Bone Season 01: The Bone Season: A Novel

Bone Season 01: The Bone Season: A Novel by Samantha Shannon Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Bone Season 01: The Bone Season: A Novel by Samantha Shannon Read Free Book Online
Authors: Samantha Shannon
didn’t want to know what they would do to us. I didn’t know how strong I’d be if they put me on the waterboard. I’d heard my father talk about it, how they only let you breathe for a few seconds at a time. He said it wasn’t torture. It was therapy.
    A seer sat down beside me. He was bald and broad-shouldered. I couldn’t see much of him in the gloom, but I could see his large, intensely dark eyes. He extended a hand.
    “Julian.”
    He didn’t seem afraid. Just quiet. “Paige,” I said. Best not to use full names. I cleared my dry throat. “What’s your cohort?”
    “IV-6.”
    “I-4.”
    “That’s the White Binder’s territory.” I nodded. “Which part?”
    “Soho,” I said. If I said I was in Dials, he’d know I must be one of Jaxon’s nearest and dearest.
    “I envy you. I’d love to have lived central.”
    “Why?”
    “Syndicate’s strong there. My section doesn’t see much action.” He kept his voice low. “Did you give them a reason to arrest you?”
    “Killed an Underguard.” My throat ached. “You?”
    “Minor disagreement with a Vigile. Long story short, the Vigile is no longer with us.”
    “But you’re a seer.” Most voyants regarded seers—a class of soothsayer—with disdain. Like all soothsayers, they communed with spirits through objects; in a seer’s case, anything reflective. Jax hated soothsayers with a passion (“ shi t sayers, dolly, call them shitsayers”). And augurs, come to think of it.
    Julian seemed to read these thoughts. “You don’t think seers capable of murder.”
    “Not with spirits. You couldn’t control a big enough spool.”
    “You do know your voyants.” He rubbed his arms. “You’re right. I shot him. Didn’t stop them arresting me.”
    I didn’t reply. Icy water dripped from the ceiling, onto my hair, and ran down my nose. Most of the other prisoners were silent. One boy was rocking back and forth on his heels.
    “You have a strange aura.” Julian looked at me. “I can’t work out what you are. I’d say oracle, but—”
    “But?”
    “I haven’t heard of a woman being an oracle in a long time. And I don’t think you’re a sibyl.”
    “I’m an acultomancer.”
    “What’d you do, stab someone with a needle?”
    “Something like that.”
    There was a crash from outside, and an awful scream. Everyone stopped talking.
    “That’s a berserker.” The voice was male, afraid. “They’re not going to put a berserker in here, are they?”
    “There’s no such thing as a berserker,” I said.
    “Have you not read On the Merits ?”
    “Yes. It’s a hypothetical type.”
    He didn’t look relieved. The thought of the pamphlet made me colder than ever. It could be anywhere, in anyone’s hands—a first edition of the most seditious pamphlet in the citadel, covered in fresh notes and contact details. I could never have got such a thing without knowing the writer.
    “They’re going to torture us again.” The whisperer was cradling her broken arm. “They want something. They wouldn’t have just let us out.”
    “Out of where?” I said.
    “The Tower, idiot. Where we’ve all been for the last two years.”
    “Two?” There was a half-hysterical laugh from the corner. “Try nine. Nine years.” Another laugh, a giggle.
    Nine years. Why nine? From what we knew, detainees were given two choices: join the NVD or be executed. There was no need to store people. “Why nine?” I said.
    There was no answer from the corner. After a minute, Julian spoke up.
    “Anyone else wondering why we’re not dead?”
    “They killed everyone else.” A new voice. “I was there for months. The other voyants in my wing all got the noose.” Pause. “We’ve been picked for something else.”
    “SciSORS,” somebody whispered. “We’re gonna be lab rats, aren’t we? The doctors want to cut us up.”
    “This isn’t SciSORS,” I said.
    There was a long silence, broken only by the bitter tears of the palmist. She couldn’t seem to stop.

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