Reboot

Reboot by Amy Tintera Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Reboot by Amy Tintera Read Free Book Online
Authors: Amy Tintera
face. The sound made me uncomfortable, made my chest tight. I didn’t like it.
    “Ever,” I repeated. “Do you know what’s going on?”
    She took in desperate gasps of air, lowering her hands from her face.
    “It’s . . .” She collapsed into sobs again, falling against me.
    I almost pushed her off. No one had used me for comfort, perhaps ever (unless I counted the times my mom leaned on me when she was too high to walk). This was an awkward time for me to start, with her being almost naked and all, but I beat down the urge to nudge her away.
    Instead I awkwardly patted her back. She pressed her face into my shoulder and cried like a human.
    “It’s . . . them,” she choked out. “They do something to us.”
    “To who?” I asked.
    “To the Under-sixties.” She took a deep breath and straightened. Her bright green eyes were tinged with red. “They started giving us shots and it makes us . . .”
    She didn’t have to say it. I knew what it made them.
    “I thought maybe I had slipped by because I was so close to sixty. They must have given me the shot in my sleep while you were on assignment,” she sniffled.
    “Why would they do this?” I asked.
    She shrugged, wiping at her nose. “We don’t know. It started a few weeks ago. Some people have said it makes them stronger, but others get all weird and hostile.”
    Weird and hostile was an understatement.
    “Fifty-one was starting to go off the deep end last week,” Ever continued. “But she said they gave her another shot and it made her all normal again. Everyone thinks they’re doing some sort of experiment on us.”
    Everyone? Who was everyone? I’d never heard of this.
    “We don’t talk about it with Over-sixties,” she said quietly, obviously noticing the look on my face. “We’re not supposed to. They tell the roommates they can’t say anything.” She tilted her head. “They ordered you not to tell me?”
    “Yes.”
    This brought on a fresh wave of tears, although I wasn’t entirely sure why. I thought she choked out a thank-you , but it was hard to tell.
    I started to get up, but she grabbed my arm. “What did I do? Did I hurt you?”
    “No. You screamed a lot. You attacked me. I broke both your legs several times last night. Sorry about that.”
    She looked down at them. “Oh. That’s okay.”
    “They gave you a shot the night before last, but they never came last night.”
    “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “That’s why you look so tired.” She wiped at her face with a corner of her towel. “What am I supposed to do?”
    I shrugged helplessly. “I don’t know.”
    “What if I hurt you?”
    “I’m stronger.”
    She closed her eyes and nodded slightly, fresh tears running down her cheeks.
    Apparently that hadn’t been a comforting thing to say.

SEVEN
    TWENTY-TWO HIT THE MAT AND DID AS I HAD REQUESTED—he didn’t scream.
    He pressed his face into the black plastic and his fists clenched the material of his shirt, but he didn’t cry. His afternoon had been littered with injuries, but he was doing a decent job of not screaming or crying.
    I knelt down and pushed his pants leg up. The bone stuck out from the skin.
    “In this case you have to shove it back in,” I said.
    He moaned and shook his head.
    “You have to. You’ve got to get the bone closer to where it’s supposed to be or it won’t heal right. Your skin is going to close up around the bone and then I’m going to have to slice the skin open again.”
    “That is so gross,” he mumbled against the mat.
    “Sit up.”
    He slowly pushed himself to a sitting position, grimacing. The training teams around us had turned to stare. Across the room, Hugo was muffling a laugh with his hand.
    “Just shove it back in.” I focused on Twenty-two again.
    “That’s it?” he exclaimed. “Shove it in?”
    “Give me your hand.” I held mine out.
    He slipped his hand into mine. It was warm and not as perfect as I had imagined. I thought rich people must have

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