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Chapter no 27

The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

Coriolanus scanned the area, trying to hide his growing anxiety. Where was Sejanus? Adrenaline fought with the white liquor for control of his brain. Heโ€™d been so steeped in music and alcohol that he really didnโ€™t know when Sejanus had disappeared. What if he hadnโ€™t had a change of heart about Lil? Was he out there in the crowd, conspiring with the rebels at this very moment?โ€Œ

He waited for the audience to finish applauding Maude Ivory and Lucy Gray before he rose to his feet. Just as he began to make his way to the door, he saw Sejanus returning in the hazy light.

โ€œWhereโ€™ve you been?โ€ Coriolanus asked.

โ€œOutside. That white liquor runs right through me.โ€ Sejanus sat on his crate and turned his attention to the stage.

Coriolanus resumed his seat as well, his eyes on the entertainment, his thoughts anywhere but. White liquor didnโ€™t run through anyone. It was too strong, the amount consumed too small. Another lie. What did that mean? That he couldnโ€™t let Sejanus out of his sight for one second now? Throughout the rest of the show, he kept shooting sideways glances at him to make sure he didnโ€™t sneak off again. He stayed close after Maude Ivory collected money in her beribboned basket, but Sejanus seemed focused on helping Bug steer a drunken Beanpole back to the base. No opportunity presented itself for further discussion. If, in fact, Sejanus had slipped away to plot with the rebels, Coriolanusโ€™s directly confronting him after the Billy Taupe incident had obviously failed. A new strategy was clearly called for.

Sunday dawned too brightly for Coriolanusโ€™s throbbing head. He threw up the white liquor and stood in the shower until his eyes focused properly again. The greasy eggs at the mess hall were unthinkable, so he nibbled on his toast while Sejanus finished both of their helpings, only confirming Coriolanusโ€™s suspicions that heโ€™d consumed next to no alcohol the night before, certainly not enough to have it run through him. Their three bunkmates had not even managed to get up for breakfast. Until he thought of a better approach, heโ€™d have to watch him like a hawk, especially when they left the base. Today, anyway, heโ€™d need a companion to go to the lake.

Although Coriolanusโ€™s own enthusiasm had waned, Sejanus cheerfully accepted the invitation. โ€œSure, it sounds like a holiday. Letโ€™s take some ice!โ€ While Sejanus talked Cookie out of another plastic bag, Coriolanus went to the clinic for an aspirin. They met up at the guardhouse and then set out.

Not knowing a shortcut to the Seam, they returned to the town square and retraced their steps from the previous week. Coriolanus considered attempting another heart-to-heart with Sejanus, but if the threat of being found guilty of treason didnโ€™t move him, what would? And he didnโ€™t know for sure that heโ€™d been conspiring with the rebels. Maybe he really had just needed to take a piss last night, in which case accusing him would only make him defensive. The only real evidence he had was the hidden money, and maybe Strabo had insisted he take it but Sejanus was determined never to use it. He didnโ€™t value money, and munitions money was probably burdensome to him. It might be a point of honor with him, to make it on his own.

If Lucy Gray was still upset about their tiff, she didnโ€™t show it. She greeted him at the back door with a kiss and a glass of cold water to tide him over until they reached the lake. โ€œItโ€™s two to three hours, depending on the briars, but itโ€™s worth it.โ€

For once, the Covey left their instruments behind. Barb Azure stayed at home, too, to keep an eye on things. She sent them off with a bucket containing a jug of water, a loaf of bread, and an old blanket.

โ€œShe just started seeing a gal down the road,โ€ confided Lucy Gray when they were out of earshot of the house. โ€œProbably glad to have the place to themselves for the day.โ€

Tam Amber led the rest of them across the Meadow and into the woods. Clerk Carmine, Maude Ivory, and Sejanus formed a line behind him, leaving Lucy Gray and Coriolanus to bring up the rear. There was no path.

They followed single file, stepping over fallen trees, pushing aside branches, trying to skirt the prickly bushes that popped up in the undergrowth. Within ten minutes, nothing remained of District 12 but the acrid smell from the mines. Within twenty, even that had been cloaked by vegetation. The canopy of trees provided shade from the sun but little respite from the heat. The hum of insects, chatter of squirrels, and birdsong filled the air, undisturbed by their presence.

Even with two days of bird duty under his belt, Coriolanus felt increasingly wary the farther away they got from what passed for civilization out here. He wondered what other creatures โ€” larger, more powerful, and fanged โ€” might be lurking in the trees. He had no weapon of any kind. After that realization, he pretended to need a walking stick and stopped a moment to strip a sturdy fallen branch of its excess limbs.

โ€œHow does he know the way?โ€ he asked Lucy Gray, nodding ahead to Tam Amber.

โ€œWe all know the way,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s our second home.โ€

As no one else acted concerned, he trooped along for what seemed like an eternity, happy when Tam Amber pulled the group up. But he only said, โ€œAbout halfway.โ€ They passed around the bag of ice, drinking what had melted and sucking on the remaining cubes.

Maude Ivory complained of a pain in her foot and pulled off her cracked, brown shoe to show a good-sized blister. โ€œThese shoes donโ€™t walk right.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re an old pair of Clerk Carmineโ€™s. Weโ€™re trying to make them last the summer,โ€ said Lucy Gray, examining the little foot with a frown.

โ€œTheyโ€™re too tight,โ€ said Maude Ivory. โ€œI want herring boxes like in the song.โ€

Sejanus crouched, offering her his back. โ€œHow about a ride instead?โ€ Maude Ivory scampered aboard. โ€œWatch out for my head!โ€

Once the precedent was set, they took turns carrying the little girl. No longer needing to exert herself, she used her lungs for singing.

In a cavern, in a canyon, Excavating for a mine, Dwelt a miner, forty-niner

And his daughter, Clementine. Light she was and like a fairy,

And her shoes were number nine. Herring boxes, without topses, Sandals were for Clementine.

To Coriolanusโ€™s dismay, a mockingjay chorus picked up the melody from high in the branches. Heโ€™d not expected them to be out this far โ€” the things were positively infesting the woods. But Maude Ivory was delighted and kept the racket going. Coriolanus carried her the final leg and distracted her by thanking her for the Lucy Gray song the night before.

โ€œWhatโ€™d you make of it?โ€ she asked.

He dodged the question. โ€œI liked it very much. You were fantastic.โ€ โ€œThanks, but I meant the song. Do you think people really see Lucy

Gray, or theyโ€™re just dreaming her?โ€ she said. โ€œBecause I think they really see her. Only now, she flies like a bird.โ€

โ€œDoes she?โ€ Coriolanus felt better that the cryptic song was at least subject to debate, and he wasnโ€™t too dim to grasp the one erudite interpretation.

โ€œWell, how else can she not make footprints?โ€ she said. โ€œI think she flies around and tries not to meet people, because theyโ€™d kill her because sheโ€™s different.โ€

โ€œYeah, sheโ€™s different. Sheโ€™s a ghost, bonehead,โ€ said Clerk Carmine. โ€œGhosts donโ€™t leave footprints, because theyโ€™re like air.โ€

โ€œThen whereโ€™s her body?โ€ asked Coriolanus, feeling that at least Maude Ivoryโ€™s version made some sense.

โ€œShe fell off the bridge and died, only itโ€™s so far down, no one could see her. Or maybe there was a river and it washed her away,โ€ said Clerk Carmine. โ€œAnyway, sheโ€™s dead and sheโ€™s haunting the place. How can she fly without wings?โ€

โ€œShe didnโ€™t fall off the bridge! The snow would look different where she was standing!โ€ Maude Ivory insisted. โ€œLucy Gray, which is it?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a mystery, sweetheart. Just like me. Thatโ€™s why itโ€™s my song,โ€ Lucy Gray answered.

By the time they arrived at the lake, Coriolanus was panting and parched, and his rash burned from his sweat. When the Covey stripped down to their undergarments and plunged into the water, he lost no time in following suit. He waded out, and the cold water embraced him, clearing the cobwebs from his head and soothing his rash. He swam well, having been taught from an

early age in school, but had never tried it anywhere but a pool. The muddy lake floor dropped off quickly, and he had a sense of deep water. He cruised out to the middle of the lake and floated on his back, taking in the scenery. The woods rose up all around, and although there seemed to be no access road, small, broken houses dotted the banks. Most were beyond repair, but a solid-looking concrete structure still had a roof, and a door shut tight against the wild. A family of ducks swam by a few feet away, and he could spot fish down below his toes. Concern over what else might be swimming around him prompted him to head back to shore, where the Covey had already pulled Sejanus into some kind of keep-away game, using a large pinecone for the ball. Coriolanus joined in, glad to be doing something just for fun. The strain of being a full-fledged adult every day had grown tiresome.

After a brief rest, Tam Amber made a couple of fishing poles, trimming down tree branches and attaching thread and homemade hooks. While Clerk Carmine dug for worms, Maude Ivory enlisted Sejanus to pick berries.

โ€œStay away from that patch near the rocks,โ€ warned Lucy Gray. โ€œSnakes like it there.โ€

โ€œShe always knows where theyโ€™ll be,โ€ Maude Ivory told Sejanus as she led him away. โ€œShe catches them in her hands, but they scare me.โ€

That left Coriolanus with Lucy Gray to collect dry wood for a fire. It all excited him a little, the swimming half-naked among wild creatures, the building of the fire in the open air, the unorchestrated time with Lucy Gray. She had a box of matches, but they were dear and she said she had to make do with just one. When the flame caught in a pile of dry leaves, he sat close to her on the ground as they fed it first the twigs, then larger scraps of wood, feeling happier to be alive than he had in weeks.

Lucy Gray leaned into his shoulder. โ€œListen, Iโ€™m sorry if I upset you last night. I wasnโ€™t laying my daddyโ€™s death on you. We were both just kids when that happened.โ€

โ€œI know. Iโ€™m sorry if I overreacted. Itโ€™s just, I canโ€™t pretend Iโ€™m someone Iโ€™m not. I donโ€™t agree with everything the Capitol does, but I am Capitol, and on the whole I think weโ€™re right about needing order,โ€ said Coriolanus.

โ€œThe Covey believe youโ€™re put on earth to reduce the misery, not add to it. Do you think the Hunger Games are right?โ€ she asked.

โ€œIโ€™m not even sure why we do them, to be honest. But I do think people are forgetting the war too fast. What we did to each other. What weโ€™re

capable of. Districts and Capitol both. I know the Capitol must seem hardline out here, but weโ€™re just trying to keep things under control. Otherwise, thereโ€™d be chaos and people running around killing each other, like in the arena.โ€ This was the first time heโ€™d tried to put these thoughts into words with anyone other than Dr. Gaul. He felt a little unsteady, like a toddler learning to walk, but he felt the independence of getting on his feet as well.

Lucy Gray drew back a bit. โ€œThatโ€™s what you think people would do?โ€

โ€œI do. Unless thereโ€™s law, and someone enforcing it, I think we might as well be animals,โ€ he said with more assurance. โ€œLike it or not, the Capitol is the only thing keeping anyone safe.โ€

โ€œHm. So they keep me safe. And what do I give up for that?โ€ she asked. Coriolanus poked at the fire with a stick. โ€œGive up? Why, nothing.โ€

โ€œThe Covey did,โ€ she said. โ€œCanโ€™t travel. Canโ€™t perform without their say-so. Can only sing certain types of songs. Fight getting round up, and you get shot dead like my daddy. Try to keep your family together, and you get your head broken like my mama. What if I think that price is too high to pay? Maybe my freedomโ€™s worth the risk.โ€

โ€œSo, your family were rebels after all.โ€ Coriolanus wasnโ€™t really surprised.

โ€œMy family were Covey, first and last,โ€ Lucy Gray asserted. โ€œNot district, not Capitol, not rebel, not Peacekeeper, just us. And youโ€™re like us. You want to think for yourself. You push back. I know because of what you did for me in the Games.โ€

Well, she had him there. If the Hunger Games were thought necessary by the Capitol, and if he had tried to thwart them, had he not refuted the Capitolโ€™s authority? Pushed back, as she said? Not like Sejanus, in outright defiance. But in a quieter, subtler way of his own? โ€œHereโ€™s what I believe. If the Capitol wasnโ€™t in charge, we wouldnโ€™t even be having this conversation, because weโ€™d have destroyed ourselves by now.โ€

โ€œPeople have been around a long time without the Capitol. I expect theyโ€™ll be here a long time after,โ€ she concluded.

Coriolanus thought of the dead cities heโ€™d passed on the journey to District 12. She claimed the Covey had traveled, so she must have seen them as well. โ€œNot many of them. Panem used to be magnificent. Look at it now.โ€

Clerk Carmine brought Lucy Gray a plant heโ€™d uprooted from the lake, with pointy leaves and small white flowers. โ€œHey, you found some katniss.

Good work, CC.โ€ Coriolanus wondered if he meant it to be decorative, like the Grandmaโ€™amโ€™s roses, but she immediately examined the roots, from which small tubers hung. โ€œLittle too early yet.โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ Clerk Carmine agreed. โ€œFor what?โ€ asked Coriolanus.

โ€œFor eating. In a few weeks, these will grow into decent-sized potatoes, and we can roast them,โ€ said Lucy Gray. โ€œSome people call them swamp potatoes, but I like katniss better. Has a nice ring to it.โ€

Tam Amber appeared with several fish that he cleaned, gutted, and cut up into pieces. He wrapped the fish in leaves and sprigs of some kind of herb heโ€™d picked, and Lucy Gray arranged them in the embers of the fire. By the time Maude Ivory and Sejanus arrived with their bucket loaded with blackberries, the fish were cooked through. With the hike and the swimming, Coriolanusโ€™s appetite had returned. He ate every morsel of his share of the fish, bread, and berries. Then Sejanus brought out a surprise โ€” a half dozen of Maโ€™s sugar cookies heโ€™d saved as his share of the box.

After lunch they spread out the blanket under the trees, half lying on it, half propped against the trunks, and stared up at the fleecy clouds in the brilliant sky.

โ€œIโ€™ve never seen a sky quite that color,โ€ said Sejanus.

โ€œItโ€™s azure,โ€ Maude Ivory told him. โ€œLike Barb Azure. Thatโ€™s her color.โ€ โ€œHer color?โ€ asked Coriolanus.

โ€œSure. We each get our first name from a ballad and our second from a color.โ€ She popped up to explain. โ€œBarb is from โ€˜Barbara Allenโ€™ and azure blue like the sky. Me, Iโ€™m โ€˜Maude Clareโ€™ and ivory like piano keys. And Lucy Gray is special, because her whole name came right from her ballad. Lucy and Gray.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s right. Gray like a winter day,โ€ Lucy Gray said with a smile.

Coriolanus had not really noticed the connection before; heโ€™d just thought they had odd Covey names. Ivory and amber brought to mind old ornaments in the Grandmaโ€™amโ€™s jewelry box. And azure, taupe, and carmine werenโ€™t colors he recognized. As to their ballads, who knew where those had come from? It all seemed a strange way to name your child.

Maude Ivory poked him in the stomach. โ€œYour name sounds Covey.โ€ โ€œHow so?โ€ he said with a laugh.

โ€œBecause of the snow part. White as snow. Snow white,โ€ giggled Maude Ivory. โ€œIs there a ballad with Coriolanus in it?โ€

โ€œNot that I know of. Why donโ€™t you write one about me?โ€ he said, poking her back. โ€œโ€˜The Ballad of Coriolanus Snow.โ€™โ€

Maude Ivory sat down on his stomach. โ€œLucy Grayโ€™s the writer. Why donโ€™t you ask her?โ€

โ€œStop pestering him, you.โ€ Lucy Gray pulled Maude Ivory beside her. โ€œYou should probably take a nap before we head home.โ€

โ€œPeople will carry me,โ€ said Maude Ivory, wriggling to get free. โ€œAnd Iโ€™ll sing for them!โ€

Oh, my darling, oh, my darling โ€”

โ€œOh, pipe down,โ€ said Clerk Carmine. โ€œCome on, try to lie down,โ€ said Lucy Gray.

โ€œWell, I will if you sing to me. Sing me the one from when I had croup.โ€ She flattened out with her head on Lucy Grayโ€™s lap.

โ€œOkay, but only if you hush.โ€ Lucy Gray stroked Maude Ivoryโ€™s hair back behind her ear and waited for her to settle down before she began to sing soothingly.

Deep in the meadow, under the willow A bed of grass, a soft green pillow

Lay down your head, and close your sleepy eyes And when again they open, the sun will rise.

Here itโ€™s safe, here itโ€™s warm

Here the daisies guard you from every harm

Here your dreams are sweet and tomorrow brings them true Here is the place where I love you.

The song quieted Maude Ivory, and Coriolanus felt his anxieties melt away. Full of fresh food, shaded by the trees, Lucy Gray singing softly beside him, he began to appreciate nature. It really was beautiful out here. The crystal clean air. The lush colors. He felt so relaxed and free. What if this was his life: rising whenever, catching his food for the day, and hanging out with Lucy Gray by the lake? Who needed wealth and success and power when they had love? Didnโ€™t it conquer all?

Deep in the meadow, hidden far away

A cloak of leaves, a moonbeam ray

Forget your woes and let your troubles lay

And when again itโ€™s morning, theyโ€™ll wash away.

Here itโ€™s safe, here itโ€™s warm

Here the daisies guard you from every harm

Here your dreams are sweet and tomorrow brings them true Here is the place where I love you.

Coriolanus was on the verge of dozing off when the mockingjays, whoโ€™d listened quite respectfully to Lucy Grayโ€™s rendition, began one of their own. He felt his body tense and the pleasant drowsiness drain away. But the Covey were all smiles as the birds ran off with the song.

โ€œLike sandstones to diamonds, thatโ€™s what we are to them,โ€ said Tam Amber.

โ€œWell . . . they practice more,โ€ said Clerk Carmine, and the others laughed.

Listening to the birds, Coriolanus noticed the absence of jabberjays. The only explanation he could think of was that the mockingjays had begun to reproduce without them, either with one another or with the local mockingbirds. This elimination of the Capitol birds from the equation deeply disturbed him. Here they were, multiplying like rabbits, completely unchecked. Unauthorized. Co-opting Capitol technology. He didnโ€™t like it one bit.

Maude Ivory finally napped, curling up against Lucy Gray, her bare feet twisted in the blanket. Coriolanus stayed with them while the others headed back into the lake for another dip. After a while, Clerk Carmine brought over a bright blue feather heโ€™d found along the bank and set it on the blanket for Maude Ivory, gruffly saying, โ€œDonโ€™t tell her where it came from.โ€

โ€œOkay. Thatโ€™s sweet, CC,โ€ said Lucy Gray. โ€œSheโ€™ll love it.โ€ When heโ€™d run back to the water, she shook her head. โ€œI worry about him. He misses Billy Taupe.โ€

โ€œDo you?โ€ Coriolanus propped himself up on his elbow to watch her face.

She didnโ€™t hesitate. โ€œNo. Not since the reaping.โ€

The reaping. He remembered the ballad sheโ€™d sung for the interview. โ€œWhat did it mean when you said you were the bet he lost in the reaping?โ€

โ€œHe bet he could have us both, me and Mayfair,โ€ she said. โ€œIt was a gamble. Mayfair found out about me, I found out about her. She had her pa call my name in the reaping. I donโ€™t know what she told him. Certainly not that Billy Taupe was her flame. Something else. Weโ€™re outsiders here, so itโ€™s easy to lie about us.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m surprised theyโ€™re together,โ€ said Coriolanus.

โ€œWell, Billy Taupeโ€™s always going on about how heโ€™s happiest alone, but what he really wants is some girl to take care of him. I guess Mayfair seemed a likely candidate for the job, so he went after her. No one can pour on the charm like Billy Taupe. That girl didnโ€™t stand a chance. Besides, sheโ€™s got to be lonely. No brothers or sisters. No friends. Miners hate her family. Driving up in their flashy car to watch the hangings.โ€ Maude Ivory stirred, and Lucy Gray smoothed her hair. โ€œPeople are suspicious of us, but they despise them.โ€

He didnโ€™t like the way her rage against Billy Taupe had faded. โ€œIs he trying to get back with you?โ€

She picked up the feather and twirled it between her thumb and forefinger before she answered. โ€œOh, sure. Came to my meadow yesterday. Big plans. Wants me to meet him at the hanging tree and run off.โ€

โ€œThe hanging tree?โ€ Coriolanus thought of Arlo swinging while the birds mocked his final words. โ€œWhy there?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s where we used to go. Itโ€™s the one place in District Twelve youโ€™re guaranteed some privacy,โ€ she said. โ€œWants us to go north. He thinks thereโ€™s people up there. Free people. Says weโ€™ll find them and then come back for the others. Heโ€™s piling up supplies, not sure with what. But what does it matter? I canโ€™t ever trust him again.โ€

Coriolanus felt jealousy tighten his throat. He thought sheโ€™d banished Billy Taupe, and here she was casually telling him about some chance meeting in the Meadow. Only it hadnโ€™t been chance. Heโ€™d known where to find her. How long had they been there, with him pouring on the charm, tempting her to run away? Why had she stayed to listen? โ€œTrust is important.โ€

โ€œI think itโ€™s more important than love. I mean, I love all kinds of things I donโ€™t trust. Thunderstorms . . . white liquor . . . snakes. Sometimes I think I

love them because I canโ€™t trust them, and how mixed up is that?โ€ Lucy Gray took a deep breath. โ€œI trust you, though.โ€

He sensed this was a difficult admission for her to make, perhaps harder than a declaration of love, but it didnโ€™t erase the image of Billy Taupe wooing her in the Meadow. โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œWhy? Well, Iโ€™ll have to give that one some thought.โ€ When she kissed him, he kissed her back, but without much conviction. These new developments upset him. Maybe it was a mistake to be getting so attached to her. And something else bothered him, too. It was the song sheโ€™d been playing in the Meadow that first day. About the hanging, heโ€™d thought then, but it had mentioned meeting up at the hanging tree as well. If that was their old place, why was she still singing about it? Maybe she was only using him to get Billy Taupe back. Playing the two of them off each other.

Maude Ivory awoke and admired her feather, which she had Lucy Gray fix in her hair. They readied themselves to go back, collecting the blanket, the jug, and the bucket. Coriolanus volunteered to carry the little girl for the first leg of the trip. When theyโ€™d left the lake, he dropped back behind the others to ask her, โ€œSo, do you see Billy Taupe these days?โ€

โ€œOh, no,โ€ she said. โ€œHeโ€™s not one of us anymore.โ€ That pleased him, but it also suggested that Lucy Gray had kept her meeting with him a secret from the Covey, which made him suspicious again. Maude Ivory bent over his ear and whispered, โ€œDonโ€™t let him around Sejanus. Heโ€™s sweet, and Billy Taupe feeds on sweet.โ€

Coriolanus bet he fed on money, too. Just how was he paying for supplies for his escape?

Tam Amber took a slightly different route, detouring to berry patches so they could fill the bucket along the way. When theyโ€™d almost reached the town, Clerk Carmine spotted a tree loaded with apples just beginning to ripen. Tam Amber and Sejanus went on, carrying Maude Ivory and the gear between them. Clerk Carmine climbed the tree and threw down apples, and Coriolanus piled them into Lucy Grayโ€™s skirt. It was early evening by the time they reached the house. Coriolanus felt exhausted and ready to return to the base, but Barb Azure sat alone at the kitchen table, picking through berries. โ€œTam Amber took Maude Ivory to the Hob to see if they could trade some berries for some shoes. I told them to go ahead and get warm ones, itโ€™ll be cold before you know it.โ€

โ€œAnd Sejanus?โ€ Coriolanus looked into the backyard.

โ€œHe left a few minutes after. Said heโ€™d meet you there, too,โ€ she said.

The Hob. Coriolanus said his good-byes immediately. โ€œIโ€™ve got to go. If they see Sejanus there without another Peacekeeper, heโ€™ll get written up. So will I, for that matter. We have to stay in pairs. He knows that โ€” I donโ€™t know what heโ€™s thinking.โ€ But in truth, he thought he knew exactly what Sejanus was thinking. What a great opportunity to visit the Hob without Coriolanus policing him. He pulled Lucy Gray in for a kiss. โ€œToday was wonderful. Thank you for it. Iโ€™ll see you next Saturday at the shed?โ€ He shot out the door before she could reply.

He walked, double time, straight to the Hob, and looked in the open door. A dozen or so people wandered around, turning over merchandise at the stalls. Maude Ivory sat on a barrel while Tam Amber laced up a boot for her. At the far end of the warehouse, Sejanus stood at a counter, engaged in conversation with a woman. As Coriolanus approached, he made note of her wares. Minersโ€™ lamps. Picks. Axes. Knives. Suddenly, he realized what Sejanus could buy with all that Capitol money. Weapons. And not just the ones laid out before him. He could buy guns. As if to confirm shady dealings, the woman broke off talking when he came into earshot. Sejanus joined him directly.

โ€œShopping?โ€ Coriolanus asked.

โ€œI was thinking of getting a pocketknife,โ€ said Sejanus. โ€œBut sheโ€™s out at the moment.โ€

Perfect. A lot of the soldiers carried them. There was even a game they played when they were off duty, where they bet money on who could hit a target. โ€œI was thinking of getting one myself. Once we get paid.โ€

โ€œOf course, once we get paid,โ€ agreed Sejanus, as if that had been understood.

Suppressing an impulse to strike him, Coriolanus strode out of the Hob without acknowledging Maude Ivory and Tam Amber. He barely spoke on the way back as he revised his strategy. He had to find out what Sejanus was mixed up in. Logic had failed to induce a confidence. Would intimacy work? It wouldnโ€™t hurt to try. A few blocks from the base, he laid a hand on Sejanusโ€™s shoulder, bringing them both to a stop. โ€œYou know, Sejanus, Iโ€™m your friend. More than a friend. Youโ€™re the closest thing Iโ€™ll ever have to a brother. And there are special rules for family. If you need help . . . I mean, if you get into something you canโ€™t handle . . . Iโ€™m here.โ€

Tears welled up in Sejanusโ€™s eyes. โ€œThank you, Coryo. That means a lot.

You may be the only person in the world who I actually trust.โ€ Ah, trust again. The air was full of it.

โ€œCome here.โ€ He pulled Sejanus into an embrace. โ€œJust promise not to do anything stupid, okay?โ€ He felt him nod in assent but knew the likelihood of his keeping that promise was almost nil.

At least their busy schedule kept Sejanus under constant supervision, even when they left the base. Monday afternoon, they retrieved the traps from the trees again. Although theyโ€™d been undisturbed for the entire weekend, not one contained a mockingjay. Contrary to expectations, Dr. Kay seemed pleased by the birds. โ€œIt seems theyโ€™ve inherited more than advanced mimicry. Theyโ€™ve evolved their survival skills as well. Forget replacing the cages; we have plenty of jabberjays. Tomorrow weโ€™ll try the mist nets.โ€

By the time the soldiers got out of the trucks on Tuesday afternoon, the scientists had chosen locations with heavy mockingjay traffic. They broke into groups โ€” Coriolanus and Bug were with Dr. Kay again โ€” and helped erect sets of poles. Between each was stretched a finely woven mist net designed to capture the mockingjays. Nearly invisible, the nets began to yield results almost immediately, entangling the birds and dropping them into horizontal rows of pockets in their mesh surfaces. Dr. Kay had given instructions that the nets were never to be left unsupervised and that the birds were to be removed immediately, to keep them from becoming too snarled and to make the experience as trauma-free as possible. She personally removed the first three mockingjays from their nets, carefully freeing the birds while holding them securely in her hand. When given the go-ahead, Bug proved to be a natural, gently untangling his mockingjay and placing it in a waiting cage. Coriolanusโ€™s bird began a tortured screaming the minute he touched it, and when he gave it a squeeze designed to dissuade it, it drove its beak into his palm. He reflexively dropped it, and in moments it had vanished into the foliage. Noxious creature. Dr. Kay cleaned and bandaged his hand, which reminded him of how Tigris had done the same on reaping day when the thorn on the Grandmaโ€™amโ€™s rose had punctured him. Not even two months ago. What hopes heโ€™d had that day, and now look at him. Rounding up mutt spawn in the districts. He spent the rest of the afternoon carrying the caged birds to the truck. The

hand didnโ€™t excuse him from bird duty, though, and he resumed cleaning cages back at the hangar.

Coriolanus began to warm up to the jabberjays. They really were impressive pieces of engineering. A few of the remotes lay around the lab, and the scientists allowed him to play with the birds once theyโ€™d been cataloged. โ€œIt wonโ€™t hurt anything,โ€ one said. โ€œIn fact, they seem to enjoy the interaction.โ€ Bug wouldnโ€™t participate, but when he grew bored, Coriolanus made them record silly phrases and sing bits of the anthem, seeing how many he could operate with one remote click. Up to four sometimes, if their cages were close together. He always took care to erase them by doing a final quick recording in which he was silent, ensuring his voice would not end up back in the Citadel lab. He stopped with the singing entirely when the mockingjays began to pick it up, even if there was a certain satisfaction in hearing them pipe out praise for the Capitol. He had no way to silence them, and they could string one melody out endlessly.

On the whole, he was beginning to weary of the infusion of music into his life.ย Invasionย might be a better word. It seemed to be everywhere these days: birdsong, Covey song, bird-and-Covey song. Perhaps he did not share his motherโ€™s love of music after all. At least, such a quantity of it. It consumed his attention greedily, demanding to be listened to and making it hard to think.

By midafternoon Wednesday, theyโ€™d collected fifty mockingjays in total, enough to satisfy Dr. Kay. Coriolanus and Bug spent the rest of the day attending to the birds and shuttling the new mockingjays over to the lab table to be numbered and tagged. They finished before dinner and returned after to prepare the birds for travel to the Capitol. The scientists showed Coriolanus and Bug how to fasten the cloth covers on the cages, and then they relocated to the hovercraft, trusting the pair to take care of it. Coriolanus volunteered to do the covers while Bug carried the birds to the hovercraft and helped settle them in for their journey.

Coriolanus started with the mockingjays, happy to see them go. He moved the cages one at a time to his work table, snapped on their covers, wrote the letterย Mย and the birdโ€™s number in chalk on the cloth, and handed them off. Bug was just leaving with the fiftieth cage, which contained a madly chirping mockingjay, when Sejanus bounced in the door, sounding a bit hyper. โ€œGood news! Another delivery from my ma!โ€

Bug, whoโ€™d been down about the birds leaving, cheered up a bit. โ€œSheโ€™s the best.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll tell her you said so.โ€ Sejanus watched Bug move off and turned to Coriolanus, whoโ€™d just collected the jabberjay tagged with the numberย 1. The bird twittered away in its cage, still imitating the last mockingjay. Sejanusโ€™s grin had vanished, and an anguished expression had taken its place. His eyes swept the hangar to ensure they were alone, and he spoke in a hushed voice. โ€œListen, weโ€™ve only got a few minutes. I know you wonโ€™t approve of what Iโ€™m going to do, but I need you to at least understand it. After what you said the other day, about us being like brothers, well, I feel I owe you an explanation. Please, just hear me out.โ€

This was it, then. The confession. Coriolanusโ€™s entreaties for sanity and caution had been weighed and found insufficient. Misguided passion had won the day. Now was the time for the pieces to be explained. The money. The guns. The base map. The moment the whole treasonous rebel plot would be revealed. Once Coriolanus heard it, heโ€™d be as good as a rebel himself. A traitor to the Capitol. He should panic, or run, or at least try to shut Sejanus up. But he did none of these things.

Instead his hands acted on their own. Like the time heโ€™d dropped the handkerchief into the tank of snakes before heโ€™d been aware of deciding to do it. Now his left hand adjusted the cover of the jabberjay cage while his right, concealed from Sejanusโ€™s view by his body, dropped to the counter, where a remote sat. Coriolanus pressedย RECORD,ย and the jabberjay fell silent.

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