Fairde isnโt far.
Or maybe itโs that the journey doesnโt seem to take too long because my heart wonโt stop pounding in my chest, and I just want to go back and regroup.
โShe wonโt trust me,โ Iโve tried protesting. โWhat makes you think your daughter is going to come withย me? She knows I was on the ship with Rian.โ
Oren shrugged. โThen youโre going to have to do your best, arenโt you?โ
โWhat if we refuse?โ Lochlan asked.
โIf youโre not going to do your part, Iโll drop you both in the ocean right now.โ
That made us both shut up.
Weโre sitting against the main mast when lights from the island become visible in the distance. Ford Cheeke is sitting a short distance away, leaning against the shipโs railing. Heโs been glaring atย me for the duration of the journey, and weโve hardly exchanged words, because Oren has been on the main deck. But now Oren is at the bow, talking to one of his officers, and weโre alone with Cheeke.
I still canโt quite figure out if heโs an ally or an enemy.
He clearly doesnโt have the best opinion of Kandala.
โWhat did you mean that I shouldnโt have been born?โ I say to him.
He snorts. โDonโt play stupid with me. I knew you were just as corrupt as your father when you wrote that note to our king.โ
I stare at him. โI truly am puzzled.โ
โOur countries have been at each otherโs throats for generations. I warned Rian that he wouldnโt be able to effect a trade agreement for steel. Just look at whatโs transpired.โ His voice wavers. โAnd now Penny is at risk again, with Edward no better . . .โ
โWhat did they do to Penny?โ says Lochlan.
โAs if you care,โ he seethes.
โI care,โ I say. โI didnโt do this to you. And I genuinely do not know my fatherโs history with Ostriary.โ
โYou wrote that vicious note to our kingโโ
โBecause heย isย an arrogant prick!โ I hiss. โHe came toย usย in poor faith. He lied about his identity and hid a prisoner on board his ship. He chastised me for the way my brother ruled Kandala, when he himself could barely hold a kingdom together. We exchanged words at least a dozen times that were easily twice as vicious. On his side as well as mine. I wrote that because I knew heโdย believeย it. Fawning platitudes would have been the lie.โ
Ford blanches. โOh.โ He pauses. โWell, you certainly couldโve said so.โ
I scowl. โIโm having a hard time believing that our countriesย have been at each otherโs throats, as you say, when I donโt know anything about it. Neither does my brother.โ
โThatโs because we didnโt realize you survived the assassination attempts.โ
I freeze when he says this, because Iโm remembering a very different conversation with Rian, while sitting on a ship in the darkness, just like this. I remember being pummeled with new information that I couldnโt process then, because there was all too much.
Honestly, I can barely process itย now.
The attempt on Harristanโs life was thwarted when he was young.
Your Consul Montague tried to poison him to force your parents into demanding a higher price on steel.
Consul Montague later tried to kill my parents. He tried to killย us. He died trying.
Later, we never knew who was behind the attack that ultimately left Harristan sitting on the throne.
I wonder if Iโm finding out right now.
Rian told me he expected to find my father sitting on the throne when he made it to Kandala. Thatโs why he came under our flag, using false documents. Thatโs why he pretended to be the son of a Kandalan spy whoโd been sent away six years before. It was a good story, and I didnโt really question it.
But now that I think about it more carefully, my father definitely wouldโve known who he was sending to Ostriary. He wouldโveย knownย the original Captain Blakemoreโs son, even if Harristan and I didnโt. Rian and Harristan are close to the same age, so the six years between twenty-three and seventeen wouldnโt change someoneโs appearance very much. I know Rian didnโtย expect to find Harristan, but he certainly couldnโt have expected to fool my father.
Which means he didnโt expect to find him on the throne either.
I wonder who he expected to find.
I grit my teeth. โRian reallyย isย an arrogant prick,โ I mutter.
Ford Cheeke and his daughter had all those books and records, but I was so focused on finding Tessa and getting a way home. I didnโt consider asking about what they might know about Kandala. But before I can ask him anything else, Oren is heading back toward us.
โWeโre close enough,โ he says.
โSheโsย yourย daughter,โ I say. โWhy would you trust me to rescue her?โ
โI donโt trust you at all, which is why Iโm not walking into a trap. Want to prove yourself? Go get Bella. Now get off the ship. The rowboat is waiting.โ
My mouth is dry. I have no cards left to play.
Weย areย walking right into a trap. A trapย Iย set.
Iโm handing myself to Rianโif he doesnโt just kill me outright, thinking Iโm Oren Crane.
As I climb down the rope ladder with Lochlan, my brain is spinning, trying to find a solution, but thereโs nothing. We ease into the rowboat, and my hands find the oars.
I half thought Lina and Mouse might follow us, but they donโt.
I frown at Lochlan. โHeโs sending us alone?โ
He looks back at me, then looks at the dark shore thatโs much farther off than I expected. โI donโt like this. Weโre about to end up dead either way.โ
My breathing is quick and shallow. โAll right. New plan. Rianย has to have a decoy, right? Weโll just get her and take her back to the ship.โ
โYou donโt think heโs going to figure out that itโs not his daughter?โ
โIโm counting on Rianโs people to try to stop us, and they can battle it out with Oren then.โ
โSo we just have to rescue someone who doesnโt want to be rescued.โ
โYes.โ
โSomeone whoโs probably a soldier in a dress, waiting for Oren so they can stab him a thousand times.โ
I hadnโt thought of that. I clench my jaw. โYes.โ
Lochlan sighs. โI canโt believe I agreed to get on that ship. All right, Cory.โ He digs in with the oars and pulls hard, and the rowboat surges forward. โStill breathing.โ