Re-cap: Disguising herself as Werner, Cadence works with Gilbert and Wernerâs men to investigate Colonel Fritz von Spiel and his dealings with the Campanas. After a confrontation with Gilbert, the two work together to discover that the Campanas are selling Diverger children and that the colonel is more than willing to buy. Afterwards, Cadence stumbles across Francis and follows him back to Thetaâs room. Here, Cadence discovers the truth behind ELPIS, the resistors, and Thetaâs plan. Reeling from this discovery, Cadence escapes and⦠[https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/40.png?w=1024]
TWIN CITIES, GEMINI
Cadence stumbled out of the portal, heart and head pounding. She didnât have a clue where she wasâit was too dark to make anything out. If it wasnât for the fact that she could hear herself panting, she mightâve thought she was dead.
Scrambling blindly forwards, she ran smack into a wall, tripped backwards, fell flat on her back, and blinked upwards. There was a crack of skyline there, and the smog clouding the sky reflected back the blue-orange lights from the city.
Judging by the thickness of the smog and the color of the lights, she figured she was in an alley on the west side of the city. The Louvre District again.
âWhat in saintâs name do I doâ¦â
Save Alma. Right. They could leave this city together. Cadenceâd gotten the means to do it. Sheâd get Alma to safety.
And then what?
What would happen to the city?
Well, that was Ophiuchusâs responsibility. Theyâd handle it fine. Since they were in the city already, theyâd find the trail. And Jericho would probably say something about âintuition,â swing that suitcase of his, and everythingâd be okay. Werner hadnât even needed to contact Ophiuchus to begin with. Right? Yeah.
No. That was a lie.
Would Ophiuchus even be able to find Thetaâs room?
Cadence reached into her pocket and pulled out Thetaâs proto-conductor that sheâd taken off Comissario Vincente Giustiziaâno, Tau.
She could just turn this into Ophiuchus, she thought. Make up a story. Say sheâd encountered Jerichoâs scuffle against Iota and found it on the streets afterwards. Everythingâd be peachy then.
No. That was also a lie.
Cadence doubted Ophiuchus knew how to use the thing. And if she gave it to them, theyâd just be hopping from place to place willy-nilly hoping theyâd get the jump on ELPIS. Pure luck and chance.
Andâ¦
Jericho wanted it. He was the reason why she was gripping it so tightly in her hand. Any tighter and sheâd shatter the thing. Jericho wanted it so that he could get to them. And if he got to themâ¦
What would Jericho do to Thetaâno, Francis?
Cadence paled as a chill ran up her spine.
ELPISâs origins were irrelevant to Jericho. His hatred remained unchanged regardless of their circumstances. Cadence knew thisâcould feel this. And if that was the case thenâ¦
What would happen to Francis?
Cadence rolled over on all fours and stared at the ground, digging her nails into the damp, dirty concrete.
If Ophiuchus couldnât fix this in time, what would happen to Allen, Carl, Fortuna? Alice? The executives? Wernerâs men? Nicoâ¦?
Something hot and putrid crawled up her throat, causing her stomach to flip flop. She hadnât felt this sick since sheâd gone out drinking with the Foxman brothers and Nico before Nico had left for the Aquarian-Capricornian border.
As the memory of that drunken, chatter-filled night surfaced, Cadence heaved, gagged, and puked.
âTake damn responsibility,â Gilbert had said.
In that moment, as Gilbert had berated her, Cadence had felt intense shame. In his eyes, sheâd only been a cowardly, selfish, two-faced liar. And Cadence knew that was what she was. That was how she grew up. There was no helping it. But still, when she met Gilbertâs disapproving eyes, sheâd wanted to curl up, hide away, drink, change.
It was ridiculous. She barely even knew Gilbert. Which meant that Werner cared a lot about what Gilbert thought. Appearances and whatnot.
No.
It was different with Gilbert. By just a slight shade. Werner had cared because of⦠âFriendshipâ? That didnât seem like him at all.
Cadence herself had never thought too deeply about the word. Sheâd purposefully stopped herself from thinking about people that way. There was no such thing in this city.
That was a lie.
All she was doing was trying to find the easiest way out. Like usual. A victim of circumstance.
âI know that,â Cadence whispered, wiping her mouth. âBut what in saintâs name am I supposed ta do?â
Who could she go to? No one. Sheâd burned all her bridges. No. They had never been there to begin with. Sheâd built up false bridges that held no substance. Try and walk across and sheâd fall right through the illusion.
Damn.
No time to think about that.
She had to report to Cavallo. About the Campanas?
Cadence scrambled to her feet, pocketed Thetaâs proto-conductor, and stumbled forward blindly. Eventually, she squeezed herself out of the alleyway and stumbled out onto a near empty street lit dimly by v-street-lamps.
â⦠Is that you, Cucciolo?â
Cadence straightened and turned.
A familiar woman with jet black hair that curled to her ears stood beneath a flickering light. Her red satin dress glowed in the dark as did her cherry red lips. Her eyes were soft, sad.
âAlmaâ¦â Cadence took a moment to take her in before she stumbled towards her. Cadence embraced her, and after a beat, Alma returned the gesture.
âYou were⦠disguised as that Capricornian soldier, werenât you?â Alma whispered into her hair. âYou saved me that night, didnât you? And you came to Enzoâs dinner tonight too⦠right? That was you.â
Alma had known. Of course, Alma had known.
âAre you alright?â Alma pressed, examining Cadenceâs face. âYou seemed really hurt in that explosion, and then you showed up at Enzoâs dinner like it was nothing⦠You poor thingâ¦â
Wernerâs bloodied body flashed into Cadenceâs mind, and Cadence felt bile climb up her throat again.
âAlma,â Cadence breathed, grabbing hold of the womanâs hand. âCome with me.â
Alma stared at her, hand loose. âCome⦠with you?â
âOut of this city,â Cadence stammered, digging into her pockets, brushing past Thetaâs proto-conductor, and pulling out the collection of proto-conducting rings sheâd stolen from Russo. She held them out for Alma to see. âWe can disguise ourselves. Sell these things. Use the money and get ourselves a place. Iâll buy you a piano. Iââ
âOh, Cucciolo.â Alma sighed, placing a hand on Cadenceâs cheek. âIf we run away, what then?â
âWhat⦠then?â
âWhere will I play, Cucciolo? Noâwho will listen when I play? People are just starting to know who I am. If I leave and disappear now, theyâll surely forget me.â
What�
âY-You donât need any of thatââ
âOf course, I do, Cucciolo,â Alma said gently. âWhatâs the point of playing a song when no one is there to listen? A caged bird always sings for someone, right?â Alma pulled her hand out of Cadenceâs grasp. âYou should leave this half of the city, Cucciolo⦠Enzo was talking about looking for you earlier. He seemed very angryâ¦â
Cadence remained frozen in place. Confused, flustered.
âI should go⦠but you should stay safe, Cucciolo,â Alma said as she began to pull away. âIt was nice seeing you again. And⦠thank you for saving me. See you some time.â
Without sparing another look back, Alma continued on her walk down the street in the opposite directionâcarrying on as if it was just any other night in her life. Unreachable.
âA-Alma⦠Alma, meet me at the Sognare!â Cadence shouted, voice cracking, as she curled her fingers around the rings. âMeet me at the Sognare! And Iâ¦â She trailed off as Alma disappeared from her sights. âPleaseâ¦â
Silence.
Cadence turned on her heels, continued forwards. Absentmindedly, she shoved the rings in her suit pocket and tried to collect her thoughts.
Shrug it off. Yeah. Just shrug it off. Alma would come back around. She would. She promised. If not, then it was just bad timing. Just the situationâ
A sharp crack and pain against the back of her head cut the thought short, and Cadence fell forward into darkness.
* * *
When Cadence came to, she realized that not only was she bound to a metal chair but she was also cold. Cold as hell. She was in a small room with metal walls, with a metal ceiling lined with hanging icicles growing in-between slabs of meat on metal hooks. A cooler. Damn bad luck. At least it had an exitâa heavy-looking door just across from her. Butâto check the last box on the checklist of misfortuneâshe could no longer feel the familiar press of her conducting rings on her fingers. Whoever had taken her in had known enough to take them off.
Fortunately, she could still feel the press of Thetaâs proto-conductor and the ring proto-conductors in her pants pocket. She wouldâve felt more relieved, however, if she could actually move her hands enough to reach them. Her captors had bound her with metal chains wound so tight around her chest, arms, and legs that it hurt to breathe, move, shiver. No sticky-fingering or muscling her way out of this one.
The cooler door abruptly opened, and two figures stepped in. Two familiar men who shouldnât have been anywhere near each other.
âWell, this is an odd sorta friendship ta see,â Cadence mused lightheartedly. âDid ya guys meet-cute?â
Donato of the Romano Family chuckled as he approached her, while Enzo of the Campanas stood beside him with a tired look. It seemed as if Donatoâs encounter with Iota hadnât shaken the old coot up a bit.
âA Caporegime of the Romanos and an executive of the Campanas meetinâ up with one another while the families themselves are beatinâ the snot outta each other,â Cadence hummed. âNow thatâs a good secret.â
âAnd youâll keep it a secret?â Donato mused. âLike how youâll keep the Campanaâs product a secret?â
âProduct?â Cadence arched a brow.
âOh, come on, Cadence.â Donato sighed. âI know you were at Enzoâs meeting. We found Cavalloâs dog Russo just as he was leaving the area and pulling off a proto-conductor ring. A ring that was obviously filled with your vitae.â
Dammit, Russo.
âAnd⦠where would Russo happen ta be now?â
âSix feet under,â Enzo replied. âUnlike you, he wasnât as willing to lend an ear and was feeling a bit loose lipped.â
Dammit, Russoâ¦
But. Okay. This was good. Bad for Russo. But good for her. They were planning on letting her live⦠up to a point. She had to get more information in the meanwhile, but she couldnât overstep her bounds.
âSo, based on whatâs goinâ down in the city now, Iâm guessinâ none of the bosses or any of the other executives know that you two are buddy-buddy. How long ya been pen pals?â
âHow long have I been capo?â Donato returned.
Cadence arched a brow. âGeeze, so from the very beginning, huh? Pretty impressive how ya got under the bossesâ noses. Bet ya both were excited when Fortuna and Ambrose said they were gettinâ engaged, huh?â
âYou too, Morello.â Enzo nodded. âI mean, that meant that the divide between you and Alma would no longer be there, right?â
Cadence froze.
âAlma talked about you a lot when she first came to me,â Enzo explained. âOf course, she stopped after she got used to the good life, but I have a good memory.â
âSheâs talked about ya a lot too when we met up,â Cadence returned good-naturedly. âGossip, right?â She paused, pulling back. âIâm not a gossiper myself. Especially when my life is on the lineââ
âIâm sure you said the same thing when you were dealing with Verga,â Donato interjected. âAnd Verga is stupid so he believed you.â He gestured to himself. âYou can see thereâs a difference here.â
Cadence smiled with effort. âThatâs why youâre a capo and he wasnât.â She shrugged. âIf youâre gonna consider doinâ me in, can I at least get some of the details? Canât let me die with curiosity, can ya?â
Donato considered this before chucking. âI like you, Cadence, so here it isââ
Obviously, he didnât like her enough not to beat her over the head and tie her up, she thought.
ââYou know this for fact: the Campana Family is selling Diverger Conductor children. The market for them is crazy. Especially in countries whoâre bordering less-than-friendly countries outside of Signum. The wealthy love them too. And Iâve been providing some of them to Enzo in exchange forâ¦â Donato slapped his bad leg. âWell, you see, theyâve got an amazing Diverger whoâs been slowly but surely healing my leg. Soon, Iâll be walking like everyone else.â
Betraying the Family just for one healed-up leg? What a rat.
âCongratulations,â Cadence said faintly. She swallowed, cocked her head. âThatâs great for ya and everything, but arenât ya concerned about whatâll happen if any of the executives find out? I mean, theyâre all busy dealinâ with killinâ each other, but ya know Francis is a good multitaskerââ
âFrancis?â Donato threw his head back and barked. âHeâs probably completely lost his head by now. Heâs not doing anything anytime soon.â
Cadenceâs heart skipped a beat.
Donato knew. And if he knew, thenâ¦
âWhat⦠did you do?â she whispered.
Enzo walked out of the cooler abruptly.
âYou see, the Foxmans and the Campanas have had a bad relationship for some time now,â Donato explained. âThe problem is the Foxmans are too loyal. Too nosey. So, honoring their relationship with the Romanos, they covertly started working with Ophiuchus to investigate the Campanas in an effort to take âem down. âCourse if they started investigating the Campanas, then thereâs no telling when theyâd dig up our business agreement. Enzo and I would both be in bad waters with our bosses.â
Enzo returned carrying an open wooden crate and dropped it at Cadenceâs feet. Cadence peered inside, and another wave of nausea overtook her. Resistors. The crate was full of resistors. Some of their glass-tube handles were filled with a swirling white light, while others were hollow and empty.
âEnzo found a whole cargo shipment full of these conductor-looking, knife-things stored in a warehouse in the west side,â Donato explained. âApparently, Verga was shipping these for a certain group.â He bent down to pick up a resistor that was empty. Its blade was caked with dried blood. âWhat youâre seeing here is the very knife Francis was stabbed with.â
Cadence balled her fists, bit the inside of her lip, kept her face calm and even.
âItâs quite interestingâthe effect of these things when theyâre filled with the white vitae stuff.â Donato ran his finger along the blade. âEnzo had his boys test them on a couple of poor saps, and they completely went off the walls. We had to put most of âem down. âCourse one managed to get away, but thatâs not relevant.â He tapped the tip. âIt surprisingly took a while for Francis to crumble, but the entire thing took the Foxmansâ eyes off of us for a while.â He chuckled. âWell, forever now.â
âDo ya even understand what yaâve doneâ¦?â
âThese things have something to do with ELPIS, yeah.â Donato nodded, tossing the resistor back into the crate. âBut Iâm not too concerned about them. We have what they want, after all. âCourse dealing with Ophiuchus is another issue. I had to put in a lot of legwork to get away from the guards they put on me. And you know meâIâm old and Iâm not as slick as I used to beââ
âThis is all your fault!â Cadence seethed, startling herself, Donato, and Enzo. âYou⦠You!â
âWhat has gotten into you, Cadence?â Donato sighed and rubbed his wrist. âYou of all people should understand. In time, whatever this is will pass, and peopleâll move on. ELPISâll do its thing, and theyâll leave like they always do. The Familiesâll resolve their issues.â He paused, smiled genially. âSame goes for all the people youâve deceived for us, right?â
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âPeopleâll move onâ¦?â Cadence parroted. She laughed. âYa canât be serious, Donato. I mean, yaâve gotta be pullinâ my leg again, right? How in saintâs name are they gonna move on from this? This is ELPIS. Theyââ
They hadnât moved on for centuries.
âIâm leaving you in Felicianoâs care while I decide what to do with you, Morello,â Donato said, nodding at Enzo. âThough, a couple of Felicianoâs friends have ended up as stiffs recently, so I canât say heâs gonna be in too good a mood. Heâll be visiting soon.â
Enzo bent down to pick up the box of resistors and with Donato he exited the room. The cellar door shut quietly behind them, leaving Cadence alone in silence.
Cadence began to tremble despite herself.
Felicianoâs âcareâ?
Saints. They were going to beat the living hell out of her.
Cadence stared at the floor, mind racing. Would she be able to talk her way out of a beating?
Felicianoâs sneering face flashed into her mind.
No, definitely not. Not with Feliciano. Heâd had a bone to pick with her since they were kids. Think.
Saintsâ
A shadow spilled across the floor in front of her. Cadence stiffened and yelped instinctively. But as she registeredâas she feltâwho was present, she startled.
Werner.
The Capricornian first lieutenant drew near to her, meeting her eyes with an unreadable expression. Just like how heâd looked at her when sheâd encountered Jericho and Iota in the Louvre District. A void stretched out behind Werner. He still wasnât awake.
âMorello, this will be excruciatingly painful.â
Cadence blinked.
What? What was he doing? Rubbing in it? Yeah, that made sense after what sheâd done. She didnât blame him at all.
Werner frowned. âI am not here to ârub it in.â Morello, youâre unable to escape, and the others will most likely feel the pain Feliciano and his men are about to inflict on you. It may compromise us, and that cannot be afforded.â
The guilt came in like a flood at the realization. She had been so caught up in her own situation that she hadnât even thought about how sheâd affect the others.
Werner regarded her silently before extending a hand. âAllow me to override you, Cadence.â
Cadence did a double-take.
What�
âThere is evidence that when one of us is overridden, the others are unable to access the memories of the events nor the sensations the overrider experiences,â Werner explained calmly. âAt the moment, this is our best option since the others are preoccupied.â
Cadence gaped.
He would go to such lengths to protect the others? It didnât make sense. This didnât seem like something he would do.
âCadence, itâs not just them. You donât have enough pain tolerance to handle this. Your reaction to Jerichoâs injury during our first synchronization meeting makes this obvious,â Werner said. âAs Iâve said, this is the best solution.â
Cadence stared at him incredulously. It really didnât make sense. After everything sheâd done, she wouldnât blame him if he despised her, hated her, maybe even wanted the worse to happen to her. Butâ¦
âWhyââ She met Wernerâs eyes and felt her voice catch in her throat.
Noâ¦
The answer neednât be said. Cadence could feel it. She wished she couldnât but she did. It was a simple feeling, but a strong one. Not pity, not disappointment, not resentmentâ
Despite her selfishness, he cared for her. No, he still cared for her.
It hurt.
âI⦠Iâm sorry, Werner,â Cadence whispered. She felt her eyes burn, felt her heart crumple, felt shame and disgust curl in her stomach.
If only she had her damn conductor. Then she could just snap her fingers and make everything go away. Disappear the shameful tears that were beginning to prick her eyes. Mask the trembles that were cascading down her body into a suave, casual, relaxed pose. And hide it. Hide everything away. Hide her cowardice, hide her selfishness. Shrug off her problemsâ
âJust proving that youâll never change,â Theta had said.
âIâm so, so sorryâ¦â she whispered. âI donât know what Iâm doing. I just wanted to help Alma.â No, that was a lie. What she wanted was to stop Alma from leaving her side. Pathetic. Another blow. âI didnât want ya to get hurt, Werner.â A truth. âI wasnât thinking. I wasnât thinking at all. I was so stupid. I coulda killed yaâ¦â Saying it out loud was horrifying. âSaints, I coulda killed all of yaâ¦â
âa hand suddenly touched her cheek.
She lifted her head to find Werner staring at her, blue eyes piercing and hardâbut not exactly cold. A faint memory, faded at its images, floated into Cadenceâs mind: a long, tall, thin woman standing in the middle of a cold, empty room wielding a long, tall, thin stickâan overbearing shadow.
They were the same, Cadence realized, paling. But that made Wernerâs proposal so much worse. She couldnât understand it. They had been in similar situations and circumstances, but they had turned out so different. How was that possible?
âEnough, Cadence,â Werner said tersely. âTheyâre coming.â
He really meant it, she realized. He really wanted to override her and endure the pain instead. But that didnât make any sense. Was this really his choice?
Werner frowned. âAlthough I do believe my current state of mind might be somewhat altered due to my condition, this is my choice, Morello. Make no mistake.â He seemed to read her mind. âIf you are truly sorry, then accept whatever guilt comes from me doing this. Accept responsibility, live with it, and donât let it happen again.â
That was awfully manipulative of him.
The cellar door creaked open behind Werner, and a cluster of men eclipsed him. Feliciano and his lackeys.
âItâs time, Cadence,â Werner said calmly as always. âAre you ready?â
Before she could respond, Cadence felt the darkness pull her away from him almost, felt him relax into the cold chair in her place, felt her consciousness slip away into blackness.
And in that pitch-black dark, she dreamt. No, in the dark, she remembered.
She remembered her mother with her long copper locks and her father with his freckled cheeks. War veterans in search of a better life in the Twin Cities. Theyâd only received a singular benefit package from Aries after the warâs end and had struggled to even afford a place to stay in the city.
Cadence had spent many nights home alone because her parents were always out working. One night, as sheâd roamed through the house in the dark waiting for them to return, sheâd discovered her motherâs conducting rings. Sheâd slipped them on, thinking they were fashionable items, adoring the way theyâd make her fingers tingle. Sheâd try them on every single night while she waited for her parents to return, and it was by mere luck that she managed to activate them one day. Sheâd transmuted herself into one of the dresses sheâd seen in her motherâs favorite fashion magazine and had been giddy with excitement and glee.
Slowly, slowly, she refined her skill until one nightâwhen her parents came home lateâshe revealed her conducting to them. Theyâd both been ecstatic, proud, cheering as they spun her around the room.
Talented, they exclaimed, amazing. My talented, amazing daughter.
But that happiness was not the norm.
It was a stressful postwar era. Her parents constantly argued over money, food, bills. But Cadence hadnât been bothered by it because to her that was normal. Besidesâor so she had thoughtâas long as they had each other, it didnât matter. Not the arguments, not the occasional thrown fists. It wasnât perfect, but it was enough.
Then one night, her mother returned home with a black a shadow riding on her shoulders. When Cadence had greeted her at the doorway, her mother sank to her knees and wrapped her fingers around her neck.
âIf it werenât for youâ¦â her mother had seethed, squeezing tight. âI wouldnât have to be with that man. If it werenât for you, I wouldnât have to go through this. I wouldnât be the damned laughing stock at work. I wouldnât have to deal with people always looking at me like they feel sorry for me. Itâs because of you. Itâs all because of you, you, you!â
Cadence had sobbed, clawing at her motherâs hands as she gasped for air. Just as her vision began to fade, her mother released her and pulled back with a sob of her own. When Cadence had finally gained her bearings and her breath, she found her mother crying apologies under her breathâ
âIâm terrible. Oh, Iâm so terrible. I donât deserve to be your mother. Iâm terrible.â
It had hurt for Cadence to see her mother like that. Hurt more than the throbbing around her throat. And so, Cadence had crawled up to her motherâs side and said, âI-Itâs not your fault, mammina. Youâre just angry because youâre tired, right? Itâs not your fault⦠And Iâm okay, you see?â Snapping her fingers with a grin, Cadence disappeared the bruise marks on her neck in a flash of copper.
The way her motherâs eyes had lit up afterwards was like a dream, and the warmth from her motherâs embrace made Cadence forget all about the pain. This wasnât her motherâs fault at all, Cadence had thought. It was merely the situation, the circumstance.
That event marked the first time her mother had a bad morrowheat trip. And it wasnât the last.
âItâs stress relief,â her father had told her as he began to take morrowheat up himself. âWe get nightmares, you know. About the war.â
This had been before morrowheat became properly refined and legalized. In its unrefined form, it was terribly addictive and often caused hallucinations, mood swings, lethargy. And as her parents continued to take the drug, they became less and less inclined to leave their apartment for work. Instead, they lounged together with interlocked limbs on the mattress that they all shared on the floor.
It was okay though. Because they were together. It was enough.
But then, Cadenceâs mother passed. Just like that. In her sleep. They didnât have enough money to hire doctors to figure out why. They didnât have enough money for a funeral. And so, Cadence was left standing in front of her motherâs unmarked grave wondering exactly what had happened. There were no answers. There never were.
Cadence spent the following weeks curled up on their mattress in her motherâs spot. Sheâd burrowed into her motherâs blankets, breathed in her scents, and imagined that her mother was still there lying beside her. Cadence had even used her conducting rings to bring the illusion to life once. It was a momentary comfort.
One day Cadenceâs father came home and spoke to her about things she didnât understand. Her mother had a savings account with a decent amount of money, heâd said. Theyâd both been saving the funds so that they could eventually send Cadence to school, heâd explained. But because of Geminiâs strict personal protection and privacy laws at the time, only the owner of the account was able to withdraw funds so he wasnât able to access any of it.
âYâ¦You can do it, canât you, Cadence?â her father whispered with bags under his eyes as he held her hand. âYou can make yourself look like mammina and take the money out, right?â
The desperation in his voice had been pitifulâso pitiful that several nights later, Cadence found herself wearing her motherâs conducting rings and standing in front of their chipped bathroom mirror. Snapping her fingers, sheâd watched with joy, disgust, relief, horror as her deceased motherâs form shimmered over her own.
When Cadence brought home all of her motherâs savings from the bank the following morning, her father had been ecstatic. Heâd picked her up and twirled her around, proclaimed how much he loved her, showered her with giftsâ
Happiness. It was enough.
And then one day, he didnât come back home.
Cadence spent those following weeks roaming the house, digging into the pantries for food, curling up on their mattress, waiting and waitingâuntil there was a knock at the door. It was the landlord who told her curtly, strictly, firmly that she needed to pack up and leave.
âYouâre lucky that Iâm not making you take on your parentsâ debt,â was what he had left her with.
And so, for the first time in her life, with only the clothes on her back and her motherâs conducting rings on her fingers, Cadence stepped outside onto the streets of the Twin Cities alone. Sheâd learned quickly though. Learned to pickpocket, steal, swindle. Learned to take advantage of other peopleâs pity. Learned to use her conducting to get herself out of tight situations.
And then Alma found her. Rather, she found Alma. A beautiful, gentle person whom she could always find at the Sognare. A person who smiled at her with apparent affection instead of pity. A perfect person. A constant.
Not so long after that, Cadence had encounteredârather, pickpocketedâRicardo Romano who then introduced her to Fortuna. Literally days later Cadence befriended the Foxmans and then finally Nico. Together they had roamed the streets, claiming territory childishly as their own, challenging other delinquent rings to pick-pocketing feuds, swindling tourists with gambles and games.
Happiness. A constant.
Perhaps, that was why Cadence adored Alma so much. Meeting Alma marked the beginning of the best time in her life⦠But Almaâs departure also marked the end of it.
Cadence still remembered it as if it was yesterdayâthe day that Alma left. After whispering apologies about being unable to stay by Cadenceâs side, Alma had placed a hand on her cheek and had said with a dreamy smile, âOh, Iâm so frightened⦠but also excited, Cucciolo. All the girls at the Casa say that Enzo is so wealthy, and he knows so many famous people. He may be cruel but maybe with him people will finally listen to my songâ¦â
But Cadence had blamed Almaâs words on too much alcohol.
Fortuna took up on her fatherâs mantle not too long after that, while the Foxmans abandoned their pipe dream of running their own bar in favor of running the cityâs docks. Sheâd congratulated all of them at the time, of course. Always appeared crooked-smile, bought them congratulatory presents using money sheâd swindled from tourists, never showed a hint of jealousy, disdain, disappointment, hurt.
But appearances were deceiving.
At least Nico would stay by her sideâCadence had thought to herself foolishly. Out of their entire group, the two of them had spent the most time together. Huddled in between alleyways, swallowing cigarettes whole for laughs, pick-pocketing wealthy kids who were in over their heads. Playing piano at the dwindling Sognare, sharing drinks at the bar after a rough day of work, musing about their unattainable dreams.
Right. Nico needed her, sheâd thought, always followed her, would never leave her. It was something Cadence treasured. A constant.
But then⦠Nico had left too. Left for the borders of Capricorn while following his dream of being free of his fatherâs shadow in that twisted way of his. Left for that dream of his that had suddenly become attainable.
And Cadence was happy for him. Honestly. But still she thoughtâ
It was better to have an unattainable dream. Something that always needed to be chased after. No disappointment when it came down to it. No losing the dream and its perks, since itâd never be achieved. No becoming disillusioned by it since it was a far-off mirage. A constant in other words. A distant destination. The same thing applied to people. Situation over disposition.
* * *
When Cadence sluggishly came into consciousness, she was greeted with pain and cold. It felt as if cement had been filled in between her muscles and bones. She also no longer had any sensation in her fingertips. And her mouth tasted of iron.
Sure enough, when she got her bearings and surveyed her surroundings, she found that she was lying in a pool of her own blood. The cellar door was locked tightly. The icicles hanging from the ceiling had grown a couple centimeters give or take. The only positive she collected from a second look around was that during the beat down, Feliciano and his goons had decided to untie her and leave her untied.
She tried to crawl up into a sitting position, but a dull pain shot up her limbs in protest. She collapsed and laid in place. Too much pain to even shiver.
If it hurt this much for her now, she thought, how much had it hurt for him?
Itâs not your fault, whispered a familiar voice at the back of her head. Werner offered.
âShut up,â she muttered.
It wasnât your mom and dadâs fault either, the whisper continued, relaying the echoes of her dream. They couldnât help their situation. They couldnât help reacting the way they did. It was the stress, the poverty, the drugs. Itâs all circumstance.
Cadence shivered, wincing at the shooting pain it brought her.
One-way ticket to hypothermia.
But even so, despite the cold, she could still feel Wernerâs warm hand against her cheek.
No, no. She didnât want to think about that. Not now.
Right? Itâs all circumstance. Itâs not yourâ
âShut up!â Cadence sobbed and pulled into herself. The tears stung the cuts on her cheek but she knew that the stinging pain was incomparable to what Werner had taken on for her. âDamn it! Shut up! Stop lying!â
Silence answered her.
Right. The person sheâd been deceiving the mostâCadence realized in the quietâhad been herself all along. The truth was that it wasnât all just circumstance. Not with herself. Not with her mother, not with her father, not even with Alma.
The answer was ridiculously clearâ
A child representing past mistakes and an inescapable situation.
A tool to earn money.
And a person who was more pitiable than herself, a person who made her feel as if her own life wasnât that awful.
âthis was how her mother, her father, and Alma had viewed her in those moments that Cadence had painted over as âcircumstance.â
It was as simple as that. And simplicity hurt.
Cadence sobbed and curled deeper into herself.
How dare she think about herself after everything that had happened? How dare sheâ
âWhat in saintâs name are you doingâ¦?â
Cadence blinked the frozen tears out of her eyes and found Olive standing before her. He felt her painâshe could tellâand was barely managing to hold back a wince. Damn.
âOf course, I can feel your pain,â Olive half-growled, half-grumbled. He knelt down beside her, hands hovering, hands shaking, eyes⦠wet? Tears. They were leaking from his eyes, and he was failing terribly at holding them back.
âS-Saints, Your Highnessâ¦â Cadence cracked a grin with effort. She had a cut on her lower lip that stretched open with the action. âY-You should be laughinâ at my situation. Not cryinâ. Specially after everything I did and everything I said to ya.â She grimaced. âI-Iâm sorry about that, kid. You were right about everything⦠so ya gotta stop cryinââ
âItâs just sad okay, dammit⦠Itâs not fair.â Olive wiped his eyes. âThose kidsâ theyâre almost my age⦠itâs wrong what the Campanas are doing⦠and whatâ¦â His voice cracked. âW-What happened to you⦠and to Werner.â He shook his head. âItâs just not fair! How can people do that?â
It was easy for people to do that, Cadence thought. It was hard for them not to do that.
âYouâre a good kid, Olive.â She sighed. âI mean it.â She laid her head back and groaned. âIâm sorry. For everything. It was all my fault. Youâre all way too good for me.â
Him, Werner, Atienna, Jericho, Maria.
A pain more terrible than the throbs running through her limbs seized her chest.
And Nico, Francis, Allen, Carl, Fortuna too.
âYouâre stupid,â Olive said, shaking his head. âYouâre stupid and youâre so unbelievably selfish.â
Cadence tried to squint at him but even that was too much effort, so she laid back her head and closed her eyes.
âIt wasnât circumstances with Alma, your mom, or your dad,â Olive continued. âBut itâs also not circumstance with me, and itâs not circumstance with any of the others. When it comes to us⦠Iâ¦â His cheeks flushed, and he took a deep breath before he grimaced. âIf you get what I mean⦠Iâm not here right now because of circumstance.â
Cadence cracked open an eye.
âYouâre good enough for me,â Olive said, meeting Cadenceâs gaze. âAs long as weâre constantly trying to improve and trying our best to not make the same mistakes, weâre good enough for each other.â
Cadence abruptly recalled she was talking to a prince, and she couldnât help but laugh. He was regal when he put the effort into it. Corny but regal.
âWe need to get out of here,â Olive muttered, rubbing his arms absentmindedly.
Right. Even if it hurt like hell, she had to find a way out of here before Feliciano came back. She couldnât make Werner go through that again. She couldnât let the others deal with the fading pain either. Responsibility, dammit.
Biting the inside of her cheek, Cadence forced herself up into a sit. The world spun around her, but she pushed herself further to an unstable stand and began to wobble to the door.
Pain, pain, pain.
Cadence, please donât push yourselfâ¦
But she had to.
Cadence managed to make it to the door and pressed her hands against its surface. She could barely see more than a crack because her eyes were so swollen, but she didnât need full vision to see that the door was frozen shut.
Suggestion. Donât panic.
That was hard to do.
Kick it down! You can do it!
Really? Why was that even a suggestion?
âClaire said somethingâ¦â Olive muttered from beside her. âHe told me that thereâs something special that True Conductors can do when it comes to vitae right before you overrode Werner⦠Since Iâm able to conduct without my conductorâno, since I am a âconductorââit might be different, butâ¦â He placed his hands over her own and closed his eyes.
Cadence arched a brow at him, wincing at the pain that followed the motion.
And then she felt warmth. A buzz at the base of her palm that spread to her fingertips.
She turned slowly and managed to catch a glimpse of her bruised hands right before copper sparks of light erupted into copper flames beneath her palms.
âWhat theââ
Olive grabbed her and pulled her backwards as the door was engulfed in flames of vitae. Flames that she had created. Without the appropriate conductor. Without being an Elementalist.
âSaintsâ¦!â she exclaimed in unison with Olive.
The heat crackled wildly, eating away at the frost and the door itself, melting everything it touched. Soon the door became molten metal and ash, and the icicles that had been hanging above her head began to drip, drip, drip into puddles of water.
Once the fire died and warm night air spilled in from the door-less doorway, Cadence turned to Olive and blinked. âDid ya just see that?â
Olive snapped, âOf course I saw that. Iâm right here! This isââ
âKid, my body hurts like hell, and I donât think I can spare another brain cell ta try and figure out what in saintâs name just happened,â Cadence said as she stepped forward, âso Iâm just gonna get outta here now and leave the thinking ta you, Werner, and Atienna.â She paused and looked back at him. âThanks, Olive. And not just for the mojo meltinâ thing.â
And Werner too. She needed to thank him. But she wanted to say it to his face. It was only fair.
Hesitantly, Cadence stepped through the melted doorway and out into a dark alleyway just beyond. She took a deep breath. Soot, salt. Home.
âWoooooow.â A clap echoed from above. âI was just swinging by and thought I was gonna have to pull a heroic rescue, but look at this!â
Cadence recognized that voice. No, Olive recognized it. But that was impossible.
A series of metal clangs filled the airâeach lower in tone than the lastâand down from the darkness dropped a slender, tall figure concealed in shadow.
Cadence felt it immediately. The apprehension. The dread. Ominous.
A woman dressed in a monochrome suit stepped into the light pouring out from the cooler.
There were two things that Cadence noticed about the woman. One: there was a white Ophiuchian sash on her arm. Two: she wore sunglasses despite it being nighttime.
Cadence. Oliveâs heart was hammering. I donât understand. How is she here â
Peacekeeping Saint Candidate Ilseong Jin stood before Cadence in the flesh.
I literally just saw herâ
âA-Are you a peacekeeper?!â Cadence stammered, rushing to Jin and wincing with every step. âYa gotta help me. I-I got jumped. A hospital. I need ta get to aââ
âHowâs that Ariesian prince doing?â Jin asked, cocking her head. âJust saw him a minute ago but still.â
Cadence froze and felt Oliveâs fear seep into her aching bones. âWhatâ¦? What are ya talkinâ about?â
Cadence stumbled slightly. Jin caught her with one hand. But it was not a comfort. The peacekeeperâs touch sent chills down Cadenceâs spine.
âOh, come on,â Jin grumbled. âFirst the prince and now you? I mean, I literally saw your conducting!â She squinted. âAt least youâre a bit more convincing. Though it really does look like you need to go to a hospital.â She squeezed Cadenceâs shoulders sending Cadence a ripple of pain. âBut congrats on taking the next step of True Conductorhood. First time Iâve ever seen a vitae crossover without an actual conductor though!â She released Cadence nonchalantly. âCool.â
Cadence stumbled backwards, barely keeping her footing. âIâm guessinâ ya didnât come here by trainâ¦â
âNope. Just came to check on a friendâ¦â Jin took a step back and gave Cadence another once over. She then slipped a familiar, needle-shaped proto-conductor filled with black liquid out from her pocket and tapped it against the wall behind her. The wall immediately became engulfed in a familiar pale, tangerine light.
Cadence paled.
âI like the stupid kiddo, so needless to say, I like you,â Jin said as she stepped into the light with a wave, âso Iâll leave you with a warning. Omicronâs told me that Thetaâs priming ready to snap, and when that happensâ¦â She aimed a mock gun. â⦠the cityâll go with it no matter what plan they have.â