By the time that ship returns from Fairde with an answer from Rian, Iโm going to be ready to throw caution to the wind and swim there myself. Iโve spent days in Silvesse now, and while I no longer hate Lochlan, Iโve been forced to spend time with Oren Craneโs people, and theyโre so much worse than he couldย everย be.
Honestly, theyโre so much worse thanย Iย could ever be.
Itโs obvious why Crane has such a stronghold on this island, why people whisper about him but donโt do anything to stand against him. Anywhere thereโs a murmur of dissent, he sends his henchmen to take care of it. Now that Lochlan and I are relegated to waiting for a response, Crane keeps sending us along to watch.
I understand why. Itโs not just so he can keep an eye on us.
Itโs a lesson. A warning.
Cross me, and this is what Iโll do to you.
When I watch Lina goad Mouse into breaking a manโs fingers,ย one by one while he screams, Iโm reminded of the time I stood outside a cell and told Rocco to do the exact same thing to Consul Sallister.
It was different.
But it also wasnโt.
I can feel the undercurrent of tension among the people, though. Itโs so similar to Kandala, where everyone wanted things to be better, but solutions seemed impossible. Itโs clear that many people have heard a rumor that Iโm from Kandala, that Iโm a sign that help isnโt far off, because I catch a few secret glances, people who kiss their fingers and touch a hand to their heart when Lina and Mouse arenโt looking. But others scowl at me when it becomes clear Iโm with Oren Craneโs people. Like when Mouse is slamming someone into a wall while Lina and the others egg him on, and I stand to the side, powerless. I wonder how it makes me look. I wonder how it makesย Kandalaย look.
On the night weโre finally due to return to the harbormaster, my nerves are on edge again. I have no idea how Tessa will respond to my words. Would she write a letter back? I should have said moreโbut I know the message would have gone through Rian, so I wasnโt going to pour my heart out throughย thatย manโs lips.
I could have at least told her I loved her.
Mind your mettle.Iโm such a fool.
โYou look like youโre going to come out of your skin,โ Lochlan says. โCalm down.โ
Iโm pacing the floor of our shared room, and I glance at him. Heโs sitting at the table, studying a paper by candlelight, trying to puzzle out the sentence Iโve written. Heโs been a quick study over the last few days, and heโs easily learned a hundred words on sight already. We had to spend silver to buy more paper. Now he hasย quite the stack, both from practicing his own penmanship and from reading words that I write for him.
Itโs very weird to go from watching someone scream while an ear is ripped off their head to going back to the boarding house and teaching a man to read. Itโs no wonder my nerves are shot.
โNever mind about me,โ I say. โThis is your first full sentence. See if you can read it.โ
He sighs and looks at the paper while I resume pacing. โI . . . โ w-w-wiss . . .โ He blows out a frustrated breath. โWish?โ
โYes,โ I say. โVery clever.โ
โShut up. โI wish I were asโโ โ
โYou donโt like the praise? Youโre learning this all so very quickly.โ I truly mean itโbut Iโm enjoying that he thinks Iโm entirely mocking him.
โShut up!ย โI wish I were as . . .โ โ He hesitates, whispering under his breath, because he must not be willing to stumble over pronunciations out loud now. He looks up at me. โAs strong?โ Another glance at the paper, and he frowns. โAnd . . . โbravy? Brave!โ
โYes! Go on. From the beginning. Youโll have it all now.โ
He takes a breath and begins slowly, but more confidently. โI wish I were as strong and brave as Corrโโ He stops short, realizing what heโs reading. He flings the pencil at me, but thereโs no real vitriol to it. โYou ass.โ
I duck and snatch it out of the air, then resume my pacing. โAnd with that, the trick pony learned to read.โ
He goes still, as if struck by that. He stares at the page again, then sets it on the table. Candlelight flickers across his features as his eyes trace over the letters.
โThank you,โ he says, and his voice is a bit hollow. โYour Highness.โ
After days ofย Cory, it gets my attention, especially since he says it without a lick of disdain. I stop between the bed and the window to look at him, but I keep my voice light. โSo formal all of a sudden, Master Cresswell?โ
Heโs not looking at me now, but he shrugs a little, abashed. โYouโre the kingโs brother. I sort of . . . โforgot.โ He gives a soft, humorless laugh, then nods at the paper. โI know weโre stuck here, but you . . . โ you didnโt have to do that.โ
I stare at him. Iโm not sure what to say.
Maybe heโs not either, because he glances at the window. โItโs almost midnight.โ
As if on cue, thereโs a knock at the door, and Lochlan shoves all the papers into a box, then drops a blanket on top.
Iโm the one who draws the door open, and Iโm not surprised to find Lina there, waiting with Mouse. โItโs time to go,ย Your Highness.โ
The way she says it is completely at odds with the way Lochlan said it.
โOr am I still calling you Weston?โ she says. โI canโt keep track.โ
โI canโt either, honestly,โ I say.
โHeโs Weston,โ says Mouse. He looks at me. โYouโre Weston.โ
Lina scowls. โWeย know, you idiot.โ She elbows him in the stomach.
He frowns and rubs at his gut, drawing back. His eyes are wounded.
Despite the fact that I watched him crush a manโs ribs earlier, he has my sympathy. Our roles are very different, but he clearly doesnโt want to do any of this any more than I wanted to be the Kingโs Justice. The saddest part is that I donโt think he has the full capacity to understand that he could resist them. He could crushย Lina one-handed and walk right out of here if he wanted to, but the longer I spend with them, the more I realize that whatever Lina did to him seems to have left him with the mind of a boy. A boy whoโs been beaten down so severely that he doesnโt even try.
I look him in the eyes, because none of them seem to. โThank you, Mouse. I do appreciate the reminder.โ
He gives me a nod. โYouโre welcome.โ
I take an apple from the basket on the table and offer it to him, because Iโve seen the others steal his food, poking his arms and saying he could stand to miss a meal. โHere,โ I say. โWe had some left.โ
His eyes light up a bit, but before he can take it, Lina swipes it from my palm and bites right into it. โThank you.โ
I glare at her, wishing I could order him to pullย herย teeth out of her mouth.
She glares right back at me, and she knows it, too.
Lochlan swears under his breath, and he pushes past me. โLetโs go.โ
Lina takes one more bite of the apple and turns to follow him.
When her back is turned, I reach into the basket and grab a muffin from the bottom. Itโs from this morning, so itโs a little dry and crumbly, but I take Mouseโs wrist and press it into his hand.
He looks down as if he canโt fathom what Iโve just put against his palm, but then he sees the muffin.
He inhales sharply, and I tap a finger over my lips, glancing at Lina. She doesnโt hear him, but Lochlan does, and he looks back.
โOur secret,โ I whisper to Mouse, as Lina stomps down the hallway.
Mouse worriedly follows my gaze, then looks back at me and Lochlan. For half a second, Iโm worried Iโve made a misstep, thatย heโs going to turn on me for offering him food behind her back, even something thatโs just a simple kindness.
But then he tucks the muffin into one of his massive pockets, and for the first time since Iโve met him, Mouse smiles.
When we head deeper into Silvesse, Lina doesnโt lead us south, toward the harbor. Instead, we head back toward the cove where Oren Craneโs ship is docked.
โWhere are we going?โ I ask. โWeโre due to meet with Ford Cheeke.โ
โNot anymore,โ she says. โHeโs already given his messages to Oren.โ
My heart thumps in my chest. That wasnโt part of the plan at all. โWhat? When?โ
She looks back at me. โAt dawn, when the ships docked.โ
My thoughts are spinning. Ford Cheeke wouldnโt have given messages to Oren Crane. Oren shouldnโt have been able to reach him. Ford was terrified of him.
Did Lina and Mouse hurt the man and his daughter?
Lochlan glances over his shoulder and meets my eyes. I donโt know what to make of it either, and I donโt know if I can ask.
Like the first morning we went out to Orenโs ship, we have to row and climb up to his boat. Iโve grown more used to the rowing, and Lina says, โYouโre turning into a bit of a sailor, arenโt you,ย Weston?โ
I donโt know why sheโs saying the name like that, and I donโt like it. It rolls around in my head with the way she came to the door, like the way she questioned which name was real.
When we climb onto the deck, torches are lit, and the sails areย open and billowing in the wind. Small fires flicker farther out on the water, too, and I realize there are other ships in the moonlight, waiting just beyond this one.
And in front of us is Oren Crane, standing with Ford Cheeke.
โThis canโt be good,โ Lochlan mutters.
Heโs right about that. I try to ignore the pounding in my chest, because I have no idea what this could mean. โI wouldnโt expect to find the two of you together,โ I say.
Ford is glaring at me. โIt was nice of you to show his people how to access my offices, Your Highness.โ
โYou knew how we got in. You should have put guards on that alley.โ I glance between the two of them and let my gaze stop on Oren. โI hope you got what information you wanted, because I rather doubt heโll send any messages for me now.โ
โI think I did,โ says Oren. โLina kept telling me that your story was too easy. That there was no possible way that you couldโve convinced someone that you were a prince of Kandala, simply fallen from a ship, right here on Silvesse. If you were, why wouldnโt you try to bargain withย me?โ His eyes are almost black in the moonlight, and the sails snap in the wind. โBecauseย Iย have ships.ย Iย couldโve gotten you back to Kandala.ย Iย couldโve used a bargain for steel in exchange for medicine, if thatโs what you so badly need.โ
Heโs also a tyrant, and I wouldnโt bargain with him if my life depended on it.
Which it might, in a second.
My spine is absolutely rigid, but I keep my voice easy. โSo you fetched the harbormaster yourself? Of course he told you Iโm the prince. Thatโs what I toldย him.โ
โHe also told me about all the ways Kandala tried to trick Ostriary in the past. I donโt know why my nephew ever thought he couldย trust any of you. I was a boy when your people set our ships ablaze, but I still remember.โ
โNo matter who you think I am,โ I say, โI donโt know anything about that. I wasnโt evenย bornย yet.โ
โYouโre lucky you were born at all,โ says Ford bitterly.
I frown. โWhat?โ
โEnough of that,โ says Oren. He pulls folded parchment out of his jacket, and he holds it out to me. โIt doesnโt matter if youโre a prince or not. It doesnโt matter if youโre tricking me or not. My sweet little nephew has set the trap you told him to lay.โ
I take the paper and unfold it. My palms feel damp.
Weโll have Bella under guard in the old Mason house on the north point. Iโll have people in the woods, too. The water will be clear.
Itโs not as incriminating as it could beโbut itโs pretty damning.
I snap my head up. โI didnโt tell anyone to lay a trap.โ
Oren shrugs. โIt doesnโt matter if you did or not.โ He looks to one of the deck hands. โPull the anchor.โ
โWhere are we going?โ says Lochlan.
โWeโre going to rescue my girl,โ says Oren. He gestures at the paper. โYou see yourself. The water will be clear.โ
I frown. โYou just said Rian is laying a trap.โ
โOh, Iโm not the one getting off the ship to get her, Your Highness.โ He smiles viciously. โYou are.โ