“...That’s not funny, Ester.” Saphy tried to force a strained
laugh. But upon seeing Ester’s eyes, her reaction pointed
otherwise.
Saphy’s wide, hazel stare went blank. The playful light snuffed out
like a candle, replaced by something processing, stuttering. Her lips
quivered, as if they had a mind of their own. The silence pressed
down on Ester like water, filling her lungs while she waited for
Saphy’s response.
“So...when you first arrived at the dorm…”Saphy took a step
back from the bed. “The way you looked…”
“I had just been released from the Geneevan dungeons in the
capital...They gave me a choice.” Ester shifted forward. Saphy
moved back another step.“Rot down there, or become a weapon for the
Church.”
“B-but the way they described the murder.” Each word made Ester
flinch. “You him. They say when they
found......you were in a pool of his own blood, his face
unrecognisable. You caused so much shame your family was made an
example of. Your father..first, then your mother...They died.”
Saphy’s voice climbed. “How could you?”
There it was. The final nail.
Not because Saphy accused her. Not because the words cut—they
did—It was the look. The same look the instructors wore. The same
one in Jacen’s eyes. Even Saphy couldn’t hide it now. Like she
wasn’t
“How could I?” Ester’s jaw worked around each syllable. “How
could
Saphy’s eyebrows pulled together. “What do you-?”
“HOW COULD THEY ALL..!”
The shout tore out of her. Ester, who had always internalised
everything from everyone, found herself unable to stop it from
escaping her. Or the tears that came with it. “How could they all
treat me like that…” Her voice splintered into something sharp
and small, breaking between breaths.
Saphy who had been slowly trying to reach the door, stopped. “What
are you about?”
Ester dragged air into her lungs. Once. Twice. “My mother. My
father.” The next words like a bad taste in her mouth. “My
uncle.”
“Your Uncle?” Saphy’s face twisted into something between
disbelief and horror. “An Archon candidate...And you killed him.”
The phrasing was supposed to show how stupid what she did was. “Why?”
Ester just shook her head. “He wasn’t a good man, Saphy.”
Ester’s gaze drifted sideways to the wall, the closets, anywhere
else. “He didn’t leave me a choice.”
“He didn’t leave you a choice!” Saphy gestured around the whole
room as if it all made sense now. Her scoff cut through the newly
furnished room. “Do you hear yourself Ester? Who’re you to decide
someone’s fate?”
Ester had asked herself similar questions in the dark. In the
dungeons. In the nightmares where she would see her parents. Standing
there, with Saphy’s righteous anger filling the space between them,
amidst all the sadness and pain, she felt something crack open. Was
it relief? Gratitude?
Finally there was a voice who, for once wasn’t her own.
If you spot this narrative on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.
“If not me, another girl would have.” The smile crept across
Ester’s face like a thief. Too calm. Too smooth. Too wrong. “I
just happened to be the one chosen to give him what he deserved.”
Saphy, who had still been backing toward the door, stumbled as her
heel caught the leg of the table. She stumbled, steadied herself.
“Why would you say that…” Saphy’s fire gutted out.
“He paid my parents for their silence. Paid them while he tried
to...have his way with me.” A laugh bubbled up from somewhere
hollow. It rattled in the air. “And do you know what they did? They
took the money! They let him.” The smile pulled tighter. “Isn’t
that funny?”
Saphy’s shoulders hit the door. “How is that funny?” Her voice
a whisper.
Ester turned back. Their eyes met, a manic glint in Ester’s.
Saphy jerked away like she’d been struck. It was the sound of
Ester’s tears dropping onto the floor that she realised what she
had shown Saphy. The side she wanted to bury.
Her mouth opened. Nothing came.
Saphy’s hand found the latch, fumbling with it. She wrenched the
door open, it swung inward, forcing her to step aside, and fled into
the corridor. The door slammed behind her, hard enough Ester winced
from it.
Ester stared at the closed door. Then at the white table Saphy had
stumbled into. Then she turned and collapsed onto her bottom bunk,
pulling the stiff sheets for a hug. They smelled of harsh soap and
nothing else, no history, no previous occupants. Just the chemical
clean of Church funded things. She was fucked. Any moment now Saphy
would tell someone. Tell someone that she was room mates with a
murdering maniac. But the question was, who would it be? An
instructor? A guard? One of the students? It was the first full day
and she was already hollowed out.
The book lay on the thin mattress where she’d left it. Might as
well, she thought. It was just getting good.
But her eyes wouldn’t focus. Outside, beyond the window a few paces
from the bed, the sun bled gold across the sky, then amber, then the
bruised purple of dusk. Voices drifted up from the grounds below,
laughter, shouting, the ordinary sounds of people who hadn’t killed
anyone. The lamp on the cabinet flickered. She turned pages without
reading them, the words incoherent to her. The room was too quiet,
all except her breathing and the whisper of pages and the occasional
question circling back, again and again.
Who’re
you to decide someone’s fate?
She’d reached chapter thirty-five when the door creaked.
Her heart lurched into her throat. Saphy stood silhouetted in the
doorway, alone, before closing the door behind her. Her eyes were
rubbed raw and red in the lamp’s light. Ester’s hands went numb.
She sat up too fast, the book tumbling from her lap onto the floor
with a flat smack.
This, she decided, was worse than her uncle.
“Saphy...I-”
Saphy shook her head. Her gaze stayed pinned to the table, to
anything but Ester.
“To be in that situation..” Her voice came out raspy. “With
your family. And to end up in those dungeons. Alone…” Slowly, she
lifted her eyes, and they were glassy, swollen. “It wasn’t easy,
was it?”
Something lodged itself in Ester’s throat. She wanted to tell her
everything, how she’d needed someone, , to understand.
To not paint her in the shapes of their worst nightmares. To say it
was okay, even if it wasn’t, even if it never would be.
Nothing came out. Just tears, hot and stinging, welling up faster
than she could blink them away.
“It wasn’t.” The words barely made it past her lips. “I tried
to tell myself it had to happen. That there was no other choice. It
was me or them. And now...”Her voice fractured. “And now…”
Saphy crossed the room, footsteps quiet. She hesitated when she
reached the bed, close enough that Ester could see her hands
trembling. Then she sat on the edge of the bottom bunk and pulled
Ester into her arms.
She smelled like night air and salt and something floral. Ester
pressed her face into Saphy’s shoulder and came apart. The room
stayed silent around them, just new emptiness holding their grief.
A knock at the door shattered it.
Both of them jerked apart. A maid with a stern, pinched face pushed
the door open without waiting for an answer, took one look at them,
eyes red, faces wet, sitting too close on the bed, and her cheeks
flushed.
“The train will depart shortly…” She cleared her throat, gazing
at anywhere in the room. “Please be ready before then.”
Then she was gone, door clicking shut behind her. Off to the next
room.
Saphy pulled back, avoiding eye contact after the misconception.
“We need to get our dresses. For the Banquet.”
The Starless
Banquet! Ester blinked. How had
she forgotten? Was she ever told about it?
“From where?”
Saphy’s face darkened.
“The capital.”

