we’d all die. Does that sound like a failure?”
“Water we can’t get to is the same as no water at all. How are you going to kill the spiders that guard it, Em?”
Why does he have to be so difficult? I hate him.
“We don’t know yet,” I say. “We will find a way. Now, about our food situation. Gaston, assuming we eat small meals, how long will the shuttle’s supplies last?”
Gaston glances across the room, at Borjigin, the half-circle wisp of a boy with big teeth and straight hair as black as his coveralls. When I left for the warehouse, he and Opkick were doing inventory on the storerooms.
“Twelve days,” Borjigin says. “If we stretch it.”
I feel some of the pressure ease out of the room. A bubble of calm sets in: we’re in bad shape, but we’re not going to die tomorrow.
Then, that bubble bursts.
“It’s worse than that.”
Spingate. She’s standing in the back wall’s open door. She must have been on Deck Two, maybe in one of the labs. She holds up a white package: CRACKERS.
“This came from a bin we opened when we landed, not even two days ago.”
She waves her bracer above the package.
The jewels flash orange.
“Contaminated,” she says. “Enough to make us sick. Maybe even enough to kill us. Everything in the open bins is contaminated. We have to assume the only safe food is in bins that are still sealed. Even those might go bad.”
I look at Gaston.
“How many bins did we already open?”
He hesitates before answering. “About half of them.”
We have, at most, seven days’ worth of food left. Not enough time to farm. Maybe enough to learn to trap those small animals, but how many of those would we need—every single day—to feed three hundred people?
Gaston looks nervous, like he thinks the crowd is about to attack him.
“Not my fault,” he says. “We didn’t know about the mold.”
Beckett stands up. The tan-skinned redhead has said almost nothing since my group merged with Bishop’s, but he’s suddenly so mad he can’t help himself.
“Why did you open so many bins, Gaston?” Beckett points to the gear symbol on his own forehead. “A real scientist would have tested first, made sure there was no reaction from the environment!”
Gaston huffs. “You’re a real scientist?”
“I wouldn’t have ruined half our food!”
Grumbles of agreement, even a few shouts—Gaston couldn’t have known, yet people blame him anyway.
This room is growing angry, fast.
Bawden points at some of the new kids. “The food would last longer if it wasn’t for all of these new empties.”
The coffin room falls quiet.
That word again.
O’Malley was embarrassed he said it. Bawden is not.
I don’t know the names of all the Xolotl kids, but I recognize their faces. On their foreheads, symbols: circles, yes, but also circle-stars, half-circles, gears, circle-crosses and a double-ring. On the foreheads of the new faces, though, I see only one symbol.
The empty circle. Like mine.
I scan the crowd, find O’Malley. I know full well he already counted.
“Are all of the new kids circles?”
He nods.
What does that mean? An entire shuttle full of my people? No, everyone here is “my people.” In only one other place were all the symbols circles: the countless massacred bodies in Bishop’s section of the Xolotl.
I see some people my age glaring at the new kids. The children sense this sudden hostility. They lean into each other, hold each other, eyes flicking from one black-clad person to the next.
Can we really be capable of turning on each other this fast? We’re not even hungry yet—what will happen when we are?
“Bawden, that word is off-limits,” I say. “Don’t use it again.”
She sneers. “It doesn’t mean anything. Their circles are empty. And you can’t tell me what to do.”
A metal-on-metal gong reverberates through the room, makes everyone jump. All heads turn toward Bishop: he has smashed the flat of his red axe against the red wall. He stares straight at Bawden.
“Em is our leader,” Bishop says. His voice is calm, but unforgiving. “That means she can tell you what to do. She got us this far, didn’t she?”
Bawden stares at Bishop as if she’s ready to fight him, but he isn’t being aggressive. He’s asking her to cooperate, not ordering her. That seems to make a difference.
She looks at me. “Fine. I won’t use that word anymore.”
Not an apology, but it’s something.
How can we know a word is bad, but not know why it’s bad?
Aramovsky stands on a closed coffin.
“We shouldn’t fight each other,” he says. “The mold is our