Authors: Shannon A. Thompson
My ankle ached as I climbed the rusted ladder. The metal steps swung against the intense wind, and my hood blew off. Still, I kept climbing. One step before the other. I never took my eyes off of Lily as she climbed above me. She scaled the golden tower, clearing the steps with a nimbleness only cats had. Unlike her, I was a dog. I wasn’t meant to climb. My feet were supposed to be on the ground, but I had to climb to get to Noah and Miles. I would get there if it meant saving Broden − if it meant Noah living past tomorrow.
Lily reached the top,
and the ladder shook as she hurdled over the roof’s edge. She yelped as soon as she disappeared, yelling, “It’s me.”
I peeked over the edge. Lily was on the ground, and Miles had her arm twisted behind her back. His hand was still pressed into her shoulder when he spoke, “Lily?”
“Hi, Miles,” I squeaked.
He glanced over his shoulder, and it dropped. “Fantastic.” He didn’t sound fantastic at all.
He let Lily go as I climbed over the rocky strip of the ceiling. When he stood, he pulled his sister up with him. They were the same height, and they were both dressed in black. Their sweaters clung to their thin torsos as if they had dressed from the same closet. They had never looked so alike.
“What—” He was completed speechless.
Noah’s blond hair flashed from the shadows. “What are you two doing here?” he asked, stepping away from the wall. Unlike the rest of us, he wore his military uniform, and his green eyes illuminated with the sage color of his clothes. Even then, there was nothing about his expression that hinted relief. He was angry − really angry. “I told you two to stay away.” He turned to Lily. “Why did you bring her?”
“We’re already here,” Lily spat, ready to fight Noah herself. She
was the only one unfazed by his sudden rage. “And we’re not leaving.”
Noah’s lips pressed to
gether in a thin, white line before they parted with a hiss, “Yes,” he answered, gesturing to the ladder, “you are.”
I stepped between them and the wall. “
No, we aren’t.”
Noah looked
at me. His eyes softened, and for a moment, I saw the boy who stood in his family’s living room, the one who wore a floppy, white hat and laughed, not the one who took drugs.
When he looked away, his jaw clenched. It was his surrender. H
e wouldn’t fight me. He had other things happening. He didn’t have time for extra drama. We didn’t have time at all. And Noah and I were the only ones who knew it. He was leaving today whether he had Rinley or not.
“W
hat’s the plan?” Lily asked, but the boys didn’t answer.
“I—uh—” I looked from Noah to Miles. I only knew he had to leave tonight – by a train – and Miles was supposed to set it up. The train station had closed over an hour ago. I wasn’t sure how they were going to pull it off. I still didn’t know where Rinley was.
“We’re staking out,” Noah responded as he walked around the corner.
I
bounded after him. Around the wall was a cliff, a hanging edge that plummeted to the cement below. Wind bellowed up, shooting my curls in all directions. Lily handed me a hair tie without the question being asked. I tied up my hair as Noah watched me, binoculars in hand.
Lily sat down, dangling her feet off of the edge.
“See anything yet?”
“Nothing
but buildings,” Miles answered, “and get your legs up here. Someone is going to see you.”
Lily pouted,
but her thin legs swung up. I stayed back, looking over the city. I had never been up so high before. From the roof of the clock tower I could see everything − the lumberyard, the schools, the jail, the hospital, and even Phelps’ mansion. I half-expected to see an ocean or the giant bridge that was tattooed across Lyn’s chest, but Miles was right. I only saw buildings. Even then, I wanted to see Albany, to know what kind of reality this world was in, but Topeka blocked out the rest of the world. I couldn’t fathom how far away everyone was, how far away Noah would be in a couple of hours.
Lights blinked throughout the city, coating the streets with golden auras, and trees
danced on the roadsides. An echo of car engines sang to us as the patrolmen searched for criminals − looking for us − and my arm wrapped around my torso in a tight hug. Lily’s borrowed sweater scratched across my skin, and I wished I had worn my own clothes. The only thing I had of my own was my favorite knife, and my tennis shoes bent as my feet tensed. I already wanted to run.
Lily peered over the city as if she had been on top of the tower with them before.
“What exactly are we looking for?” she asked.
“I don’t know,” Noah admitted, his eyebrows furrowing together. “I don’t see any houses that Rinley would expect me to know.” He ran his fingers through his hair again. The longer strands stood up as if he had been electrocuted. I remembered how messy his hair had looked when he wa
s singing after first waking up, and warmth rushed over my skin.
“I thought you two had a plan.
”
“We did,” Noah
said, “We do,” he corrected, lifting the binoculars to his eyes. “But I don’t even recognize those buildings.” The Topeka Region had changed since he fled.
In the past few years, dozens of residential buildings had been built. The tall, black structures almost blended into the darkness, but the lights from the inside gave them away. They were close enough together that someone could jump from rooftop to rooftop, but they blocked our view from what laid be
yond them.
Lily pointed at them. “Those are
correctional institutes for troubled teens,” she explained. “That’s where I do my volunteer work.”
Noah lowered his binoculars to gape at her.
“What?” she asked, “It looks good on a resume.”
“Of course it does
,” I responded, hearing the aggravation leave my lips, but Noah didn’t respond.
“It is a lot of fun,” Lily adde
d, “Phelps built them after the massacre. His way of apologizing to the orphaned families, I guess—” Lily choked on her words.
Noah’s face
hadn’t budged. Miles cleared his throat.
“Sorry,” she muttered, realizing her mistake. Noah’s family had
indirectly killed people with tomo. He knew it. We all knew it. But we hadn’t mentioned that fact. We had ignored it.
“
There are all types of kids there,” she tried to add, continuing to explain her abrupt information. “Kids who commit small crimes. Misdemeanors, really. Anything that doesn’t involve tomo and isn’t a big enough crime to put the kids to work in the lumberyard − or if they were too young. They are kept there. They even get free therapeutic treatment and rehabilitation. Sometimes kids even get adopted—”
Noah’s blank expression split into a grin. “That’s it,” he said, turning his face to stare at the darkness.
“She’s there. She has to be.”
“Wha—What?” Miles
stuttered. “You have to be institutionalized to be in there.”
“She’
d get in.” Noah dropped the binoculars on the ground like he didn’t care if they broke or not. “We have to go in, find her, get her out, and—”
“You can’t,” Lily
stopped him.
Noah glared at her as if she had snatched his sister from him.
“Why not?”
“Because,”
she pointed again, “that building is strictly for girls. Even the workers have to be female,” she explained. “There’s no way they would let you in.”
He continued to grin. “Good thing you came
, then.”
“I can’t just go in there,” Lily responded. “I’m not on duty tonight. They’d stop me, too.”
Noah’s forehead wrinkled, and he placed his hand in front of his mouth as if he wanted to bite down on his flesh to relieve his anger. He glared at the building until I stood up and demanded his attention.
“We can get in,” I said, turning to Lily. “All we’
d have to do is turn ourselves in for something.”
Lily scrambled to her feet. “I don’t know about that—”
“You work there, right?” I repeated. “That means you can bring girls there. Take me. Tell them I’m a troubled friend.” In a way, it wouldn’t even be a lie.
“But—” Lily didn’t even have to argue.
Noah shook his head. “You two are not going in there alone.”
“You have done enough on your own,” I said, refusing to drop eye contact with him. “Stop telling me to stay out of it when I’m already in it. Let me help.” When he didn’t respond, I spoke again, “I’m going to help whether you approve of it or not.”
The wind whistled between us, but his silence was louder. His bangs brushed across his forehead, but his lip twitched, urging him to speak. Even then, he wouldn’t.
“I think it’s a good idea,” Miles concurred
, standing by my side.
Noah’s
green eyes lit up, ablaze. “You’d risk your own sister like that?”
“You’re risking
all of us,” Miles spat back. “What’s the difference?” He only looked at Lily once. “Besides, I think we all know how capable they are.”
Noah’s hands clen
ched as if he were going to punch Miles across the jaw, but I reached out. I grabbed Noah’s arm, and his muscles relaxed. I could feel his heartbeat in my palm.
“Miles is right, Noah,” I spoke softly,
teetering on the ledge. “We’re already in trouble. We can’t stop now.”
“Broden didn’t get arrested for us to give up,” Lily added
.
“I told you,” Noah said,
“I’ll get him out.”
“And how do you plan on doing that when you le
ave Topeka?” I retorted. “We’re all stuck here. You’re the one who’s going to be free after all of this. None of us will be.”
Noah
pulled away from me, and the blood drained out of his face. “Sophie—”
“We. Are. Going,” I said
, taking the knife from my sweater. I handed it to him. The last thing I needed was to be caught with a weapon when Lily turned me in.
His hand shook as he raised it to take the
knife. His fingers grazed mine as the weapon fell into his grasp. He was cold.
“Meet us at the sun in an hour,” I said, using their code for the train tracks.
A gasp escaped Miles, shocked that Lily had taught me the code, and I ignored him. I took off for the ladder with Lily following me.
As Lily began to scale down, Noah called out to me, “Wait.”
“What?” My voice vibrated with adrenaline. Noah, despite everything before, couldn’t frustrate me more than now – standing on the crest of a wave that was Topeka’s clock tower.
Noah stopped himself from coming closer. The only other time I had been angry with him, I had held a knife to his throat. Someth
ing told me he didn’t know if I would find a way to do it again.
“Rinley,” he
started, looking as if he wanted to say something else entirely. “She won’t respond to that name. She’ll deny who she is,” he explained. “She won’t come with you voluntarily.”
I sighed,
“Of course not.” That would be too easy.
“She has a scar
on her left wrist,” he stated blankly. “She hides it.”
“A scar?”
“She—” His lips curved into a grimace. “She was little when the drug was released, but she knew enough that she thought ending it would be better than facing it.”
His words sank into my heart in
the same way that Liam’s portrait had. Rinley, Noah’s little sister, had tried to kill herself. I wasn’t sure I could handle any more of his reality.
Neither of us moved, but the wind pushed
his messy hair to the side, revealing the entirety of his face. His own scars were visible, including the one he got saving me from the river.
He only spoke when he
reached into his military jacket, “Take it with you, Sophie.” He held out my favorite knife, the one I trusted him with.
I shook my head. “They might search us, Noah.”
“You’ll figure something out,” he responded. The glint in his eyes reflected my ability to fight. He knew I was capable. He always knew.
I reached ou
t to take the metal in my hand, but the weight was heavier now. It felt like Noah was going with me.
“See you in an hour,” I squeaked, kicking my feet over to the ladder.
“See you in an hour, Sophie.” His voice hovered above my head as I began to descend.
We would be at the railroad tracks – the sun – and the code suited the situation perfectly. Tomo had a sun etched into its little, blue pill. It only seemed fitting that the battle would end where it started. In fact, it was a vision.
A heavy-set woman with black hair acknowledged our presence as soon as we walked in. She stood up from her desk to talk to us, and I tensed, hoping she would think my nervous state was suitable for my role. I was a troubled girl who needed all of the help she could get. In a way, I didn’t have to pretend at all.
Lily
’s bright smile was as professional as it got. “Evening, Judice,” she spoke calmly, acting as if her darkened wardrobe was her norm. “How are the kids?”
“Great.” Judice beamed.
“My daughter’s wedding is next week. Can you believe it? Did I tell you that Phelps is attending? We’re so excited.”
“You didn’t tell me that,” Lily exclaimed as she reached out to embrace the woman. “That is fantastic,
” she congratulated her as she pulled away.
“It is,” Judice continued, but her stare had moved to me.
“I’m just showing her around,” Lily murmured loud enough for me to hear.
“We don’t do tours at night—”
“I know,” she nodded like she expected to hear the rules, “but her father worked at the Traveler’s Bureau, and her mother isn’t handling it well.”
The reference shuddered over the woman’s face. Lily didn’t have to create a story. A few people had died in the fire, and this woman was assuming one of them had been my dad. In reality, I didn’t have a clue as to where my father was
.
“I thought we could – you know – make an exception,” Lily continued, dropping into a whisper. “I’ll even take your next night shift as you, so you can still get paid.”
The woman’s eyes lit up. “You are a blessing, my dear,” Judice responded with a nod. We were in. “Feel free to ask us any questions, honey.”
I dropped my face to stare at the floor. I didn’t want her to see the excitement on my face. “Thanks,” I mumbled.
“Go ahead of me,” Lily said to me before whispering to Judice, “She’s more likely to join if I give her room to breathe. Her mother’s been breathing down her neck all week.”
I slipped away
before Judice could argue. Surprisingly, the woman didn’t give me a second glance. I hurried down the nearest hallway, and my fingers clutched my hidden knife, safely snuggled in my sweater. The confidence in my blade blended me in. When I passed other workers, they acted as if I belonged, and for the first time, I felt like I did belong somewhere.
I
knew what the workers saw. My frizzy hair, tied high into a ponytail, revealed a tired face. My dark clothes were stereotypical, and my long strides were one of a nervous person. I didn’t even have to pretend.
A
small group of girls stood in the hallway I walked down. When I passed, their stares followed. I flinched when a child, a girl no older than eight, ran by me, seemingly clean, smart, and healthy. Nothing about her outside appearance suggested inner turmoil, but I knew the truth. She was probably orphaned, her parents killed by the drugs that were confiscated years ago − or worse, she had gotten ahold of some herself.
Everyone had been placed here for a reason.
Did their families leave them? Did they turn themselves in? Did they have nowhere else to go? Someone’s job was to decide which girls could stay and which ones would be sent to the lumberyards to work. Some would even be sent to Phoenix. Someone had decided to send Anthony there. Someone who worked for Phelps. Someone who I didn’t want to know, ever.
I shook my head as if I could shake my thoughts out
. I couldn’t dwell on their pain. I had to keep moving. I had to find Rinley, and I had to get out. Now.
A wide stairwell led me upstairs, and I searched all of the hallways for any
indication of Rinley’s existence, but I didn’t have an idea of what to look for. A sun? A picture of tomo? A giant T? Those would all be too obvious. Finding Rinley was impossible. The building was full of people, and there weren’t even names on the doors, but I wouldn’t know what name to look for anyway. Rinley was hidden as well as any criminal would want to be. I had to think like Noah if I was going to find his sister.
“Sophia,
” a girl shouted as I passed a communal library. “Sophia, wait.”
I spun around as Lily jogged toward me,
her hood down, her white hair bun bouncing back and forth. When she caught up to me, she leaned against the wall. “I didn’t think I’d be able to find you in this place,” she panted.
“I didn’t think you’d ever get out of
that conversation,” I retorted.
Lily’s eyes rolled.
“Judice was in my training class.”
“She
isn’t much of a security guard.”
“No, she isn’t,” Lily laughed before her expression dimmed. “Which reminds me—”
My frustration interrupted her, “I don’t know where to start—”
Lily’s
bright grin interrupted me. “I logged into the system.”
My stomach twisted. “Why?” That would only let the police know where she was.
“I could look up the old girls that I used to work with,” she said.
“So what?” I spat.
“This isn’t a socializing event.”
“You aren’t listening,” Lily grumbled, “I could look up girls.”
“Rinley won’t be in with her own name—”
“I know that.” Her brown eyes shaped into
slits. “But I found something.” She held up her hand to reveal black permanent marker covering her palm. “Harper, room 405.”
Harper. Noah’s fake name was Nate Harper.
I grabbed her hand as if the name would fade away.
“I’m betting we might know who she
really is,” Lily said, pulling away to point at the stairs. “Fourth floor is that way.”