Ruin
They didn't leave the cave until the next morning.
Tally squinted in the dawn light, eyes scanning the sky for a fleet of hovercars suddenly rising above the trees. But they hadn't heard any sound of a search all night. Maybe now that the Smoke was destroyed, catching the last few runaways wasn't worth the trouble.
David's hoverboard had spent the night hidden in the cave, and hadn't had any sunlight for a whole day now, but it had just enough charge to get them back up the mountain. They rode to the river. Tally's stomach rumbled after a whole day without food, but the first thing she needed was water. Her mouth was so dry, she could hardly talk.
David knelt at the bank and dipped his head under the icy water. Tally shivered at the sight. Without a blanket or shoes, she'd frozen in the cave all night long, even huddled in David's arms. She needed warm food in her before she could face anything colder than the morning breeze.
"What if the Smoke's still occupied?" she asked. "Where will we get food?"
"You said they put prisoners in the rabbit pen? Where'd the rabbits go?"
"All over."
"Exactly. They should be everywhere by now. And they aren't hard to catch."
She grimaced. "Well, okay. As long as we cook them."
David laughed. "Of course."
"I've never actually started a fire," she admitted.
"Don't worry. You're a natural." He stepped onto his board and held out his hand.
Riding double was something Tally had never done before, and she found herself glad she was with David and not just anyone. She stood in front of him, bodies touching, her arms out, his hands around her waist. They negotiated the turns without words, Tally shifting her weight gradually, waiting for David to follow her lead. As they slowly got the hang of it, their bodies began to move together, threading the board down the familiar path as one.
It worked, as long as they went slowly, but Tally kept her ears open for sounds of pursuit. If a hovercar appeared, a full-speed escape was going to be tricky.
They smelled the Smoke long before they saw it.
From high up the mountain, the buildings had the look of a burned-out campfire, smoking, crumbling, blackened through and through. Nothing moved in the compound, except a few pieces of paper stirred by the wind.
"Looks like it burned all night," Tally said.
David nodded, speechless. Tally grasped his hand, wondering what it was like to see your childhood home reduced to a smoking ruin.
"I'm so sorry, David," she said.
"We have to go down. I need to see if my parents..." He swallowed the words.
Tally searched for signs of anyone remaining in the Smoke. It seemed entirely deserted, but there might be a few Specials in hiding, waiting for stragglers to reappear. "We should wait."
"I can't. My parents' house is on the other side of the ridge. Maybe the Specials didn't see it."
"If they missed it, Maddy and Az will still be there."
"But what if they ran?"
"Then we'll find them. In the meantime, let's not get caught ourselves."
David sighed. "All right."
Tally held his hand tight. They unfolded the hoverboard and waited as the sun climbed, watching for any sign of a human being below. Occasionally, the embers of the fires flared to life in the breeze, the last standing columns of wood collapsing one by one, crumbling into ash.
A few animals rummaged for food, and Tally watched in silent horror as a stray rabbit was taken by a wolf, the short struggle leaving only a patch of blood and fur. This was what was left of nature, raw and wild, only hours after the Smoke had fallen.
"Ready to go down?" David asked after an hour.
"No," Tally said. "But I never will be."
They approached slowly, ready to turn and fly if any Specials appeared. But when they reached the edge of town, Tally felt her anxiety turn to something worse: a horrible certainty that no one remained there.
Her home was gone, replaced by nothing but charred wreckage.
At the rabbit pen, footprints showed where groups of Smokies had been moved in and out through the gates, a whole community turned into cattle. A few rabbits still hopped around on the dirt.
"Well, at least we won't starve," David said.
"I guess not," Tally said, although the sight of the Smoke had stilled her hunger. She wondered how David always managed to think practical thoughts, no matter what horrors were in front of him. "Hey, what's that?"
At one corner of the pen, just outside the fence, clusters of little shapes lay on the ground.