Twenty-Three
This time when Cress awoke, it was not sand engulfing her—although there was plenty of that—but arms. Thorne had pulled her against him so close that she could feel the rise and fall of his chest and his breath on the back of her neck. She groggily peeled her eyelids open.
Night had fallen. The moon had returned, larger than the night before and surrounded by a sea of stars that winked and glittered at them.
She was deathly thirsty and couldn’t find any saliva to wet her parched tongue. She started to shiver, despite the layers of sheets and blankets and the parachute and the heat rising off her scorched skin. Despite Thorne’s protective warmth.
Teeth rattling, she nestled against him as much as she could. His embrace tightened around her.
She looked up. The stars were moving, swirling over her head like a whirlpool trying to suck the whole planet into its depths. The stars were taunting her. Laughing.
She shut her eyes tight, and was met with visions of Sybil’s cruel smile. News headlines echoed in her head, spoken in a child’s nasally voice. 14 CITIES ATTACKED … LARGEST MASSACRE IN THIRD ERA … 16,000 DEATHS …
“Cress. Cress, wake up.”
She jolted, still shaking. Thorne was hovering above her, his eyes bright with moonlight.
He found her face, pressed his palm to her forehead, and cursed. “You’re running a fever.”
“I’m cold.”
He rubbed her arms. “I’m sorry. I know you’re not going to like this, but we need to get up. We need to keep moving.”
They were the cruelest words he could have said. She felt impossibly weak. Her whole body seemed to be made of sand that would blow apart with the slightest breeze.
“Cress, are you still with me?” He cupped her cheeks in both hands. His skin was cool, soothing.
“I can’t.” Her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth when she spoke.
“Yes, you can. It will be better to walk at night when it’s cool than to try and move during the day. You understand that, right?”
“My feet hurt … and I’m so dizzy…”
Thorne grimaced. She thought of stroking her fingers through his hair. In all the pictures she’d seen of him, even his jail pictures, he’d been so polished, so neat. But now he was a wreck, with whiskers on his chin and dirt in his hair. It did not make him any less handsome.
“I know you don’t want to keep going,” he said. “I know you deserve a rest. But if we just lie here, you might never get up.”
She didn’t think that sounded so awful. As the sand began to rock beneath her, she pressed her hand against his chest, seeking out the steadying heartbeat. She sighed happily when she found it. Her body began to dissolve, little grains of sand scattering.…
“Captain,” she murmured. “I think I’m in love with you.”
An eyebrow shot up. She counted six beats of his heart before, suddenly, he laughed. “Don’t tell me it took you two whole days to realize that. I must be losing my touch.”
Her fingertips curled against him. “You knew?”
“That you’re lonely, and I’m irresistible? Yeah. I knew. Come on, Cress, you’re getting up.”
Her head dropped into the sand, sleep threatening to take over. If he would just lie down beside her and take her into his arms, she would never have to get up again.
“Cress—hey, no more sleeping. I need you. Remember the vultures, Cress. Vultures.”
“You don’t need me. You wouldn’t be here at all if it weren’t for me.”
“Not true. Well … only kind of true. We’ve already been over this.”
She shuddered. “Do you hate me?”
“Of course not. And you should stop wasting your energy talking about stupid things.” Scooping an arm beneath her shoulders, he forced her to sit up.
She gripped his wrist. “Do you think you could ever love me back?”
“Cress, this is sweet, but aren’t I the first guy you’ve ever met? Come on, up you go.”
She turned her head away, dread pressing down on her. He didn’t believe her. He didn’t understand how intensely she felt.
“Oh, spades and aces and stars.” He groaned. “You’re not crying again, are you?”
“N-no.” She bit her lip. It wasn’t a lie. She certainly wanted to cry, but her eyes were all dried up.
Thorne pulled a hand through his hair, knocking away a cloud of sand. “Yes,” he said firmly. “We are obviously soul mates. Now please, stand up.”
“You’ve probably told lots of girls you loved them.”
“Well, yeah, but I would have reconsidered if I’d known you were going to hold it against me.”
Misery washing over her, she crumpled against his side. Her head spun. “I’m dying,” she murmured, struck by the certainty of it. “I’m going to die. And I’ve never even been kissed.”
“Cress. Cress. You’re not going to die.”
“We were going to have such a passionate romance, too, like in the dramas. But, no—I’ll die alone, never kissed, not once.”
He groaned, but it was out of frustration, not heartbreak. “Listen, Cress, I hate to break this to you, but I am sweaty and itchy and haven’t brushed my teeth in two days. This just isn’t a good time for romance.”
She squeaked and tucked her head between her knees, trying to get the world to stop turning so fast. The hopelessness of their situation was crushing her. The desert would never end. They would never get out. Thorne would never love her back.
“Cress. Look at me. Are you looking at me?”
“Mm-hmm,” she mumbled.
Thorne hesitated. “I don’t believe you.”
Sighing, she pried her head up so she could peer at him through the curtain of chopped hair. “I’m looking at you.”
He crouched close to her and felt for her face. “I promise, I will not let you die without being kissed.”
“I’m dying now.”
“You are not dying.”
“But—”
“I will be the judge of when you are dying, and when that happens, I guarantee you will get a kiss worth waiting for. But right now, you have to get up.”
She stared at him for a long moment. His eyes were surprisingly clear, almost like he could see her back, and he didn’t flinch before her skeptical silence. He didn’t grin nonchalantly or offer a teasing follow-up. He just waited.
She couldn’t help it when her attention drifted down to his mouth, and she felt something stir inside her. Resolve.
“Do you promise?”
He nodded. “I promise.”
Shuddering at the pain that awaited her, she braced herself and held her hands out to him. The world tilted as he hoisted her up and she stumbled, but Thorne held her until she was steady. Hunger gnawed at her empty stomach. Pain bit into her raw feet, shooting up through her legs and into her spine. Her whole face contorted, but she ignored it the best she could. With Thorne’s help, she retied the sheet around her head.
“Are your feet bleeding?”
She could barely see them in the darkness, and they were still wrapped in the towels. “I don’t know. They hurt. A lot.”
“Your fever might be from an infection.” He handed her the last bottle of water, now half full. “Or you’re dehydrated. Drink all of that.”
She paused with the water bottle already tipped against her mouth, carefully, so as not to lose a single drop. It was a tempting offer. She could drink it all and still be thirsty, but …
“All of it,” said Thorne.
She drank until she could stop without her throat crying for more. “But what about you?”
“I’ve had my fill.”
She knew it wasn’t true, but her tolerance for selflessness lessened with every gulp and soon she’d done as he asked and drank it all. She stood wavering on her feet with the bottle turned up to the sky, hoping to capture another drop, until she was sure there was nothing left.
She swooned, longingly placing the empty bottle into the blanket-sack on Thorne’s shoulder. Peering at the horizon, she spotted the mountainous shadows, still so far away.