Helene.
I have to go to her. I have to make things right with her. Our anger’s
stood too long. Maybe, after this nightmare we’ve wrought, we can find a way
forward together. She must be as horrified as I am at what happened. As
sickened.
I snatch my scims from the wall. The thought of what I’d done with them
makes me want to toss them to the dunes, Teluman blades or not. But I’m too
used to having weapons across my back. I feel naked without them.
The sun shines as I emerge from the barracks, unfeeling in a cloudless sky. It
seems profane somehow—the world clean, the air warm—when scores of young
men lay cold in their coffins, waiting to return to the earth.
The dawn drums thunder out and begin listing the names of the dead. Each
name summons an image in my head—a face, a voice, a form—until it feels as if
my fallen comrades are rising up around me, a phalanx of ghosts.
Cyril Antonius. Silas Eburian. Tristas Equitius. Demetrius Galerius. Ennis
Medalus. Darien Titius. Leander Vissan.
The drumming goes on. The families will have collected the bodies by now.
Blackcliff has no graveyard. Among these walls, all that remains of the fallen is
the emptiness of where they walked, the silence where their voices rang.
In the belltower courtyard, Cadets lunge and parry with staffs as a Centurion
circles them. I should have known the Commandant wouldn’t cancel classes, not
even to honor the deaths of dozens of her students.
The Centurion nods as I pass, and I’m confused by his lack of disgust.
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Doesn’t he know I’m a murderer? Wasn’t he watching yesterday?
How can you ignore it?
I want to shout.
How can you pretend it didn’t
happen?
I head for the cliffs. Helene will be down in the dunes, where we have always
mourned our dead. On my way there, I see Faris and Dex. Without Tristas,
Demetrius, and Leander by their sides, they look bizarre, like an animal missing
its legs.
I think they will pass me by. Or attack me for giving the order that took their
souls. Instead, they stop before me, quiet, despondent. Their eyes are as red as
mine.
Dex massages his neck, his thumb moving in ceaseless circles over the
Blackcliff tattoo. “I keep seeing their faces,” he says. “Hearing them.”
For long moments, we stand together in silence. But it is selfish of me to
share such grief, to take comfort in knowing that they feel the same self-hatred
that I do. I’m the reason they are haunted.
“You followed orders,” I say. This burden, at least, I can take. “Orders I gave.
Their deaths aren’t on you. They’re on me.”
Faris meets my eyes, a ghost of the big, joyful boy he had once been.
“They’re free now,” he says. “Free of the Augurs. Of Blackcliff. Not like us.”
When Dex and Faris walk away, I rappel to the desert floor, where Helene sits
cross-legged in the shade of the cliffs, her feet buried to the ankles in the hot
sand. Her hair ripples in the wind, glowing gold-white like the curve of a sunlit
dune. I approach her as one would an angry horse.
“You don’t need to be so cat-footed,” she says when I’m a few feet away.
“I’m not armed.”
I sit beside her. “Are you all right?”
“I’m alive.”
“I’m sorry, Helene. I know you can’t forgive me, but—”
“Stop. We didn’t have a choice, Elias. If I’d gotten the upper hand, I’d have
done the same thing to you. I killed Cyril. I killed Silas and Lyris. I nearly killed
Dex, but he backed off, and I couldn’t find him again.” Her silver face could be
carved of marble, it’s so emotionless.
Who is this person?
“If we’d refused to
fight,” she says, “our friends would have died. What were we supposed to do?”
“I killed Demetrius.” I search her face for anger. She and Demetrius grew
close after his brother died—she was the only one who ever knew what to say to
him. “And—and Leander.”
“You did what you had to. Just as I did what I had to. Just as Faris and Dex
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and all the others who survived did what they had to.”
“I know they did what they had to do, but they followed an order
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