“It does now,” the man replied. “And His Highness has been wont to take off the heads of those who say otherwise, so best you keep those pretty lips of yours sealed unless it’s to swear allegiance to him. As for your boy…” He ran a finger down the edge of his sword. “He swears or he dies, so he’d best muster up his strength while you wait.”
The woman paled and pulled the blanket-wrapped form closer. Then she stepped into line.
There were too many people for us to risk going closer, the chances of one of them stumbling through Marc’s illusion growing by the second.
“It’s too bright! Shut the door!” Roland’s voice cut through the noise of the crowd, and I instinctively edged closer to Marc. “Can you see him?” I whispered. “What’s he doing?”
“He’s taking their oaths.” Marc drew me backwards, and we retreated into the barn where the twins waited.
“No sign of Lessa, but Roland is inside with two of Angoulême’s lackeys,” he told them. “Roland, it would seem, has developed an intense dislike for the sun.”
“And here I thought I’d never find common ground with the boy,” Vincent replied, rubbing at one eye. “No doubt Lessa has the place warded, and even if she doesn’t, we get that close and one of them is going to sense our power.”
“Agreed.” Marc rested his elbows on the door of a stall, eyes on the horse within, though I doubted he was giving it much thought. “They’ll have to come out eventually, though it will likely be after dark. We’ll ambush them then.”
“When they’re expecting it.” The words were out of my mouth before the thought was fully formed. “They might think Tristan won’t attack his brother, but they aren’t fools. They’ll have taken precautions, and they know he’ll be more likely to make his move when Roland isn’t surrounded by innocents.”
Taking a moment to organize my thoughts, I sat on a bale of hay. “It’s the core of their strategy: they’re building an army of humans not because they’re a threat to Tristan, but because he won’t harm them. They’re forming a human shield.”
“What do you propose?” Marc asked. “Our entire strategy is predicated on us catching him unaware, which is impossible with them closeted inside that building.”
“What about through the window?” Victoria asked. “A quick burst of magic and–”
“He’s flanked by the other trolls and the line of sight isn’t good,” Marc said, shaking his head. “You’d have to be only a few paces away to have a clear shot, and he’d sense the magic. None of us can get close enough, and if we take out the entire building, there’ll be countless human casualties.”
I coughed once, and waited.
Three sets of silver eyes turned on me. “No,” Marc said. “Absolutely not.”
“Why?” I asked. “He’s letting the humans right up close to him. What better chance do I have to cut him off from his magic?”
“Probably none,” Marc said.
“Well then?”
“Cutting him off from his power is only half the battle,” he replied. “Unfortunately for you and for us, he doesn’t need magic to rip out your throat. Which is exactly what he’ll do if you walk in, curtsey, and then throw a perfume bottle full of blood at his face.”
“I wasn’t planning to get that close,” I muttered. “I’ve a good arm.”
“And what about the other two? Three, if Lessa is close by, which we should assume she is. Is your aim good enough to take out all of them?”
“You three can take out those two, and if Lessa is there, I won’t act.”
“But you will come out oath-sworn to Roland, which is problematic,” Marc said. “It’s a bad plan.”
“It’s humans who are enforcing the lines,” I countered. “It’s nothing for me to compel my way out.”
“Not without drawing attention to yourself, which runs the risk of Roland or Lessa seeing through your disguise.”
“How long do you think they’ll argue if we don’t interrupt?”
I heard Victoria’s comment, but I ignored her, my irritation at Marc commanding my attention. He was as bad as Tristan – refusing to put me at risk even when it was worth the reward.
“The better part of an hour, I expect,” Vincent replied, and I shot him a dark look, but not before Victoria countered with, “Care to make a wager?”
“Enough!” I rounded on my friend and plucked out the piece of hay she had stuck between her teeth. “Unless you have something to contribute other than jests, I don’t want to hear a peep from you. Understood?”
She nodded, then took the piece of hay back and replaced it between her teeth. “Peep.”
Chapter Sixteen
Tristan
“Are they even watching?” Sabine stomped her feet, the snow crunching beneath her boots. The wind caught at the hood of her cloak, and I reached up to keep it in place, but her hand was already there. “I’ve got it,” she snapped, and adjusted Cécile’s long braid of hair to ensure it remained visible.