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Chapter no 21 – The Outlaw

Defend the Dawn (Defy the Night, #2)

Tonight, Iโ€™m not wearing a mask.

I shouldnโ€™t be doing this at all, truly. Tensions in the Royal Sector are high now that Prince Corrick has boarded a ship to Ostriary. The guards and sentries around the palace have tripled. The sector gates stay locked; the wall remains heavily patrolled.

But out here in the Wilds, the security is a bit more lax. The extra guards and patrol officers had to come from somewhere.

It doesnโ€™t matter. Iโ€™m not slipping through the shadows. No chance for Violet to find me in the darkness. Iโ€™m not an outlaw at all this evening. Itโ€™s earlier than usual, well before midnight, and Iโ€™m just a man on his way to the gathering.

I stoop, picking up a handful of dirt, rubbing it between my palms as I walk, then flipping my hands to make sure I get some in my knuckles. I wipe my hands on my trousers, then run a hand across the back of my neck and over the neckline of my shirt. Another handful of dirt, another dusting of my palms, and I rake my fingers through my hair. Voices are a low rumble in the distance, and I catch a few notes of a lyre on the wind. There will probably be a

bonfire. Maybe dancers or a fortune-teller. Definitely ale.

My heart is beating a little too hard, and I try to slow my pace. This is farther than I usually go, and thereโ€™s still a scrap of a chance that I could be recognized.

I need to shove these worries away.

I slink through the trees as the music and voices grow louder, until suddenly Iโ€™m not alone. The forest gives way to a bit of a clearing, and people are everywhere. The bonfire is huge, surrounded by logs and stumps and even mats made from woven grass. An older woman on a stump picks out a tune on her lyre, while a young girl twirls in circles by her knees, slightly crushed flowers tucked into her braids. Some older men with thick beards are passing around a tankard of ale, and one laughs, then glances my way when I step between the trees.

I nearly stumble. My heart gives a stutter. For a moment, I expect everyone to turn, to look at me. I wait for a shout, for a pointed finger.

Honestly, I wait for an arrow to appear in my chest.

But the man glances back at his companions. Nothing happens. No one pays me any mind. Just another worker looking for a bit of gossip and a bit of food now that the day is done. No different from a dozen others.

I run a hand across the back of my neck again, and this time, I find it a bit damp. Thereโ€™s a series of stalls at the edge of the clearing, near the road, selling food and ale, and I make my way across.

The first one doesnโ€™t have a line, so I step to the counter, and the man working there gives me a pleasant nod. โ€œWhatโ€™ll you have?โ€ he says.

โ€œWhat are my choices?โ€

โ€œI had some roasted chicken legs, but they went quick,โ€ he says. A fire flickers in the grill behind him, and sweat threads his hair at the temples, turning the blond streaks

brown. A few days of beard growth clings to his jaw. โ€œAll Iโ€™ve got left is some honeyed cheese on nut bread, or some dried venison and jam.โ€

โ€œThe first, if you please,โ€ I say.

He smirks. โ€œIf you please,โ€ he repeats, then laughs under his breath, though not unkindly. โ€œPutting on a few airs, are you?โ€

I inwardly wince. Playing this role used to be as easy as slipping into a pair of worn shoes, but itโ€™s been so long. Iโ€™ve almost forgotten how to do this. I force a bashful smile on my face. โ€œMore than a few, I suppose. I nearly forgot I wasnโ€™t in the Royal Sector anymore.โ€

He laughs and cuts a slab of nut bread, tops it with a slab of cheese, then sets it on a grill over the small fire behind him. โ€œYou work in the sector?โ€

โ€œJust a delivery. We brought a horse down from Moonlight Plains. Some girl needed a perfect dapple gray.โ€ I scoff, then roll my eyes. I always say I work with horses because it comes the most naturally, and itโ€™s unlikely to be questioned. โ€œLike they donโ€™t have enough nags of their own in there. I swear I heard her say she wanted to have the animal shod in gold.โ€

He grins, then slides the bread off the grill and onto a fold of wax paper. He drizzles honey over the cheese, then wraps it up. The smell is heavenly, and my mouth is already watering. Iโ€™d forgotten how generous the portions are in the Wilds, and they sell them for almost nothing, really. Iโ€™m wishing I could give him a handful of silver without giving myself away, when he says, โ€œSo youโ€™re only down here for the night then?โ€

His voice is a little lower, and I canโ€™t quite figure out his tone, but he extends the wrapped food.

โ€œYes. I heard there was some kind of gossip about outlaws, so I wanted to see what I could hear.โ€ I reach to

take the food, and his fingers brush mine.

The motion is gentle, but very deliberate. My eyes snap to his.

โ€œWhatโ€™s your name?โ€ he says.

I stare back at him. Iโ€™m so utterly flummoxed that Iโ€™m not sure what to say. I came here for information, but I was so completely unprepared for โ€ฆ forย flirtation. No one flirts with me. No one ever dares. Aside from Violet making eyes at me a few nights ago, I canโ€™t remember the last time anyone has said one single thing about my appearance. Nothing to indicate attraction, surely. But hereโ€™s this man with sleeves shoved back and sweat in his hair and firelight in his eyes, holding my gaze like itโ€™s the most natural thing in the world.

My thoughts have completely stalled.

โ€œI didnโ€™t mean to shock you.โ€ His smile widens. โ€œMy name is Maxon.โ€

I inhale to say Iโ€™m not shockedโ€”even though I am, and itโ€™s quite obvious that I amโ€”but I choke on my breath, then cough hard. I turn away and cover my mouth with my forearm, but I cough again. When I inhale, itโ€™s like breathing through a wet rag, and I try to talk myself out of the initial surge of panic that swells anytime I canโ€™t breathe.

Itโ€™s almost impossible. No one here knows me. No one here cares about me. If I canโ€™t catch my breath, Iโ€™ll die in the middle of the Wilds and theyโ€™ll throw my body on the pyre with everyone else.

Lord. I was soย foolish. I should run out of here, back to where I came from.

Then again,ย runningย would probably kill me quicker. I cough again, and my eyes water.

โ€œHere.โ€ Maxon touches my arm. His eyes are full of concern now, and I realize heโ€™s pushing a cup of tea across

the counter at me. โ€œHere, drink this.โ€

I donโ€™t know what it is, but right now I donโ€™t care. I lift the cup to my lips.

The water isnโ€™t very warm, and the tea is bitter. I almost choke onย that. But then I get a swallow down, followed by another, and breathing suddenly isnโ€™tย quiteย so difficult.

I take a final swallow, then realize why the tea is bitter, and I look at Maxon in surprise. โ€œYou gave me Moonflower.โ€

He hesitates, then nods. โ€œI had some for tonight.โ€ He pauses. โ€œAnd you clearly needed it.โ€

I glance down at the empty cup, then back at him. โ€œBut

youย need it.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t have a cough right now,โ€ he says. โ€œI can skip a day or two.โ€ His eyes search mine, and he shrugs. โ€œItโ€™s all right. Youโ€™d do the same, Iโ€™m sure.โ€

Iโ€™m not sure about anything at all right now. I canโ€™t think of anyone I know personally who would offer their own dose to me without expectation of something in returnโ€” and this man handed me the cup as a matter of course. Itโ€™s a casual generosity thatโ€™s so unfamiliar that itโ€™s more shocking than the flirtation.

That smile finds Maxonโ€™s face again, but this time itโ€™s a bit more hesitant. โ€œMaybe Iโ€™ve earned your name now?โ€

I look back at him. He gave me his dose of medicine. Possibly hisย onlyย dose of medicine. Thereโ€™s a part of me that wants to give him my real name, in addition to every coin in my pocket.

But of course Iย canโ€™t.

Something about his kindness reminds me of young Violet in the woods, the way she was so clever in helping me hide from the night patrol.

I finally return Maxonโ€™s smile. โ€œFox,โ€ I say. He grins. โ€œFox? Thatโ€™s it?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s it.โ€ I take the wrapped bread and cheese, then pull a handful of coins from my pocket. I give him a nod. โ€œYou have my deepest gratitude, Maxon.โ€

โ€œSo formal again, Fox,โ€ he teasesโ€”then breaks off as the coins rattle into his palm. โ€œWait! This isโ€”this is tooย much.โ€ His fingers close around the money, and heโ€™s trying to pass the coins back to me.

I turn away without taking them. โ€œSurely youโ€™d do the same, right?โ€

Then I unwrap an end of the bread, take a bite of honeyed cheese, and lose myself among the crowd.

 

 

More people gather than I expect. I donโ€™t carry a pocket watch into the Wilds, but when I was a boy, we had an astronomer who taught me to tell time by the placement of the moon, and itโ€™s nearing midnight now. Iโ€™m tired, yet anxious. Unsettled. I thought this was supposed to be a casual gathering, but there are hundreds of people here. More musicians have joined the first, and some people are dancing, keeping the mood lively and festive. The endless steins of ale donโ€™t hurt. But I keep to myself and wait, though Iโ€™ve been considering giving up for the better part of an hour. A mob once attacked โ€œWeston Larkโ€ when they discovered he was the Kingโ€™s Justice. I donโ€™t want the same to happen to me.

The music finally goes silent, and the dancers fall still, and the bonfire has begun to dwindle. Many people take a seat on the stumps and logsโ€”though others stand, whether against trees or leaning against each other. I pull a little more deeply into the shadows and press my back against a tree. The food stalls have long since stopped selling food, but the smell of roasted meat and sweet breads carries

through the clearing. My square of nut bread is long gone. A hush falls over the crowd, and I spot movement among the trees. Someone important is coming.

โ€œIโ€™m surprised youโ€™re still here.โ€

I jump a mile, but itโ€™s Maxon. I clear my throat and try to tell my heart to stop hammering. โ€œI wanted to see what all the fuss was about.โ€

โ€œI heard some of the washerwomen talking. Apparently one of the consuls is coming.โ€

I whip my head around. โ€œWhat?โ€

He misunderstands my surprise, because he nods. โ€œI know. Itโ€™s not Beeching, though.โ€

Heโ€™s talking about Jonas Beeching, the consul of Artis. I wouldnโ€™t expect him to be at a gathering in the Wilds. Heโ€™s hardly been seen in the Royal Sector at all since the rebels killed his lover during their siege on the palace.

Honestly, I wouldnโ€™t expect any of the others either. โ€œWho is it?โ€ I say.

โ€œI guess weโ€™ll have to wait and see.โ€ He pauses. โ€œThe washerwomen said this one was involved with the Benefactors.โ€

Allisander. Or Lissa Marpetta.ย I pull back farther into the shadows. Lissa hasnโ€™t left her sector in weeks. Not since she was accused of helping Allisander to stage a coup in the palace. Iโ€™m torn between running like hell, or standing right here to find out what sheโ€™s up to.

โ€œFox,โ€ Maxon says quietly, shifting closer, but my thoughts are all tangled up and I donโ€™t realize heโ€™s talking toย meย until his hand falls on my arm.

No one ever touches me, and it takes me by surprise. I jerk my gaze over to meet his.

Heโ€™s holding out the handful of coins. โ€œTake it back,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s too much.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not,โ€ I say. โ€œI insist.โ€

He frowns a little, like heโ€™s trying to figure me out, but then a murmur runs through the crowd, and motion from the trees catches my eye.

A tall woman with deep brown skin is striding into the clearing, her hair bound back tightly, her clothing very fine, but understated.

โ€œArella,โ€ I whisper.

Then I notice the man at her side, and I go absolutely still.

โ€œYou know her?โ€ says Maxon. โ€œSheโ€™s not the one with the horse, is she?โ€

I have no idea what heโ€™s talking about. I canโ€™t stop staring at the man walking along beside Arella Cherry.

Itโ€™s Christopher Huxley, the captain of the palace guard.

Theyโ€™re followed by Laurel Pepperleaf, daughter of the most powerful baron in Allisanderโ€™s sector.

I donโ€™t know what to do. Consul Cherry and Captain Huxley are not friends. Laurel Pepperleaf has no business here at all. I donโ€™t know that Iโ€™ve ever seen any of them exchange words. My heart is pounding so hard that my lungs canโ€™t keep up. Breath rattles into my chest, and Iโ€™m worried Iโ€™m going to start coughing again.

โ€œFox?โ€ says Maxon.

โ€œThank you for coming,โ€ Arella says loudly, her voice carrying effortlessly over the crowd. โ€œThere are so many more of you than I expected.โ€

โ€œThe Benefactors cheated us,โ€ a man calls from the other side. โ€œWhoโ€™s to say you arenโ€™t going to do the same?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not offering medicine,โ€ Arella calls back.

โ€œThen what do you have?โ€ a woman says. โ€œWe need medicine, and they still havenโ€™t given us enough. They took Lochlan away.โ€

โ€œNo one is telling us anything!โ€ another man shouts. The din is growing, and Arella raises her arms, but the

shouts continue.

โ€œIf you donโ€™t have medicine,โ€ someone calls, โ€œthen what do you have?โ€

โ€œInformation,โ€ she says. โ€œPlease! There are patrols in the woodsโ€”โ€

Another shout cuts her off. โ€œWhat good is information going to do if weโ€™re dyingโ€”โ€

โ€œInformation on the king!โ€ Captain Huxley shouts, and his voice is even louder. โ€œOn how heโ€™sย trickingย you.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s telling you to take less medicine!โ€ Laurel Pepperleaf calls, adding her voice to the fray, but sheโ€™s nearly drowned out by the people. โ€œOnly because he knows there will never be enough to go around!โ€

โ€œLochlan went to get more medicine!โ€ someone else shouts. โ€œWhen Lochlan returns, youโ€™ll see!โ€

โ€œThat ship is a farce,โ€ calls Arella. โ€œItโ€™ll never reach Ostriary. The king is getting the prince and Lochlan out of theย way.โ€

โ€œFox,โ€ Maxon murmurs.

โ€œWe have proof!โ€ Arella continues. โ€œShipping logs that prove how heโ€™s been lying to you all.โ€

My thoughts are still too twisted up. I canโ€™t make sense of this. โ€œTheyโ€™re lying,โ€ I say. โ€œTheyโ€™re lying.โ€

โ€œHow?โ€ he says. โ€œHow do you know?โ€

His voice is so earnest, reminding me of the way he gave me his medicine. Some of these people are too trusting, too desperate. Theyโ€™ll believe anything they hear

โ€”especially if it reeks of scandal.

I think of Violet with her romantic ideals of Weston and Tessa.

โ€œSay something,โ€ Maxon urges. โ€œDo you want me to get their attention? What do you know? Did you hear something in the Royal Sector?โ€

โ€œNo!โ€ I almost shout it, and I tamp my voice down to a whisper. โ€œNo, donโ€™t say anything.โ€ The absolute last thing I need is for anyone from the palace to notice me in the crowd. โ€œI need to get out of here.โ€

Then someone else cries, โ€œThe night patrol!โ€

Screaming erupts, and people leap up from the logs and stumps, tearing into the woods.

โ€œNo!โ€ calls Captain Huxley. โ€œYouโ€™re doing nothing wrong! Iโ€™ll call themโ€”โ€

But his voice is drowned out by the melee. These people have already been besieged by the night patrol over stolen medicine. Theyโ€™re not going to wait around to see what happens.

Iโ€™m not either. โ€œWe need to run.โ€

Maxon grabs my hand and tugs. โ€œCome on. I know a way.โ€

At first, I follow, but weโ€™re heading south, and I need to go north. I need to get to safety. But I quickly realize that Maxonย doesย know a way, because the path seems densely packed with underbrush, but heโ€™s quick and sure-footed and we dart under branches and over fallen trees. Iโ€™m wheezing hard, but I will my lungs toย work, to go just a bit farther.

A whistle splits the night, and wood cracks. Maxon cries out.

โ€œA crossbow,โ€ I gasp. โ€œRun. Just run.โ€

We run. Another whistle and crack, but we keep going. His hand is still tugging at mine, like weโ€™re friends, like weโ€™re more, like weโ€™re not strangers who just met an hour ago.

But after a while, the cracks stop, fading into the distance, and we slow, gasping for breath, eventually drawing to a stop. Weโ€™ve run in a bit of a loop, turning north at some point, but weโ€™re well away from what just

happened. My thoughts are tumbling over and over, replaying what I heard in the clearing, while also considering how very close I came to taking a shot right through the back.

Iโ€™m still breathing hard, but Maxon isnโ€™t. โ€œAre you all right?โ€ heโ€™s saying. โ€œFox, are you all right?โ€

โ€œI will be.โ€ I cough once, then try to slow my breathing. โ€œYou likely saved my life.โ€

โ€œHardly.โ€

โ€œYou did,โ€ I say. โ€œIโ€™m in your debt. Believe it or not, thatโ€™s no small thing, Maxon.โ€

โ€œWell.โ€ He smiles, and itโ€™s a bit shy. โ€œIโ€™ll be looking forward to figuring out whatย thatย means.โ€

That makes me smile in spite of myself. โ€œNot what youโ€™re imagining, Iโ€™m quite sure.โ€

He blushes, and itโ€™s endearing. Charming. I canโ€™t think of a single time in my life that Iโ€™ve ever made someone blush.

โ€œCome on,โ€ he says. โ€œWe need to get out of the woods.โ€ He grabs hold of my hand again.

I let him.

A whistle blazes through the woods, and the point of an arrow bursts through the center of Maxonโ€™s chest.

Then another. And a third, all in rapid succession.

His eyes flare with panic, and his mouth opens, but no sound comes out.

Iโ€™m staring. Not breathing. Iโ€™m struck by the worst kind of dรฉjร  vu as my world centers on those arrow points. The blood beginning to seep around them. A shout comes from somewhere distant, but I canโ€™t move.

Maxonโ€™s eyes go dull. He falls to the ground. His hand tugs free of mine.

Another whistle, and my ear explodes with pain. For a terrifying moment, I think this is it, that Iโ€™ve been shot in

the head and my final thoughts will be nothing but terror and confusion. But no, my hand slaps to my head and comes away with blood. The arrow only clipped me, probably because Maxonโ€™s falling body tugged me sideways.

I stop thinking. I run.

More arrows fly, but I duck and dodge and weave between trees. I know how hard it is to hit a moving target.

Pain explodes in my leg, and I nearly go sprawling. Itโ€™s the side of my leg, so I havenโ€™t been impaled, but every step brings a sharp tug of fire through the muscle. My thoughts feel fuzzy, and I canโ€™t tell if itโ€™s from blood loss or if I simply canโ€™t breathe. I donโ€™t often run for long distances, but fear is making for a good motivator.

Somewhere in the distance, a man gives a sharp whistle, then yells, โ€œSergeant! Let that one go. Weโ€™ve got enough to drag back to the Hold already.โ€

I keep running anyway, worried itโ€™s a trap, that the instant I stop, a bolt will strike me right between the shoulder blades. I keep seeing Maxonโ€™s face, the sudden shock and panic as he realized he was going to die.

It feels like I run forever, but eventually my legs refuse to work anymore. My breathing is ragged and uneven, a thin whistle of air into lungs that donโ€™t want to work. I grab hold of a tree trunk and try to hold myself upright, then do my best to orient myself and find my bearings.

At first, nothing looks familiar. Farmhouses, a few distant buildings. Iโ€™m still in the Wilds, but I donโ€™t know what part. Iโ€™m not even sure what sector.

But then I recognize a wagon. A front porch. A barn door with a flower painted on the side.

Violetโ€™s barn.

Would she help me? Could I trust her? Iโ€™m not sure. I do know I canโ€™t run much farther. When I try to walk, my leg

insists on limping.

I glance down. The entire side of my trousers are soaked in blood.

I touch a hand to my ear and flinch. The flesh feels torn.

My neck is sticky, too.

I swear. There will be no hiding this.

I limp through the grass, gasping with each step.

When I make it to the stump with the ax, Iโ€™m debating whether to hide in the barn until sunrise, or whether I should risk tapping at the door.

I donโ€™t need to make a decision. Violet pops up out of the shadows like she waits for me every night.

โ€œYou came!โ€ she cries. โ€œIโ€™ve been sleeping in the barn at night. Mama thinks Iโ€™m a bit addled, but I donโ€™t care. I knew youโ€™d come back eventually. You canโ€™tโ€”โ€ Her eyes fall on my neck and she breaks off, coming closer. โ€œFox,โ€ she whispers. Her gaze skips lower. โ€œFox.โ€

โ€œViolet,โ€ I say, and my breath is so thin that the word is barely audible. โ€œI need your help. Can you hide me?โ€

โ€œOf course! Iโ€™m good at hiding. I hid fromย youย that first night we metโ€”โ€

โ€œViolet.โ€

โ€œRight. Yes. Oh, thereโ€™s blood everywhere. Here, put your arm around my shoulders.โ€

Sheโ€™s as lean as a willow, and I rather doubt she could support my weight, but she tugs at my arm and half drags me toward the barn. โ€œI do the morning chores, so no one will come in until the afternoon, when Will mucks the stalls.โ€

โ€œGood,โ€ I say. My thoughts are spinning. โ€œI need you to go to the Royal Sector. I need you to carry a message.โ€

โ€œTo the Royal Sector!โ€ she exclaims. โ€œViolet, please. Listen.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m listening.โ€

I think of the dozens of obstacles sheโ€™ll face when she gets to the palace. There are footmen and doormen and guards everywhereโ€”guards who may not be loyal to the king, if Captain Huxley was in the woods with Arella Cherry. I donโ€™t know what to make of any of this, and my thoughts refuse to organize.

They tried to kill me once. Is this a second attempt? Are they trying to kill Corrick?

A sob nearly forms in my chest, but I swallow it down. โ€œYou will go to the palace steps,โ€ I say to her, and her

eyes flare wide, but she bites her lip to keep from exclaiming. โ€œThere is a footman there named Gryff. You will tell him that you have a private message for Master Quint. You will tellย no one else. Do not stop pestering him until he fetches Quint. Do you understand me?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ she whispers, nodding quickly. โ€œGryff the footman. Master Quint.โ€

I wince and stumble on my leg. Sweat slips down my back. โ€œYou are only to talk to Gryff and to Quint. No guards, no other servants.โ€

โ€œGryff. Quint.โ€ She nods again.

โ€œYou will tell Quint that Sullivan was injured, and needs his assistance. But only he is to come.โ€

โ€œSullivan.โ€ We ease through the barn doors. โ€œIs that your real name?โ€

โ€œNo. But heโ€™ll know what it means.โ€ I let out a breath and ease against the wall of the barn, then drop to sit in the straw.

โ€œHow will I get through the sector gates?โ€ Violet says. โ€œItโ€™s the middle of the night.โ€

Damn.ย I hadnโ€™t considered that.

I swallow and reach under my shirt, to where my signet ring hangs on a chain. I tug it over my head. I donโ€™t want to

involve guards, but Iโ€™m going to have to. Then I pull the rest of my silver coins out of my pocket.

Violetโ€™s eyes get even wider. โ€œFox,โ€ she breathes.

โ€œKeep the ring under your clothes,โ€ I say, holding out the chain with the ring and the coins. โ€œTry to bribe the guard at the gate first. Tell him you want to leave a plea at the palace steps but your mother would be upset, so you have to do it in the middle of the night.โ€

She nods. โ€œThen why do I need the ring?โ€

โ€œIf he wonโ€™t take a bribe, youโ€™ll need it to prove you need access to the palace. But still, my message stands. You have a message for Quint alone. Only use the name Sullivan.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t understand. Why would the ring get me through the gates?โ€

I wince and shift my weight. Iโ€™m going to need bandages, too, before she goes. โ€œBecause Iโ€™m the king, Violet. And that ring proves it.โ€

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