neighbor. We could only risk raising the topic with those who were sympathetic to the resistanceâand who would admit to that, after the massacre on the island? The Council, after years of denying that the island existed, was now spreading the word of the islandâs defeat. The blood on its streets had rendered it safe: a cautionary tale, rather than a threat.
And the cautionary tale was working. People were warier than ever. When we approached settlements, people straightened in the fields and watched us coming, their hands firmly on their pitchforks and spades. We ventured into Drury, a large Omega town, but both times we entered taverns the noisy conversations stopped, as if the sound were a lamp suddenly extinguished. At every table, people turned to the door to assess us. Their loud conversations never resumedâwhispers and mutterings replaced them. Some people would push back their chairs and leave as soon as they saw Zoeâs unbranded face. Who in the taverns within would dare to discuss the resistance with three ragged strangers, let alone a group that included an Alpha and a seer?
The most frustrating encounters werenât with those who refused to talk to us, but those who seemed to believe us, but still did nothing. In two of the settlements people listened to our story and seemed to understand how it made sense of the Alphasâ treatment of us. That the tanks were the endpoint to which the Councilâs policies of the last few years had been heading. But the question we heard, again and again, was What are we supposed to do about it? Nobody wanted to shoulder the new burden of this news. They had enough burdens already. We saw it, everywhere we went: the lean faces, the bones of eye sockets thrust forward as though trying to escape the skin. The settlements where shanties and lean-tos propped up one another. The people with teeth andgums stained a livid red, from chewing areca nut to distract from their hunger. What did we expect these people to do with the news we told them?
Two days after weâd found the abandoned safe house, and my fight with Zoe, Piper left at dawn to scout a small Omega town farther west on the plain. He returned before noon, sweat darkening the front of his shirt despite the cold.
âThe Judge is dead,â he said. âItâs all over the town.â
âThatâs good news, isnât it?â I said. The Judge had been ruling the Council for almost as long as I could remember, but heâd been under the control of Zach and his allies for years. âIf heâs just a puppet, what difference does it make if heâs finally died?â
âItâs not good news if his death only clears the way for someone more extreme,â said Zoe.
âItâs worse than that,â Piper said. He pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket. Zoe took it and opened it. I squatted on the grass next to her to read it, trying not to think about her knife at my guts, two nights before.
Council leader killed by Omega terrorists , the headline read. In smaller print, underneath, it continued: Terrorists from the self-styled Omega âresistanceâ movement yesterday assassinated the twin of long-serving Council leader the Judge.
I looked up at Piper. âIs it possible?â
He shook his head. âHardly,â he said. âZach and his cronies have had the Judgeâs twin locked up for half a decadeâthatâs how theyâve been controlling him ever since. Itâs all a setup. Theyâve just decided they donât need him anymore.â
âSo whatâs changed? You always said they needed him because people wanted the Council led by someone who seemed to be moderate.â
âNot now. Listen.â He grabbed the poster and read from it out loud:
â In his fourteen years as Council leader, the Judge was a staunch protec tor of Omegas. This latest outrage by Omega agitators raises pressing security concerns