Ghost in the palace-Chapter 36: tooth

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Chapter 36: tooth

They had been riding for hours, the road thinning into a ribbon of packed earth, the fields at the sides low and colorless under a dull sky. The carriage rolled steady, springs creaking, the Emperor’s face a carved mask of attention and restraint. Ananya sat opposite him, hands folded in her lap, expression as still as if carved from jade. Outside, the retinue had fallen into a purposeful hush; even the horses seemed to move with caution.

Zhao Rui did not trust the silence.

It was the way the light lay, the small gaps between trees that felt too neat, that made him shift forward on his seat. He reached out as the carriage turned through a narrow copse — not in gallantry, but to steady her as the wagon lurched. His fingers closed on her wrist.

She flinched. In the cramped space his hand was more possession than protection. Instinct rose in her like heat. Before thought could temper reaction, Ananya’s teeth snapped down on the soft inside of his forearm — a sharp, animal bite, sudden and fierce.

He made a small, strange sound — not a cry, not a laugh — a surprised, dangerous exhale. He jerked his hand back, more from reflex than pain. The skin flared hot where her teeth had met it; a crescent of red there told him she had meant it.

"Are you dog" he started, voice low, incredulous.

She spat the words, breath ragged, eyes wild and furious. "Why did you pull me?"

Their moment of human heat broke like glass.

At that instant the first arrow screamed out of the trees like a black stanza. It struck the carriage side with a splintering crack and then, impossibly, another hammered into wood near the wheel. The carriage lurched, then stuck — one wheel wedged into a rutted dip, splintered planks biting soil. Dust rose in angry plumes. The world outside turned into chaos: shouts, the thud of hooves, the clatter of metal.

Zhao Rui’s expression hardened the way iron hardens in the forge. He looked at her once, a flash of something raw and quick in his face — worry, annoyance, a thing that was neither apology nor anger, but a hard, brittle care. "Do you see now?" he snapped, words compacted and sharp, "We’re ambushed. Sit. Sit and do not move."

She did not sit easily. Her jaw worked, the trace of his bite a burning proof along his arm. She pressed her hand to her mouth as if to staunch a counter-urge to answer back further, to say something that might be fatal. Instead she stood up, the carriage small around them, and leaned forward so close their breath tangled.

"Do you think I don’t know an ambush when I see one?" she hissed. Her voice was low but fierce enough to be heard through the roar. "If you pull me like some possession, you put us both at risk."

One of the coachmen outside screamed. Men were down — a jolt of motion — and from the trees a scatter of arrows began to pepper the ground. One grazed the Emperor’s cloak and another sank into the leather roof with a sick thunk. The guards had leapt out, swords bright, shouting as they returned fire and tried to secure the route. The air smelled of pine sap and hot iron.

Zhao Rui shoved as much of his composure into his next words as he could. "Sit," he said again, softer but iron-hard. "I will go watch. I will find the flank. You stay."

She read the command the way she had learned to read commands on the battlefield in dreams she’d never lived — for what it was: a demand to be safe, or a demand made in fear. Her hands curled into fists. For the space of a breath she looked like she might leap through the splintered window, into the mud and the metal and the shouting.

Then she did something that took him off-guard: she laughed, small and rough. It was not a yielding laugh. It was a sound packed with contempt and affection both. "Fine," she said, as if bartering on dangerous terms. "Go. Find what you can, Emperor. If you die prancing about like some hero, I’ll bite the next man who comes to claim your crown."

He toppled into a rare, startled smile — a human gesture in a place of sharpened steel. "If you bite the wrong man," he returned, "I will personally be very offended."

The guard leader’s return was a clattering of boots and a bowed, strained voice. "Your Majesty! The road is cut. They used light javelins and a sap trap — one wheel is stuck. Men are ready, but we were not the first to see them."

Zhao Rui’s gaze flicked to the wheel wedged deep in the mire; its axle had taken a blunt strike. "Then move fast. Clear a line toward the trees. Do not let them circle." He slid from his seat with the practised economy of a ruler who could move like a soldier when he must.

Ananya rose as well. At the doorway she hesitated, then reached up and briefly — as the coachman turned — brushed the sleeve where he had bitten before. There was no forgiveness in the motion and no apology; it was an acknowledgement they both understood: they were not safe, and words were luxuries they could not afford.

The carriage door slammed open. The Emperor vaulted from the carriage, cloak flaring, and the world reduced to motion: men shouting, arrows skittering past, a cacophony of urgent things. He did not go alone; guards were at his shoulder. He did not look back often, but when he did his eyes caught hers — a flash of steel softened by something else. For a heartbeat the battle around them stilled in both their minds.

Fen Yu’s tiny voice grazed the corner of Ananya’s ear, barely audible even over the chaos. "We should help."

Wei Rong’s tone was a rasp of eager menace. "Let them taste arrow and regret."

Li Shen’s voice, always the quietest, threaded into the rawness: "Be careful. Move not only for him — move for truth."

Ananya drew a breath and stepped out onto the chopped grass. Her foot sank into mud. The sky above knit with smoke and the scent of disturbed earth. She glanced at Zhao Rui, then at the broken wheel, then at the ring of trees that had ceased being pastoral scenery and had become a line of mouths waiting to swallow men.

"Watch your flank," she told the nearest captain, her voice now the incomparably calm blade it had been in the palace. "If they try to pin us here, we burn the road."

He blinked, taken by the smoothness of her command, then followed it: orders flowed, men moved. Somewhere in the woods a shout answered, and the ambushers moved, realizing their quarry would not be the easy feast they’d hoped for.

Ananya’s mouth tightened. The bite on the Emperor’s arm had been real; the mark would be there later — a small, fierce red to remind them both that tonight everything could be ordinary and yet everything could be war.

She glanced at him once, short and sharp. "You test me enough and you’ll find there are teeth you do not like."

He bore the look, unflinching. "Test me more," he said, and for once his tone was not a command but a dare. Then, without more words, he vanished into the ring of men and motion, and the night sang with steel.