forced herself to look into the sergeant’s blue eyes. “I just carried him up to bed.”
“Go on,” the sergeant said to his soldiers. “Find him.” They left the room quickly. He remained and gave a slow look around the kitchen. “He’s not in his bed.”
“He has a habit of wandering,” Nila said. “I just put him to bed, but I’m sure he was scared by the noise. What is happening?” This was no accident. Those soldiers knew exactly whose house this was. The sergeant had mentioned a field marshal. Adro only had one man of that rank: Field Marshal Tamas.
“Duke Eldaminse and his family are under arrest for treason,” the sergeant said.
Ganny blanched and looked as if she might faint.
Nila felt her stomach tighten. Treason. Accusations like that would see the whole staff put to the question. There was no escape. She’d heard a story once of an archduke, the Iron King’s own cousin, who plotted against the throne. His family and every member of his staff had been sent to the guillotine.
“You’re free to go,” the sergeant said. “We’re only here for the duke and his family.” He stepped toward the washbasin, frowning. “You’ll want to find new employment. In fact, if you can, you should leave the city for at least a few days.” He put the cigarette between his lips and lifted a pair of trousers from the top of the washbasin.
“Olem!”
The sergeant turned his head as another soldier entered the room.
“They find the boy?” Olem said, the washbasin forgotten.
“No, but a summons came for you. From the field marshal.”
“For me?” Olem sounded doubtful.
“Report to Commander Sabon immediately.”
“All right,” Olem said. He crushed his cigarette out on the kitchen table. “Keep an eye on Heathlo. Don’t let him rough up any of the women. If you have to give the boys an armful of loot to keep ’em occupied, do it.”
“But our orders—”
“The boys will break some of our orders one way or another. I’d rather they break the ones that won’t see them hanged.”
“Right.”
Olem took one last look around the kitchen. “Get any valuables you have here and leave,” he said. “The duke won’t be coming back for anything, either…” He touched his forehead toward Ganny and Nila before leaving.
So take what you want. Nila finished the sentence in her head.
Ganny gave Nila one quick look before she ran into the hallway. Nila could hear her feet on the servants’ stairs a moment later.
Nila fished the butler’s key from its hiding place above the mantel and unlocked the silverware cabinet. Nothing she had hidden under her mattress upstairs was worth a fraction of the silver she now piled into a burlap bag.
She waited until she couldn’t hear any of the soldiers in the hallway and pulled Jakob from the washbasin. She helped him pull his nightclothes over his head and handed him a pair of dirty trousers and a shirt from one of the serving boys. They’d be too big, but they’d do.
“What are we doing?” he asked.
“Taking you someplace safe.”
“What about Miss Ganny?”
“I think she’s gone for good,” Nila said.
“Mother and father?”
“I don’t know,” Nila said. “They’ll want you to come with me, I think.” She took a handful of cool ashes from the corner of the fireplace and mixed them in her palm with water. “Hold still,” she said, smearing the ashes in his hair and on his face. She took his hand, and with a sack full of pilfered silver over her shoulder, Nila headed out the back entrance.
Two soldiers watched the alley behind the townhouse. Nila walked toward them, head down.
“You there,” one of the men said. “Whose child is this?”
“Mine,” Nila said.
The soldier lifted Jakob’s chin. “Doesn’t look like a duke’s son.”
“Should we hold him till we find the boy?” the other said.
“Sergeant Olem said we could go,” Nila said.
“Fine,” the soldier said. “Off with you, then. We’ve a busy
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