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Thursday, July 26, 2012

Driving Lesson Chapter 4 Page 3

"The terrain's flat," Tricia told him, "I'll tell you if the radar spots anything ahead."

The pickup had a radar!? Then George recalled that the pickup had a flat circular object mounted on the roll bar above the right rear passenger seat.

"Squirt, change your heading." Tricia then gave a new direction. "There's a canyon up ahead."

George gently turned right until the compass on his HMD reported that he had the right heading.

"Okay, you can slow down," Tricia said, "Looks like the storm is dying."

George breathed a sigh of relief. Not that he was in any real danger. The dust in the air was too thick for him to see anything of the storm. If there was even one.

"Watch it, there's something ahead!" Tricia suddenly called out.

Immediately, George took his foot off the accelerator. When a small figure appeared out of the dust directly in front of him, he instinctively hit the brakes and turned. He screeched to a stop beside the figure.

When he looked up, out his side of the vehicle, he saw that it was a little child wearing a clean orange jumpsuit with blond hair that reached her neck.

"Hello," the girl greeted mildly, "Nice stop."

George looked about. The dusty air made it hard to see far but it appeared that there was no one else. "Um, are you alone here?"

"Yes," the girl replied.

George smiled, forgetting that he was wearing a mask. "I'm George. Who are you?"

"I'm Raemi."

"Um, are you lost? Could we take you somewhere?"

The girl smiled but shook her head. "There's no need. Besides, your friend is frantically gesturing not to."

George glanced at Tricia, who was indeed shaking a 'no' with her hand.

"Just being careful out here," Tricia said aloud to Raemi, "Hope you don't take offense."

Raemi shook her head again. "None taken."

"Well, then, we'll be on our way," Tricia said.

Raemi raised a hand and waved. "Goodbye."

"Let's go," Tricia urged George quietly.

George carefully shifted into first gear. Then he drove away from the child.

Once they had traveled a short distance, Tricia said, "Squirt, you should be careful of people out here." She gave him a new heading to drive.

"But she looked so young and innocent," George argued as he turned the pickup, "She's just a child."

"That's the point," Tricia stressed, "How can a child survive out here in the wastes? How did she get there in the first place?"

Those were good points.

"Also, she didn't seem afraid or troubled about being out here," Tricia added, "And did you notice that she wasn't wearing a breathing mask?"

That had George really thinking. The girl had no form of protection against the environment - not from the heat, the dusty air or the dry wind. Even Iona had kept an armored cloak with her. Had that child really been there? Could she have been a holographic projection or some other illusion?

"Things in the wastes aren't always what they seem," Tricia told him, "Take Iona for example. She may look cute and harmless but you know how dangerous she can be."

George had to agree.

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