Read The Winner's Crime Online
Authors: Marie Rutkoski
where it would lead her . . . so long as it was away from
where she was supposed to be.
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A water engineer. Arin took a skinny set of stairs that led
up out of the Narrows. At the top, he turned to look down
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at the city. Lamplights scattered over the darkness: jewels
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across a black velvet lap.
To Arin, the bets about the wedding dress were clear.
Though Tensen had doubted him, Arin had been right:
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the Senate leader was being paid with lucrative informa-
tion. He had done the emperor a favor. But what?
And if the water engineer had been paid in kind, what
had
she
done?
Arin heard the sound of rushing water. The river.
There was a canal, he remembered, where the river
thinned and gentled. A series of locks, crafted by the water
engineer herself.
Arin found the river and followed it.
Kestrel stopped at the sight of the locks. At fi rst, she mar-
veled at their design, at the way a series of gates could open
or close to raise or lower the water level so that a barge
could deliver its goods.
Such an invention. What a sharp mind had made these.
When Arin came to the locks, someone else was there. A
palace maid, her back to him. She was Valorian; through
the faint light of a far- off lamp, he could see the white-
trimmed hem of her blue skirt peeking out from beneath a
large coat. Her hair was covered with a work scarf. She was
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all shadow, a small huddle of it.
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Somehow his heart caught at the sight. The boy he had
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been, the one that Arin caught glimpses of sometimes in
the mirror, spoke up shyly within him to say
lonely
. He said
beautiful
.
But this was not a painting. This was a person. This
MARIE RUTK
was a Valorian stranger he wanted no part of, with her pal-
ace dress that reminded Arin of everything the empire had
cost him.
He told that boy to go away.
Arin kept walking. He followed the canal until it
curved. Even if he looked back, he would no longer be able
to see the maid.
The more Kestrel stared at the locks, the more she began to
feel like that river. She sensed her staggered self. The things
pent up behind the fl oodgates. The iron lies she herself had
swung into place and locked tight.
Kestrel heard footsteps: another late- night wanderer.
They slowed, but didn’t stop. They carried on, became far-
away echoes, then gone.
She, too, should leave. Kestrel couldn’t avoid the palace
forever.
Something made Arin turn back. The hand of a god? He
couldn’t say. But his feet were retracing their steps before
he even realized it. His body was alight, alive, insistent.
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Arin’s mind buzzed with the puzzle of it even as he
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quickened his pace. Why did he feel the urge to return?
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There was no great mystery in a palace maid standing
alone by the canal. There was nothing more to see.
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But:
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Hurry,
said his feet.
Hurry,
said his heart.
The maid, however, had gone.
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He kept searching. As the canal expanded into the river
and a bridge arched its back in the gloom, he remembered
the maid’s shoes: black dueling boots. Why would a maid
wear boots that were part of the ceremonial garb for a Val-
orian duel?
Unless she had nothing more practical to wear. Arin
had a very strange image of a faceless maid sorting through
piles of glamorous shoes for a comfortable pair.
Why would he think that?
Her dagger, too, hadn’t been quite right. It wasn’t un-
usual for a maid to wear one— all Valorians did— but they
didn’t wrap their hilts with cloth. That changed the grip.
Arin couldn’t think of any reason that someone would
cover a hilt like this . . . unless it needed to be hidden.
He was running now. Sweat stung the cut on his face.
Although he hadn’t seen the maid’s hands, he kept
imagining a memory of them.
He saw pale, lithe fi ngers. He remembered them reach-
ing for his own. He felt them slide under his shirt, over his
skin. He saw them strike music from black and white keys,
storm down, then quiet the melody, lull it, and trick it into
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dreams.
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When Arin truly did see the girl’s hand in the dark-
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ness, resting on a railing near the bridge, he thought it was
a phantom of his imagination. The maid’s fi ngers rippled
along the railing. They played an unheard song.
He knew that gesture.
MARIE RUTK
He knew that hand.
Arin slowed. She was lost in thought. She didn’t hear
him coming, or if she did it didn’t matter to her. The river
mattered. The music in her head mattered. She stared into
the dark.
Arin was quiet as he came close, said her name, and
touched her cold, bare hand. He didn’t want to startle her.
He thought at fi rst that he hadn’t. Arin felt the stillness
in her before she turned to look at him. He felt the recogni-
tion. But when Kestrel fi nally glanced up at Arin, she re-
coiled as if she didn’t know him. She snatched her hand
from his and lifted it— to ward him off , he thought. To
block the very sight of him.
He’d frightened her after all. There was a cry on her
lips. Horror in her eyes.
A monster stood before her. Arin remembered that
now.
The monster was him.
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19
KESTREL SAW ARIN FLINCH AWAY, HARD, FROM
the hand she’d lifted to touch him. It fell as if burned.
She seemed to feel the knife that had done this to him.
It went into her. It hit something vital, and she hunched
inside herself. Shock made it impossible to speak. Pain
scooped the air from her throat.
Arin’s fi ngers touched the two seams that cut a long
broken slash down the left side of his face.
“What happened to you?” she whispered.
He covered the wound. But Kestrel had seen its length.
The livid skin straining at black stitches. The way it had
changed him. The way he hid it.
“Arin, tell me.”
He stayed silent.
“Please,” she said.
Arin crouched down, and Kestrel didn’t understand
the movement until he had pulled a dagger from his boot.
Her dagger. Her beloved dagger, with its perfect weight
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and her seal carved into the hilt’s ruby. Her dagger, which
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the emperor had taken weeks ago.
“This,” Arin said, and gave it to Kestrel.
I’m sorry,
she had told the emperor.
No, you’re not. But you will be.
MARIE RUTK
She dropped the dagger to the ground.
Arin retrieved it. “Take care. You’ll damage the blade. I
happen to know that it keeps a nice, sharp edge. I made
sure that the palace guard I took it from knew it, too. You’d
think that a Valorian would have more courage than to
hire someone to attack me in a dark corner.”
“Arin, it wasn’t me.”
“I didn’t say it was.” But he was angry and rough.
“I could never.”
Arin must have sensed that she was ready to weep, that
the dagger in his hands was warping in her blurred vision.
He spoke more gently. “I don’t think that you did.”
“Why?” Her voice wavered and broke. “I could have
arranged for it. That’s my dagger. That’s my seal. Why do
you believe what I say? Why would you believe in me at
all?”
He moved to lean forward on the railing, forearms
folded with the blade dangling down over the river, his face
in profi le. Finally, he said, “I trust you.”
“You shouldn’t.”
“I know,” he muttered.
She heard the strain in his voice. His eyes cut to her,
and she saw that he knew she had heard it. His body shifted
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into a position of determined nonchalance. “Logically
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speaking,” he said lightly, “the idea that you hired someone
to attack me doesn’t make much sense. I’m not sure what
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your motive would be.”
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“I could have wanted to put an end to the rumors.”
“That would be a shame. I like the rumors.”
“Don’t joke. You should blame me. You must.”
THE WINNER
He shook his head. “It’s not like you to send someone
else to do your dirty work.”
“I could have changed.”
“Kestrel, why are you trying to convince me of your
guilt?”
Because this is my fault,
she wanted to say.
“A moment ago, you insisted that you had nothing to
do with this,” Arin said, “and that’s what makes sense. Do
you want to tell me why the emperor took your dagger?
Whom did he want to punish with it? Just me . . . or you,
too?”
Kestrel couldn’t speak.
“I might even be fl attered,” Arin said, “if the emperor’s
form of fl attery didn’t hurt so much.” He straightened, and
off ered her the dagger again.
“No,” she said sharply.
“It’s not the blade’s fault.”
She choked on her anguish. On her guilt, her fault, and
her trust. “If you give that dagger to me, I will throw it in
the river.”
Arin shrugged. He tucked the dagger back into his boot,
then he faced her. The slash curved slightly in his cheek
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like half a smile, but his mouth was fl at as he watched her
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take him in. “I’m sure that my new appearance is fascinat-
SKI
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ing in all sorts of ways, but I don’t want to talk about it
anymore. I’d rather talk about
this
.” He pointed at Kestrel’s
work scarf and dragged his fi nger down through the air to
her black boots. “Kestrel, what are you doing?”
MARIE RUTK
She had forgotten what she wore. “Nothing.”
He lifted his dark brows.
“It was a dare,” she said. “A senator’s daughter dared me
to sneak out of the palace without an escort.”
“Try harder, Kestrel.”
She muttered, “I was tired of being closed up inside the
palace.”
“That I believe. But I doubt it’s the whole truth.”
Arin’s eyes were narrow, inspecting her. His hand slid
along the railing as he came close. He reached for the collar
of the sailor’s coat. He drew it away from her neck.
The world went luscious, and slow, and still.
He bowed his head. Stitches scratched against her
cheek. Arin buried his face in the hollow between her
neck and the coat collar and breathed in. Warmth fl ooded
her.
Kestrel imagined: his mouth parting against her skin.
The teeth of his smile. And she imagined more, she saw
what she would do, how she would forget herself, how
everything would slip and unloop, like rich ribbon off its
spool. The dream of this held her. She couldn’t move.
She felt him feel how she didn’t move. Arin hesitated.
He lifted his head and looked down at her. The blacks of
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his eyes were huge.
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He released her. “You smell like a man.” He put some
distance between them. “Where’d you get that coat?”
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Kestrel’s voice wasn’t quite as shaky as the rest of her. “I
’S
won it.”
“Who was your victim this time?”
“A sailor. At cards. I was cold.”
THE WINNER
“Flustered, Kestrel?”
“Not at all.” She fi rmed up her voice. “To tell the truth,
he gave it to me.”
“Quite an eve ning you’re having. Sneaking out. Taking
coats off sailors. Why do I feel, though, that that’s not the
whole of it?”