Amaranthe supposed that was an improvement over chin-ups. “Fine, but if you sit over there and glare at me while I’m indulging in my sweets, I’ll shove a bun up your nose.”
Sicarius’s eyes glinted. “You may try.”
Huh. That sounded like a challenge. While he spread the map across the table, Amaranthe mused upon how that particular challenge might go if she tested him with it. She’d probably be the one to end up with baked goods lodged in her nostril, though it might be worth it if she elicited a playful side in him. Hm.
CHAPTER 2
Though Evrial had been sharing a cabin with Amaranthe since they boarded, she hesitated outside the door and decided to knock instead of walking inside unannounced. More than once, she’d found the assassin in there with her. They’d never been doing anything except playing strategy games, but Evrial had been forced to hold back a snippy comment that perhaps Amaranthe and Sicarius should be roommates. But she didn’t particularly want to stay with any of the men either-she flicked an irritated finger at her mind when it conjured Maldynado’s face-so she said nothing.
When the door opened, her hunch proved correct. Sicarius stood inside, using the door to block his body, no doubt prepared to defend-or attack-if she’d been an enforcer. Or anyone who dared give him a cross look. The man’s hard, angular face could have been chiseled from ice, for all the warmth it ever held, and Evrial, familiar with the number of soldiers and enforcers he’d killed, had a hard time thinking of him as anything other than “the assassin.” Maldynado had admitted to being perplexed by Amaranthe’s willingness to spend time with Sicarius. Evrial could understand that feeling. Still, having seen Amaranthe charm and manipulate a number of people-herself included-Evrial suspected she teased more out of the man than he gave others.
Without a word, Sicarius stepped aside to let Evrial enter.
“ Good evening, Sergeant Yara.” Amaranthe smiled from a stool perched before a Stratics game.
Like most of the others, she’d been wearing the same clothing for a week-in her case, a long-sleeved wool shirt and sturdy green trousers with numerous pockets-but, unlike the others, her garb appeared clean and freshly ironed. Even Maldynado rarely looked so crisp-apparently his love of fashion didn’t extend to a love of doing laundry. Amaranthe wore her hair in her typical bun, and not a single brown strand dared escape its confines. Her nails were clean-if short-and not a smudge of dirt darkened her hands or face, though an uncharacteristic white streak-was that frosting? — smeared one cheek.
On the table, a mosaic of tiles sprawled across a brown and green “battlefield” board. The face-down, not- yet-played tiles on either side sat in tidy stacks, three deep. Though Evrial was clearly interrupting the game, Amaranthe’s smile seemed genuine, even hopeful, as if she wanted some news to add interest to the days of confinement. One would think she’d appreciate a chance to rest. Before striking the blow that had destroyed Forge’s underwater base, she’d been captured and tortured. Most of the bruises mottling her face and hands had faded, but she likely had wounds that the eye couldn’t see, wounds that would take far longer to heal.
“ Lokdon,” Evrial greeted. Though she’d started thinking of the former enforcer by her first name, it seemed like a good idea to keep professional distance. Especially since Evrial wasn’t certain she’d stick around for the next phase of Amaranthe’s plan.
“ Did you enjoy your training?” Amaranthe asked.
Evrial had almost forgotten she’d gone. “It was adequate. I saw someone though. I thought you should know.”
Amaranthe stood up and glanced at Sicarius. “Oh?”
The assassin remained by the door, blending in with the shadows, though his tousled patch of short blond hair didn’t quite fit in with his neat, tailored black clothing. Bed-head, Evrial’s mother would have called it, though Sicarius always wore it that way, apparently too busy being dark and deadly to bother with hairbrushes.
“ An older woman,” Evrial said. “Someone I recognized from the Forge meeting.”
“ I thought some of them might be on board,” Amaranthe said, “as we seem to have flooded the tunnels before all of them could have escaped in their underwater conveyances.”
“ We? ” Evrial asked. She’d had nothing to do with collapsing the tunnels; in fact, Amaranthe had handled that all by herself.
Amaranthe offered a sheepish shrug. “Either way, it’s not surprising that others found their way back to the Goldar River and booked passage on the first steamboat heading north to the capital. What was this Forge lady doing?”
“ Sneaking about furtively. With food.”
“ Why would Forge have to sneak?” Amaranthe asked. “They’re not… wrongfully accused outlaws.”
Tactfully, Evrial decided not to mention that Amaranthe and her team had committed numerous crimes, crimes that might have one day been justified if it’d come out that they’d been working to protect the rightful emperor from assassins and usurpers, but now that Sespian was just one of more than a half-dozen people with enough royal blood to make a claim on the throne…
“ I don’t know,” Evrial said. “I followed her from the kitchen up to the top deck. I didn’t see which cabin she went into, but it was a dead-end corridor, so that narrows down the possibilities.”
“ And you came to… suggest we go for a visit?”
“ We?” Evrial asked at the same time as Sicarius said, “No,” the first word he’d spoken since she entered.
Amaranthe spread her arms and managed an expression of sheer innocence. “Where there’s one Forge person, there could be others. Don’t we need to keep an eye on them? And see if they’re up to anything besides catching a ride upriver?”
“ What could they be ‘up to’ on a steamboat?” Evrial asked.
“ I don’t know, but you’re the one who suggested furtiveness was going on.”
“ I will search the cabins tonight,” Sicarius said. “ You will stay here.”
Amaranthe’s eyebrows rose. “I will thank you not to give me orders.”
Sicarius did not respond, though his gaze seemed to grow a shade flintier. Amaranthe returned the stare. Evrial didn’t imagine “quelled” was a word many people had used to describe her.
“ I suppose a nocturnal search would be better than nothing,” Amaranthe mused when she and Sicarius finished their staring contest-Evrial couldn’t tell if anything had been resolved during it. “ But, wouldn’t it be better if we could chat with the woman as well as searching her belongings?”
Yet another degree of coldness descended upon Sicarius’s glare. Evrial had teased Maldynado once, about kowtowing to the assassin, but she had to admit those glares were unnerving-knowing all the people he’d killed only made them more so-and she was glad she wasn’t the recipient.
“ What are you suggesting?” Outside of kidnapping and torture, Evrial couldn’t imagine a scenario where they’d walk up and chat with the enemy.
“ Those upper-deck cabins are more posh than ours, I hear,” Amaranthe said. “Built-in washouts instead of pots you have to dump, and I believe there’s maid service, isn’t there?”
It took Evrial a moment to catch on-she was too busy wondering where Amaranthe had heard anything, since she was supposedly staying out of sight in her cabin for the whole trip. “Maid service? Are you suggesting we dress up as servants and clean people’s rooms?”
“ Why, that’s an excellent idea. Thank you for suggesting it.” Amaranthe beamed.
Evrial crossed her arms over her chest and added her glower to the glare Sicarius was still sending across the room. She was beginning to see how Maldynado got blamed for so many things that may have not been his fault after all.
“ We will speak.” Sicarius flicked his gaze at Evrial, then focused on Amaranthe. “Alone.”
Amaranthe’s beaming smile didn’t fade. “Sergeant Yara is my roommate. I’m not going to ask her to leave.”
Sicarius took a step toward Evrial, and she tensed. Fighting him would be ludicrous, but she wasn’t going to stand meekly and let him shove her out the door either.
“ You’re not going to ask her to leave either,” Amaranthe said, coolness creeping into her own tone for the