from the radio, listing seven at a time down the page, as Moss had instructed. I wrote until my wrist hurt, my fingers cramped and sore, then twisted the dial to the next line Moss had marked.
It took me nearly an hour, writing down the mumbled nonsense, then listening to it again—twice—to be certain I’d gotten it correct. When I was done I had two blocks of words, seven down and ten across. I set the papers beside each other, moving over every three, then every six, then every nine, recopying the words.
I stared at them for a moment, these new sentences. I shut the radio off and sat there in silence. The colonies have backed out. They cannot provide support for the siege on the City.
I held the radio in my hands, not quite believing it. The colonies weren’t coming. In one day, with one decision, the rebels had lost thousands of soldiers. What did this mean for those who’d already begun fighting? What did this mean for everyone inside the City walls? Moss had been so confident they’d come, that they’d provide the final push needed to secure the City. Everything seemed less certain now.
I sat there, waiting to feel something, anything, but my insides felt hollow and cold. My hands were numb as I set the radio down. My pregnancy sometimes seemed more like a constant, all-consuming sickness than a child growing inside me. But since the siege began I hadn’t felt the heavy nausea. More than eight hours had passed. My stomach wasn’t tense and twisted. I didn’t feel anything, and that nothingness scared me. The doctor’s words kept coming back to me. He’d said it was still possible to lose the child, that stress and strain could cause it all to go away.
I stood, my knees light, and went to the back of the bathroom. Stepping onto the edge of the tub, I could just reach the small metal vent near the ceiling. I’d taken one of the screws out of the bottom of the circular grate, which now slid to the right, around and up, leaving room to reach my hand in. I pulled out the plastic bag nestled in the back of the vent. The gray T-shirt was balled up inside it, secure in its own secret pouch.
I held it in my hands, feeling the ripped hem along the bottom, the tag that hung on by a few loose stitches, the letter C inked in. This might be the last thing I had of Caleb—the only proof he’d existed at all. It seemed so small and pathetic now, so momentary. The thread was already coming apart at the seams.
That word—lose—felt heavier than it ever had before. What if, after weeks of having the baby without knowing, I’d already lost it? For the first time since I’d found out about the pregnancy I was pulled under by grief, the kind that took hold of me suddenly in the weeks after Caleb’s death. However hard it would be to have a child beyond the City walls, I wanted it—it was a part of me, of us. And within a few days, she (why did I think it was a she?) would be the only family I had.
I couldn’t lose any more. There was so little already for me to hold on to. Moss was gone. Caleb was dead. Within days it would be over, the City, Clara, and the Palace receding behind me until I was back in the wild, alone, waiting how long—months? years?—to be called back. She was all I had left.
Please, I thought, wishing for the first time in days that the sickness would come back, that I would feel something—anything—again. I didn’t want to lose her. I didn’t want to lose the possibility of what she would be, of what I could be for her. I couldn’t now. Every time I pushed the idea out of my head it returned, until I found myself sitting on the windowsill, the T-shirt in my hands. I pressed the thin fabric to my face, trying to control my breath, but each one caught somewhere inside me. I stayed there like that, in the quiet of the room, for hours, barely able to force his name past my lips: “Caleb.”
eleven
“THE LIEUTENANT SAID THE SOLDIERS OUTNUMBER THEM three to one.” Aunt Rose pushed her eggs around her plate, prodding them along with her fork. It was the first time I’d seen her without makeup. The skin