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"Did someone pay you? Someone who doesn't like this peace? Well, give him a message from me: I don't much like it, either."

"Majesty!" One of the ministers glanced at the door as if the Goyl were listening on the other side.

"Oh, be quiet!" the Empress snapped at him. "I'm already paying for it with my daughter."

Jacob looked at Donnersmarck, but his glance was not returned.

"Nobody paid me," he said. "And it has nothing to do with your peace. I'm here for the Fairy."

The Empress's face went as blank as her daughter's.

"The Fairy?"

She tried valiantly to sound unconcerned, but her voice gave her away. Hatred and disgust — Jacob heard them both. And anger. Anger that she feared the Fairy so much. "What do you want from her?"

"Give me five minutes alone with her. You won't regret it. Or is your daughter happy her groom brought his dark mistress to the wedding?"

Careful, Jacob. But he was too desperate to be careful. She had stolen his brother. And he wanted him back.

The Empress exchanged a glance with the general.

"He's as disrespectful as his former master," she said. "Chanute used that same impertinent tone with my father."

"Five minutes," Jacob repeated. "Her curse cost you your victory. And thousands of your subjects."

She looked at him pensively.

"Majesty!" the general said, but kept his mouth shut after she shot him a warning look. She turned around and returned to her desk.

"You're too late," she said over her shoulder. "I've already signed the treaty. Tell the Goyl he inhaled elven dust or something," she ordered. One of the guards took Jacob's arm. "Take him to the gate, and give orders not to let him in again."

"And, Jacob!" she called as the Dwarfs opened the door. "Forget about the hourglass! I want a wishing sack!"

45

Past Times

Jacob had no idea how he found his way back to the hotel. In every window he passed, he saw his brother's contorted face, and every woman passing him looked like the Dark Fairy.

It couldn't be over. He would find her. At the wedding. At the station, when she'd board the King's onyx-black train. Or in the hanging palace, despite her snakes. He could no longer tell what was driving him: the hope of somehow getting Will back, the hunger for revenge, or simply his injured pride.

The hall of the hotel was crowded with newly arrived guests, their luggage, and harried bellboys. Everybody had come for the wedding. There were even some Goyl who attracted more looks and whispers than the Empress's younger sister. She had arrived without her potentate husband from the east and was clad in black fur, as though in mourning over her niece's wedding.

The ceremony would take place the next day, that much Jacob had found out, in the cathedral where Therese of Austry had also been wed, just like her father before her.

The chambermaid had mended and washed Jacob's clothes, and he was holding them under his arm as he unlocked his room. He dropped them as soon as he saw the man standing by the window. Donnersmarck turned around before Jacob could draw his pistol. His uniform was pristine white, as if to blot out the fact that the more usual colors of a soldier were mud and blood.

"Is there any room to which the adjutant to the Empress does not have access?" Jacob asked as he gathered up his garments and closed the door behind him.

ers.

"That man tried to enter the King's chambers!"

The officer was an onyx Goyl, and he spoke the language of Austry with barely an accent. Will didn't take his eyes off Jacob as he stepped back to the officer's side. Still the same face, and yet as different from his brother as a wolf was from a dog. Jacob turned his back on him; he could no longer bear to look at him.

"Jacob Reckless." He offered his saber to the guards. "I have come to speak with the Empress."

The guard who took the saber whispered something to his officer. Jacob's portrait, which the Empress had ordered after he brought her the glass slipper, was probably still hanging somewhere in the palace.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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