Of course they were. Six hours of silence from him made them nervous—twenty-four probably had them preparing for war.
“Tell me what’s happened in the last day,” he said, as the rebel guard kept stride beside him.
The sentry’s jaw tightened. “Four more gone to hunger. Medicine reserves are completely depleted in the south quarter. And they are saying the Heart’s cutting off the last of the food shipments.”
Jameson nodded once, absorbing the information without letting it show on his face. Leaders didn’t have the luxury of visible despair. “Getsome rest, Talia. You’ve been on watch duty for two days. You look like shit.”
She huffed a wet laugh. “Says the man with blood on his boots.”
He glanced down. Not his blood. Never his own, somehow. Always someone else’s sacrifice staining his path. This time a Cardinal rebel that had accidentally stepped in the way of a Veyra patrol vehicle. They had not asked questions, didn’t even bother to stop when they shot him down for simply stepping into the road too early.
The mud sucked at Jameson’s boots with each step through the rebel camp, a wet resistance that felt like the Boundary itself was trying to hold him back from racing into the Heart and tearing it apart to find Shade. Twenty-four hours down, forty-eight more to go.
Two days of hell.
The rebel camp sprawled before him. What had begun as a handful of disgruntled Boundary residents had grown into a force nearly a thousand strong. They’d transformed the abandoned factory district into something resembling a military base, if military bases were built from salvage and determination.
His eyes watered as he squinted through the smoke from the barrel fires mixing with the acrid smell of burning plastic—whatever the rebels had found to keep warm tonight. The small fires cast long shadows across mud-packed pathways, the orange glow painting the rusted mental structures in false warmth.
Sentries stood at each strategic point, some armed with Heart rifles pilfered from dead guards, others with cruder weapons fashioned from scrap. Between the structures, tents created using tarps and old billboards housed those who’d lost everything to the Heart’s brutality. He moved between them without needing to look, his feet knowing every incline, every drainage ditch from night after night of pacing every inch of this joyless refuge.
Jameson pushed farther into the camp, acknowledging nods with slight inclines of his head. They parted for him without conscious thought, a sea of starving, hopeless people.
He was the Ghost to them. The smuggler who could slip between rings unseen. The man who’d given the rebellion a backbone.
He hated the reverence in their eyes. Hated even more that he hadn’t earned it.
Headquarters stood ahead against the smoggy sky—an abandoned administrative building that had once processed the factory workers. Its windows were blown out, replaced with metal sheets that kept out rain but trapped heat. The concrete walls were scarred with bullet holes from the last time the Veyra had ventured this deep into the Boundary.
Twenty-three dead that day. Twelve of them children.
Jameson paused at the entrance, letting the memory wash over him as his fingers brushed over one of the bullet’s scars. The screams. The blood. Shadera standing in the center of it all, knives flashing like extensions of her rage, taking down five Veyra officers before the rest retreated. He’d known then. Known as he watched her covered in the blood of revolution, eyes wild with protective fury, that she would become a symbol to the cause.
He just never imagined she would become it in captivity.
He pushed through the door, climbed the stairs that groaned under his weight, and entered what had once been an overseer’s office. Maps covered every surface—the Heart’s layout and distribution centers, Cardinal and Boundary rebel camps, the underground tunnels that connected them all. Reports stacked in careful piles, each one detailing food shortages, medical needs, weapons inventory. The rebellion’s nervous system.
Jameson sank into the chair behind the desk, his body suddenly leaden. Days without sleep caught up with him in a rush, blurring theedges of his vision. He rubbed his eyes, the grit beneath his lids feeling like ground glass.
The door opened without a knock. Lieutenant Rook entered first, followed by Sergeant Samuels, both pairs of eyes narrowing on him with worry.
“Where the fuck have you been?” Rook scolded, her fingers wrapping around the edge of her tactical vest. She tilted her shaved head as she waited for an answer, making the burn scars that crawled up her neck and over the side of her face catch the shadows.
Jameson leaned back, a smile ghosting across his lips. “Charming, Rook. It’s why I keep you around.”
“You keep me around because I’m the best sniper you have ever seen.” She didn’t smile back. “Where were you, Ghost? The camp was getting worried.”
“Jaeger’s place.” Jameson kept his voice light to mask the fear. “Learning exactly how fucked we might be.”
Samuels took the seat across from him, pulling his gun from his back and resting it between his legs. Samuels was shorter than Rook, stockier with the kind of dense muscle that came from hauling bodies.
“You’ve heard about the prison massacre then? The singing?” Samuels asked.
Jameson nodded.
“Well, the singing has spread,” Samuels started again. “Every quarter of the Boundary will know the anthem soon. They’re singing it in the streets at night.”
“Do they know it was Shade? Know that it was her they were singing for?” The words caught in Jameson’s throat.