Gwyneth and Pauline had already stepped into the middle of the room, taking in the bustle of activity and becoming part of it—a plan in the making that I was beginning to grasp. At the far corner the room, I spotted Orrin pulling halberds from a rack and then Natiya carrying an armful of baldricks, all tooled with the Morrighese insignia. She handed them to the half-dressed soldiers and crossed the room to Gwyneth and Pauline, a chatter of noise and explanations I only half heard because in the opposite corner, something else caught my eye.
A warrior. Someone swinging a flanged mace to break the lock on another weapon cabinet. The lock flew into a wall, and the cabinet banged open, but then he stopped, seeming to sense me at the same time. He turned, his eyes finding mine, and then his attention dropped to my bandaged hand. Looking down, I saw that my trousers and shirt were covered in blood. He crossed the room, his steps measured. Calculation. For all his zeal in shattering the lock, there was restraint in his movements as he approached me.
The stiffness of his stride.
The pull of his shoulders.
Holding back.
That’s what I saw in his movement, but not what I saw in his gaze when he stopped in front of me. In his eyes I saw him drawing me into his arms, his lips lowering to mine, a kiss that would never end, holding me until the kingdoms vanished and the world stood still, being everything we had ever been to each other. Before.
I waited. Expected. Wanted.
Some things last. The things that matter.
And yet he held back. Distant. A king. A soldier calculating his next move.
“There isn’t time to explain,” he said.
“I don’t need an explanation. You’re here. That’s all that matters.”
He glanced at my hand. “We can wait and regroup, or move forward now. It’s your decision.”
I surveyed his soldiers in the room. “How many do you have?”
“A hundred, but they’re—”
“I know,” I said. “They’re the best.”
There were only hours left before the last session of the conclave ended and the lords dispersed back to their homes. Now was my last chance to speak to them all. Minutes counted.
“My brothers are headed into an ambush. My father’s dying. And the Komizar is on his way. There’s no more time to wait.”
“The Komizar? The bridge is fixed?”
I nodded.
He lifted my chin, turning my face toward the window. “You’re pale. How much of this blood is yours?”
Most of it, but I heard a perilous edge to his voice and decided against the truth. “Most is Malich’s. He got the worst of it. He’s dead.”
“Then you’re able to carry a weapon?”
“Yes,” I said, sheathing a sword Kaden handed me, feeling like my movements had already become their movements.
The others had finished their preparations and gathered behind Rafe, waiting for my answer too. Six of Rafe’s men, including Jeb, were now outfitted as citadelle guards. The rest of them wore the plain rough-spun cloaks favored by the local farmers and merchants, all in different shades and styles so as not to draw attention. Tavish and Orrin wore similar garb, as did Sven. Pauline and Gwyneth were belted with weapons and had donned cloaks too.
This was it, I thought, and terror rose in my throat.
“She stays,” I said pointing to Natiya.
She flew forward, enraged.
Kaden grabbed her from behind pinning her to his chest. “Listen to her, Natiya,” he said. “Listen. Don’t make her look over her shoulder with worry for you. She will. We all have our weaknesses, and you will be hers. Please. Your day will come.”
Her eyes puddled with tears, and her gaze locked on mine. “Today is my day.” Her voice wobbled with anger. She understood little of the workings of the court, nor who had betrayed whom. She knew only that she wanted justice, but even today could not give her back what she had lost.
“No,” I said, “not today. I see many tomorrows for you, Natiya, days I will need you