And the sadness came back then, so much sadness that he couldn't make sense of it. Sadness for this little girl knowing all that she knew about him now, about the world outside these walls, knowing too much of everything for someone like her. And sadness for her not being here, for her maybe not ever being here again. He walked over to the bed and fumbled through the med kit for the little white pills, the half dozen of them in a little bag he knew she'd leave for him, shook three pills onto the palm of his hand and swallowed them. He needed this, his first dreamless sleep in years. So he slept.
He woke up to a soft jabber of female voices, Amelia's was one, the other he didn't know, but it wasn't Ella's. Of course it wasn't Ella's, you moron. She didn't have a voice now. He knew that. He listened for words, phrases, but they were too far from him and too quiet, not wanting to wake him. He got up and walked toward the sound of it, and the sound stopped.
A girl who looked very much like Amelia was staring at him, open mouthed, not even trying to hide it. Same light eyes, same hair, but there was something in that look, defiance maybe. That was different then. They weren't so identical after all. He let her stare her fill, "See anything you like?" sarcastic, that, he knew, couldn't help it. This girl staring at him like that was unnerving.
She closed her mouth, "Sorry...Uhmmm, I didn't meant to... make you uncomfortable. I'm Laurel. Ams brought me."
So Amelia had a nick name. Ams. He liked it on her. It fit.
"And you are Riley... Ams told me everything about you, well, not everything I'm sure, but how you fell in here, and she helped you and then some of the other stuff too, about Samson, she told me that, and some other things. She needed to tell somebody, I think. She wasn't trying to hurt you by telling me. Please don't be angry at her. I won't tell any of it to anyone, I won't." She was still looking at him now, but almost timidly.
Something about him was scaring her, making her uneasy, too uneasy to stop talking, "I know about Drake too, and how he is a non-mute mute. I told Ams that I've met one of them before, Kaia, her name was. She was nice to me. She saved me from the purple caterpillars," she blushed at that, embarrassed, "sorry... It doesn't matter about the caterpillars. But I liked her. She had a nice smile. And then she told me to get out of here, to run, because she thought I would ask too many questions and something bad would happen to me, so I didn't ask anybody anything for a long time. But they took her away from here anyway, Kaia..." Finally out of breath, she shut up. He didn't really want her to start again either.
"What do you want?" He really did try to think of a nicer way of saying it, but it just came out this way. He looked at Amelia. Ams... The cute nick name sounded really nice in his head.
"Laurel wants to run away before the Selection. She's been wanting to for years, only she never told me about that, about any of it, not even Kaia, or her sneaking sage for Drake's tea for all these years. But that doesn't matter. She wants to not be whatever it is that they are trying to make us be, and she thought that maybe she could go with you when you were ready to run, when you got Ella back. She wanted me to talk to you, so I brought her."
He didn't know what to do with this, didn't see this coming at all. He felt bad enough for putting one of them in danger. He couldn't afford to do this. "No," he shook his head and walked away from them, back to the den, standing with his back to them, waiting for the footsteps to the door.
"Riley, but you have to. You just have to. She is brave, braver than I. She won't give you any trouble. You have to take her with you..." He could tell she was standing right behind him now, could feel her breath on his back, tickling his scars. And then he knew, knew that he wanted it to be this girl who didn't think herself brave enough to go with him, not the one he didn't know or trust yet. He wanted it to be Ams.
"And you?" he turned around, looking at her, "would you run? Or do you want to be what they are making you?" He knew he was being harsh, knew it when he was saying it, but he couldn't help himself. She had to have thought about it, maybe not for very long, but she had to have thought about it enough to know if she wanted to run or not. He knew that.
He did something unforgivable then. He knew it too, while doing it. He stepped up to her and wrapped his hands around her tiny wrists, looking right into her eyes, "If I agreed to take your friend with me but you had to come too, would you run?" He watched her eyes get larger, processing it, thinking if he really meant it, could really mean it. He didn't look away. She nodded then, "Yes, if that was the only way you'd do it, I would," and she ran out of the room to wherever it was that Laurel was waiting for her, and he knew he'd lost her.
He knew now, too, what all the sadness was when she ran out of the loft earlier, after all the telling. That he got used to her little footsteps, and her breathing, and those liquid gray eyes of hers, and that in that moment when he thought she was gone, for knowing too much, he felt the worst kind of alone he'd felt in years.
And now he hurt her, this girl who was nothing but good to him, because he was too much of a coward to tell her about not wanting her gone anymore, and because she brought Laurel and he didn't want to tell her with someone else there. He had to fix this somehow. Find a way to tell her that he'd take her friend. She didn't have to come if she didn't want to. He had to find a way to do that, before he lost her for good. Before she thought of him in that way he didn't want her to think about Drake. But he couldn't go chasing after her through the compound, so he would have to wait for someone to come, her, or Laurel, or Drake, and he didn't know how long that would take. That look of surprise in her eyes. She knew he knew she'd come, if that was the only way for her friend, and that's why he did it...
He walked over to the shelf and lit the candle, unmistakable smell of rosemary making him hurt in all the raw places. Mom's rare smiles places, softness in his hands Samson places, Ella still full of voice places, the pipe smoke through the unfixable bit places, Brody places, the girl's hurt liquid eyes places. He sat there inhaling it, hurting, punishing himself for the girl, for Ams, hoping some day she'd forgive him.
The Journal
Laurel, April 2, 2236, Compound Loft
This was day four of him not talking to her, waiting for Ams, but she wouldn't come. She tried to make her come, she really did. She could see the light in his eyes when he'd first see her in the loft go out when he knew it was just her. Ams wouldn't tell her what he did that was so bad that she didn't want to see him anymore. Not unless she had to, she said. That didn't make any kind of sense. Nobody had to see anybody they didn't want to see.
She took the food up to the boy every day and put the HealX on his scars, and he let her do all of those things without saying anything. It made her feel like she was intruding into something terrible, this silence. She'd tell him things, just to make enough noise to not feel the sadness on him. He never asked her anything, or even acknowledged that he'd heard what she was saying, but she couldn't help it. She had to at least talk, when she was with him, whether he heard her or not, or she'd go crazy.
She told him about the 26 boys waiting in some other huge, half-empty compound, the boys with the implants, but nobody knew if their implants had all the same stuff in them that the girls' did. Nobody ever told them that. Nobody ever told them much here. There didn't seem to be much need for any kind of explaining to anyone practically born knowing everything they'd ever need to know. Only she knew that it didn't work that way after she met Kaia, and maybe even before that.
She told him how she hated when she didn't know something, but learned early enough not to ask anyone, because all they ever said was that it would come to them when they needed it, not when they thought they needed it. That knowing things they didn't need to know yet would just make them unhappy, and that was one of the problems with the world the way that it was, that most everybody in it was unhappy.
Mostly, she told him about Ams, and how she knew about her marks, even though she never told her, and how it didn't matter to her that she wasn't completely pure, and she d
idn't think this pure thing made any kind of sense anyway, because it would just make it really easy for everyone to get lost with everyone looking so alike all the time.
And today, she told him that Ams never believed that memory in her implant about what happened to her family. That she remembered something else, something the implant wasn't telling her, and Hassinger told her that she was too little to actually remember anything, but Ams always thought she did, just not enough of it to know for sure, to draw the whole picture, and how she still kept looking for the missing bits.
She told him Ams' whole memory, feeling only a little guilty for doing it: "She remembered lying on top of her dog, Blanche, and pulling on his ears, because she thought he liked when she did that, and these people came in with lots of guns and pointed all their guns at her parents, and they were shouting stuff at her parents that she doesn't remember, because she didn't know what any of it meant, and then one of the men picked her up off of Blanche and just took her out of there, away from everybody. And then she was here. She remembers that, Riley, all of that. She can't remember what her parents' faces looked like. Or anybody's faces really, just Blanche, and how he smelled, and how he'd always tickle her with his nose, and make her laugh. She remembers laughing."
The boy was staring at her now, "I have to see her, Laurel. Today, right now, I have to see her. She'll never have to talk to me again, you can promise her that. I don't care what else you tell her. Lie to her if you have to. Please," and he turned away again, in that way he had, hands always behind his back, fingers locked inside fists, nothing moving on him at all.
She ran down the back stairs to the library, because that's where she left her. Ams was sitting by the tiny window in an old chair with soft handles on it, not reading, not doing anything at all.
"You have to go see him, Ams, you have to. Whatever it was that happened, you don't have to tell me. You don't have to talk to him ever again, he promised he wouldn't make you talk to him again if you don't want to. We are leaving tomorrow anyway, so you'll probably never have to see him again, but please, go talk to him. I think he knows something he needs you to know, for you, not him. I can feel it, that it's something to do with you, your family maybe." She knew she'd take the bait.
That was the one thing that would always work on Ams, and she felt every kind of wrong for doing this. "I'm going to the room. I need to clean up, and finish packing if Stella isn't back yet..." She turned to go, but Ams was right behind her now, grabbing her arm, "If I have to talk to him, you are coming," and that was that.
Ams raced up the stairs, too fast for her to have been able to keep up just a week ago, but all these days of running up there had helped get her in shape. "Good," she thought. She'd need it if their running away actually included any running. The boy was by that window he always stood at. He turned around on hearing them, and walked up to Ams, ignoring that Laurel was there at all. She walked a few steps back and slid down the wall to the floor, trying to make herself blend into the shadows. She was intruding, and it felt wrong, but Ams dragged her here, so she would stay.
"Talk. Laurel said you had something you need to talk about. So talk." It sounded so cold and harsh, not at all Ams-like. She felt bad for this boy now.
"You don't need to run, Amelia. That's part of what I needed to tell you, for days now, ever since I saw you last. I'll take Laurel. I'll do my best to keep her safe out there. You don't need to come." He said it all so softly, she barely heard him, and then she knew what it was, the thing he did to Ams that made her not want to talk to him anymore.
And she was angry, angry that Ams didn't tell her that she agreed to this without her knowing, that she did something Laurel would never ask of her, couldn't ask of her, or anyone. And mostly, angry at this boy. She walked up to them, without thinking, as if it wasn't quite her doing it, stepped in between them and slapped Riley hard, at least she hoped it was hard. She could see the pink on his cheek. He was staring at her, not moving, hands still behind his back. She slapped him again, and again, and then she was done with her anger at him, done with him.
She wasn't going to be running anywhere with him. "I'm not going with you, Riley. I've changed my mind," and she walked away, back to the door to the rest of the compound, to where people didn't do these things to people. Amelia was right behind her then, and she knew Ams wasn't angry with her for lying to her, for bringing her here like this.
"There is something else, Ams, and you need to hear this, and then you never need to see me or talk to me again... Your memory of what happened to you, to your family, I think it could be right." He was still standing where they left him, face still flushed, but he looked uncomfortable, like it would really hurt him to say whatever it was he was going to say, so she knew he wasn't making it up, and that he had to get this last thing out, needed Ams to know.
She waited by the door as Ams walked back to where he was, slower now than before, stopped in front of him and waited.
"Tell me. You owe me that much, Riley," she bit at him.
He winced, "I know. I just don't know if it would make it any better for you, knowing. Something I remembered when Laurel told me about your memories of them. Something from when I was a little kid. My parents had these old paper journals in a box under the roof that Ella and I found. We didn't know what they were, or at least I didn't. I was too little. But there weren't any paper books left, and we couldn't afford to charge the screens all the time just to read, so Ella would read to me, from the journals, to put me to bed. I didn't understand any of it then, didn't think about any of it until now. One of the things Ella read to me..." He stopped, looking at Ams, visibly struggling. She was worried about her friend now, about what this thing he was trying to get out would do to her, if it was really bad, and she felt that it was.
She watched Ams reach out and take his hands, looking at him in that way she had, her old, gentle way, the way she always looked at everybody, "I can take it, Riley, I really can, whatever it is. I can't take the not knowing."
He nodded, "One of the things she read to me talked about some failed experiment, a pill or something that was supposed to fix something that was killing everybody, but it didn't work. Something was broken about it, and nobody could have babies anymore, not in Alliance anyway, so they started doing all these tests on every baby girl that was born, looking for the ones that didn't go broken, the ones that could still make babies. Something in their genes was different, but there were very few of them. Nobody knew about what the tests were for. They did it when the baby was born, and when they found one, they'd tag her, and in two years, they would send people to take her away to a safe place, so nothing could happen to her, and so she could maybe have babies with the unbroken genes, babies who could have other babies..." He rushed through that, not looking at Ams now.
He looked sadder than anyone she'd ever seen, and she felt every kind of wrong for hitting him earlier. And then she knew that she had to run, that she couldn't stay here with the other girls, these stolen babies, to make other babies that someone else might want to steal for one reason or another. What kind of a person steals babies?
It made her want to lash out at everything here, punch through the walls. It made her want to run. "Ams, I can't stay here. I have to run. I just can't. I'm sorry," she said as softly as she could. She could see that Ams was crying softly, few streaks of wetness running down her cheeks, hands still wrapped around Riley's, her head down.
"I can't stay here either," barely above whisper, that, and then she put her head on the boy's chest and cried. She didn't want to watch that. Couldn't watch that. But she knew it was okay for her to leave now, and that Ams wouldn't stop her.
Traitor
Riley, May 2, 2233, Waller
He just couldn't bring himself to get up. Not after staying up half the night plotting all the compounds on his screens and trying to figure out how he would ever get to all of them. He could go with Brody, of course, as far as the first Alliance city, but that wouldn't h
elp him get to Ella. He couldn't ever go to any Alliance places looking the way he did. Brody knew it, so he didn't even ask. There was no point in asking.
He heard Janet leave the house. He looked out onto the street, to make sure the snow was still melting, and running in streams of water from all the high places; to make sure it was still Spring. It was, but the day was drearier than he would have liked. He dressed quickly, carelessly, snuck a breakfast bar from the kitchen table and ran out the door. The streets were deserted with all the kids in school and the adults going about their business elsewhere. A stray they nicknamed Spartan because you could see his ribs, no matter how much food he got in scraps from everybody, followed him for a bit. He couldn't bring himself to pet him, or any dog, after losing Samson.
He turned a corner, and was finally completely alone. This felt right, this walking alone, listening to the water run from the roofs in trickles now that it was so warm. The trees looked gray today, reflecting a miserable sky, but he could smell the greenness of the leaves on them. Soon, maybe in a week or so when all the water stopped running, there'd be grass and all the trees would be fully green. The first flower buds would scent the air with their perfume. He loved this just before full bloom week. This waiting was the only kind that ever felt right.
He turned onto Willis, knowing that it would take him past his old house. He didn't plan to do it at first, but it seemed as good a time as any to say goodbye to the little shack. Few more blocks, and he could see the corner of the roof with the hole in it, only there hasn't been smoke coming out of it for years now. Nobody took over the house, so it sat there, empty and dark, overgrowing with vines in summers and completely covered by snow in winters. He knew it because he could always picture it like that in his mind.
Escape (Alliance Book 1) Page 9