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Chapter no 34 – Corrick

Destroy the Day (Defy the Night, #3)

For as hard as Rian fought to conspire against me, heโ€™s remarkably quick to let me go when his country is under attack. Within minutes of learning that Oren Crane has abandoned me and Lochlan here in favor of attacking the palace at Tarrumor, Rian and his people have departed, taking soldiers and horses with them. It leaves me free in the house with Tessa, as well as Lochlan and Rocco, which would seem idealโ€”until I realize thereโ€™s a woman with dark spiral curls pulling desperately at Roccoโ€™s arms.

โ€œLet me go,โ€ sheโ€™s saying. โ€œLet me go, Erik. I need to get him.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll go with you,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™llย helpย you. Let me saddle a horseโ€”โ€

โ€œWe can take the wagon,โ€ says Tessa briskly. โ€œWeโ€™ll go after them.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s tooย slow,โ€ the woman wails. She slips free of his grip and bolts from the house, the door slamming open behind her.

Rocco doesnโ€™t even glance at me. He makes a sound of pain, presses a hand to his waist, and runs after her.

โ€œCorrick.โ€ Tessa takes hold of my hand and squeezes tight. Herย eyes are gleaming in the moonlight. I canโ€™t believe Iโ€™m here. I canโ€™t believe sheโ€™s with me. I want to take hold of more than her hand. I want to inhale her breath until the end of time. I want to make sure no one ever takes her away from me again.

But she says, โ€œWe have to go. We have to help Olive.โ€

โ€œWe just got free,โ€ says Lochlan. โ€œYou want us to rideย intoย their war to help some girl we just met?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ she says, but sheโ€™s not looking at him. She only has eyes for me. Every emotion Iโ€™m feeling, I see echoed in her gaze. Love. Desire. Need. Relief. Hope.

But thereโ€™s also a plea there.

I remember the very first night she looked up at me in the Wilds, the very first time she needed my helpโ€”how badly I wanted to give it, no matter the risk. I think of all the nights since that sheโ€™s begged me for action, for revolution, for change.

I have no idea who Olive is, or why any of this is so important to Tessa. I just know itย is, and Iโ€™m done failing her.

I bring her hand to my mouth and kiss her knuckles. My mind is already making plans. I know Tessa canโ€™t ride well, and I rather doubt Lochlan can. โ€œYou said thereโ€™s a wagon? Do you have any weapons?โ€

Lochlanโ€™s mouth drops open. โ€œYouย canโ€™tย be serious.โ€

โ€œAs you said, youโ€™ve faced an army before. This probably wonโ€™t beย muchย worse.โ€

โ€œWe have everything the guards brought on the ship, so thereโ€™s armor and supplies, too,โ€ Tessa announces. โ€œCome on. We have to hurry.โ€

I move to follow her, but Lochlan is staring at me as we pass.

I look right back at him. โ€œYou donโ€™t owe him anything. You donโ€™t have to fightย thisย battle.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re right,โ€ he says. โ€œI donโ€™t oweย himย anything at all.โ€

Then he falls in step beside me.

Tessa talks while I drive the wagon. The horses run hard, the wood rattling and bouncing over cobblestones. Lochlan clings to the railings in the back. I learn everything thatโ€™s happened while sheโ€™s been on Fairde, from their walk to Rianโ€™s palace to the poison that she assumes is spreading through the water. I donโ€™t haveย allย the pieces of what happened in Kandala yet, but I have a lot of them. I learn about Olive and her son, Ellmo, and the medicines theyโ€™ve been distributing, and the way everyone here reveres Rian.

In turn, we tell her about Oren Crane, about Lina and Mouse and the rest of his henchmen, about the way he seems to have a stranglehold on Silvesse that he maintains through fear. She hears about how Lochlan and I have been forced to work together, but he doesnโ€™t mention the reading lessons, so I donโ€™t either.

โ€œWhy was Olive so panicked?โ€ says Lochlan. โ€œYou said she and Rian donโ€™t get along.โ€

โ€œThey donโ€™t,โ€ Tessa says. โ€œBut the children were in the palace.โ€ She pauses. โ€œTo keep them safe while Oren was โ€˜rescuingโ€™ me.โ€

I glance at her. โ€œThe children?โ€

โ€œLittle Anya, too,โ€ she says.

I remember the little girl from Rianโ€™s ship who played jacksโ€”well,ย knucklebonesโ€”with me. She had bright eyes and a lively laugh and scarred arms from whatever Oren Crane did toย her.

I grit my teeth. As much as I hate Rian, Anya is a child. I think about Lina and Mouse and what Iโ€™ve seen them do, and I crack the whip, driving the horses faster.

The glow of fire lights the sky before long, and Tessa gasps.ย Smoke begins to obscure the moon. We hear the sounds of battle before we see it, because the boom and roar of cannon fire followed by screams are unmistakable.

โ€œWeโ€™re close,โ€ Tessa says, and thereโ€™s horror in her voice. โ€œThe palace is just over this hill.โ€

Then we crest another hill. Tessa gasps again.

โ€œThe palace,โ€ she says.

โ€œWhat palace?โ€ says Lochlan, and heโ€™s right.

Thereโ€™s no palace at all. Thereโ€™s nothing but fire.

We tether the horses and take a spot at high ground to try to assess the situation. Weโ€™re armed and ready for battle from what we gathered from the guardsโ€™ trunks, but I know Tessa isnโ€™t a soldierโ€”and from the look of things down below, the three of us arenโ€™t going to make much of a difference.

Oren Craneโ€™s ship has pulled into the harbor, and he appears to be firing on whatโ€™s left of the palace. Without Rian and his best peopleย here, there was no one left to defend anything. It seems that a lot of Orenโ€™s men have already claimed the ground below. Whatโ€™s left of it, anyway.

Tessa pulls a spyglass from our supplies and peers down at the harbor. โ€œThis is horrific. I donโ€™t see Olive or Erik. Not Rian either. I donโ€™t know Orenโ€™s people, though.โ€ She hands the spyglass to me. โ€œWhat do you see?โ€

I look through the lens. โ€œOren is still on his ship.โ€ I frown. โ€œWith Lina and Mouse.โ€

Lochlan swears. โ€œTheyโ€™re horrible.โ€

โ€œShe is,โ€ I agree. โ€œMouse wouldnโ€™t be.โ€ I shift the spyglass and find a crumpled body leaning against the railing. Ford Cheeke.ย Heโ€™s bleeding from his temple, and thereโ€™s more blood in a pool under his body. I donโ€™t know if heโ€™s dead or not, but it doesnโ€™t look good.

I swallow heavily. I didnโ€™t do it, but I feel as though I was a part of the cause.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I whisper.

Another cannon fires. The sound cracks through the night, and we all jump. Fewer screams erupt down below.

Because Orenโ€™s people are winning.

My heart keeps pounding. I donโ€™t know how to help here. I tried to do the right thing, and it didnโ€™t work. I tried to be the Kingโ€™s Justice, and it didnโ€™t work.

I look at Tessa and Lochlan. This isnโ€™t even my battle, but theyโ€™re both staring at me expectantly. Theyโ€™re looking at me toย lead. Somehow it reminds me of that day in the clothierโ€™s shop, when I needed to be the one to provide hope. Just like when I had to handle things for my brother, successโ€”or failureโ€”has become my responsibility.

I steel my spine and look through the spyglass again. Oren is on the ship. Untouchable from the shore. Heโ€™s sending people down to fight on the ground, but heโ€™s safe on the water, as usual. He usedย myย plan to get Rian and his people away so theyโ€™d have an advantage.

He used Rianโ€™s desire for revenge, or forย meโ€”or bothโ€”to get them away.

The numbers down below are dwindling. I donโ€™t have an army. I donโ€™t know the people here to rally townspeople. Itโ€™s not like Lochlanโ€™s rebels in Kandala. We donโ€™t know anyone at all. My chest tightens dangerously.

Tessa puts a hand on mine. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to win this war alone.โ€

The weight of her hand presses into mine, and again, I canโ€™t believe sheโ€™s here, that Iโ€™ve found her, that weโ€™re together. I canโ€™t help it. I pull her to me.

โ€œForgive me,โ€ I say. โ€œI donโ€™t know if I can win this war at all.โ€

Lochlan picks up the spyglass and looks himself. โ€œDo you remember what you said about the treble hook when we were on Silvesse? Do you think you could still do that?โ€

I frown. โ€œThat I could scale the wall to break in?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ He glances back at the wagon. โ€œWe have some treble hooks in the guard gear.โ€

I look at him sideways, because I canโ€™t figure out his angle. โ€œAh . . . โ€‹if only we had a building to break into?โ€

He hands me the spyglass. โ€œThereโ€™s half a dozen rowboats sitting in the harbor. No oneโ€™s touching them because theyโ€™re useless against a brigantine. Half of them might be on fire. But we could try.โ€

โ€œTry what?โ€ says Tessa.

โ€œYou donโ€™t need to scale aย wall,โ€ says Lochlan. โ€œHow about a ship?โ€

Tessa is going with me first, because I wouldnโ€™t have it any other way. Our treble hooks whistle up through the night and latch against the hull with aย clink, and we wait to see if anyone hears. The sounds of the battle and the slap of the water against the hull must be too loud, because no one comes to investigate. I wait anyway. Iโ€™ve been double-crossed too many times now.

But then weโ€™re climbing.

โ€œIf only we had masks, it would be like old times,โ€ she says, a little breathless from the effort.

I look at the faint tracing of her profile in the moonlight. โ€œI like it better this way.โ€

โ€œI hope you know I plan to sob all over you properly later.โ€

โ€œI hope thatโ€™s notย allย you plan to do all over me later.โ€

She gasps, then grins, her smile bright in the darkness.

โ€œNot for nothing, but I amย right here,โ€ Lochlan says from below us.

But then the ship fires again, and we clutch tight to the ropes as they shudder with the force of the cannon fire.

โ€œIโ€™m rather shocked to see the two of you getting along so well,โ€ she says once weโ€™re climbing again.

โ€œWeโ€™ve come to an understanding, I think,โ€ I say.

โ€œKarri will be so relieved.โ€

If we can get back, I think, but I donโ€™t say that.

I tap my finger over my lips, and she nods, because weโ€™re nearing the rail. The three of us climb over silently. This part of the deck is pitch-black, which is why we boarded here. But there arenโ€™t dozens of people on board anymoreโ€”most of Orenโ€™s sailors are on land, or down below, firing the cannons. Weโ€™re going to have to be strategic to take out Oren, but we donโ€™t need to sneak past a ship full of sailors. Even still, I tell Lochlan to stay at the back, to make sure no one can come up from behind us. Then Tessa and I slip along the railing, staying in the shadows.

Orenโ€™s attention is focused ahead, on the battle on the ground, so we have an advantage.

Heโ€™s standing with his back to the main mast, though, so I canโ€™t just shoot him and be done with it.

I grit my teeth. Lina is off to the side, closest to us, but she looks bored. I suppose the death and destruction of hundreds of peopleย doesnโ€™t excite her. I donโ€™t know where Mouse is now. Maybe theyโ€™ve sent him ashore, too.

But thereโ€™s Oren, right there, against the mast. Watching Rianโ€™s city fall. The fires are so hot that I can feel them from here.

Tessaโ€™s hand brushes mine, and I give it a quick squeeze. We cling to the shadows and wait for him to move.

He doesnโ€™t.

The ship fires again, another cannonball rocketing toward shore. The floorboards underneath us give a shudder, and I expect that to be the moment that Oren steps away from the mast, but itโ€™s not. Heโ€™s clinging to that spot like itโ€™ll save his lifeโ€”and it very much is.

Sweat forms in the small of my back. We canโ€™t stay here forever. Someone will eventually look this way. More sailors will eventually come up on deck. I look from Oren to Lina and wonder if we should shoot her firstโ€”but there are enough people on the deck that I worry theyโ€™d retaliate before we could get to Oren.

I consider my brother praising Rianโ€™s crew, their devotion to him. I donโ€™t get the sense that Oren has that. Thereโ€™s a reason he spends so much time on this ship, protecting himself. Torture and fear breed something, but it isnโ€™t loyalty.

We have to take him out first.

He needs to move away from the mast.

As if he knows it, heโ€™s stock-still, braced against the wooden beam. In any other situation, his refusal to move would almost be comical. The few sailors on board have changed position. Even Lina has moved. But Oren doesnโ€™t.

And then, suddenly, he does.

I lift my crossbow, but I donโ€™t have a good shot. I have to slip out onto the deck, just a bit. Andย there, heโ€™s turning.

A board creaks, or maybe light shifts, but Lina sees me. She gives a shout of warning. That might be what saves Orenโ€™s life, or maybe he just has fate on his side. Because I pull the trigger just as a swell of water hits the ship, throwing us both off-balance.

My bolt goes shooting past him. And Iโ€™m visible on the deck.

Orenโ€™s eyes flare wide, and I scrabble to get another bolt from my belt, but itโ€™s not going to be quick. Iโ€™m not going to be fast enough. I canโ€™t get it loaded, and Oren is surging toward me; he has a bladeโ€”ยญ

Another crossbow snaps, just beside me. A bolt appears in his chest, and he crumples.

Tessa is breathing hard. โ€œIโ€™m not watching you dieย again,โ€ she says.

Lina screams in rage, and I lift my newly loaded weapon to fire just as Tessa is wrenched away from me. Linaโ€™s body jerks as my bolt goes through her shoulder, but I donโ€™t kill her.

She smiles anyway, and I look to my side.

โ€œGood job, Mouse,โ€ says Lina. โ€œBreak her neck.โ€

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