We entered the stables from the south entrance just as a swarm of Ryker guards burst through the door from the north. Mary was caught in the center.
Moving faster than I’d ever seen, Tanner quickly pulled me down into the nearest stall, his hand over my mouth to silence my protests. We hadn’t been seen, but through a barrier of wire mesh and hay we could see everything.
Ten guards had surrounded Mary, their rifles aimed steadily at her. Mary didn’t scream or try to run. She just nodded, indicating that she would go with them peacefully, every inch of her still the dignified queen. I couldn’t tell whether she’d seen me and Tanner enter, if she was trying to help us stay hidden by going without a fight.
I struggled beneath Tanner’s grip, but he held me still as Mary held out her arms, letting them put her in handcuffs. There were so many guards surrounding her, it was like watching a swarm of bees at the hive.
“There’s nothing we can do, Eliza,” Tanner whispered into my ear, gripping my waist tight with one hand, the other still covering my mouth. “There are too many of them. There’s nothing we can do.”
The guards dragged her back toward the palace, shutting the door to the stables behind them with a loud thump. Then we were alone again.
Finally Tanner removed his hand from my mouth. “We couldn’t help her,” he said quickly, his voice low and soothing, the way I would talk to a spooked horse. “You know that as well as I do.”
“You shouldn’t have left her!” I started toward the north door. “We have to go back for her.”
Tanner grabbed me by the shoulders and shook me. “We can’t, Eliza. And we can’t stay here now. We’re sitting ducks. It’ll only make things worse for Mary if you’re imprisoned, too.”
“I can’t leave her with … with
him
!” My mind recoiled at the thought of what Demkoe might do to Mary, how he might punish her for my escape.
“I promise you, Eliza,” Tanner said, taking both my hands in his, “we
will
come back for her. You have my word. But we can’t do it today. Please.” He offered me his hand. “You have to trust me.”
Did I? Did I trust him?
I turned and walked slowly over to Caligula’s stall. “Hey, girl,” I murmured, petting the soft velvet of her nose. In the stall next to hers, Wesley’s horse looked at me with wet, weepy eyes. They both probably missed our little cabin in the forest.
So do I
, I thought to Caligula, but I didn’t say it.
“You let me down,” I told Tanner. “Mary should have been your priority.”
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was worried for you.”
Then, still patting Caligula’s nose, I turned to him. “We will come back for her. I hold you to that promise.”
Tanner’s face relaxed to an expression of understanding. I hadn’t said that I trusted him, but I would leave with him.
“Should we ride?” I asked, patting Caligula’s saddle.
Tanner pulled a set of keys out of his pants pocket. “Actually, I’ve got a Jeep ready for us,” he said. “Gasoline and all. I think someone will notice if you try to leave the gates on one of those huge warhorses.”
“Gasoline?” I stepped away from the horses and Caligula whinnied. “How?”
“I siphoned it from Demkoe’s tanker.”
I hadn’t ridden in a vehicle with gasoline for a year, since before Hollister’s revolt. There hadn’t been any left in England, not anymore. The Rykers must have brought it with them on the tanker.
“Good-bye, girl,” I said, giving Caligula one last hug. “I’ll be back for you.”
“Eliza,” Tanner said, and I heard the worry in his voice. “We need to go. Now.”
“Okay. I’m ready.” I gave one last pat to Caligula and followed Tanner to our escape route.
* * *
The Jeep was army green, with a freshly painted Ryker guard symbol on its hood—Demkoe’s silhouette, painted in red. Its engine roared as Tanner turned the ignition key. I ducked under the glove compartment as we passed through the gates, the guard on duty waving Tanner through with barely a second glance. Then we were off, moving through the streets of London toward the heart of the city.
“Now what?” I asked, sitting back up and turning to him.
The wind blew gusts of road dirt into my eyes, and I had to hold my cap down to keep from losing it. Tanner was driving fast, too fast, but it felt exhilarating, like freedom.
“Now we find a safe place to sleep for the night,” he said, checking the rearview mirror for the hundredth time. But no one was tailing us. There were no other vehicles visible for miles.
I watched the palace grow smaller as we drove farther away into the dark night.
The city looked rougher, more ruined than I remembered from just a few weeks ago. Windows were broken in, areas that had been rebuilt boarded up once more. There was a layer of ash covering almost everything. I couldn’t believe how quickly all the progress Mary had achieved had been undone.
I was quiet for a few minutes, then glanced over at Tanner. His eyes were set on the road ahead of us, but when he caught me watching him he offered me one of his half-smiles.
“How could you smile at a time like this?” I demanded.
This only made his grin widen to full length. “I don’t know. I guess because I’m more sure than ever that we’re going to win. We got out, Eliza. And we’re going to get Mary out next.”
“You didn’t have to wait to bring us with you,” I blurted out. “To escape, I mean. You could have hopped into this Jeep any time and gotten out all by yourself.”
He returned to watching the long road in front of us. “True.”
“So why did you?”
“Because,” he said.
I made no reply, and after a few minutes of quiet he added, “Because I would never have been able to forgive myself if I lost you.”
I wouldn’t look at him. I wouldn’t take his hand, though I knew it was right there for the taking. I focused on the broken road, the burned-out buildings, the still-burning fires that could be signs of life—or death.
Where were we headed? This American boy and I, in our Ryker army uniforms, in the middle of a bruised and broken city. What could we do, just the two of us, against the power of the Rykers?
“Everyone’s in the heart of the city,” Tanner said, as if he’d read my mind. “There’ll be civilians there, but also troops. Demkoe’s got it occupied with his soldiers.”
I looked down at the red lettering on my blue uniform. “Then we should blend right in,” I said.
“That’s the plan,” Tanner said. “I promise, we’ll figure this out.” And then he did something that surprised me—he reached for my hand, squeezing it warmly in his own, in a silent gesture of support.
I pulled my hand quickly back into my own lap and knotted my fingers together.
“Why don’t you let yourself rest for a few minutes?” Tanner said, pretending not to notice. “I’ve got the driving under control.”
He’d slowed down enough so that we were no longer bouncing up and down in our seats.
“I’m not tired,” I said, though I didn’t even have the energy to protest further. Before I knew it I was closing my eyes, lulled by the steady hum of our Jeep’s dusty engine. Soon I was fast asleep.