The Villain
The sun had disappeared beyond the horizon, but the night sky seemed to almost be mocking him with its brightness, teeming as it was with stars.
The guards had dragged him from the dungeon, his limbs like sandbags thanks to the magical cuffs sapping his strength. Heโd maintained his will thanks to one irrefutable truth, repeated like a mantra these last few days.
Sage is not dead.
The king had to be lying to torment himโa valiant effort, Trystan had to admit. But Benedict hadnโt factored in that he and Sage were irrevocably linked by a gold ink bargain: an employment tool that was originally supposed to ensure loyalty from his new assistant but had instead become a way to monitor her safety. Though Sage was still under the impression the inked gold band around her pinkie finger would kill her if she betrayed him, he quietly vowed to tell her the truth when he saw her again.
And heย wouldย see her again.
It would be a disaster, of course. The way he would take perverse delight in her face flushing with anger and her nose scrunching. How sheโd yell at him, and then the flush would go all the way down her chest, dipping below her bodice, at which time, naturally, heโd be distracted by it and stop listening. Sheโd notice and yell at him some more.
He couldnโt wait.
The chains at his wrists were long enough that they dragged to the floor, which was appallingly filthy and sticky with grimeโeven his dungeons werenโt this vile. But there were windows, and he could see, and at least the chains no longer bound him to the wall, so all in all, lovely upgraded accommodations.
โCould I get a corner cell?โ he asked the guards through the bars. Heโd
barely spoken in the last however many days had passed, and one could hear it when the words croaked out, like sandpaper against stone.
โShut it, you lout! I hope the king guts and hangs you after the unmasking.โ The guard on his left pulled on one of his chains, and he stumbled.
โWill you be unmasking as well?โ Trystan asked gruffly.
The guard lifted his helmet to expose his gaunt face and what Trystan assumed was an eternally scowling expression. Did Trystan look like that when he scowled?
โIโm not wearing a mask,โ the guard said. He sighed. โPity.โ
The guardโs face twisted with rage as he raised a fist. โYou godsdamnโโ But the man was stopped by the guard to Trystanโs right. โStay your hand,
Sir Seymore, and worry not. I will be the one to bring him into the ballroom for the unmasking.โ This new guardโs deep voice sounded oddly familiar, but his face was covered, only his green eyes visible.
Had he seen those eyes before?
While Trystan was contemplating that possibility, his own eyes drifted toward the end of the hall. His vision was still blurry and strained from so long without light, but he could make out the brown door, slightly ajar. His tongue pressed to the roof of his mouthโan escape route. Was he to be taken to the unmasking immediately? The open door shouldโve looked like doom, but all he saw was freedom. He simply needed a good enough distraction and a way to remove the magically suppressing cuffs cutting off the blood supply to his wristsโฆ
His gaze roamed over a larger window beyond the bars, and the night sky blinked back at him. Of course, he knew it was irrational to wish, but as the star out the window twinkled, daring him toโas it had once beforeโhe found himself doing it anyway.
He wished to find Sage.
He wished to tell her he was sorry.
He wished to be better about revealing how he felt, bit by bit.
And perhaps, most importantlyโhe wished to have a godsforsaken tea party with her little sister, Lyssa.
It felt ridiculous, but it was that thought that somehow energized his languid limbs as he heard the green-eyed guard unlocking his cage.
Not yet. Not yet. NOW.
He sprinted through the open door, the chains dragging behind him, the metal biting into his hands as he gripped it. The muscles in his legs burned as he ran, but he couldnโt stopโthe exit was so close. His breaths were coming in uneven pants, his sock-clad feet making him slide against the stone. Gods knew where his boots had disappeared to.
Mildly mortifying, he thought through breathless gasps,ย how hard I fought to keep them. Theyโd been a gift from Sage.
Nearly to the door, he could hear the guards yelling behind him. The loudest voice belonged to the green-eyed knight, who was begging him to halt. The pure desperationโand was that a hint of fear?โin his voice made Trystan pause as he put a hand on the door.
โDonโt go in there, Mr. Maverine. Youโll regret it, I swear.โย Ah, Benedict had finally revealed Trystanโs true name to the Valiant Guards. It would no doubt spread to the kingdom next, the Maverine name damned, his family ruined.
Intolerable.
Not that they would be affectedโbut that heย cared.
He pushed on the door and heard Benedictโs satisfied voice from behind him. He shouldโve paused, should have listened to the warning bells in his head, but his mind and body had gone haywire; he couldnโt trust his instincts any longer. They were as good as a broken compass.
This was why he could ignore the malicious subtext in Benedictโs order. โNo, men. Let. Him. Go. Let himย see.โ
Trystan didnโt wait, just exited the hall and sprinted to what was hopefully a stairwell butโno. It wasnโt a stairwell; it was a small room.
And what he saw inside proved once and for all that wishes were not made for people like him.
Only horror.