MirrorWorld

MirrorWorld by Jeremy Robinson Page A

Book: MirrorWorld by Jeremy Robinson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jeremy Robinson
Tags: thriller
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toward the roof of what appears to be a black Mayan pyramid. As we descend, I can see the faint outlines of the tinted windows that make up the building’s flat, forty-five-degree angled walls. At the center of two sides of the building, the smooth slope is divided by what looks like giant staircases, each “step” a story tall, completing the Mayan feel. I count nine levels. The top level is three hundred feet across. Maybe more. The bottom is at least three times that. The building is surrounded by tall pines, and the roof is just below the tree line. Despite its size, the megalithic building would be invisible to anyone on the ground. Not exactly covert since anyone in the air can look down and see it, but the single access road winding through the woods is blocked by a gate. And while I can’t see it, I have no doubt that the entire facility is surrounded by a fence. Anyone interested in the building is going to have a hard time reaching it.
    Which begs the question, why am I here?
    “You’re not going to assimilate me?” I ask. The pilot, Blair, and Allenby can all hear me over the thunderous rotors thanks to the headsets we’re wearing.
    “What?” Blair asks. He’s still shaken up by our experience in Manchester. “I don’t—”
    “Resistance is futile,” Allenby says. She slides up next to me and looks out the window. “It does smack of the Borg, doesn’t it? But no worries, the collective isn’t interested in the likes of you.”
    I smile at her. “If you were younger and prettier—” I stop as my logical mind puts the brakes on the statement my lack of fear let slip.
    Allenby gets a good laugh out of it, though. Slaps my shoulder. “Oh, you.” Her demeanor is casual. Comfortable. I find this strange, but perhaps it’s just a result of being institutionalized in a place where most everyone is afraid of me.
    The helicopter touches down on a black landing pad at the center of the roof. As the rotor slows, Allenby slides the door open and hops out. There is no greeting party, just a flat black surface and a halo of pine-tree tops surrounding us. The scent of the deep woods is invigorating. I breathe deeply and step out.
    “Follow me,” Allenby says, almost shouting to be heard over the still-slowing rotor blades. I fall in line behind her as we walk across the roof. “Some ground rules. Don’t talk to anyone who doesn’t first talk to you.”
    “That’s a strange rule,” I point out. “Kind of old-world parental discipline.”
    “It’s just that most people here are working on something, in their heads, even when they don’t appear to be working at all.”
    “I see,” I say, but I really don’t. I stop walking.
    After a few steps, Allenby notices I’ve stopped. She turns back. “What?”
    “Why am I here?”
    “To not be there, ” she says, and I get her meaning.
    “Anywhere is better than SafeHaven?” I say. “I’m not sure I believe that. From what it looks like, once I set foot inside this building, no one will know I’m here.”
    Allenby grins. “And if I don’t tell you?”
    “I’m going to run.”
    “And get caught.”
    I shake my head. “I think you know that’s not what will happen. You have five seconds to tell me why I’m here. Five … four…”
    Allenby grunts and stomps her foot. “You’re infuriating. Fine.”
    I grin, but also note she didn’t wait until I got to one, or until I started running. She believed me. Trusted what I said. I haven’t been given that kind of respect in a long time, and I appreciate it despite the circumstances.
    “It’s a drug trial.” She waves her hand at her head. “For your condition.”
    “What if I don’t want to be cured?” I ask. “I’ve seen what fear does to people, and I’m not sure I—”
    “Not that condition,” she says. “The other one.”
    I’m confused for a moment until I realize she’s talking about my memory. “What if I don’t want to remember?”
    She turns away and starts

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