Tanner could barely keep up with me as I barged into Silver’s car during his five a.m. breakfast.
Silver jumped back as I threw his train car door open, dropping his knife to the floor with a clatter. A huddle of bodyguards quickly raised their weapons, but he gestured for them to lower them.
“Yes, Princess?” he asked. Tanner stuck close to my hip.
“You’re going to blow up the palace,” I said. “The day of the royal wedding.”
“You’re pretty smart for a princess,” Silver said. “Please, have a seat.”
“So it’s true?” I asked, ignoring him. It came out sounding much higher-pitched than I’d intended.
“The wedding is scheduled for this evening,” Silver said calmly. “The chapel is unbarricaded. And at six p.m. sharp we’ll know exactly where Demkoe will be standing. Saying his I dos.”
“But what about Mary?” I demanded.
Silver shrugged. “What about the clergyman, the organist, all the guests? I don’t hear you crying out for any of them. Is it only people you know, Princess, whose lives are of value?”
“There has to be another way,” Tanner said.
Silver shook his head. “There isn’t.”
“Can’t you just set off the bomb a little earlier?” I pleaded, hating the tone in my voice, the fact that my emotions were getting the best of me. “Before Mary enters the chapel? Demkoe and his men will already be assembled for the ceremony, awaiting her entrance. That’s custom.”
“I refuse to take that chance,” Silver said. “Six o’clock sharp is a guarantee. Any time before that, anything can go wrong.”
Another rebel entered the train car at that moment. The one with the scowl, who had tried to hide the blueprints from me when he caught me peeking at them. We locked eyes before I returned my attention to Silver.
“Traditionally, the groom doesn’t see his bride the day of the wedding,” I went on. “Not until they’re at the altar. Demkoe will want to follow British customs, to make the wedding seem legitimate. The bombs in the chapel could be set off before Mary even enters. Then she’ll be saved and you can still take out Demkoe.”
Silver frowned before responding. “If that’s how the wedding plays out, sure, Mary would be saved. But we have no way of knowing what customs and traditions Demkoe will choose to follow.”
“Yes, we do!” I exclaimed, thinking of Demkoe wearing General Wallace’s decorated uniform, smoking my father’s cigars, sitting in my father’s throne. “You don’t know him like I do. I promise this is what he’ll do—”
“Enough!” Silver said, slamming his fist on the table. The scrambled eggs on his plate shook in the aftermath. “I can’t take that risk. I’m sorry to have to sacrifice your sister, Eliza, but it’s for the greater good. It’s the only way to ensure that Demkoe will be killed. We may never have a chance like this again. If you’re truly committed to our cause—to the safety of this country—then you’ll understand.”
I was speechless.
Silver washed down his eggs with a gulp of tea. “I know this is difficult for you to accept. But we’ve all had to make sacrifices. We’ve all lost people we love.”
He wasn’t even looking at me anymore. He spoke directly into his plate, at the sausage link he was cutting into tiny bite-size pieces. “It’s not always easy to do the right thing,” he said. “But at times like these you must learn to be selfless.”
No. This wasn’t about me being selfish. I’d already lost almost everyone who’d ever mattered to me. Mary and Jamie were all I had left. And now, Tanner.
“Now if you’ll excuse me.” Silver gave a nod to the two rebels who’d raised their guns earlier. “I’d like to finish my breakfast in peace.”
“No—” I protested, as the guards dragged me kicking and yelling out the door, locking it once we were outside.
“Let me in!” I banged on its steel frame, screaming in some kind of wild, uncontrollable rage. “Come on! Let me back inside!”
Then someone was pulling from behind, peeling me off the door—familiar hands, rough with calluses but handling me with care. Tanner. I started to relax into him.
But then I heard Tanner yell out, “Hey, get your hands off her!”
Who’s holding me, then?
I wondered, spinning around. It was such a familiar touch.
Time suddenly seemed to slow down. Tanner was off to the side. He’d drawn his pistol. And he was aiming it at—
It couldn’t be. No, it wasn’t possible.
“Wesley?” I said.
Tanner lowered his gun at the sound of my voice. He backed off and Wesley’s face softened.
“You’re alive?” I asked dumbly.
Wesley nodded, but he appeared almost afraid to speak to me.
“Oh my God, Wesley!” I exclaimed, starting to throw my arms around him. But then I hesitated. Why wasn’t he smiling? There was something wrong, something very wrong.
“What are you doing here?” I asked, studying him more closely.
He appeared to have just returned from a journey. His skin and clothes were covered in ash, and he had a huge rucksack strapped to his back.
Silver pushed open his door to see what all the commotion was about. At the sight of him, Wesley immediately stepped back from me, almost guiltily. Silver hurried to pull him forward, throwing an arm around Wesley’s shoulder.
“You’ve done it?” Silver asked breathlessly. “Oh thank God, you made it back!” He smacked him on the shoulders like a proud father.
I stood back in confusion as Wesley tossed the heavy bag on his back to the ground. Perspiration beaded on his forehead and a ring of sweat stained the collar of his army green T-shirt. Through the ash and dirt and sweat, his face glowed at the praise.
“Come in, come in,” Silver said, pulling him into their closed meeting. “Tell me everything.”
Wesley didn’t even glance back at me. He just followed Silver into the train car and disappeared behind the closed door.
Its lock clicked, and a wall of guards blocked it from all sides.
But I could see what was happening inside through the window. All eyes were on Wesley as he took a seat at the head of the table, his hands folded in front of him. His lips were moving but I couldn’t hear what he said.
After what must have been a minute or two he cracked a smile. Cheers and applause sounded around the table as the officers congratulated him on his work. Silver himself retrieved a bottle of celebratory liquor.
I’d seen enough.
“That wasn’t
the
Wesley, was it?” Tanner asked. His eyes were ablaze and he squeezed his gun at his side.
I didn’t know how to respond.
“Because that guy is obviously part of the plan to blow up your home and kill your sister.” Tanner was suddenly more defensive and angry than I’d ever seen him. “He looks
like Silver’s right-hand man. Please don’t tell me that’s the same guy you’ve been pining over.”
“That was him,” I whispered. But somehow it wasn’t. It couldn’t be.