The blade glanced off his body armor and sliced his left upper arm. As Coriolanus leaped backward, he swung at Bobbin but only encountered air. He landed in a pile of debris, old boards, and plaster as his hand searched for some kind of defense. Bobbin sprang at him again, aiming the knife at his face. Coriolanusโs fingers closed around a two-by-four, and he brought it up, catching Bobbin in the temple hard, sending him to his knees. And then he was on his feet, using the board like a club, bringing it down again and again without being sure where it made contact.โ
โWe have to go!โ Sejanus shouted.
Coriolanus could hear catcalls now, and feet pounding down the bleachers. Confused, he made a move toward Marcusโs body, but Sejanus yanked him away. โNo! Leave him! Run!โ
Needing no persuasion, Coriolanus sprinted for the barricade. Pain shot from his elbow to his shoulder, but he ignored it, pumping his arms as hard as he could, the way Professor Sickle had taught them. When he reached the barricade, barbed wire bit into his shirt, and as he turned to pull it free, he saw them. The two tributes from District 4, Coral and Mizzen, and Tanner โ the slaughterhouse kid โ making straight for him, armed to the teeth. Mizzen drew his arm back to throw a trident. The fabric on Coriolanusโs sleeve ripped wide as he yanked it from the barbed wire and dove out of the line of fire, with Sejanus right behind him.
Only a few weak rays of moonlight penetrated the layers of the barricade, and Coriolanus found himself crashing into wood and fencing like a wild bird in a cage, surely alerting any tribute whoโd somehow missed his
presence. He ran facefirst into a concrete slab, and Sejanus plowed into him from behind, smacking his forehead into the unrelenting surface a second time. When he pushed back, it was as if the concussion had never left. His head throbbed, and a cloud of confusion descended.
The tributes started up a whooping sound, rattling their weapons against the barricade as they tracked the mentors through the labyrinth. Which direction to go? The tributes seemed to be all around them. Sejanus grabbed his arm and began to pull him, and he stumbled blindly along behind, wounded and terrified. Was this it, then? Was this how he died? The fury at the injustice of it all, the mockery it made of his existence, sent a surge of energy through him, and he crashed past Sejanus, finding himself on his hands and knees in a cloud of soft, red light. The passageway! Up ahead he could make out the turnstiles, where the Peacekeepers were clustered at the temporary bars. He ran for his life.
The passageway wasnโt long, but it seemed interminable. His legs rose and fell as if he were waist-high in glue, and black specks dotted his vision. Sejanus stayed steady at his elbow, but he could hear the tributes gaining. Something heavy and unyielding โ a brick? โ clipped the side of his neck. Another object punctured his vest and stuck, bobbing behind him until it fell with a clank. Where was the cover? The protective gunfire from the Peacekeepers? There was nothing, nothing at all, and the bars still stood flush with the floor. He wanted to scream for them to kill the tributes, shoot them dead in their tracks, but his breath was in too short supply.
Someone heavy-footed shrank his lead to a few yards, but once again remembering Professor Sickleโs training, he didnโt dare waste a second looking back to see who it was. Before him, the Peacekeepers finally managed to tilt the unit of bars inward, achieving a gap of about twelve inches at the ground. Coriolanus dove, sanding several layers of skin off his chin on the rough floor and just getting his hands beneath the bars, where the Peacekeepers latched on to him and gave a great yank. Lacking time to turn his head, the rest of his face scraped against the filthy surface until he reached safety.
The guards dumped him immediately to retrieve Sejanus, who gave a sharp cry as Tannerโs knife cut open the back of his calf before he slid out of range. The bars were slammed into place, and bolts locked down the unit, but the tributes were undeterred. Tanner, Mizzen, and Coral jabbed their weapons through the bars at Coriolanus and Sejanus, spewing hate-
filled taunts while the Peacekeepers banged on the turnstiles with their batons. Not a shot was fired. Not even a shot of pepper spray. Coriolanus realized that they must have been under orders to leave the tributes untouched.
As the Peacekeepers helped him to his feet, he spat out in rage, โThanks for having our backs!โ
โJust following orders. Donโt blame us if Gaul thinks youโre expendable, boy,โ said the old Peacekeeper whoโd promised him cover.
Someone tried to steady him but he shoved them off. โI can walk! I can walk, no thanks to you!โ Then he listed sideways, almost hitting the floor before they hoisted him up again and made their way back through the lobby. Coriolanus babbled a long string of profanities, which made no impression, and hung in their grip like deadweight until they dropped him, unceremoniously, just outside the arena. After a minute they deposited Sejanus beside him. They both lay panting on the tiles that graced the front of the arena.
โIโm so sorry, Coryo,โ said Sejanus. โIโm so sorry.โ
Coryo was a nickname for old friends. For family. For people Coriolanus loved. And this was the moment Sejanus decided to try it out? If heโd had the energy, Coriolanus would have reached over and strangled him.
No one paid them any attention. Ma had vanished. Dr. Gaul and Dean Highbottom debated audio levels as they watched the feeds in the van. The Peacekeepers stood in loose clumps, waiting for instructions. Five minutes passed before an ambulance drove up and popped open its back doors. The boys were loaded in without so much as a glance from the authorities.
The medic gave Coriolanus a pad to hold against his arm wound while she dealt with the more pressing issue of Sejanusโs calf, which was producing quite a bit of blood. Coriolanus dreaded returning to the hospital and that untrustworthy Dr. Wane, until he saw through the small pane of glass that theyโd arrived at the Citadel, which seemed twice as scary. Unloaded onto gurneys, they were swiftly transported deep down to the lab where Clemensia had been attacked, leaving Coriolanus to wonder just what modifications they had in store for him.
Accidents mustโve been frequent in the lab, as a small medical clinic awaited them. It had lacked the sophistication for Clemensiaโs resurrection yet seemed adequate to patch up the boys. A white curtain divided their two hospital beds, but Coriolanus could hear Sejanus giving one-word answers
to the doctorsโ inquiries. He gave little more himself as they stitched his arm and cleaned his raw face. His head ached, but he didnโt dare tell them about the rebound of his concussion for fear heโd end up being admitted to the hospital for an indefinite stay. All he wanted was to get away from these people. Despite his protests, they stuck an IV in his arm to rehydrate him and deliver some cocktail of drugs, and he lay rigid on the bed, willing himself not to flee. Although heโd done Dr. Gaulโs bidding, although heโd succeeded, he felt more vulnerable than ever. And here he lay, wounded and trapped, hidden away in her lair.
The pain eased in his arm, but he did not feel the velvet curtain of morphling draw around him. Some alternative drug must have been administered, because, if anything, his mind felt a heightened sharpness, and he noticed everything, from the weave of the bedsheet, to the tug of the tape on his raw skin, to the bitter taste the metal cup of water left on his tongue. Peacekeeper boots approached and withdrew, taking a limping Sejanus with them. Deep in the lab, a round of squeals heralded some creatureโs feeding time, and the faint scent of fish reached him. After that, a relative hush fell over the place for a long time. He considered trying to slip away but knew in his heart he was expected to wait. To wait for the soft slipper tread that inevitably made its way to his cubicle.
When Dr. Gaul pulled back the curtain, the twilight of the nocturnal lab gave Coriolanus the strange impression that she stood on the edge of a cliff, that if he were to give her even the smallest shove, she would topple backward into some great chasm, never to be heard from again.ย If only, he thought.ย If only.ย Instead she moved forward and placed two fingers on his wrist, checking his pulse. He flinched at the feel of her cool, papery fingers.
โI started out as a medical doctor, you know,โ she said. โObstetrics.โ
How awful, Coriolanus thought.ย To have you be the first person in the world a baby sees.
โWasnโt really for me,โ said Dr. Gaul. โParents always want reassurances you canโt give. About the futures their children face. How could I possibly know what theyโd encounter? Like you, tonight. Who wouldโve imagined Crassus Snowโs darling baby boy fighting for his life in the Capitol Arena? Not him, for one.โ
Coriolanus didnโt know how to respond. He could barely remember his father, let alone divine his imaginings.
โWhat was it like? In the arena?โ asked Dr. Gaul.
โTerrifying,โ said Coriolanus flatly.
โItโs designed to be.โ She checked his pupils, shining a light into each of his eyes. โWhat about the tributes?โ
The light hurt his head. โWhat about them?โ
Dr. Gaul moved on to his stitches. โWhat did you think of them, now that their chains have been removed? Now that theyโve tried to kill you? Because it was of no benefit to them, your death. Youโre not the competition.โ
It was true. Theyโd been close enough to recognize him. But theyโd hunted down him and Sejanus โ Sejanus, whoโd treated the tributes so well, fed them, defended them, given them last rites! โ even though they could have used that opportunity to kill one another.
โI think I underestimated how much they hate us,โ said Coriolanus. โAnd when you realized that, what was your response?โ she asked.
He thought back to Bobbin, to the escape, to the tributesโ bloodlust even after heโd cleared the bars. โI wanted them dead. I wanted every one of them dead.โ
Dr. Gaul nodded. โWell, mission accomplished with that little one from Eight. You beat him to a pulp. Have to make up some story for that buffoon Flickerman to tell in the morning. But what a wonderful opportunity for you. Transformative.โ
โWas it?โ Coriolanus remembered the sickening thuds of his board against Bobbin. So he had what? Murdered the boy? No, not that. It was an open-and-shut case of self-defense. But what, then? He had killed him, certainly. There would never be any erasing that. No regaining that innocence. He had taken human life.
โWasnโt it? More than I couldโve hoped. I needed you to get Sejanus out of the arena, of course, but I wanted you to taste that as well,โ she said.
โEven if it killed me?โ asked Coriolanus.
โWithout the threat of death, it wouldnโt have been much of a lesson,โ said Dr. Gaul. โWhat happened in the arena? Thatโs humanity undressed. The tributes. And you, too. How quickly civilization disappears. All your fine manners, education, family background, everything you pride yourself on, stripped away in the blink of an eye, revealing everything you actually are. A boy with a club who beats another boy to death. Thatโs mankind in its natural state.โ
The idea, laid out as such, shocked him, but he attempted a laugh. โAre we really as bad as all that?โ
โI would say yes, absolutely. But itโs a matter of personal opinion.โ Dr. Gaul pulled a roll of gauze from the pocket of her lab coat. โWhat do you think?โ
โI think I wouldnโt have beaten anyone to death if you hadnโt stuck me in that arena!โ he retorted.
โYou can blame it on the circumstances, the environment, but you made the choices you made, no one else. Itโs a lot to take in all at once, but itโs essential that you make an effort to answer that question. Who are human beings? Because who we are determines the type of governing we need. Later on, I hope you can reflect and be honest with yourself about what you learned tonight.โ Dr. Gaul began to wrap his wound in gauze. โAnd a few stitches in your arm is a cheap price to pay for it.โ
Coriolanus felt nauseous at her words but even more enraged that she had forced him to kill for the sake of her lesson. Something that significant should have been his decision, not hers. No oneโs but his. โSo, if Iโm a vicious animal, then who are you? Youโre the teacher who sent her student to beat another boy to death!โ
โOh, yes. That role has fallen to me.โ She neatly finished the bandage off. โYou know, Dean Highbottom and I read your essay through. What you liked about the war. A lot of fluff. Drivel, really. Until that bit in the end. The part about control. For your next assignment, Iโd like you to elaborate on that. The value of control. On what happens without it. Take your time with it. But it might be a nice addition to your prize application.โ
Coriolanus knew what happened without control. Heโd seen it recently, at the zoo when Arachne died, in the arena when the bombs went off, and then again tonight. โChaos happens. What else is there to say?โ
โOh, a good deal, I think. Start with that. Chaos. No control, no law, no government at all. Like being in the arena. Where do we go from there? What sort of agreement is necessary if weโre to live in peace? What sort of social contract is required for survival?โ She removed the drip from his arm. โWeโll need you back in a couple of days to check those stitches. Until then, I would keep the nightโs events to yourself. Better get home and catch a few hours of sleep. Remarkably, your tribute still needs you.โ
After she left, Coriolanus slowly pulled on his sliced, torn, bloody shirt and fastened the buttons. He wandered until he found the elevator to street
level, and the disinterested guards waved him out. The trolleys ended at midnight, and the Capitol clock showed two, so he pointed his filthy shoes toward home.
The Plinthsโ luxurious car slid up beside him, and the window lowered to reveal the Avox, who stepped out and opened the back door for him. Coriolanus guessed heโd already taken Sejanus home, and Ma had sent him back. Since the car was empty of Plinths, he got in. One last ride, then he wanted nothing to do with that family ever again. When the driver let him out at his apartment, Coriolanus was presented with a large paper bag. Before he could object, the car pulled away.
Upstairs, he peeked in to see Tigris waiting by the tea table, wrapped in a ratty fur coat that had been her motherโs. It was her security blanket, much as the rose powder compact had been his before he revamped it as a weapon. He grabbed a school jacket from the coatrack and pulled it over his damaged shirt before he went in to see her.
Coriolanus tried to make light of the dreadful night. โSurely, itโs not so bad you need the coat?โ
Her fingers dug into the fur. โYou tell me.โ
โI will. Every bit of it. But in the morning, okay?โ he said.
โOkay.โ When she reached up to hug him good night, her hand felt the bulge of the bandage on his arm. Before he could stop her, she pulled back the jacket and saw the blood. She bit her lip. โOh, Coryo. They made you go into the arena, didnโt they?โ
He hugged her. โNot that bad, really. Iโm here. Got Sejanus out, too.โ โNot that bad? Itโs horrific to think of you in there. To think of anyone in
there!โ she cried. โPoor Lucy Gray.โ
Lucy Gray. Now that heโd been in the arena himself, her circumstances seemed even more dire than before. The thought of her huddled somewhere in the cold blackness of the arena, too petrified to close her eyes, made him ache. For the first time, he felt glad heโd killed Bobbin. At least heโd saved her from that animal. โItโs going to be okay, Tigris. But you have to let me get some rest. You need to sleep, too.โ
She nodded, but he knew sheโd be lucky to snatch an hour or two. He handed her the bag. โCourtesy of Ma Plinth. Breakfast, by the smell of it. See you then?โ
Not bothering to bathe, he collapsed into a comatose sleep until the sound of the Grandmaโam singing the anthem woke him. Time to be getting up
anyway. Aching head to toe, he teetered to the shower, removed the gauze from his arm, and let the hot water scream over his scraped flesh. He had a tube of ointment from his time in the hospital and, although unsure of its use, dabbed it on his raw face and chin. The stitches on his arm snagged on his clean shirt, but no new bleeding appeared. Heโd wear his jacket today just in case. Throwing a toothbrush and fresh uniform in his book bag, he took one last look in the mirror and sighed.ย Bicycle accident, he thought.ย Thatโs the story. Not that Iโve had a working bicycle in years.ย Well, now he had an excuse for its broken condition.
Once he was presentable, the first thing he did was check the television to make sure no harm had come to Lucy Gray. But the camera hadnโt shifted, and the only tribute visible in the early morning light was Lamina on her beam. Avoiding the Grandmaโam, he came into the kitchen, where Tigris was warming up the leftover jasmine tea.
โRunning late,โ he said. โI better get going.โ
โTake this for breakfast.โ She put a packet in his hands and placed a pair of tokens in his pocket. โAnd take the trolley today.โ
Needing to conserve energy, he did as he was told, riding the trolley and eating two loaded egg-and-sausage rolls Mrs. Plinth had sent over. His only regret about ditching the Plinths would be the loss of her cooking.
The main student body had been told to report at a quarter to eight, so the early birds consisted of the active mentors and a few Avoxes tidying the hall. Coriolanus couldnโt help throwing a guilty look at Juno Phipps, who sat discussing her strategy with Domitia when she could have slept in. He didnโt much like her โ she was always throwing her family lineage in his face, as if his wasnโt as good โ but last night hadnโt been fair to her either. He wondered how they would reveal Bobbinโs death and how he would feel when they did. Besides queasy.
The only thing being served at Heavensbee Hall was tea, which brought grumblings from Festus. โIf we have to be here early, youโd think they could at least feed us. What happened to your face?โ
โBike accident,โ Coriolanus said, loud enough for everyone to hear. He tossed the bag with the last roll to Festus, happy to be able to offer food for a change. He owed the Creeds more meals than he cared to remember.
โThanks. This looks great,โ said Festus, digging in immediately.
Lysistrata recommended a cream to prevent infection, and they went ahead and took their seats as their schoolmates began to arrive.
Although the sun had been up for a few hours, nothing much appeared changed on the screen except the disappearance of Marcusโs body. โI guess they removed it,โ said Pup. But Coriolanus thought it might still be by the barricade where he and Sejanus had abandoned it last night, just out of range of the shot.
At the stroke of eight, they all rose for the anthem, which his classmates finally seemed to be getting a handle on, and then Lucky Flickerman appeared, welcoming them to day two of the Hunger Games. โWhile you were sleeping, something pretty important happened. Letโs take a look, shall we?โ They cut back to the wide shot of the arena, and then slowly panned the camera round to the barricade, zooming in. As Coriolanus had suspected, Marcusโs body lay where he and Sejanus had dropped it. A few feet away, Bobbinโs battered form slumped against a chunk of concrete. It looked much, much worse than heโd imagined. The bloody limbs, the dislodged eye, the face so swollen it was unrecognizable. Had he really done that to another boy? And such a young boy, too, for in death Bobbin looked tinier than ever. Lost in that dark web of terror, it seemed he had. Perspiration beaded Coriolanusโs forehead, and he wanted to leave the hall, the building, the entire event behind. But, of course, that wasnโt an option. Who was he โ Sejanus?
After a good long look at the bodies, the show cut back to Lucky as he pondered who might have done the deed. Then his mood changed abruptly. โOne thing we do know is that weโve got something to celebrate!โ Confetti fell from the ceiling, and Lucky blew madly away on a plastic horn. โBecause weโve just hit the halfway mark! Thatโs right, twelve tributes down, and only twelve to go!โ A string of brightly colored handkerchiefs shot out of his hand. He swung it around his head, dancing and cheering, โWhoowee!โ When he finally wound down, he adopted a sad expression. โBut that also means weโve got to say our farewells to Miss Juno Phipps. Lepidus?โ
Lepidus had already positioned himself at the end of the unsuspecting Junoโs aisle, and she had no choice but to join him and work through her disappointment on camera. Given a little notice, Coriolanus imagined sheโd have comported herself more graciously, but as it was, she came off as sour and suspicious, questioning the recent developments as she flashed a leather binder inlaid with the Phipps family crest. โSomething seems fishy to me,โ she told Lepidus. โI mean, whatโs he doing over there with Marcusโs body?
Who moved it? And how did Bobbin end up dead? I canโt even imagine a likely scenario. I feel like there might have been foul play!โ
The reporter sounded genuinely puzzled. โWhat would qualify as foul play, exactly? I mean, in the arena?โ
โWell, I donโt knowย exactly,โ steamed Juno, โbut I, for one, would really like to see a replay of last nightโs events!โ
Good luck with that, Juno, thought Coriolanus. Then he realized it did exist. In the back of the van, Dr. Gaul and Dean Highbottom had been watching both versions, the real feed and the one theyโd darkened to obscure his mission. Even the regular one would be hard to make out. Still, he didnโt like it, the idea that somewhere there was a record, however shadowy, of him killing Bobbin. If it were ever to get out . . . well, he didnโt know what. But it made him uneasy.
Lepidus didnโt dally with Juno, a sore loser who lacked Felixโs grace in defeat, and she was directed back to her seat with a consoling pat on the back.
Still sparkly with confetti, Lucky seemed oblivious to her pain. He leaned in toward the camera with barely contained glee. โAnd now, what do you suppose? Weโve got an extra-big surprise โ especially if youโre one of the twelve remaining mentors!โ
Coriolanus only had a moment to exchange questioning looks with his friends before Lucky bounded across the studio to reveal Sejanus sitting side by side with his father, Strabo Plinth, whose stern expression seemed carved from the very granite of his home district. Lucky took the host chair and patted Sejanus on the leg. โSejanus, Iโm sorry we didnโt get a moment with you yesterday to let you comment on the demise of your tribute, Marcus.โ Sejanus just stared at Lucky uncomprehendingly. Lucky seemed to notice the abrasions on his face for the first time. โWhatโs going on here? You look like youโve been mixing it up yourself.โ
โI fell off my bike,โ Sejanus rasped, and Coriolanus winced slightly. Two biking mishaps in the same twelve-hour period seemed more than coincidental.
โOuch. Well, I guess you have some pretty big news to share with us!โ Lucky said with an encouraging nod.
Sejanus lowered his eyes for a moment, and while neither father nor son acknowledged each other, a battle seemed to be occurring.
โYes,โ Sejanus finally began. โWe, the Plinth family, would like to announce that we will be giving a prize for a full ride to the University to the mentor whose tribute wins the Hunger Games.โ
Pup let out a whoop, and the other mentors grinned at one another. Coriolanus knew most of them didnโt need the money as badly as he did, if at all, but it would be a feather in anyoneโs cap.
โSensational!โ said Lucky. โWhat a thrill those twelve remaining mentors must be experiencing right now. Was this your idea, Strabo? To create the Plinth Prize?โ
โMy sonโs, actually,โ said Strabo, curving the edges of his lips up in what Coriolanus thought might be an attempt at a smile.
โWell, what a generous and appropriate gesture, especially given Sejanusโs defeat. You may not have won the Games, but youโve certainly taken home the prize for good sportsmanship. I think I speak for the Capitol when I say many thanks!โ Lucky beamed at the pair, but as nothing else was forthcoming, he made a sweeping gesture with his arm. โAll right, then, back to the arena!โ
Coriolanusโs mind reeled with the new development. Sejanus had been right about his fatherโs hasty attempt to bury his sonโs outrageous behavior in cash. Not that it didnโt merit damage control. He hadnโt heard much reaction from the others in Heavensbee Hall about the outburst with the chair, but he expected stories were going around. A prize for the victorโs mentor seemed a small price to pay, really. What would Plinth offer to prevent word of Sejanusโs trip into the arena from going public? Could he be planning to buy Coriolanusโs silence?
Never mind, never mind that, Coriolanus told himself. The bigger news was the possibility of winning the Plinth Prize. It was independent of the Academy, so Dean Highbottom wouldnโt have a say in it. Even Dr. Gaul would not. A full ride that would free him from their power and lift this awful anxiety about the future from his shoulders! Already high, the stakes of these Games shot into the stratosphere.ย Focus, he told himself, drawing slow, deep breaths.ย Focus on helping Lucy Gray.
What was there to do, though, until she showed her face? As the morning passed, it seemed few of the tributes were tempted to do so. Coral and Mizzen roamed around together for a bit, collecting food and water from Festus and Persephone, their mentors. Theyโd been spending time together, trying to come up with a joint strategy for their tributes, and Coriolanus
could see that Festus was falling for her. Did you tell your best friend his crush was a cannibal? Never a rule book when you needed one.
When they returned to the dais after lunch they found the mentor seats had been reduced to twelve, leaving only enough space for those with tributes still in the Games.
โThe Gamemakers requested it,โ Satyria told the final dozen. โIt makes it easier for the audience to keep track of whoโs still a contender. Weโre to keep removing seats as your tributes are killed.โ
โLike musical chairs,โ said Domitia with a pleased look. โBut with people dying,โ said Lysistrata.
The decision to bump the losers from the dais made Livia even more bitter, if that was possible, and Coriolanus was glad to see her relegated to the regular audience section, where he wouldnโt have to hear her snarky comments. On the other hand, it made it harder to put distance between himself and Clemensia, who seemed to spend all her free time glaring at him. He positioned himself in the last row, bolstered by Festus and Lysistrata, and tried to look engaged.
As the afternoon unrolled, his head got heavier and heavier, until Lysistrata had to nudge him twice to keep him awake. Perhaps it was fortunate the day required so little of him, given that the night had almost killed him. There were few tribute sightings, and Lucy Gray stayed completely hidden.
Not until the late afternoon did the Hunger Games finally present the kind of action that people expected. The girl tribute from District 5, a rickety little thing who had been one of the unwashed herd to Coriolanus, made her way out onto the bleachers at the far end of the arena. Failing to find her name, Lucky just managed to connect her with her equally forgettable mentor, Iphigenia Moss, whose father oversaw the Agriculture Department, and thus the flow of food around Panem. Contrary to expectations, Iphigenia always seemed on the verge of mal-nutrition, often giving her school lunch to her classmates and even blacking out on occasion. Clemensia had once told Coriolanus it was the only revenge she could take on her father, but refused to give any more details.
True to form, Iphigenia began to unload every bit of food she could on her tribute, but even as the drones made the long trek across the arena, Mizzen, Coral, and Tanner, who appeared to have formed some sort of pack after the previous nightโs adventure, materialized from the tunnels and
began their hunt. After a brief chase along the bleachers, the trio surrounded the girl, and Coral killed her with a trident to the throat.
โWell, thatโs that,โ said Lucky, still unable to locate the tributeโs name. โWhat can her mentor tell us, Lepidus?โ
Iphigenia had already sought out Lepidus. โHer name was Sol, or maybe Sal. She had a funny accent. Not much more to tell.โ
Lepidus seemed inclined to agree. โNice job getting her to the second half, Albina!โ
โIphigenia,โ said Iphigenia over her shoulder as she walked off the dais. โThatโs right!โ said Lepidus. โAnd this means thereโs only eleven tributes
left!โ
Which means ten between me and that prize, thought Coriolanus as he watched an Avox remove Iphigeniaโs chair. He wished he could get food and water to Lucy Gray. What would happen if he sent it in without knowing her location? On-screen, the pack collected Solโs, or Salโs, food and moved back toward the tunnels, probably to get some rest before the night came. Should he risk it now?
He discussed it in whispers with Lysistrata, who felt that it might be worth a try if they sent in drones together. โWe donโt want them getting too weak and dehydrated. I donโt think Jessupโs gotten anything down in days. Letโs wait and see if they try and contact us. Letโs give them until the supper break.โ
But Lucy Gray made an entrance just as the student body was being released to go home. She darted out of a tunnel, running at full pitch, her hair loosening from her braids and flying free behind her.
โWhereโs Jessup?โ said Lysistrata with a frown. โWhy arenโt they together?โ
Before Coriolanus could venture a guess, Jessup staggered out of the same tunnel Lucy Gray had fled from. At first, Coriolanus thought he had been wounded, possibly while defending Lucy Gray. But then, what accounted for her flight? Were other tributes in pursuit? As the camera moved in on Jessup, it became apparent that he was ill, not hurt. Stiff-limbed and feverish with excitement, he swiped at the sun a few times before crouching down and springing almost immediately back to his feet for his first close-up.
Coriolanus wondered if Lucy Gray had found a way to poison him, but that didnโt make sense. Jessup was too valuable as a protector, especially
with the pack that had formed last night running around. What, then, ailed him?
Any number of things couldโve sickened him, any range of maladies been suspected, if it hadnโt been for the telltale foam that began to bubble over his lips.