Authors: Veronica Roth
Divergent
Veronica Roth
To my mother,
who gave me the moment when Beatrice realizes how strong
her mother is and wonders how she missed it for so long
Contents
THERE IS ONE mirror in my house. It is behind…
THE TESTS BEGIN after lunch. We sit at the long…
I WAKE TO sweaty palms and a pang of guilt…
I REACH MY street five minutes before I usually do,…
THE BUS WE take to get to the Choosing Ceremony…
I TRAIN MY eyes on the floor and stand behind…
WHEN ALL THE initiates stand on solid ground again, Lauren…
“THE FIRST THING you will learn today is how to…
“SINCE THERE ARE an odd number of you, one of…
THAT NIGHT I dream that Christina hangs from the railing…
THE NEXT MORNING, I don’t hear the alarm, shuffling feet,…
I CRAWL ACROSS my mattress and heave a sigh. It…
THE NEXT MORNING, when I trudge into the training room,…
TODAY IS THE day before Visiting Day. I think of…
VISITING DAY. The second I open my eyes, I remember.
THAT AFTERNOON, I go back to the dormitory while everyone…
IT’S NOON. LUNCHTIME.
AS FAR AS I can tell, the second stage of…
WHEN I WALK IN, most of the other initiates—Dauntless-born and…
I BREATHE THROUGH my nose. In, out. In.
THE DOOR TO the Pit closes behind me, and I…
I OPEN MY eyes to the words “Fear God Alone”…
I DON’T GO back to the dorms that night. Sleeping…
“TRIS.”
I STAND WITH Will and Christina at the railing overlooking…
HAND IN HAND, we walk toward the Pit. I monitor…
THE NEXT MORNING I am silly and light. Every time…
I PULL MY jacket tight around my shoulders. I haven’t…
I HAVE ATTENDED Abnegation’s initiation ceremony every year except this…
I AM READY. I step into the room, armed not…
THE LIGHTS COME on. I stand alone in the empty…
I WATCH TOBIAS’S face carefully as we walk to the…
I TRY TO get Tobias alone after the rankings are…
I LEAN HEAVILY on Tobias. A gun barrel pressed to…
I WAKE IN the dark, wedged in a hard corner.
THREE DAUNTLESS SOLDIERS pursue me. They run in unison, their…
ERUDITE AND DAUNTLESS forces are concentrated in the Abnegation sector…
TOBIAS’S HEAD TURNS, and his dark eyes shift to me.
THE SHOT DOESN’T come. He stares at me with the…
T
HERE IS ONE
mirror in my house. It is behind a sliding panel in the hallway upstairs. Our faction allows me to stand in front of it on the second day of every third month, the day my mother cuts my hair.
I sit on the stool and my mother stands behind me with the scissors, trimming. The strands fall on the floor in a dull, blond ring.
When she finishes, she pulls my hair away from my face and twists it into a knot. I note how calm she looks and how focused she is. She is well-practiced in the art of losing herself. I can’t say the same of myself.
I sneak a look at my reflection when she isn’t paying attention—not for the sake of vanity, but out of curiosity. A lot can happen to a person’s appearance in three months. In my reflection, I see a narrow face, wide, round eyes, and a long, thin nose—I still look like a little girl, though sometime in the last few months I turned sixteen. The other factions celebrate birthdays, but we don’t. It would be self-indulgent.
“There,” she says when she pins the knot in place. Her eyes catch mine in the mirror. It is too late to look away, but instead of scolding me, she smiles at our reflection. I frown a little. Why doesn’t she reprimand me for staring at myself?
“So today is the day,” she says.
“Yes,” I reply.
“Are you nervous?”
I stare into my own eyes for a moment. Today is the day of the aptitude test that will show me which of the five factions I belong in. And tomorrow, at the Choosing Ceremony, I will decide on a faction; I will decide the rest of my life; I will decide to stay with my family or abandon them.
“No,” I say. “The tests don’t have to change our choices.”
“Right.” She smiles. “Let’s go eat breakfast.”
“Thank you. For cutting my hair.”
She kisses my cheek and slides the panel over the mirror. I think my mother could be beautiful, in a different world. Her body is thin beneath the gray robe. She has high cheekbones and long eyelashes, and when she lets her hair down at night, it hangs in waves over her shoulders. But she must hide that beauty in Abnegation.
We walk together to the kitchen. On these mornings when my brother makes breakfast, and my father’s hand skims my hair as he reads the newspaper, and my mother hums as she clears the table—it is on these mornings that I feel guiltiest for wanting to leave them.
The bus stinks of exhaust. Every time it hits a patch of uneven pavement, it jostles me from side to side, even though I’m gripping the seat to keep myself still.
My older brother, Caleb, stands in the aisle, holding a railing above his head to keep himself steady. We don’t look alike. He has my father’s dark hair and hooked nose and my mother’s green eyes and dimpled cheeks. When he was younger, that collection of features looked strange, but now it suits him. If he wasn’t Abnegation, I’m sure the girls at school would stare at him.
He also inherited my mother’s talent for selflessness. He gave his seat to a surly Candor man on the bus without a second thought.
The Candor man wears a black suit with a white tie—Candor standard uniform. Their faction values honesty and sees the truth as black and white, so that is what they wear.
The gaps between the buildings narrow and the roads are smoother as we near the heart of the city. The building that was once called the Sears Tower—we call it the Hub—emerges from the fog, a black pillar in the skyline. The bus passes under the elevated tracks. I have never been on a train, though they never stop running and there are tracks everywhere. Only the Dauntless ride them.
Five years ago, volunteer construction workers from Abnegation repaved some of the roads. They started in the middle of the city and worked their way outward until they ran out of materials. The roads where I live are still cracked and patchy, and it’s not safe to drive on them. We don’t have a car anyway.
Caleb’s expression is placid as the bus sways and jolts on the road. The gray robe falls from his arm as he clutches a pole for balance. I can tell by the constant shift of his eyes that he is watching the people around us—striving to see only them and to forget himself. Candor values honesty, but our faction, Abnegation, values selflessness.
The bus stops in front of the school and I get up, scooting past the Candor man. I grab Caleb’s arm as I stumble over the man’s shoes. My slacks are too long, and I’ve never been that graceful.
The Upper Levels building is the oldest of the three schools in the city: Lower Levels, Mid-Levels, and Upper Levels. Like all the other buildings around it, it is made of glass and steel. In front of it is a large metal sculpture that the Dauntless climb after school, daring each other to go higher and higher. Last year I watched one of them fall and break her leg. I was the one who ran to get the nurse.
“Aptitude tests today,” I say. Caleb is not quite a year older than I am, so we are in the same year at school.
He nods as we pass through the front doors. My muscles tighten the second we walk in. The atmosphere feels hungry, like every sixteen-year-old is trying to devour as much as he can get of this last day. It is likely that we will not walk these halls again after the Choosing Ceremony—once we choose, our new factions will be responsible for finishing our education.
Our classes are cut in half today, so we will attend all of them before the aptitude tests, which take place after lunch. My heart rate is already elevated.
“You aren’t at all worried about what they’ll tell you?” I ask Caleb.
We pause at the split in the hallway where he will go one way, toward Advanced Math, and I will go the other, toward Faction History.
He raises an eyebrow at me. “Are you?”
I could tell him I’ve been worried for weeks about what the aptitude test will tell me—Abnegation, Candor, Erudite, Amity, or Dauntless?
Instead I smile and say, “Not really.”
He smiles back. “Well…have a good day.”
I walk toward Faction History, chewing on my lower lip. He never answered my question.