โYou look like hell.โ
Kittโs eyes skip over the scarlet splotches staining my shirt, courtesy of the Imperial he doesnโt need to know I buried.
For her.
Borderline treasonous at best.
Pathetic at worst.
The kingโs scrutiny finally meets mine, our eyes locking, laced with amusement. Familiarity forms a smile on my lips involuntarily, simply at the feeling of being brothers. Brothers who donโt have titles wedged before their names. Brothers who, for this blissful moment, ignore their allegiances tethered by blood.
Itโs the first time heโs let me look at him in days. Really look at him.
Heโs traded tears for tiredness, smiling eyes for haunted ones, accompanied by slightly sunken cheeks and a stubbled jaw. My inspection snags on the same wrinkled shirt Iโve seen the past three daysโhalf-unbuttoned, sleeves splattered with ink.
โYeah, well, you donโt look much better,โ I say, something akin to a smile still surprising my lips.
Kitt blinks, taking in his stained hands and the smudged papers sprawled out before him as if seeing the scene for the first time. Then he sighs, slowly shuffling the papers heโs been so engrossed with into a sloppy pile. โIโll be fine. Just a little tired, thatโs all.โ
โYou are aware that there is a simple solution to thatโcorrect?โ I sound annoyingly timid as I try to walk the fine line between lightening the mood and attempting to talk some sense into him.
Kitt is different. We are different. I no longer know where my brother ends and my king begins.
When he doesnโt respond, I finish with a quietly concerned, โYou should try to rest. Get some sleep.โ I nod toward the worn leather seat heโs inherited. โI havenโt seen you leave that chair in days.โ
โSleep is for the dead.โ The noise Kitt follows his blunt statement with can only be described as a choking scoff. โSorry,โ he half laughs, shaking his head with what seems to be amusement. โToo soon?โ
I force a smile while facing what feels like a stranger. In another life, I can hear those same words falling from Kittโs mouth, only they are lacking the bitter edge, the crazed crack of his smile. Grief has morphed him into a man Iโm wary of.
โFine,โ I sigh, โsleep is for the dead. Though it doesnโt seem youโre living much either.โ My eyes search his, pleading in a way I never would with words. โYou havenโt left the study since your coronation. We could take a walk through the gardens, go see the queen.โ I swallow at the thought of what grief has done to her. โThe physicians say sheโs getting worse. She hasnโt left her bed, and they fearโฆ They fear there may not be much time left.โ
He stills, silent long after my suggestion. I shouldnโt be surprisedย by his reluctancy. Kitt has no bond with my mother. Because she is exactly thatโmyย mother. Not his.
Clearing my throat, I quickly change the subject to more appealing endeavors. We could visit Gail in the kitchen. She wonโt stop asking to see you until you eat one of her sticky bunsโโ
โIโm quite happy here, thank you.โ
I blink at him. A kingly dismissal if I ever heard one.
I nod slowly, taking a step back toward the door. โWell, if there is nothing elseโฆโ
Your Majesty.
I swallow the words before I can spit them out at the end of the sentence. My hand reaches for the door, ready to make my escapeโ
โIs that her blood?โ
I falter, turning to face him.
His green gaze is fixed on the splotches soaking my shirt. Iโm still, silent for a long moment, simply allowing him to study me while I try to decipher what it is looming behind his eyes.
When I finally speak, itโs the question Iโm avoiding answering myself that falls from my lips. โWould you be more disappointed if it was, or if it wasnโt?โ
He swallows. Takes a deep breath. Smiles in a way that is anything but happy. โI donโt know.โ Another long, lingering silence. โYou?โ
โI donโt know.โ
Pathetic.
โIs it?โ Kitt doesnโt look at me as he says it. โHers, I mean.โ
I sigh, suddenly tired at the reminder of this morning. โNo.โ
Relieved? Disappointed? It seems I suddenly cannot tell the difference between the two as I say that seemingly simple word.
โI see,โ Kitt mutters. โBut she was there, I take it?โ
โShe was. I forced her out of the house.โ Kitt quirks a brow before I finish, โBurnt it to the ground.โ
โI see.โ
We watch each other warily. She is a topic better left untouched, and yet, sheโs never further than a thought away. Torture for the two of us.
โThe blood?โ Kitt nods toward me expectantly.
โBelongs to the Imperial she stabbed. Killed him near Loot.โ
Thereโs that lifeless laugh again. โShe does have a nasty habit of stabbing people, doesnโt she?โ
I clear my throat, careful not to cross the line I no longer know where to find when it comes to Kitt. โYes, well, so do I. And she didnโt escape unharmedโI made sure of that.โ
โSo,โ Kitt drawls in a tone all too familiar. I see Father reflected in his gaze, reincarnated in his words. โWhat are you telling me, Enforcer?โ
I stiffen slightly. โI believe she is headed to the Scorches, attempting to make it across to either Dor or Tando. Though Iโm not sure she will. Then again, she does also have a nasty habit of staying alive.โ My tone is flat, embodying the Enforcer he wishes me to be. โI will ready some men and desert horses to head into the Scorches after her. We will leave as soon as we are able.โ I pause. โYour Majesty.โ
Dammit. I just couldnโt help myself, could I?
Kitt studies me, seemly less than unsettled by the title. Rather, curious. โAnd then youโll bring her to me.โ
I nod.
โWill you?โ
I stare it him, breathing slowly. โDo you have reason to believe I wonโt?โ
Kitt shrugs a shoulder before leaning back to cross ink-stainedย arms over his wrinkled shirt. โItโs just that, well, I know yourโฆ history.โ
I stiffen. We eye each other, silently communicating the one thing we never used to utter aloud. Kittโs comment was subtle, but his lack of faith in my fulfilling his command was anything but.
My reply is distant. โThat is different. And you know it.โ
โIs it?โ Kittโs tone is unsettlingly innocent. โYou had no attachment to those children, and yet, you still spared them their punishments despite their crimes.โ
โKittโโ I start before he abruptly cuts me off.
โLook, Iโm not saying that saving children was the wrong thing to do.โ He laughs, devoid of humor. โIโm not a monster. Banishing the Ordinaries with their families instead of outrightly executing them was a kindness, however small. Butโโhis eyes darkenโโyou repeatedly disobeyed Fatherโs orders. Again and again.โ
I sigh through my nose, exasperated. At the mention of Father, Iโve lost the argument before itโs even begun. In Kittโs eyes, nothing I say can justify an action against the previous king.
โI always obeyed orders,โ I sigh. โAnd I always will. That was an exception.โ
โWas?โ Kitt repeats, his expression equally scrutinizing and skeptical. โWhat, do you not plan to continue that exception because I am king? Because I know?
Itโs a struggle to not openly gape at him. โDo you want me to execute the children, then?โ My chest heaves, heart hammering against sore ribs. โBy all means, just say the word and it will be done, my king.โ
Shit.
I bite my tongue hard enough to focus on the burst of pain and not the surge of anger sweeping through me. The last thing I want is toย view Kitt as nothing more than my king, to treat him how I treated the one before.
Kitt is easy to love until he begins resembling the father who had little love for me.
โKai.โ The kingโs harsh gaze softens with his voice. โI know this isnโt exactly a simple order to follow. I suppose Iโm justโฆ paranoid. Iโve witnessed you go against orders in the past.โ At the look I give him, he hastily adds, โFor good reason. Which is why I worry when asking you to bringย herย back to me.โ His eyes find mine, full of an emotion I canโt determine. โAnd what better โgood reasonโ to disobey orders than your feelings for her.โ
We stare at each other, eyes locked and throats lodged with unspoken words. I want to protest, beg my mouth to open and spew a convincing string of words that contradict his accusation. But heโs right, and we both know it. My feelings are what freed her in the first place.
The thought jolts me, has me jumping to the conclusion that Kitt knows this, knows that I already let her go onceโand he resents me for it. But nothing on his placid face proves this, and I bury the thought before it can do the same to me.
โThis canโt be easy for you, either,โ I say quietly, testing the rocky water that is Kittโs flood of feelings for the same girl.
He almost laughs. โOh, so now weโre going to talk about this?โ
Weโd skirted around the touchy topic even before she decided to tear the tendons of our fatherโs neck with the very dagger I have strapped to my side. She was a risk, something we avoided voicing as though that could stop her from driving a wedge between us.
Falling for her was fatal.
โWhatever I felt for her died the day she killed him,โ Kitt says simply.
Lies.
Iโve been telling myself the very same thing, convincingly calling it the truth.
โI know the feeling,โ I nod.
Lies.
We eye each other, both content to drown in our shared delusions. But we say nothing else, not bothering to confront the fact that weโre lying to both ourselves and each other.
โI will bring her back to you, Kitt.โ My voice is quiet, earnest. โBefore I was your Enforcer, I was your brother. My loyalty is to you and no one else.โ Iโm silent for a long moment, allowing my words to sink in. โShe killed my father too, you know.โ
More silence stretches between us.
โAlive,โ Kitt says finally. โBring her to me alive.โ
His tone doesnโt suggest that this is exactly a mercy.
Pulling off the thick ring I was given the day I became Ilyaโs Enforcer, I place it on his desk. โGive it back to me when Iโve earned your trust again.โ