“It’s a good thing you didn’t let the Mountainwatch guard your canal,” Adamat shouted over his shoulder as he ran toward the inn. “Otherwise it would have been harder for the Brudania-Gurla Trading Company to bring their whole damn fleet across it.”

“They’re going to send me to Adopest,” Taniel said.

One of Ka-poel’s eyes opened. The one that wasn’t swollen shut.

Taniel went on. “General Ket says this is a civil matter because I’m no longer in the Adran army and I’m not officially in the Wings of Adom yet. I’m to be sent back to Adopest under house arrest to await trial.” Taniel paced the short length of the tent. He held in his hand a note from Brigadier Abrax telling him the conditions of his house arrest. “That could take months. The war might be over by then, and we’ll have lost.”

Taniel stopped pacing and dropped onto his cot. What could he do? He’d spent the last hour arguing with Abrax. The brigadier claimed her hands were tied, that she could do nothing but provide Taniel with a small house in Adopest. The Wings of Adom’s charter did not allow them to admit anyone awaiting trial.

“I’m going to kill her,” Taniel said.

Ka-poel struggled to sit up in her cot. They’d been given a tent in the corner of the Wings’ camp at the farthest point from the Adran army. Her green eyes were wet. Taniel suspected she’d cried during the night.

He thought that perhaps his rage would fade as the days passed and Ka-poel was sitting up and able to move. If anything, seeing her wounds heal slowly made him even angrier. Her lips were swollen and cracked, her face still bruised.

She spread her hands, awkwardly because her arm was in a sling. Who?

“General Ket. She must have ordered what they… what they did to you. She must have known she wouldn’t be able to send me to the noose so easily. Those men had you for hours.”

Ka-poel shook her head.

“No? ‘No’ what? The doctor said you fought back. That you…”

Another emphatic shake of her head. She motioned with her thumb over her shoulder and then made a snatching motion. She pointed to herself.

“They caught you?”

She thought for a moment, and then made a walking motion with her fingers.

“Followed you?”

A nod.

She reached for her satchel and winced. Taniel lifted it for her. She took it from him and began to rummage around inside.

Ka-poel began to lay out dolls on the cot. They were instantly recognizable: General Hilanska, General Ket; the entire General Staff of the Adran army.

Taniel stared at the dolls. Each time he saw one, he was amazed by the detail she put into the wax, but here it was something more. He knew all of these people. Some of them, like Hilanska, he’d known since childhood. Bits of real hair protruded from the wax in places. A drop of blood was rubbed on one of them. It made his skin crawl.

“Why were you making dolls for them?” Taniel asked.

Ka-poel tilted her head to the side as if to tell him it was a stupid question.

“Just in case, right?”

A nod.

“And the Dredgers caught you while you were getting something of Ket’s to use in her doll?”

Another nod.

If she wasn’t already bruised, Taniel would have smacked her. What she’d done was incredibly dangerous. If people suspected the nature of her sorcery and saw her skulking about the general’s quarters, she could have been beaten and locked up.

“Still,” he went on, “they said that she’d told them they could have you.” The anger ebbed. Only a little, but it was enough to make his muscles relax. He leaned back in his chair, putting his hands over his face. “I should still kill her.”

Ka-poel thrust her thumb at herself. I will. A flat hand, as if to stop, and she mouthed the words “If I need to.

“Pit, Pole, I — ”

“Knock, knock!” The voice came from outside the front of the tent. “May I come in?”

Mihali. The damned chef. If it weren’t for him, none of this would have ever happened. Taniel would still be in the Adran army and Ka-poel would never have been beaten by Ket’s thugs.

“Go to —!” Taniel started, when Ka-poel lay a soft hand on his arm.

She nodded. Taniel took a deep, calming breath. It didn’t help.

“Yes,” he called.

The flap was swept back and Mihali ducked into the tent, carrying a wide platter. Steam rose from beneath the platter cover with the smell of warm bread and, what was that? Eggs.

Taniel looked away. He wouldn’t give Mihali the satisfaction of eating his food.

Mihali set the platter on Taniel’s cot and removed the lid. He leaned over it, wafting the smell of it toward him. “Warm cornmeal cake with a sweet crust drizzled in maple honey with poached eggs on the side.”

Ka-poel’s face lit up. Cornmeal cake was a Fatrastan staple, uncommon in the Nine. She snatched one up immediately, tossing it between her hands until it cooled enough to hold.

Taniel smiled, though he tried to cover it with a cough. He wasn’t about to let Mihali see him pleased.

“What do you want, Adom?”

“Oh, please,” Mihali said. “Call me Mihali. ‘Adom’ has such a high-and-mighty connotation.”

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