
She stared at him. “Who was he?”
He paused, and then smiled crookedly. “Russian. Name of Pushkin. Dead now. He only took the one gold.”
Ice touched the nape of her neck. And Abner, too. Dying for lack of gold.
They were both silent, and Jillian knew that he was about to leave. Before he could speak, she said, “Abner. The truth, okay? Knowing what you know now, would you do it again? Would you Boost if you were me?”
He leaned back into his seat. The clownish grin disappeared. “Would I have your skill? Your basic talent?”
“Better still. You could have yours.”
“This old man blesses you.”
“Stop stalling. Would you take the Boost?”
He grinned crookedly. “In a hot second.” And the car cruised away.
Jillian lugged her belongings into the building, up the stairs. A tickle of perspiration had wormed its way down her back by the time she reached the second level. Her footsteps echoed emptily in the deserted hallway. She heard distant shouts and thumps of exertion.
She leaned her forehead against one of the windows, and looked out over an outdoor track.
A battery of scanning devices were posted at sixteenth marks on a half-mile oval. Lithe figures jogged, sprinted, leapt. Her heart trip-hammered.
The fifty-foot ribbed dome to the east would be the sports medicine facility. There, her mind and body would be taxed to the maximum.
And over there… a converted dormitory, given nowto…
“That’s the academic center,” a male voice said behind her. She spun to face a young man of perhaps twenty-five years. His massively muscular body strained at a gold-trim warm-up jacket. A soft, round face, with bright green eyes framed by extremely black hair. He was pushing a small covered cart.
