Click.
Paradise looked at the phone.
Had she gotten that right?
Punching her finger into the two buttons on the cradle, she cleared the line, and when the dial tone came back on, she tapped out her father’s number on the buttons. Or tried to. She was shaking so badly, she couldn’t get the sequence of digits right.
When things finally rang through, she found herself breathing hard.
“Hello—”
“Father!” she cut in. “Father, they called again—”
“Paradise! Are you safe—”
“Yes, yes, you have to listen to me! They called again, the s’Hisbe—they said Wrath returned the . . .” What was it? “. . . the Anointed One? They said everything was okay—I mean, they called off the war!”
Stupid way of putting it, she thought in the back of her head. Like the thing had been a birthday party canceled because of bad weather?
“Whate’er speak you of?” her father said slowly. “Wrath was not going to give Trez up.”
“He must have changed his mind?”
“I spoke with him at dawn. The Brotherhood had sent out a day-faring emissary to gather intelligence on the Territory. Whate’er has . . . I shall have to call him at once.”
“Will you try to let me know what happens?”
“I shall.”
“I love you,” she blurted.
“Oh, Paradise, I love you, too. Stay underground.”
“I promise.”
As she hung up the phone, she found herself praying she got the chance to apologize in person to him. Although she supposed that impulse was just her inner four-year-old wanting to be a good girl.
No matter the outcome of the conflict with the Shadows, she had to stand firm.
The threat of war was a good reminder that you only had one life to live.
So you’d better make it count.
As s’Ex met the unwavering stare of the Princess, he decided she was very smart to disarm him and get the Chief Astrologer away from his reach before he got the answer she had prompted from the male.
But the explanation was unnecessary; he knew the “why” of the chart’s alteration.
The Astrologer stumbled through his words. “The infant was the rightful heir, supplanting you, Princess. But the Queen did not want a commoner’s bloodline on the throne. She knew that her executioner was the sire. She forced me to change the time of birth by four minutes, thirty-two seconds—which would place the young under a disadvantageous positioning of the sixth planet from the sun.”
At once, the sound of his daughter’s plaintive cry ran through s’Ex’s mind . . . and then entered his bloodstream.
His chest began to pump with hard breath.
His fists curled up.
His heart skipped a beat . . . and then settled into the slow, steady beat of a killer.
The Princess held out his blade to him. Her eyes were full of sorrow, but they were also very, very clear. In a voice that shook, but had strength in it, she spoke four words.
“Do what you must.”
She knew she had just sentenced her mother to death. By this truth coming to light, he would not hesitate to avenge the murder of his blood.
With his war hand, he accepted the serrated blade—and tilted the tip toward his face. With two quick streaks down the hollows of his cheeks, he marked himself.
Once for his daughter whom he would never know.
Once for the wrong he was going to rectify.
As he turned for the break in the tiled partition, he was single-minded—and yet he stopped.
Cranking his head over his shoulder, he pegged the Chief Astrologer with his stare. As the male shrank back in mortal terror, s’Ex said, “If my daughter was to be the heir, who succeeds the Queen now?”
“S-s-s-she d-d-d-does.” The male pointed to the Princess. “She has rightful claim to the throne. Her records have not been altered. She would have been second in line after your daughter, and with the death, she is the legitimate heir—”
“The murder,” he cut in, “of my daughter, you mean.”
He glanced at the Princess.
She didn’t seem to care about the repercussions of what had just been said. She didn’t even appear to have heard the words that she was about to become Queen. Instead, she was cradling that long, thin gold box to the chest of her maid’s disguise, her head bowed.
Tears hit the brilliant yellow metal, falling from her eyes.
“You must rule,” s’Ex announced. “You must take the reins of this community and rule it properly. Do you hear me? Snap out of this emotion, and get ready for what is about to happen.”
Her stare shifted up to his. “She was my sister. They killed . . . my sister.”
For a moment, s’Ex recoiled. It was the last thing in the world he expected her to say.
And abruptly, the reality that his grief was shared hit him, and he was strangely touched.
Walking over to the Princess, he cupped her face and lifted it unto his own. After wiping away her cheeks, he bent down and pressed his lips to her forehead.
“Thank you for that,” he whispered.
“What?”
He just shook his head and stepped back. “You.” He pointed to the Chief Astrologer. “You need to take care of her. You believe in your traditions, you hated your lies? Prove it by making sure she survives—in about ten minutes she is going to be your Queen.”
Instantly, the male shuffled around on the floor, prostrating himself and putting his forehead to the bloodied red marble at the female’s feet. “By all that is written in the stars, I shall serve Queen Catra vin SuLaneh etl MuLanen deh FonLerahn until the final beat of my heart and the last breath of my lungs.”
s’Ex sensed the sincerity, and knew that the new Queen was going to be safe. “You have the ceremonial garb in here, do you not?”
The Chief Astrologer answered at the floor. “I do.”
“Get her dressed. In twenty minutes, her mother’s head is going to be at the foot of the throne. Bring Catra there so that the change-of-power ceremony can be completed.”
“What about you?” Catra said. “You’ll be there, too? Please tell me you’ll be there.”
“Worry about yourself, my Queen. You are so much more important than any one individual in this room, this palace, this land.”
With that, he turned and disappeared into the hidden passageway.
EIGHTY-ONE
The cleaning and preservation of a warrior’s weapons were a sacred duty, a way of honoring the connection between the fighter and his tools.
As Rhage sat with his head bent over the second of his two favorite forties, the sweet scent of metallurgical detergent was as familiar as the sound of his own voice.
Across the bedroom, he could feel his Mary’s tension. But she did not say a word.
“I’ll be careful,” he told her, putting the spray can back in his gun cleaning box. “I promise . . . I’ll be really careful.”
He gave the vow even though he knew that personal discretion was only part of surviving a battle. Being aware of your surroundings, watching your back, having your brothers watch out for you as well—all of that helped, sure. There would always be the element of luck, however.
Or destiny.
Fate.
Whatever you wanted to call it.
“I know you will,” she said tightly.
He brought the chamois square up one side of the barrel and down the other. “If I don’t . . . come home, though.”
He stopped there. She was going to know the question he was asking. He’d given her enough to go on.
“I’ll find you,” she choked out. “I’ll find you somehow.”
He nodded—and thought he probably should go over to her, but he couldn’t handle the closeness. As it was, he was on the thin edge of falling apart, and with a flat-out war waiting for him at nightfall, he just couldn’t afford the emotion.
“I simply can’t bear the thought of you getting hurt,” she said as she blew her nose with a tissue and blotted at her eyes. “That bothers me almost more than the dying.”