Though we all still sleep under the same roof, it took only four days for the House to dissolve into four tribes. Antonia, apparently the scion of a family that owns a sizable asteroid belt, gets the midDrafters: the talkers, the whiners, the brains, the dependents, the wimps, the snobs, and the Politicos.
Titus draws mostly highDrafts or midDraftsโthe physical specimens, the violent, the fast, the intrepid, the prototypically intelligent, the ambitious, the opportunists, the obvious selection for House Mars. The prodigy pianist, quiet Cassandra, is his. So is raspy Pollux and the psychotic Vixus, who shivers with pleasure at the mere idea of putting metal into flesh.
If Cassius and I had been more political, we might have managed to steal the highDrafts from Titus. Hell, we might have had everyone ready to follow if we just told them they had to obey. After all, Cassius and I were the strongest for a brief moment, but then we gave Titus time to intimidate and Antonia time to manipulate.
โDamned Antonia,โ I say.
Cassius laughs and shakes his golden head as we bound east along the highlands in search of more hidden caches of supplies. My long legs can cover a kilometer in just over a minute.
โOh, you come to expect these things from her. If our families hadnโt spent holidays together when we were little things, I might have called her out as a demokrat on the first day. But sheโs hardly that. More like
Caesar or โฆ what did they call them, Presidents?โa tyrant in necessityโs clothing.โ
โSheโs a turd in the swillbowl,โ I say.
โWhat the gory slag does that mean?โ Cassius laughs. Uncle Narol could have told him.
โSorry? Oh. Heard it in Yorkton once from a highRed. Means sheโs a fly in the wine.โ
โA highRed?โ Cassius snorts. โOne of my nannies was a highRed. I know. Odd. Should have been a Brown. But the woman would tell me stories as I tried to go to sleep.โ
โThatโs nice,โ I say.
โI thought her an uppity bugger. Tried to tell Mother to make her shut up and leave me alone, because all she wanted to do was talk about vales and dreary romances that always end in some sort of sadness. Depressing creature.โ
โWhat did your mother do when you complained?โ
โMother? Ha! She clapped me on the head and said thereโs always something to learn from anybody. Even a highRed. She and Father like to pretend theyโre progressives. Confuses me.โ He shakes his head. โButย Yorkton. Julian couldnโt believeย youย were from Yorkton.โ
The darkness returns in me. Even thinking of Eo doesnโt dispel it. Even thinking of my noble mission and all the license it gives me doesnโt banish the guilt. Iโm the only one who shouldnโt feel guilty for the Passage, yet besides Roque, I think I am the only one who does. I look at my hands and remember Julianโs blood.
Cassius points up suddenly to the sky southwest of us. โWhat the gory hell?โ
Dozens of blinking medBots pour from floating Olympusโs castle. We hear their distant whine. Proctors flicker after them like flaming arrows toward the distant southern mountains. Whatever has happened, one thing is certain: chaos reigns in the South.
Although my tribe continues to sleep in the castle, weโve moved from the high tower to the gatehouse so we donโt have to rub shoulders with Titusโs lot. To keep safe, we leave our cooking a secret.
We meet our tribe for supper by a loch in the northern highlands. They are not all highDrafts. We have someโCassius and Roque. But then no one above seventeenth pick. Weโve some midDraftsโQuinn and Lea
โbut the rest are the dregs, the lowDraftsโClown, Screwface, Weed, Pebble, and Thistle. This bothers Cassius even though the dregs of the Institute are still certifiably superhuman compared with the rest of the Colors. They are athletic. They are resilient. They never ask you to repeat yourself unless they are making a point. And they accept my orders, even anticipating what next Iโll ask them to do. I credit their less privileged upbringings.
Most are smarter than I. But I have that unique thing they call slangsmarts, proven by my high score in the extrapolational intelligence test. Not that it matters, I have sulfur matches and that makes me the god Prometheus. Neither Antonia nor Titus have fire as far as I know. So Iโm the only one who can fill bellies. I make each of my tribe kill goats or sheep. No one is allowed to freeload, even though Screwface tries his best. They donโt notice my hands trembling when I cut my first goatโs throat with a knife. Thereโs so much trust in the beastโs eyes, followed by confusion as it dies, still thinking me its friend. The blood is warm, like Julianโs. The neck muscle tough. I have to saw with the dull knife, just as Lea does when she kills her first sheep, squealing as she does it. I make her skin it too with Thistleโs help. And when she cannot, I take her hands into my own and guide her along, giving her my strength.
โDaddy gonna have to cut up your meat for you too?โ Thistle taunts. โShut it,โ Roque says.
โShe can fight her own battles, Roque. Lea, Thistle asked you a question.โ Lea blinks over at me, wide eyes confused. โAsk her another, Thistle.โ
โWhatโs gonna happen when we get in a tight spot with Titus, will you squeal then too? Child.โ Thistle knows what I want her to do. I asked her to do it thirty minutes ago, before I brought the goat to Lea.
I motion my head at Lea to Thistle.
โYou going to cry?โ Thistle asks. โWipe your eyes inโโ
Lea snarls and jumps at her. The two roll around punching each other in the face. Itโs not long before Thistleโs got Lea in a choke-hold. Roque stirs beside me. Quinn pulls him back down. Leaโs face goes purple. Her hands slap at Thistleโs. Then she passes out. I give Thistle a nod of thanks. The darkfaced girl gives a slow nod.
Leaโs shoulders are squarer the next morning. She even musters enough courage to hold Roqueโs hand. She also claimed to be a better
cook than the rest of us; she isnโt. Roque tries his hand but heโs hardly any better. Eating their grub is like taking down stringy, dry sponges. Even Quinn, with all her stories, canโt muster up a recipe.
We cook goat and deer meat over our camp kitchen six kilometers from the castle, and we do it at night in the gulches so the light and smoke cannot be seen. We do not kill the sheep; instead we collect and deposit them in a northern fort for safekeeping. I could bring more over to my tribe with the food, but the food is as big a danger as it is a boon. What Titus and his killers would do if he found that we had fire, food, clean water โฆ
I am returning to the castle with Roque from a scouting trip to the south when we hear noises coming from a small grove of trees. Creeping closer, we hear grunts and hacking sounds. Expecting to see a wolfpack ravaging a goat, we peer through the brush and find four of Titusโs soldiers squatting around a deer corpse. Their faces are bloody, eyes dark and ravenous as they tear strips out of the dead deer with their knives. Five days without fire, five days of bad berries, and they have already turned into savages.
โWe have to give them matches,โ Roque tells me afterward. โThe stones here donโt spark with flint.โ
โNo. If we give them matches, then Titus will have even more power.โ โDoes it matter at this point? They are going to get sick if they keep
eating raw meat. They already are sick!โ
โSo they shit their pants,โ I grunt. โThere are worse things.โ
โTell me, Darrow. Would it be worse to have Titus in power and have Mars strong or for Darrow to be in power with Mars weak?โ
โBetter for whom?โ I ask petulantly. He only shakes his head.
โLet them rot their gory bellies,โ is Cassiusโs opinion. โThey made their beds. Now let them shit in them.โ
My army agrees.
I am fond of my army, the dregs, the lowDrafts. They arenโtย asย entitled or well-bred as the highDrafts. Most remember to thank me when I give them foodโat first they didnโt. They donโt prance off after Titus on midnight axe-raids simply because it gets their jollies off. No, they follow us because Cassius is as charismatic as the sun and, in his light, the shadow I cast looks like it knows what itโs doing. It doesnโt. It, like
me, was born in a mine.
Still, it does seem like I have some strategy. I have us make maps of our territory on digislates we found in a waterlogged cellar at the bottom of a ravine, but we still have no weapons other than my slingBlade and several knives and sharpened sticks. So whatever strategy we have is based in acquiring information.
Funny thing is, only one tribe has a silvershitโs idea what is going on. And itโs not ours. Itโs not Antoniaโs. And it sure as hell isnโt Titusโs. Itโs Sevroโs, and Iโm nearly certain heโs the only member in that tribe, unless heโs adopted wolves by now. It is hard to say if he has or hasnโt. Our House does not have family dinners. Though occasionally weโll see him running along the hillsides at night in his wolfskin, looking, as Cassius put it best, โlike some sort of hairy demonchild on hallucinogens.โ And once Roque even heard something, not a wolf, howling in the shrouded highlands. Some days Sevro walks around all normalishโinsulting everything that moves, except for Quinn. He makes an exception for her, delivering meats and edible mushrooms instead of insults. I think heโs sweet on her even though sheโs sweet on Cassius.
We ask her to tell us stories about him, but she wonโt. Sheโs loyal, and maybe thatโs why she reminds me of home. Sheโs always telling good stories, most all of them certainly gilded lies. A life spark is in her, just like the one that was in my wife. She is the last of us to call Goblin โSevro.โ Sheโs also the only one who knows where he lives. Even with all our scouting, we canโt find a trace of where he sleeps. For all I know, heโs out taking scalps beyond the highlands. I know Titus has sent scouts to stalk him, but I donโt think they are successful. They canโt even follow me. I know that rubs Titus raw.
โI think heโs wanking off in the bushes,โ Cassius chuckles. โJust waiting for us to all kill each other.โ
Itโs when Lea comes limping back to the castle that Roque seeks Cassius and me out.
โThey beat her,โ he says. โNot bad, but they kicked her in the stomach and took her dayโs labor.โ
โWho?โ Cassius bristles. โWhoโs the slagger?โ
โDoesnโt matter. What matters is they are hungry. So stop playing at an eye for an eye. This canโt go on,โ Roque says. โTitusโs boys are starving. What do you expect theyโd do? Hell, the big brute is hunting
Goblin because he needs fire and food. If we just give that to him, we can unite the House, maintain civility. Maybe even Antonia will bring her tribe to reason.โ
โAntonia? Reason?โ Cassius asks, guffawing.
โEven if that happens, Titus will still be the most powerful,โ I say. โAnd thatโs not the cure for anything.โ
โAh. Yes. Thatโs something you canโt abide, someone else having power. Fine then.โ Roque tugs at his long hair. โTalk to Vixus or Pollux. Take away his captains if you must. But heal the House, Darrow. Otherwise, weโll lose when another House comes knocking.โ
On the sixth day I take his advice. Knowing Titus is out raiding, I risk seeking Vixus in the keep. Unfortunately, Titus returns earlier than expected.
โYouโre looking lively and spry,โ he says to me before I can find Vixus in the keepโs stone halls. He blocks my path with his large bodyโ shoulders nearly spanning the width of the wall. I feel another in the hallway behind me. Vixus and two others. My stomach sinks a little. It was stupid to do this. โWhere are you going, if I may ask?โ
โI wanted to compare our scouting maps to the main map in the command room,โ I lie, knowing I have a digislate in my pocket.
โOh, you wanted to compare scouting maps to the main map โฆ for the good of Mars, noble Darrow?โ
โWhat other good is there?โ I ask. โWe are all on the same side, no?โ โOh, we are on the same side,โ he says. Titus booms an insincere
laugh. โVixus, if we are on the same side, donโt you think it would be best if we shared his little maps with one another?โ
โIt would be for the very best,โ Vixus agrees. โMushrooms. Maps. All the same.โ So he assaulted little Lea. His eyes are dead. Like raven eyes.
โYes. So Iโll take a lookย forย you, Darrow.โ Titus snatches the scouting maps from me. Thereโs nothing I can do to stop him.
โYouโre welcome to them,โ I say. โSo long as you know there are enemy fires to the far east and likely enemies in the Greatwoods to the south. Raid all you like. Just donโt get caught with your pants down.โ
Titus sniffs the air. He wasnโt listening to me.
โSince we are sharing, Darrow.โ He sniffs again, closer to my neck. โPerhaps youโll share with us why you smell like woodsmoke.โ
I stiffen, not knowing what to do.
โLook at him squirm. Look at him weave a lie.โ Titusโs voice is all disgust. โI can smell your deceit. Smell the lies dripping from you like sweat.โ
โLike a woman in heat,โ Pollux says sardonically. He shrugs apologetically at me.
โDisgusting,โ Vixus sneers. โHeโs a vile thing. A wretched, womanish thing.โ I donโt know why I thought Iโd be able to turn him on Titus.
โYouโre a little parasite,โ Titus continues. โNibbling away at morale because you will not come to heel; waiting for my noble boys and girls to starve.โ Theyโre closing in on me from behind, from the sides. Titus is huge. Pollux and Vixus are cruel, nearly as big as I. โYouโre a wretched creature. A worm in our spine.โ
I shrug casually, trying to let them think Iโm not worried. โWe can fix this,โ I say.
โOh?โ Titus asks.
โThe solution is simple, big man,โ I counsel. โBring your boys and girls home. Stop raiding Ceres every day before some other House comes in and slaughters you all. Then weโll talk about fire. About food.โ
โYou think you can tell us what to do, Darrow? That the thrust of it?โ Vixus asks. โThink youโre better because you scored higher on a stupid little test? Because the Proctors chose you first?โ
โHe does,โ Titus chuckles. โHe thinks heย deservesย Primus.โ
Vixusโs hawkish face leans close to mine, lips sneering each word. Handsome in repose, his lips peel back cruelly now, and his breath stinks as he looks me over, measuring me and trying to make me think heโs not impressed. He snorts a contemptuous laugh. I see him shifting his head to spit on my face. I let him. The glob of phlegm hits and drips slowly down my cheek toward my lips.
Titus watches with a wolfish smile. His eyes glimmer; Vixus looks to him for encouragement. Pollux comes closer.
โYouโre a pampered little prick,โ Vixus says. His nose nearly brushes mine. โSo thatโs what Iโm gonna take from you, goodmanโyour little prick.โ
โOr you could let me leave,โ I say. โYou seem to be blocking the door.โ
โOho!โ he laughs, looking at his master. โHeโs trying to show heโs not afraid, Titus. Trying to avoid a fight.โ He looks as me with those golden,
dead eyes. โIโve broken uppity boys like you in the dueling clubs a thousand times.โ
โYou have?โ I ask incredulously.
โBroken them like twigs. And then taken their girls for sport. What embarrassments Iโve made them in front of their fathers. What weeping messes I make of boys like you.โ
โOh, Vixus,โ I say with a sigh, keeping the tremble of anger and fear out of my voice. โVixus,ย Vixus, Vixus. There are no boys like me.โ
I look back at Titus to make sure our eyes are joined when I casually, as if I were dancing, loop my Helldiver hand around and slam it into the side of Vixusโs neck at the jugular with the force of a sledgehammer strike. It ruins him, yet I hit him with an elbow, a knee, my other hand, as he falls. Had his legs been anchored better, the first strike might have snapped his neck in half. Instead, he cartwheels sideways in the low gravity, going horizontal and shuddering from my raining blows as he hits the ground. His eyes go blank. Fear rises in my belly. My body is so strong.
Titus and the others are too startled by the sudden violence to stop me as I spin past their outstretched hands and run down the halls.
I did not kill him. I did not kill him.