I just wish he'd be a bit more hopeful, on most days, despite our tragic circumstances.

"You're becoming eighteen in a few months," I try to lighten the mood. "Are you going to work with your Dad?"

Unlike myself, Jécob actually has parents. They're just preoccupied with their jobs. That is what Jécob claims anyways. His Dad is from Tier Two and visits him occasionally. His mom never does. She works at The Inn (the biggest harlot center in Tier Two). Jécob denies it, but we know better.

He takes a long drink of the wine, then turns his wheelchair towards the woodlands. "I don't know. If they have jobs there for the blind."

An anticipated response.

"What about you?" He asks, actually sounding interested for once.

As was aforementioned, I don't have a family. My mother left me on the steps of the Children's Home, I was told. She died from hypothermia a few yards away. I never knew a Dad.

This is the only children's hospice in Tier Three and granted a blessing. They offer us health care and education. It's a stepping stone, especially for us who had been affected by the "Upsurge of Radiation in the Radioactive Wasteland" seventeen years ago. The harsh reality is it's unlikely that anyone would want to hire an almost-dying eighteen-year-old with a brain tumor, and it certainly isn't in my desire to work in the drains until my cells give out.

"I'm not sure. I'll figure something out."

He shrugs and recoils to the haven of his mind again.

The sky overhead dons a vibrant orange and a soft shell-pink, the day is coming to a close.

"We should head back before nightfall Jéc."

"Okay." He tucks the almost empty jar into the side of his chair, and we wheel on.

*

"Skye. Skye! Wake up!"

I awake groggily, wondering why fat-faced Ellen is lingering above my bed. Her features warp and merge above me— eerily resembling a distorted apparition. I sluggishly wipe the sleep from my eyes.

After hanging with Jécob by The Rocks, I hadn't felt well (I've been feeling weaker lately) so I decided that I needed a few hours rest. Fat chance.

"What is it, Ellen?" I snap, then pause when I see the panicked look on her face. I grab my t-shirt and shuffle to the edge of the bed while pulling it on.

"What?" My voice wavers. "Is something wrong with Jécob?"

"No. You have to come to the cafeteria right now."

I cross my arms.

"Why?"

Her words are rushed and choppy. "Th... The Special Ops Unit team from Tier One is on their way here."

"Okay, I'm going back to bed. Thanks for wasting my time."

She tugs at my arm, and I almost slap her.

"I'm serious Skye. I overheard Head Nurse Bailey say that they were on their way."

"Overheard huh?"

She shakes her head, her limp brown hair dangling around her face. "I'm not kidding, I swear. She said it had something to do with-"

The assembly bell shrills overhead, clear and nonstop. I glance outside at the rapidly darkening sky, then at my clock. Dinner time isn't close, so why is the bell ringing?

"Had something to do with what Ellen?"

She's already by the door jam, and I wonder how much oxygen her can is pumping.

"Come on already."

I dash behind her, asking along the way if anyone knew what was going on. No one did.

At the entrance of the cafeteria stands Head Nurse Bailey. The first thing I notice is her unusually pale face and her tense stance. The next thing I become cognizant of is the two camo-clad men flanking her.

Recognition suddenly bemuses me. Fat-faced Ellen was right. What is the Army doing here?

The army base resides in Tier One, the mother ship of all the Tiers in this continental union. They rarely come here; usually caring only to send a handful of delegates in the case of a public emergency.

This, whatever this it seems to be entirely different. In a matter of seconds, the cafeteria fills with a legion of soldiers. Okay, maybe not a legion, but enough to cause the cafeteria to burst into an anxious and confused buzz.

"Sit quickly, " Head Nurse Bailey ushers. I spy Jécob's wheelchair in a corner and briskly walk over to him.

"Jéc."

"Skye?" Jécob whispers, "What the fuck is happening?"

"Chil'ren," the Head Nurse claps her trembling hands once, discontinuing any further exchange between Jécob and I. The noise in the cafeteria dies down to a lull.

"Do not be alarmed. The Special Operations Unit is here on official business sanctioned by our Director General."

Official business?

A tall, Arabic-looking soldier steps forth. He's incredibly intimidating- statuesque and well-built with smokey gray eyes that apprehend the locale. I immediately recognize him as the Director General's son.

"Greetings." His voice is deep and sedated. "I am Lieutenant Lucas Mahmud. As the Head Nurse has informed, there's absolutely no need to be anxious. We're just here on business and to speak with a few of your mates."

Head Nurse smiles warily as she looks down at a clipboard she's holding.

"Indicate in whatever way you can whenever you hear your name."

She proceeds to call several names. All about me, tentative hands begin to ascend. I spot Ellen, and my lab partner David, among the sea of familiar faces. My heart is hammering against my chest cavity, and I think it stops for a couple seconds when I hear Jécob's name- and his subsequent intake of breath.

I glance around frantically. The trend is undeniable. They're calling our names. They're calling the names of-

"Skye Palmner."

CrimsonWhere stories live. Discover now