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Chapter no 3 – Harristan

Destroy the Day (Defy the Night, #3)

When I was a boy, sneaking into the Wilds was an adventure. Iโ€™d have my brother by my side, and weโ€™d lose ourselves among the people, spending coins and eating sweets and pretending to be Sullivan and Wes, just two boys who could escape the trappings and rigid rules of palace life for a little while. At the end of the night, we could always sneak back into the Royal Sector, climbing a rope into my chambers or following a tunnel into the empty palace kitchens. We never had to worry about a hot meal or a warm bed or a pair of boots that fit.

In retrospect, Iโ€™m ashamed to think that we were playing at being poor, though we never had to live it.

Now, Iโ€™m living it.

Some things, Iโ€™ve learned to ignore. The first time I was confronted with a straw mattress, I thought Iโ€™d never sleep again, but now I hardly notice. The autumn wind whistles through loose shutters and cracked windows at night, but Iโ€™ve been taught toย stoke the fire and tie the curtains tight to keep the warmth in. My clothes are all borrowed or donated, and nothing fitsย well, but everything keeps me warm, so theyโ€™ll do. I still have the boots I originally took from the palace, which should last me a while. The worst are the insects and rodents that seem to be everywhere. That might be the hardest thing to bite my tongue aboutโ€”but I do.

Food doesnโ€™t seem scarce, which keeps taking me by surprise. So many of the people here are thinner than they should be. Iโ€™ve been sharing a small two-room house with Quint and my two guards, Thorin and Saeth, but meals have been delivered twice a day. On the seventh day, when dinner is delivered, itโ€™s two entire roasted chickens, a full loaf of bread, a steel bowl full of salted root vegetables, and another bowl full of fruit.

I stare at all the food, and then at the woman delivering it. Her name is Alice, and at first I thought she was young, because sheโ€™s nearly a foot shorter than I am, but Iโ€™ve learned that sheโ€™s closer to my age. Her voice always shakes a bit when she talks to me. Iโ€™m pretty sure itโ€™s less because ofย me, and more the fact that Thorin or Saeth usually loom at my side.

Tonight, itโ€™s Thorin. My guards donโ€™t wear their palace livery anymore, but theyโ€™ve kept their weapons, and thereโ€™s no undoing years of training and discipline. Theyโ€™re wary of everyone in the Wilds. Itโ€™s nearly impossible for them to look harmless. Between the two of them, Thorin always looks a bit more severe, too. When Alice eases the tray onto the table, she gives me a quick, crooked curtsy, then edges immediately toward the door. โ€œW-we hope that will be enough for you.โ€

โ€œMore than plenty,โ€ I say, because itโ€™s enough forย sixย people, and Saeth is out walking a patrol. He wonโ€™t be back for hours, andย he wonโ€™t go hungry either. Iโ€™ve heard my guards are offered food and drink at every campfire they pass. โ€œThank you, Alice.โ€

She nods and slips back through the door.

I move to shove the letters I was writing into a pile, but Quint reaches across the table to put a hand down to keep them in place. โ€œFinish first,โ€ he says.

The command takes me by surprise. My eyes flick up and meet his. I wait for him to falter, to hesitate, toย deferโ€”the way he would in the palace.

He doesnโ€™t. โ€œIf you please,โ€ he adds. โ€œKarri is waiting with the runners. It will be dark soon.โ€

I sigh tightly, because Iโ€™m hungryโ€”but heโ€™s right. I reach for the kohl pencil Iโ€™ve been using.

โ€œGo ahead and eat, Thorin,โ€ I say pointedly. โ€œOne of us should.โ€

โ€œI can wait.โ€

I put the pencil back to the paper, and I fight to keep a childish scowl off my face. My focus should be on the three consuls we aim to reach, to see if I have any allies left among the elites. I have to be very careful not to give away any information about where I am hidden, because I could putย everyoneย here at riskโ€”though I have to share enough so the letter will be believed.

But instead, my thoughts are on Quint and these tiny moments of . . . โ€‹well, not quite defiance. Heโ€™s never rude or disrespectful.

Boldness, maybe. Audacity?

Because this isnโ€™t the first time. Itโ€™s not even the second. Or the fourth.

Whatโ€™s odd is that I canโ€™t decide if Iโ€™m bothered. The question of it keeps tugging at me. I donโ€™tย reallyย mind. At least, I donโ€™t think so. Or maybe I do, but itโ€™s like the straw mattress and the rats. Maybe Iโ€™m learning to ignore it. My staff of hundreds has beenย reduced to a staff ofย three, and their loyalty feels dangerously precarious. Any of them could walk out of here and claim a hefty reward for my capture, so Iโ€™m not going to take a stand over writing letters.

Especially when Quint is right. Karri and the runnersย areย waiting.

I just . . . โ€‹I want to stall aย little. The longer we wait, the greater the chance that Corrick could return. I wouldnโ€™t have to face all of this alone.

As soon as I have the thought, I realize how very selfish it is. Howย cowardly. I force it out of my head, and I start writing again.

Tessaโ€™s friend Karri is taking runners to deliver letters to the homes of Jasper Gold, Jonas Beeching, and Roydan Pelham, a very calculated attempt to see which consuls mightย notย be conspiring against the throne. Iโ€™m hesitant to send away one of the few people I trust here in the Wilds, but I trust the consuls so little that I have to risk it. Iโ€™m most doubtful about Roydan Pelham. Heโ€™s been working with Arella Cherry, who I saw working with Christopher Huxley, the captain of the palace guard, and Laurel Pepperleaf, whose father is slated to take over the richest sector in Kandala. If theyโ€™re all working together, it could go very poorly for me, especially if Allisander Sallister comes to power.

But Roydan was always kind to me, especially after my parents were assassinated. He was the only consul who didnโ€™t seem to volley for power or try to have my crown ripped right off my head. So my letter to him focuses on his loyalty, how he has always seemed to care for me and Corrick, on how much we have appreciated his kindness toward us. I talk about his care for his sector, when several other consuls have done nothing for the people of Kandala. I ask if heโ€™s willing to put the people first one more time, as I am.

I mean the words genuinely, but Iโ€™m also hoping theyโ€™ll prove to be strategic if he shares this letter with Arella or anyone else.

I hope they make it clear thatย Iย am willing to stand with the people, no matter what the cost.

I finish the letter and sign it. I donโ€™t have my seal, but I write my initials inside the curls of a few letters in the way I do to prevent forgeries. Itโ€™s not as perfect as it would be with a fountain pen, but itโ€™s the best I can do. Karri is set to take the letters to three different sectors, to use the back roads and hidden courier trails farthest from each destination to help prevent discovery.

But it meansย daysย will pass before we know if any of the consuls are on our side. Possibly weeks.

As soon as I finish my final flourish, Quint all but snatches the paper up from under my hand, folding it crisply to match the others. โ€œIโ€™ll take these to Karri.โ€ Heโ€™s through the door before I can say anything at all.

I stare after him for a moment, then set down my pencil and run a hand over the back of my neck. I havenโ€™t touched the food, so Thorin is still waiting.

All the guards go by their last name when theyโ€™re on duty, and until a few weeks ago, I couldnโ€™t have identified many of them by their first name. Outside of their ability to do their jobs, I didnโ€™t know much about any of them at all. But here, โ€œon dutyโ€ seems to have become an endless assignment. I try not to address them so officially when they should be enjoying moments of freedom.

โ€œSit, Ben,โ€ I say. โ€œEat.โ€

He sits, and as we pull food from the platter, he offhandedly says, โ€œI thought Master Quint was ready to rap your knuckles.โ€

I glance up in surprise, because I hadnโ€™t realized it was apparent to anyone but me.

Thorin sees my expression and frowns. โ€œForgive me. I shouldnโ€™t haveโ€”โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I say. โ€œI honestly thought the same.โ€

He flicks his eyes at the ceiling. โ€œI shouldnโ€™t be surprised that he would figure out a way to stage a revolution throughย paperwork.โ€

That startles a laugh out of me, which makes him smileโ€”but then my laughter turns into a coughing fit thatโ€™s so strong I have to press my forearm to my mouth so no one outside the house will hear.

Thorinโ€™s smile vanishes, and heโ€™s staring at me with concern. After a solid minute passes with no relief, he pours a cup of water, too. He looks like heโ€™s ready to go for the door, but I glare at him between coughs, and he freezes.

Iโ€™ve spent days trying to hide this, but itโ€™s getting harder. Once I can breathe, I take a gulp of water, then inhale slowly until Iโ€™m sure I wonโ€™t cough again. โ€œEat,โ€ I say. โ€œIโ€™m fine.โ€

But Iโ€™m not, and he knows it.

Thereโ€™s so little medicine here. I get a dose every few days, but itโ€™s nothing compared to what I was receiving in the palace. Sometimes at night I hide under my blankets and cough into my pillow so they wonโ€™t know how bad it is. Thorin and Saeth have begun working with the men and women who want to train to stand against the consuls, and I should join them, but I simply donโ€™t think my lungs could manage itโ€”and I canโ€™t afford to reveal any weakness to these people.

Thorin is still staring.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ I snap. โ€œSit down. Eat.โ€

โ€œYes, Your Majesty.โ€ He drops into his chair at once. โ€œForgive me.โ€

Thatโ€™s not better.

I sigh and run my hands over my face, pressing my fingers into my eyes. I donโ€™t really know how to do this. In the palace, there areย rules and protocol and . . . andย order. Thorin joked about Quint organizing a revolution through paperwork, but at least the Palace Master is organizing it somehow. Thorin and Saeth are walking patrols and working with the people. Karri is delivering letters to see if we have any allies at all. As for me . . . โ€‹Iโ€™m grasping at straws. Useless.

I can just imagine Corrickโ€™s reaction if he were here now.ย Lord, Harristan. Is writing letters the best you can do? You might as well just turn yourself in.

My brother is going to return from Ostriary and find the kingdom in shambles.

Well, more than it usually is.

I finally lower my hands. Thorin is eating, but only because I ordered him to do it. His eyes are locked on the plate, any sense of good humor completely gone.

Heโ€™s got to be exhausted. I know I am.

We canโ€™t keep operating like this. I canโ€™t just wait on the consuls. I need to take action for my peopleย here. I need toย doย something.

โ€œIf you could think of other guards to approach,โ€ I say carefully, โ€œwho do you think would be most likely to join us?โ€

His hands freeze on his food, and he looks up. โ€œThere were thirty of us in your personal guard. Rocco and Kilbourne went to Ostriary. Saeth and I are with you. That still leaves twenty-six. They might have been reassigned, or they could have been discharged from the guard entirelyโ€”but Iโ€™m still worried Captain Huxley would have thrown them in the Hold after it became known that we helped you escape. If they convinced others we were conspiring with you against the kingdom, he might have been able to justify it.โ€

If my guards are in the Hold, they may as well be on the moon. Iโ€™d have no way to reach them. I might have a small army of rebels waiting outside this tiny house, but they donโ€™t fully trust me to lead them. Not yet. And while rebels bombed the Hold once before, it wasnโ€™t without lossโ€”on either side. I canโ€™t justify that type of attack. Not just for more guards.

But maybe we donโ€™t have to. I work it through while I pick at my chicken. โ€œHuxley has no proof that any of you were conspiring with meโ€”because there was no conspiracy to speak of. Theyโ€™ve spread rumors among the people, but thatโ€™s harder to do with men who surround me every day. But implicating myย entireย personal guard implicates Huxley himself. Heโ€™s the guard captain. He couldnโ€™t just throw twenty-six guards in the Hold without causing a bit of outrageโ€”if not an outright scandal on top of the one they already have.โ€

Thorin considers this, then nods. โ€œThatโ€™s true. It would destroy morale, too. If Huxley threw that many guards in the Hold, I can name a dozen people whoโ€™d quit on the spot. Tensions have already been high since the first attack on the sector. Most of us had started to close ranks anyway, and not just among your personal guard.โ€

Most of us had started to close ranks anyway.Before Rocco left with Corrick, he warned me about Huxley, how many of the guards had started to suspect that there was more going on with the guard captain than just a taste for salacious gossip. I inwardly flinch, thinking about how much insurrection was happening right under my nose.

I wish I had people I could send into the Royal Sector, but itโ€™s just too dangerous. Even Karriโ€™s small apartment was searched, because she was known to be helping the rebelsย andย me. Another reason itโ€™s wise for her to be the one to visit other sectors now.

โ€œThe entire palace staff is surely still scrambling,โ€ I say. โ€œI rather doubt Huxley and Arella and whoever else theyโ€™re working with expected me to disappear in the middle of the night. The consuls might have seized the opportunity to take control during my sudden absence, but they couldnโ€™t have been ready for it. Any control they have is still very precarious. Especially since Quint disappeared with me.โ€

Quint, whoโ€™s currently organizing this revolution with paperwork.

Thorin rolled his eyes, but Quint was also the one who, three days ago, suggested that we should start submitting reports to the palace of various โ€œsightingsโ€ of the king in other sectors, forcing the night patrol to waste resources chasing down false leads.

I glance at the door. Heโ€™s been gone for too long.

โ€œHuxley isnโ€™t trustworthy, but heโ€™s not stupid,โ€ Thorin is saying. โ€œNo one was closer to you than we were.โ€

It draws my attention back. โ€œI donโ€™t know if he would keep them in the palace, or if he would feel safer giving them leave.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a risk to keep them in the palace,โ€ Thorin says. โ€œI donโ€™t know that Huxley fully trustedย usย at the end either.โ€

Thatโ€™s promising. โ€œHow many do you know well enough to know where they live?โ€

โ€œBetween me and Saeth? Not everyone, but a lot.โ€ He winces. โ€œA few live in the Royal Sector. Thatโ€™s a risk. We would be recognized.โ€

I hold his gaze and lean in. โ€œHow many do you think would join us here?โ€

โ€œAll of them.โ€

He says this so readily and with so much assuredness that it nearly hits me like a blow.

My chest clenches, and I have to sit back. โ€œSurely notย allย of them.โ€

โ€œFrom your personal guard? Yes. All of them.โ€

I swallow, and my throat is tight. I donโ€™t know why the loyalty takes me by surprise, but it does. I barely knew their first names. There were so few people in the palace that I trusted, and most of them sailed away on a ship to Ostriary.

โ€œWell,โ€ I say, and my voice is rough.

And then I donโ€™t know what else to say.

The kingdom is falling apart. I donโ€™tย deserveย that kind of loyalty.

โ€œAdvise,โ€ I say, because I have to sayย something.

โ€œBringing everyone at once would be foolhardy,โ€ he says. โ€œWe donโ€™t know whatโ€™s happened in the last week, and we donโ€™t want to risk discovery. Perhaps we could start with two or three. If Huxley doesnโ€™t have them in the palace, Iโ€™m certain he has some of them being watched, so we canโ€™t go for those we were close with. Iโ€™d personally go for Dart and Granger right now, but thatโ€™s exactly what Huxley would expect.โ€ He looks at the ceiling, thinking. โ€œWe could try Reed and Sommer. Theyโ€™re newer to your guard, but theyโ€™ve never run afoul of Huxley. Theyโ€™re young, too. No wives or children to miss them.โ€

I jerk my head up.ย Wives and children.ย Iโ€™ve been so worried about my own brother that I havenโ€™t spared a moment to consider that my guards might be missing someone. โ€œYouโ€™re not married, Thorin,โ€ I say, then realize Iโ€™m not entirely sure. โ€œAre you?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ He hesitates, and thereโ€™s a weight to it now.

โ€œBut you have family youโ€™re missing? Tell me. Please.โ€

โ€œNo. Not me.โ€ He pauses again. โ€œSaeth is married. He has a son and daughter.โ€

And weโ€™ve been stuck here in the Wilds for more than a week. He disappeared from his family without so much as a word.

Lord, Iโ€™m a terrible king.

โ€œHe never said anything,โ€ I say quietly.

โ€œNo, Your Majesty,โ€ says Thorin. โ€œHe wouldnโ€™t.โ€

I feel that same clenching in my chest that I did when Thorin said all my guards would join us here. โ€œDid Saeth live in the Royal Sector?โ€

โ€œNo. Mosswell. Right by the border with Artis, on the eastern side of the Royal Sector.โ€

I donโ€™t spend a tremendous amount of time outside the Royal Sector, but I estimate that to be less than two hours from where we are, by carriage or horseback. โ€œDo you know his wife?โ€

โ€œLeah? A little.โ€

โ€œWhen Saeth returns from patrol, tell him to come speak with me.โ€

Thorin frowns. โ€œHe wonโ€™t like that I told you. But you should know heโ€™s been sick with worry.โ€

And he has been, I realize. Saeth has been as dutiful as Thorin, but over the last few days, heโ€™s been tense and restless. I assumed it was the same agitation weโ€™ve all been feeling, but now I see itโ€™s more than that.

I should have noticed.

Voices echo outside, and I assume Quint is returning, but the conversation suddenly turns loud.

Very loud.

From outside the door, Quint says, โ€œIf you will wait just aย moment, I will ask the kingโ€”โ€

Something heavy hits the door hard. โ€œWeโ€™re going toย tellย the king. Get him out here.โ€

Thorin is on his feet in front of me, a dagger already drawn.

โ€œNo,โ€ I say. โ€œPut it away.โ€ If Iโ€™ve learned anything during my time in the Wilds, weapons do very little to defuse a situation.

Outside, Quint says, โ€œYou will notโ€”โ€

Something heavy hits the door again. โ€œGet out of theย way!โ€ a man yells.

Thorin looks at me. The dagger is still in his hand.

โ€œPut it away,โ€ I say again. Then I stride for the door.

My guard swears under his breath, sheaths the dagger, and moves to beat me to the door. โ€œYour Majesty,ย please.โ€

I ignore him, grab the door handle, and swing it wide.

Quintโ€™s frame blocks the doorway. His back is to me, and heโ€™s facing more than twenty men in the darkness. Four have drawn close, stepping up onto the tiny porch that sits along the front of the house we share. Some have torches, the firelight flickering eerily across their faces.

Some have axes. Some have hammers.

Well then.

I put a hand on Quintโ€™s arm. โ€œStep aside,โ€ I say quietly. โ€œIโ€™ll talk to them.โ€

At my side, Thorin is practically seething.

I glance at him and murmur, โ€œAre you going to fight off two dozen men by yourself?โ€

Without waiting for an answer, I step onto the porch myself and look at the people gathered there. โ€œIโ€™m here. Tell me what you mean to tell me.โ€

Thereโ€™s a slight ripple of shock, as if they didnโ€™t expect me to come out. Maybe they thought I would run. Maybe they thought theyโ€™d have to drag me out.

One of the men on the porch recovers first. I think his name isย Francis. He jabs his ax at me. โ€œLochlan wouldโ€™ve attacked the palace already. Itโ€™s been over a week. We told Karri that weโ€™re all risking ourselves to protect you, while it seems like youโ€™re just hiding here, eating all our food.โ€

โ€œLochlanย wouldย have attacked the palace already,โ€ I say. I remember Karri assuring me that Lochlan had a rebel army ready to fight back, but I didnโ€™t realize that it was only anย armyย in the loosest sense of the word. There are few real weapons here. Very little real training. โ€œHeโ€™d be dead for trying.โ€

โ€œWe did all right the first time,โ€ shouts another man. โ€œWe should have killedย allย the consuls.โ€

โ€œYou โ€˜did all rightโ€™ because I didnโ€™t want to kill my people,โ€ I say. โ€œI was willing to listen to your demands, as I am right now. I promise that Consul Sallister and the others do not care. If you march on the Royal Sector now, the army will shoot to kill.โ€

Some of the men glance at one another. Thorin steps out onto the porch and stands behind me.

โ€œHow much longer is this going to take?โ€ Francis demands. โ€œQuint said you were sendingย letters.โ€ He jabs the ax at me again.

Thorin reaches out and snatches it right out of his hand.

Francis surges forward, and Thorin moves to block me. Itโ€™s more aggressive than it needs to be, and I suspect heโ€™s going to shove him right off the porch. Some of the others shift and jostle, but I put up a hand before it turns into a fight.

โ€œEnough,โ€ I say evenly. โ€œStay civil. You asked to talk to me. Talk.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™reย doneย talking,โ€ Francis snaps. โ€œWeโ€™re here and weโ€™re ready and weโ€™re done waiting.โ€ His hands have formed fists, and he glances between me and Thorin.

And then I realize that the raised voices and torches haveย drawn more of a crowd. We suddenly have more than thirty people surrounding the porch. More than forty. There are women and children.

Then I see young Violet near the edge of the crowd. Sheโ€™s only thirteen. She shouldnโ€™t be here.

I take a slow breath. This was always the problem: the rebels wanted action, they wanted medicine, they wanted things to happenย immediately.

The problem is that anything that happens fast generally doesnโ€™tย last.

โ€œI sent letters,โ€ I say carefully, โ€œbecause itโ€™s important to know if any of the consuls will still support me. They rule the sectors. If they areย allย standing against me, we will have a larger fight on our hands. Before, you had funds and explosives from the Benefactors. Now, you have none of that. We need more people on our side. It does us no good to capture the Royal Sector if Jasper Gold sends more soldiers to take it right back.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™ve stopped giving us the medicine you promised,โ€ Francis says. โ€œYou said you were going to help. You said you were going to lead us. This isnโ€™t leading. This isย hiding. How do we know they arenโ€™t telling the truth? That you werenโ€™t really poisoning us all?โ€ He leans in. โ€œMaybe we should just take the reward and be done with it.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s not poisoning us!โ€ Violet calls. She runs forward like sheโ€™s going to confront these men herself. โ€œHeโ€™s trying! Heโ€™s trying to help.โ€

โ€œViolet,โ€ I beginโ€”but thatโ€™s as far as I get before I start coughing again.

When this happens in the palace, I can usually control it, and when I canโ€™t, Quint is rather skilled at distracting whoever isย nearby, drawing them to another room or engaging them in conversation. But in the palace I was receiving medicineโ€”aย lotย of medicineโ€”and the coughing was never this strong or this frequent. It never happened when I was quite literally on display in front of this many people.

I want to turn away, but thereโ€™s nowhere to go. Every time I inhale, my lungs donโ€™t want to work. Every time I cough, it hurtsโ€”and it feels like it goes onย forever. When I get to the point where I feel like Iโ€™m drowning, my eyes begin to water, and I wonder ifย thisย will be the time I donโ€™t recover.

Iโ€™ve pressed a forearm to my mouth, but thereโ€™s a part of me thatโ€™s beginning to wish the earth would open up and swallow me whole. Maybe Thorin could give Francis back the ax so he could end this misery. This torment. This humiliation.

Just when my coughing slows, a hand takes hold of my arm, and I think itโ€™s Thorin or Quint, ushering me back into the small house. But then Francis says, โ€œHere, King. Sit.โ€

My vision has already gone a bit spotty, and my breathing feels thin, so I obey. I sit down a little too hard, and my body reflexively moves to press my forehead into my knees.

Francis catches my shoulder. โ€œNo,โ€ he says. โ€œSit up. Open up your chest.โ€

His voice is gruff, but not unkind. Again, I obey, but in a way, itโ€™s worse. My coughing has slowed, but air whistles into my lungs, and now I can see that no one from the crowd has dispersed. If anything, there are more people.

Theyโ€™re all staring. I can feel the weight of their concern, like a hundred held breaths. I wonder if they all thought I might die right here.

Francis is sitting on the step beside me, and he says, โ€œMaybe tell your guard not to put a knife in my back if I touch you again.โ€

His voice is mild, and I canโ€™t tell if heโ€™s entirely serious, but I can just imagine how Thorin is reacting to this chain of events. This man was just shouting at me with an ax in hand. Thorin probably does have a weapon drawn.

โ€œThorin,โ€ I say, and my voice is barely a rasp between my shallow pants. โ€œDonโ€™t.โ€

Francis must be satisfied with that, because without hesitation, he reaches over and puts a hand against my forehead. He does it so casually that Iโ€™m not sure how to react. I donโ€™t know what I expected him to do, but . . . โ€‹it wasnโ€™t that.

His palm is dry and cool, and he smells faintly of a farm, some combination of hay and livestock. Heโ€™s an older man, probably twice my age, in stained overalls and worn boots. I

wonder if he has children among the gathered crowd, too.

โ€œNo fever,โ€ he says. He sits back.

โ€œNo. I donโ€™tโ€”โ€ I break off and take a wheezing breath. โ€œI donโ€™t often have the fever anymore.โ€

He goes still at those words, and for a moment, I donโ€™t realize what Iโ€™ve said, and then he says, โ€œOften? Anymore?ย Are you sick a lot?โ€

The people gathered seem to lean in, as if they want to hear the answer.

Iโ€™ve hidden this for so long that I donโ€™t know what to say.

I think of Tessa standing before me.ย You could be loved. Even if your people are sick.

I donโ€™t want to be a sick king. It feels like weakness. I remember the mockery when I was a boy. No one would say it to my face, butย I would still hear it. Corrick got into more than one scrape trying to defend me.

I loved him for it, but I hated it, too.

Quint speaks from behind me, and his voice is low. โ€œPrince Corrick and Tessa took off their masks. It may be time to let them see you, too, Your Majesty.โ€

I didnโ€™t want to run from their axes and hammers, but I want to run fromย this.

My breathing is finally steady, so I say, โ€œIโ€™ve been sick since I was a child. Since before the fever sickness even started. The Moonflower elixir helps, but it never goes away.โ€ I hesitate. โ€œIf Iโ€™ve been hiding anything, Iโ€™ve been hiding that.โ€ I look out at the others. My voice is so rough now that I canโ€™t shout, but I try. โ€œIf you want proof that Iโ€™m not poisoning you, I have no better than that. If I was, I was poisoning myself, too.โ€

A low murmur takes up in the crowd as word spreads.

I look back at Francis. โ€œI know you want action,โ€ I say quietly. โ€œI know you all want to attack the Royal Sector. But we need to be strategic. If I can determine some allies within the sector, Iโ€™ll be able to get more information, and potentially stoke some dissent. But if you storm the sector now, theyย willย kill you. You have no leverage. Worse, it might trigger raids on the Wilds. We can run from the night patrol, but the army has longbows and skilled trackers. Armored men on horseback. I know you think Iโ€™m just writing letters, but I promise you, a letter can have more impact than a weapon. We wonโ€™t have many opportunities to take the sector. I am begging you to not waste our chance.โ€

Francis stares at me, and the few men at his back who heard all my words whisper among themselves.

I consider what he said about the food, and I feel guilty when Iย realize theyโ€™ve probably been giving us far more than we need. So I add, โ€œI also donโ€™t want to take from my people. If you need the house back, I will sleep in the woods with my guards. If we are taking too much food, I insist that you give us less. I do not want more than our fair share. That was never my intent in coming here. I truly do want to help all of you.โ€ I glance at the others. โ€œSometimes helping takes time.โ€

Francis grunts and looks away. โ€œIโ€™m not going to make the king sleep in the woods.โ€

โ€œYou came at your king with an ax,โ€ Thorin says.

Francis draws himself up, and I think that one remark is going to spark another fight, but then he lets out a breath and runs a hand over the back of his neck and looks a bit sheepish. โ€œI was just going to break down the door.โ€ He jerks his head at Quint. โ€œHeย wouldnโ€™t let us talk to you.โ€

My heart pounds a little to consider how close we came to that type of interaction. โ€œWell,โ€ I say evenly, โ€œin the future I urge you toย knock, because I am willing to hear from you if you have concerns.โ€ I glance out at the crowd of people whoโ€™ve gathered, many of whom have pressed closer to listen. โ€œThat goes for all of you. If you come to me peacefully, I will speak to any of you.โ€ I look up at Quint. โ€œMake sure the others know. Anyone, at any time. Day or night.โ€

He stares back at me like Iโ€™m a bit crazy, but he draws his little book out of his jacket pocket and makes a note. โ€œYes, Your Majesty.โ€

I turn back to Francis. โ€œAre you and the others willing to wait?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ But he doesnโ€™t look happy about it.

I consider what Thorin said about the younger guards, about Saethโ€™s family. If theyโ€™re going to try to reach anyone, I canโ€™t send them alone. Theyโ€™re only two men, and the risk is too great.

Francis is right. I did say I was going to lead them. Maybe I need to start.

I look at the gathered people clutching their axes and hammers. โ€œIt might not be time to attack the sector,โ€ I say, โ€œbut there are things to be done, if you all are ready for action.โ€

Francis nods. โ€œWe are.โ€

โ€œGood. Come back tomorrow night.โ€

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