She starts, as though I’ve just interrupted a daydream. “Oh, sorry. Yeah, come in.” I can tell she’s just as nervous as I am. There’s a jumpy, hopped-up energy to her movements. When I enter the storeroom, she practically slams the door behind me.
“Hot in here.” I’m biding time, trying to shake loose all the words I planned on saying. I was wrong. Forgive me. You were right about everything. They’re coiled like wires in the back of my throat, electric-hot, and I can’t get them to unwind. Lena says nothing. I pace the room, not wanting to look at her, worried that I’ll see the same expression I saw on Steve’s face last night—impatience, or worse, detachment. “Remember when I used to come and hang out with you here? I’d bring magazines and that stupid old radio I used to have? And you’d steal—”
“Chips and soda from the cooler,” she finishes. “Yeah, I remember.”
Silence stretches uncomfortably between us. I continue circling the small space, looking everywhere but at her. All those coiled words are flexing and tightening their metal fingers, shredding at my throat. Unconsciously, I’ve brought my thumb to my mouth. I feel small sparks of pain as I begin ripping at the cuticles, and it brings back an old comfort.
“Hana?” Lena says softly. “Are you okay?”
That single stupid question breaks me. All the metal fingers relax at once, and the tears they’ve been holding back come surging up at once. Suddenly I am sobbing and telling her everything: about the raid, and the dogs, and the sounds of skulls cracking underneath the regulators’ nightsticks. Thinking about it again makes me feel like I might puke. At a certain point, Lena puts her arms around me and starts murmuring things into my hair. I don’t even know what she’s saying, and I don’t care. Just having her here—solid, real, on my side—makes me feel better than I have in weeks. Slowly I manage to stop crying, swallowing back the hiccups and sobs that are still running through me. I try to tell her that I’ve missed her, and that I’ve been stupid and wrong, but my voice is muffled and thick.
Then somebody knocks on the door, very clearly, four times. I pull away from Lena quickly.
“What’s that?” I say, dragging my forearm across my eyes, trying to get control of myself. Lena tries to pass it off as though she hasn’t heard. Her face has gone white, her eyes wide and terrified. When the knocking starts up again, she doesn’t move, just stays frozen where she is.
“I thought nobody comes in this way.” I cross my arms, watching Lena narrowly. There’s a suspicion needling, pricking at some corner of my mind, but I can’t quite focus on it.
“They don’t. I mean—sometimes—I mean, the delivery guys—”
As she stammers excuses, the door opens, and he pokes his head in—the boy from the day Lena and I jumped the gate at the lab complex, just after we had our evaluations. His eyes land on me and he, too, freezes.
At first I think there must be a mistake. He must have knocked on the wrong door. Lena will yell at him now, tell him to clear off. But then my mind grinds slowly into gear and I realize that no, he has just called Lena’s name. This was obviously planned.
“You’re late,” Lena says. My heart squeezes up like a shutter, and for just a second the world goes totally dark. I have been wrong about everything and everyone.
“Come inside and shut the door,” I say sharply. The room feels much smaller once he is in it. I’ve gotten used to boys this summer but never here, like this, in a familiar place and in daylight. It is like discovering that someone else has been using your toothbrush; I feel both dirty and disoriented. I feel myself swivel toward Lena. “Lena Ella Haloway Tiddle.” I pronounce her full name, very slowly, partly because I need to reassure myself of her existence—Lena, my friend, the worried one, the one who always pleaded for safety first, who now makes secret appointments to meet with boys. “You have some explaining to do.”
“Hana, you remember Alex,” Lena says weakly, as though that—the fact of my remembering him—explains anything.
“Oh, I remember Alex,” I say. “What I don’t remember is why Alex is here.”
Lena makes a few unconvincing noises of excuse. Her eyes fly to his. A message passes between them. I can feel it, encoded and indecipherable, like a zip of electricity, as though I’ve just passed too close to one of the border fences. My stomach turns. Lena and I used to be able to speak like that.
“Tell her,” Alex says softly. It is as though I’m not even in the room.