paired by the time they were twenty. But standing the Watch made it hard—up all night, sleeping most of the day or else walking around in a daze of exhaustion. But when Peter faced the question squarely, he knew that wasn’t the only reason. Something about the idea simply did not seem possible; it applied to others, but not to him. There had been girls for him, and then a few he would have described as women; each had occupied a few months’ time, working him up into such a state that they were, briefly, most of what he thought about. But in the end he had always drifted away or found himself, inexplicably, directing them toward someone he thought of as more suitable.
“Not really, no.”
“What about Sara?”
A feeling of defensiveness rose up inside him. “What about her?”
“Come on, Peter,” Alicia said, and he heard the exasperation in her voice. “I know she wants to pair with you. It’s no secret. She’s First too, it would be a good match. Everyone thinks so.”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“I’m just saying. It’s obvious.”
“Well, it isn’t obvious to me.” He paused. They had never spoken like this before. “Look, I like Sara fine. I’m just not certain I want to pair with her.”
“But you do want to? Pair, I mean.”
“Someday. Maybe. Lish, why are you asking this?”
He turned his face toward her again. She was looking through her scope across the valley, slowly sweeping the horizon line with her rifle.
“Lish?”
“Hold on. Something’s moving.”
He rolled back into position. “Where?”
Alicia quickly lifted the barrel of her rifle, pointing. “Two o’clock.”
He pressed his eye to the scope: a solitary figure, darting from one stand of scrub to another, a hundred meters past the fence line. Human.
“It’s Hightop,” Alicia said.
“How do you know?”
“Too small to be Zander. Nobody else out there.”
“He’s alone?”
“I can’t tell,” Alicia said. “Wait. No. Ten degrees right.”
Peter looked: a flash of green in the scope, skipping like a stone over the desert floor. Then he saw a second, and a third, two hundred meters and closing. Not closing: circling.
“What are they doing? Why don’t they just take him?”
“I don’t know.”
Then they heard it.
“Hey!” The voice was Caleb’s, high and wild and full of fear. He was up and running toward the fence, waving his arms. “Open the gate, open the gate!”
“Flyers.” Alicia rolled to her feet. “Come on.”
They raced back to the crawl space; Alicia quickly opened one of the containers stacked by the hatch. She withdrew a pistol of some kind—short, with a fat, snub-nosed barrel. Peter had no time to ask. They ran back to the edge and Alicia pointed it up and over the turbine field and fired.
The flare shot skyward, dragging a hissing tail of light. Peter instinctively knew he shouldn’t look but he couldn’t stop himself, he looked anyway, his vision instantly seared by the image of the flare’s white-hot center. At its apex the flare seemed to stop, suspended in space. Then it exploded, bathing the field in light.
“We’ve bought him a minute,” Alicia said. “There’s a ladder down the back.”
They slung their weapons over their shoulders; Alicia descended the ladder first, taking it like a pair of poles, her feet not even touching the rungs. As Peter scrambled down, she shot another flare, arcing it over the station toward the field. Then they ran.
Caleb was standing on the far side of the metal gate. The virals had scattered, back into the shadows. “Please! Let me in!”
“Shit, we don’t have a key,” Peter said.
Alicia shouldered her rifle and aimed it at the panel. A burst of fire and noise; a shower of sparks poured forth as the panel shot from its pole.
“Caleb, you’ll have to climb over!”
“I’ll fry!”
“No you won’t, the current’s off!” She looked at Peter. “You think it’s off?”
“How should I know?”
Alicia stepped forward and, before Peter could say anything, pressed her palm to the fence. Nothing happened.
“Hurry, Caleb!”
Caleb curled his fingers between the wires and began to climb. Around them the shadows flattened as the second flare completed its descent. Alicia withdrew a fresh flare from her waist pouch, loaded the pistol, and fired. Up and up it sailed, riding its tail of smoke, and burst above them in a shower of light.
“That’s the last,” she said to Peter. “We’ve got about ten seconds before they figure out the current’s off.” Caleb was straddling the top of the fence now. “Caleb,” she yelled, “move your ass!”
He took the last five meters