He rolls himself back up in a blanket, this time in the corner of the library cave to be near us. Cassia is careful to keep the light of the flashlight away from him. She has twisted her hair back out of her way and her eyes look shadowed with exhaustion.
“You should rest too,” I say.
“Something is here,” she says. “I have to find it.” She smiles at me. “I felt the same way when I was looking for you. Sometimes I think I’m strongest when I’m searching.”
It’s true. She is. I love that about her.
It’s why I had to lie to her about Xander’s secret. If I hadn’t, she wouldn’t have stopped trying to find out what it was.
I stand up. “I’m going to help Indie,” I tell Cassia. It’s time to find out what Indie is hiding.
“All right,” Cassia says. She lifts her hand from the book and lets the page she was reading become lost and unmarked. “Be careful.”
“I will,” I say. “I’ll be back soon.”
Indie’s not hard to find. A flickering light in one of the houses below gives her away, as she knew it would. I make my way down the cliff path, which has grown slippery with the rain.
When I get to the house I look in the window first. The glass pane is wavy with age and water, but I can see Indie inside. The flashlight sits next to her and in her hands she holds something else that gives off light.
A miniport.
She hears me coming. I knock the port out of her hand but my fingers don’t close around it in time. The port hits the ground but doesn’t break. Indie sighs in relief. “Go ahead,” she says. “Look at it if you want.”
She keeps her voice low. In it I hear the sound of wanting something very much. Underneath it I hear the sound of the river in the canyon. Indie reaches out and puts her hand on my arm. It is the first time I have ever seen her willingly touch someone, and it stops me from smashing the miniport against the floorboards.
I look at the screen and a familiar face looks back.
“Xander,” I say in surprise. “You have a picture of Xander. But how—” It only takes me a moment to realize what happened. “You stole Cassia’s microcard.”
“That’s what she helped me hide on the air ship,” Indie says, without a trace of guilt. “She didn’t know. I hid it in with her tablets, and I kept it until I had a way to see what was on it.” She reaches over and switches the port back off.
“Is this what you found in the library cave?” I ask her. “The miniport?”
She shakes her head. “I stole this before we came into the canyons.”
“How?”
“I took it from the leader of the boys in the village the night before we ran. He should have been more careful. All Aberrations know how to steal.”
Not all, Indie, I think. Only some of us.
“Do they know where we are?” I ask. “Does it transmit location?” Vick and I were never sure what the miniports could do.
She shrugs. “I don’t think so. The Society’s coming anyway, after what happened in the Cavern. But the miniport isn’t what I wanted to show you. I was only passing time until you came.” I start to say something about how she shouldn’t have stolen from Cassia, but then Indie reaches into her pack and pulls out a folded square of a thick fabric. Canvas.
“This is what you need to see.” She unfolds the material. It’s a map. “I think it’s the way to the Rising,” she says. “Look.”
The words on the map are encoded, but the landscape is familiar: the edge of the Carving and the plain beyond. Instead of showing the mountains where the farmers went, it shows more of the stream where Vick died, which runs across the plain and down the map. The stream ends in a black inky darkness that has white coded words written across it. “I think that’s the ocean,” Indie says, touching the black space on the map. “And those words mark an island.”
“Why didn’t you give it to Cassia?” I ask. “She’s a sorter.”
“I wanted to give it to you,” Indie says. “Because of who you are.”
“What do you mean?” I ask.
She shakes her head impatiently. “I know you can break the code. I know you can sort.”
Indie’s right. I can sort. Already I’ve figured out what the white words say: Turn Again Home.
It’s from the Tennyson poem. It’s Rising territory. Home, they’ve called it. And the way to get to it is by following the stream where the Society dropped poison and Vick died.
“How do you know I can sort?” I ask Indie, putting down the map and pretending I haven’t decoded it yet.
“I’ve been listening,” she says. And then she leans forward. With the two of us sitting in the glow of the flashlight, it seems like the rest of the world has gone black and I’m left alone with her and what she thinks of me. “I know who you are.” She leans even closer. “And who you’re supposed to be.”
“Who am I supposed to be?” I ask her. I don’t lean away. She smiles.
“The Pilot,” she says.
I laugh and sit back. “No. What about that poem you told Cassia? That talks about a woman being the Pilot.”
“It’s not a poem,” Indie says fiercely.
“A song,” I say, realizing. “The words used to have music behind them.” I should have known.
Indie exhales in frustration. “It doesn’t matter how the Pilot comes or if it’s a woman or a man. The idea is the same. I understand that now.”
“I’m still not the Pilot.”
“You are,” she says. “You don’t want to be, so you’re running away from the Rising. Someone needs to bring you back to the rebellion. That’s what I’m trying to do.”
“The Rising isn’t what you imagine,” I say. “It’s not Aberrations and Anomalies and rebels and rogues running free. It’s a structure. A system.”
She shrugs. “Whatever it is, I want to be part of it. I’ve been thinking about it my whole life.”
“If you think this will take us to the Rising, why give it to me?” I ask Indie, holding up the map. “Why not give it right to Cassia?”
“We’re the same,” she whispers. “You and me. We’re more alike than you and Cassia. We could leave right now.”
She’s right. I do see myself in Indie. I feel a pity so deep for her that it might be something else entirely. Empathy. You have to believe in something to survive. She’s picked the Rising. I chose Cassia.
Indie’s been quiet for a long time. Hiding. Running. On the move. I put my hand next to hers. I don’t touch her fingers. But she can see the marks on them. I have scars from living here the first time that no Citizen of the Society would have.
She looks at my hand. “How long?” she asks.
“How long what?”
“How long have you been an Aberration?”
“Since I was a child,” I say. “I was three years old when they Reclassified us.”
“And who caused it?”
I don’t want to answer but I can tell we’re on the edge. It’s as though she holds to the walls of a canyon. If I move wrong she will look over her shoulder, let go, and take her chances with the fall. I have to give her a little piece of my story.
“My father,” I answer. “We were Citizens in the Society. We lived in one of the Border Provinces. Then the Society accused him of having ties with a rebellion and sent us all out to the Outer Provinces.”
“Was he a rebel?” she asks.
“Yes,” I say. “And then when we moved to the Outer Provinces he convinced our village to join with him. Almost everyone died.”
“You still love him, though,” she says.
I’m on the edge with her now. She knows it. I have to tell the truth if I’m going to keep her hanging on.