Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Requiem
Requiem
Requiem
Ebook410 pages6 hours

Requiem

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

The third and final book in Lauren Oliver’s powerful New York Times bestselling trilogy about forbidden love, revolution, and the power to choose.

Now an active member of the resistance, Lena has transformed. The nascent rebellion has ignited into an all-out revolution, and Lena is at the center of the fight.

After rescuing Julian from a death sentence, Lena and her friends fled to the Wilds. But the Wilds are no longer a safe haven. Pockets of rebellion have opened throughout the country, and the government cannot deny the existence of Invalids. Regulators infiltrate the borderlands to stamp out the rebels.

As Lena navigates the increasingly dangerous terrain of the Wilds, her best friend, Hana, lives a safe, loveless life in Portland as the fiancée of the young mayor. They live side by side in a world that divides them until, at last, their stories converge.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMar 5, 2013
ISBN9780062202963
Author

Lauren Oliver

Lauren Oliver is the cofounder of media and content development company Glasstown Entertainment, where she serves as the President of Production. She is also the New York Times bestselling author of the YA novels Replica, Vanishing Girls, Panic, and the Delirium trilogy: Delirium, Pandemonium, and Requiem, which have been translated into more than thirty languages. The film rights to both Replica and Lauren's bestselling first novel, Before I Fall, were acquired by Awesomeness Films. Before I Fall was adapted into a major motion picture starring Zoey Deutch. It debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2017, garnering a wide release from Open Road Films that year. Oliver is a 2012 E. B. White Read-Aloud Award nominee for her middle-grade novel Liesl & Po, as well as author of the middle-grade fantasy novel The Spindlers and The Curiosity House series, co-written with H.C. Chester. She has written one novel for adults, Rooms. Oliver co-founded Glasstown Entertainment with poet and author Lexa Hillyer. Since 2010, the company has developed and sold more than fifty-five novels for adults, young adults, and middle-grade readers. Some of its recent titles include the New York Times bestseller Everless, by Sara Holland; the critically acclaimed Bonfire, authored by the actress Krysten Ritter; and The Hunger by Alma Katsu, which received multiple starred reviews and was praised by Stephen King as “disturbing, hard to put down” and “not recommended…after dark.” Oliver is a narrative consultant for Illumination Entertainment and is writing features and TV shows for a number of production companies and studios. Oliver received an academic scholarship to the University of Chicago, where she was elected Phi Beta Kappa. She received a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from New York University. www.laurenoliverbooks.com.

Read more from Lauren Oliver

Related to Requiem

Titles in the series (3)

View More

Related ebooks

YA Dystopian For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Requiem

Rating: 4.074626865671642 out of 5 stars
4/5

268 ratings74 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    BookNook — Young Adult book reviewsI had a couple ups and downs with Requiem, but at the end of the day, I enjoyed it. It is an intense conclusion to the series, with a lot at stake, and a lot to fight for.I really didn't like Lena for the first half of Requiem. I honestly couldn't help but think that she didn't deserve Alex's forgiveness. I didn't like how she expected things to suddenly be okay between her and Alex. I didn't like how she thought she could run back into his arms. I didn't like how she used Julian as a rebound when Alex rejected her. Anytime Alex spoke to another girl or ignored her, she'd go running into Julian's arms, as if she was trying to make Alex jealous."I thought you were dead," I say. "It almost killed me.""Did it?" His voice is neutral. "You made a pretty fast recovery.""No. You don't understand." My throat is right; I feel as though I'm being strangled. "I couldn't keep hoping, and then waking up every day and finding out it wasn't true, and you were still gone. I—I wasn't strong enough."[...]Finally he says, "When they took me to the crypts, I thought they were going to kill me. They didn't even bother. They just left me to die. They threw me in a cell and locked the door."[...]"There were days when I asked for [death]—prayed for it when I went to sleep. The belief that I would see you again, that I could find you—the hope for it—was the only thing that kept me going." He releases me and takes another step backward. "So no. I don't understand."—Requiem by Lauren Oliver To be fair, Lena did get better towards the end, but she was never my favourite character. She just lost my favour in Pandemonium and never quite earned it back.Hana is the character that really shone for me in Requiem. I think I'm attracted to the girl who's being shut down and struggling to be set free. That's why I liked Lena in Delirium, and why I liked Hana in Requiem. I like sitting there rooting for the character to rebel and break free. Mama, Mama, put me to bedI won't make it home, I'm already half-deadI met an Invalid, and fell for his artHe showed me his smile, and went straight for my heart—Requiem by Lauren Oliver Hana is being pushed into horrible marriage. On the surface, Fred seemed to be the perfect husband: handsome, wealthy, and sweet, but Hana soon realizes that he's really the Bluebeard tale at work. A mysterious ex-wife who has gone missing from society, Fred's sudden threatening behaviour, and streaks of violence. Hana begins to fear for her future and doubts that her cure really worked as intended. She reveals mistakes she's made in the past, and the reason for guilt haunting her every day. I loved Hana's dark secrets, I loved seeing her perfect world come crashing down, and I loved watching her redeem herself at the end!In some ways I do feel like the ending was a little open ended and not as satisfying as I was hoping for. For me, this series has always been about love. It started out with Lena falling in love for the first time—with Alex. But it ended up being all about the Resistance and taking down society. The Lena-Alex-Julian love triangle does kind of get resolved, but it sort of gets wrapped up in one page. I was hoping that the romance would dominate more of the book, instead of it all being about Resistance Resistance Resistance. There were no swoony moments at all in the story, and that's really what I was craving.With the cure, relationships are all the same, and rules and expectations are defined. Without the cure, relationships must be reinvented every day, languages constantly decoded and deciphered. Freedom is exhausting.—Requiem by Lauren Oliver It was a bit of a bummer, and the ending really did leave me wondering, "What happens now?" It just kind of drops off. I would have enjoyed some sort of epilogue at least, to help wrap things up better and answer a few more questions.But overall, Requiem was an enjoyable read. It didn't quite have the same magic and excitement and swoony romance that Delirium did, but I enjoyed it more than Pandemonium. I loved the strength of the Resistance, Fred's complete and utter creepiness (loved to hate it), Hana's slow progress towards fighting the cure, and Lena's growing relationship with her mother. The book is filled with bravery, fighting, loss, and love.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Find this review and more at On The Shelf!Well….this was the last book of the Delirium trilogy and, well….hmm….Unfortunately, I have to say that this is my least favorite of the three books (the second was my favorite), and well…I feel like there should have been more. There probably could have been a fourth book and now I am left feeling incomplete with this series. It was left so open and unfinished. I want to know what happens with everything, and I didn’t get that, no resolution. It just really bothers me when a book ends this way.As for the writing, it was great of course. I really like Lauren’s writing style and her characters are really good. I liked the change in Lena and how she grew to be the strong person she had become. I also liked the alternating point of view between Lena and Hana, you get to see an inside and outside view of what is going on.I really enjoyed the book up until the end. I liked seeing it from both sides and everything that was happening with the uprising. We got to be in on a bunch of secrets, but we didn’t get to find out more! So yeah, the score definitely got a lowered because of it feeling so incomplete and wide open. It might not bother a lot of people, but it definitely bothers me.Good characters, good POVs, a lot going on, felt incomplete.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really enjoyed this trilogy a lot. This final book does a great job of wrapping everything up. Even though I want to know what happens next, I think the author does a great job of letting me imagine what life will be like for all the main characters. Great dystopia series! Well worth the read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Lena and Hana go back and forth again - one on her way back to Portland in the throes of a love triangle and the other on her way to a marriage she may need to escape. The build-up was good. The extra Alex story was meh.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The finale to the Delirium Series and my favorite out of the series!!! First off: ALEX IS ALIVE!!!! Second, really another love triangle. I vehemently dislike love triangles they are over done, but was the only problem I had in the book. Lena was a also little annoying in this book with her jealousy but this is the world she chose, a world of love and with love comes other emotions. In this book we meet Lena's mom which I was really excited about and I love that Lena didn't know how to act around her. How do you act around a woman you thought was dead for most of your life? How do you act around someone you never really knew?

    For me it showed a more real world with real people. My favorite part of the novel was the ending because there was no ending. Now a days we get a book all tied up pretty with a bow, which yes it is nice but its not real life. Maybe Elizabeth and Darcy started to hate each other? Maybe Harry, Ron, and Hermione drift apart (God forbid). The ending also showed Lena not definitively choosing Alex and Julian (although I'm siding with Julian), but instead she took her little cousin, Grace's hand, and went into the Wilds. Would it have been nice to have a clear cut ending of what happened and if the resistance won or the government won, yes, but the ending was beautiful. The beauty of it being that we as the reader get fully pulled into the experience. With this ending we are not passive any more because we get to choose how it ends and who wins. And it involves also looking at ourselves and trying to decide what we would choose, love or the cure.

    Take down the wall.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Loved. This. Book! Requiem showed incredible character growth from both Hana and Lena. The third book in the series focuses more on the resistance movement and less on Lena's relationships with her romantic interests. I listened to the audio CD narrated by Sarah Drew who does an incredible job of voicing the characters. I especially enjoyed her interpretation of Hana, the voice and inflections fit perfectly. I loved the alternating points of view in this volume. The reader is told the story through the eyes of Hana and Lena which was a perfect fit as the revolution comes to a head. Hearing the story from the two former best friends now on opposing sides of the movement adds to the tension and suspense of the story. I enjoyed hearing more about Hana's life and her creepy sociopathic husband, who was the perfect villian. I understand why some people were upset by the ending but I thought the loose ends added to the intrigue and kept you thinking about the story long after the final page. Another, beautifully written book from Lauren Oliver. Well done!
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    What a crappy ending to a mediocre book series. Actually it wasn't an ending. And I hate that even more. FINISH the book. Don't let every story line peter out with the resolution that you can "use your imagination" because "anything can happen". Bah, and crap. Garbage. The first book was okay. The second was dull and pointless. The writing isn't great, the characters are silly and the plot was non-existent. Thanks for the waste of time.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Huh. This may be the first time I've marked an author as having both 5 star books(Before I Fall, Delirium), and 1 star books. Interesting. Full review to come.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another great book! It's going to be difficult to wait for the next release. Requiem is written from Hana and Lena's alternating POV's. It was fascinating to see the contradictions in their lives. Lena is in the wild, starving, fighting minute to minute for survival, while Hana is back in the wealthy safety of her home, preparing for a very public wedding after having her procedure. In my opinion, Hana stole the lead.

    Watching Hana wrestle with her bad choices and face off with "infected" people she once knew was very thought provoking. She's questioning everything she's been told, as well as her past decisions. Meanwhile, the "sickness" tries to break through to the surface. She learns Fred is not what she thought he was. For her safety, she stays very quiet and struggles to keep her emotions in check. I should mention, the author has NAILED the art of writing insane characters. I had goosebumps after a few of those scenes! We're talk it flat out CRAZINESS! *virtual nod to Oliver*

    Lena does get a few answers to previous questions as they prepare for war. I'm not clear if the series is continuing or if things ended here? It would be another awkward ending. I do hope there is more and I'm holding out hope that Alex and Lena will get a HEA.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Loved it!!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Unlike the first 2 books, Delirium and Pandemonium, Requiem is told from a dual personality from two different characters, Lena and Hana. As I have mentioned before, I love when stories are told from different point-of-views. However, at first, I was a bit disappointed that Hana was chosen. It didn't take long to realize that having Hana's side of the story and what was going on in her world was imperative and just as intriguing and intense as Lena's world.There isn't much that I can tell you about the actual plot without any spoilers. But I am going to do my best in telling you why I think that this is one of the best endings I have ever read... In book one, we saw Lena on the inside being kept safe from the disease. She was doing what she had to do to just get to her surgery date so she wouldn't have to worry about what happened to her mother happening to her too. That is, until she met Alex. And learned that there is another way to live, as long as you have something worth fighting for. In book two, we watched Lena survive, learn and grow out in the wilds. She creates a new life, new friends become her family. And she meets Julian, who is sweet, safe and exactly what Lena needs at this moment in her life. She makes new discoveries about people she cares deeply about and we watch her reactions and the consequences to that. Now, Lena has come to the ultimate battle. Where does her alliance stand? With whom? What does she want out of her life - to make a stand and live with new consequences? Even death? Or will she try to take the easy way out, travel far, away from all the fighting and hide for as long as she can? And, what most of us have been waiting for... who will Lena choose? But there is so much more to just Lena's story. And Lauren Oliver makes it loud and clear, no matter what life brings, you always have a choice. Don't hide from anything, no matter how scary it may be, or how hard, you have the right to do what you believe in. Follow your heart. Yes, at times you may choose wrong, you may fall down many, many times. But in the end, what truly counts, is that you are honest with yourself, with others. And don't let anyone ever stop you from doing what you want to do. The last page of Requiem, page 391, will forever stay with me. I've told many people already - I want to get another copy of this book so I can tear the last page out and frame it. It's something that I want to remind myself of. It's something that I want my kids to know... "Tear down the walls."Don't build barricades around yourself, or you'll always live in fear.I highly recommend this series to everyone. Love is not a disease. Fear is.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Beautiful!!!
    I am a huge ball of emotions right now...
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This series ended better than I thought it would. The structure of the story between Lena and Hana was a good idea and helped bring the story along especially because of the short amount of time that passes during this installment. It would of been better if Alex's voice could of been heard as well. I like how the end of the story was filled with hope and the idea of beginning something new. This book was really just a way to close out the series with one big event. An epilogue would of been nice.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have a love-hate relationship with this last book. I both loved and hated the fact that this book has no closure. I loved it because it gave me hope that everything really turned out or will turn out the way I thought it would be. I hated it because I actually want to see/read what will actually happen after. But then I still loved it!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review courtesy of All Things Urban FantasyREQUIEM is told in alternating chapters from both Lena and Hana’s point of view. What ended up surprising me the most about REQUIEM was that even though the Delirium Trilogy has been Lena’s story, in this final book, it was Hana’s chapter’s that I couldn’t get enough of. Lena’s story continues in the Wilds and focuses on the Rebellion as well as reconciling her feelings for Julian and Alex. Hana’s story, for me at least, was the more gripping of the two girls as it follows her, now Cured, preparing to marry the newly elected Mayor.Hana’s story feels very much like the first Delirium book. It’s sort of like what Lena’s life might have been like if she had been Cured and gone along with the life that was planned out for her, despite mounting misgivings. Hana has been Cured and paired amazingly well. Except, her Cure didn’t work completely. She’s plagued by feelings of guilt and uneasiness. Worse her husband to be is starting to drop the smiling facade he wears on TV and hint about Hana’s fate being similar to his mysterious first wife if she steps out of line. Hana begins seeking answers about the first wife and discovers horrific truths not just about her own future, but the plans to eradicate the Invalids and any who are sympathetic to their cause.The Delirium Trilogy has taken it’s frighteningly intriguing world where love has been declared a curable disease and followed it’s protagonist from a girl terrified of becoming infected by love before she’s old enough to be cured–like her mother, through her struggle and ultimate embrace of feelings she’d always considered an illness, to her slow ascension within the ranks of the Rebellion even to the front lines of the final battle. Not all the characters we’ve come to care about survive, and fewer still emerge unscathed, but Lauren Oliver concludes her lovely and lyrically written trilogy with both promises and hope without eliminating all the uncertainty that realistically remains. I for one will anxiously look forward to seeing how this world and these characters translate to the small screen in Fox’s TV adaptation starring Emma Roberts as Lena and Jeanine Mason as Hana.Sexual Content:Kissing
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A great conclusion to the Delirium trilogy. Lena and her companions in the Wilds begin a journey back to her hometown of Portland, where something may be happening that could change everything. Meanwhile, Lena's former best friend Hana prepares to marry Portland's new mayor while she also wrestles with her guilt about what happened to Lena and Alex. Definitely recommended for those who enjoyed the previous two novels.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I have so many problems with this book. Okay, so I just finished it like twenty minutes ago and I'm reeling so please bear with me. This may get harsh or ranty or I may just break down and cry...I don't even know.That right there is the crux of the problem. I do not know.Oliver has proven with the first two books in the series that she loves a big cliffhanger of an ending and I'm not opposed to those. Honestly, in a series of books a cliffhanger is what keeps you interested. But this is the END. I want it all wrapped up in a pretty pretty package. Preferably with a big shiny bow. And a name tag screaming TEAM ADAM WINS!Did I get that? Uh, no. What I received as a gift from Ms. Oliver was a whole lot of WTF? Oliver left so much open ended that I wanted to pull hair out. That is saying a lot...I don't have much hair to begin with and I'm quite fond of what I do have.I'm fairly sure I can see where she was trying to go with it and in some ways it is a quite beautiful statement. Mayhaps, I don't like beautiful profound statements to end my book obsessions. Give me a little to fuel my imagination, sure ~ but give me enough closure as well.All right Ali ~ enough about the ending.The story. Requiem is told in dual POV, Lena and Hana both narrate. I found Hana's first several chapters boring. I almost wanted to skim them. Not good. Though I understand the need for them and about half way through the book I wasn't so annoyed with them.However, by that point I was getting more annoyed with Lena's chapters. There wasn't enough action or love. Let's face it, these books are about love and freedom and the struggle to be able to chose both. Right? So where is all this love we are fighting for? It wasn't in Requiem. Sure, there is some but it wasn't a fulfilling amount for me. It was more depressing than anything. Lena still loves Alex, Alex doesn't love Lena, Lena loves Julian, Julian loves Lena, Coral loves Alex, Alex loves Lena, Lena might love Alex; it was like a damn tennis match with too many players. But no one ever shows they love anyone else, it's all just random thought and speculation. Okay, Julian does show it, props to Julian. And the lack of action I mentioned? Yeah, think Lord of The Rings...walk, talk a little, walk some more, eat, walking again. Bored now.I won't even get started on Dear Old Bee. Ircked me the hell out. I mean...what? I don't want to give anything away for the folks who haven't read the series, so I'll leave it at that.I watched a video, just now, of Oliver defending her open ended ending. She explains that she liked to leave it up to the imagination of the reader. Or some such thing. I understand what she's saying, I do. I am all for tickling the imagination, but I am not a writer. Pretty sure I 'hired' her for that job when I bought the book. It just feels like a cop out, to me.On the positive side, the writing is still beautiful, the idea is still beautiful. Many fans of the series are going to love it just as much as the first two. I'm just not one of them...I'm one of those cranky old people that just didn't "get it".
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Dont know my thoughts on this just yet, really liked it but the ending fell a bit flat for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Amazon summary: This exciting finale to Lauren Oliver's New York Times bestselling Delirium trilogy is a riveting blend of nonstop action and forbidden romance in a dystopian United States.Now an active member of the resistance, Lena has transformed. The nascent rebellion that was underway in Pandemonium has ignited into an all-out revolution in Requiem, and Lena is at the center of the fight.After rescuing Julian from a death sentence, Lena and her friends fled to the Wilds. But the Wilds are no longer a safe haven. Pockets of rebellion have opened throughout the country, and the government cannot deny the existence of Invalids. Regulators infiltrate the borderlands to stamp out the rebels.As Lena navigates the increasingly dangerous terrain of the Wilds, her best friend, Hana, lives a safe, loveless life in Portland as the fiancée of the young mayor. Requiem is told from both Lena and Hana's points of view. They live side by side in a world that divides them until, at last, their stories converge.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    There is really no way to write this review without giving something away so please know that there might be some minor spoilers but I will try to not give anything big away. I really hate to say it but I was bored a lot during REQUIEM. There are two different POVs and neither of them connected with me. There isn't any romance and we definitely don't get the great reunion we want. There are a lot of feelings and fighting feelings and thinking about feelings but with the huge build up and cliffhanger at the end of book 2 I really was expecting more. The only thing that interested me in REQUIEM was the adventure, fighting scenes and the story's pace was decent. The ending didn't leave me feeling satisfied, it feels like something else should be coming next. There is nothing resolved really and you have no clue what will happen next for the characters (or even if some are still alive for that matter). Its open ended and in no way concluded. I guess I was just expecting more from the ending to the series. Bummer.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Note: There are no specific spoilers for this book, nor for either of the two preceding installments.This is the third book of the trilogy that includes Delirium and Pandemonium. I tried to read this one without doing a re-read, but ended up feeling the need to revisit the end of Delirium and all of Pandemonium. This book is not a standalone, nor is this review. It assumes you know the background of the trilogy. Nevertheless, you can read this review without fear of significant spoilers for any of the three books.Requiem is told in alternating points of view between Lena, who left her life in Portland for freedom in “The Wilds,” and Hana, Lena’s best friend, who did not leave. Both of them are paying the consequences for their choices in different, and painful ways. This book is quite full of action and excitement, and as the tension escalates to the denouement it reminded me a lot of the “Tonight” ensemble medley from “West Side Story,” with the inevitable showdown anticipated from competing perspectives of the various parties involved. I raced through to the ending, and I think other readers did too, which may be why there have been so many complaints about the story’s screeching halt. But I will talk about why I did not want to throw my book, below, in the Discussion section.For those readers who don’t like the idea that this series incorporates the usual YA/dystopia/trilogy/triangle, I would counter that the triangle turns out to be much more complicated and realistic than most of them. To me, it serves to highlight the complications of being able to love (which is actually the whole basis of this dystopia), rather than being a fatuous inclusion of a common trope. (It is, i.e., a meta triangle, just as the ending is a meta ending.) As Lena observes about how it is with the “cure” from loving that is taken by most of the citizens in this dytopic future:"…relationships are all the same, and rules and expectations are defined. Without the cure, relationships must be reinvented every day, languages constantly decoded and deciphered.Freedom is exhausting.”Amen to that!Discussion: I loved this book. I loved it even more than the preceding two books in this trilogy. However, as I indicated above, many reviewers have ripped on this book for having basically a non-ending.Therefore, you might be surprised at how much I loved this, because I am a huge fan of tie-it-up-with-a-bow endings. But. The open-endedness of the conclusion is, in my opinion, part of the whole point, on a meta level. And not even meta: there is actually quite a bit of exposition about it by the author (through the interior monologue of Lena). Life, she opines, is not about knowing. It’s about not knowing, but having faith and trust in what will come. She says:"Take down the walls. ... You do not know what will happen if you take down the walls; you cannot see through to the other side, don’t know whether it will bring freedom or ruin, resolution or chaos. It might be paradise, or destruction.Take down the walls.Otherwise you must live closely, in fear, building barricades against the unknown, saying prayers against the darkness, speaking verse of terror and tightness.Otherwise you may never know hell, but you will not find heaven, either. You will not know fresh air and flying. … Take down the walls.”
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I really don't have too much to say about Requiem other than I was very disappointed. I was expecting adventure and romance, but instead I felt that those elements were missing. Each chapter switches from Lena to Hana's (Lena's former best friend) point of view, and I became more taken by Hana's story than Lena's, who had been the MC from the beginning of the trilogy. The reviews are really mixed on this one, either love it or hate it. Readers tend to go polar opposites, as it was with myself and a friend of mine. I do think the writing is beautiful as always, but the story just didn't do it for me. Also, I loved the first two, so I'm not biased.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I’ll start by saying it didn’t start great. The first few chapters moved slowly, and there was so much Lena angst over Alex and Julian that I considered putting the book down instead of slogging through the next 350 pages. Luckily, it improved.After the initial slow start, the story moved along briskly. I commend Oliver for writing building action that moved the story along and kept me reading. After dragging my way through another trilogy conclusion that never seemed to end (*cough*REACHED*cough*), it was nice to WANT to keep turning the pages. I also thought her pacing was great—the way the installments of the two storylines got shorter and more urgent until they finally met was perfect. This was a definite improvement over the two storylines of Pandemonium that never overlapped, so much so that I have to think she listened to some of those critiques.Speaking of the two storylines, I LOVED the decision to switch back and forth between Lena and Hana. Lena wavered back and forth between interesting and downright irritating, and every time I got sick of her anxiety over the boys, the chapter ended and shifted narrators. After Lena, I found Hana to be a nice change of pace, and she was refreshingly angst-free, especially given her situation. Oliver wrote the fog of her dampened emotions beautifully. In the crowd of physical, in-your-face, constantly-in-motion heroines crowding the teen fiction market, Hana stood still and made me feel her story. The climax of this storyline was perfect, in an oh-no-she-DIDN’T kind of way. I was energized after that and kept turning the pages excitedly until…BOOM. It just ended. Without having read many of the other reviews, my guess is this is a negative that is repeated over and over again. There are a few different plotlines going on in this book, some stories within stories, and we get an ending for maybe one or two of them. The rest is left hanging. I understand Oliver wanting to end her series on a high note, but it feels like this was a fake ending she’d send to her publisher as a joke: “and we’ll pretend they all lived happily ever after even though this was never resolved and neither was this, and we’ll just tuck this one away and hope they forget.” The biggest unresolved plotline I had trouble with was the obvious one…*SLIGHT SPOILERS* The freakin’ love triangle is never resolved. Lauren Oliver, I became a fan of your writing in this series, but I can’t continue being a fan if you’re going to pull crap like this. I’m betting I’ll get comments about this saying it *was* resolved, but I just reread the last couple pages and I still interpret those as indecision. You can’t build up a love triangle and then leave it hanging under the guise of, ‘I’m jazzed on life and everything will work itself out.’ That’s a copout, and a pretty major one at that.*END SPOILERS*If I could, I’d probably knock this down to 3½ stars because of the lack of resolution, the recurring Lena angst, and the spoiler paragraph. As it is, I give it four stars for Hana, the pacing, and the action.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Good Stuff Perfect ending to a brilliant series Exceptional character development - I detested Lena at the beginning of this trilogy and was disgusted with her acceptance of her life & ended up cheering and hoping for her The ending is so wonderful. If Oliver never writes anything else about these characters you can be satisfied and left with a sense of hope. At the same time it leaves it open if she wants to write more she can - brilliant Oliver is a gifted storyteller. Everything feels so very real and you are emotionally invested in the characters Kept on the edge of my seat about what was going to happen Really makes you think about love - at times it does feel like a disease - and maybe we would all be better without it -- but at the same time it is the thing that gives us purpose Last page is beautiful and wiseThe Not So Good Stuff A little too angsty with the two love interests - hey I am old, this sort of thing irritates me at timesFavorite Quotes/Passages"Who knows? Maybe they're right. Maybe we are driven crazy by our feelings. Maybe love is a disease, and we would be better off without it.But we have chosen a different road. And in the end that is the point of escaping the cure: We are free to choose.""How can someone have the power to shatter you to dust - and also to make you feel so whole.""I like seeing the Wilds this way: skinny, naked, not yet clothed in spring. But reaching, too, grasping and growing, full of want and thirst for sun that gets slaked a little bit more every day. Soon the Wilds will explode, drunk and vibrant.""This is the strange way of the world, that people who simply want to love are instead forced to become warriors."Who Should/Shouldn't Read Obviously if you enjoyed the other two books in the trilogy, you will love this You have to read the other two stories first - won't make sense unless you do5 Dewey'sI purchased this from Chapters Shawnessy because I read the rest of the series and loved it
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Plot: 3 stars
    Characters: 3 stars
    Style: 3 stars
    Pace: 3 stars

    I don't know why I expected more on this one. I wanted to love it, but found myself rather bored instead. The skipping back and forth between Lena and Hanna was actually the only thing that saved it; I could always hope that the next chapter, something more interesting would happen. It was a very internal story, for both girls, but I found it harder to connect with Lena. I didn't care who she ended up with, and it never really felt resolved at the end. If anything, it felt like the real plot of the novel was just getting started when it ended.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The first book, Delirium, was the best in this series. The second book and this book don’t match up with it at all in my opinion. As with the second book, the narrator of this audio book really grated on me. I didn’t like her at all. Sometimes it just takes a little to get used to a narrator but not this time. As for the story: I didn’t like the love triangle. I think it’s used too often in young adult literature to be honest. I felt the ending of this book was cut off. Not necessarily rushed but cut off too soon. I feel like I’ve been left hanging. What happens to Hana? Did Lena really choose Alex or not? What happens now after the walls are torn down? We get nothing. I had hoped that my ambivalence of the second book was just a case of a weak middle trilogy book, but this last book didn’t make me feel any better about the series. I like the idea – that love is a disease and society’s role is to cure it, and it came across great in the first book but I just didn’t feel it for these last two books. Not sure I’d recommend the series as a whole.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great finish to the trilogy. I enjoyed it. Life really is all about "taking down the walls"!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    You know that without being unhappy, you can't be happy, right? How apt! As I end my foray into one of the most hyped YA books of 2013, I miss my old hunting ground. Some books have a beginning, a middle, and an end, not necessarily in that order. Is Requiem like that? Not necessarily, considered that it does not have an end. I knew of that beforehand. It was quite agreeable to me. It ended as if the kids are taking over from the adults. It sounded as if the ending was happy. Some expectations were met and some thwarted. Those who could be dead lived longer than others surprised in the action of being snuffed out. In this case, the middle was the end. But it was a little too late.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Told in alternating chapters between Lena and Hana, we watch as the forces that are both for and against the government reach critcial mass back in Lena's hometown of Portland. Lena's group is heading that way via Connecticut, while we see bits and pieces of Portland's present through Hana's eyes. I thought that Hana's section were especially intriguing, as she was paired with a minor politician after completing her procedure. Of course, things change, but Hana's recollection of her role in Lena and Alex's escape seems to drive her present feelings. The final book in this series was very strong, but ended just a tad abruptly for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was hoping for a more final ending but I guess it is what it is

Book preview

Requiem - Lauren Oliver

Lena

I’ve started dreaming of Portland again.

Since Alex reappeared, resurrected but also changed, twisted, like a monster from one of the ghost stories we used to tell as kids, the past has been finding its way in. It bubbles up through the cracks when I’m not paying attention, and pulls at me with greedy fingers.

This is what they warned me about for all those years: the heavy weight in my chest, the nightmare-fragments that follow me even in waking life.

I warned you, Aunt Carol says in my head.

We told you, Rachel says.

You should have stayed. That’s Hana, reaching out across an expanse of time, through the murky-thick layers of memory, stretching a weightless hand to me as I am sinking.

About two dozen of us came north from New York City: Raven, Tack, Julian, and me, and also Dani, Gordo, and Pike, plus fifteen or so others who are largely content to stay quiet and follow directions.

And Alex. But not my Alex: a stranger who never smiles, doesn’t laugh, and barely speaks.

The others, those who were using the warehouse outside White Plains as a homestead, scattered south or west. By now, the warehouse has no doubt been stripped and abandoned. It isn’t safe, not after Julian’s rescue. Julian Fineman is a symbol, and an important one. The zombies will hunt for him. They will want to string the symbol up, and make it bleed meaning, so that others will learn their lesson.

We have to be extra careful.

Hunter, Bram, Lu, and some of the other members of the old Rochester homestead are waiting for us just south of Poughkeepsie. It takes us nearly three days to cover the distance; we are forced to circumnavigate a half-dozen Valid cities.

Then, abruptly, we arrive: The woods simply run out at the edge of an enormous expanse of concrete, webbed with thick fissures, and still marked very faintly with the ghostly white outlines of parking spaces. Cars, rusted, picked clean of various parts—rubber tires, bits of metal—still sit in the lot. They look small and faintly ridiculous, like ancient toys left out by a child.

The parking lot flows like gray water in all directions, running up at last against a vast structure of steel and glass: an old shopping mall. A sign in looping cursive script, streaked white with bird shit, reads EMPIRE STATE PLAZA MALL.

The reunion is joyful. Tack, Raven, and I break into a run. Bram and Hunter are running too, and we intercept them in the middle of the parking lot. I jump on Hunter, laughing, and he throws his arms around me and lifts me off my feet. Everyone is shouting and talking at once.

Hunter sets me down, finally, but I keep one arm locked around him, as though he might disappear. I reach out and wrap my other arm around Bram, who is shaking hands with Tack, and somehow we all end up piled together, jumping and shouting, our bodies interlaced, in the middle of the brilliant sunshine.

Well, well, well. We break apart, turn around, and see Lu sauntering toward us. Her eyebrows are raised. She has let her hair grow long, and brushed it forward, so it pools over her shoulders. Look what the cat dragged in.

It’s the first time I’ve felt truly happy in days.

The short months we have spent apart have changed both Hunter and Bram. Bram is, against all odds, heavier. Hunter has new wrinkles at the corners of his eyes, although his smile is as boyish as ever.

How’s Sarah? I say. Is she here?

Sarah stayed in Maryland, Hunter says. The homestead is thirty strong, and she won’t have to migrate. The resistance is trying to get word to her sister.

What about Grandpa and the others? I am breathless, and there is a tight feeling in my chest, as though I am still being squeezed.

Bram and Hunter exchange a small glance.

Grandpa didn’t make it, Hunter says shortly. We buried him outside Baltimore.

Raven looks away, spits on the pavement.

Bram adds quickly, The others are fine. He reaches out and places a finger on my procedural scar, the one he helped me fake to initiate me into the resistance. Looking good, he says, and winks.

We decide to camp for the night. There’s clean water a short distance from the old mall, and a wreckage of houses and business offices that have yielded some usable supplies: a few cans of food still buried in the rubble; rusted tools; even a rifle, which Hunter found cradled in a pair of upturned deer hooves, under a mound of collapsed plaster. And one member of our group, Henley, a short, quiet woman with a long coil of gray hair, is running a fever. This will give her time to rest.

By the end of the day, an argument breaks out about where to go next.

We could split up, Raven says. She is squatting by the pit she has cleared for the fire, stoking the first, glowing splinters of flame with the charred end of a stick.

The larger our group, the safer we are, Tack argues. He has pulled off his fleece and is wearing only a T-shirt, so the ropy muscles of his arms are visible. The days have been warming slowly, and the woods have been coming to life. We can feel the spring arriving, like an animal stirring lightly in its sleep, exhaling hot breath.

But it’s cold now, when the sun is low and the Wilds are swallowed by long purple shadows, when we are no longer moving.

Lena, Raven barks out. I’ve been staring at the beginnings of the fire, watching flame curl around the mass of pine needles, twigs, and brittle leaves. Go check on the tents, okay? It’ll be dark soon.

Raven has built the fire in a shallow gully that must once have been a stream, where it will be somewhat sheltered from the wind. She has avoided setting up camp too close to the mall and its haunted spaces; it looms above the tree line, all twisted black metal and empty eyes, like an alien spaceship run aground.

Up the embankment a dozen yards, Julian is helping set up the tents. He has his back to me. He, too, is wearing only a T-shirt. Just three days in the Wilds have already changed him. His hair is tangled, and a leaf is caught just behind his left ear. He looks skinnier, although he has not had time to lose weight. This is just the effect of being here, in the open, with salvaged, too-big clothing, surrounded by savage wilderness, a perpetual reminder of the fragility of our survival.

He is securing a rope to a tree, yanking it taut. Our tents are old and have been torn and patched repeatedly. They don’t stand on their own. They must be propped up and strung between trees and coaxed to life, like sails in the wind.

Gordo is hovering next to Julian, watching approvingly.

Do you need any help? I pause a few feet away.

Julian and Gordo turn around.

Lena! Julian’s face lights up, then immediately falls again as he realizes I don’t intend to come closer. I brought him here, with me, to this strange new place, and now I have nothing to give him.

We’re okay, Gordo says. His hair is bright red, and even though he’s no older than Tack, he has a beard that grows to the middle of his chest. Just finishing up.

Julian straightens and wipes his palms on the back of his jeans. He hesitates, then comes down the embankment toward me, tucking a strand of hair behind his ear. It’s cold, he says when he’s a few feet away. You should go down to the fire.

I’m all right, I say, but I put my hands into the arms of my wind breaker. The cold is inside me. Sitting next to the fire won’t help. The tents look good.

Thanks. I think I’m getting the hang of it. His smile doesn’t quite reach his eyes.

Three days: three days of strained conversation and silence. I know he is wondering what has changed, and whether it can be changed back. I know I’m hurting him. There are questions he is forcing himself not to ask, and things he is struggling not to say.

He is giving me time. He is patient, and gentle.

You look pretty in this light, he says.

You must be going blind. I intend it as a joke, but my voice sounds harsh in the thin air.

Julian shakes his head, frowning, and looks away. The leaf, a vivid yellow, is still tangled in his hair, behind his ear. In that moment, I’m desperate to reach out, remove it, and run my fingers through his hair and laugh with him about it. This is the Wilds, I’ll say. Did you ever imagine? And he’ll lace his fingers through mine and squeeze. He’ll say, What would I do without you?

But I can’t bring myself to move. You have a leaf in your hair.

A what? Julian looks startled, as though I’ve recalled him from a dream.

A leaf. In your hair.

Julian runs a hand impatiently through his hair. Lena, I—

Bang.

The sound of a rifle shot makes us both jump. Birds start out of the trees behind Julian, temporarily darkening the sky all at once, before dispersing into individual shapes. Someone says, Damn.

Dani and Alex emerge from the trees beyond the tents. Both of them have rifles slung across their shoulders.

Gordo straightens up.

Deer? he asks. The light is nearly all gone. Alex’s hair looks almost black.

Too big for a deer, Dani says. She is a large woman, broad across the shoulders with a wide, flat forehead and almond-eyes. She reminds me of Miyako, who died before we went south last winter. We burned her on a frigid day, just before the first snow.

Bear? Gordo asks.

Might have been, Dani replies shortly. Dani is harder-edged than Miyako was: She has let the Wilds whittle her down, carve her to steel.

Did you hit it? I ask, too eager, though I already know the answer. But I am willing Alex to look at me, to speak to me.

Might have just clipped it, Dani says. Hard to tell. Not enough to stop it, though.

Alex says nothing, doesn’t register my presence, even. He keeps walking, threading his way through the tents, past Julian and me, close enough that I imagine I can smell him—the old smell of grass and sun-dried wood, a Portland smell that makes me want to cry out, and bury my face in his chest, and inhale.

Then he is heading down the embankment as Raven’s voice floats up to us: Dinner’s on. Eat up or miss out.

Come on. Julian grazes my elbow with his fingertips. Gentle, patient.

My feet turn me, and move me down the embankment, toward the fire, which is now burning hot and strong; toward the boy who becomes shadow standing next to it, blotted out by the smoke. That is what Alex is now: a shadow-boy, an illusion.

For three days he has not spoken to me or looked at me at all.

Hana

Want to know my deep, dark secret? In Sunday school, I used to cheat on the quizzes.

I could never get into The Book of Shhh, not even as a kid. The only section of the book that interested me at all was Legends and Grievances, which is full of folktales about the world before the cure. My favorite, the Story of Solomon, goes like this:

Once upon a time, during the days of sickness, two women and an infant went before the king. Each woman claimed that the infant was hers. Both refused to give the child to the other woman and pleaded their cases passionately, each claiming that she would die of grief if the baby were not returned solely to her possession.

The king, whose name was Solomon, listened to both their speeches, and at last announced that he had a fair solution.

We will cut the baby in two, he said, and that way each of you will have a portion.

The women agreed that this was just, and so the executioner was brought forward, and with his ax, he sliced the baby cleanly in two.

And the baby never cried, or so much as made a sound, and the mothers looked on, and afterward, for a thousand years, there was a spot of blood on the palace floor that could never be cleaned or diluted by any substance on earth. . . .

I must have been only eight or nine when I read that passage for the first time, but it really struck me. For days I couldn’t get the image of that poor baby out of my head. I kept picturing it split open on the tile floor, like a butterfly pinned behind glass.

That’s what’s so great about the story. It’s real. What I mean is, even if it didn’t actually happen—and there’s debate about the Legends and Grievances section, and whether it’s historically accurate—it shows the world truthfully. I remember feeling just like that baby: torn apart by feeling, split in two, caught between loyalties and desires.

That’s how the diseased world is.

That’s how it was for me, before I was cured.

In exactly twenty-one days, I’ll be married.

My mother looks as though she might cry, and I almost hope that she will. I’ve seen her cry twice in my life: once when she broke her ankle and once last year, when she came outside and found that protesters had climbed the gate, and torn up our lawn, and pried her beautiful car into pieces.

In the end she says only, You look lovely, Hana. And then: It’s a little too big in the waist, though.

Mrs. Killegan—Call me Anne, she simpered, the first time we came for a fitting—circles me quietly, pinning and adjusting. She is tall, with faded blond hair and a pinched look, as though over the years she has accidentally ingested various pins and sewing needles. You’re sure you want to go with the cap sleeves?

I’m sure, I say, just as my mom says, You think they look too young?

Mrs. Killegan—Anne—gestures expressively with one long, bony hand. The whole city will be watching, she says.

The whole country, my mother corrects her.

I like the sleeves, I say, and I almost add, It’s my wedding. But that isn’t true anymore—not since the Incidents in January, and Mayor Hargrove’s death. My wedding belongs to the people now. That’s what everybody has been telling me for weeks. Yesterday we got a phone call from the National News Service, asking whether they could syndicate footage, or send in their own television crew to film the ceremony.

Now, more than ever, the country needs its symbols.

We are standing in front of a three-sided mirror. My mother’s frown is reflected from three different angles. Mrs. Killegan’s right, she says, touching my elbow. Let’s see how it looks at three-quarters, okay?

I know better than to argue. Three reflections nod simultaneously; three identical girls with identical ropes of braided blond in three identical white, floor-skimming dresses. Already, I hardly recognize myself. I’ve been transfigured by the dress, by the bright lights in the dressing room. For all my life I have been Hana Tate.

But the girl in the mirror is not Hana Tate. She is Hana Hargrove, soon-to-be wife of the soon-to-be mayor, and a symbol of all that is right about the cured world.

A path and a road for everyone.

Let me see what I have in the back, Mrs. Killegan says. We’ll slip you into a different style, just so you’ll have a comparison. She slides across the worn gray carpet and disappears into the storeroom. Through the open door, I see dozens of dresses sheathed in plastic, dangling limply from garment racks.

My mother sighs. We’ve been here for two hours already, and I’m starting to feel like a scarecrow: stuffed and poked and stitched. My mother sits on a faded footstool next to the mirrors, holding her purse primly in her lap so it won’t touch the carpet.

Mrs. Killegan’s has always been the nicest wedding shop in Portland, but it, too, has clearly felt the lingering effects of the Incidents, and the security crackdowns the government implemented in their aftermath. Money is tighter for practically everybody, and it shows. One of the overhead bulbs is out, and the shop has a musty smell, as though it has not been cleaned recently. On one wall, a pattern of moisture has begun bubbling the wallpaper, and earlier I noticed a large brown stain on one of the striped settees. Mrs. Killegan caught me looking and casually tossed a shawl down to conceal it.

You really do look lovely, Hana, my mother says.

Thank you, I say. I know I look lovely. It might sound egotistical, but it’s the truth.

This, too, has changed since my cure. When I was uncured, even though people always told me I was pretty, I never felt it. But after the cure, a wall came down inside me. Now I see that yes, I am quite simply and inarguably beautiful.

I also no longer care.

Here we are. Mrs. Killegan reemerges from the back, holding several plastic-swathed gowns over her arm. I swallow a sigh, but not quickly enough. Mrs. Killegan places a hand on my arm. Don’t worry, dear, she says. We’ll find the perfect dress. That’s what this is all about, isn’t it?

I arrange my face into a smile, and the pretty girl in the mirror arranges her face with me. Of course, I say.

Perfect dress. Perfect match. A perfect lifetime of happiness.

Perfection is a promise, and a reassurance that we are not wrong.

Mrs. Killegan’s shop is in the Old Port, and as we emerge onto the street I inhale the familiar scents of dried seaweed and old wood. The day is bright, but the wind is cold off the bay. Only a few boats are bobbing in the water, mostly fishing vessels or commercial rigs. From a distance, the scat-splattered wood moorings look like reeds growing out of the water.

The street is empty except for two regulators and Tony, our bodyguard. My parents decided to employ security services just after the Incidents, when Fred Hargrove’s father, the mayor, was killed, and it was decided that I should leave college and get married as soon as possible.

Now Tony comes everywhere with us. On his days off, he sends his brother, Rick, as a substitute. It took me a month to be able to distinguish between them. They both have thick, short necks and shiny bald heads. Neither of them speaks much, and when they do, they never have anything interesting to say.

That was one of my biggest fears about the cure: that the procedure would switch me off somehow, and inhibit my ability to think. But it’s the opposite. I think more clearly now. In some ways, I even feel things more clearly. I used to feel with a kind of feverishness; I was filled with panic and anxiety and competing desires. There were nights I could hardly sleep, days when I felt like my insides were trying to crawl out of my throat.

I was infected. Now the infection has gone.

Tony is leaning against the car. I wonder if he has been standing in that position for all three hours we’ve been in Mrs. Killegan’s. He straightens up as we approach, and opens the door for my mother.

Thank you, Tony, she says. Was there any trouble?

No, ma’am.

Good. She gets into the backseat, and I slide in after her. We’ve had this car for only two months—a replacement for the one that was vandalized—and just a few days after it arrived, my mom came out of the grocery store to find that someone had keyed the word PIG into the paint. Secretly, I think that my mom’s real motivation for hiring Tony was to protect the new car.

After Tony shuts the door, the world outside the tinted windows gets tinged a dark blue. He turns the radio to the NNS, the National News Service. The commentators’ voices are familiar and reassuring.

I lean my head back and watch the world begin to move. I have lived in Portland all my life and have memories of almost every street and every corner. But these, too, seem distant now, safely submerged in the past. A lifetime ago I used to sit on those picnic benches with Lena, luring seagulls with bread crumbs. We talked about flying. We talked about escape. It was kid stuff, like believing in unicorns and magic.

I never thought she would actually do it.

My stomach cramps. I realize I haven’t eaten since breakfast. I must be hungry.

Busy week, my mother says.

Yeah.

"And don’t forget, the Post wants to interview you this afternoon."

I haven’t forgotten.

Now we just need to find you a dress for Fred’s inauguration, and we’ll be all set. Or did you decide to go with the yellow one we saw in Lava last week?

I’m not sure yet, I say.

"What do you mean, you’re not sure? The inauguration’s in five days, Hana. Everyone will be looking at you."

The yellow one, then.

"Of course, I have no idea what I’ll wear. . . ."

We’ve passed into the West End, our old neighborhood. Historically, the West End has been home to many of the higher-ups in the church and the medical field: priests of the Church of the New Order, government officials, doctors and researchers at the labs. That’s no doubt why it was targeted so heavily during the riots following the Incidents.

The riots were quelled quickly; there’s still much debate about whether the riots represented an actual movement or whether they were a result of misdirected anger and the passions we’re trying so hard to eradicate. Still, many people felt that the West End was too close to downtown, too close to some of the more troubled neighborhoods, where sympathizers and resisters are concealed. Many families, like ours, have moved off-peninsula now.

Don’t forget, Hana, we’re supposed to speak with the caterers on Monday.

I know, I know.

We take Danforth to Vaughan, our old street. I lean forward slightly, trying to catch a glimpse of our old house, but the Andersons’ evergreen conceals it almost entirely from view, and all I get is a flash of the green-gabled roof.

Our house, like the Andersons’ beside it and the Richards’ opposite, is empty and will probably remain so. Still, we see not a single FOR SALE sign. No one can afford to buy. Fred says that the economic freeze will remain in place for at least a few years, until things begin to stabilize. For now, the government needs to reassert control. People need to be reminded of their place.

I wonder if the mice are already finding their way into my old room, leaving droppings on the polished wood floors, and whether spiders have started webbing up the corners. Soon the house will look like 37 Brooks, barren, almost chewed-looking, collapsing slowly from termite rot.

Another change: I can think about 37 Brooks now, and Lena, and Alex, without the old strangled feeling.

And I’ll bet you never reviewed the guest list I left in your room?

I haven’t had time, I say absently, keeping my eyes on the landscape skating by our window.

We maneuver onto Congress, and the neighborhood changes quickly. Soon we pass one of Portland’s two gas stations, around which a group of regulators stands guard, guns pointing toward the sky; then dollar stores and a Laundromat with a faded orange awning; a dingy-looking deli.

Suddenly my mom leans forward, putting one hand on the back of Tony’s seat. Turn this up, she says sharply.

He adjusts a dial on the dashboard. The radio voice gets louder.

"Following the recent outbreak in Waterbury, Connecticut—"

God, my mother says. "Not another one."

"—all citizens, particularly those in the southeast quadrants, have been strongly encouraged to evacuate to temporary housing in neighboring Bethlehem. Bill Ardury, chief of Special Forces, offered reassurances to worried citizens. ‘The situation is under control,’ he said during his seven-minute address. ‘State and municipal military personnel are working together to contain the disease and to ensure that the area is cordoned off, cleansed, and sanitized as soon as possible. There is absolutely no reason to fear further contamination—"

That’s enough, my mother says abruptly, sitting back. I can’t listen anymore.

Tony begins fiddling with the radio. Most stations are just static. Last month, the big story was the government’s discovery of wavelengths that had been co-opted by Invalids for their use. We were able to intercept and decode several critical messages, which led to a triumphant raid in Chicago, and the arrest of a half dozen key Invalids. One of them was responsible for planning the explosion in Washington, DC, last fall, a blast that killed twenty-seven people, including a mother and a child.

I was glad when the Invalids were executed. Some people complained that lethal injection was too humane for convicted terrorists, but I thought it sent a powerful message: We are not the evil ones. We are reasonable and compassionate. We stand for fairness, structure, and organization.

It’s the other side, the uncureds, who bring the chaos.

It’s really disgusting, my mother says. If we’d started bombing when the trouble first—Tony, look out!

Tony slams on the brakes. The tires screech. I go shooting forward, narrowly avoiding cracking my forehead on the headrest in front of me before my seat belt jerks me backward. There is a heavy thump. The air smells like burned rubber.

Shit, my mother is saying. "Shit. What in God’s name—?"

I’m sorry, ma’am, I didn’t see her. She came out from between the Dumpsters. . . .

A young girl is standing in front of the car, her hands resting flat on the hood. Her hair is tented around her thin, narrow face, and her eyes are huge and terrified. She looks vaguely familiar.

Tony rolls down his window. The smell of the Dumpsters—there are several of them, lined up next to one another—floats into the car, sweet and rotten. My mother coughs, and cups a palm over her nose.

You okay? Tony calls out, craning his head out the window.

The girl doesn’t respond. She is panting, practically hyperventilating. Her eyes skate from Tony to my mother in the backseat, and then to me. A shock runs through me.

Jenny. Lena’s cousin. I haven’t seen her since last summer, and she’s much thinner. She looks older, too. But it’s unmistakably her. I recognize the flare of her nostrils, her proud, pointed chin, and the eyes.

She recognizes me, too. I can tell. Before I can say anything, she wrenches her hands off the car hood and darts across the street. She’s wearing an old, ink-stained backpack that I recognize as one of Lena’s hand-me-downs. Across one of its pockets two names are colored in black bubble letters: Lena’s, and mine. We penned them onto her bag in seventh grade, when we were bored in class. That’s the day we first came up with our little code word, our pump-you-up cheer, which later we called out to each other at cross-country meets. Halena. A combination of both our names.

For heaven’s sake. You’d think the girl was old enough to know not to dart in front of traffic. She nearly gave me a heart attack.

I know her, I say automatically. I can’t shake the image of Jenny’s huge, dark eyes, her pale skeleton-face.

"What do you mean, you know her?" My mother turns to me.

I close my eyes and try to think of peaceful things. The bay. Seagulls wheeling against a blue sky. Rivers of spotless white fabric. But instead I see Jenny’s eyes, the sharp angles of her cheek and chin. Her name is Jenny, I say. She’s Lena’s cousin—

Watch your mouth, my mom cuts me off sharply. I realize, too late, that I shouldn’t have said anything. Lena’s name is worse than a curse word in our family.

For years, Mom was proud of my friendship with Lena. She saw it as a testament to her liberalism. We don’t judge the girl because of her family, she would tell guests when they brought it up. The disease isn’t genetic; that’s an old idea.

She took it as almost a personal insult when Lena contracted the disease and managed to escape before she could be treated, as though Lena had deliberately done it to make her look stupid.

All those years we let her into our house, she would say out of nowhere, in the days following Lena’s escape. Even though we knew what the risks were. Everyone warned us. . . . Well, I guess we should have listened.

She looked thin, I say.

Home, Tony. My mom leans her head against the headrest and closes her eyes, and I know the conversation is over.

Lena

I wake in the middle of the night from a nightmare. In it, Grace was trapped beneath the floorboards in our old bedroom in Aunt Carol’s house. There was shouting from downstairs—a fire. The room was full of smoke. I was trying to get to Grace, to rescue her, but her hand kept slipping from my grasp. My eyes were burning, and the smoke was choking me, and I knew if I didn’t run, I would die. But she was crying and screaming for me to save her, save her. . . .

I sit up. I repeat Raven’s mantra in my head—the past is dead, it doesn’t exist—but it doesn’t help. I can’t shake the feeling of Grace’s tiny hand, wet with sweat, slipping from my grip.

The tent is overcrowded. Dani is pressed up on one side of me, and there are three women curled up against her.

Julian has his own tent for now. It is a small bit of courtesy. They are giving him time to adjust, as they did when I first escaped to the Wilds. It takes time to get used to the feeling of closeness, and bodies constantly bumping yours. There is no privacy in the Wilds, and there can be no modesty, either.

I could have joined Julian in his tent. I know that he expected me to, after what we shared underground: the kidnapping, the kiss. I brought him here, after all. I rescued him and pulled him into this new life, a life of freedom and feeling. There is nothing to stop me from sleeping next to him. The cureds—the zombies—would say that we are already infected. We wallow in our filth, the way that pigs wallow in muck.

Who knows? Maybe they’re right. Maybe we are driven crazy by our feelings. Maybe love is a disease, and we would be better off without it.

But we have chosen a different road. And in the end that is the point of escaping the cure: We are free

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1