Smits had nothing left of his brother.
He was gone.
And Luke had taken his name.
How could anyone hear Smits sobbing and think he was merely a foolish,
homesick kid? Luke knew what grief was like....What if Oscar suddenly
understood, too?
Smits's grief was dangerous. Smits's grief could kill Luke.
As a third child in a society that allows only two children per family,
Luke Garner was in hiding for the first twelve years of his life.
Then he was given the freedom of an identity card that had belonged
to Lee Grant, a Baron (a member of the highest class of society), and
was sent to boarding school as Lee. But now, just when things are
finally starting to go right, Lee's little brother, Smits, arrives at
school, and Luke finds himself caught in a web of lies that gets
more complex with every passing day -- and possibly even lethal. Can
Luke trust the grief-stricken Smits to keep Luke's secret? And can he
trust Smits's menacing bodyguard, Oscar?
Luke finds that living among the Barons puts him in the deadliest danger
he has ever faced.
As she did in Among the Hidden and the other Shadow Children books,
Margaret Peterson Haddix depicts one individual trying to make sense
of a world in which nothing is what it seems.