Jen did an impression, walking around with her arms dragging from imaginary loaded-down bags. Even though Luke had only seen her brothers from a distance, he caught the resemblance and laughed.

'Your brothers would never turn you in,' he protested. 'Would they?'

'Of course not,' Jen agreed. 'They lo-ove me.' She hugged herself mockingly and flopped back onto the couch beside Luke. 'Anyhow, they wouldn't be smart enough to figure out how to turn me in without getting the rest of the family in trouble. What about your brothers?'

'They're not stupid,' Luke said defensively. 'Or-do you mean-'

'Would they ever betray you?' Jen narrowed her eyes, truly curious. 'Not now, necessarily, but, say, years from now, if your parents were dead and it wouldn't hurt anybody but you, and they'd get lots of money for it-'

It was a question Luke had never considered. But he knew the answer.

'Never,' he said, his voice cracking with earnestness. 'I can trust them. I mean, we grew up together.'

It was strange how he could be so sure, because they barely took time even to tease him anymore. Matthew was getting very serious with his girlfriend, and spent every spare moment at her house. Mark had suddenly gone basketball-crazy, and talked Dad into nailing an old tire rim to the front of the barn for a hoop. Luke could hear him outside, throwing balls late into the night. No matter how certain he was of their loyalty, Luke sometimes felt like his brothers had outgrown him. He missed them.

But it didn't matter. He had Jen now.

Luke kept Jen from talking about the rally the rest of that day, and they didn't even go near the computer. They just had fun. He crawled back to his house a few hours later, thinking that he didn't mind at all anymore, having to hide. He could go on this way forever, as long as he got to visit Jen. The leaves would come back to the trees soon, and he'd feel even safer on his trips to her house. And when planting season started, Dad would be out in the fields all day, and Luke could see Jen all the time.

But April came before planting season.

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

It rained the first two weeks of April, and Luke was in a tizzy wondering when he would ever get to see Jen again. Finally the ground dried out, and Dad headed out to the fields to plow. Luke raced to Jen's house.

'Oh, good!' she greeted him. 'You can get the advance battle plans. I was afraid we were just going to have to pick you up Thursday night and fill you in then.'

Luke carefully slid the door shut behind him and straightened the blinds so he and Jen would be totally hidden. Then he turned to face her.

'What are you talking about?' he asked. But he knew. His heart began to thump harder than it had in his rush through the backyards.

'The rally, of course,' Jen said impatiently. 'Everything's set. I'm taking one of my parents' cars, and I'm picking up three other kids on my way. But I made sure there'd be room for you. You should feel lucky-lots of kids are just going to walk. We're all meeting at the president's house at 6 A.M.'

Luke clutched the cord to the blinds.

'Do you know how to drive?' he asked.

'Well enough.' She flashed him a wicked grin. 'My brothers told me how. Come on.'

She waved him over to the couch. He sank into it while Jen perched on the edge.

'What if the Population Police stop you before you get to the capital?' he asked.

'Us, you mean. We. You're going, too, remember? Don't worry-nobody'll stop us.' She giggled. 'I checked the national employee staffing schedules through the computer. Let's just say several of the Population Police got some unexpected days off.'

'You mean you changed their schedules? You can do that?'

Jen nodded, a wicked gleam in her eye.

'It took me a whole month to figure out how, but you are now looking at an accomplished hacker.'

Dimly, Luke realized why Jen had seemed so relaxed and happy on his last several visits. They'd been vacations for her, breaks from intense work on plans for the rally. He looked closer and saw the fatigue in her eyes. She looked like a younger version of Mom after a twelve-hour shift in the chicken factory, or Dad after a long day of baling hay. But there was something more in her expression-his parents had never looked so feverishly giddy.

'What if someone finds out what you did? And changes it back?'

Jen shook her head. 'They won't. I was very selective- I coordinated everyone's travel plans and only eliminated the police who had to be eliminated. Aren't you excited? We're going to be free after all these years.' She leaned down and pulled a sheaf of papers out from under the couch. 'Best hiding place in the world. The maid's too lazy to clean under there. Now, let's see, I'll pick you up at 10 P.M., and-'

Luke was glad she was looking at the papers instead of him. He wouldn't have been able to meet her eyes.

'Okay, okay, so nobody's going to be caught on the way to the capital. But once you're there, at the president's house, someone will call the Population Police, and then-' Luke felt panicky just thinking about it.

Jen wasn't fazed. 'So what?' she asked. 'I don't care who gets called once we're there. Heck, I may call the Population Police myself. They're not going to do anything to a crowd of a thousand, especially not when lots of us are related to Government officials. We'll make them listen to us. We're a revolution!'

Luke looked away. 'But your friends-you were mad at them because they weren't into it-what if they don't show up?'

'What do you mean?' Jen's voice was fierce.

Luke could barely speak for the panic welling inside him. 'In the chat room, they were making jokes. Carlos and Sean and the others. You said they weren't taking it seriously.'

'Oh, that. That was-a long time ago. They're all on board. They're psyched. Why, Carlos is my lieutenant in all of this. You wouldn't believe how much he's helped. So, okay, ten o'clock, and then it's eight hours to the capital, and-' she consulted her papers again. 'What kind of sign do you want to carry? 'I deserve a life' or 'End the Population Law now!' or-this is one I found in an old book-'Give me liberty or give me death'?'

Luke tried to imagine what Jen seemed to be taking for granted. He could get in a car. He'd sat in the pickup in the barn-a car wasn't much different And for eight hours, that would be all he had to do-sit. Not that difficult. Except that panic would be coursing through him for the entire eight hours because of where the car was going. And then to get out, in public, at the president's house? And carry a sign? His imagination failed. He broke out in a cold sweat.

'Jen, I-' he started.

'Yes?'

Jen waited. The silence between them seemed to be growing, like a balloon. Luke struggled to speak.

'I can't go.'

Jen gaped at him.

'I can't,' he said again, weakly.

Jen shook her head briskly. 'Yes, you can,' she said. 'I know you're scared-who isn't? But this is important. Do you want to hide all your life, or do you want to change history?'

Luke made a stab at humor.

'Isn't there another choice?'

Jen didn't laugh. She sprang from the couch.

'Another choice. Another choice.' She paced, then jerked back to face Luke. 'Sure. You can be a coward and hope someone else changes the world for you. You can hide up in that attic of yours until someone knocks at your door and says, 'Oh, yeah, they freed the hidden. Want to come out?' Is that what you want?'

Luke didn't answer.

'You've got to come, Luke, or you'll hate yourself the rest of your life. When you don't have to hide anymore, even years from now, there'll always be some small part of you whispering, 'I don't deserve this. I didn't fight for it.

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