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to ease Touraineā€™s fears. ā€œIā€™ve heard worse. And yes, I know. Weā€™ll use that to our advantage. Youā€™re going to play both sides.ā€

Understanding dawned on Touraineā€™s face, followed closely by horror. Another tick against her diplomacy skills.

ā€œYouā€™ll go to them as my negotiator. See what it would take for them to ally with me. If that doesnā€™t work, you can pretend to betray us by giving them choice information. Locations of food deposits, things like that. First, though, weā€™ll start with peace. Either way, you know them. They know you. Any knowledge is better than none at all.ā€

A leader should never give more information than necessary. Better not to mention tugging out the secrets of Shālan magic just yet.

Touraineā€™s eyebrows shot up. ā€œAs you command, Your Highness.ā€

ā€œDo you know how to find the rebels who held you?ā€

After a momentā€™s thought, the woman shook her head.

That was disappointing. It would have sped things up tremendously. ā€œYouā€™ll have to speak to the locals, then. Sniff around for them. We could do you up a disguise.ā€ Luca waved her hand mysteriously.

ā€œIā€™ll do my best, Your Highness. I donā€™t speak Shālan, though.ā€

Luca sat upright, feeling the sudden panic of plans disintegrating from the inside out. ā€œYou donā€™t?ā€ She shook her head before Touraine could even open her mouth again. ā€œNo, of course you canā€™tā€”even the Tailleurists wouldnā€™t allow that. Thatā€™s shortsighted of them.ā€ Shortsighted of her, not to have thought of that.

ā€œYou said you can read Balladairan, though?ā€

Touraineā€™s cheeks flared, and she looked down at her lap, hands gripping tighter on her knees. ā€œOf course, Your Highness.ā€

ā€œCan you lie?ā€

Touraine looked startled and then flushed. ā€œI suppose?ā€ she stammered, showing that her lies probably wouldnā€™t go unnoticed by any but the most oblivious party.

Sky above. ā€œWhat else can you do?ā€

The woman sat back and crossed her arms peevishly. ā€œI can kill people. Scout. Plan military maneuvers. Organize a hundred soldiers, wounded and well, their food, their pay, their leave. Simple soldier things.ā€

Ah. There was the bite Luca was looking for. Whatever else Touraine lacked, Luca could work with a backbone. And above all, she was loyal. Even Cantic had vouched for her loyalty. And so here they were.

At Madame Abdelnourā€™s shop, ready to outfit Touraine as the loyal servant of Balladaire that she was.

ā€œYour Highness, your presence is an honor.ā€ A short woman with long curling dark hair bowed and led them in, to a small table. Luca saw the high chairs and sighed internally with relief. Two cups of steaming tea waited for them. Luca sat. Touraine didnā€™t sit until Luca gestured to the second chair. Even so, the ex-soldier eyed GuĆ©rin and Lanquette, who stood beside Luca and by the door, respectively. It would take the woman some time before she stopped thinking of herself as a soldier.

ā€œHow may we serve you, Your Highness?ā€

Madame Abdelnourā€™s back was hunched from years over a seamstressā€™s table, and she wore spectacles, likely as a result of the same. She was elegant in a simple red robe over an orange underdress. A gold belt wrapped around her plump waist before hanging down in the middle. The colors complemented the deep brown of her skin. Luca would have looked like scraped parchment.

ā€œI need to outfit my new assistant as befits someone of her station.ā€ Luca gestured at Touraineā€™s current outfit. More of GuĆ©rinā€™s off-duty clothes, well made but ill fitting. ā€œShe has a military background, and I donā€™t mind if the clothing reflects that. Iā€™d also like it to reflect a unity between Shālan and Balladairan sensibilities. And of course, comfort in this heat. Can you make something like that?ā€

Madame Abdelnourā€™s eyebrows hung somewhere near her hairline. ā€œMilitary background, you say? Unity, you say? Of course, Your Highness. It will take some time to design and test pieces, but we can make some simple ones immediately.ā€ The modiste studied Touraine as if she could size the woman right there, in her seat. She probably could. Still, she gave Touraine a small bow and beckoned with one crook of her finger. She strode to the center of the room without waiting for Touraine to follow.

At the modisteā€™s shrill whistle, a few young women appeared from a back room. One of them had the same thick dark hair and bold nose as the modiste, plus a vivid scar on her chin. A measuring tape hung across her shoulders.

ā€œAnd, madameā€”sheā€™ll need something formal. Appropriate for a ball.ā€

Touraine stumbled as she walked to a stool. ā€œA ball.ā€

Luca drank her tea. It was light and sweet. Saturated with mint. ā€œIn two days. I know itā€™s soon, and Iā€™d rather we didnā€™t have it at all, butā€¦ā€ She was the first of the royals to visit the colony in too long. It would have to be celebrated with the proper pomp and preening and ingratiating, and as a member of Lucaā€™s staff and household, Touraine would have to be there.

ā€œYour Highness, Iā€™ve neverā€”ā€

Madame Abdelnour snatched Touraineā€™s left arm up to run the measuring tape down from Touraineā€™s armpit.

ā€œI donā€™t knowā€”ā€ Panic was writ clear on the other womanā€™s face. It was the closest sheā€™d come to outright dissent. Like each time before, she stopped herself. The fear vanished, replaced with that impassive wall again. ā€œOf course, Your Highness.ā€

Luca turned the cup in her hands. Her grief rings clinked against the fine clay. The gold band inset with onyx for her father, the thinner gold band with a black diamond for her mother. Make those you would lead depend on you. ā€œDonā€™t worry. Iā€™ll make sure youā€™re ready. Can you dance?ā€

ā€œNo, Your Highness. It wasnā€™tā€”ā€ Touraine yelped as the modisteā€™s daughter pushed her legs wider to measure the inseam of her trousers. She blushed and cleared her throat. ā€œIt wasnā€™t considered a training priority for us, even by Tailleurist standards.ā€

Luca perked up. ā€œYou study the theorists?ā€

That blank expression. Again. Luca was beginning to recognize the topics that sent her new assistant into stony obedience.

ā€œI donā€™t know if study is the right word for it, Your

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