Chapter Twenty
The revolution is not decided in the city. It never is; or rather, it is never settled where one might assume it would be. Revolutions, politics, wars, all are truly fought and won in small rooms far removed from the conflict, decided by a select and terrifyingly disparate group of people who might otherwise never interact with the issue at hand. Miss Blackburne iterates and reiterates this point through the duration of the entire walk over, ensuring that every member of their group understood their place in the events at hand.
As the evening arrives under a gloomy sky, smoke continues to trickle up from various places across Bellchester. The afternoon of fighting showed no signs of stopping, and as Annette feared, it only seems to escalate as night drops down to cover them all. An array of gunshots sound out through the streets and alleys, accompanied by police whistles, overturned barricades, and the cries of dozens upon dozens of people. Each step that carries Annette out of the city feels very nearly like betrayal. She knows she wouldn't last very long out in the chaos of it all, and yet it leaves a bitter taste in her mouth to imagine just how many of her friends and comrades might be fighting for their lives and their futures in the streets.
Morrigan leads the march out of the city, accompanied by Annette, Cordelia,and a half dozen guards who provided no form of identification to their organization. The easiest guess is that they are simply mercenaries, hired by Pemberly for whatever purposes Miss Blackburne requires, but Annette suspects anything regarding the woman would resist simple explanation. Her self-disclosure of occupying an administrative role for Pemberly Exports falls more and more into question with each moment they interact, and it is difficult for Annette to overlook the curious terror with which Cordelia holds her in. And so, as Annette turns the loaded revolver in her hand over and over and over, gazing out on the glowing lights of Lamishton in the countryside, a half mile away, she does begin to believe the true battle lay before them.
"You don't have to use it," Cordelia says to Annette, her voice low and cautious as they stand apart from the rest of their party.
Annette is surprised by how heavy the pistol feels in her hands. She'd held them before and was always struck by their weight, so dense and so compact, yet this particular one is notably heavier. "You don't load a weapon you won't intend to use," Annette utters back to her, voice hollow and weak.
"You didn't load it," Cordelia rebuts.
Annette purses her lips and raises her hand, aimlessly pointing the barrel out towards the countryside. "And yet it is ready to fire nonetheless."
The sound of grass giving way underfoot pulls her attention away and she drops the weapon to her side once more. Morrigan strolls over to them, her guards tending to the captured courier behind her. The poor errand boy had been on his way to Lamishton when they caught him, and it had taken very little encouragement to pry information out from him.
"We're ready to move," Morrigan stops, tucking her hands behind her back.
Annette steals another glance at the grand estate before them, perhaps a half mile away. "Your men have finished scouting the area?"
"Annette," Morrigan exhales, as though disappointed. "Everything before you has been planned and prepared for weeks. You are simply the last to know it."
Her face turns sour and she looks away, fiddling with the pistol in her hand. "Apologies if this is my first coup."
"More of a civil war," Cordelia shrugs. "Benton & Hayle are not yet the ruling power of this land."
Annette sighs. "You seem calm."
"I'm not," the detective replies quickly.
"Done correctly, this will be entirely, or very nearly, bloodless," Morrigan assures them. "The courier has confirmed the presence of both Winchester brothers as well as Arthur Hayle. We remove this triumvirate and the leadership of the conspiracy collapses." With that, Morrigan nods, confident and resolute, and she returns to check in with her soldiers.
"That woman is something else..." Annette grumbles.
"Oh, I expect to be staring down the barrel of her revolver at some point," Cordelia pips back, her voice absent of any humor.
"Ever the optimist."
Cordelia smiles, though it is difficult to tell if it is from acknowledgement or from nerves. She shakes her head, holstering her own pistol into a place carefully hidden at her beltline at the back of her coat, and gestures for Annette to do the same. "Despite it all," she says, "I do adore the focused glow in your eyes in moments such as these."
"Unfortunately, Miss Jones," Annette flicks her eyes over at the detective, her brows low and tight, "it seems you are attracted to my fear."
"Less afraid that you believe yourself to be," Cordelia prescribes. "I daresay future investigations may run the risk of leaving you quite bored when this is all settled."
"God, I hope you're wrong."
"Chin up, this will surely-,"
Cordelia is interrupted by a sharp and crisp whistle from Morrigan, who waves at them to indicate it was time to go. Annette pauses on the backs of her heels, rocking in place for just a moment before nodding and joining the rest of the group, followed closely behind Cordelia. The detective had been resolute to ensure that Annette was never further than ten feet from her since they left the city.
They move through the fields towards Lamishton in the fading light of the arriving evening, baptizing them into near total darkness by the time they reach the hedged gates surrounding the property. One of the Pemberly guards carefully pulls open a space through the green wall, quiet and deliberate, and they enter one by one into the back gardens. Annette isn't totally sure if they'd meet resistance as they approach, though it seems the Winchester's possess a small reserve of private guards scattered across their property. Morrigan's forces catch them by surprise, either grabbing hold of them and strangling them to unconsciousness or catching them by surprise and forcing their surrender. They arrive at the back entrance without any real trouble.
From there, Morrigan turns to her guards and orders, "Mallory, Daniels, Kellen, I want you to watch this route. Keep prisoners quiet, don't let anyone in or out. The rest are with me." She waits for their nods of acknowledgement, then faces Annette and asks, "You've been here recently; where do you believe we ought to search first?"