I sidestep an eruption in the ground and duck just in time to avoid a cluster of vines growing in midair. A distant rock balloons to an astronomical size, and the moment it starts barreling in our direction I tighten my hold on Nazeeraโs hand and dive for cover.
The sky is ripping apart. The ground is fracturing beneath my feet. The sun flickers, strobing darkness, strobing light, everything stilted. And the cloudsโ Thereโs something newly wrong with the clouds.
Theyโreย disintegrating.
Trees canโt decide whether to stand up or lie down, gusts of wind shoot up from the ground with terrifying power, and suddenly the sky is full of birds. Full of fuckingย birds.
Emmaline is out of control.
We knew that her telekinetic and psychokinetic powers were godlikeโ beyond anything weโve ever knownโand we knew that The Reestablishment built Emmaline to control our experience of the world. But that was all, and that was just talk. Theory.
Weโd never seen her like this.
Wild.
Sheโs clearly doing something to J right now, ravaging her mind while lashing out at the world around us, because the acid trip Iโm staring at is only getting worse.
โGo back,โ I cry out over the din. โGet helpโbring the girls!โ
A single shout of agreement and Nazeeraโs hand slips free from mine, her heavy boots on the ground my only indication that sheโs bolting toward the Sanctuary. But even nowโespecially nowโher swift, certain actions fill me with no small measure of relief.
It feels good to have a capable partner.
I claw my way across the sparse forest, grateful to have avoided the worst of the obstacles, and when Iโm finally close enough to properly discern Warnerโs face, I pull back my invisibility.
Iโm shaking with exhaustion.
Iโd only barely recovered from being drugged nearly to death, and yet here I am, already about to die again. But when I look up, half-bent, hands on my knees and trying to breathe, I realize I have no right to complain.
Warner looks even worse than l expected.
Raw, clenched, a vein straining at his temple. Heโs on his knees holding on to J like heโs trying to hold back a riot, and I didnโt realize until just this second that he might be here for more than just emotional support.
The whole thing is surreal: theyโre both practically naked, in the dirt, on their kneesโJ with her hands pressed flat against her earsโand I canโt help but wonder what kind of hell brought them to this moment.
I thought I was the one having a weird night.
Something slams suddenly into my gut and I double over, hitting the ground hard. Arms shaking, I push up onto all fours and scan the immediate area for the culprit. When I spot it, I gag.
A dead bird, a couple feet away. Jesus.
J is still screaming.
I shove my way through a sudden, violent gust of windโand just when Iโve regained my balance, ready to clear the last fifty feet toward my friends
โthe world goes mute.
Sound, off.
No howling winds, no tortured screams, no coughs, no sneezes. This is not ordinary quiet. Itโs not stillness, not silence.
Itโs more than that. Itโs nothing at all.
I blink, blink, my head turning in slow, excruciating motion as I scan the distance for answers, willing the explanations to appear. Hoping the sheer force of my mind is enough to sprout reason from the ground.
It isnโt.
Iโve gone deaf.
Nazeera is no longer here, J and Warner are still fifty feet away, and Iโve gone deaf. Deaf to the sound of the wind, to the shuddering trees. Deaf to my own labored breathing, to the cries of citizens in the compounds
beyond. I try to clench my fists and it takes forever, like the air has grown dense. Thick.
Something is wrong with me.
Iโm slow, slower than Iโve ever been, like Iโm running underwater. Something is purposely keeping me back, physically pushing me away from Julietteโand suddenly, it all makes sense. My earlier confusion dissolves. Of course no one else is here. Of course no one else has come to help.
Emmaline would never allow it.
Maybe I got this far only because she was too busy to notice me right awayโto sense me here, in my invisible state. It makes me wonder what else sheโs done to keep this area clear of trespassers.
It makes me wonder if Iโll survive.
Itโs growing harder to think. It takes forever to fuse thoughts. Takes forever to move my arms. To lift my head. To look around. By the time I manage to pry open my mouth, Iโve forgotten that my voice makes no sound.
A flash of gold in the distance.
I spot Warner, shifting so slowly I wonder whether weโre both suffering from the same affliction. Heโs fighting desperately to sit up next to JโJ whoโs still on her knees, bent forward, mouth open. Her eyes are squeezed shut in concentration, but if sheโs screaming, I canโt hear it.
Iโd be lying if I said I wasnโt terrified.
Iโm close enough to Warner and J to be able to make out their expressions, but itโs no good; I have no idea whether theyโre injured, so I donโt know the extent of what weโre dealing with. I have to get closer, somehow. But when I take a single, painful step forward, a sharp keening explodes in my ears.
I cry out soundlessly, clapping my hands to my head as the silence is suddenlyโviciouslyโcompounded by pressure. The knifelike pain needles into me, pressure building in my ears with an intensity that threatens to crush me from the inside. Itโs like someone has overfilled my head with helium, like any minute now the balloon that is my brain will explode. And just when I think the pressure might kill me, just when I think I canโt bear the pain any longer, the ground begins to rumble. Tremble.
Thereโs a seismicย crackโ
And sound comes back online. Sound so violent it rips open something inside of me, and when I finally tear my hands away from my ears theyโre
red, dripping. I stagger as my head pounds. Rings. Rings.
I wipe my bloody hands on my bare torso and my vision swims. I lunge forward in a stupor and land badly, my still-damp palms hitting the earth so hard the force of it shudders up my bones. The dirt beneath my feet has gone slick. Wet. I look up, squinting at the sky and the sudden, torrential rain. My head continues to swing on a well-oiled hinge. A single drop of blood drips down my ear, lands on my shoulder. A second drop of blood drips down my ear, lands on my shoulder. A third drop of blood drips down myโ
Name.
Someone calls my name.
The sound is large, aggressive. The word careens dizzily in my head, expanding and contracting. I canโt pin it down.
Kenji
I turn around and my head rings, rings.
K e n j i
I blink and it takes days, revolutions around the sun.
Trusted friend
Something is touching me, under me, hauling me up, but itโs no good. I donโt move.
Too heavy
I try to speak but canโt. I say nothing, do nothing as my mind is broken open, as cold fingers reach inside my skull and disconnect the circuitry within. I stand still. Stiffen. The voice echoes to life in the blackness behind my eyes, speaking words that feel more like memory than conversation, words I donโt know, donโt understand
the pain I carry, the fears I shouldโve left behind. I sag under the weight of loneliness, the chains of disappointment. My heart alone weighs a thousand pounds. Iโm so heavy I can no longer be lifted away from the earth. Iโm so heavy I have no choice now but to be buried beneath it. Iโm so heavy, too heavy
I exhale as I go down.
My knees crack as they hit the ground. My body slumps forward. Dirt kisses my face, welcomes me home.
The world goes suddenly dark.
Brave
My eyes flicker. Sound hums in my ears, something like dull, steady electricity. Everything is plunged into darkness. A blackout, a blackout in the natural world. Fear clings to my skin. Covers me.
but
w e a k
Knives bore holes into my bones that fill quickly with sorrow, sorrow so acute it takes my breath away.
Iโve never been so hopeful to cease existing.
I am floating.
Weightless and yetโweighted down, destined to sink forever. Dim light fractures the blackness behind my eyes and in the light, I see water. My sun and moon are the sea, my mountains the ocean. I live in liquid I never
drink, drowning steadily in marbled, milky waters. My breathing is heavy, automatic, mechanic. I am forced to inhale, forced to exhale. The harsh, shuddering rasp of my own breath is my constant reminder of the grave that is my home.
I hear something.
It reverberates through the tank, dull metal against dull metal, arriving at my ears as if from outer space. I squint at the fresh set of shapes and colors, blurred forms. I clench my fists but my flesh is soft, my bones like fresh dough, my skin peeling in moist flakes. Iโm surrounded by water but my thirst is insatiable and my angerโ
My angerโ
Something snaps. My head. My mind. My neck.
My eyes are wide, my breathing panicked. Iโm on my knees, my forehead pressed into the dirt, my hands buried in wet earth.
I sit straight up and back, my head spinning.
โWhat theย fuck?โ Iโm still trying to breathe. I look around. My heart is racing. โWhatโ Whatโโ
I was digging my own grave.
Slithering, terrifying horror moves through my body as I understand: Emmaline was in my head. She wanted to see if she could get me to kill myself.
And even as I think itโeven as I look down at the miserable attempt I made to bury myself aliveโI feel a dull, stabbing sympathy for Emmaline. Because I felt her pain, and it wasnโt cruel.
It was desperate.
Like she was hoping that if I killed myself while she was in my head, somehow Iโd be able to kill her, too.
J is screaming again.
I stagger to my feet, heart in my throat as the skies wrench open, releasing their wrath upon me. Iโm not sure why Emmaline gave the inside of my head a shotโbrave but weakโbut I know enough to understand that whatever the hell is happening here is more than I can handle on my own. Right now, I can only hope that everyone in the Sanctuary is okayโand
that Nazeera gets back here soon. Until then, my broken body will have to do its best.
I push forward.
Even as old, cold blood dries in my ears, across my chest, I push forward, steeling myself against the increasingly volatile weather conditions. The steady succession of earthquakes. The lightning strikes. The raging thunderstorm growing quickly into a hurricane.
Once Iโm finally close enough, Warner looks up. He seems stunned.
It occurs to me then that heโs only just seeing meโafter all thisโheโs only just realizing Iโm here. A flicker of relief flashes through his eyes, too quickly replaced by pain.
And then he calls out two wordsโtwo words I never thought Iโd inspire him to say:
โHelp me.โ
The sentence is carried off in the wind, but the agony in his eyes remains. And from this vantage point, I finally understand the depth of what heโs endured. At first Iโd thought Warner was only holding her steady, trying to be supportive.
I was wrong.
J is vibrating with power, and Warner is only barely hanging on to her. Holding her still. Somethingโsomeoneโis physically animating Julietteโs body, articulating her limbs, trying to force her upright and possibly away from here, and itโs only because of Warner that Emmaline hasnโt succeeded.
I have no idea how heโs doing it.
Jโs skin has gone translucent, veins bright and freakish in her pale face. Sheโs nearly blue, ready to crack. A low-level hum emanates from her body, the crackle of energy, the buzz of power. I grab on to her arm and in the half second Warner shifts to distribute her weight between us, the three of us are flung forward. We hit the ground so hard I can hardly breathe, and when Iโm finally able to lift my head I look at Warner, my own eyes wide with unmasked terror.
โEmmaline is doing this,โ I say, shouting the words at him. He nods, his face grim.
โWhat can we do?โ I cry. โHow can she just keep screaming like this?โ Warner only looks at me.
He justย looksย at me, and the tortured expression in his eyes tells me everything I need to know. Jย canโtย keep screaming like this. She canโt just be here on her knees screaming for a century. This shit is going to kill her. Jesus Christ. I knew it was bad, but for some reason I didnโt think it was this bad.
J looks like sheโs going to die.
โShould we try to pick her up?โ I donโt even know why I ask. I doubt I could lift her arm above my head, much less her whole body. My own body is still shaking, so much so that I can barely do my part to keep this girl from lifting directly off the ground. I have no idea what kind of crazy shit is pumping through her veins right now, but J is on another planet. She looks half-alive, mostly alien. Her eyes are squeezed shut, her jaw unhinged. Sheโsย radiatingย energy. Itโs fucking terrifying.
And I can barely keep up.
The ache in my arms has begun to creep up my shoulders and down my back and I shiver, violently, when a sharp wind strikes my bare, overheated skin.
โLetโs try,โ Warner says. I nod.
Take a deep breath.
Beg myself to be stronger than I am.
I donโt know how I do it, but through nothing short of a miracle, I make it to my feet. Warner and I manage to bind Juliette between us, and when I look over at him, Iโm at least relieved to discover that he looks like heโs struggling, too. Iโve never seen Warner struggle, not really, and Iโm pretty sure Iโve never seen him sweat. But as much as Iโd love to laugh a little right now, the sight of him straining so hard just to hold on to her only sends a fresh wave of fear through me. I have no idea how long heโs been trying to restrain her all by himself. I have no idea what wouldโve happened to her if he hadnโt been there to hold on. And I have no idea what would happen to her right now, if we were to let go.
Something about that realization gives me renewed strength. It takes choice out of the situation. J needs us right now, period.
Which means I have to be stronger.
Standing upright like this has made us an easy target in all this madness, and I call out a warning as a piece of debris flies toward us. I pivot sharply to protect J, but take a hit to my spine, the pain so breathtaking Iโm seeing
stars. My back was already injured earlier tonight, and the bruises are bound to be worse now. But when Warner locks eyes with me in a sudden, terrified panic, I nod, letting him know Iโm okay. Iโve got her.
Inch by agonizing inch, we move back toward the Sanctuary.
Weโre dragging J like sheโs Jesus between us, her head flung backward, feet dragging across the ground. Sheโs finally stopped screaming, but now sheโs convulsing, her body seizing uncontrollably, and Warner looks like heโs hanging on to his sanity by a single, fraying thread.
It feels like centuries pass before we see Nazeera again, but the rational part of my brain suspects it mustโve been only twenty, thirty minutes. Who knows. Iโm sure she was trying her best to get back here with people who could help, but it feels like weโre too late. Everything feels too late.
I have no idea what the hell is happening anymore.
Yesterday, this morningโan hour agoโI was worried about James and Adam. I thought our problems were simple and straightforward: get the kids back, kill the supreme commanders, have a nice lunch.
But nowโ
Nazeera and Castle and Brendan and Nouria rush to a sudden stop before us. They look between us.
They look beyond us.
Their eyes go round, their lips parting as they gasp. I crane my neck to see what theyโre seeing and realize that thereโs a tidal wave of fire headed straight toward us.
I think Iโm going to collapse.
My body is worse than unsteady. By this point, my legs are made of rubber. I can barely support my own weight, and itโs a miracle Iโm holding on to J at all. In fact, a quick glance at Warnerโs clenched, insanely tense body is all it takes to realize that heโs probably doing most of the work right now.
I donโt know how any of us are going to survive this. I canโtย move. I sure as hell canโt outrun a wave of fire.
And I donโt really understand everything that happens next.
I hear an inhuman cry, and Stephan is suddenly rushing toward us.ย Stephan.ย Heโs suddenly in front of us, suddenly between us. He picks J up and into his arms like she might be a rag doll, and starts shouting at all of us to run. Castle hangs back to redirect water from a nearby well, and though his efforts at dousing the flames arenโt entirely successful, itโs enough to
give us the edge we need to escape. Warner and I drag ourselves back to camp with the others, and the minute we cross the threshold into the Sanctuary, weโre met with a frantic sea of faces. Countless figures surge forward, their shouts and cries and hysterical commotion fusing into a single, unbroken soundstorm. Logically, I understand why people are out here, worried, crying, shouting unanswered questions at each otherโbut right now I just want them all to get the hell out of my way.
Nouria and Sam seem to read my mind.
They bark orders into the crowd and the nameless bodies begin to clear out. Stephan is no longer running, but walking briskly, elbowing people out of his way as necessary, and Iโm grateful. But when Sonya and Sara come sprinting toward us, shouting for us to follow them to the medical tent, I nearly launch myself forward and kiss them both.
I donโt.
Instead, I take a moment to search for Castle, wondering if he made it out okay. But when I look back, scanning our stretch of protected land, I experience a sudden, sobering moment of realization. The disparity betweenย in hereย andย out thereย is unreal.
In here, the sky is clear.
The weather, settled. The ground seems to have sutured itself back together. The wall of fire that tried to chase us all the way back to the Sanctuary is now nothing but fading smoke. The trees are in their upright positions; the hurricane is little more than a fine mist. The morning looks almost pretty. For a second I couldโve sworn I heard a bird chirping.
Iโm probably out of my mind.
I collapse in the middle of a well-worn path leading back to our tents, my face thudding against wet grass. The smell of fresh, damp earth fills my head and I breathe it in, all of it. Itโs a balm. A miracle.ย Maybe, I think. Maybe weโre going to be okay. Maybe I can close my eyes. Take a moment.
Warner stalks past my prone body, his motions so intense Iโm startled upright, into a sitting position.
I have no idea how heโs still moving.
Heโs not even wearing shoes. No shirt, no socks, no shoes. Just a pair of sweatpants. I notice for the first time that heโs got a huge gash across his chest. Several cuts on his arms. A nasty scratch on his neck. Blood is dripping slowly down his torso, and Warner doesnโt even seem to notice. Scars all over his back, blood smeared across his front. He looks insane.
But heโs still moving, his eyes hot with rage and something elseโ Something that scares the shit out of me.
He catches up to Stephan, whoโs still holding Jโwhoโs still having seizuresโand I crawl toward a tree, using the trunk to hoist myself off the ground. I drag myself after them, flinching involuntarily at a sudden breeze. I turn too fast, scanning the open woods for debris or a flying boulder, and find only Nazeera, who rests a hand on my arm.
โDonโt worry,โ she says. โWeโre safe within the borders of the Sanctuary.โ
I blink at her. And then around, at the familiar white tents that cloak every solid, freestanding structure on the glorified campsite that is this place of refuge.
Nazeera nods. โYeahโthatโs what the tents are for. Nouria enhanced all of her light protections with some kind of antidote that makes us immune to the illusions Emmaline creates. Both acres of land are protected, and the reflective material covering the tents provides more assured protection indoors.โ
โHow do you know all of that?โ โI asked.โ
I blink at her again. I feel dumb. Numb. Like I broke something deep inside my brain. Deep inside my body.
โJuliette,โ I say.
Itโs the only word Iโve got right now, and Nazeera doesnโt even bother to correct me, to tell me her real name is Ella. She just takes my hand and squeezes.