The Culling ttk-1 Page 20
My breath lodges in my throat.
Stripped of their formalwear, they’re clad in filthy rags that dangle from their bodies, barely concealing their dignity. Mrs. Warrick’s hair hangs in knotted disarray about her scrawny shoulders, while one of Mr. Warrick’s eyes is practically sealed shut and ringed in a swollen patch of dark purple. Bloody slush fills my veins at the thought of what all the other Incentives must be going through, imprisoned in Purgatorium.
But even more disturbing than the Warricks’ physical appearance is the fact that they’re both sitting on metal chairs on either side of the chamber, strapped down by their wrists and ankles. Just to the side of each of their necks, long metal blades curve toward them like sickles, casting blinding flashes of light.
Recruit Warrick. You have sixty seconds to make your selection.
At Slade’s announcement, the digital countdown display above the podium begins hacking away at the seconds.
Mr. Warrick just sits there, his wide eyes glazed.
In contrast, Mrs. Warrick, despite her frail appearance, struggles with her bonds. “Gideon, honey. Please! I’m your mother ! You have to get me out of here!” Her face contorts into a mask of terror.
Gideon’s face frightens me more than anything else I’ve seen. Tears are flowing like rivers down his cheeks. But his eyes gleam with a twisted fire.
And he’s smiling.
“How does it feel, huh?” His voice is a bitter frost. “Are you scared, Mommy? Does it feel like you’re all alone and you’re never going to live to see the sunrise? The light?”
Mrs. Warrick’s scream pierces through me.
“Gideon, please,” Mr. Warrick begs, his voice drained of any strength it might have once had. “Don’t do this to your moth-”
“Shut up!” Gideon spits. “You’re always covering for her! How could you not know what she was doing to me all those years? You saw the marks, heard the screams. You did nothing. Nothing! You’re a coward, always have been.”
“I was always a good mother to you, Gideon!” Mrs. Warrick wails. “Anything I did was for your own good!”
Gideon pounds the glass. “What kind of a mother beats her child and locks him in the dark for days on end just for crying because he was hungry?”
Anger flashes on her face. “You’re weak. Always have been. And ungrateful. I was trying to toughen you up. It’s a harsh world-”
“Harsh world?” He flings the words back at her. “It’s not supposed to be a harsh world at home, with the people that are supposed to love you.” He rips his shirt up and turns, exposing his back to her. “I can’t forget. I’ll never forget.” He slumps against the enclosure, sobbing. “I hope you’re terrified, like I was.”
Make your selection.
Gideon raises his head to the sky. “I choose her, Sgt. Slade. My mother.”
The blade springs forward and arcs into Mrs. Warrick’s throat, slicing clean through to the other side with a loud thwack. For a second she just sits there, her eyes looking confused. Then a red line fades in around her neck and her head topples off, rolling down her body and across the ground until it stops, pressed against the glass at Gideon’s feet.
Mr. Warrick’s horrified eyes take in the sight of his wife’s body, still sitting in the chair, gouts of blood pumping from the severed neck. A deep moan stretches out from his throat and turns into garbled sobs.
“I just wanted to scare her, that’s all,” Gideon says with an eerie calm. He slides down the panel and traces the glass as if he’s trying to caress his mother’s face. “How does it feel, Mom? Huh? How does it feel ? Tell me. How does it feel ? How does it-?”
He repeats the mantra over and over again, rocking back and forth.
This Trial is now complete. Recruits will now proceed to the next station where you will have a rest period before receiving instructions and proceeding to your next Trial.
Slade’s voice fades into nothingness.
None of us move. If the others are feeling anything like I am, they’re too stunned to even speak.
A swarm of drones buzzes overhead and hovers over us, their glistening pincers providing the motivation we’re lacking. Slowly, we slog single file toward our next horror.
All except one of us.
I look back.
Gideon’s still rocking and chanting, even after the chamber’s lights have dimmed and faded to black.
twenty-six
Everything’s dark. For a terrified second, I feel like I’m back in the Fleshers’ Lair …
“Lucian. Can you hear me? Are you okay?”
Digory’s voice buffers the throbbing in my head. Thwack! Thwack! Thwack! Each pound reminds me of that sharp blade lopping off Mrs. Warrick’s head, over and over again, until it’s not just her head, but Ophelia’s, Cypress’s, Gideon’s.
Digory’s …
“What?” My eyes snap open, burning despite the chill rattling my bones. I try and sit up and I’m overcome with lightheadedness. A firm hand on my back steadies me until I’m able to sit upright on my own.
“It’s about time you woke up, sleepyhead.” Even though Digory tries to smile, a translucent veil of fear clings to his face. Tiny red veins mar the whites of his eyes.
It doesn’t look like he’s gotten any sleep. Has he been awake since we reached this holding station? Watching over me?
He presses his large palm against my forehead. It feels cool, soothing against the heat baking my face. “Fever’s worse. You’re burning up.” His lips curl in. The muscles in his jaw flex.
“H-how l-long have I–I b-been out?” I force the words through chattering teeth.
“It’s been about five hours, I guess. Hard to say without a real sky.” He glances at the sterile artificial light shining down into the holding station.
I glance around the cramped, concrete dome that re-minds me of a beehive. Except in this case it’s what’s outside that can sting you dead.
Ophelia is pressed against one of the curved walls, doing some kind of stretching exercise. When she sees me, her eyes narrow and a long breath hisses out, as if she’s disappointed I’ve regained consciousness.
It’s a good thing the rules say we aren’t allowed to kill each other, otherwise I’d never get any rest.
On the opposite wall, Cypress sits cross-legged on the floor next to Gideon. She’s murmuring to him, stroking his hair.
Everything after that first Trial is a blur. All I remember is stumbling after the others through the dark metal catacombs of the Skein, trying to escape the horrors of the battle zone.
“You collapsed just after we got here,” Digory says. “I figured it was just exhaustion and stress after … ” He drops his gaze. “After what happened.” His eyes meet mine again. “But I saw you trembling, and when I came over to check on you, I realized it was a fever.” His fingers graze the crimson-stained bandage around my thigh. “How does it feel?”
I inhale sharply. Even his light touch sends electric pain rippling through me. “I’m … okay … just a little sore … ” Another chill rattles me. I press a fist against my lips to stifle a cough. Now it’s my turn to look away from him.
He lifts a corner of the bandage, careful not to touch the swollen skin beneath it. “I tried dressing it as best I could, but there aren’t any medical supplies here.” He tucks the bandage back. “Actually, there’s not much of anything here except a hard floor. No water, no food, not even a damn blanket. How do they expect us to keep going without any provisions?” He yells the last above him, for the benefit of Slade and whoever else is probably eavesdropping. When he looks at me again, his face is flushed, as if he, too, is suffering with fever. “I figured I’d try and keep you warm as best I could.”
He pulls the zipper of his jumpsuit up the rest of the way, hiding his bare chest.
All this time he’s been lying next to me, sharing his body heat to keep me warm.
Another shiver ripples through me.
“Anyway.” He stands. “You need
to conserve your strength. I tried to let you get as much rest as possible, but you slept through the Sarge’s latest warning announcement.” His lips form a thin rigid line. “They’re about to cart us off to the next Trial, in the order we finished the last one.”
I nod. “Which means you’re first.”
“Yes.” He looks disappointed, despite the advantage.
“Did they say what this next Trial’s all about?”
He shakes his head.
The speaker system crackles to life.
“Looks like we’re about to find out,” he says.
Attention Recruits.
We all gaze above us as if we’re trying to pinpoint Slade’s whereabouts.
One by one you will pass through the barrier on the other end of this pavilion in the order you completed your first Trial. The goal of your next mission is to simply make your way through a labyrinth until you find the exit.
“Sounds easy enough,” Digory grunts. He smiles and squeezes my hand.
Along the way you will find supplies that will aid you through the next Trials. These include food, medicines, tools, and weapons.
I squeeze his fingers. “Guess your speech made an impression after all.” My hollow laughter becomes a raspy cough. Digory pats me on the back until it subsides, his eyes worried slits.
You are urged to appropriate as many of these provisions as you can carry, as they will not be made available at any other time and are vital to your continued participation in the Trials.
Digory shoots me a nervous look. “Sounds too simple.”
But you are cautioned to be as efficient as possible, balancing your needs with your speed. The locator wristlets you are all still wearing have now been programmed to act as chronometers, monitoring and timing your progress. You will only have fifteen minutes to navigate the labyrinth.
I study my now-flashing wristband.
00:15:00
The Recruit who takes the longest to make it all the way through shall be the next to participate in the Culling. Anyone that does not make it out at all will be immediately shelved, along with their Incentives.
“There’s your catch.” I sigh.
Recruit Tycho. Prepare to depart for your next Trial in one minute.
He kneels down beside me. “I can’t go and leave you like this.” His head turns toward the others, who seem to be oblivious to us, caught up in their own anxiety no doubt. He nudges his chin toward Ophelia, who’s now doing push-ups. “I’m sure she’d switch places with me if I can get them to allow it-”
“No.” Ignoring the throbbing in my head and leg and the tremors in my muscles, I push myself up, teetering to my feet.
Digory is at my side in an instant, providing me a shoulder to lean on.
I grip him only long enough to steady myself, then let go. “You have to go. We both need each other to make it through this. If either one of us comes in last and is forced to choose … ” The words hang above us like a threatening storm cloud. “Besides.” I swallow the bitterness scorching my throat. “You have someone that’s depending on you, and he should be your first priority, not me.”
“Lucian … about that … ” His eyes fidget and shift away. “You’re a priority to me, too … ”
Recruit Tycho. Your departure will commence in thirty seconds.
I fight waves of dizziness and nausea. “Looks like you’re up.”
Our eyes lock.
Digory’s are flooded with concern. “I’ll be waiting for you on the other end, Lucian. Please, be careful.” He reaches out and takes both my hands in his. “You just get through as quickly as possible. I’ll try and grab enough supplies for both of us.”
“Good luck, Digory.” I give him a final squeeze and let go.
He lowers his head and turns, walking toward the entrance and pausing in front of the crackling energy barrier. He turns and stares at me again. And this time his eyes are tinged with something else.
Fear.
The sizzling of the field dissipates.
Recruit Tycho. Proceed into the labyrinth and commence your Trial.
He holds my gaze just a moment longer. Then he’s gone.
“Don’t worry.”
Ophelia’s voice sends a different type of chill through me.
I whip around, and then have to close my eyes for a few seconds to ward off the dizziness.
She giggles. “You two are so cute together.” Then she cups a hand around the side of her mouth and whispers, “It should be really interesting to see what happens when the both of you are in a dead heat against each other.”
I ride out another wave of tremors. “Too bad you won’t be around to see it.”
Her eyes slither up and down my body. “You’re such a big kidder, sweetie.” Her lips bow into a pout. “How’s that fever? You should really get more rest.” She chuckles like it’s the funniest thing she’s ever heard, then goes back to her calisthenics as if I don’t exist anymore.
I limp over to the other side of the dome, where Cypress and Gideon remain huddled.
She’s stroking his hair. But he’s stone-faced, like he’s somewhere far away.
“How’s he doing?” I ask her.
“How do you think?”
I crouch down and almost topple over. “I can’t even imagine.”
“Soon the rest of us won’t have to imagine anything. It’s only a matter of time before we each get our shot.” She hugs Gideon close, resting his head against her and rocking him. “You have to be strong.”
I can’t help but wonder if her words are meant to console not just Gideon.
A feeling of being powerless spreads through me quicker than the infection is spreading through my blood, eating away at what little hope I have left. The dizziness shrouds my brain. I sag.
I don’t think I’m going to make it.
Recruit Goslin. Prepare to commence your next Trial in one minute.
“Don’t worry, Goslin,” Ophelia calls. “I’ll be right behind you.” Her snickers cut like a knife.
Cypress ignores her. Instead, she kisses Gideon on the forehead and strokes his face with such tenderness that my heart aches.
Then her eyes search out mine. “Can you stay with him until it’s your time? I don’t think he should be alone.”
“You really care about him.”
Her lips curve into a smile laced with bitterness. She gently detaches from him. Leaning on one another, we both stand up.
“Even if we were away from all this, there wouldn’t be a chance for us,” she says. “Not now. Not ever.”
I know what she’s feeling because it hits me like a taser blast. None of us will ever see each other again, after this is all over.
Cypress throws her arms around me, her cheek cool against my burning one. “Don’t let it be over without telling Digory how you really feel, or you’ll always be sorry,” she whispers.
Recruit Goslin. You will now commence your second Trial.
Cypress squeezes me one last time, then approaches the barrier and disappears through it just like Digory did. I’m left standing there, her last words swirling through my pounding brain.
I’m not sure if it’s the fever or all the emotions ricocheting through my mind, but I lose track of how much time passes before Slade’s next announcement blares through the pavilion.
Recruit Juniper. Proceed into the labyrinth to commence your Trial.
Ophelia shoves past me, practically knocking me to the floor, and disappears through the barrier without a word.
Three down.
The acid rips through me.
It’s my turn next.
“Cypress is right, Lucian.”
Gideon’s voice startles me.
When I turn he’s looking right at me, not through me as before. “You don’t want whatever time you have left spent in regret.” He buries his forehead in his palms.
“Gideon.” Despite the sickness ensnaring me, just hearing his voice-seeing him responsive-is a boost to my
spirit. I hobble over to him and squat down despite the searing pain, and pry his hands from his face. “If you could hear us, why didn’t you say-”
“I couldn’t get too close. You have to understand.” Desperation soaks Gideon’s bloodshot eyes. “To Cypress, I mean. To anyone really … ” His eyes turn glassy again. “I’m really evil, aren’t I?”
My body burns hotter. “Gideon, listen to me. The Establishment … they forced you to do something-”
“They didn’t force me to enjoy it.” The words burst from his quivering lips. “They just gave me the opportunity to do something I’ve dreamed of ever since I can remember. That’s probably why I was recruited-why we were all recruited.”
“What do you mean?”
His eyes bore deep into me. “We all have it inside us. The darkness.” He glazes away again.
Recruit Spark. Proceed into the labyrinth to commence your second Trial.
I slowly back away and enter the maze.
twenty-seven
The darkness is almost impenetrable. It’s like I’m standing in the vastness of space but every star in this false horizon is dead, its light completely snuffed out.
I squint, in the blue glow cast by the chronometer, which feels like it’s cutting off the circulation in my wrist.
00:13:15
How can almost two minutes have gone by already? I need to get moving.
I take a tentative, step, then another, and another, until I’m teetering along like a sleepwalker, guided by the gradual adjustment of my burning eyes and the dim light of my timepiece. I can only make out shapes a couple of feet ahead of me, but that’s a start at least.
Where are Digory, Cypress, and Ophelia? Can they be so far ahead of me that I haven’t seen or heard a trace of them? What if they’ve already made it to the exit with their supplies in tow?
My pulse careens through my ears.
Even if the others are way ahead of me, Gideon must still be behind me.
Holding out my hand, I graze cold, smooth steel. A wall. Pausing a second, I steady myself against the partition and realize that a row of shelves is facing me. Small pouches are stacked on each shelf. I cast the glow of my timer on the writing on the nearest one.