by Claire Luana
“Look!” Wren pointed. “They’re moving.”
“It’s now or never.” Thom nodded, striding forwards.
Wren hurried after him. “Never is sounding good,” she muttered to herself, clutching her cloak around her with white-knuckled fingers.
They merged into the stream of soldiers heading for the dark opening in the wall with little trouble. Wren could hear little but the bass beat of her heart in her ears, the rapid cadence of her breath. This march would take a year off her life, if she even made it through alive.
And then they passed into the tunnel, lit by torches held aloft around them.
“We need to be ready to move when we get out,” Thom said under his breath. Wren wasn’t sure when their roles had switched, but Thom now seemed to be taking charge. She felt a pang of gratitude. Her own decision-making skills felt atrophied and weak.
“I need to get to the palace,” Wren murmured. “If I could talk to Lucas, Ella, even one of their servants, I could warn them. Make them stay away from the execution. The Apricans will need the element of surprise to take the whole family. If they’re not there…they might have enough time to get out before the city is overrun.”
They were both silent for a moment. The sound of boots on stone echoed ominously around them.
“I’m going to warn my family to lay low until the city falls,” Thom said. “And then…I might know where Trick is. He was working on a way to save the guildmasters. Maybe he’s come up with something. At the very least, I need to warn him.”
The thought that Trick might have come up with a plan to save Callidus and the others was too good to be true. What they needed was some luck. She found herself wishing for a kitchen and some sugar.
“He always talked about this bar he and his friends would go to, the Foundry. Another Guild member owned it. It would be a place to start to look for him. Maybe he would have a way to warn Lucas.”
“Rendezvous at the courthouse?”
A slight nod of Thom’s hood showed her his assent.
“Wren,” he whispered, “we need to be fast. I think they’ll wait until the Imbris family is in position before they attack, but…” he trailed off.
“I’ll run,” she said.
They marched on in silence, listening to the low murmur of conversations around them, the occasional laugh. Wren’s mood blackened. To these men, this was another day, another campaign, another conquest. They didn’t care that they were going to be killing and maiming, subjugating a city and a people that had always been free. Was there any possibility that the Cedar Guard could defend the city and defeat the Apricans? No. Not from the inside. No doubt some of these soldiers would sneak off to open the various gates, sending the rest of the Aprican army streaming into the city.
Guilt needled her. It shouldn’t have mattered that the city would inevitably fall, or that King Imbris was a murderer and a tyrant. She shouldn’t have gone to the Aprican camp. Shouldn’t have suggested it to Hale. Without her key, the one Lucas had gifted her, this attack wouldn’t be possible. A horrible thought occurred to Wren. Even if Lucas lived, would he ever forgive her for what she had done? For betraying his secret and twisting his trust of her into their enemy’s victory?
“We’re close,” Thom hissed, and Wren looked up from her misery, seeing that there was, indeed, a door a few paces before them. The soldiers were slowing down, funneling into the chokepoint two at a time. Next to the door, torchlight limning his handsome face, was Hale.
Wren’s nails dug into Thom’s arm, and he jerked. He let out a muffled curse when he saw what she did.
“Keep your head down,” he said, and he swaggered forwards, pushing in front of her, to block her from view.
Wren held her breath as she approached, her steps carrying her forwards, her lungs burning. She saw the shine on Hale’s boots as she passed and felt his presence like a jolt of energy between them. Please, she thought. Don’t see me. Please.
And he didn’t. She was past, blowing out her stale air, filling her lungs with a fresh influx. She followed close behind Thom as they passed out of the storeroom into the empty hallways of the courthouse building. Wren was overcome by a sense of déjà vu as she remembered Hale’s and her trip through the tunnel and these same hallways, giddy with the thrill of their escape. Her eyes pricked with tears at the thought of that man. She shook her head angrily to clear them. That Hale was gone.
“When we get outside, we split up?” Thom said. “Run like the wind and meet back here. Good luck, Wren.”
Wren’s voice was small when she replied. “You, too, Thom. Gods speed.”
Wren planned to bolt as soon as she was free of the building and the Aprican soldiers around her, her muscles tensed and ready. But when she pushed through the doors into the square, her feet stumbled. Before her was a large wooden platform. Emerald Aprican flags waved in macabre cheer from flagpoles on each of the four corners. On one end of the platform was a gallows, with four thick nooses swinging gently in the breeze. One for Callidus, and one for each of the other guildmasters.
Wren’s stomach lurched. This wasn’t a faked death by ingestion, where the Gifted would be squirreled away to some secret prison where they’d cook infused food for the king. It was a real execution. This was no show for the crowd. This was the end.
Chapter 36
The city was just beginning to wake. Wren couldn’t help but look with pity at the sleepy citizens around her. It was possible that this would be the last peaceful morning they experienced for a long time. The day everyone remembered. The day everything changed.
The palace loomed above her as she raced up the cobblestone path, stepping out of the way of a fast-moving carriage. It was an imposing fortress; it looked today like the prison that it was, not a home to raise a family.
Two Cedar guardsmen stood at attention by the main gate. She straightened, striding up to them, wishing her hair was not whipping about her like a whirlwind. She did her best to corral it with a hand. “I’m here to see Lucas Imbris. He’s expecting me.”
“Name?” The guard looked bored. Perhaps he wished he could be out on the front lines, earning glory and accolades. She wanted to scream at him, to shake him and tell him that the Apricans were already in the city. To bar the gates. But they would think her mad. She needed to talk to Lucas.
“Wren Confectioner.”
The guard looked up at her name before glancing to his fellow. “Come with me.”
Something felt off about the veiled exchange, but Wren ignored the feeling. She had little choice but to go forwards.
The guard led her through the palace, up a flight of stairs, to a comfortable sitting room. “Let me fetch him.”
Wren crossed to the paned window, watching dry leaves swirl by outside. The wind whistled in the window, the frame not quite flush along the bottom. In the courtyard below, a line of carriages were hitched to horses. She pressed her forehead against the cold glass, trying to get a better vantage. Were those carriages intended to take Lucas and his brothers to the execution? She had to stop them.
“How kind of you to deliver yourself to us.”
Wren whirled at the snarled comment, her heart sinking as she recognized who had entered. Steward Willings leaned against the frame, resting one hand on the sword at his hip. Behind him in the hallway she could see the shadow of guards.
“Willings,” she said, trying to hide her dismay. “Still spending your days imprisoning innocent Maradian citizens?”
“Innocent.” He chuckled, shoving off the doorframe and stalking towards her. “I’m amazed you can call yourself that with a straight face. There’s no end to the trouble you’ve caused. But those days are over. The king has a special cell picked out for you.”
“Do with me what you will,” she said. “I’m here to warn you. Warn Lucas. There’s going to be an Aprican attack in the city. They’ll be targeting the royal family. You mustn’t let them go to the execution today. Call the whole thing off.”
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��The Apricans can’t breach the wall,” Willings said. “The royal family is safe within the city. The king wants a show of family solidarity today.”
“They can and they will,” she said, wishing there were a way to save Lucas and his siblings without warning the king too. She wouldn’t mind if Hadrian was caught in a little crossfire. “This threat is real. It’s not worth risking the entire royal family. The entire line of succession.”
“You seem to know a lot about these plans. Yet this is exactly what I would expect you to say if you were trying to save your guildmaster and disrupt the execution. Without some proof of its truthfulness, I’m afraid you’re just not a credible source.”
She closed her eyes. She didn’t want to admit Hale’s involvement, but she had to convince Willings somehow.
“It’s a shame, you know.” He turned, pacing across the room. “Killian could get the truth out of you if he were here. The man had a gift.”
Her anger boiled within her, and she almost, almost, said nothing. But she couldn’t doom Lucas’s family just because Willings was a bastard. “They’re using the escape tunnels. From the palace. The municipal court. They have the key. They’re already in the city.”
Willings’s head whipped towards her, his pockmarked face gone pale. “How do you know about those tunnels?” His voice was low.
“Does it matter?” Wren threw up her hands. “There’s little time! Warn them!”
Willings stood for a moment, blinking rapidly, his mind clearly working through the facts she had just told him, judging their veracity. “Stay here,” he snarled, storming towards the door.
Wren stood for a moment, straining to hear the sound of Willings’s boots on the tiles of the hallway. Was he going to warn Lucas? Had she convinced him? Wren chewed her lip, weighing her options. She needed to be sure Lucas was nowhere near that execution. And then she needed to find Thom, and pray to the Beekeeper he and Trick had come up with some way to save the guildmasters. She hurried to the door, examining the lock. A voice sounded on the outside, deep and male. Another answered. She straightened, cursing under her breath. Guards. He had stationed guards outside. Even if she could pick the lock, she wasn’t a fighter. Not against guards with swords.
She whirled back towards the window, where the wind whistled through the cracks in the panes. The window was designed to open. She looked down and saw the row of waiting carriages far below. There would be no better chance. So long as she didn’t break her neck on the way down.
Wren unhooked the latch and pushed the window open. She winced as it screeched in protest, looking over her shoulder, waiting for the guards to burst into the room. None did.
The opening was narrow, the window titled out rather than sliding up. But Wren was slim, and she managed to maneuver her body through the opening, head first, slithering like an eel. Once outside, her feeling of elation dimmed instantly. She clung to the rim of the window and it was the only thing keeping her from sliding down the slick tiles of the roof.
The carriages were waiting below, and as she crouched, precariously perched on the second-story roof, the king and his retinue emerged from the far building, heading towards the first carriage. They were leaving! Had Willings not convinced them? Had he not even tried?
Wren narrowed her eyes, glaring at the king. The man seemed unperturbed by the siege at his gate or his brutal suppression of his own Guilds. His face was a calm mask, his crown polished to a shine on his temples. He was wearing the Falcon crest of the Imbris clan, and a lush fur cloak was buckled about his shoulders. He approached the carriage, but there was no footman waiting to open the door. The king’s calm face twisted in displeasure, and a servant scrambled around the carriage at Willings’s shout. The king disappeared into the carriage and Willings cracked the man across the face with the back of his fist, sending him stumbling against the carriage, clutching his jaw. Wren’s mood darkened, and a part of her rejoiced that the Apricans were coming to dispatch this unworthy despot.
Willings disappeared into the carriage with the king, and more of the royal family appeared. The crown prince, Zane, and his Centese bride. Prince Casius, still walking with a cane from his time under the Apricans’ “hospitality.” Lucas’s other half-brothers, Maxim and Rikard. Virgil. Lucas.
Wren went as numb as her clutching fingers at the sight of Lucas dressed in a coat of dark forest green, decorated by a line of silver buttons. From afar, he looked cold and imperious, his face stiff and unmoving, just as royal as the rest of them. This wasn’t her Lucas. This was Prince Imbris. A man who was a target, as surely as he wore his emerald coat.
She willed him to look up, to see her crouching on the roof like an unlikely pigeon. But he didn’t, instead stepping into the carriage with Virgil.
Wren’s fingers were totally numb now, and she knew there was only one way this could end. She had to get down somehow. There was a carriage below her, its black roof glistening with dew. This would be Ella and the queen’s carriage, she thought. If she went now…but in the end, her fingers made the decision for her, slipping off the wooden lip of the window frame. She slid down the pitch of the tiled roof, her feet scrambling for purchase, her fingers grasping at the sharp tiles for a handhold but finding only slick, wet surfaces. And then the edge was approaching and she tried to grasp for it, but she didn’t have the right angle, and she tumbled into the air, freefalling in a swirl of cloak and dress and grasping hands.
She landed on the roof of the carriage below with a hard thunk. She groaned, her back protesting, cradling her sliced hands to her chest. The door was opening and Ella and her mother were walking out. Before Wren even had a chance to pray for Ella to miss her, those sharp eyes caught hers, widening in surprise. Wren held a shaking finger to her lips, and Ella narrowed her eyes, considering her options. She looked resplendent in a dress of gold damask, a high collar and plunging neckline accenting her proud posture.
“Mother.” Ella grabbed her mother’s arm, pointing away towards the end of the carriage line. “Did you see that?”
“See what, darling?” the queen asked. She wore a dress of the same fabrics but in a demurer cut, her silver hair twisted in an elaborate crown around her gold circlet.
“Hmm, I could have sworn I saw a bald eagle,” Ella said. “Good omen for today, don’t you think?” She held the door for her mother, motioning for her to enter first.
“When did you grow a set of manners?” The queen chuckled but went in.
Ella closed the door quickly. “What are you doing here?” she hissed. “They’re looking for you.”
“You’re in danger,” Wren said. “There will be an attack at the execution.”
“What kind of attack?” Ella asked, but the queen was opening the door.
“Ella, dear, whatever are you doing?”
Wren shrank back onto the roof of the carriage, away from the queen.
“Just looking for the eagle, Mother.”
“Did you find it?”
“Just some sad little wren,” Ella said, stepping into the carriage. “I don’t know how I confused it.”
And then the driver and footman were approaching from the stable, hopping onto the front of the carriage. Wren plastered herself flat on the roof, praying they wouldn’t see her. The line of carriages in front was already moving. The driver cracked the whip, and the carriage began to move.
Chapter 37
The carriage jostled through the streets of Maradis, bouncing on the cobblestones. It was all Wren could do to hold on to the edges of the roof, her blood-slicked fingers making it nearly impossible to keep her grip. She thought about allowing herself to slide off, hoping she could find a forgiving pile of trash, but she held on. She needed to get to the execution. If she lost her grip now, she might arrive too late.
At last, after what seemed an impossibly long ride, the carriages began to slow. They were approaching a roadblock manned by Cedar Guard soldiers, cordoning off the large square where the execution would take place. The soldiers
moved the block to let the carriages go past, and they trundled up the alley behind the courthouse before turning the corner into the large public square, where they pulled to a stop behind the massive wooden platform. Wren let go of her death grip, slumping against the roof in relief. Her hands were smeared with blood, stinging and shaking.
A crowd was already gathering in the square to watch the spectacle, held back from the platform by low fences and guards.
Wren kept her head down, hoping no one had seen her on her strange perch. The crowd began to roar, and Wren saw that the king had exited his carriage. He was walking up the stairs, waving and smiling. Wren shimmied onto the side of the carriage before letting her feet dangle off the side. She dropped to the ground, her ankle twisting painfully. “Son of a spicer,” she swore with a hiss of breath.
She limped painfully forwards to the carriage that had transported Lucas and Virgil. She pulled open the far door, ready to give her warning. But it was already empty, the door on the other side just clicking shut. She crept around the carriage towards the platform. Lucas and Virgil were already summiting the stairs, followed by Ella and the queen, who went to stand next to King Imbris, waving at the crowd. Wren’s mood grew blacker. It was as if they were at a midsummer festival, not an execution.
The only consolation was that Trick was not on the platform with the rest of his family. Perhaps Thom had been able to find him and they had some last desperate move up their sleeves. Wren bit her lip, considering her options. The crowd was too far for Lucas to hear her shout, and guards lined the platform, even two at the stairs on this side, to keep unruly citizens from reaching the royal family. But she was running out of time. If she didn’t do something soon, she would be too late.
The crowd roared to life, surging with an angry wave of jeers and shouts. The prisoners were being led out now, their hands chained before them. Wren tightened her hands into fists as she saw Callidus, her fingernails stinging the wounds on her palms. He wore a white shirt and trousers, and his feet were bare. His ebony hair hung about his ears and over his forehead, his proud coif now just a straggle of locks. His flesh was sallow, and deep purple shadowed the skin beneath his eyes. Wren’s heart twisted painfully. She couldn’t stand here and watch this. She had to do something. But what? The prisoners were flanked by a dozen Cedar guards, and two Black Guards, the king’s most elite trained soldiers. There was no way she could fight her way to free them. Chandler followed Callidus, looking old and tired. The vitality Wren had seen in the man seemed to have been sucked from him, replaced with resignation. McArt followed next, his one wrist bound to his body. Bruxius followed last, surrounded by most of the guards. The guards had threaded a chain from a collar on his neck to shackles at his wrists and ankles. Wren was relieved to see he had recovered from Killian’s stab wound enough to have some fight left in him.