beyond all doubt that, halfer or not, she deserved the most the queen could grant in the way of
responsibility and honor.
Impatient, careening past commuters toward Heart Palace, the continuum’s prismatic surfaces a smear of twinkling colors, she lifted the lid of King Arch’s weapon no more than a vein’s breadth and— Whoomp!
CHAPTER 9
A TOP THE second-highest peak in the Snark Mountains, at a military base overlooking the Valley of Mushrooms, card soldiers armed themselves with AD52 projectile-decks, fortified the grounds with orb cannons and whipsnake grenade launchers. The latest communication from Doppelgänger’s headquarters had informed them that there was no discernible pattern to the attacks on other outposts, no strategic principle by which the general could deduce which base would next come under siege. Seven other outposts had already been destroyed; the card soldiers had no intention of becoming the eighth. They cautiously walked patrols, stood their lines. Yet there was no sign of Glass Eyes or anyone else, no sign of life whatsoever unless they counted the wind, the scudding clouds. They were remote enough from civilization that, if not for the shadow cast over them by Talon’s Point to remind them where they were, they might have supposed themselves the lone community in the world, isolate in the vast, unpopulated upper reaches of the sky.
Talon’s Point was the highest peak in the queendom and thought to be unreachable by ordinary means, the winds too fierce even for the two-person crafts operated by Wondertropolis sightseeing firms. But unbeknownst to the nearby card soldiers, it was here, on the only upsurge of land closer to the heavens than they, that an extraordinary Wonderlander had taken up residence, one who had wanted to utterly remove himself from his responsibilities, to wallow in the fact that he was not first and foremost a Milliner, but a man. He had fought against this for so long, struggled to subordinate every impulse, every desire, to the dictates of Millinery duty. It had been futile to try. He knew that now. He had helped Princess Alyss ascend to her rightful place on Wonderland’s throne and been granted leave. Packing only enough provisions to last the journey, planning to forage for food on the lower parts of the mountain as needed, he came to Talon’s Point, wanting time and space and solitude to mourn the loss of Weaver, a woman he loved more than he had realized. Completely severed from his responsibilities for the first time in his life, he unburdened himself of his Millinery backpack, took off the long, battle-scarred coat that had been his uniform for as long as he could remember. He unhooked his Millinery belt and unlocked the cuffs that held his wrist-blades in place. He removed his top hat last, sensing its reluctance in the suction-like hold that made it slightly more difficult to lift from his head. He arranged all of his Millinery gear in a neat pile and set it aside, doubtful he would use any of it again. Far from the bustlings of Heart Palace yet within easy sight of Alyss’ imaginative powers if she but knew where to direct them, the legendary Hatter Madigan—unflinching in combat, role model of the duty-bound stoic for all those born to the Millinery, was allowing himself to feel.

Long before, he had chosen Talon’s Point for his intermittent rendezvous with Weaver because it was presumed to be unreachable. Untrodden by Wonderlander and Boarderlander alike, it would be safe from trespassers.
He’d made the first visit alone—by means of blades pulled from his backpack, scaled the sheer cliff that

Seeing Redd
titlepage.xhtml
68886.xhtml
68888.xhtml
68890.xhtml
68892.xhtml
68894.xhtml
68896.xhtml
68898.xhtml
68900.xhtml
68902.xhtml
68904.xhtml
68906.xhtml
68908.xhtml
68910.xhtml
68912.xhtml
68914.xhtml
68916.xhtml
68918.xhtml
68920.xhtml
68922.xhtml
68924.xhtml
68926.xhtml
68928.xhtml
68930.xhtml
68932.xhtml
68934.xhtml
68936.xhtml
68938.xhtml
68940.xhtml
68942.xhtml
68944.xhtml
68946.xhtml
68948.xhtml
68950.xhtml
68952.xhtml
68954.xhtml
68956.xhtml
68958.xhtml
68960.xhtml
68962.xhtml
68964.xhtml
68966.xhtml
68968.xhtml
68970.xhtml
68972.xhtml
68974.xhtml
68976.xhtml
68978.xhtml
68980.xhtml
68982.xhtml
68984.xhtml
68986.xhtml
68988.xhtml
68990.xhtml
68992.xhtml
68994.xhtml
68996.xhtml
68998.xhtml
69000.xhtml
69002.xhtml
69004.xhtml
69006.xhtml
69008.xhtml
69010.xhtml
69012.xhtml
69014.xhtml
69016.xhtml
69018.xhtml
69020.xhtml
69022.xhtml
69024.xhtml
69026.xhtml
69028.xhtml
69030.xhtml
69032.xhtml
69034.xhtml
69036.xhtml
69038.xhtml
69040.xhtml
69042.xhtml
69044.xhtml
69046.xhtml
69048.xhtml
69050.xhtml
69052.xhtml
69054.xhtml
69056.xhtml
69058.xhtml
69060.xhtml
69062.xhtml
69064.xhtml
69066.xhtml
69068.xhtml
69070.xhtml
69072.xhtml
69074.xhtml
69076.xhtml
69078.xhtml
69080.xhtml
69082.xhtml
69084.xhtml
69086.xhtml
69088.xhtml
69090.xhtml
69092.xhtml
69094.xhtml
69096.xhtml
69098.xhtml
69100.xhtml
69102.xhtml
69104.xhtml
69106.xhtml
69108.xhtml
69110.xhtml
69112.xhtml
69114.xhtml
69116.xhtml
69118.xhtml
69120.xhtml
69122.xhtml
69124.xhtml
69126.xhtml
69128.xhtml
69130.xhtml
69132.xhtml
69134.xhtml
69136.xhtml
69138.xhtml
69140.xhtml
69142.xhtml
69144.xhtml
69146.xhtml
69148.xhtml
69150.xhtml
69152.xhtml
69154.xhtml
69156.xhtml
69158.xhtml
69160.xhtml
69162.xhtml
69164.xhtml
69166.xhtml
69168.xhtml
69170.xhtml
69172.xhtml
69174.xhtml
69176.xhtml
69178.xhtml
69180.xhtml
69182.xhtml