The white stag pin was still warm in Silas’s palm.
That bothered him.
A cold clue could sit on a table for days and wait to be understood. A warm one ant soone had just been there. Soone had stood beneath Lady Evelyne Wren’s portrait, touched that pin, whispered an apology into the dark, and walked away only monts before Silas stepped out from behind the curtain.
Elara stood near the gallery doors with her dagger still half hidden in her sleeve. She kept looking at the corridor as if she wanted to run after the owner of the voice. Lyra held the crystal lamp low, its violet glow brushing over the dust, the table, the fresh candle, and the faces watching from the walls.
Lady Evelyne Wren stared down from her gilded fra with that sa beautiful, resentful mouth.
Elara looked at the pin in Silas’s hand. "We can still catch him."
"We probably can," Silas said.
"Then why are we not moving?"
"Because if we chase him, he knows we were here."
Elara’s eyes narrowed. "Silas, he ca into a sealed gallery, whispered to a dead woman, dropped a family pin and left. I think he already knows sothing is wrong."
"Maybe. But he does not know we saw the room behind the curtain."
Lyra ca closer and looked at the pin without touching it. "He also does not know we heard him clearly. If that was Alistair, he might think the gallery was empty."
Elara glanced between them. "You both keep saying if. It sounded like him."
"It did," Lyra said. "But sounding like soone is not proof. The court is full of cousins, servants, pages and frightened boys with similar voices."
Elara gave her a dry look. "That is a very archive answer."
"It is a correct answer."
"It is also annoying."
Lyra sighed. "Most correct answers are."
Silas closed his fingers around the pin. "We will treat it as if it was Alistair, but we will not act as if it was Alistair. Not yet."
Elara folded her arms. "That sounded like a clever way to do nothing."
"It ans we watch him."
"We were already watching him."
"Then we watch him better."
Elara stared at him for a mont, then muttered, "You enjoy saying things that make people want to hit you."
Lyra nodded. "He does."
Silas looked at them both. "Noted."
Elara shook her head, but the corner of her mouth moved despite herself.
The small mont passed quickly.
Lyra turned back to the table. "He said he did what he was told. That matters. If he was alone, then that sentence was not ant for us. It was for her."
Silas looked up at Evelyne’s portrait.
"Or for himself," he said.
Elara frowned. "You think he feels guilty?"
"I think guilt is one possibility."
"What are the others?"
"Fear. Loyalty. Habit. Madness. A ssage."
Elara rubbed the bridge of her nose. "I miss simple cris. A man steals bread, you catch him with bread, done."
Lyra gave a tired laugh. "In this palace, the bread would have a hidden bloodline and three dead priests attached to it."
"Do not joke," Elara said. "That will happen next."
Silas slipped the warm pin into the inner pocket of his coat. "We leave the candle. We leave the cloth. We leave the room exactly as it was."
Elara looked unhappy. "Even the fake seal?"
"Especially the fake seal."
"That thing nearly got your na tied to a burned convoy."
"Yes. And whoever left it here may co back for it."
"And if they do not?"
"Then they wanted us to find it."
Lyra closed her folder carefully. "Either way, touching too much tells them we were here."
Elara pointed at the hidden room. "They marked my tunnels on that map."
"I know."
"My girls use those tunnels."
"I know."
Her voice sharpened. "No, Silas, I need you to really know. These are not soldiers. They are laundresses, kitchen girls, boys who sleep in stables, old won who are invisible because nobles do not bother looking down. I pulled them into this because you needed eyes. If soone starts hunting them because of that map, they will not die heroically. They will die scared in so back room where no one learns their nas."
The words hit the room harder than any whisper.
Lyra looked down.
Silas did not answer too quickly.
Elara’s face had gone tight, not from fear for herself but from the weight of everyone beneath her. She had once been one frightened maid in a palace full of predators. Now others were standing behind her, trusting her to keep them unseen.
He respected that more than she knew.
"You are right," he said.
Elara blinked, as if she had expected an argunt.
Silas continued, "We change how the ghosts move. No one carries a full ssage anymore. No one uses the sa path twice. If a girl watches a door, she does not also carry a report. If a boy moves a bundle, he does not know where the next bundle goes."
Elara listened, still tense.
"We split them into smaller groups," he said. "Nessa handles one group. You handle Nessa. If soone catches one servant, they cannot roll up the whole net."
Lyra nodded slowly. "That would make the network safer, but slower."
"Slow is fine," Elara said quietly. "Dead is not."
Silas looked at her. "Then we do it that way."
Elara took a breath and nodded. "All right."
They left the gallery the sa way they had entered. Lyra dimd the crystal lamp until its light barely touched the floor. Their steps moved carefully through the disturbed dust. At the doors, Elara looked back at the clean portraits one last ti.
"Ravena should have burned this room," she said.
Lyra glanced at the slashed faces and the black cloth over so of the fras. "No. This is very Ravena. She does not like letting enemies disappear completely. She likes them where she can point and say, look what happened."
Elara made a face. "That is unpleasant."
"That is Ravena."
Silas closed the doors gently behind them. "It is also useful."
Lyra looked at him. "You should stop saying things like that where people can hear you."
"Why?"
"Because one day the Queen will hear you sound impressed by her worst habits, and she may decide she enjoys that too much."
Elara gave Lyra a sideways glance. "I think that has already started."
Silas said nothing.
That was safer.
The corridor outside felt colder now. Sowhere deeper in the palace, bells rang once, marking an hour that ant little beneath the Perpetual Twilight. There was no sunrise here, no true morning waiting beyond the windows. Only violet gloom pressing against the stone and the endless feeling that the night had forgotten how to end.
As they walked, Lyra tapped the leather folder against her palm. "I need to test the parchnt from the hidden room. If the ink is simple, heat will reveal it. If it is old court ink, I will need salt wash. If it is oath ink, I may need moonless water and a very steady hand."
Elara looked at her. "And if you use the wrong one?"
"The words disappear. Or burn through the page. Or scream."
Elara stopped walking for half a step. "Scream?"
Lyra looked mildly embarrassed. "Only so inks."
"Why would anyone make ink that screams?"
"To discourage thieves."
Elara stared at her. "Did it work?"
"No. It just made thieves bring earplugs."
Silas almost smiled.
Elara shook her head. "I hate scholars."
"You hate nobles more," Lyra said.
"I have room for both."
They turned into a narrower passage where the walls were damp and the ceiling lower. A servant girl waited near the bend with a basket of folded linens pressed against her hip. She was small, perhaps fourteen, with dark curls tucked under a grey cap and nervous eyes that went to Elara first.
One of the ghosts.
Elara stepped closer, her voice softening at once. "What happened?"
The girl swallowed. "Mistress Nessa says the swords are being moved like you ordered. Smaller bundles. Different routes. But there are two n near the south ward tunnels."
Elara’s face changed. "What kind of n?"
"Porter coats," the girl said. "But they are not porters."
"Why?"
"Hands are wrong. One keeps touching his side like he has a blade there. The other walks stiff, like his trousers are hiding sothing. Mistress Nessa thinks armor."
Lyra looked at Elara. "Your people are getting very good at noticing things."
Elara did not look proud. "They are getting scared. Fear makes people look harder."
Silas crouched slightly so the girl did not have to look up so far. "Did the n see any of you?"
The girl shook her head quickly. "No, my lord. I do not think so."
"Good. Tell Nessa not to test them. No one follows too close. No one tries to be brave. If those n want a trail, give them one that leads to laundry, spoiled flour or angry cooks, nothing real."
The girl nodded.
Elara added, "Use the ash route for the next bundles. Not the fish route. And tell Nessa to send old Mara past them with the broken soap cart."
The girl blinked. "Mara will shout at them."
"Exactly."
Lyra raised an eyebrow. "Who is Mara?"
Elara glanced at her. "A washerwoman with bad knees, worse temper, and no fear of n under forty."
"Useful woman."
"Terrifying woman."
The servant girl almost smiled, then rembered where she was and lowered her head.
Elara touched her shoulder lightly. "Go. And tell Nessa I said no risks. I an it."
"Yes, miss."
The girl hurried away, basket balanced against her hip, footsteps soft down the passage.
For a mont, Elara watched until she disappeared.
Silas said, "You did well."
She looked at him suspiciously. "Was that actual praise?"
"Yes."
"It sounded normal."
"I am improving."
Lyra nodded solemnly. "Slowly."
Elara breathed out, so of the tightness leaving her face. "Do not ruin it by saying sothing strange."
Silas looked ahead. "We need to see those n."
Elara groaned. "There it is."
"They are watching the tunnels. I want to know who sent them."
"And how do you plan to ask? Politely?"
"No."
"I was afraid you would say that."
Lyra adjusted the folder under her arm. "I should go to the records wing. If this parchnt has a ssage, we need it before the next council. Preferably before soone realizes it is missing."
"Take two ghosts with you," Elara said before Silas could speak. "Not the young ones. Take Fara and Old Seli. Fara can run, Seli can lie without blinking."
Lyra looked amused. "I am not sure whether I should be reassured or offended that you have selected guards for like I am fragile furniture."
"You are carrying the only thing we stole from that room," Elara said. "So tonight, yes, you are expensive furniture."
Lyra gave her a look, then tucked the folder closer to her chest. "Fine. But if Old Seli insults my shelves again, I am sending her back."
"She insults everything. Do not take it personally."
Silas looked at Lyra. "Send word when you find sothing."
"I will. And Silas?"
He paused.
"Do not get stabbed before I finish reading this."
Elara pointed at Lyra. "See? That is what I keep telling him."
Silas looked between them. "I will try to avoid it."
"That is not a promise," Lyra said.
"No."
Lyra sighed. "Of course it is not."
She turned and walked toward the records wing, crystal lamp in one hand, stolen parchnt hidden in the folder against her chest.
Elara waited until Lyra was gone before she looked at Silas again. "Now what?"
"Now we give the n near the tunnels sothing to follow."
"Sothing fake?"
"Sothing believable."
"That is still not comforting."
"It should not be. They may have orders to kill whoever cos close."
Elara stared at him. "You see? That. That is the part normal people ntion before walking toward the danger."
"I just ntioned it."
"After deciding to go."
Silas started toward the servant stairs.
Elara followed, muttering under her breath. "One day, you are going to say sothing calm, and then soone is going to put a knife in you just to prove a point."
"That has almost happened."
"Exactly. Learn."
He glanced at her.
Despite everything, there was warmth in her voice now. Annoyance, yes. Fear too. But warmth as well.
They descended through the servant stairs, leaving the dead royal faces behind. Below them, the palace changed. The polished stone gave way to narrow passages, damp walls and the sll of soap, smoke, old food and tired bodies. This was the part of the palace nobles forgot existed until their clothes were dirty or their fires went cold.
Silas preferred it.
People here lied less beautifully.
At the bottom of the stairs, a thin boy with a broom leaned near a doorway without sweeping. He gave Elara one quick look and scratched his ear twice.
Elara slowed. "They are still there."
"How many?"
"Still two."
Silas adjusted his gloves. "Then let us et them."
Elara gave him a hard look. "When you say et, do you an talk?"
"At first."
"And after?"
"That depends on whether they are polite."
She closed her eyes for a brief second. "I should have stayed a maid."
"No," Silas said. "You would have hated that too."
Elara opened her eyes and looked at him.
Then, despite the danger waiting below, she smiled faintly.
"Unfortunately," she said, "you are right."
Together, they stepped into the lower passage.
Far ahead, beyond the sll of wet linen and old stone, two n in porter coats waited near the entrance to the south ward tunnels.
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