“Another orphan?” Roden asked. “Conner’s probably been to every orphanage in the country. What could he possibly want with all of us?”
“You don’t know?” I asked.
Latamer shrugged, but Roden said, “He’s looking for one particular boy, but I don’t know why.”
“He won’t want me.” Latamer’s voice was so quiet, the snorting of our horses nearly drowned him out. “I’m sick.”
“Maybe he will,” I said. “We don’t know what he wants.”
“I plan on being whatever he wants,” Roden said. “I’m not going back to any orphanage, and I’ve got no future on the streets.”
“Who is Bevin Conner?” I asked. “Do either of you know anything about him?”
“I overheard him speaking to Master Grippings, who runs the orphanage where Roden and I lived,” Latamer mumbled. “He said he was a friend of the king’s court.”
“King Eckbert?” I shook my head. “Conner’s lying, then. Everyone knows the king has no friends.”
Latamer shrugged. “Friend or enemy, he convinced Master Grippings that he was here as a service to the king.”
“But what does that have to do with us?” I asked. “A handful of orphaned boys?”
“He just wants one boy,” Roden reminded us. “The rest of us will be cast away as soon as we become useless to Conner. He said as much to Master Grippings.”
“Let me make it easier on you,” I said to Roden. “Untie me and I’ll be on my way. That’s one less boy to contend with.”
“I’ll do no such thing,” Roden said. “Do you think I want to be punished for your escape?”
“Fine. But the knots are really tight. Could you just loosen them?”
Roden shook his head. “If they’re tight, it’s because you irritated Conner’s vigils, and you probably deserve it.”
“Conner wouldn’t want him to be hurt.” Latamer crept toward me and said, “Turn around.”
“I can’t maneuver with my arms behind me. Just reach back there.”
Latamer stretched an arm across my back, which I caught with my hand and twisted behind him. Roden jumped up to one knee, startled, but with my other hand I slipped a noose over Latamer’s neck and pulled it so that it was nearly tightened. Roden froze, waiting to see what I’d do next.
Getting the rope off my wrists had been an easy matter. Knotting it into a noose was a bit trickier, although now was not the time to admire my handiwork. Roden didn’t look impressed with my behind-the-back knot tying. Clearly, he’d never attempted something like that before, or he would have been. Or maybe he just didn’t want me to strangle Latamer in front of him.
“Not an inch closer to me,” I warned Roden. “Or else I’ll dump him over the side of the cart and you can describe to Conner the sound of his snapping neck.”
“Please don’t do that,” Latamer breathed.
Roden sat back down. “I don’t care if you kill him and I don’t care if you run away. Leave if you want, and pray Conner’s vigils don’t find you.”
I stood, apologized to Latamer for threatening to kill him, then gave a ceremonial bow to Roden. The bow might’ve been a mistake. Midway through standing up straight, Cregan whacked me in the back with the flat end of his sword. I fell forward, all air knocked from my lungs.
“You know what’d happen to me if I let you get away, boy?” Cregan snarled.
I knew, and I wasn’t entirely opposed to it.
“You said you’d kill anyone who tried to escape,” Roden reminded him.
“And so I will,” Cregan said, baring his teeth when I turned to look at him. He’d replaced his sword with a knife and leapt into the wagon in two steps. I rolled over to make a run for it, but he grabbed my shirt, shoved me back down, and pressed the knife to my throat. “Master Conner doesn’t need all of you. And I think he needs you least of all.”
Suddenly, I had a motivation to be needed by Master Conner. “Okay,” I grumbled. “You win. I’ll cooperate.”
“You’re lying,” Cregan said.