Her name is on a list of the dead.
I squint into the stinging sunlight, scrutinizing every name inked onto the banner. Hers sits among the eight others, likely overlooked beneath the princeโs crowning the top. But despite being on the list, our future Enforcer will easily evade the death awaiting the other contestants. Because these Trials were made for Elites like him. Not Elites like her.
My eyes skim over the list once again, recognizing no other names. Iโve never been one to keep up with which Elites manage to wrangle enough relevance to make it into the Trials.
A shoulder collides with mine, followed by several other limbs pushing against me. Loot is swimming with sticky bodies and echoing shouts of celebration, further adding to the list of reasons why I would rather be anywhere else but the slums of Ilya. Itโs a struggle to push my way through the crowded street, every inch of it crawling with ignorance incarnate. Every inch cheering for each contestant they chose to represent Loot.
I push through the crowd, ignoring their celebrations.
They have done nothing more than send Mundanes and Defensive Elites to their deaths.
And she is one of them.
But it should be me. Me who dies brutally. Dies alone. Dies at all.
Chants in honor of the sixth ever Purging Trials ring in my ears, each word a reminder of what Iโve done โ nothing.
Iโve spent my whole life huddling in her shadow, hiding from life itself. And now she has been chosen simply because she did nothing of the sort. The people knew her, loved the street magic she performed as a Veil. And yet, they sentence her to death under the guise of honor.
She is a Defensive. Therefore, she is dead.
And I need to 1nd her.
My hands are streaked with coal dust, leathers clinging to my sweaty body as though Iโm still hammering steel over a scalding 1re. I had worked through the night and was continuing still when the commotion managed to drag me from the shop.
I should have gone to see her last night. Should have been there when she found out.
And now Iโm shoving through a sea of people, attempting to 1nd her before itโs too late. I scan the packed street, catching sight of a coach rumbling towards the end of it. It screeches to a halt, the horses nearly as impatient as the drivers, eager to escape the slums.
I sure as hell know how that feels.
Iโm shoved forward when the congested crowd begins Rocking towards the coach, clustering it as though theyโre oIering free rides out of this shithole. Begrudgingly, I allow myself to be swept forward, managing to catch a glimpse of her climbing inside.
An Imperial ushers her up the step, and in typical Hera fashion, she shyly thanks him as though heโs not escorting her to her doom. Her sleek black hair is the last thing I see before sheโs swallowed by the four walls, sitting in the belly of the coach.
The world seems to quiet, slow its spinning with each shaky breath I manage. I didnโt get to say goodbye.
My thumb 1nds the scar cutting crookedly through my lips, tracing it like I had the day my life truly became a secret. A familiar numbness begins to bleed over my body, bathing every bit of me in bitterness.
Iโm about to turn away, unable to watch her be paraded towards her death. Thatโs when a Rash of silver catches my eye.
I peer over the dozens of heads dotting the street, watch her walk towards the coach with hair that tells me all I need to know.
So, this is the famous Silver Savior.
Word of her saving Prince Kai managed to reach even my ears โ evidence of how signi1cant sheโs become amongst the slums. Perhaps Iโm a skeptic, or simply the only logical person living in the vicinity, but Iโm not entirely
convinced by her battle with a Silencer. A battle that the future Enforcer himself couldnโt win.
And I know exactly what itโs like to be in Kaiโs shoes.
Iโm watching her climb into the coach when a hopping 1gure captures my attention. Dark curls bounce with each attempt to see over the crowd. Her hands are raised, waving haphazardly at the Silver Savior. Sheโs shouting something that looks quite heartfelt, likely a wasted goodbye that will never be heard.
I lean over a pair of young women who are chanting terribly oI-key to the rest of the street. Squinting, I struggle to scan the girlโs face with how persistently sheโs bouncing. Something about her seems faintly familiar, as though this isnโt the 1rst time Iโve been graced by the presence of her perpetual perkiness.
I roll my eyes when recognition rams into me.
Oh, I know exactly who this is. In fact, I believe she even made it onto my ever-growing list of reasons to never leave my shop.
I was buying supplies from a merchant who was just as eager to take my money as I was to retreat back into my glori1ed shed. It was with a bundle of leather tucked beneath my arm and a severe lack of pep in my step that I heard the most absurdly bubbly sales pitch.
And thatโs when I saw her, curly hair bouncing with each energetic bob of her head. A plethora of clothing piled around her while she described what is commonly known as a blue shirt with about a dozen more words than necessary.
I may have said a thing or two, though the details of our conversation were hardly interesting enough for me to waste time recalling now.
That was several weeks ago now, but there is no mistaking that the girl currently waving a crazed set of hands down the street is the same seamstress who sells on the corner of an alley.
And sheโs a Phaser. I know that much about her. Well, that, and her astounding ability to never tire of talking.
I watch her blow kisses to the Silver Savior, so many that I brace myself to witness her faint. But she does nothing of the sort, leaving me to continue watching the endearing embodiment of her aIections for this girl.
There is no mistaking the sincerity in each Railing wave and shouted sentiment. This seamstress knows the Silver Savior, and quite personally by the looks of it. Likely enough to do just about anything for her.
My mind races recklessly, scheming. A horribly impulsive plan begins to form, one that should likely never leave the con1nes of my mind, let alone be executed at all.
But this just might work.
That is typically what one thinks right before everything goes to shit. Then again, one might argue that things couldnโt possibly get any shittier.