“RUNE WINTERS HAS NO casting scars,” Gideon told Harrow as they climbed the marble steps together.
Harrow arched a thin brow. “You certainly move fast.”
“It’s not like that,” he said quickly. “I needed her measurements for a dress I’m making her.”
Harrow’s brow arched higher. “You, my brawny friend, are cleverer than I gave you credit for.”
They passed under the columned entrance and into Blood Guard headquarters. When it was still the Royal Library, this building preserved witch propaganda, histories full of lies, and entire floors of spell books. Gideon remembered the marble busts of notable witches that once lined the wings, as well as the gilt-framed paintings depicting the golden age of witches. All of it was gone, destroyed in the early days of the New Republic.
“If she doesn’t have scars, I can’t accuse her.”
“How closely did you look?”
Gideon thought back to the dark, boarded-up shop. To Rune’s nearly naked form, standing in the glow of his lamp.
“The lighting was poor, but trust me, I looked.”
His memory was like a faucet. Once he opened the valve even a little, he couldn’t stop everything from rushing out. The memory of her soft, white curves. The delicate lace of her bra. The scent of her skin …
Gideon had gotten very close to a nearly naked Rune. And he had looked. There was nothing to find.
“She’s flawless.”
“She was completely nude?” asked Harrow.
“What? No. You don’t do measurements in the nude.”
“Well, there’s your problem. The Crimson Moth won’t have casting scars where someone like you could find them. How do you think she’s escaped detection the past two years? You’ll need to get her good and naked.”
The words were a lightning strike. But Harrow was right. Rune hadn’t been entirely unclothed. And he’d inspected her quickly, in dim lighting.
Gideon ran a hand over his face.
How was he supposed to get Rune Winters naked?
“Maybe I won’t have to.”
Harrow rolled her eyes. “You have some other plan?”
They entered the atrium, which was encircled by a massive staircase spiraling to the top floor. Overhead, the glass-domed ceiling revealed a sky full of clouds. Holding up the dome were statues of the seven Ancients, chiseled out of marble. Liberty, with her gun held high. Mercy, with her arc of doves flying toward the glass. Wisdom, with an owl on her shoulder and an open book in her hands …
“Do you remember it?” asked Harrow, halting halfway to the stairs, standing now in the center of the atrium. Gideon turned to find her staring at a spot in the middle of the floor, where the tiles didn’t match.
“There used to be a tree that grew right here,” she said, going quiet. “It reached all the way to the fourth floor.”
Gideon nodded. Rioters had destroyed it, too, after the revolution. Hacking it apart, uprooting the stump, and burning it all.
“Every spring, it blossomed for a month straight. My mistress, Juniper, loved to come when the blossoms dropped. They would carpet the floor in a sea of white.” Harrow swallowed, lost in the memory. “She said that Amity herself planted it here and centuries later, people built the library around it.”
Gideon had never heard Harrow speak about the witch who’d indentured her.
“Was she purged?” he asked.
This snapped Harrow out of the memory. Her footsteps started again, hastening toward the stairs.
“No.”
When Gideon caught up to her, a heavy silence hung between them. If this Juniper hadn’t been purged, then the witch was still out there, somewhere. He wondered if her memory haunted Harrow the way Cressida’s memory haunted him.
“Is she the one who …?” Gideon pointed to his ear.
Harrow reached to touch the place where her ear used to be, before a witch had cut it off.
“No. But neither did she stop it.”
What other kinds of cruelty had Harrow suffered at the hands of witches? And how could she not know—or care—if her former mistress was dead or alive?
But Harrow clearly didn’t want to discuss it further, because she changed the subject.
“You were talking about your plan to entrap Rune Winters. The one that doesn’t involve getting her naked. How is that going to work?”
Their footsteps echoed in unison as they climbed to the second floor, where Gideon’s office lay.
“I gave Rune bad information this morning.”
Harrow glanced over at him. “Oh?”
“I told her the location of a holding cell for witches near Seldom Harbor.”
“And that’s bad?”
“There’s no holding cell near Seldom Harbor. Just a trap waiting for the Crimson Moth.”
Harrow’s golden eyes widened. As this sank in, she smiled, impressed.
“And you think Rune will show up there.”
“I don’t know. If she does, I’ll have my fugitive. But even if someone else shows up instead, I’ll know Rune is in league with the Moth—since she’s the only person I gave the location to.”
“And if no one shows up?”
Gideon sighed. “Then I abandon this false trail, break things off with Rune …”
And hope my little brother finds his balls.
TWENTY-TWO
RUNE
THE OLD MINE NEAR Seldom Harbor stood on a small clifftop a hundred meters above sea level, sagging beneath the weight of a century.
Rune came prepared with an invisibility spell already drawn on her forearm in blood. She called it Ghost Walker, and it was her most-used spell on nights like this, one she’d created herself using a combination of two symbols she’d found in one of Nan’s books. The symbols for emptiness and evasion. It didn’t make her disappear so much as nudge a person’s attention away from her.
She dismounted Lady a quarter mile up the dirt road. Leaving the horse to graze in a small copse of trees, Rune headed toward the mine, which was silhouetted by the light of a silver moon.
The wind and sea salt stung Rune’s eyes—the only part of her face left uncovered. Dressed entirely in black, she’d hidden her hair beneath a hood, and covered her mouth and nose with a snug cowl. A fitted black shirt and leggings concealed the rest of her, along with calf-high leather boots.
The lantern hanging in the entryway swung in the gusty wind, scattering its light across the Blood Guard standing sentry. As Rune drew nearer to the stone building, she saw that the guard on duty was none other than Laila Creed.
With her spell cloaking her, Rune pulled out a slender silver whistle no wider than a fountain pen from the hidden pocket in her clothes. The same pocket contained her last full vial of blood.
Drawing closer to Laila, she put the cold metal to her lips and blew three short, hard notes. The notes were too high-pitched for Laila’s ears, but Lady heard them immediately.
Lady had once been Nan’s favorite show horse. Nan trained her to respond to different whistled commands, and her obedience had won them dozens of ribbons over the years.
In the darkness, sounding closer than she was, Lady whinnied.
Hearing it, Laila grabbed the pistol at her hip, eyes narrowing. Her gaze bounced off the space where Rune stood and turned toward the sound.
That’s right, thought Rune. Go check. Better to be safe.
Glancing back to the mine’s entryway—a sun-bleached door speckled with lichen—Laila strode hesitantly into the dark.
Rune opened the door and stepped inside.
The entrance to the mine was a small room with wood-paneled walls and two small windows—one of which was broken. The old floorboards shifted beneath her footsteps, and in the center of the floor was a hole big enough for two burly men to drop into. A ladder protruded out of it.
When she peered in, all she could see was darkness below.
Rune frowned, her skin prickling. The Blood Guard had been getting more and more creative with their holding locations, which made it more difficult for Rune to guess where they were keeping captured witches. Normally, though, there were more guards than this.
Crouching, she tried to see down into the first level of the mine and caught a shimmer of light in the distance.