Iย RAN FROM THE ROOM. Of course Celeste wasnโt doing me a favor. She was showing me my place. Why was I even bothering with this? The king was expecting me to fail, the public didnโt want me, and I was sure I couldnโt be a princess.
I made my way upstairs quickly and quietly, trying not to draw attention to myself. There was no telling who that magazineโs unnamed source was.
โMy lady,โ Anne said when I walked through the doorway. โI thought youโd be downstairs until lunch for sure.โ
โCould you leave, please?โ โIโm sorry?โ
I huffed, trying not to lose my patience. โI need to be alone. Please?โ Without a word, they curtsied and left me. I went to the piano. I would distract myself until I couldnโt think about this anymore. I played a handful of songs that I knew by heart, but that was too easy. I needed to
really focus.
I stood up and dug through the bench for something more challenging. I burrowed past pages of sheet music until the edge of a book peeked out at me. Illรฉaโs diary! Iโd completely forgotten it was down here. This would be a great distraction. I carried the book over to the bed and opened it, taking in the ancient pages as they flipped through my hands.
The diary opened to the page with the Halloween picture, the stiff photo acting as a natural bookmark, and I reread the entry.
THE CHILDREN CELEBRATEDย HALLOWEEN THIS YEAR WITH A PARTY. Iย SUPPOSE ITโS ONE WAY TO FORGET WHATโS GOING ON AROUND THEM, BUT TO ME IT ALL FEELS FRIVOLOUS. WEโRE ONE OF THE FEW FAMILIES REMAINING WHO HAS ENOUGH MONEY TO DO SOMETHING FESTIVE, BUT THIS CHILDโS PLAY SEEMS WASTEFUL.
I looked at the picture again, wondering about the girl in particular. How old was she? What was her job? Did she like being Gregory Illรฉaโs daughter? Did it make her very popular?
I turned the page and realized that it wasnโt a new entry but a continuation of the Halloween post.
Iย GUESSย Iย THOUGHT THAT AFTERย CHINA INVADED WEโD SEE THE ERROR OF OUR WAYS. ITโS BEEN OBVIOUS TO ME, PARTICULARLY RECENTLY, JUST HOW LAZY WEโVE BECOME. REALLY,
ITโS NO WONDERย CHINA CAME IN SO EASILY, AND ITโS NO WONDER IT TOOK SO LONG FOR US TO GET IN A POSITION TO FIGHT BACK. WEโVE LOST THAT SPIRIT THAT DROVE PEOPLE ACROSS OCEANS AND THROUGH DEVASTATING WINTERS AND CIVIL WAR. WE GOT LAZY. AND WHILE WE WERE SITTING BACK, CHINA TOOK THE REINS.
IN THE LAST FEW MONTHS IN PARTICULAR, IโVE FELT DRIVEN TO GIVE MORE THAN MONEY TO THE WAR EFFORTS. Iย WANT TO LEAD. Iย HAVE IDEAS, AND PERHAPS SINCE IโVE DONATED SO GENEROUSLY, NOW IS THE TIME TO OFFER THEM UP. WHAT WE NEED IS CHANGE. Iย CANโT HELP BUT WONDER IFย Iย MIGHT BE THE ONLY PERSON WHO CAN PROVIDE IT.
I got chills. I couldnโt help but compare Maxon to his predecessor. Gregory seemed inspired. He was trying to take something broken and make it whole. I wondered what heโd say about the monarchy if he was here today.
When Aspen slid my door open that night, I was nearly bursting at the seams to tell him what Iโd read. But I remembered that Iโd already mentioned to my dad that the diary existed, and even that was going past what Iโd sworn to do.
โHow have you been?โ he asked, kneeling by my bed.
โAll right, I suppose. Celeste showed me this article today.โ I shook my head. โIโm not sure I want to get into it. Iโm so tired of her.โ
โI guess with Marlee gone, he wonโt be sending anyone home for a while, huh?โ
I shrugged. I knew the public had been looking forward to an elimination, and what happened with Marlee was more dramatic than anything anyone expected.
โHey,โ he said, risking a touch in the light of the wide-open door. โItโs going to be all right.โ
โI know. I just miss her. And Iโm confused.โ โConfused about what?โ
โEverything. What Iโm doing here, who I am. I thought I knew โฆ. I donโt even know how to explain it right.โ That seemed to be the problem lately. Every thought that passed through my head was sloppy. I couldnโt line up anything.
โYou know who you are, Mer. Donโt let them try to change you.โ His voice was so sincere, and for a minute I did feel sure. Not because I had any answers, but because I had Aspen. If I ever lost sight of who I really was, I knew heโd be there to guide me back.
โAspen, can I ask you something?โ He nodded. โThis is kind of strange, but if being the princess didnโt mean I had to marry someone, if it was just a job someone could pick me for, do you think I could do it?โ
Aspenโs green eyes grew wide for a second, taking in the enormity of that question. To his credit, I could see him considering the possibility.
โSorry, Mer. I donโt. You donโt have it in you to be as calculating as they are.โ There was an apology in his expression, but I wasnโt offended that he thought I couldnโt do it. I was a bit surprised at his reasoning though.
โCalculating? How so?โ
He sighed. โIโm everywhere, Mer. I hear things. Thereโs a lot of turmoil down South, in the areas with a heavy concentration of lower castes. From what the older guards say, those people never particularly agreed with Gregory Illรฉaโs methods, and thereโs been unrest down there for a long time. Rumor has it, that was part of why the queen was so attractive to the king. She came from the South, and it appeased them for a while. Not so much anymore it seems.โ
I thought again about bringing up the diary, but I didnโt. โThat doesnโt explain what you meant by calculating.โ
He hesitated. โI was in one of the offices the other day, before all the Halloween stuff. They were mentioning rebel sympathizers in the South. I was told to see these letters to the postal wing safely. It was over three hundred letters, America. Three hundred families who were getting knocked down a caste for not reporting things or for helping someone the palace saw as a threat.โ
I sucked in a breath.
โI know. Can you imagine? What if it was you, and all you knew how to do was play the piano? Suddenly youโre supposed to know how to do clerical work, how to find those jobs even? Itโs a pretty clear message.โ
I nodded. โDo you โฆ Does Maxon know?โ
โI think he has to. Heโs not that far off from running the country himself.โ
In my heart, I didnโt want to believe that heโdย agreedย with this, but it seemed likely he was aware of what was going on. He was expected to fall in line.
Couldย Iย do that?
โDonโt tell anyone, okay? A slip like that could cost me my job,โ Aspen warned.
โOf course. Itโs already forgotten.โ
Aspen smiled at me. โI miss being with you, away from all this. I miss our old problems.โ
I laughed. โI know what you mean. Sneaking out of my window was so much better than sneaking around a palace.โ
โAnd scrounging to find a penny for you was better than having nothing to give you at all.โ He tapped on the glass jar by my bed, the one that used to hold hundreds of pennies that heโd given me for singing to him in the tree house back home, payment that he thought I deserved. โI had no idea youโd saved them all until the day before you left.โ
โOf course I did! When you were away, they were all I had to hold on to. Sometimes I used to pour them over my hand on the bed, just to scoop them up again. It was nice to have something you touched.โ Our eyes met, and everything else felt distant for the moment. It was comforting finding myself in that bubble again, the place that Aspen and I had created for ourselves years ago. โWhat did you do with all of them?โ
I had been so mad at him when I left, Iโd given them back. All except for the one that stuck to the bottom of the jar.
He smiled. โTheyโre at home, waiting.โ โFor what?โ
His eyes glittered. โThat, I cannot say.โ
I sighed through my smile. โFine, keep your secrets. And donโt worry about not giving me anything. Iโm just happy youโre here, that you and I can at least fix things, even if itโs not what it used to be.โ
But clearly, for Aspen, that wasnโt enough. He reached down to the bottom of his sleeve and tore off one of his golden buttons. โI literally have nothing else to give you, but you can hold on to thisโsomething Iโve touchedโand think of me anytime. And you can know that Iโm thinking of you, too.โ
As silly as it seemed, I wanted to cry. It was unavoidable, the natural instinct to compare Aspen to Maxon. Even now, when thinking of choosing one or the other felt like something very distant, I measured them side by side.
It seemed very easy for Maxon to give me thingsโto resurrect a holiday for my sake, to make sure I had the best of everythingโbecause he had the entire world at his disposal. Here Aspen was, giving me
precious stolen moments and the tiniest trinket to connect us to each other, and it felt like heโd given me so much more.
I remembered suddenly that Aspen had always been this way. He sacrificed sleep for me, he risked getting caught out after curfew for me, he scrounged together pennies for me. Aspenโs generosity was harder to see because it wasnโt as grand as Maxonโs, but the heart behind what he gave was so much bigger.
I sniffed back the lingering urge to cry. โI donโt know how to do this right now. I feel like I donโt know how to do anything. I โฆ I havenโt forgotten you, okay? Itโs still here.โ
I put my hand to my chest, partly to show Aspen what I meant and partly to soothe the strange longing there. He understood.
โThatโs enough for me.โ