by DAVID B. COE
“You’re angry,” the duke said, after the guard had gone.
Fotir didn’t wish to lie to Javan, but neither did he think it appropriate to say anything critical of the king. So he gave a vague shrug, his gaze fixed on the floor. A year ago, he felt certain that his duke wouldn’t have even thought to speak of this. But the time they had spent together in Kentigern, struggling to win Tavis’s freedom and then fighting side by side against the invaders from Mertesse had strengthened their friendship. There may have been a time when Javan questioned Fotir’s loyalty, but in the wake of all they had shared those doubts had long since been laid to rest.
“I probably would be, were I in your place,” he went on a moment later. “But this is obviously a precaution he’s taking with all the ministers—it has nothing to do with you personally.”
“Of course, my lord.”
“And yet that makes no difference to you.”
Fotir looked up. The duke was watching him closely, a troubled look in his blue eyes.
“May I speak frankly, my lord?”
“By all means.”
“Every time we divide ourselves it weakens us. It doesn’t matter if the divisions lie between realms, between houses, or even between a lord and his ministers. No doubt the king believes that he’s merely being prudent. But to what end? If what we hear of the attack on the woman is true, the leaders of the conspiracy already know that she’s helping us. And assuming that no duke would bring to the royal city a minister he didn’t trust, I would think it likely that all of us will hear eventually of what’s said in your discussion, despite our absence. On the other hand, if by some chance one of the Qirsi in this castle is wavering in his loyalty to the courts, this is only likely to drive him or her closer to the conspiracy.”
“All that you say may be true, First Minister,” the duke said, his expression still grave. “But the king obviously feels that in light of recent events we cannot risk any more betrayals. He’s convinced that the conspiracy is real, that it was responsible for Brienne’s death. The time has come for the courts to plot a response to this threat. And it behooves us to keep the nature of that response a secret, even at the risk of offending our ministers.” He opened his hands. “I’m sorry.”
“Of course, my lord. Thank you.” He did his best to keep the hurt from his voice, but knew that he had failed.
They stepped into the corridor and walked much of the distance to the presence chamber in silence. At the door, Fotir bowed to the duke before continuing on toward the great hall, where the ministers were to meet.
“First Minister,” the duke called to him, forcing Fotir to stop and turn. “You do understand that I’ll tell you all I can of what’s discussed here today.”
The minister had to smile. Again, it was a kindness the duke would not have shown him a year ago. “Yes, my lord. Thank you.”
Javan entered the chamber, and Fotir turned once more and resumed his walk to the hall. For a second time, however, he stopped. With the nobles speaking among themselves, the ministers were left with certain freedoms they might not have enjoyed otherwise. And if the court Qirsi were to develop their own strategy for combatting the conspiracy, they would be well served by consulting all who would be aiding them in the coming struggle. Taking the nearest stairway down to the castle’s inner ward, the minister crossed to the prison tower, where he knew he would find the gleaner, Grinsa jal Arriet.
There was a good deal Fotir wished to ask Grinsa—about the man’s journey with Lord Tavis, about Shurik’s death and the strange remarks Tavis had made to Javan about all that happened in Mertesse, and about this woman who had confessed to arranging Brienne’s murder, and with whom Grinsa had apparently once been in love. But knowing what he did of the gleaner’s powers, Fotir realized that these questions would have to wait. He had aided the gleaner in his efforts to win Tavis’s freedom from the dungeon of Kentigern Castle, and so knew that the man was a Weaver. And he knew as well that there was no one in the Forelands he was more eager to have on his side in the coming war.
As the minister expected, Grinsa was there, holding the child he had fathered and walking slowly around the corridor just outside the woman’s chamber.
“Good morning,” Fotir said, emerging from the stairway.
Grinsa held a finger to his lips, then whispered, “Good morning,” in return.
Fotir approached him, eyeing the baby. “Is she asleep?” he asked, lowering his voice.
The gleaner nodded toward the chamber door. “They both are.”
Glancing through the iron grate at the top of the door, Fotir saw the woman sleeping peacefully on the small bed against the opposite wall. There were livid scars on her face that seemed eerily similar to those borne by Lord Tavis.
“They’ll fade eventually,” Grinsa said, standing beside him, “though they won’t disappear entirely.”
Fotir nodded, unable to tear his gaze from her. Even marked so, she was beautiful. “You healed her?” he asked.
“Yes.”
The minister looked back at the guards, who would have been close enough to hear, had the two Qirsi been speaking in normal voices. “It seems,” he said, his voice even softer than it had been a moment before, “that you’ve revealed a good deal of yourself in recent turns.”
Grinsa nodded. “And it hasn’t gone unnoticed by the king.”
Fotir raised an eyebrow. It was one thing for him to know that Grinsa was a Weaver. He was Qirsi himself, and though loyal to the courts, he had no intention of betraying the man’s confidence; not after all Grinsa had done for Tavis. Not after he had seen to it that Shurik jal Marcine paid for his betrayal. It was quite another matter, however, for an Eandi noble, particularly the king, to learn of Grinsa’s true powers. “Do you think he knows?”
“I’m certain of it. I told him.”
“What?”
“I had little choice, and there are . . . other matters to consider, other secrets that must be preserved. Believe me when I tell you that Kearney is the least of my concerns.”
“I do believe it. In a way, that’s why I’ve come.”
The gleaner eyed him sidelong. “What do you mean?”
“Shanstead, Tremain, and my duke are meeting right now with the king. The ministers are meeting separately in the great hall. We all intend to discuss the conspiracy and what we’ve learned from . . .” He gestured toward the woman.
“Her name’s Cresenne.” Grinsa exhaled. “You want me to join your discussion.”
“Yes. I think you’d have much to offer.”
The gleaner gave a small smile. “I’m not certain the others would even sit in the same chamber with me. You know who I am. The others will see only a Revel gleaner, one who’s tied to both Cresenne and Lord Tavis. I can hardly claim to be impartial in this matter.”
“Some may see that as a weakness. I don’t. And I believe the rest are reasonable enough to consider that your opinions might be of value.”
“I’d rather not leave her alone.”
“You can bring her with you if you’d like.”
“I mean Cresenne. I’m afraid the Weaver will try to kill her again. I don’t know that anyone else can protect her.”
“I understand,” Fotir said. “I certainly wouldn’t want you to do anything that might endanger her life.” He turned to leave. “We can speak again later. I’ll tell you what was said.”
“Wait.” Grinsa beckoned one of the guards to the door and had him open it. Entering the chamber, he sat on the bed and laid the baby beside the woman. Cresenne stirred, opening her eyes.
“Is everything all right?” she asked, her gaze straying to the open door and Fotir.
“Yes, everything’s fine,” he told her. “I need to go for just a short while. I won’t be long, but I think it best that you remain awake until I return.”
She nodded, sitting up and passing a hand through her tangled hair. She glanced at the baby, then looked at Grinsa once more, smiling. “You got her to sle
ep.”
The gleaner grinned, looking embarrassed. “I told you I could.” His eyes flicked to Fotir, then back to her. “I’ll return soon.”
The woman crossed her arms over her chest, the smile slipping from her face. Abruptly she looked frightened and very young. “I’ll be all right.” She sounded as if she were trying to convince herself as well as the gleaner.
“I know.”
He stooped to kiss her cheek, then left the chamber, stopping just in front of the guard. “If there’s any trouble—any at all—you come and find me. I’ll be in the great hall. Understand?”
“Yes,” the man said.
Grinsa looked back at her one last time before gesturing for Fotir to lead him to the hall.
Once they were away from the guards, Grinsa asked, “Whose idea was it for the nobles and ministers to gather separately?”
“I’m not certain. Word of the arrangement came from the king, but others may have suggested it.”
“I don’t like it.”
“Nor do I. I said as much to my duke, but he seemed to feel the king’s caution was justified.”
“So Javan believes there’s a traitor among the ministers?”
“He must think it’s a possibility,” Fotir said.
“Do you agree with him?”
The minister considered this for a moment as they walked through the ward and into the tower nearest the king’s hall. “Shanstead’s Qirsi is the one who deceived Thorald’s first minister into revealing her involvement with the conspiracy. I trust him. I’ve never met Tremain’s minister, but I have no reason to doubt her loyalty either. And the only one of the king’s ministers who has given any sign of being capable of such betrayal is the archminister. I had little opportunity to meet her before Kearney’s investiture, but from what I observed, I’m not convinced that she’s a traitor either.”
Grinsa seemed to falter briefly at the mention of the archminister, but otherwise he said nothing.
“You’ve been in the castle for some time now,” Fotir said. “Do you suspect her?”
“No,” the gleaner said quietly. “But I didn’t suspect Cresenne either. And she and I shared a bed.”
They stepped into the great hall a few moments later. The other ministers had already arrived and they turned toward the doorway when Fotir and Grinsa entered, several of them eyeing the gleaner warily.
“What’s he doing here?” asked Dyre jal Frinval, one of the king’s high ministers.
“This is Grinsa jal Arriet,” Fotir said. “He knows the Qirsi woman being held in your prison tower, and he’s spent the last several turns traveling with Lord Tavis, guarding the boy’s life. I asked him to join us.”
“This isn’t Curgh, cousin. I don’t care who he is or what he’s done, you had no right to bring him, or anyone else, for that matter.”
“It’s all right, High Minister,” the archminster broke in. “I see no reason why the gleaner shouldn’t join us.”
“You can’t be serious,” Dyre said. “As the First Minister just said, this man has ties to both Tavis, who may be a murderer, and this woman who bore his child, who admits to being a traitor. Isn’t that reason enough?”
Fotir couldn’t believe what he was hearing. “You still think Tavis is a murderer? Even after hearing of the woman’s confession?”
“I don’t know what to believe. Your friend there brought the woman to us, perhaps hoping that the king would take pity on her because of her child. This could all be a Curgh trick, intended to establish Tavis’s innocence.”
The others were watching Dyre, looking uncomfortable. But none of them disputed anything he had said.
Fotir chanced a look at Grinsa, expecting the gleaner to be beside himself with rage, just as Fotir would have been had the minister said such things about him. Instead, Grinsa wore a small smile, as if all of this amused him.
“And what of the attack on the woman two nights ago?” the archminister asked. “Was that a trick as well?”
Dyre shifted in his chair. “I don’t know what that was.”
“Then let me tell you,” Grinsa said. “It was an attempt to silence her by the conspiracy’s leader. He wanted her to suffer first, before he killed her, so he entered her dreams and used her own magic to shatter her hand and carve gashes in her face.”
“How can you know this?” Dyre demanded.
“Cresenne told me so,” the gleaner answered. “And it’s the only explanation that makes any sense. The guards saw the wounds open on her face—there was no blade, there was no intruder. Only the woman and her dreams.”
“So the movement is led by a Weaver.”
They all turned to look at Tremain’s first minister, Evetta ja Rudek. She had paled noticeably, her fear written plainly on her soft features.
Keziah nodded. “It is. We learned this from Cresenne as well.”
“Do we know the name of this Weaver?” Xivled asked. “Or where he can be found?”
“Not yet.”
“She hasn’t told you?”
“She doesn’t know,” Grinsa said.
Dyre looked skeptical. “Or so she claims.”
The gleaner glared at him. “Don’t be a fool. You honestly believe that she would still defend this man after what he did to her? She’s forced now to sleep by day, because she fears that if the Weaver comes to her again he’ll kill her. And because her child needs to be nursed and cared for, she’s forced to have the baby sleep during the day as well. She wants us to find him. She wants him dead. And if a minister of Eibithar’s king is too blinded by suspicion to see that then I fear for the realm.”
“How dare you speak to me so! You, a Revel gleaner—”
“Stop it,” the archminister said, her voice flat, as if she were too tired to grow angry with them. “Both of you.” She cast a reproachful look at Grinsa before facing the high minister. “I don’t believe she’s lying about this, Dyre. Grinsa’s right. She’s frightened. If she knew anything that could help us defeat the Weaver, she’d gladly tell us so.”
The high minister didn’t look convinced, but he nodded, conceding the point.
Keziah turned to Xivled. “Minister, it’s because of you that we’re here. Perhaps you’d like to lead our discussion.”
“It was your idea to meet separately from our lords?” Fotir asked.
“Actually it was Lord Shanstead’s idea.”
Dyre sat forward, grinning darkly. “Doesn’t he trust you, cousin?”
“Like so many of us today, High Minister, my lord isn’t certain whom he can trust. Recent events in Thorald have left him . . . troubled. He thought it best not to risk giving any more information to the conspiracy than was necessary.” He faced Keziah again. “As to leading our discussion, Archminister, I’d first like to know all that you can tell us about this woman who sits in your prison tower and what you’ve learned from her of the conspiracy.”
Keziah nodded, taking a long breath. Then she began to speak, and for some time, the other ministers merely listened as she told them of Cresenne’s role in the killing of Lady Brienne, and her description of the Qirsi movement, its network of couriers for delivering gold, and the Weaver who led it. Long after she finished, the Qirsi continued to sit in silence, as if trying to absorb all she had said.
“Forgive me for asking this,” Evetta said at last, her eyes on Grinsa, “but you believe all that she’s told you? Don’t you think it’s possible that she’s making up some of these details in the hope that it will give the king reason to keep her alive?”
“I do believe her,” Grinsa said. “Even had I not before the attack on her, I would now. The Weaver wants her dead, which tells me that he fears her, that he doesn’t want her telling us more than she already has.”
Evetta nodded, seeming satisfied with his reply.
Xivled sat back, pressing his fingertips together. “When my Thorald first minister died, she had over two hundred qinde hidden in her chamber. Because of this, Lord Shanstead and I came to t
he conclusion that if we can find the source of the Qirsi gold we’ll be able to find the people who lead the movement. What you’ve told us of the couriers only serves to make me that much more certain of this.”
“I’ve thought much the same thing,” the archminister said.
Wenda ja Baul, another of Kearney’s high ministers, looked from one of them to the other “How would we do that?”
“By joining the conspiracy ourselves,” Xivled said. He and Fotir shared a brief look. They had spoken of this before, during Qirsar’s turn, when Fotir and his duke journeyed to Thorald to speak with Tobbar and Marston. They had agreed then that if one of them could join the movement, it would allow them to learn a great deal about its leaders and its weaknesses. Xivled had raised this possibility with the thane only to have Marston reject the idea as too dangerous.
Evetta shook her head. “You can’t be serious.”
“It makes a good deal of sense to me,” Grinsa said. “There are risks, to be sure, but think of how much we could learn.”
“There isn’t a lord in the Forelands who would allow such a thing.”
“Sometimes,” the archminister said, staring at her hands, “we have to defy our lords in order to do what’s best for them.”
“Meaning what?” Evetta demanded. “You actually think this is a good idea?”
“I believe it’s worth considering.”
But Fotir thought the archminister meant even more than that. It occurred to him in that moment that she had already made up her mind to try this, that perhaps she had already succeeded in contacting the movement. His first response to the notion was to wonder how she could have been so foolish. Had it been Xivled, he wouldn’t have felt so; Xivled, if he failed, brought danger only to the court of Shanstead. If Keziah failed, she endangered the royal court of Eibithar. Still, he could not help but be impressed as well by her bravery. She was small and slight, with a face so youthful that he found it hard to imagine her in the court of a king, much less as archminister. And yet, it seemed possible that she had taken it upon herself to challenge a Weaver.