Pen tries grating the twine against the heel of her shoe. The water room has been her only complaint. No mention of her own parents, who are undoubtedly worried by now. Her needy mother, and her stern father. I think she’s trying to spare my feelings.
After a few minutes, she gives her arms a rest and leans back. “Thomas is probably writing bad poetry about my absence by now,” she says. “‘My lovely Pen / Disappeared from maps / Eaten by a deer perhaps.’”
Neither of us is in the mood for laughing at her joke.
“What do you suppose he thinks happened to me?” she says. “Let’s play twenty guesses.”
This is a game we made up when we were children. It began one day when I lost my shoe playing dress-up at her house and we began guessing what had happened to it, each guess more absurd than the one before.
“He thinks you really were eaten by a deer,” I say.
“He thinks my mother swallowed me whole like one of her pills,” she says.
The candle goes out.
My eyes struggle to adapt, but the blackness is perfect. Pen pushes herself against me and fits her head into the curve of my neck. Her curls have gone frizzy and flat, but they still smell lovely, as though to defy the musty air of this room.
“He thinks you built a machine and sailed into the sky,” I say.
“That’s a good one,” she says. “Let’s stop now. I’ll never top that.”
Neither of us speaks after that. We stay close together, tensing at each sound we think we hear. Waiting.
We hear the latches sometime after the ninth chime. Pen draws a sharp breath, waking from a frail sleep.
The door opens with a slow creak, candlelight stealing through the gap.
Princess Celeste is alone this time, holding a silver tray in one hand and a flame lantern in the other.
“I’ve brought grapes,” she says, setting the tray on the ground and nudging it toward us. “And I figured the candle would have gone out, so I’ve got a new one.
Pen and I say nothing. The princess raises her eyebrow. I think she was expecting us to move away from the sconce so she could replace the candle. When we don’t, she takes several tentative steps toward us, touches the new candle to the flame in her lantern, and then sets the candle into place.
She jumps away from us as though we’ll bite. Her skirt swishes against my knee and for a moment I feel the cool purple silk. She’s wearing a plum uniform; plum is a game that involves rackets spun with twine and a ball the size of a plum that gets hit back and forth.
Now I realize that the twine binding our wrists is probably from a plum racket.
She stands back, staring at us. When she puts her hands on her hips, I see the perspiration marks under her arms, indicating she has just finished a rigorous game.
“Well?” she says. “Aren’t you going to eat?”
“We don’t want your poison grapes, thanks,” Pen says. “But a water room would be nice.”
The princess gnaws her lip, cants her head. “Oh, a water room. I hadn’t thought about that. I’ve never had hostages before. I kept a rabbit hidden in my bathtub for a while, once. It just went where it pleased.”
“We aren’t rabbits,” Pen says.
“Right. Well, if you eat the grapes, you can use the bowl to—you know.”
I try to see what’s beyond the semi-open door. I can see no daylight and no lanterns, nothing but blackness. We’re hidden so deep in the clock tower that there aren’t even lights to guide the way.
Basil must be frantic. Being unable to reach him is impossibly frustrating. I can only hope he doesn’t think the king has succeeded in murdering me. Not that being right under the king’s nose is much safer.
The prince enters, out of breath, in his plum uniform, a ring of sweat around the collar. “I told you not to come here without me,” he says, grabbing the princess by the arm and pulling her away from us. “What if they overpowered you?”
“And what would you have done to protect me?” she says. “You can’t even shoot a dart properly.”
They turn their backs to us, talking softly, stealing glances at us over their shoulders. Pen squirms uncomfortably. I don’t know how she can manage it; I’m so stiff that even the thought of moving is painful.
“You,” the prince says, turning to Pen. “Come with me.”
I don’t know what this means. I don’t know if he’s going to let her go or try to kill her. She must be thinking the same thing because she doesn’t move, instead looks at me.
The prince grabs her arm, yanks her to her feet. Her legs have gone numb and she stumbles. “It would be unwise to scream, either of you,” he says. “It’s an old building. Voices carry. We’re the nicest people you’re likely to encounter. Maybe you were clever enough to get your hands in front of you, but you’re no match for the people a scream will summon.”
Pen jerks away when he tries to touch her hair. Her lips are pursed and I think she’s going to scream just because she was told not to, but she doesn’t. As he drags her toward the door, she looks back at me and mouths, “I’ll be fine.”
The door closes. My heart pounds. Breathing gets harder. The princess stands at an arm’s length, twisting her hips, her skirt swishing over her knees.
“He took her to the water room,” she says. “The only danger she’s in would come from the filth of that place. It’s positively archaic. It used to all be holdings for prisoners down here.”
“It still is,” I say.
She smirks. “True, isn’t it?” she says.
I don’t understand why she’s trying to make conversation. The king’s children are isolated from society and have never set foot in the academy unless it was to make a political appearance with their father, but is she so lonely as to try to make friends with me?
“We haven’t decided what to do with you yet,” she says. “But …”
She hesitates. After a moment, she removes the bowl of grapes and kneels on the tray like it’s a seat. She doesn’t want to sully her clothes.
“Our father warned us about your family,” she says. “Your brother is a jumper.”
“There are plenty of families with jumpers,” I say.
“Not families that know the way to the ground.”
“There is no way to the ground,” I say.
“Liar,” she says. “There’s a machine that can do it. My father is going to find it, you know. He’s going to destroy it, because that’s what the god of the sky would have him do. And he’ll destroy your brother and everyone else involved with it, too, for treason.”
“Then what do you need me for?” I say, not hiding my anger. “Why kill anyone if he’s just going to destroy the machine?”
“So you admit it.” She’s smiling, her teeth perfect and white. “There really is a machine that could bring us to the ground safely.”
“I didn’t say that.”
“There is. You’ve seen it. You know.”
Her eyes brighten, but there’s nothing maniacal or cruel in them. Worse, there’s hope.
25
There’s majesty in the ability to create. Look at an artist’s hands—sullied by colors. Powerful and strange.
—“Intangible Gods,” Daphne Leander, Year Ten
PEN RETURNS WITH COMPLAINTS THAT THE prince was trying to spy on her while she used the water room, but she’s otherwise unscathed.
“If that isn’t the silliest thing I’ve heard today,” the princess says, helping me to my feet. “If it were a boy in the water room, maybe he’d spy then.”
“Leste!” he cries.
“You’re more interested in my betrothed than I am,” she says. “His cheekbones—Honestly.” She takes the lantern from her brother and pushes me toward the door. For the first time, I’m able to see the stairwell that brought me here, but it’s all I’m able to see on the way to and from the water room, which isn’t even a fitting name because it has no running water and is little more than a hole in the ground.
 
; But I’m still thinking about the prince being attracted to his sister’s betrothed. Could the decision makers have done something wrong? Is his own betrothed not appealing to him? Is he irrational? The prince isn’t the first to be attracted to his own gender; although it isn’t talked about, I remember my brother denouncing the serum and the surgery purported to treat this kind of attraction. Even before Alice’s forced termination procedure, there were elements of medicine that he despised.
“Oh, your wrists are so red,” the princess says as she’s guiding me back to my prison. “The twine will do that, I suppose.”
I say nothing. I can hear footfalls above me, and doors closing and opening. People going about their business, believing I’m dead because of tainted pharmaceuticals. Unaware of the king’s sour practices, the corruption in his reign, and the absurdity of his children.
All of it leaves an ache in my chest. I consider running. The princess doesn’t appear to be armed. But my hands are still tied, and I can’t leave Pen besides.
My only hope is that Judas saw us being taken. And even if he doesn’t care enough to pursue us himself, he’ll tell Basil. Basil will come for me. The alternative would be living the rest of his life alone. I would try to save him if it were the other way around.
Though I’d be sour that he left me while I was sleeping, without so much as a note of explanation, which is what I did to him.
I wasn’t thinking rationally when I left him. Looking back, it’s all a haze of grief that overtook me. It made the craziest ideas seem possible. It made logic as far away as a beige patch of the ground.
The princess stops us walking. She holds the lantern up between us, and she looks at me with the eyes of all the princesses and queens in the history book. Eyes as old as Judas the Hero and Micah’s boat of stars. She is ancient and profound, and she has Internment fascinated, copying her hair and her clothing in an attempt to understand.
She looks at me now the way the whole floating city looks at her—hoping for some sort of answer she’ll never have.
“You can tell me,” she whispers. “What does the machine look like? Smell like?”
“Smell?” I say.
“I want a full sensory experience,” she says. “I imagine it smells like freshly printed paper and old coins.”
It smells like mold, though old coins isn’t inaccurate. But I don’t tell her this.
“There is no machine,” I say.
“Last night when you were talking to your friend, you said ‘I wasn’t even supposed to come out.’ Why would you have said that if you hadn’t been hiding in the machine?”
“I was being general,” I say. “It wasn’t safe for me to be outside, and clearly we can both see why.”
She truly doesn’t understand. She spends her life hidden away in this tower with her private instructors and her plum uniform and her braided crown. Her mother and father are alive. I hate her for that. I hate her in a way no princess in a tower can ever understand.
“There is no machine,” I repeat. She can rot here.
The hope hasn’t left her face. I don’t know what it will take to kill it, but if I’m going to be trapped here, I’ll have time to think up ways.
The door opens and the prince says, “What is taking so long?” He’s still angry about his sister’s jab.
I slump back to the ground beside Pen, hoping our captors hear the rumble in our stomachs. We don’t touch the grapes.
If we refuse to eat, maybe it’ll make them nervous and they’ll consider letting us go so we don’t starve to death. Though, given their oblivion, it isn’t likely they’ll notice.
The clock begins its set of ten chimes. “We should just kill the blond one,” the prince says, perhaps thinking we won’t hear him over the noise.
“Don’t be a dolt,” the princess says. “She might know something, too.”
Pen leans closer to me. “If they’re going to kill me,” she whispers, “I wish they’d be quicker about it.”
“Don’t say that.”
The prince makes a gesture to his sister like slicing a throat, and though Pen’s tactic has been to appear unfazed, this is more than I can stand.
“There is a machine,” I say, just as the tenth chime is finishing.
The duo looks at me, stunned.
“I’ve seen it, that’s true. I’ve ridden in it. I’ve been to the ground and back.”
The prince is the first to break his hopeful gaze. He narrows his eyes. “Impossible.”
“More than once,” I say. “Lots of us have gone.”
“Half a dozen trips, at least,” Pen says, playing along. “I can’t believe it’s gone on under your noses and you never suspected a thing. I’d have thought you’d be more clever than that.”
“We’re clever,” the prince snaps.
“Very,” the princess agrees. “I knew the whole while, didn’t I, Az? I’ve said it plenty of times.”
“You can’t be the children of the king and be stupid, you know,” the prince says.
“Clearly,” Pen mutters through gritted teeth.
The prince and princess turn their backs to us in tandem, begin speaking quietly to each other, glancing back at us more than once.
“Where is it, then?” the princess finally asks. “The machine.”
“That is the question,” I say, looking right into her eyes. “Isn’t it?”
“We don’t disclose our secrets to kidnappers,” Pen says.
The princess opens her mouth, but a voice echoes down the stairwell. “Celeste? Azure? You aren’t playing down there, are you? You know what your mother said.”
The prince looks to his sister, panicked. “Our instructor can’t know we’re down here,” he says. “She can’t find them.” He points at us.
“We’ll go out the other way,” she assures him. “We’ll make like we were outside.” She points to me as she’s backing out of the room. “This isn’t over, you. I’ll have my answers if I have to crack your head open and take them out myself.”
She’s still pointing when she closes the door.
“She has a way with words,” Pen says, now that we’re alone. “A bit stupid, though. Does she not realize secrets aren’t actual things sitting in our heads?”
But I’m not thinking about the princess now. I’m thinking about that voice that called down the stairwell.
“That was the specialist,” I say. “The woman the prince called their instructor—that was Ms. Harlan.”
“Are you sure?” Pen says. “You’re probably dehydrated. Maybe you’re imagining things.”
“No,” I say. “You don’t forget the voice of the woman who poisoned you.”
“Yesterday you were just a sweet schoolgirl,” Pen says. “Now everyone wants you dead. I’m a little jealous of your intrigue.”
“They want you dead, too,” I remind her.
“You think?” She beams.
I see where the twine has made her skin raw, and despite her verve I know she’s as miserable as I am, and as frightened. It’s selfish of me, but I’m glad I’m not alone.
“Why did we tell them there’s a machine?” she says.
“They won’t kill us if they want our secrets. I was hoping to buy us some time.”
After a pause, she says, “Morgan?”
“Yes?”
“What are we waiting for? We can’t stay at the mercy of those two. They’re insane.”
“Basil will come for me,” I say. “Maybe Judas, too. He was hiding when we were taken. He must have seen.”
“No,” she says. “We’re on our own.”
“He’ll come,” I say, forcing myself to believe it.
“He won’t know where to find us. Morgan, look at me. Nobody is going to come. We are on our own.”
I want to argue, but I know she’s right. I think I’ve always known. Basil will try, and maybe Judas will try. But they won’t know to find us in this strange dungeon and they won’t be able to reach us. We have to free ourselve
s. “Then what do we do?”
“I say we knock them out,” Pen says. “Push them, maybe. Or I could get behind one of them and use this twine to strangle them.”
There are many ways this could go wrong, but is it any more dangerous than waiting? With dread, I accept that her plan makes more sense than mine.
“Nothing that violent,” I say. “We can’t just lunge blindly at them. We have to think it out. For starters, we have to make sure they don’t have any syringes or blades on them.”
“The prince might,” she admits. “He seems the paranoid sort. Then again, the princess likes to be in control of situations. She probably still has your knife.”
She sees my crestfallen expression and hooks her arms over my shoulders and brings her forehead to mine. “Let’s make a promise,” she says. “To be brave and go for it. We can plan it as best we can, and if it goes horribly wrong, we keep trying until we’re free or they stab us. Maybe even after they stab us.”
“If we can keep moving, we move,” I say.
“And not leave each other behind,” she says.
“I promise.”
“I promise, too.”
And in hushed voices we begin planning our mutiny.
It will have to be when they come to check on us next, likely tonight, we decide. We’ll ambush them and try to buy a few seconds so we can lock them in while we make our escape.
The princess mentioned a back entrance so that their instructor wouldn’t see them sneak outside. We’ll look for that first, and if we can’t find it, we’ll hope the main floor of the clock tower is empty after dark. There may be patrolmen; we’ll have to risk it. My brother and Judas made it seem as though many of the patrolmen are secretly opposing the king; it’s too much to hope that we’ll encounter some of them and they’ll let us go.
Pen continues trying to saw through the twine that binds her wrists. But even when she finds a bit of protruding brick to work with, it does no good. “Definitely good stuff for strangling,” she says. “I would say I could lure the prince over to me by flirting, but it doesn’t seem that would work, does it? Given his preference.”
“We can’t kill them,” I say.
Perfect Ruin (Internment Chronicles, Book 1) Page 21