Hours pass. I spend some of them sleeping, and most of that is against my will. The first time I wake, Iโm jolted by a barn cat that climbs into my lap. I inhale sharply and look around in a panic, but the barn is still dark, moonlight shining through the windows by the doors.
I shift my leg, and the movement is weak, pain throbbing through the muscle. When I lift a hand to my head, I discover that the blood has crusted to my ear and in my hair, but I canโt tell how bad the injury is.
I blink and remember Maxon, the kindness in his eyes. He was a complete stranger, but he gave me medicine just because I needed it. He tried to lead me away from the night patrol.
And then they killed him. They killed him before I could do anything about it.
I donโt know how Corrick did this for years. Only now do I realize how very much my brother risked. How much guilt he must have carried.
I wish my brother were here.
The thought slips into my brain so quickly that my chest tightens and warmth rushes to my eyes. But I didnโt cry over my parents, and I certainly wonโt cry over this.
I can imagine Corrick here in the barn, rolling his eyes at me.
Lord, Harristan, next time just take me with you.
Yes, Cory. Next time.
I sleep again, waking when a rooster crows. Hens are clucking on the other side of the barn. The cat is sound asleep in my lap, a warm weight across my throbbing thigh. Morning sunlight is beaming through the window now.
Morning.
A swell of panic fills my belly. Violet has been gone for too long. Something must have happened.
Was she captured? Delayed? What if one of the guards threw her into the Hold? Am I to sit here waiting for discovery?
And I gave her my ring. I have no way to prove myself now. Iโm injured and half soaked in blood. Even if Violetโs family found me and believed meโwhich is doubtfulโI rather doubt the night patrol would.
They shot Maxon. They shot him, and he didnโt even do anything wrong.
Youโd do the same, Iโm sure.
The words seem to have two meanings now. I clench my eyes closed and try to breathe.
I press my hands into the ground and shift my weight, and the cat uncurls, annoyed, but I ignore the animal and try to get my legs underneath me. I can stand, but I feel lightheaded, dizzy. My trousers are tacky with blood, and I can see through the tear in my pants that the injury is still seeping.
I draw a ragged breath and swear.
Well, I canโt just stand here. I limp into a stall with a cow and attend to human needs. Iโm not quite thirsty enough to share the animalโs water trough, but itโs close. Violetโs family has a draft horse, but when I limp to his
stall, I discover that heโs old and sway-backed, and most likely broke for harness, not for riding.
Iโm so dizzy that Iโm not sure I could stay on top of a horse anyway.
I wish for clothes, but there are none in the barn. I could try to walk toward the Royal Sector, but I gave Violet all of my money, so I donโt even have coins to pay for a ride in a wagon.
I have no idea which is worse: staying here, waiting for discovery, or heading out in the sunlight and praying that no one recognizes me.
I think of Captain Huxley standing with Arella and Laurel.
If you donโt have medicine, then what do you have? Information on the king. On how heโsย trickingย you.
Iโm not tricking anyone. This is more treason and betrayalโand as much as I hate to admit it, Iโm a bit shocked itโs coming from Arella Cherry.
Corrick is gone. If I canโt trust my guards, I have no one.
Quint.
But if Arella is working against me, maybe I canโt trust Quint either. Maybe Quint is the one who had Violet locked up, and heโs just now gathering guards and consuls to come takeย meย into custody, to parade me back to the palace in chains for doing the exact same thing Corrick was doing.
A chill crawls up my spine, and I make my way back to the wall of the barn, then slide back to sitting. The deepest, darkest part of me wants to run and hide, to lose myself somewhere. No one would ever know.
But that would mean abandoning my throne. Abandoning my people.
If anyone deserves to escape this role, itโs my brother.
Without warning, I hear hoofbeats, and I freeze. Itโs more than one horse, so it canโt be Quint alone.
I struggle to my feet again, then brace a hand against the wall when I begin to slip sideways. My heart stutters in my chest, then bolts, pounding so hard that I feel it in my head. I wish I had a weapon. I donโt know how long or how well I can fight, because the weapons master always goes too easy on me. It makes him nervous when my breathing gets strained.
But I rather doubt Iโll last long. Running as far as I did last night just about killed me.
Then, without warning, the barn doors are rolling open, the sun so bright that I have to blink it away. Figures fill the doorway. I recognize Violet first, because she bursts forward. โFox!โ she cries. โYouโre still here!โ
โStill here,โ I say. My eyes are on the men following her. They step out of the sunlight slowly, and Iโm frozen in place. Quint is there, his expression tense when his eyes land on me. Iโm not sure itโs a relief, because he didnโt come alone, as I requested. Heโs backed by two guards, Thorin and Saeth, and they look as fierce and foreboding as ever.
I keep thinking of Captain Huxleyโs words in the clearing last nightโor Roccoโs warnings to me and Corrick before he left. Thorin and Saeth are trussed up in weapons and armor. Iโm exhausted and injured โฆ and unarmed. They could kill me right now and thereโd be nothing I could do about it. My fingers are clutching at the barn wall so tightly that splinters have dug under my nails, and I can hear my breathing shaking. Itโs only slightly louder than my heart.
Thorin moves first. He takes a step forward, and my breath catches. I draw myself up and brace against the wall.
But he drops to one knee. โYour Majesty.โ An instant later, Saeth and Quint do the same.
A relieved breath huffs out of my chest, and I almost sag against the side of the barn. I have to run a shaking hand over my face. โRise,โ I say, and my voice is rough.
Violet looks from me to them and back. โAm I supposed to do that?โ she whispers.
โNo.โ I study her in the morning light. โYou were gone so long. I thought something happened toโโ My eyes fall on her bare feet, which are red and blistered, one toe stubbed and bloodied. I snap my gaze up. There are so many more important things to worry about, but I say, โI told you to buy boots, Violet.โ
Thorin and Saeth exchange a glance.
Quint looks like heโs not entirely sure what to make of this conversation.
Violet doesnโt even look chagrined. โWell, I wasย goingย to, but I wanted to give some extra coins to Toby. Then I kept thinking about how you said you werenโt coming back, and I didnโt want anyone to think the Fox was gone, so I kept leaving a few coins on the other doorsteps. Just here and there.โ
Of course she did.
Today, however, I canโt be irritated. It reminds me of the way Maxon gave me his medicine. And Violet likely risked her life.
โDid you run all that way in bare feet?โ I say.
โI didnโt run theย wholeย way. It took me a long time at the gate. And then I couldnโt find the palace. Itโs not like Iโve ever been inside the Royal Sector. You couldโve told me it was in theย middle.โ
I look at Quint. โHave a pair of boots sent.โ
He opens his mouth, then closes it. He draws a small book from inside his jacket and makes a note. โOf course, Your Majesty.โ
I look between him and Violet. โI said no guards.โ
She scowls. โI told him that, but he wouldnโt listen.โ She huffs. โGryff wouldnโt listen either. It tookย hoursย to convince him to fetch Master Quint. I had to sing until I didnโt think Iโd have a voice left.โ
I have the sense that I canโt follow this conversation. โYou โฆ you had toย sing?โ
โYes. He wouldnโt listen. He said your ring was a fake. So I sat down and sang every annoying song I know, and itโs aย lot, I tell youโโ
โShe sang until daybreak,โ Quint says. โMeanwhile, when you did not return, I had to alert Thorin. We were beginning to discuss a discreet search party when one of the day maids mentioned the girl singing at the palace steps.โ He takes a step forward, but then he seems to think better of it. He glances from my leg to my head, and his mouth forms a line. โYour Majesty,โ he says quietly. โForgive me, but youโre bleeding.โ He pauses. โWeโve brought a closed carriage.โ
โGood.โ I touch a hand to my ear, and Iโm surprised when it comes away wet with fresh blood. โWho else knows of this?โ
โNo one yet,โ Quint says. โSullivanย is a person of interest. Thatโs all.โ
I look at Thorin. โWho among the guards?โ
โJust us.โ He hesitates and glances at Saeth again. โWe all know how Huxley has an ear for gossip. Weโve been keeping close ranks.โ
Huxley has more than just an ear for gossip, but I donโt say that.
I straighten from the wall, and Saeth steps forward to help me, but I wave him off. I still feel too unsteady, and I want to walk out of here on my own two feet.
โViolet,โ I say to her. โCan I trust you to keep this secret?โ
As I say the question, I know the answer. Even if she promises, even if she swears, this is too big.
She shakes her head anyway, and I must look fierce, because she throws up her hands. โWell, I had to tell Toby.โ Her expression turns somber. โIn case something happened to me. I needed someone to tell Ma.โ
As if on cue, a boy of about ten years old comes skidding into the barn. Heโs barefoot, too, and so quick that Thorin and Saeth both have weapons drawn before he even comes to a stop.
The boy cries out and flails backward, sitting down hard in the straw. But he doesnโt look frightened. He looksย fascinated. โI saw the carriage, Vi! Are those real palace guards?โ
โReal enough, boy,โ says Saeth. โIs anyone else coming behind you?โ
โNo,โ he says. Tobyโs gaze skips past them, then looks to me and Quint. His eyes go even wider, and he scrambles to his feet. He bows to Quint, whoโs in a half-buttoned red brocade jacket. โYour Majesty.โ
โAh โฆ no,โ says Quint. But he glances at the boyโs feet, then draws out his little notebook again and makes a note. He looks to me. โYour Majesty,โ he says pointedly. โPerhaps we should depart while itโs still early.โ
Toby looks at me, and his face scrunches up. โHim?
Really?โ
Iโm too tired for this. My night has been too full of fear and loss and uncertainty, and I have bigger worries than anything Iโll find inside this barn. โNo,โ I say. โQuint. You said you brought a carriage?โ
I donโt wait for an answer. I just start limping. Outside of the barn, thereโs a carriage and one of the guardsโ horses.
โWait!โ cries Violet. โWill I ever see you again?โ
No. She wonโt. But I canโt look into her desperate eyes and say that.
โIโm the king,โ I say wearily. โEveryone sees me.โ Before I climb into the carriage, I look at her. โYou have my thanks, Violet. Truly.โ
She looks so troubled. โWe need the Fox,โ she whispers. I frown. โForgive me. Please.โ I climb into the carriage.
Quint climbs in behind me. The door slams.
โWe need you!โ she calls shrilly. She bangs on the door of the carriage. โWe need the Fox!โ
โViolet!โ a woman calls from somewhere distant. โViolet, what are you doing?โ
โIt was the king, Miss Tucker!โ the boy calls. โThe king was in your barn!โ
I freeze, staring across at Quint. His expression is somber, his eyes searching my face, but he says nothing.
โWhat is this?โ the woman calls. โWhat is happening?โ โA man was hiding in your barn,โ calls Saeth. โHe was
impersonating the king. Weโve taken him into custody, miss.โ
โHe wasnโt impersonating him,โ calls the boy. โHe
wasnโtโโ
A whip cracks, and the carriage starts to rattle away.
We need the Fox.
The words hit me almost as hard as Maxonโs death. She ran on bare feet. She sang all night.
And now Iโm riding away in a carriage, leaving her behind.
โYour Majesty,โ says Quint.
I blink, then look at him. โHow did Corrick do this for so long?โ I say. โHow could he bear it?โ
He frowns. โHe had Tessa. He wasnโt alone.โ I swallow. Iโm always alone.
Quint pulls a stoppered bottle of water from a trunk set under the seat, then pulls a handkerchief free. He wets an end, then holds it up. โMay I?โ
โI donโt need tending, Quint.โ
โItโs morning. I can do my best to keep you out of sight, but if you donโt want to raise too many questions, youโll need to be somewhat presentable to walk into the palace.โ He glances at my leg, which is stretched across the space between us, because bending it hurts. โPresuming you can walk at all.โ
I glare at him, and while Quint is always respectfully deferential, heโs not easily cowed. He lifts the handkerchief in response.
I scowl. โFine.โ I take the handkerchief from him, but when I touch it to my neck, it comes away with more blood than I expect. I frown and take another swipe, dragging against my ear, and I hiss at the sudden pain.
โHonestly.โ Quint shifts across the carriage to sit beside me. โAllow me.โ He doesnโt wait for an answer; he just plucks the cloth from my hand, adding more water from the bottle. Diluted drops of blood fall, disappearing in the velvet cushion. When he touches the handkerchief to my neck, I almost jump. Quint isnโt rough, but heโs not quite gentle either. My head aches, and the water stings where it finds broken skin, so I have half a mind to yank the handkerchief back out of his hand. I have to fight not to squirm like an errant schoolboy.
But maybe Quint can tell, because his movements slow, the handkerchief tracing lightly over the injury.
โHow often did you do this for Corrick?โ I say.
โTending his wounds or fetching him from the Wilds?โ
I donโt like the way he phrases either of those options. โBoth.โ
He shakes his head. โNeither, really. Corrick was rarely injured.โ He pauses. โAside from the time your soldiers found him with the rebels, he never failed to return of his own accord.โ He pauses. โHe never went on his nightly runs without a mask. He never even let Tessa know who he was.โ
I draw back and turn to face him. โAre you chastising me, Quint?โ
โNever, Your Majesty.โ He rinses the handkerchief again, then lifts it. When I donโt move, he raises his eyebrows.
I sigh and turn my head. I have to run a hand across my face. Corrick did this for years. Only a few weeks, and I nearly brought down the kingdom.
Heโs better at this than I am.
Heโs better at a lot of things than I am.
โMaybe you should be,โ I say. The water is cold, and I shiver.
โHmm?โ
โChastising me,โ I add. โWhen I told you I wanted to do this, you didnโt even try to talk me out of it.โ
โIโm honored to think I could have talked the king of Kandala out of anything at all.โ He pauses, and I wince as he passes the handkerchief over the worst of it. โThis will need stitching, Iโm afraid.โ
โThe arrow nearly took me in the face.โ โYou were very lucky.โ
โLucky.โ I should be worried about my consuls and my guards, but instead, I think of Maxon, lying dead in the middle of the woods. My voice has gone rough. To my horror, my chest tightens. I frown and push Quintโs hand away. โEnough.โ
He recedes, wrapping up the cloth so it doesnโt drip too badly, and I fix my gaze on the opposite wall of the
carriage. The air between us is thick with silence, and thatโs not better. It leaves me with too much time to think.
Information on the king. On how heโsย trickingย you.
Arella and Roydan have been having private meetings for weeksโbut theyโve been reviewing shipping logs. I have absolutely no idea how that could be related to me tricking anyone.
And I still canโt see Arella conspiring with Laurel Pepperleaf and Captain Huxley. Heโs a gossip, everyone knows that, but Iโve never thought he was disloyal. Laurel was at the dinner with Allisander, and Arellaย hatesย him and everything he stands for. I canโt quite see Laurel and Arella working together either.
But the night patrol showed up, and everyone scattered. Maxon helped meโand then he was killed for it.
My eyes burn and I blink it away. โIf I may,โ Quint begins.
โNo,โ I say, and he shuts his mouth.
I donโt like that. I glance up. His red hair is nearly brown in the dim light of the carriage, but his eyes are piercing. Weโve never been friends, so I have no idea how old he is, but he has to be older than I am. He was an apprentice when he first came to the palace, and heโs held his position as Palace Master for years now, so he must be
โฆ twenty-four? Twenty-five? I only ever really kept him on because I know Corrick is so fond of him. Personally, I always found him a bit bothersome: he might be good at his job, but he prattles endlessly about everything, and he seems to enjoy doing so.
Itโs only in these recent weeks that Iโve discovered that Quintโs mindless chatter is a front for someone whoโs sharp, attentive, and deeply loyal.
Brave, too. He saved my life when the palace was under attack. And cunning, if he secretly helped Corrick for so
long.
โWas that your idea?โ I finally say. โTo give the impression that the guards were arresting me for โimpersonatingโ the king?โ
โYes,โ he says. โViolet didnโt have much of a story, really. If she protests, I rather doubt anyone will listen. Itโs a lot easier to believe that a man tricked a few children into thinking he was royalty.โ
Heโs right, but Violet doesnโt really deserve that. I canโt believe she took the money for boots and used some of it to make people think the Fox was still making rounds. A new thread of guilt joins the first few that are already tugging at my heart. At least I can make sure she has warm feet for a while.
I think of the way Quint glanced at Tobyโs feet, too, how he added a note to his little book.
โForgive me,โ I say. โWhat were you going to say to me?โ
Quint blinks at that. โI was going to ask how you were injured.โ He pauses. โWhen we arrived at the barn, you did not seem relieved to see us.โ
โHow did I seem?โ
โWith all due respect, Your Majestyโโ โJust tell me, Quint.โ
โTerrified.โ
โAh.โ I run a hand across the back of my neck. Just the memory of โฆ ofย allย of it causes me to shudder. โWell.โ I try to draw my leg up, but my knee protests, and I wince and shift my weight. I give up and sigh. โI heard there was going to be a meeting. I wanted to see if I could learn what was said.โ
โWhat did you learn?โ
That sending the Kingโs Justice away has emboldened dissenters, just as we feared.
That sedition and treason still wait in the shadows. That the consuls are still working against meโand they have the support of the palace guards.
That my brother is gone, and I can trust no one. That I am very much alone.
I canโt say any of that. Iโm the king. Even the barest utterance of uncertainty can sow discord and distrust.
I donโt even know how much I can tell Quint. I wish I had Corrick.
โYour Majesty โฆ,โ Quint begins, but he stops there, as if he expects me to cut him off again.
โGo ahead,โ I say. I fix my eyes on the sunlight that streams around the draperies.
โCorrick did not share everything with me in the beginning,โ he says. โIn fact, it took him quite some time before he saw fit to share what he was doing, even though I had my suspicions.โ His voice is very quiet, very serious. โYou trusted me enough to tell me that you hoped to help the people in the same way he once did. You trusted me enough to come to your aid this morning.โ He hesitates. โSurely you must know your guards will have some suspicions. Corrick did not do this alone.โ Another hesitation. โThereโs no need for you to do it alone either.โ
That draws my gaze back to his. My thoughts keep spinning, and I know now is a time to issue warnings and orders and begin making plans to protect the palaceโand the people. I draw a breath to tell him about the consul, about the guard captain.
Instead, I open my mouth, and I find myself saying, โA man died. He wasโhe triedโโ I have to breathe past the lump in my throat that feels ever-present. โHis name was Maxon. The night patrol shot him.โ
Quint doesnโt flinch. He doesnโt look away. โWhat happened?โ
Corrick did not do this alone.
I donโt know how to do it any other way.
But I draw a slow breath and tell Quint everything. At first, my words are tight and formal. A sterile recitation of events. I expect him to interject with questions or take notes, as if we were sitting in a meeting at the palace and advisers would need a written report later. But heโs quiet and attentive, and as the carriage rolls along, I find myself sharing details I wouldnโt otherwise. The food stall. The crowds. The honey and cheese on warm nut bread. Arella and Captain Huxley and their announcementโfollowed by the panic over the arrival of the night patrol.
Maxonโs generosityโand his death.
โWhen you arrived with guards,โ I say, โI wasnโt sure what to expect.โ
โI didnโt mean to alarm you,โ he says, his tone full of contrition. โI apologize.โ
โNo,โ I say. โYou donโt need to apologize.โ โWill you discharge Captain Huxley?โ
โIโve considered it.โ I pause. โIf I do, I worry that it may tip my hand too quickly. Anyone heโs working with will better hide their activities.โ I think of how Thorin said they know about Huxleyโs ear for gossip, how theyโve closed ranks. I wonder how tight that circle is.
โArella will surely deny all of it,โ Quint says. Heย tsks. โDo you have any idea how they planned to explain how youโreย trickingย the people?โ
โTessaโs medicine?โ I guess. โBut Lochlan already implied that the people were worried. They donโt need Captain Huxley to reinforce it. What could the end goal be? To simply spur revolution? The crowd wasnโt organized. They scattered when the night patrol arrived.โ
โIt takes more than the promise of gossip to unite people,โ Quint says. โFor as much as Corrick hates
Lochlan, the people were willing to follow the rebelโs lead when he offered a new path.โ He pauses. โJust as you allowed him to be a part of your negotiationsโand sent him away on Captain Blakemoreโs ship.โ
Thatโs all trueโand thereโs something about that simple leadership that I envy.
โTessa once said that we could be loved,โ I say to him. โShe said that we hide the truest parts of ourselves. Do you agree with that, Quint?โ
A line forms between his eyebrows, and he looks half- amused, half-sad. โIs this a trick question, Your Majesty?โ
โNo.โ
โThen โฆ yes. I agree with every word.โ
When I say nothing, he rushes on. โWeโre riding in a carriage after your attempt to hide yourself among the people ended in peril.โ He pauses. โAfter Prince Corrickโs attempts to do the same ended in revolution.โ
Thatโs true enough, I suppose.
โI have another question,โ I say. โThis one isnโt a trick either.โ
Quint nods. โYes, Your Majesty.โ
โDo you think I hide behind my brotherโs viciousness?โ
He inhales as if heโs going to offer platitudes, but I hold his eyes, and he goes very still.
Thatโs answer enough. I speak into his silence. โSo you think Iโm a coward.โ
โWhat?โ He looks a bit incredulous. โNo. Certainly not.โ His answer is quick, and I frown. โWhy not?โ
โYou have to ask meย why? I watched you face down the rebels in the square when they were shooting consuls and throwing fire at you. You were safe in the woods after they laid siege to the palace, and you tookย one guardย to confront them all.โ
โIn all truth,โ I say, a bit chagrined, โI expected to find more on the way.โ
He doesnโt smile. โCorrick boarded that ship because he doesnโt want to disappoint you. Before we learned of Violetโs claims, I think Thorin was ready to walk every trail of the Wilds until he found you. Tessa stood by your side because she believes you truly want to better Kandala.โ He pauses. โCowardice does not breed this kind of loyalty.โ
โYet you believe I hide behind my brother.โ
โNo. I believe you allow his actions to speak for you.โ I almost flinch.
โForgive me,โ he begins.
โDonโt apologize,โ I say. โIโm glad youโre being forthright with me.โ
And I am, I realize. Iโve spent monthsโno,ย yearsโ guarding my thoughts and my actions, not allowing a shred of vulnerability to reveal itself. Not even in front of Corrick.
How did I seem?
Terrified.
I study him. When the palace was attacked, Quint took an arrow that was meant for me. โYou stayed by my side, too, Quint.โ
โYes, Your Majesty.โ
I run a hand over my face and sigh. โIf only I could convince the people to be equally loyal.โ
โWell,โ says Quint, โperhaps you can.โ โHow?โ
โYouโre not a coward,โ he says. โYouโre not afraid to walk among them.โ Quintโs eyes donโt leave mine. โCorrick is gone. Perhaps itโs time to speak for yourself.โ