It all gave Thomas a big fat headache.
When he tried to think of Group B and imagine their roles—how he and Aris were basically switched, and how Aris was actually Teresa's counterpart—it twisted his mind. The fact that Chuck had been killed in the end instead of him . . . that was the only major difference that I stood out in the parallels. Were the setups meant to instigate certain conflicts or provoke reactions for WICKED's studies?
'It's all kind of freaky, huh?' Aris asked after letting Thomas digest his story for a while.
'I don't know what the word for it is. But it blows me away how the two groups went through these trippy parallel experiments. Or tests, trials, whatever they were. I mean, if they're testing our responses, I guess it makes sense that we were put through the same thing. Weird, though.'
Right when Thomas stopped speaking the girl in the distance let out a shriek even louder than her now- regular cries of pain and he felt a fresh rush of horror.
'I think I know,' Aris said, so quietly Thomas wasn't sure he'd heard him correctly.
'Huh?'
'I think I know. Why there were two groups.
Thomas looked over at him, could barely see the surprising look of calm on his face. 'You do? What then?'
Aris still didn't seem very winded. 'Well, actually I have two ideas. One is I think these people—WICKED, whoever they are—are trying to weed out the best of both groups to use us somehow. Maybe even breed us or something like that.'
'What?'Thomas was so surprised he almost forgot about the screaming. He couldn't believe anyone would be so sick. 'Breed us? Come on.'
'After going through the Maze and what we just saw happen in that tunnel, you think
'Good that.' Thomas had to admit that the kid had a point. 'Okay, so what was your other theory?' As he asked it Thomas could feel the weariness brought on by the run settling in; his throat felt like someone had poured a glassful of sand down his gullet.
'Kind of the opposite,' Aris responded. 'That instead of wanting survivors from both groups, they only want one group to live through to the end. So they're either weeding out people from the guys
Thomas thought about what he'd said for quite some time before responding. 'But what about the stuff the Rat Man said? That they're testing our responses, building some kind of blueprint? Maybe it's an experiment. Maybe they don't plan for any of us to survive. Maybe they're studying our brains and our reactions and our genes and everything else. When it's all done, we'll be dead and they'll have lots of reports to read.'
'Hmm,' Aris grunted, considering. 'Possibly. I keep trying to figure out why they had one member of the opposite sex in each group.'
'Maybe to see what kind of fights or problems it would cause. Study people's reactions—it's kind of a unique situation.' Thomas almost wanted to laugh. 'I love how we're talking about this—like we're deciding when we need to stop for a klunk.'
Aris actually did laugh, a dry chuckle that made Thomas feel better— actually made him like the new kid even more. 'Man, don't say that. I've had to go for at least an hour.'
It was Thomas's turn to snicker, and right on cue, like he'd heard Aris calling for it, Minho yelled out for everyone to stop.
'Potty break,' he said with his hands on his hips as he caught his breath. 'Bury your klunk and don't do it too close. We'll rest for fifteen, then we'll just walk awhile. I know you shanks can't keep up with Runners like me and Thomas.'
Thomas tuned out—he didn't need directions on how to use the bathroom—and turned to get a look at where they'd stopped. He took a deep, full breath, and when he relaxed his eyes caught on something. A dark shadow of a shape a few hundred yards in front of them, but not directly in the path of their journey. A square of darkness against the faint glow of the town up ahead. It stood out so distinctly he couldn't believe he hadn't noticed it until now.
'Hey!' he yelled, pointing toward it. 'Looks like a little building up there, just a few minutes away, to the right some. You guys see it?'
'Yeah, I see it,' Minho responded, walking up to stand next to him. 'Wonder what it is.'
Before Thomas could respond, two things happened almost simultaneously.
First, the haunted screams of the mystery girl stopped, instantly, cut short as if a door had closed on her. Then, stepping out from behind the dark building up ahead, the figure of a girl appeared, long hair flowing from her shadowed head like black silk.
CHAPTER 20
Thomas couldn't help it. His first instinct was to hope it was her, call out to her. To hope that against all odds she was there, just a few hundred yards away, waiting for him.
Nothing.
Nothing. The abscess left when she disappeared was still in his head—like an empty pool. But... it
Once the girl had stepped out from behind the building, or more likely from
'You think that's Teresa?' Newt asked, as if he'd read Thomas's mind.
Thomas nodded before he knew what he was doing. He quickly looked around to see if anyone had noticed. Didn't seem so. 'No clue,' he finally said.
'You think
Minho grunted. 'Better bet is she was the one torturing somebody. Probably killed her and put her out of her misery when she saw us coming.' Then for some reason he clapped his hands once. 'Okay, then, who wants to go meet this nice young lady?'
How Minho could be so lighthearted at times like this just baffled Thomas. 'I'll do it,' he said, way too loudly. He didn't want to make it obvious that he hoped it was Teresa.
'I was just kidding, shuck-face,' Minho said. 'Let's all go over there. She could have an army of psycho girl ninjas hiding in that shack of hers.'
'Psycho girl ninjas?' Newt repeated, his voice showing he was surprised, if not annoyed, by Minho's attitude.
'Yeah. Let's go.' Minho started walking forward.
Thomas acted on a sudden and unexpected instinct. 'No!' He lowered his voice. 'No. You guys stay here—I'll go talk to her. Maybe it's a trap or something. We'd be idiots to all go over there and fall right into it.'
'And you're
'Well, we can't just walk on by without checking it out. I'll go. If something happens or gets suspicious, I'll call for help.'