I DREW UP SHORT. CAGE jerked me behind him and spun, his eyes flashing in the moonlight as if he could see in the darkness. The others pivoted so fast Imani tripped over Reed and would have fallen if Cage hadn’t grabbed her with his lightning reflexes.
“What the hell was that?” Reed gasped.
“An animal?” Rune whispered. Her fingers sank into my arm.
I covered her hand with my own, swallowing. “Have you seen any animals around here?”
“No, but that doesn’t mean—”
Another scream answered, this one from the other side of the desert. The cries sounded horribly familiar, almost like the aliens shouting to one another. “Wolves,” I said out loud, my voice shaky. “Or the alien equivalent. That’s all it is.” Not that I was excited to face some kind of alien animal, but … better than the alternative. The things that stalked us through space? Anything was better than that.
“Sure,” Cage agreed. There was no trace of fear in his voice even though physical tension radiated off him. God, I envied how he smothered all signs of emotion beneath a cheerful facade. “We haven’t seen animals, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t any. And whatever that is, it’s far away, somewhere behind us. We don’t need to worry.”
“It’s a good sign,” Rune said, although she was whispering and didn’t sound very happy. “If there are animals, there’s probably water. There’s food. We just have to find it.”
“Yeah,” Reed agreed slowly. “Yeah, but could we maybe look in that city? If that’s what it is? I mean, instead of standing here waiting for whatever’s howling in the desert to find us?”
There hadn’t been another sound since the second one faded, but no one argued with Reed. With a renewed surge of energy, we pressed on. Within minutes it was clear that Rune, as usual, was right: we were finally achieving our objective, the city’s ruined hollow looming in more distinct outlines with every step. We made for its edge, a series of run-down buildings looped by a cement highway.
By mutual consent, we staggered to the nearest building. It was a store of some sort, its door hanging ajar to reveal a dilapidated shop interior. I had no idea what it had once sold, because the shelves were stripped bare. But the walls provided shelter, and we were all too drained to do much more than slump behind the counter and fall instantly asleep.
As exhausted as I was, though, I opened my eyes when it was still dark. I was shivering, even curled tightly against Cage, my head pillowed on his chest and his arms wrapped loosely around me. I took a moment to revel in the sensation. Cage and I had what could be called a tumultuous history. It started when he took me captive, back when he was a prisoner on Omnistellar’s orbital prison Sanctuary and I was a guard with no idea about … well, anything, really. I didn’t know my mom would choose company regulations over my life, or that the company I’d believed in my entire life was basically a supervillain, or that the prisoners housed beneath my feet were mostly innocent, or even that I had special abilities of my own. I’d been like a child, worried about nothing more than basketball and the latest issue of Robo Mecha Dream Girl 5 and, eventually, whether my parents would divorce.
Well, that wasn’t an issue anymore. The aliens had killed both of my parents—first my mom, back on Sanctuary, moments after she’d written off my life, and later my dad. I’d mostly dealt with Mom’s dying, but Dad … it was still fresh. And harder, maybe, because Dad had been the softer parent in my life, and the one who’d made it clear he still loved me even as he toed the company line. The one I might have gotten through to, might have made understand.
And now at last the tears came, pushing through my barriers, overcoming the total lack of moisture and my own common sense. I clenched my hands into fists and disentangled myself from Cage, climbing awkwardly over my sleeping friends, stumbling out into the night before the sobs burst from me in a broken, horrible wrench.
I slumped against the wall, arms wrapped around my legs, face buried in my knees, my shoulders shaking, tears streaming down my face. I was crying not only for my parents but for everyone we’d lost since the aliens tore their way into Sanctuary, claws bared to harvest us all. For Tyler, who’d ravaged my mind when we were still enemies, and my friend Rita, and even Liam, who’d been so terrified of the aliens that he’d betrayed us to Omnistellar. I couldn’t take any more loss. I bit my lip, picturing Mia and Alexei and Matt and even the Legion bounty hunters I’d lost while transporting us here. I was going to goddamn find them. I had to.
At last I raised my head and wiped the tears from my face. Crying should have made me feel better, but it just left me hollow and drained, like the tears nullified my ability to feel anything at all. I ran my tongue over my chapped lips. Crying was also stupid. My throat was parched and sore, my skin taut and itchy. We had to find water soon.
The first rays of sunlight peered over the horizon, casting the entire area in a strangely beautiful orange glow. For the first time, I clearly saw the city, or at least the part where I sat. It was right on the edge of the desert, and the cement sidewalks and roads, the mixture of buildings, shops, and apartments, held a familiar air, like a city back home. I spied what looked like a grocery store in the distance and worked my dry lips. Maybe they had water. If we didn’t find some soon, we were going to have a whole new problem.
Were my friends somewhere in this city? We’d seen something—a spark or an explosion. It seemed to come from this direction, but, as I now knew, distance was relative in the desert. My shoulders sagged. I didn’t know how big this city was, or anything else about it, actually. How could I ever hope to find anyone in its depths?
A sound behind me made me start, but it was only Imani, stepping into the morning sun and stretching. She’d found a bright blue cloth to fashion into a hijab, and the color set off her perfectly contoured features. Even without the makeup that made her a beauty belle back on Earth, Imani was stunning. “Thought I’d find you out here,” she said, settling onto the doorstep beside me. “Thinking about your parents?”
I half smiled. “What gave me away?” My voice came out in a dry rasp, exactly like Imani’s.
“I can always tell.” She shrugged. “You have the same look I get when I think about my sister.”
I nodded. We’d all lost people in this mess, but Imani and I were the only ones who’d seen family members die at alien hands. It created a bond between us. “Did you hear any more animals last night?” I asked, changing the subject. I wasn’t quite ready to talk about my parents, especially my dad. Not yet.
“I was out the second I closed my eyes.” She frowned. “Stupid, really. We should have set up watches. Not like Cage to let us forget something like that. Not like you, either, come to think of it.”
I nodded. I’d had this same conversation with myself after I opened my eyes. But Cage and I were both human. My Omnistellar training made me vigilant, strong, and wary, not infallible. “We were just as tired as you,” I replied, struggling to keep a defensive note from my voice.
Imani put her hands up, a smile playing on her cracked lips. “I didn’t mean to accuse you,” she said, her tone gentle. “You and Cage aren’t the only ones with brains. The rest of us could have said something too.”
I sighed, inspecting the deserted street. “Maybe we didn’t want there to be danger. At least for a little while.”
“Yeah. Hope overrides common sense, right?”
A long silence stretched between us. It was a surreal feeling, sitting on a doorstep as the sun rose overhead. The concrete vanished in either direction—cracked in places, with weeds forcing their way through and winding along buildings. But it was all so familiar nonetheless. “Where the hell did I take us?” I wondered out loud.
“Hey,” said Imani softly. “I suppose … I mean, this is an alien planet, right?”
I blinked, my water-starved brain struggling to catch up with her. “What else would it be?”
“I don’t know. I mean, we couldn’t have jumped through time, could we? This isn’t Earth in the future once the aliens have destroyed it?”
That I could answer definitively. I shook my head. “No. The only person with the ability to jump was Liam, and he moves through space, not time. I used his power before, remember? If I’d jumped in time, I’d have known it.”
“Yeah. You’re right. That makes sense.” She smiled faintly. “Okay, good. I was getting nervous, thinking maybe we’d missed the fight.”
“Who, us? We never miss a fight. We always seem to be right in the middle of whatever goes down.”
“That we are.” She raised her fist, and I pressed my knuckles to hers and smiled. In spite of everything, I still had friends. Still had family. Sitting here with Imani was a powerful reminder of that, and it unlocked a fierce protective swell in my chest, something I’d never experienced with my parents, maybe because I’d never had to. I knew with sudden, startling clarity that I would die for Imani—for Cage, for Reed, for any of my friends. I would leap off a cliff without thinking if it meant giving them an extra second to escape certain death, because they were all I had left, the only thing that mattered.
Of course, before I could worry about laying down my life for them, I had to find them.
Imani stood and stretched. “You ready to come back inside? I think I hear people moving around.”
I gazed into the morning, the crumbling city to my left, the desert expanse to my right. My heart still raced with the intensity of my emotions, my drive to protect this ragtag group of survivors. “In a minute. I think I need to sit here awhile longer.”
She reached down to touch my shoulder. “You saved our lives, Kenz. Don’t think we don’t know it.”
I squeezed her hand in gratitude and watched her retreat inside. I visualized a part of myself going with her to protect everyone, keep them safe, alive. And part of me was with the others, too, wherever they were. If some stupid metaphysical part of me—call it spirit or heart or soul or whatever—could keep them safe, then my determination would do it.
I returned to studying the desert. By day it was just sand, an endless expanse of blowing dirt. Had we imagined the screams the night before?
Right, I said to myself wryly. You all imagined the same thing at the same time. Want to explain how exhaustion managed that?
No. It had been real enough. And probably Cage was right: wolves, or what passed for them on this alien planet. Maybe Rune was right too: it was a good sign. Animals meant food and water, and we needed to find both—especially water—soon.
A clatter signaled Cage emerging from the shop. He scanned the street, saw me, and sighed in relief. “You scared me,” he said, sinking down beside me against the wall. “I woke up and you were gone.”
I studied him for a moment, his sharp, angular face, the high cheekbones and flashing eyes that always appealed to me so strongly, even when he’d been nothing but a murderous prisoner in my mind. “I wanted to see things more clearly. We stumbled in here in the dark last night. I barely got a look at the building, never mind the street.”
Cage gazed into the desert. “And you wanted to see if there was any sign of the creatures we heard?”
I laughed in spite of myself. No point hiding anything from him. “Yeah. I haven’t seen anything. What do you think they were?”
“Honestly? The more I consider it, the more convinced I become that it was some kind of animal. I mean, this is an alien planet, right? We shouldn’t expect the local wildlife to be familiar.”
“Or friendly,” I said cynically. “Better wolves than monsters, I guess—but alien wolves could still be a problem.”
“You’re not wrong. We’ll have to be careful.”
He didn’t seem particularly worried, though, and I didn’t blame him. After everything we’d been through, with all of our abilities, surely we could handle a few wild animals—even alien ones.
But none of that made me feel much better. “What do we do now?” I asked. The hopelessness echoed in my voice and I hated it but could do nothing to stop it. Had I saved us from the aliens just to die of thirst and starvation on a deserted planet? And why was this planet deserted, anyway? Plague? Radiation? There were just so many ways to die, and I had no idea what I’d dropped us into. My mind raced, picturing a thousand scenarios and trying to respond to all of them at the same time.
Cage must have heard my despondency. He slid his arm around my shoulders, and I leaned against him gratefully, wanting for this moment to let someone else carry the burden. “We search the city,” he said, sounding positive. It was only because I knew him so well that I caught the slight hesitation in his voice, telling me he didn’t have any great expectations of success. “We’ll find supplies, and we’ll find the others.”
“And if we don’t?”
“We will.”
That was Cage, always refusing to even consider the possibility of failure. “Even if we do find them, there might not be much left to save. Think about who’s out there,” I added, my imagination filling in horrifying details. “Mia, who can’t go five seconds without insulting someone, alongside the bounty hunters sent to catch us. Should go really well.”
Cage winced but didn’t argue, knowing I was right. Mia was not going to get along with Hallam and Priya. As for Matt, well, who knew? “That’s a good argument for moving sooner rather than later,” he said, “and before it gets too hot. I’ll wake the others.”
“Sure,” I said, standing and stretching, my joints popping and cracking. I tried not to think about how long it was since I’d had anything to drink, or how dry my mouth was, or the parched feeling on my tongue and lips. “I’m going to take a walk down to that shop and see if anything’s left.”
Cage, who’d been halfway into the store, spun on me. “Not by yourself.”
I scowled in impatience. Every second’s delay was another second my friends could be in trouble. “Have you seen any signs of life in this city?”
“Remember what we heard last night.”
“I’ll go with her.” Rune emerged from the shadows, rolling her head from side to side. “If there’s something worth finding, we’d better try.”
Cage didn’t look any happier with me and his sister going off, but I raised an eyebrow in challenge, and after a moment he backed down. “We’ll be right behind you,” he said, sighing in defeat.
Rune smacked him on the shoulder as she walked by. “Cool it, gege. We’re going fifty feet. After all, what’s the worst that could happen?”
Cage and I winced simultaneously, but Rune was already halfway down the street. I shrugged and ran after her. After all, if the worst did indeed happen, I probably shouldn’t let my best friend face it alone.