Soon they were all sitting together. The goal was to talk over what should come next, but the reality was
they had nothing to say. The group of four just stared at the floor and said nothing. For some reason,
Thomas couldn’t get Janson out of his head. Could going back really be a way to save Newt? Every part
of him rebelled against the idea of returning to WICKED, but if he did go back, and was able to complete
the testing …
Minho broke the sullen silence.
“I want you three to listen to me.” He took a moment to look at each one of them, then continued. “Ever
since we broke out of WICKED, I’ve basically gone along with whatever you slintheads ended up saying
we should do. And I haven’t complained. Much.” He gave Thomas a wry grin. “But right here, right now,
I’m making a decision and you’re going to do what I say. And if anyone pushes back, to hell with you.”
Thomas knew what his friend wanted, and he was glad for it.
“I know we have bigger goals in mind,” Minho continued. “We need to connect with the Right Arm,
figure out what to do about WICKED—all that save-the-world klunk. But first we’re going to find Newt.
This isn’t open for discussion. The four of us—all of us—are flying to wherever we need to go, and
we’re getting Newt out of there.”
“They call it the Crank Palace,” Brenda said. Thomas turned to her and she was staring off into space.
“It has to be what he was talking about. Some of those Red Shirts probably broke into the Berg, found
Newt and saw that he was infected. Let him leave us a note. I don’t have any doubt that’s what happened.”
“Sounds fancy,” Minho said. “You’ve been there?”
“No. Every major city has a Crank Palace—a place where they send the infected and try to make it
bearable for them until they reach the Gone. I don’t know what they do to them then, but it’s not a pretty
place to be, no matter who you are, so I can only imagine. Immunes run things there, and get paid a lot for
it because a non-Immune would never risk catching the Flare. If you want to go, we should think long and
hard about it first. We’re completely out of ammunition, so we’ll be unarmed.”
Despite the ominous description, Minho had a glimmer of hope in his eyes. “Long and hard thinking
done. You know where the closest one is?”
“Yeah,” Jorge answered. “We passed over it on the way here. It’s just on the far side of this valley,
right up against the mountains to the west.”
Minho clapped his hands once. “Then that’s where we’re going. Jorge, get this piece of klunk up in the
sky.”
Thomas expected at least a little argument or resistance. But none came.
“I’ll be glad for a little adventure, muchacho,” Jorge said, standing up. “We’ll be there in twenty
minutes.”
Jorge was true to his word on the timing. He landed the Berg in a clearing along the beginnings of a forest
that stretched up the surprisingly green mountainside. About half of the trees were dead, but the other half
looked as if they’d just begun to recover from years of massive heat spells. It made Thomas sad to think
that the world would probably recover from the sun flares just fine someday, only to find itself
uninhabited.
He stepped off the cargo ramp and took a good look at the wall surrounding what had to be the Crank
Palace just a few hundred feet away. It was made of thick planks of wood. The closest gate was just
beginning to open, and two people appeared, both of them holding huge Launchers. They looked
exhausted, but wearily they took a defensive stance and aimed their weapons—they’d obviously heard or
seen the Berg’s approach.
“Not a good start,” Jorge said.
One of the guards shouted something, but Thomas couldn’t hear what he’d said. “Let’s just go over
there, talk to them. They must be immune if they have those Launchers.”
“Unless the Cranks took over,” offered Minho, but then he looked at Thomas with an odd grin. “Either
way, we’re going in, and we’re not leaving without Newt.”
The group held their heads up high and slowly walked to the gate, making sure not to do anything that
would cause alarm. The last thing Thomas wanted was to be shot by a Launcher grenade again. As they
got closer, he saw that the two guards looked worse up close. They were filthy, sweaty and covered in
bruises and scratches.
They stopped at the gate and one of the guards stepped forward.
“Who the hell are you people?” he asked. He had black hair and a mustache and was taller than his
partner by a few good inches. “You don’t look much like the science goons that come in sometimes.”
Jorge did the talking, just as he had at the airport when they’d arrived in Denver. “You wouldn’t have
known we were coming, muchacho. We’re from WICKED, and one of our guys got captured and taken
here by mistake. We’ll be picking him up.”
Thomas was surprised. What Jorge had said was technically the truth, when he thought about it.
The guard didn’t seem too impressed. “You think I give a crap about you and your fancy WICKED
jobs? You’re not the first uppity-up to drop in here and act like you own the place. You wanna come hang
out with Cranks? Be my guest. Especially after what’s been going on lately.” He stepped to the side and
made an exaggerated sweeping gesture of welcome. “Enjoy your stay at the Crank Palace. No refunds or
exchanges if you lose an arm or eyeball.”
Thomas could almost smell the tension in the air, and he worried that Minho would add some smart
remark and send these guys over the edge, so he spoke up quickly.
“What do you mean ‘what’s been going on lately’? What’s happening?”
The guy shrugged. “It’s just not a very happy place, and that’s all you need to know.” He didn’t offer
anything more.
Thomas already disliked the way things were going. “Well … do you know if any new”—saying
Cranks didn’t feel right to Thomas—“people were brought here in the last day or two? Do you have a
register?”
The other guard—short and stocky, his head shaved—cleared his throat, then spit. “Who you lookin’
for? A he or a she?”
“A he,” Thomas answered. “His name is Newt. A little taller than me, blond hair, kinda long. Has a
limp.”
The guy spit again. “I might know somethin’. But knowin’ and tellin’ are two different things. You kids
look like you got plenty of money. Wanna share?”
Thomas, daring to let himself hope, looked back at Jorge, whose face had tightened in anger.
Minho spoke before Jorge could. “We’ve got money, shuck-face. Now tell us where our friend is.”
The guard jabbed the Launcher toward them a little more fiercely. “Show me your cash cards or this
conversation is over. I want at least a thousand.”
“He’s got it all,” Minho said, jabbing a thumb at Jorge as his eyes lasered in on the guard. “Greedy
slinthead.”
Jorge pulled his card out and waved it in the air. “You’ll have to shoot me dead to take this, and you
know it won’t do any good without my prints. You’ll get your money, hermano. Now show us the way.”
“All right, then,” the man said. “Follow me. And remember, if any of your body parts become detached
due to an unfortunate encounter with a Crank, I highly advise you to leave said body part behind and run
like hell. Unless it’s a leg, of course.”
He turned on his heels and walked through the opened gate.
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