Iโm desperately curious about the ship that arrived in Artis, but anyone I can ask about it is busy dealingย withย it. One of the hardest things about knowing Corrick as the princeโ instead of Weston Lark, the outlawโis that heโs surrounded by obligations and duties and constraints, just by virtue of his position. Thereโs no secret workshop in the dark hours of the morning anymore. Thereโs the palace, which is full of guards and servants and courtiers, all listening for a bit of gossip about the Kingโs Justice.
So I have to wait. At leastย Iย donโt have any more obligations, so I can get out of this dress.
To my surprise, a message is waiting for me when I return to my quarters. Itโs been delivered by one of the stewards at the front gates. No seal, just a familiar scrawl.
Tessa,
I wish that had gone better. I donโt know if youโre allowed to leave the palace, but I was hoping maybe we could meet up as friends again. Iโll head for Woolfreyโs Confectioners on the chance you have time to come join me. Itโs been a long time since we could share a chocolate cream. I miss you.
xo, K
Oh, Karri.ย I have to press a hand to my chest.
Sheโs right. I wish that had gone better, too.
Woolfreyโs Confectioners is a candy shop in Artis near Mistress Solomonโs, where Karri and I worked together grinding herbs to create potions and remedies. We used to giggle over a chocolate cream at least once a month, whispering about the frivolous patrons whoโd visit Mistress Solomonโs shop.
The memories tug at my heart.
Maybe this is a sign. Maybe Karri and I can figure out a way to convince Prince Corrick and Lochlan to find some common ground.
I need to call for a servant to help unlace me from this gown. But if Karri left this message at the front gate, it would have already taken a bit of time to get to me. I donโt want her to think I have no intention of showing.
I look down at the silk dress Iโm wearing. I can suffer in a corset for a few more hours.
I smooth my skirts, then head for the palace steps, where I ask one of the footmen to call me a carriage.
He gives a slight bow. โYes, of course, Miss Tessa.โ
Heat rushes to my cheeks. Weeks ago, Iโd never even beenย insideย a carriage, and now I can summon one at my whim. โThank you,โ I say, but heโs already gone, off to attend to the needs of the next courtier.
Since Iโm alone, I donโt expect anything grand, but Iโm still surprised to be escorted to a two-seater open-air buggy with dark purple panels and gold trim. The horse is a large dapple gray in patent leather harness, every buckle and strap shining in the sunlight. The driver tips his hat to me and lowers a wooden step for my convenience.
โTo the town square in Artis, miss?โ
For an instant, I hesitate. I know how a carriage like this
โeven aย smallย carriageโwill be seen in Artis. I know how a young woman in a fancy dress will be seen.
I remember howย Iย would have looked at someone like that.
The driver is peering at me. โMiss?โ
โI โฆ yes.โ I hesitate, then climb up. The driver clucks to the horse, and weโre off, bouncing along the cobblestones.
In the Royal Sector, no one pays me any mind, because carriages like this are common. Itโs not until we pass through the main gates into the poverty-stricken villages of the Wilds that I become aware of the people who stop to stare. Most of the looks are curious, attention drawn by something shiny and fast.
But some of the looks are hostile. A few heads shake disgustedly. A mother pinches her daughter on the arm for staring, then turns her own glare on me while she shakes out her laundry.
No, no, I want to call.ย Iโm not one of them. Iโm one of you.
But of course I canโt.
The driver misunderstands my silence. โDonโt worry, miss,โ he calls over the sound of the horseโs hooves clopping along the path. โNo one will trouble you.โ
โIโm not worried,โ I say back, but my voice is lost in the wind and the sound of the horse.
Once we make it through the dense forests of the Wilds, the streets of Artis are more crowded, and the buggy has to slow to a walk. There are more horse-drawn vehicles here, hauling wagons of cargo from the docks. Itโs a warm day, so many children are gathered by the fountain in the center of the town square, splashing each other with water while they shriek with laughter. I garner stares here, too, but nothing quite as hostile as in the Wilds.
We pull up along the front of Woolfreyโs, and for the first time, I notice the chips in the pink paint surrounding the doorframe, or the broken bricks forming the walkway. The
wood around the window is weathered and aged, and the window is cracked in the corner. Little imperfections Iโve never noticed before, but suddenly seem glaringly obvious when compared with the brilliant perfection of the Royal Sector.
The driver leaps down to offer me his hand, and I feel a bit foolish taking it. I used to climb the wall surrounding the Royal Sector, and I never gave it a second thought. Now Iโm taking a hand to step down from a buggy. Everything from the Royal Sector always seems to be an illusion.
โShall I tether the horse and wait, miss?โ the driver says to me.
โOh! Iโโ I break off. I can see Karriโs silhouette inside the confectionerโs shop. A man nearby sighs heavily, trying to navigate his fully loaded wagon around the buggy thatโs stopped, obtrusively, quite in the middle of the road. โNo,โ I say. โIโll be fine.โ
The driver looks dubious. โAre you certain?โ
โYes,โ I say firmly. Iโm capable of walking back. Now that I feel everyoneโs eyes on me, I almost wish Iโd walkedย here.
Karri appears in the doorway of the confectionerโs. โTessa!โ she cries, and thereโs no mistaking the delight in her voice. โYou came!โ
She strides forward, and I gratefully accept the hug she offers. Sheโs warm and familiar and she smells like the vanilla and brown sugar wafting from the candy shop.
โOf course I came,โ I say.
She stands back, holding me by the shoulders. โYou look soย fine. I hardly recognized you in the palace.โ
I flush, more embarrassed than pleased. โI should have changed. I just didnโt want to make you wait.โ
โNo! You look beautiful! I just got here anyway.โ Oh. Iโm an idiot. Becauseย sheย had to walk.
I tug at the bodice of my dress, more uncomfortable now. โIโm just trying to fit in. The palace physicians hardly take me seriously as it is.โ
Karri hesitates, and for a moment, I think itโs going to be uncomfortable betweenย us. But she nods decisively. โThatโs their loss, then. Come inside. The chocolate is fresh.โ She hooks her arm through mine. โIโm so glad you came. I was โฆโ Her voice trails off a bit. โI was so worried.โ
โIโm still your friend,โ I say quietly.
โAnd Iโm still yours.โ She gives my arm a squeeze. I squeeze back and smile.
Some of the tightness in my chest eases. I was right. We can figure out a way to make this work. She and I. Together. We donโt need these arrogant men to get in the way of trulyย helpingย people.
Then she leads me to a table, and Lochlan is sitting there.
I give a small jolt, then drop her arm.
He doesnโt look any happier to see me. โYou came,โ he says flatly. โI suppose Iโll be buying your drinks, then.โ
โIโwhat?โ
โHe didnโt think you would come,โ Karri says quietly. โHe made a wager on it.โ
Oh. Lovely. Iโve run face-first into his attitude. โYou donโt need to pay for me,โ I say tightly. โOr any of us. I can buy the chocolate creams.โ
โIโm sure you can.โ
โAre you going to drive away anyone who offers you something?โ I say. โIt seemed to be working so well in the palace.โ
He holds my gaze boldly. โI was just telling Karri that itโs all well and good for you two to be friends, but youโve changed sides.โ
โWhat does that mean?โ
He gives me a cool up-and-down glance. โNot much outlaw left, is there?โ He gives a pointed look at the doorway leading to the street. โNice carriage. Too good to walk now?โ
โIโm not too good to walk. It took some time for the message to reach me. I didnโt want Karri to wait.โ
He inhales, his eyes darkening, but Karri gives him a solid shove in the shoulder. โDonโt argue,โ she says. โShe might not be an outlaw anymore, but Tessa is myย friend.โ
โSo youโve said.โ He rises from the table and offers me a mocking bow. โDo forgive me, Miss Tessa. Allow me to fetch your confections, ladies.โ
I open my mouth to protest, but Karri catches my hand. โNo,โ she says. โLet him do it. Maybe a little sugar will change his mood.โ
I sigh, but I sit while Lochlan heads for the counter.
To my surprise, an awkward silence falls between me and Karri. Itโs so foreign. We used to sit and chat for hours on end. I still remember the day she realized I was mooning over the outlaw Weston Larkโback before I knew he was Prince Corrick. The memory makes me smile.
Tell me about his hands, she said, and I blushed like a schoolgirl.
โIโm really glad you sent me a note,โ I say.
That seems to break the tension, because she smiles, too. โMe too.โ She pauses and flicks her eyes at Lochlan, where he stands by the counter. โHe doesnโt trust them at all, Tessa. That consul was terrible. Itโs obvious he doesnโt care.โ She hesitates, and I can hear the fear in her voice. โThis morning, Lochlan was worried the meeting was a trap. That you were luring us to the palace. The whole time we were there, he kept waiting for them to drag us to the Hold.โ
โItโs not a trap,โ I say. โKarri, I would neverย lureย you.โ
โI know. But there are still people who believe that โWeston Larkโ was only a spy to find more criminals to hang.โ
I frown. โNo. He cares.ย Weย care. The king really does want to figure out a way to make sure thereโs enough medicine for all of Kandala. Butย everyoneย has to agree. Not just the elites, and not just the people in the Wilds.ย Everyone.ย We all have a stake here.โ
โI know.โ She hesitates. โLochlan didnโt even think the rumors of the ship from Ostriary were real. He thought it was a ploy to end the meeting until he heard the talk in the streets here.โ
โItโs not a ploy either, Karri! Harristan and Corrick wouldnโt do that.โ
She stares back at me, and her voice has cooled a bit. โIt wasnโt too long ago that you stood with me in front of the sector gates declaring how much youย hateย them.โ
The words hit me like a slap. Sheโs right. I did.ย Sheย was the one to chastise me for speaking words of treason.
But that was before I knew who Weston was. That was before I knew everything the king and his brother had at stake.
That was before Corrick and I were captured by the rebels. Before he wasย torturedย by them.
Before the rebels set the whole sector on fire as a means to show Harristan how desperate they were.
And here we are.
โYouโre right.โ I reach out and put a hand over hers. โThis isnโt easy for anyone.โ
For a moment, sheโs frozen in place, and I worry that weโve moved too far apart.
But then she turns her hand to clasp mine. โWeโll make it work,โ she whispers.
I nod fiercely, pressing my fingers into hers.
Lochlan reappears beside the table. โYour chocolate cream, Miss Karri.โ His bellicose eyes flash my way. โAnd yours, Miss Tessa.โ
Heโs mocking me, baiting me to snap at him. I donโt play. โThank you for your kindness, Master Lochlan.โ
I could say it primly, but I donโt. I say it honestly. Surprise registers in his expression, and he eases into the seat beside Karri. His jaw is tight, but he doesnโt say anything else.
โYouโre suspicious,โ I say quietly. โI know. I was, too.
They have a lot to make up for.โ
He studies me. โYou trust them.โ
I canโt tell if this is an accusation or a question, but I nod. โI do.โ
โWhy?โ he says. โWhy?ย You know what theyโve done.โ He glances at Karri. โYou were both in the crowd when he was set to execute the eight of us.โ
โYou saw Consul Sallister,โ I say. โYou see how much power he has. He kept threatening to withhold Moonflower if Prince Corrick didnโt do as he saidโโ
โAnd thatโs supposed to be reassuring?โ he says. โThat the king doesnโt have control of his consuls? Heโsย stillย threatening to withhold it. I heard what he said about supply issues and laborers. The king can make him work the fields, but heโs still one man.โ
โYou donโt understand. They wonโtโitโs notโโ
โNo.โ He half rises from his seat, leaning in against the table. โYouย donโt understand. This is life or death for us.โ His eyes glare down at me. โThey act like itโs a game. The elites think they can convince the fools in the Wilds to take evenย lessย medicine than they were getting before.โ
Heโs looming over me, and I swallow. I donโt want to look away from him while he looks so threatening, but
weโve garnered more than a little attention. Whispers have erupted all around us. The pretty young lady in the fine clothing being dressed down by someone whoโs probably never had more than a handful of coins in his life.
Iโm sure most of them heard what he said, too.
โLochlan,โ Karri says quietly. โSheโs my friend. Leave her alone.โ
But she doesnโt contradict what he said.
Lochlan doesnโt move. His eyes donโt leave mine. โShe might have been your friend before,โ he says, โbut you need to be careful now, Kar.โ
I know theyโre worried, but itโs hard to find any empathy when heโs standing over me like this. I donโt want to be afraid of him. If we were back in the palace, I wouldnโt be. But weโre here in a little confectionerโs shop, and Iโm thinking of the moment he surged across the table at Consul Sallister.
โWhy did you ask me to come here?โ I say evenly. โIf you didnโt want to talk?โ
โKarri invited you,โ he says. โI didnโt.โ
โThen maybe you should let her talk to me,โ I say, and my voice goes breathy. I canโt help it.
I see the moment my fear registers in his eyes, because he jerks back, his eyes wide. โYouโre afraid of me?โ he says. โYouโre sharing a bed with the Kingโs Justice, and youโre afraid ofย me?โ
Karri grabs his wrist. โLochlan.โ
My cheeks are surely flaming now. โIโm not sharing anything,โ I growl.
โThis is why I canโt trust you,โ he says, his voice very low. โBecause I donโt trustย him. The prince is no fool. He convinced you that he was a rebel outlaw in the Wilds because it served his needs as the Kingโs Justice. And now,
heโs figured out a way to give the people evenย less, and heโs convinced you that itโs for the benefit of everyone.โ
His eyes fill my vision, but I refuse to look away. โMy medicine works,โ I say. โItโs not a trick, Lochlan. You can watch me measure the elixirs yourself. I canย showย you.โ
โMaybe heโs just tricked you into believing that. Maybe all those people are taking double doses when you arenโt looking, just to give you yourย proof.โ He studies me. โHe certainly tricked you into believing you wereย helping. The poor, tortured prince who just couldnโt help himself. And you lapped it up, didnโt you?โ
My chest is tight, and Iโm dangerously afraid I might cry.
โIโm telling you to keep your eyes open,โ he says. โIโm telling you what it looks like from here. If youโre not sharing his bed, someone is. Heโs the brother to the king. As soon as you donโt suit his needs, youโll be at the end of the rope, too.โ
โYouโre wrong,โ I whisper, but thereโs a part of his words that are pricking at my thoughts, sowing doubt in a way I wish I could shove aside.
He must see it in my expression. โDonโt you realize,โ he says dangerously, โthat you could disappear tonight and literallyย everythingย would go right back to the way it was?โ
Fear seems to pierce my heart from both directions. โIs that supposed to be a warning or a threat?โ
Lochlan smirks. โMaybe you shouldnโt have walked out of the palace without guards,โ he says.
โMaybe she shouldnโt have,โ says a voice behind me, โbut I brought more than enough.โ
My heart kicks to hear Corrickโs voice. Lochlan snaps back. Iโm suddenly aware of the tense silence in the shop, how we are all the center of attention. I wonder how much everyone heard. I wonder how muchย Corrickย heard.
If youโre not sharing his bed, someone is. Heโs the brother to the king.
He must not have heard that part. If he did, I canโt imagine Lochlan would still be on his feet.
The people behind the counter are peering between towers of wrapped candies and tiny trinkets, and thereโs an older woman a few tables over whoโs openly gawking at the princeโwho truly does have half a dozen guards behind him.
Lochlanโs eyes have darkened with hatred, but he takes in the guards who have filled the space behind the prince. โThe girls were just having fun together,โ Lochlan says. He pauses, then grinds out, โYour Highness.โ
Corrickโs eyes shift to me. I watch his gaze sweep over my form, taking stock of me. โExceptional.โ His voice is rather cordial, almost warm, but I know better. โAre you having fun, Tessa?โ
No. Definitely not.
But I canโt say that, because no matter what I think of Lochlan, I really donโt want to stoke the tension between them. โKarri sent me a note after our meeting,โ I say. โWe were just having a sweet drink.โ I force a smile onto my face. โLike old times.โ
Karri looks hesitant again, the way she was in the palace. She glances between me and Corrick and has to clear her throat. โYes. I did. We were. Your Highness.โ
Corrickโs eyes return to mine, and I give him a tiny nod. โVery well,โ he says. โIโll leave you to your friendly chat.
Please forgive the interruption.โ His eyes cool as he looks to Lochlan again, but his voice is just as cordial. โThank you for the wise recommendation. Iโll have the guards remain.โ He glances at the table. โPerhaps Iโll have a drink while I wait.โ
Karri looks to me, and her hands flutter. She abruptly stands, her chair scraping harshly along the tile floor. โNo need, Your Highness. We were just about to leave. Youโyou can have mine. I havenโt even taken a sip.โ
I stand to stop her. โKarri,โ I say softly.
She hesitates, then leans over to kiss me on the cheek. โHeโs still terrifying,โ she whispers in my ear before drawing back. โAndโfor what itโs worth, I agree with Lochlan.โ
I donโt know what to say to that. I donโt have time, anyway. She grabs Lochlanโs hand, and theyโre gone.