Chapter 9
Aleksander was busy working in his office. The roaring fire warmed him as he poured over ship manifests and army documentation on this Dmitry. If they could find who Dmitry traveled with, who was likely to be loyal to him, then perhaps they could identify any threats before they even came to the Little Palace.
When Inessa and Fedyor delivered Alina, Aleksander rushed to her side. "Thank you," he said, dismissing them. He pulled her into his arms, rested his chin on top of her head, and deeply inhaled the scent of her. She was safe. "How was your day?"
"Boring. Fedyor and Inessa wouldn't even let me go outside, not even for training. I'm never going to get stronger if I don't train."
"It's just a precaution."
"A precaution for what?"
He ignored her. She didn't need the stress of knowing how anxious their enemies were to kill her. "I thought we'd take dinner in here tonight, if that's okay with you." His emotions were a mess. As haunted as he had been since Marie's death, it was even worse now that the continued active threat was confirmed. He was relieved to be with her because he could see she was safe, but he was also still deeply ashamed of his panic attack from the nightmare the night before. He feared she would bring it up. He couldn't talk about it. Eating in the main hall would stop her from doing so, but he was worried about security and didn't want her with a large crowd. Her food would be easier to poison there, even with her taster. Truthfully, though, Aleksander wasn't sure he had it in him to perform the intimidating General Kirigan act tonight, and he wanted her nearby for safety. Then he worried about what would happen when it was time for sleep. He had unleashed shadows last night, and they could have hurt her. He would never be able to forgive himself if he harmed her. That morning he had decided they'd have to sleep apart, but that was before he'd known of this new threat, of spies sneaking into the palace to check her routines. There was no way to know if the man he'd killed had been the first or the last. He couldn't risk letting her sleep without someone strong guarding over her, and she'd never agree to let someone like Ivan stand over her bed. She had to stay here. Selfishly, he was grateful to have the excuse to keep her in his bed.
"Of course." Her expression begged him to answer her previous question, but he didn't. He well remembered what it was like to be afraid everywhere you went at all times. He could protect her from that.
"I do have quite a bit of work to complete, though. I'm afraid I'll be quite busy. I did take the liberty of having Genya select some books from the library for you."
She raised an eyebrow, as if signaling to him that she saw right through his attempts to distract her, but all she said was, "That was kind of you."
He sat back at his desk and tried to focus on the lists in front of him. Something wasn't adding up. Dmitry would appear on a ship crossing into West Ravka, but not on a return, and then somehow a time later be on a manifest for a ship crossing the wrong way. How was that possible? Was he missing manifests or was Dmitry paying someone off to keep his name off the lists?
Alina stepped behind him and started rubbing his shoulders. "Alek, you're so tense. The stress coming off you is nearly unbearable. What happened today?"
"It's nothing. I'm fine."
She sighed. "Are we really going to do this thing tonight?"
He lifted his eyes to take in the annoyed look on her face. "Thing?"
"You know, where you pretend to be the oh so busy and important General Kirigan who uses his sense of authority to push people away? And then acts like he couldn't possibly have any feelings or needs of his own? He's fine. Everything is fine. He doesn't need any help."
He hadn't even realized he was doing it, but she had. "Accurate," he admitted.
"I'm going to let you in on a secret. The act doesn't work with girls who have shared your bed."
He laughed. Only she could call him on his behavior like this without irritating him. Only she could make him smile when he was otherwise so miserable. "I can assure you it worked fine on girls who have shared my bed. Apparently, it doesn't work on the one girl I have let into my heart."
"You've let me into your heart? So … let me help you."
"Alina, it's not that simple …"
"You can't bear this burden alone, Aleksander. I won't let you. Whatever is happening, it is crushing you. If not me, then get Ivan in here and talk to him. "
"You want me to summon Ivan in here? This must be serious."
"He is a good friend to you, and I know you trust him. I just want you to let someone help. You are not alone. This," she said, putting her hand over the papers, "is not yours alone to figure out. Stop trying to solve everything with no support."
"I'm not … used to having support."
She nodded, took his hand, and squeezed it. "I know. I'm not really either. We've learned to do things alone, to hide pain and keep it to ourselves, but I know that problems are better solved together. Together, Aleksander. Stop trying to protect me from scary truths. Fedyor scanned every room we went into before he'd let me enter. I'm not stupid, Aleksander. If I can handle you cutting a Druskelle in half on top of me, I can handle whatever is threatening us now. Stop trying to push me away when it comes to important things. Let me help."
He sighed. She was frightened already; she might as well know the truth. "Zoya caught a man trying to break in today. I have her guarding the palace exterior since she can't seem to behave herself around you. He is working for Zlatan and was sent to spy on you. They're making a plan for a better attempt on your life."
Her shoulders slumped and her gaze fell to the floor as she took that in. "Hunted wherever I go. Still not used to that."
He stood and wrapped his arms around her. "I will not let them succeed. I promise you that you will come to no harm."
She looked into his eyes, stared there for a while, then found her strength. "Tell me about the papers."
He quickly filled her in on what he had discovered about Dmitry and the mystery of the paperwork. It did actually feel good to have someone to discuss his findings with and not keep the thoughts spinning in his head. He talked through all of his ideas, no matter if they led nowhere. She indulged him and asked appropriate questions at all the right times. Finally, he arrived out loud at the stuck place he was in his head. He had so many theories, but how did he figure out if any of them were right?
She was quiet as she turned from page to page. Dinner arrived, and they ate in silence as they continued to try to find a pattern among the papers-the same captain, the same record keeper, accomplices that might travel with him. All ideas led nowhere, but they continued to look.
Hours later, Alina stood and walked into the war room.
"Alina?" He trailed after her. She was staring at the map. After a long time, he prompted her. "What is it?"
"I'm sure it's stupid." She shook her head and hugged herself.
He stepped closer and wrapped his arms around her. "I don't like it when you put yourself down like that. That's not you. Those are words from your past."
She shrugged. "Maybe."
"Hmm, well then, let's hear it. I'm frustrated. Maybe if it's really stupid we can have a good laugh about it."
"I used to stare at the map and dream of finding a way around. I was told there is no around, but … is there? Any secret path or …"
Aleksander felt his stomach twist as the implications became clear. "There are reports of Fjerdans in West Ravka, rumors that Zlatan is aligning with them, letting Druseklle ..." A vision of Nina being tortured popped into his head. He had to fight his jaw from trembling so she couldn't see how upset this made him. "There is an around if you're in bed with the enemy. He's going through Fjerda."
She gasped as it came together in her head. "He sends his emissary to Fjerda with messages, who then gets a free pass into our country to deliver orders to his spies, but then he needs the quick return across to do it again. How long would it take to travel through Fjerda? Check the dates. Do they match?"
"Fjerdans. It's worse than I thought." He could feel the Fjerdan fires licking at his skin.
They spent another hour pouring over records and checking their theory. Finally, Alina yawned. "We should get some sleep."
He wanted to tell her to go on ahead, but he didn't want her sleeping in a room away from him. He almost offered to just watch over her, but he feared he would accidentally fall asleep and end up as he had the night before. His chest tightened with worry as he considered possibilities, none of which were acceptable.
"I tell you to come to bed, and that sense of dread is what I get? I might think you don't want to …" she tried to lightly tease.
"You know why," he whispered, still not wanting to talk about it.
"Which is all the more reason to get you to sleep soon. Your nightmares are worse the longer you try to keep yourself awake. Have you noticed?"
He sighed. "This morning I was trying to work myself up to telling you that it's not safe to sleep with me anymore, but now with this information on this potential attack, it's not safe to sleep away from me either."
"Don't you dare do that to me!"
"What?" To her?
"Don't you realize what you do for me? For years I cried myself to sleep every night, Aleksander. For years! I used to lie there and wonder what was wrong with me that no one could want me, how it was possible for me to not belong anywhere. I slept with a weapon under my pillow to fend off anyone who might come to hurt me. And now I sleep in your arms. Desired. Loved. Don't you dare take that away from me."
His heart ached for her. Was it possible she needed him as much as he needed her? "I hadn't realized …"
"No matter how bad our nightmares get, we stay together. You make sure I can sleep, and I will do the same for you. Just promise to wake me up tonight. You can't get yourself overtired like that again."
"And you will wake me if the shadows start again?"
"I promise. Right away."
"Okay," he agreed, feeling less selfish about allowing it if it benefited her too. It was better than the alternative of some spy finding her room in the night or her lying awake with a knife under her pillow wondering if someone was coming to kill her. He would have to take care of himself more for her-get an adequate amount of sleep, actually stop and eat meals instead of working through every waking hour, maybe even share some of his stresses with her. He would do those things if it meant he could be there to protect her.
"Now," she said, kissing him gently. "What do I have to do to get you out of that kefta so I can kiss away all those battle scars?"
