clipping. The definition of anticlimactic.
I collapse against the wall next to Jules. Heâs testing his hand, watching it swell red and shiny where it caught his fall. Lillyâs on her knees in front of the wall of wires. Her headâs slumped to her chest, hair hanging lank over her face. I canât see if sheâs hurt. Sheâs breathing, at least.
I lean back against the wall and close my eyes.
âWhat do they want from us?â
It comes out in a rasping, grating croak.
No one answers. I roll my head to the side, try to catch Julesâs eye. âIâm serious, what? Why didnât they just killus in the mirror room? Or at dinner? Or on the freaking airplane? And why are there traps? Dorf said they could see us, they know weâre here, so why did they stop the wires? Why didnât they just finish us off?â
Will eases himself down next to us. He has a cut on his arm. One of the long sleeves of his T-shirt is sticking to his skin, soaked dark and glistening. He rips the other sleeve along the seam at the shoulder and starts tying a tourniquet above his bicep, the knot held between his teeth.
âThey donât want us dead,â he says.
I see the barbed nozzle, sliding into Haydenâs skull.
âReally?â I say. âBecause they sure wanted Hayden dead.â
Will pulls the tourniquet tight, wincing. Jules has his head between his knees. All I can see of him is his black hair, hanging toward the floor. I feel like throwing up, and I also feel like I want to smack someone, or argue and figure things out, but everyone is just sitting here !
I stand abruptly, ignoring the pain in my foot. âWe need to get out of here.â
Jules starts gasping. Heâs sobbing, his head still pinched between his knees. Will glances up at me. His eyes areclear and still. Heâs not crying like Jules, but I think he might if no one were around.
I look to the golden doors at the end of the hall. They seem to be flaming in the light from the chandeliers, gathering it. âSo get up ! â My voice bounces through the hall, cold and hollow.
Nobody moves.
I start toward Lilly. I saw Hayden die, too, and Iâm all for the four stages of grief and periods of mourning and all that, but I also donât want to be murdered. I grab Lillyâs wrist and practically drag her to her feet.
âWhat is your problem?â Lilly sobs. âWe almostââ
âYeah,â I say fiercely. âWe almost died, and weâre going to completely die if we donât get moving!â
As if in response, a series of metallic pops echo behind the walls. Lilly and I freeze. The wall of wires starts sliding back along their tracks. Theyâre not whirring anymore, not vibrating. Itâs like watching a wounded animal drag itself back into its hole. They reach the end of the hall and rise up, coming to rest in their slots above the golden door. Taut. Invisible.
âWill, get Jules,â I snap over my shoulder. âDorf said they were dispatching trackers from the other end ofthe palace. That means there is another end.â
Somewhere behind me, Jules speaks, his voice bitter: âYou want us to just walk through those doors? Is that your plan? And what about Dorf? He said thereâs something down here. What if whatever he warned us about is right on the other sideââ
âItâs that or Miss Sei and her gas nozzle, so puzzle it out.â
Iâve got Lilly by the arm and weâre moving quickly across the floor. The golden doors loom, spiny and vaguely surreal, Rodinâs Gates of Hell. Theyâre like a gold-drenched nightmareâgilt faces, contorted bodies, wings and hooves and claws, all struggling up through the golden mass. Jules and Will catch up, Will supporting Jules even though Julesâs swollen hand is in no way impeding his ability to walk. We stand in a row, breathing hard, staring up at the doors.
âMaybe
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