Steelheart (The Reckoners #1)(65)
I thought of the other kids at the Factory, of the people in the understreets. I guessed that many of them thought the same way— they’d come here knowing that Steelheart was a monster, but they still thought life was better in Newcago than in other places.
Only they were complacent— Megan was anything but that. She was active, incredible, capable.
How could she think like they did?
It shook what I knew of the world —at least, what I thought I knew.
The Reckoners were supposed to be different.
What if she was right?
“Oh sparks!” Cody suddenly said in my ear.
“What?”
“Y’all’ve got trouble, lad. It’s—”
At that moment the doors to the elevator shaft just above—the ones on the third oor—slid open. Two uniformed guards stepped up to the ledge and peered down into the darkness.
22
“I’M telling you, I heard something,” one of the guards said, squinting downward. He seemed to be looking right at me. But it was dark in the elevator shaft—darker than I’d thought it would be, with the doors open.
“I don’t see anything,” the other said. His voice echoed softly.
The rst pulled his ashlight o his belt.
My heart lurched. Uh-oh.
I pressed my hand against the wall; it was the only thing I could think to do. The tensor started vibrating, and I tried to concentrate, but it was hard with them up there. The ashlight clicked.
“See? Hear that?”
“Sounds like the furnace,” the second guard said drily.
My hand rattling against the side of the wall did have a kind of mechanical sound to it. I grimaced but kept on. The light of the ashlight shone in the shaft. I nearly lost control of the vibration.
There was no way they could have missed seeing me with that light. They were too close.
“Nothing there,” the guard said with a grunt.
What? I looked up. Somehow, despite being only a short distance away, it seemed they hadn’t seen me. I frowned, confused.
“Huh,” the other guard said. “I do hear a sound, though.”
“It’s coming from … you know,”
the first guard said.
“Oh,” the other said. “Right.”
The
rst guard stu ed the
ashlight back into place on his belt. How could he have missed seeing me? He’d shined it right in my direction.
The two backed away from the opening and let the doors slide shut.
What in Calamity’s res? I thought. Could they have actually missed us in the darkness?
My tensor went off.
I’d been preparing to vaporize a pocket into the wall to hide in—get us out of their line of re if it came to that. But because I wasn’t focusing the blast, I took a large chunk out of the wall in front of me, and in an instant my handhold disappeared. I grabbed at the side of the hole I’d made, barely nding a grip.
A burst of dust fell back over me and cascaded over Megan in an enormous shower. Holding tight to the side of the hole, I glanced down to nd her glaring up at me, blinking dust from her eyes. Her hand actually seemed to be inching toward her gun.
Calamity! I thought with a start.
Her scarf and skin were dusted silver, and her eyes were angry. I don’t think I’d ever seen an expression like that in a person’s eyes before—not directed at me at least. It was like I could feel the hate coming off her.
Her hand kept inching toward the handgun at her side.
“M-Megan?” I asked.
Her hand stopped. I didn’t know what I’d seen, but it was gone in a moment. She blinked, and her expression softened. “You need to watch what you’re destroying, Knees,” she snapped, reaching up to wipe some of the dust o her face.
“Yeah,” I said, then looked back up into the hole I was hanging onto. “Hey, there’s a room here.” I raised my mobile, shining light into it to get a better look.
It was a small room—a few orderly desks out tted with computer terminals lined one wall and ling cabinets ran along the other. There were two doors, one a reinforced metal security door with a keypad.
“Megan, there’s de nitely a room here. And it doesn’t look like there’s anyone in it. Come on.” I pulled myself up and crawled through.
As soon as I was in I helped Megan up and out of the shaft. She hesitated before taking my hand, then once she was out she walked past me without a word. She seemed to have gone back to being cold toward me, maybe even a little mean.
I knelt beside the hole back into the elevator shaft. I couldn’t shake the feeling that something very strange had just happened. First the guard hadn’t seen us, then Megan went from opening up to me to totally closing o in seconds at. Was she having second thoughts about what she’d shared with me? Was she worried I’d tell Prof that she didn’t support killing Steelheart?
“What is this place?” Megan said from the center of the small room.
The ceiling was low enough that she almost had to stoop—I would de nitely have to. She unwrapped her scarf, releasing a pu of metal dust, grimaced, and then began shaking out her clothing.
“No idea,” I said, checking my mobile and the map Tia had uploaded. “The room’s not on the map.”
“Low ceilings,” Megan said.