GIDEON STOOD IN THEย rain, staring at the arched doors flanked by two roaring lions made of stone. The rain soaked his hair and dampened his clothes, making him colder by the second. But a deeper cold lived in his bones.
He couldnโt make his legs move. Couldnโt order his body to carry him into the house.
I was wrong.
I canโt do this.
He was about to turn around and leave, already planning the apologetic telegram he would send Alex tomorrow, when Runeโs words seeped in through the chill. Like the first spring day after a harsh winter.
You are not the things that happened to you, Gideon.
Her voice summoned something from beneath the nightmares. Something stronger than the pull of the past. It was a kick of adrenaline, a shot of courage.
Gideon drew in a deep breath and walked into the damned house.
The same sapphire carpets lined the floor. The same floral wallpaper adorned the walls. The air still smelled faintly of Cressโs magic, too. Like blood and roses. The scent was stale and cloying.
As Alexโs manservant escorted him through the halls of Thornwood, Gideon felt like he was walking backward in time. His muscles tensed as scenes from the past rose like mist before his eyes. But all he had to do was think of Rune, and the awful things would fade.
When they arrived at the parlor, Gideon made his way to the round table near the fire, where half a dozen young men sat playing cards, coins piled in the middle. He saw Noah Creed and Bart Wentholt and several other familiar faces.
His brotherโs back was to him.
โGideon Sharpe!โ Bartโs red hair shone in the firelight as he motioned Gideon over to an empty chair. โWhat exceptional timing. Alex, deal him in.โ
Gideon sat and he shrugged off his coat. Across the table, Alex smiled brightly as he shuffled and counted out cards, apparently happy to see him. Leaning back in his chair, Gideon couldnโt help but notice all the ways he admired his little brother.
Alex was appropriately social, for one thing. He had friends whom he invited over, and whose invitations he accepted. He knew how to hold polite conversations with all sorts of people. He never growled or glared or got into fights โฆ except for that one time he punched Gideon in the ringโ but that had been Gideonโs fault.
Alex dressed and danced well. He used the correct utensil for each course of a meal, served the kinds of wines that impressed his guests, and knew the meaning of devotion. Even upon dropping out of schoolโ something Gideon wished heโd fought harder to preventโAlex had never stopped practicing his music.
After the revolution, it was Alex who stayed by Gideon for weeks, helping him fight off his laudanum addiction. Alex didnโt leave Gideonโs side until he no longer shook with the cravings.
Gideon didnโt know what he would do without his little brother.
If Rune Winters was truly in the market for a husband, she could do no better than Alexander Sharpe.
That thought put a sour taste in his mouth.
Before swallowing it down, he let himself wonder:ย What if Alex werenโt in love with her? Would I stop pretending, and court her in truth?
For a second, he let himself imagine it. Heโd have to attend her parties. Learn how to dance to her songs. Spend less time in Old Town, and more time at Wintersea.
He could do that. Those were small prices to pay for the luxury of going on long walks in the woods with her. Or the privilege of arguing with her. Or the rare gift of seeing that wild girl she kept hidden beneath the surface.
It doesnโt matter.ย His knuckles bunched.ย Because it will only ever be pretendโor not at all.
โGideon?โ Bart slid three copper coins toward the center of the table. โYou in?โ
Torn out of his fantasy, Gideon nodded.
โIโm in.โ He pulled a money pouch from the pocket of his coat, grabbed three copper coins, and threw them into the center of the table.
As Alex dealt the cards, Gideon noticed a pale line of untanned skin at the base of his smallest finger, where a ring usually rested.
Our motherโs ring,ย he remembered. Gideon had given it to Alex after their parentsโ funeral.
Something Harrow had said flashed in his mind.
An hour before it set sail, there was last-minute cargo brought on board: two barrels of wine delivered by an aristo.
The man had worn a ring on his smallest finger.
Plain and thin. Silver, maybe. A poor manโs wedding band.
Gideon watched the cards move around the table, dealt by his brotherโs hand. Trying to remember what their motherโs ring looked like.
He immediately caught himself.
Alex, abetting a criminal witch? After witches tore our family apart?
It was unthinkable. Alex wasnโt capable of subterfuge. He knew how badly Gideon wanted to catch the Crimson Moth.
Alex would never sabotage me.
โGideon? Itโs your turn.โ
He looked to find Noah nodding to the cards facedown beneath Gideonโs hands. When he glanced around the table, he found everyone waiting for him.
Gideon quickly picked out a straight and threw it down.
โYou sent a tidal wave through the entire aristocracy the other week,โ said Noah, putting down a flush and beating out Gideon.
โDid I? When?โ
โWhen you showed up at Rune Wintersโ after-party.โ
โAh,โ said Gideon, laying down two pairs when his turn came back around. โWell, aristos arenโt difficult to shock. Just use the wrong spoon at dinner. Or wear a dress out of season.โ
Noah smiled, but his eyes were like ice chips. Of the two Creed siblings, Gideon had always preferred Laila, who kept her aggression like she kept her gunโout in the open, where he could see it. Noah was โฆ less straightforward.
โTruly, though. Whatโs come over you? Last week, it was Runeโs after- party. Tonight, youโre here playing cards. Next thing we know, youโll be hosting your own charity ball.โ
โIf I do,โ said Gideon, drawing more cards to replace the ones heโd laid down, โyouโll be the first person I invite.โ
Noah smiled thinly. โDonโt you have a reputation to upholdโthe New Republicโs most unavailable bachelor?โ
โGideon,โ interrupted Alex, as if sensing the storm brewing and needing to quell it. This was why it was always better for Gideon to stay home. โTell us what happened last night, at the Luminaries Dinner. Is it true what the papers are saying?โ
โYes, tell us everything.โ A young man whose name Gideon didnโt know leaned across the table, his eyes gleaming in the firelight. โWas there really a witch attackย insideย the palace?โ
He nodded. โItโs true.โ
โDo you have any leads?โ asked his brother, watching Bart discard. โPossibly. Weโre still investigating.โ
Alex laid his cards lastโfour of a kind. Upon seeing them, everyone else threw down their own in defeat.
โRune seemed shaken by it,โ said Alex, pulling the winnings toward him while Noah gathered everyoneโs cards and shuffled. The young men around him placed new bets and threw more coins into the center.
When did you see Rune?ย Gideon wondered, watching his brother. It had barely been twenty-four hours since the event.
โTheย New Heraldย reported that Citizen Winters is only alive because of you,โ said the young man whose name Gideon didnโt remember. โSaid you
ran straight into the spellfire and carried her out.โ
Gideon preferred not to relive the moment when Rune had disappeared inside the fire. The fear of not getting to her in time still hummed a little too loud in his blood.
โI hunt witches for a living,โ he said, trying to shrug it off. โIโm no stranger to their magic.โ
โWas it the Crimson Moth?โ
They werenโt going to stop poking at this until he surrendered. So Gideon yielded, giving them a full account of the night before. As Alexโs friends soaked up the story like sponges, more cards were laid and the coins in Gideonโs pouch slowly disappeared.
He had never been good at gambling.
โWell,ย Iย for one am glad we have people like Gideon doing the dirty work for us.โ This came from Bart as he won the current round with a full house. โCan you imagine it? Putting yourself in that kind of dangerย every day?โ He shuddered. โNo wonder the girls all fancy him.โ
Gideon almost laughed, wondering what Harrow or Laila would say to that.
โSpeaking of girls who fancy Gideon,โ said Noah, sipping his drink. โHowย isย Miss Winters? Does she live up to her reputation?โ
If Gideon had hackles, Noahโs tone would have raised them.
โIโm sure I donโt know what you mean,โ he said, staring hard at his cards but not seeing any of them.
The last thing he wanted was to get into it with the Good Commanderโs son. So he let Noahโs comments go.
โYou know exactly what I mean,โ said Noah, as if sensing Gideonโs restraint and wanting to test its limits. โRune Winters is a merciless flirt. She has a new suitor every week.โ
Unable to help himself, Gideon rose to the bait. Just an inch. โIf I didnโt know better, Iโd say you sound jealous.โ
โJealous?โ Noah scoffed. โWhatโs there to be jealous of? If the rumors are true, sheโs as loose as a whore.โ
Before Gideon was halfway out of his seat, a fist slammed against the table, making them all jump.
Gideon looked up, his body buzzing with anger. Across the table, Alex stared down Noah the way a lion might stare down a hyena. โInsult her again, and Iโll show you the door.โ
Noah scowled. โIt was a joke, Alex.โ
โJoke or not, I wonโt tolerate disrespect toward Rune.โ
Noah set down his cards, his knuckles bunching. The entire table went quiet as the two boys continued their glaring game.
โWell, this has been fun.โ Gideon pushed his chair back from the table. He needed to get out of here before he accidentally put his fist through Noahโs face. โBut Iโm out of funds.โ
Not wanting to spark panic among the gentlemen here, he decided to leave a message with Alexโs manservant, warning him about Cressidaโs return.
โOne more round,โ said Alex.
Gideon tipped his money pouch upside down to show he wasnโt lying. โSurely you have something else you can bet with.โ
โI once bet my silk handkerchief,โ offered Bart. Which might have been helpful, if Gideon owned a silk handkerchief.
He was about to say as much when Alex pressed him. โEmpty your pockets.โ
Gideon raised his eyebrows but did as his brother requested. Reaching into both trouser pockets, he pulled out their contents: a folding knife; a crumpled message from Harrow about their meeting tomorrow night; and his prison access coin for bringing witches past the seventh gate.
โThat,โ said Alex, pointing to the coin, โwill do.โ
Gideon shook his head. โItโs not currency.โ Not the kind that was valuable to these gentlemen. โItโs worthless to you.โ
โItโs silver, isnโt it? Silver can be melted down.โ
โI need it to enter the prison,โ said Gideon, already returning everything to his pockets.
โYou can get a new one, canโt you? Besides, donโt the prison staff know who you are by now?โ
โSure. Exceptโโ
โJust one more round,โ said Alex. As if he truly wanted his brother to stay. โFor me.โ
Gideon remembered their fight in the boxing ring. He remembered daring Rune to strip down naked and swim in the sea with him, even though he knew how Alex adored her. He remembered kissing her in the garden, his mouth and hands insistent. Then kissing herย againย in that alley.
The shame of it scorched him. Gideon sat.
โOne more game,โ he said, tossing the prison coin into the pile of money in the center of the table. โAndย thenย Iโm out.โ
Fifteen minutes later, he lost that round, too. And with it, his prison clearance.
โIโll walk you out,โ said Alex, tossing the coin once and depositing it into his pocket.
IT WAS RAINING LIGHTLYย by the time they left the parlor. Drops speckled the windows and plinked against the roof as the brothers strode side by side toward the front hall.
โThereโs something you should know,โ said Gideon, trying to ignore the lingering scent of roses in this hallway. โBut until I have more information, I need you to keep it between us.โ
Alex shot him a look. โAll right.โ
โCressida Roseblood was at the Luminaries Dinner. It was her spell that came for Rune.โ
Alexโs stride halted. Slowing, Gideon turned to find the color seeping from Alexโs face, turning his skin white as parchment.
โYouโre certain?โ
โWe found her casting signature under a table.โ โDoes Rune know?โ
Gideon shook his head. โI havenโt told her yet.โ โShouldnโt you? If Cressidaโโ
โI believe Rune is aware of the danger sheโs in, but yes: she should know. I havenโt had the chance toโโ
โIโll tell her.โ Alex ran long fingers through his hair, walking on, like he was still trying to make sense of what Gideon was saying. โIโll ride to Wintersea first thing in the morning.โ
โFine,โ said Gideon.
As they arrived at the entrance to Thornwood, Alex pulled open the front doors while Gideon shrugged on his coat. Rain dripped from the lintel and splashed across the slabs of stone. The sun had set a long time ago, and darkness cloaked the woods beyond the doors.
A question was burning inside Gideon. Before he stepped out into the rain, he turned to ask it. โAlex? Is there any chance Cressida wasnโt dead after you shot her?โ
Alex stared at him. โI shot her three times.โ
Gideon nodded. Alex hated revisiting that night. His brother didnโt have a violent urge in his body. It would have gone against everything he stood for to take a girlโs life. Heโd done it for Gideonโs sake.
The bodies of all three sister queens had gone missing the next morning. Defiled, Gideon had always suspected. But if Cressida was truly alive, what had happened in her bedchamber that night? Had Alex unknowingly not finished the job, or was some dark magic at play? There were stories of witches in the past powerful enough to raise the dead, but Gideon had always assumed those were tales witches used to frighten people into obedience.
He wondered now if they were true.
โNever mind.โ He put a reassuring hand on his brotherโs shoulder. โIt might not be her. It could be another witch impersonating Cressida. Either way, weโll catch her. And this time, Iโll finish the job myself.โ
Alex only nodded, saying nothing. Feeling like heโd ruined his brotherโs night, Gideon dropped his hand and changed the subject.
โWhen do you leave for Caelis?โ โFour days from now.โ
So soon?ย thought Gideon, swallowing the lump in his throat. โWill you come to see me off?โ
โOf course.โ Gideon turned to leave, thought better of it, then pulled his little brother into a tight hug. โIโll miss you.โ
As hard as it was to say goodbye to Alex, there was something that was going to be a lot harder.
If Alex was leaving for good in a matter of days, and if Gideon had truly decided Rune wasnโt a witch, now was the time to step aside. That way, his brother could make his feelings clear to her before he left.
It was the only decent thing to do. And it would make amends for his previous betrayal.
The next time I see her,ย thought Gideon, stepping miserably into the rain,ย Iโll tell her itโs over between us.





