CHAPTER ONE
I n the Hayloft, Kel and Conor were practicing their swordplay.
It had been some while since there had been time for practice, and both were a little rusty. Still, the moves came back as they always did. Muscles had their own memories, as Jolivet often said. Kel had begun the morning feeling stiff, his body half asleep and his joints objecting to being stretched. Now, after an hour or so of drills in the space they’d trained in since they were young boys, he felt flexible, his muscles fast and liquid.
The flat of his blunt-tip sword slammed against Conor’s with a metallic ring. Kel pressed his advantage, but this time Conor leaped out of the way, jumping onto one of the hay bales that, scattered about the room, served to create a changing terrain for practice. He raised his left hand, signaling a time-out.
Kel let his sword arm fall, rolling his shoulders back.
Conor raked a hand through his sweaty dark hair, frowning. “We need to do this more often,” he said. “I can barely recall what to do with my blade. Too many late nights at the desk, exercising nothing but my writing hand. I’ve turned into a pudding from inaction these past months, Kellian.”
“I wouldn’t say a pudding, ” Kel objected. Conor was as trim and fit as ever. Busy as he was, he still swam and rode his horse Asti nearly every day. Besides, hadn’t the Queen been fretting that he was too thin just the other day? If he was having trouble, it was far more likely to be the late hours and lack of sleep causing it.
Not that Kel would ever say so. Conor was willing to hear things from Kel that he would never stand for from someone else, but the subject of the great change in Conor that had begun three months ago—his strange new dedication to his role in actual governance—was off limits even to his Sword Catcher. Kel guessed it was because the whole business was a sort of penance for Conor, but it was only a guess. It had to be. Conor would not speak on the subject, and Kel did not press.
“We can certainly train more often, if you’d like,” he said now. “You can join my sessions with Jolivet. I stand ready,” he added, “to assist with all pudding-avoidant activities.”
He raised his sword, indicating the time-out was over. Conor laughed and spun down from the hay bale, bringing his blade across in a sideways strike. Kel responded with an overhand cut, the swords slamming together with the satisfying sound of steel on steel. Kel danced backward, out of harm’s way, as Conor came toward him.
They had been practicing such sword-work together for so long that they knew each other’s ways: Conor tended to be too reckless, Kel too careful. They were comfortable enough to carry on a conversation even as they parried and redoubled, lunged and feinted.
“Are you feeling ready?” Kel asked. “It will be the first Dial Chamber meeting since—in nearly four months.”
He had almost said since before the Shining Gallery slaughter. Though Conor was willing to speak of the attack on the Palace and the murder of the little Princess from Sarthe, he did not like to be reminded. He had nightmares, still, about it, and woke up screaming; Kel, who slept in the same room with the Prince, would remain awake when that happened, tensed and waiting for Conor’s breath to even out. For him to sleep again.
Parry, riposte. Conor ducked nimbly back, his face expressionless. “A bunch of cowards,” he said, referring to the Charter holders—the eleven most powerful families in Castellane. “Half of them seem convinced they’ll all be murdered the moment they set foot in Marivent.” (To be fair, Kel thought, the last time they’d all come to Marivent for a banquet dinner, they nearly had all been slaughtered.) “Of course, they won’t say that’s the problem. They fuss about being busy or having strange ailments. But Mayesh has put about rumors that I have a significant announcement, so this time curiosity drives them.”
Despite the fears of the aristocracy, Conor had been determined that the monthly Dial Chamber meetings be reinstated as soon as possible. He had gone to each of the holdouts individually to point out that they could not hide themselves away like rats but must present a unified, stalwart front. There were always going to be spies—especially now, with Castellane being squeezed like a grape in a wine-press by Sarthe’s demands. Should the spies return to their homelands with the information that the ruling class of Castellane were terrified, it would only go worse for them all in the end.
“And it’s quite an announcement,” Kel said.
Conor tried a vertical cut; Kel defended with a parry quarte. Conor gave him a sharp look. “You’re worried,” he said. “Do you think I’m doing the wrong thing?”
“No,” Kel said. “But the nobles may disagree. The last time you told them you were marrying to solve the nation’s problems, it ended badly.”
Badly being an understatement. Badly being the slaughter in the Shining Gallery that was the cause of Conor’s nightmares. And the reason that Kel not only did not ask questions, but also kept secrets. Far more secrets than he had ever wanted to keep.
“Well, this decision was not only mine. It was also Jolivet and Mayesh’s. And my mother’s. As for my father... Well, they will get no answers on that front.”
Indeed not. The day after the slaughter, the King had entered the North Tower. He had not left it since. Food was brought to him there; he did not emerge, did not speak, did not respond when spoken to. Mayesh had named it a kind of shock—catatonia, he called it—and said that, like an illness, it would heal in time.
Yet the extent of the King’s withdrawal had been kept a secret. Besides Kel, only Conor, Mayesh, Jolivet, and the Queen knew he did not speak, that the “King’s orders” that emerged from the North Tower were actually Conor’s orders, crafted with the advice of Mayesh and Jolivet.
“Yes,” Kel said. “It is something of a shame. You have fended off war with Sarthe all this time with extraordinary diplomacy.” Late nights of work, carefully crafted missives, apologies that admitted no culpability, accommodations without capitulations. “But you will not get the credit. Not from the families.”
“Perhaps not,” Conor said. “But I am the one with experience of blackmail.” His smile was a blade. “Sarthe does not care about the death of the Princess. They care about the leverage it gives them to make demands. And once a blackmailer gets their hooks in you, it won’t end neatly. They’ll keep coming back, always wanting more, no matter what you give them. Sarthe will not just go away one day the way Prosper Beck did.”
Prosper Beck. Sometimes Kel found it hard to believe the criminal he’d once bargained with for Conor’s safety and sanity had simply left Castellane. It was the existence of Beck that had pulled him into the Ragpicker King’s shadow world in the first place—Beck had set himself up as a challenger to Andreyen, and the Ragpicker King had employed Kel to find out who on the Hill was bankrolling Beck’s various criminal enterprises. Beck had seemed to Kel a crueler, more dangerous version of the Ragpicker King himself, someone not held back by Andreyen’s peculiar code of honor. A wild card, capable of anything.
Conor was still talking about Sarthe; Kel forced his mind back to the present. “The only thing that will make the Sarthians stop is if we show that we are too powerful to bully. If we secure money and warships through this marriage, Sarthe will realize it is too dangerous to try to bleed us dry.” His gray eyes flashed. “That reminds me. Speaking of marriage, Artal Gremont should arrive soon. Then we will all have to prepare for what will surely be an interminable show of triumph as Lady Alleyne prepares to marry her daughter off.”
Kel moved to parry Conor’s jab a moment too late, and Conor tapped him with the protective cap of his sword as if to say, Pay attention. Kel said woodenly, “Indeed, this will be the culmination of her plans for Antonetta. I wonder what she will find to engage her once the ink on the certificate of marriage dries.”
“I assume she will do all she can to meddle in the affairs of Gremont’s tea Charter as well as her own,” said Conor. “I will have to keep an eye on the two of them. That much power concentrated in one family is likely trouble. At least Antonetta is not ambitious,” he added, “though her mother may prod her to make trouble.”
Not ambitious. It was what everyone thought of Antonetta; only Kel knew they were all of them wrong. He remembered her telling him that she wanted control of the silk Charter, and at another time she had told him that her mother did not think it acceptable for an unmarried woman to control a Charter. If she and Gremont married, though, each of them would hold their Charter individually until it became time to will the Charters to a new generation. That she was willing to marry a lout like Gremont in order to control the most valuable Charter in Castellane spoke quite a bit to her ambition.
“Then again,” Conor added, and the tip of his sword came up under Kel’s to lightly scratch his shoulder; Kel went still to acknowledge the scoring of a point. “I think often of what old Gremont said before he died. No one is really to be trusted.”
Kel almost closed his eyes as he remembered the old man’s words. He had been there when Gremont passed away, the only one at his side as he went through the gray door, and Gremont had not even known him. Had thought he was Conor.
Place your trust in no one, he’d said. Not mother, not Counselor, not friend. Trust no one on the Hill. Trust only your own eyes and ears, or else the Gray Serpent will come for you, too.
The words were meant for Conor. It was advice Kel had passed on, in the terrible days after the slaughter, when Conor did not sleep but only paced the floor in their apartments. When Kel had told him of Gremont’s speech, a ghost of a smile had passed over Conor’s face.
“Good enough advice,” he’d said, “but I have already learned it. I place my trust in no one—save you, but then, you are my eyes and ears, are you not? Not my Counselor, or my friend, or even my brother. You are more like myself. And I will need you even more now. Not just to protect me, but also to look and to listen. To tell me what you see and hear.”
And Kel had said nothing. He could not tell Conor he was lying to him, too—even if it was for his own good. Not then. Not now, either. He kept his silence and his counsel, telling himself that it was all for Conor’s own good. That Conor would know the truth someday and forgive him for the betrayal.
“Oh, it’s so good you’re here,” said Antonetta Alleyne, struggling to sit up against the massive pile of cushions that dominated her gilt-carved bed. “Did anyone but Magali see you come in?”
Lin Caster shook her head. She’d had a brief battle with Magali, the parlormaid, at the front door; Magali had been determined to relieve Lin of her coat and medical satchel, and Lin had refused to part with either. A silent struggle had ensued under the watchful eyes of what seemed to Lin at least two dozen portraits of past Alleynes.
Lin had never gotten used to the Alleyne house’s interior. It was not grand and empty, the way House Roverge had once been, but rather stuffed full of things: landscape paintings, massive silver epergnes overflowing with silk flowers, gilt clocks, and marble busts of poets and playwrights past. Every bit of furniture that could have been gilded had been, and if it had not been gilded, it had been capped with white lace like a virgin bride.
The maid finally gave up her siege of Lin’s belongings and led her up a gilded staircase to a long hall carpeted in knotted silk. As Lin ascended the stairs, she passed a dozen silver-framed mirrors that gave her back her reflection: her red hair coiled close to her head in braids, her simple dress of Ashkar gray, the worn leather satchel in her hands. She was certainly the plainest and most unadorned thing in the house.
She could not help but recall the first time Antonetta had summoned her. She had been surprised to receive the request, given the Alleyne family’s exalted status, but Antonetta had been firm: She wished for weekly visits from Lin—absolute discretion required—and the visits must be at a specific hour and day. She had not said why, but in talking to Kel at the Black Mansion, Lin had come to understand it was the time of Lady Alleyne’s weekly card game with the ladies of the Hill, which meant Antonetta’s mother would most likely not be at home.
Lin had liked Antonetta Alleyne when she’d first met her—not surprising, since Antonetta had snuck her into the Palace under the watchful eye of the Castelguards—and had only come to like her more during their weekly meetings.
Antonetta was kind, if a little scattered. She seemed to Lin a rabbit among the jackals of the Hill. She actually required very little in the way of medical care. Usually they would spend a few hours together chatting and drinking one of Lin’s medicinal teas. In Lin’s opinion, Antonetta was paying for the company, not for the services of a physician.
She found Antonetta half lost among a massive influx of fabrics: Silks and satins in a rainbow of colors hung from dressing-rails and even the curtain rods at the windows. Every surface was piled with papers: menus, invitations, lists of items still needed. Antonetta herself was propped against a mound of silk pillows that formed a sort of barrier between her and the head of her bed, which had been carved into a pretty but uncomfortable-looking gilded rose.
If anything, Antonetta’s room was less extreme in its decoration than the rest of the house. The walls were painted pale pink, like the inside of a seashell; silk flowers still cascaded from vases, and scroll-armed sofas were upholstered with fabric depicting pastoral scenes of shepherdesses and farmhouses. Still, there were fewer silk flowers, and no marble busts whatsoever.
Antonetta dismissed the maid with a brief, “Leave us, Magali,” and gestured for Lin to lock the door behind her before approaching the bed. Antonetta’s hair, down, was a riot of golden curls nearly the same color as the silk bedclothes. She wore a pale-blue dressing-gown with lace at the sleeves and a woebegone expression. “Have you anything for a headache brought on by the stress of planning for an engagement party you wish was not happening?” she inquired.
Lin sat down on the bed by Antonetta’s feet and began rummaging through her satchel for an extraction of willowbark. She could not help but smile at the title of a leather-bound book that lay open on the covers nearby: The Cold Heart of the Lonely King.
“Is it still next week?” Lin said sympathetically. “It does seem like it’s coming up awfully fast. And he hasn’t even reached Castellane yet, has he?”
“His ship docks in five days,” Antonetta said without enthusiasm. She looked hopefully at Lin. “Perhaps I could develop a mysterious illness, something that would prevent me from having to see him? At least for a month or two.”
Lin handed the small sachet of willowbark tincture to Antonetta. “It would only be putting things off,” she said. “I wish...” She left the rest of the sentence unfinished. She already knew that the man Antonetta was engaged to marry, Artal Gremont, not only was much older than her but had an unsavory reputation as well. Kel had hinted at doings so unpleasant that Gremont’s family had been forced to send him away to foreign shores—and given the sort of misbehavior the nobility of Castellane got away with regularly, they must have been wretched doings indeed.
Lin worried, too, at how resigned Antonetta seemed about the whole situation. It was something her mother had arranged; Antonetta had had no say in it, and there was, she insisted, nothing she could do to change her mother’s mind. Lin knew all Antonetta had wanted was to remain single and hold the silk Charter herself, as her mother did. But Liorada Alleyne, it seemed, did not trust her daughter: She had told Antonetta that unless she agreed to marry and carry on the Alleyne bloodline, she would leave the Charter, and all the power that came with it, to a distant cousin, cutting her own daughter out completely. Now Antonetta’s hope seemed pinned on the possibility that Gremont was as unenthused about the marriage as she was and would leave her mostly alone, allowing her to lead the life of a wealthy lady of the Hill without too much interference.
“I hope he either already has a mistress or takes one soon,” Antonetta said now. “If he was very attached to her, he might hardly bother me at all.” She looked at Lin. “Do you think it’s possible?”
“Unfortunately, how to convince one’s husband to take a lover is outside my experience,” Lin said with a wry smile. “Take that and put it under your tongue.”
“You are demanding,” Antonetta said. “At least after I’m married, I’ll still be able to see you. I can’t imagine what kind of man wouldn’t let his wife visit a physician.”
“I suppose the kind who might be planning to hurt her himself,” Lin said carefully. She had treated many such women, who insisted their injuries came from their own clumsiness, though they were well aware Lin knew better.
Antonetta snorted. “Gremont wouldn’t lay a finger on me if he wanted to stay in Castellane,” she said. “Assaulting a noblewoman is punishable by exile—even if the attacker is her husband.”
If only the ordinary women of Castellane had such protection, Lin mused, but she pushed down the thought. Better that some women were protected than that none were.
Hoping to change the subject, Lin pointed at the book lying open on the bed. “Is that any good?” she said. “It sounds like a Story-Spinner’s tale.”
“It’s about Prince Conor,” Antonetta said with a sideways smile. “Most of the Story-Spinners’ tales are, you know.”
Lin felt herself going red. She always did when the Prince of Castellane was mentioned; it was very inconvenient. She began rummaging through her satchel. “Surely not all of them.”
“Oh, yes,” said Antonetta. “ The Seven Skeletons of the Prince’s Seven Brides, The Prince with a Heart of Ice and a Crown of Gold, The Prince in Silk and the Lady in Rags, and The Naughty Prince’s Cruel Laws —”
“Those titles seem very long,” Lin observed.
Antonetta shrugged. “Everyone likes a Prince, especially when he’s unmarried.” She idly examined her nails. “Though he won’t be unmarried very much longer.”
Lin couldn’t help but look up at that. “What do you mean?”
“Conor is entering into an engagement,” said Antonetta, watching Lin’s face closely. “It’s all been arranged. He is to wed Anjelica of Kutani.”
There seemed to be a rushing noise in Lin’s ears. She could not help but think of the last time she had seen the Prince, in his carriage outside the Sault. Of the last words he’d said to her. Then I am cursed to think only of you. You, who think I am a loathsome person. A vain monster who could not resist showing off and who, in doing so, has made you wretched.
She had never had a chance to reconsider those words. Certainly not a chance to tell him she did not think he was a monster. That evening, it had happened—the massacre. The Shining Gallery slaughter. The Great Betrayal. There were all sorts of names for the attack on Marivent that night—the night Lin had declared herself the Goddess Returned and the Roverge ships had burned in the harbor. She had woken up the next morning to see black flags flying from the parapets of Marivent, had heard the dirge-bells ringing out across the city, and had thought that it somehow had something to do with her —with her crime, her great lie.
I am the Goddess Returned.
But of course it was not that. Mayesh had come to her house, his face like a skull’s, seeming to have aged another ten years overnight. He had looked at her and said, his voice weary with strain, “A bloodbath at the Palace. And now this.” He had not sounded angry, even. Only very tired.
She had made him karak and forced him to tell her what had happened—the attack, the death of the little Princess from Sarthe, what this would mean for Castellane—and all the time she had held herself back from asking: Has he been hurt? IS HE HURT? Is the Prince all right?
She had no right to ask. No right to be worried about Kel, either, though she had been. She had put her hands under the table, to hide that they were shaking, until he was done with the story.
“We cannot afford war,” he’d said, and she’d realized he was talking not about Castellane but about them, the Ashkar. “If Castellane is attacked from outside, it will become a passion to purify that which is inside. They will begin to ask themselves: Who are they, these Ashkar, who are among us but not of us? Where do their loyalties lie? ”
“They won’t. You’ve done so much, zai. So many gains made, even in the last twenty years—”
He’d looked at her then, his eyes hard. “Do you say that as my granddaughter Lin or as the Goddess Returned?”
She swallowed hard. “I could tell you—”
“Don’t,” he’d said. “I don’t know what you hope to gain from all this, but don’t tell me. It is better if I do not know.”
She had known then that though he and the Maharam might detest each other, they were in agreement on one point: Lin Caster was not the Goddess Returned, and no good would come of her saying she was.
“Lin,” said Antonetta fretfully, “what are you thinking about?” She leaned closer. “Does the news about Conor... bother you?”
“I once treated a man with an awl through his head,” Lin said. “I do not bother easily.”
“Good, because I would like to ask you to do something unpleasant.”
“What sort of unpleasant?”
“I would like you to come to my engagement party—”
“Oh, no,” Lin said, recoiling. “No more parties on the Hill. The last one—”
“I heard you danced very well,” said Antonetta. Lin gave her a hard look, but Antonetta’s eyes were wide and innocent. “I need someone there who is sympathetic, Lin. Please. Someone who is on my side.”
“What about Kellian?” Lin asked. “Won’t he be there?”
It was Antonetta’s turn to look away. “Well, yes, but he will be in attendance on the Prince. Conor likes his friends around him at parties.”
Of course, Lin realized. Conor would be at the engagement party. A small part of her shrank from the idea of seeing him, but a greater part whispered: Go. Go and face him. Soon enough you will face the Exilarch and the Sanhedrin. You must not be thinking of the Prince of Castellane when you do. See him one last time and put him behind you.
“Please,” Antonetta said again. “I will lend you any of my dresses. Whichever one you like. You will look absolutely stunning.”
And it will be easier to put the Prince behind you while armored in a glorious dress, Lin thought. “Oh, well, if you truly need me, Ana,” she said with a reluctant smile, “I will certainly go.”
ALL THAT IS GOOD COMES FROM THE GODS . ALL THAT IS EVIL COMES FROM MEN .
Kel could not help but stare at the words picked out in gold tesserae across the interior of the domed ceiling of the Dial Chamber. They seemed to carry a sinister weight they had not conveyed three months ago, the last time the heads of the Great Charters of Castellane had met together in this place.
He was not sure precisely why. In the end, Conor’s announcement went over rather better than Kel had expected. At first, voices had risen in protest after Conor gave the news of his engagement. Kel could hear snatches of conversation, objections— it was a marriage that got us into this in the first place —and complaints about not being consulted. Conor sat patiently—patience, like a new coat, sitting awkwardly on his shoulders—until the noise died down.
He said, “Our new partner knows of the situation with Sarthe. They have pledged a dowry of one hundred thousand crowns, and the use of their fleets in case of war. They have ten thousand warships. Sarthe has none; they would have to beg, borrow, or steal the use of them, and if they chose to do so, they would find our harbor full of ships ready to blast them to Hell.”
His eyes were narrowed to silver slits, and Kel could not help but think how much care had been put into the preparation for this moment. Sleepless nights considering whether this was the right thing to do. Consultations with Mayesh, hours spent locked in the North Tower with the Counselor and Legate and those maps, endless maps with pins in them. Every pin an army. And for every pin representing the armies of Castellane, ten more representing the armies of Sarthe.
In the end, there had been no real question.
It was Cazalet who spoke first. As it should be, Kel thought; the other families took their cues from him. “An admirable decision, Monseigneur,” he said, “and one clearly made with the benefit of Castellane in mind.”
If a fuss had been brewing, it subsided. Ciprian Cabrol looked genuinely pleased. “Brilliant stuff,” he said. “Sarthe cannot stand against such combined forces. They dare not even try.”
Even Lady Alleyne had accepted it gracefully. After all, Antonetta was engaged; Liorada had no further hopes of marrying her to Conor. She had abandoned her dream that her daughter might be royalty and accepted that it was likely she would only be very, very rich.
Kel had half hoped that Antonetta would be at the meeting, but she was not. He had seen her only a little since her engagement had been announced, only a week after the Shining Gallery murders. She had not come to the Palace at all, and when he had seen her at House Cabrol one night, she had only smiled very brilliantly and said that the wedding required a lot of preparations. She was much busier than she had imagined, and did he think that it would be a problem to have pink roses on the altar, because pink roses were her favorite but in the Castellani language of flowers they suggested impermanence of affection?
He had only just managed to get away without saying something he shouldn’t. He could still remember her, months ago, begging him to do something to stop the marriage—but he had been wearing his talisman at the time. She had thought he was Conor. Which meant that Kel was not supposed to know she had—at first—not wished for this engagement; he could not mention the fact without betraying his Sword Catcher vows.
Suddenly, he found he was desperate to get out of the Dial Chamber and into the fresh air. The meeting over, several of the Charter holders were clamoring around Conor. Between the heaving shoulders of those trying to get close to the Prince, Kel could see only the bright splash of his red velvet cloak and the wink of the ruby in his crown.
A movement near the door caught his attention. Legate Jolivet, the leader of the royal guard. His hair seemed to have grown grayer since the Shining Gallery, his profile more angularly hawkish. He had said very little during the meeting, though he had been intimately involved with every decision the Prince had made over the past months.
In the chaotic days after the slaughter of the Sarthian Princess, along with her bodyguard and ambassadors, Marivent had waited breathlessly for word from Sarthe. To show good faith, it was Jolivet who suggested they send a message to Sarthe immediately, detailing what had happened—truthfully, he had emphasized; the tale of what had occurred would be everywhere soon enough, and the King in Aquila would soon discover any lie. The only untruth had not been in the words, but in the implication that the King had penned the message himself. Conor had done it, and then signed his father’s name.
When the reply arrived, it was terse and cold. Writing from his palace in Aquila, King Leandro d’Eon said that Sarthe had sent its Princess in good faith. That calamity had befallen her at Marivent was the fault of Castellane. To prevent war, an honor price must be paid.
He named a figure of one million crowns. Even Mayesh’s expression had changed at that. “He can’t be serious,” he’d said. “One could sell all of Castellane and not raise that much. No country save perhaps Kutani could part with that much gold and survive.”
“D’Eon is saying he wants war,” Conor had said wearily. “He is offering a way out, but it is not a real offer.”
“Or a real way out,” Jolivet had said. He had looked around the room at them all, his expression imperturbable as always. “We will not pay. We will find another road.”
And so they had, though Jolivet did not seem overjoyed at the plan’s apparent success. He jerked his chin at Kel, indicating that Kel should follow him out of the room, and left.
Kel slipped away through the crowd. Outside the Star Tower, it was a hot, bright midday. A haze hung over the city that fell away below the Hill, turning the ocean to a distant green smudge.
He found Jolivet standing in the shade of the wall that surrounded the Queen’s Garden. He wore a flat expression along with his Lion Ring and the gold braid on his uniform. When Kel drew close, he said in a low voice, “I suppose you will be taking the news of this meeting to the mansion.”
“I see no reason to conceal it,” said Kel. “The city will know soon enough, and the Ragpicker King before anyone else.”
Jolivet grunted and crossed his arms. “I suppose you and your friends have made no further progress.”
Kel bit off an annoyed retort. Of all the people in Castellane, he certainly would not have chosen Legate Jolivet to be the only one outside the Black Mansion to know his secret. But he’d had no choice in the matter. Jolivet had nearly ordered him to throw in his lot with the Ragpicker King in the hope of finding out who had orchestrated the Shining Gallery murders.
Kel belonged to the Palace; he was Palace property. If Jolivet ordered him to do something, it would have been in the nature of a small insurrection to refuse. He could have gone to Conor, but in his heart he was in agreement with the Legate. Whoever had executed the attack on the Gallery had a bigger target in their sights than the visiting Sarthians.
Kel had followed one of the assassins out of the Gallery, trapping them on the roof. He still recalled what the black-clad figure—face and body entirely hidden, identity unguessable—had hissed at him as he stood, incredulous, sword in hand.
You stand upon the threshold of history, Sword Catcher. For this is the beginning of the fall of House Aurelian.
Conor was the only child of a King who was himself the only survivor of three sons. If the line of Aurelian was to end, it meant Conor’s death. And Kel was sworn to prevent that. Even if it meant following the orders of Jolivet to keep his activities a secret. Even if it meant joining forces with the Ragpicker King—the biggest criminal in Castellane.
“Progress is slow,” Kel said. “We are chasing ghosts. No one seems to know anything of the attackers. Thirty men must have died that night, yet there have been no whispers of anyone missing. And the Ragpicker King has access to many whispers.”
Jolivet grunted again. “Nothing happens with no warning,” he said. “Only the warnings may not take the form you imagine. Anything unusual or amiss in the city is worth noting.” He glanced toward the door of the tower; Ciprian Cabrol, Joss Falconet, and Lupin Montfaucon had emerged and were walking in their direction along the path of crushed stones, their heads bent together as they spoke.
“Cabrol,” Jolivet muttered in his gravelly voice. “What d’you think of him?”
Kel hesitated a moment before replying, watching the three men as they slowly drew closer. Against the white backdrop of Marivent’s towers, they resembled birds of bright plumage. Montfaucon was elaborately dressed as always, in trousers and a doublet of bright yellow, like a golden oriole. Joss wore a suit of cardinal red, embossed with a stitched design of coppery serpents. Beside him, Cabrol was the most plain of the three, in dark gray, though his tunic had a kingfisher-blue underlining that flashed when his sleeves fell back as he gestured.
“Hard to trust him,” Kel said quietly, “after the way he gained the dye Charter.”
Until three months ago, the dye Charter of Castellane had belonged to the family Roverge, whose son, Charlon, had been one of Conor’s close friends, along with Joss and Lupin. On the night of the Shining Gallery slaughter, the whole of the Roverge fleet had burned in the harbor, wiping out their fortune. Within days they were gone from the Hill, taking only a few belongings; the rest of what they had would be sold to pay down their vast debts. The Charter itself belonged to the crown and the Council, and was given over to a family chosen by Cazalet (and approved by the King in theory; Conor, in reality): the Cabrols, prominent ink merchants in the city.
There were three in the family: Ciprian, the eldest son; Beatris, his sister; and his elderly mother, who had been little-seen since the changeover of power. Ciprian was arrogant and good-looking, and he seemed to have entirely expected to be handed the reins to one of Castellane’s most profitable Charters.
And perhaps he had reason. After talking to Lin about the destroyed fleet, Kel had cornered Mayesh in the North Tower. “We are all aware that the Cabrol family burned the Roverge ships, aren’t we?”
“Oh, yes,” Mayesh had said. He’d been studying a map of Sarthe. It was studded with different colored pins, though Kel could not make out their code. “It is an open secret, Kellian.”
“And nothing will be done?”
“The Roverge family had many enemies.” Mayesh moved a pin. “They threatened and intimidated anyone they saw as rivals; the Cabrol family was only the most recent of their victims, and the first to have fought back. Their behavior would likely have landed them in the Trick if they had been other than who they were. Many on the Hill and among the merchant guilds consider this Benedict’s comeuppance.” He looked curiously at Kel. “How did you think Charter seats changed hands?”
“Not like this,” Kel had said. He’d thought of the harbor on the night of the fires, of the sea full of dye, of waves that broke in foam colored in yellow and scarlet, turquoise and violet. For days after, the smoke had hung in the air over Castellane, turning the sunsets into painterly displays of wine red and gold. A victory banner for the Cabrols. “They may have their power now, but it will matter how they got it. It always does, in the long run.”
Mayesh had smiled a little at that. “An astute observation, Kel. You have identified one reason that nobles are not constantly blowing up one another’s ships for Charter seats.”
“Is there another reason?”
“Black powder is expensive,” Mayesh had said, chuckling, and gone back to his map.
“Anjuman!” Joss called out. He was grinning his usual easy, lazy grin. “I suppose you already knew Conor’s big news, eh? No wonder you looked half asleep the whole meeting. No surprises for you.”
Kel made a mental note to adjust his listening calmly but with interest expression. Clearly it was not conveying what he had hoped. “I knew, yes. It was no simple decision for Conor. He has wrestled with it.”
“Indeed,” said Montfaucon with a chuckle. The yellow of his suit was almost alarmingly bright against his dark skin. “He barely escaped the manacles of matrimony once. Now he willingly walks back into the prison.”
“Conor rarely just walks anywhere,” observed Joss. “I would say he is striding back into the prison with purpose aplenty.” He turned to Jolivet. “Would you agree, Legate?”
Jolivet muttered something about needing to review his troops and slipped away.
Cabrol looked after him with a raised eyebrow. “A lighthearted individual,” he said dryly. He had unusual coloring: dark eyes and hair the color of Castellane’s red roof tiles. “I have usually found soldiers to be good company in a tavern, but I would say the Legate is an exception.”
“Soldiers can be good company when off duty,” said Kel, wondering why he was about to defend Jolivet, but unable to help it. “Arguably, Jolivet is never off duty.”
Cabrol transferred his raised eyebrow to Kel. “I suppose that’s true. One certainly cannot doubt his loyalty to the city or the crown. Or Conor’s,” he added. “He is clearly marrying for the good of Castellane. And he will be sure to earn the gratitude of the people for it. Even those of us on the Hill.”
His voice was smooth, his tone light. Kel did not trust him for a moment.
“Gratitude.” Montfaucon waved away the concept as boring. “Listen, Anjuman, I’m having a gathering at the Caravel tonight. Liquor and hourglasses on me. Bring our young Prince along with you. He needs to have a bit of fun.”
“Indeed, and not much time to have it in,” Joss said, laughing. “Besides, he’s been working himself to death since—” He broke off, a little awkwardly, which was unusual for Joss. He was rarely awkward. “Well, for the past few months. He deserves to enjoy himself a bit.”
“I’ll tell him about tonight, Lupin,” Kel said. He realized he could not recall the last time Conor had gone to the pleasure houses of the Temple District—with his friends or without them.
Montfaucon pointed a white-gloved finger at him. “Tell him it’s important,” he said. “There’s someone I wish him to meet.”
Joss, having regained his composure, slapped Montfaucon on the back. “Montfaucon’s infatuated with a new lover,” he said. “Been very secretive about him. Won’t even tell us his name.”
Montfaucon shrugged, though he was clearly pleased with himself. “I told you, he goes by his Arena name. The Gray Serpent.”
Cabrol laughed and said something about how surely Montfaucon could not reasonably, in the throes of passion, be expected to call his lover “the Gray Serpent,” but Kel barely heard him. Too shocked to speak, he stood where he was, motionless, staring into the past.