LEAVE.
Leave the island?
People didnโtย leaveย the island.
Tress knew, logically, that wasnโt explicitly true. Royal officials could leave. The duke left on occasion to report to the king. Plus heโd earned all those fancy medals by killing people from a distant place where they looked slightly different. Heโd apparently been quite heroic during those wars; you could tell because a great number of his troops had died, while he lived.
But in the past, the duke had never taken his family. โThe ducal heir has
come of age,โ the proclamation announced, โand so we shall present him for betrothal to the various princesses of the civilized seas.โ
Now, Tressย wasย a pragmatic young woman. And so she onlyย thought
about ripping her shopping basket to shreds in frustration. She merely
deliberatedย whether it would be appropriate to swear at the top of her lungs.
Sheย barely consideredย marching up to the dukeโs mansion to demand he change his mind.
Instead she went about her shopping in a numb haze, using the familiar action to give her suddenly crumbling life a semblance of normality. She
found some garlic she was certain she could salvage, several potatoes that hadnโt withered too badly, and even some grain where the weevils were large enough to pick out.
Yesterday, sheโd have been pleased with this haul. Today she couldnโt think of anything but Charlie.
It seemed so incredibly unfair. Sheโd onlyย justย acknowledged what she felt for him, and already everything was turning upside down? Yes, sheโd been told to expect this pain. Love involved pain. But that was the salt in your tea
โwasnโt there also supposed to be a dab of honey? Wasnโt there supposed to beโdared she wishโpassion?
She was to receive all of the detriments of a romantic affair with none of the advantages.
Unfortunately, her practicality began to assert itself. So long as the two of them had been able to pretend, the real world hadnโt been able to claim them. But the days of pretending were over. What had sheย thoughtย was going to happen? That the duke would let her marry his son? What didย sheย think
she could offer someone like Charlie? She was nothing compared to a princess. Think of how manyย cupsย they could afford!
In the pretend world, marriage was about love. In the real world, it was
about politics. A word laden with a large number of meanings, though most of them boiled down to:ย This is a matter for noblesโand (begrudgingly) the very richโto discuss. Not peasants.
She finished her shopping and started up the path toward her home, where at least she could commiserate with her parents. But it appeared that the duke was wasting no time, for she saw a procession snaking down toward the docks.
She turned around and walked back via a different path, arriving right after the processionโwhich began to load the familyโs things onto a
merchant ship. Nobody was allowed to leave the island. Unless they were, instead, somebody. Tress worried she wouldnโt get a chance to speak with Charlie. Then she worried that sheย would, but he wouldnโt want to see her.
Mercifully, she caught him standing at the side of the crowd, searching among the gathering people. The moment he spotted her, he rushed over. โTress! Oh, moons. I worried I wouldnโt find you in time.โ
โIโฆโ What did she say?
โFare maiden,โ he said, bowing, โI must take my leave.โ
โCharlie,โ she said softly, โdonโt try to be someone you arenโt. Iย know
you.โ
He grimaced. He was wearing a traveling coat and even a hat. The duke considered hats improper wear except during travel. โTress,โ he said, softer, โIโm afraid Iโve lied to you. You seeโฆIโm not the groundskeeper. Iโmโฆ umโฆthe dukeโs son.โ
โAmazing. Who would have thought that Charlie the groundskeeper and Charles the dukeโs heir would be the same person, considering theyโre the same age, look the same, and wear the same clothing?โ
โEr, yes. Are you angry at me?โ
โAnger is in line right now,โ Tress said. โItโs seventh down, sandwiched between confusion and fatigue.โ
Behind them, Charlieโs father and mother marched up onto the ship. Their servants followed with the last of the luggage.
Charlie gazed at his feet. โIt seems I am to be married. To a princess of some nation or another. What do you think of that?โ
โIโฆโ What should she say? โI wish you well?โ
He looked up and met her eyes. โAlways, Tress. Remember?โ
It was hard for her, but after groping around for a moment, she found the words hiding in a corner, trying to avoid her. โI wish,โ she said, seizing hold of them, โthat you wouldnโt do that. Get married. To someone else.โ
โOh?โ He blinked. โDo you really?โ
โI mean, Iโm sure they are very nice. The princesses.โ
โI believe itโs part of the job description,โ Charlie said. โLikeโฆhave you heard of the things they do in stories? Resuscitate amphibians? Notice for parents that their children have wet the bed? One would have to be relatively kind to do these services.โ
โYes,โ Tress said. โIโฆโ She took a deep breath. โI would stillโฆrather you didnโt marry one of them.โ
โWell then, I shanโt,โ Charlie said.
โI donโt believe you have a choice, Charlie. Your father wants you married. Itโsย politics.โ
โAh, but you see, I have a secret weapon.โ He took her hands and leaned in.
Behind, his father moved up to the prow of the ship and looked down,
scowling. Charlie, however, smiled a lopsided smile. His โlook how sneaky I amโ smile. He used it when he wasnโt being particularly sneaky.
โWhatโฆkind of secret weapon, Charlie?โ she asked. โI can beย incrediblyย boring.โ
โThatโs not a weapon.โ
โIt might not be one in a war, Tress,โ he said. โBut in courtship? It is as fine a weapon as the sharpest rapier. You know how I go on. And on. And on.โ
โIย likeย how you go on, Charlie. I donโt mind the on, in fact. I sometimes quite enjoy theย on.โ
โYou are a special case,โ Charlie said. โYou areโฆwell, this is kind of sillyโฆbut youโre like a pair of gloves, Tress.โ
โIย am?โ she said, choking up.
โYes. Donโt be offended. I mean, when I have to practice the sword, I wear these gloves andโโ
โI understand,โ she whispered.
From atop the ship, Charlieโs father shouted for him to be quick. Tress realized then thatโlike Charlie had different kinds of smilesโhis father had different kinds of scowls. She didnโt much like what the current one implied about her.
Charlie squeezed her hands. โListen, Tress. I promise you. Iโmย notย going to get married. Iโm going to go to those kingdoms, and Iโm going to be soย insufferablyย boring that none of the girls will have me.
โIโm not good at much. Iโve never scored a single point against my father in sparring. I spill my soup at formal dinners. I talk so much, even my footmanโwho isย paidย to listenโcomes up with creative reasons to interrupt me. The other day I was telling him the story of the fish and the gull, and he pretended to stub his toe, andโฆโ
The duke shouted again.
โI can do this, Tress,โ Charlie insisted. โIย willย do this. At each stop, Iโll pick out a cup for you, all right? Once Iโve bored the current princess to deathโand my father has decided we need to move onโIโll send you the cup. As proof, you see.โ He squeezed her hands once more. โIโll do it, not only because you listen. But because you know me, Tress. Youโve always been able to see me when others donโt.โ
He began turning to finally respond to his fatherโs shouts. Tress held on, clinging to his hands. Unwilling to let it end.
Charlie gave her one last smile. And though he was plainly trying to act confident, she knew his smiles. This was his uncertain one, hopeful but
worried.
โYou are my gloves too, Charlie,โ Tress said to him.
After that, she had to let go so he could jog up the plank. Sheโd imposed enough already.
The duke forced his son belowdecks as the ship slipped off the dead grey spores nearest the Rock and into the true verdant ocean. Wind caught the
shipโs sails and it struck out toward the horizon, leaving a wake of disturbed emerald dust behind it. Tress climbed up to her house, then watched from the cliff until the ship was the size of a cup. Then the size of a speck. Then it vanished.
After that, the waiting began.
They say that to wait is the most excruciating of lifeโs torments. โTheyโ in this case refers to writers, who have nothing useful to do, so fill their time thinking of things to say. Any working person can tell you that having time toย waitย is a luxury.
Tress had windows to wash. Meals to cook. A little brother to watch. Her father, Lem, had never recovered from his accident in the mines, and though he tried to assist, he could barely walk. He helped Tressโs mother, Ulba, knit socks all day, which they sold to sailors, but with the expense of yarn they turned only a meager profit.
So Tress didnโtย wait. She worked.
Still, it was an enormous relief when the first cup arrived. It was delivered by Hoid the cabin boy. (Yes, thatโs me. What tipped you off? Was it perhaps the name?) A beautiful porcelain cup, without even a single chip in it.
The world brightened that day. Tress could almost imagine Charlie
speaking as she read the accompanying letter, which detailed the affections of the first princess. With heroic monotony, he had listed the sounds his
stomach made when he lay in various positions at night. As that hadnโt been quite enough, heโd then explained how he kept his toenail clippings and gave them names. That had done it.
Fight on, my loquacious love,ย Tress thought as she scrubbed the mansionโs windows the next day.ย Be brave, my mildly gross warrior.
The second cup was of pure red glass, tall and thin, and looked like it could contain more liquid than it actually did. Perhaps it came from a
particularly stingy tavern. Heโd put off this princess by explaining what heโd had for breakfast in intricate detail, as heโd counted the pieces of the
scrambled egg and categorized them by size.
The third cup was an enormous solid pewter tankard with heft to it.
Perhaps it was from one of those places Charlie had made up, where people always needed to carry weapons. Tress was reasonably certain she could knock out an attacker by swinging the tankard. The latest princess hadnโt been able to withstand an extended conversation about the benefits of various punctuation marks, including a few Charlie had invented.
The fourth packageโs card included no letter, only a small drawing: two gloved hands holding to one another. The cup had a painted butterfly on it with a red ocean underneath; she found it odd that the butterfly wasnโt terrified of the spores. Maybe it was a prisoner, forced to fly out over the ocean to its doom.
The fifth cup never arrived.
Tress tried to play it off, telling herself that it must have been interrupted in transit. After all, any number of dangerous things could happen to a ship sailing the spores. Pirates orโฆyou knowโฆspores.
But the months stretched long, each more tedious than the one before. Every time a ship arrived at the docks, Tress was there asking for mail.
Nothing.
She did this for months on end, until an entire year had passed since Charlie had left.
Then, finally, a note. Not from Charlie, but from his father, sent to the entire town. The duke was returning to Diggenโs Point at long last, and he was bringing his wife, his heirโฆand his new daughter-in-law.