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The contortions of her face told me the pain shed suffered. Please, Christian, take it away. Its a matter of honour, Indarin, said Lara, her tone sharp. Cant you see that? He tried to smile, his features strained with relief.To me? I heal quickly. What have they done to you? Dad! Theyre my books. What are you doing? Jeren abandoned us to our fate, Doria replied, her hands on her hips, her thin elbows thrusting out. The moral right of the author has been asserted. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. Nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Shed successfully fled the day. Shops began to close for the night, with sales assistants dragging down noisy metal shutters and heading to the bus station. Packs of kids in high school uniforms hunted entertainment through the dark streets, loitering around benches to swap jokes, smokes, and saliva. Samara staggered on. He cleared his throat so that his voice came out as calmly as hers.I can see that. But Lady Jeren... we have need of you. Could you finish this...debate later? What are you doing out here? His hands met cold skin as he pulled her to him. She gave a sob, curled in against his body, for a moment the girl in the snow again, clinging to life, to him. Even though he had promised, he hadnt come. Hed left her. And dreams were not enough. He had not come back. I have to do this, she longed to say, and yet dreaded forming the words. To see his face as he heard. To form them would make them real. Make it final and unchangeable. And even though she knew what she had to do now, perhaps she could still find a way. Or at least pretend so. Like beaks on a coffin lid, says Rowan, broodingly, as the raindrops peck furiously at the roof of the car. Theyve parked with their backs to the fells; looking up towards the grand property with its imposing doorway, great crinkled columns of granite: a crush of dazzling black and white. The lights of a silver Range Rover glare, too bright, through the rain-streaked glass. Rowan closes his eyes but an image remains oddly stamped on the darkness; an ultra-violet outline of a middle-aged man in a baseball cap, fumbling about with the windscreen wipers and headlamps while chatting into a mobile phone. An old, conked-out looking Volvo clatters into a space beside them: a damp clanking of chassis and surging gutters. Rowans happy here, in the dark of the classic Nissan Figaro. Its peaceful. He’d heard some nearby church bells chime a few moments ago; a pleasingly old-fashioned sound, rolling out of somemist-wreathed bell-tower with a low and sonorous authority, shushing the raindrops and the cars like impudent children. He’s content. Maudlin, but acceptably so. He’s beginning to regret sucking down a lungful of Pickle’s finest before they’d bundled him into the car: a downcast figure trudging beneath a big umbrella wearing a newly pressed shirt, good jeans and a crumpled corduroy jacket. They’d even given him a shave. He looks piratical with his sharp goatee, his pupils big Kalamata olives. His heart’s racing. He feels paranoid and nervous. He can feel pressure building in his head.So many problems. So many deadlines. So much money! You’ll fallen so far, lad. How did you fuck it up, howdidyoufuckitup? How, lad? Snowdrop says nothing for a while, mulling over some moral conundrum.Its for the greater good though, isnt it? she asks. “Breaking stories, uncovering corruption, bringing down wrong-uns …, Shan fell to the ground, rolled, his mouth filling with dirt, his mind filling with shadows. He gave in to the darkness, to use it, to welcome it, to make it part of him at last. He walked away, his boots crushing Shans severed hair into the wet filth of the cell. Catherins laugh has a schoolgirl sound, a high, nervous giggle. She claps her hands like a Southern dame. Honestly, Im so pleased I came tonight. Compared to what? The words snapped out before she could stop them, but Gilliad barely seemed to notice. If anything he seemed amused. This time she believed him, even though her instincts told her she was a fool. She believed him in spite of herself..