Home > Steel Scars (Red Queen #0.2)(9)

Steel Scars (Red Queen #0.2)(9)
Author: Victoria Aveyard

CONFIDENTIAL, SENIOR CLEARANCE REQUIRED

Operative: Colonel REDACTED.

Designation: RAM.

Origin: REDACTED.

Destination: LAMB at Corvium.

-Request denied. Corp E and Aide B nonessential.

-Move on from CORVIUM. Continue assessing WHISTLE contacts/RED WEB Stage 2

assets.

RISE, RED AS THE DAWN.

THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE HAS BEEN DECODED

CONFIDENTIAL, SENIOR CLEARANCE REQUIRED

Operative: Captain REDACTED.

Designation: LAMB.

Origin: Corvium, NRT.

Destination: RAM at REDACTED.

-CORVIUM intelligence vital to SG cause at large. Request more time at location. Pass up

to COMMAND.

-Firmly believe Corp E and Aide B are strong candidates.

RISE, RED AS THE DAWN.

THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE HAS BEEN DECODED

CONFIDENTIAL, SENIOR CLEARANCE REQUIRED

Operative: General REDACTED.

Designation: DRUMMER.

Origin: REDACTED.

Destination: LAMB at Corvium, RAM at REDACTED.

-Request denied. Orders are to continue Stage 1 assessment for Stage 2/Asset Removal.

RISE, RED AS THE DAWN.

THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE HAS BEEN DECODED

CONFIDENTIAL, COMMAND CLEARANCE REQUIRED

Operative: Captain REDACTED.

Designation: LAMB.

Origin: Corvium, NRT.

Destination: DRUMMER at REDACTED.

-Strong opposition. Many military assets present at CORVIUM, must be assessed for Stage

2 removal.

-Request more time at location.

RISE, RED AS THE DAWN.

THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE HAS BEEN DECODED

CONFIDENTIAL, SENIOR CLEARANCE REQUIRED

Operative: General REDACTED.

Designation: DRUMMER.

Origin: REDACTED.

Destination: LAMB at Corvium.

-Request denied. Move out.

RISE, RED AS THE DAWN.

Following protocol, I light the thin strip of correspondence paper on fire. The dots and dashes

detailing Command orders char away to nothing, consumed by flame. I know the feeling. Hot anger

licks at my insides. But I keep my face still, for Cara’s sake.

She looks on, thick glasses perched on her nose. Her fingers itch, ready to click out my response

to orders she cannot read.

“No need,” I say, waving her off. The lie sits in my mouth for a moment. “Command bent. We

stay.”

I bet the Colonel’s damned red eye is rolling in his skull right now. But his orders are stupid,

narrow-minded, and now Command thinks the same. They must be disobeyed, for the cause, for the

Scarlet Guard. Corporal Eastree and Barrow would be invaluable to us, not to mention they’re both

risking their lives to get me the information I need. The Guard owes them an oath, if not evacuation in

Stage 2.

They’re aren’t here, in the thick of things, I tell myself. It helps ease the sting of disobedience.

The Colonel and Command don’t understand what Corvium means to the Nortan military, or how

important our information will become. The tunnel system alone is worth my time—it connects every

piece of the fortress city, allowing not only clandestine troop movements but easy infiltration of

Corvium itself. And thanks to Barrow’s position as aide to a high-ranking Silver, we know less-

savory intelligence as well. Which officers prefer the unwilling company of Red soldiers. That Lord

General Osanos, the nymph governor of the Westlakes region and commander of the city, continues a

family feud with Lord General Laris, commander of the entire Nortan Air Fleet. Who is essential to

the military and who wears rank for show. The list goes on. Petty rivalries and weaknesses to be

exploited. There are places of rot for us to poke at.

If Command doesn’t see this, then they must be blind.

But I am not.

And today is the day I set foot inside the walls myself and see the worst of what Norta has to offer

tomorrow’s revolution.

Cara folds up her broadcaster and reattaches it to the cord around her neck. It stays with her

always, nestled next to her heart. “Not even to the Colonel?” she asks. “To gloat?”

“Not today.” I force my best smirk. It placates her.

And it convinces me. The last two weeks have been a goldmine of information. The next two will

certainly be the same.

I force my way out of the stuffy, shuttered closet we use for transmissions, the only part of the

abandoned house with four walls and an intact roof. The rest of the structure does its job well,

serving as the safe house for our dealings in Corvium. The main room, as long as it is wide, has brick

walls, though one side is collapsed along with the rusted tin roof. And the smaller chamber, probably

a bedroom, has no roof at all. Not that we mind. The Scarlet Guard has suffered worse, and the nights

have been unseasonably warm, albeit humid. Summer is coming to Norta. Our plastic tents keep out

the rain, but not the moist air. It’s nothing, I tell myself. A mild discomfort. But sweat drips down my

neck anyway. And it’s not even midday yet.

Trying to ignore the sticky sensation that comes with the rising humidity, I pile my braid on top of

my head, wrapping it like a crown. If this weather keeps up, I might just cut it all off.

“He’s late,” Tristan says from his lookout at a glassless window. His eyes never still, always

darting, searching.

“I’d be worried if he wasn’t.” Barrow hasn’t been on time once in the past two weeks, not for any

of our meetings.

Cara joins Tye in the corner, dropping down with a merry flop. She sets to cleaning her glasses as

intently as Tye cleans pistols. Both of them share the same look, fair-haired Lakelanders. Like me,

they’re not used to the May heat, and they cluster together in the shade.

Tristan is not so affected. He’s a Piedmont boy originally, a son of mild winter and swampy

summer. The heat doesn’t bother him. In fact the only indicator of the changing season are his freckles,

which seem to breed. They dot his arms and face, more every day. And his hair is longer too, a dark

red mop that curls in the humidity.

“I told him as much,” Rasha says from the opposite corner. She busies herself braiding her hair

out of her dark face, taking care to divide her curling black locks into even pieces. Her own rifle, not

so long as Tristan’s but just as well used, props against the wall next to her. “Starting to think they

don’t sleep down in Piedmont.”

“If you want to know more about my sleeping habits, all you have to do is ask, Rasha,” Tristan

replies. This time he turns over his shoulder, just for a second, to meet her black eyes. They share a

knowing look.

I fight the urge to scoff. “Keep it to the woods, you two,” I mutter. Hard enough sleeping on the

ground without listening to rustling tents. “Scouts still out?”

“Tarry and Shore are taking the ridge, they won’t be back until dusk, same as Big Coop and

Martenson.” Tristan ticks off the rest of our team on his fingers. “Cristobel and Little Coop are about

a mile out, in the trees. Waiting on your Barrow boy, and looking to wait awhile.”

I nod. All in order then.

“Command happy so far?”

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