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23.
A clock. I can almost see the hands ticking around the twelve-sectioned face of the arena. Each hour begins a new horror, a new Gamemaker weapon, and ends the previous. Lightning, blood rain, fog, monkeys — those are the first four hours on the clock. And at ten, the wave. I don't know what happens in the other seven, but I know Wiress is right.
At present, the blood rain's falling and we're on the beach below the monkey segment, far too close to the fog for my liking. Do the various attacks stay within the confines of the jungle? Not necessarily. The wave didn't. If that fog leaches out of the jungle, or the monkeys return ...
“Get up,” I order, shaking Peeta and Fi
I think I've convinced everyone who's conscious except Joha
While the others collect our few possessions and get Beetee back into his jumpsuit, I rouse Wiress. She awakes with a panicked “tick, tock!”
“Yes, tick, tock, the arena's a clock. It's a clock, Wiress, you were right,” I say. “You were right.”
Relief floods her face — I guess because somebody has finally understood what she's known probably from the first tolling of the bells. “Midnight.”
“It starts at midnight,” I confirm.
A memory struggles to surface in my brain. I see a clock. No, it's a watch, resting in Plutarch Heavensbee's palm. “It starts at midnight,” Plutarch said. And then my mockingjay lit up briefly and vanished. In retrospect, it's like he was giving me a clue about the arena. But why would he? At the time, I was no more a tribute in these Games than he was. Maybe he thought it would help me as a mentor. Or maybe this had been the plan all along.
Wiress nods at the blood rain. “One-thirty,” she says.
“Exactly. One-thirty. And at two, a terrible poisonous fog begins there,” I say, pointing at the nearby jungle. “So we have to move somewhere safe now.” She smiles and stands up obediently. “Are you thirsty?” I hand her the woven bowl and she gulps down about a quart. Fi
I check my weapons. Tie up the spile and the tube of medicine in the parachute and fix it to my belt with vine.
Beetee's still pretty out of it, but when Peeta tries to lift him, he objects. “Wire,” he says.
“She's right here,” Peeta tells him. “Wiress is fine. She's coming, too.”
But still Beetee struggles. “Wire,” he insists.
“Oh, I know what he wants,” says Joha
“He won his Games with wire. Setting up that electrical trap,” says Peeta. “It's the best weapon he could have.”
There's something odd about Joha
Joha
My fingers tighten on the knife handle at my belt.
“Go ahead. Try it. I don't care if you are knocked up, I'll rip your throat out,” says Joha
I know I can't kill her right now. But it's just a matter of time with Joha
“Maybe we all had better be careful where we step,” says Fi
Peeta picks up the now-unresisting Beetee. “Where to?”
“I'd like to go to the Cornucopia and watch. Just to make sure we're right about the clock,” says Fi
Beetee and Wiress will probably find some way to die on their own. If we have to run from something, how far would they get? Joha
Because this is so repellent to think about, my mind frantically tries to change topics. But the only thing that distracts me from my current situation is fantasizing about killing President Snow. Not very pretty daydreams for a seventeen-year-old girl, I guess, but very satisfying.
We walk down the nearest sand strip, approaching the Cornucopia with care, just in case the Careers are concealed there. I doubt they are, because we've been on the beach for hours and there's been no sign of life. The area's abandoned, as I expected. Only the big golden horn and the picked-over pile of weapons remain.
When Peeta lays Beetee in the bit of shade the Cornucopia provides, he calls out to Wiress. She crouches beside him and he puts the coil of wire in her hands. “Clean it, will you?” he asks.
Wiress nods and scampers over to the water's edge, where she dunks the coil in the water. She starts quietly singing some fu
“Oh, not the song again,” says Joha
Suddenly Wiress stands up very straight and points to the jungle. “Two,” she says.
I follow her finger to where the wall of fog has just begun to seep out onto the beach. “Yes, look, Wiress is right. It's two o'clock and the fog has started.”
“Like clockwork,” says Peeta. “You were very smart to figure that out, Wiress.”
Wiress smiles and goes back to singing and dunking her coil. “Oh, she's more than smart,” says Beetee. “She's intuitive.” We all turn to look at Beetee, who seems to be coming back to life. “She can sense things before anyone else. Like a canary in one of your coal mines.”
“What's that?” Fi
“It's a bird that we take down into the mines to warn us if there's bad air,” I say.
“What's it do, die?” asks Joha
“It stops singing first. That's when you should get out. But if the air's too bad, it dies, yes. And so do you.” I don't want to talk about dying songbirds. They bring up thoughts of my father's death and Rue's death and Maysilee Do