I growled, voice low, “call my wife a whore.”
He held up his hands in apology. “Of course. How crass of me. Do continue the interrogation, Captain—unless you think we’ll need the thumbscrews?”
She fixed him with a steely smile. “That won’t be necessary.”
I gave her a pointed look. “It won’t?”
She reached up and patted my cheek. “I’ll be more than happy to continue . . . as long as you say please.”
If I hadn’t known better, the gesture would’ve felt affectionate. But I did know better. And this wasn’t affection. This was patronization. Even here, now—surrounded by my brethren—she dared to goad me. To humiliate me. My wife.
No—Lou. I could no longer deny the name suited her. A man’s name. Short. Strong. Ridiculous.
I caught her hand and squeezed—a warning mitigated by my burning cheeks. “We’ll dispatch men to interrogate these enemies, but first, we need to know everything that happened that night.” I paused despite myself, ignoring my brothers’ furious mutters. “Please.”
A truly frightening grin split her face.
The Forbidden Infirmary
Lou
My tongue was thick and heavy from talking when my darling husband escorted me back to our room. I’d given them an abbreviated version of the tale—how Coco and I had eavesdropped on Tremblay and Madame Labelle, how we’d planned to rob him that night. How we’d stolen from his vault, but Bas—I hadn’t bothered concealing his name, as the idiot hadn’t bothered concealing mine—had pocketed everything when the Chasseurs arrived. How Andre and Grue had jumped me in that alley. How they’d almost killed me.
I’d really emphasized that point.
I hadn’t mentioned Angelica’s Ring. Or Madame Labelle’s interest in it. Or Tremblay’s trafficking. Or anything that might further connect me to the witches. I walked a thin line as it was, and I didn’t need to give them another reason to tie me to the stake.
I knew Madame Labelle and Tremblay wouldn’t risk incriminating themselves by mentioning the ring. I hoped Andre and Grue were intelligent enough to follow suit. Even if they didn’t—even if they stupidly revealed they’d known about Angelica’s Ring without reporting it—it would be our word against theirs. The honor of Monsieur Tremblay, the king’s vicomte, was surely worth more than the honor of a couple of criminals.
It also didn’t hurt that my husband was in love with his daughter.
Either way—judging by the furious gleam in said husband’s eyes—Andre and Grue were in for a thrashing.
You’re my wife now, whether we like it or not. No man will ever touch you that way again.
I almost cackled. All in all, it hadn’t been a bad afternoon. My husband was still the most pompous ass in an entire tower of pompous asses, but somehow, that had been easy to overlook in the dungeon. He’d actually . . . defended me. Or at least come as close as he was capable without his virtue imploding.
When we reached our room, I headed straight for the tub, craving time alone to think. To plan. “I’m taking a bath.”
If my suspicions were correct—and they usually were—the tree man from yesterday had disappeared to the forbidden upper floors. Perhaps to an infirmary? A laboratory? A furnace?
No. The Chasseurs would never murder innocent people, though burning innocent women and children at the stake seemed like it should qualify. But I’d heard the Chasseurs’ tired argument: there was a difference between murdering and killing. Murder was unjustified. What they did to the witches . . . well, we deserved it.
I turned on the tap and perched on the edge of the tub. Bigotry aside, I’d never considered where the witches’ victims actually went, why there weren’t bodies littering the streets after every attack. All those attacks. All those victims . . .
If such a place existed, it was surely doused in magic.
Just the sort of cover I needed.
“Wait.” His heavy footsteps halted just behind me. “We have things to discuss.”
Things. The word had never sounded so tedious. I didn’t turn around. “Such as?”
“Your new arrangements.”
“Arrangements?” Now I did turn, stomach sinking. “You mean my new warden.”
He inclined his head. “If you’d like. You disobeyed me this morning. I told you not to leave the Tower.”
Shit. Being watched . . . that didn’t work for me. Didn’t work for me at all. I had plans for this evening—namely, a little jaunt to the forbidden upper floors—and I’d be damned if another pompous ass would stand in my way. If I was right, if the Tower held magic, it was a visit I needed to make alone.
I took my