Iย AVOIDED EVERYONE OVER THEย weekend, and no one seemed bothered by it, not even Mom. With the names out there, the Selection felt that much more real, and I was saddened by the dwindling days of solitude.
The Monday before the candidates arrived, I finally rejoined humanity and made my way to the Womenโs Room. Miss Lucy was there, seeming back to her usual, cheerful self. I kept wishing I could do something to help her. I knew a puppy wasnโt a person, but so far my only idea was to get her a pet.
Mom was talking to Miss Marlee, and they waved me over the moment I was through the doorway.
โMiss Marlee put her hand on mine as I sat. โI wanted to explain about Kile. He doesnโt want to leave because of you. Heโs been talking about going for a long time, and I thought the semester away would put an end to it. I canโt bear to let him go.โ
โYouโll have to let him make his own choice sooner or later,โ Mom urged.
Funny, since she was the one trying to marry her daughter to a stranger. โI donโt understand it. Josie never talks about leaving.โ
I rolled my eyes. Of course she doesnโt.
โBut what can you do? You canโt force him to stay.โ Mom poured a cup of tea and set it in front of me.
โIโm hiring another tutor. This one has hands-on experience and can give Kile more than a book could, so I think Iโve bought some more time. I keep hopingโโ
Aunt May burst into the room, looking as if she stepped out of a magazine. I bolted over to her and gave her a bone-crushing hug.
โYour Highness,โ she greeted. โShut up.โ
She laughed and pulled me back, grasping me by both shoulders and looking into my eyes. โI want to hear everything about the Selection. How are you feeling? Some of those pictures were cute. Are you already in love?โ
โNot even close,โ I replied with a laugh. โWell, give โem a few days.โ
Thatโs how it was with Aunt May. A new love every few months or so. She treated the four of usโand our cousins, Astra and Leoโlike we were her kids since she never settled down herself. I particularly enjoyed her company,
and the palace always felt more exciting when she was here.
โโHow long are you staying?โ Mom asked, and May held my hand as we crossed back to her.
โLeaving again Thursday.โ I gasped.
โI know. Iโm going to miss all the excitement!โ She pouted at me. โBut Leo has a game Friday afternoon, and Astraโs dance recital is on Saturday, and I promised Iโd be there. Sheโs really coming along,โ Aunt May said, turning to Mom. โYou can tell her mother was an artist.โ
They shared a smile. โI wish I could go,โ Mom lamented.
โWhy donโt we?โ I suggested, picking up some cookies for my tea.
Aunt May gave me a questioning look. โYou do realize you already have plans for this weekend, right? Big plans? Life-changing plans?โ
I shrugged. โIโm not too worried about missing them.โ โEadlyn,โ Mom reprimanded.
โSorry! Itโs just overwhelming. I like the way things are now.โ โWhere are the pictures?โ May asked.
โIn my room, on my desk. Iโm trying to learn the names, but I havenโt gotten very far yet.โ
May waved her arm at a maid. โDearie, will you go up to the princessโs room and grab the stack of Selection candidatesโ forms off her desk?โ
The maid beamed and curtsied, and I suspected sheโd be thumbing through the pile on her way down.
โMom leaned in toward her sister. โI just want to remind you that, one, theyโre off-limits, and, two, even if they werenโt, youโre twice their age.โ
Miss Marlee and I laughed, while Miss Lucy only smiled. She was much easier on Aunt May than the rest of us.
โDonโt tease her,โ Miss Lucy protested. โIโm sure she has the best intentions.โ
โThank you, Lucy. This isnโt for me; itโs for Eadlyn!โ she vowed. โWeโre going to help her get a head start.โ
โThatโs not really how it works.โ Mom leaned back, drinking her tea with an air of superiority.
Miss Marlee laughed loudly. โThis from you! Do we need to remind you ofย yourย head start?โ
โWhat?โ I asked, shocked. How many details had my parents omitted from their story? โWhat does she mean?โ
Mom put down her tea and held up a hand defensively. โI accidentally ran into your father the night before the Selection started, and, I will have you know,โ she said, more to Miss Marlee than to me, โI could easily have been
kicked out for that. It wasnโt exactly the first impression you hope for.โ I sat there gaping. โMom, exactly how many rules did you break?โ
Her eyes darted up as if she was trying to tally them. โOkay, you know what, go through the pictures all you want; you win.โ
โAunt May laughed with delight, and I tried to memorize the way her head sloped gracefully to one side and her eyes sparkled. Everything about her was so effortlessly glamorous, and I adored her with a love close to what I held for my mother. While I felt a little slighted by Josie being my closest female playmate growing up, Momโs circle of friends more than made up for it. Aunt Mayโs spirit, Miss Lucyโs kindness, Miss Marleeโs buoyancy, and Momโs strength were invaluable, and more enlightening than any class I ever took.
The maid came back, placing the pile of forms and pictures in front of me. To my surprise, it was Miss Marlee who grabbed the first handful of applications to graze through. Aunt May was close behind, and while Mom didnโt pick up any herself, she did lean over Miss Marleeโs shoulder to peek. Miss Lucy looked like she was trying not to be curious but in the end had a pile in her own lap as well.
โOh, he looks promising.โ Aunt May shoved a picture in front of me. I stared into a set of dark eyes embedded deep in ebony skin. His hair was cropped short, and he wore a bright smile. โBaden Trains, nineteen, from Sumner.โ
โHeโs handsome,โ Mom gushed.
โWell, obviously,โ May agreed. โAnd with a last name like Trains, he probably comes from a family of Sevens. It says here heโs in his first year studying advertising. That means either he or someone in his family is very determined.โ
โTrue,โ Miss Marlee agreed. โThatโs no small feat.โ
I pulled a couple of the forms over, picking through them.
โSo how are you feeling?โ Aunt May asked. โIs everything ready to go?โ โI think so.โ I flipped over an application, scanning for something that
โmight seem remotely interesting. I just didnโt care. โFor a while everyone was in such a tizzy I thought it might never end. It looks like all the rooms are finished, the food calculations have been made, and now that the list is official, travel arrangements should be done by tomorrow.โ
โYou sound positively thrilled,โ May teased, poking me.
I sighed, then looked pointedly at Mom. โYou might as well know, this isnโt completely about me.โ
โWhat do you mean, honey?โ Miss Lucy asked, setting her pile of papers on her lap, looking between Mom and me with concern.
โOf course weโre hoping Eadlyn will find someone worthy of settling
down with,โ Mom began shrewdly. โBut as it happens, this is coming at a time when we were in need of a plan to calm the unrest over the castes.โ
โAmes!โ May said. โYour daughter is a decoy?โ โNo!โ
โYes,โ I muttered. Aunt May rubbed my back, and it made me feel so much better to have her there.
โSooner or later, we would have needed to look at suitors, and this isnโt binding. Eadlyn has an agreement with Maxon that if she doesnโt fall in love, then the whole thing is off. However, yes, Eadlyn is doing her job as a member of the royal family by creating a little . . . diversion while the population cools down and we investigate what more we could do. And, might I add, itโs working.โ
โIt is?โ I asked.
โโHavenโt you looked at the papers? Youโre the center of everything right now. Local papers are interviewing their candidates, and some provinces are holding parties, hoping their suitor will be the winner. Magazines are talking about possible front-runners, and I saw a segment on the news last night about a few girls who were forming fan clubs and wearing shirts with the names of their favorites plastered all over them. The Selection has consumed the entire country.โ
โItโs true,โ Miss Marlee confirmed. โKile living in the palace is no longer a secret.โ
โHave they also discovered he has no interest in participating?โ I asked, more irritation in my voice than I intended. Miss Marlee wasnโt to blame for this whole debacle.
โNo,โ she answered with a laugh. โAgain, though, that has nothing to do with you.โ
I smiled back. โMiss Marlee, you heard Mom. He doesnโt need to worry. I think Kile and I already know we wouldnโt be that great of a match, and thereโs a chance Iโll walk away from this without a fiancรฉ anyway.โ A one hundred percent chance, to be more accurate. โDonโt worry about him hurting my feelings, because Iโm just seeing how it goes,โ I replied, as if this was normal, bringing in a slew of boys for me to pick from. โIโm not upset.โ
โYou said itโs taken over everything,โ May began, concerned. โDo you think it will last?โ
โI think itโll hold things off long enough for the people to forget some of the unhappiness thatโs been so prevalent lately and for us to come up with a way to address issues if they pop up again.โ Mom sounded confident.
โโWhenย they pop up,โ I corrected. โMy life might be exciting for a while, but eventually people will start worrying about themselves again.โ I went
back to looking at the pictures, almost pitying these boys. They had no chance of winning and no idea they were part of a public distraction.
โThis is strange,โ I said, picking up one of the applications. โI donโt want to be judgmental, but look at this. I caught three different spelling mistakes on this one.โ
Mom took the form. โItโs possible he was nervous.โ โOr an idiot,โ I offered.
May chuckled.
โDonโt be so harsh, sweetie. Itโs scary on their end, too.โ Mom handed me the form, and I clipped it back to a picture of a boy with a very innocent face and a head full of wild blond curls.
โWait, are you scared?โ Aunt May asked, worry on my behalf coating her voice.
โNo, of course not.โ
Her expression relaxed back into its normal, beautiful, carefree state. โCanโt imagine you being scared of anything.โ She winked at me.
It was comforting that at least one of us thought so.