Iโve been sitting in the back of a police car for over an hour. I havenโt been able to cry, not yet. And I donโt know what Iโm waiting for, but I know what I did, and Iโm pretty sure I know what happens next.
I killed a little boy.
I donโt know how I did it. I donโt know why it happened. I just know that it was me, my hands, me. I did that. Me.
I wonder if my parents will show up.
Instead, three men in military uniforms march up to my window. One of them flings open the door and aims a machine gun at my chest.
โGet out,โ he barks. โOut with your hands up.โ
My heart is racing, terror propelling me out of the car so fast I stumble, slamming my knee into the ground. I donโt need to check to know that Iโm bleeding; the pain of the fresh wound is already searing. I bite my lip to keep from crying out, force the tears back.
No one helps me up.
I want to tell them that Iโm only fourteen, that I donโt know a lot about a lot of things, but that I know enough. Iโve watched TV shows about this sort of thing. I know they canโt charge me as an adult. I know that they shouldnโt be treating me like this.
But then I remember that the world is different now. We have a new government now, one that doesnโt care how we used to do things. Maybe none of that matters anymore.
My heart beats faster.
Iโm shoved into the backseat of a black car, and before I know it, Iโm deposited somewhere new: somewhere that looks like an ordinary office building. Itโs tall. Steel gray. It seems old and decrepitโsome of its windows are crackedโand the whole thing looks sad.
But when I walk inside Iโm stunned to discover a blinding, gleaming interior. I look around, taking in the marble floors, the rich carpets and furnishings. The ceilings are high, the architecture modern but elegant. Itโs all glass and marble and stainless steel.
Iโve never been anywhere so beautiful.
And I havenโt even had a moment to take it all in before Iโm greeted by a thin, older man with even thinner brown hair.
The soldiers flanking me step back as he steps forward. โMs. Ferrars?โ he says.
โYes?โ
โYou are to come with me.โ I hesitate. โWho are you?โ
He studies me a moment and then seems to make a decision. โYou may call me Delalieu.โ
โOkay,โ I say, the word disappearing into a whisper.
I follow Delalieu into a glass elevator and watch him use a key card to authorize the lift. Once weโre in motion, I find the courage to speak.
โWhere am I?โ I ask. โWhatโs happening?โ
His answer comes automatically. โYou are in Sector 45 headquarters. Youโre here to have a meeting with the chief commander and regent of Sector
45.โ He doesnโt look at me when he speaks, but thereโs nothing in his tone that feels threatening. So I ask another question.
โWhy?โ
The elevator doors ping as they open. Delalieu finally turns to look at me. โYouโll find out in just a moment.โ
I follow Delalieu down a hall and wait, quietly, outside a door while he knocks. He peeks his head inside when the door opens, announces his presence, and then motions for me to follow him in.
When I do, Iโm surprised.
Thereโs a beautiful man in military uniformโIโm assuming heโs the commanderโstanding in front of a large, wooden desk, his arms crossed against his chest. Heโs staring me straight in the eye, and Iโm suddenly so overwhelmed I feel myself blush.
Iโve never seen anyone so handsome before.
I look down, embarrassed, and study the laces of my tennis shoes. Iโm grateful for my long hair. It serves as a dark, heavy curtain, shielding my face from view.
โLook at me.โ
The command is sharp and clear. I look up, nervously, to meet his eyes. He has thick, dark brown hair. Eyes like a storm. He looks at me for so long I feel goose bumps rise along my skin. He wonโt look away, and I feel more terrified by the moment. This manโs eyes are full of anger. Darkness. Thereโs something genuinely frightening about him, and my heart begins to hammer.
โYouโre growing up quickly,โ he says.
I stare at him, confused, but heโs still studying my face.
โFourteen years old,โ he says quietly. โSuch a complicated age for a young girl.โ Finally, he sighs. Looks away. โIt always breaks my heart to
break beautiful things.โ
โI donโtโ I donโt understand,โ I say, feeling suddenly ill. He looks up again. โYouโre aware of what you did today?โ I freeze. Words pile up in my throat, die in my mouth.
โYes or no?โ he demands.
โY-yes,โ I say quickly. โYes.โ
โAnd do you know why you did it? Do you know how you did it?โ
I shake my head, my eyes filling fast with tears. โIt was an accident,โ I whisper. โI didnโt knowโ I didnโt know that thisโโ
โDoes anyone else know about your sickness?โ
โNo.โ I stare at him, my eyes wide even as tears blur my vision. โI mean, n-not, not reallyโjust my parentsโbut no one really understands whatโs wrong with me. I donโt even understandโโ
โYou mean you didnโt plan this? It wasnโt your intention to murder the little boy?โ
โNo!โ I cry out, and then clap both hands over my mouth. โNo,โ I say, quietly now. โI was trying to help him. Heโd fallen to the floor and Iโ I didnโt know. I swear I didnโt know.โ
โLiar.โ
Iโm still shaking my head, wiping away tears with shaking hands. โIt was an accident. I swear, I didnโt mean toโI d-didnโtโโ
โSir.โ Itโs Delalieu. His voice.
I didnโt realize he was still in the room.
I sniff, hard, wiping quickly at my face, but my hands are still shaking. I try, again, to swallow back the tears. To pull myself together.
โSir,โ Delalieu says more firmly, โperhaps we should conduct this interview elsewhere.โ
โI donโt see why thatโs necessary.โ
โI donโt mean to seem impertinent, sir, but I really feel that you might be better served conducting this interview privately.โ
I dare to turn, to look up at him. And thatโs when I notice the third person in the room.
A boy.
My breath catches in my throat with an almost audible gasp. A single tear escapes down my cheek and I brush it away, even as I stare at him. I canโt help itโI canโt look away. He has the kind of face Iโve never seen in real life. Heโs more handsome than the commander. More beautiful. Still, thereโs something unnerving about him, something cold and alien about his face that makes him difficult to look at. Heโs almost too perfect. He has a sharp jawline and sharp cheekbones and a sharp, straight nose. Everything about him reminds me of a blade. His face is pale. His eyes are a stunning, clear green, and he has rich, golden hair. And heโs staring at me, his eyes wide with an
emotion I canโt decipher.
A throat clears. The spell is broken.
Heat floods my face and I avert my eyes, mortified I didnโt look away sooner.
I hear the commander mutter angrily under his breath. โUnbelievable,โ he says. โAlways the same.โ
I look up.
โAaron,โ he says sharply. โGet out.โ
The boyโhis name must be Aaronโstartles. He stares at the commander for a second, and then glances at the door. But he doesnโt move.
โDelalieu, please escort my son from the room, as he seems presently unable to remember how to move his legs.โ
Hisย son.
Wow. That explains the face. โYes, sir, of course, sir.โ
Aaronโs expression is impossible to read. I catch him looking at me, just once more, and when he finds me staring, he frowns. Itโs not an unkind look.
Still, I turn away.
He and Delalieu move past me as they exit, and I pretend not to notice when I hear him whisperโ
โWho is she?โ
โas they walk away.
โElla? Are you all right?โ
I blink, slowly clearing the webbing of blackness obscuring my vision. Stars explode and fade behind my eyes and I try to stand, the carpet pressing popcorn impressions into my palms, metal digging into my flesh. Iโm wearing manacles, glowing cuffs that emit a soft, blue light that leaches the life from my skin, makes my own hands seem sinister.
The woman at my door is staring at me. She smiles.
โYour father and I thought you might be hungry,โ she says. โWe made you dinner.โ
I canโt move. My feet seem bolted in place, the pinks and purples of the walls and floors assaulting me from every corner. Iโm standing in the middle of the bizarre museum of what was likely my childhood bedroomโstaring at what might be my biological motherโand I feel like I might throw up. The lights are suddenly too bright, the voices too loud. Someone walks toward me and the movement feels exaggerated, the footsteps thudding hard and fast in my ears. My vision goes in and out and the walls seem to shake. The floor shifts, tilts backward.
I fall, hard, onto the floor.
For a minute, I hear nothing but my heartbeat. Loud, so loud, pressing in on me, assaulting me with a cacophony of sound so disturbing I double over, press my face into the carpet and scream.
Iโm hysterical, my bones shaking in my skin, and the woman picks me up, reels me in, and I tear away, still screamingโ
โWhere is everyone?โ I scream. โWhatโs happening to me?โ I scream. โWhere am I? Whereโs Warner and Kenji and oh my Godโoh my Godโall those peopleโall those people I k-killedโโ
Vomit inches up my throat, choking me, and I try and fail to suppress the images, the horrible, terrifying images of bodies cleaved open, blood snaking down ridges of poorly torn flesh and something pierces my mind, something sharp and blinding and suddenly Iโm on my knees, heaving the meager contents of my stomach into a pink basket.
I can hardly breathe.
My lungs are overworked, my stomach still threatening to betray me, and Iโm gasping, my hands shaking hard as I try to stand. I spin around, the room moving more quickly than I do, and I see only flashes of pink, flashes of purple.
I sway.
Someone catches me again, this time new arms, and the man who calls me his daughter holds me like Iโm his child and he says, โHoney, you donโt have to think about them anymore. Youโre safe now.โ
โSafe?โ I rear back, eyes wild. โWhoย areย youโ?โ
The woman takes my hand. Squeezes my fingers even as I wrench free from her grip. โIโm your mother,โ she says. โAnd Iโve decided itโs time for you to come home.โ
โWhatโโI grab two fistfuls of her shirtโโhave you doneย with my friends?โ I scream. And then I shake her, shake her so hard she actually looks scared for a second, and then I try to pick her up and throw her into the wall but remember, with a start, that my powers have been cut off, that I have to rely on mere anger and adrenaline and I turn around, suddenly furious, feeling more certain by the second that Iโve begun to hallucinate, hallucinate, when
unexpectedly
she slaps me in the face. Hard.
I blink, stunned, but manage to stay upright.
โElla Sommers,โ she says sharply, โyou will pull yourself together.โ Her eyes flash as she appraises me. โWhat is this ridiculous, dramatic behavior? Worried about yourย friends? Those people are not your friends.โ
My cheek burns and half my mouth feels numb but I say, โYes, yes theyโre my frโโ
She slaps me again.
My eyes close. Reopen. I feel suddenly dizzy.
โWe are your parents,โ she says in a harsh whisper. โYour father and I have brought you home. You should be grateful.โ
I taste blood. I reach up, touch my lip. My fingers come away red. โWhereโs Emmaline?โ Blood is pooling in my mouth and I spit it out, onto the floor. โHave you kidnapped her, too? Does she know what youโve done? That you donated us to The Reestablishment? Sold our bodies to the world?โ
A third, swift slap.
I feel it ring in my skull.
โHow dare you.โ My motherโs face flushes crimson. โHowย dareย youโ You have no idea what weโve built, all these yearsโ The sacrifices we made for ourย futureโโ
โNow, Evie,โ my dad says, and places a calming hand on her shoulder. โEverything is going to be okay. Ella just needs a little time to settle in, thatโs all.โ He glances at me. โIsnโt that right, Ella?โ
It hits me then, in that moment. Everything. It hits me, all at once, with a frightening, destabilizing forceโ
Iโve been kidnapped by a pair of crazy people and I might never see my friends again. In fact, my friends might be dead. Myย parentsย mightโve killed them. All of them.
The realization is like suffocation.
Tears fill my throat, my mouth, my eyesโ
โWhere,โ I say, my chest heaving, โis Warner? What did you do to him?โ
Evieโs expression goes suddenly murderous. โYou and that damn boy. If I have to hear his name one more timeโโ
โWhereโs Warner?โ Iโm screaming again. โWhere is he? Whereโs Kenji?
What did you do with them?โ
Evie looks suddenly exhausted. She pinches the bridge of her nose between her thumb and index finger.
โDarling,โ she says, but she isnโt looking at me, sheโs looking at my father. โWill you handle this, please? I have a terrible headache and several urgent phone calls to return.โ
โOf course, my love.โ And he pulls a syringe from his pocket and stabs it, swiftly, into my neck.