โIs this the point where Iโm supposed to plead for my life?โ
While Eben and Natiya loaded the other prisoners into a wagon, Wren and Synovรฉ led me into the forest, then tied me to a tree.
โCould be,โ Wren said. โJust be quiet and listen.โ Listen to what?
They turned and left, and I wondered if the plan was to leave me here to rotโor be eaten by a Candok. Minutes later, I heard rustling behind me. Human footsteps. Not Candok. I wasnโt sure it worried me any less.
Kazi came into view. She stood in front of me and told me she wanted me to listen and not say a single word. There were things I needed to hear. Sheโd gag me if she had to.
โYou can spare me another lecture on being a thiefโโ โI saidย not a word.โ
I fumed. Strained against the rope that held me. โYou have a true captive audience.โ
I didnโt say another word. She paced in front of me as she spoke, trying to convince me I had been played by Beaufort. Her voice held no emotion, and her eyes were just as detached.
โLet me give you the particulars of his crimes.โ She told me Beaufort had been a trusted member of the Morrighese cabinetโa man of wealth and position, but he wanted more, and conspired with the Komizar to get it. She went into great detail, his crimes ranging from infiltrating the Morrighese
citadelle with enemy soldiers, to poisoning the king, to planning an attack that killed the crown prince.
My mind ticked over the details she threw at me, taking in her version and Beaufortโs, two scenarios, two possible lies, two possible truths. She continued to pace, her demeanor void of emotionโexcept for her hands tapping a tense dance against her thighs.
โDid I mention the thirty-two young soldiers who also died in the massacre he orchestrated? He was only warming up at that point. His crimes go on from there. Youโll see soon enough.
โI realize you didnโt know about the other men,โ she continued. โTorback and Phineas are Morrighese scholars who are able to decipher the secrets of the Ancients and bring them to life again. Theyโre traitors too. They made vows to serve the gods, but instead they serve themselves.โ
She told me that Sarva, Kardos, and Bahr were Vendan. โEveryone thought they died on the battlefield. There were so many charred bodies it was hard to tell, but some of their personal effects were found. They obviously staged their deaths before they ran.โ She said Kardos was a general in the Komizarโs army who used children as young as Lydia and Nash on his front lines. It was his method of unnerving enemy soldiers before he moved his cavalry forward.
โSarva was the governor of a Vendan province, and Bahr a Sanctum guard.โ She said they led an attack against unarmed citizens, butchering them on the streets. Whole families died. Children, parents, grandparents. One of those families was Wrenโs. She held her father as he died in her arms. โAnd Synovรฉ watched Bahr behead both of her parents. She had no choice but to run, because he came after her too. She was ten years old.โ
She turned to face me. โThese are the men you gave sanctuary to, the ones who promised to make you weapons. What did you want them for, Jase? To protect Hellโs Mouth? The arena? I can assure you, they had much bigger plans. Youโll see just how big later today. I heard them reveling in the fact that they would have the kingdoms under their thumbs soon. That the Great Battle would look like a spring picnic. The captainโs plans were for domination. The Ballengers were a lucky stepping stone for them, their means to an end.
โThey laughed about it. They mocked you. Iโm guessing they planned to kill your whole family once you gave them everything they neededโwhich
apparently was supplies for weapons. Who better to acquire the raw materials than a wealthy family who has access to everything through the arena? I heard them laugh about the arsenal that theyโd soon have.ย Them, not you. It wouldnโt be the first time Captain Illarion has done something like thisโbut you knew when you hid a fugitive in order to get what you wanted that you were taking a risk.โ
She stopped pacing and stared at me as if she was waiting for something. โWell?โ
โOh? I have permission to speak now?โ She nodded.
My gaze locked onto hers and I spoke slowly, so each word had time to sink in. โLet me see if I have this straight. What youโre telling me is they infiltrated Torโs Watch under false pretenses. They violated my familyโs trust. They put them at risk. Ate our food. Slept in our beds. They used us. They made promises they had no intention of keeping. They betrayed us.โ
She swallowed, my point made.
โSo tell me, how are they different from you?โ
She looked at me like I had slapped her face. โI wouldnโt have killed you, Jase. I wouldnโt have butchered your family. Can you say the same for them?โ
โYou intended to poison my family! You thought you were putting birchwings in our food!โ
โItโs not a poison and you know it! Itโs only a sedative.โ โNash and Lydia are children! I donโt care what it is!โ โWe didnโt put it in their food!โ
โAnd yet, Beaufort and his men never even did that much to us.โ โYet.โ
โWeโre an independent realm, theย firstย country, and you violated our sovereignty. Who am I supposed to believe? A Rahtan soldier who dishonored my familyโs trust? Who mocked me? Or the word of a queen Iโve never met who seized land that wasย ours?โ
โYou have no borders, Jase. The land was in the Cam Lanteux. She chose it based on what the king told her. How was she to know?โ
โSo that excuse works for her, but not for me? I didnโt know what Beaufortโs crimes were beyond a tattered bill that he refuted.โ
โAll you had to do was ask.โ
โWe did! My father asked the kingโs magistrate, who said he had no information about him.โ
โThen you should have asked the queen!โ
โThe queen who doesnโt answer our letters? The queen who doesnโt even know we exist?โ
โYou hid him, Jase. That says everything.โ She paused, her eyes drilling into mine. โYou hid a lot of things.โ
โWhich crime am I really here for, Kazi? Hiding Beaufort, or hiding Zane?โ
Her lip quivered. She turned and walked away, saying over her shoulder, โWren and Synovรฉ will come back to get you.โ I strained against the ropes, crazy thoughts running through my head, thoughts that made no sense.
โKazi, wait!โ I called.
She stopped and for long seconds looked down at the ground. โI was going to tell you about Zane,โ I said. โI swear I was.โ
She spun to face me. โWhen, Jase? When I took your ring, I gave it back to you when it mattered. When it helped you save everything you cared about. You had the chance to tell me about Zaneโwhen it mattered to me. But you didnโt.โ
She left, and I wished there had been anger in her voice or misery in her eyes orย something. Instead, there was nothing, vast empty plains of nothing, and it hit me harder than if she had struck me in the jaw again.
The wind, time, They circle, repeat,
Teaching us to be ever watchful, For freedoms are never won, Once and for all,
But must be won over and over again.
โSong of Jezelia