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He felt strange. Calm. The axe made a sucking sound as it was dragged out of that old warrior’s head. Stour’s men turned towards him, red blades in their hands. Wonderful faced ’em, on her feet in a fighting crouch, sword levelled and teeth bared.

‘Easy, everyone!’ called Stour. ‘Everyone easy!’ And he sat back, the wolf smile across his bruised face wider than ever. ‘See this coming, Clover?’

‘We don’t all have the Long Eye.’ For all his high opinions of his own cleverness, he’d been as blind to it as Scale. But he knew if Stour wanted him dead, he’d have been stretched out with the others. So Clover stood there, and waited to see which way the wind would blow.

‘You make out you’re a silly bastard.’ Stour took a little sip from his cup and licked his lips. ‘But you’re a clever bastard, too. The wise fool, eh? Always thought your lessons were coward’s nonsense but, looking back, I see you had the right of it all along.’ He wagged his bloody dagger at Clover. ‘Like what you said about knives and swords. Spent twenty years training with a sword every morning and every dusk, but I won more with one knife-thrust. I’d like you to stick with me. Might be you’ve more to teach. But … I’ll need a show o’ good faith.’ He looked sideways, to Wonderful. ‘Kill her.’

She turned, eyes wide. ‘Clo—’

She looked greatly surprised as he caught her in a hug, her sword arm trapped under his left while he stabbed her in the heart with his right, and the blood gushed hot over his fist and down his arm and spattered the floor.

You have to pick your moment. He’d always said so. Told everyone who’d listen. Have to recognise it when it comes, and seize it, with no care for the past and no worries about the future.

He held her as she died. Didn’t take long. He told himself he’d want to be held when he went back to the mud, but it was really that he wanted to hold her. Needed to. What she felt about it, there was no knowing. The feelings of the dead weigh less than a feather.

No last words. Just a sort of grunt. And Clover lowered her to the ground and laid her in the widening pool of her own blood, her disappointed eyes fixed on some cobwebs high among the rafters.

‘Fuck,’ said Stour. ‘You didn’t have to think about that for long.’

‘No.’ Clover had seen a lot of corpses. Made a fair few himself. But he was having trouble thinking of Wonderful as dead. Any moment, she’d laugh it off. Make some joke about it. Cut him down to size with a raised brow.

‘That was cold.’ Greenway shook his head while another of the young warriors gave a long whistle. ‘Cold.’

‘A man has to bend with the breeze.’ The Great Wolf’s grin was wider than ever. ‘You’re a bastard, Clover. But you’re my kind of bastard.’

Stour’s kind of bastard. That was where all his cleverness had got him.

There was a bang as the doors were flung open, armed men spilling into the hall, painted shields up and swords and spears and axes ready. Black Calder strode in after them, eyes wide as he took in all the murder.

‘Father!’ called Stour, pouring some ale and holding up the cup. ‘Fancy a drink?’ And he drained it, and set it down in the spreading puddle of the king’s blood.

‘What have you done?’ whispered Calder.

‘Chosen not to wait.’ Stour peeled Scale’s fat head from the table by one ear and dragged the chain from around his shoulders, its dangling diamond red with blood. Greenway giggled and the others grinned, all well satisfied with the outcome.

Clover had never thought to see Black Calder at a loss for words. He looked to Wonderful’s body, then to Clover, then back to his son, and bunched his fists. ‘We’ve got allies who won’t stand for this! There’ll be men who won’t stay loyal!’

‘Didn’t you hear?’ asked Stour. ‘I made a friend of the Young Lion! Won’t find a stronger ally than the Union. But if folk want to stick with my uncle, that’s fine.’ And he showed his teeth, wet eyes bulging. ‘They can go back to the fucking mud with him!’ And Stour tossed the chain over his own shoulders, the red links landing skewed and smearing blood across his white shirt. ‘They’re going to have to learn times change. And so are you. I’m King o’ the Northmen now.’

Calder’s face was pale as milk, but what could he do? Kill his son for killing his brother? Stour was the future of the North. Always had been. And with all those old warriors lying slaughtered on the bloody floor of the hall, it seemed the future had come early. A man’s worst enemies are his own ambitions, Bethod used to say, and here was the red-spattered proof. Black Calder had ruled for twenty years. With one thrust of the knife, his time was done.

‘Your grandfather’s dream—’ he whispered, like all his grand schemes could be unfucked. Like King Scale could be unkilled.

Stour gave a hiss, somewhere between disgust and boredom. ‘Folk say a lot o’ things about my grandfather, Bethod this and Bethod that, but I never even met the bastard.’ He winced as he lifted his wounded leg and propped it up on the murdered king’s fat back. ‘I got my own dreams to think about.’

Clover just stood there, the blood soaking his sleeve turning cold.

Long Live the King

Orso woke in the darkness and reached out, but she was gone.

He sat up, not sure where he was. Not sure who he had been reaching for. He rubbed at the bridge of his nose. Had he been dreaming?

Rikke had gone back to the North. Savine had gone for good. People still clambered over each other to be noticed by him, of course, to embrace him, to flatter him, to profit by him. But he was alone.

He could not remember ever feeling more so.

He was snatched from the comforting blanket of self-pity by a noise in the hall. A distant shout, muffled. Then another, closer, and the thumping of quick footsteps, past and away. He flung back the covers, swinging his bare feet to the cold floor. Shadows moved in a thin strip of light under his door, then the knob turned and it creaked open.

‘Bloody hell, Mother, don’t you ever knock?’

She looked regal as ever, face emotionless as a mask by the light of the candle she held. But she wore a dressing gown and her hair was down. Orso was not sure he had ever seen her leave her chambers without it elaborately pinned. It hung almost to her waist and seemed, somehow, a surer herald of disaster than if some other person had charged in on fire.

‘What is it?’ he whispered.

‘Come with me, Orso.’

There was a great deal of activity in the palace, considering it was the middle of the night. Everyone busy at nothing, running to nowhere, all with the same oddly panicked expression. A fully armoured Knight of the Body clanked past, sweat beaded across his forehead, the lamp in his hand bringing a glitter to the gilded panelling.

‘What is it, Mother?’ asked Orso, his mouth very dry.

She said nothing, only glided down the chilly hallway, decorated with berries for the new year festival, so quickly he had to take the odd running step to keep up.

Three more Knights of the Body stood at the towering door of his father’s bedchamber. They fumbled their way to attention as the queen swept up. One gave Orso the strangest haunted look before he turned his eyes to the shining tiles.

There was a press of people about the bed, in nightshirts and dressing gowns, grey hair in wispy disarray. Men of the king’s household, lords of the Closed Council, shocked faces strange in the shifting candlelight. They parted wordlessly to let him through and Orso was drawn into the gap without choosing to move his feet. As if he was rolled along on a trolley, numb and dreamlike, his breath coming slow, slow, slow, until it hardly seemed to come at all.

He stopped beside the bed, looking down.

King Jezal the First lay flat on his back, eyes closed, mouth slightly open. The covers had been pulled down to his ankles, feet still making two little peaks in the crimson cloth. His nightshirt had been dragged right up above his chest, waxy pale body exposed, fuzzed here and there with grey hair, shrivelled prick flopped sideways and stuck flat to his hip. Orso’s father had always said that dignity was a luxury kings could not afford.