Iโve lost track of the days.
I shouldโve kept track. Prisoners in the Hold used to scratch lines into the walls, though they rarely got more than five.
This feels like more than that.
A lot more.
The first burst of sunlight peeks between the trees that I can see from the bars of our cell. Itโs not really aย cellย at all, more of a cave set deep in the woods of whatever island weโre on. Weโre a good distance from wherever the pirates live, because unless they come to us, we never hear them: no talking, no shouting, no sounds of life at all. The cave runs deep underground, until the light disappears and we can hear water, but the walls go too narrow, leaving us with no exit that way. Bars block the entrance, fixed and mortared into the stone. Lochlan and I spent our early days testing every bar, every joint, every hinge. But despite the salty sea air andย the rainstorms that drive us back below cover, the bars and mortar stand strong.
A well-constructed prison.
When I was locked in the Hold in Kandala, it felt like poetic justice.
It shouldnโt feel like it now, but it does.
Footsteps crunch through the underbrush somewhere among the trees, but I donโt sit up. This will be our breakfast.
Iโve stopped caring. I roll over and face the cave wall, pulling farther into the shadows.
The crunching stops, followed by a slide of metal against stone.
โFood, boys,โ a woman calls. Itโs Lina, one of Oren Craneโs people. She whistles a few short notes, like weโre caged dogs. โCome eat now.โ
I ignore her. I ignore all of them.
Lochlan doesnโt say anything either. I wonder if heโs asleep.
I donโt care.
โOren will be back soon,โ she says. โYouโd best be ready. Heโll have a plan for you, Wes. You want to keep that pretty head on your shoulders, youโre going to do what he says.โ
Wes.The name tugs at me, reminding me of nights in the Wilds with Tessa. Her quiet smile, her quick hands, her gentle manner. Her intelligence. Herย bravery. I fell in love with her by moonlight.
My heart clenches. I have to shove these thoughts away.
I canโt be Weston Lark here. Wes was warm and kind and rarely had a harsh word for anyone.
If Weston Lark were real, heโd probably be dead already.
Weston Larkย wasย dead already. I thought Tessa would never forgive me for it.
And now Iโm sure she thinks Iโm dead for a second time. Or is this the third? Iโve lost track.
I might as well be. I close my eyes.
Eventually, Lina gives up on our silence. Her feet crunch through the undergrowth again, and weโre alone.
The scent of the food doesnโt take long to reach me. Some kind of meat, and what smells like fresh-baked bread. They only feed us twice a day, so I should be starving, but Iโm not. I
stopped caring about foodย daysย ago. Birds chirp somewhere out in the trees, waking in the sunlight, but I burrow more deeply under my sparse blanket, pulling my jacket tightly against myself.
Notย myย jacket.ย Harristanโsย jacket.
Iโll never see my brother again.
I try to shove this thought away too, but Iโm not quick enough. My throat tightens and my eyes go hot. I hold my breath so I donโt make a sound.
Maybe Iโll hold it long enough that Iโll suffocate and die.
โHey.โ
Lochlanโs voice. I ignore him, too.
โYou need to eat,โ he calls.
A tear rolls out of my eye, making a path across my cheek.
I bite the side of my tongue until the pain chases away my emotion, and then I duck my face into the blanket and swipe the tear off.
The last time I cried, I was in a cell, too. I was on my knees, facing my brother.
โYou didnโt eat anything yesterday,โ Lochlan is saying. โWesโyouย needย to eat.โ
Wes.I hate that he calls me that. He started doing it when weย washed up onshore, so the pirates wouldnโt know I was the prince, but the name reminds me too much of everything Iโve lost.
I have to duck my face into the blanket again.
โHey.โ His voice is closer, right behind me. โGet up.โ
I donโt want to get up. My throat is still tight and my eyes are hot and I want him to go away.
Lochlan pokes me in the shoulder. โGet up.ย Eat.โ
I grit my teeth. โLeave me alone.โ
โNo.โ He pokes me again. โStop wallowing and get up.โ
โIโm not wallowing.โ
I am absolutely wallowing.
This time he tugs at my shoulder. โStop being a baby,โ he says. โGet up, Wes.โ
โStop calling me that.โ
โFine.โ His voice drops, and it sounds like heโs crouching behind me, leaning in. โGet up,ย Corrick.โ
My given name sounds like an insult. โGo away.โ
โNo.โ He smacks me on the back of the head,ย hard.
Itโs so startling that I whip around, throwing the blanket back. I inhale to snap at him, but heโs ready for it. He claps me on the ear like Iโm a child, sending me sprawling a little. โThatโs right,โ he taunts. โMove, Cory.โ
That does it. I growl and launch myself at him with enough force that he goes skidding into the dirt. I try to swing a fist, but he dodges most of my blows, and we roll, grappling for purchase, snarling with anger.
But heโs right that I havenโt been eating, and heโs able to pin me to the ground a lot more easily than Iโd like. He straddles my waist and puts an arm across my neck until itโs hard to breathe, and heโs bearing down on one arm so I canโt swing at him anymore.
I have the pleasure of seeing blood on his lip, though. I strain against his hold and wonder if heโll break my neck.
He glares down at me, panting. โLord, you fight like a wildcat. Are you ready to eat now?โ
โGet off me,โ I grind out. Blood is bitter on my tongue.
โBreakfast?โ
โGo to hell, Lochlan.โ
He leans close. His black hair hangs into his eyes, lank and filthy from our days locked in this cell. Iโm sure Iโm no better. โSo this is all it wouldโve taken to break the Kingโs Justice?โ he says. โA few days in a cage?โ
I spit blood at him. โEat shit.โ
โWell, thatโs not very princely.โ He reaches for something, and I try to take advantage of his moment of distraction to wrench free, but heโs too quick. Lochlan grabs a fistful of my hair and twists it tight.
Itโs so sharp and unexpectedly painful that it pulls a yelp from my throat. I grab hold of his wrist, but his grip on my hair is too tight and I just hurt myself. โWhat the hell isย wrongย withโโ
โHere.โ He holds a biscuit in front of my face. โEat it and Iโll let you go.โ
I stare at him like heโs crazy.
He gives my hair another wrench. โEat, you idiot!โ
โFine!โ I bite into the biscuit and tear a piece free.
Lochlan looks at me like heโs waiting to make sure I chew, so I do, glaring at him petulantly the whole time. Itโs not theย mostย humiliating thing Iโve ever done, but it likely ranks among the top five.
โGood,โ he says. He finally lets go of my hair and climbs off me.
I launch myself at him againย immediately.
This time he ends up with a scrape down the side of his face, and heโll probably have a black eye by nightfall. Unfortunately, so will I. This struggle ends with me facedown and inhaling dirt, his knee in my back, his hand twisting my hair again.
He finds the biscuit where it fell, blows dirt off the edge, and holds it in front of my face. โReady for more?โ
I inhale to tell him something even less princely, but itโs like the first bite of biscuit woke my stomach. I actually am hungry now.
โLet me up,โ I grind out. โIโll eat.โ
I expect him to force-feed me each bite anyway, but to my surprise, he lets me go. I gingerly rearrange my limbs until Iโm sitting cross-legged, and I swipe the biscuit from his hand. I tear another piece free and chew, and suddenly itโs all I can do to keep from shoving the whole thing in my mouth.
โSlow,โ Lochlan says. โIt wonโt do either of us any good if you throw it all up.โ
โShut up.โ I donโt look at him. I shove hair back from my face and try to ignore the ache in my scalp from where he yanked.
But I force myself to take small bites, because heโs right.
The sun has risen further, bright through the trees. It makes my head ache. I want to curl up in the corner again.
Lochlan rises to his knees, and I tense, ready for him to attack me again, but he just holds out a small steel cup of water. โYou need to drink, too,โ he says.
I donโt take it. โWhat do you care?โ
โIf you make me hold you down and pour it down your throat, weโll end up wasting half.โ
I glare back at himโbut heโs likely serious, so I take the cup, then take a sip.
I follow it with a longer swallow, because he was right about theย water, too. By the time I set down the cup, Iโm looking for the rest of the food that Lina brought.
There are boiled eggs and roasted chicken legs and salted potatoes that have been cooked so long that the skin has gone crispy, the insides soft. Surprisingly good food for prisoners, but I suspect this is just whatever is left over from the food that Oren Craneโs people prepare for themselves. I didnโt get aย goodย look at them in the darkness of that first night, but there were only ten of them on the beach, and it probably wouldโve been more work to prepare us something less filling.
Lochlan sits across from me, eating his own. โAnd you were going to turn this down,โ he says, mildly chiding.
I keep my eyes on my food. I still havenโt really looked at him. My pride is smarting from the way he pinned me to the ground and shoved a biscuit in my face. โYou shouldโve left me alone, and you couldโve had twice as much.โ
โIโm not watching you kill yourself.โ
That draws my gaze up. Heโs not looking at me either. His eyes are shadowed, his heavily freckled skin more tanned from our days on theย Dawn Chaser. His sleeves are rolled back, revealing a dozen burn scars along his forearms, likely earned from working in the forges in Steel City. I broke his left wrist weeks ago, but heโs long since lost the bandage he was wearing on the ship. It canโt be fully healed yet, but itโs not like weโre getting any medical attention in this cell.
And he sure didnโt have any trouble fighting me to the ground.
I scowl and look back at my food.
โWhen we were desperate for medicine,โ Lochlan says quietly, โwe had rules drilled into us. For . . . โfor when we were caught.โ
Thereโs a note in his voice that draws my attention up again.
He tears a piece of chicken from the bone with his teeth. Heโs still not looking at me. โThe most important one was to never stop eating. If foodโs put in front of you, you eat it. If waterโs there, you drink it. Wasting food only spites yourself. Being weak only helps your captors.โ He pauses, and his voice is grave. โIf youโre breathing, youโre alive. If youโre alive, thereโs still hope. Donโt undo it on your own.โ
I stare at him.
He shrugs a little. โI shouldโve made you eat yesterday. I forgot that a spoiled prince in the palace wouldnโt have learned that lesson.โ
I should bristle, but I donโt. Heโs right. I didnโt learn that lesson.
I learned different ones.
I narrow my eyes at him. โYouโre a funny one to lecture me about hope, Lochlan.โ
He tears another piece. โWell, I made it out of the Hold,โ he says slowly. โThen I made it off your stage, and that was with a hood over my head and a crossbow jabbed in my back.โ He shrugs. โI made it out of the Circle, when I thought your brother was going to have the army kill us all. And then I made it off that stupid ship.โ He looks up, his eyes a little fierce. โStill breathing.โ
I take a breath and tear a piece of my own chicken. I suppose heโs got me there.
Still breathing.
Silence falls between us, and I donโt like it. Iโm rattled now, agitated. I donโt know if itโs the food or the fight, but Iโve woken up, and thereโs nowhere to go.
โWhat were the other rules?โ I say.
โAlways have fake names ready to offer, if youโre questioned. Ifย youโre running from the night patrol, grab a wheelbarrow and walk. No one stops someone with a wheelbarrow.โ He hesitates, and his eyes hold mine. โIf you get close to the prince, use whatever you can to hurt him.โ
I drain my cup and pour more from the water skin. โDo you want to pull my hair again?โ I say flatly.
โA little.โ
โWhat, are you six years old?โ I demand. โWho fights like that?โ
โIt worked, didnโt it?โ
I scowl. He grins darkly and tears another piece of chicken.
My thoughts are turning clearer. The food really is helping. I feel less like crying and more likeย doingย something. Unfortunately, weโre still locked in a cell.
I have no idea how to get us out of here. Harristan wonโt know weโre missing forย weeks. Rian, formerly Captain Blakemore, and currently the king of Ostriary, likely thinks weโre deadโif he cares at all. I donโt know what Oren Crane will do with me, but heโs not in power here. Even if I tell him who I really am, I donโt think heโd trust me. And I donโt think offering steel from Kandala would give him leverage. Not yet, anyway.
Then again, these pirates left us alive, so they must seeย someย advantage to keeping us here.
Oren will be back soon. Heโll have a plan for you, Wes.
I donโt know what that plan could be. On the first night, I tried to fight Oren Crane. I tried to kill him. I tried to run.
He laughed in my face. Then he locked us in here.
I look at Lochlan again. Heโs the worst person I could be trapped with. I can name a hundred others who would be more convenient than a man who spends every hour of his lifeย hatingย me.
Then again, he cut me loose on the ship when Rian had me tied to the mast. And he was smart enough to give me a false name in front of Oren Crane. I might be in a cell, but as far as the pirates are concerned, Iโm just a servant. A potential source of information, nothing more.
A prince of Kandala would be a source of leverage. Against Harristan for sureโand potentially against Rian, too, considering what he needs. A political prisoner. Whatever the pirates do to Weston Lark, itโs not going to be half as bad as what they could do with Prince Corrickโand I have Lochlan to thank for that.
I strip the last piece of chicken from the bone.
Lochlan made me eat, too.
Iโm not watching you kill yourself.
No, itโs more than that. I study him, trying to figure out his angle.
He peers at me from under a fall of hair. โWhy are you looking at me like that?โ he says.
โIโm trying to figure out why you care if I live or die.โ
He shrugs and says nothing.
โI was tied to a mast on the ship. You couldโve killed me and all your problems wouldโve been over.โ
He spreads his hands, gesturing around the cell. โReally? You think so?โ
Well, no. Maybe not. I sigh and turn my attention back to the food.
But then my hands go still. Lochlan once figured out that Prince Corrick and Weston Lark were the same person, and he was savvy enough to find my workshop in the Wilds. He trapped me and Tessa, then led a mob to attack me. And as much as I hate him, Lochlan was also smart enough to lead rebels intoย the Royal Sector and imprison the consuls. That took strategy and planning.
He also spoke up for me on the ship, when I worried things were going to unravel with Rian. Things could have gone very poorly, and he saw a chance to help defuse the tension.
I remember sitting around a table in the palace during one of the few meetings between the rebels and the consuls that resulted from the attempt at revolution. Consul Sallister was speaking with nothing but disdain, while Lochlan was sitting there seething. On the ship, Lochlan confronted me about the way Sallister committed far more egregious crimes than Lochlan ever had, but the consul faced no penalties at allโjust because he was a man of wealth and power. There was more to it than that, but at its base level, there was truth to it.
Everyone sat at that table and treated Lochlan like an uneducated fool. He was belligerent and angry, but now, looking back, I canโt really blame him.
He wasnโt a fool, though. We were, for underestimating him.
I canโt imagine he wants me for an ally, but maybe he sees no other choice.
โWe need to get back to Kandala,โ I say quietly. โBut if we get out of this cage, Iโm going for Tessa first. Iโm not going back without her.โ
โMe too. Karri would never forgive me if I left her here.โ
Oh.He keeps surprising me.
โRocco as well,โ I add.ย If he survived.ย But I donโt say that. I hope he survived. I hope Tessa isnโt alone.
Lochlan studies me anyway. โHe was badly injured.โ
I frown, remembering the stab wound in my guardsmanโs waist. โIf they die . . .โ My voice trails off, and I feel a clenching inย my belly. Rian was responsible for all of this. I think of all his lies, the way he judgedย meย for my crimes, while ignoring his own. I think of the way he stood on his ship and told me that the people in Kandala werenโt sick from a fever at all, but that they were being poisoned somehow. Rage surges in my belly, hot and sudden. โIโm going to kill Rian.โ
โGood. Iโll help. But go back to the part about us getting out of here.โ Lochlan glances at the bars. โLina said Oren would be back soon, so we donโt know how much time we have.โ
โIf Oren is coming back,โ I say, โit might be our only chance out of this cage. We need to make a plan.โ
โWell, we have no weapons, and weโre clearly outnumbered. What else do you have in mind,ย Weston Lark?โ
For an instant, my chest tightens. Thereโs so much at stake, and panic threatens to overwhelm me. But I think of Harristan and Kandala, of everything thatโs gone wrong. Of every promise Iโve ever made to Tessa. Of wanting to do better. Toย beย better. Of everyone and everything I might never see again. Of everyone Iโve failedโincluding the man in front of me.
Iโve had to play a thousand roles to help my brother hold Kandala together. I can play one more.
I take a breath.ย Still breathing.
โHis daughter, Bella, was on that ship,โ I say. โSo heโs going to hate Rian as much as we do. Weโll need to think of something to offer him. Something that will grant us a little freedom.โ
Lochlanโs eyes light with surprise, and then he smiles a little dangerously, a little ruefully. โIโve been waiting for you to wake up.โ
I donโt smile back. โMaybe you shouldโve picked a fight days ago.โ
โWelcome back, Your Highness.โ