My breath heaves through my chest, shredding my throat. I rush to the bars, pressing myself against them to get closer. “W-what have you done?”
“You are confused.” Lord Jamis moves, eclipsing my view of my handmaid. My friend. “This is what you have done by not cooperating.”
My eyes bulge out.
“Cooperate and she lives. If not, she dies.”
His terrifying truth burns like a thousand bee stings to my chest.
“Tell us where Aodren is hiding like a little mouse.” His mouth twists and turns around the words. My hands choke the bars.
“I don’t know where he is,” I say, choosing my words carefully, just as Lord Jamis did. My gaze flicks to Phelia as if in challenge. It’s the truth. I don’t exactly know where Aodren is at this precise moment.
“No?” The lantern makes Lord Jamis’s teeth look yellowed and decayed.
“Gillian hasn’t done anything. Let her go.”
His hand flicks in the smallest of motions. The guards drop her to the ground without care. Her body flumps on the soiled stone dungeon floor. I press a fist to my mouth. After all Gillian’s done for me, the care and friendship . . .
“Please don’t—don’t hurt her.” I take in all her bruises, and rage rises, a tornado under my skin.
“What about her?” I point at Phelia. “Have her tell you where the king is. Surely, she can sense people’s energy better than I can.”
Lord Jamis ignores me.
Changing tactics, I narrow my eyes on Phelia. “You say you’re my mother. Then don’t let him hurt her.” Spit dots my chin from the force of my speech. “Please.”
She takes a step closer to my cell. But she says nothing and does nothing, despite how I’m watching her, pleading with her.
I feel like the time I slipped through the ice on the lake beside Papa’s training grounds—cold, numb, and full of useless frantic fight. My blood is slush in my veins. My energy throbs in my hands, wanting to push it into Gillian. To heal her. Save her. But she’s not close enough for me to touch.
I shake the cell bars as hard as I can. “If you have the same power as me, then you find the king.”
The challenge, thrown on the muck and stone separating us, goes unanswered. Her gaze switches to something like awe focused on my hands, which are wrapped around the metal bars. Bars that are now bowed slightly outward. Not enough to escape. Just enough that it’s noticeable.
Bloody seeds. How did I do that? I’m not strong enough to have muscled them into that position. Papa taught me to be capable. Not to bend iron bars.
Phelia blinks in a slow, centering way. Her lids gliding down and up before her pupils settle on me. “So much potential, Britta.”
I want to stare at my hands and see if they look different than before, but I won’t give Phelia the satisfaction of knowing how inexperienced I truly am.
“Don’t you want to learn what more you can do?” Phelia’s eyes gleam as she examines the bars.
“Enough.” Jamis breaks the spell. “Make her talk. I want Aodren tonight.”
“Have your Spiriter tell you.” I tug at the cell again, but the bars don’t bend farther. Perhaps because my energy isn’t focused and my head is spinning too much to control it.
Phelia tsks. “You broke the bind, Britta. Your new bond masks his energy. Only you can tell us where he is.”
I’m shocked she’s admitting so much. This information seems crucial. It almost seems as if she’s helping me. But that cannot be. Can it?
Lord Jamis walks to Gillian, and I freeze, watching his slow steps clacking on the ground. He lifts the toe of his boot. At a snail’s pace, he lowers it over her hand, the one part of her not battered.
“No” comes out of me in a tortured whisper.
Gillian stirs, an agonized moan slipping from her lips.
Every part of me cringes. “Stop. P-please, stop.”
The challenge on Lord Jamis’s expression doesn’t falter. I want to kill him.
“Gilly.” I try to get her attention. “Gillian, I—I . . .” I hate myself for having no words. Nothing to comfort her. No promise to give. Because what can I say? Can I turn over the king of Malam to save my friend?
My gaze volleys to Phelia. She scoots back out of the light’s yellow spill, evident she’s not going to stop him.
Lord Jamis said he’ll spare Gillian if I turn over Aodren. It would be foolish of me to believe him, though. He could change his mind later. He just sanctioned the death of half the noblemen and noblewomen. He won’t let us live.
There is no good choice in this situation. One life for another. The option is the most despicable form of motivation. I cannot send Aodren to his death.
Even so, I say, “I don’t know exactly where he is. But I can figure it out.”
Jamis’s attention cuts to Phelia.
“Truth,” she says, and she’s right because I’m determined to find out exactly where Aodren is hiding.
Chapter
30
Cohen
I WANT TO DIE.
My eyes crack open and the first thing I see is Lirra. The Archtraitor’s daughter is staring down at me, looking as plucked as the day I left her in the church office in Rasimere Crossing. I twist to sit up, and darts of fiery pain shoot into my arm and lungs.
“Mother of scrants,” I pant.
Sunrays sneaking in from a nearby window bleed across the bed, where I lie in an unfamiliar room. Strips of brown cloth wind around my arm and torso, which I notice is unclothed. My legs are covered with the gods’ ugliest creation of a quilt I’ve ever seen. “What’s this?”
Lirra points her finger at my face. “‘Thank you for saving my arrogant arse’ is what you should be starting with. Seeing as you haven’t learned manners in your twenty years, I’ll excuse you. Once. That’s all you get.” She drops down on the edge of the bed, causing the mattress to shift.
“Bloody seeds.” I bite my tongue against the fresh dose of agony.
“My father used to say a man curses because he doesn’t have the wit to come up with anything original.”
“You saying I’m an idiot?”
She smirks, her expression answering for her. Her finger shifts to point at my arm. “That’s a brace. It’ll keep your bones in place while you heal.”
“I know what a brace is, Lirra. I meant the thing on my legs.” The maker of the quilt used every color known to man.
Lirra’s snarl is a bite away from rabid. “My gran made that quilt, so you shut your mouth.”
I go to move my hands and remember . . . pain. Bludger. “No offense to your gran.”
“You just offended her. You cannot erase it by saying ‘no offense.’”
“Fine. Be offended,” I huff, which earns me an eye roll. Lirra’s got about as much charm as Omar.
Seeds, Omar.
“What happened? How’d I get here?” I ask.
Lirra purses her lips. I think she’s going to answer, but instead she goes about poking at my arms and ribs, unwrapping cloth, and lathering my skin with the foulest-smelling poultice known to man.
Her fingers are torture devices. After the third accidental jab, I grab her wrist with my good hand, bite back the pain, and say, “Thank you for saving me.” Even though I don’t have any clue what she saved me from. Last I remember I was with Ulrich and Wallace, following Jamis’s trail. “Where am I, and how’d I get here?”