Chapter 1: Exile's Shadow
“Two silver for a feverroot balm," Irene said flatly, eyes never lifting from the cracked wooden counter.
“That's robbery," the peddler spat. “It's just ground weeds and melted lard."
She folded the cloth bundle shut. “Then you're welcome to die honest."
A long silence. Then the coins clinked against the counter. Irene didn't watch him leave, just stored the coins in a leather pouch beneath her cloak.
The desert wind clawed through the gaps in her shack. Beyond the flap door, sand hissed along Goldclaw's border like warning whispers. Irene tied the scarf tighter around her throat, fingers brushing the faint ridge of her bite scar.
“They're rounding up border folk again," said a voice at her back.
She turned. Mikhail leaned in the doorway, blood caking one sleeve. “Saw the hounds myself—Cassian's banners. Three wagons full by noon."
Her pulse didn't quicken. It never did anymore. “Why come here?"
He tossed her a satchel. “One of mine got slashed across the ribs. You're the only one who won't ask names."
She knelt beside the injured boy inside the satchel wrap. “He'll live. If he lies still."
“Then you'll help us get through the dunes tonight?"
“I'm not a guide."
Mikhail's voice hardened. “You owe us."
“I owe no one."
But her hands moved anyway—steady, practiced, cruelly gentle. She crushed feverroot, added two drops of sleeping nettle, and began stitching without asking.
Outside, bootsteps cracked against the hardpan.
Mikhail swore. “Patrol."
Irene's hand froze mid-stitch. “Hide the boy."
“Where?"
She yanked open a floorboard and gestured. “Go."
As the flap opened with a gust, Mikhail dove. Irene rose, dusting blood from her skirts.
Cassian entered like he owned the wind.
He was taller than rumor claimed. Burned gold hair, sharp eyes like coins buried too long. And at his neck—the pendant.
Irene's fingers tightened at her sides. That tooth. Chipped on the right edge.
“You're the healer," he said.
She said nothing.
“You won't speak?"
She shook her head.
Cassian stepped closer. “Mute, or defiant?"
Her silence remained.
He studied her. “They said you cured three men last moon. One had his guts halfway out."
She didn't blink.
“And yet, you stay out here. Slum dust and vagrant filth. Why?"
Her hands lifted—simple signs: Not your concern.
His eyes narrowed. “Interesting."
Behind him, soldiers fanned out. One lifted a torn scrap of cloth from the firepit. “Blood," he announced.
Cassian turned back. “I could have this place burned. Drag you to Ivory Hold. Demand your secrets."
Irene only watched him. Her heart did not race. Her fingers twitched once near her scarf.
He stepped even closer. “But I won't."
That made her flinch.
Cassian smiled without warmth. “Because I remember hands like yours."
He left with no orders, no threats.
When the last bootstep faded, Irene knelt again.
Mikhail emerged. “That was him?"
She didn't answer.
“The pendant," Mikhail said, catching her look. “You sure?"
She nodded.
“He's the one who—"
“Yes."
“What now?"
Her voice was a whisper so low it might have been wind. “Now I follow."