Bella stared, not sure how to respond. "You know what Will's curse is?"
"Damn it," Jack whispered. "I didn't want to talk about this."
"Too late. Do you know how to get rid of it?" Bella demanded.
"Yes," Jack sighed. "It isn't what you think though."
"What is it then?" Bella asked, wishing Jack would just give her a straight answer.
"No. I've already said too much. You and Will are both too damn smart and neither of you can just let anything lie," Jack shook her head. She stood up.
"Oh no! You don't get to leave now." Bella threw off her blankets and stood up to confront Jack. "You don't get to come in here and drop a half-hearted apology, explain nothing, and admit that you know what the most powerful curse I've ever heard of is, and that you know how to get rid of it, and then leave!"
Jack felt her mouth go dry. Bella was naked and stunning, and all the emotions and memories of the two of them together came flooding back. Jack stared, then turned around.
"Look at me!" Bella snapped.
"I can't. You're..." Jack's heart knotted in her chest. It felt hard to breathe.
Bella rolled her eyes and made a disgusted sound. "Imperials," she sneered. She pulled on a blouse and a skirt. Jack stood there, listening to the rustle of fabrics, trying to control her shuddering heart. The silence was somehow the worst thing possible. All the guilt came swelling up without any handy excuse to shunt it toward anger. Somehow Bella had been the naked one, but Jack had never felt more exposed.
"There. Now turn around," Bella demanded.
Jack slowly turned. "Please don't ask me more."
"Like hell," Bella scoffed. Jack looked defeated. It wasn't a look Bella was used to seeing on her face. Not even when Bella had tossed Jack out had she seen that expression.
"It isn't a curse," Jack said quietly. "Or, at least it isn't supposed to be. I think the problem is Will."
"Explain," Bella said flatly.
"I can't. I really have already said too much. Please don't talk to Will about this," Jack asked.
"You don't get to ask me for anything," Bella shook her head, her eyes like flint in the dim light.
"I was trying to help him!" Jack exploded. Bella flinched, afraid for a moment, then she watched Jack crumple at the foot of the bed. The strongest, proudest, fiercest woman Bella had ever known was sobbing. Words came, racked, helpless, unbidden.
"I had to! It... it was... I didn't have a choice! I tried! I wanted... I only wanted to help..." Jack was incoherent.
Bella stood. Her mothering instincts threatened to override everything else. How could she stay angry while watching this? Wasn't her anger justified? Did she even want to stay angry? Shouldn't she? Jack had done so much, hurt her, hurt Will, offered no explanation. Now this? What was this? What did Jack mean? Suddenly it was Bella who felt like she didn't know what to do.
The initial burst of emotion over, Jack was starting to become more intelligible. She clutched the bed, her fists knotted in the blankets, her body still wracked. "You're... you're both just... If I told you anything, you'd... you'd figure it all out. You're both... smarter than me. I can't... I knew I couldn't out-think you. Not both. I couldn't... I can't... so I had to say nothing. I thought it would be good! I didn't know it was going to hurt him so much! When he came back I... I couldn't tell him... I had to just... let him hate me. I didn't-"
"You aren't making any sense," Bella said softly.
"Good!" Jack looked up. Her eyes were raw and red-rimmed. "You weren't ever supposed to know! I didn't come here for any of this!"
"Alright. Why did you come here?" Bella asked.
"To ask you how to apologize to him," Jack squeezed her eyes shut. "I don't know how!"
"I'm not sure you can. Not without some kind of explanation," Bella shook her head.
Jack's chest shook. "All a waste of time then. Fine." She stood up and started wiping away her eyes.
Bella felt drained. She'd just woken up and wanted to go back to sleep. She took a deep breath. "I believe you."
Jack stopped, blinked her stinging eyes and watched Bella for a moment. "Thank you."
"So it's not a waste of time," Bella said with a small shrug. "I still don't understand, but maybe I don't have to."
A small smile twitched on Jack's lips, then was gone again. "It's a start."
Bella nodded. "Can you at least tell me why you can't tell me anything?"
Jack shook her head. "No. I'm sorry."
"This must be really important," Bella said with a half smile of sympathy on her face.
"It's the most important thing I'll ever do," Jack said.
"I hope it was worth it," Bella said, hoping she sounded sympathetic.
"It was. It still is." Jack turned.
"Just talk to him," Bella said, catching her before she could leave.
"I don't know if I can." Jack shook her head. "You can accept the things you don't understand. He can't. He'll dog me about it until I either break down and tell him, or he has enough bits and pieces to figure it out for himself."
"Would that be so bad?" Bella asked.
"It's a risk I just can't take," Jack said.
"Is it really life or death?" Bella couldn't fathom what would possibly make Jack make these choices.
"Maybe. Probably," Jack shrugged. "I'm not willing to bet what I can't afford to lose."
"I'll talk to him for you." Bella wanted to... do something. Now that the walls were down between them, the space between was filling up with years of unresolved emotions. Now wasn't the time. They were both too raw.
"Thank you," Jack quietly. Then she was gone. The door opened letting in the blinding midday sun. Bella shielded her eyes and heard the door shut. Then she was alone in the dark.
She flopped back onto the bed, her arms wide. "What the hell was that?" she muttered.
___________________________
"Is all the cloak and dagger bullshit really necessary?" Caine asked.
Behind him, Prelate Alexandra sat, facing the opposite direction. They were back to back in what passed for a park at the edge of the cliffside wall, near the market. It was really just a small garden kept by a local herbalist which someone had put a few stone tables and chairs near. Now, it was a place where old men played board games in the afternoon sun, and passersby stopped to take in the view. Prelate Alexandra was dressed in sensible, plain clothes, a parasol shielding her from the sun. It was currently aimed at the crowds behind them, hiding her face.
"Well I can't exactly walk into that wretched place you call home these days, can I?" the Prelate asked.
"You might be surprised. For the most part, they're good people there. Very accepting, and they take care of each other," Caine said.
"I am not here to argue about the moral complexities of your whore house," Alexandra said primly.
"How about you get to the point then?" Caine took a drink off his ever-present tankard.
"I am in a precarious position. Fort Deliverance is functionally operational, but not yet complete. The bulk of my resources are tied up finishing the construction. I cannot openly take a stance against the Kidd family yet," Prelate Alexandra explained.
"You know where I stand on all that," Caine said.
"Oh, you've made your position quite clear, yes," Alexandra sighed.
"So why are you here?" Caine asked flatly.
"I need a favor," Alexandra replied.
Caine stood up, about to leave.
"Sit," Alexandra said in a tone that reached straight down into Caine's mind and threatened to usurp it completely. Three nearby people, who could not possibly have heard the Prelate over the noise of the crowd, all sat down directly in the dirt and looked confused. One of them got back up and looked around. Caine stopped moving, but did not sit.
"I should break your damn jaw. It'd be a public service," Caine growled.
Alexandra sighed. "Your threats are unbecoming."
"You're so used to everyone doing what you say that the moment you get any pushback you jump right to compulsion," Caine still didn't sit.
"Will you please listen?" Alexandra asked, turning around to look up at him. Her parasol continued to carefully block anyone from getting a good look at her.
"You have ten seconds," Caine said, cold anger still held in his eyes.
"I need you to protect Jane Castilian." the Prelate said simply.
Caine stood a moment longer, then sat down. "Sterling's assistant? You could have just led with that."