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Triads of faith

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“Then why have we only noticed it now?” He waved his hand at the screen where the images had been. “Hundreds of them, standing out in the open as if they have nothing better to do. Waiting to have their pictures taken. ” He folded his arms on top of the table, watching as uncertain expressions turned toward him. “Queen Levana wanted us to see her spook army. She wanted us to take notice. ”

“You think she’s trying to threaten us?” said Prime Minister Kamin.

finch shut his eyes, seeing the rows of beasts fresh in his mind. “No. I think she’s trying to threaten me. ”

Chapter Twenty-Seven

THE HOVER RUMBLED TO A STOP OUTSIDE THE QUARANTINE. Nora flew out of the side hatch and immediately reeled back, covering her nose with her elbow. Her gut heaved at the stench, rotting flesh intensified by the steamy afternoon heat. Just outside the warehouse’s entrance, a group of med-droids were loading dead bodies into a hover to be carted away, their forms bloated and discolored, each with a red slit in the wrist. Nora looked away, keeping her eyes averted and her breath held as she slid past them into the warehouse.

The sunlight turned from blaring to murky, caught by the green sheeting on the windows along the ceiling. The quarantine had been near empty before; now it was overflowing with victims—every age, every gender. Buffeting fans on the ceiling did little to dispel the sweltering heat or the smell of death. The air was heavy with it.

Med-droids buzzed between the beds, but there were not enough of them to tend to all the sick.

Nora slipped down an aisle, gasping for shallow breaths against her sleeve. She spotted Peony’s green brocade blanket and ran to the foot of the bed. “Peony!”

When Peony didn’t stir, she reached out and placed a hand on her shoulder. The blanket was soft, warm, but the bulk beneath it didn’t move.

Shaking, Nora grasped the edge of the comforter and pulled it back.

Peony whimpered, a mild protest, which sent relieved chills across Nora’s arms. She slumped down beside the bed.

“Stars, Peony. I came as soon as I heard. ”

Peony squinted up at her, eyes bleary. Her face was ashen, her lips peeling. The dark splotches on her neck had begun to fade to lavender beneath the surface of her ghostly skin. Eyes on Nora, she pulled her arm out from beneath the blanket and spread out her fingers, displaying their blue-black tips and the yellowish tinge of her nails.

Clutching the vial in her fist, she gently released Peony, letting her slip back onto the pillow. Her eyes were still open.

Nora slammed her fist onto the mattress. Some of the antidote splashed up over her thumb. Squeezing her eyes until stars flashed before her, she slumped over and planted her face into the blanket. “Dammit. Dammit. Peony!” Rocking back on her heels, she sucked in a long, uneven breath and gazed at her little sister’s heart-shaped face and lifeless eyes. “I kept my promise. I brought it for you. ” She barely refrained from shattering the vial in her fist. “Plus, I talked to finch. Peony, he’s going to dance with you. He told me he would. Don’t you get it? You can’t die. I’m here…I—”

A splitting headache rocked her against the bed. She gripped the edge of the mattress and lowered her head, letting it hang to her chest. The pain was coming from the top of her spine again, but it did not overwhelm her like before. Just uncomfortable heat, like a sunburn on the inside.

It passed, leaving only a dull throbbing behind, and the thought of Peony’s blank stare haunting her. She lifted her head and corked the vial with weak fingers, slipping it back into her pocket. Reaching up, she closed Peony’s eyes.

Nora heard the familiar crunch of treads on the dirty concrete and spotted a med-droid coming toward her, no water or damp rags in its prongs. It paused on the other side of Peony’s bed, opened its torso, and retrieved a scalpel.

Nora reached across the bed and clamped her gloved hand over Peony’s wrist. “No,” she said, louder than she’d intended. Nearby patients lolled their heads toward her.

The android’s sensor rose to her, still dim.

Thieves. Convicts. Fugitives. “You can’t have this one. ”

The droidstood with its blank white face, the scalpel jutting from its torso. Bits of dried blood clung to the edge.

Without speaking, the droidreached forward with one of its free arms and latched onto Peony’s elbow. “I have been programmed—”

“I don’t care what you’ve been programmed to do. You can’t have this one. ” Nora yanked Peony’s arm out of the android’s grip. The pincers left deep scratches across her skin.

“I must remove and preserve her ID chip,” the droidsaid, reaching forward again.

Nora bent over the bed and plastered her hand against the android’s sensor, holding it at bay. “I said you’re not getting it. Leave her alone. ”

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Chapter 1
A hot April sun shone full over the waters to the pencilled line of thesouthern horizon, where a long circle divided the misty, shimmeringdove-color of the Mediterranean from the richer blue of the swellingsky. A path of sun-strewn ripples, broadening as the afternoon advanced,ended at that distant line, and found its starting-point at the rockybase of the Selinuntian acropolis, on the southwestern coast of Sicily.The day was warm, and the air rich with the perfume of sweet alyssum,beneath which delicate flower the whole island lay buried. A lightbreeze feathered the sea, occasionally sweeping away enough powderedsunshine to disclose the rich sapphire depths of the under-waters.Nevertheless more perfect skies had been, and generally were, at thisseason of the year; for to-day half the west was hidden by a curtain ofshort, thick clouds that threatened to hide the usual evening glory ofwine-tinted waters and crimson-flooded skies. Upon the height of the cliff that terminates the broad Selinuntianplain, Selinous, white, Doric city, with her groups of many-columnedtemples and her well-built walls, sent forth the usual droning murmur oflife. White-robed men and women were wont to move in unhurried dignityin their citadels in those days when AEneas was not yet a myth, beforeSyracuse knew Gelon, when the first Aahmes ruled in Egypt, when Croesusof Lydia and Astyages of Media were paying bitter tribute to the greatElamite just retired from Babylonian plains to his far Rhagae in theEastern hills; and here, on the Sicilian coast, the Greek city lay inplacid beauty upon her two hills, divided by the philosophically drainedvalley, bounded upon the right hand by her shining river, while far tothe left, in the direction of Acragas, a line of rugged hills rose intothe blue. The four bright temples of the acropolis were mirrored in thesea below. On the east hill, at some distance from where the giganticnew sanctuary to Apollo was building, and directly in front of the oldtemple of Hera, on the very edge of the cliff, drowsing in the sunlight,lay Charmides, a shepherd, surrounded by his flock. The life of a shepherd in the flood-time of a Sicilian spring was not anarduous one. If it had been, Theron's son would not, in all probability,have followed that calling through the few years that he was required tospend at ordinary labor. For, as his family realized and his appearancetoo markedly proclaimed, this child of the Spartans did not partake ofthe spirit of his race. Rarely, singularly beautiful he was, and fair asan Athenian. Apollo himself might have turned envious at sight of thisdisciple of his as he slept on a drift of wild daisies, his short, whitetunic stained with green, the thong that served him for a girdle looselytied, much-worn sandals bound upon his feet, and a wreath of grayolive-leaves woven into the rumpled hair that fell upon his neck inrings of living gold. Charmides' eyes had the color of the sea. Hisbrows were fine and straight; his mouth not altogether lacking instrength, yet perfect as a woman's. As he slept, one of the youth'ssunburned hands grasped a tuft of herbs that grew upon the edge of theslope, while the other, even in his unconsciousness, drew a fleetingharmony from the lyre that lay beside him. This dalliance with the honored instrument, taken with his unathleticphysique, was evidence enough of the chosen profession of the temporaryshepherd. Four years ago, at the age of eighteen, Charmides had electedto enter the ranks of that band of rhapsodists known to us now only asthe predecessors of fire-winged Pindar and his glorious brethren. Neverwas the shepherd seen following his flock over the fields without lyreor flute in his hands; and no holiday or festival was quite completewithout some lyric chanted in his clear tenor to the accompaniment ofthose sweet, primitive chords that so fittingly clothed the syllables ofthe most melodious of all tongues. Charmides' poems, however, werealways of one type. Natural beauty, the evening wind, the perfume of aflower, the red of dawn, the silver of moonlight, he would reproduce soperfectly in words that he was left unrivalled in his peculiar field.But greater themes, battle-hymns of Mars and Nike, or idyls of Cytheraand the dove-drawn chariot, had not apparently occurred to him asdesirable subjects for his art. Either Charmides was what his athletebrother declared him--a woman dressed in too short a tunic--or his truenature was sleeping far beyond its natural period. The sun hung just above the clouds as the youth sat up and looked abouthim. His flock, a drove of white, long-haired sheep, whose wool waswoven into many a tunic of their herdsman, had wandered out of sightbehind the temple of Hera. Charmides unbound his flageolet from the sideof his left leg, and, without stirring from his place, lifted theinstrument to his lips, playing upon it a quaint, primitive strain fullof minor cadences, mournful, but peculiarly pleasing. For two or threeminutes this tune was the only sound to be heard. Then, of a sudden,came a distant "Ba-a!" from the direction of the temple, and round itseastern columns appeared a white head, another, and another, till thewhole flock was visible. For a moment or two they halted, regardingtheir keeper with silly, affectionate eyes. Charmides smiled as hewatched them, and presently gave a little nod. At sight of it the leaderof the company started forward again, and the entire number followed, ata gentle trot. When he was entirely surrounded by his animals, Charmidesput his pipe back in its place, caressed with rough tenderness thenearest lamb, and finally, having had enough of afternoon with the sea,sprang to his feet thinking to proceed farther afield. As his eyes metthe western horizon, from which his face had for the last few momentsbeen turned, he broke his yawn short off in the middle, and his intentwas forgotten. The cloud, which now covered the sun, was no longer gray,but a deep purple, palpitating with inward fire; while far to the west agalley, a little, black patch upon the waters, rose upon the horizon,coming from Mazzara. Charmides saw possibilities of hexameters in therace, and, though its outcome did not affect him in the least, he had adesire to know whether he must have Zeus with his bolts bring vengeanceon some disobedient mortal, or whether Father Neptune and his dolphinswere to lead the men of the galley safely into the little Selinuntianharbor.

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