by Ginn Hale
Kiram laughed but admitted nothing.
“Well, if you do see him tell him thanks.” Elezar yawned. “He’s a fair judge of a good knife.”
“If I see him I will certainly tell him,” Kiram replied.
“Yes, and ask him why he didn’t leave anything for me.” There was only a trace of hurt in Javier’s tone but Kiram responded to it immediately.
“What? But I did—” Kiram stopped as he caught Javier’s smug expression. He scowled at Javier. “I left a fart on your pillow.”
Elezar snorted at the response. Javier just smacked the back of Kiram’s head lightly. His hand lingered for a moment, almost making a caress of the blow. Belatedly Kiram saw that Javier wore one of his Solstice gifts: a simple gold ring with a Mirogoth knot design forming the centerpiece. Kiram felt a sudden flush of pleasure and something like conquest at the sight of Javier wearing the ring.
Not that they had exchanged oaths or ever would, Kiram reminded himself. But for an instant he sensed the pride that he might have taken in their pledges and rings. Then he felt foolish for choosing to give Javier a ring and making himself melancholy.
“Something wrong?” Javier asked.
“No.” Kiram pulled his gaze from the ring and leaned on the table. “I’m a little hungover, that’s all.”
“Hungover?” Atreau groggily shoved an oily strand of his black hair back from his face. “How come you get to be hungover when the rest of us just have to be exhausted?”
“Just one of the advantages of being barred from chapel,” Kiram replied.
“Yes, well you left our room quite a wreck, and you’ve hardly begun copying my history essay.” Javier stood and stretched. Their room was fine and Javier’s history essays never required a rewrite to tidy them, but he didn’t object. “I expect that you’ll have all in order by the time I’m done with my nap, Underclassman Kiram.”
“Yes, Upperclassman.” Kiram let a heavy sigh serve as his feigned protest. Atreau weakly waved after him as he followed Javier out of the library.
Once they were up in their room, Javier pulled Kiram into a hard, possessive kiss. Kiram returned his force and desire but then drew back, taking in Javier’s wide dark eyes and naked longing. He smiled, and when Javier tried to kiss him again, he offered a teasing evasion.
Javier pinned him against the wall, forcing Kiram to open his lips to him. Pleasure pulsed through Kiram’s groin as Javier slowly pressed their hips into contact.
“I missed you last night.” Javier kissed him again but this time with a slow sensuality. The buckles of their belts clinked and ground as they pressed themselves closer.
Javier’s hands closed on the small of Kiram’s back and then cautiously dropped lower to caress Kiram’s buttocks.
There was intention in Javier’s touch, but neither certainty nor skill. Raw hunger made his grip almost bruising. His strong fingers dug in. It was not the first time that Javier courted a deeper intimacy, but this was by far his most direct overture. Whether he did not know the words or simply could not bring himself to speak them, Kiram did not know, but Javier never voiced his desire and when Kiram quietly evaded him, Javier always quickly relented.
Javier knew what he wanted, Kiram thought, but he didn’t know exactly how to have it. Kiram could have taught him. Running his hand over Javier’s taut body, Kiram ached to have him but wasn’t sure that he knew Javier well enough to trust where such exchanges might lead them. He had heard too many Cadeleonians—Javier among them—use the word ‘bender’ as a byword for a weakling or a coward. Kiram wouldn’t risk Javier viewing him as either. Nor did he wish to force Javier to accept such an identity.
So Kiram ducked to the side, caught hold of Javier’s hand, and pulled him to the bed. He pushed Javier back onto the bedding and straddled his legs.
Kiram’s hands had grown skilled at working open the delicate gold buttons of Javier’s trousers. A soft moan escaped Javier as Kiram bowed over him.
There was such pleasure feeling Javier’s entire body respond to the slightest motion of his tongue and the tension of his throat. There was power as well, working him to the height of ecstasy and withholding his release, again and again. Kiram exulted in Javier’s ragged breathing, his desperate grip and even the moment when Javier’s control broke and he rolled Kiram beneath him and thrust hard. Then Javier fell back, breathing as though he’d run miles.
Kiram laughed and wiped his face. Javier threw his arm around Kiram and pulled him down into a kiss.
“You are too good at that, Kiram,” Javier whispered. “I feel like a novice compared to you.”
“Well, they do say that the best way to learn is practice and instruction,” Kiram replied.
“Yes, well, I need a little of both.” Javier rolled onto his side and traced the line of Kiram’s chest down to his hips. Kiram leaned back into the pillows.
That night and many after it they nearly missed dinner. When they did arrive, Kiram’s lips were still tender and the taste of Javier’s flesh lingered in his mouth. Despite their fatigue, an eager lust overcame them both as soon as they were in their room alone.
Kiram expected his desire for Javier would wane as the winter months passed, but instead it seemed to grow. During the New Year celebration they slipped away between the scholars’ speeches and returned with sticky hands. Twice they went riding through the orchard and pleasured each other against the bare apple trees. It was dangerous and yet they couldn’t seem to stop themselves.
In part Kiram understood that desperation drove them. Once spring arrived the academy year would be at an end. Kiram would return to Anacleto, and Javier would go to Rauma. If they met again it would not be until midsummer and by then Kiram had no idea of how much would have changed between them. The few weeks left became precious. But they passed all too soon.
The snows melted and red crocus flowers pushed up through newly exposed soil. Icicles crashed down from the eaves of the dormitory like thunder strikes. In the infirmary, Kiram’s engine stood complete though not yet linked to Scholar Donamillo’s mechanical cure. All around Kiram students chattered about their families and homes. Nestor calculated the days until he would see Riossa again.
“Six days to Anacleto if the weather holds and none of the roads have washed out.” Nestor scowled at the wet ground. “As many as eighteen if the mountain snows melt all at once.”
Kiram nodded but he was hardly listening. Already private coaches had arrived at the academy; among them stood a glossy carriage with the black Tornesal sun emblazoned upon it. Javier would leave within the hour, once his luggage was loaded. They’d already wished each other farewell as best they could with both Nestor and Elezar standing beside them.
“No point in you riding alone, is there?” Nestor’s question slowly penetrated Kiram’s distraction.
“What?”
“Well, we’re all three going to Anacleto. We might as well share a carriage.”
“You mean you, me and Elezar?”
“Sure,” Nestor replied. “It seems lonely, you staying here an extra night just to ride all that way alone.”
Kiram agreed to leave today with Nestor and Elezar. Then at least he wouldn’t have to return to his and Javier’s room, knowing that Javier would not join him.
Briefly he wondered what Fedeles felt, remaining all year at the academy, maintaining his treatments while all the other students returned to their homes.
If he felt hurt or lonely, none of it showed when he came to see Kiram off. Fedeles sang and danced beside Kiram. After Kiram’s belongings had been packed onto the red Grunito carriage, Fedeles hugged him fiercely.
“Don’t forget Firaj,” Fedeles told him.
“I won’t,” Kiram reassured him. He wished that he could bring Fedeles with him and remove him from Holy Father Habalan’s grasp. But Scholar Donamillo’s mechanical cures offered Fedeles far greater protection than Kiram’s company could. “You’ll look after him while I’m gone, won’t you?”
Fedeles nodded but his expression was distant and dreamy. A moment later he dashed away to the Tornesal carriage, singing out a gibberish of students’ names and dance steps as he went. Kiram took his seat beside Nestor and across from Elezar. He glanced out the small window and caught sight of Javier.
Kiram’s pulse quickened. He prayed desperately that Javier would stride across the grounds to the carriage. If only he would ask to come along to Anacleto or offer to take Kiram to Rauma…
But he did not move. He remained at a distance, watching with an expression of studied indifference. Even when the carriage pulled away, Javier remained where he stood. As they passed through the academy gates Kiram lost sight of him.
Chapter Seven
After eight days of cramped travel Kiram was thrilled to catch site of Anacleto. The port city rose up from the sea like a white wave of limestone, granite, marble and gold. Square, towering Cadeleonian architecture dominated the northern streets. Churches with gilded steeples shot up between the immense houses of merchants and noblemen. But even here in the most conservative section of the city, Kiram caught sight of Haldiim patterns on men’s vests and brilliantly feathered hats in the latest fashion, inspired by the princes of Yuan.
Heavy accents and foreign words mingled with the shouts of Cadeleonian street hawkers and wagon drivers. Amongst the tight press of carts, carriages, pedestrians and horsemen Kiram spied tattooed sailors and red-haired Mirogoths. Wood smoke, animal sweat and rich spices perfumed the air but never blotted out the moist, salty tang of the crashing sea.
“There!” Nestor jabbed his finger against the window, pointing to a massive limestone wall and the thick clusters of cherry blossoms that bowed over it. “That’s our house!” His face flushed with joy and he beamed at Kiram. Across from them, Elezar straightened and peered out the window. He smiled but without Nestor’s wild enthusiasm. Then again, why would he? Elezar didn’t have a lover awaiting him.
Their carriage turned up a narrow street. Immediately the wrought iron gates swung open and they rode past the great lawn with its flowering trees to the entry of the massive marble Grunito house. Red-enameled statues of bulls stood at either side of the stairs and ivory tusks curved like giant horns over the red doorway.
Footmen in crimson liveries ran ahead of the carriage, and even before it had drawn to a halt, people flooded out of the house. Lady Grunito, dressed in a pinstriped gold gown, led the throng of beefy boys and youths. At a glance Kiram knew that these had to be Nestor and Elezar’s brothers. One tall, comparatively gaunt young man wore a holy collar and Kiram guessed he was the eldest brother, Timoteo. The other eight boys appeared younger than Nestor. They pushed and bounced off each other like fat puppies.
Then Riossa broke out from the group and rushed down the stairs. Nestor bolted from the carriage, narrowly missed a spill as he hit the mud, and then rushed to Riossa. He swept her up in his arms and kissed her as though he were the hero of some ancient epic poem returning home after twenty years lost at sea. Kiram strongly suspected that Atreau had served as an example and instructor of the technique. Riossa melted into his embrace.
At the top of the stairs, Lady Grunito simply shook her head and Kiram was amused to see her exact expression and gesture mirrored by Elezar, who remained in the carriage seat opposite him. Then the pack of plump young boys pelted down the stairs to embrace and tease Nestor. They squealed and laughed as Nestor grabbed them and pinched their noses. Footmen hurried past the scene to unload baggage from the carriage.
Elezar glanced to Kiram. “Will you stay with us or shall I send the carriage on to your family house?”
“I think I should see my family as soon as possible.” Witnessing the warmth of Nestor’s return home had made Kiram feel the absence of his own family with sudden intensity.
Elezar gave an understanding nod by way of saying farewell. He exited the carriage with an easy bound. At once his little brothers hurled themselves at him and Elezar swung two of them up off the ground tucking one under each arm, while a rotund child clamped onto his leg and rode his foot.
As Elezar directed the coachman on his way, Nestor shouted, “Kiram, I’ll visit soon!”
Then the carriage carried him back out into the crowded streets of Anacleto. As they traveled south, stately marble facades gave way to plaster walls and cramped winding lanes. Buildings leaned into each other; print shops shared walls with taverns, dancehalls and teahouses. Street vendors dressed in gaudy coats shouted and crooned to the dense afternoon crowds. One woman danced in a full skirt while twirling long strings of glass beads. Another simply waved skewers of peppered meat, allowing the strong aroma to advertise her wares. Between them, boys hawked the newest printings of sheet music and broadsheets.
As the carriage bounced over the wooden planks of the Black Moon Bridge, Kiram’s heartbeat quickened. He’d crossed this bridge countless times with hardly a thought but now every one of the two hundred and forty beams registered as an increment closer to home.
Across the bridge a huge limestone wall loomed up, marking the boundary of the Haldiim district of the city.
Bored Haldiim sentries stood guard at the top of the wall and two older Haldiim men, dressed in the black uniforms of Civic Guards, lounged at the gates. They waved wagons and carriages through without concern. Kiram smiled, remembering his own turn up on the wall two years earlier. At the time he’d thought that he would never have a use for all the archery practice. He’d complained to his father about the exhausting labor of it. If only he had known what the Sagrada Academy had held in store for him.
As he passed through the massive wood and iron gates the entire world changed. The architecture flowed and curved with color. Brilliant vitreous tiles glittered across domed roofs; floral mosaics glimmered from walls and arches. Almond trees abounded along the red cobbled streets. Their clustering, white blossoms nearly obscuring the ribbons and simple lamps that hung from their branches.
In every direction that Kiram looked he met dark Haldiim faces. Men and women dressed in long vests and bright coats. Most of the men wore wide-legged trousers, while the women often wore skirts over their thinner trousers. Haldiim voices rang out and the scents of mint, lemon and cinnamon filled the air. Red-dyed doves cooed from their nests. Kiram felt as if the very atmosphere was somehow warmer and more welcoming.
He passed the goat market, the common gardens and then the rough outcropping of seeming wilderness where the Bahiim met in the Circle of Red Oaks. Before he had traveled through other towns and cities Kiram had never realized how strange this place was: untamed forest engulfing four city blocks. Carpets of spring flowers spread around thick walls of thorn brambles and weedgrapes. Above the riot of plant life towered ancient gnarled oaks.
When they’d been children Kiram’s sister Dauhd had terrified him with stories of boys abandoned in the shadowy wilderness and how savage creatures lurking in the verdant underbrush devoured them. But now the grove only made him think of Alizadeh. Kiram touched his medallion and felt safe.
The Wahdi River flowed just past the Circle of Red Oaks. Dozens of small bridges throughout the Haldiim district spanned the fast rolling waters. None were as beautiful nor as extravagant as the bright red Ammej Bridge. Thousands of stylized flames were carved into its arching timbers, which were painted a multitude of scarlet shades and inlaid with lustrous amber. It rose like a spectacle of fire over dark waters, and most importantly, it emptied directly onto Gold Street where the Kir-Zaki house stood.
Kiram pressed his face to the window staring as the high, tiled walls that surrounded his home drew closer. The sweet fragrance of perfume and candy saturated the air. The house gates stood open, as they always did on business days, to allow deliverymen and merchants to come and go with ease. As a rule some peddler or hopeful candymaker was always waiting in the courtyard for an opportunity to meet with his mother.
But the large crowd today surprised Kiram. Groups of people stood under the flowering almond trees and leaned against t
he mosaiced walls of the reflecting pool. Some sat on brightly painted boxes advertising their wares. Others carried small display cases or covered sampling trays. Fruit sellers, paper makers, butchers, cheese vendors and, oddly, several troupes of musicians filled the steps in front of the gold entry doors. House servants moved between them, taking down names in their ledgers or offering clay cups of warm, spiced tea.
Kiram could only remember this many merchants gathering in their courtyard once before and that had been for his grandmother’s funeral. Sudden fear gripped Kiram. Could something have happened to his mother or father? One of his sisters? Had his brother Majdi finally drowned at sea like his grandmother always claimed he would? He hardly waited for the carriage to draw to a stop before he leapt out and charged into the courtyard.
“Fiez!” Kiram called to his mother’s secretary, recognizing her by her short hair and large, silver hoop earrings. The slim woman turned and her white curly hair bounced around her face. Shock showed in her expression as she took Kiram in.
“Kiram!” Fiez went to him and took his hand. “We weren’t expecting you for another two days.”
“Why are all these people here?” Kiram hardly heard Fiez’s words. Across the courtyard he thought he caught a glimpse of his sister Dauhd. Neither his mother nor his father were anywhere to be seen. His mind raced with terrible scenarios—both of them taken in a carriage wreck or by fever. “Has something happened?”
“Not yet. It was meant to be a surprise for you.” Fiez sighed and shook her head. “Well, you did look surprised. Oh, your mother is going to be so annoyed.”
“What do you mean?”
“We’re preparing to celebrate your return home,” Fiez said. An instant later Kiram’s sister Dauhd rushed across the courtyard and pulled him into a hug. Kiram returned the embrace, though somewhat awkwardly. She felt smaller than she had been, almost delicate in his arms. Had he grown so used to the company of men? Perhaps he had simply grown. His shirt did feel tight, now that he thought about it.