Chapter 1

1

Magnifico was one hundred percent black and white. Most people would think it an odd comment to make, but life hadn’t always been dreary.

Fourteen years ago, when I was three, color vanished from my country. No one knew what happened to make it that way, but it wasn’t for a lack of trying to find an answer. I even asked Mom numerous times over the years why Magnifico switched from color to black and white. She shrugged and said my time would be better spent doing other things.

However, I still couldn’t help but wonder because anyone with a brain should’ve been curious about what had happened in Magnifico. At least that was how I felt.

I couldn’t get distracted, though. The execution of King Dorian and Queen Penny at the Lax Stadium in the capital city of Conforia was happening today. And that was where I was with my friends, Katherine, Taylor, and Raquel. The stadium was steadily filling with others who had come to see the executions.

Katherine grimaced. “I can’t believe they gave us the day off from school to witness this.”

Taylor bumped Katherine’s shoulder. “I hate to break it to you, but there are more important things in life than school.”

Life’s unfairness made me snarl sometimes. Kissing a guy twice was the only romance I’d ever experienced because I never had a boyfriend, let alone a first date. So, yeah. I had no qualms about being jealous of Taylor and Katherine’s relationship.

“I know,” Katherine said, sighing. “But I can’t help that I enjoy school.”

Raquel rolled her eyes. “You don’t have to hide behind school because you’re embarrassed you were born without magic.”

“How many times have I told you not to bring that up?” Katherine asked.

Yeah. I noticed all of the snide comments, glares, and obscenities people uttered when finding out Katherine had no magical abilities. But being different wasn’t a reason for cruelty. Katherine wasn’t a bad person.

“I’m sorry. I wasn’t trying to be insensitive. I meant you shouldn’t feel ashamed for being born without magic,” Raquel said.

“I don’t,” Katherine grunted.

Raquel twirled a strand of hair around her finger. “If you say so.”

Sure. Raquel meant well, but she needed to drop the subject. She’d been there when people acted as if Katherine had ten eyes because she couldn’t practice magic.

Taylor shifted his gaze. “You’re so quiet, Max.”

“Don’t you mean Maximillian?” I asked.

Taylor sighed. “Sorry. I forgot for a moment. Maximillian is such a mouthful.”

“Anyway.” I gave Taylor a hard stare. “I don’t feel the need to talk all the time.”

Katherine chuckled. “That’s a shocker. Have you met yourself?”

At least Taylor was successful in lightening the mood because there wasn’t a hint of harshness in Katherine’s voice when she laughed. And if I took one for the group so things wouldn’t escalate, then so be it.

A gust of wind whistled through the air, making Raquel’s curly hair ripple. “I can’t believe Vivian is having her own parents executed…”

“She’ll be a better ruler,” Taylor said.

Katherine huffed. “Appointing herself queen makes her seem self-serving.”

Taylor shook his head. “Give her a chance, and don’t believe all the negativity.”

Katherine furrowed her eyebrows. “Excuse me? Her boyfriend, Sirch Manges, thinks people born without magic are scum. In fact, he wrote a book on the subject.”

Good for Katherine. She needed to stand up for herself. Dating Taylor wasn’t mutually exclusive with thinking everything he said was perfect. Any anger Katherine might’ve had was justified. There was a difference between saying hateful things and getting a book about it published. Yet most people hadn’t been fazed by Vivian and Sirch’s relationship even though his book was published before he met Vivian. Perhaps people thought Sirch was only a provocateur. A difference existed between spouting ideas and dying because of them. Not that I wanted to make excuses for him; I didn’t.

I couldn’t help feeling disgusted at how hatred for nonmagical people existed. Intolerance didn’t make people’s lives better. Okay. Fine. That point wasn’t completely true since Sirch made a little money off his book. But my point remained clear. Bigotry wouldn’t make the average person rich. It was an empty idea to hold onto.

“I never said I agreed with everything she says or stands for,” Taylor said. “But Magnifico needs peace, not rioting and looting.”

“Vivian isn’t some savior,” Katherine said, pursing her lips. “Her parents ended the Goblin War eventually.”

The Goblin War. It was an interesting phrase. There was nothing like mentioning that to start an altercation. A person either believed in the war or didn’t. Depending on who you asked, some people thought it was a waste of time and that the goblins living in the south posed zero threat, while others considered the opposite to be true. Though, two things that couldn’t be debated were how King Dorian and Queen Penny had raised taxes to pay for the war and how they slashed spending on domestic projects such as programs for the poor or building highways. Because even I understood how that infuriated people struggling to get by.