THERE WAS A GROAN OFย wood and metal as the door was pushed open, and through the narrow gap appeared first a delicate hand, then a slippered foot, and, finally, a familiar face.
โAliz โ I mean, Your Majesty? Are you awake? They said you were, and oh, I dearly hope โโ
โMiss Huda?โ said Alizeh, startled. โIs that you?โ
The young woman gave a strange, birdlike scream, slammed the door shut behind her, clapped both hands over her mouth, then ran up the stone stairs and all but tackled Alizeh in a series of exceptionally unladylike behaviors. Alizeh laughed at this, then stiffened as she was gathered up in a severe hug, for she was not wearing any underwear, and did not know how
to extricate herself from the embrace without wounding the young womanโs feelings.
Eventually, Miss Huda pulled back, her face bright with emotion.
โYouโre awake!โ she said. โYou have no idea how worried weโve been!
And you mustnโt call meย Missย anymore, just Huda will do, and anyway, weโre friends now, arenโt we?โ
โYes,โ Alizeh said softly. โYes, of course weโre friends.โ
Alizehโs mind was in turmoil. Her fears were so tangled and her confusion so great that she could hardly choose which question to ask first โ and then she grew entirely distracted. There was something different about Huda, something vivid and fine, and Alizeh found herself staring at her friend, trying to understand this transformation before realizing the explanation was quite straightforward.
โHuda,โ she said on a breath, โyou look absolutelyย enchanting.โ
The young womanโs color heightened as she pressed her hands nervously to her stomach. Huda was aglow, beaming as she stood there in a stunning velvet gown, the construction of which Alizeh couldnโt help but admire. The dark blue fabric was of the highest caliber, its details exquisite, its stitches undetectable. The dress accentuated her lavish curves in so elegant a manner that Huda looked a great deal like royalty. It was precisely the sort of garment Alizeh mightโve designed for her, had she had the opportunity. Huda possessed far too statuesque a figure to be encumbered by the latest fashions, and now, released from the stays of the current styles, she was remade. Even her dark hair, too often pulled back in a severe knot, was newly arranged in a low, loose bun, artfully chosen tendrils framing the graceful planes of her face. Her eyes seemed bigger, her sun-kissed complexion more radiant. Everything about her ensemble allowed her best features to shine, but โ
More than that, Huda seemedย happy.
โDo you really think so?โ she said, drawing a hand down her skirt.
โSarra says the dress suits me, though Iโm not entirely โ Goodness, look at me, my focus so easily diverted.โ She shook her head, then took Alizehโs hands. โItโs just like you, isnโt it, to emerge from a difficulty only to deliver me a kindness?โ Huda beamed. โMuch as I would love to discuss my
wardrobe with you, dear, I must first tell you how very, very pleased I am to see you awake. I didnโt believe it when they told me you were up, not at first, as weโve been waiting weeks and weeks with no word and weโve all been terribly distressed, and the Diviners havenโt made it easy, you know,
always warning us in their strange way that they can only keep the peace for so long before โโ
โWeeks?โ Alizeh blanched. โHow many weeks? And what do you mean of the Diviners? And Sarraโ โ she frowned โ โwhat do you know of Sarra?โ
Huda paled. โOh dear. Iโve really stepped in it, havenโt I?ย Pleaseย donโt tell me Iโm the first one in to see you?โ
Alizeh could hardly breathe around the mayhem in her chest. โYes,โ she said. โYou are.โ
โOh dear,โ Huda whispered again.
โWhatโs happening?โ Alizeh said, backing away. โWhere am I? Where is Hazan? Where isโฆ everyone else?โ
Huda went motionless, only her lips parting and closing as she prevaricated. She then clasped and unclasped her hands, looking around nervously, and jumped nearly a foot in the air when there was a sudden knock at the door. There was the whine of old wood, then โ
โMiss? Can we come in, too? They said sheโs โโ
โNot yet!โ Huda spun around too fast, her voice too high. โI need another moment alone with her, but then, you know, after that, you might pop in to say hello โโ
โBut โ miss โ Deen and I would really โโ
โClose the door, Omid!โ she practically shrieked.
There was the sound of a long-suffering sigh, then another whine before the door slid heavily closed.
Huda looked at Alizeh, then, smiling horribly, said, โPerhaps you should sit down.โ
โIโd really rather not.โ
โYes, well, perhaps I should sit down, then,โ she said, and sat heavily on the bed. Huda closed her eyes, drew a deep, bracing breath, and then coughed, her face souring as her eyes opened. โGood grief, how do you
breathe in here? I can hardly think straight for all the perfume.โ
Of all the things Huda mightโve said, this observation came as an
unwelcome surprise. โI think itโs lovely,โ said Alizeh, her brows drawing together. โDonโt you like the smell of roses?โ
โA little, perhaps, is not so offensive to the senses,โ Huda rejoined, looking around the room with renewed revulsion. โBut this, I fear, is
egregious.โ
โI like it,โ said Alizeh, who was feeling oddly defensive. She shook her head. โWhy are we arguing over the flowers?โ
โI donโt know, dear,โ she said, aggrieved. โIโm terribly nervous.โ โAnd how do you imagine I must feel?โ
โBetter, I hope?โ Huda raised her eyebrows. โBetter than you did with
the arrow in your back, anyway. I canโt imagine that was very comfortable.โ She laughed; Alizeh did not.
โYes, well,โ Huda hurried on, โI donโt knowย allย the details, of course, as I am generally precluded from joining important meetings โ and do you
knowโ โ she lifted her chin โ โeveryone is odiously self-important around here, as if I canโt be trusted! As if Iโd give away all the empireโs secrets!โ
Alizeh shot her a look.
Huda crossed her arms. โAnd so what if I do occasionally divulge my findings? A tiny secret shared among friends is not so awful, is it? Though perhaps if they shared more with me I might not be so inclined to snoop!โ
โHave you been snooping?โ
She dropped her arms. โOnly a very little, entirely innocent bit!โ โHuda โโ
โPerhaps later we can talk about all the discreet letters Prince Kamran has been writingโ โ she raised her eyebrows โ โand all the mysterious trips King Cyrus has been taking โโ
โYouย haveย been snooping.โ Alizehโs eyes widened.
Huda gave a brilliant smile. โIโm not entirely useless, am I? I donโt care what Mother says about me. Anyway, to answer an important question: we are currently at the Diviners Quarters in Tulan. It turns out that the reason you were feeling so ill the morning ofโ โ she made air quotes โ โThe Unpleasantness, was that youโd been poisoned by dark magic.โ She bit at her fingernail. โWhich, you know, is why itโs taken you so long to heal.
Nearly four weeks youโve been here at the temple โโ
โFour weeks?โ Alizeh cried. โIโve been asleep for almost a month?โ โOh, itโs been torturous for all of us, let me assure you! Certainly not
more torturous than it was for you,โ she hastened to add. โI donโt mean to imply that we suffered more than you did! I only mean to say that we did suffer, quite a bit, for even with the Divinersโ intercession it wasnโt a simple fix. No one was certain how long your healing might take, and it was the fact of not knowing that made it all the more brutal. They had to, ermโ โ she bit again at a cuticle โ โbleedย the bad magic from your body โโ
Alizeh drew a sharp breath.
โYes, disgusting! Grotesque, even! Though I donโt know if theyย actuallyย bled you, to be honest? But it sounds awful, just awful โ and anyway the thing is, dear, no one can figure out why youโd have such a poison in your
body to begin with, and, wellโ โ she cringed โ โnaturally theyโve all been fighting over it.โ
โI see.โ Alizehโs heart was thudding painfully.
Huda sighed, released her tortured fingers from her teeth, and stared at Alizeh. โThe boys have been awful. I quite hate them now. Not Deen and Omid, of course โ but the others are always fighting and brooding and muttering andย ridiculous. And to think, I nearly swooned the first time I saw Kamran!โ She clasped her chest. โThe way heโd parted the crowd the night of that horrific ball! I thought Iโd die there in that fiery ring, and suddenly
there he was โ striding toward me like a hero, calling me a lady! Heaven help me, Alizeh, I thought Iโd never seen anyone more magnificent in all my life.โ Huda dropped her hand, then made a disgusted face. โCan you believe, growing up in the royal city, I always dreamed of meeting him?โ
Alizeh raised her eyebrows. She was still trying to digest the fact that sheโd been half-dead for a month when she said, faintly, โYes, I believe itโs fairly common to be enamored of royalty.โ
Huda laughed. โItโs generous of you to think of it that way. It makes my stomach turn to think back on the insipid dreams of my younger self, and yet โ every time Mother was awful to me, or my sisters were cruel, or I discovered my pillows had been stuffed with rat entrails โโ
โRat entrails?โ
โYes, the rat entrails were particularly unimaginative,โ she said, pursing her lips. โAnyway, every time something terrible happened, Iโd lock myself in my room and then lock myself in my closet and then lock myself in my head, where the stupidest of all my dreams lived, and Iโd imagine that one day Iโd meet the dashing prince and heโd be everything good and glorious
andโ โ she hesitated, looking suddenly haunted โ โwell, I suppose I thought heโd be different. Kinder than everyone else.โ She was quiet a moment, fighting a flare of emotion before returning her gaze to Alizeh.
โGood thing thatโs sorted, isnโt it?โ she said with forced brightness. โAnyway, do you happen to have any recollection of being poisoned? It would solve a great deal of our problems, I think, if you could remember whether anyone had poisoned you.โ
Alizeh blinked steadily at the young woman, then sank down onto the bed beside her. She felt dazed; her mind was churning โย roiling.
Had she been poisoned? She didnโt know. She couldnโt remember.
Had she really been asleep for four weeks? What had happened to the world in her absence? What of her people, to whom sheโd made promises?
Her heart was racing, her panic multiplying.
Unconsciously, Alizeh placed an arm around Hudaโs shoulder and squeezed, holding steady as the young miss yielded to this comfort. Alizeh listened as Huda sniffed sharply, retracting the feelings that had escaped her otherwise iron grip. The two of them were staring toward the window in
silence when Alizeh said, softly, โIf anyone puts rat entrails in your pillows again, Iโll kill them.โ
Huda choked out a shocked, watery laugh.
Alizeh knew it hadnโt been easy for Huda to be raised in high society as the unwanted daughter of a fallen woman; it hadnโt helped that Hudaโs
scandalous bloodline had informed the curves of her body, easily distinguishing her from her sisters. Hudaโs figure was voluptuous in a way that seemed to delight the worst vultures of a preying public, all while driving her stepmother to madness and cruelty. Alizeh had paid close enough attention to Huda to know that her loud, prickly facade sheltered a wealth of crushing pain โ and a deep vein of untapped tenderness as well.
Why else would the girl have followed her all this way?
โI never thanked you for coming to save me,โ said Alizeh, whose own smile was faint. โConsider it a repayment for your kindness.โ
Huda laughed again, louder this time. She wiped her eyes and said, โGoodness, I donโt know why Iโve turned into a watering pot. Iโm a bit overwhelmed, I suppose. Itโs been nearly a month of worry, then too much relief, and now this generous offer of murder โโ
โWhat are friends for, if not to kill your enemies?โ
Huda collapsed into a fit of giggles. โOh, wouldnโt it be lovely if we could choose our own sisters? Iโd trade in all five of mine for just one of you.โ
Alizeh reared back. โYou haveย fiveย sisters?โ
Huda nodded even as her shoulders shook, her laughter slowly abating. โIโm the baby, if you can believe it. Youngest children are supposed to be spoiled rotten, arenโt they? But then Mother says I was born rotten and needed no spoiling to get there.โ Huda was still smiling as she spoke, but Alizeh stiffened.
She turned carefully to face her friend, for she was remembering an alarming conversation theyโd once had โ something Huda had said โ
If Mother discovers Iโve hired you to make me a dress Iโll be reduced to little more than a writhing, bloody sack on the street, for she willย literally
tear all my limbs from my body.
The nosta had glowed neither hot nor cold at this horrifying statement, leading Alizeh to believe that Huda had been uncertain whether her mother might deliver her such violence. Alizeh was beginning to worry that Hudaโs home life was a good deal worse than her sharp wit and untroubled air had led others to believe. She thought to test the nosta again now, to ask Huda a pointed question about her mother when she realized โ in a blaze of fresh
panic โ that she wore nothing but a silk shift. All of Alizehโs things were gone: her cloak, her dress, her boots, her corset โ
The nosta.
Had it fallen out of her clothes in this recent plummet to the death? Had the Diviners confiscated the magical object when tending to her wounds?
How might she be sure? Perhaps she could find one of the priests and ask? Her mind was spinning now, her uncertainties escalating โ
โAnyhow, dear, it really would be grand if you could try to remember.
Do you even think itโs possible someone poisoned you?โ
Alizehโs head shot up at that. She could hardly think straight at the moment, much less remember anything useful. This conversation had dealt her so many emotional challenges she struggled even to flit from one thought to another, and yet โ unfortunate as it was โ a possible attempt on her life was the least shocking of Alizehโs concerns. Sheโd been nearly murdered enough times now that such an event was no longer cause for surprise, and, in fact, was becoming quite routine.
โYes,โ she said, blinking. โYes, I suppose itโs entirely possible.โ โIn that case, I have to say โ reluctant as I am to reward Kamranโs
terrible moods โ that Cyrusย doesย seem the likeliest suspect for such a crime, no matter how many dramatic displaysโ โ Huda gestured dismissively to the room โ โheโs fashioned all around the city.โ
Very slowly, Alizeh electrified.
She felt the tremble of awareness in her fingers first, then in her chest and elsewhere, her body coming alive with a terrifying quaver of feeling.
Her heart pounded dangerously as she looked around the room at the
infinite blooms; the endless, devastating beauty. Her words were a breath when she said, โCyrus did this?โ