Noah let out a sound that was half laugh and half strangled groan.
"Stay on the train," he repeated, the words flat with irony. "And tell the Wrohan honor guard that I simply misplaced the crown prince? That he opted for a spontaneous structural inspection of their street-level pavement? My wife would kill me before the Council even finished the paperwork."
Arik's smile didn't soften. If anything, it sharpened, catching the red strobe of the emergency lights. "Then stop talking and find your footing. I'm not waiting for the invitations to be printed."
He leaned forward, a casual tilt of his weight that defied the instinct of every living thing to fear the fall.
For a heartbeat, Arik hung suspended against the backdrop of the glowing city, a silhouette of dark intent, before gravity claimed him. He dropped straight down into the gulf between the rail and the district below.
"Arik!" Noah hissed, lunging for the door frame.
The Prince didn't plummet like a stone. Even with the Wrohan brooch acting as a heavy anchor on his ether, Arik knew how to bleed just enough power through the cracks of his restraint. He hit the maintenance strut Mezos had promised - a rusted, protruding girder - with the grace of a hunting cat, his elegant shoes making a dull clack against the metal.
He didn't stop to admire the view. He swung off the strut, caught a lower suspension cable, and dropped again.
Noah didn't have the luxury of a reborn warlord instincts, but he did have two decades of surviving Arik's whims. He followed, his own descent far less elegant and significantly more reliant on the reinforced strength of his military-grade gloves.
By the time Noah's shoes hit the cobblestones of a darkened alleyway just behind the main market bustle, Arik was already standing there.
He looked as if he had just stepped out of a high-end lounge rather than off a sixty-foot drop. He was calmly adjusting the sleeve of his coat, his breathing shallow and even, his golden eyes already scanning the back end of the stalls.
"Forty-two seconds," Mezos's voice hummed in their ears. "Wrohan's local security grid is currently flagging a 'physical debris' alert on the line. You have approximately three minutes before the first drone patrol passes over that alley. I suggest you blend in."
Arik stepped out of the shadows and toward the light of the market. The smell of charred meat, sweet spices, and ozone-heavy ether hit them, a sensory assault that was unexpected after the train's sterile silence.
"Blend in," Noah muttered, catching up and trying to smooth his disheveled blonde hair. "Right. A prince of the realm and his top security advisor, dressed in ceremonial finery, standing in a common night market. We'll be invisible."
"Lose the jacket, Noah," Arik said, his voice regaining that terrifyingly calm, focused edge. He reached up and unclipped the owl brooch from his collar and pinned it under the edge of the collar.
Noah stared at him.
"Of course," he said. "Why would the humiliating symbol of diplomatic restraint not become a fashion decision?"
Arik ignored that. His fingers were precise as he fixed the brooch beneath the line of his collar, hidden enough not to draw civilian eyes and present enough to keep the current running.
He looked up once he was done.
"Now the jacket."
Noah let out a breath through his nose, already unfastening it. "You do realize none of this counts as blending in."
"It counts as trying," Arik said.
"That is a very generous interpretation of what we're doing."
Still, Noah shrugged out of the tailored dark jacket and folded it over one arm before seeming to reconsider and draping it instead over his shoulder, a gesture careless enough to pass for wealth. Underneath, the white shirt was still expensive, and the watch was clearly limited edition, but at least he no longer looked as though he had just stepped out of an official receiving line.
Arik took one look at him and said, "Better."
"That tone suggests you're grading me."
"I am."
Noah muttered something obscene under his breath.
Then he looked at Arik.
Which, unfortunately, was worse.
Arik with his coat still on looked like what he was: dangerous, polished, and immediately wrong for the setting in a way people would notice even if they couldn't explain why. The coat was black, sharply cut, and expensive in the way that only imperial tailoring and old money could achieve, and it sat over his frame with too much purpose. No ordinary man would dress like armor and make it look natural.
Noah's eyes narrowed. "You're one sentence away from looking like you own the market."
"I would run it better."
"That is not the point."
Arik glanced toward the brighter lane ahead where light spilled into the alley mouth in gold and red and moving shadow. "Then enlighten me."
"The point," Noah said, "is that Wrohan is about to realize its crown guest has vanished from a train route, and your version of subtlety is apparently to descend into a public district dressed like an assassination rumor."
Arik considered that.
Then, to Noah's surprise, he reached for his coat.
He slipped it off, folded it once, and handed it to Noah without ceremony.
Noah blinked. "You do listen."
"I'm not stupid."
"No," Noah said. "Just exhausting."
Without the coat, Arik still looked like the rich heir he was, but at least there was no indication that he was a prince too. The white shirt and dark trousers were still immaculate. The hidden brooch still pressed a line beneath the collar.
"Your cuffs," Noah said.
Arik looked down.
Then he loosened them, rolled his sleeves and tucked them into his pocket.
Mezos's voice came through again, drier now. "I'm touched by the effort. Wrohan's internal grid has escalated from physical debris to route anomalies. One minute, forty seconds before they stop pretending they don't have a problem."
Arik's gaze lifted toward the mouth of the alley. "Any local eyes on this section?"
"None yet. The first drone is rerouting two blocks east. But if either of you intends to pose dramatically in the shadows for another full minute, I'll start charging."
Noah pushed off the wall. "Finally, a sensible sentence."
Arik took a step toward the light.
Then stopped.
