โYOU COULD HAVE SAIDย something!โ Switch hissed when we left the lot. The sun hung near its zenith, and the daylight beat on me like a rain of fists. I drew out my stolen dark glasses and pushed them up my nose, tucking my shoulders as I hurried along the canal, eager to be home. I had a lot to think about, but Switch granted me no time to think. The younger man seized me by the shoulder and turned me around. โWhy didnโt you tell me?โ
โTell you what, Switch?โ I demanded. I wasnโt playing stupid. I knew what he meant. I just didnโt know how to say it. โTell you what?โ
His cheeks flushed nearly red as his hair, pointed jaw working as if he
were trying to crush a pebble between his molars. โI get wanting to play the merchanter, but you could have told me!โ He twisted the fabric of my shirt in his fist, then repeated more softly, โYou could have told me you were one ofย them.โ
He said that last in barely more than a whisper. Almost on reflex I pulled myself up to my full height, angling my chin so that I looked down at him. Iโd not registered it until that moment, but I was much taller than he. Had I grown so used to being surrounded by plebeians that I was now blind to their smallness? I am not tallโnot by the standards of the courtโbut I felt myself a colossus then, and clung to my palatine height like the emblem that it was.
But Switch was not cowed, not the scared boy heโd been a year ago. He jabbed me in the ribs, eyes wide. โYouโre supposed to be my friend, Had.โ I can still hear the reproach there, see the way he bared his less-than-white teeth. โYouโre supposed to tell me these things.โ
Something twisted in me, a fraction of the old nobileโs rage brought on by bargaining with the dockyard foreman. โTell you what? About this?โ I
drew the ring out and held it up for Switchโs inspection, the silver transmuted to bronze by the bloody sun. โWhat did you want me to say?โ
The younger man worked his jaw again, struggling for words that would not come. He looked away, up at the looming wall of the White District fifty feet above our heads. A series of cable cars bobbed overhead, carrying people from the richer part of the city down into Belows. I felt I should say something. Anything. Everything. About my father, Crispin, Kyra. About
Gibson and what had been done to him. About my mother and what I feared might be done to her. About the Chantry and what I was sure theyโd do to me.
In the end I told him none of these things.
Instead I said, โIt . . . didnโt seem important.โ The words sounded dismissive to my ears, shadows cast by these higher concerns. They were small things, and I was made smaller by saying them. โIt doesnโt matter.โ
โDidnโt seem important?โ Switch still hadnโt let me go. He shook me.
โDidnโt seem important?โ His voice shot up, drawing stares from a passing courier and a young couple in matching sarongs. โWhy are you even in the Colosso? You donโt need the fucking money!โ
My jaw clamped shut, and I placed a conciliatory hand on Switchโs arm. โItโs not that simple, Switchโโ
โOf course it is!โ he hissed, pulling so that I bowed at the waist. โYouโre one ofย them.ย Donโt tell me it doesnโtย matter.โย I saw something move just beneath his face, a shadow coloring his face. The memory of what heโd been came to the front of my awareness, and recalling the houris in the vicereineโs harem and the way Crispin and my mother used them, I
shuddered. What had Switchโs experiences of the palatines been like? Thinking of Kyra, of how she had frozen in my arms, I froze in turn. โIs this a game to you?โ he demanded. โSlumming it with the rest of us?โ
โNo!โ I snapped. โDamn it! No. Donโt be absurd!โย Absurd.ย It was not a plebeian word. Switchโs face twisted at it, or perhaps at my clipped Delian accentโrecognizing it now as a token of what I was.
โGhen was right about you, Your Radiance,โ he sneered, and he shoved me back.
โItโs not like that!โ It was all I could do not to scream at him. A couple of people were staring openly now, so I hissed, โI wouldnโt use this unless I had no other choice. The minute I do itโll be nothing but trouble until I leave the Empire! Do you understand?โ
Switch was practically snarling. โWhatโd you do? Beat one of your fatherโs concubines when you couldnโt get it up?โ That touched a nerve, lighting on my grandfatherโs murder at the hands of one of his concubines.
โI never touched one. I never would. I donโt know what you went through, Switch, but it wasnโt at my hand. Do you think weโre all monsters, is that it? I am the same man I was two days ago. The same man who saved your ass in the coliseum a hundred times over. The same man.โ
โYouโre not,โ Switch said. โYouโre one of them, and you lied about it.โ โI couldnโt tell the truth!โ I spat. โI canโt. Itโs too dangerous.โ
โIt didnโt look dangerous when you were waving that ring around!โ
I did not have the patience to discuss the finer points of financial transactions between planetary houses. โThey would haveย hadย to give me the ship because of who I am. They would haveย trustedย the ship to me.โ
โBecause of who you are,โ Switch sneered.
โI was trying to steal from them, to put one over on my father and these Mataro people,โ I growled, gesturing to the grimy street and the tin-roofed houses and storefronts around us. โYou think I want to be here? You think I wanted this? Do you really think Iโd be here if I had another choice?โ It was the worst thing I could have said.
โWhatโs so wrong with us?โ Switch countered, barely keeping his voice at a growl. โThis is what lifeโs like, Your Radiance. Real life. You donโt know!โ
โI donโt know? Really? Me?โ I countered, but choked on my
explanations. I could feel the blood pounding in my head. My lips were pulled back in a rictus more snarl than smile. โYouโre not the only person who ever suffered! Three years I ran around this city sleeping in gutters.
Iโve been beaten, stabbed, nearly raped. I survived the damned Rot. I buried my . . .โ My what? My lover? My friend? โI lost people in this city. Just because some perfumed merchanter buggered you up and down the
spaceways doesnโt give you a monopoly on suffering!โ From the way Switchโs face went white, I knew thatย thisย was truly the worst thing I could have said. I felt all my explanations, justifications, and pride rush out of me. I could handle my pain; I shouldnโt need it to make a point, even a fair one.
I folded like a jewel box closing, shoulders caving in. How I wish I could say that it was my fatherโs voice speaking from my mouth. How I wish I
could say it was Crispinโs, my motherโs, Uncle Lucianโs . . . but it was only my own.
I didnโt see the blow coming until it landed square against the side of my chin. It snapped my head back, and I almost lost my footing, staggering back against the wall of a bakery. Someone gasped, and as my vision
adjusted I saw two young men in the silver livery of some ship or other fiddling to get their terminals out to record. I spat. Was there red in it? Or was that only the indecent sunlight? For a moment I was made especially
conscious of the way my clothes stuck to me in the damp and smoking air. I did not respond at first, just straightened my brown shirt. Switch was glaring at me, the color slowly rising into his face. He held his fists at his
sides, but they remained clenched. The scholiasts tell us that the flow of time is absolute, but standing there with half the street looking on, I felt the seconds dripping by like eons.
โIโm sorry,โ I said at last. Weakly. However I had sufferedโand I had
sufferedโit didnโt give me a monopoly on suffering. I thought of that night Rellsโs gang had dragged me from my hovel, of the many times Iโd been
stunned and beaten by the city prefects. We were not so different, Switch and I, whatever our breeding. And here I was, accusing him of exactly my failure. โIโm sorry. I just canโt talk about it.โ
โWhy not?โ Switch glowered at me.
I rubbed my mouth with the back of my hand. โThat was a good hit.โ I looked at my arm. Thereย wasย red in the sputum. โI deserved that.โ
โWhy wonโt you talk to me?โ Switch moved a step closer, blocking the sailors recording on their terminals from view as they circled like the masked crows in a Eudoran dumb show. He practically whispered, โDid you kill someone?โ
I shook my head, glaring past him at the onlookers, the vacuous fools
with naught in their lives but to peck at the lives of others. I sucked air past my teeth and shook my head again. The first was a denial, the second a refusal to say more. Switch spatโnot quite at my feet, but near enough as made no difference. My jaw ached, and I wondered with some detachment if Iโd lose a tooth. One felt loose. It would grow back. I am palatine. They always grow back.
I cleared my throat. โSwitch, I . . . I canโt. Iโm sorry, I . . .โ He raised a hand. โSave it.โ
Then he turned and went away. I watched him go, lowering myself
slowly until I sat with my back against the wall of the shop, just like the beggar I had been.