Afterward, they lay curled together against the chill of the October night. Irrith ran one hand over Galen’s short hair, soft against her fingers. Without his wig and coat and walking stick, she reflected, he was not Lord Galen, Prince of the Stone, nor the gentleman Mr. St. Clair. Only Galen, a tumultuous human heart wrapped up in a body that seemed scarcely able to contain it.
Those absences made him vulnerable; the darkness made him brave. “I sometimes think,” Galen whispered, “that it would be better if she knew.”
“Which one?”
An injudicious question. He curled tighter, like a snail pulling into its shell. But his shell was draped over the rail at the foot of the bed, or dropped carelessly on the floor. After a moment, he said, “Both, I suppose.”
Irrith didn’t know Delphia Northwood. She did know Lune. Before she could doubt her own impulse, Irrith said, “The Queen does know.”
That sent him flying away from her as if propelled by a bow, almost falling off the narrow bed before fetching up against the rail. He said, helplessly, “Oh God, no.”
The word glanced off the protection of the tithe, but Irrith flinched nonetheless. Then she pushed herself upright, studying him. The light coming through the room’s one narrow window was scant indeed, only what filtered in from the inadequate lanterns on Covent Garden square; it was just enough to trace the wing of his collarbone, the line of his uninjured arm clutching the rail, the right-hand side of his face. Not enough to see his eyes.
No way out but through the truth. Some of it, anyway. Galen didn’t need to hear that the rest of the Onyx Court knew it, too. “She’s known for a while.”
He stayed motionless for three heartbeats, then buried his face in his hands.
“You said it might be better,” Irrith reminded him. “Think about it, Galen—if it bothered her, you would know.”
His reply was muffled by his palms. “Except now I must face her. Knowing that she knows. Damn it all, Irrith—why did you have to tell me?”
This time, she’d clearly done the latter. Galen dropped his hands and said, “She never should have chosen me.”
The dark hid her second flinch. Irrith hadn’t forgotten what the Goodemeades told her.
It didn’t matter. He
Irrith wasn’t sure he’d even listened to her. After a moment, though, Galen spoke. “Do
She was as bad a liar as he was. A simple
“So you think I’m a failure.”
“No. You didn’t let me finish.” Irrith tucked her feet up, leaning forward to seek out his eyes in the shadows. “The Princes have all been different sorts of men, who bring different kinds of strength to the Onyx Court. They’ve all shared one thing, though: they care too much to give up. Whatever trouble the court faces—and believe me, there’s been a lot—they keep fighting. If the day ever comes that you run away,
His back had stiffened at the thought of running away, proving her very point. Galen seemed to realise it, too. He swung his legs over the edge of the bed, then sat thinking. One hand scratched absently at his ribs, and Irrith thought she felt something crawling up her own leg. They might be ignoring the bugs, but the bugs weren’t ignoring them.
“If she knows,” he said at last, “then I cannot possibly tell Miss Northwood.”
“About the Onyx Court?”
He nodded. “I had considered it, but—no. Mere foolishness.”
“Why? There’s always the risk that a mortal will attack us, or tell everyone we’re here, but we risk it just the same. What are you afraid will happen—that she’ll cry off once she knows what you do with the other half of your life?”
His drifting hand stilled, then lowered to his thigh. “I had thought—” Galen began, but stopped.
Irrith waited patiently. This time, she was fairly certain that anything she might say would frighten him off.