taller and wider than most normal houses. The room beyond was so vast and awe-inspiring that Matthias came to a dead halt. A row of ornate chairs led up to a wooden desk that seemed as big as a car. The windows — all ten of them — stretched from the floor to the ceiling and were studded with colored glass.
And between the windows were black banners, just as tall and even wider — banners showing children dying, Population Police officers cheering.
'Sir!' Tiddy was saying, snapping his arm into a salute.
Belatedly, Matthias thought he ought to salute too. He lifted his arm, and the excess material of his uniform sleeve swung against his cap, knocking it off. Tiddy noticed and swung his hand down, smoothly catching the cap before it hit the floor. And, in spite of the fact that Tiddy was a Population Police officer and therefore Matthias's worst enemy, Matthias felt a surge of gratitude.
'At ease. Approach,' a creaky old voice said from the far end of the room.
Tiddy and Matthias walked past all the empty chairs, toward the massive desk. The oldest man Matthias had ever seen in his entire life was sitting behind it.
'I am saddened to report the loss of my men, Commander,' Tiddy said.
The old man looked down at a paper on his desk.
'That would be Sullivan, Grimes, and Hathaway?'
“Yes, sir.”
The old man — the commander — bent over and slowly made three notations on his paper.
'Explain,' he said.
'We were patrolling in the endangered territories,' Tiddy said. 'We had just come across this boy' — he pointed toward Matthias—'who was journeying to enlist in the Population Police. And then suddenly we were set upon by the enemy. There must have been thirty or forty of them, at least. All armed.'
'Sullivan, Grimes, and Hathaway were murdered in the first strike,' Tiddy continued.
'Indeed,' the commander said. 'And how is it that you escaped?'
Matthias wondered if Tiddy would lie about that as well. But Tiddy turned and pointed to Matthias again.
'This boy — this, this
'Ah,' the commander said. He leaned back in his vast leather chair and focused his attention on Matthias.
'How many of the enemy did you see, young man?' he asked.
Matthias forced himself to stare straight back at the commander. But what was he supposed to say? He didn't want to lie or even to back up Tiddys lies indirectly. But he felt a strange sort of loyalty to Tiddy.
'I don't know, sir,' Matthias finally said. 'They were hiding. There were a lot of bullets, though.'
'Cowards,' the commander said, biting off the word as if it left a horrible taste in his mouth.
'You see the blood on his sweater, sir,' Tiddy said. 'It was mayhem.'
And then Matthias had to choke back his anger. The blood on his sweater was from carrying an injured Alia, from tending Percy's gunshot wounds. As far as Matthias was concerned, those bloodstains were practi' cally sacred.
But the commander didn't even look. He was sliding papers around on his desk.
'You'll get your troops,' he told Tiddy. 'Dismissed.'
'Thank you, sir,' Tiddy said.
He turned and strode away from the commander, down the aisle with all the empty chairs. Matthias had to rush to keep up with him. Out in the hall, Tiddy winked at Matthias.
'That went well, don't you think?' he said.
Matthias waited until they were several paces past the snooty guard. He glanced around to make sure there was no one else within earshot. Then he said quietly, 'There weren't forty people shooting at us.'
Tiddy shrugged and kept walking. 'Sometimes you have to exaggerate a little to get the commander's attention. Besides, how are you so sure there weren't forty? Or fifty? I don't know about you, but I didn't have time to stop and count. Twenty, forty, fifty, a hundred — who cares? This way, I know the commander will give me enough men to take care of the problem in that sector.'
And then Matthias knew.
'Are you going back right now?' Matthias asked. 'I want to come too!'
Tiddy laughed.
'You're an eager one, aren't you?' he asked. 'Much as I'd appreciate having you around to watch my back — or steal cars for me — I don't think there's any way I could get approval to take a new recruit with me into
'But I was just there!' Matthias argued desperately. 'What's the difference?'
'Procedure,' Tiddy said with a shrug. 'Got to follow the rules, you know?'
They were descending a set of stairs, then stringing their way through an array of twisty hallways. Finally they came out in front of another huge door in the middle of a bustling lobby.
'Give yourself six months, maybe a year,' Tiddy said. 'I'll make sure you're signed up for all the necessary training. If you do well, and if we still have enemies left to fight then, I promise, I'll take you with me every battle I can.'
'But—,' Matthias protested. Where would Percy and Alia be in six months or a year?
'No 'but's' about it,' Tiddy said. 'Now, I have to go back to the field, and you get to have a delicious meal courtesy of the Population Police. Honestly, I think you're getting the better end of the deal.'
He led Matthias through the doorway, which opened into a huge eating area. Dozens of uniformed men, women, and teenagers were sitting at long tables, hunched over trays. And there were all sorts of heady aromas in the air: freshly baked breads, simmering stews, baked potatoes… In spite of his worries, Matthias couldn't help closing his eyes and inhaling deeply.
'I knew you'd like this part,' Tiddy said, chuckling.
He said something to a woman sitting at the end of a serving line at the side of the room, and the woman handed Matthias a tray.
'Fill up your stomach, and I'll check up on you when I get back,' Tiddy said.
Matthias stood there numbly, watching Tiddy walk away.
'Bean soup, sir?' someone asked.
Matthias swayed a little. He was hungry. Starving, actually. He hadn't eaten since — when? The broth back at Mr. Hendricks's house? That seemed like several lifetimes ago. Would it be so awful to eat something now, so he'd have energy to think of a plan?
'Okay,' Matthias said.
A woman placed a steaming bowl of soup on his tray. Another woman put a plateful of rolls beside the soup, and a girl added a cup of mixed fruit.
Matthias hadn't seen fruit like that in ages, and he loved it.
'Thank you,' he said, looking straight at the girl. And then he looked again. The girl had a white papery hat