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Chapter no 29 – My Brother

Red Rising

Titus is what Dancer did not want me to become. He is like Harmony. He is a creature of vengeance. A rebellion with Titus at the helm would fail in weeks. Worse, if Titus continues this way, continues unstably, he puts me at risk. Dancer lied, or else he did not know that there are other Reds whoโ€™ve been carved, other Reds who have donned the mask of the Golds. How many more are there? How many has Ares planted here, in the Society? In the Institute? It doesnโ€™t matter if it is a thousand or just one. Titusโ€™s instability puts every Red ever carved into a Gold at risk. He puts Eoโ€™s dream at risk. And that is something I cannot abide. Eo did not die so that Titus can kill a few kids.

I sob in the armory as I resolve what must be done.

More blood will stain these hands, because Titus is a mad dog and must be put down.

In the morning, I pull him into the square in front of the House. They clear away the remnants of the nightโ€™s feast. I even have the slaves there to watch. A few Proctors flicker high above. There is no medBot floating beside them, which must stand as their silent consent.

I push Titus down on the ground in front of his former tribe. They watch quietly, mist hanging in the air above them, nervous feet scraping the cold cobblestones of the courtyard. A chill seeps into my hands through the durosteel of my slingBlade.

โ€œFor crimes of rape, mutilation, and attempted murder of fellow House members, I sentence Titus au Ladros to death.โ€ I list the reasons. โ€œDoes anyone contest my right to do so?โ€ First, I glance to the Proctors above. Not one makes a sound.

I stare at cruel Vixus. His bruise is not yet gone. My eyes go to Cassandra next. I even look at craggy Pollux, the one who saved Cassius and opened the gates for us. He stands by Roque. How loyalties shift here.

How my own shift. I will make a Red die because he killed Golds. He dug the earth like me. He has a soul like mine. In death, it will go to the vale, but in life he was stupid and selfish with his grief. He should have been better than this. Reds are better than him, arenโ€™t we?

Titusโ€™s tribe stays silent; their guilt is bound up with their leader. When he goes, itโ€™ll go. That is what I tell myself. Everything will be well. โ€œI contest the sentence,โ€ Titus says. โ€œAnd issue a challenge to you,

turdlicker.โ€

โ€œI accept,ย goodman.โ€ I bow curtly.

โ€œThen a duel per custom of the Order of the Sword,โ€ Roque announces.

โ€œI choose then,โ€ Titus says, eyeing my slingBlade. โ€œStraight blades.

Nothing curved.โ€

โ€œAs you have it,โ€ I say, but as I step forward, I feel a hand at my elbow and feel my friend come close behind.

โ€œDarrow, he is mine,โ€ Cassius whispers coldly.ย โ€œRemember?โ€ย I make no sign of acknowledgment. โ€œPlease, Darrow. Let me honor House Bellona.โ€ I look to Roque; he shakes his head โ€œNo.โ€ As does Quinn, who stands behind Cassius. But I am leader here. And I did promise my friend, who now recognizes my ascendance. He requests instead of demands, and so I make a show of considering and then accepting his request. I stand aside as Cassius steps forward with a straight blade held in his fencerโ€™s grip. It

is an ugly weapon, but heโ€™s sharpened it on stones.

โ€œThe little prince,โ€ Titus snickers. โ€œWonderful. Iโ€™ll be happy to drench your corpse with piss again when weโ€™re through.โ€

Titus is meant for brawls. Meant for muddy battlefields and civil wars.

I wonder if he knows how easily he will die today.

Roque draws a circle in ash around the two combatants. Clown and Screwface walk out with arms full of weapons. Titus picks a long

broadsword he took from a Ceres soldier five days before. The metal scrapes over stone. Echoes around the courtyard. He swings it once, twice to test the metal. Cassius does not move.

โ€œPissing your pants already?โ€ Titus asks. โ€œNo fretting, Iโ€™ll be quick about it.โ€

Roque performs the necessities and commences the fight. Cassius is not quick about it.

The ugly blades sound brittle against each other. The clangs are harsh. The blades chip. They grind. But how silent they are when they find flesh.

The only sound is Titusโ€™s gasp.

โ€œYou killed Julian,โ€ Cassius says quietly. โ€œJulian au Bellona of House Bellona.โ€

He pulls his blade free of Titusโ€™s leg and slides it in somewhere else.

He rips it out.

Titus laughs and swings feebly. It is pathetic at this point.

โ€œYou killed Julian.โ€ A thrust accompanies the words, words he repeats until I no longer watch. โ€œYou killed Julian.โ€ But Titus is long dead. Tears stream down Quinnโ€™s face. Roque takes her and Lea away. My army is silent. Thistle spits on the cobbles and puts her arm over Pebbleโ€™s shoulders. Clown looks even more dejected than usual. Even the Proctors make no comment. It is Cassiusโ€™s rage that fills the courtyard, a cruel lament for a kind brother. He said he did it for justice, for the honor of his family and House. But this is revenge, and how hollow it seems.

I grow cold.

This was meant for me. Not for my poor brother, Titusโ€”if that was ever really his name. He deserved better than this.

Iโ€™m going to cry. The anger and sadness well in my chest as I push through the army. Roque looks at me when I pass him. His face is like a corpseโ€™s.

โ€œThat wasnโ€™t justice,โ€ he murmurs without looking me in the eyes.

I failed the test. Heโ€™s right. It wasnโ€™t justice. Justice is dispassionate; it is fair. I am the leader. I passed the sentence. I should have done it. Instead, I gave license to vengeance and vendetta. The cancer will not be cut away; I made it worse.

โ€œAt least Cassius is feared again,โ€ Roque mutters. โ€œBut thatโ€™s the only thing you got right.โ€

Poor Titus. I bury him in a grove near the river. I hope it speeds him on his way to the vale.

That night I do not sleep.

I donโ€™t know if it was his wife or his sister or his mother they hurt. I do not know what mine he came from. His pain is my own. His pain broke him as mine broke me on the scaffold. But I was given a second chance. Where was his?

I hope his pain fades in death. I did not love him till he was dead; and he should be dead, but he is still my brother. So I pray he finds peace in the vale and that I will see him again one day and weโ€™ll embrace as brothers as he forgives me for what I did to him, because I did it for a dream, for our people.

My name, three bars beside it now, floats nearer the Primus hand. Cassius has risen too.

But there can be only one Primus.

Since I cannot sleep, I take the guard shift from Cassandra. Mist curls around the battlements, so we tie sheep around the walls. They will bleat if an enemy comes. I smell something strange, rich and smoky.

โ€œRoast duck?โ€ I turn and find Fitchner standing beside me. His hair is messy over his narrow brow and he wears no golden armor today, only a black tunic striped with gold. He hands me a piece of duck. The smell makes my stomach rumble.

โ€œWe should all be pissed at you,โ€ I say.

His face is one of surprise. โ€œTots who say that usually mean to explain why they are not pissed.โ€

โ€œYou and the Proctors can see everything, yes?โ€ โ€œEven when you wipe your ass.โ€

โ€œAnd you didnโ€™t stop Titus, because itโ€™s all part of the curriculum.โ€ โ€œThe real question is why we did not stop you.โ€

โ€œFrom killing him.โ€

โ€œYes, little one. He would have been valuable in the military, donโ€™t you think? Perhaps not as a Praetor with ships in the ink. But what a Legate he would have made, leading men in starShells through enemy gates as fire rained down against their pulseShields. Have you ever seen an Iron Rain? Where men are launched from orbit to take cities? He was

meant for that.โ€

I do not answer.

Fitchner wipes grease from his lips with the black sleeve of his tunic. โ€œLife is the most effective school ever created. Once upon a time they

made children bow their heads and read books. It would take ages to get anything across.โ€ He taps his head. โ€œBut we have widgets and datapads now, and we Golds have the lower Colors to do our research. We need not study chemistry or physics. We have computers and others to do that. What we must study is humanity. In order to rule, ours must be the study of political, psychological, and behavioral scienceโ€”how desperate human beings react to one another, how packs form, how armies function, how things fall apart and why. You could learn this nowhere else but here.โ€

โ€œNo, I understand the purpose,โ€ I murmur. โ€œI learn more when I make mistakes, so long as they donโ€™t kill me.โ€ How well I learned from trying to be a martyr.

โ€œGood. You make plenty of them. Youโ€™re an impulsive little turd. But this is the place to frag up. To learn. This is life โ€ฆ but with medBots, second chances, artificial scenarios. You might have guessed that the first test, the Passage, was the measurement of necessity versus emotion. The second was tribal strife. Then there was a bit of justice. Now there will be more tests. More second chances, more lessons learned.โ€

โ€œHow many of us can die?โ€ I ask suddenly. โ€œDonโ€™t worry about that.โ€

โ€œHow many.โ€

โ€œThere is a limit set each year by the Board of Quality Control, but weโ€™re well within the bounds despite what happened with the Jackal.โ€ Fitchner smiles.

โ€œThe Jackal โ€ฆ,โ€ I say. โ€œIs that what happened the other night when the medBots blitzed south?โ€

โ€œDid I say his name? Oops.โ€ He grins. โ€œI mean to say that the medBots are very effective. They heal nearly all wounds. But will they be so effective when Cassius finds out who really killed his brother?โ€

My stomach tightens.

โ€œHe already killed Julianโ€™s murderer. Apparently you werenโ€™t watching.โ€

โ€œOf course. Of course. Mercury thinks you brilliant. Apollo thinks

youโ€™re uppity. He really does not like you, you know.โ€ โ€œI could give a piss.โ€

โ€œOh, you should care much more than that. Apolloโ€™s a peach.โ€ โ€œRight. So what do you think? You are my Proctor.โ€

โ€œI think you are an ancient soul.โ€ He watches me and leans against the rampart. The night is misty beyond the castle. From its depths, a wolf howls. โ€œI think youโ€™re like that beast out there. Part of a pack but deeply sad, deeply alone. And I canโ€™t puzzle out why, my dear boy. This is all so much fun! Enjoy it! Life doesnโ€™t get better.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re the same,โ€ I say. โ€œLonely. Youโ€™re all japes and snide comments, just like Sevro, but itโ€™s just a mask. Itโ€™s because you donโ€™t look like the others, isnโ€™t it? Or are you poor? Somehow youโ€™re an outsider.โ€

โ€œMy looks?โ€ He barks a laugh. โ€œWhat does that matter? Think Iโ€™m aย Bronzieย because Iโ€™m not an Adonis?โ€ He leans forward, because he really does care about what Iโ€™m going to say.

โ€œYou are ugly and you eat like a pig, Fitchner, but you chew metabolizers when you could just go to a Carver and fix yourself to look like the others. They could take care of that paunch in a second.โ€

Fitchnerโ€™s jaw muscle flickers. Is it anger?

โ€œWhy should I have to visit a Carver?โ€ he hisses suddenly. โ€œI can kill an Obsidian with my bare hands. An Obsidian. I can outwit a Silver in parlance and negotiation. I can do math Greens only dream of. Why should I make myself look any different?โ€

โ€œBecause it is what holds you back.โ€

โ€œDespite my low birth, I am of note. I am important.โ€ His hatchet face dares me to contradict. โ€œI am Gold. I am a king of man. I do not change to suit others.โ€

โ€œIf thatโ€™s true, why do you chew metabolizers?โ€ He does not answer. โ€œAnd why are you only a Proctor?โ€

โ€œBecoming a Proctor is a position of prestige, boy,โ€ Fitchner snaps. โ€œThe Drafters voted me to represent the House.โ€

โ€œYet youโ€™re no Imperator. You lead no fleets. Youโ€™re not even a Praetor in command of a squadron. Nor are you any sort of Governor. How many men can do the things you say you can do?โ€

โ€œFew,โ€ he says very quietly, face all anger. โ€œVery few.โ€ He looks up. โ€œWhat is the bounty you desire for capturing the Minervan standard?โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that Sevroโ€™s deal?โ€ I say, understanding the conversation is nearing its end.

โ€œHe has passed it to you.โ€

I ask for horses and weapons and matches. He agrees curtly and turns to leave before I can ask him one last question. I grab his arm as he starts to ascend. Something happens. My nerves fry. Like needles in acid through my hand and arm. I gasp. My lungs canโ€™t function for a second.

โ€œGoryhell,โ€ I cough out, and fall to the ground. He wears pulseArmor. I canโ€™t even see the generator. Itโ€™s like a pulseShield, but inlaid in the armor itself.

He waits without a smile.

โ€œThe Jackal,โ€ I say. โ€œYou mentioned him. The Minervan girl mentioned him. Who is he?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s the ArchGovernorโ€™s son, Darrow. And he makes Titus look like a blubbering child.โ€

Large horses graze in the fields the next morning. Wolves try to take down a small mare. A pale stallion trots up and kicks one of the wolves to death. I claim him. The others call him Quietus. It means โ€œthe final stroke.โ€

He reminds me of the Pegasus that saved Andromeda. The songs we sang in Lykos spoke of horses. I know Eo would have liked a chance to ride one.

I do not realize till days later that when they named my horse Quietus, they were mocking me for my part in Titusโ€™s death.

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