Paene Umber maintained a steady breathing, trying to remain
calm. Crick Hasting was anything but.
“We barely have the men to defend against the local populace
as it is,” he said. “And now you want
us to send a hundred men down the Rush?”
“We wouldn’t need so many men if you hadn’t instilled such
fear into them,” Paene said. “I wish to the gods that you hadn’t used such
cruel methods during your takeover.”
“Parish, you don’t understand… you’re so naïve. If I hadn’t
done those things, what would stop people from uprising against me? Once you
show that the king can be deposed with a quick strike, others will be quick to
try—unless you can prove that such an action would be costly to them.”
Paene did not answer right away. He tried a different
tactic. “As we speak, it is likely that Invercard is undergoing another
assault,” he said. “And I don’t think that the men can hold it this time. If
you send men down, you can hopefully stop them before they leave the Rush and break
out into the Island Above. The people will love you. You’ll no longer by their
conqueror, their torturer… you’ll be their savior.”
Crick scratched his chin. “I’ll think about it.”
Paene took a deep breath. “You can stop thinking about it,”
he said. “I’ve already sent the men down.”
The Carpenter turned and looked at him. “You did?” he asked,
softly. “Why would you do that?”
“You were nowhere to be found,” he said. “Time was of the
essence. If we delayed even a bit, it might have been too late to defend the
canyon adequately.”
“You have always been loyal to me,” the Carpenter said. “I
suppose you were trying to do what was right. But you could have opened our conversation with that,
instead of dropping this on me. Why didn’t you?”
Paene considered it. “You have always valued honesty…” he
said, putting some meaning into his words. “Honesty at any cost. I will give
you some now as well.”
“Please do,” Crick said.
“When I woke up, I was appalled at what I heard. You were no
longer attacking our enemies. You were attacking the people that you swore to
free. You burned innocent families inside their homes. You inflicted hideous
tortures upon soldiers, some of whom were forced
into that service—the exact sort of person that we created this whole movement
more. And when I heard these things… I wasn’t sure who I was dealing with.”
“I was afraid,” he said, “that if I asked that you would say
no. And if you said no… I was worried that the Island would burn. I took
responsibility for it. I didn’t think that you were in a healthy state of mind
to make that call.”
“It was not your call to make,” the Carpenter said. “But we
will have words about this later. I need your help to come up with and build something
truly fearsome for the Sunset Knight’s punishment. Something above and beyond
what we had planned originally.”
“I suppose I can do that,” Paene said slowly. He had to keep
the Carpenter in good spirits, or none of this was going to work. “Why the
sudden increase? I thought what we had planned was fine.”
Crick cocked his head. “Because she violated the treat,” he
said. “She captured you after you agreed to meet in good faith. I mean… I’m not
too surprised. It’s what I would have done if she herself had met, and not the
priestess.”
Paene was confused. “The Sunset Knight didn’t capture me,”
he corrected. “The priestess did. Lito may have planned the idea, I suppose,
but the priestess gave the order.”
Crick stood up suddenly. “That bitch,” he whispered. “That
lying, traitorous, double crossing…”
Paene felt sick.
“I’m putting the Sunset Knight project on hold, Parish. That
priestess deserves some immediate punishment.”
Oh, shit.
“Crick…” Paene said. “I can think of nothing that would be
worse for your reputation than to publicly torture to death a priestess. I was
the one harmed by this, and I’m telling you to let this go. Let her go home.
Banish her from the city, put pressure on Ard-Abthen to prevent her from ever
counseling again, something, but don’t kill her in this way.”
“Parish, this is not your call. I need you, but don’t test my forgiveness.”
“I understand,” Paene said, bowing his head slightly.
* *
* * *
* * *
Paene nodded at the jailer. The burly man left soon after,
twirling the newly acquired gold in his hands. Paene hoped that he wouldn’t
report any of his midnight meetings with Lito to the Carpenter—he only had to
keep his tongue a little longer, and Paene was happy to pay enough to ensure
it.
“Hello again,” Lito said.
“Hello,” Paene said. He took a seat. “Your hair is growing
back.”
Lito shook her head. “It doesn’t matter.”
They had been meeting every night for the last few days.
Slowly, surely, Paene was winning her confidence.
“We need you to look powerful and able to lead when you get
out,” Paene said. “Not beaten and battered.”
Lito laughed weakly. “That’s going to be difficult,” she
said. “Unless you plan to house and feed me for a straight week after you break
me out.”
Paene nodded. “We might,” he said. “I’m not sure how long we
can wait after I kill the Carpenter.”
“Kill?” Lito asked. “Last night you only wanted to imprison
him.”
“I’m killing him,” Paene said firmly. “He is dead set on publicly
torturing the priestess to death.”
Lito was quiet.
“Which brings me to another point,” Paene said. “Why didn’t
you tell me what you and Elaene had schemed together? I was caught confused,
and told the Carpenter what really happened when I was captured.”
“Sunken hells,” Lito said. She leaned her head back wearily.
“Yes,” Paene said. “We need to make our move before then. If
a priestess is killed in this way… the city is going to riot, and I don’t think
we’ll be able to control them the feeble forces we’re going to have.”
After a few nightly conversations, Lito had revealed the
truth: Dane Wrickon’s message was a fake. He had defeated the prisoners and was
coming back up the road. Lito suspected that Dane might already be in
Caeledonia. Paene was unsure.
They had sent down the Carpenter’s forces to solve a crisis
that didn’t exist. Once they were able to make contact with Dane, Paene and
Lito were going to spring their trap. The Carpenter would be dead, and the city
would be united under their leadership. Both camps, they hoped, would be
pleased with the outcome.
But none of Lito’s contacts had been able to confirm where
Dane was. And until he was in the city, ready to help, they couldn’t move.
“I pray so too,” Lito said. “Gods. Elaene.”
“How did she convince the Carpenter?” Paene said. “I couldn’t
believe it.”
“She tortured me,” Lito said. “The Carpenter watched.”
“That must have been difficult,” Paene said.
“I think it was,” Lito said. “Gods. How did this get so
wrong? Elaene has her own plans to break me out, I think, but I haven’t seen
her since that day. You obviously haven’t seen her, and now she’s doomed.”
“It’s a bad situation,” Paene agreed. “All we can do is pray
that Dane gets back in time.”
Lito tried to stretch herself out. “Thank you for talking,
Parish. You better get back.”
Paene nodded, and as he turned to leave, he thought of
something.
“Lito,” he said. “Why did you trust me, over these nights?”
“On the one hand, why would you lie?”
“Giving you hope, then taking it away. It’s as cruel as
anything that the Carpenter could imagine.”
Lito raised her eyebrow. “Do you always undermine yourself?
You second guess everything.”
Paene shook his head. “Not exactly,” he said. “I try to see
everything from all sides. Even the sides that I don’t agree with.”
“Regardless,” Lito said. “I have no choice. And even if it’s
a lie… it’s a beautiful lie.”
Paene Umber nodded, and exited the jail. When he arrived
back at his quarters, he found a message from the Carpenter. Elaene’s public
trial was taking place next evening.
Paene stared out, trying to see through the walls of his
quarters and into the city. He had less than twenty four hours to make contact
with Dane, assassinate the Carpenter, run his counter revolution, break the
Sunset Knight out of jail, and save Elaene.
He cracked his knuckles.
Let the water rise,
he thought. I’ll swim through it
regardless.
Chapter 24 1,448 | 53,400/50,000
Author’s Note in Comments
Hello, dear readers,
ReplyDeleteThe end of Act 4. We have 6 chapter left.
With this chapter, I've finally gotten out of the knot that I got myself in. With Paene, Elaene, and Lito all having POV chapters with each other in them, and a lot of information needing to go around, and a bit of improvisation... this was a nightmare to write while also juggling Thanksgiving fun.
I hope people now understand the situation a bit more.
Act 5 is going to be a lot of fun.
Thanks, as always, for reading,
john