The battery icon on the walkie-talkie had one bar left. Henry and Camilla had both remembered to only switch them on at the right time of day, to conserve battery life. These things were supposed to live in charging stations when they weren’t in use; the kind of radio used by construction workers and security guards. The first day they looked brand new, but hours of sun and dirt meant they now wouldn’t have been out of place in some dingy industrial office somewhere.
Henry now only held one of the pair, having given the other to Morgan. He lost track of which of them had been carried by Camilla, and which he’d carried with himself across the island. They had both been tuned to channel seven, for no reason other than that it was easy to remember. They were the seventh abduction, after all. When he handed it to Morgan, he’d asked him to keep it tuned to channel one. It felt wrong to use the same one he’d used with her.
She had died the day before, according to the announcements. Couldn’t say for sure if it had been after she abandoned the walkie-talkies, or beforehand. Danya left out so many details. Henry couldn’t imagine why someone wouldn’t keep them, though. Henry hated that he felt almost relieved not having to confront her about Theo. The path she'd taken still felt like one he could've helped steer her away from.
Just a silent key, now.
There was a tradition among amateur radio operators of honouring the callsigns of other radio operators who had passed away. It used to be that the signs weren’t used again, but these days they were kept from reassignment for only a year at most. Henry had heard the ceremony twice so far, which wasn’t surprising given the average age of most of the people building radios in this day and age.
Most of the time he didn’t mind talking to the old guys; they were really enthusiastic that a young person was interested in their hobby, like they’d all been at his age. Losing them was a dark side to that; he never knew if he had anything he could say to comfort men so far beyond his years.
They called out to the callsign three times to the callsign of the operator who had died, sometimes saying a few words about their life, the kids they left behind, their faith, or where they were interred. After letting the silence hang for a minute, they’d end the transmission. Henry wondered if they’d wait until his death was announced to call it, or if any of those people knew he didn’t really believe in a God like they did. Those words and abbreviations might have already sailed over his head, having hit the airwaves the day they’d confirmed the abduction.
CQ - CQ - CQ - KC4ASH
CQ - CQ - CQ - KC4ASH
KC4ASH - SK
Henry turned the dial on the radio to channel seven. He raised it to his face, nearly calling her name. Eyes fixated on the half-empty battery symbol, he turned the dial back to one.
There was no one but a cabal of murdering psychopaths to hear that transmission. It was redundant, too. In a way, they had already immortalized her with a broadcast and a number.
Camilla wouldn’t get more than that. He didn’t know the details of what she did, or why Diego killed her. It was possible it was revenge for Theo, in which case Henry felt wrong to even feel anger about what Diego had done. Part of him wanted to add Diego to their list, but he hated so deeply that he even had a mental list of people they needed to kill that he didn't mention it to the others. Hunting him down was no more a sign of respect to Camilla than speaking her name into empty space.
He wondered how he could think that and simultaneously continue on the path he walked down.
B030, and KC4ASH. At least I’m known by two sets of numbers and letters.
Henry shuffled uneasily at the entrance to the Commissary. He’d volunteered to keep watch outside while Aurelien and Morgan scoured the interior for signs of Blaise or Michael, or any other killers. It was probably not necessary for him to stay out here, but he was content with any excuse to keep out of the action. If they opened a broom closet and Michael was whimpering inside of it, he didn’t want to be party to what came next.
Even if he knew he wouldn't lift a finger to stop it.
Peering into the open door of the Commissary, Henry called out to the two of them.
“Hey, uhh… you guys find anything?”