“She taught me. She also taught me to cheat at dice, and to play the voice of a ghost for her seances.”
The old woman’s face went even harder than it had been. “Then you should know the difference,” she hissed. “You should know the difference between the cold and the hot, between the breeze and the storm.” She leaned even closer. “Look in my eyes. Look there.”
Aspar didn’t want to, but her eyes had already caught him, like a snake about to eat a mouse. The gold and copper of her orbs seemed to expand until they were all he could see, and then …
A forest turned into gallows, rotting corpses hung from every branch. The trees themselves gnarled and diseased, covered in black thorns, and instead of foliage they bore carrion birds, ravens and vultures, gorged and fat.
In the depths of the forest the shadows between the trees shifted, as if something large were moving there. Aspar searched, but the movement stayed at the corner of his eyes, always still when he stared full at it.
Then he noticed the nearest corpse. The rope that hung her was nearly rotted through, and mostly it was just bones and blackened flesh hanging there, but the eyes were still alive, alive and pale gold …
The same eyes he was looking into now. Mother Cilth’s eyes.
With a harsh gasp, Aspar turned his gaze away. Mother Cilth grated out a laugh.
“You see,” she murmured.
“Sceat,” he managed, though his legs were trembling. “A trick.”
Cilth drew back. “Enough. I thought you were the one foretold. Perhaps I was wrong. Perhaps you learned nothing after all.”
“I can only hope.”
“A shame. Truly. For if you are not the one foretold, he is not yet born. And if he is not yet born, your race—and mine—will be wiped from the earth, as if we had never been. That part of the telling cannot be doubted except by fools. But maybe you are a fool. My sister perished for nothing.” She reached up and drew a veil over her face. “I dream,” she said. “Leave me.”
Aspar obeyed her, fighting an unaccustomed urge to run. Only when the Sefry camp was a league behind him did his breathing calm.
The Briar King.
What sceat, he thought.
But in the corner of his vision, something was still moving.
2
In Another Tavern
“The queen, of course, must die first. She is the greatest danger to our plans.”
The man’s voice was cultured and sibilant, speaking the king’s tongue with a hint of some southern accent. His words sent a snake slithering up Lucoth’s back, and he suddenly feared the sound of his heart was a drum for all to hear.
I am a mouse, he told himself. A mouse.
Which was what everyone called him. His real name was Dunhalth MaypHinthgal, but only his mother had ever called him Dunhalth. To everyone else in the small town of Odhfath, he was Lucoth, “the mouse.”
A dry silence followed the man’s pronouncement. From his vantage in the rafters, Lucoth could not see any of their faces, only that there were three of them, and from their voices, all men. He knew they’d paid hostler MaypCorgh for the use of the back room of the Black Rooster Inn, which in Lucoth’s experience meant that they probably had some secret business to discuss.
Lucoth had eavesdropped on such meetings before. He had an arrangement with hostler MaypCorgh, who let him know when the room was in use. In the past, he’d mostly overheard smugglers and brigands, and often learned things that Mayp-Corgh could use to turn a profit, part of which he would pass on to Lucoth.
But these weren’t smugglers or highwaymen. Lucoth had heard murders plotted before, but never that of a queen. Excitement replacing fear, he listened as another of the men spoke.
“The queen,” he sighed. This one had a deeper voice, with some gravel in it. “Is the prophecy so clear?”
“In all ways,” the first man replied. “When he comes, there can be no queen of the blood in Eslen.”
“What of the daughters?” the final man asked. His accent was strange even to Lucoth, who had heard many odd ones. The town of Odhfath was at a crossroads: Take the eastern way, and you came in time to Virgenya. West lay the port at Paldh. North brought you to Eslen and finally Hansa. The south road met the Great Vitellian Way, with its colorful merchant caravans.
“The daughters may not succeed to the throne,” the second man said.
“There is movement afoot to legitimize their succession,” the first man replied. “So they must all die, of course. The king, the queen, their female issue. Only then will our plans be assured.”
“It is an important step,” the third man said reluctantly. “A step that cannot be taken back.”
The first man’s voice dropped low and soft. “The Briar King wakes. The age of man is ended. If we do not step now, we will perish with the rest. That will not happen.”
“Agreed,” the second man said.
“I’m with you,” the third said. “But care must be taken. Great care. The time is coming, but it is not yet here.”
“Of course,” the first man said.
Lucoth licked his lips, wondering what reward might come from saving a queen. Or a whole royal family.
He had always dreamed of seeing the wide world and seeking his fortune in it. But he was wise enough to know that a fourteen-year-old boy who went on the road with no coin in his pocket would meet a bad end, and likely sooner than later. He had saved over the years—almost enough, he reckoned, to make a start of it.
But this—he almost saw the gold before his eyes, heaps of it. Or a barony, or the hand of a princess. All of that.
Hostler MaypCorgh wouldn’t know about this, oh no. Odds were too great he’d try to blackmail the men below. That wasn’t the way to do it. The way to do it was to lightfoot out of the loft, wait till tomorrow, and get a good look at the men so he could describe them. Then he’d take his earnings, buy a donkey, and set out for Eslen. There he would find an audience with Emperor William and tell him of what he had heard.
He suddenly realized the men below had gone silent, and left his imaginings to focus on them.
The first man’s head moved, and though Lucoth saw no eyes through the shadows, he felt a gaze burning on him.
Which was impossible. He held his breath, waiting for the illusion to fade.
“You have a loud heart, boy,” the man said. His voice was like velvet.
Lucoth jerked into motion, but it was the motion of nightmare. He knew the rafters of the inn like he knew the inside of his palm, but somehow it seemed all alien to him now, the few yards he had to cross to find safety a distance of leagues. Still, the thinking part of his mind told him, cross the wall, drop down. They’ll have to go around, by the door; that will put them long moments behind, plenty of time for a mouse to find a hiding place in the town of his birth.
Something smacked him on the side of the face, not too hard. He wondered what they had thrown at him, but was relieved it wasn’t something more deadly.
Then he understood that whatever it was, was still there, resting against his cheek. He didn’t have time for that, though. He went over the wall—it did not extend into the rafters—and dropped down into the next room. The open window was there, waiting for him. He felt dizzy and tasted something strange. For some reason he wanted to gag.
Only when he had reached the street did he feel to see what was stuck to him, and then he didn’t quite understand it, because it was the hilt of a dagger, which made no sense at all …
Then he realized that it did make sense if the blade was in his throat. Which it was. He could feel the tip of it inside his windpipe.
Don’t take it out, he thought. Take it out, it’ll bleed …