathered like a rugby scrum, kicking something in the center. Then Connor realizes it’s not something, it’s someone. He races in, pulling the kids apart. The kids who know Connor immediately back off, and the others follow suit. The man on the ground is battered and bloody. It’s Cleaver. Connor kneels down and props up his head.
“It’s okay. You’re going to be okay.” But even as he says it, Connor knows it’s not true: He’s been beaten to a pulp.
Cleaver grimaces, his mouth bloody. Then Connor realizes that this isn’t a grimace at all. It’s a smile. “Chaos, man,” Cleaver says weakly. “Chaos. It’s beautiful. Beautiful.”
Connor doesn’t know what to say to this. The man’s delirious. He has to be.
“It’s okay,” Cleaver says. “This is an okay way to die. Better than suffocating, right?”
Connor can only stare at him. “What . . . what did you say?” No one but Connor and the Admiral knew about the suffocations. Connor, the Admiral, and the one who did it . . .
“You killed the Goldens! You and Roland!”
“Roland?” says Cleaver. In spite of his pain, he actually seems insulted. “Roland’s not one of us. He doesn’t even know.” Cleaver catches the look on Connor’s face and begins to laugh. Then the laugh becomes a rattle that resolves into a long, slow exhale. The grin never entirely leaves his face. His eyes stay open, but there’s nothing in them. Just like his victim, Amp.
“Oh, crap, he’s dead, isn’t he,” says Hayden. “They killed him! Holy crap, they killed him!”