himself, and to his credit, not one of them appeared keen to take him on.
Daria rolled her eyes, then sat down on a stump. “Relax, we’re on the same side. If things had gone according to plan, we’d currently be keeping her safe while we waited for rescue, but Zarrah didn’t take well to learning of our diet and hightailed it over to the enemy’s camp.” She sighed. “In fairness, it might have been better if I’d been forthright, but I was afraid she’d react as she did.”
“How did you know we were coming?” Aren asked, blade still held as though he anticipated one of them would try to take a bite out of his leg at any minute.
“We didn’t.”
Keris frowned. “Then how do you know who I am?”
“Zarrah told me about you.” When he tensed, she said, “Not by name, of course. But enough detail that, in combination with what I’d heard about her time in Vencia, I was able to put two and two
together. Especially when daylight revealed those eyes of yours.” She leaned forward and scrutinized his face. “The rumors about the color don’t lie. Is it true that every Veliant has eyes that hue?”
Before Keris could answer, her attention moved to Aren. “Who’s your combative comrade?”
“Family,” Aren answered, and Keris glanced sideways at the other man. Though it was technically true, it still surprised him that Aren would refer to him as such.
“Good-looking family.” Daria stretched her legs out in front of her. “My name is Daria Retta, and I’m a captain in the True Empress’s army. Devil’s Island might have once been a prison for convicts, but now it’s a place the Usurper sends her prisoners of the Silent War, the rebellion against Petra Anaphora’s unlawful rule.”
True Empress. Unlawful rule. Yet more proof that the rumor Aster remembered was no rumor, nor Serin’s final words that Aryana was the true and rightful ruler a lie. Zarrah should be empress, but Petra had stolen her crown.
Daria was watching him with knowing eyes. “Yes. Emperor Ephraim named Princess Aryana as his heir and successor. Rather than bending the knee to her younger sister, Petra destroyed the proclamation and assassinated nearly everyone who knew the truth, using her power in the military to spread the lie that she was named heir. Aryana bent the knee to Petra to protect herself and her young daughter, but secretly spent years gathering support in the south to eventually overthrow Petra’s rule.
Unfortunately your father murdered Aryana before her plans could come to fruition, but the cause didn’t die with her. We kept up the fight in the name of her daughter and heir even as Petra twisted Zarrah into her own creature.”
Daria was quiet for a long moment, and then she continued, “I was captured and imprisoned two years ago. But information comes to me every time Petra imprisons one of my comrades, so I learned that Zarrah came back from Vencia … changed. Which meant little to me until I received direct word from the commander that Petra had turned on her heir and was sending her to her prison. The idea that Zarrah was no longer Petra’s pet gave us hope that she might become the empress we needed her to be. Yet that hope stood on a knife’s blade because it resided in this place.” She gestured outward. “I was given orders to secure her at all costs and protect her until the commander was able to organize a rescue. In that, I have surely failed.”
“How do you communicate with your commander?” Aren asked.
“The commander was able to get one of ours a position as a guard,” she answered. “He
communicates information to me by signing short messages while I cuss him, and every other guard, out each morning.”
“How much of this does Zarrah know?” Keris asked, because if she knew the rebels had concrete plans to rescue her, even the revelation of cannibalism wouldn’t have been enough to make her run.
Daria rolled her eyes, then sat down on a stump. “Relax, we’re on the same side. If things had gone
“Some.” Daria looked away. “Most of us know Zarrah as Petra’s creature, her tool for violence and a proponent of the Endless War, so we were not quick to trust that she hadn’t been sent here as an agent to infiltrate the rebellion.”
Aren scoffed. “A foolish thought. Why in the hell would Petra risk her heir to discover information about a rebellion that she seems to have well in hand?”
Daria’s jaw worked back and forth. “Because Zarrah is unique bait for the commander, and Petra hates him at least as much as she hates you.” She jerked her chin at Keris.
Keris’s eyes narrowed. “Who is this commander?”
All of the warriors surrounding them shifted uneasily, this clearly a secret close to their hearts.
Daria bit her lip, then said, “That’s a need-to-know. And you don’t need to know. But trust that he’ll do what it takes to get Zarrah free.”
together. Especially when daylight revealed those eyes of yours.” She leaned forward and scrutinized
“A task made more difficult by the fact that you lost her,” Aren finished. “She’s with this other group, led by someone called Kian?”
Several of the other prisoners spat into the dirt at the man’s name.
“Kian holds the beach camp,” Daria answered. “He knows Zarrah’s identity and has been
desperate to get his hands on her from the second she stepped foot on the island. I thought it was because she was pretty and he likes his ladies, but he’s lost at least twenty men trying to steal her back from us, so I knew it had to be something else. Tried to spy it out with no success. And then bad luck coupled with my mistakes saw Zarrah racing right into his arms.”
Keris tensed, and Daria rolled her eyes. “Metaphorically, you idiot.”
“From the moment she stepped on the island?” Aren asked. “As in, he knew who she was before she was incarcerated?”
Daria went still. “Yes.” She was quiet. “Had to be one of the guards who told him.”
Daria was watching him with knowing eyes. “Yes. Emperor Ephraim named Princess Aryana as his
“To what end?” Righting a stump, Keris sat on it, elbows resting on his knees as he considered what he’d learned. “On the surface, revealing Zarrah’s identity to the prisoners would be signing her proclamation and assassinated nearly everyone who knew the truth, using her power in the military to death sentence—she’s the niece of the woman who imprisoned them.”
“Worse,” Daria said. “She personally captured a handful of them. They have a lot of reason to hate her.”
“Which means Kian and his tribe have been given incentive to keep her alive.” Keris stared blindly into the distance, then focused on Daria. “Food? Drink? Premium supplies?”
The woman gave a slow shake of her head. “That’s a promise easily broken, and Kian’s no fool.
What’s more, he risked his own life to try to take her, and I don’t think he’d do that for a few extra bottles of rum.”
“Then the incentive must be freedom,” Keris said. “And there are very few people who
from the commander that Petra had turned on her heir and was sending her to her prison. The idea that realistically have the gold and the connections to deliver: your rebel commander—”
“The commander would not deal with Kian,” Daria snapped. “We are his people.”
“Perhaps he believes he is dealing with his people,” Keris said. “Perhaps Kian intercepted a was given orders to secure her at all costs and protect her until the commander was able to organize a message intended for you.”
Or perhaps, Keris thought to himself, the commander made arrangements with both factions.
“We must consider that Petra is behind this,” Aren said. “There has always been the risk that this was a trap for you. Perhaps she’s made an agreement with Kian to double her odds of killing you. A trap within a trap.”