I have to get to the ocean.
As much as I want to save Todd, my only chance is to find her first.
And then I’ll come back for him.
I will.
I ain’t never leaving you, Todd Hewitt.
My heart aches as I remember saying it.
As I break my promise.
(you hold on, Todd)
(you stay alive)
I run.
I make my way downriver, avoiding patrols, cutting across back gardens, running behind back fences, staying as far clear of houses and housing blocks as I can.
The valley is narrowing again. The hills approach the road and the houses begin to thin out. Once, I hear marching and I have to dive deep into the undergrowth as soldiers pass, holding my breath, crouching as low to the ground as I can. I wait until there’s only bird call (Where’s my safety?) and the now-distant ROAR of the town, wait for a breath or two more, then I raise my head and look down the road.
The river bends in the distance and the road is lost from view behind further rolling hills and forests. Across the road here, this far from town, there are mostly farms and farmhouses, working their way up sloping hillsides, back towards more forest. Directly across, there’s a small drive leading to a farmhouse with a little stand of trees in the front garden. The farming fields spread out to the right, but above and beyond the farmhouse, thicker forest begins again. If I can get up the drive, that’ll be the safest place for me. If I have to, I’ll hide until nightfall and make my way in the dark.
I look up and down the road again and once more. I listen out for marching, for stray Noise, for the rattle of a cart.
I take in a breath.
And I bolt across the road.
I keep my eyes on the farmhouse, the bag banging into my back, my arms pumping the air, my lungs gasping as I run faster and faster and faster–
Up the drive–
Nearly to the trees–
Nearly there–
And a farmer steps out from behind them.
I skid to a stop, sliding in the dirt and nearly falling. He jumps back, obviously surprised to see me appearing suddenly in front of him.
We stare at each other.
His Noise is quiet, disciplined, almost gentlemanly, which is why I didn’t hear it from a distance. He’s holding a basket under one arm and a red pear in his free hand.
He looks me up and down, sees the bag on my back, sees me alone out on the road in a break of the law, sees from the heaviness of my breath that I’ve obviously been running.
And it comes in his Noise, fast and clear as morning.
The Answer, he thinks.
“No,” I say. “I’m not–”
But he holds a finger up to his lips.
He cocks his head in the direction of the road.
And I hear the distant sound of soldiers marching down it.
“That way,” the farmer whispers. He points up a narrow path, a small entrance to the woods above that would be easy to miss if you didn’t know it was there. “Quickly now.”
I look at him again, trying to see a trap, trying to tell but there’s no time. There’s no time.
“Thank you,” I say and I take off running.
The path leads almost immediately into thicker woods, all uphill. It’s narrow and I have to push back vines and branches to make my way. The trees swallow me and I can only go forward and forward, hoping that I’m not being led into a trap. I get to the top of the hill only to find a small slope down and then another hill to climb. I run up that, too. I’m still heading east but I can’t see enough over anything to tell where the road is or the river or which way I’m–
I nearly stumble out into a clearing.
Where there’s a soldier not ten metres from me.
His back is to me (thank god, thank god) and it’s not until my heart has leapt out of my chest and I’ve caught myself and fallen back into the bushes that I see what he’s guarding.
There it is.
In the middle of a clearing cresting the hill, stretching up on three metal legs almost fifty metres into the sky. The trees around it have been felled, and across the clearing underneath it I can see a small building and a road that leads back down the other side of the hill to the river.
I’ve found the communications tower.
It’s here.
And there aren’t that many soldiers around it. I count five, no, six.
Just six. With big gaps.
My heart rises.
And rises.
I’ve found it.
And a BOOM! echoes in the distance beyond the tower.
I flinch, along with the soldiers. Another bomb. Another statement from the Answer. Another–
The soldiers are leaving.
They’re running, running towards the sound of the explosion, running away from me and down the other side of the hill, towards where I can already see a white pillar of smoke rising.
The tower stands in front of me.
All of a sudden, it’s completely unguarded.
I don’t even wait to think how stupid I’m being–
I’m just running–
Running towards the tower–
If this is my chance to save us then–
I don’t know–
I’m just running–
Across the open ground–
Towards the tower–
Towards the building underneath–
I can save us–
Somehow I can save all of us–
And out of the corner of my eye, I see someone else break cover from the trees to my left–
Someone running straight towards me–
Someone–
Someone saying my name–
“Viola!” I hear. “Get back!”
“Viola, NO!” Mistress Coyle is screaming at me.
I don’t stop–
Neither does she–
“GET BACK!” she’s yelling–
And she’s crossing the clearing in front of me–
Running and running and running–
And then I realize-
Like a blow to the stomach–
The reason why she’s yelling–
No–
Even as I’m skidding to a stop–
No, I think–
No, you can’t–
And Mistress Coyle reaches me–
You CAN’T–
And pushes us both to the ground–
NO!
And the legs of the tower explode in three blinding flashes of light.
{VIOLA}
“Get off me!”
She slaps her hand over my mouth, holding it there, holding me there with the weight of her body as clouds of dust billow around us from the rubble of the communications tower. “Quit shouting,” she hisses.