Chapter 40 The Sound of Shattering Glass
The Winter Gala stage is not wood and linoleum. It is a sea of black glass, polished until it reflects the thousand-dollar chandeliers hanging from the ceiling.
I stand in the wings, my heart a frantic bird against my ribs. My ankle is frozen, literally. I have had it packed in ice for two hours, and now I have injected enough lidocaine to walk through fire.
"They are waiting," Caspian whispers.
He is wearing a deep velvet tuxedo jacket, no shirt underneath, his chest bare and marked with the faint sweat of the warm-up. He looks like a prince who traded his crown for a revolution.
"Let them wait," I say, checking the tuck of the shipyard logs in my gear bag. "Did you see who is in the center box?"
Caspian glances through the curtain. "Arthur. And beside him, Greg Will. The head of the Global Stage Foundation."
"The man who decides who goes to the London Showcase," I breathe.
"Tonight, he is not looking for a Thorne, Zora. He is looking for the fire."
The music starts. It is not a cello this time. It is a silence that slowly fills with the sound of a heartbeat, my heartbeat, recorded and looped by Elias.
We walk out.
The crowd does not gasp. They do not even breathe. I am not wearing the pink silk the Academy assigned me. I am wearing my cleaning uniform, the blue polyester, but I have shredded it. It is wrapped around my body like battle armour, stained with the red paint from my door.
I am the Janitor. And I am here to sweep the floor with their expectations.
The dance is a blur of bone-breaking intensity. We do not touch for the first three minutes. We circle each other like predators. When we finally collide, it is not a lift. It is a crash. Caspian catches me as I fall, his hands gripping my waist so hard I will have bruises tomorrow.
I do not care.
As the music reaches a screaming peak, we perform the move Elias warned us about, the Traitor's Leap. It requires me to jump into the dark, trusting that Caspian will be there.
I fly. For a second, I am weightless. I am not the girl with the debt. I am not the driver who crashed the car. I am just light.
Caspian catches me. He spins me, the world a blur of gold and black, and brings me down inches from the front row.
I am staring directly into Arthur Thorne's eyes.
The heartbeat stops.
The silence lasts for five, ten, fifteen seconds. Then, Greg Will stands up. He does not look at Arthur. He looks at me.
"That," Greg says, his voice carrying through the acoustic chamber, "is the first real thing I have seen in this building in thirty years."
He turns to the Board. "The London Scholarship is a dual award. It goes to Vane and Thorne. On one condition."
Arthur stands up, his face purple. "This is highly irregular, Greg. The girl is under disciplinary review—"
"My condition," Greg interrupts, "is that they leave tonight. I have a private jet waiting at the airfield. They will represent the Foundation, not the Academy. Their contracts will be handled by my legal team, independent of any local board influence."
I feel my knees go weak. London.
I look at Caspian. He is looking at me, a wild, beautiful hope in his eyes.
"What about my sister?" I yell, ignoring the gasps of the donors. "The surgery is tomorrow."
"The Foundation has already cleared the bill at Saint Jude's," Greg says. "And we are flying in the specialist from Zurich. Your mother is with her now, Zora. She has the logs. She has the truth. And she has our protection."
I look at Arthur. He looks like a man watching his empire turn to ash. He tries to speak, but Elias steps out from the wings, leaning on his cane, blocking Arthur's path to the stage.
"The dance is over, Arthur," Elias says. "Let them go."
Caspian grabs my hand. "Zora. Let us go."
"I do not have my passport," I stammer, my head spinning.
"I have everything," Caspian says. "I have been packing since the shipyard. Jax is at the gate. If we go now, he cannot stop us."
We do not wait for the applause to end. We do not wait for the trophies. We run.
We run through the back halls, past the lockers, past the JANITOR graffiti I spent the morning scrubbing. We burst out into the cold night air, where Jax's sedan is idling.
"You did it!" Jax yells, throwing the door open. "I saw it on the live feed! You absolute lunatics!"
As we roar away from the Vance Academy, I look at the gates in the rearview mirror. For the first time in my life, I do not feel like I am running away. I feel like I am running toward something.
Caspian leans back against the seat, his hand still locked in mine. He looks at me, the tension finally breaking into a laugh, a real, genuine laugh.
"London," he says, shaking his head. "I have never even been on a plane that did not have my father's name on the tail."
"It is just a city, Thorne," I say, leaning my head on his shoulder. The trauma of the last few months is still there, a dull ache in my chest, but the air feels different. It feels like oxygen.
"No," he whispers, turning to me. "It is a start."
He leans in, and this time, there is no intercom. There is no Arthur. There is just the taste of the rain and the heat of his lips against mine. It is a desperate, messy kiss, a collision of two people who have finally stopped being victims.
"I am going to make you hate London," I murmur against his mouth.
"Try your best, Janitor," he smiles.