The Trap (31 page)

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Authors: Andrew Fukuda

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

BOOK: The Trap
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And when the end came, she tried to block off all her senses. Shut her eyes behind her shades to blind herself. Screamed as loud as she could to erase all other sound. But nothing could be
done about the blood that splashed across her face, because her hands were restrained, her arms tethered to a pole. The droplets of her father’s blood were still warm. All she could do was
scream again, but even that didn’t seem enough, her mouth was too small an outlet for the horror exploding within. And when she felt a tongue—Gaunt Man’s—licking the blood
off her face, up and down, the texture of his tongue rough and coarse and wet and sticky, she screamed even louder. But their screams around her were louder yet.

Two days later, she was back in the Introduction. And as before, she was screaming. But this time, it was with fear, not horror. And this time, she wasn’t tethered
to a pole but was racing across the arena, gunning for the entrance to the Pit, three duskers hot on her heels. Blood dripped from a self-inflicted gash across her palm. The scent of it enticed the
pursuing duskers, drove them batty. She ran thinking of Gene, many floors above her, hoping she’d created the diversion necessary for him to get away.

Run, Gene, run!
she yelled in her head.
Now’s your chance to get out!

And she ran, too, the soles of her feet shredded away, her lungs singed with exhaustion. And although every step increased the distance between her and Gene, she also believed these steps
were somehow bringing them back together at some distant point in the future, that she was merely running along the circumference of time. They would meet again. Gene would come for her. Theirs was
a story only beginning.

She slid, then fell into the Pit, pulling down with her the pole that held the Pit door open. She hit the ground hard, the solid limestone rattling her spine. Above her, the door slammed
down, sealing the darkness inside. Scrabbling, scratching sounds, claws on metal. And then curved slivers of light rimming through. The three duskers, they were wedging in their fingers and claws,
trying to pry the lid off. Ashley June shot up and turned the lock-wheel until there was a click and she knew the entrance was sealed.

She found candles, matches. The interior was larger than she’d expected, the size of a small bedroom. On shelves lining the far wall sat a riffraff of containers and canisters, stacked
cans of food, bottles of water in various stages of emptiness. Rough bedding lay against the nearest wall, blankets folded neatly on the ground, the pillow still depressed in the center. Candles,
long extinguished, sat on small ledges that jutted out of the limestone walls. Melted wax lay pooled and hardened, some of it lining down the walls, eerily artery-like, as if these walls pulsed
with life.

It was only then she felt the blood. Soaking through the back of her shirt. Her hand trembled as she reached beneath the fabric. She felt three long gashes. Running deep and wet and parallel
to one another, across her spine.

One of the duskers had slashed her.

The gashes meant nothing, she told herself. She wasn’t infected, the claws were clean of saliva. She was fine, she was fine, she was fine. This was what she told herself for hours even
as the adrenaline gave way to sharp pain, even as a fever erupted from deep within her bones. Only when she collapsed to the floor, cradling her legs, her body slick with ice-hot sweat, did she
finally accept the undeniable.

She was turning.

Gritting her teeth, she forced herself to her knees. She would not succumb to this. She would fight the turning. There had to be something inside the Pit that might help her. She began to
search. For something, anything. The Pit was a tight, confined space and it didn’t take long before she found something. But it was not what she was expecting.

Under the pillow, she found a dozen or so snippets of paper, folded many times into tight squares. There were words written on them. Not her father’s handwriting—someone
else’s. She frowned, not recognizing it.

Whoever wrote them must have passed these notes to her father from the outside. But how? The Pit door was too tightly sealed to allow even paper to slide through the rim. The more she
thought about it, the more she realized the notes must have been secretly passed during the Introduction—that initiation procedure when her father was lured out of the Pit by the offer of
food and morsels and water and other necessities. Whoever wrote these notes must have secreted them in the bottles and cans that held these items.

She read the notes. Most were short, clipped messages of obscure meaning.

 

Tobias, it’s me, Joseph. I’m here.

 

Can’t believe you survived.

 

I’m sorry about what happened to your family. But know that your daughter is alive.

 

The Origin is fine.

 

The Hunt is proceeding according to plan.

 

Hang in there, we’ll get you after this is all over, too dangerous now.

 

But it was the very last sheet that most caught her attention. It was the longest of all the notes, a letter really.

 

Tobias,

I screwed up. I ventured back to the Domain Building yesterday and was—miraculously—able to break into the 59
th
floor. I couldn’t believe it. After so many
failed attempts . . . But I had to hurry, had only a few minutes before the doors locked on me again.

I stumbled upon something. Almost literally. A stack of old documents in an old box. These documents—we’re talking
ancient
here. Not sure what’s in them.
They’re written in archaic script—almost like hieroglyphics, really—it’ll take me weeks, months to transcribe them.

But I heard someone coming and in my haste to leave I left documents scattered about and I dropped my shades. Didn’t realize it until hours later. If found, those shades will be linked
to me; and the missing documents are bound to create a stir. I can’t chance the attention, which could lead them to the Originators. The risk is too great.

So I must disappear. Before any link can be made, before I might be seized. I just need to
poof
. Quickly, immediately. I haven’t even been able to tell the Originators at the
Palace what happened.

It kills me to have to leave you. And even more to leave Sissy. Obviously, without even a good-bye. The same way I had to leave Gene—suddenly and without explanation. Not a day goes by
that I wish it could have been done differently. I would rather die than hurt him again.

And so . . . I must simply . . . vanish.

But the Hunt plan is still in play. The fixed Lottery, the boat, the arrangement to house Gene in the library, the sunbeams leading to the map—everything is in place. And although I
wish I could be here for them when the Hunt begins, it’s too risky to stay. And so I will return to the Mission and await their arrival. For a reunion I’ve been dreaming about for a
decade now. I’ll inform the Mission eldership about the Origin plan (if I trust them—please let it not be Krugman who’s in charge now, remember that cad?).

Up in the mountains, to pass time, I’ll keep working on the green-liquid weapon. After so many years, I think I’m almost there. And I’ll start transcribing those ancient
documents I found on the 59
th
floor. I think they hold some important information, though I’m not sure exactly what. So hang tight. I will return for you. I don’t know
when, but all in due time. I won’t forget you, friend. I will return for you. Stay strong. Burn this note, as I know you have all the others.

 

Ashley June read this last letter, over and over. Even in her deteriorating state, she could not stop reading it, mulling over it. Even as her fever intensified, even as sweat poured down
her body, she read. One sentence in particular leaped out at her.
I would rather die than hurt him again.
Those words branded themselves into her mind.
I would rather die than hurt
him again. I would rather die than hurt him again.

But when the turning clamped down on her with a vicious finality, twisting her body in agonizing spasms and seizures, her mind fastened on a different phrase.
Up in the mountains . . .
Up in the mountains . . . Up in the mountains . . .

That was where Gene would be.

The next night, after the turning was completed, Ashley June emerged from the Pit. She snarled at the people around her, smacking them aside with a glorious newfound strength. They sniffed
her, could not understand. Where had the heper odor gone? When they realized she was just as they were and that she had just pulled a cruel prank on them, they poured into the Pit.

They demolished everything down there in their yearning to taste anything heper. Nothing survived. Everything was licked and ripped to shreds. Even the notes were torn asunder. All except
one: the letter—that she had folded and tucked into her back pocket. But she found she didn’t even need to look at that letter to know the only words that mattered. Just four
words.

Up in the mountains.

Fifty-three

S
OMETHING HAPPENS
.
INSIDE
the Palace. We sense it miles before we reach the gigantic disc-shaped building. The wind,
once saturated with heper blood, suddenly loses its pungency. Only the slightest of scents remain. Sissy and I pause. The heper massacre is over. All heper bodies have been devoured, flesh eaten,
blood drunk.

Sissy shakes her head, and long trails of saliva loop around her head. She seems conflicted. Without the heavy influence of heper odor overloading her senses, older priorities are being
reclaimed. She’s thinking about David. She’s thinking about re-turning. She’s thinking about the Origin weapons.

I’m thinking about David, too. But not necessarily in the same way Sissy is.

Behind us, the rumble of the millions increases. More of them, and closer now. Sissy and I push forward. A mile from the wall, we see movement along the ramparts, dots of people racing about. We
hear their excited voices, chaotic and exuberant.

Once we reach the walls of the Palace, Sissy and I don’t slow down but leap up the walls, scaling the ancient marble easily. We race along the parapet walk, observing the chaos below.
Staffers are running across the courtyard, most of them naked, hair disheveled, eyes keening and hungry. But despite the electricity in the air, it is plainly leftover excitement. We’re
joining the party late, the apex long passed, the aftermath cooldown already begun. The carnage is over.

But instead of slowing down, a renewed energy surges through Sissy. She stares up at the obelisk, considering, then bursts forward. She leaps down to a lower level, tears along the roof of a
covered parapet walk before jumping to the courtyard. She’s barely landed before she’s springing forward, charging down a corridor as if possessed. She doesn’t look back,
certainly doesn’t wait for me. It’s all I can do to simply keep her in sight as I bound after her.

As we tear down the corridors, we pass groups of people dashing to and fro. I’d once thought the sight of these naked bodies, gleaming with a sickly anemia, was repulsive. And I never
understood their wont for nakedness during the hunt. But now I know. It’s the excitement, the raw energy that pulsates through the system. I grab my shirt and rip it into ribbons in seconds.
I shout into the sky.

Sissy stops and looks at me, cocking her head. A wariness in her eyes as she takes in my naked upper torso. For a second—less, maybe just a tenth of a second—I feel shame. Because
she hasn’t given in, not yet, not completely. I know it from her clothes, still wrapped around her, untorn. She’s still resisting. She’s not on the prowl for hepers. She’s
here to rescue them, one of them, anyway.

“What is it?” I say.

“Help me find it.”

“It’s up in the obelisk tower. In the Ruler’s chamber.”

Her eyes turn suspicious. “What are you talking about? Help me find the Originators’ science lab. Where the dart guns are stored, the ones loaded with Origin blood.” She stares
down a corridor, then down the other. “It all looks the same to me,” she hisses.

Forget sight. Eyes aren’t going to help us. I lift my nose into the air, sniff deeply. There. The faintest trail. Of metal unlike any other in the Palace. And an even slighter hint of gun
oil.

Sissy sees me raise my nose and realizes what I’m doing. A second later, she catches the scent as well. Her body stiffens, then she’s flying down the corridor, her feet kicking out
behind her.

We find the door leading into the laboratory. It is smashed inward, but the hinges and lock have held. Along the edges of the cratered door, a draft from the laboratory flows through tiny
cracks. That is how we were able to detect the artillery and weapon scents.

Sissy wastes no time. She backs up, then flings her body at the door. Again. And again. I join her, and on the seventh try we bust through the door.

The laboratory is empty. Not an Originator in sight. A pity, that. “Over here,” Sissy says, and rushes over to a dart gun lying on a laboratory bench. Next to the guns is a row of
darts, filled with the Originator serum.

Though I can’t smell the blood through the sealed darts, I’m suddenly drooling uncontrollably.

“Gene.” Her voice has changed, a hint of threat in her tone. She picks up the dart gun, loads it. “We re-turn you first. Then me. Then we go up the obelisk, find David.”
Her voice hard, guarded. Suspicious.

But I’m braced, ready for it. “No, wait.”

She lifts the gun higher, at my chest. “No time to wait.”

“You don’t understand. If we re-turn here, we’ll clod along at a snail’s pace. We’ll never make it to the obelisk, much less climb to the top where the
Ruler’s Suite is. Truth? We won’t get fifty meters before we’re detected and hunted down.”

She pauses, considering. She’s conflicted. Her battle is not only with me but also with herself. She doesn’t want to re-turn. Not back to that unwieldy, cumbersome heper form.

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