across the floor, and though her father never answered the door himself, he, too, came out of his private study across the way.
“Master?” the butler said. “Are you expecting anyone?”
Abalone pulled his suit jacket back into place. “A distant relative. I should have told you, my apologies.”
“I gotta go,” Paradise said. “Have a good sleep.”
There was a pause. “Yeah, you, too, Parry. And you know, you can call me if you get the bad dreams, okay.”
“Sure. Same for you. ’Day.”
“’Day back at you.”
As she hung up, she was glad her friend was still around. Ever since the raids had gone down and so many of their class had been slaughtered, the two of them had used the phone lines to pass the sometimes forever hours of daylight. The connection had been indispensable in the immediate aftermath of the raids, when she and her father had gone out to the Catskills, and she had rattled around that big barn of a Victorian for months.
Peyton was a good friend. As for the mating thing?
She didn’t know how to feel about that.
Going around the desk, she jogged across to the foyer until her father caught sight of her and shook his head. “Out of sight, Paradise. Please.”
Her brows popped. That was the code for her to take cover in the hidden tunnels of the house. “What’s going on?”
“Please go.”
“You said it was a relative?”
“Paradise.”
Paradise ducked back into the library, but she stayed by the archway, listening.
The soft creak of the massive front door opening seemed very loud.
“It’s you,” her father said in a strange tone. “Fedricah, please excuse us, will you.”
“But of course, master.”
The butler walked off, crossing briefly over that part of the foyer Paradise could see. After a moment, the door into the back half of the house closed.
“Well?” a male said. “Are you going to invite me in?”
“I don’t know.”
“I’m going to die out here. In a matter of minutes.”
Paradise fought the urge to put her head around the molding and see who it was. She didn’t recognize the voice, but the precise pronunciation and haughty accent suggested it was someone from the aristocracy. Which made sense, considering he was a “relative.”
“You are wearing the vestments of war,” her father countered. “I do not abide them across my threshold.”
“Is it my associations or my weapons that frighten you more?”
“I am not afeared of either. You were beaten, if you recall.”
“But not defeated, I’m sorry to say.” Clicking sounds suggested someone was handling things made of metal parts. And then there was a clattering, as if something hit the front stone stoop. “Here, then, I am naked before you. I am utterly unarmed, and my weapons are on your doorstep, not within your walls.”
“I am not your cousin.”
“You are my blood. We have many common ancestors—”
“Spare me. And whatever message your leader wishes to send to the King, have him do it through—”
“I am no longer affiliated with Xcor. In any way.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Ties have been cut.” There was an exhausted sigh. “I have spent these months since the election that returned Wrath to the throne trying to convince Xcor and the Band of Bastards to disengage from their treason. Even after such entreaty and reasoning, such extended pleading for a smarter course, I am saddened that I cannot dissuade them from their folly. Finally, I just had to leave. I sneaked away from where they stay, and I now fear for my life. I have nowhere else to go, and when I spoke with Salliah back in the Old Country, she suggested that I pay you a visit.”
Their distant cousin, Paradise thought. She recognized that name.
“Please,” the male said. “Lock me in a room if you have to—”
“I am a loyal servant of the King’s.”
“Then do not turn away a tactical advantage.”
“What are you suggesting?”
“In return for safety under your roof, I am prepared to tell you everything I know about the Band of Bastards. Where they spend the daylight hours. What their patterns are. Where they meet during the night. How they think and fight. Surely that is worth the use of a bed.”
Paradise couldn’t stand it. She had to see who it was.
Inching out, she curled her body around the archway and looked past her father’s stiff shoulders. Her first thought was that the male’s leathers and ragged button-down shirt did not match his intonation. Her second was that his eyes were bruised, they were so tired.
He did indeed appear to have come from the war’s front