My son, my son
 
 Remember the chains
 
 When gold ruled with iron reins
 
 We roared and roared
 
 And twisted and screamed
 
 For ours, a vale
 
 of better dreams
 
 And
 
 Down in the vale
 
 Hear the reaper swing, the reaper swing
 
 the reaper swing
 
 Down in the vale
 
 Hear the reaper sing
 
 A tale of winter done
 
 /> “It is strange,” she says.
 
 “What is?”
 
 “Father told me that there would be riots because of that song. That people would die. But it is such a soft melody.” She coughs blood into a pelt. “We used to sing songs by the campfire, out in the country, where he kept us out of …” coughs again “… of the public … eye. When … my brother died … Father never sang with me again.”
 
 She will soon die. It’s only a matter of time. Her face is pale, her smiles feeble. There’s only one thing I can do, since the medBots haven’t come. I will have to leave her to seek out medicine. One of the Houses might have found some or received injectables as a bounty. I’ll have to go soon, but I need to get her food first.
 
 Someone follows me that day as I hunt alone in the winter woods. I wear my new white wolfcloak. They are camouflaged as well. I do not see whoever it is, but he is there. I pretend my bowstring needs fixing and steal a glance back. Nothing. Quiet. Snow. The sound of wind on brittle branches. They still follow as I move along.
 
 I feel them behind me. It’s like the ache in my body from my wound. I pretend to see a deer and pass quickly through a thicket only to scramble up a tall pine on the other side.
 
 I hear a pop.
 
 They pass beneath me. I feel it on my skin, in my bones. So I shake the branches under my legs. Gathered snow tumbles down. A distorted hollow in the shape of a man forms in the snowfall. It is looking at me.
 
 “Fitchner?” I call down.
 
 His bubblegum pops again.
 
 “You may come down now, boyo,” Fitchner barks up. He deactivates his ghostCloak and gravBoots and sinks into the snow. He’s wearing a thin black thermal. My layered fatigues and stinking animal skins don’t keep me half as warm.
 
 It’s been weeks since I last saw him. He looks tired.
 
 “Going to finish what Cassius started?” I ask as I hop down.
 
 He looks me over and smirks. “You look horrible.”
 
 “You do too. The soft bed, warm food, and wine giving you trouble?” I point up. We can just barely see Olympus between the skeletal branches of the winter trees.
 
 He smiles. “Readout says you’ve lost twenty pounds.”