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Marie Rutkoski

The Winner's Crime

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Lady Kestrel's engagement to Valoria's crown prince calls for great celebration: balls and performances, fireworks and revelry. But to Kestrel it means a cage of her own making. Embedded in the imperial court as a spy, she lives and breathes deceit and cannot confide in the one person she really longs to trust …While Arin fights to keep his country's freedom from the hands of his enemy, he suspects that Kestrel knows more than she shows. As Kestrel comes closer to uncovering a shocking secret, it might not be a dagger in the dark that cuts him open, but the truth. Lies will come undone, and Kestrel and Arin learn just how much their crimes will cost them in this second book in the breathtaking Winner's trilogy.
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324 printed pages
Publication year
2015
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Quotes

  • b2942177965has quoted2 years ago
    Of all the lessons you could have learned as empress, the most important would have been this: loyalty is the best love.”
  • b2942177965has quoted2 years ago
    Kestrel said no. She said that she could no longer look at this dog, this warm and perfect gift, without seeing it hurt. It was different to give something up than to see it taken away. The difference, Kestrel said, was choice. A limited freedom, but better than none. Or so she had thought when Arin had given her two keys to his guarded house. She had thought the same when she’d offered him his country, nailed and bound and screwed tight with certain conditions. Better than nothing. She’d thought this before, and thought it again, but she didn’t believe it anymore. Now she knew that to give something up was to have it taken away.
  • b2942177965has quoted2 years ago
    “Arin.” Roshar was still horrified. “That’s our land.”

    “Sometimes you think you want something,” Arin told him, “when what you need is to let it go.”

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