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Excerpt:
"T'orn."
Matt shook his head and tried again, making a sputtering sound until
it changed into "Thorn."
"That's
your name? Matt Thorn?" Her smile came more naturally when the boy
nodded and sat up a little straighter. "Well, Matt, how long has
it been since you had hot cereal for breakfast?"
"Long...time."
"Do
you want to help me make it? You could pour it into the water, or
stir it. You aren't afraid of the fire, are you?"
"No."
Matt scooted over next to her without any prompting.
"That's
good." She dug into the supply pack for the bag of cereal. "You
didn't come just for breakfast, did you?"
"Made
me come." He gestured with a lift of his chin at the Azuli, which
watched them from Miranda's abandoned bed.
She
fought not to grin, knowing she would be offended if she were Matt.
"We
can take you home to your parents, if you want. You don't feel sick
anymore, do you?"
"Home?"
Matt shivered. His mouth opened, lips twisting into a curious smile
that was half a rictus of pain. Tears touched his eyes but he blinked
them away. "Home."
"We'll
send you home as soon as we finish breakfast," Ian said.
Miranda
jumped. The boy didn't. She suspected he knew the Scout captain
was awake and listening and the lack of movement had made Matt feel
safe.
"You
might as well come over here and help us make breakfast," she said.
Turning, she saw Ian roll over and kick aside his blankets. He gave
her a cheeky grin and a brief thumbs up, hiding the movement by
standing.
"Diff'rent,"
Matt said. He gestured at the insignia on Ian's shoulder and shirt
pocket. He didn't move aside when the man joined them by the fire.
"Different
from what?" she asked. She didn't need the prompting look from Ian.
"O-others."
He stroked the red streaks on his cheek.
"Other
people hurt you?" Ian said. His lips twitched when the boy nodded
quickly. Miranda wondered if he struggled as she did to keep calm
despite the anger and confirmed suspicions. "We're Scouts, and Scouts
only hurt people to stop them from hurting others. If you tell us
about those other people, we'll try to stop them from hurting other
Wildlings."
Matt
considered, head bowed, drawing into a ball of bent arms and legs.
Miranda wondered if that was a bad sign, or it meant the boy was
simply thinking deeply.
"Hungry,"
he said, raising his head again.
"One
constant in the universe," Ian said with a chuckle. He gestured
at the steaming pot hanging over the flames. "Think it's hot enough?"
"It
had better be," she said. "Matt, did you want to pour, or do you
want me to do it?"
"You."
The boy put his hands on hers, tightening her grip on the bag of
cereal.
Miranda
caught her breath. His touch was so strange; calloused hands; small
hands; the skin gritty with dirt, the nails jagged; skin stretched
tight over hard muscle and sinew. His hands could kill her if Matt
were provoked enough.
He had
touched her voluntarily, no coaxing on her part. Miranda concentrated
on that and not the other details. Matt trusted her, initiated contact,
spoke without threats or punishments or pleading. All in total opposition
to the standard reaction of Wildlings recovered from the forests
of Chorillan.
Miranda
knew then that either the records lied, or there were better, less
damaging ways of recovering the children.
She
let Ian take over the conversation while she stirred the cereal
into the hot water and brought out bowls and spoons. She caught
a glimpse of movement under Coreen's blankets. Like her captain,
the Psych Tech was awake--probably Droban, too--and listening to
the conversation. Knowing Coreen, Miranda suspected she recorded
the conversation and made notes. Likely Droban itched to do a medical
exam on the boy.
Ian
asked Matt about finding food, shelter, and why the Azuli 'made'
him come to them. Matt couldn't differentiate between the 'how'
and the 'why.' The Azuli caught the rags of Matt's shirt in its
teeth and dragged him along when he grew stubborn, or pushed him
with shoulder or head the rest of the time. From the boy's remarks
and his sullen expression, it had taken more than a day to get from
where they had seen him before, to this camp.
Maybe
the boy didn't care why his protector had forced him to contact
the adults. Maybe, Miranda thought, 'why' didn't matter to wild
animals, which Wildlings were at this stage.
But
did a wild animal sit and answer questions, with a vocabulary and
elocution that improved rapidly, and wait for breakfast to finish
cooking? She smiled at that thought and kept stirring the pot.
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