TORI STANDS, Aย wild look in her eyes, and turns toward me.
I feel numb.
All the risks I took to get hereโconspiring with Marcus, asking the Erudite for help, crawling across a ladder three stories up, shooting myself in a simulationโand all the sacrifices I madeโmy relationship with Tobias, Fernandoโs life, my standing among the Dauntlessโwere for nothing.
Nothing.
A moment later, the glass door opens again. Tobias and Uriah storm in as if to fight a battleโUriah coughing, probably from the poisonโbut the battle is done. Jeanine is dead, Tori is triumphant, and I am a Dauntless traitor.
Tobias stops in the middle of a step, almost stumbling over his feet, when he sees me. His eyes open wider.
โShe is a traitor,โ says Tori. โShe just almost shot me to defend Jeanine.โ โWhat?โ says Uriah. โTris, whatโs going on? Is she right? Why are you
even here?โ
But I look only at Tobias. A sliver of hope pierces me, strangely painful, when combined with the guilt I feel for how I deceived him. Tobias is stubborn and proud, but he is mineโmaybe he will listen, maybe thereโs a chance that all I did was not in vainโ
โYou know why Iโm here,โ I say quietly. โDonโt you?โ
I hold out Toriโs gun. He walks forward, a little unsteady on his feet, and takes it.
โWe found Marcus in the next room, caught in a simulation,โ Tobias says. โYou came up here with him.โ
โYes, I did,โ I say, blood from Toriโs bite trickling down my arm.
โI trusted you,โ he says, his body shaking with rage. โIย trustedย you and you abandoned me to work withย him?โ
โNo.โ I shake my head. โHe told me something, and everything my brother said, everything Jeanine said while I was in Erudite headquarters, fit perfectly with what he told me. And I wantedโIย neededย to know the truth.โ
โThe truth.โ He snorts. โYou think you learned theย truthย from a liar, a traitor, and a sociopath?โ
โThe truth?โ says Tori. โWhat are you talking about?โ
Tobias and I stare at each other. His blue eyes, usually so thoughtful, are
now hard and critical, like they are peeling back layer after layer of me and searching each one.
โI think,โ I say. I have to pause and take a breath, because I have not convinced him; I have failed, and this is probably the last thing they will let me say before they arrest me.
โI think thatย youย are the liar!โ I say, my voice quaking. โYou tell me you love me, you trust me, you think Iโm more perceptive than the average person. And the first second that belief in my perceptiveness, that trust, thatย loveย is put to the test, it all falls apart.โ I am crying now, but I am not ashamed of the tears shining on my cheeks or the thickness of my voice. โSo you must have lied when you told me all those things . . . you must have, because I canโt believe your love is really that feeble.โ
I step closer to him, so that there are only inches between us, and none of the others can hear me.
โI am still the person who would have died rather than kill you,โ I say, remembering the attack simulation and the feel of his heartbeat under my hand. โI am exactly who you think I am. And right now, Iโm telling you that I know . . . Iย knowย this information will change everything. Everything we have done, and everything we are about to do.โ
I stare at him like I can communicate the truth with my eyes, but that is impossible. He looks away, and Iโm not sure he even heard what I said.
โEnough of this,โ says Tori. โTake her downstairs. She will be tried along with all the other war criminals.โ
Tobias doesnโt move. Uriah takes my arm and leads me away from him, through the laboratory, through the room of light, through the blue hallway. Therese of the factionless joins us there, eyeing me curiously.
Once weโre in the stairwell, I feel something nudge my side. When I look back, I see a wad of gauze in Uriahโs hand. I take it, trying to give him a grateful smile and failing.
As we descend the stairs, I wrap the gauze tightly around my hand, sidestepping bodies without looking at their faces. Uriah takes my elbow to keep me from falling. The gauze wrapping doesnโt help with the pain of the bite, but it makes me feel a little better, and so does the fact that Uriah, at least, doesnโt seem to hate me.
For the first time the Dauntlessโs disregard for age does not seem like an opportunity. It seems like the thing that will condemn me. They will not say,ย But sheโs young; she must have been confused.ย They will say,ย She is an adult, and she made her choice.
Of course, I agree with them. I did make my choice. I chose my mother and father, and what they fought for.
Walking down the stairs is easier than going up. We reach the fifth level before I realize that weโre going down to the lobby.
โGive me your gun, Uriah,โ says Therese. โSomeone needs to be able to shoot potential belligerents, and you canโt do it if youโre keeping her from falling down the stairs.โ
Uriah surrenders his gun without question. I frownโTherese alreadyย hasย a gun, so why did it matter for him to give his? But I donโt ask. I am in enough trouble as it is.
We reach the bottom floor and walk past a large meeting room full of people dressed in black and white. I pause for a moment to watch them. Some of them are huddled in small groups, leaning on one another, tears streaking their faces. Others are alone, leaning against walls or sitting in corners, their eyes hollow or staring at something that is far away.
โWe had to shoot so many,โ Uriah mutters, squeezing my arm. โJust to get into the building, we had to.โ
โI know,โ I say.
I see Christinaโs sister and mother clutched together on the right side of the room. And on the left side, a young man with dark hair that gleams in the fluorescent lightโPeter. His hand is on the shoulder of a middle-aged woman I recognize as his mother.
โWhat is he doing here?โ I say.
โLittle coward came in the aftermath, after all the work was done,โ Uriah says. โI heard his dadโs dead. Looks like his motherโs okay, though.โ
Peter looks over his shoulder, and his gaze meets mine, just for a second. In that second I try to summon some pity for the person who saved my life. But while the hatred I once had for him is gone, I still feel nothing.
โWhatโs the holdup?โ demands Therese. โLetโs get going.โ
We walk past the meeting room to the main lobby, where I once embraced Caleb. The giant portrait of Jeanine is in pieces on the floor. The smoke that hovers in the air is condensed around the bookshelves, which are burned to cinders. All the computers are in pieces, strewn across the floor.
Sitting in rows in the center of the room are some of the Erudite who didnโt get away, and the Dauntless traitors who survived. I search the faces for anything familiar. I find Caleb near the back, looking dazed. I look away.
โTris!โ I hear. Christina sits near the front, next to Cara, her leg wrapped tightly with fabric. She beckons to me, and I sit down next to her.
โNo success?โ she says quietly. I shake my head.
She sighs, and puts her arm around me. The gesture is so comforting I almost start to cry. But Christina and I are not people who cry together; weโre
people who fight together. So I hold my tears in.
โI saw your mom and your sister in the next room,โ I say. โYeah, me too,โ she says. โMy family is okay.โ
โGood,โ I say. โHowโs your leg?โ
โFine. Cara said itโll be fine; itโs not bleeding too much. One of the Erudite nurses stuffed some pain meds and antiseptic and gauze into her pockets before they took her down here, so it doesnโt hurt too bad either,โ she says. Beside her, Cara is examining another Eruditeโs arm. โWhereโs Marcus?โ
โDunno,โ I say. โWe had to split up. He should be down here. Unless they killed him or something.โ
โI wouldnโt be that surprised, honestly,โ she says.
The room is chaotic for a whileโpeople rushing in and rushing out again, our factionless guards trading places, new people in Erudite blue brought to sit among usโbut gradually everything gets quieter, and then I see him: Tobias, walking through the stairwell door.
I bite my lip, hard, and try not to think, try not to dwell on the cold feeling that surrounds my chest and the weight that hangs over my head. He hates me. He does not believe me.
Christina clutches me tighter as he walks past us, without even looking at me. I watch him over my shoulder. He stops next to Caleb, grabs his arm, and wrenches him to his feet. Caleb wriggles for a second, but he is not half as strong as Tobias and canโt break away.
โWhat?โ Caleb says, panicking. โWhat do you want?โ
โI want you to disarm the security system for Jeanineโs laboratory,โ says Tobias without looking back. โSo that the factionless can access her computer.โ
And destroy it, I think, and if possible, my heart becomes even heavier.
Tobias and Caleb disappear into the stairwell again.
Christina slumps against me, and I slump against her, so we hold each other up.
โJeanine activated all the Dauntless transmitters, you know,โ Christina says. โOne of the factionless groups got ambushed by simulation-controlled Dauntless, coming late from the Abnegation sector about ten minutes ago. I guess the factionless won, though I donโt know how you call shooting a bunch of brain-dead people winning.โ
โYeah.โ There isnโt much more to say. She seems to realize that. โWhat happened after I got shot?โ she says.
I describe the blue hallway with two doors, and the simulation that followed, from the moment I recognized the Dauntless training room to the moment I shot myself. I do not tell her about hallucinating Will.
โWait,โ she says. โIt was a simulation? Without a transmitter?โ
I frown. I hadnโt bothered to wonder about that. Especially not at the time. โIf the laboratory recognizes people, maybe it also knows data about everyone, and can present a corresponding simulated environment depending on your faction.โ
It doesnโt matter, now, to figure out how Jeanine set up the security on her laboratory, of all things. But it feels good to put myself to some use, to think of a new problem to solve now that I have failed to solve the most important one.
Christina sits up straighter. Maybe she feels the same way. โOr the poison somehow contains a transmitter.โ
I hadnโt thought of that.
โBut how did Tori get past it? Sheโs not Divergent.โ I tilt my head. โI donโt know.โ
Maybe she is, I think. Her brother was, and after what happened to him, she might never admit it, no matter how accepted it becomes.
People, I have discovered, are layers and layers of secrets. You believe you know them, that you understand them, but their motives are always hidden from you, buried in their own hearts. You will never know them, but sometimes you decide to trust them.
โWhat do you think theyโre going to do to us when they find us guilty?โ she says after a few minutes of silence have passed.
โHonestly?โ
โDoes now seem like the time for honesty?โ
I look at her from the corner of my eye. โI think theyโre going to force us to eat lots of cake and then take an unreasonably long nap.โ
She laughs. I try not toโif I let myself laugh, Iโll start to cry, too. I hear a yell, and peer around the crowd to see where it came from.
โLynn!โ The yell came from Uriah. He runs toward the door, where two Dauntless are carrying Lynn in on a makeshift stretcher, made of what looks like a shelf from a bookcase. She is paleโtoo paleโand her hands are folded over her stomach.
I jump to my feet and start toward her, but a few factionless guns stop me from going much farther. I put up my hands and stand still, watching.
Uriah walks around the crowd of war criminals and points to a severe- looking Erudite woman with gray hair. โYou. Come here.โ
The woman gets to her feet and brushes off her pants. She walks, light- footed, to the edge of the seated crowd and looks expectantly at Uriah.
โYouโre a doctor, right?โ he says. โI am, yes,โ she says.
โThen fix her!โ He scowls. โSheโs hurt.โ
The doctor approaches Lynn and asks the two Dauntless to set her down.
They do, and she crouches over the stretcher.
โMy dear,โ she says. โPlease remove your hands from your wound.โ โI canโt,โ moans Lynn. โIt hurts.โ
โI am aware that it hurts,โ the doctor says. โBut I wonโt be able to assess your wound if you do not reveal it to me.โ
Uriah kneels across from the doctor and helps her shift Lynnโs hands away from her stomach. The doctor peels Lynnโs shirt back from her stomach. The bullet wound itself is just a round, red circle in Lynnโs skin, but surrounding it is what looks like a bruise. I have never seen a bruise that dark.
The doctor purses her lips, and I know that Lynn is as good as dead. โFix her!โ says Uriah. โYou can fix her, so do it!โ
โOn the contrary,โ the doctor says, looking up at him. โBecause you set the hospital floors of this building on fire, I cannot fix her.โ
โThere are other hospitals!โ he says, almost shouting. โYou can get stuff from there and heal her!โ
โHer condition is far too advanced,โ the doctor says, her voice quiet. โIf you had not insisted upon burning everything that came into your path, I could have tried, but as the situation stands, trying would be worthless.โ
โYou shut up!โ he says, pointing at the doctorโs chest. โIโm not the one who burned your hospital! Sheโs my friend, and I . . . I just . . .โ
โUri,โ says Lynn. โShut up. Itโs too late.โ
Uriah lets his arms fall to his sides, then reaches for Lynnโs hand, his lip quivering.
โIโm her friend too,โ I say to the factionless pointing guns at me. โCan you at least point guns at me from over there?โ
They let me pass, and I run to Lynnโs side, holding her free hand, which is sticky with blood. I ignore the gun barrels pointed at my head and focus on Lynnโs face, which is now yellowish instead of white.
She doesnโt seem to notice me. She focuses on Uriah.
โIโm just glad I didnโt die while under the simulation,โ she says weakly. โYouโre not gonna die now,โ he says.
โDonโt be stupid,โ she says. โUri, listen. I loved her too. I did.โ โYou loved who?โ he says, his voice breaking.
โMarlene,โ says Lynn.
โYeah, we all loved Marlene,โ he says.
โNo, thatโs not what I mean.โ She shakes her head. She closes her eyes.
Still, it takes a few minutes before her hand goes limp in mine. I guide it across her stomach, and then take her other hand from Uriah and do the same
to it. He wipes his eyes before his tears can fall. Our eyes meet across her body.
โYou should tell Shauna,โ I say. โAnd Hector.โ
โRight.โ He sniffs and presses his palm to Lynnโs face. I wonder if her cheek is still warm. I donโt want to touch her and find that itโs not.
I rise and walk back to Christina.