The Legacy
himself. ‘She died, right there.’
Sheila appeared next to him, wide-eyed, and pul ed out a chair for him; he felt the usual flut er of longing that fil ed his chest every time he saw her and sat down.
‘She died? So she was an Opt Out?’ Sheila asked. Opt Outs were the people who opted out of the Declaration, who chose to forgo Longevity drugs in order to have children. They were few and far between and regarded with suspicion by Legals –children. They were few and far between and regarded with suspicion by Legals –who would want to get old and be open to disease when Longevity tablets could protect you? Who would want to have a child when the world was now almost entirely childless?
‘She was alone?’ Pip cut in before Jude could answer; he was looking at him intently now.
Jude nodded.
‘And no one saw you?’ Pip continued.
‘No. I mean, I didn’t see anyone. I was careful – coming back here, I mean.’
‘Good. Sheila, would you be so kind as to make Jude a cup of tea? And then, Jude, I would like you to tel me exactly what happened. Every detail, everything you can remember. Can you do that?’
Jude nodded.
‘Tea?’ Sheila asked, her face screwing up indignantly. ‘But there’s no tea left. We don’t get more until this afternoon and –’
‘And I was hoping that you might be resourceful and find some,’ Pip said, his eyes twinkling slightly.
Sheila’s eyes narrowed and Jude felt his protective urges kick in as he realised that Pip had discovered her lit le col ection of tea bags, of biscuits, of anything else she’d been able to secrete. She couldn’t help herself – Jude knew that, and didn’t blame her for it. She’d grown up with nothing to cal her own. Jude, who’d been brought up with plentiful supplies of everything except love, didn’t begrudge her more than her share of anything – he’d have given her the shirt off his back if she’d asked for it.
‘I don’t need tea,’ he said quickly. ‘Real y, I –’
‘Yes you do,’ Sheila said quietly. ‘I think actual y there might be one tea bag left. I’l go and look.’
She disappeared into the kitchen and Jude forced himself to look back at Pip.
‘Are you OK?’ the leader of the Underground asked, sit ing down next to him. Jude nodded.
‘I’m fine,’ he said, in his mind’s eye seeing Sheila taking one of her treasured tea bags out from wherever she’d hidden it.
‘It must have been a shock.’
‘I’m fine,’ Jude insisted. ‘I’m not a complete weakling, you know.’
His tone was more sarcastic than he’d intended and he saw Pip frown slightly.
‘I don’t consider you to be a weakling at al ,’ he said after a short pause. ‘Tel me what you saw, Jude. Don’t leave anything out.’
Jude sat back in his chair and told Pip everything – about the raid, the cameras, uploading the film, hearing the gasping and finding the woman. Pip listened at entively, nodding every so often, his face serious.
‘Her skin was blackened?’
‘She looked almost like she’d been burnt,’ Jude agreed, shuddering slightly. ‘She looked like a skeleton.’
Pip nodded, deep in thought. Then he looked at Jude, his eyes, which had clouded over, suddenly bright and clear.
‘What do you think was wrong with her?’ Jude asked him searchingly. ‘Do you think it was something to do with Pincent Pharma?’
‘I think it seems likely,’ Pip said gently.
‘So let’s find out. I’l get in there somehow, find out what’s going on.’ He looked at Pip hopeful y. Just a year before, Peter had gone to work for Pincent Pharma, pretending that he wanted to work for his grandfather, Richard Pincent, pretending that he had severed al links with the Underground. Pip had trusted him to spy for him, to uncover the vile secrets that Richard Pincent had been hiding. Peter had been a hero; even now everyone spoke his name almost with a whisper. Jude longed to have a similar chance to prove himself, to show himself worthy.
But Pip was shaking his head. ‘No, Jude,’ he said, standing up. ‘You must stay here. There is much to do.’
‘Like what?’ Jude asked defensively. ‘I can spy too. I got into Pincent Pharma last time. I can do it again. Just give me a chance to –’
‘No,’ Pip said again. ‘I need you here. I need you to study.’
‘To study?’ Jude sighed irritably, his eyes resting on the pile of books Pip had given him to read: political biographies, history books, books on
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