Instead of returning to see me himself as heโd promised, the king had me brought to him. But not before I was given another change of clothes, curiously complete with leather vest, high boots, and a weapon beltโminus the weapons. I looked almost like a real soldier again. My escort was unarmed. The king had a very different regard for my talents than Banques and his goons. As I padded forward, a fog ebbed in and out around me. It wasnโt hunger, but memories and words I couldnโt flush from my head. I squeezed my eyes, trying to make horrific images vanish.ย Animals got him.ย I made myself focus on a distant point down the hall. The faraway point was all that mattered. It kept the world from turning upside down.
The guard stopped at a door, and I was led into what appeared to be the kingโs private dining room, the drapes drawn against the bright of day. Tall candles glowed atop golden candlesticks on a table set for two.
The king turned as I entered the room, his hand absently pressed to his side, and I wondered if there was a pocket inside his vest that held treasure
โor were his ribs simply aching?ย These are hard times.ย Had he been injured? His eyes swept over me, and he smiled. โI see they brought you proper clothes this time. Good. You deserve to look like the premier soldier you are.โ
โYou mean the premier soldier who was stabbed, starved, and held in a dark cell for countless days?โ
He grimaced. โFair enough, but if I could explain.โ He pulled a chair out for me to sit.
I shook my head, refusing his offer.
โIt was a mistake,โ he said. โThey didnโt know who you were.โ โI screamed it through the door every day.โ
He looked down and sighed as if dismayed. โPrisoners scream a lot of things, Iโm afraid.โ
โWhy do you have prisoners? Why are you here?โ
He stepped from behind the chair, walking closer to me, taller than I remembered. โI mean no disrespect,โ he said, โbut if you donโt mind, thatโs a question I would like to ask. Why areย youย here? At the arena I saw you slug theย Patreiย in the jaw, and then shortly after that, you arrested him at knifepoint and hauled him back to Venda to face trial for harboring fugitives.โ
โAt knifepoint? How would you know that last part?โ
โOleez, a servant who was there, told General Banques about the confrontation.โ
Had Oleez been there that night? I didnโt remember seeing her, but she could have been hanging back in the shadows. It would explain her sharp look in my direction.
I studied the king. He was an enigma. Different. He was still the tall, broad-shouldered king I had met at the arena, though more well-groomed now, and with an air and presence about him I hadnโt seen before. It wasnโt his clothes or how he carried himselfโit was his demeanor that had changed. The king before me was brooding, almost meditative, his words calm and even. Thoughtful. Where was the clueless buffoon who shrugged and grinned and tapped his fingers together like a child? Was it the hard times he had mentioned that made that king disappear?
โIโm here because I had orders from the Queen of Venda to escort theย Patreiย back to his home,โ I answered, still uncertain how much truth was safe to share. โShe said I had overstepped my bounds by arresting him. There was no evidence he knew who the fugitives were that he harbored. Some of them didnโt even have warrants.โ
โSo hunting down fugitives is what you were really here for all along?
Not treaty violations?โ I nodded.
Color flushed his neck. โAnd you didnโt think to tell me?โ His eyes were hard steel looking into mine, and his words clipped. โIย amย the king, after all. But maybe you only saw me as a simple farmer shopping for Suri.โ He looked away and a deep breath filled his chest as if he was trying to shake the resentment Iโd heard in his tone. But where there was resentment, there
was awareness. He wasnโt completely oblivious. He knew how others viewed him and his reign.
โPlease,โ he said, walking back to the chair. He pulled it out a little farther. โI thought you should have a more substantial meal. You have some catching up to do.โ
I eyed the chair, and then him. I remembered the luxurious bath and the fine bed linens and didnโt move. โWhy am I feeling like a goose being fattened up for a holiday dinner?โ
He sighed. โDid you ever stop to think that maybe Iโm trying to make up for oversteppingย myย boundaries? For the egregious break in protocol? For being busy with other matters and not paying attention to who was taken prisoner and how she was treated?โ
Had he only been jugglingโand dropping a few balls in the process? I knew from Jase that Montegue had become king unexpectedly a few years ago when a draft horse crushed his father. He was only a little older than Jase, who would beโ
An angry fist grabbed my heart and shook it. I still expected Jase to walk through a door. I couldnโt stop thinking of him as alive, busy, vibrant, taking care of what needed to be done, already scouting out borders, drawing up new trading rules, explaining to his family about me. None of that was going to happen. I felt myself being pulled under the current once more, everything about me unsteady, trying to breathe. I reached up and felt his ring on my finger.
Donโt fight it, Kazi, lean back, feet forward.
His voice, so clear in my head. So close. So determined.
The kingโs eyes remained fixed on me. Curious. And, strangely, patient.
I walked over to the chair and sat, but it felt more like I was collapsing into it. Every word, every effort, drained me. Jase was not coming through that door. Not through any door ever again.ย Heโs alive, Kazi. He has to be alive.ย My head ached with the battle going on inside. I had lived through this battle before. I couldnโt do it again. Did anything the king had to say even matter?
Head up. Breathe.ย Jase pulling me up again and again. โExplain,โ I said.
โPlease, let me serve you first.โ He lifted a silver cover from a dish and spooned some perfect, tiny roasted potatoes onto my plate that were delicately coated with herbs, and then beside them he set three boiled quail eggs. He drizzled a smoky golden sauce over it all, making it look like a piece of artwork rather than something to be eaten. It made me want to laugh. It was a glaring contrast to the grim news coating my mouth.
As he returned the silver cover to the dish, he hesitated, spotting my hand on the arm of the chair. โYouโre wearing the signet ring?โ
โYour general pulled it off theโโ I blinked away the sting in my eyes. โHe gave it to me. He called it a trophy.โ
His brows pulled down and he shook his head. โHe shouldnโt have done that. I can dispose of it if youโd like?โ
I stared at the ring. Dispose of it?ย Itโs only a cheap piece of jewelry to me.ย Did either the king or his general have any idea of the history this ring held?ย Itโs been in my family for generations. Once itโs put on, it never comes off.ย I spun it on my thumb.
โAre you all right?โ The king stared at me, waiting for my answer. โIโll keep it.โ
He sat opposite from me and explained that almost two months ago, Hellโs Mouth had come under siege by miscreants who raided businesses, burned homes, and preyed on its citizens. He was in Parsuss, and by the time news reached him, the lawlessness was out of control. A league run by a fellow named Rybart was conducting an all-out war, trying to gain control of Hellโs Mouth and the arena. Citizens were panicked. Some were dying. Worse, the Ballengers were doing nothing to help them, instead demanding more protection money first.
Impossible.ย Jase would never do such a thingโbut would Gunner? I already knew he was impulsive and short-tempered. Trying to blackmail me to send a letter to the queen had been his idea. And I would never forget how low he had stooped when he held Zane out to me as a bribe. But would he break the Ballenger vow to protect the town and hold the citizens hostage for more money? Surely the rest of the family wouldnโt allow him to do that.
โIt seems they had to find some way to finance their latest illegal endeavors,โ the king went on. โAs you are aware, theyโd been harboring fugitives for some time, but it was for a very specific purpose. They conspired together to build weapons. They had stockpiled quite an arsenal.โ
โBut thatโs not possible. There were no weapons. Beaufort saidโโ โThey were there, all right. Luckily one of General Banquesโs advance
squads of soldiers found the stockpile in a Ballenger warehouse and confiscated them. There was some damage done to the town in the battle for retrieval, but we used the weapons to eliminate Rybart and his ruffians. Thatโs what the armyโs using now to protect the town.โ
My mind reeled with a different truth. I knew what I had heard. Kardos had complained that Jase had taken their only working weapon, and we had arrested them before their arsenal could become a reality. There were no weapons, except for the one prototype that Sarva had fashionedโoneย weaponโand Jase had taken and hidden it. Who had made additional weapons? Had it been Rybartโs league all along, working with Beaufort to terrorize the town and turn them against the Ballengers? And now a whole army wasโ
That was another thing that made no sense. โBut you donโt have an army,โ I said. โHow canโโ
โI do now. I needed one quickly and had to hire private militia. My advisors recommended it andโโ
โMercenaries?ย You have hired mercenaries roaming the streets of Hellโs Mouth?โ
โIโve been assured they are professional qualified militia, and really, I had no choice. You have to understand, there was a war going on here. As I mentioned, property was being destroyed. Citizens were dying. I had to do something. Itโs costing me a fortune, but Paxton assures me that profits from the arena will help me recoup some of the expense. If not, I will have no fields to plant next season.โ
Everything had spun out of control. โYouโve taken control of the arena too?โ
โSomeone had to. Too many citizens rely on it for their income. If the arena fails, so does the town.โ
โAnd the Ballengers? Where are they?โ I asked. โAre they the prisoners you spoke of?โ
He shook his head. โAs soon as they knew their scheme had been uncovered, the whole clan managed to retreat into that vault of theirs in the mountain to avoid arrest. They wonโt come out, and thereโs no reaching them without blasting our way in, and that might bring the whole mountain down on them. We donโt know exactly who all is in there, and I really donโt want innocents to die.โ
โYou canโt blast through a mountain of solid rock.โ
โThe weapons we confiscated are frighteningly powerful. Some are handheld, but a few are similar to ballistae. Theyโre not like anything weโve ever seen. We donโt know what the Ballengers planned to do with them. My one fear is that some papers have gone missing. Iโm afraid the Ballengers may still have the plans in their possession in order to build more. We need to find those papers.โ
โI burned the plans.โ
He set his fork down and his chin lifted slightly. โSo it was you who did that? I saw the burned-out workshop.โ
โHow did you know it was a workshop? Did Oleez tell you that too?โ โNo, it was another servant. Several of the staff were left behind when
the Ballengers fled. Weโve taken them in and given them work to help make their lives normal again. Thatโs what weโre trying to do with the whole town. We mostly have it back under control now.โ He sighed and took a long drink of the wine he had poured. He added more to my untouched glass, filling it to the brim. โThe problem is, the Ballengers have a few loyalists,โ he explained, โand those few keep stirring up more trouble, making it harder to calm nerves. Commerce is suffering. Livelihoods diminished. Some citizens are afraid to go about their business as usual. I canโt blame them. The few violent loyalists are keeping the whole town hostage. I understand their loyalty. Itโs all theyโve ever known, but the Ballengers have sealed their own fate. Their reign is over, and my loyalty is to Hellโs Mouth, to get it back on its feet again. What the townspeople need is some sort of conclusion. A finality to this horrible mess, so they can move on.โ
He looked down and scooted a potato across his plate, examining it like it held the answer to his problems. โI may as well say it right now. I need your help. Iโm ashamed I didnโt tell you up front.โ His gaze rose to meet mine, the candlelight flickering in his pupils. There was a weight in them, something that made him look younger, a boy king who was overwhelmed. โThis is all new to me,โ he finally admitted. โIโm trying to step up and do what I should have done all along. Be the leader my subjects have always needed me to be, even the ones in the far reaches like Hellโs Mouth. Maybe if I had done it sooner, none of this would have happened.โ
His dark eyes never left mine, searching my face like I held some coveted key that would fix everything.
โWhat do you want from me?โ
He was direct. โTell the town that the lastย Patreiย is dead. But say that Jase Ballenger was found guilty of crimes against the Alliance of Kingdoms and executed in Venda by order of the queen. That justice has been served.โ