Through the Dark (A Darkest Minds Collection) (A Darkest Minds Novel) (31 page)

BOOK: Through the Dark (A Darkest Minds Collection) (A Darkest Minds Novel)
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Aiming at us.

At my sharp
“No!”
the girl spun around, throwing out a hand. Blue. She was Blue. I launched into an uneven, limping run just as Lucas flew back, skidding across the mud, the gun in his hands knocked free.

“Hey!” the girl called after me. “Get back here, dumbass!”

“Sam!” Ellie. “Come back!
Sam
!”

“Go!” I called. “I’ll catch up!”

“What are you doing?”

I shook the last of their voices out of my head, didn’t turn back to watch them leave me behind.

“Lucas, Lucas—don’t—” I fumbled for the words as he jumped up onto his feet. Smoke filtered through the air. I’d seen it coasting over the tops of the cabins, but I had no idea where it was coming from, the Reds or the firefight. “Lucas! Listen to me!”

I wondered if he could hear me at all. His beautiful face was set in a grim mask of violence, spattered with blood. Pale with anger. There was a buzzing coming from somewhere nearby, like an insect, and I realized almost a second too late that the earpiece he was wearing over his right ear was still active. He was still getting orders.

“Lucas!” The name ripped out of my throat as he raised a hand. The air heated, jumping twenty, thirty degrees around me.
“Stop!”

I tackled him hard enough to nearly bite my own tongue off. Lucas went wild under me, bucking and thrashing to get me off, but it wasn’t going to happen, not until I ripped that piece of plastic out of his ear and sent it sailing into the wall of Cabin 40.

They’ll take him, they’ll kill him, they won’t let the Reds live, I will never see him again, can’t have him, can’t take him
—my thoughts spun out as Lucas stared at me. As his eyes
fixed
on me. There wasn’t a whisper of emotion in his expression, but, for a second…for a second there was
something
.

Doubt.

Confusion.

And all at once, I understood. There was no one barking commands in his ear. He didn’t know what to do if someone hadn’t directly ordered it. They must have—conditioned them? Was that the right word? They must have done something to get them to listen to the Camp Controllers and PSFs. Lucas hadn’t wanted to talk about his training. I scrambled to remember if he’d said
anything
that I could use now.

Mud stuck to the back of my legs and side, and the rain, it didn’t stop. I reached toward him, brushing his red vest.
Need to get him out of here, need to save Lucas, need to hide him
—he had fought so hard to get us out, it was my turn now.

My fingers brushed him and he snarled.

I held my hands up. “We need to get you out of your uniform! They’ll take you!”

He didn’t move, and when I tried to grab him again, it felt like his skin was going to blister my palm. His own hand convulsed violently at his side.

Why had he stopped before, but not now? What had I said, done, beyond telling him to stop?

You didn’t tell him. You ordered him,
I thought.
Commanded him.

The Reds responded to commands, the way trained dogs would. Not requests.

“You listen to me now.
I’m
in charge.” God—would he hate me for this later? I sucked in a deep breath. There wasn’t time for this. The girl who had come to my cabin was working her way down toward us, clearing each cabin as someone else in black did the same from the other direction. They were about to cut us off before we even had the chance to run.
They’ll take him, you have to get him out of here.

“Take off your vest!” I shouted, the words hard and clipped. I couldn’t look at the number spray-painted there: M27.

Lucas stripped off the blood-red vest, the whole of his attention focused on me. My throat squeezed so tight, I couldn’t breathe.

“Drop it!”

He did.

“Stay beside me! Run!”

He did—into the open door of the cabin in the next, outer ring. It housed the Green boys we’d passed on the way to the Mess Hall. In their scramble to leave, to fall into the line flowing
out
through the open gate, they’d left behind their spare summer uniforms. Shorts and a t-shirt would be brutal in the freezing rain, but so much better than his uniform.

“Change into this!” I barked, closing off the part of me that felt agonized about this. “Hurry up!”

I turned my back, drifting toward the door, and watched the shockingly calm progress of the kids being ushered forward by men and women in ski masks. The firing had stopped, but here and there you could still pick up the crack of one-off shots. When I turned back, Lucas was in the green uniform, shoeless.

I looked for a pair of the camp-issued slip-ons, I really did, but if the choice was between him going barefoot and someone noticing his black boots, I would risk the boots. He pulled them on, silent and efficient, so machine-like. I knelt down, searching his face, trying to find some hint of what he was thinking or feeling—Lucas was someone who registered pain on such a deep level, who let himself live in feelings of soul-lifting joy, and this…Lucas in front of me had all the working parts, but not the electricity to spark them.

“Follow me, stay close beside me, don’t say anything, don’t look at anyone—”

Lucas let out a sharp yelp, his hands digging into his hair like he was trying to crush his skull. It was only then that I realized how close I was to the edge of breaking down completely.

I made the mistake of trying to touch him again, and this time he threw me off hard enough to send me slamming to the ground.

Suddenly, Lucas curled down, moaning as his hands slid down, pressing over his ears. Blood dripped down his chin from where he’d bitten his lip. I’d only ever seen kids react this way for one thing, and one thing alone: White Noise. But I couldn’t hear anything, only a metallic grinding sound coming through squeaky, sputtering speakers. It wasn’t anything like what they used to blast us; it didn’t cut, it didn’t split me open.

No time, no time, no time
…I dug through his uniform, still warm from his skin. My hands fumbled with the pockets and pouches on his belt until they found the earplugs I had seen them use when the Camp Controllers turned on the White Noise for us.

“Put. These. In.
Now!
” I bit out, knowing better than to try to do it myself. “Follow me. Say nothing. Do
nothing
but follow me. Understood?”

Lucas didn’t even blink.

“Understood, Luc—M27?”

He let out a sharp breath. Nodded. I dropped the earplugs onto the ground in front of him, and another little piece of me broke off into numbness as he scrambled for them, jabbing them deep into his ears with a heaving sigh.

This will work. This has to work.

“What the hell are you still doing here?”

The deep voice rocketed me out of the moment, slamming me back into full-on panic. I whirled, finding an older man, his face stained with soot, gun at the ready. “These cabins are supposed to be cleared! Get going, or you’ll be left behind!
Go!

I didn’t need to be told twice, and neither did Lucas. It was back out into the rain. Back on the sopping wet, muddy trail between the cabin that would lead to the main path out. I felt him a step behind me, a walking radiator against my back as we fell in line with the rest of the stragglers being waved forward, forward, forward by another set of kids, their ski masks up around their faces.

Do they know Ruby, too?
That boy—I hoped he found her, that she was already clear of the fence. I knew there was something crucial I was missing here, some obvious connection between her return and
this
, but my thoughts were as scattered as the PSFs were across the grounds of the camp. Some lay on their backs and stomachs, unmoving. Others were bound hand and foot.

Several of the older soldiers had bullhorns in their hands—the source of the White Noise that only Lucas and the other Reds could hear?

Lucas jerked at my back. I turned, strangely hopeful that I’d find some kind of feeling reflected on his face. Instead his dark eyes were hooded, fixed on the spots of crimson a few hundred feet away. Two men were dragging a limp Red forward, easing her down in line with the others. More men in black masks were working quickly, snapping cuffs around their hands and feet, linking them together so they were bound like animals, like they used to back when Thurmond had Red cabins.

My feet slowed. Something dull and silver flashed in their hands—needles? It must have been. They jabbed them into the exposed skin on each Red’s neck, leaving the kids to slouch back into the mud, boneless.

Dead
?

God, would they kill them?

Don’t think, just go, don’t think, just go

Maybe I should have looked back, taken in the sight of the few smoldering cabins left behind by either Reds or explosions. Maybe I should have taken more pleasure in seeing the PSFs trapped in the mud, kicked down again and again. Maybe the moment should have felt bigger than it did—maybe it would, later. After all, I never forget anything.

But what mattered was right behind me, that I was finishing what he’d started.

We slowed our pace, drifting back farther and farther from the thousands of kids in front of us spreading out among the trees, edging farther and farther to the right until I could barely make out the trail of lights they cast, and a booming voice telling them to stop where they were.

I didn’t need to go with them. I was with my family.

I got us out of there. He was with me. That should have been enough.

But just because you want something, it doesn’t mean you’ll get it.

Just because I wanted to save Lucas, it didn’t mean I could.

T
HE CAR GLIDES UP INTO
the carport with a tiny jolt, the headlights sweeping up over the house. It’s a small—
minuscule
—wooden structure. A cottage, almost; the stone walkway leading to the door is overgrown, covered by dead crabgrass and pockets of snow. There are a few icicles dripping, dripping, dripping off the edge of the steeply peaked slate roof. A sunshine-yellow paint trim is peeling off the windows and has been dropping into the snow-filled flower boxes.

The car’s wheels find the well-worn grooves in the dirt as we coast around the side of the house. Sam brings the car to a hesitant stop, inches from some kind of shed.

Neither of us have said a word since we crossed out of South Dakota and into Iowa. The sign at the city limits proudly declared
LE MARS: ICE CREAM CAPITAL OF THE WORLD
. And, okay, I guess there are worse things to be known for, but what good is ice cream going to do in our situation?

This place is a people desert, and I’m sure that’s why Sam picked it—why she felt safe here leaving him behind.
Alone
. We haven’t seen a single person out, even when we were blazing down its main street.

Sam slips the keys out of the ignition and sits back. I can’t tell which has exhausted her more: the drive, or the story she just unloaded on me.

“Remember what I said….”

“I remember!” I snap. God, like I could forget with her repeating it a thousand times. I don’t need her rules or her warnings. If I want to hug my brother, I will. He was
looking
for me. He was coming to find
me
.

And he would have been there at the hotel if he hadn’t tried to save her, too. He wouldn’t have left me feeling humiliated, like a stupid overeager kid who was one of the first to board the buses, only to end up being one of the last to leave.

Am I supposed to be grateful that she came to get me at the very last second, out of guilt? Sam can say whatever she wants, throw a million denials my way, but Lucas will know me. You don’t forget family. And when we leave, it won’t be with her.

I slam out of the car, running—
bounding
—up the stairs. But of course, Sam makes me wait for her to limp up and unlock it, and then pockets the key. I see the little stone hedgehog she found under by my feet.

“Move,” I growl, shouldering her out of the way when she doesn’t.

“Mia, remember—”

Slow, use a quiet voice, don’t touch him
—she wants me to treat Luc like he’s some kind of rabid dog, foaming at the mouth, and I won’t. I refuse to. Screw all her stupid rules.

“Lucas?” I call the second I’m through the door. “Luc?”

I wrinkle my nose, trying to breathe through my mouth. It smells like sour milk and weeks-old garbage. I spin around like I’m balanced at the center of a merry-go-round, trying to see everything at once. The décor in here is like…cut and pasted together from an old lady’s dreams. Ugly—
hideous
—floral wallpaper is curling off the walls, mimicking the shape of the faded green vines. There are flowers sewn—
embroidered
—onto the pillows and samplers. The curtains are yellowed white lace, pooling onto the dusty rose-shaped carpet. A part of me wants to laugh at how ridiculous it is, but the bigger part wants to find Lucas.

I pass through the kitchen, carefully picking my way through the sticky black-and-white checkerboard of tiles, the shards of broken pink plates and glasses all brushed to the side under the lower cabinets. Somewhere a clock is ticking, keeping track of how many seconds I’m wasting.

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