Much like Corrickโs home in Kandala, the Palace of the Sun is vast, and it takes a while to walk from room to room. When Rian leads us to a wide, spiral staircase, sunlight beams in through the yellow-and-red stained-glass windows to create a vivid pattern on the walls. Weโre heading to his strategy room so we can look at maps and records, but my eyes keep falling on the signs of battle that must have happened right here. Little burn marks along the walls, nicks in the railings that must have come from a blade.
Rian sees me looking, and he says, โI didnโt lie about the war either.โ
Itโs the first thing heโs said since offering to explain about the poison, and his voice is quiet, mild, almost an apology after the way we were yelling at each other.
โI know,โ I say, making my voice match. โI saw the outside.โ
โA lot of people havenโt returned to Tarrumor. You saw theย damageโtheyโre afraid to rebuild in case Orenโs people return to raze the citadel again. Easier to head into the hills.โ
โBut you stayed,โ I say.
He nods. โIโd never convince them to return if I were hiding, too.โ
โWhat have you told them?โ I ask.
Weโve reached the landing, and he looks at me in the buttery light from the windows here. โTold them?โ he echoes.
โYour people,โ I say. โWhat have you told them about what happened with Kandala?โ
โTheyโve seen the ship. Itโs not seaworthy right now. Itโs clear we were attacked, and thereโs no secret the most likely offenders would be Oren and his pirates. Iโve said a few people from Kandalaโs contingent survived.โ He glances between me and Rocco, whoโs followed along with Rianโs guards. โAnd here you are.โ
My heart thumps against my rib cage. I didnโt intend to walk right into the reasons Rocco and I discussed coming here, but the opportunity has arisen, and I donโt want to waste it.
There is more than one way to fight.I swallow and hope I donโt throw up on him again. It doesnโt help that I still want to stab him, too.
โOn the ship, you were so worried about the promises you made to arrange for a trade for steel. Are you still?โ
He glances over in a way that tells me he can see right through me. โOf course.โ
โDo you intend to return to Kandala to negotiate again?โ
โI sense itโll be a bit harder if I return without the kingโs brother and two of his guards.โ
I take a slow breath to let those words land so I can speak evenly.ย โTo say nothing of the fact that youโd be returning as a king yourself, not a displaced emissary.โ
โYou seem to be maneuvering toward a goal, Miss Cade, and youโve made no secret of your feelings for me.โ He stops beside an open door, and I can hear the muffled sounds of a womanโs voice somewhere deep within. โAsk for what you want. If we can come to terms, we will.โ
I somehow forgot that he was like this. Everyone at court in Kandala was always full of double-speak and hidden motives. Rian obviously hid some things, but heโs always been direct.
โFine,โ I say. โI want to go back to Kandala. If you need steel, you want to go back, too. You know King Harristan wonโt negotiate with you after what happened. You need me and Rocco to explain so you donโt look like a complete villain.โ
โSo I should return you to Kandala, under the pretense ofย negotiation, where you would claim to speak in my defense.ย An intriguing offer, but you just came at me with a dagger. I feel rather certain your king would hear that his brother was dead and shoot me on sight.โ He extends a hand toward the doorway. โAfter you.โ
I stare at him with my mouth open. โSo . . . โyouโre never going back? But you were so desperate for steel!โ
โI was desperate. Iย amย desperate. I didnโt say I was never going back, but it was a tremendous risk for me to go onceโand you see how it turned out. I donโt know if I can attempt returning again so quickly.โ
I canโt believe this. Iโm defeated before we even started. โButโbut if we went with you . . . โwe could explainโโ
โExplain?ย Explain what? There is no explanation the king would hear that would work in my favor. And even if I believedย youwould speak in my defense, which Iโm not sure I do, there is still the matter of your guard.โ Rian looks past me at Rocco.
Behind me, the guardsman is silent. โWhat does Rocco have to do with anything?โ I demand.
โHeโs the only one to survive. His one charge isย dead. He failed in his duty. Do you believe the king would turn a blind eye to that?โ
I inhale sharplyโbut then I remember the story Rocco just told me during our walk. How Harristan dismissed all of his fatherโs personal guardsmen after his parents were assassinated.
Rianโs eyes havenโt left Rocco. โI would expectย your guardย to say anything possible to keep himself in the kingโs good gracesโand that certainly wouldnโt paint me in a good light. No matter what you say about me, I feel rather certain that Rocco would tell a different story if it meant he might keep his head. Itโs no surprise heโs dedicated himself to you. If he can bring at least one person back alive, it might be the only way he escapes an execution.โ
โKing Harristan will notย executeย him,โ I snap.
Rian looks back at me, and his eyebrows go up. He gestures into the room again, where the voices have fallen silent. โAgain, Miss Cade. After you.โ
I clench my jaw and walk into the room. I glance at Rocco, wondering if heโs bothered by Rianโs comments, but his expression is cool and unaffected. Guard eyes, the way heโd be if he were standing behind the king.
So I look back at the roomโand Iโm surprised to find Gwyn, Rianโs first lieutenant, and Sablo, both from the ship. Sablo lost his tongue in an attack by Oren Crane, and he was rescued by Rian. Gwyn and her daughter were both attacked by Oren, too, and she bears the scars. Theyโre both sitting beside a table that has a wide assortment of maps and books and instruments strewn all over.
Gwyn gives me a nod as if Iโve been coming here daily. โTessa. Good to see you.โ
Sablo taps the table and gives me a nod as well.
โHello,โ I say, because I donโt know if itโs good to see them yet.
โI see you already started arguing,โ says Gwyn. โI heard what happened out front.โ
She was always even more direct than Rian. My cheeks warm. โIโm glad gossip travels as quickly here as it did in Kandala,โ I say.
Rian slices through my embarrassment and says, โMiss Cade was curious about the Moonflower poison, and I wanted to show her what we know.โ
โYou brought it to Kandala as a cure,โ I say. โHow is it a poison atย all?โ
โIf you boil the stems,โ says Gwyn. โIt causes the fever and the cough. Too much, and it can be downright debilitating. Thatโs how we kept Bella subdued for so long.โ
I look between them, trying to work this through. โBut the petals are a cure. Thatโs why you brought it.โ
โNo,โ says Rian. โI truly only brought it for Bella. Making an elixir of the petals acts as an antidote for the poison.โ He pauses. โIt was a lucky turn to discover you were all so desperate when I first docked at Port Karenin.โ
โNone of this makes sense.โ I stare at him. โHow would someone poison an entire country?โ
โI donโt know.โ He moves closer to the table. โCome look at the maps. I have a few thoughts.โ
My curiosity is overpowering my anger, and I join him beside the tableโand a second later, it occurs to me that the guardsman shouldnโt be excluded from this conversation.
โRocco,โ I say. โCome look.โ
He steps away from the wall, and he stands on my opposite side. I wonder if thatโs deliberate.
Heโs been completely silent since Rian basically accused him of manipulating me against the king, and Iโm sureย thatโsย deliberate.
I wish I could reach out and squeeze his hand to reassure him, but this feels more precarious than any second I spent in the Kandalan court.
I look at Rian instead. โEven if someone had the means,ย whyย would someone poison all of Kandala?โ
โPerhaps because thereโs so much money to be made in curing it?โ
My heart pounds when he says that. I donโt want to think someone could be that heartlessโbut Iโd be wrong. Consul Sallister was funding the rebels himself, raiding his own supply runs to drive up the cost of Moonflower petals. He practically funded the whole revolutionโthen supplied the rebels with faulty medicine so they got sicker.
โWell, thereโs still the matter ofย how,โ I say.
Rian taps the first map on the table. โThese are the islands of Ostriary.โ He points to the center. โWeโre here, on Fairde. We were attacked by Craneโs peopleย here, just south of Silvesse. Kaisa is where the Moonflower grows.โ He points to the northernmost island. โThat leaves Iris, the strip of land that you all believed was the whole of Ostriary, and Roshan and Estar.โ He drags another map closer, laying it alongside, and I realize itโs a somewhat rudimentary map of Kandala. โHere. Kandala sits north, so Fairde actually lies about parallel to your southern sector, Sunkeep.โ He adjusts the maps a bit.
I study the two countries lying side by side. The sectors are very crudely marked, and I wonder how old this map is. Each sector hasย a name labeled under it, which Iโm assuming are the consuls, but some of the names are unfamiliar. Iโm about to ask how old this map is until I get to the Sorrowlands. Under that one is the nameย Pelham.
โRoydan Pelham,โ I say. I glance at Rocco. โHeโs the current consul for the Sorrowlands.โ
Rocco nodsโbut his eyes hold mine, and he says nothing else.
I donโt know if heโs telling me not to give away any more informationโor if he just doesnโt have any to give me.
But at my side, Rian nods, too. โThese are old maps, so a lot of the consul names are out of date. I was surprised to hear this one at dinner, though.โ He taps the northern part of the map.
Pepperleaf.
โLaurel,โ I whisper. โHer father was a baron. But not a consul.โ
โWell, someone in her lineage was a consul in the past.โ
Rocco taps on Traderโs Landing.
Montague.
I inhale sharply, but Roccoโs finger brushes against my hand when he withdraws, and I swallow.
That wasย definitelyย a warning.
Rianโs no fool. He looks at me. โWhat?โ
โMontague died,โ I say, scrambling for something to say, because I have to sayย something. โKing Harristan never replaced him.โ I pause. โItโs been a bit of a scandal in Kandala for years.โ
He studies me as if he suspects Iโm lying, but Iโm not, and maybe he realizes that. โWhy has it been a scandal?โ
Iโm frozen in place, staring at him. Iโm such a terrible liarโand Iโm so unprepared for a discussion aboutย this. Barnard Montague was the consul who was behind the assassination of King Harristan and Prince Corrickโs parents. He was never replacedย because they were never able to determine a motive. I donโt know if any of that information is good or bad to share with Rian.
I consider how the entire sector was always suspected of shady dealingsโuntil the fever sickness grabbed everyoneโs attention. I frown a little, thinking of Roccoโs job in the night patrol, how he talked about explosives being smuggled out of Traderโs Landing. Traderโs Landing was also involved in the shipping logs that Arella Cherry and Roydan Pelham were reviewingโthe same ones that showed trade deals with Ostriary from long ago that went sour.
All of this has to be related somehow, but I donโt know the key players in the palace well enough to piece it together.
Rian has clearly had enough of my silence. โDid it have anything to do with Montague poisoning King Harristan as a child?โ
I nearly choke on my tongue. โWhat?โ
โYou said it was a scandal. According toย ourย records, Montague is the one who used to barter for steelโand the one who first began demanding more silver. He said he had leverage on King Lucas. That the heir wouldnโt survive. Iโve seen the letters to my father myself.โ
My mouth has gone dry. โThat doesnโt mean anything. King Harristanโheโs always been sickโโ
โMiss Tessa.โ Roccoโs voice is soft at my side, but a tone of warning hides under the words.
Rian glances between him and me. His eyes narrow.
I donโt say anything elseโbut my brain is spinning.ย Couldย Harristan have been poisoned? I donโt know enough about this side of the Moonflower. I donโt know enough about any of this.
I shake off all the things Iย donโtย know. But I canโt deny basic facts. โMontague killed the king and queen. He was killed during the attack. Thatโs why there was a scandal. But if he thought he hadย leverage, it didnโt work. Harristan and Corrick clearly arenโt getting more silver from Ostriary.โ
Maybe Rian canโt deny that either. โAnd theyโre not benefitting from sales of the Moonflower?โ
He asks this like a genuine question, which takes me by surprise. I have to remind myself of what Olive said, how he truly does mean wellโbut he also doesnโt care who gets hurt when he thinks heโs right. โNo. Theyโre not.โ It draws my attention back to the maps. โSo letโs say someoneย isย poisoning all of Kandala somehow. Why did you show me the maps? What have you figured out already?โ
โNothing yet. But I showed you where Moonflower grows here.โ He points to Kaisa again. โWhere does Moonflower grow in Kandala?โ
I point to the northernmost sectors. Based on how heโs positioned the maps, they sit farther north than Kaisa. โHere. Moonlight Plains and Emberridge. But how would they poison the entire country? They barely produce enough Moonflower toย treatย it.โ
Rian winces. โIโm not sure. But it doesnโt take very much poison to cause an effect. Just a bit of boiled stem will cause the fever in an adult. A bit more will bring the coughing.โ
โAnd it has to be boiled?โ
โOr soaked,โ Rian says. โThough that takes longer. Far quicker just to boil it.โ
I study the maps, remembering the way Corrick and I did the same thing in the palace. It was so late at night, and we went through books and records and pored over maps, talking about how Sunkeep fares the best with the fevers, but it has the lowest population in Kandala. He revealed that several people had theorized that Sunkeepโs access to the ocean water might stave off the feverย sickness, but it was determined thatย everyย sector has access to fresh water. It was a dead end.
โCould the โmedicineโ be tainted?โ Rian asks. โCould they be handing out vials of poison mixed in with the cure so no one would know what theyโre getting?โ
I shake my head. โNo. Moonflower is sold as petals. No one is given vials of elixir because it doesnโt really last, and the elites are allowed to buy as much as they want.โ
Rian scoffs. โOf course they are.โ
I canโt even disagree with his reaction.
โHow much does it take?โ I say. I look up at him. โYou said you brought so much Moonflower to keep Bella subdued. Does the poison take repeated doses?โ
He hesitates, and for the first time, a hint of shame flickers in his eyes. โYes. And you have to be careful. Too much, and it can be debilitating. Tooย longย and damage can be permanent.โ
I think about that, turning it around in my head. โBut if people in Kandala were given access to an antidote, even infrequently, maybe we werenโt curing the fever sickness. Maybe we were just holding back the poison, over and over again. Only the most vulnerable fell very sick and died.โ
Or those who didnโt have access to medicine at all.
My eyes trace the lines of the rivers that neatly slice through Kandala on both sides again, the Queenโs River in the east, and the Flaming River to the west. Rian saidย boiledย orย soaked. Thereโd be no way to hand out vials of poison to the entire population on a regular basisโbut there must be hundreds of streams branching off each river, leading into towns and valleys that each have their own system of water mills, with pumps and wells and sewers all throughout each sector, even the Wilds. The Royal Sector, completelyย landlocked, even has running water provided by a complicated sewer system that diverts water directly from mills fed by the Queenโs River.
The Queenโs River, which starts at the northern tip of Kandala, just like the Flaming River.
The northern tip of Kandala, coincidentally home to the two sectors where the Moonflower grows.
Where the โcureโ was discovered.
I stare at the map. Maybe every sectorย doesnโtย have access to fresh water.
โTheyโre putting it in the water,โ I say in horror.
โIn theย water?โ Rian says in surprise.
But Rocco leans close. โHow, Miss Tessa? How would they do it?โ
I have to shake my head. โI donโt know. I donโt know enough about water mills or wells or how any of that works.โ But now that Iโm thinking about it, a lot of other things begin to fall into place. โBut it would explain why Sunkeep doesnโt have as many sick people. If the rivers are poisoned in Emberridge and Moonlight Plains, by the time water travels that far south, the poison is probably diluted. It would also explain why people who work at the river docks always seem to get the worst fever sickness.โ
I tap my finger against my chin. Iโm on a roll now, and I canโt stop. โIt wouldย alsoย explain why itโs so difficult to determine who gets sick and who doesnโt. Some people might be drinking water from a rain barrel, some people might be drinking from a well, some people might be drinking water from a faucet. With the size of Kandala, the rain surely dilutes the poison from time to time, too, so thereโd be no way to figure out a rhythm or pattern to who is getting the sickest either. And some people would be moreย vulnerable than others. Maybe the sea life can be affected, too. So people who eat fish would be influenced. Or what about livestock whoโve drunk the water? Would the poison be in their flesh?โ I let out a breath. All of a sudden, I want my books. I need to get to the king. I need to warn someone. โThis is too big! Thereโs too much.โ
But then my eyes lock on Rianโs, and I remember what he said about returning to Kandala.
I donโt know if I can attempt returning again so quickly.
โWe have to go back,โ I say. โWe have to go backย now. I have to tell the king.โ
Rian looks at me steadily. โAnd how will you get there? Swim?โ
I inhale a breath of fire and move like Iโm going to launch myself at him.
Chairs scrape against the floor, and the two guards who followed us step away from the wall, but Rian puts up a hand, and they all stop. Iโm aware of Rocco right against my side.
โI canโt,โ Rian says to me. โNot even if I wanted to. You saw the condition of theย Dawn Chaser. The ship is going to take weeks to repair, if not a monthโโ
โI know you have other ships,โ I snap.
โI do. But youย alsoย know we were just engaged in a war, Miss Cade. A lot of the bridges have been destroyed, so any steamships I have are running cargo to rebuild. If I claim failure on this mission and then take a ship away from rebuilding, itโs going to be a tough sell to my people. If I do that and leave now, Oren Crane willย absolutelyย take over.โ
My fists are clenched at my sides.
People are dying, I want to scream.
But he knows thatโand as much as I hate to admit it, people are at riskย here, too. I saw the citadel.
I hate this. Itโs no better than it was in Kandala.
I wish weโd never come.
But if weโd never come, I never would have known about the poison. We wouldโve kept trying to figure out a way to make better medicine, fighting our own war endlessly.
I unclench my fists and sigh.
โFine,โ I say. โThen Iโm going back to the house. Iโll take the horses and cart you promised.โ I remember what Rocco said about our little boats and add, โSome sailcloth, too. And some maps, if weโre to navigate Fairde on our own.โ
He could easily make a dig about how we wouldnโt have to navigate anything alone if I werenโt choosing to leave, but he doesnโt. โIโll give you anything you need to make yourself comfortable, Miss Cade.โ
I somehow refrain from giving him a rude gesture, and instead, I turn for the door. โGoodbye, Gwyn,โ I say. โGoodbye, Sablo.โ
As I listen to their farewells behind me, I stomp down the stairs, feeling Roccoโs presence at my back. Rianโs footsteps are lighter behind him, and Iโm sure there are guards following him, too. This all feels like such a failure. He hasnโt promised to bring me back. I have no way to tell Harristan what happened to Corrickโor about whatโs truly happening in Kandala. I donโt know how much time will need to pass before heโll launch a rescue mission, if he can even accomplish one.
Rocco and I could be stuck here . . . โforever.
My chest tightens, and my breathing hitches for a moment. Thatโs almost too overwhelming to comprehend.
There is more than one way to fight.
Well, I told Rocco I couldnโt lie. Iโm not an emissary, and Rian saw right through me immediately. I probably ruined any hope weย had the very instant I drew that dagger and vomited on his toes. The only thing I know how to do is take care of people.
Is that something? I donโt know. It never seems to make a difference.
I think of those people we passed when we rode through town. The ones who looked at Roccoโs livery and wondered if I was someone important. Iโm not. Even in Kandala, the only time I felt like I was making a difference was when I was working in the Wilds as an outlaw, with Weston Lark at my side.
When we get to the bottom of the stairs, I turn and look at Rian. โIn addition to the horses and the cart and everything else, Iโm going to need extra silver.โ
His eyebrows go up. โOh, you are?โ
โYes. I worked as an apothecary in Kandala. Iโd like to do the same here. If your people are rebuilding, they surely get sick and injured from time to time. I have my books and a few things I brought on the ship, but Iโll need to buy supplies so I can be prepared. Once we have the wagon, Rocco and I will ride through your towns to determine whatโs needed.โ
Rian stares at me. His mouth opens like he wants to say something, but heโs not sure what. I think Iโve truly surprised him.
โStop looking at me like that,โ I say. โIโm certainly not going to sit in that house waiting around for some man to decide my fate. If Iโm stuck here, Iโm going to make myself useful.โ
He clamps his mouth shut. โFine. Iโll grant you whatever you need.โ He pauses, and his eyes narrow. โBut if I hear that youโre causing trouble among my peopleโโ
โIโm not causing trouble.โ I take a step closer, looking him dead in the eye. โIโve never caused trouble. You criticized Prince Corrick for manipulation and scheming at every turn, when youย did exactly the same thing. And you know what the problem with that is? You think youโre doing the right thing, but all youโre really doing is turning everyone into yourย enemy. If you knew Moon-flower was a poison, you had a chance to tell King Harristan when you were there. You could have saved livesย right then. But you knew it was a way to lure Corrick onto that ship, so you didnโt.โ
โIย didnโtย because it was clear I was sitting with traitors andโโ
โIโm done talking to you, Rian.โ I have to take a deep breath to steady myself. โAll Iโve ever wanted to do is help people, and thatโs all Iโm doing now.โ
โTruly.โ His eyes search mine, and I can tell he suspects me of lying.
But Iโm not.
โTruly,โ I say. โSo give me my silver, and Iโll be on my way.โ
He hesitates, and for a breath of time, I think heโs going to refuse. Weโll have gained nothing at all.
But then Rian nods. โConsider it done.โ