The Diatous Wars 1: Rebel Wing (26 page)

Read The Diatous Wars 1: Rebel Wing Online

Authors: Tracy Banghart

Tags: #Young Adult, #Romance, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Adventure

BOOK: The Diatous Wars 1: Rebel Wing
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Chapter 57

Aris was in
a white room, and the ceiling was glowing, and Galena’s torturer was standing over her, smiling.
Oh Gods.
She screamed, struggling wildly to escape, but her arms were trapped beneath the bright white sheets, and the lights above her glowed.

The man held his silver tool up to her face, drew it gently down her cheek so she could feel the cold metal against her skin. Her scream froze in her throat. She couldn’t breathe.

His smile widened as the tip of the weapon shot blue flame.

Everything went black.

And then she was blinking and gasping into the light of another blank room. A stranger sat beside her, stroking her hand.

“Where am I?” Her face burned, and her throat was raw.

“Quiet now. You’re at Revening. You’re safe,” the mender said. Only he wasn’t a stranger after all. She recognized his delicate face and graceful hands.

“Zaro.”

“Try not to speak. Your throat was damaged in the crash.”

“The crash?”

Zaro squeezed her hand, eyes narrowing in warning. “Yes, the crash. During your routine trip to Feln Stationpoint.”

Aris blinked. Was she still dreaming? None of that made any sense. She’d been nowhere
near
Feln.

“Where’s Milek?” she asked urgently.

Zaro sighed. “Major Vadim is in Ruslana, with the Ward. He waited a few days, to make sure you were well. But he had to go. You’ve been unconscious for some time.”

“That’s enough,” a gruff voice said.

Aris shifted her head, wincing at the pain in her throat. Commander Nyx stood behind Zaro. Without another word, the mender stood, spared Aris a small smile, and left the room.

Aris tensed automatically; she’d never seen Commander without snapping to attention. It felt
wrong
to just lie there, to not acknowledge his presence in some way. “Sir,” she whispered.

Commander Nyx didn’t sit. He placed a digitablet on her lap. “I’m going to need your signature before we leave.”

Aris raised her brows in question.

The Commander scowled. “It’s a statement saying that you have been working as a consultant for the Military sector through the Enviro office in Panthea. You were en route to Feln for a meeting when your wingjet crashed. If you deviate from this story in the press or in public in any way, you will be detained. Do you understand?”

“But it’s not true.” Aris shook her head and felt a twinge of pain in her shoulder. “I was part of the mission to save Ward Vadim.”

“Not officially. If you’d been Aristos, I’d be giving you a commendation right now. But as Aris, a woman, I have to bury your role in the rescue and deny any rumor of your involvement.”

Panic unfurled in her chest. “But I don’t have to be a woman. Only Major Vadim and Calix know. I can still be Aristos. Dianthe can make me another veil. Please—”

“When Major Vadim returned to Revening with you and the Ward, your true identity was exposed. Your crew and some of the menders recognized you. We were able to keep it from the media, but not the other soldiers on point. I’m sorry, Haan. As far as the Military is concerned, Aristos is dead.” Commander Nyx tapped the digitablet with one thick finger. “Now, you will sign this.”

Aris tried to keep her face blank, tried to be the soldier, but she couldn’t hold back the tears. They ran down her cheeks, stinging in some places, until her whole face was on fire. She
wasn’t
a soldier anymore. And, with Commander Nyx’s story, it’d be like she never had been. “Does Milek know?” she whispered. Surely he wouldn’t let this happen if he did?

The Commander didn’t answer.

Aris could hardly breathe. “Am I—does this mean I’m going to jail?”

The lines of his face remained unforgiving. “We received authorization to remove your Military brand.”
Like a criminal.
“For now, you’ll be going home, but if you reveal your involvement in Military or Ward Vadim’s rescue, you will be prosecuted. Do you understand?”

“But I helped save Ward Vadim.” Aris hadn’t expected to stay Aristos forever, but she didn’t realize she’d just be
erased
, her actions forgotten. “I was a good flyer. I helped people. Why do I have to lie?”

“Because there are no women in Military.” For a split second, Commander Nyx’s eyes softened. “And there never will be.”

Chapter 58

It was happening
again. Aris was in the white room, trapped beneath the sheets, and the blue fire was getting closer. Only this time it was held by one of the blank-faced Safaran soldiers she’d killed. His uniform was burnt away by solagun fire, his skin blackened and rotting. He smiled; he would enjoy exacting his revenge.

She struggled to get away, but strong hands held her down, shook her, and somewhere she heard a woman scream.

“Aris, Aris!” a voice from her childhood called to her.

She fought against the hands, fought against the sheets. The soldier was holding her down, and his eyes were so cold and black and
flat
they looked like doll’s eyes. Blank and inhuman.

She screamed again.

And then she was free, ripped from that barren white room and into her father’s arms. Her face burned, her throat was raw, and all she could do was gasp and cough as he held her, whispering her name over and over in her ear.

“I’m okay,” she murmured, staring over his shoulder at the half-open shades of her bedroom windows. The milky glow of Lux’s pathways painted the floor with silver. This was her bedroom. She was home.

Her father didn’t answer her, didn’t let go, and she realized he was crying.

“Father, I’m fine.” She wiped the tears from his cheek, wishing it were true. “It’s okay. Really.”

He leaned away from her, squeezing her shoulders once before letting go. There was so much pain in his face, etched in the furrow between his brows, the sagging skin beneath his eyes. It killed her. But he didn’t say anything, just kissed her forehead and left the room, his shoulders hunched and his steps dragging.

She swallowed; her throat still throbbed.

She slipped out of bed and pulled on black leggings and a short exercise tunic. The dim light coming through her windows was changing to the grayish gold of dawn.

After padding to the washroom, she splashed cool water on her face and stared at herself in the mirror, as she did each morning, hoping that by some magic her reflection had changed.

It never did.

Aris ran a tentative finger across the angry red rope of scar that began at her temple and slashed across the bridge of her nose to the opposite corner of her lips. There was no way to hide it, to hide from it. It had been weeks, and still the scar burned red.

Her hair had grown to a sleek dark cap; a little while longer and she’d have curls. She still caught herself running her hand across her head, surprised to feel soft hair, rather than smooth skin or the hitch of stubble.

She drew the neckline of her tunic up and tried to cover the fading yellow bruises that circled her neck. Zaro said her voice would never sound exactly as it had . . . the man had done lasting damage to her vocal chords when he’d tried to rip her throat out. Some days Aris pulled down the corner of her tunic to stare at the small red scar on her shoulder, where the solagun blast had burned clean through, but today she didn’t. It was just another reminder.

The only way she’d survive was to try to forget.

She turned away from the mirror and walked through the house, her feet quiet against the tile. The door to her parents’ bedroom was shut; her father had probably gone back to bed. She slipped from the house without a sound.

It didn’t take her long to descend the steep path to the beach. By the time the sun had risen above the village, she had run for miles, her bare feet sinking rhythmically into the sand. Already, the air that streamed against her face was warm and moist with humidity.

She knew her father didn’t mean to look at her the way he did, like she had died and was her own ghost, haunting him. But that didn’t make it easier to bear.

When she had arrived at her parents’ door, Commander Nyx made Gus and Krissa sign confidentiality agreements like the one she had signed. But he’d let her tell them the truth, or most of it anyway, that she’d been part of a search and rescue unit, disguised as Aristos. She wasn’t allowed to mention the Ward of Ruslana.

Her father had been so angry. “You mother and I thought you’d disowned us, that we’d never see you again. But this is so much worse. How could you do such a thing?”

And she had tried to explain. “I wanted to be with Calix,” she’d said, her voice still a hoarse whisper. “And then . . . that didn’t even matter anymore. I was happy as a flyer,Father. It fit. Like it was what I was supposed to do.”

But everything she said just made his face go redder. “You could have been killed, and for what? A stupid crush? Some misplaced act of rebellion?”

“It wasn’t about rebelling!” she responded, her own face heating up. “It was about doing the right thing. I saved lives, don’t you get that? What I did was
important
.”

“You think fighting in this war is important? Even the Ward of Ruslana is urging us to work with Safara. If we’d just give them what they want—”

Aris slammed a hand on the counter, rattling dishes and making her mother gasp. Her voice low, dangerous, she growled, “You don’t know what you’re talking about. You have no idea what Safara is capable of, how close they are to destroying this dominion. Stop talking about things you don’t understand!”

Her father’s jaw had dropped.

She had stomped away, slammed her bedroom door . . . and felt the thick swell of shame threaten to drown her. She’d never spoken to him that way before. She’d never been a violent person, never wanted to punch walls or slam doors. But she’d been Aristos for too long.

Aristos
wanted to tell Gus the whole truth, that he wasn’t just a flyer, but the flyer who’d helped save Ward Vadim. Only no one knew that Ward Vadim had needed saving. There’d been nothing on the news; Aris had no idea if the true Ward had resumed her place yet or not.

Aristos wanted to spar with Dysis, wanted to punch and weave and parry until he was too tired to think, too exhausted to care.

But
Aris
couldn’t do those things. So she ran instead. The irony. She never would have thought it possible, but running was the only thing that gave her any sense of freedom now. She pumped her arms harder, pushed herself faster as she flew along the beach.

And still her worries paced her, refusing to be left behind.

Calix had turned his back on her. Milek had disappeared. And she was a girl again. No longer a member of the Atalantan Military. No longer a flyer.

She had nothing.

She
was
nothing.

Every few days, Krissa pushed her to dust the groves, saying it would ease Gus’s mind. But Aris couldn’t fly anymore, not even to dust. Not even for her father.

The nightmares wouldn’t let her.

•••

When Aris returned to the house, her parents were in the great room watching the news vid with their breakfast. She could hear the murmur of the monitor in the distance, but no one called hello or came to meet her when the front door slid closed. She moved around the kitchen, fixing a cup of strong tea and rummaging in the foodsaver for leftover bread and cheese from dinner the night before.

Through the main arch, she could see a corner of the monitor and her mother’s knee. “Anyone need anything?” she called, on impulse.

“We’re fine, doll,” came her mother’s voice in response.

Aris bit off a chunk of bread, hoping that today her stomach would settle, today would be the day the nightmares wouldn’t follow her, when she heard the sound of something shattering.

Dropping the piece of bread, she ran to the main room.

Shards of glass glittered on the floor at her father’s feet, and a dark puddle of tea was spreading across the cream tile. But no one was looking at it or moving to clean up the mess.

Aris glanced at the monitor, the reporter’s voice jangling incoherently in her ears. She gasped.

The Ward of Ruslana—the fake Ward Vadim, Aris could tell, face devoid of any scarring—stood at a podium before the Council Building, but she wasn’t speaking because a host of soldiers in Ruslanan blue were swarming the stage. Behind her, Ward Nekos, his wife, Bett, and Ward Balias stood frozen. A number of other dignitaries were screeching in fear and struggling to escape into the audience of reporters.

“Pardon me,” the fake Ward was saying, obviously flustered. “There seems to be some sort of situation.” At first she seemed to think they were there to protect her. Even Ward Nekos stepped forward, surveying the crowd for danger. But then one of the men drew Ward Vadim’s arms behind her back and clapped restraints on her wrists. “Now
wait a minute
,” she said, her voice still amplified by the microspeaker on her lemon-yellow dress.

Aris watched, eyes wide.

“What the blighting hell is going on?” Gus asked, the worry thick in his voice. The puddle of tea was still spreading around his feet.

Another woman walked onto the stage, helped by a tall man with a thin scar that drew his lip into a sneer. Milek. Her heart lurched.

“Watch, Father.” Aris sank into a chair, eyes glued to the screen.

“People of Ruslana, you have been deceived,” the woman said, her microspeaker throwing her voice over the murmurs of the crowd. She turned to face the camera. It zoomed in on her red, disfigured face.

Krissa gasped.

“This woman is not who you believe her to be.” The woman with the wounded face walked to stand beside the Ward. “I am the real Galena Vadim, and as you can see, someone has gone to great pains to ensure that you never discovered this truth.”

The camera panned out, and Aris could see Milek again, his face grim with determination as he moved to flank the woman pretending to be his mother. She didn’t even seem to recognize him. The whispered exclamations and questions from reporters threatened to drown out what was happening on stage.

“This is ridiculous! How can you—I am just appalled. Where is my security?” The woman who looked like Galena sputtered and yelled, her voice carrying over the murmuring crowd. The real Galena reached up to the back of her double’s neck and released the device Aris knew she would find there.

Immediately, the woman’s features shimmered, melted, and reorganized themselves. She still looked a lot like Galena once had, but her nose was longer, her lips thinner, her cheeks gaunt. The crowd gasped.

There was a clatter and a thud as Ward Nekos’s wife threw herself forward, knocking over the podium in the process. She stood nose to nose with the real Galena. The camera zoomed in on her; she didn’t flinch, even that close to the Ward’s ravaged face. “How did you get free?” Bett hissed, moving as if to grab Ward Vadim’s arm. The crowd had quieted, and the microspeakers picked up every word.

Milek stepped forward and put himself between them.

“Why, Bett?” Ward Vadim asked.

Bett held on to her anger for a second longer and then, gradually, it bled from her face, leaving her eyes hollow. She buried her hands in the brilliant orange fabric of her dress. “It was for the good of the dominion. I’m sorry, Galena,” she whispered. “I’m sorry, but it was the only way.”

The crowd in front of the stage was silent, and Aris had the strange sense that she’d walked in on the rehearsal for a play. She wondered how long the cameras would be allowed to record the drama, when someone would remember that the world was watching.

Ward Nekos stepped in front of his wife. “What have you done?”

A shout cut through Bett’s reply. The fake Galena was fighting her restraints, trying to get away. Milek took Bett’s arm and nodded to Ward Vadim, then he and his soldiers led the captive women off the stage.

In a whisper, a reporter’s voice recounted the events that had unfolded: “It seems there was a plot to replace the Ward of Ruslana with a double using some kind of device. It’s unclear to what purpose, but one can gather it had something to do with the war. As we’re watching now it appears Ward Nekos’s wife was involved as she’s being led away . . .”

Ward Vadim again spoke over the crowd. “As the rightful Ward of Ruslana, I would like to announce a few policy changes, effective immediately.” She turned to stare at Ward Balias, who was standing still as a statue at the corner of the stage, that strange smile of his fixed in place. “First, I am reinstating all military and economic sanctions on the dominion of Safara.”

The crowd didn’t make a sound.

“Second, I am establishing a tribunal. I hereby formally charge Safaran operative, code name Elom, with war crimes against the Ward of Ruslana.”

In her mind’s eye, Aris saw the man’s black, pitiless eyes as he clutched at her throat. She swallowed, her hands shaking.
Elom
. Now she knew his name.

“And finally,” the Ward said, taking a deep breath, “I would like to pledge to Atalanta whatever Ruslanan military and economic support is necessary to defend the dominion, now and forever, from Safara.”

The news agents erupted with shouted questions.

Krissa tapped the panel on the table beside her chair, and the screen went blank. For a moment, the room hummed with silence.

Gus turned to Aris, as if somehow he thought she would have the answers. “What you said about Safara destroying us. Do you know something about this?”

She stared at him, her chest tight. She couldn’t stop herself from telling him the truth, not this time. “I helped save her. The real Ward. I helped Milek save her.”

His face was pale, his skin papery and creased with wrinkles. He looked so much older now than she remembered. Confusion and anguish warred in his eyes.

He opened his mouth. “I . . .”

“I’ll get a towel for that spill,” she said, and she fled the room.

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