The first knock at the door comes at midnight, and it makes me immediately regret my promise ofย any time.
The small house is dark, the fire still burning in the tiny hearth, throwing shadows everywhere. Itโs so quiet that for a moment, I sit up in bed and wonder if I dreamed the sound of the knock.
But then the shadows shift and Thorin appears beside the door. He looks to me. โYour Majesty?โ
I run a hand over my face, then nod. โGo ahead. Open the door. I did sayย day or night.โ
โWait!โ Quint hisses from the other side of the room. โA moment,ย please.โ
I think he must be in some state of undress, but heโs not. Instead, he strides across the room, fetchesย myย tunic from where I tossed it at the end of the bed, and holds it out to me.
I stare at him.
He doesnโt falter. โI thought you might not want to greet your people shirtless,โ he says, and my eyes narrow.
Another knock sounds at the door, louder this time.
I snatch the tunic out of Quintโs hand. โGo ahead,โ I say to Thorin again. As I pull the tunic over my head, I realize weโre the only three in the dimly lit room. โHas Saeth not returned from patrol?โ
โNo,โ says Thorin, and in that one word, I can hear his concern. But then he opens the door.
Iโm wondering if it will be another group of men with axes and hammers, but Iโm surprised to find a middle-aged woman on the doorstep. Her graying hair is in a long braid hanging over her shoulder, and sheโs wringing her hands.
โIโm sorry,โ she says. โI know itโs lateโโ
โItโs fine,โ I say. โCome in.โ
Quint is already lighting the candles on the table, drawing the chairs back. The woman hesitates in the doorway, glancing from me to Thorin and then to Quint. Her handwringing turns to fingers gripping knuckles, and she appears ready to flee.
โI shouldnโt be here,โ she says quickly. โMy husband didnโt want me to come. IโI had to wait for him to fall asleep. IโIโll justโโ She backs through the door.
โWait,โ I say, but sheโs already off the small porch. By the time I make it to the doorway, sheโs in the yard, scurrying into the darkness. โPlease,โ I call. โWait. Iโll hear whatever you have to say.โ
She stops before she reaches the trees. โI heard that you granted amnesty to those who held the Royal Sector.โ
I step down off the porch, but as soon as my bare feet touch the dirt, she looks like she might bolt, so I just nod. โI did.โ
โI wasnโt there. That night. IโI wasnโt there.โ
I frown. Iโm not sure what sheโs trying to tell me. โBut you were a part of it?โ
She takes another step closer to the trees, until sheโs almost invisible in the darkness. โIโm not admitting anything.โ
Talking to people in the Wilds is so very different from talking to people in the palace. In the Royal Sector, everyone always has a hidden agenda. Words are barbed like weapons, and every syllable is calculated. Iโm generally good at sensing when the consuls are lying to me, to say nothing of the courtiers who simper at dinner every night. I have no hesitation in cutting through their nonsense. If Iโm not decisive and sharp, itโs seen as weakness. They circle me like sharks who sense blood in the water.
If Iโm sharp with this woman, thereโs a good chance Iโll never see her again, so I sit down on the step. โAre you worried Iโll punish you if you were?โ I say quietly. โAmnesty wasnโt just for people who were there that night. I know you were all desperate. I said I wanted things to change, and I meant it. You can speak freely.โ I lean forward, then brace my forearms on my knees. โBesides, it may not be obvious, but Iโm currently without a throne. Truly, you have nothing to fear.โ
Sheโs silent for a while, considering that, but she eventually draws closer, pulling her shawl tightly around her shoulders. I glared at Quint when he offered me the tunic, but now Iโm glad for it, because thereโs a chill in the night air. My bare feet are freezing against the ground, but Iโm worried sheโll bolt again if I stand up.
I gesture beside me. โPlease. Sit.โ
She regards me for a moment, then eases forward to gingerly perch on the step beside me.
โWhatโs your name?โ I say.
โAnnabeth, sir. King? Your Majesty.โ She frowns and tugs herย shawl closer, then bites her lip. โIโI donโt know what to call you. A lot of people have been calling you the Fox.โ
The Fox.Violet started that, when I was an outlaw leaving coins on steps and stumps and windowsills. Now that Iโm living among them, I wonder if itโs easier to think of me as someone separate from the king. As if Iโm not the man who, in their eyes, simply lazed about the palace and allowed his brother to execute people for stealing medicine they needed to survive.
A lot of them used to call me Horrible Harristan, the way they called my brother Cruel Corrick.
Annabeth didnโt show up with an ax, so she can honestly call me whatever she wants.
I glance over. โYou donโt have to be formal. Fox is fine.โ
A bit of light flares behind us, and I realize Quint is lighting the lanterns.
And in that light, I notice there are tears on Annabethโs cheeks.
โPlease,โ I say. โYou came here to talk to me. Iโll listen.โ
She takes a slow breath, and her voice trembles. โI know the men are ready to charge the Royal Sector like they did before. But they wouldnโt have been able to do it if we hadnโt hit critical parts of the city. It was the women who figured out where to lay the explosives.โ
Iโm glad I have a lifetime of experience at keeping any hint of emotion off my face, including every gruesome execution Corrick forced me to witness, so I donโt even blink.
โHow?โ I say.
โMy cousin is a day maid in the palace,โ she says quietly. โShe snuck us some uniforms. Piece by piece. We made more. Weโve been able to slip inside.โ
I keep my breathing very slow and even, but my heart feels likeย a galloping horse. The people in the Wilds speak openly about revolution, but this is the first time someone has directly admitted their own specific role in what happened during the attack on the sector.
โWho is your cousin?โ I say.
She says nothing. Itโs clear she still doesnโt trust me. Iโm shocked she offered this much. I know they donโt have any explosives left. โThe Benefactorsโ have stopped providing money and medicine, and I ordered that any shipments from Traderโs Landing be thoroughly searched following the attacks. Theyโre not getting any more.
โYou had to be working with the guards,โ I say. โThey know the maids. A stranger wouldnโt have been able to sneak in, even with a uniform.โ
Though Tessa snuck in, I remember.
โNo.โ Annabeth hesitates. โThoughโโ
A shadowed figure steps out of the trees, and her head snaps up in alarm. A boot scrapes on the porch behind me, and I realize Thorin has spotted the figure, too. Iโm frozen in place, remembering the crowd who showed up with axes, but then enough light reveals Saeth. A bit of the tightness in my chest loosens. โItโs all right,โ I say. โMy other guard is just returning from patrol.โ
But Annabeth has been spooked, and sheโs already off the step and into the shadows. โI need to return before my husband realizes Iโm gone.โ
โPlease,โ I say. โAt least tell meโโ
But sheโs slipped into the trees.
โI can go after her,โ Thorin says quietly.
โNo,โ I say. She barely trusted me enough to reveal this much. Iโll wait and see if she comes back.
Saeth has drawn closer, and now I can see stains on his tunic, and a dark streak across one side of his face.
Iโm on my feet in an instant. โAre you hurt?โ I demand.
โNo, Your Majesty.โ He grimaces. โWell. Not badly. The night patrol started searching homes a few miles south of here. I picked a fight to give them a different quarry. Then I had to wait for them to stop chasingย me.โ
A few miles south.Thatโs close. Possibly too close.
At my back, Quint says, โWere they searching for the king?โ
โNo, they were looking for smugglers.โ Saeth has moved close enough to the light that I can see bruising along his jaw now, and blood on his lip. Heโs not very old, probably not much more than thirty, but his eyes are shadowed and tired, and sweat threads his hair. โI led them into Steel City and through the merchantsโ quarter, then lost them somewhere after we crossed into Artis.โ
Thatโs a lot of ground to cover, and my guards havenโt been going out on horseback. Weโre hamstrung in so many ways. โOn foot?โ I say.
Saeth nods.
โSit,โ I say, gesturing to the step. I glance behind me. โQuint, fetch him someโโ
But when I look, Quint already has a cup of water, along with a damp rag. Saeth drops onto the step, his movement heavy with exhaustion, and he takes both. He runs the rag across the back of his neck, then drains the water without taking a breath.
I want to give him time to recover, but if the night patrol is searching for me, we donโt have time. I ease onto the step beside him.
โAdvise,โ I say quietly. โDo we need to move?โ
He shakes his head. โNo, Your Majesty. I lost them miles ago.ย I doubled back through the creek half a dozen times to cover my tracks.โ
But still. That was very close. โIf they came this way once, theyโll do it again.โ
He nods, then wipes the rag against his cheek, wincing when it finds broken skin. โI donโt remember the night patrol being that determined.โ
โSomeone is paying them to beย moreย determined.โ I imagine itโs Allisander, or one of his barons. I keep thinking of Arella Cherry working with the head of the palace guard, though. I still donโt know how or why theyโre tricking people into thinking Iโmย poisoningย them. โThey know Iโm out here somewhere.โ
Saeth nods and looks out at the night, but he says nothing to that.
As always, there are so many people, so many angles, so manyย worriesย to consider. I have all of Kandala to think of, but when Iโm sitting here in the dark, itโs hard to cast my concerns beyond the people in front of me. Like Annabeth, who came to tell me about her means to sneak into the palace. Like Quint, whoโs whisked away Saethโs water cup to refill it without being asked.
Like the man at my side, who must have run forย milesย tonight, just to protect me.
All while worried about a family that he hasnโt seen in more than a week.
When I was first crowned king after my parentsโ assassination, I had to choose my own personal guard. It would have been easy to use the same men my father had used. As the crown prince, I knew them all, and was familiar with each one of them.
But my mother and father had died on their watch, and in the days after it happened, I found I didnโt trustย anyย of them.
So I discharged them all.
When it came time to interview applicants to staff myย ownย personal guard, however, I found it more challenging than I expected. It didnโt help that I had years of hearing little remarks about my illnesses, little snickers about my frail health, little moments of mockery behind my back when I would pass. Comments that werenโt quite soft enough for me to ignoreโespecially when they were coming from the hall guards themselves. Comments that would have been petty to address but sat under my skin for weeks.
I would sit across the table from each man and woman and try to remember if it was someone whoโd mocked me behind my back, or if it was someone I could trust with my life. Until our parents were slaughtered right in front of us, we rarely faced any threats. But suddenly I was trying to discern which guards would truly risk their life to save mine, when a week before I was trying my best toย ignoreย them.
But for some reason Iโd remembered Saeth from when heโd been among the general guard. I donโt remember what he said during his interview, and it probably didnโt matter. When he sat down at the table, heโd looked familiar, and it only took me a second to remember why. Heโd been a hall guard when I was younger, and some footmen were whispering when I passed. Saeth had snapped at them to stop.
He was one of the first guards I chose.
I shouldโve known he had a family.
Itโs quiet and cold and dark, and I think Quint and Thorin have gone back in the house, so I say, โBen told me about your wife and children. That youโve been worried.โ
Saeth goes absolutely rigid, and his head whips around, but he doesnโt look at me. Heโs looking for Thorin.
โHe didnโt betray you,โ I say.
โHe shouldnโt have said anything.โ
โSaeth.ย Adam.ย I asked him. I shouldโve asked earlier.โ
He glares at the door, then gives an aggravated sigh and runs the rag over his neck again. โLeah knows the risks. Sheโs a brave girl. Sheโll take care of them, Your Majesty. You shouldnโt have to trouble yourself.โ
Every word of that sounds like heโs trying to convinceย himself.
โIf I could give you leave to return home,โ I say, โI would.โ
โIโd be arrested,โ he says. โIโm sure theyโre watching her.โ
โNo doubt.โ
His throat jerks as he swallows, and his jaw is set, his eyes fixed on the trees. โI wonโt abandon Thorin either.โ
โIโm glad to hear it.โ I pause. โIf we could manage it safely, would you be willing to bring them here?โ
He goes still again.
โThorin suggested approaching two of the younger members of my personal guard,โ I say. โReed and Sommer. You know them?โ
He nods. โYes.โ
โKarri is gone, but it could be some time before we hear back from any of the consuls. We need more insight from inside the palace. From the Royal Sector. The men here are ready to fight, and itโs time to make a small move. We have a plan. If the men can quietly bring Reed and Sommer without notice, I would ask them to bring your wife and children, too.โ I pause. โIf youโre willing. This is not without risk either.โ
Saeth hasnโt moved. Heโs still staring out at the night. Eventually, he looks at me.
โYou donโt need to risk yourself for my family,โ he says.
โWhy not? Youโre risking yourself for me.โ
He lets out a breath, then shakes his head. โI canโt ask for this.โ
โYouโre not asking. Iโm offering. Are you willing or not?โ
โIโm willing,โ he says, and his voice is very quiet. โThank you.โ
He shouldnโt be thanking me. Not yet. I have no idea if any of my decisions are the right ones. So manyย wrongย ones led me to this point.
But Saeth hasnโt looked away, and I have to say something. I gesture toward the door. โYou should rest. Youโve earned it.โ
โThorin and I agreed we wouldnโt leave you alone,โ he says.
โHis Majesty is not alone,โ Quint says from behind me, and I turn my head to realize he never left the porch. Heโs seated against the wall, his little book open on his lap while he writes, a lantern beside him on the boards.
He turns a page and continues writing. โI can certainly shout for one of you if more trouble appears.โ
Saeth looks like he wants to object, but he really must be exhausted, because he says, โYes, Master Quint,โ and then he disappears into the house as well.
It leaves me alone on the porch with the Palace Master.
Or . . .ย whateverย Quint is, now that weโre no longer welcome in the palace.
I rub a hand over the back of my neck and sigh, then shift so Iโm leaning against the post that supports the roof. Iโm tired, and I need to return to bed, too, but Iโm also somewhat rattled. I donโt know what Annabeth really wanted, but if she planted explosives, she could have knowledge that might be useful later. I donโt know if weโll be able to retrieve more guards and Saethโs familyโor if weโll all be in the Hold by this time tomorrow.
Or maybe the men who showed up to confront me wonโt think this plan is worth their time, and theyโll kill me themselves.
All of these thoughts make me feel sour and prickly and nowhere near ready to sleep again. I look at Quint. โYou donโt have a family, too, do you?โ
I mean for the question to be genuine, but somehow it sounds a bit argumentative. His eyes flick up from his little book. โYour Majesty, I lived in the palace.โ
He says this like itโs obvious, and itย is, and it makes me feel like an idiot.
I scowl and look out at the night. โI know. There could still be someone youโre . . . missing.โ
โItโs kind of you to ask. But no.โ
With that, he looks back at his book.
It feels dismissive. On the first day we had to flee the night patrol, Quint mentioned that Corrick asked him to look after me. It annoyed me then, and something about this moment, of the way Quint is remaining on the porch, reminds me of it.
Much like the way he put his hand down on the piece of paper, or the way he thrust a tunic at me before I answered the door.
Like Iโm a child who needs minding, not the king of Kandala.
For some reason, that turns my mood even pricklier.
โWhat on earth are you writing?โ I demand.
His eyes flick up again, and he closes the book. โI was making an accounting of what Annabeth said, in the event you query it later. Then your offer to Saeth as well, as you had not made your plans with Thorin known. I wanted to rememberโโ
โI didnโt know I needed to consult with you,โ I say sharply.
โYou donโt, of course, but now Iโm aware. Reed and Sommer are a decent choice. I see no reason to question their loyalty. I was also making note to discuss lodging with Beatrice, because if you intend to bring two more guards here, as well as Saethโs family, weย will need more than a two-room house.โ A line appears between his eyebrows, and he flips the book open again. โOn that note, I should alsoโโ
I roll onto my knees and snatch the book right out of his hands. His pencil goes streaking across the page.
Itโs possibly the most childish thing Iโve ever done.
For the barest moment, a flare of challenge hangs in the air. I think heโs going to snatch the book back, that weโre going to tussle for it. Itโs a weird sense of anticipation, because I canโt remember the last time I ever tussled with anyone for anything. Not even Corrick.
But then he must remember his place, even though I seem to have forgotten mine. He draws his legs up to sit cross-legged, and he straightens to sit upright against the wall. โYour Majesty?โ
The light from the lantern flickers off his features, turning his red hair gold. He was always lax about shaving in the palace, and heโs even more so now, leaving a dusting of red to coat his jaw.
I frown and sit back on my heels, then hold out the book. โForgive me.โ
He takes it, but he doesnโt look at it. โItโs not private,โ he says. โYou could have asked.โ
โDonโt chastise me, Quint.โ
โIโm informing you. Itโs simply palace notes.โ
Much like the moment I thought we were going to fight over the book, this quibbling has a weirdly anticipatory feel to it. We would sometimes bicker in the palace, but Corrick would always interject.
โAre youย arguingย with me?โ I demand.
His eyes glint in the light. โI fail to see how I could be.โ
I inhale sharply, but the door opens, and Thorin stands there. He looks down at me, and then at Quintโand then back to me. โIs all well?โ he finally says.
And then I realize that Iโm kneeling on the porch, glaring at Quint petulantly, and thereโs no way to undo it without drawing more attention to my position.
Thorinโs expression doesnโt give away a single hint of surprise or judgment, but I doubt itโs escaped his notice.
โAll is fine,โ I say evenly.
โThe king simply wished to debate semantics,โ says Quint. He opens his little book and goes back to writing as if the last three minutes didnโt happen.
Now I want to snatch the book back and hit him with it.
As soon as the thought occurs to me, I realize that none of my agitation is with Quint at all.
Thorin glances between the two of us again, then says, โForgive me,โ and he closes the door.
I shift to sit against it, then draw my legs up to sit cross-legged too. Everything inside me is so jumbled up. I shouldnโt be bickering with anyone, but Iโm just so angry and sad and worried and a whole host of emotions I probably couldnโt name.
I rub my hands over my face and sigh, then look out at the night. โLord, I miss my brother.โ
โYes, Your Majesty. I do, too.โ
I turn my head and look at him. Again, Iโm a fool. Of course thereโs someone Quint is missing. Heโs probably as lonely as I am. He and Corrick were always close.
A part of me envied that, especially once I learned that my brother had Tessa as well. I never had anyone.
โCorrick would be better at all this,โ I say.
Quint laughs as if Iโve startled him. โNo.โ Then he sobers, and his pencil goes still for a moment as he reconsiders. โWell.โ
I sigh. โExactly.โ
โPrince Corrick is always quite good with details,โ he says. โAnd his experience in the Hold gives him an edge that you lack. I rather doubt Francis would have dared to come near him with an ax, of all things.โ
โI wasnโt sure it was possible to feel worse, Quint. Thank you.โ
He resumes his writing. โThough it may be worth considering that Annabeth likely wouldnโt have found the courage to speak to Prince Corrick atย all.โ
Iโm not sure what to say to that.
Eventually, he sets the pencil down, then begins flipping through the book, going back a few pages. He holds it open near the light so I can read. โHere. The day after you agreed to send them to Ostriary, you chose to send Lochlan instead of Laurel Pepperleaf, as a measure of goodwill for the people, as well as a means of protection, so he could not launch another revolution in Corrickโs absence. You had me draft a letter to Baron Pepperleaf in appreciation for his daughterโs offer to attend the journey, but insisting on declining for her protection.โ
I look at his brief notes to that effect, then back up at his face. โI remember.โ
He flips back a few pages. โOn the day you suspected Corrick of conspiring with the rebels or the Benefactors, you sent the army into the Wilds to collect him.โ His hand runs down the page, then stops somewhere near the center. โLook. You specifically gave orders not to arrest the people. Corrick only. Tessa if she was with him. You did not want the armyโs presence in the Wilds to stoke revolution.โ
I frown. I donโt understand why heโs showing me this.
Quint keeps flipping. โHere. Jasper Gold wanted a special tax on trade routes through Mosswell, but heโd conspired with Sallister to make sure they both got a cut. When you approved it, you ensured the tax went to the benefit of the sector, not to line either of their pockets.โ He taps at the page. โI did enjoy the look on his face when he realized what youโd done.โ
This page is full of tightly packed notes. It must have been from a meeting with the consuls. Quintโs handwriting is small and hard to read, full of shorthand. Messy too, because he was writing quickly. It takes me a moment to figure out that he refers to the consuls with their initials. AC for Arella Cherry, RP for Roydan Pelham, and so on. It looks like many of them protested the tax outright. I remember that meeting now, because Corrick had been the one to identify that the tax was somewhat justified, but I wanted to make sure the money was going where it was needed.
I take the book from Quint, because itโs hard to read in the flickering lantern light.
He shifts a bit closer, then leans over to tap a finger over two words. โI rarely editorialize, but . . . โwell.โ
JG annoyed.
I smile, remembering. โJasper Gold. Heย wasย annoyed.โ
โYes. He asked me to have a porter call for a carriage the very instant the meeting was over.โ He pauses. โPrince Corrick never fails to take action in the moment, but you always look out for the entire kingdom. Do not doubt yourself. I donโt know that he could calm and rally the people the way you have.โ
That makes me look up, and I realize that weโre very close, almostย tucked around the lantern, the book held between us. Quintโs eyes are on the pages, and when he goes to turn another, his fingers brush mine.
Itโs a bare touch, brief and meaningless, but somehow it contains the force of a lightning strike. Itโs so startling that I nearly draw back. I have to swallow, to force myself still while he turns another page.
I donโt know how he has the talent to annoy me toย no endโand then sit beside me in the dark and offer encouragement so offhandedly.
Quint has worked in the palace for years, so we have a thousand moments between us. Maybe a million. Some have been absolutely interminable, like when he demands that I weigh in on the color selection of table linens, when I absolutely could not care less. But others have been downright intimate, from the time I dressed his wounds, to the time when he dressedย mine. When Tessaโs friend Karri stitched up my thigh after Iโd been shot by the night patrol, he let me clutch his hand until I thought I might break his fingers.
My thoughts are scattering dangerously, and my cheeks feel warm. I need to remember myself. It was easy in the palace because I was surrounded by protocol. When I was younger, I could escape the Royal Sector and forget myself for a time, but once I was crowned king, I knew what was expected of me. I had rigid rules to follow, and deviating from them could mean disaster.
Here, I have nothing. Iโm wearing patched broadcloth and wool, sitting outside in the middle of the night. It was bad enough when I snatched the book out of Quintโs hands, when that spark of challenge hung in the air. I should go back inside before I do anything else.
I donโt.
Quint continues turning pages as I watch. Iโm not sure what heโs looking for, but his notes go onย forever. Several apply to meetings I was a part of, but most of the time, I have no idea what his scrawled shorthand is even about.
Linens -24?
Geo -morning
Heath -discuss tea leaves
Pr Corr -interrupt dinner
I stop his turning and tap that one. โWhat was this?โ
He leans close to read, and he has to think for a moment. โPrince Corrick was dining with Hugh Jansson.โ
Hugh Jansson is old and fond of telling stories that last forย agesย and are more boring than watching snails crawl through grass. Heโs the kind of man who talks with his mouth full and has a tendency to spit when he enunciates.
Heโs also one of the wealthiest barons of Emberridge, so everyone puts up with it.
I stare at Quint, fascinated. โCorrick asked you toย interruptย him?โ
He draws back. โAh . . . โyes, Your Majesty. Rather urgent matters requiring the Kingโs Justice.โ His expression turns sly. โOf course it happened every single time, but surely the baron would understand the sheer demand for the princeโs attention. Couldnโt be helped, really.โ
I burst out laughing. โBrilliant. I should have employed you to interruptย myย dinners.โ
โGladly.โ
Now that Iโve discovered this, I take over, flipping through more quickly, looking for more. โWhat other secrets have you kept?โ
โYou know what secrets Iโve kept.โ
Heโs right, I do, but thereโs an intriguing note to his voice. I want to look up, but the book has flipped to the front, and itโs just a list of dates that have clearly been added to over time. Some are widely spaced, by a span of weeks, while others are divided by only a matter of days. โWhatโs this?โ
โA list of dates.โ
Thereโs a tone in his voice I canโt quite parcel out. โI can see that. What does it mean?โ
โItโs nothing,โ he says. โSimple recordkeeping for my needs.โ
It doesnโt quite feel like a lie, but Iโm too practiced in the double-speak at court to know that itโs definitely not the entire truth. Iโm not sure why I care. I donโt even know why a list of dates mightย matter.
I finally turn my head to look at him. Heโs very close, and like before, I canโt decide if Iโm annoyed or intriguedโor something else entirely. โAre we going to argue over semantics again, Quint?โ
His eyes hold mine, gleaming in the flickering light. โIf it pleases you.โ
My heart gives a little stutter. I have to look back at the page because I donโt know what to do with it. I feel flushed and uncertain and off-balance, and I havenโt felt like this since . . . โI donโt know when.
At my back, the door clicks, and I jump a mile.
Thorin stands over us. โI should take a post by the trees if youโre going to remain outside, Your Majesty.โ
โNo. Itโs late. I should retire.โ I sound like Iโve been eating sand, but my heart wonโt stop pounding. I drop the book beside the lantern and practically scramble up from where I was sitting. โThank you for the debate, Master Quint.โ
โYes, Your Majesty.โ His voice is so calm, so composed. Thereโs no spark in the air, no blush on his cheeks, which makes me feel foolish. Like my heart got twisted up with my imagination.
Over Quint, of all people.
I need to stay focused. Too much is at risk here. I move to follow Thorin into the house.
But before the door falls closed, I notice Quint flip open the little book, just turning back the cover to that list of dates.
At the bottom, he adds one more.