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think it’s one of those things that’s easier to say than to do,” Sophia said aloud. She reached down to ruffle Sienne’s ears automatically.

      “Possibly,” Lucas admitted. He looked ready for war in a way that Sophia did not, a blade by his side and pistols set at his belt. Sophia guessed that she just looked impossibly round with the weight of her unborn child, unarmed and unarmored as she stood there.

      But not unready, Lucas sent. He gestured to the rear of the ship. “Our commanders await.”

      Mostly, that meant her cousins and her uncle. They held this together as surely as Sophia did, but there were other men there too: clan chiefs and minor lords, hard men who still offered bows as Sophia approached, her brother and her forest cat by her side.

      “Are we ready?” she asked, looking over to her uncle and trying to look like the queen that they all needed her to be.

      “There are still decisions to make,” Lars Skyddar said. “We know what we are trying to achieve, but now we need to decide on the specifics.”

      “What’s to decide?” her cousin Ulf demanded, in his usual bluff tone. “We get the men together, pound the walls with cannon, then charge in.”

      “This explains a lot about the way you hunt,” Ulf’s sister Frig said, with a wolf-like smile. “We should encircle the city like a noose, closing in.”

      “We need to be ready for a siege,” Hans said, cautious as ever.

      It seemed that everyone had their own idea of how it should go, and a part of Sophia wished that she could stand back, leaving all of this to those with wiser heads, more knowledge of war. She knew she couldn’t, though, and that the cousins would argue forever if she let them do it. That meant the only way to do this was to choose.

      “When will we reach the city?” she asked, trying to think.

      “Probably dusk,” her uncle said.

      “It’s too late for a simple assault then,” she said, thinking of the time she’d spent in the city at night. “I know Ashton’s streets. Trust me, if we try to charge through them in the dark, it won’t end well.”

      “A siege then,” Hans said, seeming pleased by the prospect, or maybe just that his plan was the one being chosen.

      Sophia shook her head. “A siege hurts the wrong people, and doesn’t help the right ones. The city’s old walls only protect the inner part of the city, and you can bet that the Dowager would starve the poorest to feed herself. Meanwhile, every moment we wait, Sebastian is in danger.”

      “What then?” her uncle asked. “Do you have a plan, Sophia?”

      “We will anchor in front of Ashton when we get there,” she said. “We will send out messages for them to surrender.”

      “They won’t do it,” Hans said. “Even if we offer them quarter.”

      Sophia shook her head. She knew that much. “The Dowager won’t believe that anyone else would have more mercy than her. But the illusion that we are giving them time to surrender will buy us time for half our men to move around to the landward side of the city. They will take the outskirts quietly. The people there have no love for the Dowager.”

      “Do they have any more for an invader?” Lucas asked.

      It was a good question, but then, her brother had a knack for asking good questions.

      “I hope so,” Sophia said. “I hope they’ll remember who we are, and what things were like before the Dowager.” She looked over to Hans. “You’ll lead the forces there. I need someone who can keep the men disciplined, and not slaughter ordinary people.”

       “I will see to it,” Hans assured her, and Sophia knew that he would.

      Sophia turned to Ulf and Frig. “You two will take a small force close to the river gates. If the men I sent made it inside, those will open. Your job will be to help them hold it until the rest of us can attack. The main fleet will land, and we’ll move in under cover of the ships’ cannons.”

      It sounded like a good plan. She hoped it was, at least. The alternative was that she’d just condemned men she commanded to death.

      It is a good plan, Lucas sent to her.

      I just hope it works, Sophia replied.

      A third voice joined them then, coming in across the water. It will. I’ll make sure it does.

      Sophia turned and saw a smaller cluster of ships approaching. They had a disreputable look to them, seeming like the kind of things mercenaries or bandits might have chosen. It was her sister’s voice that rang out from them, though.

      Kate? You’re here?

      I’m here, she sent back. And I brought the most disreputable free company there is with me. Lord Cranston says that he will be honored to serve.

      That thought cheered Sophia almost as much as the presence of her sister there. It wasn’t just the extra fighting men, although Sophia would take all she could get right then. It was the fact that her sister was back with the fighting company she’d enjoyed being part of so much, and…

      Is Will there? Sophia asked.

      He is, Kate replied. Sophia could feel the happiness there. I will see you soon, my sister. Save some enemies for me.

      I’m sure there will be plenty to go around.

      “Kate is coming,” Sophia said to Lucas.

      “I know,” her brother said. “I felt her thoughts. I’d thought I’d have to wait until we returned to finally meet her.”

      “And find our parents after that,” Sophia said. She knew she shouldn’t be thinking so far ahead yet. She should be concentrating on the battle to come, but it was almost impossible to keep her thoughts there. She was too busy thinking about everything that might flow from it. She would get Sebastian back. She would free the Dowager’s people from the crushing weight of her rule. They would find their parents.

      “Kate will be as excited as we are to find our parents,” Sophia said. “More. I’m not sure she even has memories of them to keep her going.”

      “Soon, we’ll all have more than that,” Lucas said.

      “I hope so,” Sophia replied. She couldn’t help worrying though. “Do you have it?”

      Lucas nodded, obviously understanding what she meant. He brought out the flat disc made from interlocking bands of metal, glowing with bright, jumbled lines as he touched it. When Sophia brought her hand to rest on the metal too, the segments of the device spun into place, revealing the outlines of landmasses, from the Dowager’s kingdom to distant shapes that must have been the Far Colonies and the Silk Lands. It was tantalizingly close to telling them what they needed to know; there just wasn’t anything to tell them where their parents might be now. Sophia guessed that would come when Kate joined them. She hoped it would.

      “Keep the device safe,” Sophia said. “If we lose it…”

      Lucas nodded. “I have protected it this far. I’m more concerned about keeping you and Kate safe.”

      Sophia hadn’t thought about that. The three of them were about to head into the middle of a battle. If one of them were to fall in that battle, they might never find their parents. It would be a double blow, losing the promise of their mother and father even as they mourned a brother or sister.

      “You have to stay safe too,” Sophia said. “And I’m not just saying that because I want to find our parents.”

      “I know,” Lucas said. “And I will do all I can. Official Ko had me trained well.”

      “And Kate learned plenty from the witch who tried to claim her,” Sophia said.

      “If she’s half as deadly alone as she was when she was throwing me around the castle, she’ll be fine,” Lucas said. “The question is you, Sophia. I know you have Sienne, but

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