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Chapter no 26 – Harristan

Destroy the Day (Defy the Night, #3)

Itโ€™s nightfall again, and I have more questions than I started the day with. I should be focusing on all the lies about colluding with Ostriary, but instead Iโ€™m fixated on the fact that consuls watched me send my brother off on a ship to fetch more medicineโ€”and then they sent warships after him.

โ€œYou need to eat,โ€ Quint says quietly. Heโ€™s sitting at the table with me, just like last night, and once again, loss and worry and heady emotion are filling the air.

Alice delivered stew half an hour ago, but I havenโ€™t touched it.

I stare into the bowl, at the congealing mass of beef and vegetables that have long since stopped steaming. I donโ€™t want to touch any of it. I push the bowl away.

Quint pushes it right back. โ€œYou havenโ€™t eaten since this morning,โ€ he presses.

Every muscle in my body is taut, and every breath I inhale feels like a battle. Forget eating. Forget everything. They tried to kill my brother. I long to find a horse and a crossbow and ride into the Royal Sector and shoot every consul I can find.

Iโ€™d be deadโ€”or capturedโ€”before I made it through the gates.

โ€œSommer said the brigantines didnโ€™t return,โ€ Quint says. โ€œOur sailors have never been able to navigate the rough seas southwest of Sunkeep, so thereโ€™s no reason to assume they would suddenly be able to now. Captain Blakemore surely would have spotted brigantines long before they were a threat. Prince Corrick would know that you wouldnโ€™t send warships after him. I have to believe Captain Blakemore would be able to use his nautical skills to evade them in unfamiliar watersโ€”and those ships were destroyed in the rough seas just like so many others.โ€

Iโ€™ve had these thoughts, too. They feed me a few crumbs of hope.

But I want more than crumbs. I want more than the hope that warships simply sank.

โ€œIs this more of your perpetual optimism?โ€ I ask, and as soon as I say it, I see the tiniest flinch in his eyes.

I frown. โ€œThatโ€™s not condemnation. I envy it.โ€

Heโ€™s quiet for a minute. โ€œIf the consuls believed those warships were successful, they would have been bragging about their victory right along with the claims theyโ€™ve already made. Thereโ€™s a reason this hasnโ€™t been made public. They donโ€™t want to advertise failure.โ€

Also true.

It still does little to ease the burn of anger and worry in my heart.

Is this my fate? To have everyone I love taken away from me?

โ€œYou said yesterday that you must be serving some kind of penance.โ€ I draw a heavy breath so my voice doesnโ€™t break. โ€œIs this mine?โ€

โ€œFor what?โ€

โ€œFor everything.โ€ My fingers press into the table. โ€œFor everything Iโ€™ve done wrong.โ€

He shifts closer, and his hand brushes over mine. โ€œYouโ€™ve done nothing wrong.โ€

I sent Corrick away.I swallow, and my throat is tight.

โ€œDo you think heโ€™s dead?โ€ I say.

Itโ€™s the first time Iโ€™ve spoken these words, and they fall like a stone into a pond. The silence that follows is deafening, accented by the crack of the fire in the hearth.

The fact that he doesnโ€™t answer immediately makes me assume the worst. I look up and find Quint studying me in the candlelight.

My chest clenches. โ€œYou do,โ€ I whisper.

โ€œNo. I was debating whether to share a story. I thought it may provide some . . . hope.โ€

I frown. โ€œThen why were you debating?โ€

โ€œBecause it doesnโ€™t have a happy ending. It might not offer any hope at all.โ€

My heart gives a lurch, and I want to refuse. But he hasnโ€™t left my side all day, and I keep thinking of the way his hand fell on my shoulder when we were questioning Sommer. He misses Corrick, too. I run a damp hand over the back of my neck and say, โ€œDoes it give you hope?โ€

โ€œI wonโ€™t know until you hear it.โ€

I draw a long breath. โ€œVery well. Go ahead.โ€

โ€œWhen my grandmother was young, she had a sister who disappeared in the woods when they were picking flowers. She said she was quite distraught, because she and her sister had been very close. Couldnโ€™t be consoled, really. Her mother, too. Her brother and her father had half the town come out to help look for the sister, and everyone kept reassuring them that they would find her. So many people were looking.โ€

I study him. He already told me the story didnโ€™t have a happy ending. โ€œThey didnโ€™t find her?โ€

โ€œThey found her body. Sheโ€™d been killed by a wild animal.โ€

โ€œWhy on earth would this story give me any shred of hope?โ€ I demand.

โ€œBecause my grandmother used to say she knew. She always said she could feel the loss in her heart. Thatโ€™s why she couldnโ€™t be consoled. She knew they wouldnโ€™t find her sister alive.โ€

I stare at him, my breathing quick. Quint reaches out and touches the center of my chest, and itโ€™s so new that the warmth of his hand against my shirt takes me by surprise.

โ€œDo you feel it?โ€ he says, and his voice is so quiet, forcing me still. โ€œYouโ€™ve known loss. In your heart, do you think heโ€™s gone?โ€

His eyes flicker with firelight and stare back at me, unflinching now. In this moment, I realize heโ€™s begging for the same kind of hope that I am.

I put a hand over his, holding his palm against my chest. My breath hitches, and I think of my brother. My brave brother, daring and reckless and downright incorrigible.

Cory.

Iโ€™d give anything for him to be here right now. I wish Iโ€™d never let him get on that ship. The thought feels selfish in so many ways.

As always, heโ€™d be so much better at all of this.

But even though heโ€™s absent, I donโ€™t feel like heโ€™s gone.

As soon as I realize it, a certainty seems to fill my chest, so cool and sure that it chases the waiting tears away and settles my pounding heart. I can breathe for the first time in hours.

โ€œNo,โ€ I say steadily. โ€œI donโ€™t.โ€

Quint nods fiercely in agreement. โ€œI donโ€™t either.โ€

Maybe itโ€™s ridiculous, because this is the most nebulous hope, but it gives me the greatest relief. I take a deep breath.

โ€œThank you.โ€ I take his hand off my chest and clasp it between mine. Emotion is swelling in my heart. โ€œThank you.โ€ I draw his hand to my face and press it to my cheek, then kiss his palm. โ€œThank you.โ€

His hand softens against my jaw, his thumb stroking over my skin. โ€œYes, Your Majesty.โ€

I go still. โ€œHarristan,โ€ I whisper.

He shakes his head.

โ€œStill a refusal?โ€ I say. โ€œEven now?โ€

That almost gets him. But then he sighs and draws back. โ€œWell, you see, every time I consider it, I remember yet another moment and determine I simply could not possibly.โ€

I turn those words around in my head and determine theyโ€™re complete nonsense. โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll remember you facing down one of the consuls, or standing in front of the rebels in the sector while they threw fire at you, or negotiating with Tessa when you wanted to reclaim the palace. Censure me if you must, but I cannot call a man like that something as simple as his name.โ€

He really is going to drive me insane. I have to run a hand over my jaw.

โ€œJust this afternoon!โ€ he exclaims. โ€œYou squared up to that brutish man with the beard who was refusing to bring food to Sommer. He was twice your sizeโ€”โ€

I give him a withering look. โ€œThatโ€™s quite impossible.โ€

โ€œPlease donโ€™t ruin my memory. He was possibly three times your size, and youโ€”โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s enough, Palace Master.โ€

My use of his title draws him up short again. โ€œAh. Is that how it will be now?โ€ He pushes the bowl toward me again. โ€œVery well. Eat.โ€

I still donโ€™t want to, but this time, I obey. The food has gone cold, but I consider how Leah Saeth spoke of her daughter begging for scraps while guards tormented them, and I donโ€™t complain. I think of Reed, who was probably hungry, too, and died proving his loyalty. And despite myself, I think of a bound Sommer trying to forage for chicken feed in the cold cellar. I shouldnโ€™t have any empathy for treasonous guards, but I do. I canโ€™t help it.

But I eat my cold stew. Quint sits with me the whole time.

He ate an hour ago, so he really doesnโ€™t need to. His little book sits on the table, but there isnโ€™t much light, so heโ€™s not flipping through notes either. Heโ€™s quiet, watchful, not quite watching me, but not . . . not either. It shouldnโ€™t be different from the thousand other times weโ€™ve sat at a table beside each other, but it is. Earlier, there were no walls between us, no barriers, but now an entire day has passed and I donโ€™t know how to proceed again. The idea of courtship is something I put so far from my mind that I never considered the mechanics of it.

Of all the reasons I wish for my brotherโ€™s presence, this is an area where I could desperately use his counsel.

But heโ€™s not here, and I canโ€™t sit here in silence. Now that Iโ€™m not panicking over warships, it leaves too much room for new worries to crowd into my head.

โ€œHas there been no word from Karri or the runners yet?โ€ I say.

โ€œNo.โ€

I frown. Jonas Beeching, the consul of Artis, was the closest, and also the likeliest ally. The fact that we havenโ€™t heard from him is concerning.

I try to shake it off, but thinking about Artis makes me think about the last time I saw my brother at the docks. โ€œIf Corrick survived the warships, he would suspect something is amiss in Kandala. Heโ€™d attempt to return quickly, donโ€™t you think?โ€

Quint nods. โ€œIf he returns with Captain Blakemore, theyโ€™re walking right into a hornetโ€™s nest.โ€

I mentally play that out in my head. We originally had no warning that Captain Blakemoreโ€™s ship was arriving at port, because the Dawn Chaser had a Kandalan flag. Would Corrick sail under the same? That might give him an advantageโ€”though the Ostrian king would no longer feel the need to send a spy.

Then again, if they were trailed by warships, I rather doubt the Ostrian king was happy about it. The man might send back his whole navy to attack Kandala. I remember what Captain Blake-more said about Kandalaโ€™s history with Ostriary.

For one shining second, I want to leave it all to Consul Sallister and the others.

Go ahead, I think. Enjoy ruling while the country is at war.

But no. I could never do that to my people. Sallister would hand over the keys to the kingdom if it meant he got to hold on to his silver.

As always, there are too many variables, and thereโ€™s simply no way to know whenโ€”or if, I think grimly, despite whatever I feel in my heartโ€”Corrick will return.

But still, we should be cautious. I look at Quint. โ€œIf we donโ€™t have word from any of the runners within the next few days, weโ€™ll need to station people at the docks to listen for gossip. We need to hear if any unfamiliar ships are coming to port, if any brigantines set sail, if thereโ€™s any talk at all of sailors from Ostriary. Letโ€™s talk to Violet. Maybe she can take some of the children for walks along the water.โ€

Quint reaches for his book. โ€œYes, Your Majesty.โ€

I watch him write that down, the firelight turning his hair gold. I think of the way he kept pushing the food in front of me, when he knew I hadnโ€™t eaten.

I think of the little flinch in his eyes when I spoke too sharply. How there must have been a thousand such moments between us that I never noticedโ€”yet he stayed by my side through every single one.

My chest clenches. I wish I could undo them all.

His eyes flick up. Iโ€™m staring again.

I clear my throat and glance away. โ€œIโ€™m sure word has spread about the guards we killed. The consuls will use this to strengthen their claims. We need to undo the harms theyโ€™re causing. I need my people back.โ€

He nods. โ€œDo you have a course of action?โ€

Little Ruby kept staring at me, her eyes so big. โ€œFood,โ€ I say. โ€œTheyโ€™re starving. We need to find a way to feed them.โ€ I hesitate, wondering if the men who wouldnโ€™t feed Sommer would be willing to risk their lives to feed guards who might be just as willing to kill them to get at me. โ€œIโ€™ll need to talk to the people in the morning to convince them.โ€

โ€œYou will. I have no doubt.โ€ He says this so offhandedly while he writes.

I watch, entranced. I simply cannot comprehend how he manages to be so kind and so vexing and so determinedโ€”and so optimistic.

Heโ€™s the impressive one, truly.

โ€œIf I may,โ€ I begin, and his eyes flick up again, the pencil going still. My tongue stalls when his eyes meet mine, and the silence hangs between us for a moment.

โ€œYou may,โ€ he prompts.

It makes me blush and smile in spite of myself, and I try not to stumble over my words. โ€œWhy do you write everything down?โ€ I say. โ€œYour predecessors didnโ€™t.โ€ I frown a little, trying to remember. โ€œAt least . . . โ€‹I donโ€™t think they did.โ€

He closes the book and sets it on the table. โ€œThey may not have, but I find it suits my needs.โ€

I study him, because heโ€™s said this in much the same way he brushed aside my questions about the list of dates in the front of the book. Heโ€™s not lying, but heโ€™s not giving me the whole truth either.

I study him, curious now. โ€œI sense Iโ€™m going to have to pry secrets from you, Palace Master.โ€

He stares at me, implacable. I stare back.

He breaks in less than a minute, tossing down the pencil. โ€œVery well.โ€ He sighs. โ€œIโ€™ll deny you nothing, so I donโ€™t know why I bother trying. Iโ€™ll have you know, itโ€™s not a flattering story. When I was young, I was quite the burden on my family. Couldnโ€™t stop talking, couldnโ€™t finish my chores, couldnโ€™t be trusted to do anything, really.โ€ He hesitates, then offers a little shrug. โ€œDownright useless.โ€

I frown. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œOh, but I was. My mother would send me to fetch a sack of flour, and Iโ€™d spend an hour arranging stones in the creek. My father would tell me to feed the chickens, and heโ€™d find me weaving straw under the rabbit hutch, telling stories to random travelers. I had a sister who was perfect, worked right alongside my mother in the kitchen and never forgot a thing, so I always felt like a complete foolโ€”which really only made things worse. My father grew so sick of it that they sent me to live with my aunt and uncle in Mosswell for a while, because they thought it was a matter of disciplineโ€”and so I endured a long, miserable year that made absolutely no difference. But the following summer, my father brought me home and said heโ€™d hired me out to a miller down the lane whoโ€™d gone blind. He needed someone to read notices and bills and draft any new ones for customers. Iโ€™m sure my father expected I would do a poor job, but that the man wouldnโ€™t have any way to know the difference. Honestly, I was just glad to be out of my familyโ€™s reach, so I went.โ€

None of this story has gone anywhere I thought it would, and Iโ€™m not sure what to say.

Part of me wants to find his parents so I can lock them in the Hold. The darkest part of me wants to do worse.

But now Iโ€™m remembering that moment we sat on the porch, when I asked Quint if he had a family, if there was anyone he was missing.

How he said no.

โ€œThe man was older,โ€ Quint is saying, โ€œand so kind, and when I saw all the papers and notices that he had waiting for me, I told him that I was unsuitable. No matter how badly I wanted to be away from my family, I wasnโ€™t going to swindle someone. His name was Pascal, and he asked if I could read and write, and I said I could. Despite everything else, Iโ€™d always had rather good penmanship. But then he asked if I was honest and trustworthy, and I said I was, which was why Iโ€™d be unsuitable. I explained about the stones in the creek or forgetting the sack of flour. I told him about my aunt and uncle whoโ€™d make me sleep out in the cold or tie a rope around my mouth whenever Iโ€™d talk too much.โ€

I draw a frustrated breath. โ€œI hope you know I want to kill almost everyone in this story.โ€

โ€œIt was a very long time ago, Your Majesty.โ€

โ€œHow long?โ€

โ€œTen years? I was fourteen or fifteen or so. Pascal said as long as I was honest and could read and write, I would do, because the last person whoโ€™d tried to help him kept sneaking his coins, and he was worried heโ€™d lose the mill. He said he didnโ€™t care how much I talked, because he couldnโ€™t see anymore, so listening to me gave him something to do. He gave me a ledger and a jar of pencils, and he told me to write down everything. No matter how big or small, everything. Every task, every duty, every single thought in my head if I wanted. He said I could read it back to him later and we would figure out what was most important. If people came to the mill, I was to write down the personโ€™s name, anything they saidโ€”ยญeverything, Your Majesty. Sometimes I would write down what they wore.โ€

โ€œThis all sounds rather hellish.โ€

He smiles. โ€œDo you think so? I found it a bit freeing. Pascal said that this way it didnโ€™t matter if I forgot anything, because I could read it all back to him later. I wasnโ€™t perfect, especially not at first, because Iโ€™d write down that I saw a butterfly, or that the sun was very hot that day. But as I said, he was very kind, and very patientโ€”and I did write down the things that mattered, too. We got on well. When the afternoons were quiet, heโ€™d ask me to read off my notes, and I began to realize that writing things down actually helped me remember a great dealโ€”instead of allowing me to forget. I found myself telling him everything that happened without needing to resort to my notebooks at all. Then the mill grew busier, and he hired a girl to help him tend the shop and the house. I was a bit frightened then, remembering my sisterโ€™s perfection, thinking he was going to have me discharged. Instead, he told the girl to come to me for her duties. He said, โ€˜Quint always knows every detail. Youโ€™ll do whatever he tells you needs doing.โ€™ โ€

He pauses, and I can hear the weight in his voice, the importance of that moment. How much it meant to him, to finally feel valued. Before I can acknowledge it, he blinks and looks up. โ€œWithin a few years he wanted to retire, because heโ€™d grown too old to work. By then heโ€™d hired half a dozen more people. He was selling the mill, and I was worried I might end up with a boorish new employer, but Pascalโ€™s brother worked for the mill that supplied the Royal Sector. Heโ€™d heard that the Palace Master was aging and that King Lucas was urging him to take on some apprentices. Pascal encouraged me to apply, and his brother knew Iโ€™d done good work, so he provided a reference. I never thought Iโ€™d be considered, but here I am.โ€ He taps the book. โ€œWriting things down.โ€

โ€œAnd here you are.โ€ I narrow my eyes. โ€œWith your boorish new employer.โ€

Quint laughs, and it makes his eyes sparkle.

โ€œDoes Corrick know that story?โ€ I say.

โ€œHe knows I worked in the mill before I came to the palace. But Iโ€™ve never shared the rest of it.โ€ He grimaces and looks away. โ€œNot with anyone, really. As I said, itโ€™s not a flattering story.โ€

โ€œI disagree,โ€ I say. โ€œYour determination and tenacity are rather inspiring.โ€

โ€œWell now.โ€ He blushes, though he seems pleased. โ€œI shall add that to my treasure trove along with the knowledge that I am โ€˜very pleasing to look at.โ€™ โ€

I grimace, then run a hand down my face. โ€œI did say that, didnโ€™t I?โ€

He nods, then opens his book, lifting his pencil. โ€œI should write this down.โ€ He speaks slowly, drawing out each syllable as he writes. โ€œTenacious . . . determined . . . very pleasing toโ€”โ€

I snatch the book right out from under his pencil. This time, when he comes after it, I donโ€™t let him tussle. I let go of the book, take hold of his shirt, and kiss him. He yields immediately, his mouth softening under mine. No tension, no uncertainty. Just simple ease, simple comfort. Thereโ€™s something so gratifying to that.

โ€œAh, Quint,โ€ I whisper when I draw back.

He smiles when I say his name. โ€œI knew youโ€™d break first.โ€

I brush a thumb along his lip and donโ€™t smile back. Thereโ€™s so much I want to say, but Iโ€™ve spent too many years trapping every sentiment behind a thousand walls in my head.

Youโ€™re so much more than pleasing to look at. Youโ€™re brilliant. Youโ€™re flawless. Youโ€™re exquisite. Have you not noticed the effort it takes to summon words when I look at you?

But the words stall on my tongue, proving exactly that.

โ€œI wish I could have met you when I was escaping the palace as Sullivan,โ€ I say instead.

His eyes flare in surprise, but then he smiles mischievously. โ€œInstead of your stable boy?โ€

That makes me blush. โ€œWell.โ€

But I say nothing more, because Iโ€™m imagining it now: meeting Quint years ago, finding him toiling over books and records in some mill somewhere. He wouldโ€™ve been chattering endlessly to everyone, Iโ€™m sure, somehow managing to preserve his core of kindness despite the way his family treated him. Red hair and sparkling eyes and just enough wild defiance to drive me crazy.

I remember what I was like before my parents were killed, before I was forced to rule a kingdom that seemed determined to tear itself apart. I very likely would have fallen for him on the spot.

I donโ€™t know what he sees in my face, but the mischief slips out of his eyes. โ€œWhy do you wish you could have met me as Sullivan?โ€

Because if Iโ€™d met you then, I donโ€™t think I ever wouldโ€™ve gone back.

I canโ€™t say the words. It wouldโ€™ve meant leaving the palace. Leaving my brother. And nothing wouldโ€™ve changed. My parents would still be dead. Kandala still wouldโ€™ve fallen to the fevers. The consuls would still be running roughshod over the people.

And it would all be my fault anyway, just in a different way.

The impact of it strikes me harder than I expect, tightening my throat before Iโ€™m ready, and I canโ€™t even answer.

Quint must see a flicker of my distress, because he rescues meโ€”as usual. โ€œWait. Letโ€™s imagine it together. I presume with your love for horses that you wouldโ€™ve played the role of the stable boy. What reason could you have had for visiting the mill?โ€ He taps at his lip, thinking.

He truly is the kindest man Iโ€™ve ever met. I cannot believe anyone ever made him feel useless. I stare into his eyes. โ€œI spied the captivating young man writing ledgers, and I was transfixed.โ€

โ€œCaptivating! I really must write these down. And then what would you have done?โ€

I slip my hands to his waist and pull him against me. Iโ€™m pleased to earn a gasp from his throat when my fingers find his skin.

I lean close, speaking low. โ€œHere. Let me show you.โ€

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