Lochlan and I have tucked ourselves into the shadows, and while neither of us has aย weapon, weโve each put a hand on something sturdy enough to use as a club. Mine is a heavy wooden dowel about the length of my arm. The manโs feet climb the steps heavily, lacking any stealth at all, so heโs clearly not worried about scaring off thieves. Weโre ducked behind a large chest, so I canโt see anything at all, but I can hear when his footsteps reach the landing. Lantern light suddenly flickers on the walls.
The man lets out an aggrieved sigh. โThereโs a draft up here,โ he calls down. โSomeone left a window open. I bet some gulls got in.โ
โCan you get them out?โ a womanโs voice calls.
โIโm looking,โ the man calls back. โI knowย someoneย is going to be discharged for this tomorrow.โ
Lochlan looks at me. His eyes gleam in the darkness.
I wonder if heโs thinking the same things I am.
Thereโs this man, and now a woman, too. Plus Ford Cheeke himself. Four guards outside. He has a lantern, so heโs going to discover the shattered window eventuallyโif he doesnโt discover us first. Do we kill him, too?
The man is moving away from us now. Heโs wearing a white shirt with sleeves rolled back and pants held up with suspenders, and heโs built like the kind of man who spends a lot of time sitting at a desk. I canโt tell how old he is, but the top of his head is bald, and whatโs left around the sides looks gray. I donโt want to sit here and stare at him much longer, because if he doubles back with that lantern, heโs going to see us.
I turn to Lochlan. I point at him, then toward the stairs. I point at myself, then at the man. I hope my meaning is clear.ย Go for the stairs. Iโll take care of him.
Lochlan nods and doesnโt hesitate. Silently, he slips away from me, and Iโm alone behind the chest. My heart pounds against my ribs, and I consider that for all the hours Iโve spent hiding in the darkness, I never did it with the intent to cause harm.
I hate that Iโm doing it now.
I have to close my eyes and take a breath.ย Please, Tessa. Forgive me.
I slip out of my spot as silently as Lochlan did. The lantern light helps me avoid the obstacles that made us trip earlier. I creep along behind the man, who gives another sigh. Heโs muttering as he goes, and he sounds like the kind of person who rambles as he works. โI know itโs hot during the day, but those men haveย gotย to remember to close up before they go. They were probably lingering with Penny again. Now where are those gulls?โ
It reminds me a little of Quint, and I feel a pang of homesickness. I wish I could have brought him instead of Lochlan. Traipsing theย streets of Silvesse with my best friend wouldโve felt like a holiday, regardless of what Oren Crane wanted us to do.
Well, Iโll never see Quint again if I donโt handle things here. I steel my will and tighten my grip on the dowel, ready to knock him across the back of the head.
But the man turns around.
He jumps a mile when he spots me, and he drops the lantern. It cracks into the floor with a little tinkle of glass, but the flame doesnโt go out. Now that I can see his face, I realize heโs older than I thought. Fifty, maybe sixty. Iโm prepared to fight, so Iโm surprised when he falls back a few steps and gasps.
His eyes skip up and down my form, and he actually says, โYouโre not a gull.โ
โNo,โ I say.
His eyes shoot behind me, where the draft is coming from, then flick toward the stairs. I see him put two and two together, and when he inhales sharply, I know heโs going to shout for Mr. Cheeke and the woman we heard.
I donโt give him the chance. I surge forward and punch him right in the face.
He drops like aย rock. I stand there with my fist drawn back to hit him again, because I genuinely didnโt expect to knock him out with one strike.
Heโs landed in a crumpled heap, and I drop to a crouch next to him. Iโm a bit horrified at the thought that I might have killed him without meaning to.
But no, heโs breathing and already moaning a little.
โIโm sorry,โ I say softly, and I mean it. โPlease forgive me. This wasnโt my intent.โ
His fingers are already shifting against the floorboards. No one ever stays knocked out for long.
Maybe itโs because he reminds me so much of an older version of my best friend, but I donโt think I can kill a doddering man who says things likeย youโre not a gullย to an intruder.
Well, he wasnโt our target anyway. I reach for his suspenders, unbuttoning them as he feebly begins to try to fight me off.
โStop,โ he gasps. โWhatโwhat are you doingโโ
โTying you up,โ I say. I pull the suspenders free and wrench one of his arms behind his back.
He cries out, and I wince at the sound.
โIf youโre not quiet,โ I say, โmy only other option is to kill you, so I need you to shut up.โ
He goes silent at once.
That lasts for exactly three secondsโwhich again reminds me of Quint.
โPlease donโt hurt Penny,โ he says in a whispered rush. โPleaseโnot in front of Ford. Heโs been throughโheโs seenโโ
โI told you to be quiet,โ I snap. I jerk the suspenders in a knot around his wrists. โIโm not here for Penny.โ
โYes. Yes. All right. But youโyour accentโyouโre notโโ
โIโm going to punch you again.โ
He clamps his mouth shut.
I move to tie his ankles.
He starts babbling immediately. โThe bankers take the dayโs draw at dusk. Thereโs no silver on the premises, sir.โ
โIโm not a thief.โ
โButโโ
I yank the knot on his ankles so tightly that he cries out again,ย then cuts off the sound abruptly when I meet his eyes. I load my gaze with cruel promise, the way Iโd look at prisoners in the Hold.
โI only have one thing to do,โ I say. โSo youโre either going to be quiet and let me do it, or Iโm going to have to kill everyone in this building. Do you understand?โ
His face goes white. But he clamps his mouth shut and he nods vigorously.
โGood.โ I look down and see the edge of a handkerchief sticking out of his pocket. I seize it and pull it free, then ball it up in front of his face. โOpen up.โ
โOh, you cannot be serโโ
I shove the handkerchief in his mouth, and he cuts off with a muffled gasp. Heโs glaring at me, but I clap him on the shoulder. โWeโll be out of your way in no time.โ
Then I slip down the stairs to find Lochlan.
My โpartnerโ is waiting in the shadows at the bottom of the stairs, and he grabs hold of my wrist without warning, dragging me into an alcove. Iโm so keyed up that I nearly killย himย with my dowel.
โItโs just me, you idiot,โ he breathes in my ear as he drags me against the wall.
โDid you find Cheeke?โ I whisper, because itโs obvious the job isnโt done yet. I hate myself for it, but thereโs a part of me thatโs disappointed that Lochlan didnโt take care of this for me, that we could be done and get out of here.
โYeah, I found him,โ Lochlan whispers. โIโve only seen him and the girl. Iโm waiting to see if thereโs anyone else, but I havenโt heard anything.โ He peers at me in the darkness. โDid you take care of the man?โ
โYes.โ
Lochlan frowns a little and looks away, and I realize he thinks I killed him.
I set my jaw and peek out of the alcove down the hallway, where candlelight flickers from three different rooms. โWhich one?โ
โTo the right.โ
โHas Edward come back down yet?โ calls a female voice, and I duck back quickly. Sheโs obviously in one of the rooms to the left. Her voice sounds a bit closer, and I wonder if sheโs stepped into the hallway. โMaybe I should go see if he needs help.โ
โIโm sure heโll be back in a minute,โ calls a man. His voice is kind, and he sounds like heโs as old as the man I tied up upstairs. โHave you found the logs from Kaisa yet? Iโd really like to get through these ledgers so you can get home.โ
โYou know I donโt mind staying to help.โ Her voice is muffled again, and lightly teasing. โYouย need to get home, old man.โ
โAh, Penny, hush.โ He chuckles, his tone low and gentle.
They sound so friendly and kind that I want to climb back up those stairs, untie those suspenders from Edward, and throw myself out the broken window. I thought the first man was too much with hisย sirย andย youโre not a gull, but Iโm supposed to killย thisย one? Iโm supposed to bring backย hisย head? He sounds like the grandfathers in the Wilds whoโd share warm stories about their childhoods while Tessa and I were bringing them medicine. Theyโd pat me on the cheek and call me a good boy and wink at me, asking if I was sweet on Tessa when she couldnโt hear.
Just a little, Iโd always say.
Lord, how sheโd hate this.
I pull back into the shadows of the alcove, bracing my shoulders against the wall. My heart is pounding hard. I donโt want toย hurt anyoneโbut my thoughts are so tangled up, and I donโt know how else to work with Oren Crane to find a way back to Tessa. There isnโt going to be anyone else in Ostriary whoโs willing to stand against Rianโand I know what Rian will do if he gets his hands on me.
Lochlan looks at me, studying my face for a long minute.
โDo you have another idea?โ he says.
โNo,โ I grind out roughly.
โDo you know why I didnโt kill your brother when we held the Circle?โ he says.
The question comes out of nowhere, and I turn my head to look at him. โWhat?โ
โWhen we held the Circle. In the middle of the Royal Sector. During the revolutionโโ
โNo, I know when you mean. What are you talking about?โ
He steps closer. โDoย you, Cory, know why I didnโt kill theย king?โ
โIf you call me that again, Iโm going to shove this dowel somewhere you wonโt like it.โ I glare at him. โIf youโd killed the king, the army would have filled you with a hundred arrows before your finger left the trigger.โ
โMaybe, maybe not. There was a lot of smoke. A lot of cover. And I had a clean shot at least three times. The king had armor, but I had a crossbow. I could have got him in the face. Or the throat. Tessa, too.โ
Iโve gone completely still, frozen in place in the little alcove. I have to shake my thoughts loose and remind myself that heย didnโtย kill my brother. That he didnโt harm Tessa. My hand is tight on the dowel anyway.
Lochlanโs eyes havenโt left mine, and he laughs under his breath, but not like anything is really funny. โExactly,โ he says. He leans inย close. โI wasnโt worried about the army. Iโd seen you as Weston Lark, and Iโd seen you as Prince Corrick. If I killed the king, I was afraid of whatย youย would do.โ
I look away from him and shift to peer down the hallway. โI already know you think Iโm a monster, Lochlan. Itโs the only reason weโre here.โ
He grabs my shoulder and jerks me back into the alcove. โNo,โ he growls, his voice low. โI actually kind of hate that youโreย notย a monster.โ His eyes are very dark in the shadows. โBut I know you can do terrible things when you have to.โ
I stare at him. Itโs the closest heโs ever come to acknowledging that my actions are backed by something other than cruelty, andย Iย actually kind of hate that heโs said it in a way that wonโt let me enjoy it.
But heโs not done. โI hate all of this,โ he says. โI donโt want to be a part of Rianโs stupid conflict either. But I want to go home as badly as you do. I wouldnโt have followed you this far if I expected you to hesitate. Theย Kingโs Justiceย wouldnโt hesitate.โ
That shocks me still again. Lochlan is the last person in the world I ever expected to hear such a thing from. But maybe itโs a reminder I need, because I take a deep breath and let a cool band of focus wrap around my thoughts. Iโve done terrible things to protect Kandala for years. Iโve supported my brotherโs reign for years. I canโt be better for Tessa if I canโt get us out of this mess.
I steel my spine, and then I tap Lochlan on the cheek, a little too hard to be friendly. โLove you, too. Now cover my back.โ
With that, I slip out of the alcove. Cheekeโs room is first, and I cling to the wall, because shadows are shifting in the room where the woman is working. Cheeke is visible from the hallway, but heโs not quite as old as he sounded. Heโs sitting at a desk, writing in aย ledger by the light of several lanterns. Heโs slender, and doesnโt seem overly tall, with thick gray hair. A pipe sits on the desk beside him, and I catch a whiff of tobacco smoke. Heโs facing the door, so thereโs no way Iโm going to take him unawares. Iโm going to have to run at him, and considering his build, heโll probably put up a fight. Based on the distance, heโll have time to pull a weapon, if heโs got one.
But none of that is whatโs really caught my attention. His clothes are buttoned up nicely, his hair and beard finely trimmed, but a massive cluster of burn scars run from his ear to the back of his head and down the side of his neck. The scarring is profound, disappearing down the collar of his shirt.
While Iโm staring, I notice the scars affect his hand, too. It looks like heโs missing a finger or two.
And then I realize Iโve stared for one second too long, because the woman appears in the other doorway, carrying two books under one arm. Sheโs saying, โI really do think I should check on Edward,โ but she breaks off with a shriek when she sees me.
โPenny!โ the man shouts in alarm, and he shoves back from his desk.
โOne of Craneโs people got in here!โ Penny cries. Sheโs young and pretty and full of scars herselfโand thatโs all I notice before she chucks a book right at my head.
Well, there goes my element of surprise. I knock the book out of the way and prepare to fend her off.
But Lochlan slips out of the darkness to seize her. โGetย him!โ he snaps at me, just as she cries out, trying to wrench herself free.
โTry not to hurt her,โ I tell him, and then I turn to face Cheeke.
Iโm almost too late. The man tackles me with a knife in hand, and it nearly goes right into my gut. As it is, I knock his arm to theย side with the dowel, but he slams into me anyway. We go tumbling into the hallway. My shoulders take the impact, but I use momentum to my advantage, and I roll Cheeke into the wall. Iโm distantly aware of Lochlan struggling to keep a grip on the girl, and it sounds like sheโs trying to scream, but heโs got a hand over her mouth. I get a hold of Cheekeโs wrist and slam his hand against the floor. The knife clatters to the floor, and he grunts, trying to twist away from me.
โPenny!โ he gasps.
Behind us, she squeals, and she must doย something, because Lochlan yelps. Cheeke surges against my weight, but I have the upper hand now. I shift to kneel on his wrist, then pin his neck to the floor with the dowel. The blade hasnโt gone too far, and I take hold of the hilt, putting the point right against his throat.
Heโs panting, wheezing from the pressure on his neck. It reminds me of the way Harristan breathes sometimes. I force the thought out of my head, because if I compare him to my brother, Iโll never be able to do this.
The Kingโs Justice wouldnโt hesitate.
The blade is in my hand, but I canโt move. My heart wonโt stop pounding.
This is nothing like what I ever had to do in Kandala. Maybe Harristan and I could have doneย better, but we wereย trying. We were trying to keep our people alive. We were doing the best we could in an impossible situation. When I did terrible things, I was enforcing laws to protect the people.
Thereโs no justice in this. None at all.
Cheeke isnโt even looking at me. His eyes are straining past me, at Lochlan and Penny, who donโt seem to be struggling as much now. Sheโs whimpering.
โPlease,โ Cheeke gasps. โPlease let her go. Donโt hurt her anymore. Tell Crane Iโll give him whatever he wants.โ
Penny squeals a little in Lochlanโs grasp, and her voice is muffled, but she says, โPapa,ย no.โ
Now I understand the fondness in his tone when he spoke earlier. Sheโs not an employee. Theyโre not business partners. Ford Cheeke is herย father.
It reminds me of Tessa. Tessa, whose own father was killed right in front of her. I watched it happen.
Tessa, who would hate every single part of what weโre doing.
Tessa, who sat in front of me on theย Dawn Chaserย and lectured me about the way I turn every single person I meet into an adversary before I give them a chance to be an ally.
Much like Iโm doing right now.
Lochlan grunts with strain again, but his voice is tight with something akin to sorrow. โIโll take her down the hall.โ
A cord pulls in my chest. Heโll take her down the hallโso she doesnโt have to see.
I stare into Ford Cheekeโs face. His eyes blaze into mine. He doesnโt look afraid, and he doesnโt look furious.
He looksย beseeching.
โPlease,โ he gasps, and his voice has grown so soft itโs barely a whisper. โPlease just let her go. Sheโs been through so much.โ
โPapa,โ she whimpers. Then she must fling her head back, because thereโs a cracking sound, and Lochlan swearsโbut he doesnโt let her go. He begins wrenching her backward.
โPlease,โ Ford says again. โI beg of you.โ
I try to steel myself against the words, but I canโt. Iโm so tired of listening to people beg me for mercy and never being able to grantย it. My brother is the king. There should be another way. There should be aย betterย way.
I hear Tessaโs voice in my head.
You could have been kind, and you could have been gentle, and you couldโve explained.
She was talking about the night she snuck into the palace, when she woke up and discovered I was the terrifying Prince Corrick, not the warm outlaw Weston Lark sheโd grown to love and trust.
And she was right.
โStop,โ I grind out. โLochlan, wait.โ
โItโs her da,โ he says, his tone resigned. โShe doesnโt need to see this.โ
I look down at the man Iโm pinning to the floor. โAre you Ford Cheeke?โ I say, because I want to be absolutely sure.
He swallows hard against the dowel. The burn scars against his throat have an unusual patternโnot like someone whoโs been caught in a fire. Like someone whoโs been exposed to fire over and over again.
โYes,โ he chokes out.
โAre you passing secret messages about Oren Crane to the king?โ I say. โYou have the means to get word to Galen Redstone?โ
โWhat are you doing?โ Lochlan hisses.
Ford looks back at me, and his expression shifts as he studies me. But that only lasts for a second before his eyes flick back to Penny. โMy daughterโyou have to let her goโโ
โIโll let her go if you answer honestly.โ
โDonโt tell them anything,โ Penny is saying behind Lochlanโs hand. โItโs a trap.โ
Then she must bite him because he yelps and jerks his hand away.
And then she starts screaming.
Itโs only for a second before Lochlan clamps his hand over her mouth again, then braces his back against the wall as she redoubles her struggles. Heโs practically panting from the effort to keep her still. โEither get it done, or weโre going to have to run. The guards probably heardย that.โ Now he sounds aggrieved.
I press the blade against Fordโs neck. โI donโt work for Crane,โ I say. โBut I need to know if Iโm speaking to someone who truly has the means to get word to Redstone. Tell me now.โ
He studies me again. โYour accent. Youโre from Kandala.โ Realization dawns. โPennyโPenny,ย stop!โ
His daughter goes still.
I donโt look away from Ford. โYes. We are. Your turn.โ
He nods, then winces as his chin touches the cold steel of the blade. โYes. I can get word to the king. Who are you?โ
I take a deep breath and hope Iโm not making a mistake here. I withdraw the blade, then the dowel. I sit back and let him go.
โIโm Prince Corrick,โ I say. โYounger brother to King Harristan of Kandala. We were separated from theย Dawn Chaserย on our journey to Ostriary and captured by Oren Crane.โ
Ford pushes himself to sitting, but at that, he goes still. His voice is very quiet. โI received word that the prince was killed.โ
โIโm very much alive.โ I glance at Lochlan, whoโs let Penny go. Sheโs staring at me, too. I look back at her father. โMaster Cheeke, forgive the violent intrusion, but we need your help.โ