“The queen misses you, and so do Lady Beatriss and precious Vestie and Lady Abian. At least in the forest, they were able to see you more often.”
She looked at him, the shape of her eyes similar to Froi’s. His were hooded and gave an impression of mistrusting the world. They were eyes not born for smiling, but for judging and being judged in return. He wondered often about the similarity. Sometimes he dreamed that Tesadora and Perri had sired him and that one day the truth would be revealed and they’d all celebrate. But then he’d see Tesadora with Lady Beatriss’s daughter, Vestie, or even with Princess Jasmina. He’d see the fierce love, and he knew that whatever was said about Tesadora, she would never have forsaken her child.
“There are some things beyond our control, aren’t there?” she said.
Froi was surprised to hear her words. Tesadora was controlled by no one.
“Were all the Charynites bad?” he asked quietly, thinking of the many hidden soldiers he’d come across.
She shrugged. “Most. If not bad, they were weak. One or two took a stand. A young soldier and a Charynite traveler found us in the early days and told me that the novices of Lagrami in the palace village were in danger. They helped the novices escape and brought the girls to us. Strange,” she murmured. “It was two Charynites who united the cloisters of Sagrami and Lagrami.”
She shuddered. “The traveler was imprisoned and they hanged the young soldier for it. In front of the rest of their army. A good deterrent, don’t you think? A Charynite never helped a Lumateran again, whether they wanted to or not. Even if they weren’t working against their own, they hated to be seen as outcasts. So what one did, the others would follow.”
Froi thought of Tesadora’s words the next day in the cell. He could not keep the hatred out of his voice. “What would you have done if you were the enemy trapped within the walls of Lumatere?” he asked Rafuel of Sebastabol.
Rafuel gave a humorless laugh. “Does it matter, Froi? What’s more important is what would you have done?”
That day, Trevanion and Perri had asked for information about the role of the provincari in Charyn. Rafuel explained that they were in power until they died and then the people of their province chose either their offspring if the person was desirable, or another.
Froi absently translated, bored by the information. Rafuel droned on about their power within their province and how they differed from the nobility and how they worked hard to keep the palace out of their affairs. But in the middle of his swift lesson, the Charynite caught Froi’s eye and slipped in the words, “You don’t belong in this kingdom, lad.”
Froi was alert in an instant. He looked back to where Trevanion and Perri sat.
“What did he say?” Perri asked.
Froi hesitated. His mouth felt dry and he could hardly speak.
“The provincari don’t care too much for the king these days,” he found himself saying.
Trevanion nodded. “We know. Once you get inside, we’ll want you to find out who holds the most power among them. The queen and Finnikin want to know who helped the Charyn king plan the slaughter in our palace.”
A Mont guard came to the prison door. Perri and Trevanion stood to speak to him.
Froi turned back to Rafuel. From Trevanion’s calm tone, the Charynite knew Froi hadn’t repeated his words.
“Why do you travel down into the valley each night?” Rafuel asked with urgency.
Froi didn’t respond.
“Do you want to know why I think you’re there, Froi?” Rafuel asked, leaning as far forward as he could with the iron bracelets around his hands. “Because blood sings between Charynites far from home. My blood sings to you. The blood of every Charynite in the valley sings to you.”
Froi stared at him, fury in his expression. “I’m not a Charynite far from home,” he spat. “I’m a Lumateran from over the mountain.”
“Why is Tes — the white witch in the valley?” Rafuel asked, looking over Froi’s shoulder to see if the men had recognized that he had almost spoken Tesadora’s name. But Perri and Trevanion were still speaking to the Mont guard.
Froi thought for a moment. Swallowed hard.
“A worse-tempered woman I’ve never met, despite her beauty, which makes a man ache regardless of age,” Rafuel continued, “but she’s in the valley because our blood sings to her. It’s out of her control.”
Froi shuddered. Rafuel’s words were too close to Tesadora’s the night before.
“She’s half Charynite, is she not?” Rafuel continued. “It’s what kept her apart from the other Forest Dwellers when she was a child. Outcast from the outcasts themselves.”
Froi’s hands were shaking.
Rafuel’s eyes shone with excitement. “My men are searching for an assassin to kill the king, Froi. But I’m also searching for the last male child born to the Citavita on the day of the curse and smuggled out of the kingdom. Most say he’s a myth. But I know for a fact that he’s not.”
Froi stared at him, confused.
“Do you know why you seek out the white witch, Froi? Because her blood sings to you. Two Charynites far from home.”
Froi’s palm flattened itself with great force against the bridge of the Charynite’s nose. Trevanion and Perri were on him in an instant, dragging him away from Rafuel, whose face was bloody and swelling. They shoved Froi toward the guard.
“Get him out of here,” Trevanion snarled.
The silence Froi experienced as they rode down the mountain was unnerving. He prayed it wouldn’t last long, but it wasn’t until they reached the foot of the mountain that the captain spoke.
“What were you thinking?” Trevanion demanded, as if it had taken him all that time to quell his fury.
“I wasn’t thinking,” Froi said.
“He’s a prisoner, Froi! He was chained. We’re not savages.”
Perri’s face stayed impassive. “We can’t let him go to Charyn, Trevanion. We can’t.”
Froi leaped off his horse, standing before them both. “You say I’m not ready?” he shouted.
“In might and skill, you are. Here,” Perri said, pointing to his head. “No.”
“I can imagine explaining ourselves years from now to the less hostile provincari of Charyn,” Trevanion said. “‘Our boy doesn’t work well without instruction. He needs to be informed of his bond. Of what is expected of him. Of what is unacceptable. He has little idea how to do that on his own. He lived fourteen years as a savage on the streets of Sprie. Three years in Lumatere has changed many of his ways, but he insists on a bond.’”
“I can do this, Captain. You know that.” Froi was begging.
“What if your rage is hard to control, Froi?”
“Count to ten, Captain. And then count to ten again.”
“Speak to us your bond.”
“Only kill those who are a threat to Lumatere. Make sure the kill is clean. Treat all women as I would the queen. Don’t answer back an elder who deserves my respect. Listen with my ears and not my rage. Never act on anger. Never ever disregard an order from you or Perri.”
“No spitting at the nobility regardless of what comes out of their mouths,” Perri continued.
Froi bristled. “I’ve never spat at Lord Augie or Lady Abian.”
“They’re different, Froi,” Trevanion said, irritation in his voice. “They’ve given you a home. There’s no doubt that you are protective of those you care for, but it’s the way you treat others that causes strife. You spat at Lord Nettice at the Harvest Moon Festival. Grabbed him by the throat and didn’t let go until he turned blue.”
“I didn’t like the way he spoke to Lady Beatriss,” Froi said, looking at Trevanion. “How could you not understand that, sir?”
“I’m the captain of the Guard, Froi,” Trevanion said. “Do you honestly think it is my place to choke every man who insults those I love?”
“And he insulted the king. Your son, Captain.”
“He’s the consort, Froi. Not the king. There
will be men who will insult Finnikin for the rest of his life. It’s what happens when you marry the most powerful woman in the kingdom. But that’s no reason to almost choke the life out of a man. A wise man has tolerance for such people. A wise man walks away or finds a means of changing the way they think.”
Froi looked away.
“Don’t turn away from me when you don’t care for the words spoken,” Trevanion said through gritted teeth.
Froi counted to ten in his head and turned back. “Sorry, Captain.”
Trevanion and Perri exchanged a look. Something passed between them as it always did. They had spent ten out of the last thirteen years apart, yet both men could still speak so much to each other with just one glance.
“You follow the bond that only we speak to you. Not Rafuel of Sebastabol or even the priest-king who may want you to search for the hidden priests of Charyn. You do only what we instruct you now.”
Froi nodded, excitement strumming his blood.
“You enter that palace. A place filled with nobility more useless than any you have ever met here. At least in Lumatere they do not rely on the queen to house and feed them. When they speak words that insult you, you keep to your bond and your mouth stays shut. As far as they’re concerned, you’re a witless idiot from the provinces.”
Froi nodded, although he wanted to tell them that according to Rafuel, those from Sebastabol were not witless.
“You make no attachments to any other person and you never involve yourself with the plan of another. There are those living in the king’s court who will always search for new blood to give their cause more weight. You do not join forces, even if they are an enemy to our enemy. You work on your own.”
“As if I’d be that daft.”
Perri made a sound of disbelief and dismounted, pointing a finger at Froi. “He’s not ready, Trevanion,” he shouted. “He can’t even listen without answering back!”
Froi knew the decision could turn against him at any moment. He wanted this kill. He gripped Perri’s jacket. “Let me do this for her. Let me prove to you that I’ll give my life so the queen and Finnikin can live with peace in their hearts. Please. You know I can do this.” He looked at Trevanion. “You know I can, Captain.”
Trevanion was softening, Froi could tell.
“Thankfully, because of your bond to the queen, we do not have to remind you that bedding the princess of Charyn is not part of the plan. When it comes to her, you do what you need to do.”
Froi wasn’t quite sure what Trevanion meant by that, but dared not ask in case his captain thought he was answering back. He nodded all the same. What needs to be done.
“You find a way into the king’s chamber. Regardless of the hatred we all feel for him, you make it quick. Make sure he is dead before you leave that room. The moment he stops breathing, you return home. The very moment. Do not look back.”
Froi nodded. He looked at Perri, waiting for his blessing.
“Can you do that without causing mayhem?” Perri snapped.
“Have I ever broken my bond to you and the captain?”
“Part of the bond is not to talk back to us!” Perri said, exasperated. “You do that all the time.”
“Apart from that,” Froi said sheepishly.
Perri grabbed hold of his ear and pulled Froi toward him in an embrace. “You keep safe, Froi. Keep safe and come home to us.”
On his final day in Lumatere, Froi said his farewells to Lord August and Lady Abian and their sons, who were the brothers of his heart. He was glad Lady Celie was in Belegonia. She would have cried, and no one enjoyed watching Celie cry.
“Where are you really going, Froi?” Talon asked. He was Lord August’s oldest son and shrewd despite his younger years.
“Sarnak,” Froi lied. “I’m a messenger for the queen. I know the language well.”
It was the story Trevanion had instructed him to use. He looked Lord August squarely in the eye and wondered if he knew the truth. Lord August shared a strong friendship with Trevanion.
“You know where your home is,” was all Lord August said before walking away.
Lady Abian kissed his cheek. She said little for once, but he saw tears in her eyes.
“When you return, we will choose that day to celebrate your eighteenth birthday,” she said.
He nodded, his throat tightening with emotion. A birthday. What did the Charynite call the day their princess was born? The day of weeping.
“I’ll count down the days,” he said.
He went to see the priest-king next. The old man was teaching some of the younger Lumaterans in the front garden of his hovel. Froi waited for them to leave, pulling out thistles from the herb patch he had planted for the priest-king that spring. Oregano, garlic, chives, and rosemary were dwarfed by creeping thistles.
“I’ve told you before, blessed Barakah,” Froi said when the youngsters left. “Pull them out the moment you see them, or you’ll be slurping the blandest of soup.”
“But they’re so beautiful in color,” the priest-king mused, getting to his feet and straightening his back with a groan.
“And what happened to the chair I made you?” Froi asked, frustrated, looking around at the hovel. When Rafuel spoke of the godshouse of Charyn where the priests and priestlings once lived and learned, Froi could not help comparing it to this shack in a meadow. Once, the priest-king of Lumatere lived in a grand shrine-house in the palace village, but the blessed Barakah claimed to have been another man back then.
“You need to move to a bigger home. Did you know that in Charyn they used to have schools for priestlings, taught by those less powerful than you? They’d learn about the Ancients, become the scribes of the people, learn how to be physicians.”
The priest-king chuckled and beckoned Froi to him so that he could lean on his shoulder. “Let’s walk a moment or two, lad,” he said.
Froi propped up the old man, frustrated by his stubbornness.
“Anyway, I thought you said learning was a waste of time,” the priest-king said.
“We don’t want the Charynites being better than us.”
They walked an overgrown path through the small meadow that looked over the outskirts of Lord August’s village. Even if the priest-king agreed to build a larger house, the land surrounding it would be too small to make a proper impression. Froi knew Finnikin’s dream, but he usually fell asleep while Finnikin was speaking about it over and over again. Finnikin dreamed of a library filled with the greatest books Lumatere ever saw, in a school where holy men and scholars from Belegonia and Osteria would come to teach as guests. It was the queen’s dream as well. “We’re going to lose our smart ones like Celie to Belegonia,” she said. “We need a school for them.”
Froi felt the priest-king’s stare. He knew the time was coming for him to say his good-bye. He didn’t want the priest-king asking where and why he was going. Then he’d have to lie again, and this blessed man was the first person to treat Froi as an equal.
“Can you sing me the Song of Lumatere?” Froi asked quietly.
There was a ghost of a smile on the priest-king’s face. “I’ve said it once, and I will say it again: there is a song in your heart, Froi. You must unleash it or you will spend your days in regret.”
“I’ll sing for no one,” Froi said stiffly. “And if you don’t want to sing it, you just have to say!”
The priest-king leaned forward and pressed a kiss to Froi’s brow. A blessing. “Stay safe, my young friend.”
Froi gently placed his hands on the fragile man’s arms. “I will see you in less than a fortnight, blessed Barakah, and we’ll do something about this garden.”
In the palace courtyard, Perri fitted him with scabbards for his daggers and short sword.
“This was made especially for you,” he said, placing one of them across Froi’s shoulder blades. “A beautiful hide, indeed. Look.” Froi saw his own name engraved in the leather, and whether it came from Perri or Trevanion, or the king or queen, i
t made Froi feel proud. Apart from Isaboe’s ruby ring, Froi had never owned anything in his life.
“You mightn’t be able to get weapons into the capital, but keep it safe.”
Froi looked up and saw Isaboe standing alongside Sir Topher, watching from the parapet. Even from here, he saw sadness in his queen’s eyes. A sadness of spirit. He knew Finnikin would be feeling exactly the same.
Later, Finnikin walked with him until they arrived at the gates of the palace village. “Do you ever think of that day with the slave traders of Sorel?” Finnikin asked quietly.
“I think of it all the time,” Froi said.
“I was going to kill you,” Finnikin said, a catch in his voice. “You were begging me, remember?”
Froi couldn’t speak. In his whole existence, it was the only time he had ever lost hope. He would have preferred to die that day rather than be sold as a slave in Sorel. He had counted on Finnikin being accurate with his dagger from a distance. But he had not counted on Isaboe wanting him to live. Not after what he had tried to do to her.
He sensed Finnikin’s sadness and didn’t want to leave Lumatere with the memory of it.
“Then you both argued.” Froi grinned. “About my name.”
Finnikin chuckled. “Your mouth was split. I was sure you were calling yourself Boy.” He feigned a grimace of displeasure. “Did she have to be right?”
“She did have a point. Who’d name a babe a nothing name like Boy?”
Froi looked back up to the palace and then at Finnikin. “Why won’t she see me? I can’t leave without her blessing.”
“She’s afraid to bid you farewell. You mean everything to us, Froi.”
“I do this for you and her. I will do anything for my king and my queen.”
Finnikin smiled sadly. “But Isaboe and I are just two people, Froi. You need to want to do it for the kingdom.”
Froi saw tears in his king’s eyes, and they embraced.
“Kill this beast who has brought so much despair, and come home to us safe, my friend.”