all the time.â
âThis?â she says, motioning to herself, then the room around us. âWhat you see? Itâs not even close to reality. Stop trusting your eyes and start listening to your heart. It sees more than you ever will.â
âHeart...as in emotions?â Troika is usually more concerned about law.
âHeart, as in spirit. The real you.â
Thatâs just it. Who am I? Ten? Or soul-fused with someone else?
My mom once speculated about my âother half.â With the way Myriad is acting, she said, it must be someone powerful .
How do you know Iâm Fused? I remember asking.
Everyone is Fused with someone, sweet girl. Itâs a way to give those who originally signed with Troika a second chance...a way to give those who signed with Myriad a chance to win more souls.
Before all this, I was pro-Myriad all the way. The fairy tales she wove about an enchanted land where daylight never intrudes and the royal ball never winds down, where candlelit castles are standard housing, and marrying a prince is a very real possibility, enthralled me.
The dirty little secret I kept from her? A part of me has always been Troi-curious.
Is the realm poverty-stricken? Does sunlight always glare? Are the homes basically cardboard boxes? Or is the sun bright and glorious, offering comforting warmth? Does the sweet scent of wildflowers saturate the air?
My (former) TL told me deception is Myriadâs greatest weapon. The hungry wolf hidden by a lambâs skin. I havenât heard from him since my incarceration.
To my parentsâ consternation, itâs illegal to prevent a Laborer from speaking with a potential candidate if said candidate is willing. No matter the Laborerâs realm.
Iâd mostly ignored my TL, not wanting to cause trouble at home...until a friend admitted sheâd signed with Troika. In a moment of startling clarity, Iâd realized we wereâfor all intents and purposesâenemies. I would be expected to excise her from my life. Even hate her.
Iâd wanted to know why. So I risked chastisement at long last, going to a Troikan center, where humans in need of aid could request a meeting with a TL.
Before we parted, the TL assigned to me asked me a question that cracked through a hard outer shell I hadnât known Iâd erected.
Are you living your parentsâ dream...or your own?
Iâd scoffed at him then, but that night and every one after, Iâd wondered... Why do I believe what I believe? What is truth and what is lie? What is real? What makes me right and so many others wrong? What if Iâm wrong?
The wily bastard had planted seeds of doubt in the rich soil of my brain, and the more I searched for answers, the more those seeds were watered...the stronger they grew. Now the leaves are so thick I canât see past them.
If Iâm Fused, Iâm not me. Iâm part of someone else. Or several someone elses. But if I am me, I alone am responsible for my problems. Who wants to suck that badly?
But the thing I wonder most? Do I have a set fate, or can I change it? In other words...can I mess it up worse?
chapter four
âWhat is isnât always whatâs supposed to be.â
âTroika
I watch him. At lunch and dinner that day, I watch Killian. When he talks to girls, he seems utterly absorbed in the conversation, as if every word spoken is a secret he has to know. And the girls eat it up. He makes them feel special, I can tell. They preen for him. But those girls...they arenât special to him. I can tell that, too.
Heâs too aware of the world around him, his hand never far from his pocket, as if he has a weapon hidden inside. As if he expects to be ambushed at any moment. As if he wants to be ambushed.
Anytime the girl looks away from himâwhich isnât oftenâhis gaze finds me. He winks. He knows Iâm watching him, and he wants me to know he knows.
His confidence lends him an aura of
Stendhal, Horace B. Samuel