When I was a boy, summer nights in the Wilds always smelled like adventure. Fresh pine boughs. The cloying sweetness of honeysuckle. Someone always had a bonfire going, with plenty of sour ale to pass around. The air was full of lively conversation, or bawdy drinking songs, or men swearing as they lost their last coins on a bet.
Now, summer nights carry the underlying scent of rotting corpses. Most of the fires that burn are funeral pyres. Singing is rare.
Drinking is still common. Maybe more so.
Extra Moonflower petals have been promised, but theyโve been slow in coming. No one here trusts anyone in the palace. Few people trust the consuls. Even the rebels who are supposedly negotiating for better access to medicine have become suspect.
The rumorsโand there areย manyโare outrageous.
When Iโm here in the Wilds, I keep my head down and do what I can.
The winding paths through the woods are empty at this time of night, but I cling to the darkness like a ghost. I donโt want to run afoul of the night patrol. The pouch at my belt is heavy with my own copper coins, but I have a red
mask over my eyes, a hat pulled low over my forehead. In this getup, at this hour, Iโd be detained. Worse, Iโd be locked in the Hold to await an interrogation. Thatโs the last thing I need.
I step off the trail and slip a few coins from my pouch. The first house is smaller than most, likely only one room inside, but thereโs a chicken coop and a rabbit hatch out back. Iโve never seen who lives here, but the animals seem well cared for. I intend to leave a few coppers on the barrel of grain, but then I see a small bundle wrapped up in muslin, next to a misspelled message written in the dust.
Thenk you.
I unwrap the muslin to discover a soft pair of biscuits that smell of cheese and garlic.
Itโs not the first gift Iโve found, but each time I do, it makes something in my stomach clench. I want to leave it, because I donโt need gifts. I donโt do this for payment.
But this gift meant something to the person who left it. I donโt want to be rude.
I wrap the biscuits back up in the muslin and tuck the bundle into my pack. After I leave a few coins on the barrel, I move on.
The next house has several children, including a new baby. Sometimes I hear it squalling in the middle of the night, and I step lightly so as not to be noticed. I slip coins into the pockets of clothes left to dry on a line. At the next house, I leave the coins on the doorstep. At the next, the coins go onto the windowsill.
At the fifth house, Iโm leaving coins beside an ax blade thatโs been left embedded in a stump, when a figure leaps out of the shadows.
โAha!โ a whispered voice says. โI caught you.โ
I startle so hard that the coins scatter into the grass. I grab the ax handle and whirl.
I donโt know what Iโll do if itโs the night patrol. An ax wonโt do much against a crossbow. They arenโt supposed to shoot on sight, but Iโve heard stories of their violence from enough rebels and outlaws to know that what theyโreย supposedย to do is not always the end result.
Regardless, I stand my ground, the ax ready.
The figure springs back, hands raised. โWhoa!โ
Itโs not the night patrol. Itโs โฆ itโs a girl. Sheโs tall, nearly as tall as I am, which makes me think sheโs older, but her features still have the softness of childhood, and her limbs are lean and willowy. Sheโs in a pale sleeping shift that leaves her arms bare, the hem trailing in the grass. Her blond hair is in a messy braid that reaches past her waist.
โI donโt want trouble,โ I say to her.
โYou have an ax.โ Her voice is low, but she doesnโt sound afraid. โYou wonโt be getting any from me.โ
I ease my grip on the handle and let the ax head hang to the ground. โThen return to where you came from, and Iโll be on my way.โ
Now that I donโt have a โweapon,โ she lowers her hands, but she doesnโt turn away. Her eyes narrow as she peers at me, then glances into the darkness at my back. โYouโre alone.โ
โI am.โ
โWhen coins started showing up, my cousin thought Weston and Tessa were making rounds again. Youโre not Wes, are you?โ
โNo.โ I stare into the shadows, wondering if anyone else is hiding among the trees. My heart hasnโt stopped pounding since she appeared out of nowhere.
โWell,โ she continues in her quiet voice, โrumor says Weston Lark was really the kingโs brother, anyway. Prince Corrick.โ
โIโve heard those stories.โ
โOne of the rebels caught him,โ she continues. โIn Artis, I think. He was dressed as an outlaw. Mask and all. The kingโs army had to rescue him.โ
Rumors aboutย thatย are everywhere. I glance at the sky,
which hasnโt begun to lighten, but it wonโt be long. Itโll be dawn soon, and I need to get back. I hesitate, considering, then swing the ax into the stump. The noise echoes in the woods, and I wince. The girlโs eyes flare, and she inhales sharply, but I drop a few coins on the stump, then turn away to walk.
My shoulders are tight, and I brace for her to send up an alarmโbut I forget that people in the Wilds tend to look out for each other. Instead, she jogs through the grass to walk at my side.
โIf youโre not Weston Lark,โ she says, โwhatโs your name?โ
โIt doesnโt matter.โ
โYour mask is red, anyway,โ she chatters on, heedless. I was thinking she might be fourteen or fifteen, but now Iโm thinking sheโs even younger. โThe red makes you look like a fox. I heard Westonโs mask was black.โ
โGo home.โ
It doesnโt work. โSome people think your coins are a trap,โ she says, striding along beside me. โMy uncle calls youโโ
โAย trap!โ I swing around to study her. โHow could coins
left in the middle of the night be a trap?โ
โWell, some of the rumors said that Prince Corrick was
pretendingย to be Weston Lark so he could trick people into
revealing the smugglers.โ Her eyes are wide and guileless. โSo he could execute them.โ
I snort and keep walking. โThat feels like a lot of effort for a man who can execute anyone he likes.โ
โSo you donโt think thatโs true?โ
โI have a hard time imagining the brother to the king was secretly dressing as anย outlawย to catch smugglers.โ
โWell, heโs called Cruel Corrick for a reason. Or do you think the king is the viciousโouch!โ She stumbles, then grabs my arm for balance, hopping on one foot.
Sheโs making so much noise that I have half a mind to jerk free and leave her here. But Iโm not heartless. I swallow a sigh and look down.
Sheโs barefoot, holding one foot high off the ground. A streak of blood glistens along the pale stretch of her heel, black in the moonlight.
โIs it bad?โ sheโs saying, and thereโs a hint of a tremor in her voice.
โI canโt tell. Sit.โ
She sits, folding her leg over her opposite knee. Blood drips into the grass below. Something gleams in the wound, either a sharp rock or a bit of steel.
She grimaces. โMa will kill me.โ
โYou made so much noise, the night patrol might beat her to it.โ I drop my pack in the grass, then crouch to study her injury. โYou shouldโve gone home.โ
โI wanted to know who you are. My cousin wonโt believe I caught you.โ
โYou didnโtย catchย me. Hold still.โ I pull the muslin-
wrapped biscuits out of my pack and unwind the fabric. I hold out the food to her. โHere.โ
She frowns, but takes it. I move to pull the debris free, but then think better of it. I give her a level look. โThis might hurt. You need to stay quiet.โ
She clenches her teeth and nods fiercely.
I close my fingers on the offending item and tug it free. She squeals and nearly yanks her ankle out of my grasp, but I keep a tight grip and give her a warning glare. She sucks in a breath and goes still.
Blood is flowing freely down her foot now, but I put a fold of muslin against the wound, then swiftly wrap up her foot, tearing the ends so I can knot it in place.
She blinks tears out of her eyes, but none fall. โWhat was it? A rock?โ
I shake my head. โAn arrowhead.โ โFrom the night patrol?โ
I shrug. โFrom someone wearing shoes, most likely.โ โIs that supposed to be a joke?โ
โYouโll have to flush that when you get home,โ I say. I straighten, then sling the pack over my shoulder. Iโll have to find a new route after this. I donโt need people sitting in the dark, waiting for meโnot even a girl whoโs barely more than a child. โBe safe,โ I say. โI have to go.โ
She scrambles to her feet, limping on her injured one. โBut I still donโt know your name!โ
โCall me whatever you want,โ I say. โI wonโt come this way again.โ
โNo!โ she calls. โWait. Please. This is my faultโyou donโtโโ Her voice breaks like sheโs going to cry. โYou donโt know how much we all needโโ
I turn back and slap a hand over her mouth. โDo you trulyย wantย to draw the night patrol?โ
She shakes her head quickly, mollified. โBut your food,โ she murmurs behind my hand, holding out the biscuits Iโd given her.
You donโt know how much we all need โฆ
I do know how much they all need. The outlaws Wes and Tessa once provided a lot to these people. Iโve heard so
many stories that it makes my head spin. I canโt make up for their disappearance with a few coins left here and there. Iโm not entirely sure why I keep trying.
โKeep the food.โ I drop my hand, then fish in my pouch for more coins. โAnd keep your silence.โ I hold them out.
She looks at the coins in my palm, then nods quickly and swipes them.
An alarm bell begins ringing in the Royal Sector, and she jumps. I sigh. โGo home.โ
โYouโll come back?โ she says.
I give her a stern look. โAs long as no one is waiting in the shadows next time.โ
She beams, and it lights up her face. โI promise.โ โWhatโsย yourย name?โ I say.
โViolet.โ
โTake care of that foot, Violet.โ She nods. โThank you, Fox.โ
That makes me smile. I touch the brim of my hat to her, then sprint into the darkness.