Home > The Turncoat King (The Rising Wave #1)(72)

The Turncoat King (The Rising Wave #1)(72)
Author: Michelle Diener

He frowned down at the jacket on the table, but then nodded. “Yes. This was worth a try, but you aren’t going to sew a working for me, are you?”

“I’m afraid not.”

He shrugged, philosophical, and took the jacket off the table, shrugged into it. “Come then.”

“Do we need the guards?” Ava asked, lifting her bound hands. “You can handle me, surely?”

“I can, but—” He looked through the door, and she saw both guards had returned.

She had spooked them, before she’d realized the knock at the door had been her Grimwaldian trader, delivering her revenge.

“We’re leaving?” one of the guards asked, relieved.

“Yes.” Herron walked from the room, and she rose to her feet and followed him out the house, a guard on either side of her.

They walked along a main street, almost completely empty of people.

“Everyone is at the square,” the one guard said, and Ava heard the nerves in his voice.

He was just realizing the impact of this delay.

“We’ll make an entrance.” Herron sounded pleased. He kept stretching out his arms to admire the shirt cuffs sticking out from the jacket sleeves, or smoothing his fingers over the design.

“Incoming crowd,” a guard warned.

Ava looked up ahead, and couldn’t work out what she was seeing. It looked like . . .

Luc. With his blade at her aunt’s throat as he dragged her down the street.

She could see Oscar walking backwards behind Luc, covering his back as hundreds of people followed behind. She guessed Deni must be somewhere around, too.

“I understand why no one is attacking him on the ground, because he could easily kill the queen, but why isn’t someone climbing a wall and shooting him in the back?” One of the guards wondered quietly to the other.

“I think the queen had already arranged for him to be assassinated in that way.” Herron frowned. “I’m not sure why it hasn’t happened yet.”

“A stray arrow, or a poor shot, and the queen would be hit,” the other guard said. “I wouldn’t take the chance.”

“I don’t like him holding the blade to her throat,” Herron said. He sounded annoyed.

Ava wondered if it was because he would prefer to be the one holding the blade to her throat.

The shirt would bring out his hidden self. All his truths. Truths he would be desperate to share.

She had gambled that that version of himself would be far worse than his public face. Would in fact inspire her aunt to finally rid herself of him.

It looked as if the opposite was also true.

They were close enough now for Ava to see the fury and fear in her aunt’s eyes at her situation. And the calm and strength in Luc’s.

He actually did seem to have been shot a few times from the walls as he’d made his way down the street. Two arrows had caught on his cloak, and were hanging like snapped twigs. As she watched, another arrow flew at him, hit him in the back and fell off him.

“They are trying to shoot him in the back,” the guard to her left whispered. “And they’re just bouncing off.”

“You all right, princess?” Luc asked, and she raised her eyebrows at the title.

“I’m all right, Commander.” He was close enough now she could see he had been fighting. There was blood on his cloak and his hands. “You?”

He shot her a grin at that. “All good.” He tipped his head at Herron. “That’s the Queen’s Herald?”

“Yes.”

How were they going to get out of this situation?

The street behind Luc was heaving with people. They could be overrun at any moment, except the queen would surely die.

Someone lunged from the crowd with a sword, but Oscar moved, almost fast enough to seem a blur, and the man retreated, screaming in agony.

“Anyone else?” Oscar called into the crowd.

Most likely, if more of the military were here, they would be in serious trouble, but Ava hadn’t seen many soldiers, not even in the barracks where she’d been held in the heart of the city.

They were either prisoners in Bartolo or they’d died on the plains under General Ru’s sword.

The sound of voices behind her made her turn, and she saw people beginning to spill from side streets to surround them, as if the ones at the back of the group following Luc had spread out and down toward the palace for a better view.

Everyone wanted a front row seat.

“Why aren’t you doing something, Herron?” Her aunt’s voice shook with anger. “Deal with this!”

“I wouldn’t help you even if it meant my personal fortunes doubled,” Herron told her, and there was a sudden hush in the crowd.

“Why would you say something like that to our aunt?” Ava asked.

“Because she won’t die!” Herron’s scream cut off every sound. He stopped, staring in horror at his own revelation. He looked down at his jacket, at the black embroidery on it, and then at Ava. He ripped the jacket off, kicking it away from him in panic. “That bitch did something to it. She worked something in.”

“Who’s she?” Ava asked. “Don’t be so cryptic, not everyone knows what you’re talking about.”

“Your mother.” Herron shouted the words. “She did something to it, made it so I would have to answer you.”

“It seems you’re still answering her,” the queen said. “So it can’t be the jacket. Now do something to get me free.”

Herron shook his head as if dealing with an irritating fly. “I’ve waited patiently for my turn on the throne, but whatever makes you look like you’re about to fall down dead isn’t killing you fast enough.” He stopped talking, looked at Ava in shock. “How are you still making me talk?”

“Making you tell the truth, you mean?” Ava shrugged. “Maybe you just need to get it off your chest?”

“Maybe.” Herron gave a slow nod. He lunged suddenly, grabbing the queen in a hug, and Luc lifted his sword from her throat when Herron tugged her out of his hold.

For a moment, Herron and the queen stood in each other’s arms, and then Herron stepped back, raising his arms at his sides. He held a long knife in his right hand, and it dripped blood.

The queen’s hands went to her chest, and she looked down. “I’m protected.” She looked around wildly. “I’m protected. My chemise is spelled to protect me.”

“Those protections don’t last forever,” Herron told her. “How long have you had it?”

“Nearly thirty years. It made me sick, but it protected me. I survived two assassination attempts thanks to it.”

“Thirty years is a long time.” Herron shrugged. “I should have known you had some protection.”

The queen fell to the ground and Ava crouched beside her.

“If it doesn’t work anymore, how was it still making me sick?” the queen whispered.

The golden brocade gown had slid off the queen’s shoulder, and Ava saw the black silk edging on the bodice of the chemise.

Suddenly, as if getting a second wind, the queen batted at Ava to get her to shuffle back and then struggled up on an elbow. “What are you waiting for?” She pointed at the palace guards. “Kill him.” She moved her finger to Herron.

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