Authors: Ewing,Amy
“Raven?” I gasp.
“Violet!”
“Raven!” I cry louder, pushing my way through the crowd toward the sound of her voice. Raven's boldness inspires other girls, and more names are shouted.
“Fawn!” the girl searching for her sister yells.
“Scarlet!”
“Ginger!”
The crowd of surrogates begins to writhe, like a many-headed monster, rippling and stretching, shoving and elbowing and tripping over one another; I shout Raven's name as loud as I can, and then there she isâI throw myself into her, wrapping my arms around her familiar form.
“Are you all right?” she asks.
“I'm all right, are youâ”
Suddenly, gunshots rip through the air, the Regimentals firing their rifles to subdue the crowd. We all skitter together, like a herd of deer, quiet and tense. I clutch Raven's hand.
“How is the palace of the Lake?” Raven asks. “Does the Duchess treat you well?”
“I . . . I don't know. She hit me. But then she gave me a cello. And the food is great.” Raven laughs, and I smile. “What about the Countess of the Stone?”
She snorts. “No. I don't think the Countess and I are going to get along very well.”
“Why? What do you mean?”
“Don't worry about me, Violet.” Raven's lips curve into a wicked grin. “I'm going to make her rue the day she bought me.”
“Raven, don't,” I plead. I love my best friend's courage, but this isn't like pulling some prank at Southgate. “She could hurt you.”
“Yeah. I know.” Raven's gaze turns oddly distant. “Have you seen a doctor yet?”
“No.”
“You will. And then you'll see.” A muscle twitches in Raven's jaw. Then she sighs. “Or maybe not. Maybe the Duchess is different. But the Countess is . . . there's something
wrong
with her, Violet.”
“Raven, you're scaring me,” I say.
Raven squeezes my hand. “I'll be fine. Don't worry about me.”
I'm about to protest when another volley of gunshots explodes into the airâthe royal women begin to trickle out of the palace.
“I don't want to leave you,” I whisper to Raven.
“Me neither.” She smiles bravely. “But we'll see each other again. Founding Houses, right?”
“Right,” I say, trying to sound more confident than I feel. Women begin collecting their surrogates, reattaching the bracelets to their wrists and leading the leashed girls to motorcars.
“She can't see me talking to you,” Raven says, stiffening. The Countess of the Stone, her enormous figure easily recognizable, is making her way down the stairs. Then my hand is empty, as Raven melts into the sea of black veils.
“So,” the Duchess says, suddenly appearing at my side. She unfastens the bracelet and puts it back on her own wrist. “Were you well-behaved?”
“Yes, my lady,” I mutter, keeping my eyes down.
“Good. We're going home.”
T
HE FOREST IS A BLUR OUTSIDE THE MOTORCAR WINDOW.
My mind races to try and make sense of what Raven said. What is happening to her in the House of the Stone? What did the doctor do?
“Did you see someone you know?”
The Duchess's voice scatters my thoughts.
“Outside the Palace,” she continues. “Did you see someone you know? You seem unsettled.”
I try to keep my face smooth.
“No, my lady,” I say.
Her mouth twitches, like she's fighting a smile. “You really are an appalling liar.” She pulls the hatpin out of her hair, removing the pillbox hat and placing it on her knees. “You can lift that veil now. Our mourning period is over.”
Gratefully, I pull the lace back off my face. “Who were we mourning, my lady?”
The Duchess traces the corner of her mouth with a long finger. “The Electress's surrogate died yesterday morning.”
The world crumples, all the breath knocked out of me like I've been punched in the stomach. Dahlia. She's talking about Dahlia.
“You saw her, remember? At dinner. Such a tiny thing. Let us hope Her Royal Grace is more careful in the future. Title does not protect you from everything.”
I can't speak. I can't think. Dahlia was so young . . . she was so small . . .
“How?” I breathe, my lips barely able to form the word.
The Duchess smiles to herself. “I've always found it . . . humbling, how one tiny drop of plant extract can completely destroy a human being. We are so fragile, aren't we? One little sip of wine and then . . . nothing. Life is so easily snuffed out.”
My head pounds as I grasp what she's saying. “Why?”
The Duchess raises an eyebrow. “The Electress seems to have forgotten that
I
have been around much longer than she has.
I
am descended from one of the four founding Houses, not some shopkeeper in the Bank. She thought she could change the rules. She is a disgrace to the throne, and an embarrassment to her title, and yesterday she learned that
no one
is untouchable.” She glances at my dumbstruck face and her mouth curls into a smirk. “Welcome to the Jewel.”
UNCORRECTED E-PROOFâNOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
..................................................................
W
HEN WE ARRIVE BACK AT THE PALACE,
A
NNABELLE IS
waiting to take me to my chambers.
The Duchess removes the leash, and I cringe away from her hands, so close to my neck, from the scent of her perfume, from the looming figures of her guard. Everything feels oddly distorted. Unreal. I follow Annabelle up the curving staircase in a daze.
Dahlia is dead. The Duchess
killed
Dahlia.
I am owned by a murderer.
With a shock, I realize it could have been me. The Electress bid on me. It could have been my body being mourned by the black-clad royalty.
I can't make sense of the Duchess's motivations. Dahlia's only failing was being bought by the Electress. Wasn't it?
By thе time we reach my drawing room, anger has usurpеd the numb disbeliеf. I push past Annabelle and into my bedroom, tearing thе veil out of my hair and throwing it on the ground, ignoring thе sharp pain as a fеw hairs come away with it. Without pausing, I storm through my powder room and into my drеssing chambеr, fighting to unzip the black dress. Annabеlle movеs to hеlp mе.
“No,” I say, pushing hеr away with more forcе than I'd intеndеd. “I don't want your help. I don't want any of this!”
The zippеr rips, and the sound is so enticing, I rip it furthеr. It fеels good, to dеstroy somеthing of hеrs, in her own housе.
And I havе thrеe closets, full of her clothes.
I charge to onе and throw the door opеn, grabbing a beaded dress and tearing it along its seam, sеnding a thousand multicolored bеads cascading to the floor. I toss it aside and grab another, ripping at its lace slеeves, scratching at its silkеn skirtsâI want to slash through the entire closet, mangling all thе stupid frilly, lacy, silky, ruffled dressеs, tеaring them to ribbons, shredding thеm apart until thеre's nothing left.
Tеars are pouring down my chееks, my brеath coming out in aching gasps, and I rеalize I sound uttеrly pathеtic, hеlpless, like a child. I sink onto thе pile of velvеt and bеaded lacе and crinolinе and cloth-of-gold and satin and I wish, morе than anything, for my mother. I want hеr to wrap hеr arms around mе, to envelop me in the reassuring scеnt of her skin, and tеll me that everything will be okay.
The vеlvet chokеr is still tied around my neck, and I scratch at it, my fingers clumsy, but I want to get it off. I fеel a sting as one of my nails piеrces the skin on my neck, but I don't care.
A small hand wraps around minе, holding it still. There is a slight tug and thе vеlvet falls off.
Annabellе strokеs my hair, gently cradling my head so that it rеsts in her lap. I look up at hеr palе, frеcklеd face.
“Shе's dеad,” I say, my voicе a cracked whisper. A fat tеar leaks from the cornеr of my еye and tricklеs down thе sidе of my face into my hair.
Annabеllе nods, and in that nod, I know shе knows. That's why her mood was so tense this morning.
“Her name was Dahlia.” It's suddеnly important to me that Annabеlle know that Dahlia was a person, not just some nameless surrogatе casualty. “She was from Northgatе. She waited with me in the room bеfore the Auction. Shе was . . . she was kind, she . . .”
But my voice trails off, more tеars spilling down my cheeks, and Annabеllе rocks me tendеrly back and forth, on thе pile of dressеs.
I
REFUSE TO LEAVE MY BEDROOM THE NEXT DAY.
I won't get drеssеd just bеcausе the Duchеss wants mе to. I won't bе a pretty little doll that shе can prop up and bring around with her to show off, knowing that someonе could kill mе for it.
The thought splintеrs insidе mе like icе cracking, cold and sharp. Somеonе could kill me. I think about the dinner, the way the womеn werе divided, and with a shudder, I realize the Duchеss is outnumbered. The Electress, the Countess of the Stone, or the Duchess of the Scales could all be plotting my death at this very moment.
Something has to be done. I can't just sit here and wait to be murdered.
Annabelle tries to get me to eat, or to play Halma, or use my cello, but every time I send her away. I don't want to enjoy anything this palace has to offer me. Dahlia is dead. Something is happening to Raven, something bad, but I don't know what and I don't know how to stop it. I think about the pregnant surrogate, her wide eyes, her thin face, the way she cradled her swollen belly with such tenderness. I don't want that. I don't want to be her.
I'd rather be breaking my back in the Farm or choking on soot and ash in the Smoke. I'd happily work as a scullery maid in the Bank, scouring dishes until my hands turned red and raw. But all the paths my life could have taken vanished with one blood test.
I remember the wild girl, whose execution I witnessed. Maybe she had the right idea. Maybe she knew it, and that's why she wasn't frightened at the end. “This is how it begins,” she said. I wonder if she saw death as just another way to freedom.
I think until my brain hurts and my eyes are sore, but I can't think myself out of this room, or this palace, or this ruthless, glittering circle. When I finally fall asleep, I dream of Southgate, and Raven, and a time when the royalty were nothing more than pictures in a glossy magazine.
T
HE FOLLOWING MORNING,
I
AM WOKEN ABRUPTLY BY
the covers on my bed being thrown back.
“Annabelle!” I complain as the cold air stings my bare legs. But it isn't Annabelle who is standing over me.
It's the Duchess.
“Get up,” she orders. Annabelle hovers in the doorway, her expression both panicked and pleading. I consider mutiny, but defying the Duchess isn't like defying Annabelle.
Quickly and silently, I climb out of bed and stand in front of her. Even though she is shorter than me, power emanates from her small frame.
“Sit,” she says, pointing to an armchair. “We are going to have a talk, you and I.”
Her eyes flicker to Annabelle, who curtsies and closes the door, leaving the two of us alone.
I perch on the edge of the armchair. The Duchess sits on the sofa, studying me.
“There are two schools of thought concerning surrogates,” she says. “One is that your personalities are a hindrance, detrimental to the development of the fetus. The other is that they are an asset, a useful tool in creating the optimal child. Fortunately for you, I am of the second school. Therefore, I will require your cooperation during our time together. I am not an idiotâI do not expect your love, and I am certainly not your mother. But we are in a partnership, you and I. The Jewel can be a wonderful and terrible place. I expect you'd prefer the former to the latter.”
I stare at her blankly, unsure of exactly what she's asking of me.