Authors: Sara B. Larson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Action & Adventure, #General
for it when Eljin saved her.” I looked to Damian for affirmation.
“She was only doing what the Insurgi asked her to do, not
because she wanted to,” Damian said. He glanced at Tanoori, who
wouldn’t look up from her food. “I’m the one who asked the
Insurgi to plant someone to attempt an assassination on me, and I
didn’t want her to die for it. So, I’m also the one who asked Eljin
to save her.”
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“You did
what
?”
“I knew she was going to try to murder me,” Damian said
calmly. “She was never intended to succeed — only to attempt it.
If my guard hadn’t been there, I would have had to stop her myself,
which I was prepared to do if necessary.”
I glared at him, my food forgotten on the plate in front of
me. “Why would you ask them to attempt to murder you? Aren’t
they the ones who actually
did
murder your brother?” With everyone else listening to our conversation, I didn’t dare yell at him
for keeping something this important from me, but inside I was
seething.
“Yes.” Damian sighed. “But afterward, Lisbet discovered their
hideout and went to them. She learned that their leaders were a
trio of sorcerers, loyal to Blevon and General Tinso, who wished to
overthrow King Hector. She explained that she was the general’s
sister-in-law, and that I was loyal to Blevon, not my father. She
convinced the Insurgi that killing his heirs wouldn’t stop Hector,
and she also told them about Iker, warning them that they wouldn’t
be able to murder the king, either. They agreed to try to work
together with General Tinso and me to overthrow him.”
“But how does having the Insurgi send Tanoori to try to
assassinate you help? And why did you send me to deliver a mes-
sage to them?
Now
will you tell me what was in it?” With everything else that had happened and how focused I’d been on learning how
to defeat a sorcerer, I’d almost completely forgotten about that
nightmarish trek through the jungle, despite the scars from the
jaguar attack to remind me.
“The attempted murder was to get Iker’s and the king’s atten-
tion, to make them think we had enemies out there who wanted
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me dead. When I had you take the message to the Insurgi, I had
no other choice but to ask for your help. Lisbet and Jax usually
delivered the messages, but Iker followed us to their rooms that
night I took you with me. She felt his presence and told me to
leave. She had to f lee the castle before I could write the message
for her to deliver to the Insurgi.”
“It was Iker who followed us? I thought it was Eljin.”
Damian shook his head.
I knew I hadn’t been imagining things, but it was worse to
think that it had been Iker and that I hadn’t even suspected him.
“So what did the message say?”
“It contained the details they needed for their part in our plan.
They’re going to help us when we attempt to break into the palace.”
“The Insurgi are going to help us?” I looked at Tanoori, who
had been eating quietly this whole time. She finally met my gaze,
and I saw a ghost of the girl I used to know in the hesitant smile
she gave me. I still couldn’t believe Damian had asked her to try to
murder him. Had she known she was meant to fail — was she just
acting, too?
“They promised they would.”
“They have some very powerful sorcerers and an impressive
number of rebels, all of whom wish to overthrow the king. And
we’re going to need all the help we can get,” General Tinso added.
“I agree,” I said after I forced myself to eat a bite of meat. “I’ve
been thinking about it, and even though I’m pretty sure I
could
beat Iker, I don’t see how I’m going to be able to get close enough
to him to even try unless you bring
your
black sorcerers to help me.
Otherwise, he’ll just burn me to a crisp before I even come close
enough to get past his defenses.”
260
“
My
black sorcerers?” General Tinso gave me a strange look.
“What are you talking about?”
Before I could answer, Damian jumped in. “I’ve been mean-
ing to speak with you about that. Alexa’s parents were killed by a
sorcerer’s fire when part of the Blevonese army raided her village.
Is it possible that there are black sorcerers helping your army that
you aren’t aware of?”
General Tinso’s eyes widened as Damian spoke. “No. I would
know if there were. Are there any other reports of this happening,
or was it an isolated event?”
Damian shook his head. “I don’t know.”
“When you are king, we will need to look into this. I don’t know
who that sorcerer was, but I’m certain he was not with our army.”
“So you
don’t
have any black sorcerers who can help us?” I
asked, confused and upset. If the sorcerer hadn’t been part of the
Blevonese army, who was he? And why had he killed my parents?
“No, we don’t,” the general said.
“Then how am I going to get close enough to Iker to fight
him without him killing me first?” My stomach tightened into
knots of anxiety.
“You wouldn’t want a black sorcerer’s help — trust me. And as
it happens, you won’t have to worry about getting close to Iker. If
our plan works, you should be standing at his side when we come
with the prince.” General Tinso smiled at me like this was the best
news I’d ever heard.
“And just how are you planning to make that happen?”
General Tinso began to explain, but Damian held up his hand
to cut him off. “Alexa, I want you to remember that you agreed to
do this. That you wanted to help.”
261
“I know,” I said bitterly, looking between him and the gen-
eral. “What is it you want me to do?”
“To do the best acting job you’ve ever done.”
“I don’t understand.” I glanced at Rylan, but he stared down
at his untouched food and wouldn’t meet my gaze.
“You’re going to be taken back to the palace first, a day or two
ahead of us by some Blevonese soldiers,” Damian said.
“I’m not going with you?” My chest tightened, as if a hand
were slowly squeezing the air from my lungs.
“No. You have to go first. You’ll tell them you’ve been held
captive with the prince in Blevon, and that you were sent back to
deliver a message to the king. The message will announce the
coming of General Tinso and his army with the prince as his cap-
tive. It’ll say that the general is coming to negotiate the release of the prisoner in return for an end to the war.”
“And I’m supposed to take this to the king?”
“Yes,” Damian said, his expression guarded.
“Why would he believe you are their captive if he suspects
you’re loyal to Blevon? Wouldn’t he realize it’s a trap?”
“That’s why we made the assassination attempt look so realis-
tic, and why we have to act like the abduction was real. Hector has
spies in the Blevonese army, and we can only hope they have
reported back to him by now.”
I took a shaky breath. “And if it works and he believes the mes-
sage, what then? Are you just going to storm into the palace and
hope I’m somewhere close by?”
“No. When you deliver the message, he’ll probably say he
doesn’t care about bargaining for my life,” Damian said matter-of-
factly, as though the reality that his father didn’t care whether he
262
lived or died was about as interesting as commenting on the bland-
ness of our supper.
“So how am I going to get him to agree to meet with you?
And why would he keep me anywhere near him?”
“You must suggest that this is an opportunity for him to sur-
round and trap Blevon’s most powerful general,” General Tinso
said. “Tell him that you know which men in my army are sorcerers.
You have to convince him that you can point them out, so he can
have them shot before they got close enough to use any sorcery to
fight. You must make yourself indispensable to him so that he
keeps you with him and Iker.”
“But I thought Iker could sense if another sorcerer was in
the room.”
“He can, but with so many people around — and so many
sorcerers in one place — he won’t be able to pinpoint who they are
fast enough. You have to convince them that they need you, with-
out revealing that you know Iker is a sorcerer.”
My head began to ache as they continued to explain their plan
to me. I listened and nodded, but my heart was pounding and I
was having a hard time memorizing what they said. All I could
think about was the fact that I was going to leave them behind,
that I was going to have to face the king and Iker alone — and
somehow try to convince them to let the general come with his
army and the prince.
The plan depended heavily on me. If I wasn’t successful, it would
be a disaster, and King Hector really would have the chance to crush
King Osgand’s most powerful general right in his own courtyard.
“I think we should call it a night and head to bed,” Eljin finally
said, when the entire plan had been laid out for me.
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“Yes, we all need to rest while we can,” General Tinso agreed.
I stood up in a daze. Rylan wouldn’t meet my gaze when he
stood up and followed Eljin from the room. Lisbet and Jax slipped
out the door quietly, but not before Jax gave Damian a tight hug.
I watched as Damian bent over to embrace the boy, a look of ten-
derness on his face. His half brother. My chest tightened, and I
had to force myself not to think about my own brother and how
much I missed him. With a sigh, I started to follow Eljin and Rylan
out of the room when someone touched my arm.
I turned to see Tanoori standing by me, her expression pained.
“I’m sorry for what I did to you, Alexa. I just wanted to tell you
that before you go. And . . .” She paused, as if summoning cour-
age. “I want to thank you. For saving me even though I didn’t
deserve it. I will make it up to you someday, I promise.”
I impulsively reached out to embrace her. She stiffened at first,
but soon she softened and hugged me back tightly.
“Be safe, Tanoori.”
“You, too.” She looked at me for a moment longer, and then
turned and followed Lisbet and Jax to the front wings of the
castle.
“I wish you well,” General Tinso said from behind me, mak-
ing me jump.
I turned to look up at him. “Thank you.”
He nodded and moved to leave the room. “General?” I hesi-
tantly called after him.
He paused, glancing back.
“Papa used to call me something — a nickname in Blevonese.
He never told me what it meant. I was wondering, before I leave,
if you could . . .” I trailed off.
264
General Tinso nodded for me to continue.
“He called me his
zhànshì nánwu¯
.”
The general’s eyes widened. “Alexa,
zhànshì
roughly translates to ‘champion fighter.’”
My heart began to pound. “And
nánwu¯
?”
“It means ‘sorcerer.’”
I couldn’t swallow past the sudden lump in my throat.
“You can do this, Alexa. I know you can.” He clapped one
hand on my shoulder, staring down into my eyes for a moment.
And then, with one final smile, he left.
“Let’s go,” Damian said from behind me, startling me. He
touched the small of my back with his fingertips, guiding me
toward the staircase that would lead us back to our room for the
last time.
265
thirty-seven
T
he men who are taking you back to the palace don’t know
the truth,” Damian said, his voice barely above a whisper as
we walked. “They think they really are delivering a prisoner of war
with a message to the king. And they still think you’re a boy.”
“Okay,” I responded, too overwhelmed and too tired to care
about this additional information. What was pretending to be a
boy — something I’d done for years — to two soldiers compared
to everything else they expected of me? I didn’t want to think
about that. I didn’t want to think about how frustrated I was with
Damian, either. Instead, I focused on the fact that Papa had been
calling me “champion fighter sorcerer” my whole life. He’d
been
trying
to tell me the truth after all, in the only safe way he knew how. But what had he meant — that he knew all along I’d
have the ability to fight sorcerers, or was there even more to his
nickname for me?
Damian touched my arm, gently grasping my elbow and pull-
ing me to a stop. “I didn’t intentionally keep my involvement with
the Insurgi a secret from you, Alex.”
I sighed as I looked up at him.
“With everything else going on, I didn’t think to tell you
about it. I’m sorry.”
266
“Maybe if we survive all this, you’ll get to a point someday
where you don’t have to think about telling me these little details,
like asking someone to pretend to murder you.” I couldn’t keep
the bitterness from my voice.
Damian’s expression hardened. “I’m not used to telling
anyone
anything — let alone every secret I have. Not to mention that even
though I
hoped
I could trust you, I had to be sure before I told you my whole plan. I said I’m sorry; what more do you want from me?”