Scythe Chomsky, the largest of them, stepped forward and, without warning, swung his fist, connecting with Rowan’s cheek so hard, he spun around, lost his footing, and fell to the dusty floor.
Rowan felt the shock of the punch, the jagged bolt of pain, and waited for the telltale warmth of his nanites releasing painkilling opiates into his bloodstream. But relief didn’t come. Instead the pain swelled.
It was horrible.
Overwhelming.
Rowan had never experienced such pain—he never knew such pain could even exist.
“What did you do?” he wailed. “What did you do to me?”
“We turned off your nanites,” Scythe Volta said calmly, “so you could experience what our ancestors once did.”
“There’s a very old expression,” Scythe Goddard told him. “‘To be painless is to be gainless.’” He gripped Rowan warmly on the shoulder. “And I wish you to gain much.”
Then he stood back, signaled the others to advance, and they began to beat Rowan to a pulp.
? ? ?
Recovery without the aid of healing nanites was a slow, miserable process that seemed to get worse before it got better. The first day Rowan longed to die. The second day he thought he actually might. His head pounded, his thoughts swam. He slipped in and out of consciousness with little warning. It was hard to breathe, and he knew he had several broken ribs. And although Scythe Chomsky had painfully popped his dislocated shoulder back into place at the end of his beating, it still ached with each heartbeat.
Scythe Volta visited him several times a day. He sat with Rowan, spoon-feeding him soup, and blotting where it spilled from his split, swollen lips. There seemed to be a halo around him, but Rowan knew it was just optical damage that caused the effect. He wouldn’t be surprised if he had detached retinas.
“It burns,” he told Volta as the salty soup spilled over his lips.
“It does for now,” ?Volta told him with genuine compassion. “But it will pass, and you’ll be better for it.”
“How could I be better for any of this?” he asked, horrified at how distorted and liquid his words sounded, as if he were speaking through the blowhole of a whale.
Volta fed him another spoonful of soup. “Six months from now, you tell me if I was right.”
He thanked Volta for taking the time to visit him when no one else did.
“You can call me Alessandro,” ?Volta said.
“Is that your real name?” Rowan asked.
“No, idiot, it’s Volta’s first name.”
Rowan supposed that’s as close as anyone got to knowing anyone else in the Scythedom.
“Thank you, Alessandro.”
? ? ?
On the evening of the second day, the girl—the one who Goddard said was so important—came into his room in between deliriums. What was her name again? Amy? Emmy? Oh yes—Esme.
“I hate that they did this to you,” she said with tears in her eyes. “But you’ll get better.”
Of course he’d get better. He didn’t have any choice in the matter. In mortal days, one died or recovered. Now there was only one option.
“Why are you here?”
“To see how you were getting on,” she said.
“No . . . I mean here, in this place?”
She hesitated before she spoke. Then she looked away. “Scythe Goddard and his friends came to a mall near where I lived. They gleaned everyone in the food court except for me. Then he told me to come with him. So I did.”
It didn’t explain anything, but it was the only explanation she offered—perhaps the only one she knew. From what Rowan could see, this girl served no discernible function at the estate. ?Yet Goddard gave orders that anyone who ran afoul of her would be severely disciplined. She was not to be bothered in any way, and was allowed free run of the estate. She was the biggest mystery he’d encountered yet in Scythe Goddard’s world.
“I think you’ll be a better scythe than the others,” she told him, but gave no explanation as to why she thought so. Perhaps it was a gut feeling, but she couldn’t be more wrong.
“I won’t be a scythe,” he told her. She was the first person he confessed it to.
“You will if you want to,” she said. “And I think you’ll want to.”
Then she left him to ponder the pain and the possibility.
? ? ?
Scythe Goddard didn’t show his face in Rowan’s room until day three.
“How are you feeling?” he asked. Rowan wanted to spit at him, but knew it would hurt too much, and might even bring about a second beating.
“How do you think I’m feeling?” Rowan answered.
He sat on the edge of the bed and studied Rowan’s face. “Come see yourself.” Then he helped Rowan out of the bed, and Rowan hobbled to an ornate wardrobe on which was a full-length mirror.
Rowan barely recognized himself. His face was so swollen it was pumpkin-like. Purple bruises all over his face and body were mottling to all shades of the spectrum.
“Here is where your life begins,” Goddard told him. “What you see is the boy dying. The man will emerge.”
“That’s such a load of crap.” Rowan said, not even caring what response it might evoke.
Goddard merely raised an eyebrow. “Perhaps . . . but you can’t deny this is a turning point in your life, and every turning point must be marked by an event—one that burns itself into you as indelibly as a brand.”
So now he was branded. Yet he suspected this was just the beginning of a much larger trial by fire.
“The world longs to be like us,” Goddard told Rowan. “Taking and doing what we choose, with neither consequence nor remorse. They would steal our robes and wear them if they could. You have been given an opportunity to become greater than royalty, so at the very least it requires this rite of passage that I have provided for you.”
Goddard stood there, studying Rowan a few moments more. ?Then he pulled out the tweaker from his robes. “Arms up, legs spread.”
Rowan took as deep a breath as he could, and did as he was told. Goddard wanded him. Rowan felt tingling in his extremities, but when it was done, he didn’t feel the warmth of opiates or the deadening of his pain.
“It still hurts,” Rowan told him.
“Of course it does. I didn’t activate your painkillers, just your healing nanites. You’ll be good as new by morning, and ready to begin your training. But from this moment on, you’ll feel every measure of your body’s pain.”
“Why?” Rowan dared to ask. “What person in their right mind would want to feel that kind of pain?”
“Rightmindedness is overrated,” Goddard said. “I’d rather have a mind that’s clear than one that’s ‘right.’”
* * *
In the business of death, we scythes have no competition. Unless, of course, you consider fire. Fire kills just as swiftly and completely as a scythe’s blade. It’s frightening, but also somehow comforting to know that there’s one thing the Thunderhead can’t fix. One type of damage that revival centers are powerless to undo. Once one’s goose is cooked, it is truly and permanently cooked.
Death by fire is the only natural death left. It almost never happens, though. The Thunderhead monitors heat on every inch of the planet, and the fighting of fires often begins before one can even smell smoke. There are safety systems in every home and every office building, with multiple levels of redundancy, just in case. The more extreme tone cults try to burn their deadish, to make it permanent, but ambu-drones usually get to them first.
Isn’t it good to know that we are all safe from the threat of the inferno? Except, of course, when we’re not.
—From the gleaning journal of H.S. Curie
* * *
22
Sign of the Bident
Citra’s days were filled with training and gleaning.