Save the money for when you run.”
Elide hid the shaking in her hands and nodded.
The witch gave her a sidelong glance, her golden eyes shimmering in the torchlight. “Where the hell would you have run to, anyway? There’s nothing within a hundred miles. The only way you would stand a chance is if you got on the …” Manon snorted. “The supply wagons.”
Elide’s heart sank. “Please—please don’t tell Vernon.”
“Don’t you think if Vernon wanted to use you like that, he’d have done it already? And why make you play servant?”
“I don’t know. He likes games; he might be waiting for one of you to confirm what I am.”
Manon fell silent again—until they rounded a corner.
Elide’s stomach dropped down to her feet when she beheld who stood in front of her door as if she’d summoned him by mere thought.
Vernon was wearing his usual vibrant tunic—today a Terrasen green—and his brows rose at the sight of Manon and Elide.
“What are you doing here?” Manon snapped, coming to a stop in front of Elide’s little door.
Vernon smiled. “Visiting my beloved niece, of course.”
Though Vernon was taller, Manon seemed to look down her nose at him, seemed bigger than him as she kept her grip on Elide’s arm and said, “For what purpose?”
“I was hoping to see how you two were getting along,” her uncle purred. “But …” He looked at the hand Manon had around Elide’s wrist. And the door beyond them. “It seems I needn’t have worried.”
It took Elide longer to catch it than Manon, who bared her teeth and said, “I’m not in the habit of forcing my servants.”
“Only slaughtering men like pigs, correct?”
“Their deaths equate to their behavior in life,” Manon replied with a kind of calm that made Elide wonder whether she should start running.
Vernon let out a low laugh. He was so unlike her father, who had been warm and handsome and broad-shouldered—a year past thirty when he was executed by the king. Her uncle had watched that execution and smiled. And then come to tell her all about it.
“Allying yourself with the witches?” Vernon asked Elide. “How ruthless of you.”
Elide lowered her eyes to the ground. “There is nothing to ally against, Uncle.”
“Perhaps I kept you too sheltered for all those years, if you believe that’s so.”
Manon cocked her head. “Say your piece and be gone.”
“Careful, Wing Leader,” Vernon said. “You know precisely where your power ends.”
Manon shrugged. “I also know precisely where to bite.”
Vernon grinned and bit the air in front of him. His amusement honed itself into something ugly as he turned to Elide. “I wanted to check on you. I know how hard today was.”
Her heart stopped. Had someone told him about the conversation in the kitchens? Had there been a spy in the tower just now?
“Why would it be hard for her, human?” Manon’s stare was as cold as iron.
“This date is always difficult for the Lochan family,” Vernon said. “Cal Lochan, my brother, was a traitor, you know. A rebel leader for the few months after Terrasen was inherited by the king. But he was caught like the rest of them and put down. Difficult for us to curse his name and still miss him, isn’t it, Elide?”
It hit her like a blow. How had she forgotten? She hadn’t said the prayers, hadn’t beseeched the gods to look after him. Her father’s death-day, and she had forgotten him, as surely as the world had forgotten her. Keeping her head down wasn’t an act now, even with the Wing Leader’s eyes on her.
“You’re a useless worm, Vernon,” Manon said. “Go spew your nonsense elsewhere.”
“Whatever would your grandmother say,” Vernon mused, stuffing his hands into his pockets, “about such … behavior?” Manon’s growl chased after him as he sauntered down the hall.
Manon flung open Elide’s door, revealing a room barely big enough for a cot and a pile of clothes. She hadn’t been permitted to bring any belongings, none of the keepsakes that Finnula had hidden all these years: the small doll her mother had brought back from a trip to the Southern Continent, her father’s seal ring, her mother’s ivory comb—the first gift Cal Lochan had given Marion the Laundress while courting her. Apparently, Marion the Ironteeth Witch would have been a better name.
Manon shut the door with a backward kick.
Too small—the room was too small for two people, especially when one of them was ancient and dominated the space just by breathing. Elide slumped onto the cot, if only to put