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Chapter 3 - Chapter One: When Duty Calls — Numbers & Knives

It was a cursive warning and mockery. Rhosyn knew the north was rallying for something, but this was the tinder to the flames peoples' outrage would light. He was far more cunning than she imagined, and far more irritating.

Friday, that gave them just two days. It seemed her own issues were going to have to wait, her future king and friend came first.

"Let's go to Uncle's old office."

Edrien's hand never fell away as they started into the manor together, Caerwyn following a few steps behind, Rhosyn's eyes rereading the letter from the duke. It had been so long since any noise was heard from the north that she thought it had simmered to a halt. But she should've known he was just gathering more ammunition.

They turned into the main hall where her uncle used to reside—mostly empty now. It was probably why she liked it in this wing, the quiet of disused corridors and memory of family like a faint scent lingering in the fabric. When they reached the large double doors of Uncle Halvar's office, Rhosyn pulled the handle, only to push against the iron bolt of a lock. It had been a while since she'd used the room last, but she hadn't expected it to be locked. The only person with the key was Master Oswin and he could be anywhere in the estate.

Edrien dropped to a knee, pulling something out of his pocket and slipping it into the lock with an expression on his face that looked all too happy.

"What are you doing?" she scolded.

"What does it look like?" he threw over his shoulder, "I'm unlocking the door for us."

Rhosyn rolled her eyes. He'd been doing this ever since a boy in the kitchens taught him when they were still kids. The kitchen boy didn't know he was the prince, thought everyone was playing a joke on him by claiming it. Long story short, Edrien learnt how to pick a lock and since then, no door or chest had kept them out. It was probably something he sought comfort in. Knowing that if they ever found themselves locked in a cell again, that he'll be able to get them out.

"Just don't break my uncle's door," she bit back, finger anxiously picking at her thumb.

He made a noise that had Rhosyn leaning in worried.

"Could you both turn around," Edrien asked a little awkwardly. "I can't do it when someone's watching." He self-consciously chuckled and she turned her back with a huff.

A few beats later, a click sounded and she turned to find an awfully smug prince holding the door ajar.

"After you, My Lady." He gestured gentlemanly.

"Why, thank you."

The room was large, lined with tall shelves and fine furniture organised so that there was a sitting area to receive guests around a low table, and a massive desk big enough to fit two—which it did, her and Edrien.

Rhosyn sat in her uncle's old seat, Edrien pulled up a spare and they began to sieve through the wallets contents. Most of it was recorded reports from Lower Houses and common people. Witnesses to injustice, or victims of grievances. Occasionally, the northern duke would detail a section, his handwriting standing out stark against the scribbles of the serjeant-at-mace's clerk.

"What's the plan then?" Edrien asked, reading the way Rhosyn searched the pages laid out in front of them.

"We need to find probable deniability for as many as we can and set up a plan to resolve any offenses we can't justify," she explained. "We'll make two piles; one for those that are undefendable, another for those that we can refute."

"Why not just answer each of the charges with their demands?" he asked, reading over a request that a lord had underpaid on a contract arguing that he didn't compensate the merchant after prices of the raw materials went up, meaning the goods were sold at a loss.

"Because the duke knows what he's doing and lords don't like being told they are wrong."

Edrien blinked at her as if he was made uncomfortable by her words. She didn't like it anymore than he did, but it was the ugly truth. If they conceded and forced all the lords named in the wallet to pay back all the gold they owed, there would be an uproar, and it'll be aimed at them, not the duke. They are damned if they do and damned if they don't, so they needed to vindicate as many with appropriate reasoning—which was going to take a lot of hours of reading financial ledgers.

"I'm going to need ledgers with dates and yearly finance dockets to absolve most of these," Rhosyn ran her finger over a few issues aimed at underpaying or outright dodging tax.

"My secretary will have copies of those, how far back would you need?" he queried, pulling out a fresh piece of paper and starting a request in his own hand.

"It'll have to encompass any dates in question on the accusations."

Edrien raised his eyebrows, realising the size of the job at hand.

"Sir Caerwyn," she continued, still searching through the pages scattered haphazardly. "Can you go to the palace and return with what we need please?"

The shadow next to the doorway stood straighter. "I can't do that, My Lady—line of sight." His code that overruled her command, a repetitive and tiresome battle between them.

"We're not going anywhere and there's no danger here," Rhosyn combated. "Besides, Edrien has his own guards stationed outside the door—a position you requested—and they followed their Prince's command."

"My first duty is to your safety, My Lady," Caerwyn replied, with no tone change as usual.

She simply rolled her eyes and her knight didn't need to see it to know she was vexed. Though he'd see it as her being irked, but safe.

No matter, she'd decided she'll just have to ask the next maid to send for a page and—ah, Master Oswin, just the man she needed.

"Perfect, Master Oswin."

"My Lady," he bowed, "Your Highness." He dipped again.

"Can you ready a room for Crown Prince Edrien, he'll be staying the night—" Rhosyn asked, seeing the again tell on the man's face, "can you request a light dinner, something not messy as it's a working dinner." She could see Oswin pale at trying to convince the chef to cook something so basic for the prince and smiled. "And fetch someone who doesn't care for my safety nor security who is free to run documents the prince needs from the palace." She felt Caerwyn hang on that one, Oswin hearing yet another argument masked by a simple request and wielded as a weapon.

"Of course, My Lady," he bowed, taking the offered letter from Edrien, "thank you, Your Highness." He dipped again and then he was out of the door, his shoes slapping on the hallway floor as he rushed to complete his tasks.

Edrien rolled his head, giving her a jesting look as if to scorn her. "You don't have to give him a hard time."

"I don't, he gives himself a hard time fretting over the important guests I get," Rhosyn replied swiftly, starting to pile the papers in a fashion that made sense, seeing a pattern.

"'Guests,' as in more than one? Who have you been making friends with?" Edrien pried, dripping with interest—and maybe a bit of jealousy.

"You very well know it's just you. Everyone else doesn't know if they should try to befriend me, not knowing if it'll benefit them, or bow to me—and all because I'm playmate of the prince," Rhosyn teased straight-faced.

"They do it because you're the prince's favourite," Edrien teased.

"No," she replied firmly, "This—" she slapped the pile of papers, "—is what favouritism leads to."

Edrien grinned. "Well, we should get good at this then," he kicked back into his chair, flourishing a page out prepping it to be read, "because I plan on buying you a pony as soon as I'm king—just as I said I would when we were children."

His insistence on getting her a pony was because he wanted to make up for her eighth birthday. But that was in the past and she didn't wish to dredge it back up.

Rhosyn simply gave Edrien an unimpressed look.

"Come on. You like this really," Edrien prodded. "I know you still read Ravelocke's monthly finance ledger before handing it off to my father."

"Because habits are hard to break and uncle taught me that; 'numbers never lie—'"

"'Where people with words bend the truth,'" Edrien finished for her. "Well, I'd never lie to you Rhos," he announced, leaning casually propped up by an elbow.

"That's because you can't lie to me," she replied, not looking up from the audit she studied. "I know your tells."

Edrien looked generally hurt—but she knew it was put on, he was good at acting. Rhosyn simply rose an eyebrow at him and set her lips in a half smirk and the prince rolled his eyes, smiling innocently.

"I swear, you can read people, like people read books."

She scoffed, the idea of reading books was irksome.

"What?" Edrien pinned her a look. "There's books out there that aren't all fiction and lies, you don't have to read that 'Beatrice Fairleigh' stuff."

"No, but even the non-fiction out there are questionably lies. Last centuries facts, disproved this century," Rhosyn sieved through the stack in front of her. "What next? In the future they'll be saying that God doesn't actually exist, that we made him up to keep people in line and control them."

"That'll never happen, we'd prove them wrong."

"What, the Crown Prince and his playmate using equations that calculate nature with numbers to prove how only an intelligent higher power would be able to create such a feat?" Rhosyn asked, sarcastically.

"By then, I'll be king and I can command their thesis to be ignored."

"And risk censorship which would only seem to prove them right and create an environment that'll stoke rebellion in pursuit to be heard," she questioned.

She knew he meant well, but Edrien was a dreamer. He always saw the world in some pleasant shade, finding the humour in the glum. He hid it—rather well sometimes—but he was actually rather intelligent, with the ability to read and write in three different languages, one of them being a dead one.

It was just everything they did, they did together. He knew words and had the power of his station as Crown Prince and Rhosyn understood numbers and how to string a plan together, keeping the delicate balance of the lord's interest and that of the crown's.

A runner returned with the boxes of papers requested ages ago now. The sun kissed the tree-tops and Caerwyn still clung to the wall, only now he wasn't the only shadow in the room.

Rhosyn had sieved through petty squabbles between lords about border disputes, lower lords claiming their business was hijacked from underneath them, and the grim realities of how many lords didn't pay the high taxes despite the reported empty coffers and resulting high cost of bread and other basic commodities. No wonder the common people were outraged by what a noble lived on—Rhosyn was too.

"You look like you need a break," Edrien sat forward, wearing concern.

She massaged a headache starting to form. "There's just too many words," she cursed. "It's like he knows my weakness." He was getting bolder, Rhosyn gnawed on the skin of her thumbs pad, a nasty habit that itched at her.

"By him, you're referring to the Duke of Harrowfen," Edrien guessed, his brow set in a way that told her he didn't agree. "Don't you mean the Northern Bloc or whatever the north lords are calling themselves."

"It has his signature all over it," she waved, annoyed by the stack of papers. "He uses words like an executioner uses an ax. It's the way he dots the 'i's and crosses the 't's—"

"Oh, how blasphemous," Edrien mocked.

"Making everything seem so much more sinister," Rhosyn continued as if he hadn't interrupted.

"Well, this one is actually quite sinister without his help," he threw a sheet of paper over the large desk.

The words played in a familiar way, a low ghostly voice whispering the words in her head. It detailed an incident where a lord failed to pay the wergild, or man money, for ordering the death of a man without trial. It was injustice in more ways than one and yet it was swept under the overly sized gold-threaded rug, just because the lord felt in the right. The man had been accused of stealing, but there was no evidence. Rather than drag out an investigation and run a fair trial, the lord decided to take matters into his own hands.

Rhosyn sighed, burying her head into her hands. "The southern lords are not helping us here. It's like they want the north to split from us, just to be proven right rather than co-exist under the same roof."

"Well, we won't let that happen," Edrien gently retrieved the page. "Nothing can beat us when we put our heads together."

"I suppose you're right," she smiled fondly at him, through the dull ache pounding behind her eyes. "You deal with the words and I'll follow the money trail, because—"

"Numbers," they both said together and she can't help but share a laugh with Edrien.

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