“One of the soldiers killed Hadassi.” Mesema watched the floor, as if she could see it there.
“No!” Eyul half-drew his Knife. For an instant he felt foolish, as if murder were a small crime when set against murder by the wrong person. The whispers coiled around his fingers again as the Felting woman turned towards the door.
“He comes.”
“He comes.”
“ He comes.”
Mesema’s stomach rolled when Beyon crashed into the room; his presence washed over her like music with all the wrong notes, or a room full of men fighting. He was not like Sarmin, and certainly not like Banreh. He walked straight over to her.
“Are you well?”
She nodded, avoiding his eyes. Purple triangles asserted themselves against the honey color of his cheeks and her finger itched, wanting to reach for them, but she dug her nails into her palms instead. It had been days since she’d seen Beyon, but she was always aware of him, aware of his marks and his memories. Beyon embodied everything she feared in the palace, including herself. The vision still pressed against her mind. Do not forget that you chose to stay, foolish girl. She looked through the window-screen. Down in the courtyard, white-hatted soldiers were hammering three stakes into bases.
“My lady, you should keep clear of the window.” Eyul spoke from where he still knelt on the floor, his head to the tiles.
Mesema didn’t realise at first that the old assassin was speaking to her. She stepped back.
“Oh, get up, Eyul.” Beyon barely glanced at the man. “I brought you some clean clothes, Zabrina.” He held out a swathe of ocean-colored silk. “At least, I believe these tiny scraps to be clothes.”
The emperor does not deal with such matters. That’s what Lana had said- but then, Beyon wasn’t the emperor any longer.
“Thank you.” She grabbed the cloth by its corner to avoid touching his hand. His wife’s blood still crusted her fingernails. “I’m sorry…’
“Not your fault.” Confusion flickered over his features. Mesema gathered the clothes and shifted on her feet.
Beyon snorted, turning to the window. “We stand within an entire wing of the palace. You don’t have to change in front of me.” He fell silent a moment, watching Arigu’s men. “What- What are they doing?”
“I don’t know.” She held her new clothes against her chest like a doll, or a shield. She thought about Atia, Marren and Chiassa. Three women. Three stakes.
“Come away from the window, Your Majesty, lest you are seen.” The assassin again. He stretched his wounded leg, glancing at Mesema.
I stabbed him. Will I stab Beyon next?
Beyon hit a hand against the window-screen. “Eyul.” He used a different voice now, lower-colder, the voice he’d used in the tent, looking at Banreh. “They have my wives.”
Instead of responding to the emperor, Eyul turned to Mesema. His eyes were still hidden by the cloth and she wondered what he looked at, and what he saw. “You should go and change now,” he said in a kind voice that didn’t feel kind, a voice that had steel behind it. “In another room.”
Mesema nodded. The goddess tiled into the floor stared at her, eyes glowing. She knew it was a goddess because there was no man pictured with her.
Eyul pulled a bit of silk from inside his robes. Then he produced Sarmin’s three-sided dagger and wrapped it up like a baby. “Don’t forget your knife.” Mesema shook her head at the knife, but he thrust it at her a second time. Beyon stood motionless at the window, his back to her. Resigned, she accepted Eyul’s offering. She walked slowly down the corridor and picked a plain white room. This had obviously been the women’s wing in a more austere time. A bench spanned the length of three windows. They were not open windows, nor glass, nor screened with wood like the one in the other room: these windows were fitted with a translucent stone that gleamed with yellow light. She had seen jagged bits of the same stone in Sarmin’s room. A small word had been carved into the very bottom, but Banreh had never taught her to read or write Cerantic words, or any words, for that matter.
Mesema wondered what Eyul was going to do about Atia, Chiassa and Marren. He put her in mind of her father, somehow, though her father was neither so strong nor so cold. Her father would try to rescue them, but if he couldn’t, and they were going to be in pain… She closed her eyes against the light.
The first scream rose from the courtyard.
Nessaket bowed her forehead to the green and white rug when Tuvaini entered. She had centred herself so that the leaf pattern appeared to generate from her emerald-colored skirt. Her spine curved prettily to where her head lay against the silk, a poison flower on a golden stalk.
“Rise and face me, Empire Mother, mother to dead sons.” Nessaket sat back on her heels, but kept her eyes cast down, and it angered him. She had always been ready to meet his eye, to speak before spoken to; now she chose to feign humility.
“Speak,” he commanded.
“I expected you last night, Your Majesty, but you did not come to me.” “I was occupied with matters of empire.” In fact he had watched the shadows glide across his wall, but there was no need to tell her that.
She kept her eyes down, calling back the girl she had been, but she was no longer that girl, and he was no longer the frightened, lonely boy in the shadow of Tahal’s robes.
“Did you sleep well without me, Empire Mother Nessaket?” Her shoulders tensed with his words, but she soon found her balance. “I did not, Your Majesty. I have grown accustomed to your arms about me.”
He paced around her one way, and then the other. He reminded himself of Beyon. He understood so much more about his cousin now. “We all make sacrifices.”
“I know about sacrifice, Your Majesty.”
Something in her tone made him turn to face her.
She shifted her knees. A strand of gleaming black hair fell over her chest.
“Tahal used to say that the empire does not give itself freely. That those who want it must pay for it.”
“In restless nights?”
Her voice grew strong, steely. “I have given more than restless nights, Your Majesty.”
The faces of her young boys passed behind his eyes. “You knew the price.”
“No price is truly known until it is paid.”
Stillness fell over Tuvaini like funereal silk. “And you would teach me this?”
“I have only kept you to your bargain: no wife but myself, no children but mine.”
And there it was. Herzu laid a hand upon his shoulder, his claws sinking deep. “Lapella could bear no children!”
“And Sarmin was harmless to you.” She spoke in such a quiet voice that if Tuvaini had so much as brushed his slippers against the carpet, he would not have heard it. But he was standing still, and so the words reached him.
Revenge? For Sarmin? He had no idea Nessaket had felt any affection for her second son. Tuvaini knew his madness kept her from visiting him more than once or twice a year. She never spoke of him, with love, or anything else. In Herzu’s temple she had agreed to pass him over for the throne, and she must have known what that entailed. She, after all, had seen the last succession, seen the bodies of those boys in the courtyard.
And yet her eyes grew wet and she looked away.
Could Sarmin have been her favorite? That mad, pacing prince who talked to himself for hours? The one who did not himself care whether he lived or died? Tuvaini recalled his wild eyes, the hair dark against his forehead, the lips that curled into a mocking snarl. “Better run, Vizier,” Sarmin had said to him.
It is bad luck to kill the mad.
“Rise, Empire Mother, and leave me.” Tuvaini settled into his couch. It was much softer than the throne.