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“What is this about?” he said, already starting to breathe hard from the exertion. “If Krael’s trying to make sure I don’t go back to Mel-Aqat, he needn’t worry—it’ll take more than the Keeper’s gold to send me back there.”

“What makes you think Krael sent me this time, Martell?” the warforged said. Again Janik could hear the mocking smile in his voice behind the utterly emotionless face. “Maybe I’m just angry about a fall from an airship.”

The woman gave the warforged a sidelong glance, and Janik thought for a moment that he recognized her eyes.

“You jumped!” Janik blurted out as both assailants rushed him again. His sword blocked the adamantine weapon as the warforged swung it toward his head. The powerful blade bit into Janik’s sword and stuck for a moment. As the warforged struggled to pull his weapon free, Janik twisted his own sword, trying to pull the hilt out of his opponent’s grasp. At the same time, he kicked in a high arc to knock the woman’s sword arm away as she swung in under his defenses.

How am I going to get out of this? he thought, trying to remember the lay of the streets around him, mentally searching for possible escape routes.

The warforged yanked his sword free and stumbled backward a step. The woman edged around Janik’s left flank.

“You’re right, Martell,” the warforged said. “Krael sent us.”

“Evidently he no longer trusts you to get the job done alone,” Janik said. “Of course, he’d never face me with less than a dozen soldiers between us.”

“Maybe I just wanted to come along to watch you die,” the woman said. Janik could see the smile in her eyes and suddenly realized where he had seen them before.

“Ah, Tierese,” he said, backing away so she couldn’t maneuver behind him. “I knew there was a reason I hated your smile.”

“Damn you to the Outer Darkness, Janik Martell,” Tierese said. She glanced at the warforged. “He really has to die now, Sever. If he escapes …”

The warforged roared and charged, his blade slashing down to cut into Janik. At the same time, Tierese rushed him from the other side. Janik spotted his only chance to escape. He stepped toward Tierese and ducked under her swing as she tried to compensate for his new position. He crouched and reached for her legs. She slammed into him hard, but he used her momentum to propel her over his shoulder and into the warforged. Both of his opponents sprawled on the cobblestones, and Janik took off running as fast as he could, the same way he had come.

He did not look back. He heard their shouts of fury behind him and heard them scrambling to their feet, then running after him. Janik knew their heavy armor would slow them. With his head start, he would be safe as long as he kept running. In moments, the jangling of armor faded behind him and he knew he had lost them, but he didn’t slow his pace. He spotted the Cathedral rising high above the rest of the city, making it easy to find.

He finally slowed to a walk as he approached the door of the palace. He worried that Tierese’s participation in this assault spelled danger at the palace, but the knights at the gate let him pass without a word. He made his way back to the suite he shared with Mathas, where no knight stood watch. Still breathing hard from his exertion, he flung open the door and stormed in.

Mathas sat on the divan with his book, leaning back with one arm stretched across the tops of the cushions.

“What kind of twisted nest of vipers has Dania drawn us into?” Janik growled, shrugging out of his coat and tossing it on a chair—atop another coat. He paused for an instant, then spun around to see a half-elf woman leaning against the wall behind him. She pushed a strand of red hair off her face and folded her arms.

“Dania!” Janik blurted.

“Hello, Janik,” she replied. “What nest of vipers are you talking about?”

“Krael Kavarat.” Janik spat the name. “He sent an assassin after me on the airship to Aundair—clearly he knew what your Keeper wanted from me before I did. And I just met the assassin again, in the company of one of your Knights of Thrane. Which would explain Krael’s source of information.”

Mathas and Dania were speechless.

“What is going on here, Dania? And what are you doing here?” Janik looked her up and down. “You’re dressed like a Knight of Thrane—right down to the Silver Flame around your neck! I suppose Tierese is a friend of yours, smiling to your face while feeding news to Krael?”

“I should have known you’d come in here throwing blame around at everybody but yourself, Janik Martell,” Dania said. “This isn’t some conspiracy to make your life miserable.”

“No, just a conspiracy to get me killed, courtesy of Krael Kavarat.”

“Well, Krael’s done his level best to kill me, too, while you’ve been hiding at Morgrave University. Welcome back to the front lines! It’s about time you came out of your rabbit hole and started fighting again!”

“Rabbit hole? Hey, the war’s over, Dania. Are you having trouble accepting that? Is that why you’ve put on the armor of a Knight of Thrane? So you can keep fighting the war?”

“I’m not a Knight of Thrane, Janik. I’m a paladin of the Silver Flame.”

“A paladin?” Janik’s eyebrows shot up in surprise. “So that’s it. Now you’ve got what the Last War could never give you—right and wrong. You think you’re on the side of good and virtue now, is that it? And because you’ve chosen sides, I need to come out of a comfortable retirement and fight evil with you? So how do you explain an Emerald Claw spy in the Cathedral? How can you fight evil when you can’t see it in front of your face?”

“This isn’t about the Last War, Janik—you’re right, it’s over. And there’s greater evil in the world than Emerald Claw spies. But you wouldn’t understand that, would you? As far as you can tell, evil is what hurts you, and good is what you like. Get your head out of the sand! It’s bigger than you! And—” She broke off suddenly and turned to face Mathas, inhaling slowly.

“Why don’t you sit down and join us, Janik?” Mathas said. Dania let out her breath and sank into the seat facing Mathas, her hand at her throat, touching the Silver Flame pendant that hung there. Janik turned his back on them both, crossing the room to a small table and pouring himself a glass of water from a pitcher. Uneasy silence settled over the room.

“So there’s a traitor among the Knights of Thrane,” Dania said, addressing Mathas since Janik refused to turn around. “That explains a great deal, more than just your airship assassin. Tierese is her name?” Janik grunted. “I don’t know her, but I’ll make sure she is dealt with.”

“And how does the Church of the Silver Flame ‘deal’ with spies and traitors in its midst, Dania?” Janik spoke to the wall. “The same way Breland does? Or the Order of the Emerald Claw? Can I look forward to seeing her smiling face hanging from a gibbet?”

“Would that make you happy, Janik?” Dania’s voice stayed calm. “Would that reaffirm your conviction that the whole world is callous and uncaring? Would that take the edge off your anger, or justify it, give you an excuse to go on being angry?” Janik took a long drink of water, still refusing to turn around. “You’ve got no right to be angry at me, Janik. None at all. Turn around and hear this.”

Janik drained his cup and turned around, not looking at Dania.

“You hurt me, Janik,” she said. “About as badly as it’s possible to be hurt. I was stupid to let you into my heart when I knew you didn’t love me, but that’s not my fault. It’s yours.” Janik looked ready to respond, but she cut him off. “Listen. It doesn’t matter. It’s in the past. What matters now is finding a way to fix what we did in Mel-Aqat. More than my heart or your pride is at stake here, Janik. Let’s put it aside.”