The Hunt (27 page)

Read The Hunt Online

Authors: Andrew Fukuda

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Survival Stories, #Dystopian, #Science Fiction

BOOK: The Hunt
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We found a clearing in the woods. By then, our shoulders hurt from the weight of the sacks and we were glad to unburden ourselves of them. My father told me to gather some wood, smal twigs and sticks, nothing too big. When I got back, he was hunched over on his knees, his face almost touching the ground as if in deep, penitent prayer. In his hand was a magnifying glass he was using to direct the sunbeam onto a pile of leaves. He told me not to move, 198 ANDREW FUKUDA

and I stood where I was, absolutely stil. Without fanfare, a wisp of smoke rose from the pile of leaves that grew thicker and darker. A fl ame suddenly burst out, devouring the leaves in its midst.

“The sticks,” he said, stretching out his hand to me.

The fi re grew. Every once in a while, he’d hunch down and blow into the fi re. It’d rear up in anger and surprise, venting sparks. He placed two shorn branches into the fi re and sat back. The fi re roared with a ferocity that frightened me. He told me to fetch the books and journals, and I brought them over to him.

For a long time, they lay next to him. He sat without moving until I realized he could not muster that last ounce of wilpower for that fi nal, irrevocable act. He asked me to come to him, and I did, sitting in the cozy warmth of his lap. I held a picture book, my sister’s. I knew every drawing inside, the color of every dog and cat and house and dress. He took a deep breath, and for a moment I thought he was going to explain again why we were burning the books. But instead his whole upper body began to hitch, as if he were trying to contain loud hiccups. I put my hand on his broad hand, muscles and rocks under his coarse skin, and told him it was okay. Told him I understood why we were burning the books, that because Mommy and sister had disappeared, we could not keep anything in the house that would cause unexpected visitors to ask about them. I told him “it was too dangerous,” reciting back words he’d earlier told me that I had not understood and stil did not.

he’d earlier told me that I had not understood and stil did not.

I think he meant to go through each book with me one last time.

But for what ever reason, he did not. He simply took each book and threw it into the fi re one after the other. I stil remember the feel of my sister’s picture book puled away. I did not resist, but the feel of the journal against my fi ngertips as it was whisked away and tossed into the fi re felt like something lost forever.

THE HUNT 199

We left an hour later, when there was nothing left of the fi re (or books) but dying embers and gray ash. Like my father, ashen and gray, his inner fi re smothered out. Just before we crossed the clearing, I went back for the burlap sacks we’d forgotten to take with us.

They were lying right beside the pile of ashes. As I bent to pick them up, something came over me: I blew softly into the embers the way I’d seen my father do. Fine ash kicked up into the air and into my eyes. But right before my eyes shut, watering against the sting, I saw the smalest glow in the midst of the black ashes. Red, orange, a re-surgent spark of an ember. It was a drop of the June sun in a sea of gray ashes.

It was not until years later, in a schoolyard on a drab gray night, that I saw the color of that red glow again. It was the color of her that I saw the color of that red glow again. It was the color of her hair, a girl I have never seen before but from whom I cannot look away.

When she turns to me, our eyes connecting even across the length of the schoolyard and through the kaleidoscope of crisscrossing students, I remember that red ember glowing in the dark ashes like a June sun.

Her designation is
Ashley June, I think to myself.

Alone in the library, standing before her in the beams of the midnight moon, this is the memory I share with her.

The press are out in ful force when we step out of the library. As far as the brick path extends to the main building, reporters and photographers are lined along each side. Mercuric fl ashlights pop everywhere, not that they bother us. An escort leads us at a 200

ANDREW FUKUDA

maddeningly slow pace, stopping us every few steps to pose for a camera or to answer a few interview questions.

Ashley June’s arm stays hooked in mine the whole time, her wrist bent at the crook of my elbow. It’s an awesome feeling. Alone, I would have hated the fanfare and onslaught of media attention.

But with her next to me, I’m comfortable and at ease, and I sense the same is true for her. The soft weight of her hand on my arm, the the same is true for her. The soft weight of her hand on my arm, the occasional moments when the side of her hip brushes lightly against mine, the sense of togetherness as we navigate down the path. I think it’s because we’re masters of this game of image projection and deception that we’re so comfortable with the media. A pose, a sound bite, an image: right down our aley.

“How has your training gone? Do you feel prepared for the Hunt?”

“It’s been great, and we’re chomping at the bit to get on with it.”

“Is it true that the two of you are an aliance?”

“It’s no secret. We’re together.”

“Which of the hunters do you think wil chalenge you the most?”

And on and on went the questions.

The usualy short walk takes us almost an hour, and there’s no letup of media and curious guests once we get to the main building.

They’re stil arriving in droves, guests and media, in carriages of various shapes and sizes; the horses are sweaty and out of breath as they are led away to the stable out back.

Inside, there are even more media and onlookers. They’re cor-doned off behind velvet ropes, and our escort thankfuly takes us past them without stopping. “To the main hal,” he says, glancing quickly at his watch.

quickly at his watch.

They’ve spared no expense in decorating the main banquet hal.

Gold chandeliers descend from high ornate ceilings, casting a misty mercuric light over each table. Onyx- embedded table silver, THE

HUNT 201

porcelain plates commissioned during the neo- Gothic Ruler era, wineglasses encrusted with diamond shavings set on embroidered violet linen tablecloths. A fl ower basket sits center on each table, double- layered jade stemming from the Selah dynasty. Tal windows with decorative swagged velvet curtains loom over and around us. Guests cluster at the windows facing east, gazing at the Dome.

It sits like a sliced marble bal. At the far end of the banquet hal, the grand staircase ascends to the second fl oor, its perfectly centered red carpet bright and lush like a swolen tongue. In the center of the hal is a large dance fl oor, gleaming under the mercuric lights.

The hunters are separated, each to his or her own assigned table.

When Ashley June removes her arm from mine to be taken to her table, it feels like a tragic parting. High- standing Palace offi cials sit at my table, their spouses peppering me with nettlesome questions.

The food comes out in waves, tuxedoed waiters and wait-resses with ruffl ed front blouses balancing trays of dripping meat as they maneuver between tables. Large bibs are tied on us, draping over our tuxedos and gowns from our necks to knees. They quickly become splattered with droplets of blood as we eat. After days of eating endless plates of meat sopping in blood, I can barely stand the sight of more. I hardly touch my plate, citing overexcitement with the Hunt in two nights.

Throughout the endless courses of meat, I steal glances at Ashley June. She’s in her element, engaging the guests at her table with charm. Even during the main course when the fattest portions of meat are served, she stil has their rapt attention. This setting plays to her strength. It’s how she’s always lived her life of deception.

Offense is the best defense
. I recal her words.

After dessert— cakes and souffl és, for which I claim to have regained my appetite— a succession of speeches are made by a handful 202 ANDREW FUKUDA

of top- ranking offi cials. I spend my time gazing at Ashley June, who’s in my line of vision. Her slender arms fl ow gracefuly out of her gown, the gleam of silvery light along her arm like the refl ection of moonlight along a river. She gathers her hair from the back and with the expert sweep of one hand brushes it over her shoulder, exposing the sinuous nape of her neck. I wonder if she is thinking of me the way I am of her: incessantly, obsessively, helplessly.

I’m not the only one who’s looking at her. Gaunt Man, two tables away, is staring at her, his eyes wide and bulging. He takes a sip from his wineglass. And another, his eyes never budging from her.

from his wineglass. And another, his eyes never budging from her.

Last to speak is the Director. He’s powdered his face, buffed up his hair, polished his nails a blood red. “Dear esteemed guests, I trust that you have found the Institute— with its unsulied reputation

— to have met your high expectations to night. The food, the décor, the grandeur of this balroom— al, I do hope, to be pleasing to such regal guests as yourselves, who ordinarily wouldn’t deign to travel so far for entertainment. But this is not an ordinary occasion, is it? For tomorrow night, the Heper Hunt begins!”

The guests, already with a few drinks in them, clink glasses, pound tabletops.

“To night is the night to celebrate the benevolent sovereignty of our beloved Ruler, under whose leadership the Heper Hunt was made possible. And celebrate we shal! Without restraint! For we wil have plenty of time tomorrow daytime to sleep off to night’s ex-cesses!” The rasping of wrists sounds across the hal.

The Director totters slightly; I realize that he’s had a few too many drinks in him. “Now, just in case some of you are getting ideas, ideas about, hmm . . . shal we say, ‘unoffi cialy’ joining this Hunt tomorrow, upon my shoulders fals the burden of dispeling any such hope. This building goes into lockdown mode an hour THE

HUNT 203

before dusk. You simply won’t be able to leave this building for the duration of the Hunt.”

He swirls the wine in his glass dramaticaly, gazing at it in the mercuric light. “Sometime before lockdown, the hunters wil be taken to an undisclosed, secret location. At the cusp of dusk, as early as each shal dare, they wil set off into the Vast after the hepers. And so,” he says, his voice rising, “the most exciting, most scin-tilating, most extravagant, most bloody, most violent Heper Hunt ever shal begin!”

The banquet hal erupts into a spasm of hisses and bone cracks and wineglasses smashed.

After the speech, as the guests settle down, a string quartet assembles on the edge of the dance fl oor. The quartet plays the Baroque piece slowly and freely, a late- century arrangement.

Gradualy, couples make their way to the fl oor. Halfway through the fi rst song, I catch sight of Gaunt Man rising from his chair. He has his eyes on Ashley June, and as he starts making his way toward her, his tongue sticks out, licks his lips. I push my chair back and walk swiftly toward Ashley June, outpacing Gaunt Man.

She sits with her hands placed in her lap, her back straight, head up, expectantly.

As I draw closer to her, her head tilts up ever so, and she looks at me from the corner of her eye. Do I detect the faintest smile touch her lips, a brief emergence of her cheek dimple? I offer her my her lips, a brief emergence of her cheek dimple? I offer her my elbow and she takes it, rising gracefuly from her chair with the slightest pul on my arm. We walk to dance fl oor, past Gaunt Man, left standing stiffl y and awkwardly by himself.

As if on cue, the quartet starts another song, this one softer and more romantic in tone. There are whispers and murmurings al around, and then the other couples on the dance fl oor slide away to the edge, surrendering the spotlight to Ashley June and me, the 204 ANDREW FUKUDA

hunter couple. The fl oor is ours. And suddenly, unwittingly, al eyes in the balroom are on us. A few photographers move into position, cameras at the ready. I turn to face Ashley June: a hint of dread in her eyes. Neither of us wants this attention. But it is too late for that. My shoulder squares with hers, so close I feel heat waves humming off her body. And despite everything, there is an almost audible
click
of rightness. A strong pul draws us closer, as if our hearts are powerful, insistent, opposite magnets.

Drumming up everything I learned in school, I fi st both hands and interlace my knuckles with the knuckles of her fi sted hands.

Back at school, I dreaded dance classes, hating the proximity, fear-ing that I hadn’t shaved the light hairs on my knuckles close enough.

But with Ashley June now, I am free of fear. And free to feel: the But with Ashley June now, I am free of fear. And free to feel: the texture of her skin, the musky proximity of her body, her breath delicately touching my neck. Her glistening green eyes look into mine. I wish I could whisper to her, but there are too many eyes upon us, the music too soft. But what I would say.

I’m so lost in the moment that I almost forget we actualy have to dance. I press my knuckles deeper into hers to let her know I’m about to start. A slight push back in ac know ledg ment, and then we begin. For two people who’ve never danced together, we’re surprisingly adept. Our bodies move in fl uid synchrony, the distance between us constant and close. Other than a few minor brushes, our legs are harmonized and rhythmic, our feet faling within inches of one another, never closer. In my school dance class, dancing was never more than a bulet- point progression to folow, a checklist to complete in sequence. But with Ashley June it is a fl ow, a matter of simply hoisting a sail and alowing yourself to be caught up. At the end of the piece, I let her loose for the three-step spin, and her long, slim arms raise above her head like a whirling dervish. She teases out of her spin, hair spiling seductively across her face, her green THE HUNT 205

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