Scarlett
pulls a box out of the corner and stands up to hold it in the torchlight. “It looks like crackers. They’re out of date, but this box obviously
hasn’t been opened.”
“What’re
you waiting for, then? Open them,” Grace
says, leaning forward eagerly.
“Anyone
got their knife on them?” Scarlett
asks. Mallory pulls her pocket knife
from her pocket and flips it up to Scarlett.
Scarlett
flicks the knife open and tears into the box.
Sure enough, there are ten rolls of crackers in the box. She tosses us each one roll and puts the rest
back into the box.
Mary,
who is now a bit less disoriented, picks at a cracker while the rest of us chow
down. We all agree that some water would
be nice, but nobody answers when we pound on the door, which is locked from the
outside. Not that we were expecting
anything, but it seems like the food brought a bit of hope with it.
I hear
Grace start to say something as the torch goes out.
I hear
gasps to my left and a little shriek from Scarlett.
“Well,”
Grace says wryly, “that’s the end of that.”
Katie’s
voice comes from the wall to my left. “I
hope nobody’s thinking that at least it can’t get any worse. Because it could get a whole lot worse.”
“Wait a
minute…,” Grace says. She snaps her fingers. “Maryann, you can summon fire, right?”
“It’s
Mallory. And my powers don’t work down
here,” Mallory says from next to me.
“Yeah. Mine either,” says Scarlett, whose voice is a
bit strained, telling me that she’s trying to get some water out of her hands.
“Same
here,” says Lois. “It’s like someone
turned off my powers.”
“Weird. Very weird,” says Grace.
“Wait. I could hear everyone’s thoughts right when
we got here. Not the guards. They must’ve had some sort of blocking technology. But yeah, I heard Scarlett thinking about
food. And then…,” Lois pauses for a
moment. “Well, it started to get foggy
as I ate more…those crackers! Don’t eat
the crackers, you guys. Once they’re out
of our system, and don’t ask how we’re going to get rid of them, but anyway,
once they’re out we should be okay. But
it might be days….”
“Well,
either way, these people weird me out,” says Katie. “I know that about half of us in here speak
English, but they didn’t, I could tell that much, and they had to have had
translators or they wouldn’t have understood some of us.”
“Okay,
I’m going to move to the other wall because this is too cramped,” I tell
them. I scoot my way across the room so
that, if there were light, I would be facing them. I hear more shuffling and mutters of scoot
over.
It gets
quieter and quieter. I assume everyone’s
asleep, because of the sounds of even, paced breathing. I decide that sleep is a good idea, and drift
off.
I wake up to the sound of the door creaking open. Light shines through; it makes a line across
Mallory’s sleeping face. She opens her eyes a bit and puts her hand stretching out
from her eyebrow to make a visor.
A boy
about seventeen comes in. His head
almost brushes the ceiling of the room and the torch he’s holding makes his
gray eyes sparkle. His black hair has
streaks of light flashing across it as the fire flickers.
“What…?”
I say, still half asleep.
“I’m
William Holloway. I’m here to rescue you.”