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Chapter no 30

The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

Coriolanus stood stunned as the guards slapped him on the back, laughing. โ€œI โ€” I โ€”โ€โ€Œ

โ€œYouโ€™re the youngest person ever to pass the test.โ€ The commander beamed. โ€œOrdinarily, weโ€™d train you here, but your scores recommend you for an elite program in District Two. Weโ€™ll be sorry to see you go.โ€

Oh, how he wished he could go! To District Two, which was not really that far from his home in the Capitol. To officersโ€™ school,ย eliteย officersโ€™ school, where he could distinguish himself and find a way back to a life worth living. This might be an even better road to power than the University had offered. But there was still a murder weapon with his name on it out there. His DNA would condemn him, just as it had on the handkerchief. Sadly, tragically, it was too dangerous to stay. It hurt to play along.

โ€œWhat time do I leave?โ€ he asked.

โ€œThereโ€™s a hovercraft headed that way early tomorrow morning, and youโ€™ll be on it. Youโ€™re off today, I think. Use the time to pack up and say your good-byes.โ€ The commander shook his hand for the second time in two days. โ€œWe expect great things from you.โ€

Coriolanus thanked the commander and headed outside, where he stood a moment, weighing his options. It was no use. There were no options. Hating himself, and hating Sejanus Plinth even more, he walked toward the building that housed the generator, almost not caring if he was apprehended. What a bitter disappointment, to have a second chance at a bright future so irrevocably stripped away. He had to remind himself of the rope, and the

gallows, and the jabberjays mimicking his last words to renew his focus. He was about to desert the Peacekeepers; he needed to snap out of it.

When he reached the building, he took a quick look over his shoulder, but the base still slept, and he slunk around to the back without witnesses. He examined the fence and could find no opening at first. He wound his fingers in the links and gave them a shake of frustration. Sure enough, the mesh pulled free of a supporting pole, leaving a break in the fence he could just squeeze through. Outside, his natural wariness reinstated itself. He skirted around the rear of the base and through a wooded area, eventually making his way to the road that led to the hanging tree. Once there, he simply followed the path the truck had taken on previous trips, walking briskly, but not so fast as to attract attention. There was precious little to attract anyway on a hot Sunday shortly after dawn. Most miners and Peacekeepers would not rise for hours.

After a few miles, he reached the depressing field and broke into a run for the hanging tree, eager to conceal himself in the woods. There was no sign of Lucy Gray, and as he passed under the branches, he wondered if in fact heโ€™d misinterpreted her message and should have headed to the Seam instead. Then he caught a glimpse of orange and tracked it to a clearing. There she stood, unloading a stack of bundles from a small wagon, his scarf wound in a fetching manner around her head. She ran over and hugged him, and he responded even though it felt too hot for an embrace. The kiss that followed put him in a better mood.

His hand went to the orange scarf in her hair. โ€œThis seems very bright for fugitives.โ€

Lucy Gray smiled. โ€œWell, I donโ€™t want you to lose me. You still up for this?โ€

โ€œI have no choice.โ€ Realizing that sounded halfhearted, he added, โ€œYouโ€™re all that matters to me now.โ€

โ€œYou, too. Youโ€™re my life now. Sitting here, waiting for you to show up, I realized Iโ€™d never really be brave enough to do this without you,โ€ she admitted. โ€œItโ€™s not just how hard it will be. Itโ€™s too lonely. I mightโ€™ve made it for a few days, but then Iโ€™d have come home to the Covey.โ€

โ€œI know. I didnโ€™t even consider running until you brought it up. Itโ€™s so . . . daunting.โ€ He ran a hand over her bundles. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, I couldnโ€™t risk bringing anything much.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t think you could. Iโ€™ve been collecting all this, and I raided our storeroom, too. Itโ€™s okay. I left the Covey the rest of the money.โ€ As if convincing herself, she said, โ€œTheyโ€™ll be okay.โ€ She hoisted up a pack and threw it over her shoulder.

He gathered some of the supplies. โ€œWhat will they do? I mean, the band.

Without you.โ€

โ€œOh, theyโ€™ll get by. They can all carry a tune, and Maude Ivoryโ€™s just a few years from replacing me as lead singer anyway,โ€ said Lucy Gray. โ€œBesides, the way trouble seems to find me, I may be wearing out my welcome in District Twelve. Last night the commander told me not to sing โ€˜The Hanging Treeโ€™ anymore. Too dark, he said. Too rebellious, more like it. I promised heโ€™d never hear it from my lips again.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a strange song,โ€ offered Coriolanus.

Lucy Gray laughed. โ€œWell, Maude Ivory likes it. She says it has real authority.โ€

โ€œLike my voice. When I sang the anthem in the Capitol,โ€ Coriolanus remembered.

โ€œThatโ€™s it,โ€ said Lucy Gray. โ€œYou ready?โ€

Theyโ€™d divided everything between them. It took him a moment to realize what was missing. โ€œYour guitar. Youโ€™re not taking it?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m leaving it for Maude Ivory. That and my mamaโ€™s dresses.โ€ She struggled to make light of it. โ€œWhat will I need them for? Tam Amber thinks thereโ€™s still people in the north, but Iโ€™m not convinced. I think itโ€™s just going to be us.โ€

For a moment, he realized that he wasnโ€™t the only one leaving his dreams behind. โ€œWeโ€™ll get new dreams out there,โ€ Coriolanus promised, with more conviction than he felt. He pulled out his fatherโ€™s compass, consulted it, and pointed. โ€œNorth is this way.โ€

โ€œI thought weโ€™d head to the lake first. Itโ€™s mostly north. Iโ€™d kind of like to see it one more time,โ€ she said.

It seemed as good a plan as any, so he didnโ€™t object. Soon theyโ€™d just be adrift in the wilderness, never to return. Why not indulge her? He tucked in a bit of scarf that had come loose. โ€œThe lake it is.โ€

Lucy Gray gazed back at the town, although the only thing Coriolanus could make out was the gallows. โ€œGood-bye, District Twelve. Good-bye, hanging tree and Hunger Games and Mayor Lipp. Someday something will kill me, but it wonโ€™t be you.โ€ She turned and headed deeper into the woods.

โ€œNot much to miss,โ€ agreed Coriolanus.

โ€œIโ€™ll miss the music and my pretty birds,โ€ said Lucy Gray with a catch in her voice. โ€œIโ€™m hoping one day they can follow me, though.โ€

โ€œYou know what I wonโ€™t miss? People,โ€ Coriolanus replied. โ€œExcept for a handful. Theyโ€™re mostly awful, if you think about it.โ€

โ€œPeople arenโ€™t so bad, really,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s what the world does to them. Like us, in the arena. We did things in there weโ€™d never have considered if theyโ€™d just left us alone.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I killed Mayfair, and there was no arena in sight,โ€ he said. โ€œBut only to save me.โ€ She thought it over. โ€œI think thereโ€™s a natural goodness built into human beings. You know when youโ€™ve stepped across the line into evil, and itโ€™s your lifeโ€™s challenge to try and stay on the right

side of that line.โ€

โ€œSometimes there are tough decisions.โ€ Heโ€™d been making them all summer.

โ€œI know that. Of course, I do. Iโ€™m a victor,โ€ she said ruefully. โ€œItโ€™d be nice, in my new life, not to have to kill anyone else.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m with you there. Three seems enough for one lifetime. And certainly enough for one summer.โ€ A feral cry came from nearby, reminding him of his lack of a weapon. โ€œIโ€™m going to make a walking stick. Do you want one?โ€

She pulled up. โ€œSure. That could come in handy in more ways than one.โ€

They found a couple of stout branches, and she steadied them while he snapped off their limbs. โ€œWhoโ€™s the third?โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ She was giving him a funny look. His hand slipped, driving a piece of bark under his nail. โ€œOw.โ€

She ignored his injury. โ€œPerson you killed. You said you killed three people this summer.โ€

Coriolanus bit at the end of the splinter to pull it out with his teeth, buying a moment of time. Who, indeed? The answer was Sejanus, of course, but he couldnโ€™t admit to that.

โ€œCan you get this out?โ€ He held out his hand, wiggling the compromised fingernail, hoping to distract her.

โ€œLet me see.โ€ She examined his splinter. โ€œSo, Bobbin, Mayfair . . . whoโ€™s the third?โ€

His mind raced for a plausible explanation. Could he have been involved in a freak accident? A training death? He was cleaning a weapon, and it

went off by mistake? He decided it was best to make a joke of it. โ€œMyself. I killed the old me so I could come with you.โ€

She plucked the splinter free. โ€œThere. Well, I hope old you doesnโ€™t haunt new you. Weโ€™ve already got enough ghosts between us.โ€

The moment passed, but it had killed the conversation. Neither of them spoke again until the halfway point, where they stopped for a breather.

Lucy Gray unscrewed the plastic jug and offered it to him. โ€œWill they miss you yet?โ€

โ€œProbably not until dinner. You?โ€ He took a deep drink of water.

โ€œOnly one up when I left was Tam Amber. I told him I was going to find out about a goat. Weโ€™ve been talking about building a herd. Sell the milk as a sideline,โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™ve probably got a few more hours before they start looking. Might be night before they think about the hanging tree and find the wagon. Theyโ€™ll put it together.โ€

He handed her the jug. โ€œWill they try to follow you?โ€

โ€œMaybe. But weโ€™ll be too far gone.โ€ She took a swig and wiped her mouth with the back of her hand. โ€œWill they hunt you?โ€

He doubted the Peacekeepers would be concerned anytime soon. Why would he desert with elite officersโ€™ school waiting? If anyone even noticed he was missing, theyโ€™d probably think heโ€™d gone into town with another Peacekeeper. Unless they found the gun, of course. He didnโ€™t want to go into all the school stuff now while the wound was still fresh. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Even when they realize Iโ€™ve run, they wonโ€™t know where to look.โ€

They hiked on toward the lake, each lost in their own thoughts. It all seemed unreal to him, as if this were just a pleasure outing, as the one two Sundays ago had been. As if they were going for a picnic, and he must be sure to get back in time for fried baloney and curfew. But no. When they reached the lake, theyโ€™d move on into the wilderness, to a life consumed with the most basic type of survival. How would they eat? Where would they live? And what on earth would they do with themselves, when the challenges of obtaining food and shelter had been met? Her with no music. Him with no school, or military, or anything. Have a family? It seemed too bleak an existence to condemn a child to. Any child, let alone one of his own. What was there to aspire to once wealth, fame, and power had been eliminated? Was the goal of survival further survival and nothing more?

Preoccupied as he was with these questions, the second leg of the journey to the lake passed quickly. They set down their loads on the shore, and Lucy

Gray went directly to find branches for fishing poles. โ€œWe donโ€™t know what lies ahead, so we better fill up here,โ€ she said. She showed him how to attach the heavy thread and hooks to their poles. Clawing through the soft mud for worms disgusted him, and he wondered if this would be a daily activity. It would, if they were hungry enough. They baited the hooks and sat silently on the bank, waiting for a strike as the birds chattered around them. She caught two. He caught nothing.

Heavy, dark clouds rolled in, providing some relief from the beating sun but adding to his oppression. This was his life now. Digging for worms and being at the mercy of the weather. Elemental. Like an animal. He knew this would be easier if he wasnโ€™t such an exceptional person. The best and the brightest humanity had to offer. The youngest to pass the officer candidate test. If heโ€™d been useless and stupid, the loss of civilization would not have hollowed out his insides in this manner. Heโ€™d have taken it in stride. Thick, cold raindrops began to plop down on him, leaving wet marks on his fatigues.

โ€œNever be able to cook in this,โ€ Lucy Gray said. โ€œBetter go inside.

Thereโ€™s a fireplace in there we can use.โ€

She could only mean the one lake house that still had a roof. Probably his last roof, until he built one himself. How did you build a roof anyway? It had not been a question on the officer candidate test.

After sheโ€™d quickly cleaned the fish and wrapped them in leaves, they gathered up their bundles and hurried to the house as the rain pelted them. It mightโ€™ve been fun, if it hadnโ€™t been his real life. Just an adventure for a few hours, with a charming girl and a fulfilling future elsewhere. The door was jammed, but Lucy Gray bumped it with her hip and it swung open. They scrambled in out of the wet and dropped their belongings. It was only one room, with concrete walls, ceiling, and floor. There was no sign of electricity, but light came through the windows on four sides and the single door. His eyes lit on the fireplace, full of old ashes, with a neat pile of dried wood stacked beside it. At least they wouldnโ€™t have to forage for that.

Lucy Gray crossed to the fireplace, laid the fish down on the little concrete hearth, and began to arrange layers of wood and twigs on an old metal grate. โ€œWe keep some wood in here so thereโ€™s always some dry.โ€

Coriolanus considered the possibility of just staying in the sturdy little house, with plenty of wood around and the lake to fish in. But no, it would be too dangerous to put down roots this close to District 12. If the Covey

knew of this spot, surely other people did, too. He had to deny himself even this last shred of protection. Would he end up in a cave after all? He thought of the beautiful Snow penthouse, with its marble floors and crystal chandeliers. His home. His rightful home. The wind blew a splatter of rain in, peppering his pants with icy drops. He swung the door shut behind him and froze. The door had concealed something. A long burlap bag. From the opening poked the barrel of a shotgun.

It couldnโ€™t be. Unable to breathe, he nudged the bag open with his boot, revealing the shotgun and a Peacekeeperโ€™s rifle. A little more and he could recognize the grenade launcher. Beyond question, these were the black market guns Sejanus had bought in the shed. And among them the murder weapons.

Lucy Gray lit the fire. โ€œI brought along an old metal can thinking maybe we could carry live coals from place to place. I donโ€™t have many matches, and itโ€™s hard to get a fire going from flint.โ€

โ€œUh-huh,โ€ said Coriolanus. โ€œGood idea.โ€ How had the weapons gotten here? It made sense, really. Billy Taupe could have brought Spruce to the lake, or maybe Spruce had simply known about it anyway. It would have been useful to the rebels during the war, to have as a hideout. And Spruce had been smart enough to know he couldnโ€™t risk hiding the evidence in District 12.

โ€œHey, whatโ€™d you find there?โ€ Lucy Gray joined him and leaned down, pulling the burlap from the weapons. โ€œOh. Are these the ones they had in the shed?โ€

โ€œI think they must be,โ€ he said. โ€œShould we take the guns along?โ€

Lucy Gray drew back, rose to her feet, and considered them for a long moment. โ€œRather not. I donโ€™t trust them. This will come in handy, though.โ€ She pulled out a long knife, turning the blade over in her hand. โ€œI think Iโ€™ll go dig up some katniss, since we got the fire going anyway. Thereโ€™s a good patch by the lake.โ€

โ€œI thought they werenโ€™t ready,โ€ he said.

โ€œTwo weeks can make a lot of difference,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s still raining,โ€ he objected. โ€œYouโ€™ll get soaked.โ€ She laughed. โ€œWell, Iโ€™m not made of sugar.โ€

In truth, he was happy for a minute alone to think. After she left, he lifted the bottom of the burlap bag, and the weapons slid out onto the floor. Kneeling beside the pile, he picked up the Peacekeeperโ€™s rifle heโ€™d killed

Mayfair with and cradled it in his arms. Here it was. The murder weapon. Not in a Capitol forensic lab, but here, in his hands, in the middle of the wilderness, where it posed no threat at all. All he had to do was destroy it, and he would be free from the hangmanโ€™s noose. Free to go back to the base. Free to go forward to District 2. Free to rejoin the human race without fear. Tears of relief flooded his eyes, and he began to laugh out of sheer joy. How would he do it? Burn it in a bonfire? Disassemble it and scatter the parts to the four winds? Throw it into the lake? Once the gun was gone, thereโ€™d be nothing to connect him to the murders. Absolutely nothing.

No, wait. There would be one thing. Lucy Gray.

Well, no matter. She would never tell. She wouldnโ€™t be thrilled, obviously, when he told her thereโ€™d been a change of plans. That he was returning to the Peacekeepers and heading to District 2 tomorrow at dawn, essentially leaving her to her fate. Still, sheโ€™d never rat him out. It wasnโ€™t her style, and it would implicate her in the murders as well. It would mean she could wind up dead, and as the Hunger Games had shown, Lucy Gray possessed an extraordinary talent for self-preservation. Plus, she loved him. Sheโ€™d said so last night in the song. Even more, she trusted him. Although, if he ditched her in the woods to claw out an existence alone, no doubt she would consider that a breach of faith. He had to think of just the right way to break the news. But what would that be? โ€œI love you deeply, but I love officersโ€™ school more?โ€ That wasnโ€™t going to go over well.

And he did love her! He did! It was just that, only a few hours into his new life in the wilderness, he knew he hated it. The heat, and the worms, and those birds yakking nonstop . . .

She was certainly taking a long time with those potatoes.

Coriolanus glanced out the window. The rain had diminished to a sprinkle.

She hadnโ€™t wanted to go by herself. Too lonely. Her song said that she needed, loved, and trusted him, but would she forgive him? Even if he deserted her? Billy Taupe had crossed her, and heโ€™d ended up dead. He could hear him now . . .

โ€œMakes me sick how youโ€™re playing the kids. Poor Lucy Gray. Poor lamb.โ€

. . . and see her sinking her teeth into his hand. He thought about how coolly sheโ€™d killed in the arena. First that frail little Wovey; that was a cold-blooded move if heโ€™d ever seen one. Then the calculated way sheโ€™d taken

out Treech, baiting him to attack her, really, so she could whip that snake out of her pocket. And she claimed that Reaper had rabies, that it was a mercy kill, but who knew?

No, Lucy Gray was no lamb. She was not made of sugar. She was a victor.

He checked to see that the Peacekeeperโ€™s rifle was loaded, then opened the door wide. She was nowhere in sight. He walked down to the lake, trying to remember where Clerk Carmine had been digging before he brought them the katniss plant. It didnโ€™t matter. The swampy area around the lake was deserted, and the bank undisturbed.

โ€œLucy Gray?โ€ The only response came from a lone mockingjay on a nearby branch, who made an effort to mimic his voice but failed, as his words were not particularly musical. โ€œGive it up,โ€ he muttered to the thing. โ€œYouโ€™re no jabberjay.โ€

No question, she was hiding from him. But why? There could only be one answer. Because sheโ€™d figured it out. All of it. That destroying the guns would wash away all physical evidence of his connection to the murders. That he no longer wanted to run away. That she was the last witness to tie him to the crime. But theyโ€™d always had each otherโ€™s backs, so why would she suddenly think he might harm her? Why, when only yesterday, heโ€™d been pure as the driven snow?

Sejanus. She must have figured out that Sejanus was the third person Coriolanus had killed. She wouldnโ€™t have to know anything about the stunt with the jabberjays, only that heโ€™d been Sejanusโ€™s confidant, and that Sejanus was a rebel, while Coriolanus was a defender of the Capitol. Still, to think heโ€™d kill her? He looked down at the loaded gun in his hands. Maybe he shouldโ€™ve left it in the shed. It looked bad coming after her armed. As if he was hunting her. But he wasnโ€™t really going to kill her. Just talk to her and make sure she saw sense.

Put down the gun, he told himself, but his hands refused to cooperate.ย All she has is a knife.ย A big knife. The best he could manage was to sling the gun onto his back. โ€œLucy Gray! Are you okay? Youโ€™re scaring me! Where are you?โ€

All sheโ€™d have to say was โ€œI understand, Iโ€™ll go on alone, like I was planning to all along.โ€ But just this morning sheโ€™d admitted she didnโ€™t think she could make it on her own, that sheโ€™d return to the Covey after a few days. She knew he wouldnโ€™t believe her.

โ€œLucy Gray, please, I just want to talk to you!โ€ he shouted. What was her plan here? To hide until he grew tired and went back to the base? And then sneak back home tonight? That didnโ€™t work for him. Even with the murder weapon gone, sheโ€™d still be dangerous. What if she went back to District 12 now and the mayor succeeded in getting her arrested? What if they interrogated or even tortured her? The story would come out. She hadnโ€™t killed anyone. He had. His word against hers. Even if they didnโ€™t believe her, his reputation would be destroyed. Their romance would be revealed, along with the details of how heโ€™d cheated in the Hunger Games. Dean Highbottom might be brought in as a character witness. He couldnโ€™t risk it.

Still no sign of her. She was giving him no choice but to hunt her down in the woods. The rain had stopped now, leaving the air humid and the earth muddy. He went back to the house and scanned the ground until he found the slight imprint of her shoes, then followed her tracks until he reached the brush where the woods began again in earnest and quietly made his way into the dripping trees.

Bird chatter filled his ears, and the overcast sky made visibility poor. The underbrush concealed her footprints, but somehow he felt he was on the right track. Adrenaline sharpened his senses, and he noticed a snapped branch here, a scuff mark in the moss there. He felt a bit guilty, frightening her this way. What was she doing, quivering in the bushes while she tried to suppress her sobs? The idea of life without him must be breaking her heart.

A patch of orange caught his eye, and he smiled. โ€œI donโ€™t want you to lose me,โ€ sheโ€™d said. And he hadnโ€™t. He pushed through the branches and into a small clearing canopied by trees. The orange scarf lay across some briars, where it had apparently blown loose and snagged as she fled. Oh, well. It confirmed he was on the right track. He went to retrieve it โ€” maybe heโ€™d keep it after all โ€” when a faint rustle in the leaves pulled him up short. Heโ€™d just registered the snake when it struck, uncoiling like a spring and digging its teeth into the forearm extended toward the scarf.

โ€œAa!โ€ he screamed in pain. It released him immediately and slithered into the brush before he even had a chance to get a good look at it. Panic set in as he stared at the red, arched bite mark on his forearm. Panic and disbelief. Lucy Gray had tried to kill him! This was no coincidence. The trailing scarf. The poised snake. Maude Ivory had said she always knew where to find them. This was a booby trap, and heโ€™d walked straight into it! Poor lamb, indeed! He was beginning to sympathize with Billy Taupe.

Coriolanus knew nothing about snakes, other than the rainbow ones in the arena. Feet rooted to the ground, heart racing, he expected to die on the spot, but while the wound hurt, he was still standing. He didnโ€™t know how long he might have, but by all things Snow, she was going to pay for this. Should he tie off the arm with a tourniquet? Suck out the venom? They hadnโ€™t done survival training yet. Afraid his first aid treatments might only spread the poison more swiftly through his system, he yanked his sleeve down over his forearm, pulled his rifle off his shoulder, and started after her. If heโ€™d felt better, heโ€™d have laughed at the irony of how quickly their relationship had deteriorated into their own private Hunger Games.

She wasnโ€™t so easy to track now, and he realized the earlier clues had been left to lead him directly to the snake. But she couldnโ€™t be that far away. Sheโ€™d want to know if the thing killed him, or if she should form another plan of attack. Maybe she hoped heโ€™d pass out so she could cut his throat with the long knife. Trying to quiet his panting, he moved deeper into the woods, gently pushing the branches back with the nose of his rifle, but it was impossible to discern her whereabouts.

Think, he told himself.ย Where would she go?ย The answer hit him like a ton of bricks. She would not want to battle him, armed with a rifle, when she had only a knife. Sheโ€™d return to the lake house to get a gun herself. Perhaps sheโ€™d circled around him and was headed there right now. He strained his ears and yes. Yes! He thought he could hear someone moving off to his right, retreating to the lake. He started running toward the sound and then stopped abruptly. Sure enough, having heard him, she was flying through the underbrush, realizing what he had realized, no longer caring if he heard her. He estimated her to be about ten yards away, lifted the rifle to his shoulder, and released a spray of bullets in her direction. A flock of birds squawked as they took to the air, and he heard a faint cry.ย Got you, he thought. He crashed through the woods after her, branches and thorns catching his clothes and scratching his face, ignoring all of it until he came to the spot where heโ€™d guessed her to be. There was no trace of her. No matter. She would have to move again, and when she moved, heโ€™d find her.

โ€œLucy Gray,โ€ he said in his normal voice. โ€œLucy Gray. Itโ€™s not too late to work something out.โ€ Of course, it was, but he owed her nothing. Certainly not the truth. โ€œLucy Gray, wonโ€™t you talk to me?โ€

Her voice surprised him, lifting suddenly and sweetly into the air.

Are you, are you Coming to the tree?

Wear a necklace of rope, side by side with me. Strange things did happen here

No stranger would it be

If we met up at midnight in the hanging tree.

Yes, I get it, he thought.ย You know about Sejanus. โ€œNecklace of ropeโ€ and all that.

He took a step in her direction just as a mockingjay picked up her song. Then a second. Then a third. The woods came alive with their melody as dozens joined in. He dove through the trees and then opened fire on the spot the voice had come from. Had he hit her? He couldnโ€™t tell, because the birdsong filled his ears, disorienting him. Little black specks swam in his field of vision, and his arm began to throb. โ€œLucy Gray!โ€ he bellowed in frustration. Clever, devious, deadly girl. She knew theyโ€™d cover for her. He lifted the rifle and machine-gunned the trees, trying to wipe out the birds. Many fluttered into the sky, but the song had spread, and the woods were alive with it. โ€œLucy Gray! Lucy Gray!โ€ Furious, he turned this way and that and finally blasted the woods in a full circle, going around and around until his bullets were spent. He collapsed on the ground, dizzy and nauseous, as the woods exploded, every bird of every kind screaming its head off while the mockingjays continued their rendition of โ€œThe Hanging Tree.โ€ Nature gone mad. Genes gone bad. Chaos.

He had to get out of there. His arm had begun to swell. He had to get back to the base. Forcing himself to his feet, he tramped back to the lake. Everything in the house remained as he had left it. At least heโ€™d prevented her from getting back. Using a pair of his socks as gloves, he wiped off the murder weapon, crammed all the weapons back in the burlap bag, hoisted it over his shoulder, and ran to the lake. Judging it heavy enough to sink without being weighted down with rocks, he plunged into the lake and towed it out into deeper water. He submerged the bag and watched it spiral slowly down into the gloom.

An alarming tingling enveloped his arm. A clumsy dog paddle carried him back to shore, and he staggered back to the house. What of the supplies? Should he drown those as well? No point. Either she was dead and the Covey would find them, or she was alive and she would hopefully

use them to escape. He threw the fish into the fire to burn and left, closing the door tightly behind him.

The rain began again, a real downpour. He expected it would wash away any trace of his visit. The guns were gone. The supplies were Lucy Grayโ€™s. The only thing that remained were his footprints, and those were melting before his eyes. The clouds seemed to be infiltrating his brain. He struggled to think.ย Get back. You must get back to base.ย But where was it? He pulled his fatherโ€™s compass from his pocket, amazed it still worked after the dunking in the lake. Crassus Snow was still out there somewhere, still protecting him.

Coriolanus clung to the compass, a lifeline in the storm, as he headed south. He stumbled through the woods, terrified and alone but feeling his fatherโ€™s presence beside him. Crassus might not have thought much of him, but heโ€™d have wanted his legacy to live on, and perhaps Coriolanus had redeemed himself somewhat today? None of it would matter if the venom killed him. He stopped to vomit, wishing heโ€™d brought along the jug of water. He vaguely realized that his DNA would be on that, too, but who cared? The jug was not a murder weapon. It didnโ€™t matter. He was safe. If the Covey found Lucy Grayโ€™s body, they wouldnโ€™t report it. They wouldnโ€™t want the attention it brought. It might connect them to the rebels or reveal their hideout. If there was a body. He could not even confirm heโ€™d hit her.

Coriolanus made it back. Not to the hanging tree, exactly, but to District 12, wandering out of a stretch of trees into a clump of minersโ€™ hovels and somehow finding the road. The ground shook with thunder, and lightning slashed the sky as he reached the town square. He saw no one as he made it to the base and climbed back through the fence. He went straight to the clinic, claiming heโ€™d stopped to tie his shoe on his way to the gym, when a snake had appeared out of nowhere to bite him.

The doctor nodded. โ€œThe rain brings them out.โ€

โ€œDoes it?โ€ Coriolanus thought his story would have been challenged, or at least met with skepticism.

The doctor did not seem suspicious. โ€œDid you get a look at it?โ€

โ€œNot really. It was raining, and it moved fast,โ€ he answered. โ€œAm I going to die?โ€

โ€œHardly,โ€ the doctor chuckled. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t even venomous. See the teeth marks? No fangs. Going to be sore for a few days, though.โ€

โ€œAre you sure? I threw up, and I couldnโ€™t think straight,โ€ he said.

โ€œWell, panic can do that.โ€ She cleaned the wound. โ€œProbably leave a scar.โ€

Good, thought Coriolanus.ย It will remind me to be more careful.

She gave him several shots and a bottle of pills. โ€œCome by tomorrow, and weโ€™ll check it again.โ€

โ€œTomorrow Iโ€™m being reassigned to District Two,โ€ replied Coriolanus. โ€œVisit the clinic there, then,โ€ she said. โ€œGood luck, soldier.โ€

Coriolanus went back to his room, shocked to find it was only midafternoon. Between the booze and the rain, his bunkmates had never even risen. He went to the bathroom and emptied his pockets. The lake water had reduced his motherโ€™s rose-scented powder to a nasty paste, and he threw the whole thing in the trash. The photos stuck together and shredded when he tried to separate them, so they went the way of the powder. Only the compass had survived the outing. He peeled off his clothes and scrubbed off the last bits of the lake. When heโ€™d dressed, he took down his duffel and began to pack, returning the compass to his box of personal items and stowing it deep in the bag. On reflection, he opened Sejanusโ€™s locker and took his box as well. When he got to District 2, heโ€™d mail it to the Plinths with a note of condolence. That would be appropriate as Sejanusโ€™s best friend. And who knew? Maybe the cookies would keep coming.

The following morning, after a tearful good-bye from his bunkmates, he boarded the hovercraft for District Two. Things improved immediately. The plush seat. The attendant. The beverage selection. Not luxurious, by any means, but a far cry from the recruit train. Comforted by comfort, he leaned his temple against the window, hoping to get in a nap. All night, while the rain had drummed on the barrackโ€™s roof, heโ€™d wondered where Lucy Gray was. Dead in the rain? Curled up by the fire in the lake house? If sheโ€™d survived, surely sheโ€™d abandoned the idea of returning to District 12. He dozed off with the melody to โ€œThe Hanging Treeโ€ humming in his brain, and awoke hours later as the hovercraft touched down.

โ€œWelcome to the Capitol,โ€ the attendant said.

Coriolanusโ€™s eyes popped open. โ€œWhat? No. Did I miss my stop? I have to report to District Two.โ€

โ€œThis craft goes on to Two, but we have orders to drop you here,โ€ said the attendant, checking a list. โ€œIโ€™m afraid you need to disembark. We have a schedule to keep.โ€

He found himself on the tarmac of a small, unfamiliar airport. A Peacekeepersโ€™ truck pulled up, and he was ordered into the back. As he rattled along, unable to get any information from the driver, dread seeped into him. There had been a mistake. Or had there? What if they had somehow linked him to the murders? Maybe Lucy Gray had returned and accused him, and they needed to question him? Would they drag the lake for the weapons? His heart gave a little jump as they turned onto Scholars Road and drove past the Academy, quiet and still on a summer afternoon. There was the park where theyโ€™d sometimes hung out at after school. And the bakery with those cupcakes he loved. At least heโ€™d been granted one more glimpse of his hometown. Nostalgia faded as the truck made a sharp turn and he realized they were heading up the drive to the Citadel.

Inside, the guards waved him right through to the elevator. โ€œSheโ€™s expecting you in the lab.โ€

He held on to the thin hope that โ€œsheโ€ meant Dr. Kay, not Dr. Gaul, but his old nemesis waved to him from across the lab as he stepped off the elevator. Why was he here? Was he going to end up in one of her cages? As he crossed to her, he saw her drop a live baby mouse into a tank of golden snakes.

โ€œSo the victor returns. Here, hold these.โ€ Dr. Gaul pushed a metal bowl filled with squirming, pink rodents into his hands.

Coriolanus suppressed a gag. โ€œHello, Dr. Gaul.โ€

โ€œI got your letter,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd your jabberjay. Too bad about young Plinth. Although, is it, really? Anyway, I was pleased to see you were continuing your studies in Twelve. Developing your worldview.โ€

He felt himself pulled right back into the old tutorial with her, as if nothing had happened. โ€œYes, it was eye-opening. I thought about all the things weโ€™d discussed. Chaos, control, the contract. The threeย Cโ€™s.โ€

โ€œDid you think about the Hunger Games?โ€ she asked. โ€œThe day we met, Casca asked you what their purpose was, and you gave the stock answer. To punish the districts. Would you change that now?โ€

Coriolanus remembered the conversation heโ€™d had with Sejanus as theyโ€™d unpacked his duffel. โ€œIโ€™d elaborate on it. Theyโ€™re not just to punish the districts, theyโ€™re part of the eternal war. Each one is its own battle. One we can hold in the palm of our hand, instead of waging a real war that could get out of our control.โ€

โ€œHm.โ€ She swung a mouse away from a gaping mouth. โ€œYou there, donโ€™t be greedy.โ€

โ€œAnd theyโ€™re a reminder of what we did to each other, what we have the potential to do again, because of who we are,โ€ he continued.

โ€œAnd who are we, did you determine?โ€ she asked.

โ€œCreatures who need the Capitol to survive.โ€ He couldnโ€™t help getting in a dig. โ€œItโ€™s all pointless, though, you know. The Hunger Games. No one in Twelve even watches it. Except for the reaping. We didnโ€™t even have a working television on base.โ€

โ€œWhile that could be a problem in the future, itโ€™s a blessing this year, given that Iโ€™ve had to erase the whole mess,โ€ said Dr. Gaul. โ€œIt was a mistake getting the students mixed up in it. Especially when they started dropping like flies. Presented the Capitol as far too vulnerable.โ€

โ€œYou erased it?โ€ he asked.

โ€œEvery last copy gone, never to be aired again.โ€ She grinned. โ€œIโ€™ve a master in the vault, of course, but thatโ€™s just for my own amusement.โ€

He was glad about the erasure. It was just one more way to eliminate Lucy Gray from the world. The Capitol would forget her, the districts barely knew her, and District 12 had never accepted her as one of their own. In a few years, there would be a vague memory that a girl had once sung in the arena. And then that would be forgotten, too. Good-bye, Lucy Gray, we hardly knew you.

โ€œNot a total loss. I think weโ€™ll bring Flickerman back next year. And your idea about the betting is a keeper,โ€ she said.

โ€œYou need to somehow make the viewing mandatory. No one in Twelve will tune in to something that depressing by choice,โ€ he told her. โ€œThey spend what little free time they have drinking to forget the rest of their lives.โ€

Dr. Gaul chuckled. โ€œIt seems youโ€™ve learned a lot on your summer vacation, Mr. Snow.โ€

โ€œVacation?โ€ he said, perplexed.

โ€œWell, what were you going to do here? Laze around the Capitol, combing out your curls? I thought a summer with the Peacekeepers would be far more educational.โ€ She took in the confusion on his face. โ€œYou donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve invested all this time in you to hand you off to those imbeciles in the districts, do you?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t understand, I was told โ€”โ€ he began.

She cut him off. โ€œIโ€™ve ordered you an honorable discharge, effective immediately. Youโ€™re to study under me at the University.โ€

โ€œThe University? Here in the Capitol?โ€ he said in surprise.

She dropped one last mouse into the tank. โ€œClasses start Thursday.โ€

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