the voice at once; it did not belong to one of Rhy’s pursuits. The words were English, but accented, the edges rougher than an Arnesian tongue.
It was a voice like a shadow in the woods at night. Quiet and dark and cold.
And it belonged to Holland. The
Antari
from afar.
Parrish paled a little. He worshipped Master Kell—a fact Gen gave him grief for daily—but Holland terrified him. He didn’t know if it was the evenness in the man’s tone or his strangely faded appearance or his haunted eyes—one black, of course, the other a milky green. Or perhaps it was the way he seemed to be made more of water and stone than flesh and blood and soul. Whatever it was, the foreign
Antari
had always given Parrish the shivers.
Some of the guards called him Hollow behind his back, but Parrish never dared.
“What?” Gen would tease. “Not like he can hear you through the wall between worlds.”
“You don’t know,” Parrish would whisper back. “Maybe he can.”
And now Holland was in Rhy’s room. Was he supposed to be there? Who had let him in?
Where
was
Gen?
wondered Parrish as he took up his spot in front of the door. He didn’t mean to eavesdrop, but there was a narrow gap between the left side of the door and the right, and when he turned his head slightly, the conversation reached him through the crack.
“Pardon my intrusion,” came Holland’s voice, steady and low.
“It’s none at all,” answered Rhy casually. “But what business brings you to me instead of to my father?”
“I have been to your father for business already,” said Holland. “I come to you for something else.”
Parrish’s cheeks reddened at the seductiveness in Holland’s tone. Perhaps it would be better to abandon his post than listen in, but he held his ground, and heard Rhy slump back onto a cushioned seat.
“And what’s that?” asked the prince, mirroring the flirtation.
“It is nearly your birthday, is it not?”
“It is nearly,” answered Rhy. “You should attend the celebrations, if your king and queen will spare you.”
“They will not, I fear,” replied Holland. “But my king and queen are the reason I’ve come. They’ve bid me deliver a gift.”
Parrish could hear Rhy hesitate. “Holland,” he said, the sound of cushions shifting as he sat forward, “you know the laws. I cannot take—”
“I know the laws, young prince,” soothed Holland. “As to the gift, I picked it out here, in your own city, on my masters’ behalf.”
There was a long pause, followed by the sound of Rhy standing. “Very well,” he said.
Parrish heard the shuffle of a parcel being passed and opened.
“What is it for?” asked the prince after another stretch of quiet.
Holland made a sound, something between a smile and a laugh, neither of which Parrish had borne witness to before. “For strength,” he said.
Rhy began to say something else, but at the same instant, a set of clocks went off through the palace, marking the hour and masking whatever else was said between the
Antari
and the prince. The bells were still echoing through the hall when the door opened and Holland stepped out, his two-toned eyes landing instantly on Parrish.
Holland guided the door shut and considered the royal guard with a resigned sigh. He ran a hand through his charcoal hair.
“Send away one guard,” he said, half to himself, “and another takes his place.”
Before Parrish could think of a response, the
Antari
dug a coin from his pocket and flicked it into the air toward him.
“I wasn’t here,” said Holland as the coin rose and fell. And by the time it hit Parrish’s palm, he was alone in the hall, staring down at the disk, wondering how it got there, and certain he was forgetting something. He clutched the coin as if he could catch the slipping memory, and hold on.
But it was already gone.
II
Even at night, the river shone red.
As Kell stepped from the bank of one London onto the bank of another, the black slick of the