Rook(110)
“I’m sorry about everything.”
He didn’t reply right away. “I don’t think you have anything to be sorry for, my sister. How did you leave Father?”
He was talking like he’d just sat down to have a chat on her window seat in Bellamy House. But now it was her turn not to respond immediately. She wondered if it was for the same reason: because they were both telling lies. “He was fine.”
“And you got Jennifer out? Was she all right?”
“She’s out, but she was … very sick. I’m so sorry, Tom.”
“Sophie,” he said, pulling her over so she could put her head on his shoulder. “Tell me what you have to be sorry about.”
And just like that, the inner mechanism that had been propelling her forward sputtered and seized, its ticking stopped, and all that had been held at bay came flooding out, spilling pain and remorse onto Tom’s filthy shirt. She told him everything, unable to see his face, and she thought maybe that was best, because she wouldn’t be able to see the condemnation there. When there was nothing left she said, “I was just … so stupid.”
Tom stroked her head and said, “Sophie, do you trust Spear?”
“What do you mean?”
“Because …” Tom hesitated. “It’s just that I know he has other motives.”
“I saw the denouncement, Tom,” she whispered, trying to suppress the memory of René telling her almost the very same thing on Spear’s steps, his mouth and jaw so angry in the dark. She took a breath of bone-dusted air. “And I know about Spear.”
“Did he tell you?”
“No, or not at first. René told me. I don’t know how he knew …”
“Sophie, everyone knew about Spear and you. Except for you.”
“Then why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because it was Spear’s business to, not mine. What did you say to him?”
“That I thought of him as my brother. And that I was going to marry René Hasard whether there was a marriage fee or not.”
“I see. And what did he do?”
“Knocked over some furniture.” She could feel Tom’s breath coming shallow in his chest. She should make him stop talking. But how long did they have before they would never talk again?
“I don’t know what Hasard is, Sophie, except that he’s been raised to be excellent at what he does. But I do know this. Spear is a good man, but when he gets something in his head, there’s … there’s just no getting it out again. And if he thought he was doing what’s right … Well, he could be ruthless.”
“Ruthless? That doesn’t sound like Spear.”
“Doesn’t it?”
This was just like Hammond, wasn’t it? René felt the vibrations traveling down his rope as he climbed. A knife. And he was hanging halfway up from a smooth piece of cliff, nothing to clutch on to, nowhere to go but down. René sighed when he felt the rope slacken to nothing beneath his hands. He pushed his feet against the cliff face, spread his arms like wings, and fell backward, the cold night air whistling past his head.
A draft blew cold through the bones, a weird noise in the dark. Sophia shivered, wondering where it had come from. “Are you in pain?” she asked.
“I’m so thirsty I don’t think it matters,” Tom replied. “Are you in pain?”
She could feel the blood from the scratch LeBlanc had given her trickling down her arm. She shook her head.
“So who’s out there, Sophie? Any chance someone will come to find us?”
“I told Cartier to get on the last landover whether I came or not. And Spear will think I’m on a landover, too. He’ll be leaving the city by now.”
“And what about Hasard?”
Sophia closed her watering eyes. “He’s exactly where he wants to be, Tom.”
René kept his eyes closed. He hated landing in the compost heap. It might not break bones like the ground would, but it did knock the wind out, which was useful only for avoiding a few moments of the stench. He supposed he should thank Uncle émile for making him take this fall so many times. Tonight it had saved his life. But he was too angry for justice at the moment. He waited for his air to return, and when it did and his temper had settled, he opened his eyes.
The clouds had cleared and the night was glowing with the north lights. Green, hazy edges tinged with purple, but there was also a stripe of yellow. A streak of fire, he realized. Like what he had seen on the A5 from Bellamy House. And now he saw that there were dozens of them, fine, thin lines racing across the sky. What were they? Pieces of stars? Or pieces of Ancient machines still flying? He wished he could show Sophia. He wondered, impractically, if they were for the Rook. If they were for her.
He rolled himself out and slid down the stinking pile, toward the cliff face and the next set of ropes his uncles kept for climbing in and out of the Lower City. He was going to be sore from that fall. He walked slowly, thinking about Sophia, and all the different ways he might like to kill Spear Hammond.
Spear ran down a back street of the Upper City in the dark, glad he had killed René Hasard. He didn’t like killing people, but if that was what it took to protect Sophia from herself, then so be it.
Sharon Cameron's Books
- Hell Followed with Us
- The Lesbiana's Guide to Catholic School
- Loveless (Osemanverse #10)
- I Fell in Love with Hope
- Perfectos mentirosos (Perfectos mentirosos #1)
- The Hollow Crown (Kingfountain #4)
- The Silent Shield (Kingfountain #5)
- Fallen Academy: Year Two (Fallen Academy #2)
- The Forsaken Throne (Kingfountain #6)
- Empire High Betrayal