“I don’t even know where to begin with that,” Hunt said.
“Just trust me,” Tharion said, “Ophion is on its way, if not already here. So I need to know as much as possible, and as quickly as possible. Find Emile, and we potentially find Sofie.”
“And gain a nice child soldier, right?” Bryce said tightly.
Tharion turned pleading eyes on her. “Either the River Queen puts me in charge of hunting for them, or she assigns someone else, possibly someone less … independently minded. I’d rather it be me who finds Emile.”
Ithan burst out, “Can we discuss that you guys are talking about rebels in this city? About Danika potentially being a rebel?” He snarled. “That’s a serious fucking claim.”
“Sofie and Danika exchanged a number of intentionally vague emails,” Tharion said. “Ones that included an allusion to a safe hiding place here in Lunathion. A place where the weary souls find relief from their suffering. I’m guessing the Bone Quarter, though I’m not sure even Danika would be so reckless as to send them there. But anyway, it’s not a claim. It’s a fact.”
Ithan shook his head, but it was Hunt who said, “This is a lethal game, Tharion. One I’d rather not play again.” Bryce could have sworn his hands shook slightly. This had to be dragging up the worst of his memories and fears—he’d been a rebel, once. It had won him two hundred years of servitude.
And today had been long and weird and she hadn’t even told Hunt about Cormac’s visit at lunch.
But to let this boy be hunted by so many people … She couldn’t sit by. Not for an instant. So Bryce said, “I can ask Fury tomorrow if she knows anything about Danika and Sofie. Maybe she can give some insight into where Danika might have suggested hiding.”
“Ask her right now,” Tharion said with unusual seriousness.
“It’s Wednesday night. She and Juniper always have date night.”
It was half a lie, and Hunt must have known it was for his sake, because his wing gently brushed over her shoulder.
But Tharion ordered, “Then interrupt it.”
“Don’t you know anything about Fury Axtar?” Bryce waved a hand. “I’ll call her tomorrow morning. She’s always in a better mood after she and June get it on.”
Tharion glanced between her and Hunt, then to Ruhn and Ithan, both silently watching. The mer reached into his jacket and pulled out a folded stack of papers with a resigned sigh. “Here’s a sampling of the emails,” he said, handing them to Bryce, and aimed for the door again. He paused near Syrinx, then knelt down and petted his head, his thick neck. He straightened Syrinx’s collar and earned a lick of thanks. Tharion’s mouth curled up at the corners as he stood. “Cool pet.” He opened the front door. “Don’t put anything in writing. I’ll be back around lunch tomorrow.”
As soon as the mer shut the door, Hunt said to Bryce, “Getting involved with this is a bad idea.”
Ruhn said, “I agree.”
Bryce only clutched the papers tighter and turned to Ithan. “This is the part where you say you agree, too.”
Ithan frowned deeply. “I can ignore the shit about Danika and Ophion, but there’s a kid out there on the run. Who probably has nothing to do with Ophion and needs help.”
“Thank you,” Bryce said, whirling on Hunt. “See?”
“It’s Tharion’s business. Leave it alone, Bryce,” Hunt warned. “I don’t even know why you had to ask about any of this.”
“I don’t know why you wouldn’t ask,” Bryce challenged.
Hunt pushed, “Is this really about finding the kid, or is it about learning something new about Danika?”
“Can’t it be both?”
Hunt slowly shook his head.
Ruhn said, “Let’s think this through, Bryce, before deciding to act. And maybe burn those emails.”
“I’ve already decided,” she announced. “I’m going to find Emile.”
“And do what with him?” Hunt asked. “If the Asteri want him, you’d be harboring a rebel.”
Bryce couldn’t stop the light from shimmering around her. “He’s thirteen years old. He’s not a rebel. The rebels just want him to be.”
Hunt said quietly, “I saw kids his age walk onto battlefields, Bryce.”
Ruhn nodded solemnly. “Ophion doesn’t turn away fighters based on their age.”
Ithan said, “That’s despicable.”