Arena Two tst-2

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Arena Two tst-2 Page 21

by Morgan Rice

Yes, I will him silently. Do it. Please.

  He releases, and I watch the arrow sail through the air. I brace myself.

  But it doesn’t hit me.

  Instead, I hear a horrific screech, and turn to see it lodge inside the creature’s open mouth.

  It is a perfect hit. The creature momentarily lets its tentacles go, and I quickly scurry up the rope, faster than ever; I’m soon dozens of feet high, away from the water.

  The monster reaches up again, his tentacles reaching up-but they fall just a few inches short of me. It screeches out in agony and frustration.

  I continue to climb, and in moments I reach the cave, Ben and Bree and Charlie standing there, waiting to greet me, to pull me to safety. I am a good fifty feet high, above the water. The creature flails below, but can’t get near us. I can’t believe it. I made it.

  I bend over and breathe hard, my legs burning from where the creature touched them. I feel like I can’t catch my breath.

  “ Are you okay?” Ben asked.

  I am. And I’ve never been so grateful to my life. He saved my life.

  I hear the crowd booing, jeering, heckling. I look up and see the disapproval on the leader’s face, on all of their faces. We have outwitted them. We have found safe harbor inside an arena where we were not supposed to. This is not how they wanted it to turn out. They are not happy.

  We’ve lost Logan, and Flo, but there are still four of us left. And these sick people are still not satisfied. They want us all dead.

  But none of us are stupid enough to climb that rope again. They would only cut it, and send us dropping back into the water. So we stay here, in our little cave, safe, out of harm’s way.

  The leader suddenly steps forward and the crowd silences.

  “ Raise the waters!” he screams.

  The crowd cheers, and my heart drops as I see the water level begin to rise again. The sea monster surfaces, eager to get its new food, as it rises closer and closer to us.

  My heart fills with panic, and I can see the panic on Bree and Charlie’s and Ben’s faces, too. Soon, the monster will be at our level, and will kill us all. We are out of options.

  Then, I get an idea. It is risky, but so is being alive. If I’m going to save the others, and myself, it is now or never.

  So without thinking, I step forward, pull out the spear mounted to my back, hold it out in front of me with both hands, and step out onto the edge of the cliff. I look down: the monster rises slowly, getting closer and closer. It shrieks.

  “ What are you doing?” Ben screams out. Then he must realize. “That’s suicide!”

  “ Brooke,” Bree screams. “Don’t!”

  But it is too late. There’s no more time for thinking. Only for action.

  I leap off the edge of the cliff, holding the spear out before me, pointed down, with both hands. I hurl through the air, to the wild cheers of the crowd.

  I raise my spear high, with both hands, over my head, and aim right for the monster’s one eye. As I get closer, the monster rises, right for me, its tentacles squirming, its mouth open, its large one eye looking right at me.

  And that is what I aim for. That single eye.

  As I go hurling down full speed, I am the spear perfectly. It lodges right in the center and I drive it down, all the way to the hilt, deep into the monster’s eye.

  It shrieks an unearthly shriek, and the world shakes.

  I plunge into the water, and the creature plunges down on top of me, its weight pulling me down. I can’t tell if it’s alive, or if it’s just its weight dragging me down, and as I plunge deeper into the blackness, I still don’t know if I am dead or alive.

  N I N E T E E N

  I slowly open my eyes, wondering if I’m dead or alive. My head is killing me, feels like it weighs a million pounds, and as I look all around, blinking, I struggle to figure out where I am.

  I spot Bree sitting beside me, Charlie by her side, and Ben beside him. We are in some sort of cell, but it is different than the cave. It is a small metal cell, protected by metal bars, leading to an outside tunnel. It is just the four of us in here.

  I wonder if I’m awake or dreaming, until Bree suddenly sits up and looks at me.

  “ Brooke?” she asks.

  She leans over and gives me a huge hug. My head is splitting, but I still try to hug her back. Charlie runs over and hugs me, too. Ben kneels down, looks at me, and places a gentle hand on my face.

  “ You’re alive,” he says with relief.

  He leans in and kisses me on the forehead, and despite everything, I am electrified by the feel of his lips on my skin.

  He looks at me with such love, as do the others, and I realize, finally, that I’m alive. We made it.

  “ What happened?” I ask.

  “ You killed the monster,” Charlie says.

  “ And then you passed out, under the water, and Ben dove down and saved you.”

  “ When the monster died, they called the game,” Ben says. “They ushered us all away, to this new cell. I think no one’s ever killed it before. I think they’re trying to figure out what to do with us. I don’t think they could’ve killed us right there, in front of everyone. I think the crowd wanted more.”

  I sit up, rubbing my head, trying to remember. I remember jumping off the cave, stabbing the monster, plunging underwater…but then nothing.

  “ You’re very brave,” Ben says.

  “ How long have I been here?” I ask.

  “ You’ve been out for hours. It’s nighttime now. They brought us to this new cell. I think something different is happening. I don’t know what. But I think we really pissed some people off.”

  I hear the distant sound of a metal door opening, then slamming. There’s the sound of dozens of marching boots, and we all sit up and look.

  Several slaverunners appear. They open our cell door, and standing in the center is their leader. He’s taller and bigger up close, a shoulder length above all the others, and wears a long green cape. He is holding something, and I am amazed to see what it is.

  “ Penelope!” Bree screams.

  She squirms and barks in his hands, trying to get away; but the leader holds her tight against his chest with an iron grip, practically suffocating her.

  “ This is your dog,” he says to her, in a deep, twisted voice. “Or should I say, was. It’s our property now.”

  Penelope whines, and I can see the disappointment on Bree’s face.

  The leader turns to me, and his smile drops to a frown.

  “ You have defied me,” he says. “I’ve never seen anyone do what you have done. You have made a fool of me in front of all my people.”

  I swallow, wondering what’s in store for us. I pray there are no more arenas. My body can’t take another day.

  “ But vengeance will be mine,” he continues. “Tomorrow, I will have the four of you publicly executed, on top of our highest knoll, for everyone to see. We will send a message to all the others who try to defy our rules.”

  He takes a step forward, and smiles at me.

  “ In the meantime, for your final night on earth, I will grant you one last wish. I’m going to allow you to choose one person of the four of you who will live. The choice will be on your head. All the others will die. You can choose yourself if you like.”

  He looks down at me with an evil smile, and I realize that this is the cruelest of all the things he’s done. How can I choose one of the four of us? Of course, I would choose Bree. But that would be so unfair to Charlie, and to Ben. Choosing one would be a death sentence for the others. And Bree would be torn by guilt. I know her. I can’t do that to her. I can’t have all of our blood on her head.

  I think quick, wracking my brain-and I get an idea.

  “ I choose our dog, Penelope,” I say. “Allow her to stay with us for our final night.”

  The leader looks down at me as if I’m crazy, stares at me wide-eyed, in shock. Then he leans back and breaks into loud, mocking laughter. He reaches back and
hurls Penelope, and she goes flying through the air, landing hard on the floor.

  “ You’re stupider than I thought,” he says. “I shall enjoy watching you die tomorrow.”

  He turns and marches out the cell, and his people follow, slamming the metal door behind him and locking it. I listen to their boots march away.

  Bree clutches Penelope, kissing her, and Penelope whines back.

  Immediately, the others turn and look at me.

  “ Why did you do that?” Ben asks sharply. “Penelope? Seriously? Of all of us? You could’ve had one of us live. Bree. Or Charlie. Anyone. Why did you do that?” he asks, his frustration rising.

  “ I have a plan,” I say to him. “See there? On the far wall?”

  Everyone turns and looks. There, down the corridor, about fifty feet away, are the keys to all the cells, hanging on hooks.

  I turn and look back at Penelope.

  “ She’s the smartest dog I’ve ever met. She’s our ticket out of here.”

  I look at Charlie.

  “ Charlie, you said you know the way out.”

  “ I do!” he insists, defensive.

  “ I believe you,” I say. “If we get out of this cell, can you lead us out?”

  Charlie nods back vigorously.

  “ I’ve seen the tunnels. I know where they go. There’s a way out, a back way. To the river. There are boats on the river. We could take one.”

  Ben shakes his head. “It’s risky,” he says.

  “ Got any other ideas?” I ask.

  He looks at me, long and hard, then finally shakes his head. “Let’s do it.”

  I turn to Bree.

  “ Bree. Talk to Penelope. She listens to you. Command her. Tell her what to do. Tell her to get us the keys. The ones that we need.”

  Bree carries Penelope to the edge of the cell, and we all follow. I look both ways, and see no one.

  Bree pulls Penelope close and whispers in her ear.

  “ Penelope, baby. We need your help. Please. You have to get us those keys.”

  Bree points to the far wall, and Penelope looks over with her one good eye.

  “ Do you understand?” Bree asks. “Fetch those keys, and bring them back. Go!”

  Bree takes a knee and inserts Penelope’s skinny body between the bars, and shoves her into the hall.

  Penelope takes three steps, then stops and turns and looks back at Bree.

  Bree points to the far wall.

  “ Go!” she hisses.

  Penelope hesitates, then suddenly turns and darts off to the far wall. She runs down the hall, snatches the key ring in her mouth, lifts it off the hook, and races back with it. She runs and runs, slipping between the bars, the keys in her mouth.

  Inside our cell, she drops them in Bree’s palm.

  I can’t believe it. It worked. We are all thrilled and delighted. My heart floods with love and appreciation for the dog.

  Bree hands me the ring, and it is heavy, filled with keys. I immediately flip through them, reach through the bars, and try each one. On the third one in, it turns with a loud, metallic click, and our cell door opens.

  It worked. I can’t believe it worked.

  We all hurry out the cell, Bree grabbing Penelope and holding her inside her jacket.

  “ Charlie, it’s your turn. Which way?”

  Charlie stands there, looking both ways, hesitating. Then, he turns right.

  “ This way,” he says, taking off. We follow him, and soon we are all running down the hallways.

  Charlie turns left and right, following the emergency lights, down different tunnels, turning again and again. I can barely keep up with him, and can hardly believe how he’s figured all this out.

  I am beginning to worry if he knows where he’s going when, after several more turns, he comes to a stop before two yellow emergency lights. He goes to a black part of the wall, reaches out, and raps hard with his knuckles. A hollow sound comes back.

  “ This is the door,” he says. “I’ve seen them use it. It goes outside. You ready?”

  The four of us crowd around it, then I yank it open.

  I can’t believe it. We are outside. He’s found it. Charlie was right.

  We are outside the prison complex, at some sort of rear entrance. It is amazing to be out in the open sky again, free.

  It is night time, and the sky is filled with thousands of stars. It is a cold winter night, the temperature dropping again, and we are out in the freezing elements. I still wear my uniform, as do the others, and it provides some protection, but barely enough to keep me warm.

  Charlie points to the river in the distance. It glistens in the moonlight, and I see slaverunner motor boats, bobbing in the water. It is late, and they look unmanned.

  We all break into a sprint, racing across the grass for the river, about a hundred yards away. The ground is iced over, and our footsteps crunch as we run. There are watchtowers all around us, but it is a dark, moonless night, and there are no slaverunners standing guard on this side of the complex.

  As we reach the river’s edge, we head for a motorboat. It is a beautiful, new boat, and it sits there, anchored, no one standing guard. Of course, why would they? We are inside an army complex.

  “ Let’s go,” I whisper urgently.

  We jump into the boat. As we do, Ben immediately pulls the anchor.

  My heart is pounding as I search for the key, then find it in the ignition. I make sure everyone is seated, then turn it, bracing myself.

  It turns over. I hit the throttle, slow at first. I don’t want to make too much noise until we are beyond the perimeter of the city.

  We are moving, and I look all around us as we go, looking for any sign of being followed. But there are none. It must be very late at night, and no one is watching. I look down and see a full tank of gas. I look around and see the tense faces on my fellow passengers.

  I want to gun it, but I force myself to go slowly, just a few miles an hour, nearly drifting down the river in the dark night. On my right, in the distance, I can see the outline of the arena, of the stadiums, of all the different competing grounds. In the far distance, I see groups of slaverunners, standing guard. But they are far away, and their backs are to us. No one sees us, here in the river, slipping through. Or if they do, they probably just assume we are one of theirs.

  As we get further, the river twists and turns. We are heading north, against the current. As far away from Manhattan as we can get. Towards Canada.

  We continue on, twisting and turning, and when we get far enough where I think it’s safe, I hit the throttle. The engine roars and we gain real speed. We are now racing up this nameless river, going who knows where. I don’t care where. As long as it is far, far from here.

  I can’t get Logan’s and Flo’s faces out of my mind. I feel they are looking down, watching us. And that they are smiling.

  We have made it. We have survived.

  T W E N T Y

  I drive the boat all night long, standing at the wheel, while the others lie down, sleeping, as our boat bobs up and down on the currents. Every so often I can hear Charlie’s cries, and I have no doubt that he’s thinking of Flo. Bree leans cuddled with her arm around him, his head on her shoulder. The two of them are inseparable, and I think that if it weren’t for Bree, Charlie would be devastated right now.

  I stare out at the blackness of the water, its foam racing past us as we go upriver-and all I see is Logan’s face. I see him in the water, drowning, reaching out for me. I see the whirlpool sucking him down. I see him asking for my help, and my being unable to give it. It tears me apart. Every time I close my eyes, I see his.

  I feel that he is with me now, more than ever, that he is a part of me. I feel a burning desire to have him really here, with me, by my side. In some ways, it is the same burning ache I feel when I miss my dad. I want him here, too. To see everything I’ve accomplished. To be proud of me. To be a part of it all.

  Ben, awake, walks up beside me and looks out a
t the water with me.

  “ I’m sorry about Logan,” he says softly, looking straight ahead.

  “ I am, too,” I answer.

  “ I can’t believe we made it,” he says. “I was sure we were dead. That was good thinking back there.”

  “ We haven’t made it yet,” I caution.

  “ But we’ve been driving for hours,” he says. “No one’s following us. They have no idea. They won’t know until morning. And by the time they find out, we’ll be at least a day ahead of them.”

  I shrug, thinking back to all the trials we’ve been through, and knowing that means nothing.

  “ I’m not worried about them,” I say, thinking about it. “I’m more worried about what lays ahead.”

  Ben searched the boat earlier, and found nothing-no food, no supplies, no weapons. We are all starving, exhausted, and freezing cold. And the further north we get, the colder it grows. The river is already freezing up in places. I look down at the gauge, and see we’re burning fuel fast. We can’t keep this up much longer. By sunrise, I estimate, will be completely out of gas, and once again, free-floating, at the mercy of whatever sick predators are out there.

  I want to relax, to kick back and think that we found comfort, that everything’s going to be okay. But this time, I feel no security. Only a sense of anguish. Of needing to survive.

  In some ways, Logan and Flo are the lucky ones. They’re out of the game. Now, they have no worries.

  “ Well, we came this far,” Ben says, “and I’m proud of you.”

  He leans in and kisses me on the cheek. It feels good, and I don’t want him to stop, or to go away. But he does. He quickly retreats, and I wonder if we will be close again. Like we were that night.

  “ Want me to take the wheel?” he asks.

  I shake my head no.

  He nods, and goes back to his side of the boat.

  As I stand there, staring out at the night, I wonder again how all of this will end. I think about that town, that mythical perfect town, somewhere north, in Canada. I guess that’s why I’m heading North, unconsciously-to fulfill Logan’s dream. To see if it’s all true. I know in my mind that it’s probably not. But I’ve finally learned something: we need to have hope. Without hope, we have nothing.

 

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