electrocuted Bartie.
Those times were all laughter and happiness.
The smile slips off my face, and Bartieâs grin fades. I donât have to look at him to know weâre both thinking the same thing: everything changed after Kayleigh died. Kayleigh was the glue that held our friendship together, and with her gone, we were nothing. Harley spiraled into darkness that only Docâs meds got him out of. By the time heâd started recovering, Iâd moved to the Keeper Level, and Bartie and Victria had drifted in different directions. Victria spent her time in the Recorder Hall with Orion, and Bartie, as far as I could tell, found friendship only in his music.
âHow have you been?â I ask, leaning forward.
Bartie shrugs. A stack of books surrounds him, but theyâre all thick, regal-looking tomes from the civics section of the book room, not music books.
âItâs odd to see you without Amy,â Bartie says.
âIâitâs justâweââ I heave a sigh, running my fingers through my hair. Amy and I have spent a lot of time lately in the Recorder Hall, in this very room, actually, developing a plan for a police force. I know sheâs wary of me, hesitant to trust me after I confessed to being the one to have woken her up, but . . . sheâd quit flinching at my touch, she used to smile at me easier.
Until I called her a freak.
Frex.
âEverything okay?â Bartie asks, a hint of real concern in his face.
âYeah,â I muttered. âItâs just . . . Amy . . .â
Bartie frowns. âThere are more problems on this ship than a freak from Sol-Earth.â
âDonât call her a freak!â I say, snapping my head up to glare at Bartie so violently my neck cracks.
Bartie leans back in his chair, throwing up both hands in a gesture of either defense or dismissal. âI was merely pointing out that you have more important things to worry about.â
My eyes narrow, reading the title of the thick book Bartie had been scrutinizing. On the cover is a woman with skin paler than Amyâs and a dress so wide I doubt sheâd fit through the doorway. I read the titleâa history of the French Revolution.
âWhy are you reading that?â I ask. I try to laugh in a genial sort of way, but the sound comes out like a garbled snort. I look at Bartie with new eyes, wary eyes. A lot of time has passed since we would follow Kayleigh and Victria to the Recorder Hall and race rocking chairs across the porch.
And the French Revolution isnât a topic I would have thought Bartie would study.
Was he interested in the freaâI stop myself from even thinking the wordâwas he interested in the
unusual
woman on the cover of the book? Or was he interested in the guillotine cutting off the kingâs head? I mentally shake myself. Iâm being paranoid.
âFood,â Bartie says.
âFood?â
He nods, pushing the volume closer to me and picking up a slender book bound in green leather. âI thought it was . . . interesting. That âlet them eat cakeâ bitâI wonder if they would have even revolted if there hadnât been the shortage of food.â
âMaybe they were just revolting from dresses like that,â I say as I point to the voluminous swaths of silk pouring off the womanâs skirt on the cover of the book. Iâm trying for levity again, but Bartieâs not laughing and neither am Iâmy mind is remembering the red line in the chart Marae showed me, the line that showed the decreasing food production. When the rest of the ship sees how quickly the foodâs disappearingâthat the ship is dead in the empty sky, and that soon we will be tooâhow long will it be till they, like the people in Bartieâs book, turn their farm tools into weapons and revolt?
Bartie doesnât answer me, just flips open the smaller green book. His eyes
J.A. Konrath, Bernard Schaffer