âWell, isnât this embarrassing. My son, tied down like an animal.â
Iâm half-convinced Iâm having another nightmare. I blink my eyes open slowly; I stare up at the ceiling. I make no sudden movements, but I can feel the very real weight of restraints around my left wrist and both ankles. My injured arm is still bound and slung across my chest. And though the pain in my shoulder is present, itâs dulled to a light hum. I feel stronger. Even my head feels clearer, sharper somehow. But then I taste the tang of something sour and metal in my mouth and wonder how long Iâve been in bed.
âDid you really think I wouldnât find out?â he asks, amused.
He moves closer to my bed, his footsteps reverberating right through me. âYou have Delalieu whimpering apologies for disturbing me, begging my men to blame him for the inconvenience of this unexpected visit. No doubt you terrified the old man for doing his job, when the truth is, I wouldâve found out even without his alerts. This,â he says, âis not the kind of mess you can conceal. Youâre an idiot for thinking otherwise.â
I feel a light tugging on my legs and realize heâs undoing my restraints. The brush of his skin against mine is abrupt and unexpected, and it triggers something deep and dark within me, enough to make me physically ill. I taste vomit at the back of my throat. It takes all my self-control not to jerk away from him.
âSit up, son. You should be well enough to function now. You were too stupid to rest when you were supposed to, and now youâve overcorrected. Three days youâve been unconscious, and I arrived twenty-seven hours ago. Now get up. This is ridiculous.â
Iâm still staring at the ceiling. Hardly breathing.
He changes tactics.
âYou know,â he says carefully, âIâve actually heard an interesting story about you.â He sits down on the edge of my bed; the mattress creaks and groans under his weight. âWould you like to hear it?â
My left hand has begun to tremble. I clench it fast against the bedsheets.
âPrivate 45B-76423. Fletcher, Seamus.â He pauses. âDoes that name sound familiar?â
I squeeze my eyes shut.
âImagine my surprise,â he says, âwhen I heard that my son had finally done something right. That heâd finally taken initiative and dispensed with a traitorous soldier whoâd been stealing from our storage compounds. I heard you shot him right in the forehead.â A laugh. âI congratulated myselfâtold myself youâd finally come into your own, that youâd finally learned how to lead properly. I was almost proud.
âThatâs why it came as an even greater shock to me to hear Fletcherâs family was still alive.â He claps his hands together. âShocking, of course, because you, of all people, should know the rules. Traitors come from a family of traitors, and one betrayal means death to them all.â
He rests his hand on my chest.
Iâm building walls in my mind again. White walls. Blocks of concrete. Empty rooms and open space.
Nothing exists inside of me. Nothing stays.
âItâs funny,â he continues, thoughtful now, âbecause I told myself Iâd wait to discuss this with you. But somehow, this moment seems so right, doesnât it?â I can hear him smile. âTo tell you just how tremendously . . . disappointed I am. Though I canât say Iâm surprised.â He sighs. âIn a single month youâve lost two soldiers, couldnât contain a clinically insane girl, upended an entire sector, and encouraged rebellion among the citizens. And somehow, Iâm not surprised at all.â
His hand shifts; lingers at my collarbone.
White walls, I think.
Blocks of concrete.
Empty rooms. Open space.
Nothing exists inside of me. Nothing stays.
âBut whatâs worse than all this,â he says, âis not that youâve managed to humiliate me by disrupting the order Iâd finally managed to establish. Itâs not even that you somehow got yourself shot in the process. But that you would show sympathy to the family of a traitor,â he says, laughing, his voice a happy, cheerful thing. âThis is unforgivable.â
My eyes are open now, blinking up at the fluorescent lights above my head, focused on the white of the bulbs blurring my vision. I will not move. I will not speak.
His hand closes around my throat.
The movement is so rough and violent Iâm almost relieved. Some part of me always hopes heâll go through with it; that maybe this time heâll actually let me die. But he never does. It never lasts.
Torture is not torture when thereâs any hope of relief.
He lets go all too soon and gets exactly what he wants. I jerk upward, coughing and wheezing and finally making a sound that acknowledges his existence in this room. My whole body is shaking now, my muscles in shock from the assault and from remaining still for so long. My skin is cold sweat; my breaths are labored and painful.
âYouâre very lucky,â he says, his words too soft. Heâs up now, no longer inches from my face. âSo lucky I was here to make things right. So lucky I had time to correct the mistake.â
I freeze.
The room spins.
âI was able to track down his wife,â he says. âFletcherâs wife and their three children. I hear they sent their regards.â A pause. âWell, this was before I had them killed, so I suppose it doesnât really matter now, but my men told me they said hello. It seems she remembered you,â he says, laughing softly. âThe wife. She said you went to visit them before all this . . . unpleasantness occurred. You were always visiting the compounds, she said. Asking after the civilians.â
I whisper the only two words I can manage.
âGet out.â
âThis is my boy!â he says, waving a hand in my direction. âA meek, pathetic fool. Some days Iâm so disgusted by you I donât know whether to shoot you myself. And then I realize youâd probably like that, wouldnât you? To be able to blame me for your downfall? And I think no, best to let him die of his own stupidity.â
I stare blankly ahead, fingers flexing against the mattress.
âNow tell me,â he says, âwhat happened to your arm? Delalieu seemed as clueless as the others.â
I say nothing.
âToo ashamed to admit you were shot by one of your own soldiers, then?â
I close my eyes.
âAnd what about the girl?â he asks. âHow did she escape? Ran off with one of your men, didnât she?â
I grip the bedsheet so hard my fist starts shaking.
âTell me,â he says, leaning into my ear. âHow would you deal with a traitor like that? Are you going to go visit his family, too? Make nice with his wife?â
And I donât mean to say it out loud, but I canât stop myself in time. âIâm going to kill him.â
He laughs out loud so suddenly itâs almost a howl. He claps a hand on my head and musses my hair with the same fingers he just closed around my throat. âMuch better,â he says. âSo much better. Now get up. We have work to do.â
And I think yes, I wouldnât mind doing the kind of work that would remove Adam Kent from this world.
A traitor like him does not deserve to live.