The storm struck the city long before dusk, flooding the cobblestone streets around the Royal Conservatory. Mira Rowan pulled her hood tight as she slipped through a back gate, heart hammeringânot from the rain, but from the risk she was about to take.
Inside, the grand hall glowed with soft lanternlight, rows of velvet seats filled with nobles awaiting the annual Symphony of Unity. She wasnât one of them. She wasnât supposed to be anywhere near them.
But she had a message to deliver to the prince.
She scanned the room, searching for a path that would get her to the balcony stairwell unseen. She nearly made it tooâuntil a voice, warm as summer despite the storm, spoke behind her.
âYou donât belong here.â
Mira spun around.
Prince Alistair stood only a few steps away, dressed in midnight blue, his eyes sharper than any portrait painted of him.
He wasnât supposed to notice her.
He wasnât supposed to look at her like that.
âIâI came with a message,â she managed, gripping the sealed letter beneath her cloak.
âFor whom?â
âFor you,â she whispered.
He stepped closer, breaking every rule of etiquette the palace drilled into him. âThen give it to me.â
His glove brushed hers as he took the letter. Sparks pulsed through her like lightning; she knew he felt it too, because his breath hitchedâjust slightly, just enough.
He opened the letter. Mira watched the shift in his expression, the tightening of his jaw. After several seconds, he folded the parchment slowly.
Then, unbelievably, he said, âCome with me.â
âI canât,â she whispered immediately. âIâm not allowedââ
âNeither am I.â
His smile was soft, reckless, dangerous.
âBut rules have never stopped me before.â
He held out his hand.
She shouldnât take it.
She shouldnât even think about it.
But the storm outside had nothing on the one rising inside herâand her fingers slid into his before she could stop herself.
At that moment, someone gasped from the shadows.
A witness.
The prince swore under his breath.
Miraâs world narrowed to the sound of boots racing toward them.
And then Alistair whispered the words that would change her life forever:
âRun with me.â
--â The Corridor of Echoes
The witnessâs footsteps hammered against the marble floor, echoing like war drums. For a split second Mira frozeâshe wasnât a runaway, she wasnât a rebel, she wasnât⊠whatever the prince thought she was. She was just a courier from the outer district. She had no business fleeing with royalty.
But Alistairâs hand tightened around hers, warm and unwavering.
âTrust me,â he said.
And gods help herâshe did.
They sprinted down a side corridor just as guards spilled into the hall behind them. Miraâs hood slipped back, rain-wet curls bouncing against her cheeks. Alistair glanced at her once, startled by the sight of her face, but he didnât slow.
The corridor was narrow, lined with portraits of kings long deadâeach one watching them with cold, painted disapproval. Their shadows stretched across the floor like dark warnings.
âWho saw us?â Mira whispered as they ran.
âLady Caldrin, most likely,â he muttered. âShe has a tongue sharper than a duelistâs blade. If she reaches the king before we doââ
He didnât finish. He didnât need to.
Mira swallowed hard. Sheâd heard stories of the kingâs temper. And of the punishments for commoners who overstepped.
âWhy are we running together?â she hissed.
Alistair cast a sidelong glanceâjust a flicker, just a heartbeat, but something in his eyes softened. âBecause youâre carrying a message that canât fall into the wrong hands. And because I wonât let them hurt you.â
Her chest tightened. She hated the way her pulse jumped at his words. This was madness. She was nobody. And heâhe was destined to marry some foreign noblewoman for political peace. That was what the streets whispered, at least.
The corridor forked. Alistair dragged her left, into a dim passage that smelled of dust and forgotten secrets.
âThe archives?â Mira breathed. âWeâll be trapped.â
âNot with the right key.â
He stopped before a tall iron door etched with sigils. Releasing her handâ reluctantly, she thoughtâhe reached beneath his coat and pulled out a small silver key. When he fit it into the lock, gears groaned deep within the walls.
The door creaked open.
Inside, towering shelves stretched upward like the ribs of some ancient creature. Scrolls and tomes filled every inch. A single lantern on a central table cast a golden halo across the stone floor.
Alistair ushered her in and shut the door quietly behind them.
Only after the lock clicked did Mira realize how loud her breathing was. Or how close he was standing.
He ran a hand through his damp hair. âWe have a moment, but not much more. Tell meâwho sent this?â He lifted the letter sheâd delivered, its seal now broken.
âI donât know their name,â Mira admitted. âI was paid through a third party. The instructions were clear: âPlace it in the princeâs hands and no one elseâs.â I didnât read it.â
Alistair hesitated, then handed the letter to her.
âRead it now.â
Mira blinked. Sheâd never expected trust from someone of his rank. Slowly, she unfolded the parchment.
Her throat tightened as she read aloud:
âThe king intends to declare war within the month. He means to use you as the symbol that rallies the nobles. You are to lead the charge, whether you live through it or not.â
Her voice faltered.
Alistair looked away, jaw clenched.
Mira forced breath into her lungs. âIâI didnât know.â
He laughed bitterly. âOf course you didnât. But Lady Caldrin? She would sell this truth to the highest bidder. Or worseâshe would tell my father.â
Silence wrapped around them, heavy and electric.
Then Alistair stepped closer, his forehead nearly touching hers. âThank you, Mira. For bringing me this. For risking yourself.â
She tried to step back, tried to remind herself he was f*******n in every senseâbut the archives were too small, and he was too near, and his presence was overwhelming.
âYou shouldnât look at me like that,â she whispered.
âWhat way?â
âLike I matter.â
His breath caught. âYou do.â
Her pulse stumbled.
But before either could say another impossible thing, shouts echoed from down the hallway.
The guards had found the trail.
Alistair grabbed her hand againâthis time slower, more deliberate.
âIf we leave this room,â he murmured, âeverything changes.â
âThen what do we do?â
He held her gaze, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper.
âWe change it.â
He pulled down a hidden lever beside the lanternâMira gasped as the floor beneath them split open, revealing a staircase descending into darkness.
Boots thundered outside the door.
Alistair squeezed her hand onceâ a promise, or a questionâbefore stepping into the unknown.
Mira took a trembling breath.
And followed him into the dark.