They went through the West Door into Section Eight and made their way down several corridors, Thomas
right beside Minho as he turned right and left without seeming to think about it, running all the while. The
early-morning light had a sharp sheen about it, making everything look bright and crisp—the ivy, the
cracked walls, the stone blocks of the ground. Though the sun had a few hours before hitting the noon spot
up above, there was plenty of light to see by. Thomas kept up with Minho as best he could, having to
sprint every once in a while to catch back up.
They finally made it to a rectangular cut in a long wall to the north that looked like a doorway without a
door. Minho ran straight through it without stopping. “This leads from Section Eight—the middle left
square—to Section One—the top left square. Like I said, this passage is always in the same spot, but the
route here might be a little different because of the walls rearranging themselves.”
Thomas followed him, surprised at how heavy his breaths had already become. He hoped it was only
jitters, that his breathing would steady soon.
They ran down a long corridor to the right, passing several turns to the left. When they reached the end
of the passage, Minho slowed to barely more than a walk and reached behind him to pull out a notepad
and pencil from a side pocket in his backpack. He jotted a note, then put them back, never fully stopping.
Thomas wondered what he’d written, but Minho answered him before he could pose the question.
“I rely … mostly on memory,” the Keeper huffed, his voice finally showing a hint of strain. “But about
every fifth turn, I write something down to help me later. Mostly just related to stuff from yesterday—
what’s different today. Then I can use yesterday’s Map to make today’s. Easy-peasy, dude.”
Thomas was intrigued. Minho did make it sound easy.
They ran for a short while before they reached an intersection. They had three possible choices, but
Minho went to the right without hesitating. As he did so, he pulled one of his knives from a pocket and,
without missing a beat, cut a big piece of ivy off the wall. He threw it on the ground behind him and kept
running.
“Bread crumbs?” Thomas asked, the old fairy tale popping into his mind. Such odd glimpses of his past
had almost stopped surprising him.
“Bread crumbs,” Minho replied. “I’m Hansel, you’re Gretel.”
On they went, following the course of the Maze, sometimes turning right, sometimes turning left. After
every turn, Minho cut and dropped a three-foot length of ivy. Thomas couldn’t help being impressed—
Minho didn’t even need to slow down to do it.
“All right,” the Keeper said, breathing heavier now. “Your turn.”
“What?” Thomas hadn’t really expected to do anything but run and watch on his first day.
“Cut the ivy now—you gotta get used to doing it on the run. We pick ’em up as we come back, or kick
’em to the side.”
Thomas was happier than he thought he’d be at having something to do, though it took him a while to
become good at it. First couple of times, he had to sprint to catch up after cutting the ivy, and once he
nicked his finger. But by his tenth attempt, he could almost match Minho at the task.
On they went. After they’d run awhile—Thomas had no idea for how long or how far, but he guessed
three miles—Minho slowed to a walk, then stopped altogether. “Break time.” He swung off his pack and
pulled out some water and an apple.
Thomas didn’t have to be convinced to follow Minho’s lead. He guzzled his water, relishing the wet
coolness as it washed down his dry throat.
“Slow down there, fishhead,” Minho yelped. “Save some for later.”
Thomas stopped drinking, sucked in a big satisfied breath, then burped. He took a bite of his apple,
feeling surprisingly refreshed. For some reason, his thoughts turned back to the day Minho and Alby had
gone to look at the dead Griever—when everything had gone to klunk. “You never really told me what
happened to Alby that day—why he was in such bad shape. Obviously the Griever woke up, but what
happened?”
Minho had already put his backpack on. He looked ready to go. “Well, shuck thing wasn’t dead. Alby
poked at it with his foot like an idiot and that bad boy suddenly sprang to life, spikes flaring, its fat body
rollin’ all over him. Something was wrong with it, though—didn’t really attack like usual. It seemed like
it was mostly just trying to get out of there, and poor Alby was in the way.”
“So it ran away from you guys?” From what Thomas had seen only a few nights before, he couldn’t
imagine it.
Minho shrugged. “Yeah, I guess—maybe it needed to get recharged or something. I don’t know.”
“What could’ve been wrong with it? Did you see an injury or anything?” Thomas didn’t know what
kind of answer he was searching for, but he was sure there had to be a clue or lesson to learn from what
happened.
Minho thought for a minute. “No. Shuck thing just looked dead—like a wax statue. Then boom, it was
back to life.”
Thomas’s mind was churning, trying to get somewhere, only he didn’t know where or which direction
to even start in. “I just wonder where it went. Where they always go. Don’t you?” He was quiet for a
second, then, “Haven’t you ever thought of following them?”
“Man, you do have a death wish, don’t you? Come on, we gotta go.” And with that Minho turned and
started running.
As Thomas followed, he struggled to figure out what was tickling the back of his mind. Something
about that Griever being dead and then not dead, something about where it had gone once it sprang to life
…
Frustrated, he put it aside and sprinted to catch up.
Thomas ran right behind Minho for two more hours, sprinkled with little breaks that seemed to get shorter
every time. Good shape or not, Thomas was feeling the pain.
Finally, Minho stopped and pulled off his backpack once more. They sat on the ground, leaning against
the soft ivy as they ate lunch, neither one of them talking much. Thomas relished every bite of his
sandwich and veggies, eating as slowly as possible. He knew Minho would make them get up and go once
the food disappeared, so he took his time.
“Anything different today?” Thomas asked, curious.
Minho reached down and patted his backpack, where his notes rested. “Just the usual wall movements.
Nothing to get your skinny butt excited about.”
Thomas took a long swig of water, looking up at the ivy-covered wall opposite them. He caught a flash
of silver and red, something he’d seen more than once that day.
“What’s the deal with those beetle blades?” he asked. They seemed to be everywhere. Then Thomas
remembered what he’d seen in the Maze—so much had happened he hadn’t had the chance to mention it.
“And why do they have the word wicked written on their backs?”
“Never been able to catch one.” Minho finished up his meal and put his lunch box away. “And we don’t
know what that word means—probably just something to scare us. But they have to be spies. For them.
Only thing we can reckon.”
“Who is them, anyway?” Thomas asked, ready for more answers. He hated the people behind the
Maze. “Anybody have a clue?”
“We don’t know jack about the stupid Creators.” Minho’s face reddened as he squeezed his hands
together like he was choking someone. “Can’t wait to rip their—”
But before the Keeper could finish, Thomas was on his feet and across the corridor. “What’s that?” he
interrupted, heading for a dull glimmer of gray he’d just noticed behind the ivy on the wall, about head
high.
“Oh, yeah, that,” Minho said, his voice completely indifferent.
Thomas reached in and pulled apart the curtains of ivy, then stared blankly at a square of metal riveted
to the stone with words stamped across it in big capital letters. He put his hand out to run his fingers
across them, as if he didn’t believe his eyes.
WORLD IN CATASTROPHE:
KILLZONE EXPERIMENT DEPARTMENT
He read the words aloud, then looked back at Minho. “What’s this?” It gave him a chill—it had to have
something to do with the Creators.
“I don’t know, shank. They’re all over the place, like freaking labels for the nice pretty Maze they built.
I quit bothering to look at ’em a long time ago.”
Thomas turned back to stare at the sign, trying to suppress the feeling of doom that had risen inside him.
“Not much here that sounds very good. Catastrophe. Killzone. Experiment. Real nice.”
“Yeah, real nice, Greenie. Let’s go.”
Reluctantly, Thomas let the vines fall back into place and swung his backpack over his shoulders. And
off they went, those six words burning holes in his mind.
An hour after lunch, Minho stopped at the end of a long corridor. It was straight, the walls, solid, with no
hallways branching off.
“The last dead end,” he said to Thomas. “Time to go back.”
Thomas sucked in a deep breath, trying not to think about only being halfway done for the day. “Nothing
new?”
“Just the usual changes to the way we got here—day’s half over,” Minho replied as he looked at his
watch emotionlessly. “Gotta go back.” Without waiting for a response, the Keeper turned and set off at a
run in the direction from which they’d just come.
Thomas followed, frustrated that they couldn’t take time to examine the walls, explore a little. He
finally pulled in stride with Minho. “But—”
“Just shut it, dude. Remember what I said earlier—can’t take any chances. Plus, think about it. You
really think there’s an exit anywhere? A secret trapdoor or something?”
“I don’t know … maybe. Why do you ask it that way?”
Minho shook his head, spat a big wad of something nasty to his left. “There’s no exit. It’s just more of
the same. A wall is a wall is a wall. Solid.”
Thomas felt the heavy truth of it, but pushed back anyway. “How do you know?”
“Because people willing to send Grievers after us aren’t gonna give us an easy way out.”
This made Thomas doubt the whole point of what they were doing. “Then why even bother coming out
here?”
Minho looked over at him. “Why bother? Because it’s here—gotta be a reason. But if you think we’re
gonna find a nice little gate that leads to Happy Town, you’re smokin’ cow klunk.”
Thomas looked straight ahead, feeling so hopeless he almost slowed to a stop. “This sucks.”
“Smartest thing you’ve said yet, Greenie.”
Minho blew out a big puff of air and kept running, and Thomas did the only thing he knew to do. He
followed.
The rest of the day was a blur of exhaustion to Thomas. He and Minho made it back to the Glade, went to
the Map Room, wrote up the day’s Maze route, compared it to the previous day’s. Then there were the
walls closing and dinner. Chuck tried talking to him several times, but all Thomas could do was nod and
shake his head, only half hearing, he was so tired.
Before twilight faded to blackness, he was already in his new favorite spot in the forest corner, curled
up against the ivy, wondering if he could ever run again. Wondering how he could possibly do the same
thing tomorrow. Especially when it seemed so pointless. Being a Runner had lost its glamour. After one
day.
Every ounce of the noble courage he’d felt, the will to make a difference, the promise to himself to
reunite Chuck with his family—it all vanished into an exhausted fog of hopeless, wretched weariness.
He was somewhere very close to sleep when a voice spoke in his head, a pretty, feminine voice that
sounded as if it came from a fairy goddess trapped in his skull. The next morning, when everything started
going crazy, he’d wonder if the voice had been real or part of a dream. But he heard it all the same, and
remembered every word:
Tom, I just triggered the Ending.
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