and girl looked to each other, then nodded eagerly. Astrid beamed and took the girlâs hand. The others followed suit, making a chain and snaking their way through the bustle of the camp.
âWeâll wait a few days before we start figuring out who they are,â Greer said. âLet âem get settled. Gonzalez wonât blow a gasket over that, right?â
I shook my head. Greer stood up and stretched.
âWell, thatâs two lives saved for the day. How about we shoot for the trifecta? Iâll go see if I can find angry-girl-with-knife. Now
her
we can get moving along.â
I jumped up. âItâs okay. Iâll find her.â
He gave me a look.
âWhat?â
He smiled. âNothing. You know what? Youâre absolutely right. You go after her. Iâll grab my things and get set up.â
Greer jogged off. I gathered some food into a paper bag and set out along the trail. It wasnât long before the noise of the camp receded behind me. The morning was warm and the rain clouds from the day before had passed, leaving the sky achingly blue.
I found the girl right where Iâd left her the night before, sitting at the edge of the mountain wedged between two boulders. She had her back to me and was looking out at the valley below. Her shirt was drying on one of the rocks, leaving her in a gray tank top that exposed the curve of her shoulders, which were as taut as a strung bow. Iâd barely made it into the clearing when she heard me and turned, knife in hand.
I lifted the bag . âThought you could use something to eat.â
She studied it like she was trying to decide if it contained a hidden explosive device.
âThereâs this girl in our camp,â I said, stepping from the dirt trail to the grass. âTomiko? Sheâs twelve. Greer found her hiding out in the health-and-beauty aisle of a Rite Aid. Literally all he did was show her this cookbook he got from the library, and in no time she was making the most amazing biscuits ever. Cakes, too. You know, when we can get sugar and stuff. Which isnât very often, butââ I suddenly realized I was babbling. âAnyway, I managed to score you a few before the kids devoured them all.â
I took another step toward her, and she jabbed the knife out into the space between us.
âRight. No problem. Iâll just leave âem here.â I set the bag at the base of the boulders and retreated. âTheyâre really at their best when theyâre warm, so you might wannaââ
The girl turned her back again. There was a clatter as she set the knife down within easy reach. It would have been nice if Iâd had a plan at that point, but I didnât, so I just found a spot on the grass halfway between her and the tent and settled in to wait. The tent looked like it hadnât been slept in, and I saw through the flap that the clothes Iâd brought were still in a neat pile right beside the uneaten food.
Greer was the master detective, but I couldnât resist starting to look for clues.
Her clothes were unremarkable. Cutoff shorts. Tank top and an old button-down shirt. Black combat boots. It was the kind of thing anyone might have picked out of a Salvation Army delivery.
Her skin was pale, but there were traces of pink on her shoulders, which made me think she had been spending most of her time indoors until just recently. Not surprising, if sheâd been hiding out in the QZ with a bunch of uninfected for the last year.
The only really odd thing was her hair. Fully dry, it was a lighter green, like leaves with the sun behind them. How could she have done that? Hair dye certainly didnât come in a Guard supply drop. A looted salon, maybe? There was a black market in town run by a couple of enterprising guardsmen, but it usually dealt in booze and cigarettes. Of course, I was pretty sure theyâd supply green hair dye if the price was right. So, that was
Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations