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Chapter no 14 – Nina

Crooked Kingdom (Six of Crows, #2)

โ€ŒWย ylan hadnโ€™t been on a browboat of this size since heโ€™d tried to leave the city six months ago, and it was hard not to remember that disaster now, especially when thoughts of his father were so fresh in his mind. But this boat was considerably different from the one heโ€™d tried to take that night. This browboat ran the market line twice a day. Inbound, it would be crowded with vegetables, livestock, whatever farmers were bringing to the market squares scattered around the city. As a child, heโ€™d thought everything came from Ketterdam, but heโ€™d soon learned that, though just about anything could be had in the city, little of it was produced there. The city got its exoticsโ€”mangoes; dragon fruit; small, fragrant pineapplesโ€”from the Southern Colonies. For more ordinary fare, they relied on the farms that surrounded the city.โ€Œ

Jesper and Wylan caught an outbound boat crammed with immigrants fresh from the Ketterdam harbor and laborers looking for farmwork instead of the manufacturing jobs offered in the city. Unfortunately, theyโ€™d boarded far enough south that all the seats were already taken, and Jesper was looking positively sulky about it.

โ€œWhy canโ€™t we take the Belendt line?โ€ Jesper had complained only hours before. โ€œIt goes past Olendaal. The boats on the market line are filthy and thereโ€™s never any place to sit.โ€

โ€œBecause you two will stand out on the Belendt line. Here in Ketterdam, youโ€™re nothing to look atโ€”assuming Jesper doesnโ€™t wear one of his brighter plaids. But give me one good reason other than farmwork youโ€™d see a Shu and a Zemeni traipsing around the countryside.โ€

Wylan hadnโ€™t considered how conspicuous he might be outside the city with his new face. But he was secretly relieved Kaz didnโ€™t want them on the Belendt line. It might have been more comfortable, but the memories would have been too much on the day he would finally see where his mother had been laid to rest.

โ€œJesper,โ€ Kaz had said, โ€œkeep your weapons hidden and your eyes open. Van Eck has to have people watching all the major transportation hubs, and we donโ€™t have time to fake up identification for Wylan. Iโ€™ll get the corrosive from one of the shipyards on Imperjum. Your first priority is to find the quarry and get the other mineral we need for the auric acid. You go to Saint Hilde if and only if thereโ€™s time.โ€

Wylan felt his chin lift, that simmering, stubborn feeling overtaking him. โ€œI need to do this. Iโ€™ve never been to my motherโ€™s grave. Iโ€™m not leaving Kerch without saying goodbye.โ€

โ€œTrust me, you care more than she does.โ€

โ€œHow can you say that? Donโ€™t you remember your mother and father at all?โ€

โ€œMy mother is Ketterdam. She birthed me in the harbor. And my father is profit. I honor him daily. Be back by nightfall or donโ€™t come back at all. Either of you. I need crew, not sentimental nubs.โ€ Kaz handed Wylan the travel money. โ€œMake sureย youย buy the tickets. I donโ€™t want Jesper wandering off to take a spin at Makkerโ€™s Wheel.โ€

โ€œThis song is getting old,โ€ muttered Jesper. โ€œThen learn a new refrain.โ€

Jesper had just shaken his head, but Wylan could tell Kazโ€™s barbs still stung. Now Wylan looked at Jesper leaning back on the railing, eyes shut, profile turned to the weak spring sun.

โ€œDonโ€™t you think we should be more cautious?โ€ Wylan asked, his own face buried in the collar of his coat. Theyโ€™d barely dodged twoย stadwatchย as theyโ€™d boarded.

โ€œWeโ€™re already out of the city. Relax.โ€

Wylan glanced over his shoulder. โ€œI thought they might search the boat.โ€

Jesper opened one eye and said, โ€œAnd hold up traffic? Van Eckโ€™s already making trouble at the harbors. If he jams up the browboats, thereโ€™ll be a riot.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œLook around. The farms need laborers. The plants need workers. The

Kerch will only abide so much inconvenience for a rich manโ€™s son, especially when thereโ€™s money to be made.โ€

Wylan tried to make himself relax and unbuttoned the roughspun coat Kaz had obtained for him. โ€œWhere does he get all the clothes and uniforms from anyway? Does he just have a giant closet somewhere?โ€

โ€œCome here.โ€

Warily, Wylan sidled closer. Jesper reached for his collar and flipped it, giving it a tug so Wylan could twist around and just make out a blue ribbon pinned there.

โ€œThis is how actors mark their costumes,โ€ Jesper said. โ€œThis one belonged to โ€ฆ Josep Kikkert. Oh, heโ€™s not bad. I saw him inย The Madman Takes a Brideย .โ€

โ€œCostumes?โ€

Jesper flipped the collar back, and as he did, his fingers brushed against the nape of Wylanโ€™s neck. โ€œYup. Kaz cut a secret entrance into the wardrobe rooms of the Stadlied opera house years ago. Thatโ€™s where he gets a lot of what he needs and where he stashes the rest. Means he can never be caught with a fakeย stadwatchย uniform or house livery in a raid.โ€

Wylan supposed it made sense. He watched the sunlight flashing off the water for a while, then focused on the railing and said, โ€œThanks for coming with me today.โ€

โ€œKaz wasnโ€™t going to let you go by yourself. Besides, I owe you. You came with me to meet my dad at the university, and you stepped in when he started getting inquisitive.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t like lying.โ€

Jesper turned around, balancing his elbows on the railing and gazing out at the grassy banks that sloped down to the canal. โ€œSo why did you do it?โ€

Wylan didnโ€™t really know why heโ€™d made up that crazy story about luring Jesper into a bad investment. He hadnโ€™t even been totally sure what he was going to say when he opened his mouth. He just couldnโ€™t stand to see Jesperโ€”confident, smiling Jesperโ€”with that lost look on his face, or the terrible mix of hope and fear in Colm Faheyโ€™s gaze as he waited for an answer from his son. It reminded Wylan too much of the way his own father had looked at him, back when heโ€™d still believed Wylan could be cured or fixed. He didnโ€™t want to see the expression in Jesperโ€™s fatherโ€™s eyes change from worry to anguish to anger.

Wylan shrugged. โ€œIโ€™m making a habit of rescuing you. For exercise.โ€

Jesper released a guff aw that had Wylan looking frantically over his shoulder again, afraid of drawing attention.

But Jesperโ€™s mirth was short-lived. He shifted his position at the rail, scrubbed his hand over the back of his neck, fiddled with the brim of his hat. He was always in motion, like a lanky piece of clockwork that ran on invisible energy. Except clocks were simple. Wylan could only guess at Jesperโ€™s workings.

At last Jesper said, โ€œI should have gone to see him today.โ€ Wylan knew he was talking about Colm. โ€œWhy didnโ€™t you?โ€ โ€œI have no idea what to say to him.โ€

โ€œIs the truth out of the question?โ€ โ€œLetโ€™s just say Iโ€™d rather avoid it.โ€

Wylan looked back at the water. Heโ€™d started to think of Jesper as fearless, but maybe being brave didnโ€™t mean being unafraid. โ€œYou canโ€™t run from this forever.โ€

โ€œWatch me.โ€

Another farmhouse slid by, little more than a white shape in the early morning mist, lilies and tulips stippling the fields before it in fractured constellations. Maybe Jesper could keep running. If Kaz kept coming along with miracle scores, maybe Jesper could always stay one step ahead.

โ€œI wish Iโ€™d brought flowers for her,โ€ Wylan said. โ€œSomething.โ€

โ€œWe can pick some on the way,โ€ said Jesper, and Wylan knew he was seizing the change in subject with both hands. โ€œDo you remember her much?โ€

Wylan shook his head. โ€œI remember her curls. They were the most beautiful reddish gold.โ€

โ€œSame as yours,โ€ said Jesper. โ€œBefore.โ€

Wylan felt his cheeks pink for no good reason. Jesper was just stating a fact, after all.

He cleared his throat. โ€œShe liked art and music. I think I remember sitting at the piano bench with her. But it might have been a nanny.โ€ Wylan lifted his shoulders. โ€œOne day she was sick and going to the country so her lungs could recover, and then she was gone.โ€

โ€œWhat about the funeral?โ€

โ€œMy father told me sheโ€™d been buried at the hospital. That was all. We just stopped talking about her. He said it didnโ€™t pay to dwell on the past. I

donโ€™t know. I think he really loved her. They fought all the time, sometimes about me, but I remember them laughing a lot together too.โ€

โ€œI have trouble imagining your father laughing, even smiling. Unless heโ€™s rubbing his hands together and cackling over a pile of gold.โ€

โ€œHe isnโ€™t evil.โ€

โ€œHe tried to kill you.โ€

โ€œNo, he destroyed our ship. Killing me would have been an added benefit.โ€ That wasnโ€™t entirely true, of course. Jesper wasnโ€™t the only one trying to keep a step ahead of his demons.

โ€œOh, then youโ€™re absolutely right,โ€ said Jesper. โ€œNot evil at all. Iโ€™m sure he also had good reasons for not letting you grieve for your mother.โ€ Wylan tugged at a thread unraveling from the sleeve of his coat. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t all his fault. My father seemed sad most of the time. And far away. That was around the same time he realized I wasnโ€™t โ€ฆ what

heโ€™d hoped for.โ€

โ€œHow old were you?โ€

โ€œEight, maybe? Iโ€™d gotten really good at hiding it.โ€ โ€œHow?โ€

A faint smile touched Wylanโ€™s lips. โ€œHe would read to me or Iโ€™d ask one of the nannies to, and Iโ€™d memorize whatever they said. I even knew when to pause and turn the pages.โ€

โ€œHow much could you remember?โ€

โ€œA lot. I sort of set the words to music in my head like songs. I still do it sometimes. Iโ€™ll just claim I canโ€™t read someoneโ€™s writing and get them to read the words aloud, set it all to a melody. I can hold it in my head until I need it.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t suppose you could apply that skill to card counting.โ€ โ€œProbably. But Iโ€™m not going to.โ€

โ€œMisspent gifts.โ€ โ€œYouโ€™re one to talk.โ€

Jesper scowled. โ€œLetโ€™s enjoy the scenery.โ€

There wasnโ€™t much to look at yet. Wylan realized how tired he felt. He wasnโ€™t used to this life of fear, moving from one moment of worry to the next.

He thought about telling Jesper how it had all started. Would it be a relief to have the whole shameful story out in the open? Maybe. But some part of him wanted Jesper and the others to keep believing that heโ€™d left his fatherโ€™s house intending to set up in the Barrel, that heโ€™d

chosen this life.

As Wylan got older, Jan Van Eck had made it increasingly clear that there was no place for his son in his house hold, especially after his marriage to Alys. But he didnโ€™t seem to know what to do with Wylan. He took to making pronouncements about his son, each one more dire than the last.

You canโ€™t be sent to seminary because you canโ€™t read.

I canโ€™t apprentice you somewhere because you may reveal yourself to be defective.

You are like food that spoils too easily. I canโ€™t even put you on a shelf somewhere to keep without making a stink.

Then, six months ago, Wylanโ€™s father had summoned him to his office. โ€œIโ€™ve secured you a position at the music school in Belendt. A personal secretary has been hired on and will meet you at the school. He will handle any mail or business beyond your capabilities. It is a ridiculous waste of both money and time, but I must accept what is possible where you are concerned.โ€

โ€œFor how long?โ€ Wylan had asked.

His father shrugged. โ€œAs long as it takes people to forget I had a son. Oh, donโ€™t look at me with that wounded expression, Wylan. I am honest, not cruel. This is best for both of us. Youโ€™ll be spared the impossible task of trying to step into the role of a merchantโ€™s son, and Iโ€™ll be spared the embarrassment of watching you attempt it.โ€

I treat you no more harshly than the world will.ย That was his fatherโ€™s refrain. Who else would be so frank with him? Who else loved him enough to tell him the truth? Wylan had happy memories of his father reading him storiesโ€”dark tales of forests full of witches and rivers that spoke. Jan Van Eck had done his best to care for his son, and if heโ€™d failed, then the defect lay with Wylan. His father might sound cruel, but he wasnโ€™t just protecting himself or the Van Eck empire, he was protecting Wylan as well.

And everything he said made perfect sense. Wylan could not be trusted with a fortune because he would be too easily swindled. Wylan could not go to university because heโ€™d be the target of mockery.ย This is best for both of us.ย His fatherโ€™s ire had been unpleasant, but it was his logic that haunted Wylanโ€”that practical, irrefutable voice that spoke in Wylanโ€™s head whenever he thought about attempting something new, or trying to learn to read again.

It had hurt to be sent away, but Wylan had still been hopeful. A life in Belendt sounded magical to him. He didnโ€™t know much about it other than that it was the second-oldest city in Kerch and located on the shores of the Droombeld River. But heโ€™d be far away from his fatherโ€™s friends and business associates. Van Eck was a common enough name, and that far from Ketterdam, being a Van Eck wouldnโ€™t mean being one ofย thoseย Van Ecks.

His father handed him a sealed envelope and a small stack ofย krugeย for travel money. โ€œThese are your enrollment papers, and enough money to see you to Belendt. Once youโ€™re there, have your secretary see the bursar. An account has been opened in your name. Iโ€™ve also arranged for chaperones to travel with you on the browboat.โ€

Wylanโ€™s cheeks had flooded red with humiliation. โ€œI can get to Belendt.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve never traveled outside Ketterdam on your own, and this is not the time to start. Miggson and Prior have business to see to for me in Belendt. Theyโ€™ll escort you there and ensure that youโ€™re successfully situated. Understood?โ€

Wylan understood. He was unfit to even board a boat out of the city by himself.

But things would be different in Belendt. He packed a small suitcase with a change of clothes and the few things he would need before his trunks arrived at the school, along with his favorite pieces of sheet music. If he could read letters as well as he read a tablature, heโ€™d have no problems at all. When his father had stopped reading to him, music had given him new stories, ones that unfolded from his fingers, that he could write himself into with every played note. He tucked his flute into his satchel, in case he wanted to practice on the trip.

His goodbye to Alys had been brief and awkward. She was a nice girl, but that was the whole problemโ€”she was only a few years older than Wylan. He wasnโ€™t sure how his father could walk down the street beside her without shame. But Alys didnโ€™t seem to mind, maybe because around her, his father became the man Wylan remembered from his childhoodโ€” kind, generous, patient.

Even now, Wylan could not name the specific moment when he knew his father had given up on him. The change had been slow. Jan Van Eckโ€™s patience had worn quietly away like gold plate over cruder metal, and when it was gone, it was as if his father had become someone else

entirely, someone with far less luster.

โ€œI wanted to say goodbye and wish you well,โ€ Wylan said to Alys. She had been seated in her parlor, her terrier dozing at her feet.

โ€œAre you going away?โ€ she asked, looking up from her sewing and noticing his bag. She was hemming curtains. Kerch womenโ€”even the wealthy onesโ€”didnโ€™t bother with anything as frivolous as embroidery or needlepoint. Ghezen was better served by tasks that benefited the household.

โ€œIโ€™ll be traveling to the music school at Belendt.โ€

โ€œOh, how wonderful!โ€ Alys had cried. โ€œI miss the country so much. Youโ€™ll be so glad of the fresh air, and youโ€™re sure to make excellent friends.โ€ Sheโ€™d set down her needle and kissed both his cheeks. โ€œWill you come back for the holidays?โ€

โ€œPerhaps,โ€ Wylan said, though he knew he wouldnโ€™t. His father wanted him to disappear, so he would disappear.

โ€œWeโ€™ll make gingerbread then,โ€ Alys said. โ€œYou will tell me all your adventures, and soon weโ€™ll have a new friend to play with.โ€ She patted her belly with a happy smile.

It had taken Wylan a moment to understand what she meant, and then heโ€™d just stood there, clutching his suitcase, nodding his head, smiling mechanically as Alys talked about their holiday plans. Alys was pregnant. That was why his father was sending him away. Jan Van Eck was to have another heir, a proper heir. Wylan had become expendable. He would vanish from the city, take up occupation elsewhere. Time would pass and no one would raise a brow when Alysโ€™ child was groomed to be the head of the Van Eck empire.ย As long as it takes people to forget I had a son.ย That hadnโ€™t been an idle insult.

Miggson and Prior arrived at eight bells to see Wylan to the boat. No one came to say a last goodbye, and when heโ€™d walked past his fatherโ€™s office, the door was closed. Wylan refused to knock and plead for a scrap of affection like Alysโ€™ terrier begging for treats.

His fatherโ€™s men wore the dark suits favored by merchants and said little to Wylan on the walk over to the dock. They purchased tickets for the Belendt line, and once they were aboard the boat, Miggson had buried his head in a newspaper while Prior leaned back in his seat, hat tilted downward, lids not quite closed. Wylan couldnโ€™t be sure if the man was sleeping or staring at him like some kind of drowsy-eyed lizard.

The boat was nearly empty at that hour. People dozed in the stuffy

cabin or ate whatever dinner theyโ€™d packed, ham rolls and insulated flasks of coffee balanced on their laps.

Unable to sleep, Wylan had left the heat of the cabin and walked to the prow of the boat. The winter air was cold and smelled of the slaughter- houses on the outskirts of the city. It turned Wylanโ€™s stomach, but soon the lights would fade and theyโ€™d be in the open country. He was sorry they werenโ€™t traveling by day. He would have liked to see the windmills keeping watch over their fields, the sheep grazing in their pastures. He sighed, shivering in his coat, and adjusted the strap of his satchel. He should try to rest. Maybe he could wake up early and watch the sunrise.

When he turned, Prior and Miggson were standing behind him. โ€œSorry,โ€ Wylan said. โ€œIโ€”โ€ And then Priorโ€™s hands were tight around

his throat.

Wylan gaspedโ€”or he tried to; the sound that came from him was barely a croak. He clawed at Priorโ€™s wrists, but the manโ€™s grip was like iron, the pressure relentless. He was big enough that Wylan could feel himself being lifted slightly as Prior pushed him against the railing.

Priorโ€™s face was dispassionate, nearly bored, and Wylan understood then that he would never reach the school in Belendt. Heโ€™d never been meant to. There was no secretary. No account in his name. No one was expecting his arrival. The supposed enrollment papers in his pocket might say anything at all. Wylan hadnโ€™t even bothered to try to read them. He was going to disappear, just as his father had always wanted, and heโ€™d hired these men to do the job. His father who had read him to sleep at night, whoโ€™d brought him sweet mallow tea and honeycomb when heโ€™d been sick with lung fever.ย As long as it takes people to forget I had a son.ย His father was going to erase him from the ledger, a mistaken calculation, a cost that could be expunged. The tally would be made right.

Black spots filled Wylanโ€™s vision. He thought he could hear music. โ€œYou there! Whatโ€™s going on?โ€

The voice seemed to come from a great distance. Priorโ€™s grip loosened very slightly. Wylanโ€™s toes made contact with the deck of the boat.

โ€œNothing at all,โ€ said Miggson, turning to face the stranger. โ€œWe just caught this fellow looking through the other passengersโ€™ belongings.โ€

Wylan made a choked sound.

โ€œShall I โ€ฆ shall I fetch theย stadwatchย then? There are two officers in the cabin.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve already alerted the captain,โ€ said Miggson. โ€œWeโ€™ll be dropping him at theย stadwatchย post at the next stop.โ€

โ€œWell, Iโ€™m glad you fellows were being so vigilant.โ€ The man turned to go.

The boat lurched slightly. Wylan wasnโ€™t going to wait to see what happened next. He shoved against Prior with all his mightโ€”then, before he could lose his nerve, he dove over the side of the boat and into the murky canal.

He swam with every bit of speed he could muster. He was still dizzy and his throat ached badly. To his shock, he heard another splash and knew one of the men had dived in after him. If Wylan showed up somewhere still breathing, Miggson and Prior probably wouldnโ€™t get paid.

He changed his stroke, making as little noise as possible, and forced himself to think. Instead of heading straight to the side of the canal the way his freezing body longed to, he dove under a nearby market barge and came up on its other side, swimming along with it, using it as cover. The dead weight of his satchel pulled hard at his shoulders, but he couldnโ€™t make himself relinquish it.ย My thingsย , he thought nonsensically,ย my fluteย . He didnโ€™t stop, not even when his breathing grew ragged and his limbs started to turn numb. He forced himself to drive onward, to put as much distance as he could between himself and his fatherโ€™s thugs.

But eventually, his strength started to give out and he realized he was doing more thrashing than swimming. If he didnโ€™t get to shore, he would drown. He paddled toward the shadows of a bridge and dragged himself from the canal, then huddled, soaked and shaking in the icy cold. His bruised throat scraped each time he swallowed, and he was terrified that every splash he heard was Prior coming to finish the job.

He needed to make some kind of plan, but it was hard to form whole thoughts. He checked his trouser pockets. He still had theย krugeย his father had given him tucked safely away. Though the cash was wet through, it was perfectly good for spending. But where was Wylan supposed to go? He didnโ€™t have enough money to get out of the city, and if his father sent men looking for him, heโ€™d be easily tracked. He needed to get somewhere safe, someplace his father wouldnโ€™t think to look. His limbs felt weighted with lead, the cold giving way to fatigue. He was afraid that if he let himself close his eyes, he wouldnโ€™t have the will to open them again.

In the end, heโ€™d simply started walking. He wandered north through the city, away from the slaughter houses, past a quiet residential area where lesser tradesmen lived, then onward, the streets becoming more crooked and more narrow, until the houses seemed to crowd in on him. Despite the late hour, there were lights in every window and shop front. Music spilled out of run-down cafรฉs, and he glimpsed bodies pressed up against each other in the alleys.

โ€œSomeone dunk you, lad?โ€ called an old man with a shortage of teeth from a stoop.

โ€œIโ€™ll give him a good dunking!โ€ crowed a woman leaning on the stairs. He was in the Barrel. Wylan had lived his whole life in Ketterdam, but heโ€™d never come here. Heโ€™d never been allowed to. Heโ€™d neverย wantedย to. His father called it a โ€œfilthy den of vice and blasphemyโ€ and โ€œthe shame of the city.โ€ Wylan knew it was a warren of dark streets and hidden passages. A place where locals donned costumes and performed unseemly acts, where foreigners crowded the thoroughfares seeking vile entertainments, where people came and went like tides. The perfect place

to disappear.

And it had beenโ€”until the day the first of his fatherโ€™s letters had arrived.

With a start, Wylan realized Jesper was pulling at his sleeve. โ€œThis is our stop, merchling. Look lively.โ€

Wylan hurried after him. They disembarked at the empty dock at Olendaal and walked up the embankment to a sleepy village road.

Jesper looked around. โ€œThis place reminds me of home. Fields as far as the eye can see, quiet broken by nothing but the hum of bees, fresh air.โ€ He shuddered. โ€œDisgusting.โ€

As they walked, Jesper helped him gather wildflowers from the side of the road. By the time theyโ€™d made it to the main street, he had a respectable little bunch.

โ€œI guess we need to find a way to the quarry?โ€ Jesper said. Wylan coughed. โ€œNo we donโ€™t, just a general store.โ€

โ€œBut you told Kaz the mineralโ€”โ€

โ€œItโ€™s present in all kinds of paints and enamels. I wanted to make sure I had a reason to go to Olendaal.โ€

โ€œWylan Van Eck, you lied toย Kaz Brekkerย .โ€ Jesper clutched a hand to his chest. โ€œAnd you got away with it! Do you give lessons?โ€

Wylan felt ridiculously pleasedโ€”until he thought about Kaz finding out. Then he felt a little like the first time heโ€™d tried brandy and ended up spewing his dinner all over his own shoes.

They located a general store halfway up the main street, and it took them only a few moments to purchase what they needed. On the way out, a man loading up a wagon exchanged a wave with them. โ€œYou boys looking for work?โ€ he asked skeptically. โ€œNeither of you looks up to a full day in the field.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™d be surprised,โ€ said Jesper. โ€œWe signed on to do some work out near Saint Hilde.โ€

Wylan waited, nervous, but the man just nodded. โ€œYou doing repairs at the hospital?โ€

โ€œYup,โ€ Jesper said easily.

โ€œYour friend there donโ€™t talk much.โ€ โ€œShu,โ€ said Jesper with a shrug.

The older man gave some kind of grunt in agreement and said, โ€œHop on in. Iโ€™m going out to the quarry. I can take you to the gates. What are the flowers for?โ€

โ€œHe has a sweetheart out near Saint Hilde.โ€ โ€œSome sweetheart.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll say. He has terrible taste in women.โ€ Wylan considered shoving Jesper off the wagon.

The dirt road was bordered on each side by what looked like barley and wheat fields, the flat expanses of land dotted occasionally by barns and windmills. The wagon kept up a fast clip.ย A little too fastย , Wylan thought as they jounced over a deep rut. He hissed in a breath.

โ€œRains,โ€ said the farmer. โ€œNo oneโ€™s got around to laying sand yet.โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s okay,โ€ said Jesper with a wince as the wagon hit another bone-

rattling divot in the ground. โ€œI donโ€™t really need my spleen in one piece.โ€ The farmer laughed. โ€œItโ€™s good for you! Jogs the liver!โ€

Wylan clutched his side, wishing heโ€™d shoved Jesper out of the wagon after all and jumped right down with him. Luckily, only a mile later, the wagon slowed before two stone posts that marked a long gravel drive.

โ€œThis is as far as I go,โ€ said the farmer. โ€œNot a place I want truck with. Too much suffering. Sometimes when the wind blows right, you can hear โ€™em, laughing and shrieking.โ€

Jesper and Wylan exchanged a glance. โ€œYou saying itโ€™s haunted?โ€ asked Jesper.

โ€œI suppose.โ€

They said their thanks and gratefully slid down to the ground. โ€œWhen youโ€™re done here, head up the road a couple miles,โ€ said the driver. โ€œI got two acres still need working. Fiveย krugeย a day and you can sleep in the barn instead of out in the field.โ€

โ€œSounds promising,โ€ said Jesper with a wave, but as they turned to make their way up the road to the church, he grumbled, โ€œWeโ€™re walking back. I think I bruised a rib.โ€

When the driver was gone from view, they shrugged out of their coats and caps to reveal the dark suits Kaz had suggested they wear underneath, and tucked them behind a tree stump. โ€œTell them you were sent by Cornelis Smeet,โ€ Kaz had said. โ€œThat you want to make sure the grave is being well maintained for Mister Van Eck.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€ Wylan had asked.

โ€œBecause if you claim to be Jan Van Eckโ€™s son, no one is going to believe you.โ€

The road was lined with poplars, and as they crested the hill, a building came into view: three stories of white stone fronted by low, graceful stairs leading to an arched front door. The drive was neatly laid with gravel and bordered by low yew hedges on either side.

โ€œDoesnโ€™t look like a church,โ€ said Jesper.

โ€œMaybe it used to be a monastery or a school?โ€ Wylan suggested. He listened to the gravel crunch beneath his shoes. โ€œJesper, do you remember much about your mother?โ€

Wylan had seen a lot of different smiles from Jesper, but the one that spread across his face now was new, slow, and as closely held as a winning hand. All he said was, โ€œYeah. She taught me to shoot.โ€

There were a hundred questions Wylan wanted to ask, but the closer they drew to the church, the less he seemed able to capture a thought and hold it. On the left of the building, he could see an arbor covered with new-blooming wisteria, the sweet scent of the purple blossoms heavy on the spring air. A little past the churchโ€™s lawn and to the right, he saw a wrought-iron gate and a fence surrounding a graveyard, a tall stone figure at its centerโ€”a woman, Wylan guessed, probably Saint Hilde.

โ€œThat must be the cemetery,โ€ Wylan said, clutching his flowers tighter.ย What am I doing here?ย There was that question again, and suddenly he didnโ€™t know. Kaz had been right. This was stupid, sentimental. What good would seeing a gravestone with his motherโ€™s name on it do? He

wouldnโ€™t even be able to read it. But theyโ€™d come all this way. โ€œJesperโ€”โ€ he began, but at that moment a woman in gray work

clothes rounded the corner pushing a wheelbarrow mounded with earth. โ€œGoed morgenย ,โ€ she called to them. โ€œCan I help you?โ€

โ€œAnd a fine morning it is,โ€ said Jesper smoothly. โ€œWe come to you from the offices of Cornelis Smeet.โ€

She frowned and Wylan added, โ€œOn behalf of the esteemed Councilman Jan Van Eck.โ€

Apparently she didnโ€™t notice the quaver in his voice, because her brow cleared and she smiled. Her cheeks were round and rosy. โ€œOf course. But I confess to being surprised. Mister Van Eck has been so generous with us, yet we hear from him so rarely. Nothingโ€™s wrong, is it?โ€

โ€œNot at all!โ€ said Wylan.

โ€œJust a new policy,โ€ said Jesper. โ€œMore work for everyone.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that always the way?โ€ The woman smiled again. โ€œAnd I see you brought flowers?โ€

Wylan looked down at the bouquet. It seemed smaller and more straggly than heโ€™d thought. โ€œWe โ€ฆ yes.โ€

She wiped her hands on her shapeless smock and said, โ€œIโ€™ll take you to her.โ€

But instead of turning in the direction of the graveyard, she headed back toward the entrance. Jesper shrugged, and they followed. As they made their way up the low stone steps, something cold crawled over Wylanโ€™s spine.

โ€œJesper,โ€ he whispered. โ€œThere are bars on the windows.โ€ โ€œAntsy monks?โ€ Jesper offered, but he was not smiling.

The front parlor was two stories high, its floor set with clean white tiles painted with delicate blue tulips. It looked like no church Wylan had ever seen. The hush in the room was so deep, it felt almost suffocating. A large desk was placed in the corner, and on it was set a vase of the wisteria Wylan had seen outside. He inhaled deeply. The smell was comforting.

The woman unlocked a large cabinet and sifted through it for a moment, then removed a thick file.

โ€œHere we are: Marya Hendriks. As you can see, everything is in order. You can have a look while we get her cleaned up. Next time you can avoid a delay if you notify us ahead of your visit.โ€

Wylan felt an icy sweat break out over his body. He managed a nod.

The woman removed a heavy key ring from the cabinet and unlocked one of the pale blue doors that led out of the parlor. Wylan heard her turn the key in the lock from the other side. He set the wildflowers down on the desk. Their stems were broken. Heโ€™d been clutching them too tightly. โ€œWhat is this place?โ€ Wylan said. โ€œWhat did they mean,ย get her cleaned upย ?โ€ His heart ticked a frantic beat, a metronome set to the

wrong rhythm.

Jesper was flipping through the folder, his eyes skimming the pages.

Wylan leaned over his shoulder and felt a hopeless, choking panic grip him. The words on the page were a meaningless scrawl, a black mess of insect legs. He fought for breath. โ€œJesper, please,โ€ he begged, his voice thin and reedy.ย โ€œRead it to me.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Jesper said hurriedly. โ€œI forgot. I โ€ฆโ€ Wylan couldnโ€™t make sense of the look on Jesperโ€™s faceโ€”sadness, confusion. โ€œWylan โ€ฆ I think your motherโ€™s alive.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s impossible.โ€

โ€œYour father had her committed.โ€

Wylan shook his head. That couldnโ€™t be. โ€œShe got sick. A lung infectionโ€”โ€

โ€œHe states that sheโ€™s a victim of hysteria, paranoia, and persecution disorder.โ€

โ€œShe canโ€™t be alive. Heโ€”he remarried. What about Alys?โ€

โ€œI think he had your mother declared insane and used it as grounds for divorce. This isnโ€™t a church, Wylan. Itโ€™s an asylum.โ€

Saint Hilde.ย His father had been sending them money every yearโ€”but not as a charitable donation.ย For her upkeep. For their silence.ย The room was suddenly spinning.

Jesper pulled him into the chair behind the desk and pressed against Wylanโ€™s shoulder blades, urging him forward. โ€œPut your head between your knees, focus on the floor. Breathe.โ€

Wylan forced himself to inhale, exhale, to gaze at those charming blue tulips in their white tile boxes. โ€œTell me the rest.โ€

โ€œYou need to calm down or theyโ€™re going to know somethingโ€™s wrong.โ€

โ€œTell me the rest.โ€

Jesper blew out a breath and continued to flip through the file. โ€œSon of a bitch,โ€ he said after a minute. โ€œThereโ€™s a Transfer of Authority in the file. Itโ€™s a copy.โ€

Wylan kept his eyes on the tiled floor. โ€œWhat? What is that?โ€

Jesper read, โ€œThis document, witnessed in the full sight of Ghezen and in keeping with the honest dealings of men, made binding by the courts of Kerch and its Merchant Council, signifies the transfer of all property, estates, and legal holdings from Marya Hendriks to Jan Van Eck, to be managed by him until Marya Hendriks is once again competent to conduct her own affairs.ย โ€

โ€œโ€˜The transfer of all property,โ€™โ€ Wylan repeated.ย What am I doing here? What am I doing here? What is she doing here?

The key turned in the lock of the pale blue door and the womanโ€”a nurseย , Wylan realizedโ€”sailed back through, smoothing the apron of her smock.

โ€œWeโ€™re ready for you,โ€ she said. โ€œSheโ€™s quite docile today. Are you all right?โ€

โ€œMy friendโ€™s feeling a bit faint. Too much sun after all those hours in Mister Smeetโ€™s office. Could we trouble you for a glass of water?โ€

โ€œCertainly!โ€ said the nurse. โ€œOh, you do look a bit done under.โ€

She disappeared behind the door again, following the same routine of unlocking and locking it.ย Sheโ€™s making sure the patients donโ€™t get out.

Jesper squatted in front of Wylan and put his hands on his shoulders. โ€œWy, listen to me. You have to pull yourself together. Can you do this?

We can leave. I can tell her youโ€™re not up to it, or I can just go in myself. We can try to come back someโ€”โ€

Wylan took a deep, shuddering breath through his nose. He couldnโ€™t fathom what was happening, couldnโ€™t understand the scope of it.ย So just do one thing at a time.ย It was a technique one of his tutors had taught him to try to keep him from getting overwhelmed by the page. It hadnโ€™t worked, particularly not when his father was looming over him, but Wylan had managed to apply it elsewhere.ย One thing at a time. Stand up.ย He stood up.ย Youโ€™re fine.ย โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ he said. โ€œWe are not leaving.โ€ It was the one thing he was certain of.

When the nurse returned, he accepted the water glass, thanked her, drank. Then he and Jesper followed her through the pale blue door. He couldnโ€™t bring himself to gather the wilting wildflowers scattered on the desk.ย One thing at a time.

They walked past locked doors, some kind of exercise room. From somewhere, he heard moaning. In a wide parlor, two women were playing what looked like a game ofย ridderspel.

My mother is dead. Sheโ€™s dead.ย But nothing in him believed it. Not anymore.

Finally the nurse led them to a glassed-in porch that had been located on the west side of the building so it would capture all the warmth of the sunโ€™s setting rays. One full wall was composed of windows, and through them the green spill of the hospitalโ€™s lawn was visible, the graveyard in the distance. It was a pretty room, the tiled floor spotless. A canvas with the beginnings of a landscape emerging from it leaned on an easel by the window. A memory returned to Wylan: his mother standing at an easel in the back garden of the house on Geldstraat, the smell of linseed oil, clean brushes in an empty glass, her thoughtful gaze assessing the lines of the boathouse and the canal beyond.

โ€œShe paints,โ€ Wylan said flatly.

โ€œAll the time,โ€ the nurse said cheerily. โ€œQuite the artist is our Marya.โ€

A woman sat in a wheeled chair, head dipping as if she was fighting not to doze off, blankets piled up around her narrow shoulders. Her face was lined, her hair a faded amber, shot through with gray.ย The color of my hairย , Wylan realized,ย if it had been left out in the sun to fadeย . He felt a surge of relief. This woman was far too old to be his mother. But then her chin lifted and her eyes opened. They were a clear, pure hazel, unchanged, undiminished.

โ€œYou have some visitors, Miss Hendriks.โ€

His motherโ€™s lips moved, but Wylan couldnโ€™t hear what she said.

She looked at them with sharp eyes. Then her expression wavered, became vague and questioning as the certainty left her face. โ€œShould I โ€ฆ should I know you?โ€

Wylanโ€™s throat ached.ย Would you know meย , he wondered,ย if I still looked like your son?ย He managed a shake of his head.

โ€œWe met โ€ฆ we met long ago,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen I was just a child.โ€ She made a humming noise and looked out at the lawn.

Wylan turned helplessly to Jesper. He was not ready for this. His mother was a body long buried, dust in the ground.

Gently, Jesper led him to the chair in front of Marya. โ€œWe have an hour before we have to start the walk back,โ€ he said quietly. โ€œTalk to her.โ€

โ€œAbout what?โ€

โ€œRemember what you said to Kaz? We donโ€™t know what may happen next. This is all weโ€™ve got.โ€ Then he rose and crossed to where the nurse

was tidying up the paints. โ€œTell me, Miss โ€ฆ Iโ€™m ashamed to say I didnโ€™t catch your name.โ€

The nurse smiled, her cheeks round and red as candied apples. โ€œBetje.โ€

โ€œA charming name for a charming girl. Mister Smeet asked that I have a look at all the facilities while weโ€™re here. Would you mind giving me a quick tour?โ€

She hesitated, glancing over at Wylan.

โ€œWeโ€™ll be fine here,โ€ Wylan managed in a voice that sounded too loud and too hearty to his ears. โ€œIโ€™ll just run through some routine questions. All part of the new policy.โ€

The nurse twinkled at Jesper. โ€œWell then, I think we might have a quick look around.โ€

Wylan studied his mother, his thoughts a jangle of misplayed chords. Theyโ€™d cut her hair short. He tried to picture her younger, in the fine black wool gown of a mercherโ€™s wife, white lace gathered at her collar, her curls thick and vibrant, arranged by a ladyโ€™s maid into a nautilus of braids.

โ€œHello,โ€ he managed.

โ€œDid you come for my money? I donโ€™t have any money.โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t either,โ€ Wylan said faintly.

She was not familiar, exactly, but there was something in the way she tilted her head, the way she sat, her spine still straight. As if she was at the piano.

โ€œDo you like music?โ€ he asked.

She nodded. โ€œYes, but there isnโ€™t much here.โ€

He pulled the flute from his shirt. Heโ€™d traveled the whole day with it tucked up against his chest like some kind of secret, and it was still warm from his body. Heโ€™d planned to play it beside her grave like some kind of idiot. How Kaz would have laughed at him.

The first few notes were wobbly, but then he got control of his breath. He found the melody, a simple song, one of the first heโ€™d learned. For a moment, she looked as if she was trying to remember where she might have heard it. Then she simply closed her eyes and listened.

When he was finished, she said, โ€œPlay something cheerful.โ€

So he played a Kaelish reel and then a Kerch sea shanty that was better suited to the tin whistle. He played every song that came into his head, but nothing mournful, nothing sad. She didnโ€™t speak, though

occasionally, he saw her tap her toe to the music, and her lips would move as if she knew the words.

At last he put the flute down in his lap. โ€œHow long have you been here?โ€

She stayed silent.

He leaned forward, seeking some answer in those vague hazel eyes. โ€œWhat did they do to you?โ€

She laid a gentle hand on his cheek. Her palm felt cool and dry. โ€œWhat did they do to you?โ€ He couldnโ€™t tell if it was a challenge or if she was just repeating his words.

Wylan felt the painful press of tears in his throat and fought to swallow them.

The door banged open. โ€œWell now, did we have a good visit?โ€ said the nurse as she entered.

Hastily, Wylan tucked the flute back into his shirt. โ€œIndeed,โ€ he said. โ€œEverything seems to be in order.โ€

โ€œYou two seem awfully young for this type of work,โ€ she said, dimpling at Jesper.

โ€œI might say the same for you,โ€ he replied. โ€œBut you know how it is, the new clerks get stuck with the most menial tasks.โ€

โ€œWill you be back again soon?โ€

Jesper winked. โ€œYou never do know.โ€ He nodded at Wylan. โ€œWe have a boat to catch.โ€

โ€œSay goodbye, Miss Hendriks!โ€ urged the nurse.

Maryaโ€™s lips moved, but this time Wylan was close enough to hear what she muttered.ย Van Eck.

On the way out of the hospital, the nurse kept up a steady stream of chatter with Jesper. Wylan walked behind them. His heart hurt. What had his father done to her? Was she truly mad? Or had he simply bribed the right people to say so? Had he drugged her? Jesper glanced back at Wylan once as the nurse gibbered on, his gray eyes concerned.

They were almost to the pale blue door when the nurse said, โ€œWould you like to see her paintings?โ€

Wylan jerked to a halt. He nodded.

โ€œI think that would be most interesting,โ€ said Jesper.

The woman led them back the way theyโ€™d come and then opened the door to what appeared to be a closet.

Wylan felt his knees buckle and had to grab the wall for balance. The nurse didnโ€™t noticeโ€”she was talking on and on. โ€œThe paints are expensive, of course, but they seem to bring her so much pleasure. This is just the latest batch. Every six months or so we have to put them on the rubbish heap. There just isnโ€™t space for them.โ€

Wylan wanted to scream. The closet was crammed with paintingsโ€” landscapes, different views of the hospital grounds, a lake in sun and shadow, and there, repeated again and again, was the face of a little boy with ruddy curls and bright blue eyes.

He must have made some kind of noise, because the nurse turned to him. โ€œOh dear,โ€ she said to Jesper, โ€œyour friendโ€™s gone quite pale again. Perhaps a stimulant?โ€

โ€œNo, no,โ€ said Jesper, putting his arm around Wylan. โ€œBut we really should be going. Itโ€™s been a most enlightening visit.โ€

Wylan didnโ€™t register the walk down the drive bordered by yew hedges or retrieving their coats and caps from behind the tree stump near the main road.

They were halfway back to the dock before he could bring himself to speak. โ€œShe knows what he did to her. She knows he had no right to take her money, her life.โ€ย Van Eckย , sheโ€™d said. She was not Marya Hendriks, she was Marya Van Eck, a wife and mother stripped of her name and her fortune. โ€œRemember when I said he wasnโ€™t evil?โ€

Wylanโ€™s legs gave out and he sat down hard, right there in the middle of the road, and he couldnโ€™t bring himself to care because the tears were coming and there was no way he could stop them. They gusted through his chest in ragged, ugly sobs. He hated that Jesper was seeing him cry, but there was nothing he could do, not about the tears, not about any of it. He buried his face in his arms, covering his head as if, were he to only will it strongly enough, he could vanish.

He felt Jesper squeeze his arm. โ€œItโ€™s okay,โ€ Jesper said.

โ€œNo, itโ€™s not.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re right, itโ€™s not. Itโ€™s rotten, and Iโ€™d like to string your father up in a barren field and let the vultures have at him.โ€

Wylan shook his head. โ€œYou donโ€™t understand. It was me. I caused this. He wanted a new wife. He wanted an heir. A real heir, not a moron who can barely spell his own name.โ€ Heโ€™d been eight when his mother had been sent away. He didnโ€™t have to wonder anymore; that was when

his father had given up on him.

โ€œHey,โ€ Jesper said, giving him a shake. โ€œHey.ย Your father could have made a lot of choices when he found out you couldnโ€™t read. Hell, he could have said you were blind or that you had trouble with your vision. Or better yet, he could have just been happy about the fact that he had a genius for a son.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not a genius.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re stupid about a lot of things, Wylan, but you are not stupid. And if I ever hear you call yourself a moron again, Iโ€™m going to tell Matthias you tried to kiss Nina. With tongue.โ€

Wylan wiped his nose on his sleeve. โ€œHeโ€™ll never believe it.โ€

โ€œThen Iโ€™ll tell Nina you tried to kiss Matthias. With tongue.โ€ He sighed. โ€œLook, Wylan. Normal people donโ€™t wall their wives up in insane asylums. They donโ€™t disinherit their sons because they didnโ€™t get the child they wanted. You think my dad wanted a mess like me for a kid? You didnโ€™t cause this. This happened because your father is a lunatic dressed up in a quality suit.โ€

Wylan pressed the heels of his hands to his swollen eyes. โ€œThatโ€™s all true, and none of it makes me feel any better.โ€

Jesper gave his shoulder another little shake. โ€œWell, how about this?

Kaz is going to tear your fatherโ€™s damn life apart.โ€

Wylan was about to say that didnโ€™t help either, but he hesitated. Kaz Brekker was the most brutal, vengeful creature Wylan had ever encounteredโ€”and heโ€™d sworn he was going to destroy Jan Van Eck. The thought felt like cool water cascading over the hot, shameful feeling of helplessness heโ€™d been carrying with him for so long. Nothing could make this right, ever. But Kaz could make his fatherโ€™s life very wrong. And Wylan would be rich. He could take his mother from this place. They could go somewhere warm. He could put her in front of a piano, get her to play, take her somewhere full of bright colors and beautiful sounds. They could go to Novyi Zem. They could go anywhere. Wylan lifted his head and wiped away his tears. โ€œActually, that helps a lot.โ€

Jesper grinned. โ€œThought it might. But if we donโ€™t get on that boat back to Ketterdam, no righteous comeuppance.โ€

Wylan rose, suddenly eager to return to the city, to help bring Kazโ€™s plan to life. Heโ€™d gone to the Ice Court reluctantly. Heโ€™d aided Kaz grudgingly. Because through all of it, heโ€™d believed that he deserved his fatherโ€™s contempt, and now he could admit that somewhere, in some

buried place, heโ€™d hoped there might still be a way back to his fatherโ€™s good favor. Well, his father could keep that good favor and see what it bought him when Kaz Brekker was finished.

โ€œCome on,โ€ he said. โ€œLetโ€™s go steal all my dadโ€™s money.โ€ โ€œIsnโ€™t it your money?โ€

โ€œOkay, letโ€™s go steal it back.โ€

They headed off at a run. โ€œI love a little righteous comeuppance,โ€ said Jesper. โ€œJogs the liver!โ€

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