Authors: Kat Zhang
“Actually,” I said hesitantly as he offered to show us around, “we’re looking for someone. A girl named Kitty? She’s eleven. Short. She’s got really long, dark hair—”
Lucas’s face brightened. “Kitty. Yes—but she left about a week ago, headed for Brindt. She was looking for her brother, Ty. Guitar player. She heard from someone that he’d moved there a few months ago, was playing downtown at some of the bars . . .” His voice drifted off at my obvious disappointment; he added, quickly, “There’s a bus that goes from here to Brindt. Won’t take more than a few hours. But I don’t think there’ll be one running this late. You’ll have to wait until tomorrow.”
We’d missed Kitty by a week. So in the end, the extra day we’d stayed at the bed-and-breakfast hadn’t made any difference—we’d have missed her no matter what.
But every second we delayed meant something. This time, we’d missed Kitty by a week, but next time? Next time, it might be an hour, or thirty minutes, or less.
It only took a minute for someone to get into a car. Ten minutes for her to be miles and miles away.
T
hat night, I woke up, not because of my nightmares, but because of Jackson’s. As soon as he climbed to his feet, my eyes fluttered open, too. The living room was completely dark. I had no idea what time it was. But I sat up and whispered, “Jackson?”
I could hear the rasp of his breathing, as if he’d been running and couldn’t catch his breath.
“I just want to go outside a bit,” he murmured.
“Can I come with you?” I asked, and he hesitated, then nodded.
We crept from the house, opening and closing the front door as quietly as we could, grabbing our jackets on the way out. The night was frigidly cold. It woke me up with a shudder of icy air.
Jackson shivered, too, but didn’t say anything about going back in. If anything, he seemed to relish the alertness the chill brought with it. We moved away from the house, wandering through the neighborhood. I looked at all the darkened windows, imagining the families sleeping behind them, marveling at their peace.
Jackson glanced at me. The cold gave everything an urgency and clarity. The nearest streetlight was half a block away, but it seemed like it was the brightest thing I’d ever known.
Back at the B and B, I’d caught Jackson looking at me like this, sometimes. As if he was searching for some trace of Addie in the way I walked, or sliced an apple, or mopped a spill.
I’d watched him, too. I’d tried to see him the way Addie had seen him. I tried to see the
world
the way Addie would have seen it. To become her, for a little while. Just a moment. As if that would bring her back.
I understood, a little more, how Addie could have fallen in love with this boy. More than that, I understood
him
. When he stared off at nothing, I understood. When he startled at a touch on his shoulder, I understood. When he buried everything underneath a smile, I understood.
“What would you do if all this ended tomorrow?” he asked.
“What do you mean?” I wasn’t sure if it was the cold, the fact that I’d been so abruptly woken, or a combination of both and other, unnameable things, but I felt at once like I was in a dream, and like I was the most awake I’d ever been.
“If tomorrow, there was suddenly nothing wrong with being hybrid. And everyone accepted it, and you could just be like everyone else, what would you do?” He spoke in a whisper. We didn’t want to disturb anyone. But there was also no knowing who might be listening. Who might hear these words, so innocently spoken, and hunt us for them.
“I’d be like everyone else,” I said.
His lips twitched. “Would that be enough?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I’ve never done it. But it would be a start, and then I could go on from there.” I looked away, back to surveying the darkness. “To be honest, I can barely think about it. It seems so distant. There’s so much to do.”
“But what’s the point of doing it, if you aren’t dreaming about the outcome?” He sounded so earnest.
“What if all the dreaming gets in the way of actually doing things? What if there isn’t time for dreaming?”
“There’s always time for dreaming,” Jackson said. “If it makes you happy, then there’s time.”
“I guess.” I smiled, just a little. “You’re always full of little bits of wisdom, aren’t you?”
“Except Powatt,” he said, and I nodded.
“Except Powatt,” I said solemnly. “Because God, that was stupid.”
There was a beat of silence. Then Jackson started to laugh. He laughed until I was laughing, too, both of us half-hunched over, cracking up like madmen, gasping for air. Slowly, my laughter quieted to giggles, then a gasping sort of smile.
We looked at each other. The moonlight and the streetlight mixed and cast darting highlights in his hair, odd shadows on his face.
I wanted to kiss him.
I wanted to kiss him, and the wanting felt normal. Felt right. I was reaching up, on tiptoe, my lips a hairsbreadth from his before I even knew what was going on.
He froze.
I froze, too.
He wasn’t breathing. If he’d been breathing, I would have felt him against my skin—I was that close.
I backed away. Pressed my fingers to my temples, trying to drive my thoughts into straight lines, press my emotions back into familiar territory. Iron them straight.
Addie
, I thought. These were Addie’s feelings—they had to be Addie’s feelings. But when I cried out for her—shouted for her in the quiet of my mind—there was nothing but silence and echoes.
“Sorry,” I said, and my voice wavered at the end. “I—I don’t—”
I didn’t look at him. He didn’t say anything.
“We could pretend that didn’t happen,” I whispered, and forced my eyes to search for his. After a moment, I caught them.
He stared at me. At me. Through me.
His voice was hoarse. “Is she really gone, Eva?”
My throat tightened. “Why—why would I say she was, if she wasn’t?”
He broke eye contact. Shook his head. “I don’t know. I guess I just—when you—”
“It was a mistake,” I said shakily. My heart tried to convince me it was more than that. That it had been a sign. Proof that Addie still existed somewhere inside this body, sleeping but living. But try as I might, I didn’t feel the slightest hint of her.
Was it only my imagination?
I didn’t want to believe Addie was gone.
My heart would do anything it could to convince me she wasn’t.
A car zoomed by, music thudding. The bass shuddered all the way through my bones.
“Just a mistake,” Jackson echoed.
I was so shaken that I didn’t immediately notice the second car when it turned into the neighborhood. Didn’t realize how it was cruising toward us without any lights on.
Then I did, and I yanked Jackson deeper into the shadows.
“Police.”
My first instinct was to head back to the house—Jackson’s was to run the other way. Our hands were still linked. We pulled each other to a stop.
“We have to warn them,” I whispered.
He tried to tug me away. “Too late—by the time we wake them up, the police will have the place surrounded.”
He was stronger than I was, but I kept resisting, and finally, he stopped pulling at me. I looked over my shoulder. A second police car had arrived, as quietly as the first. Who had tipped them off? A suspicious neighbor? Lucas’s uncle?
It hardly mattered now. Not to the people sleeping obliviously inside that house—who’d wake to someone breaking down the door.
Jackson was right. We were too far away, and we’d have to go back in by the front door—right in the view of the police cars. Most likely, we’d only succeed in waking up half the house before we were all arrested.
But that was only
most likely
. So much of me rebelled at the idea of running away when there was even the slightest chance of saving them. I was no stranger to small possibilities—my existence, my entire life, had been a series of small possibilities, of risks taken.
“Eva,” Jackson whispered. “We can’t.”
The police car doors opened.
I could save them. I could maybe save them. Risk everything—the chance to find Kitty again, Ryan again—help Emalia and Jaime and Bridget.
“You’re right,” I whispered. I swallowed. Turned away from the house and tried to ignore the pain carving holes in my heart. “Let’s go.”
We focused on stealth at first, keeping to the shadows, trying to stay silent. Then the shouting started—the screaming and the banging—and we abandoned stealth and put everything into speed.
We ran as fast as we could. Out of the neighborhood. Along the silent, deserted suburban roads. We ran until we couldn’t run anymore, and then we walked. Anything to get as far away from that no-longer-safe house, and the police, and my own guilt. First Peter and Jaime, then the other girls at Hahns, and now this. Somehow, I kept running away. I kept leaving people behind.
“There wasn’t anything we could do,” Jackson said, once the silence between us became stifling.
“I know,” I said.
But was it a lie? A platitude I told myself, because I hadn’t been brave enough to stay?
The sun came up slowly, a line of yellow on the horizon that seeped upward into the passing clouds. By daybreak, neither Jackson nor I had any idea where we were. We risked ducking into a gas station to grab a map of the area and find the bus station. Turned out, it was on the other side of town.
“I don’t like this,” Jackson muttered as we huddled in our jackets and hurried through the streets. “We stand out too much.”
We did. It had been better in the darkness. Now, with the sun up, there were more cars on the road, but almost no one else out walking. Thank God neither of us owned pajamas, and had slept in our regular clothes. Mrs. Shay’s ten-dollar bill was tucked safely into my pants pocket.
By the time we finally made it to the bus station, I was a bundle of frozen nerves. The sight of the old station, bearing the vestiges of blue-and-white paint, was like waking up from a bad dream. We hurried inside, where the blast of warmth made me shudder, made me rush to take a lungful of air that wouldn’t stab its way through my lungs.
The woman working the counter barely looked up. She was too busy flipping through stations on her television, a squat little thing that kept fuzzing into static every other channel.
“I’ll get the tickets,” I said to Jackson. “I look less like myself than you do.”
He looked like he was going to protest, but I was already headed for the counter. When I glanced at him over my shoulder, he was looking at me worriedly, but stayed where he was.
I had a sudden memory of the press of his mouth. His fingers tangled in my hair. It had been dark when I woke up that day in his room, back in Anchoit. But I remembered the blue of his eyes when the lights came on. That day, I’d found out about him and Addie, and I’d been furious about it then. I’d flinched away.
But last night—
I whispered to Addie. It was the first time I’d spoken to her since admitting to Jackson that she was gone.
There was, as there had been since Hahns, no reply.
“Where to?” the woman at the counter asked. She’d let the TV settle on the national news channel, one of the few that reached almost everywhere with good clarity. I tried not to look at it, terrified it might broadcast a report about me. Three days had passed since my escape from Hahns. Had Jenson been notified?
“Brindt,” I said. “Two tickets, please. When’s the earliest bus?”
She was just about to answer when the television plunged into static again. She sighed and slapped her palm against the side of it. The second slap snapped the picture back.
But it wasn’t the news station anymore. Both the ticket woman and I stared at—
At Henri.
H
enri was alive.
Henri was alive—and overseas. He’d made it back. He said as much. He stared out from the fuzzy television screen in this dingy bus station and explained how he’d come to the Americas in secret to see the inside of a country so long hidden from the rest of the world. How he’d discovered the lies that the people learned here—in schools, in newspapers, in stories.
“The world beyond your shores,” he said in that now-familiar, lilting accent of his, “is not what you believe it is. Not what your government tells you it is.”
He said he’d show us the truth.
But my eyes had been drawn to something else. In the very corner of the screen, nearly hidden from view under one of Henri’s papers, was a quarter-sized chip. It flashed faintly red.
It looked like my chip. Or Ryan’s. Not exactly, and it couldn’t be, since ours were not with Henri. But someone had gone through some trouble to make a replica. To catch my attention.
The flashing was irregular. Like—
Like Morse code.
C
A
L
L
It flashed once, then again.
Call.
And then it flashed a different message—something long that I didn’t recognize until it looped back again. A string of numbers.
A phone number.
The video changed. Cut to a young man who spoke a language we didn’t understand. He was standing on a street corner, smiling at the camera. Waving our attention toward a city we’d never seen, full of enormous, shimmering billboards and unfamiliar lights. Then another video. Another person. Women. Men. Children. Cities and towns, schools and homes and dinner tables and birthday parties and strangers so eager to share their world with us. Some spoke English. Some didn’t.
It cut off sharply. Back to static. Had someone at the station wrestled back control? Overridden something to cut off the video?
The ticket lady and I stared at the snowy screen like it might reveal more secrets. Then the woman leaned back against her chair, as if shaking herself from a dream.
“Well
.
”
She didn’t seem to know what else to say. Her eyes found mine. “That was obviously fake, wasn’t it?”
“What?” I breathed. I was repeating the string of numbers again and again in my mind, imprinting them into my memory. But I kept getting distracted by the footage that had followed Henri’s appearance—visual proof of what seemed like another world.