Nazeera was right. I shouldโve sat down.
Iโm looking at my hands, watching a tremor work its way across my fingers. I nearly lose my grip on the stack of photos Iโm clutching. The photos. The photos Nazeera passed around after telling us that Juliette is not who we think she is.
I canโt stop staring at the pictures.
A little brown girl and a little white girl running in a field, both of them smiling tiny-toothed smiles, long hair flying in the wind, small baskets full of strawberries swinging from their elbows.
Nazeera and Emmaline at the strawberry patch, it read on the back.
Little Nazeera being hugged, on either side, by two little white girls, all three of them laughing so hard they look like theyโre about to fall over.
Ella and Emmaline and Nazeera, it read.
A close-up of a little girl smiling right into the camera, her eyes huge and blue-green, lengths of soft brown hair framing her face.
Ella on Christmas morning, it read.
โElla Sommers,โ Nazeera says.
She says her real name is Ella Sommers, sister to Emmaline Sommers, daughter of Maximillian and Evie Sommers.
โSomething is wrong,โ Nazeera says.
โSomething is happening,โ she says. She says she woke up six weeks ago remembering Julietteโsorry, Ellaโ
โRemembering her. I wasย rememberingย her, which means Iโd forgotten her. And when I remembered Ella,โ she says, โI remembered Emmaline, too. I remembered how weโd all grown up together, how our parents used to be friends. I remembered but I didnโt understand, not right away. I thought maybe I was confusing dreams with memory. Actually, the memories came back to me so slowly I thought, for a while, that I mightโve been hallucinating.โ
She says the hallucinations, as she called them, were impossible to shake, so she started digging, started looking for information.
โI learned the same thing you did. That two girls named Ella and Emmaline were donated to The Reestablishment, and that only Ella was taken out of their custody, so Ella was given an alias. Relocated. Adopted. But what you didnโt know was that the parents who gave up their daughters were also members of The Reestablishment. They were doctors and scientists. You didnโt know that Ellaโthe girl you know to be Julietteโis the daughter of Evie Sommers, the current supreme commander of Oceania. She and I grew up together. She, like the rest of us kids, was built to serve The Reestablishment.โ
Ian swears, loudly, and Adam is so stunned he doesnโt complain.
โThat canโt be possible,โ Adam says. โJulietteโ The girl I went to school with? She wasโโhe shakes his headโโI knew Juliette for years. She wasnโt made like you or Warner. She was this quiet, timid, sweet girl. She was always soย nice. She never wanted to hurt anyone. All she ever wanted was to, like, connect with people. She was trying toย helpย that little boy in the grocery store. But then it justโeverything ended so badly and she got sucked into this whole mess and I tried,โ he says, looking suddenly distraught, โI tried to help her, I tried to keep her safe. I wanted to protect her from this. I wanted tโโ
He cuts himself off. Pulls himself together.
โShe wasnโt like this,โ he says, and heโs staring at the ground now. โNot until she started spending all that time with Warner. After she met him she justโ I donโt know what happened. She lost herself, little by little. Eventually she became someone else.โ He looks up. โBut she wasnโt made to be this way, not like you. Not like Warner. Thereโs no way sheโs the daughter of a supreme commanderโsheโs not a born murderer. Besides,โ he says, taking a sharp breath, โif she were from Oceania she would have anย accent.โ
Nazeera tilts her head at Adam.
โThe girl you knew had undergone severe physical and emotional trauma,โ she says. โSheโd had her native memories forcibly removed. She was shipped across the globe as a specimen and convinced to live with abusive adoptive parents who beat the life out of her.โ Nazeera shakes her head slowly. โThe Reestablishmentโand Anderson, in particularโmade sure that Ella could never remember why she was suffering, but just because she couldnโt remember what happened to her didnโt change the fact that it happened. Her body was repeatedly used and abused by a rotating cast of monsters. And that shit leaves its mark.โ
Nazeera looks Adam straight in the eye.
โMaybe you donโt understand,โ she says. โI read all the reports. I hacked into all my fatherโs files. I foundย everything. What they did to Ella over the course of twelve years isย unspeakable. So yes, Iโm sure you remember a very
different person. But I donโt think she became someone she wasnโt. My guess is she finally gathered the strength to remember who sheโd always been. And if you donโt get that, Iโm glad things didnโt work out between the two of you.โ
In an instant, the tension in the room is nearly suffocating.
Adam looks like he might be on fire. Like fire might literally come out of his eyeballs. Like it might be his new superpower.
I clear my throat. I force myself to say somethingโanythingโto break the silence. โSo you guys, uh, you all knew about Adam and Juliette, too, huh? I didnโt realize you knew about that. Huh. Interesting.โ
Nazeera takes her time turning in her seat to look me in the eye. โAre you kidding?โ she says, staring at me like Iโm worse than an idiot.
I figure itโs best not to press the issue.
โWhere did you get these photos?โ Alia asks, changing the subject more deftly than I did. โHow can we trust that theyโre real?โ
At first, Nazeera only looks at her. And she seems resigned when she says, โI donโt know how to convince you that the photos are real. I can only tell you that they are.โ
The room goes silent.
โWhy do you even care?โ Lily says. โWhy are we supposed to believe you care about this? About Julietteโaboutย Ella? What do you have to gain from helping us? Why would you betray your parents?โ
Nazeera sits back in her seat. โI know you all think the children of the supreme commanders are a bunch of carefree, amoral psychopaths, happy to be the military robots our parents wanted us to be, but nothing is ever that straightforward. Our parents are homicidal maniacs intent on ruling the world; that part is true. But the thing no one seems to understand is that our parentsย choseย to be homicidal maniacs. We, on the other hand, were forced to be. And just because weโve been trained to be mercenaries doesnโt mean we like it. None of us got to choose this life. None of us enjoyed being taught to torture before we could even drive. And itโs not insane to imagine that sometimes even horrible people are searching for a way out of their own darkness.โ
Nazeeraโs eyes flash with feeling as she speaks, and her words puncture the life vest around my heart. Emotion drowns me again.
Shit.
โIs it really so crazy to think I might care about the girls I once loved as my own sisters?โ sheโs saying. โOr about the lies my parents forced me to swallow, or the innocent people I watched them murder? Or maybe even something simpler than thatโthat I mightโve opened my eyes one day and realized that I was part and parcel of a system that was not only ravaging the world but also slaughtering everyone in it?โ
Shit.
I can feel it, can feel my heart filling out, filling up. My chest feels tight,
like itโs swollen, like my lungs donโt fit anymore. I donโt want to care about Nazeera. Donโt want to feel her pain or feel connected to her or feelย anything. I just want to keep a level head. Be cool.
I force myself to think about a joke James told me the other day, a stupid punโsomething to do with muffinsโa joke that was so lame I nearly cried. I focus on the memory, the way James laughed at his own lameness, snorting so hard a little food fell out of his mouth. I smile and glance at James, who looks like he might be falling asleep in his seat.
Soon, the tightness in my chest begins to abate.
Now Iโm really smiling, wondering if itโs weird that I love bad jokes even more than good ones, when I hear Ian sayโ
โItโs not that you seem heartless. Itโs just that these photos seem so convenient. You had them ready to share.โ He stares down at the single photo heโs holding. โThese kids could be anyone.โ
โLook closely,โ Nazeera says, standing up to get a better look at the picture in his hands. โWho do you think that is?โ
I lean overโIan isnโt far from meโand peer over his shoulder. Thereโs really no point denying it anymore; the resemblance is insane.
Juliette.ย Ella.
Sheโs just a kid, maybe four or five years old, standing in front of the camera, smiling. Sheโs holding a bouquet of dandelions up to the cameraman, as if to offer him one. And then, just off to the side, thereโs another figure. A little blond boy. So blond his hair is white. Heโs staring, intensely, at a single dandelion in his hands.
I nearly fall out of my chair. Juliette is one thing, but thisโ โIs thatย Warner?โ I say.
Adam looks up sharply. He glances from me to Nazeera, then stalks over to look at the photo. His eyebrows fly up his head.
โNo way,โ he says. Nazeera shrugs.
โNo way,โ Adam says again. โNo way.ย Thatโs impossible. Thereโs no way they knew each other this long. Warner had no idea who Juliette was before she came here.โ When Nazeera seems unmoved, Adam says, โIโm serious. I know you think Iโm full of shit, but Iโm not wrong about this.ย I wasย there.ย Warner literally interviewed me for the job of being her cellmate in the asylum. He didnโt know who she was. Heโd never met her. Never seen her face, not up close, anyway. Half the reason he chose me to be her roommate was because she and I had history, because he found that useful. Heโd grill me for hours about her.โ
Nazeera sighs slowly, like sheโs surrounded by idiots.
โWhen I found these photos,โ she says to Adam, โI couldnโt understand how I came across them so easily. I didnโt understand why anyone would
keep evidence like this right under my nose or make it so easy to find. But I know now that my parents never expected me to look. They got lazy. They figured that, even if I found these photos, Iโd never know what I was looking at. Two months ago I couldโve seen these pictures and assumed that this girlโโshe plucks a photo of herself, what appears to be a young Haider, and a thin brown-haired girl with bright blue eyes, out of a pileโโwas a neighbor kid, someone I used to know but canโt be bothered to remember.
โBut I do remember,โ she says. โI remember all of it. I remember the day our parents told us that Ella and Emmaline had drowned. I remember crying myself to sleep every night. I remember the day they took us to a place I thought was a hospital. I remember my mother telling me Iโd feel better soon. And then, I rememberย rememberingย nothing. Like time, in my brain, just folded in on itself.โ She raises her eyebrows. โDo you get what Iโm trying to say to you, Kent?โ
He glares at her. โI get that you think Iโm an idiot.โ She smiles.
โYes, I get what youโre saying,โ he says, obviously irritated. โYouโre saying you all had your memories wiped. Youโre saying Warner doesnโt even know that they knew each other.โ
She holds up a finger. โDidnโtย know,โ she says. โHe didnโt know until just before the symposium. I tried to warn himโand Castle,โ she says, glancing at Castle, whoโs looking at the wall. โI tried to warn them both that something was wrong, that something big was happening and I didnโt really understand what or why. Warner didnโt believe me, of course. Iโm not sure Castle did, either. But I didnโt have time to give them proof.โ
โWait, what?โ I say, my eyebrows furrowing. โYou told Warner and Castle?ย Beforeย the symposium? You told them all of this?โ
โI tried,โ she says.
โWhy wouldnโt you just tell Juliette?โ Lily asks. โYou mean Ella.โ
Lily rolls her eyes. โSure. Ella. Whatever. Why not warn her directly?
Why tell everyone else?โ
โI didnโt know how sheโd take the news,โ Nazeera says. โIโd been trying to take her temperature from the moment I got here, and I could never figure out how she felt about me. I didnโt think she really trusted me. And then after everything that happenedโโshe hesitatesโโit never seemed like the right time. She got shot, she was in recovery, and then she and Warner broke up, and she just . . . I donโt know. Spiraled. She wasnโt in a healthy headspace. Sheโd already had to stomach a bunch of revelations and she didnโt seem to be handling them well. I wasnโt sure she could take much more, to be honest, and I was worried what she might do.โ
โMurder six hundred people, maybe,โ Ian mutters under his breath.
โHey,โ I snap. โShe didnโt murder anyone, okay? That was some kind of magic trick.โ
โIt was a distraction,โ Nazeera says firmly. โJames was the only one who saw this for what it was.โ She sighs. โI think this whole thing was staged to make Ella appear volatile and unhinged. That scene at the symposium will no doubt undermine her position here, at Sector 45, by instilling fear in the soldiers who pledged their allegiance to her. Sheโll be described as unstable. Irrational. Weak. And thenโeasily captured. I knew The Reestablishment wanted Ella gone, but I thought theyโd just burn the whole sector to the ground. I was wrong. This was a far more efficient tactic. They didnโt need to kill off a regiment of perfectly good soldiers and a population of obedient workers,โ Nazeera says. โAll they needed to do was to discredit Ella as their leader.โ
โSo what happens now?โ Lily says.
Nazeera hesitates. And then, carefully, she says, โOnce theyโve punished the citizens and thoroughly quashed any hope for rebellion, The Reestablishment will turn everyone against you. Put bounties on your heads, or, worse, threaten to murder loved ones if civilians and soldiers donโt turn you in. You were right,โ she says to Lily. โThe soldiers and citizens paid allegiance to Ella, and with both herย andย Warner gone, theyโll feel abandoned. They have no reason to trust the rest of you.โ A pause. โIโd say you have about twenty-four hours before they come for your heads.โ
Silence falls over the room. For a moment, I think everyone actually stops breathing.
โFuck,โ Ian says, dropping his head in his hands.
โImmediate relocation is your best course of action,โ Nazeera says briskly, โbut I donโt know that I can be much help in that department. Where you go will be up to your discretion.โ
โThen what are you even doing here?โ I say, irritated. I understand her a little better nowโI know that sheโs been trying to helpโbut that doesnโt change the fact that I still feel like shit. Or that I still donโt know how to feel about her. โYou showed up just to tell us weโre all going to die and thatโs it?โ I shake my head. โSo helpful, thanks.โ
โKenji,โ Castle says, finally breaking his silence. โThereโs no need to attack our guest.โ His voice is a calm, steadying sound. Iโve missed it. โShe really did try to talk to meโto warn meโwhile she was here. As for a contingency plan,โ he says, speaking to the room, โgive me a little time. I have friends. Weโre not alone, as you well know, in our resistance. Thereโs no need to panic, not yet.โ
โNot yet?โ Ian says, incredulous.
โNot yet,โ Castle says. Then: โNazeera, what of your brother? Were you able to convince him?โ
Nazeera takes a steadying breath, losing some of the tension in her shoulders. โHaider knows,โ she explains to the rest of us. โHeโs been remembering things about Ella, too, but his memories of her arenโt as strong as mine, and he didnโt understand what was happening to him until last night when I decided to tell him what Iโd discovered.โ
โWhoaโ Wait,โ Ian says. โYou trust him?โ
โI trust him enough,โ she says. โBesides, I figured he had a right to know; he knew Ella and Emmaline, too. But he wasnโt entirely convinced. I donโt know what heโll decide to do, not yet, but he definitely seemed shaken up about it, which I think is a good sign. I asked him to do some digging, to find out if any of the other kids were beginning to remember things, too, and he said he would. Right now, thatโs all Iโve got.โ
โWhereย areย the other kids?โ Winston asks, frowning. โDo they know youโre still here?โ
Nazeeraโs expression grows grim. โAll the kids were supposed to report back as soon as the symposium was over. Haider should be on his way back to Asia by now. I tried to convince my parents I was staying behind to do more reconnaissance, but I donโt think they bought it. Iโm sure Iโll hear from them soon. Iโll handle it as it comes.โ
โSoโ Waitโโ I glance from her to Castle. โYouโre staying with us?โ โThat wasnโt really my plan.โ
โOh,โ I say. โGood. Thatโs good.โ She raises an eyebrow at me. โYou know what I mean.โ
โI donโt think I do,โ she says, and she looks suddenly irritated. โAnyway, even though itย wasnโtย my plan to stay, I think I might have to.โ
My eyes widen. โWhat? Why?โ
โBecause,โ she says, โmy parents have been lying to me since I was a kid
โstealing my memories and rewriting my historyโand I want to know why. Besidesโโshe takes a deep breathโโI think I know where Ella and Warner are, and I want to help.โ