The Drowned Cities
off, was sucking on his hand. Soa was shouting at him.
    “Grind it, Van! The pot’s hot, right?” He slapped the smaller boy upside the head.
    Van dodged back and his hand went to his knife. “You touch me again, I gut you.”
    “Let’s see you try, war maggot.”
    “Shut it, you two!”
    It was Ocho, sitting up straighter than Mahlia would have thought he could, his voice full of command. “Van! You pick up that rice. You serve us all off the top, and you eat what touched the ground. Soa, get out and get some fresh water. I won’t have you fighting in this unit. We ain’t Army of God.” He made a dismissing motion with his hand. “Go on. Get to it.”
    “Trouble, Sergeant?”
    Lieutenant Sayle’s voice floated down from the squat above, where he had ensconced himself. A voice full of threat. Everyone seemed to freeze. “Anything I need to know about?”
    “No, sir,” Ocho responded. “Just a little kitchen mess, right, boys?”
    They all said, “Yes, sir,” and then Van was scooping up rice and putting it onto palm leaves and handing it out to the other soldier boys as they shuffled up and took rice and goat, and then went back to their various posts. Only when everyone else was served did Van squat down and scoop up the last rice for himself.
    Mahlia watched as everything got cleaned, trying to figure out what felt odd about it all. It felt wrong. She kept trying to put her finger on it, and then it dawned on her… They were afraid.
    They were all staring out at the black rustling jungleand casting nervous glances toward their dead, and every one of them was afraid. They’d had four of theirs torn to pieces in seconds. Despite all their bravado and threats of violence, these soldier boys were little puppies in comparison to the creature they were hunting in the jungle, and they knew it.
    Mahlia wished fervently that there was some way to sic the half-man on them. She went back to her cleaning, imagining the half-man mowing through them. Wishing that the jungle’s teeth would just swallow them up.
    Teeth. Mahlia paused. She studied the nervous warboys again. The jungle had teeth, and it made them afraid. Mahlia started to smile.
    I’ll give you teeth.
    She straightened and wrung out her rag.
    “Where you going?” Ocho asked. “You ain’t done here.”
    “You need better meds. I got something for you.”
    “Thought you already gave everything.”
    “Maybe if you act decent toward me instead of treating me like an animal, you get treated better, too.”
    “That’s peacekeeper talk.” But the almost-smile flickered again as Ocho said it, and the soldier boy waved her off.
    In the squat above, Mahlia found the lieutenant seated at Doctor Mahfouz’s rough-cut table, studying an old book of the doctor’s, while the doctor sat quietly and answered the man’s questions about the jungles in his steady voice.
    The lieutenant looked up as she climbed through the hatch. “What you want, girl?”
    “I need to fix your sergeant’s bandages. And I remember where we had some other meds,” she said.
    “Other meds?” the lieutenant asked. “You holding out on us, doctor?”
    Doctor Mahfouz looked surprised, but he covered well enough. “Mahlia manages our medicines.” He touched his glasses. “Because of my sight.” He nodded to her. “Go on, then.”
    Mahlia looked at the lieutenant. “You want me to get the meds or not?”
    He waved her on. “Don’t let me stop you.”
    Mahlia went over and crouched in a shadowy corner. Started pulling half-moldy books off a lower shelf. She hated giving away the doctor’s hiding place, but she suspected that the soldiers would have found it eventually, or else forced the information from her or the doctor at knifepoint.
    Behind the first row of books, more books were tucked away. These, Mahlia pulled out and started opening, revealing the doctor’s medicine supply. She extracted blister packs of pills from within the hollowed-out volumes while the

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