best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 40 – Paradigm

Red Rising

โ€œFitchner left?โ€ she asks me. โ€œThrough the window,โ€ I say.

I watch Mustang across Apolloโ€™s white warroom table. A blizzard has risen outside, no doubt meant to keep my army inside the castle around their warm fires and hot pots of soup. Her hair coils about her shoulders, held by leather bands. She wears the wolfcloak like the others, though hers is streaked with crimson. Muddy boots with spurs are kicked up on the table. Her standard, the only weapon she really favors, leans on a chair beside her. Mustangโ€™s face is a quick one. Quick to mocking smiles. Quick to pleasant frowns. She gives me the smile and asks what is on my mind.

โ€œI am wondering when you will betray me,โ€ I say. Her eyebrows knit together. โ€œYouโ€™re expecting that?โ€

โ€œCheat or be cheated,โ€ I say. โ€œEchoed by your own lips.โ€

โ€œAre you going to cheat me?โ€ she said. โ€œNo. Because what advantage would you gain? You and I have beaten this game. They would have us believe one must win at the cost to all the rest. That isnโ€™t true, and weโ€™re proving it.โ€

I say nothing.

โ€œYou have my trust, because when you saw me hiding in the mud after taking my castle, you let me escape,โ€ she explains thoughtfully. โ€œAnd I have your trust, because I pulled you from the mud when Cassius left you for dead.โ€

I do not respond.

โ€œSo there is the answer. You are going to do great things, Darrow.โ€ She never calls me Darrow. โ€œMaybe you donโ€™t have to do them alone?โ€

Her words make me smile. Then I bolt upright, startling her. โ€œGet our men,โ€ I order.

I know she was looking forward to resting here. I was too. The smell of soup tempts me. So does the warmth and the bed and the thought of spending a quiet moment with her. But that is not how men conquer.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to surprise the Proctors. Weโ€™re going to take Jupiter.โ€ โ€œWe canโ€™t surprise them.โ€ She taps her ring. The jamField Fitchner had

is gone. Weโ€™d ditch the rings completely, but they are our insurance. The Proctors may be able to edit out a few things here and there, but common sense dictates that they canโ€™t tamper with the footage too much or the Drafters will get suspicious.

โ€œAnd even if we make it through this storm, what will taking Jupiter accomplish?โ€ she asks. โ€œIf Apollo didnโ€™t leave when his House lost, Jupiter wonโ€™t either. Youโ€™re just going to provoke them into interfering. We should go after the Jackal now!โ€

I know the Proctors are watching me plan this. I want them to know where Iโ€™m going.

โ€œIโ€™m not ready for the Jackal,โ€ I tell her. โ€œI need more allies.โ€

She looks at me, eyebrows pinched together. She doesnโ€™t understand, but it doesnโ€™t matter. She will soon enough.

Despite the blizzard, my army moves swiftly. We bundle ourselves in cloaks and furs so thickly that we look like animals stumbling through the snow. At night, we follow the stars, moving despite the mounting winds and the piling snow. My army does not grumble. They know I will not lead them purposelessly. My new soldiers press themselves harder than I would have thought possible. They have heard of me. Pax makes sure of that. And they are desperate to impress me. It becomes problematic. Wherever I walk, the procession around me suddenly doubles their efforts so that they overtake those in front or outpace those behind.

The blizzard is vicious. Pax always stands close to me and Mustang, as though he means to block us from the wind. He and Sevro are always

stepping on each otherโ€™s toes to be nearest me, though Pax would likely want to light my fires and tuck me in bed at night if I let him, while Sevro would tell me to pick my own ass. I see his father in him every time I look at him now. He seems weaker now that I know his family. Thereโ€™s no reason that should be the case; I guess I just supposed he really did spring from the loins of a she-wolf.

Eventually, the snows cease and spring comes fast and hard, which confirms my suspicions. The Proctors are playing games. The Howlers make sure all eyes are to the sky in case Proctors decide to harass us as we make our way. None do. Tactus keeps an eye out for their tracks. But it is quiet. We see no enemy scouts, hear no war trumpets in the distance, see no smoke rising except to the north in Marsโ€™s highlands.

We raid provision stores in burnt and broken castles as we push toward Jupiter. There are jugs from Bacchusโ€™s castle that Sevro was disappointed to discover full of grape juice instead of wine, salted beef from Junoโ€™s deep cellars, molding cheeses, fish wrapped in leaves, and bags of the ever-present smoked horsemeat. They keep us full as we march.

In four rugged days, I have reached and besieged Jupiterโ€™s triple-walled castle in the low mountain passes. Snow melts swiftly enough to make the ground soggy for our horses. Streams flow through our camp. I do not bother devising a plan of action. I simply tell Paxโ€™s, Miliaโ€™s, and Nylaโ€™s divisions that whoever gives me the fortress will win a prize. The defenders are very few and my army takes the outer fortifications in a day by making a series of wooden ramps under intermittent arrow barrages.

My other three divisions scout the surrounding territoryย en forceย in case the Jackal decides to stick his nose into this. Jupiterโ€™s main army, it seems, is stranded across the now-thawed Argos laying siege to Marsโ€™s castle. They did not expect the river to thaw so quickly. Still there is no sign of the Jackalโ€™s men or of the Proctors. I wonder if they have found Fitchner locked in one of the Apollo Castle cells yet. I left him food and water and a face full of bruises.

On the third day of the siege, a white flag is flown from Jupiterโ€™s ramparts. A thin boy of middling height and timid smiles slips out Jupiter Castleโ€™s postern gate. The castle lies on high, rocky ground. It is sandwiched between two huge rock faces, so its three-tiered walls bow

outward. Soon I would have tried sending men down the rock faces. It would have been a job for the Howlersโ€”but theyโ€™ve had enough glory. This siege belongs to the soldiers captured when we fought Apollo.

The boy walks tentatively in front of the main gate. I meet him there with Sevro, Milia, Nyla, and Pax. We are a fearsome lot even without Tactus and Mustang, though Mustang could never really be called fearsome in appearanceโ€”maybe spirited, at best. Milia looks like something out of a nightmareโ€”sheโ€™s taken to wearing trophies like Tactus and Thistle. And Pax has cut notches along his huge axe for each slave he has taken.

In front of my lieutenants, the boy shows his nervousness. His smiles are quick, almost as if heโ€™s worried we might disapprove of them. The ring on his finger is that of Jupiter. He looks hungry, because it barely fits on him any longer.

โ€œName is Lucian,โ€ the boy says, trying to sound manly. He seems to think Pax is in charge. Pax booms a laugh and points to me and my slingBlade. Lucian flinches when he looks at me. I think he well knew I was the leader.

โ€œSo we here to swap smiles?โ€ I ask. โ€œWhatโ€™s your word?โ€

โ€œThe word is hunger,โ€ he laughs piteously. โ€œWeโ€™ve not eaten anything but rats and raw grain in water for three weeks.โ€

I almost pity the boy. His hair is dirty, eyes teary. He knows heโ€™s giving up a chance at an apprenticeship. Theyโ€™ll shame him for surrendering for the rest of his life. But he is hungry. So are the seven other defenders. Oddly, all are of Jupiter, not slaves. Their Primus left their weak instead of the slaves behind.

The only condition they have in surrendering the castle is that they must not be enslaved. Only Pax grumbles something honorable about them needing to earn their freedom like all the rest of us, but I agree to the boyโ€™s request. I tell Milia to watch them. If they act seditious, sheโ€™ll make trophies of their scalps. We tether our horses in the courtyard. The stone is cobbled and dirty. A tall, angular keep stretches up and into the cliffโ€™s wall.

Darkness seeps through the clouds. A storm is coming to the mountain pass, so I bring my force into the castle and bar the gates. Mustang and her troop stay beyond the walls and will return later in the evening from scouting with Tactus. We speak over the commUnits and Tactus curses

us for having a dry roof over our heads. The nightโ€™s rain is heavy.

I make sure our veterans get the first beds in Jupiterโ€™s dormitories before we eat. My army may be disciplined, but theyโ€™ll shiv their own mothers for a warm bed. Itโ€™s the one thing most of them never got used toโ€”sleeping on the ground. They miss their mattresses and silk sheets. I miss the small cot I used to share with Eo. Sheโ€™s been dead now longer than we were married. Iโ€™m surprised how much it hurts to realize that.

I think Iโ€™m eighteen now, Earth metric. Not rightly sure.

Our bread and meats are like heaven to the starved defenders of Jupiter. Lucian and his lot, all skinny, tired-looking souls, eat so fast that Nyla is fussing about them ripping their guts. She runs around telling them each that the smoked horsemeat isnโ€™t galloping off anywhere. Pax and his BloodBacks occasionally throw bones at the meek lot. Paxโ€™s laugh is infectious. It booms out of him and then turns into something feminine as it continues past two seconds. No one can keep a straight face when he gets rolling. Heโ€™s talking about Helga again. I look for Mustang so we can laugh about it, but sheโ€™ll be away for hours more. I miss her even then, and I swell a little inside my chest because I know she will curl into my bed this night and together weโ€™ll snore like Uncle Narol after Yuletide.

I call Milia to the head of the table. My army lounges around Jupiterโ€™s warroom; they are easy in conquest. Jupiterโ€™s map is destroyed. I cannot make out what they know.

โ€œWhat do you think of our hosts?โ€ I ask Milia. โ€œI say put them under the sigil.โ€

I cluck my tongue. โ€œYou really donโ€™t like to keep promises, do you?โ€

She looks very much like a hawk, face all angles and cruelty. Her voice is of a similar breed. โ€œPromises are just chains,โ€ she rasps. โ€œBoth meant for breaking.โ€

I tell her to leave the Jupitareans alone, but then loudly command her to fetch the wine we scavenged on our trek to Jupiter. She takes some boys and brings up the barrels from Bacchusโ€™s store.

I stand foolishly on the table. โ€œAnd I order you to get drunk!โ€ I roar to my army. They look at me like I am mad.

โ€œGet drunk?โ€ one says.

โ€œYes!โ€ I cut him off before he can say more. โ€œCan you manage that?

Act like fools, for once?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll try,โ€ Milia cries. โ€œWonโ€™t we?โ€ Sheโ€™s answered in cheers. Some time later, as we drink Bacchusโ€™s stores, I loudly offer some to the Jupitareans. Pax stumbles up in protest at the idea of sharing good wine. Heโ€™s a good actor.

โ€œAre you contradicting me?โ€ I demand.

Pax hesitates but manages to nod his giant head.

I draw my slingBlade from its back scabbard. It rasps in the humid warroom air. A hundred eyes go to us. Thunder rolls outside. Pax wobbles forward with a giant inebriated step. His own hand is on his axeโ€™s hilt, but he does not draw it. After a moment, he shakes his head and goes to a kneeโ€”heโ€™s still almost my own height. I sheathe my sword and pull him up. I tell him heโ€™s to run patrols.

โ€œPatrols? But โ€ฆ in the storm and rain?โ€ โ€œYou heard me, Pax.โ€

With a grumble, the BloodBacks wobble after him to go about their punishment. Theyโ€™re all smart enough to have figured out their parts even if they donโ€™t know the play. โ€œDiscipline!โ€ I brag to Lucian. โ€œDiscipline is the best of mankindโ€™s traits. Even in big brutes like that. But he is right. No wine for you tonight. That, you must earn.โ€

In Paxโ€™s absence, I make a show of giving ceremonial wolfcloaks to the slaves of Venus and Bacchus who earned their freedom in taking this fortressโ€”ceremonial because we donโ€™t have any time to find wolves. There is laughter and lightness. Merriment for once, though no one discards their weapons. Nyla is coaxed into singing a song. Her voice is like an angelโ€™s. She sings at the Mars Opera House and was scheduled to perform in Vienna until a better opportunity came along in the form of the Institute. The opportunity of a lifetime. What a lark.

Lucian sits in the corner of the warroom with the other seven defenders watching our soldiers make a show of falling asleep atop tables, in front of the fire, along the walls. Some slink away to steal beds. The sound of snores tickles my ears.

Sevro stays close to me, as though the Proctors could rush in and kill me at any moment. I tell Sevro to get drunk and leave me be. He obeys and is soon laughing, then snoring atop the long table. I stumble over my sleeping army to Lucian, a smile across my face. I have not been drunk since before my wife died.

Despite Lucianโ€™s meekness, I find him curious. His eyes rarely meet

mine and his shoulders slump. But his hands never go to his trouser pockets, never fold to guard himself. I ask him about the war with Mars. As I thought, itโ€™s almost won. He says something about a girl betraying Mars. Sounds like Antonia to me.

I must move quickly. I donโ€™t know what will happen if my Houseโ€™s standard and castle are taken even though I have my independent army. I could technically lose.

Lucianโ€™s friends are tired, so I give them leave to go try to find beds. They wonโ€™t be a problem. Lucian stays to talk. I invite him over to the warroom table. As Lucianโ€™s friends file out, I hear Mustang in the hall. She waltzes into the room. Thunder rolls outside. Her hair is damp and matted, wolfcloak soaked, boots tracking mud.

Her face is a model of confusion when she sees me with Lucian. โ€œMustang, darling!โ€ I cry. โ€œI fear youโ€™re too late. Went straight

through Bacchusโ€™s stores already!โ€ I gesture to my snoring army and wink. Maybe fifty remain, sprawled out and in various states of sleep across the large warroom. All drunk as Narol on Yuletide.

โ€œGetting shitfaced seems a prime idea at a time like this,โ€ she says strangely. She looks back to Lucian, then to me. She doesnโ€™t like something. I introduce her to Lucian. He mumbles how nice it is to meet her. She snorts a laugh.

โ€œHow did he convince you not to make him a slave, Darrow?โ€ I donโ€™t know if she understands what game Iโ€™m playing.

โ€œHe gave me his fortress!โ€ I wave my clumsy hand to the half-destroyed stone map on the wall. Mustang says that she will join us. She begins to call some of her men in from the hall, but I cut her off. โ€œNo, no. Me and Lucian here were becoming prime friends. No girls. Take your men and go find Pax.โ€

โ€œBut โ€ฆโ€

โ€œGo find Pax,โ€ I command.

I know sheโ€™s confused, but she trusts me. She murmurs goodbye to me and Lucian and closes the door. The sound of her bootheels slowly fades. โ€œThought sheโ€™d never leave!โ€ I laugh to Lucian. He leans back in his chair. He really is very slim, nothing excess to him at all. His blond hair is clipped plainly. His hands thin and useful. He reminds me of someone. โ€œMost people donโ€™t want pretty girls to leave,โ€ Lucian says, smiling sincerely. He even blushes a little when I ask if he really thinks Mustang

is pretty.

We talk for nearly an hour. Gradually, he lets himself relax. He lets his confidence grow and soon he is telling me of his childhood, of a demanding father, of family expectations. But heโ€™s not pitiful when he does this. He is realistic, a trait I admire. Itโ€™s no longer necessary for him to avoid my eyes when we talk. His shoulders donโ€™t hunch quite so much, and he becomes pleasant, even funny. I laugh loudly half a dozen times. The night grows late, but still we talk and joke. He laughs at the boots I wear, which are swaddled in animal furs for warmth. They are hot now that the snows melt, but I need to wear the pelts.

โ€œBut what of you, Darrow? We gab and gab over me. I think itโ€™s your turn. So tell me, what is it thatโ€™s taken you here? What pushes you? I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve heard of your family โ€ฆโ€

โ€œNot people you would care to hear about, to tell it true. But I think it comes down to a girl, thatโ€™s all. I am simple. So are my reasons.โ€

โ€œThe pretty one?โ€ Lucian blushes. โ€œMustang? She hardly seems simple.โ€

I shrug.

โ€œI told you everything!โ€ Lucian protests. โ€œDonโ€™t be a vague Purple on me. Cut to it, man!โ€ He raps the table impatiently.

โ€œFine. Fine. The whole story.โ€ I sigh. โ€œSee that pack beside you?

Thereโ€™s a bag inside it. Reach and grab it for me, will you?โ€

Lucian pulls the bag out and tosses it to me. It clinks on the table. โ€œLet me see your hand.โ€

โ€œMy hand?โ€ he asks with a laugh.

โ€œRight, just put it out, please.โ€ I pat the table. He doesnโ€™t react. โ€œCome on, man. Thereโ€™s this theory Iโ€™ve been working on.โ€ I pat the table impatiently. He puts his hand out.

โ€œHow does this tell your story or theory?โ€ His smile is still on. โ€œItโ€™s a complicated one. Better to show you.โ€

โ€œFair enough.โ€

I open the bag and dump out its contents. A score of golden sigil rings roll across the table. Lucian watches them roll.

โ€œThese all come from the dead kids. The kids the medBots couldnโ€™t save. Letโ€™s see.โ€ I shuffle through the pile of rings. โ€œWe have Jupiter, Venus, Neptune, Bacchus, Juno, Mercury, Diana, Ceres โ€ฆ and we have a Minerva right here.โ€ I frown and rummage around. โ€œHmm. Odd. I canโ€™t

find a Pluto.โ€

I look up at him. His eyes are different. Dead. Quiet. โ€œOh, thereโ€™s one.โ€

You'll Also Like