Kell should have stopped at one drink.
Or two.
He thought heโd stopped at three, but he couldnโt be entirely sure. He hadnโt felt the full effects of the drink until heโd gotten to his feet, and the white stone floor had tilted dangerously beneath him. Kell knew that it was foolish, drinking as much as he had, but the sight of Hollandโs blood had rattled him. He couldnโt get theย Antariโs expression out of his mind, the look that crossed his face just before the knife bit down. Hollandโs visage was a perpetual mask of menacing calm, but just for an instant it had cracked. And Kell had done nothing. Had not pleadedโor even pressedโfor Athos to yield. It wouldnโt have done any good, but still. They were bothย Antari. Luck alone cast Holland here in ruthless White and Kell in vibrant Red. What if their fortunes had been reversed?
Kell took a shaky breath, the air fogging before his lips. The cold was doing little to clear his head, but he knew he couldnโt go home, not yet, not like this, so he made his wandering way through the streets of White London.
This, too, was foolish. Reckless. He was always being reckless.
Why?ย he thought, suddenly angry at himself. Why did he always do this? Step out of safety and into shadow, into risk, into danger?ย Why?ย he heard Rhy begging on the roof that night.
He didnโt know. He wished he did, but he didnโt. All he knew was that he wanted to stop. The anger bled away, leaving something warm and steady. Or maybe that was the drink.
It had been a good drink, whatever it was. A strong drink. But not the kind of strong that made you weak. No, no, the kind of strong that made you strong. That made your blood sing. That made โฆ Kell tipped his chin to look at the sky, and nearly lost his balance.
He needed to focus.
He was fairly sure he was heading in the general direction of the river. The air was biting against his lips, and it was getting darkโwhen had the sun
gone down?โand in the dregs of light, the city was starting to stir around him. Silence cracking into noise.
โPretty thing,โ whispered an old woman from a doorway in Maktahn. โPretty skin. Pretty bones.โ
โThis way, Master,โ called another. โCome inside.โ
โRest your feet.โ โRest your bones.โ โPretty bones.โ โPretty blood.โ โDrink your magic.โ โEat your life.โ โCome inside.โ
Kell tried to focus, but he couldnโt seem to hold his thoughts together. As soon as he managed to gather a few, a breeze would blow through his head and scatter them, leaving him dazed and a little dizzy. Danger prickled at the edge of his senses. He closed his eyes, but every time he did, he saw Hollandโs blood running into the glass, so he forced them open and looked up. He hadnโt meant to head for the tavern. His feet had set out on their own.
His body had made its way. Now he found himself staring at the sign over the door of the Scorched Bone.
Despite being a fixed point, the tavern in White London didnโtย feelย like the others. It still pulled at him, but the air smelled like blood as well as ash, and the street stones were cold beneath his boots. They tugged at his warmth. His power. His feet tried to carry him forward, but he willed them to stay.
Go home, thought Kell.
Rhy was right. Nothing good could come of these deals. Nothing good enough. It wasnโt worth it. The baubles he traded for, they brought him no peace. It was just a silly game. And it was time to stop.
He held on to that thought as he drew the knife from its holster and brought it to his forearm.
โItโs you,โ came a voice behind him.
Kell turned, the blade sliding back to his side.
A woman stood there at the mouth of the alley, her face hidden by the hood of a threadbare blue cloak. If theyโd been in any other London, the blue might have been the color of sapphires or the sea. Here it was the faintest shade, like the sky through layers and layers of clouds.
โDo I know you?โ he asked, squinting into the dark. She shook her head. โBut I know you,ย Antari.โ
โNo, you donโt,โ he said with a fair amount of certainty.
โI know what youย do. When youโre not at the castle.โ Kell shook his head. โI am not making deals tonight.โ
โPlease,โ she said, and he realized that she was clutching an envelope. โI donโt want you to bring me anything.โ She held out the letter. โI only want youย takeย it.โ
Kellโs brow crinkled. A letter? The worlds had been sealed off from one another for centuries. Who could she be writingย to?
โMy family,โ said the woman, reading the question in his eyes. โAges ago, when Black London fell, and the doors were sealed, we were divided. Over the centuries our families have tried to keep the thread โฆ but Iโm the only one left. Everyone here is dead but myself, and everyone there is dead but one. Olivar. Heโs the only family I have and heโs on that side of the door and heโs dying and I just want โฆโ She brought the letter to her chest. โWe are all thatโs left.โ
Kellโs head was still swimming. โHow did you even hear,โ he asked, โthat Olivar was ill?โ
โThe otherย Antari,โ she explained, glancing around as if she feared someone would hear. โHolland. He brought me a letter.โ
Kell couldnโt picture Holland deigning to smuggleย anythingย between Londons, let alone correspondences between commoners.
โHe didnโt want to,โ added the woman. โOlivar gave him everything he had to buy the letterโs passage and even thenโโshe brought her hand to her collar as if reaching for a necklace, and finding only skinโโI paid the rest.โ
Kell frowned. That seemed even less in Hollandโs nature. Not that he was selfless, but Kell doubted that he was greedy in this way, doubted that he cared about that kind of payment. Then again, everyone had secrets, and Holland wore his so close that Kell was forced to wonder how much he truly knew of theย Antariโs character.
The woman thrust out the letter again.ย โNijk shรถst,โย she said. โPlease, Master Kell.โ
He tried to focus, to think. Heโd promised Rhy โฆ but it was only a letter. And technically, under the laws set out by the crowns of all three Londons, letters were a necessary exemption from the rule of no transference. Sure, they only meant letters between theย crownsย themselves, but still โฆ
โI can pay you in advance,โ she pressed. โYou neednโt come back to close the deal. This is the last and only letter. Please.โ She dug in her pocket and retrieved a small parcel wrapped in cloth, and before Kell could say yes or no, she pushed the note and payment both into his hands. A strange feeling shot through him as the fabric of the parcel met his skin. And then the woman was pulling away.
Kell looked down at the letter, an address penned onto the envelope, and then to the parcel. He went to unwrap it, and the woman shot forward and caught his hand.
โDonโt be a fool,โ she whispered, glancing around the alley. โTheyโll cut you for a coin in these parts.โ She folded his fingers over the package. โNot here,โ she warned. โBut itโs enough, I swear. It must be.โ Her hands slipped away. โItโs all I can give.โ
Kell frowned down at the object. The mystery of it was tempting, but there were too many questions, too many pieces that didnโt make sense, and he looked up and started to refuse. โฆ
But there was no one to refuse. The woman was gone.
Kell stood there, at the mouth of the Scorched Bone, feeling dazed. What had just happened? Heโd finally mustered the resolve to make no deals, and the deal had come to him. He stared down at the letter and the payment, whatever it was. And then, in the distance, someone screamed, and the sound jarred Kell back to the darkness and the danger. He shoved the letter and parcel both into the pocket of his coat, and drew his knife across his arm, trying to ignore the dread that welled with his blood as he summoned the door home.