I sleep with a dream of the past. My hand curled in the tendrils of her hair. About us the vale lay quiet in slumber. Even the children did not yet stir. The birds rested on knotted limbs in the pinewood nearby, and I heard nothing but her breath and the crackling of the old fire. The bed smelled of her. No scent of flowers or perfume. tust the earthy musk of her skin, of the oils in the hair around my hands, of her hot breath as it warmed my cheek. Her hair was of our planet. It was wild like mine, dirty like mine, red like mine. A bird outside croons loudly. Incessantly. Louder. Louder.
And I wake hearing someone at my door.
Kicking aside sweaty sheets, I sit up on the edge of the mattress. โVisual.โ A holo appears of Mustang in the hall. I rise instinctively to let her in, but when I reach the door, I pause. We have our plan. Thereโs nothing left to discuss at this hour. Nothing from which any good could come.
I watch her on the holo. Shifting foot to foot, something in her hands. If I let her in โฆ itโll just cost us both in the end. Iโve already hurt Roque. Already killed Quinn and Tactus and Pax. Bringing her close now would be selfish. At the very best, she survives this war and she learns the truth about me. I back away from the door.
โDarrow, stop being an ass and let me in.โ My hand chooses for me.
Her hair is wet and loose, her uniform replaced by a black kimono. How fragile she seems next to Ragnar, who lurks in the hall.
โTold you,โ she says to Ragnar. To me she says, โKnew youโd be awake. Ragnar here was being stubborn. Said you needed to sleep. And he wouldnโt take the food I brought him.โ
โDo you need something?โ I ask, more coldly than I intended.
Her feet make a show of shuming nervously. โIโm โฆ afraid of the dark.โ She pushes past me. Ragnar watches this, eyes giving nothing away.
โI told you to go to bed, Ragnar.โ He does not move.
โRagnar, if Iโm not safe here, Iโm not safe anywhere. Go to bed.โ
โI s1eep with my eyes open,ย dominus.โ
โReally?โ
โYes.โ
โWell, do it in your bunk, Stained. Thatโs an order,โ I say, hating the masterโs words as soon as they come from my mouth.
Reluctantly, he nods his head and slips silently down the hall. I watch him go as the door hisses closed. I turn to find Mustang inspecting my suite. Itโs more wood and stone than metal, the walls carved and worked with woodland scenes. Strange the efforts these people go to in order to make themselves feel part of history and not a piece of the future.
โSevro must be pissed heโs not the only one lurking behind you anymore.โ
โSevroโs grown up a bit since you last saw him. He even sleeps in beds.โ
She laughs at that. โWell, Ragnar was so adamant I go away that I thought you might have company.โ
โYou know I donโt use Pinks.โ
โItโs big,โ she says of the suite. โSix rooms for little old you.
Arenโt you going to offer me something to drink?โ โWould youโโ
โNo, thank you.โ She tells the roomโs controls to play music.
Mozart. โBut you donโt really like music, do you?โ โNot this sort. Itโs โฆ stuffy.โ
โStuffy? Mozart was a rebel, a brigand of monolithic genius! A breaker of all that was stuffy.โ
I shrug. โMaybe. But then the stuffy people got ahold of him.โ โYouโre such a hayseed sometimes. I thought that Theodora
would have managed to feed you some culture. So what do you like, then?โ She runs her hands along a carving of an elk leading its herd. โNot that electronic madness the Howlers thump their heads to, I hope. Makes sense that the Greens came up with that โฆ itโs like listening to a robot having a seizure.โ
โHave much experience with robots?โ I ask as she moves around the Victory Armor in a room off to the side of the entry hall. The Sovereign gave it to the Ash Lord when he burned Rhea. Mustangโs fingers play over the frost-hued metal.
โFatherโs Oranges and Greens had a few robots in their engineering labs. Ancient, rusted things that Father had refurbished and put in the museums.โ She laughs to herself. โHe used to take me there back when I wore dresses and Mother was still alive. Absolutely detested the things. I remember Mother laughing about his paranoia, especially when Adrius tried restarting one of the combat models from Eurasia. Father was convinced that robots would have overthrown man and now rule the Solar System if Earthโs empires had never been destroyed.โ
I snort out a laugh. โWhat?โ she asks.
โIโm just โฆโ I snicker quietly. โIโm trying to imagine the great ArchGovernor Augustus having nightmares of robots.โ A louder bout of laughter seizes me. โDoes he suppose theyโd want more oil? More vacation time?โ
Mustang watches me, amused. โAre you all right?โ
โIโm fine.โ My laughter fades. I hold my stomach. โIโm fine.โ I canโt stop grinning. โIs he afraid of aliens too?โ
โI never asked him.โ She taps the armor. โBut theyโre out there, you know.โ
I stare at her. โThatโs not in the archives.โ
โOh, no no. I mean weโve never found any. But the Drake- Roddenberry equation suggests the mathematic probability isย N
=ย R*ย รย fpย รย neย รย flย รย fiย รย fcย รย L. Whereย R*ย is the average rate of star formation in our galaxy, whereย fpย is the fraction of
those stars that have planets โฆ Youโre not even listening anymore.โ
โWhat do you suppose they would think of us?โ I ask. โOf man?โ
โI suppose they would think weโre beautiful, strange, and inexplicably horrible to one another.โ She points down a hall. โIs that the training room?โ She flips off her slippers and walks away down a marble hall, casting a look back at me over her shoulder. I follow. Lights come mutedly to life as we pass. She slips ahead faster than I care to follow. I find her moments later in the center of the circular training room. The white mat is soft under my feet. Carvings line the wooden walls. โThe House of Grimmus is an old one,โ she says, pointing to a frieze of a man in armor. โYou can see the Ash Lordโs first ancestor there. Seneca au Grimmus, the first Gold to touch land in the Iron Rain that took the American eastern seaboard after one of Cassiusโs ancestors, forget his name, broke through the Atlantic Fleet. Then there is Vitalia au Grimmus, the Great Witch, right there.โ She turns to me. โDo you even know the history of the things you try to break?โ
โIt was Scipio au Bellona who defeated the Atlantic Fleet.โ
โWas it?โ she asks.
โIโve studied the history,โ I say. โtust as well as you.โ
โBut you stand apart from it, donโt you?โ She paces around me. โYou always have. Like youโre an outsider looking in. It was growing up away from all this on your parentsโ asteroid mine that did the trick, wasnโt it? Thatโs why you can ask a question like โWhat would aliens think of us?โ โ
โYouโre just as much an outsider as I am. Iโve read your dissertations.โ
โYou have?โ Sheโs surprised.
โBelieve it or not, I can read too.โ I shake my head. โItโs like everyone forgets I only missed one question on the Instituteโs slangsmarts test.โ
โEw. You missed a question?โ She wrinkles her nose as she picks a practice razor from a bench. โI suppose thatโs why you werenโt in Minerva.โ
โHow did Pax manage to get picked by House Minerva, by the way? Iโve always wondered โฆ he wasnโt exactly a scholar.โ
โHow did Roque end up in Mars?โ she replies with a shrug. โEach of us have hidden depths. Now, Pax wasnโt as bright as Daxo is, but wisdom is found in the heart, not the head. Pax taught me that.โ She smiles distantly. โThe one grace my father gave me after my mother died was letting me visit the Telemanus estate. He kept Adrius and me apart to make assassination of his heirs more di cult. I was lucky to be near them. Though if I hadnโt been, maybe Pax wouldnโt have been quite so loyal. Maybe he wouldnโt have asked to be in Minerva. Maybe heโd be alive. Sorry โฆโ Shaking away the sadness, she looks back to me with a tight smile. โWhat did you think of my dissertations?โ
โWhich one?โ โSurprise me.โ
โ โThe Insects of Specialization.โ โย Snap. A practice razor slaps
into my arm, stinging the flesh. I yelp in surprise. โWhat the hell?โ
Mustang stands there looking innocent, swishing the practice blade back and forth. โI was making sure you were paying attention.โ
โPaying attention? I was answering your question!โ
She shrugs. โAll right. Perhaps I just wanted to hit you.โ She lashes at me again.
I dodge. โWhy?โ
โNo reason in particular.โ She swings. I dodge. โBut they say even a fool learns something once it hits him.โ
โDonโt quoteโโshe slashes, I twist asideโโHomer โฆ to me.โ โWhy is that dissertation your favorite?โ she asks coolly,
swinging at me again. The practice razor has no edge, but it is as hard as a wooden cane. I leave my feet, twisting sideways out of the way like a Lykos tumbler.
โBecause โฆโ I dodge another.
โWhen youโre on your heels, youโre a liar. On your toes, you spit truth.โ She swings again. โNow spit.โ She hits my kneecap. I roll away, trying to reach the other practice razors, but she keeps me from them with a flurry of swings. โSpit!โ
โI liked itโโI jump backwardโโbecause you said โSpecialization makes us limited, simple insects; a fact โฆ from โฆ which Gold is not immune.โ โ
She stops attacking and stares accusatorially, and I realize Iโve fallen into a trap.
โIf you agree with that, then why do you insist on making yourself only a warrior?โ
โItโs what I am.โ
โItโs what you are?โ she laughs. โYou who trust Victra. A tulii. You who trusted Tactus. You who let an Orange give strategic recommendations. You who gives command of your ship to a Docker and keeps an entourage of bronzies?โ She wags a finger at me. โDonโt be a hypocrite now, Darrow au Andromedus. If youโre going to tell everyone else they can choose their destiny, then you damn well better do the same.โ
Sheโs too smart to lie to. Thatโs why Iโm so ill at ease around her when she asks me questions, when she probes things I canโt explain. Thereโs no explainable motivation to so many of my actions if I am really an Andromedus who grew up in my Gold parentsโ asteroid mining colony. My history is hollow to her. My drive confusing โฆ if I was born a Gold. This must all look like ambition, like bloodlust. And without Eo, it would be.
โThat look,โ Mustang says, taking a step back from me. โWhere do you go when you look at me like that?โ The color slips from her face, retreating into her as her smile slackens. โIs it Victra?โ
โVictra?โ I almost laugh. โNo.โ โThen her. The girl you lost.โ
I say nothing.
Sheโs never pried. Sheโs never asked about Eo, not when we shared time together after the Institute when I was a rising lancer. Not when we rode horses at her familyโs estate or walked through the gardens or dove in the coral reefs. I thought she must have forgotten I whispered the name of another girl as I lay with her in the Instituteโs snows. How stupid of me. How could she forget? How could it not linger there inside her, forcing her to wonder, as she lay with her head on my chest listening to my heart beat, if it didnโt belong to another girl, a dead girl.
โSilence isnโt the answer right now, Darrow.โ After a moment, she leaves me alone in the room. Sounds from her feet fade. The Mozart disappears.
I chase after her, reaching her before she finds the door to the hall. I grab her wrist. She flings me off.
โStop it!โ
I reel back, startled.
โWhy do you do this?โ she asks. โWhy do you pull me back if youโre just going to push me away?โ Her fists ball like she wants to strike me. โItโs not fair. Do you understand that? Iโm not like you โฆ I canโt just โฆ I canโt just shut off like you do.โ
โI donโt shut off.โ
โYou shut me off. After that speech about Victra โฆ about the importance of friends โฆโ She snaps her fingers in front of my face. โYou can still cut me away likeย that. You care and then you donโt. Maybe thatโs why he likes you so much.โ
โHe?โ
โMy father.โ
โHe doesnโt like me.โ
โHow could he not? You are him.โ
I back away from her and find rest on the edge of the bed. โIโm not like your father.โ
โI know,โ she says, releasing some of her anger. โThatโs not fair to you. But you will become him if you follow this path alone.โ She puts her hand on the door controls. โSo ask me to stay.โ
How can I let her? If she gives me her heart, Iโll break it. My lie is too great to build a love upon. When she discovers what I am, she will reject me. Even if she could survive that, I would not. I look at my hands as if the answer is there.
โDarrow. Ask me to stay.โ When I look up, she is gone.