35

The shots reverberate through the walls, blasting through my ears like bullets slamming into my body. Seven times. I clutch Logan and look around frantically, wishing I could see through the walls, because the shots sound close by.

They sound like death is on its way.

“What’s going on?” Ella says. The sound must’ve woken her up. Her voice sounds panicky.

There’s another shot. And another.

I don’t understand this because the guards are the only ones with weapons. Why would they shoot us after all this time, when the bomb’s going to go off anyway?

The door clangs open at the end of the passageway beyond our cells. There are shouts and pounding footsteps. They’re headed this way.

I don’t have a weapon. I don’t have anything.

Logan pulls me hard against his chest, to shield me from whatever’s coming. But bullets and lasers can fly through skin.

“Clementine!” someone yells.

The voice knocks the breath out of me.

It sounds like Beechy.

Beechy, who abandoned me. Beechy, who let Commander Charlie throw me in here without saying a word.

He comes running into view. He’s wearing the garb of Core officials: gray suit, knee-high boots, belt with weapon holsters. He’s carrying a pulse rifle.

What is he doing here?

“She’s here!” he yells, making for my cell. He’s breathing fast, checking the other cells for their inhabitants too. “So is Colonel Fred!”

Two more people in official garb stumble into view. I don’t recognize any of them.

Beechy pulls out a pair of keys and unlocks my cell door. One of the others goes to Fred’s, and the last official goes to Ella’s. Ella is wide-eyed; Fred looks relieved. He must think they’re getting us out and we’re going to be safe, but I don’t know about that.

“Come on, Clem,” Beechy says.

He offers me a hand. I don’t know if I want to touch him. I don’t know what’s going on, but I take it because there’s urgency in his eyes and there was a time when I trusted him.

“What are you doing here?” I sputter.

He helps Logan out of our cell. “Breaking everyone out,” he says. He pulls a copper out of his belt holster and thrusts it into my hands. “Charlie is transporting the bomb to the explosion site. He sent us to bring you and Colonel Fred back to the Core—don’t ask me why, because I don’t know—but we’re abandoning his orders. We’re getting every Unstable out, and we’re going to intercept him. We’re fighting.”

Charlie’s transporting the bomb. It’s ready.

Fred doesn’t look relieved anymore. He’s gripping a gun an official has given him, with a trembling hand. Logan has a gun now too, and so does Ella.

But I still don’t get this. I have to understand.

“Why would you save us?” I ask Beechy. “You let Charlie throw me in here. You stood by and watched. So did your wife, Sandy. His daughter.”

Beechy runs his fingers through his hair, agitated. “Clementine, I’ll explain everything, I promise you. All you need to know right now is that we’re running. We’re fighting him. Can you fight with me?” He takes a step forward, begging me to believe him with his eyes. “Please.”

I want to demand answers, but he’s right. Gunshots still ring out in the distance, and Charlie’s on his way to set off the bomb.

There isn’t time.

“Fine,” I say, gripping my copper. “How many of you came here? The guards don’t sound happy.”

“Eight others. But there are more inmates than guards.”

“There are also doctors.”

“We outnumber them if you’re each carrying a weapon. We can get out of here. Trust me. But we have to hurry.” He turns down the passageway.

Fred holds his gun up, ready to fire, and limps after Beechy. One of the officials slips his arm through Ella’s to help her walk. She’s shaking in her skin, from the cold and whatever the doctors did to her yesterday.

Beechy didn’t account for the fact that most of the inmates are weak. Some can’t even run; how will they aim a gun?

But there’s no time to find a better solution. Gritting my teeth, I slip my fingers through Logan’s. “Come on,” I say. I hope to the stars I can trust Beechy.

“Clem, what the vrux is going on?” Logan asks me. His jaw is hard. He must be so lost in all this.

I press my lips together. I tell him what I can while we break out of the passageway and run down a corridor with Beechy, the rebels, and the other inmates from the cells near ours. I tell him fast.

*   *   *

Beechy shoots the first guard we see.

We’re in another corridor now, one I don’t recognize. I haven’t seen enough of this facility. I have no idea how far off the exit is.

The gunshots sound like they’re just ahead. Beechy explained some of the rebels have already released the Unstables from the cells on the other side of Karum, and the guards are trying to stop them from leaving. I don’t know if it’s working.

Beechy shouts orders from the front of our stumbling, staggering, limping group: “Stay close to each other. Follow Cady”—he points to a woman rebel with long black hair—“and she’ll get you to the exit corridor. Shoot anyone who gets in your way. Get out as fast as you can. We’ll take care of Karum personnel. We’ll rendezvous by the flight pods waiting at the back of the facility.”

I’m not ready for this. But I let go of Logan’s hand so I can use both hands to hold my copper. “Logan, stay close to me,” I say.

“You too,” he says, gripping his own weapon. His teeth are clenched, and his cheeks are pale. He knows about the bomb now. He knows Charlie’s going to kill everyone in the camps and cities in all the outer sectors unless we stop him.

But I’m not even sure we’ll make it out of Karum.

We turn the corner into a wider area, something like a lobby. But smoke clouds my view and I can hardly see anything. There are lights flashing everywhere—reds and blues and purples from the laser guns some of the guards must be carrying. People in white coats and guard uniforms blend together with the people in official uniforms and Unstable rags.

A red laser whizzes past my ear.

I duck, gasping.

Lifting my copper with trembling hands, I fire in the direction the laser came from, at one of the men in guard uniforms. I can’t tell if I hit him. I don’t think I did.

Another laser whizzes past. Eyes wide, I jump out of the way and trip over a body, landing hard on my knees. Blood pools in the hair of the dead nurse.

I gulp down the urge to vomit. I scramble to my feet.

The zaps and pings of gunfire ring loud in my ears, drowning out voices. The smoke makes my eyes water, and I blink fast, looking around wildly to tell where I am. I can’t see Logan or Beechy or Fred or Ella or anyone anymore.

“Logan!” I scream his name.

There’s a zap too close to my head, and I duck again and the laser hits the ceiling. There’s a loud cracking sound. A light shatters.

Shards of glass rain on my head. I shield myself with my hands and scramble out of the way, but I trip instead. There are so many bodies on the floor—and I can’t tell if they’re on my side or Charlie’s. It matters, but it shouldn’t.

A body crashes into me.

Ella stumbles, blood spilling from a hole in her chest.

The copper slips from my hand. I grab on to her to keep her from falling. Her eyes are wide. A strangled sound comes from her throat.

“No!” I cry.

A laser strikes her back. She falls limp in my arms. Smoke sizzles on her rags.

I’m crying and choking and I can’t move because I’m holding her. I can’t put her down. People will trample her. People will trip and get her blood on their hands, and they won’t even care, but they should care.

Someone touches my back, and I start to let go of her. I start to whip around to defend myself.

But it’s Logan. He says something I can’t hear. I can’t see him well through my tears and the smoke.

He eases Ella out of my trembling arms and transfers her bleeding body to his.

He’s going to carry her.

A laser flashes too close to Logan’s shoulder. My fingers fumble to snatch my copper from the ground. I turn and aim a shot into the steam. I don’t stop to see where it hits. We’re already running.

We scramble through the smoke, the dead bodies, the flashing lights.

There’s a hallway ahead. Cady is standing at the entrance firing a pulse rifle, gesturing wildly for us to head down that way, ahead of her.

Something hot grazes my shoulder. Heat trickles like liquid fire across my skin.

I scream and stumble, but I don’t stop running. The laser only grazed me. I’ll be okay.

Some more steps down the corridor, and there’s a doorway, a passage leading out into the night.

It’s too quiet out here. The wind bites my skin.

Green grass stretches at our feet, sloping to cliffs over the sea. We’re the only ones here so far. We’re the first ones out.

I double over, gasping for breath. Trying to focus on something other than the pain in my shoulder. Logan pauses to rest too, but he’s still holding Ella’s body. He’s squinting into the dark toward the sea cliffs.

“Clem, her body,” he says softly. “Should we…”

I swallow hard and follow his gaze to the sea. The ocean instructors told us about when we were young. The Surface camp and city are somewhere behind us, a hundred miles at least.

I know what Logan’s thinking. I don’t want to let Ella go, but I know we have to. And I think coming to rest in the sea would make her happy. So I whisper, “Okay.”

We walk to the edge of the cliff. Fierce moonlight sparkles on the water below, where waves crash on the rocks, roaring in the night.

Logan glances at me, his lips tight. There’s blood on his cheeks that I hope isn’t his.

“Should I do it?” he asks.

I glance at her frail, broken body. Red stains her rags. There are bruises around her eyes. I wish she could open them and laugh at me for thinking she’s only sleeping. I wish she’d tell me more about the handsome boy whose smile made the rain stop falling.

I wish I could tell her Thank you for those nights and I’m sorry I couldn’t save you and I’ll kill Charlie someday to get back at him for this, I swear, but I can’t.

“Here, I’ll help you,” I say, wiping my eyes.

I slip my arms under her skinny legs, gritting my teeth to ignore my throbbing shoulder, and Logan carefully holds her head up. We lift her body over the water.

I count: one—two—three.

And we let her go.

I watch her body splash in the water, barely missing the rocks.

Logan wraps his arms around me. I bury my head in his shoulder, blinking tears out of my eyes.

“I’m sorry,” he says.

“I’m sorry too. I’m sorry they hurt you. I’m sorry I left.”

“It’s not your fault, Clem.”

“But it is.” At least part of it is. If I’d agreed to obey Charlie in the first place, they wouldn’t have brought Logan to Karum. They wouldn’t have electrocuted him or given him those bruises on his arms.

His arms loosen around me, and I’m sure he’s going to agree. I’m sure he’s going to say I hate you for leaving and Why didn’t you save me? There are a million “I’m sorrys” but I’m not sure they’ll ever be enough.

Instead, he turns me around gently. His hands have Ella’s blood on them.

“It’s not your fault. I promise,” he whispers. His starry-night eyes stare straight into mine, sending a flutter into my stomach. He holds me like I’m a shard of trembling glass. Like he’s sure he’s going to make a mistake and I’m going to break, but I’m waiting for it. I’ve wanted it forever.

He leans in, and our lips touch. Brushing, barely touching.

I close my eyes. I breathe in his smell that I know so well, and I lose myself.

His fingers tangle in my curls. Our noses touch, and our cheekbones bump.

Slowly, little by little, we figure out this newness. This mess of beauty that isn’t messy at all because there’s me and there’s Logan. The two of us and the stars flickering over our heads. I know him, and he knows me without saying anything.

And I forget what it means to be afraid.