ELEVEN
AURORA SPENT THE AFTERNOON EMBROIDERING handkerchiefs with the other women of court. The dullness of their chatter left her plenty of opportunity to repeat Finnegan’s words in her head, to dwell on his subtle insults and invent the perfect retorts. He had been so presumptuous, so overconfident, like he expected Aurora to swoon at his feet and took her refusal to do so as a particularly challenging delight. Every time she remembered his smug smile, her anger bubbled up again, stronger than before.
The queen sat so close to Aurora that their elbows brushed together each time she pulled her thread, and she watched the princess’s every stitch, offering corrections and comments as though Aurora were a small child. With the queen present, Aurora could not talk to the other ladies, or even attempt to enter the conversation. They talked of frivolous court gossip—how Lady So-and-So was expecting her third child but hoping to return to court, the new popularity of pearls in Falreach, the trouble that Young Whatshername was having finding a suitable maid. Topics changed without any apparent care for what the topic itself might be.
Iris must have known Finnegan was plotting to take the throne. Why else would she have warned Aurora away from him? Either she did not believe Aurora was safe with Finnegan, or she did not trust Aurora to resist whatever charms he was convinced he had.
She pricked her finger on her needle and gasped. The queen frowned at her. Aurora sucked the blood away, earning her a deeper frown.
Finnegan had offered to whisk her away, as though she were sitting and waiting for him to save her. He thought she would hide in his kingdom, stage a war against her own people. That she would put herself in debt to an arrogant prince who might well be her enemy, just so she could escape.
If she wanted to leave, she had another option. Tristan. A thrill ran through her at the thought. Vanishing into the inn, joking with Tristan, listening to Nettle sing, drinking mead and kissing him and never worrying about duty ever again.
She stabbed her needle through the cloth.
Tristan’s kiss lingered on her lips. If she closed her eyes, she could still see the lights spinning around them. She could still feel his hand in the hollow of her back, so close it had seemed he would never let go.
In the end, it was all just a fantasy. But she would cling to it for as long as she could.
Aurora practically ran to the Dancing Unicorn that night, dizzy with nerves about seeing Tristan again. The inn was quieter than she had expected, but Tristan was there, wiping down the bar. For once, he wasn’t smiling. He looked up almost as soon as she slipped in through the door, and he hurried over without a word to anyone. “Mouse,” he said. “You’re here.” He rested a hand on her upper arm, and then looked over his shoulder. “I need to talk to you.”
“I want to talk to you too!” she said. “I finished the book last night. You have to tell me what happens to Belinda. Is there more, or—”
“Now’s not the time, Mouse. Come on.”
He set off across the room, weaving through the crowd. Aurora followed. “What’s wrong? Is this about last night?”
“No, not that,” he said. “We just need to talk. But not here.”
He grabbed a lamp from a table and led her through a door behind the bar into a messy storeroom, piled high with kegs and jars. Aurora could smell the alcohol in the air. The seemingly endless stock left little room to stand. He placed the lamp on the windowsill at the end of the room, casting glow and shadow across the floor. Then he turned to face her.
“I have to tell you something,” he said. “But you can’t tell anyone what I’m about to say. Not anyone.”
The lamplight bounced off the side of Tristan’s face. “All right,” Aurora said. “What is it?”
“You have to promise,” he said. “If you tell anyone, it won’t be safe for any of us. Do you understand that?”
“Yes,” she said. “I promise. Tell me.”
He let out a breath. “I’m part of a movement,” he said. “A group of people who aren’t happy with the way things are. We want to change things.”
“A movement?” she said. “You mean you’re part of the rebels?” She glanced at the door. Her heart thudded against her ribs. Iris had warned her about rebels in the city. People who would be willing to tear her apart if they could. Aurora had never thought she meant Tristan.
“Rebels makes us sound like the enemy,” he said. “We’re not like that.” He gripped her hand. “You’ve seen it, Mouse. You haven’t been here long, but even you’ve seen it. How hungry people are. How cruel the king is. How he’s shoved those who need help out to the edges of the city.”
His hand seemed to burn against her skin. She swallowed. Her thoughts leapt too quickly for her to process them. “And you’re trying to help them?”
“We’re trying,” he said. “I’m not sure if we’re succeeding. We’d been making progress, more people had been willing to listen to us, but then . . . well. Things changed. With the princess.”
His grip on her hand was too tight. “Why are you telling me this?”
“Because I trust you,” he said. “Because I know you’ll understand. And if you support us . . . things have been looking bad, but with you on our side, we’ll have a chance. A real chance.”
Aurora stepped back. Her lower back thudded against the doorknob. “You know who I am.”
Tristan didn’t move. “Yes,” he said. “I know.”
It wasn’t possible. Her thoughts blurred together, struggling to pluck out anything she had said, anything she had done, that could have revealed the truth to him. “How?” she said.
“I’ve known since I met you,” he said. “It wasn’t hard to figure out.”
She shook her head. “You didn’t say anything.”
“I’m telling you now.”
She kept shaking her head, trying to grab on to her thoughts. “So you’ve been lying to me? This whole time?”
“I wasn’t lying,” he said. “If I’d said anything before, you wouldn’t have come back. And I had to find out why you were here. I had to find out what you were up to.”
“So that’s why you’ve been spending time with me? Was all of this . . . was it just some game?”
“No,” he said. “None of this is a game.” He moved closer. “I didn’t have to tell you the truth,” he said. “But I wanted to. Because . . . because you’re a good person. And because I care about you. And I know you’ll want to help.”
“Help?” she said. She tried to step backward again, fighting for some space to breathe, but the doorknob dug into her spine.
“I know you don’t like the king and queen.” His eyes gleamed. “I saw you, on that first day. You’re not the sort of person who wants to marry some stuffy prince just because a story told you to. You’re not going to want to stand there and act pretty and prop up every terrible thing they do.” His words gathered speed. She could not look away from his face. “And that’s all they’ll do with you, you know. Make you a pretty little figurehead, until they have no more use for you.”
“I know that,” she said. “Of course I know that.”
“Then this is your chance to change things. To fight them.”
She couldn’t think. The room was too small, and Tristan was too close. “Fight them how?”
“Just tell us what’s going on in the castle, maybe speak to some people who might be sympathetic—”
“But why?” she said. “What do you intend to do?”
“Ultimately?” he said. “We want to overthrow the king.”
“Overthrow him? You mean, rid him of his crown, arrest him, lock him up?”
Tristan did not answer.
Cold rushed through her. She slipped to the side, trying to catch some air, but there was no space in the room, nothing but barrels and the smell of alcohol and him. “You want me to help you murder the king?”
“No,” Tristan said. “It’s not murder if he deserves it.”
“Yes,” she said. “It is.”