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Chapter no 38 – Harristan

Destroy the Day (Defy the Night, #3)

Itโ€™s not hard to sneak out of Consul Beechingโ€™s house. Or maybe my guards just allow me to do it, the way they did when I was a teenager. Maybe they think Iโ€™m running away from my duty and this is the only way they can keep me alive.

Theyโ€™re wrong.

Regardless, I slip onto a horse bareback and jog out of the manor stables, then canter all the way to the Wilds. My heart was in my throat last night, pounding with panic, but now Iโ€™m settled with purpose. My letters are written, my goodbyes said. I even wrote a letter to Quint, left by his side on the bed.

And now Iโ€™m here, pulling open the barrier to the spy tunnel that leads into the palace.

Walking it alone for the last time.

I stare at the wall of the palace in the moonlight, wishing Stone-hammerโ€™s Arch were still lit so I could see it a final time.

Ah, but there are so many wishes that I canโ€™t make come true.

I latch my fingers into the wall and climb. Back into my quarters I go. The darkness is more absolute tonight. Itโ€™s later, the moon at a different angle.

A scratch of sound echoes behind me, and I spin, ducking low.

Then, to my absolute shock, Quint steps through the window.

โ€œQuint!โ€ I hiss. โ€œAre you insane?โ€

โ€œI rather feel as though Iโ€™m owed the same answer, Your Majesty.โ€

โ€œGo back!โ€ I say.

He holds up a piece of paper. โ€œTell Consul Beeching that what I am doing ensures the safety of all citizens,โ€ he reads. His eyes flick up to find mine. โ€œYou couldnโ€™t think to wake me?โ€

I frown and look away. โ€œThatโ€™s notย allย I wrote.โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t write nearlyย enough.โ€

โ€œPlease, Quint. I need you to go back. I needโ€”โ€

โ€œIย need to know what youโ€™re doing.โ€ He walks right up to me and hits me in the chest.

My eyes flare in surprise. But then I see his pain, and I put a hand to his cheek. โ€œForgive me.โ€ I hesitate. โ€œSallister and Huxley will be here at dawn to wait for me. Possibly Baron Pepperleaf and any of their other allies. You know what theyโ€™re doing to the people.โ€

He frowns. โ€œAnd?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m going to hide in the servantsโ€™ hallway and light the explosives behind the throne room.โ€

He stares at me, his chest rising and falling rapidly. Heโ€™s clearly waiting for there to be more to my plan.

There isnโ€™t.

โ€œYouโ€™ll die,โ€ he says.

โ€œIโ€™m dead anyway. But I can take them with me. They wonโ€™t be able to stand against Corrick.โ€

He swallows so hard I can see his throat jerk. He nods and puts a hand over mine.

โ€œThank you,โ€ I say. โ€œYou must go quickly. Itโ€™ll be dawn soon, and we canโ€™t risk being found out.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not leaving you.โ€

โ€œQuint. Corrick needs youโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, Harristan.โ€ He takes my hand. โ€œYouย need me.โ€

Of course he would say itย now. This time my eyes go blurry with tears, and he steps closer, his finger gentle as he brushes them away. โ€œNo time for tears. Thereโ€™s work to be done.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re right,โ€ I say, and I tug his hand.

We slip through the abandoned servantsโ€™ hallways, which are silent and dark. When we find the passage behind the throne room, Iโ€™m worried that Annabeth was lying, and there will be no explosives, or that there will be a chance that theyโ€™ve already been discovered and moved, but we tug and pull at wall hangings and tapestries and sconces and paintings until we finally find them.

And there they are, just as she promised. Strung together with narrow bits of twine, dozens of bundles of explosives, tucked behind various paintings in hollows carved out for exactly this purpose.

โ€œThis was well planned,โ€ Quint whispers to me.

I nod. โ€œThey almost killed me then. So maybe itโ€™s fitting that their explosives will prevent him from causing more harm.โ€

โ€œYou brought matches?โ€ he says.

That draws me up short.

Lord. No. I forgot matches.

Quint laughs under his breath, then tugs a small box from his jacket. He taps it against my chest. โ€œI grabbed them from the servantsโ€™ closet.โ€

โ€œI would be lost without you.โ€

โ€œI know. Where shall we hide?โ€

I look around. โ€œDo we have to? Weโ€™ll be able to see the sunrise through those windows. Weโ€™ll hear them on the other side of the wall.โ€

โ€œVery well. Shall we sit?โ€

We do, shoulder to shoulder, arm to arm, and I listen to him breathe. I lace our fingers together and feel his heartbeat.

And when the sky begins to lighten, he says, โ€œWould Sullivan the stable boy keep visiting the mill, do you think?โ€

I turn and look at him. โ€œEvery day. And when the miller was retiring, the stable boy would be devastated to learn that the millerโ€™s boy was heading off to the Royal Sector to take an apprenticeship in the palace.โ€

โ€œOh, the millerโ€™s boy would be a fool to do that. Work for some stoic king who rarely smiles?โ€ He scoffs. โ€œNo, heโ€™d take over the mill himself and hire the stable boy to fill his barn with a dozen quality steeds.โ€

I smile and kiss him. โ€œBut why on earth would a miller needโ€”โ€

The sound of a voice stops me. Then another. Allisander, for sure. Iโ€™m not certain on the other one, but I think it might be Captain Huxley. Iโ€™m frozen in place. Theyโ€™re on the other side of the wall, so theyโ€™ll never see us, but Iโ€™m trembling anyway.

Quintโ€™s hand never leaves mine. Iโ€™m gripping so tight. So is he.

I kiss him one last time, pulling his hand to my heart.

Then I find the box of matches. My hands are shaking so hard that I nearly drop them all.

Quint reaches out and steadies me, his fingers supporting mine. โ€œFor Kandala,โ€ he says.

I nod. โ€œFor Kandala.โ€

Then I strike the match.

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