There is a tap on the door, and I peek out. A Walker, wearing Kendall’s symbol. Carrying a thin box.
“The president sent this for you, ma’am.” I take the box and give him a blank look. The Walker steps to one side of the door, assuming a loose military stance.
“What are you doing?” I ask.
“I’m to take you to President Stiles, when you’re ready.”
I open my mouth to argue with him, but I close it again before I can say anything. He’s following orders—nothing more or less than that. Instead, I close the door quietly and move to sit on the bed. Boxes dig into my knees. I want to sleep—for just a while, I want to forget everything, the fight with Finn, and Orwell’s words, the zombies—everything. Sometimes, I just want Collin, and our dirty apartment in Hellspawn, and the knowledge that as long as he was there, I wasn’t alone.
I twist on the bed, staring out the window slit. The pack from earlier is dead now. A lone figure is standing out there, and I know he’s human—he is too still to be anything else. I release my breath and stand.
Finn and Kendall have something in common. Both of them enjoy dressing me in ridiculous outfits.
The dress is pretty—a form fitting black sheath with a low v-neck and geometric designs cut out of the back, wrapping around my sides. The skirt is tight and short, with a sheer red overlay that is short in the front and hangs almost to my feet in the back. And heels. The man sent me fucking heels. Black boots with corset lacing up the back, that wrap to just past my knees, with a spiking heel that gives me an extra four inches of height. I touch up my makeup and leave my hair down. And run into a problem. There is nowhere for my gun. My knives are tucked into my boots, and a garrote wire is wrapped around my wrist like a bracelet.
But the dress has no room for hiding.
Biting my lip, I put the gun on the bed and open the door. The Walker’s eyes go wide when he sees me, and he swallows. “I’m ready to go,” I say softly.
I feel like I’m on display, following the solider. In a way, I am. The other Walkers see, and I can hear the murmurs. They know where I’m going. Soon the entire Haven will.
I see Finn when we reach the base of the Wall, just before veering off toward the government district. His eyes trace over me, going dark, but when he meets my gaze, he’s blank. Perfectly blank and quietly furious.
How could you?
I want to say I’m sorry. That I fucked up. I do trust him.
But I don’t. I look away and follow my escort to another man. I leave Finn behind.
Chapter 48.
Presidential Dinners
Kendall is in his office, which is where I am delivered. The Walker is dismissed without a second glance, and I’m alone with him. Kendall smiles at me. “That dress looks amazing on you.”
“Thank you. I don’t dress up often—there wasn’t a lot of need for it in Hellspawn.”
“A beautiful girl should always wear beautiful clothes.”
I cock my head at him. “Not very practical for fighting, though.”
“Which is why you have people to do that for you.”
I blink. It’s not me. Letting someone else take care of the infects, to not fight—that is anathema. Even in Hellspawn, my workouts were heavy on defensive maneuvers.
“Enough of that. Give me just a moment and I’ll be ready.”
I nod and take a step away. A few pictures are hanging on his wall, and I step closer to one. He’s standing with a blonde haired girl, his arm wrapped around her waist. They stand in a room that looks vaguely familiar.
“Ready?”
I nod, pulled from my thoughts to face Kendall. His gaze flicks past me to the picture, and then back to me. He smiles and says, “Come on, then.”
There is a car waiting to drive us, and I arch an eyebrow at it. Kendall catches the expression and gives me a smile. “Privilege of the job.”
He helps me into my seat, and I smile at him. “How did you get the job, anyway?”
“Well, it’s something of a family tradition. My father wasn’t the first to be president—there was Grandfather Stiles, about ten years before him. We’ve always been heavily involved in politics and the military. When it was time to elect someone, there weren’t many volunteers. I was asked, and I thought I could do some good. So I said yes.”
“And have you? Done good?”
Kendall gives me a bashful smile. “Some think so.”
It’s a non-answer. My lips curve into a smile, matching his, but I feel off. The argument with Finn is too present in my mind, his warnings and insistence that Kendall is dangerous.
“Why do you hate Finn so much?” I ask.
He’s good. Nearly as good as Finn. And if I were used to anyone else, I probably wouldn’t catch the small tells—the tightening of his lips, the anger flaring in his eyes. There and gone so quickly.
“How did you come to be with him?” he counters.
I shrug. “Finn was around when Hellspawn fell. We wouldn’t have made it out without him.”
“But why did you stay with him?” Kendall presses.
I stare. “Because he survives. Because the people around him survive.”
“But he killed an Alderman.”
The car comes to a gentle stop. I barely realize it—the statement is too shocking, too unexpected. Why is it unexpected? Kendall is the president of the Untied States, and even in the fractured state that we are, he knows things that happen. Things that I don’t necessarily expect him to know.
Kendall helps me out of the car and holds my hand lightly as we enter the brightly lit restaurant. A few Walkers are scattered around the room. I glance around.
It’s a restaurant. We had one, in Hellspawn, but it was for the wealthy—not for an orphan and her Walker brother. I’ve never been to a restaurant, unless you count the kink club in Vegas. Which I don’t.
Vegas. The sacrifice.
I stumble, missing a step, and Kendall’s grip on my hand tightens, steadying me. I want to shake him off. The pieces of the puzzle have fallen into place, and my stomach is heaving. I want to bolt.
Finn said he was dangerous, and I dismissed it. Because even though I know he’s right—even though I know to trust him—I thought it was jealousy.
I’m a fucking idiot.
“Are you ok?” Kendall asks softly.
I nod, too sharp and jerky. “Of course. Sorry—these heels. I’m used to flat shoes.”
“Not much farther, darling,” he says, smiling and wrapping an arm around my waist. He tugs me into him and guides me to a small table. Two glasses of wine are already waiting for us. Kendall waits until I’m sitting then circles to sit across from me. I sneak a glance around—a few other couples are here, but the restaurant is mostly deserted.
What the hell is he doing? What game is he playing?
“I had the chef prepare a steak. I hope you don’t mind,” he says, looking vaguely apologetic. I wave it away and sip my wine.
“Nurrin. I know you came here for your brother. And I want you to know I’ll do whatever I can to find him—to help you find him. But if we can’t—what will you do? Have you considered that?”
I stare at him blankly. “Not finding Collin isn’t an option.”
“But you must understand that he could be dead. That there are no guarantees.”
I pick at the chain around my neck, lifting the tiny vial so that it hangs between us.
“You know what this is?”
He looks uncomfortable, but he nods. Of course he nods. He knows, just as well as anyone—we are children of this world, after all. “This was my first boyfriend. Dustin. Collin was with him. So yes. I know—I’m aware of the lack of promises and that even when people make them, they can’t be kept. I know that Collin could be dead. But I won’t quit looking. Finn won’t quit looking. Do you understand that as long as there is hope—as long as there is no dead body—we’ll keep looking?”
“So you’ll leave with him. That’s what you’re saying,
” Kendall says quietly. He’s staring at me, a little too hard for my comfort. I sigh and toy with my wine glass.
“Yes. Because I trust O’Malley to find Collin.”
Kendall’s eyebrows go up at that, and I shrug. “You don’t have to understand or agree with me, Kendall. I don’t really expect you to. But I know why I’m staying near him.”
“He’s ruthless.”
“He’s also effective,” I say, my voice even. I shake my head. “We could argue all night about this. But Finn is a non-negotiable. I might have my own issues with the man, but he’s who I’ve trusted to find my brother. You can accept that or you can not, but it won’t change. So,”—I lift my glass, and arch an eyebrow—“why don’t we enjoy what’s left of the evening?”
Kendall smiles, and if it seems a bit thin, I can understand that. I’m don’t expect him to like my stance. I just expect him to back off his attack.
A server approaches with our dinner, and I stare at the red meat. Juice is swirling around the plate, too fast. My head spins, and I feel my stomach lurch dangerously.
“You gave her too much,” a voice says.
“Shut up,” Kendall answers. I look up and see him, still staring. His gaze is clinical, and that is more disturbing than anything else.
I forgot. For just a few seconds, I forgot, and how fucking stupid is that?
“She won’t do the Priestess any good if she’s dead.”
“I said shut up,” Kendall says, snarling now. I try to stand, and the room sways drunkenly. My lips are too thick, and my voice comes out garbled when I try to speak. It doesn’t make sense—nothing makes sense.
Finn.
Oh god, I forgot his warning. How stupid can I possibly be, that I would forget it, even knowing?
“Sacrifice,” I gasp. Surprise flares on Kendall’s face, and he laughs as the world tilts away. A tunnel of black wraps around me as I fall.
“She’s a smart little bitch. Go ahead. Get it done.”
Something slams into my head. Pain explodes through me. I fall into the dark.
Chapter 49.
The Dark
My mouth is dry when I wake up. My mouth is dry, and my head feels like it’s about to fall off. It doesn’t ache—it literately feels like it will separate from my body and roll across the fucking floor, and I almost wish it would.
I can’t see anything.
An unfamiliar voice murmurs, “She’s awake, sir.”
I hear a soft shuffle, and then, “How did you know?”
I almost scream, but I manage to keep the noise from escaping. The pain is too fierce, roaring through me, and I whimper, curling onto my bare legs. The silk of my dress is almost obscene now. “How,” Kendall’s voice, disembodied and too loud, repeats.
“I watched her die, you sick fuck,” I gasp, and he laughs. The bastard actually fucking laughs at me.
“He actually took you to the Stronghold.”
Finn will murder you for this—slowly,” I hiss.
“Finn has wanted me dead for years, Nurrin. And yet I’m alive. I’m alive and powerful while he wanders from Haven to Haven, and no one fucking cares. No one remembers that he was a hero—they only remember his mother started the apocalypse.”
“Fuck you, Buchman. Your hands are just as fucking bloody.”
The lights flare, and I do scream, pain lancing through me, exploding in my head. I clamp my eyes shut, willing the pain away, tears squeezing down my cheeks, until spots form behind my closed eyelids and everything fades away.
The lights are on when I come to. Kendall is sitting in the corner of the room, on the only piece of furniture—a hard-backed chair. There’s a small file in his hands. I lick my lips. I’m thirsty. So thirsty. I wonder how long I’ve been out this time.
“What did you give me?”
“Cocktail we give all sacrifices,” he says, not bothering to look up. “I’ve known about you for a while, Nurrin. When Priest Matthew came here with Collin, I knew it was only a matter of time before you would come here with Finn. We were prepared. I’ll admit, though—I didn’t expect you to be so reminiscent of Kelsey. That startled me.”
“It’s kind of sick, you know,” I say, conversational. Kendall finally looks up, an eyebrow raised. “That your sister’s look-alike is such a turn on.”
Amusement flickers in his eyes, but he doesn’t argue with my assessment.
“What happens now?” I demand.
“Now? We wait for the Reds. They won’t be long,” he says, a smile playing on his lips.
“Why do you do this?” Nothing is making sense, he’s spinning, and I frown, trying to make the world settle. Why is everything spinning?
“Why are you working with the Order? What’s in it for you?”
Kendall smiles. “I’m president, Nurrin. Who do you suppose made that happen? You don’t really believe a bunch of war heroes decided a boy who has never Walked would make a good president.”
I throw up, suddenly, and he sighs. “I hate this part.” He stands, and I listen to his footsteps recede as the world twists around me.
Chapter 50.
Waiting
Not long is a relative term. Kendall doses me with the cocktail of drugs four times, and each time, I do the same cycle—blinding pain, burning thirst, and a disorientation. Long stretches of time are lost. I wake screaming, my throat raw and sore.
In my rare moments of lucidity, I focus on Finn. He knows—by now, he must know. He’ll find me.
What is the only thing that matters?
When I drift on pain and scream through the delusions of disorientation, I can’t remember why I think he’ll come. The guards change, and I see Kendall less frequently. Sometimes I wake sore, finding bruises I can’t account for.
Why hasn’t he found me? Where the fuck is he?
We fought. We fought, and he left— maybe he’s decided that he’s had enough.
Maybe he’s left me and 1 behind, washed his hands of Collin.
I’ll keep you alive. I’ll keep Collin safe.
Where is he?
Finn once said hope is the great lie. It’s what we used to rally. What kept humanity going when we should have laid down and accepted our fate. I wonder if that is true.
I don’t have hope. I don’t need it. I have knowledge. It may take time, and I might hate every moment of the wait, but Finn will come. He will find me—and when he does, he’ll wash these rooms in blood.
Hope doesn’t keep me alive. Faith in him does—and the burning desire to see every last one of my tormentors dead.
Chapter 51.
The Order
Something is different when I wake the sixth time. The pain is gone—but I’m not thirsty, and the only thing that moves is the ground, a steady sway.
I’m being moved.
I shiver and shift in the room. Or whatever the hell it is that I’m in. Tentatively, I reach out and touch the walls. Cool metal, vibrating slightly.
“What the hell,” I murmur.
“It’s a train.”
The voice is weak and tired, thin with exhaustion, hoarse. But it jerks me around, so fast I hear my neck pop. The room is dark, but light flickers from overhead occasionally—a thin gap in the roof. I catch the occasional glimpse of him, and my breath catches in my throat. A sob works its way up, and Collin gives me a wry smile. “Come here, idiot.”
I make a noise, and his face spasms, and then I’m across the small space, buried in his arms. And I’m crying—all the tears I haven’t shed, all the ones I didn’t cry over him when I first realized he was missing, or when I found Dustin dead.
“Hush, shhh.” Collin shifts me so I’m resting against one arm, petting my hair awkwardly as he lets me cry myself out. And I do. For so long that I lose track of time. My eyes feel puffy, and my nose hurts, but I finally look back at him and give him a watery smile.
“Where are we going? Where’s Finn?”
Hope flares across his face. “You were with Finn? What happened?�
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I blink. “Wait—Collin, where are we?” “Where is O’Malley?” he demands.
“1,” I say, my lips numb. I feel empty, hallowed out from crying and the sudden crash of knowledge.
I knew Finn would come for me. I knew he would find Collin. So to have one, without the other—it’s unfathomable. But it’s my reality.
“Where are we?”
“The Order has us, Ren. I don’t know where they’re taking us.”
Which means…I shift, away from Collin.
“He lied,” I whisper.
“About what?”
I can’t answer. Everything from the past few days is crashing over me, every moment I lay, drugged and hurt, believing that he would find me.
“Why did you ever trust him?” I demand, furious suddenly.
“Because there is very little in the world that he wouldn’t do to keep you—and me— safe,” Collin says softly. There is something off about his voice, something in those words that I can’t quite fathom.
I turn to look at him, put my hand down.
He flinches, and everything freezes inside me.
“Collin?” I whisper, a little girl begging for reassurance. He shifts, and I can feel tears burning in my eyes. I don’t want to see this—I shake my head, and he laughs, that hoarse noise that is so off.
“How many weapons do you have?” he asks.
Not enough. Not for this. Not a gun.
“Where? How?”
He grunts, and I look behind me. It’s lying on the other side of the train car, rank and rotten.
I can’t bear to look at it, so I turn away. Light flashes above us again, illuminating the truth.
His leg is mangled, a mess of bloody bite marks.
I’ve found him, and it’s not fair, because I’m not ready for this, I’m not ready to do this.
Not again.
Not ever.
“Don’t hide from it, Ren,” he says, and I hear Finn in his voice, disgusted with my dissembling.
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