Evie told me I just have to watch a twenty minute video about how King Henry had to fight for his place as king, his past, and then weâre to write a summary about it. Because thereâs no actual lesson where she talks for an hour, I take it upon myself to shower and get dressed into something more comfortable and dry. Then I blow dry my hair and get started on the video and summary she requests of us when my hair is dry. The video is actually twenty five minutes long and the summary is due before Dance practice. She doesnât care if weâre done or not, sheâll take it. She did stress to me that I should be done within thirty to forty-five minutes, but if weâre not, she wonât be mad.
The video isnât anything new. Itâs been out since the beginning of King Henryâs reign. They showed this to us in elementary school. I donât mind watching it again. Itâs entertaining and educational at the same time. Iâm sure Iâm not the only one who thinks so.
The story is simple: The king before him, King Edgar of the United Kingdoms, reigning for a whopping twelve years, the first twelve years of Henryâs life was one of the best kings the UK have had in a long time, but like all good people, he died. Doctors and professionals insisted it was natural causes that killed him. Unfortunately, that meant his mother was the reigning queen of the UK, and she wasnât as kind as her husband, and neither was the man she chose to marry after the death of her husband. A news report said that he was abusive emotionally and sometimes physically to Henry, told him he would never be king or worth anything. It got to the point where he dreaded getting out of bed.
During his stepfatherâs reign over the UK, troubles spread from London to Sydney to northern Ireland. Instead of being a fair king, like he said in his vows he made to kingdoms, he was ruthless and selfish. All the money that was supposed to go to the countries, he kept for himself. Orphanages, schools, grocery stores. He kept it all. People began to die from starvation and illness. Mainly children who didnât have the resources to be vaccinated. Parents love their children to death, but seeing their children die painfully is another thing, and it caused many parents, grandparents, siblings and anyone who scream and stand for hours on end to riot outside the palace gates. They were not happy campers and with good reason.
One night, Henryâs stepfather tried to give him away to another kingdom to create alliances, stop them from threatening him, and probably to ensure that Henry never would be crown king of the UK. The key about this is they threatened . Not his kingdom. Him! And for his selfish reasoning, they wanted him dead, and he gave away Henry. Or tried to. His mother wouldnât go for it. She wasnât the kindest queen the UK has ever known, but she did love her son.
After she refused for three days, her evil husband went into a rage. He had his men destroy some cities in Australia and Scotland to convince Henryâs mother to go through with it,and if that wasnât enough, he beat Henry, hoping he would tell the queen, but he didnât. That night, she still refused and he attempted murder. She tried to keep silent, but some of the maids and servants went to tell Henry. At the time he was sixteen. It wasnât and still isnât rare for a prince to be a king at the age of sixteen. Thatâs exactly what happened.
The King actually killed Henryâs mother by slamming her into hard objects around their room. It only took three times for her to die, but it didnât stop him. What did was Henry when he punched him in his face. Her maids,kitchen servants, and a few guards watched Henry and his stepfather fight in his study.
Henry took the first punch and that knocked him back. The guards were worried for the princeâs safety. Theyâve known Henry their whole lives. His whole life. Theyâve witnesses his love and compassion for others. When he was the prince of the UK, he was kind not only to the servants and maids his stepfather was cruel to, but the peasants of the kingdom as well. Every Saturday, he would play with the kids with no parents and sometimes buy them some bread for the unfortunate families. Some were struggling more than others, and those were the ones he chose.
The servants adored Henry and still do to this day. Some may not have understood him and his reasons like other servants did, but they respected his attitude and how he did things. Everyone in the kingdom was loyal to Henry rather than the queen and his stepfather.
When his stepfather demanded the guards do something, they did nothing. He was shocked and outraged, but knew it was because of their love and loyalty to the prince. Henry grew angry immediately and shouted at his stepfather to not threaten his loyal subjects and rambled about how they could have been loyal to him too had he not been selfish and murdered their beloved queen. Like itâs been said, she wasnât the best queen, but they did respect her for the love she had for her son, her lost husbandand her attempts to make the kingdom happy. He didnât like what he had to say and swung his fist on him. As soon as it made contact with Henryâs face, Henry snapped his fingers. Of course, it wasnât necessary. The guards were already rushing towards him to place him under arrest.At King Henryâs command, they imprisoned him and he was executed after his motherâs funeral. It was open to the public. Protected by his guards, the citizens told Henry how sorry, but grateful they were. Afterall, Henry was still alive. Had he died too, the kingdom would be in ruins. A week later, King Henry was crowned king of the UK. The night of his coronation happened to be on his seventeenth birthday.
Every since, King Henry has been kind and generous to his people, giving them the very best. A few years ago, he was known to the kingdom was one of the best kings, after his father, to ever govern the kingdoms of the UK. Because of their loyalty, King Henry richly rewards his people with gifts, money, job opportunities. Anything they could ever need. Of course, he allows them to work for survival, but he isnât ruthless like his stepfather was. As his reign continued, the kingdoms he had alliances that were at his side to help him run his kingdom.
On his eighteenth birthday, it was advised he finds a wife to help him and keep him sane. Queen Alice was just a princess when she came to visit the UK and it was love at first sight. They got to know each other and it wasnât planned then, but they were married two years later and had Sydney two years after they were married. They still love each other as they did years ago.
I put my pencil down after spending five minutes writing a summary about the video and lean back in my chair, rubbing my eyes. Thereâs a knock on my already open door with Evie standing in the doorway with the slip I handed her. I smile and tell her she can come in. She doesnât hesitate to sit on my bed.
âYou didnât tell me you saved Kayiah from drowning.â I shrug and look down. âAnyways, Aiken says sheâs doing well. Just some memory issues, but the doctor said she should remember within the next few days and Aiken said he canât thank you enough, youâre a hero and he wants to make it to you.â
âI already told him I just wanted him to see that Kayiah was okay.â
âYes, he did mention that, but something about Aiken is that he takes this very seriously. â
âIâm sure he does, but itâs okay. I just want her to be okay.â
She nods. âAre you going to talk to the kids in the juvenile detention center tonight?â I nod. âAnd are you done with your assignment?â I nod and hand her paper. She looks at it. âImpressive. Thatâs a lot of information. Whatâs your favorite part?â
âHow King Henry was tormented his whole life, but always remained kind to his kingdom.â
âHow true. Itâs admirable. Well, Iâll let you do whatever it is you wish to do.â
âA nap sounds great.â
She chuckles and then heads for door, but not before telling me about the story of me saving Kayiah got out to the public. We know what that means. More publicity. More paparazzi. More anger from The Elimination. I feel like Jackâs just angry and is looking for someone else to blame for it.
Kayiah and two guards assure me Iâll do just fine or wonât give them another reason to hate me more than they already do. I find it weird that a silent man with the kingâs trust and a sword will speak his mind, especially to a regular boy like me. Arenât there principles suggesting if youâre royalty, youâre to be silent unless speaking to nobles and royalty? I guess I always thought guards didnât have tongues, even though they have names. Bruce and Ack, and theyâre twins.
Kayiah kisses my cheek. âIf you saved me of all people, Iâm sure you can save them. Youâre a natural born hero.â
âTrust me,â Ack says with a strong Australian accent. âMy king has loyal subjects from all over and servants that he loves and cherishes, but there are also those subjects and servants that have his favor above all others. I donât count you as a servant because you werenât born to serve the king, but my point is, he believes in you. So does the princess and queen. Now itâs time you believe in yourself.â
âItâs not often I say this, but my brother is right. Itâs no wonder King Henry has entrusted your life to us for the next hour or however long weâll be here,â Bruce adds.
âAppreciate it,â I say. âBut believing in myself isnât exactly one of my stronger points.â
âWe know and weâre going to help you to make it a stronger point. Stronger than thinking negatively about yourself is.â
âIs such a thing possible?â I ask.
Kayiah holds my hand in hers and speaks softly. âI think you know you can do things, but for you, itâs hard to admit it because youâre afraid of being judged for thinking like that.â
âAnd weâre going to help you,â Ack says. âYouâre not just a job for us. Weâve seen how you are and this is going to sound weird, but we like you. And so does our king.â
As soon as the door opens, the kids stare at me, fear and hatred clearly visible in their eyes. The girls are probably more afraid than hateful whereas boys tend to hide their feelings and refuse to let anyone know theyâre broken. As a boy, I can confirm this. If I were to be tortured by The Elimination like these kids were, Iâd probably be as cruel as The Elimination.
I sit on the platform and clear my throat. Every child is sitting at a round table, five at each table. The girls are wearing purple smocks and the guys have the luxury of wearing regular street clothes. Thereâs a high demand for dresses and girlsâ jeans in London for all age.
Kayiah sits next to me and pulls her knitted mermaid tale up. A girl with green eyes, mixed skin, and long, black hair stands and approaches me slowly. I can feel Ack and Bruce stiffen. She notices and stops. âJack said youâre cruel and without mercy? Is that⦠true?â
I pat the platform next to me. Someone calls her name, but she ignores them and sits on stage next to me. I lightly play with her long hair and ask for her name.
âSkylar, but I prefer Sky.â The boys gasp softly.
âWell, Sky. The reason Iâm here is to assure all of you that Iâm not cruel likeThe Elimination say I am. What they told you are lies.â I take a deep breath. âI guess itâs not a huge secret Jack and I share a family tree.â
âHe says heâs your father,â Sky says.
âBiologically, yes, but to me he was never an ideal father. To me, he isnât. Believe it or not, he hurt me too. Just like you guys.â
They murmur among themselves in disbelief, but Sky is the only one willing to talk to me.
âHow?â
âHe beat my mother and let one of his friends rape me for two years. Didnât try to help. Just sat and watched.â I pause. âSometimes he beat me too, but itâs nothing compared to what you guys had to endure, but to me what he did was all that mattered to me at the time.â
âHe said you killed your own mother,â an older boy says, not believing me. He looks like he could be Skyâs brother.
âI could have saved her if I stayed home that night and I wasnât, but I didnât kill her. Anothermember of The Elimination killed her.â
Kayiah squeezes my hand. My heart sinks. I change the subject and put on a pretty smile. âHow do you guys like the food?â
The room bursts into shouts of their opinions. Most of the answers are the same, but there a few different ones. The common answer is âItâs food. Actual food. Not dirt and disgusting meat not even cooked all the wayâ. That makes me sick. Itâs one thing to beat someone everyday, but if you donât give them proper nutrition, such as fruits, vegetables, their wounds wonât heal. Theyâll get sick and possibly die. Iâm not one to push my beliefs on someone else if they are happy with their own, but if youâre going to eat meat, it has to be cooked fully or youâre going to get sick.
I feel the coffee and the lunch I had earlier threaten to come up my throat. It takes everything I have to hold it down. The other answer is the food could be better. A politely version of âThe food stinksâ. The answer is coming from most of the younger kids.
âWhy do you ask?â Sky asks.
I smile and whisper to Kayiah, who giggles and nods her head.
I watch the guards and head of the center stare at me in awe as the kids eat watermelon and make macaroni art with glitter and glue. As Sky giggles at her art, I smile and pat her back while she glues more macaroni. One of them approaches me and asks in a serious tone. âWhat black magic do you possess? Please, tell me so I can gain some of it. This is the first time theyâve been quiet since theyâve been here.â
A tiny five year old named Emma giggles and hugs my legs as Iâm about to answer. I pick her up and hold in my arms. She grips my glowy necklace, completely fascinated by it.
âExcept that one and Sky,â the guard adds.
I can see why the guards are confused. I honestly didnât think they would relax this quickly. Or at least not stare and plot to kill me at the same time. I think itâs just a good day in their lives. No one can recover that quickly. Theyâre just having fun. Thereâs no way I did anything within an hour and forty five minutes. Maybe with Sky and Emma, but Iâll have to work harder to make them see the truth, and then they can decide what they want to do with it.
âWhen kids are bored or upset, they tend to act rebellious. Trust me. I know. I was that way too when I was really young and my mom took a parenting class. Kids just need to be occupied. Doesnât always have to be something cheesy like food art, butâ¦â
âWell, youâre doing something right. Itâs keeping them quieter and less violent. We never would have thought of that.â
âAre all of the kids the issues or just a certain gender?â
âMainly the boys,â the guard says. Called it. âBut the girls require more attention. Emma, Sky and a few other girls are afraid more than angry. They were tormented a lot more just because of their gender and the demands of The Elimination. Sure, the boys were too, but it affected the girls more. Most of the guys are angry and bloodthirsty though. Itâs just what weâve observed, Danny. Thatâs why you have to be careful.â
âGot it.â
âYouâre one of the first ones to ever be so nice to us,â Emma says. âThey never gave us yummy fruit, water, or juice, gave us fun games to play. The boys may be hard around the edges, but theyâre grateful. Thank you.â
My heart melts. âOh,â is all I can say and then a few minutes later, I add, âYou donât thank me. This is for you guys. I hate whatâs happened to you and wish I could erase your pain, but since I canât, the least I can do is help deal with it.â
The guards smile. I can tell Emma is making them want to cry too. One guard has a tear trickling down his cheek. Holding Emma in my arms, I start to walk around the lunchroom, admiring the creativity. A group of preteen boys in particular and their macaroni art stand out from everyone elseâs. Unfortunately, these are the boys that hate me the most. Or are angry with me the most. One of the two.
âYou guys are so creative,â I say. âThe way you place them over the glue so perfectly shows you have creative minds.â
They fake smiles and thank me silently. Except for one. The oldest, I believe. Aged sixteen. Ten months older than me. He stops and stares at me.
âWhy are you doing this? Youâve been nice to us since you got here. What is it youâre trying to prove?â
âNothing,â I say, putting Emma on the floor and giving her a toy. She plays toy car and crawls around the floor. âIâm going to tell you guys two secrets. I got close to no sleep last night and I love sleep.â He stares blankly at me. âIf I didnât care about what was happening to you guys, Iâd still be sleeping.â
âIf you care so much, then why did they sa-â
âSo you wonât trust anyone to help. So youâll feel helpless and alone. Iâve felt so alone growing up. Itâs an awful way to feel. You guys are awesome kids. Donât let them change you. Once they change you, they control you.â
They donât look convinced. âProve it.â
These kids are smart. How can I make them believe Iâm telling the truth? Wait. Winston. Duh.
âDid you hear about a member of The Elimination being executed?â They nod slowly. âHave they ever shown love?â They donât even nod this time. No answer. âIf Iâm such a cruel person, isnât it likely they would have recruit me instead of threaten me?â
When they donât answer, I sigh, whisper, âJust a thought,â and flash a smile, walking around some more. Kayiah jumps in my arms and hugs me. I pat her back, surprised.
âJust talked to a few boys.â
âMe too,â I say. âI did most of the talking.â
âThe ones I talked to, they look up to you. They heard that you saved me from drowning.â
I roll my eyes. âFantastic.â
She places a hand on her hip. âWhy are so afraid of being the one? The hero.â
âIâm not afraid of being the hero. Iâm scared of letting people down.â
She giggles. âThatâs cute. âHow have you let people down? Because itâs not Riley, who comes from a similar background. Lia. Kamron. Blake. Meâ¦â I donât respond. âYou really have helped people, Danny, and these kids do see the lies of The Elimination, but are having a tough time grasping it. Itâs all theyâve ever known. To lose that, itâs scary when they know nothing else.â
âAnd what can I do about that?â
âJust be your sweet self. People are noticing.
Graceâs brother approaches me. I donât know for sure, but I think his name is Liam. Heâs an exact replica of his younger sister. Except for his attitude, but if he thinks Iâm as bad as Iâm portrayed to be then of course, heâs acting like this. Her sister is more trusting than him. Thatâs going to help me, but itâs also a scary thing.
âIf what you say is true, I trust youâre not harming my sister then?â
âI donât want to hurt any of you.â
He nods and sighs. âShe doesnât trust easily. Especially since The Elimination tore her down many times. Itâs not enough to not hurt her. If I canât be there for her, you have to. Sheâll need someone to hold her when she has nightmares. It has to be you. And if you hurt her, Iâll make Jack look kind and merciful.âI give him props. I think thatâs the best threat Iâve heard my entire life. Itâs coming from a child. Thatâs kind of sad. âDo we understand each other?â
âI think weâre on the pageâ¦â I pause.
âLiam,â he whispers. âMy name is Liam.â
By noon the next day, itâs freezing. Twenty degrees below zero.It wasnât so cold yesterday. And I thought Seattle winter weather was unreasonable and cruel at times. It happened within the eight hours were sleeping or pretending to be asleep. Due to the lack of sleep I got the night before, I slept like a baby, but I heard Marybeth and Emily were debating or gambling all night about the weather and how it will change or remain the same. Theyâre going to hate practice today and itâs not the normal practice routine we do. Hip-hop Dance Battle. Intense. Iâm a little nervous myself. Rules are simple. Boys versus girls. Ladies are to go first. Go figure. Any style of hip hop our teachers and Evie have taught us. From old school to twenty-first century popping and locking. One hundred percent our choice. This is our dance lesson for the whole hour. The point is for us to be creative in what styles we chose to throw in our dance equation. And to prepare us for the anxiety weâll get on stage.
Grace holds my hand as we walk down the hallway, her fairy tale book in her arm. The closer we get to the rehearsal room, the louder Emily and Marybeth are shouting about a pair of silver heels and the forty dollars. I guess Marybeth had plans to wear those shoes to the red carpet and Emily wants her forty dollars. Wonât this be an interesting dance session?
Standing in the door and watching them argue, I glimpse at Evie who shakes her head and snickers quietly. Thank God Iâm not a girl. I donât do the whole arguing over shoes and accessories thing. Doesnât make sense. Maybe it means the world to them. I donât know.
Jared tries to convince the girls to argue later and calm down for practice. That only ends at them teaming up and ganging up on him. Then he runs behind Evie and looks to me for help. I put my hands up and shake my head. Not today.
âLadies,â Evie booms. Her voice is loud enough to force the class to straighten up, military style. âItâs a shoe and two twenty dollar bills. My men are afraid because of a shoe and forty dollars. Both could have been avoided if you had not gambled in the first place! And boys, man up!â
âBut-â the girls say.
âNo buts. Who owes who money?â
âMarybeth owes me money!â Emily shouts.
Marybeth yells about her shoes. âI want my shoe back!â
I cover Graceâs eyes and pout that Liam isnât here to bash my head in or something. Anything would be better than this. Not only is it stupid and annoying, but Emily and Marybeth are fighting over something worthy compared to Kamron and I, and itâs kind of embarrassing. Kamron and I fought over paying for soda that costs like a dollar and twenty five cents, and theyâre fighting over a pair of heels and forty dollars. I donât know whoâs petty here. Marybeth and Emily or Kamron and I. Shoes and forty dollars? Or diet soda?
âEmily, after practice you will give Mary her shoes, and Mary, you will pay her like promised. Am I understood? Itâs not too late to start giving bad reviews! Is that what we want? Because it doesnât help you in the competitionâ¦â
I didnât know she could give bad reviews. Ouch. Yep, that will definitely hurt their chances.
At this point, Jared is no longer hiding and everyone else is watching in amusement. I look down at Grace who silently watches.
âAm I understood?â Evie asks again, her voice irritated by the yelling sheâs had to do this afternoon.
âYes, Evie,â Emily and Marybeth say together.
âGood,â Evie huffs and claps her hands. I remove my hands from Graceâs eyes. âAlright, guys. Get in your positions. I want all of you to do a quick warm up while I run to the bathroom.â She turns to Grace and I and smiles. Her voice grows ever softer. âAnd Grace, honey, you can sit on the stairs and watch or read your book if you want, but Danny needs to practice too.â
Grace nods and skips to the ledge and opens her book up, laying it on her small thighs, and sending me a smile and blowing a kiss. I blow one back and stand in my position. Jared stands next to me and we both start a warmup.
âCraziness,â he mumbles.
âI donât know. Kamron and I fought over paying for a soda,â I snicker. âMaybe itâs normal.â
âA pair of shoes is not worth it.â I laugh and shrug, leaning to my right to stretch some more. âThis is why Iâm done with girls.â
âWhat are you doing do, buy a bunch of dogs?â Marybeth asks, sarcasm in her voice.
âIâd rather have poop and pee stains on my couch every day than to deal with a woman who will cause a uprising because of a shoe and forty dollars.â
Emily is about to say something, but then she glances at Grace reading her book, and growls loudly at Jared. âYou are so lucky that little girl is right there and that Danny would kill me if I said anything bad in front of her.â
âSounds like something you should take up with him,â Jared smirks.
âNot open for discussion,â I add and smile. Emily looks at me blankly and confused. âIâm not going to say anything about the argument like Jared.â
âNo wonder Kayiah fell for you, a boy with some brains,â Emily says.
I can feel my cheeks red up. Blushing bright red. âShut up,â I mumble with a smile.
She smirks and starts her warm up, yawning the entire time. I canât imagine how exhausted she must be after arguing and making bets with Marybeth all night. Iâm glad I got to sleep, but with as sleep deprived as I was, I wasnât going to stay up all night for any reason. If The Elimination stormed London and broke in the mansion, they were going to have to kill me because I wasnât moving for anything.
When Evie comes back, everyone else pretends they actually did the warm up. The warm up isnât required. Evie just thinks itâs a good idea so no one pulls anything and complains of leg or muscle pain. I prefer to do a quick warm up before I dance or go running. It really helps. Half of these people are about to endure a lot of pain unless theyâre immune. In that case, I hate them for it.