Read The Winner's Crime Online
Authors: Marie Rutkoski
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ened during their push through the tavern. He looked a
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little tired, like a runner done running. What ever thought
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had seized him in the alleyway was gone . . . or had gone
away enough. She couldn’t see it anymore on his torn
face.
His dear face, dear to her, dearer still. How could she
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love his face more for its damage? What kind of person saw
someone’s suff ering and felt her heart crack open even
wider, even more sweetly than before?
There was something wrong with her. It was wrong to
want to touch a scar and call it beautiful.
Arin wasn’t looking at her anymore. He’d been dis-
tracted.
Kestrel followed his gaze to see a black- eyed redhead at
a nearby table giving Arin a cool look. His expression didn’t
change, but something inside him did. Kestrel felt it. It
twisted her heart.
When Arin’s attention returned to Kestrel, she exam-
ined the splintery surface of the table. “I’m going to get a
Bite and Sting set,” he said. “And wine. Should I get wine?”
The answer to that was a clear no. Kestrel needed all
her wits about her for a game she shouldn’t—
couldn’t
—
lose. But she felt suddenly miserable, and realized that
she’d been ner vous ever since Arin had found her by the
river. She said yes.
He hesitated, like he might counsel her against that
choice. Then he left the table.
The crowd swallowed him. Kestrel couldn’t see where
he had gone.
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Arin didn’t like to leave her for long. She was going to at-
tract attention. It was her nature. But when he returned
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with wine and a game set, she was alone and quiet: an al-
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most eerie silence in the tavern’s storm.
He saw her before she did him. He saw that she was
unhappy. He realized that this was what had arrested him
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by the canal when he’d thought she was a nameless maid:
the sense that this stranger had lost something as precious
to her as what he had lost was to him.
In his mind, Arin lost to Kestrel at Bite and Sting, and
let all of his questions slip away.
In his mind, he said,
Tell me what you want.
And she said,
Leave this city.
She said,
Take me with you.
Kestrel lifted her gaze. As he met her eyes— an ex-
tremely light brown, the lightest shade before brown be-
comes gold— Arin knew that he was a fool. A thousand
times a fool.
He must stop. They were painful, these waking dreams.
Why did he allow himself to think them? They skewed
everything. Arin was ashamed now, remembering how
he’d pretended— even if for a moment— that Kestrel was
the Moth. He shoved that lovely little lie from his head. He
refused to think of it again. Thoughts like this made him
feel split in two, just as his face was: one side fi ne and the
other sore and throbbing.
He sat, and set the game, wine bottle, and glass on the
table. He poured.
“Only one glass?” she said.
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He handed it to her. “I’ve no head for wine. How is it?”
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“Terrible.” But she drank deeply.
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Arin upacked the set. Kestrel picked up one of the tiles,
which was made of rough wood, and turned it over in her
fi ngers. Her thumb rubbed at some grime. He watched her
drink again.
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Arin thought of the ruined dress Deliah had described.
Tensen had dismissed it with an impatient wave of the hand,
a gesture that told Arin it was ridiculous to imagine any-
thing dire. Vomit on the sleeve of a dress? Well, don’t court-
iers like wine? Arin had seen scores of Valorians drunk until
sick. As for the dirt on the dress and split seams . . . anybody
can trip. The Winter Garden had no mud, true, but Arin
hadn’t seen all of the palace grounds. There were places he
wasn’t allowed to go. Kestrel could have tripped anywhere.
Neither tripping nor drunkenness seemed like Kestrel.
But he watched her drain the glass.
I could have changed,
she’d said by the river.
Arin took the game piece from Kestrel. He mixed the
tiles with unnecessary force. They drew their hands.
Arin’s was pitiful. The only thing that saved this game
from being a lost cause was a pair of mice, and mice held
almost the lowest value. The rest of his hand was an assort-
ment of Sting tiles— which Kestrel delighted in playing,
and played well. He, less so.
And Kestrel had a high hand. He knew it. She had no
tells— not exactly. It was more that she had a concentrated
lack
of tells. She changed without giving any clear sign that
she had changed. She gathered intensity.
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“Kestrel.”
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She discarded a tile and drew another. She didn’t look
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at him. He’d noticed— of course he had— how she avoided
looking at him now. And no wonder. Arin’s face stung.
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The stitches itched. He was tempted to rip them out. “Look
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at me,” he said. She did, and Arin suddenly wished she
hadn’t. He cleared his throat. He said, “I won’t try any-
more to convince you not to marry him.”
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She slowly added the new tile to her hand. She stared at
it, and said nothing.
“I don’t understand your choice,” Arin said. “Or maybe
I do. It doesn’t matter. You want it. That’s clear. You’ve al-
ways done exactly what you wanted.”
“Have I.” Her voice was fl at and dull.
He plunged ahead. “I was wondering . . .” Arin had an
idea. He’d had it for some time now. He didn’t like it. The
words lay bitter on his tongue, but he had thought about it,
and thought about it, and if he said nothing . . .
Arin made himself study his tiles again. He tried to think
which Sting tile would profi t Kestrel least. He discarded a
bee. The instant he set the tile down, he regretted it.
He pulled a high Bite tile. This should have encour-
aged him, yet Arin had the sense of fl ying toward the in-
evitable moment when Kestrel won and he asked her what
she wanted.
“I thought . . .”
“Arin?”
She looked concerned. That decided him. Arin took a
deep breath. His stomach changed to iron. His body was
girding itself in a way he knew well. Arin was tightening
the muscles needed before a plunge into deep water. A
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punch to the gut. The lift of the hardest, lowest, highest
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notes he could possibly sing. His stomach knew what he’d
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have to sustain.
“Marry him,” Arin said, “but be mine in secret.”
Her hand lifted from the tiles as if scorched. She sat
back in her chair. She rubbed at her inner elbow. She drank
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the dregs of her wine and was silent. Finally, she said, “I
can’t do that.”
“Why?” Arin was hot with humiliation, hating himself
for having asked. The cut burned in his cheek. “It’s not so
diff erent than what you would have chosen before. When
you kissed me in your carriage on Firstwinter, you thought
to keep me your secret. If you thought of anything. I would
have been one of those special slaves, the ones called for at
night when the rest of the house is sleeping. Well? Isn’t that
how it was?”
“No.” She spoke low. “It wasn’t.”
“Then tell me.” Arin was damning himself with every
word. “Tell me how it was.”
Slowly, Kestrel said, “Things have changed.”
Arin jerked his head to the side, chin up, stitched left
cheek tilted to catch the light. “Because of
this
?”
She replied as if the answer was obvious. “Yes.”
He shoved back from the table. “I think I’ll have that
drink.”
Arin began to walk away, then glanced back over his
shoulder. He made sure his words were an insult. “Don’t
touch the tiles.”
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Kestrel didn’t understand. His anger made no sense. Wasn’t
it clear that Arin’s wound was her fault? And that worse
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could happen?
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He didn’t return.
She thought about what she didn’t understand. She
thought about how Arin’s wound might run deeper than
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the fl esh. She remembered his question and her answer.
She remembered them again.
Slowly, she began to see the misunderstanding. For her,
yes
was the emperor’s message carved into Arin’s face. For
Arin,
yes
was the scar itself, not what it meant. His anger
was for how he looked . . . how he thought he looked to
her now.
A horror sank into her. She couldn’t wait until he re-
turned. She must fi nd him. She must set things straight.
Arin had forced his way up to the bar, where he waited to
ask for a second glass. The Valorian barkeep ignored him.
She served everyone else fi rst. When new Valorians came
up to the bar, she served them, too. She wasn’t going to
glance at Arin unless he made a scene— which he was very
ready to do. In his head, he heard Kestrel say
Yes.
The surface of the bar was sticky and smelled sour.
Arin stared at it and thought of the emerald earring, how it
had shone: enchanted, his. Sarsine had found it hooked
into a thick, patterned carpet that had been rolled up and
shoved into storage in a disused quarter of his house in
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Herran. The emerald had been like one of those tales where
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a god is revealed. Arin had sworn he would never part
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with it.
Yet he had, and he understood now that it hadn’t really
been information he wanted to buy. It had been trust. Arin
could no longer trust himself. Arin had believed the bets in
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the bookkeeper’s hand were important. The emerald had
seemed to promise that if this belief could be proven true,
then Arin could trust his every belief.
Arin’s palms were sticky now, fl attened against the
bar. His temper slowed. He remembered the Kestrel he’d
known in Herran. He didn’t think about who she’d been
lately. And he didn’t make his increasingly frequent mis-
take of reimagining this new Kestrel— so fully Valorian, so
nicely set in the court and capital— as the person he wanted
her to be.
He simply remembered the person she’d been. Arin
asked that Kestrel the same question he’d asked the Kestrel
dressed as a palace maid, and she gave the same answer. But
this time, her
yes
was also a
no
. This time, her answer was a
box with a false bottom, and the meaning of it went deeper
than he had seen.
He had misunderstood her.
Arin began to think he shouldn’t have walked away
from that table. He should go back. He should go back
right now.
And he would have, if he hadn’t been distracted by a
snatch of conversation from a nearby table.
A group of senators were drinking. The Broken Arm
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had a very mixed crowd that night, more than its usual
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share of courtiers. These were talking about the east.
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“. . . an impressive victory,” said one. “Exactly the sort
of thing I’d expect from General Trajan.”
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“He can’t take all the credit,” said another. “The idea
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was his daughter’s.”
“Really?”
“I was there. There was a gathering in the Winter Gar-
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den the morning after the engagement ball. Only the most
important members of the court were invited, of course. A
group of us discussed how best to take the eastern plains.
The emperor even asked
my
advice. If I say so myself, my
idea was very good. Yet let no one believe that I am ungen-