Cassius wakes me in the middle of the night.
โSevro found Roque,โ he says quietly. โHeโs a mess. Come.โ โWhere?โ
โNorth. They canโt move him.โ
We gallop away from the castle under the light of twin moons. An early winter snow fills the air with dancing flurries. Sucking sounds come from the mud as we head toward the north Metas. No sounds but the gurgling of the water and the wind in the trees. Wiping sleep from my eyes, I look over to Cassius. He has our two ionSwords, and suddenly a pit opens in my stomach as I realize whatโs what. He doesnโt know where Roque is. But he knows something else.
He knows what Iโve done.
This is a trap I cannot ride away from. I guess there are those times in life. Itโs like staring at the ground as you fall from a height. Seeing the end coming doesnโt mean you can dodge it, fix it, stop it.
We ride for twenty more minutes.
โIt was no surprise,โ Cassius says suddenly. โWhatโs that?โ
โIโve known for over a year that Julian was meant to die.โ The snow falls silently as we move together through the mud. The hot horse moves between my legs. Step by step through the mud. โHe made a mess of his test. He was never the brightest, not in the way they wanted. Oh, he was kind and bright with emotionsโhe could sense sadness or anger a klick
away. But empathy is a lowColor thing.โ I say nothing.
โThere are feuds that do not change, Darrow. Cats and dogs. Ice and fire. Augustus and Bellona. My family and the ArchGovernorโs.โ
Cassiusโs eyes are fixed ahead even as his horse stumbles and his breath makes fog in the air.
โBut despite what it portended, Julian was excited when he received the acceptance letter stamped with the ArchGovernorโs personal seal. Didnโt seem right to me or my other brothers. Never thought Julian would be the sort to make it in. I loved him, all my brothers and cousins did; but you met him. Oh, youโve met himโhe wasnโt the keenest of mind, but he wasnโt the dullest; he wouldnโt have been the bottom one percent. No need to cull him from the stock. But he had the name Bellona. A name which our enemy loathes. And so our enemy used bureaucracy, used his title, his duly appointed powers, to murder a kind boy.
โTo turn down an invitation to the Institute is an illegal act. And he was so delighted, and weโmy mother and father and brothers and sisters and cousins and loved onesโwere so hopeful for him. He trained so hard.โ His voice takes a mocking tone. โBut in the end, Julian was fed to the wolves. Or should I say wolf?โ
He pulls his horse to a halt, eyes burning into me.
โHow did you find out?โ I ask, staring ahead over the dark water. Flakes of snow disappear into the black surface. The mountains are but shadowed mounds in the distance. The river gurgles. I do not dismount.
โThat you did Augustusโs dirty work?โ He laughs scornfully. โI trusted you, Darrow. So I did not need to see what the Jackal sent me. But when Sevro tried to steal it from me as I slept in the Greatwoods, I knew something was the matter.โ He notices my reaction. โWhat? You thought you consorted with dullards?โ
โSometimes. Yes.โ
โWell, I watched it tonight.โ A holo.
With Roque and Lea, I had forgotten about the package. Better that I had. Better that I had trusted him and not sent Sevro to steal it. Maybe he would have discarded it then. Maybe things would be different.
โWatched what?โ I ask.
โA holo that shows you killing Julian,ย brother.โ
โThe Jackal got a holo,โ I snort. โHis Proctor gave it to him then. Guess that means the game is rigged. Suppose it doesnโt matter to you that the Jackal is the ArchGovernorโs son and that heโs manipulating you into getting rid of me.โ
He flinches.
โDidnโt know the Jackal was his son, eh? I reckon youโd recognize him if you saw him and thatโs why he sent Lilath.โ
โI wouldnโt recognize him. Iโve never met the bastardโs spawn. He kept them hidden from us before the Institute. And my family kept me from him after โฆโ His voice fades as his eyes sink into a distant memory.
โWe can beat him, together, Cassius. We neednโt be dividedโโ โBecause you killed my brother?โ He spits. โThere is noย we, you
feckless quim. Get off your gorydamn horse.โ
I dismount and Cassius throws me one of the ionSwords. I stand facing my friend in the mud. No one to watch but the crows and the moons. And the Proctors. My slingBlade is on the saddle; it at least has a curve, but itโs useless against an ionBlade. Cassius is going to kill me.
โI didnโt have a choice,โ I tell him. โI hope you know that.โ
โYou will rot in hell, you manipulative son of a bitch,โ he cries. โYou allowed me to call youย brother!โ
โSo what would you have had me do? Should I have let Julian kill me in the Passage? Would you?โ
That freezes him.
โItโs how you killed him.โ Heโs quiet for a moment. โWe come as princes and this school is supposed to teach us to become beasts. But you came a beast.โ
I laugh bitterly. โAnd what were you when you ripped apart Titus?โ โI was not like you!โ Cassius shouts.
โI let you kill him, Cassius, so the House wouldnโt remember that a dozen boys took a good long piss on your face. So donโt treat me as though Iโm some monster.โ
โYou are,โ he sneers.
โOh, shut your goddamned gob and letโs just cut to it. Hypocrite.โ
The duel is not long. I have been practicing with him for months. He has played at duels his entire life. The blades echo across the moving river. Snow falls. Mud sticks and sloshes. We pant. Breath billows. My
arms rattle as the blades clang and scrape. Iโm faster than him, more fluid. Almost get his thigh, but he knows the mathematics of this game. With a little flick of his wrists to move my sword sideways, he steps in and drives his ionBlade through my armor into my belly. It should cauterize instantly and destroy the nerves, leaving me damaged though alive, but he has the ion charge off, so I only feel a horrible tightness as alien metal slides into my body and warmth gushes out.
I forget to breathe. Then I gasp. My body shivers. Hugs the sword. I smell Cassiusโs neck. Heโs close. Close as when he used to cup my head and call me brother. His hair is oily.
Dignity leaves me and I begin to whimper like a dog.
Throbbing pain blossomsโbegins like a pressure, a fullness of metal in my stomach, becomes an aching horror. I shudder for breaths, gulp at them. Canโt breathe. Itโs like a black hole in my gut. I fall back moaning. There is pain. That is one thing. This is different. It is terror and fear. My body knows this is how life ends. Then the sword is gone and the misery begins. Cassius leaves me bleeding and sniveling in the mud. Everything that I am goes away and I am a slave to my body. I cry.
I become a child again. I curl around the wound. Oh God, it is horrible. I donโt understand the pain. It consumes me. Iโm no man; Iโm a child. Let me die faster. I sink in the cold, cold mud. I shiver and weep. I canโt help it. My body does things. It betrays me. The metal went through my guts.
My blood goes out. With it go Dancerโs hopes, my fatherโs sacrifice, Eoโs dream. I can hardly think of them. The mud is dark and cold. This hurts so much. Eo. I miss her. I miss home. What was her second gift? I never found out. Her sister never told me. Now I know pain. Nothing is worth this. Nothing. Let me be a slave again, let me see Eo, let me die. Just not this.