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He was going to America.

They only stopped twice, both times for gas. His mother still wouldn’t let him drive. She didn’t take any food—Kopano bought a bag of potato chips and two large oranges from a stand when they passed through Auchi—but Akuziem only gulped deeply from the bottles of water she had the foresight to pack. His mother was hard-eyed, squinting into the sun. She’d remembered the water but forgotten her sunglasses. To Kopano, she looked like a woman on a mission. She drove fast.

“Are you so eager to get rid of me?” Kopano asked his mother, only half joking.

His mother’s mouth tightened in a frown. “You are my son,” she said, but Kopano could hear the doubt in her voice. Akuziem must have been aware of that, too, because she reached over to grab Kopano’s hand and repeated herself with more conviction. “You are my son. I wish none of this had happened to you. But you are on a journey from God now. We must accept that.”

By afternoon, they approached Abuja. The highway was crowded, although nothing like the traffic of Lagos, and Kopano felt comfortably anonymous. His stomach turned, however, when Zuma Rock came into view. For a long stretch, the road pointed right at the stone monolith, Zuma Rock casting a shadow, its dull gray surface eating up the sun. Around Zuma Rock the land was green and hilly, not mountainous like one would expect, which made the 725-meter-high stone stick out all the more. To Kopano, Zuma Rock looked like God above had dropped a meteor in the middle of Africa and left it there. Zuma Rock made sense as a place where the aliens would choose to have their Loralite grow. It was as otherworldly a place as one could find on Earth.

As they drove closer, the newly built man-made feature of Zuma Rock caught Kopano’s eye. A swath of the parkland around the giant rock had been recently converted into a military base camp. Scaffolding ran up and down the side of the rock face; even from this distance, he could see a small elevator going back and forth to the top of Zuma Rock. A helicopter circled overhead.

Akuziem’s expression didn’t change as they got closer. In fact, she looked even more determined than ever to see this through, her eyes locked on the checkpoints that loomed ahead.

There were detour signs. Large notifications in many languages that Zuma Rock was closed to the public. The traffic thinned around them, the other drivers following the curve around Zuma Rock and into the capital city of Abuja. Kopano’s mom pressed onwards, ignoring the signs. Soon, they were the only car on the road.

They drove towards a group of Nigerian soldiers lounging in their Humvees, their vehicles arranged to create a loose roadblock. Kopano glanced at his mother. She slowed down but showed no sign of stopping.

“Did you tell them we were coming?” Kopano thought to ask.

“No,” his mom replied.

Kopano stared at the soldiers, who were now paying attention to their little car. They were guarding a site of great power. Kopano was worried they would start shooting at any moment.

Kopano’s mom rolled down her window and waved. The soldiers waved back, and she simply drove around them. Kopano nodded at one of them as they went by. The soldier lit a cigarette.

Kopano laughed in relief. “Just like Father says! If you act like you belong, you can get in anywhere.”

“I packed your bag for you, Kopano,” his mother replied stiffly. “I did not leave room for your father’s wisdom.”

The soldiers at the next checkpoint weren’t so lackadaisical. They wore the light blue berets of UN Peacekeepers and manned a heavy iron gate that blocked the road to Zuma Rock. A very pale man with a bad sunburn and red eyebrows raised a gloved hand to stop them and approached their car.

“You have to turn around, lady,” the soldier said with what Kopano thought was an Irish accent. “Place is closed to the public until further notice.”

“My son is one of them,” Akuziem countered stiffly. “He has the Legacies.”

The soldier glanced at Kopano and then rolled his eyes. Apparently, this happened a lot. “Sure he does. Look, there’s no reward, you get me? You got a strapping young lad here, that’s true, but the docs’ll take one look at him and know you’ve wasted everyone’s ti—”

Before the soldier could finish, Kopano used his telekinesis to float his beret into the air. The soldier took a step back, wide-eyed, and waved his hands above and below the beret, as if checking for strings.

“I could lift something bigger, if you want,” Kopano offered with a smile.

“Not necessary,” said the soldier, already getting on his walkie-talkie.

The soldiers ushered their car through the gate and allowed them to park in the shadow of Zuma Rock. A knot of men and women—some soldiers, but also some scientists in lab coats and a few people in business attire—speed-walked toward their car.

“I love you, Kopano, no matter what happens,” his mother said.

“I love you too,” Kopano replied.

Kopano would not speak to his mother again for some time. He was glad they had that moment, even if his mother’s words were cut with the edge of doubt, as if she still wasn’t entirely convinced Kopano was still Kopano.

What happened next was a whirlwind of activity. They were welcomed enthusiastically by the UN representatives and quickly separated. The people in the suits gravitated towards Kopano’s mother. There were documents for her to sign on Kopano’s behalf—visa applications, emancipation agreements, surveys of which vaccinations he’d received. The suits asked for her address in Lagos, the names of his father and brothers, and assured her that they’d all be brought somewhere safe.

“There will be a cure, yes?” Kopano heard his mother ask one of the men. “You do all this research with them so you can eventually find a cure.”

Kopano’s heart sank, but soon a barrage of questions from the scientists made him forget his mother’s words.

How old are you? When did your powers first manifest? That long ago? All this time, right here, under our noses! Did you experience the vision of John Smith? Have you been practicing on your own? Why didn’t you come sooner?

Kopano got the feeling that the science team stationed at Zuma Rock hadn’t had much to do. They were thrilled to have him, nodding and smiling and writing down everything he said as if it were of the utmost importance. They showed him into their encampment, then brought him into a high-tech laboratory that was meticulously clean.

Any strange feelings or poor health? Depression? Anxiety? Have you used your Legacies in any hostile situations?

Kopano described yesterday’s attack. The scientists didn’t judge him for his year spent as a superpowered courier. One of them, the only Nigerian in the room besides Kopano, shook her head in sympathy. She understood.

A pair of doctors administered what seemed to be a very ordinary physical. The only speed bump occurred when they tried to take a sample of Kopano’s blood. The needle pierced just the first layer of Kopano’s skin when his Legacy kicked in. The syringe crunched and crumpled before it could reach his vein. Three times they tried with the same result.

“Is it possible for you to turn that off?” one of the doctors asked.

“I don’t know,” said Kopano. “It’s brand-new.”

“We’ve been told that when dealing with Legacies, it’s helpful to visualize the desired result,” one of the observing scientists suggested. “Perhaps imagine that you want to have your blood drawn.”

“I do want to help,” Kopano replied with a smile. “But who in this world has such a strong imagination that they can pretend to like needles?”

Everyone laughed. After a few more broken needles, the doctors gave up, settling instead for hair and skin samples, plus a few fingernail clippings. Apparently, his fingernails weren’t made of the same stern stuff that lurked beneath his skin.

His physical complete, the initial ruckus of his arrival dying down, many of the scientists went off to quietly evaluate their data or video-chat with colleagues about the boy with impenetrable skin. Kopano was left alone with the Nigerian scie

ntist.

“They’re very excited,” she said, gesturing after the other scientists. “You’re the first Human Garde we’ve seen here.”

Kopano puffed out his chest. “I am excited too.”

Her name was Orisa, she was in her late twenties, with huge brown eyes and tightly arrayed braids. She was an employee of the World Health Organization who had volunteered to transfer to Zuma Rock when the “alien manifestation” occurred.

“Do you want to see it?” she asked.

They rode the elevator up the side of Zuma Rock, the little cage rattling in the wind. At the top, they were greeted by a pair of soldiers, both armed with automatic weapons and paperback novels.

“I guess guarding a rock on top of another rock doesn’t take much attention,” Kopano remarked.

Orisa smiled. “Honestly, until you came, this was the most boring assignment ever.”

The outcropping of Loralite grew from the top of Zuma Rock like a tree of stone. Veins of the glittering cobalt-blue substance spread like roots beneath Kopano’s feet. The Loralite growth was seven feet tall and reminded Kopano of a tidal wave in the way that it shot up sharply and then curved back over itself. He remembered what John Smith had said in the vision all those months ago—imagine another place with a stone, touch its glowing surface and the Loralite would teleport you across the globe.

Kopano couldn’t help himself. He reached forward, hand outstretched.

Orisa pulled him back.

“Don’t do that,” she said. “You might teleport away on accident.”

“I would come right back,” Kopano promised with a crooked grin.

“Not all the Loralite growths are as secured as this one,” she said. “Anyway, they say you Garde must be able to picture where you want to go.”

“I can picture America. That’s where I’m going, right?”

“Yes, but not by teleportation. You will be flown there.” She caught Kopano’s look of disappointment. “Old-fashioned, I know. But at least the plane is private.”

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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