Chapter 20
“Peeta!” I scream. I shake him harder, even resort to
slapping his face, but it's no use. His heart has failed. I am slapping
emptiness. “Peeta!”
Finnick props Mags against a tree and pushes me out of the
way. “Let me.” His fingers touch points at Peeta's neck, run over the bones in
his ribs and spine. Then he pinches Peeta's nostrils shut.
“No!” I yell, hurling myself at Finnick, for surely he
intends to make certain that Peeta's dead, to keep any hope of life from
returning to him. Finnick's hand comes up and hits me so hard, so squarely in
the chest that I go flying back into a nearby tree trunk. I'm stunned for a
moment, by the pain, by trying to regain my wind, as I see Finnick close off
Peeta's nose again. From where I sit, I pull an arrow, whip the notch into
place, and am about to let it fly when I'm stopped by the sight of Finnick
kissing Peeta. And it's so bizarre, even for Finnick, that I stay my hand. No,
he's not kissing him. He's got Peeta's nose blocked off but his mouth tilted
open, and he's blowing air into his lungs. I can see this, I can actually see
Peeta's chest rising and falling. Then Finnick unzips the top of Peeta's
jumpsuit and begins to pump the spot over his heart with the heels of his hands.
Now that I've gotten through my shock, I understand what he's trying to do.
Once in a blue moon, I've seen my mother try something
similar, but not often. If your heart fails in District 12, it's unlikely your
family could get you to my mother in time, anyway. So her usual patients are
burned or wounded or ill. Or starving, of course.
But Finnick’s world is different. Whatever he's doing, he's
done it before. There's a very set rhythm and method. And I find the arrow tip
sinking to the ground as I lean in to watch, desperately, for some sign of
success. Agonizing minutes drag past as my hopes diminish. Around the time that
I'm deciding it's too late, that Peeta's dead, moved on, unreachable forever, he
gives a small cough and Finnick sits back.
I leave my weapons in the dirt as I fling myself at him.
“Peeta?” I say softly. I brush the damp blond strands of hair back from his
forehead, find the pulse drumming against my fingers at his neck.
His lashes flutter open and his eyes meet mine. “Careful,” he
says weakly. “There's a force field up ahead.”
I laugh, but there are tears running down my cheeks.
“Must be a lot stronger than the one on the Training Center
roof,” he says. “I'm all right, though. Just a little shaken.”
“You were dead! Your heart stopped!” I burst out, before
really considering if this is a good idea. I clap my hand over my mouth because
I'm starting to make those awful choking sounds that happen when I sob.
“Well, it seems to be working now,” he says. “It's all right,
Katniss.” I nod my head but the sounds aren't stopping.
“Katniss?” Now Peeta's worried about me, which adds to the
insanity of it all.
“It's okay. It's just her hormones,” says Finnick. “From the
baby.” I look up and see him, sitting back on his knees but still panting a bit
from the climb and the heat and the effort of bringing Peeta back from the
dead.
“No. It's not—” I get out, but I'm cut off by an even more
hysterical round of sobbing that seems only to confirm what Finnick said about
the baby. He meets my eyes and I glare at him through my tears. It's stupid, I
know, that his efforts make me so vexed. All I wanted was to keep Peeta alive,
and I couldn't and Finnick could, and I should be nothing but grateful. And I
am. But I am also furious because it means that I will never stop owing Finnick
Odair. Ever. So how can I kill him in his sleep?
I expect to see a smug or sarcastic expression on his face,
but his look is strangely quizzical. He glances between Peeta and me, as if
trying to figure something out, then gives his head a slight shake as if to
clear it. “How are you?” he asks Peeta. “Do you think you can move on?”
“No, he has to rest,” I say. My nose is running like crazy
and I don't even have a shred of fabric to use as a handkerchief. Mags rips off
a handful of hanging moss from a tree limb and gives it to me. I'm too much of a
mess to even question it. I blow my nose loudly and mop the tears off my face.
It's nice, the moss. Absorbent and surprisingly soft.
I notice a gleam of gold on Peeta's chest. I reach out and
retrieve the disk that hangs from a chain around his neck. My mockingjay has
been engraved on it. “Is this your token?” I ask.
“Yes. Do you mind that I used your mockingjay? I wanted us to
match,” he says.
“No, of course I don't mind.” I force a smile. Peeta showing
up in the arena wearing a mockingjay is both a blessing and a curse. On the one
hand, it should give a boost to the rebels in the district. On the other, it's
hard to imagine President Snow will overlook it, and that makes the job of
keeping Peeta alive harder.
“So you want to make camp here, then?” Finnick asks.
“I don't think that's an option,” Peeta answers. “Staying
here. With no water. No protection. I feel all right, really. If we could just
go slowly.”
“Slowly would be better than not at all.” Finnick helps Peeta
to his feet while I pull myself together. Since I got up this morning I've
watched Cinna beaten to a pulp, landed in another arena, and seen Peeta die.
Still, I'm glad Finnick keeps playing the pregnancy card for me, because from a
sponsor's point of view, I'm not handling things all that well.
I check over my weapons, which I know are in perfect
condition, because it makes me seem more in control. “I'll take the lead,” I
announce.
Peeta starts to object but Finnick cuts him off. “No, let her
do it.” He frowns at me. “You knew that force field was there, didn't you? Right
at the last second? You started to give a warning.” I nod. “How did you
know?”
I hesitate. To reveal that I know Beetee and Wiress's trick
of recognizing a force field could be dangerous. I don't know if the Gamemakers
made note of that moment during training when the two pointed it out to me or
not. One way or the other, I have a very valuable piece of information. And if
they know I have it, they might do something to alter the force field so I can't
see the aberration anymore. So I lie. “I don't know. It's almost as if I could
hear it. Listen.” We all become still. There's the sound of insects, birds, the
breeze in the foliage.
“I don't hear anything,” says Peeta.
“Yes,” I insist, “it's like when the fence around District
Twelve is on, only much, much quieter.” Everyone listens again intently. I do,
too, although there's nothing to hear. “There!” I say. “Can't you hear it? It's
coming from right where Peeta got shocked.”
“I don't hear it, either,” says Finnick. “But if you do, by
all means, take the lead.”
I decide to play this for all it's worth. “That's weird,” I
say. I turn my head from side to side as if puzzled. “I can only hear it out of
my left ear.”
“The one the doctors reconstructed?” asks Peeta.
“Yeah,” I say, then give a shrug. “Maybe they did a better
job than they thought. You know, sometimes I do hear funny things on that side.
Things you wouldn't ordinarily think have a sound. Like insect wings. Or snow
hitting the ground.” Perfect. Now all the attention will turn to the surgeons
who fixed my deaf ear after the Games last year, and they'll have to explain why
I can hear like a bat.
“You,” says Mags, nudging me forward, so I take the lead.
Since we're to be moving slowly, Mags prefers to walk with the aid of a branch
Finnick quickly fashions into a cane for her. He makes a staff for Peeta as
well, which is good because, despite his protestations, I think all Peeta really
wants to do is lie down. Finnick brings up the rear, so at least someone alert
has our backs.
I walk with the force field on my left, because that's
supposed to be the side with my superhuman ear. But since that's all made up, I
cut down a bunch of hard nuts that hang like grapes from a nearby tree and toss
them ahead of me as I go. It's good I do, too, because I have a feeling I'm
missing the patches that indicate the force field more often than I'm spotting
them. Whenever a nut hits the force field, there's a puff of smoke before the
nut lands, blackened and with a cracked shell, on the ground at my feet.
After a few minutes I become aware of a smacking sound behind
me and turn to see Mags peeling the shell off one of the nuts and popping it in
her already-full mouth. “Mags!” I cry. “Spit that out. It could be
poisonous.”
She mumbles something and ignores me, licking her lips with
apparent relish. I look to Finnick for help but he just laughs. “I guess we'll
find out,” he says.
I go forward, wondering about Finnick, who saved old Mags but
will let her eat strange nuts. Who Haymitch has stamped with his seal of
approval. Who brought Peeta back from the dead. Why didn't he just let him die?
He would have been blameless. I never would have guessed it was in his power to
revive him. Why could he possibly have wanted to save Peeta? And why was he so
determined to team up with me? Willing to kill me, too, if it comes to that. But
leaving the choice of if we fight to me.
I keep walking, tossing my nuts, sometimes catching a glimpse
of the force field, trying to press to the left to find a spot where we can
break through, get away from the Cornucopia, and hopefully find water. But after
another hour or so of this I realize it's futile. We're not making any progress
to the left. In fact, the force field seems to be herding us along a curved
path. I stop and look back at Mags's limping form, the sheen of sweat on Peeta's
face. “Let's take a break,” I say. “I need to get another look from above.”
The tree I choose seems to jut higher into the air than the
others. I make my way up the twisting boughs, staying as close to the trunk as
possible. No telling how easily these rubbery branches will snap. Still I climb
beyond good sense because there's something I have to see. As I cling to a
stretch of trunk no wider than a sapling, swaying back and forth in the humid
breeze, my suspicions are confirmed. There's a reason we can't turn to the left,
will never be able to. From this precarious vantage point, I can see the shape
of the whole arena for the first time. A perfect circle. With a perfect wheel in
the middle. The sky above the circumference of the jungle is tinged a uniform
pink. And I think I can make out one or two of those wavy squares, chinks in the
armor, Wiress and Beetee called them, because they reveal what was meant to be
hidden and are therefore a weakness. Just to make absolutely sure, I shoot an
arrow into the empty space above the tree line. There's a spurt of light, a
flash of real blue sky, and the arrow's thrown back into the jungle. I climb
down to give the others the bad news.
“The force field has us trapped in a circle. A dome, really.
I don't know how high it goes. There's the Cornucopia, the sea, and then the
jungle all around. Very exact. Very symmetrical. And not very large,” I say.
“Did you see any water?” asks Finnick.
“Only the saltwater where we started the Games,” I say.
“There must be some other source,” says Peeta, frowning. “Or
we'll all be dead in a matter of days.”
“Well, the foliage is thick. Maybe there are ponds or springs
somewhere,” I say doubtfully. I instinctively feel the Capitol might want these
unpopular Games over as soon as possible. Plutarch Heavensbee might have already
been given orders to knock us off. “At any rate, there's no point in trying to
find out what's over the edge of this hill, because the answer is nothing.”
“There must be drinkable water between the force field and
the wheel,” Peeta insists. We all know what this means. Heading back down.
Heading back to the Careers and the bloodshed. With Mags hardly able to walk and
Peeta too weak to fight.
We decide to move down the slope a few hundred yards and
continue circling. See if maybe there's some water at that level. I stay in the
lead, occasionally chucking a nut to my left, but we're well out of range of the
force field now. The sun beats down on us, turning the air to steam, playing
tricks on our eyes. By midafternoon, it's clear Peeta and Mags can't go on.
Finnick chooses a campsite about ten yards below the force
field, saying we can use it as a weapon by deflecting our enemies into it if
attacked. Then he and Mags pull blades of the sharp grass that grows in
five-foot-high tufts and begin to weave them together into mats. Since Mags
seems to have no ill effects from the nuts, Peeta collects bunches of them and
fries them by bouncing them off the force field. He methodically peels off the
shells, piling the meats on a leaf. I stand guard, fidgety and hot and raw with
the emotions of the day.
Thirsty. I am so thirsty. Finally I can't stand it anymore.
“Finnick, why don't you stand guard and I'll hunt around some more for water,” I
say. No one's thrilled with the idea of me going off alone, but the threat of
dehydration hangs over us.
“Don't worry, I won't go far,” I promise Peeta. “I'll go,
too,” he says.
“No, I'm going to do some hunting if I can,” I tell him. I
don't add, “And you can't come because you're too loud.” But it's implied. He
would both scare off prey and endanger me with his heavy tread. “I won't be
long.”
I move stealthily through the trees, happy to find that the
ground lends itself to soundless footsteps. I work my way down at a diagonal,
but I find nothing except more lush, green plant life.
The sound of the cannon brings me to a halt. The initial
bloodbath at the Cornucopia must be over. The death toll of the tributes is now
available. I count the shots, each representing one dead victor. Eight. Not as
many as last year. But it seems like more since I know most of their names.
Suddenly weak, I lean against a tree to rest, feeling the
heat draw the moisture from my body like a sponge. Already, swallowing is
difficult and fatigue is creeping up on me. I try rubbing my hand across my
belly, hoping some sympathetic pregnant woman will become my sponsor and
Haymitch can send in some water. No luck. I sink to the ground.
In my stillness, I begin to notice the animals: strange birds
with brilliant plumage, tree lizards with flickering blue tongues, and something
that looks like a cross between a rat and a possum clinging on the branches
close to the trunk. I shoot one of the latter out of a tree to get a closer
look.
It's ugly, all right, a big rodent with a fuzz of mottled
gray fur and two wicked-looking gnawing teeth protruding over its lower lip. As
I'm gutting and skinning it, I notice something else. Its muzzle is wet. Like an
animal that's been drinking from a stream. Excited, I start at its home tree and
move slowly out in a spiral. It can't be far, the creature's water source.
Nothing. I find nothing. Not so much as a dewdrop.
Eventually, because I know Peeta will be worried about me, I head back to the
camp, hotter and more frustrated than ever.
When I arrive, I see the others have transformed the place.
Mags and Finnick have created a hut of sorts out of the grass mats, open on one
side but with three walls, a floor, and a roof. Mags has also plaited several
bowls that Peeta has filled with roasted nuts. Their faces turn to me hopefully,
but I give my head a shake. “No. No water. It's out there, though. He knew where
it was,” I say, hoisting the skinned rodent up for all to see. “He'd been
drinking recently when I shot him out of a tree, but I couldn't find his source.
I swear, I covered every inch of ground in a thirty-yard radius.”
“Can we eat him?” Peeta asks.
“I don't know for sure. But his meat doesn't look that
different from a squirrel's. He ought to be cooked... .” I hesitate as I think
of trying to start a fire out here from complete scratch. Even if I succeed,
there's the smoke to think about. We're all so close together in this arena,
there's no chance of hiding it.
Peeta has another idea. He takes a cube of rodent meat,
skewers it on the tip of a pointed stick, and lets it fall into the force field.
There's a sharp sizzle and the stick flies back. The chunk of meat is blackened
on the outside but well cooked inside. We give him a round of applause, then
quickly stop, remembering where we are.
The white sun sinks in the rosy sky as we gather in the hut.
I'm still leery about the nuts, but Finnick says Mags recognized them from
another Games. I didn't bother spending time at the edible-plants station in
training because it was so effortless for me last year. Now I wish I had. For
surely there would have been some of the unfamiliar plants surrounding me. And I
might have guessed a bit more about where I was headed. Mags seems fine, though,
and she's been eating the nuts for hours. So I pick one up and take a small
bite. It has a mild, slightly sweet flavor that reminds me of a chestnut. I
decide it's all right. The rodent's strong and gamey but surprisingly juicy.
Really, it's not a bad meal for our first night in the arena. If only we had
something to wash it down with.
Finnick asks a lot of questions about the rodent, which we
decide to call a tree rat. How high was it, how long did I watch it before I
shot, and what was it doing? I don't remember it doing much of anything.
Snuffling around for insects or something.
I'm dreading the night. At least the tightly woven grass
offers some protection from whatever slinks across the jungle floor after hours.
But a short time before the sun slips below the horizon, a pale white moon
rises, making things just visible enough. Our conversation trails off because we
know what's coming. We position ourselves in a line at the mouth of the hut and
Peeta slips his hand into mine.
The sky brightens when the seal of the Capitol appears as if
floating in space. As I listen to the strains of the anthem I think, It will be harder for Finnick and Mags. But it turns out to
be plenty hard for me as well. Seeing the faces of the eight dead victors
projected into the sky.
The man from District 5, the one Finnick took out with his
trident, is the first to appear. That means that all the tributes in 1 through 4
are alive — the four Careers, Beetee and Wiress, and, of course, Mags and
Finnick. The man from District 5 is followed by the male morphling from 6,
Cecelia and Woof from 8, both from 9, the woman from 10, and Seeder from 11. The
Capitol seal is back with a final bit of music and then the sky goes dark except
for the moon.
No one speaks. I can't pretend I knew any of them well. But
I'm thinking of those three kids hanging on to Cecelia when they took her away.
Seeder's kindness to me at our meeting. Even the thought of the glazed-eyed
morphling painting my cheeks with yellow flowers gives me a pang. All dead. All
gone.
I don't know how long we might have sat here if it weren't
for the arrival of the silver parachute, which glides down through the foliage
to land before us. No one reaches for it.
“Whose is it, do you think?” I say finally.
“No telling,” says Finnick. “Why don't we let Peeta claim it,
since he died today?”
Peeta unties the cord and flattens out the circle of silk. On
the parachute sits a small metal object that I can't place. “What is it?” I ask.
No one knows. We pass it from hand to hand, taking turns examining it. It's a
hollow metal tube, tapered slightly at one end. On the other end a small lip
curves downward. It's vaguely familiar. A part that could have fallen off a
bicycle, a curtain rod, anything, really.
Peeta blows on one end to see if it makes a sound. It
doesn't. Finnick slides his pinkie into it, testing it out as a weapon.
Useless.
“Can you fish with it, Mags?” I ask. Mags, who can fish with
almost anything, shakes her head and grunts.
I take it and roll it back and forth on my palm. Since we're
allies, Haymitch will be working with the District 4 mentors. He had a hand in
choosing this gift. That means it's valuable. Lifesaving, even. I think back to
last year, when I wanted water so badly, but he wouldn't send it because he knew
I could find it if I tried. Haymitch's gifts, or lack thereof, carry weighty
messages. I can almost hear him growling at me, Use your
brain if you have one. What is it?
I wipe the sweat from my eyes and hold the gift out in the
moonlight. I move it this way and that, viewing it from different angles,
covering portions and then revealing them. Trying to make it divulge its purpose
to me. Finally, in frustration, I jam one end into the dirt. “I give up. Maybe
if we hook up with Beetee or Wiress they can figure it out.
I stretch out, pressing my hot cheek on the grass mat,
staring at the thing in aggravation. Peeta rubs a tense spot between my
shoulders and I let myself relax a little. I wonder why this place hasn't cooled
off at all now that the sun's gone down. I wonder what's going on back home.
Prim. My mother. Gale. Madge. I think of them watching me
from home. At least I hope they're at home. Not taken into custody by Thread.
Being punished as Cinna is. As Darius is. Punished because of me. Everybody.
I begin to ache for them, for my district, for my woods. A
decent woods with sturdy hardwood trees, plentiful food, game that isn't creepy.
Rushing streams. Cool breezes. No, cold winds to blow this stifling heat away. I
conjure up such a wind in my mind, letting it freeze my cheeks and numb my
fingers, and all at once, the piece of metal half buried in the black earth has
a name.
“A spile!” I exclaim, sitting bolt upright.
“What?” asks Finnick.
I wrestle the thing from the ground and brush it clean. Cup
my hand around the tapered end, concealing it, and look at the lip. Yes, I've
seen one of these before. On a cold, windy day long ago, when I was out in the
woods with my father. Inserted snugly into a hole drilled in the side of a
maple. A pathway for the sap to follow as it flowed into our bucket. Maple syrup
could make even our dull bread a treat. After my father died, I didn't know what
happened to the handful of spiles he had. Hidden out in the woods somewhere,
probably. Never to be found.
“It's a spile. Sort of like a faucet. You put it in a tree
and sap comes out.” I look at the sinewy green trunks around me. “Well, the
right sort of tree.”
“Sap?” asks Finnick. They don't have the right kind of trees
by the sea, either.
“To make syrup,” says Peeta. “But there must be something
else inside these trees.”
We're all on our feet at once. Our thirst. The lack of
springs. The tree rat's sharp front teeth and wet muzzle. There can only be one
thing worth having inside these trees. Finnick goes to hammer the spile into the
green bark of a massive tree with a rock, but I stop him. “Wait. You might
damage it. We need to drill a hole first,” I say.
There's nothing to drill with, so Mags offers her awl and
Peeta drives it straight into the bark, burying the spike two inches deep. He
and Finnick take turns opening up the hole with the awl and the knives until it
can hold the spile. I wedge it in carefully and we all stand back in
anticipation.
At first nothing happens. Then a drop of water rolls down the
lip and lands in Mags's palm. She licks it off and holds out her hand for
more.
By wiggling and adjusting the spile, we get a thin stream
running out. We take turns holding our mouths under the tap, wetting our parched
tongues. Mags brings over a basket, and the grass is so tightly woven it holds
water. We fill the basket and pass it around, taking deep gulps and, later,
luxuriously, splashing our faces clean. Like everything here, the water's on the
warm side, but this is no time to be picky.
Without our thirst to distract us, we're all aware of how
exhausted we are and make preparations for the night. Last year, I always tried
to have my gear ready in case I had to make a speedy retreat in the night. This
year, there's no backpack to prepare. Just my weapons, which won't leave my
grasp, anyway. Then I think of the spile and wrest it from the tree trunk. I
strip a tough vine of its leaves, thread it through the hollow center, and tie
the spile securely to my belt.
Finnick offers to take the first watch and I let him, knowing
it has to be one of the two of us until Peeta's rested up. I lie down beside
Peeta on the floor of the hut, telling Finnick to wake me when he's tired.
Instead I find myself jarred from sleep a few hours later by what seems to be
the tolling of a bell. Bong! Bong! It's not exactly
like the one they ring in the Justice Building on New Year's but close enough
for me to recognize it. Peeta and Mags sleep through it, but Finnick has the
same look of attentiveness I feel. The tolling stops.
“I counted twelve,” he says.
I nod. Twelve. What does that signify? One ring for each
district? Maybe. But why? “Mean anything, do you think?”
“No idea,” he says.
We wait for further instructions, maybe a message from
Claudius Templesmith. An invitation to a feast. The only thing of note appears
in the distance. A dazzling bolt of electricity strikes a towering tree and then
a lightning storm begins. I guess it's an indication of rain, of a water source
for those who don't have mentors as smart as Haymitch.
“Go to sleep, Finnick. It's my turn to watch, anyway,” I
say.
Finnick hesitates, but no one can stay awake forever. He
settles down at the mouth of the hut, one hand gripped around a trident, and
drifts into a restless sleep.
I sit with my bow loaded, watching the jungle, which is
ghostly pale and green in the moonlight. After an hour or so, the lightning
stops. I can hear the rain coming in, though, pattering on the leaves a few
hundred yards away. I keep waiting for it to reach us but it never does.
The sound of the cannon startles me, although it makes little
impression on my sleeping companions. There's no point in awakening them for
this. Another victor dead. I don't even allow myself to wonder who it is.
The elusive rain shuts off suddenly, like the storm did last
year in the arena.
Moments after it stops, I see the fog sliding softly in from
the direction of the recent downpour. Just a reaction. Cool
rain on the steaming ground, I think. It continues to approach at a
steady pace. Tendrils reach forward and then curl like fingers, as if they are
pulling the rest behind them. As I watch, I feel the hairs on my neck begin to
rise. Something's wrong with this fog. The progression of the front line is too
uniform to be natural. And if it's not natural ...
A sickeningly sweet odor begins to invade my nostrils and I
reach for the others, shouting for them to wake up.
In the few seconds it takes to rouse them, I begin to
blister.
No comments:
Post a Comment