Part 11 (1/2)
Kyra relaxed into Fred's arms. Somehow, when he couldn't see her, it seemed okay to let herself lean into him. Just a little bit.
The Tup-tup, tup-tup grew louder.
The first soldiers came around the bend-two men across, row after row of soldiers, until the long line of royal blue filed past Kyra and Fred. An endless procession of blue coats and black boots; glowing, poison-coated weapons strapped across their backs. A squadron of the King's Army, members of the main ground fighting force.
Finally, the last of the army marched down the trail.
Fred's forehead pressed against Kyra's, and they stood together for a moment, completely still as the Tup-tup, tup-tup faded.
”Why is the army patrolling the woods around Wexford, Kitty?”
”I don't know,” Kyra lied, glad they were still invisible, glad he couldn't see the expression on her face.
”Why were you hiding from that man in the king's black?”
”I wasn't! It's just-he was creepy! That mustache!”
It was the last thing she said to him before she invisibly swooped down, groped for his boots, and pulled the laces loose.
As she heard him stumble and stop with a ”Kitty, hold on a minute, my laces are untied,” she took off running down the path, Rosie clutched in her arms.
KYRA RAN UNTIL HER breath was short, until Rosie squirmed uncomfortably in her arms, until Fred's voice calling for her was just a small, faraway sound. Eventually she couldn't hear him at all, and she slowed her pace.
The rain began pouring down again, was.h.i.+ng away the last remnants of the cloaking charm.
Outside the city, Kyra slipped under a large dense fir tree to wait out the downpour. Surrounded by the sharp scent of pine, she wrapped her arms around her knees, Rosie nestled between her legs and chest. The tiny pig looked up, then tucked her chin in and sighed contentedly.
Just then, the sky turned black and the rain bloodred. Where it hit the ground, dark pools of coppery blood steadily rose until they filled Kyra's vision. She coughed, choking on the b.l.o.o.d.y mist in the air. And then, in moments, the rain disappeared again. Just as all her other flashes of Sight had.
Kyra covered her eyes and slumped against the tree. The b.l.o.o.d.y scene revealed in her Sight hadn't taken place yet-and she had to make sure it never did. That's why she would do anything she had to-even abandon a new friend, even kill an old friend-to stop her vision from coming true.
It rained through the rest of the day, and when it stopped, Kyra decided she might as well stay where she was for the night. She was tired and felt hollowed out. Let the King's Army, Dartagn, and Fred get ahead while she rested.
The path to Wexford was crowded enough right now without her.
Kyra sank into a fitful sleep under the tree, holding tight to the warm pig in her arms.
In the morning, the sun crept up into a clear blue sky. Today could be the day when Rosie led her to where the princess was hiding.
Kyra was ready for the whole thing to be over.
She spritzed on an old lady glamour, feeling her body contort to take on the new shape. The Master Trio's glamours were the real deal-they didn't just alter the way people saw you, they altered reality itself for the short time they were effective. Kyra even felt the weight of her enormous old lady bosoms as she leaned forward to pick up Rosie's leash.
She gave Rosie the lead. They padded softly through the rain-damp forest, then onto a main road into the city. No one paid attention to them. They were was just an old lady and a pig.
The closer they got to the city, the more people filled the road, and their pace grew slower and slower. When a wagon full of jugglers joined them, Kyra realized why the road was so crowded: April 30, Beltane Eve, was the next day. It was a huge spring festival that brought people to Wexford from all around the kingdom, to be entertained or to be the entertainers.
The jugglers kept up their act the entire way to the city, stealing caps from kids, tossing them into a bright arc of b.a.l.l.s and pins and knives, and then deftly plopping them back on heads and shouting out, ”Winegarten Jugglers! Everyone, come see us at the fairgrounds!”
It annoyed Kyra no end.
The dirt road slowly gave way to cobblestones, and buildings rose up on all sides as they entered the city proper.
Wexford.
Kyra had missed the capital after she'd moved to Trent to form the Master Trio-she really had. There was so much going on all the time, and the market was ten times bigger than the one in Trent. And this was where her best friend, Ari, the princess, lived.
Ari was irreplaceable-no one laughed as easily or as hard as she did, or knew exactly what Kyra needed-oftentimes even before Kyra knew herself. Leaving Ari behind had been, by far, the most difficult part about moving to Trent. But Kyra had thrown herself into her work, and that had filled the hole that had opened up in her.
Most of the time, anyway.
The castle came into view, high upon the hill at the far edge of the city, and Kyra's heart skipped a beat.
She'd been happy enough in Trent. Until three months before, when her first horrifying vision had come-a sight so grim that it drove Kyra to abandon her life as a master potioner and journey back to Wexford in time for Ariana's fifteenth birthday bash. The party at which Kyra had toasted the princess, then calmly reached down, pulled a poisoned needle out of a disguised holster, and sent it flying across the room, targeted directly at her best friend's heart.
And missed. Kyra never missed.
The needle thunked into the chair beside Ariana's neck, and instead of collapsing to the floor, the princess had let out an ear-piercing scream. The entire ballroom had erupted into panic.
Kyra had run for her life, chased by cries of ”a.s.sa.s.sin!” from the crowd, Ariana's scream ringing through her head.
She had fled to her concealed hideaway-her secret hut in the woods-and lain low for a month, too terrified and too angry at herself for her failure-to venture forth.
Now Kyra had returned in the glamour of a dumpy old lady, led by a pig on a leash.
The closer they got to the castle gleaming in the midday sun, the more intent Rosie grew on her hunt, until suddenly, nose pressed to the ground, she yanked Kyra off onto a side street.
The pig's nose quivered with an intensity Kyra had never seen before. Rosie tugged hard on the lead, pulling Kyra through the winding mews of the city.
Soon they were going in the opposite direction of the palace-to the market and shop-lined streets of the northwest district.
To the Sleepy Boar Inn. It was a three-story yellow eyesore that slumped against the building beside it as though it were tired.
Rosie pulled Kyra right through the gateway of the courtyard and began digging at the front door. Kyra pressed the latch down and pushed it open.
The concierge stand to her left was empty, but she could hear a voice down the hall. ”...wake-up service is available,” the man was saying, ”and if you need anything else...”
Rosie pulled her straight ahead to the stairs. Kyra followed in a rush, hoping they got out of view before the concierge returned.
They flew up the stairs, Kyra's old-lady bones complaining with each step.
At the third-story landing, Rosie led Kyra down the corridor to the right and stopped in front of a door with 302 painted in gold letters.
”Good girl, Rosie,” Kyra whispered. Her heart beat wildly. Could Ariana really be on the other side of this door? It would be genius of the royal family to hide their daughter away in an una.s.suming inn so close to home.
But it felt wrong somehow. Not the way the monarchy usually worked. They never did anything that smart.
Kyra got her weapons ready, one quill dipped in deadly, blue phosph.o.r.escent Peccant Pentothal, another half dozen tipped with Doze. Putting her ear to the door, she listened for sounds of guards inside. There would be at least one protecting the princess, possibly more.
Silence.