came in and found me looking at photographs. . . .â
âI remember,â I say. âSurveillance images, right? You told me you were looking for Invalid camps.â
âThat was a lie.â Julian shakes his head. âI justâI liked seeing all that openness. That space, you know? But I never imaginedâeven when I dreamed about the Wilds and the unbordered placesâI didnât think it could really be like this.â
I reach out and take his hand, give it a squeeze. âI knew you were lying,â I say.
Julianâs eyes are pure blue today, a summer color. Sometimes they turn stormy, like the ocean at dawn; other times they are as pale as new sky. I am learning them all. He traces my jaw with one finger. âLena . . .â
Heâs looking at me so intently, I begin to feel anxious. âWhatâs wrong?â I say, trying to keep my voice light.
âNothing.â He reaches for my other hand too. âNothingâs wrong. IâI want to tell you something.â
Donât, I want to say, but the word breaks apart in a fizz of laughter, the hysterical feeling I used to get just before tests. He has accidentally smudged a bit of dirt across his cheekbone, and I start to giggle.
âWhat?â He looks exasperated.
Now that Iâve started laughing, I canât stop. âDirt,â I say, and reach out to touch his cheek. âCovered in it.â
âLena.â He says it with such force, I finally go quiet. âIâm trying to tell you something, okay?â
For a second we stand there in silence, staring at each other. The Wilds are perfectly still for once. Itâs as though even the trees are holding their breath. I can see myself reflected in Julianâs eyesâa shadow self, all form, no substance. I wonder what I look like to him.
Julian sucks in a deep breath. Then, all in a rush, he says, âI love you.â
Just as I blurt out, âDonât say it.â
Thereâs another beat of silence. Julian looks startled. âWhat?â he finally says.
I wish I could take the words back. I wish I could say I love you, too . But the words are caught in the cage of my chest. âJulian, you have to know how much I care about you.â I try to touch him, and he jerks backward.
âDonât,â he says. He looks away from me. The silence stretches long between us. It is growing darker by the minute. The air is textured with gray, like a charcoal drawing that has begun to smudge.
âItâs because of him, isnât it?â he says at last, clicking his eyes back to mine. âAlex.â
I donât think Julian has ever said his name.
âNo,â I say too forcefully. âItâs not him. Thereâs nothing between us anymore.â
He shakes his head. I can tell he doesnât believe me.
âPlease,â I say. I reach for him again, and this time he lets me run my hand along his jaw. I crane onto my tiptoes and kiss him once. He doesnât pull away, but he doesnât kiss me back, either. âJust give me time.â
.Finally he gives in. I take his arms and wind them around my body. He kisses my nose, and then my forehead, then traces his way to my ear with his lips.
âI didnât know it would be like this,â he says in a whisper. And then: âIâm scared.â
I can feel his heart beating through the layers of our clothing. I donât know what, exactly, he is referring toâthe Wilds, the escape, being with me, loving someoneâbut I squeeze him tightly, and rest my head on the flat slope of his chest.
âI know,â I say. âIâm scared too.â
Then, from a distance, Ravenâs voice echoes through the thin air. âGrubâs on! Eat up or opt out!â
Her voice startles a flock of birds. They go screaming into the sky. The wind picks up, and the Wilds come alive again with rustling and scurrying
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