The sun sets, turning the room a hazy gray. My back is against the wall, my butt is asleep, and the cement floor is seeping coldness through my pants and into my legs. I shiver.
Kevin’s head is resting in my lap, and his left arm is cradled across his chest. His quiet snores almost drown out the occasional howling and barking of dogs. But not quite. And every time I hear them, I think of what they will be eating for breakfast and get hit with a fresh wave of sobs.
I’m exhausted, but sleep won’t come. I don’t know how Kevin can sleep when he is about to die, and I don’t know what’s worse: the thought of him being killed by the dogs or of me having to watch it. I trail my fingers through Kevin’s tangled hair and stare at him, silently cursing the growing darkness for hiding him from me. I am trying to memorize everything about him, since I will never have the chance again.
When there’s no light left outside the window, I close my eyes and lean my head against the wall and listen to the sounds he makes when he sleeps. They say they will set me free tomorrow—right after they force me to watch Kevin die in my place. I don’t believe it, but at least I will live and have a chance to escape.
I wonder what Bowen and Jonah are doing right now. Hopefully they’ve found the cure and gotten out of here already. If it wasn’t for me walking into the raider’s hands, they’d probably all be on their way back to the shelter by now, and Kevin wouldn’t be standing on death’s threshold. If only I had stayed on the mountain, none of this ever would have happened. I am sick of making stupid mistakes!
I take a deep, unsteady breath, and time seems to stop moving. A stillness settles over me—an awareness—as if my mind has suddenly opened up and is absorbing more things than it has ever absorbed before, and I am hit with a revelation that steals my breath: if I let Kevin die for me, it will be the biggest mistake of my life, the one I will never recover from.
My head sags forward as shame overwhelms me. I have been content to let him take my place with the dogs. Worse—I’ve been relieved that he is taking it, grateful even. That I was willing to let him take my place at all, that he volunteered to do it, proves who the better person is. And the better person does not deserve to die. Especially when I am the one who got us into this mess in the first place.
Me. It has to be me in with the dogs tomorrow.
Doing the Right Thing Is Always Harder Than Doing the Wrong Thing. Mom embroidered that the day the vagabond—Kevin—came to our house the very first time. She cried while she sewed it but refused to tell me why. Now I understand what she meant. I lean forward and bury my face against Kevin’s shoulder and start to weep. My tears soak through his shirt and my entire body begins shaking with sobs.
Kevin shifts and pulls me down, hugging me to him. “Don’t cry, Jack.” His voice is raspy from sleep. “I want this. I want you to live a long, happy life.”
I press my face against his chest and cry harder.
I breathe in the smell of Kevin and press my hand over his beating heart, and fill myself with the knowledge that it will be beating for a long time. Moving my hand to my own chest, I feel the beating beneath fabric and skin and bone. I’m sorry, heart, I say to myself. It is slow and strong under my hand and not ready to be done beating.
I curl my body against Kevin’s and lie limp and exhausted and completely defeated, with my head on his shoulder. If he wasn’t holding me so close, I would fall away from him and lie limp on the cold, hard ground, staring up at the black ceiling.
Tomorrow I die.
I don’t sleep—I’m certain of this fact—but when the door opens and two dark shapes slink inside, I wonder if I am dreaming. The door shuts and whispers fill the darkness. A light flashes on and I squint against the glow. Kevin jumps away from me and stands as I crouch on the balls of my feet in the corner of the room and wish for a weapon.
The light swoops over the floor and then flashes on the faces of the two men who have just entered. One is a grizzled bearded man who is pressing his finger to his lips. He’s the guy who made chili for the raiders the afternoon I was captured—the old man who kept staring at me. He is staring at me again, furrowing his scraggly gray eyebrows. The other man is . . .
“Jonah!”
“Zeke, please tell me you’re getting us out of here,” Kevin says, turning toward the old man.
“We’re doing our best,” the old man—Zeke—answers. He holds something out toward me and I stand. It’s my knife. I cross the room and take it from him, cradling it against my chest. “You’re going to need to hide that,” he says. “It’s not going to be much defense against the dogs, but it might tip the scales in your favor long enough for you to survive.”
My eyes grow round, and I wonder how this stranger knows my secret thoughts, knows that I have decided to take my death back from Kevin.
Kevin steps up beside me and reaches for the knife, but I move it before he can take it. “She’s not fighting the dogs.” He reaches for the knife again, and I step away.
“Yes I am, Kevin.” Tears start welling in my eyes again. “I can’t let you die for my stupid mistakes.”
“Yes you can.” His voice is hard and mad.
I shake my head. “No.”
He grabs my arm a little too tightly and reaches for the knife, but I hold it as far away from him as I can.
“Actually, there’s been a change of plans. Soneschen’s orders,” Jonah says. Kevin lets me go and turns to Jonah.
“Change of plans? Does Hastings know this?”
“If he does, he hasn’t done anything about it,” Zeke says. “You are both going into the courtyard at dawn.”
“What? No!” Kevin’s voice is trembling. He grabs the front of Zeke’s shirt. “You’ve got to get Jack out of here! That’s why you’re here, right? To smuggle her out?”
I hold my breath and look between Kevin and Zeke.
“No rest for the weary tonight,” Zeke says. “All watches have been tripled. Every exit, every window, and every chimney has at least three men guarding it. Soneschen’s got a feeling something big is about to happen.” He chuckles. “He’s right, too. Just not what he’s expecting. Let’s get a move on, Jonah.”
Jonah rolls his shoulders and opens and closes his hands a few times. “Kevin, you’re a good man. Sorry for this.” He balls his hand, pulls his arm back, and slams his fist into Kevin’s chin. Kevin’s entire body seems to soften and freeze, as if time has paused and the air has condensed around him. And then he crumples to the ground, mouth sagging open, eyes closed.
I fall to my knees beside Kevin and pat his cheeks. He doesn’t so much as flinch. “What did you do that for, Jonah?”
“I’m trading places with him, and I don’t have time for him to argue about it,” Jonah explains. He peels the sweatshirt from Kevin’s limp body and pulls it over his head, puts the hood up, and turns to Zeke. “What do you think?”
Zeke shines the light on him. With Jonah’s face shadowed, he could pass for Kevin. At least in the dark.
“Sag a little. Slouch. You’re too tall and the shirt doesn’t fit right,” Zeke says. “And pull the sleeves down over your electromagnetic cuffs.” Jonah slouches and pulls the sleeves of his sweatshirt so they cover the half inch of metal cuffs peeking out. Zeke nods. “It might work long enough to get you in with the dogs, and once you’re in, they won’t be getting you out. Help me get Kev into the other room.”
Jonah bends down and lifts Kevin into his arms like Kevin doesn’t weigh any more than a child. He walks out the door with him and is back in half a minute. “We found the cure,” he says, looking at me.
This news should make me glad. It should make me excited, even. I can barely muster up a weak “Oh.”
“I would have gotten here earlier, but we’ve been using it.”
“Wait. What? You’ve been using the cure?”
“Yeah.”
“On the raiders’ beasts?”
Jonah shudders. “We’ve injected all their beasts. We’ve also been using it on the dogs.”
I stand a little taller. “The dogs we’re fighting? They won’t be beasts anymore?”
“No, not them. We couldn’t get to them. They’re under lock and key and being guarded by ten raiders. We’ve got an hour before dawn. Are you ready to fight?”
I shake my head. “Is anyone ever ready to face their violent death? I’m as ready as I’ll ever be, but I’m scared.”
Jonah puts his hands on my shoulders. “It’s okay to be scared,” he whispers. “It is better to be scared of doing the right thing, than to regret doing the wrong thing for the rest of your life.” His words almost echo my own thoughts. He squeezes my shoulders. “When I woke up after being a beast, I swore to myself I’d never lift my hand in violence again as long as I lived. Even against an animal.”
I look at his dark silhouette. “Then why are you doing this? Why did you trade places with Kevin?”
“Because I would never forgive myself if I watched you die when I could have possibly prevented it. I’m stronger than Kevin. I’m stronger than every man in this place. And I’m your best chance for survival. So go out there and fight as if it is your choice!”
“It is my choice,” I whisper.
He wraps me in his arms and holds me close. He’s solid beneath Kevin’s sweatshirt, as if he has no flesh and blood, only bones and electromagnetic cuffs.
I put my arms around his rock-hard ribs and rest my head on his chest, listening to the slow, even throb of his heart. A heart that might not be beating in an hour. Because of me.
My heart starts to ache. The ache grows until I hurt so badly that I’m certain my broken heart is now bleeding.
They come for us at sunrise, when the black sky has lightened to a pale, blinding blue. As they enter the room, I focus on Jonah’s scarred hands and wrists, and the sweatshirt that doesn’t quite hide the electromagnetic cuffs. He tugs the sleeves down, but they come right back up.
Once again, the raiders overestimate their own prowess. They don’t frisk me. They don’t frisk Jonah or look inside the hood shadowing his face. They just herd us out like we’re mindless cattle, smacking their baseball bats into their palms like that’s the scariest thing ever. It’s not.
The walk is short. Before I have time to dwell on the fact that a pack of raiders is escorting me to my violent, bloody death, I am at a glass door, looking at the courtyard. I stare at the tree where Kevin and I were tied the day before. The ground around it is scraped bare of dead grass from the claws of the dog. Those claws will be scraping me soon. I have known a lot of darkness in the past four years, but nothing has ever compared to this. I am in the darkest moment of my life, and time seems to have stopped.
As if in slow motion, the glass door is pulled open and I step outside. Cool air washes over my taut face, sunlight stings my swollen eyes, and I blink. My heart thuds in my chest. Air moves in and out of my lungs. I thrust my chin forward, put one foot in front of the other, and stand tall as I walk toward the tree. Sweat beads on my palms, so I wipe them down the front of my pants in anticipation of clutching the hilt of my knife.
I get to the tree and stand in its long, dead shadow, and all of a sudden, time no longer moves too slowly. It starts to zoom.
The air fills with cheering and I look up. At least twice as many raiders as yesterday are standing on the building’s flat roof and looking down into the courtyard. I squint, searching for a familiar face. My brother, mouth in a tight frown, meets my gaze. He is at the very front of the building, with the rising sun at his back. On his right sits Soneschen, in a black office chair, white shirt gleaming with morning sunlight. Soneschen’s gaze locks on me and his lips pull back into an eager smile. On Dean’s left stands a man whose face is shadowed by a cowboy hat, but I know who he is. Flint. The former king of the raiders. Succeeded by my brother.
“Go for the hamstring first, and the throat as a last resort. We don’t want to kill the dogs.” Jonah’s voice, barely audible over the cheering crowd, jars me back to reality.
My jaw drops open and I gawk at him. “What are you talking about? We don’t want to kill them?”
He shakes his head. “Trust me, Jack. There’s a bigger picture here than just you and me fighting some biologically altered dogs. Much bigger. There are more important things than us at stake.”
I want to punch him, to tell him I beg to differ. What can be bigger than me dying?
“Please trust me, Jack.”
“Okay. So, I don’t kill the things trying to kill me.” He nods. “I’ll do my best.”
The crowd grows silent. I squint against the bright sky and look up. Flint is holding a hand up in the air and all eyes are on him.
“Today is a monumental day! You are about to see your newest weapons being put to use against human beings,” Flint says. He clasps my brother’s shoulder. “You all know my successor had the brilliant idea to start injecting dogs with the bee flu vaccine.” The crowd nods and hollers. “He started with three dogs. It has been ten months. You already know they’ve been biologically altered. What you don’t know is that for five months, he has been breeding an entire army of these biologically altered animals, and they are all starting to turn.” The raiders look at my brother, eyes wary.
“Why do we want a whole army of them when we can barely control three?” someone calls.
Flint takes off his hat. His gray hair is matted to his head, and his eyes are sharp. “You all recall that the possession of guns by civilians inside the wall is illegal, right?”
“So what?” someone calls. “It’s not like we can get past the militia.”
“Well,” Flint continues, “we are going to set the dogs loose in the militia’s tent cities. When they’ve killed the militia, we will let the dogs into the walled city. The citizens of the city won’t be able to defend themselves. Hastings has trained the dogs for a special purpose.” He glances at my brother. “Why don’t you tell the boys about your pets?”
Dean nods and yells, “I have trained the beast-dogs to listen to no one but me, and to kill only men. They hate men. They will be brutal toward men. When the men are gone from the walled city, we will shoot the dogs and you will have your choice of women. You will get to rule. You will be the founders of a new society!”
The response nearly flattens my eardrums. I wonder if the roof holding the raiders can handle such a ruckus. They are jumping, stomping, screaming.
A gunshot rumbles, mixing with the raiders’ noise. The men quiet down, but their bodies are tensed with pent-up energy. “We want women!” a raider standing behind Flint yells. My brother turns and grabs the man and puts him in a headlock. He starts pounding the guy’s face and I am seeing the volatile, violent Hastings I have heard about. I am seeing the raiders’ way of life.
The raiders whoop and holler at my brother and make vulgar gestures. They are like a plague, destroying everything they touch. I look at my brother, still beating the man, and know I am right. Dean would not let me die like this if the raiders hadn’t poisoned his mind. He would be trying to save me.
Dean stops pummeling the raider and shoves him back with the others. He wipes his bloody knuckles on his jeans.
Flint waves his cowboy hat in the air and the raiders tone down their excitement. “And now, let’s celebrate this news with a little entertainment! Gentlemen, meet the secret weapons Hastings has been creating for the past ten months: Speranza, Futuro, and Fede.”
I gasp and look at my brother. I know those words, those names.
Dean gives someone a hand signal and a pair of double doors leading to the courtyard are opened. And so it begins.