One of my fatherâs men is waiting for me outside my door.
I glance in his direction, but not long enough to discern his features. âState your business, soldier.â
âSir,â he says, âIâve been instructed to inform you that the supreme commander requests your presence in his quarters for dinner at twenty-hundred hours.â
âConsider your message received.â I move to unlock my door.
He steps forward, blocking my path.
I turn to face him.
Heâs standing less than a foot away from me: an implicit act of disrespect; a level of comfort even Delalieu does not allow himself. But unlike my men, the sycophants who surround my father consider themselves lucky. Being a member of the supreme commanderâs elite guard is considered a privilege and an honor. They answer to no one but him.
And right now, this soldier is trying to prove he outranks me.
Heâs jealous of me. He thinks Iâm unworthy of being the son of the supreme commander of The Reestablishment. Itâs practically written on his face.
I have to stifle my impulse to laugh as I take in his cold gray eyes and the black pit that is his soul. He wears his sleeves rolled up above his elbows, his military tattoos clearly defined and on display. The concentric black bands of ink around his forearms are accented in red, green, and blue, the only sign on his person to indicate that he is a soldier highly elevated in rank. Itâs a sick branding ritual Iâve always refused to be a part of.
The soldier is still staring at me.
I incline my head in his direction, raise my eyebrows.
âI am required,â he says, âto wait for verbal acceptance of this invitation.â
I take a moment to consider my choices, which are none.
I, like the rest of the puppets in this world, am entirely subservient to my fatherâs will. Itâs a truth Iâm forced to contend with every day: that Iâve never been able to stand up to the man who has his fist clenched around my spine.
It makes me hate myself.
I meet the soldierâs eyes again and wonder, for a fleeting moment, if he has a name, before I realize I couldnât possibly care less. âConsider it accepted.â
âYes, sââ
âAnd next time, soldier, you will not step within five feet of me without first asking permission.â
He blinks, stunned. âSir, Iââ
âYou are confused.â I cut him off. âYou assume your work with the supreme commander grants you immunity from rules that govern the lives of other soldiers. Here, you are mistaken.â
His jaw tenses.
âNever forget,â I say, quietly now, âthat if I wanted your job, I could have it. And never forget that the man you so eagerly serve is the same man who taught me how to fire a gun when I was nine years old.â
His nostrils flare. He stares straight ahead.
âDeliver your message, soldier. And then memorize this one: do not ever speak to me again.â
His eyes are focused on a point directly behind me now, his shoulders rigid.
I wait.
His jaw is still tight. He slowly lifts his hand in salute.
âYou are dismissed,â I say.
I lock my bedroom door behind me and lean against it. I need just a moment. I reach for the bottle I left on my nightstand and shake out two of the square pills; I toss them into my mouth, closing my eyes as they dissolve. The darkness behind my eyelids is a welcome relief.
Until the memory of her face forces itself into my consciousness.
I sit down on my bed and drop my head into my hand. I shouldnât be thinking about her right now. I have hours of paperwork to sort through and the additional stress of my fatherâs presence to contend with. Dinner with him should be a spectacle. A soul-crushing spectacle.
I squeeze my eyes shut tighter and make a weak effort to build the walls that would surely clear my mind. But this time, they donât work. Her face keeps cropping up, her journal taunting me from its place in my pocket. And I begin to realize that some small part of me doesnât want to wish away the thoughts of her. Some part of me enjoys the torture.
This girl is destroying me.
A girl who has spent the last year in an insane asylum. A girl who would try to shoot me dead for kissing her. A girl who ran off with another man just to get away from me.
Of course this is the girl I would fall for.
I close a hand over my mouth.
I am losing my mind.
I tug off my boots. Pull myself up onto my bed and allow my head to hit the pillows behind me.
She slept here, I think. She slept in my bed. She woke up in my bed. She was here and I let her get away.
I failed.
I lost her.
I donât even realize Iâve tugged her notebook out of my pocket until Iâm holding it in front of my face. Staring at it. Studying the faded cover in an attempt to understand where she mightâve acquired such a thing. She mustâve stolen it from somewhere, though I canât imagine where.
There are so many things I want to ask her. So many things I wish I could say to her.
Instead, I open her journal, and read.
The journal drops out of my hand and onto my chest. I run my only free hand across my face, through my hair. I rub the back of my neck and haul myself up so fast that my head hits the headboard and Iâm actually grateful. I take a moment to appreciate the pain.
And then I pick up the book.
And turn the page.
Iâm trying to focus, telling myself these are just empty words, but Iâm lying. Because somehow, just reading these words is too much; and the thought of her in pain is causing me an unbearable amount of agony.
To know that she experienced this.
She was thrown into this by her own parents, cast off and abused her entire life. Empathy is not an emotion Iâve ever known, but now itâs drowning me, pulling me into a world I never knew I could enter. And though Iâve always believed she and I shared many things in common, I did not know how deeply I could feel it.
Itâs killing me.
I stand up. Start pacing the length of my bedroom until Iâve finally worked up the nerve to keep reading. Then I take a deep breath.
And turn the page.
âGod, Juliette,â I gasp.
And fall to my knees.
âCall for transport immediately.â I need to get out. I need to get out right now.
âSir? I mean, yes, sir, of courseâbut whereââ
âI have to visit the compounds,â I say. âI should make my rounds before my meeting this evening.â This is both true and false. But Iâm willing to do anything right now that might get my mind off this journal.
âOh, certainly, sir. Would you like me to accompany you?â
âThat wonât be necessary, Lieutenant, but thank you for the offer.â
âIâs-sir,â he stammers. âOf course, itâs m-my pleasure, sir, to assist youââ
Good God, I have taken leave of my senses. I never thank Delalieu. Iâve likely given the poor man a heart attack.
âI will be ready to go in ten minutes.â I cut him off.
He stutters to a stop. Then, âYes, sir. Thank you, sir.â
Iâm pressing my fist to my mouth as the call disconnects.