“Since when are humans fair?”
“Good point.”
“Besides, she’d be glad to make you suffer, if I’d let her.”
He laughed.
“That’s nice about Wes and Lily, don’t you think?” he said.
“Yes. They both seem very happy. I like that.”
“I like it, too. Wes finally got the girl. Gives me hope.” He winked at me. “Do you think Melanie would make you very uncomfortable if I were to kiss you right now?”
I stiffened for a second, then took a deep breath. “Probably.”
Oh, yes.
“Definitely.”
Ian sighed.
We heard Wes shouting at the same time. His voice came from the end of the tunnel, getting closer with each word.
“They’re back! Wanda, they’re back!”
It took me less than a second to process, and then I was sprinting. Behind me, Ian mumbled something about wasted effort.
I nearly knocked Wes down. “Where?” I gasped.
“In the plaza.”
And I was off again. I flew into the big garden room with my eyes already searching. It wasn’t hard to find them. Jamie was standing at the front of a group of people near the entrance to the southern tunnel.
“Hey, Wanda!” he yelled, waving.
Trudy held his arm as I ran around the edges of the field, as if she were holding him back from running to meet me.
I grabbed his shoulders with both hands and pulled him to me. “Oh, Jamie!”
“Did ya miss me?”
“Just a tiny bit. Where is everyone? Is everyone home? Is everyone okay?” Besides Jamie, Trudy was the only person here who was back from the raid. Everyone else in the little crowd—Lucina, Ruth Ann, Kyle, Travis, Violetta, Reid—was welcoming them home.
“Everyone’s back and well,” Trudy assured me.
My eyes swept the big cave. “Where are they?”
“Uh… getting cleaned up, unloading…”
I wanted to offer my help—anything that would get me to where Jared was so I could see with my own eyes that he was safe—but I knew I wouldn’t be allowed to see where the goods were coming in.
“You look like you need a bath,” I told Jamie, rumpling his dirty, knotted hair without letting go of him.
“He’s supposed to go lie down,” Trudy said.
“Trudy,” Jamie muttered, giving her a dark look.
Trudy glanced at me quickly, then looked away.
“Lie down… ?” I stared at Jamie, pulling back to get a good look at him. He didn’t seem tired—his eyes were bright, and his cheeks flushed under his tan. My eyes raked over him once and then froze on his right leg.
There was a ragged hole in his jeans a few inches above his knee. The fabric around the hole was a dark reddish brown, and the ominous color spread in a long stain all the way to the cuff.
Blood, Melanie realized with horror.
“Jamie! What happened?”
“Thanks, Trudy.”
“She was going to notice soon enough. C’mon, we’ll talk while you limp.”
Trudy put her arm under his and helped him hop forward one slow step at a time, keeping his weight on his left leg.
“Jamie, tell me what happened!” I put my arm around him from the other side, trying to carry as much of his weight as I could.
“It’s really stupid. And totally my fault. And it could have happened here.”
“Tell me.”
He sighed. “I tripped with a knife in my hand.”
I shuddered. “Shouldn’t we be taking you the other way? You need to see Doc.”
“That’s where I’m coming from. That’s where we went first.”
“What did Doc say?”
“It’s fine. He cleaned it and bandaged it and said to go lie down.”
“And have you walk all this way? Why didn’t you stay in the hospital?”
Jamie made a face and glanced up at Trudy, like he was looking for an answer.
“Jamie will be more comfortable on his bed,” she suggested.
“Yeah,” he agreed quickly. “Who wants to lie around on one of those awful cots?”
I looked at them and then behind me. The crowd was gone. I could hear their voices echoing back down the southern corridor.
What was that about? Mel wondered warily.
It occurred to me that Trudy wasn’t a much better liar than I was. When she’d said the others from the raid were unloading and cleaning up, there was a false note to her voice. I thought I remembered her eyes flickering to the right, back toward that tunnel.
“Hey, kid! Hey, Trudy!” Ian had caught up to us.
“Hi, Ian,” they greeted him at the same time.
“What happened here?”
“Fell on a knife,” Jamie grunted, ducking his head.
Ian laughed.
“I don’t think it’s funny,” I told him, my voice tight. Melanie, frantic with worry in my head, imagined slapping him. I ignored her.
“Could happen to anybody,” Ian said, planting a light punch on Jamie’s arm.
“Right,” Jamie muttered.
“Where’s everybody?”
I watched Trudy from the corner of my eye as she answered him.
“They, uh, had some unloading to finish up.” This time her eyes moved toward the southern tunnel very deliberately, and Ian’s expression hardened, turned enraged for half a second. Then Trudy glanced back at me and caught me watching.
Distract them, Melanie whispered.
I looked down at Jamie quickly.
“Are you hungry?” I asked him.
“Yeah.”