The Crown of Embers fat-2

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The Crown of Embers fat-2 Page 9

by Rae Carson


  I turn back to Lord Liano. “I am forced to cut our appointment short, my lord. I’m afraid my dear friend the conde was overly eager in scheduling you, as I have another appointment in moments.”

  His expression turns tragic, like that of a child who just had his favorite sweet taken away, and I hastily add, “But I’d love to discuss . . . javelina hunting further at some point. Are you in town awhile for the Deliverance Gala?”

  He bows. “Of course, Your Majesty.”

  “Then I look forward to seeing you.”

  Once he is gone, I turn to Hector, who is trying very hard not to laugh.

  “I can’t, Hector. Not him.”

  “You can do better,” he agrees.

  Another knock, another murmured conversation, and my guard swings the door wide to receive Conde Tristán.

  A small, foppish man with puffed sleeves and a plumed hat sweeps in and bows with a flourish. I am about to greet him, but he intones, “I present to you His Grace Conde Tristán, master equestrian, fighting man, and the pride of Selvarica.”

  Ah, just a herald then.

  He steps aside as a second man strides through the door. He’s of average height and lanky, and he moves with a dancer’s purposed grace. His features are a touch too delicate for true handsomeness, the black hair gently curling at his nape a little too beautiful, but his eyes shine with warmth and intelligence. He looks younger than I imagined. I’m surprised to find myself returning his shy smile with one of my own.

  He bows, straightens, stares.

  “Um, hello,” I say lamely. “Welcome.”

  “Thank you. Er, Your Majesty. It is . . . You are . . .” He shakes his head ruefully. “I’m sorry. I’m usually more articulate than this. It’s just that you are so much more beautiful than I remember.”

  My eyes narrow as I try to discern his level of sincerity. In my peripheral vision, I notice Hector shift on his feet and cross his arms over his chest.

  I decide to be frank. “Don’t be ridiculous, Your Grace. You and I both know my court has pronounced me unlovely.”

  He decides to be frank right back. “True. Gossip has you pegged as portly, prone to uncouth wardrobe choices, and alarmingly blunt.” His smile reveals straight white teeth. “I concur that you are blunt.”

  “I assure you they are correct about my fashion sense too. Were it not for my devoted attendants, I would be dressed in sand chaps and a goat-hair tunic.”

  “I’m certain you would be stunning in them.”

  I wait for him to make placating noises about the gossip regarding my reputed corpulence, and I’m a little disappointed, a little relieved, when he does not.

  I’m not sure what to say next. From the corner comes the scrape-scrape of quill against parchment as the secretary feverishly records our meeting. I imagine him writing: . . . goat-hair tunic.

  My head is now pounding from the relentless weight of my crown. Frustration boils over, and I say, “Conde Tristán, why are you here?”

  He has the grace to seem flustered. He says, “I was hoping we could get to know each other. It is no secret that my people would benefit greatly if I were to . . . ally myself . . . with Your Majesty. But there is no hurry. I simply propose that we meet once in a while and see if we enjoy each other’s company.”

  “That’s it for now? No requests, no favors?”

  “Well, there is one thing.”

  Of course there is. “What?”

  “At the upcoming Deliverance Gala, would you be so kind as to honor me with two dances?”

  Oh, God, I will have to dance. It hadn’t occurred to me. I’m a terrible dancer.

  The horror on my face must be apparent, for Conde Tristán takes a step backward, eyes wide with alarm. “I apologize, Your Majesty. Perhaps I am too forward—”

  “Yes, you may have two dances. But it is my plan to test your devotion by stepping on your feet.”

  His eyes crinkle with genuine mirth. “I shall look forward to it. You may find, though, that I am not so easy to step on.”

  I force myself to resist his smile, even as I admit to myself that I like him a little. I gesture to one of the guards and say, “Please escort the conde and his . . .” Herald? Assistant? “. . . and his man back to their rooms and make sure they have everything they need.”

  If the conde is discouraged by the dismissal, he doesn’t show it. “Until the festival, Your Majesty.” He executes a polished bow. His attendant does the same, and they leave with the guard.

  After the door shuts, Hector says, “He thought you were joking about stepping on his feet,” and we exchange a quick smile.

  The secretary scribbles last-minute notations about the meeting. Will he record every single word spoken in this room?

  “Mr. Secretary,” I say.

  He looks up, mid–pen stroke. A smudge of ink mars the tip of his nose. “Your Majesty?”

  “I’m thirsty. Fetch me a glass of water, please?”

  He frowns with the understanding that I’m getting rid of him but schools his expression quickly. “Yes, Your Majesty.”

  Once he’s gone, I lean back in my chair and look up at Hector. “What did you think of the conde? An improvement on Liano, at least, yes?” I rub at my temples. The weight of this stupid crown is making it hard to think.

  Hector’s gaze turns inward as he ponders. I have always liked this about him, the way he mulls ideas over in his head. He never feels obliged to speak until he has exactly the right words.

  He says, “Conde Tristán is at the top of Lady Jada’s list, but I think it has more to do with his general popularity and charm than it does his suitability. Selvarica is a small southern holding, consisting mostly of islands. It’s difficult to access, not heavily populated. I’m not sure what the conde feels he can offer the throne. I think you can do better. And Eduardo and Luz-Manuel have both expressed a preference that you choose someone from the north.”

  He says it all without emotion, as if quoting an academic text. I look down at my lap. “But what of him?” I say softly. “What kind of man is he, do you think?”

  Seconds pass. I feel his eyes on me, but I can’t bring myself to meet his gaze, so I focus hard on the hands resting atop my skirt. My dark skin lies in sharp contrast to the blue of my gown. My right thumbnail is uneven from my habit of biting it. I should have Mara file it for me.

  At last he says, “He inherited young, when his father died in a riding accident. By reputation, he is intelligent and charming. The ladies of the court consider him quite dashing. That’s all I know.”

  His voice is so tight that I look up to try to read his face. It’s hard and determined. We stare at each other for a long moment.

  I need to fill the silence, to explain, so I say, “I know I’ll marry for the benefit of Joya d’Arena, and my own feelings will not be a consideration. So it’s silly to hope . . . but I can’t help it. . . . That is, I hope I marry a good man. Like Alejandro. I know he didn’t love me, but he was my friend.” The sigh that escapes is almost like a sob.

  His eyes flash with something—pity, maybe—and he reaches down, grabs my hand. His thumb sweeps across my knuckles as he says in a gruff whisper, “I can’t imagine there is a man in all of Joya who is good enough for our queen. But if such a man exists, we will find him. I swear it.”

  I swallow hard. “Thank you.”

  The mayordomo rushes unannounced through the doorway. Hector drops my hand and lurches to attention.

  “Your Majesty!” the mayordomo pants. “He’s here. Lo Chato from the Wallows. Do you still wish to grant immediate audience? You’re scheduled to see Lady Jada next. I could ask her to wait.”

  My startled reaction has dislodged my crown, and it slips down my brow. I pull it off, wincing when strands of hair are yanked out by the roots. “Did Lo Chato come alone?” Even saying the name gives me a shiver.

  “Yes, Your Majesty.”

  I set the crown on the edge of my desk. I hate that I am not big enough, not strong
enough, to wear it. “Then send him in,” I whisper.

  He bows and exits the office.

  “Be ready,” Hector says to the guards, and hands move to scabbards; eyes shift toward the door. With a metallic whisk, Hector draws his gauntlet daggers. A smart choice, since his position between my desk and the wall gives him little range of motion for a sword.

  The mayordomo enters and says in a clipped, formal voice, “Your Majesty, I present Lo Chato of the Wallows.”

  A figure glides into the room. He is impossibly tall, and he wears a long black cloak with a deep cowl that shadows his face. He drops to one knee, bows his head, and waits silently.

  “Rise,” I say, hoping he doesn’t notice the tremor in my voice. I place a fingertip to the Godstone, hoping for a tickle of warmth, or even a chill—anything to indicate whether the person before me is friend or foe. But I feel nothing.

  The cowled man straightens.

  “Remove your hood.”

  He raises his hands, and I already know, even as he slides the hood back from his head—by the pale peach of his hands, the preternatural grace of his movement—what will be revealed.

  Eyes as green as moss, a face so sharply delicate as to be catlike, waist-long hair the syrupy gold of honey.

  It takes only a split second for my guards to ring him with swords. Hector steps in front of me, daggers in defensive position.

  The man before me carries himself like an animagus. My forearm throbs with the phantom memory of a sorcerer’s claws lashing into my skin, and I stare at his hands, expecting to see clawlike points embedded in his nails.

  His nails are cracked and encrusted with dirt, but they are free of barbs. And unlike the uncannily perfect animagi I encountered, he has faint lines across his forehead; a patch of dry, peeling skin across his nose; and weary, bloodshot eyes. Not blue, those eyes. And his hair is not white.

  Not a sorcerer, then. I breathe deeply through my nose, savoring this feeling of relief.

  Still, an Invierno has been secretly living in my city, leading a group of my own people.

  The mayordomo stands just out of range of the guards’ swords, gaping at the creature he escorted in. I say with a steadiness that surprises me, “The secretary will return soon from an errand. Please head him off. And tell no one, not even Lady Jada, the nature of my current appointment.”

  “Yes, Your Majesty.” He departs gratefully.

  I gesture to one of the guards to close and bar the door.

  The Invierno regards me calmly.

  I’m not sure how to proceed, so I say, “Thank you for coming.”

  “Your Majesty commanded it, and I obeyed.” He speaks perfect Plebeya, without even a trace of the clipped impatience I’ve heard from animagi.

  “Why would an Invierno feel compelled to obey me?”

  “I am Your Majesty’s loyal subject.”

  Not likely. “Is Lo Chato your name?”

  “A title.”

  “Do many Inviernos carry the title of ‘Lo Chato’?” I ask, too tentatively.

  “We have more Chatos than you have condes,” he says.

  I don’t want to call him that. Not ever. “And your name?”

  “My name, in God’s language, means ‘He Who Wafts Gently with the Wind Becomes as Mighty as the Thunderstorm.’”

  One of the guards snorts.

  He shrugs. “It’s a common name in Invierne. But the people of my village call me Storm when they are being familiar.”

  “Ah, yes. Please explain why you live in a cavern beneath the Wallows.”

  “I first came to serve as ambassador to Joya d’Arena. I was a member of King Alejandro’s court for several years. As the war began, I found it necessary to go into hiding.”

  The first part is easy enough to prove. “Hector, do you recognize this man?”

  Hector is studying him, eyes narrowed. “No. Well, maybe.”

  “Maybe?”

  “It could be him. There are similarities. The man I remember had darker hair.”

  “I see.” I purse my lips, thinking hard. I can’t read the Invierno’s face, much less separate truth from falsehood. “You call yourself my loyal subject. That sounds more like defection than hiding.”

  “You are correct, Your Majesty. I was not hiding from the people of Joya, but from my own.”

  “Why?”

  His face is void of feeling as he says, “I had failed, you see. After years of campaigning for port rights, I had nothing to show for my efforts. My life was forfeit, and my choice was to either go home in disgrace and face execution, or find a new home here.”

  “A harsh sentence.”

  “My kind embrace honorable death. I am wretched in my unusual desire to live beyond the shame of my failure.”

  I shudder, remembering the zeal with which the animagus atop the amphitheater burned himself. And before that, how dozens of Inviernos submitted themselves to the animagi’s knives, the way their blood poured into the sand and fueled the fire magic that nearly burned our city to the ground. Did they all believe they were embracing honorable death?

  Hector asks, “Why didn’t you seek asylum? The king would have granted it.”

  “Your king could not have protected me. I had to disappear completely.” Storm smiles for the first time—a slow, edged grin that sends shivers down my back. “Surely you realize? Your city is crawling with Invierne spies.”

  The guards exchange a startled glance.

  I breathe deeply through my nose to keep steady. Though my pulse races, I wave a hand nonchalantly and say, “Everyone spies on everyone else. My own father, King Hitzedar of Orovalle, has several spies in my court.”

  Storm says, “Your Majesty, there are hundreds. Living right here in the city.”

  “Inviernos like you? Or are Joya’s own citizens turning against her?”

  “Both.”

  Hector says, “We would recognize Inviernos among us.”

  He just shrugs and looks off in the distance as if bored.

  I lean forward. “Would we, Storm? Would we recognize them?”

  His expression turns smug. “All of you Joyans and Orovalleños look exactly alike, with your dirty skin and dark hair and wood-rot eyes. You are like black rats crawling across the sand. But we Inviernos are a colorful people, and as numerous as the stars in the sky. It is rare to find some among us who resemble you enough to pass, but found them we have. Enough to make spies.”

  “You claim to be my loyal subject, yet you speak as though you hold my people in contempt.” I should be angrier, but I find myself fascinated with his complete disregard for propriety.

  “You are a contemptible people. I am loyal out of necessity, not love.”

  Strange that he does not make even the barest attempt at flattery. “Hard to believe you were unable to make diplomatic headway in my husband’s court, charming as you are.”

  He nods knowingly. “This is the sarcasm your people are so fond of. When you say one thing but mean another. Inviernos value honesty too much for it, in accordance with God’s will.”

  I don’t have the time or energy for a doctrinal debate, so I let that go. “The animagus who burned himself alive . . . surely you heard about it?”

  He nods. “Everyone within two weeks’ journey has heard by now.”

  “Did you know him? Did you know what would happen?”

  “No, and no. I was not surprised, though. The animagi are fond of such demonstrations.”

  “Are you the person who tried to kill me?”

  He doesn’t even flinch. “No.”

  “If your life is in such great danger, why answer my summons?”

  His lips twist into that cruel smile. “I came to warn you, my queen. It occurred to me that a warning would be taken more seriously if it came from me rather than from an ignorant, impoverished denizen of the Wallows.”

  He’s probably right about that. “And what is your warning?”

  “You are in grave peril, Your Majesty. I have se
en the signs, and I know Invierne will make another play. Soon. But this time, there will be no army to defend against. This time, they will come at you like spirits in the night, and you won’t recognize the danger until it’s too late.”

  The animagus uttered similar words. I swallow the panic that rises in my throat. “Why? Why warn me?”

  “I like my life. My secret village turns a nice profit on river scavenge. The people I lead are stupid and filthy, but they treat me with respect, even worship. All my needs are tended to. I would like things to stay exactly the way they are, and I know the city of Brisadulce has its best chance of remaining stable if you are in power and well aware of the Invierne threat.”

  Hector leans forward, nostrils flared, face hard. I have never seen him so angry. “The Inviernos will find that Elisa is very difficult to kill,” he says, making the dagger dance in the air by some gymnastic of wrist and fingers.

  Storm laughs, and the sound is as brittle as breaking glass. “Did I say kill? I don’t believe I did. Invierne wants her very much alive. Though I assure you that if one of Invierne’s innumerable spies gets hold of her, she will wish herself dead.”

  It’s possible that I hate this man after all. “This audience is over,” I snap. “Take him to the prison tower.”

  My guards pin his arms and turn him around.

  “Arresting me will mean my death, Your Majesty,” he calls over his shoulder. “And once Invierne finds me and kills me, you’ll learn nothing more. I know you’re curious. About us. About what we want with that thing in your belly.”

  “Wait!” I say, and the guards halt. “And if I let you return to your village?”

  “Visit any time and ask all the questions you want. As I said, I am your loyal subject. You have nothing to fear from me.”

  I pretend to consider for a long moment. “You may go free. But Storm, in accordance with God’s will, I must be honest and tell you that I hope you will give me an excuse to kill you.”

  Something flits across his face. I hope it’s fear. He bows. “Until we meet again, Your Majesty. Remember to watch yourself.” The guards step aside. He flips the cowl over his head and sweeps from the room.

 

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