Book Read Free

The Maze Runner Series Complete Collection

Page 21

by James Dashner


  “What am I looking for?” he asked.

  “Patterns. But looking at two days’ worth isn’t gonna tell you jack. You really need to study several weeks, look for patterns, anything. I know there’s something there, something that’ll help us. Just can’t find it yet. Like I said, it sucks.”

  Thomas had an itch in the back of his mind, the same one he’d felt the very first time in this room. The Maze walls, moving. Patterns. All those straight lines—were they suggesting an entirely different kind of map? Pointing to something? He had such a heavy feeling that he was missing an obvious hint or clue.

  Minho tapped him on the shoulder. “You can always come back and study your butt off after dinner, after we talk to Newt and Alby. Come on.”

  Thomas put the papers in the trunk and closed it, hating the twinge of unease he felt. It was like a prick in his side. Walls moving, straight lines, patterns … There had to be an answer. “Okay, let’s go.”

  They’d just stepped outside the Map Room, the heavy door clanging shut behind them, when Newt and Alby walked up, neither one of them looking very happy. Thomas’s excitement immediately turned to worry.

  “Hey,” Minho said. “We were just—”

  “Get on with it,” Alby interrupted. “Ain’t got time to waste. Find anything? Anything?”

  Minho actually recoiled at the harsh rebuke, but his face seemed more confused to Thomas than hurt or angry. “Nice to see you, too. Yeah, we did find something, actually.”

  Oddly, Alby almost looked disappointed. “Cuz this whole shuck place is fallin’ to pieces.” He shot Thomas a nasty glare as if it were all his fault.

  What’s wrong with him? Thomas thought, feeling his own anger light up. They’d been working hard all day and this was their thanks?

  “What do you mean?” Minho asked. “What else happened?”

  Newt answered, nodding toward the Box as he did so. “Bloody supplies didn’t come today. Come every week for two years, same time, same day. But not today.”

  All four of them looked over at the steel doors attached to the ground. To Thomas, there seemed to be a shadow hovering over it darker than the gray air surrounding everything else.

  “Oh, we’re shucked for good now,” Minho whispered, his reaction alerting Thomas to how grave the situation really was.

  “No sun for the plants,” Newt said, “no supplies from the bloody Box—yeah, I’d say we’re shucked, all right.”

  Alby had folded his arms, still glaring at the Box as if trying to open the doors with his mind. Thomas hoped their leader didn’t bring up what he’d seen in the Changing—or anything related to Thomas, for that matter. Especially now.

  “Yeah, anyway,” Minho continued. “We found something weird.”

  Thomas waited, hoping that Newt or Alby would have a positive reaction to the news, maybe even have further information to shed light on the mystery.

  Newt raised his eyebrows. “What?”

  Minho took a full three minutes to explain, starting with the Griever they followed and ending with the results of their rock-throwing experiment.

  “Must lead to where the … ya know … Grievers live,” he said when finished.

  “The Griever Hole,” Thomas added. All three of them looked at him, annoyed, as if he had no right to speak. But for the first time, being treated like the Greenie didn’t bother him that much.

  “Gotta bloody see that for myself,” Newt said. Then murmured, “Hard to believe.” Thomas couldn’t have agreed more.

  “I don’t know what we can do,” Minho said. “Maybe we could build something to block off that corridor.”

  “No way,” Newt said. “Shuck things can climb the bloody walls, remember? Nothing we could build would keep them out.”

  But a commotion outside the Homestead shifted their attention away from the conversation. A group of Gladers stood at the front door of the house, shouting to be heard over each other. Chuck was in the group, and when he saw Thomas and the others he ran over, a look of excitement spread across his face. Thomas could only wonder what crazy thing had happened now.

  “What’s going on?” Newt asked.

  “She’s awake!” Chuck yelled. “The girl’s awake!”

  Thomas’s insides twisted; he leaned against the concrete wall of the Map Room. The girl. The girl who spoke in his head. He wanted to run before it happened again, before she spoke to him in his mind.

  But it was too late.

  Tom, I don’t know any of these people. Come get me! It’s all fading…. I’m forgetting everything but you…. I have to tell you things! But it’s all fading….

  He couldn’t understand how she did it, how she was inside his head.

  Teresa paused, then said something that made no sense.

  The Maze is a code, Tom. The Maze is a code.

  CHAPTER 36

  Thomas didn’t want to see her. He didn’t want to see anybody.

  As soon as Newt set off to go and talk to the girl, Thomas silently slipped away, hoping no one would notice him in the excitement. With everyone’s thoughts on the stranger waking up from her coma, it proved easy. He skirted the edge of the Glade, then, breaking into a run, he headed for his place of seclusion behind the Deadhead forest.

  He crouched in the corner, nestled in the ivy, and threw his blanket over himself, head and all. Somehow, it seemed like a way to hide from Teresa’s intrusion into his mind. A few minutes passed, his heart finally calming to a slow roll.

  “Forgetting about you was the worst part.”

  At first, Thomas thought it was another message in his head; he squeezed his fists against his ears. But no, it’d been … different. He’d heard it with his ears. A girl’s voice. Chills creeping up his spine, he slowly lowered the blanket.

  Teresa stood to his right, leaning against the massive stone wall. She looked so different now, awake and alert—standing. Wearing a long-sleeved white shirt, blue jeans, and brown shoes, she looked—impossibly—even more striking than when he’d seen her in the coma. Black hair framed the fair skin of her face, with eyes the blue of pure flame.

  “Tom, do you really not remember me?” Her voice was soft, a contrast from the crazed, hard sound he’d heard from her after she first arrived, when she’d delivered the message that everything was going to change.

  “You mean … you remember me?” he asked, embarrassed at the squeak that escaped on the last word.

  “Yes. No. Maybe.” She threw her arms up in disgust. “I can’t explain it.”

  Thomas opened his mouth, then closed it without saying anything.

  “I remember remembering,” she muttered, sitting down with a heavy sigh; she pulled her legs up to wrap her arms around her knees. “Feelings. Emotions. Like I have all these shelves in my head, labeled for memories and faces, but they’re empty. As if everything before this is just on the other side of a white curtain. Including you.”

  “But how do you know me?” He felt like the walls were spinning around him.

  Teresa turned toward him. “I don’t know. Something about before we came to the Maze. Something about us. It’s mostly empty, like I said.”

  “You know about the Maze? Who told you? You just woke up.”

  “I … It’s all very confusing right now.” She held a hand out. “But I know you’re my friend.”

  Almost in a daze, Thomas pulled the blanket completely off and leaned forward to shake her hand. “I like how you call me Tom.” As soon as it came out, he was sure he couldn’t have possibly said anything dumber.

  Teresa rolled her eyes. “That’s your name, isn’t it?”

  “Yeah, but most people call me Thomas. Well, except Newt—he calls me Tommy. Tom makes me feel … like I’m at home or something. Even though I don’t know what home is.” He let out a bitter laugh. “Are we messed up or what?”

  She smiled for the first time, and he almost had to look away, as if something that nice didn’t belong in such a glum and gray place, as if he had no right to
look at her expression.

  “Yeah, we’re messed up,” she said. “And I’m scared.”

  “So am I, trust me.” Which was definitely the understatement of the day.

  A long moment passed, both of them looking toward the ground.

  “What’s …,” he began, not sure how to ask it. “How … did you talk to me inside my mind?”

  Teresa shook her head. No idea—I can just do it, she thought to him. Then she spoke aloud again. “It’s like if you tried to ride a bicycle here—if they had one. I bet you could do it without thinking. But do you remember learning to ride one?”

  “No. I mean … I remember riding one, but not learning.” He paused, feeling a wave of sadness. “Or who taught me.”

  “Well,” she said, her eyes flickering as if she was embarrassed by his sudden gloom. “Anyway … it’s kind of like that.”

  “Really clears things up.”

  Teresa shrugged. “You didn’t tell anyone, did you? They’d think we’re crazy.”

  “Well … when it first happened, I did. But I think Newt just thinks I was stressed out or something.” Thomas felt fidgety, like he’d go nuts if he didn’t move. He stood up, started pacing in front of her. “We need to figure things out. That weird note you had about being the last person to ever come here, your coma, the fact you can talk to me telepathically. Any ideas?”

  Teresa followed him with her eyes as he walked back and forth. “Save your breath and quit asking. All I have are faint impressions—that you and I were important, that we were used somehow. That we’re smart. That we came here for a reason. I know I triggered the Ending, whatever that means.” She groaned, her face reddening. “My memories are as useless as yours.”

  Thomas knelt down in front of her. “No, they’re not. I mean, the fact that you knew my memory had been wiped without asking me—and this other stuff. You’re way ahead of me and everybody else.”

  Their eyes met for a long time; it looked like her mind was spinning, trying to make sense of it all.

  I just don’t know, she said in his mind.

  “There you go again,” Thomas said aloud, though he was relieved that her trick didn’t really freak him out anymore. “How do you do that?”

  “I just do, and I bet you can, too.”

  “Well, can’t say I’m too anxious to try.” He sat back down and pulled his legs up, much like she had done. “You said something to me—in my head—right before you found me over here. You said ‘The Maze is a code.’ What did you mean?”

  She shook her head slightly. “When I first woke up, it was like I’d entered an insane asylum—these strange guys hovering over my bed, the world tipping around me, memories swirling in my brain. I tried to reach out and grasp a few, and that was one of them. I can’t really remember why I said it.”

  “Was there anything else?”

  “Actually, yeah.” She pulled up the sleeve of her left arm, exposing her bicep. Small letters were written across the skin in thin black ink.

  “What’s that?” he asked, leaning in for a better look.

  “Read it yourself.”

  The letters were messy, but he could make them out when he got close enough.

  WICKED is good

  Thomas’s heart beat faster. “I’ve seen that word—wicked.” He searched his mind for what the phrase could possibly mean. “On the little creatures that live here. The beetle blades.”

  “What are those?” she asked.

  “Just little lizardlike machines that spy on us for the Creators—the people who sent us here.”

  Teresa considered that for a moment, looking off into space. Then she focused on her arm. “I can’t remember why I wrote this,” she said as she wet her thumb and started rubbing off the words. “But don’t let me forget—it has to mean something.”

  The three words ran through Thomas’s mind over and over. “When did you write it?”

  “When I woke up. They had a pen and notepad next to the bed. In the commotion I wrote it down.”

  Thomas was baffled by this girl—first the connection he’d felt to her from the very beginning, then the mind-speaking, now this. “Everything about you is weird. You know that, right?”

  “Judging by your little hiding spot, I’d say you’re not so normal yourself. Like living in the woods, do ya?”

  Thomas tried to scowl, then smiled. He felt pathetic, and embarrassed about hiding. “Well, you look familiar to me and you claim we’re friends. Guess I’ll trust you.”

  He held out his hand for another shake, and she took it, holding on for a long time. A chill swept through Thomas that was surprisingly pleasant.

  “All I want is to get back home,” she said, finally letting go of his hand. “Just like the rest of you.”

  Thomas’s heart sank as he snapped back to reality and remembered how grim the world had become. “Yeah, well, things pretty much suck right about now. The sun disappeared and the sky’s gone gray, they didn’t send us the weekly supplies—looks like things are going to end one way or another.”

  But before Teresa could answer, Newt was running out of the woods. “How in the …,” he said as he pulled up in front of them. Alby and a few others were right behind him. Newt looked at Teresa. “How’d you get here? Med-jack said you were there one second and buggin’ gone the next.”

  Teresa stood up, surprising Thomas with her confidence. “Guess he forgot to tell the little part about me kicking him in the groin and climbing out the window.”

  Thomas almost laughed as Newt turned to an older boy standing nearby, whose face had turned bright red.

  “Congrats, Jeff,” Newt said. “You’re officially the first guy here to get your butt beat by a girl.”

  Teresa didn’t stop. “Keep talking like that and you’ll be next.”

  Newt turned back to face them, but his face showed anything but fear. He stood, silently, just staring at them. Thomas stared back, wondering what was going through the older boy’s head.

  Alby stepped up. “I’m sick of this.” He pointed at Thomas’s chest, almost tapping it. “I wanna know who you are, who this shank girl is, and how you guys know each other.”

  Thomas almost wilted. “Alby, I swear—”

  “She came straight to you after waking up, shuck-face!”

  Anger surged inside Thomas—and worry that Alby would go off like Ben had. “So what? I know her, she knows me—or at least, we used to. That doesn’t mean anything! I can’t remember anything. Neither can she.”

  Alby looked at Teresa. “What did you do?”

  Thomas, confused by the question, glanced at Teresa to see if she knew what he meant. But she didn’t reply.

  “What did you do!” Alby screamed. “First the sky, now this.”

  “I triggered something,” she replied in a calm voice. “Not on purpose, I swear it. The Ending. I don’t know what it means.”

  “What’s wrong, Newt?” Thomas asked, not wanting to talk to Alby directly. “What happened?”

  But Alby grabbed him by the shirt. “What happened? I’ll tell ya what happened, shank. Too busy makin’ lovey eyes to bother lookin’ around? To bother noticing what freaking time it is!”

  Thomas looked at his watch, realizing with horror what he’d missed, knowing what Alby was about to say before he said it.

  “The walls, you shuck. The Doors. They didn’t close tonight.”

  CHAPTER 37

  Thomas was speechless. Everything would be different now. No sun, no supplies, no protection from the Grievers. Teresa had been right from the beginning—everything had changed. Thomas felt as if his breath had solidified, lodged itself in his throat.

  Alby pointed at the girl. “I want her locked up. Now. Billy! Jackson! Put her in the Slammer, and ignore every word that comes out of her shuck mouth.”

  Teresa didn’t react, but Thomas did enough for the both of them. “What’re you talking about? Alby, you can’t—” He stopped when Alby’s fiery eyes shot such a look of anger at
him he felt his heart stutter. “But … how could you possibly blame her for the walls not closing?”

  Newt stepped up, lightly placed a hand on Alby’s chest and pushed him back. “How could we not, Tommy? She bloody admitted it herself.”

  Thomas turned to look at Teresa, paled at the sadness in her blue eyes. It felt like something had reached through his chest and squeezed his heart.

  “Just be glad you ain’t goin’ with her, Thomas,” Alby said; he gave both of them one last glare before leaving. Thomas had never wanted so badly to punch someone.

  Billy and Jackson came forward and grabbed Teresa by both arms, started escorting her away.

  Before they could enter the trees, though, Newt stopped them. “Stay with her. I don’t care what happens, no one’s gonna touch this girl. Swear your lives on it.”

  The two guards nodded, then walked away, Teresa in tow. It hurt Thomas even more to see how willingly she went. And he couldn’t believe how sad he felt—he wanted to keep talking to her. But I just met her, he thought. I don’t even know her. Yet he knew that wasn’t true. He already felt a closeness that could only have come from knowing her before the memory-wiped existence of the Glade.

  Come see me, she said in his mind.

  He didn’t know how to do it, how to talk to her like that. But he tried anyway.

  I will. At least you’ll be safe in there.

  She didn’t respond.

  Teresa?

  Nothing.

  The next thirty minutes were an eruption of mass confusion.

  Though there had been no discernible change in the light since the sun and blue sky hadn’t appeared that morning, it still felt like a darkness spread over the Glade. As Newt and Alby gathered the Keepers and put them in charge of making assignments and getting their groups inside the Homestead within the hour, Thomas felt like nothing more than a spectator, not sure how he could help.

  The Builders—without their leader, Gally, who was still missing—were ordered to put up barricades at each open Door; they obeyed, although Thomas knew there wasn’t enough time and there weren’t materials to do much good. It almost seemed to him as if the Keepers wanted people busy, wanted to delay the inevitable panic attacks. Thomas helped as the Builders gathered every loose item they could find and piled them in the gaps, nailing things together as best they could. It looked ugly and pathetic and scared him to death—no way that’d keep the Grievers out.

 

‹ Prev