Kiss My Apocalips
The story of Jacob Jones and the end of the world
CHAPTER FOUR -- Sister Sadie
"Wait!" the cute girl hesitated. "You're telling me that while those horrible men kept us captive in that cellar, the end of the world came?" She looked between us. "You expect me to believe that?"
"Sofia," I answered seriously, "I swear. We'll let you do whatever you want to do and we'll take you wherever you want to go. But we have an opportunity here to figure out WHO did this to you, and maybe even where that other girl is. Just please, put everything else aside for now and answer a few questions."
The redhead looked at me like I was certifiable. "What?"
"Do you have ANY idea where they've been keeping you? Do you at least know which direction they brought you here from?"
"Um ... no. They came into our cell and put a cloth over my mouth and nose. They do that a lot; before they rape us; before they hunt us. I hate the cloth. It makes me feel all dopey. I usually go to sleep."
"Chloroform?" I asked aloud. Sofia shrugged.
"Sounds more like nitrous oxide," Doriana said. "Still dangerous, but a lot less toxic; and it takes longer to work. If it was in liquid form, it evaporates very quickly, so it would have felt extremely cold."
"It was freezing!" the girl said. "So cold ... then I'd get dizzy ... then SO tired! And I'd finally just give up. I'd usually go to sleep." She looked down at her feet and held herself. "Sometimes, they'd rape me while I was too groggy to do anything about it. A couple times, I'd wake up and I knew they'd done it to me while I was asleep. The same thing happened to Sadie."
"Two of you in a cell?" I asked. "And they'd just take one of you?"
"There would always be two of them. Two men, I mean; and they'd drug us both," she told us. "Once, I woke up alone in the cell. Sadie was gone. They brought her back several hours later. She told me they'd hunted her. The other times, I'd wake up in a moving car. I guess it was a van. Bench seat. Tied up and blindfolded. I could tell we were on windy roads. Sometimes, it would make me sick to my stomach. Then, they'd pull me out and let me go. They said if I escaped, I was free. But someone would always find me. And shoot me with one of those darts. And rape me. And once, Sadie was with me, and we both ran together. But ... we got separated. And then a guy found me. It was always the same."
"They're moving the body to the van," Doriana told us, looking at the monitor.
"We're running out of time," I groused, thinking hard. "I have to make an educated guess. The second drone doesn't have much charge left! East or west?" I couldn't decide. "Sofia, did you hear anything while you were in that cell that would give us any clue? A train? Church bells? Anything?"
She looked down, considering, shaking her head. "I heard a back-up beeper once, like they use on trucks, you know?"
That wasn't really helpful. Or was it? "So," I thought aloud, "you could hear SOMETHING outside." Finally, the idea jelled. "Did you ever hear seagulls?"
She thought about that hard. "No. No, I think I would remember that. I never heard a seagull."
"SO ... it probably wasn't Reedsport. East then!" I grabbed a map and pointed. "Send the third drone here!"
Doriana nodded and grabbed the map from my hands. "I don't know if it has that much juice, but I'll launch it in that direction." She gave me the controller for the drone that was already airborne and stalked off toward the third aerial device.
"Why?" Wanda asked. "I can't figure out why you're in such a hurry; and why you're sending our last drone to a particular spot."
"That van is three times faster than the drone," I said.
"So?"
I looked over at Sofia, who seemed to be hanging on our every word. "You probably don't believe us yet. I'm sure I probably wouldn't either, if I was in your shoes. But ... there are only three inhabited towns that we know of southwest of Eugene."
The third drone buzzed to life, lifted off straight up, then shot off toward the east. In seconds, it was out of sight. Doriana, holding the craft's controller, walked over to us to listen in.
"Anyway, as far as we know right now, Yoncalla, Reedsport and Acton are the only towns in this part of the state that survived. If you hadn't been in one of those, you wouldn't be standing here with us right now. I'm still watching that van, but this drone's charge isn't going to last forever. If we had the last drone take over in the same spot, we'd see their first turn. If they turn west, toward the coast, then it has to be Reedsport. BUT, if it turns east, we STILL won't know which of those other two it is. The van would quickly outrun the drone, and we'd never find out. So, I'm trying to preposition the last drone at a road intersection. If they turn south, they're going to Yoncalla. If they don't turn, it's Acton."
Sofia was looking between the three of us imploringly. "You ... You guys are really scaring me," she said in a small, little-girl voice.
"They're on the move," Doriana said, pointing toward the tablet that showed the image from the second drone. It showed the van turning around, then making its way slowly back out to the state road. It didn't stop at the intersection; it turned right. "East!" she said. "You were right!"
I pushed a button on my console, ordering the second drone to return automatically. The tablet went blank, and I handed it to Doriana so that she could sync it to hers. Slowly, thinking as I went, I walked over to the middle of our clearing and set down the console that was paired to the second drone. It would use the signal to fine-tune its return and landing.
I turned to Sofia. "Look, I know it's an understatement to say that this is confusing ...."
"My parents and my little brother in Eugene ... you're telling me that they're ... they're all dead?"
I shrugged. "Well, the jury's still out on that one."
"He always says that," Wanda told her, putting her arm around the smaller girl. "I'll explain it to you later."
Rather than pull away from the embrace, Sofia leaned into her. "I ... I don't feel so well."
"It's the drug cocktail in that dart," Doriana said confidently. "It might take a few days to get it out of your system. Why don't you go and lie down in the back seat of the truck. This might take us a little while."
As Wanda led her to the vehicle, they had to pause while our number-two drone suddenly showed up overhead, hovered for several seconds, descended softly to the ground and shut down. Wanda stayed with our new friend for ten minutes, and then finally, she was back. "She's sound asleep. I feel SO sorry for her! After all she's been through, and now she's worried sick about her family. AND the girl she was with in that cell. She calls her 'Sister Sadie.' They've been fellow prisoners for more than a month."
"There's the van," Doriana said.
I checked the monitor and saw it, but the perspective was all wrong. "Is it upside-down?" I asked.
"It's about to drive past, underneath the drone. I have the camera with the longest lens looking backwards. It'll be right-side-up after it passes."
I found the whole thing to be horribly disorienting. After about five minutes, though, the camera was looking straight down on its target as the van wove back and forth along the curving route. And then finally, finally, there was a sliver of horizon at the top of the screen, and the van was a too-rapidly diminishing image out in front of the craft.
"I don't think we're going to make it," Doriana sighed. "Three more minutes and it's going to auto-return."
"Can we override it? Can we force it to stay longer, then have it land so we can pick it up?"
"Nope," Doriana answered. "Didn't you read the whole manual? Safety. It has to follow that protocol. Can't have drones going rogue. Once it reaches 'Bingo Charge,' it automatically returns to its takeoff point."
"So close," I whispered. "Just a little further. Just a little ...."
"It's past!" Wanda said. "I see it! Don't you? It went straight! It didn't turn!"
"Are you sure?"
"She's right," Doriana confirmed. "It didn't turn. It's going straight."