they gonna do? Put me in prison? Go.â
âThank you,â Helen murmurs, then hurries away.
Hope wrings out the dress and puts it on. Its dampness raises goose bumps and she rubs her arms to warm herself up. As she does, she thinks of the Less ThanâBook. Although their encounter seems like a distant dream, she lets herself pretend itâs Book who strokes her arms. She imagines him holding her firmly against his chest, the heat from his body mingling with hers.
Donât be a fool, she tells herself, and shakes away the thought.
Still, why is it that just thinking of him makes her feel less alone? Makes her want to escape from Camp Freedom this very moment?
By the time Hope returns, the inspection is under way. An entourage parades from one barracks to another. Hope slips inside her tar-paper shack through the rear door. The other girls are standing stiffly by their cots.
âThanks for joining us,â Athena says as Hope shuffles to her place in line.
âDonât mention it.â
âNext time you put us all in jeopardy, let us know ahead of time, okay?â
The door swings open and in steps the tall, blond womanâthe same one who demanded Hopeâs hair be cut off. So thatâs who the special inspection is for. As before, the woman wears an ankle-length coat that hangs off her shoulders. Colonel Thorason and half a dozen Brown Shirts single-file behind her, down one aisle and then another.
Suddenly the blond woman stops. âWhatâs that smell ?â
The entourage comes to a halt.
âThere,â one of the Brown Shirts says, pointing at Hopeâs feet.
Water drips from the hem of her dress, creating a small brown puddle on the pine floor.
Colonel Thorason stomps forward, grabbing Hopeâs arm to read her tattoo. âWhatâs the meaning of this, 739?â
âI had an accident,â Hope mumbles.
âAnd you didnât think it necessary to clean up for our honored guest?â
âI tried.â
âNot hard enough,â he sputters. âAnd just for that, Iâm going to double your work duties, and thenââ
The blond woman with the high cheekbones cutshim off. âIf I may,â she says, her voice so sugary sweet itâs painful to listen to.
âOf course.â Thorason takes a deferential step backward.
The woman faces Hope directly. Her smile is brittle, her eyes icy. In a move so fast it startles even Hope, she rips off Hopeâs head scarf, revealing a patchy fuzz of short black hair.
âI thought it might be you,â she says, deliberately tossing the head scarf into the puddle of brown muck.
Hopeâs cheeks burn red.
âCare to tell us how you got into this mess?â the woman asks.
Out of the corner of her eye, Hope sees Helen about to open her mouth. Hope beats her to it. âI fell in the barn shoveling manure,â she blurts out. âI tried to clean up. Guess I didnât do a very good job.â
âNo, I guess you didnât. But then again, you know what they say. You can take the girl out of the shit, but you canât take the shit out of the girl.â
There is a brief moment when no one quite knows how to respond. When the woman begins to laugh, the Brown Shirts and Colonel Thorason are quick to follow.
As the laughter dies, the womanâs smile hardens. She turns to Colonel Thorason and says, âNo need to double this girlâs work time.â
Hope lets out a small sigh.
Then the woman adds, âLet Dr. Gallingham have her instead.â
With that, she does an abrupt about-face and exits the barracks, the click click of her heels echoing in the tar-paper shack long after she is gone.
21.
W E TRAVELED THE ENTIRE night without stopping. Along the trail, faded signs from long ago warned travelers of the perils of hiking.
âMountains donât care,â one read, describing the dangers of avalanches. As if the post-Omega world wasnât
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