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Chapter no 22

These Infinite Threads (This Woven Kingdom, 2)

OMID AND MISS HUDA STOODย center stage, both tall and too proud in equally awful, ill-fitting attire, shouting in different languages at a trio of stubborn footmen. In the wings stood Deen, the wiry apothecarist, and Mrs. Amina, the brutal housekeeper of Baz House; this unlikely duo stood silently side by side, each with a hand clapped over their mouths in horror.

Angels above.

Kamran had given the boy aย singleย task.

Heโ€™d charged Omid with bringing in the apothecarist and the housekeeper for a round of questioning. After Miss Hudaโ€™s unexpected arrival at the palace this morning, heโ€™d been inspired to interview all others whoโ€™d known or conversed with Alizeh at lengthโ€”and though Kamran had spoken once, briefly, with the apothecarist while incognito, heโ€™d intended to ask the man more direct questions this time around.

Now, he knew nothing but regret.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry, miss,โ€ said a footman who didnโ€™t sound sorry at all. โ€œI canโ€™t let you pass. I have no idea who this boy isโ€โ€”he nodded to Omidโ€”โ€œand I donโ€™t care who your father is. So unless youโ€™re hoping to land yourself in prison tonight, step aside.โ€

Miss Huda reared back, clasping a hand to her chest with no small amount of drama. โ€œHowย dareย youโ€”โ€

โ€œThis is your final warning,โ€ said another footman.

โ€œOh, just you wait,โ€ she said, drawing herself up to her full height. โ€œJust wait until I speak to the prince about this. My associate and I are here on royal ordersโ€”โ€

โ€œYourย associate?โ€ Kamran said sharply, emerging from the shadows. โ€œYour Highness!โ€ cried a chorus of breathless voices.

All bowed and scraped before him in an almost choreographed motion, all but Omid, the boy peeling off from the crowd to approach Kamran with wild eyes, his head shaking hard as he spoke in rapid-fire Feshtoon:

โ€œI swear I wouldโ€™ve been here before nightfall, sireโ€” I swear with my whole heart I wouldโ€™veโ€” I brought them just as you asked, except there was a mob gathered outside the palace gatesโ€”โ€

โ€œAย mob?โ€

โ€œYes, sire, the people are very angry, sire, and the guards were threatening to pull up the drawbridge to prevent anyone from coming through until Miss Huda told them who she was and finally weย didย get through the gates but then they wouldnโ€™t let us come through the front door

because they said you werenโ€™t accepting visitors but then we finally got through the door and then theyโ€”โ€

โ€œEnough,โ€ Kamran said.

Omid bit his lip and slunk back, looking suddenly like he might cry. The prince ignored this, his mind in chaos. Heโ€™d suspected the people would riot, so it wasnโ€™t a surprise, exactly, to hear that a mob had assembledโ€”but it was devastating nonetheless.

Solemnly, he nodded at the footmen. โ€œYou may go.โ€ โ€œButโ€” Sireโ€”โ€

โ€œHa!โ€ cried Miss Huda, jabbing a finger at the trio of young men. โ€œI told you that youโ€™d be sorryโ€”โ€

โ€œIf I hear you say another word,โ€ Kamran said quietly, his eyes flashing, โ€œI will have you barred forevermore from the palace.โ€

Miss Huda fell back, two spots of pink appearing high on her cheekbones.

Kamran took a steadying breath, struggling to rein in his anger, his frustration, his myriad disappointments. He turned to the footmen, acknowledging them one by one. โ€œThank you for your efforts. Iโ€™ll take it from here.โ€

โ€œY-Yesโ€”โ€

โ€œYes, sire.โ€

โ€œAs you wish, sire.โ€

And then, they were gone.

Finally Kamran was left no choice but to face his strange audience, the odd group staring at him now with terror. The prince knew heโ€™d no one but himself to blame for this shameful turn of events, and wasnโ€™t sure then whether his anger was aimed more at himself, or Omid. Or perhaps even the infuriating Miss Huda.

Quietly, he said: โ€œSomeone explain to me at once what is going on here before I have the lot of you carted off to the dungeons.โ€

Omid and Miss Huda, so loud only minutes before, seemed incapable then of saying a word. Their mouths opened and closed as they shared frightened, uncertain glances, and Kamran thought he really might lose his mind when, finally, Deen stepped forward and broke open the silence.

โ€œIf I may, Your Highnessโ€โ€”he cleared his throatโ€”โ€œIโ€™d only like to say that I, too, would love to know what is going on here, for I havenโ€™t the faintest idea.โ€

Kamran raised his eyebrows. โ€œHow is that possible?โ€

โ€œAll I know, sire, is that the ruination of my day began when this young womanโ€โ€”Deen nodded at Miss Hudaโ€”โ€œbarreled into my shop oh, about four hours ago and, without warning or even an introduction, began interrogating meโ€”in front of my customers, no lessโ€”about someone Iโ€™d treated days ago, demanding all the while that I divulge confidential information to a complete strangerโ€”which I feel I should point out is not only unethical, but illegalโ€”and I was still trying to get the miss to leave the premises when this absurdly tall childโ€โ€”he pointed at Omidโ€”โ€œbarged into my store for the second time today, and this time demanded I follow him back to the palace or else hang at dawn for defying an order from the crown

โ€”โ€

Kamran made a pained sound.

โ€œAnd thenโ€”and then these two hooligansโ€โ€”Deen gestured vaguely at Miss Huda and Omidโ€”โ€œforged some spontaneous and no doubtย nefariousย alliance, after which they forced me into the back of a foul, rented hackney, where I was made to wait at least forty-five minutes before I was suddenly thrust into the very unpleasant company of the woman standing beside me now. Iโ€™m afraid I donโ€™t know her nameโ€โ€”he turned to Mrs. Amina and muttered an apology, which she ignored with a scowlโ€”โ€œbut she spent the entire ride moaning about how angry her mistress would be upon discovering sheโ€™d gone, for her mistress was in terrible spirits and she couldnโ€™t be spared, especially not on such short noticeโ€”โ€

โ€œAll right,โ€ Kamran said flatly. โ€œI think Iโ€™ve heard enough.โ€ Deen nodded, then stepped back.

The prince was about to send the witnesses home, fire Omid on the spot, and bar Miss Huda from the palace grounds on principle, when Mrs. Amina suddenly cleared her throat. โ€œIโ€™d like to say a word, too, sire, if I may.โ€

Kamran studied the womanโ€”her beady eyes, her small nose, her ruddy cheeksโ€”and couldnโ€™t help but feel a note of revulsion, even now. Heโ€™d never forget the bruises heโ€™d seen on Alizehโ€™s face, the threat of brutality this housekeeper had unleashed before his very eyes. Mrs. Amina was a cruel woman.

โ€œYou may speak,โ€ he said, watching her closely.

โ€œThank you, Your Highness,โ€ she said haltingly. โ€œFirst, Iโ€™ll preface this by saying that I realize now might not be the best moment to say my piece, but I feel I might never have another opportunity to stand before you, sire,

and clear my name, and so I will say now in my own defense that when you last came to visit your good aunt at Baz House I fear you got the wrong idea of me, for Iโ€™ve read enough in the papers now to know Iโ€™d been right all along to discipline that girl, and in fact I think she couldโ€™ve benefited from a good beating, sire, for maybe then she wouldnโ€™t have gone on to cause such troubleโ€”โ€

โ€œWait, what girl?โ€ said Miss Huda, clearly forgetting her tacit agreement to be silent. โ€œYou donโ€™t mean Alizeh?โ€

Kamran flinched.

โ€œIndeed, I do,โ€ Mrs. Amina said triumphantly. โ€œI read the girlโ€™s name in the papers this morning and I knew straightaway when I saw it seemed familiar, and then I remembered how Iโ€™d heard that awful girl tell her name to this boyโ€โ€”she pointed at Omidโ€”โ€œwhen heโ€™d come to Baz House to hand her a dratted invitation to the ball, and which I see now I was far too generous to allow, and after the way my dear mistress came home last night, all affright over the terrible tragedy, I told her, I said to herโ€”as I brought her a cup of mint tea to soothe her nervesโ€”I said well how do you like that, milady, Iโ€™ve pieced it all together myself, the girl from the papers had worked here at Baz House all that timeโ€” And my mistress was ever so upset about the whole thing, I canโ€™t even describe her horror, for sheโ€™d begun thinking that you, sire, had known all along about the girlโ€™s deception and lied about it, for why else would you have defended her so ardently that day and again at the ball, but I assured her that the girl had likely bewitched you, Your Highness, and that you shouldnโ€™t be blamed for her wickedness

โ€”โ€

โ€œMrs. Amina, that is quite enoughโ€”โ€

โ€œForgive me,โ€ Deen said, frowning as he glanced around the group. โ€œBut were we brought in to be questioned about the same girl? The Jinn snoda who came to me for salve? If so, I cannot corroborate these stories, for I donโ€™t know her name, and Iโ€™ve no notion of her attending a ball or causing any kind of troubleโ€”โ€

โ€œShe was no ordinary snoda!โ€ Mrs. Amina cried. โ€œDonโ€™t you see? Iโ€™d long suspected there was something the matter with herโ€”she was always putting on airs, speaking all the time like she was some kind of toffโ€”and I only blame myself, sire, for not exposing her sooner. I felt the darkness in her the first day I saw her, and when I watched her eyes change color right in front of me I shouldโ€™ve known she had the devil inside herโ€”โ€

โ€œIf anyone has the devil inside her,โ€ Omid said angrily, โ€œitโ€™s you!โ€

โ€œVile girl,โ€ Mrs. Amina was saying, ignoring this outburst from the boy. โ€œNever liked her. She never followed instructions, you know. Always sloppy with her work, cutting cornersโ€”โ€

โ€œSloppyย with her work?โ€ Deen cut her off, his eyes wide with shock. โ€œThe girl who came into my shop with hands so destroyed by hard labor she could hardly make a fist?โ€ He shook his head, took a sharp step away from the woman. โ€œYouโ€™re the housekeeper who beat her, arenโ€™t you? Donโ€™t tell me youโ€™re responsible for that infected cut across her throat, too?โ€

โ€œOh, no, sir,โ€ Omid said quietly in Ardanz. โ€œThat was me.โ€

Deen looked suddenly revolted. โ€œWhoย areย you people? Pray tell me, what crimes have I committed to deserve the great misfortune of your company? I merely treated a girl for her wounds!โ€ He looked beseechingly at the prince. โ€œYour Highness, will you not allow me to return home? Iโ€™ve done no wrong hereโ€”I donโ€™t deserve to have my name lowered by association with these heathensโ€”โ€

โ€œHold a moment,โ€ Kamran said, considering Deen closely. โ€œYou can confirm that the girlโ€™s injuries were real, then? They werenโ€™t the result of an illusion?โ€

โ€œAn illusion?โ€ Deen hesitated. โ€œYour Highness, I canโ€™t imagine what reason sheโ€™d have to waste magic on torturing herself, but if for some inane purpose sheโ€™d managed to enchant her hands to ruin, I should think sheโ€™d have the ability to change them back. What need would she have of my salves if she could do such a thing on her own? No, sire, I donโ€™t believe her wounds were any kind of illusion.โ€ The apothecarist frowned then, appearing to remember something. โ€œShe did, however, discover in my presence that her body was able to heal itself at a more rapid rate than was normal, and removed her bandages after only days, instead of the week Iโ€™d suggestedโ€”โ€

โ€œHeal itself?โ€ Kamran repeated, going still. โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œYes, sire.โ€ Deen blinked at him, surprised by the princeโ€™s interest. โ€œHer skin recovered itself at a rather unnatural pace, which is not considered common even among Jinnโ€”โ€

โ€œA sign of the devil!โ€ Mrs. Amina cried. โ€œHere is proof!โ€ โ€œOh, doย shut up,โ€ Miss Huda said irritably.

โ€œYou ignore the signs at your own peril, miss,โ€ Mrs. Amina countered sharply. โ€œJinn can make themselves invisible, notย blurryโ€”and no one was

able to get a good look at the girl last night, almost certainly on account of the devilโ€™s influenceโ€”โ€

โ€œThere are possibilities other than the devil,โ€ Miss Huda shot back angrily. โ€œThe clothes she was wearingโ€” Well, theyโ€™d been delivered with a note I couldnโ€™t read, but garments are all the time bewitched, particularly in battle, to offer their wearer anonymity or protection, and her blurriness mightโ€™ve been the work of a fairly straightforward magical enchantmentโ€”โ€ โ€œDarkย enchantments! Dark magic!โ€ Mrs. Amina cried. โ€œEveryone

knows that dark magic cannot be born without the devilโ€™s interference!โ€

โ€œThis is utter rubbish,โ€ said Deen, rolling his eyes. โ€œIf the girl had access to dark magic, do you really think sheโ€™d accept a pittance in exchange for scrubbing scum from your mistressโ€™s floors? You think if she had access to dark magic that sheโ€™d willingly share a roof with a brutal housekeeper who clearly took pleasure in beating her?ย I should think not.โ€

Mrs. Amina gasped in outrage, took a step back, and promptly lashed out at the apothecarist, who rallied with ease.

Kamran wanted to put an end to this madness, wanted to clear these clowns out of his home, but heโ€™d discovered thenโ€”to his dismayโ€”that he could not move. His pulse seemed to be pounding in his head, his heart beating violently against his chest.

Bit by bit, he was being proven wrong about Alizeh.

Having now been personally subjected to Cyrusโ€™s manipulations of magic, Kamran could imagine that the southern king possessed the skills necessary to have imbued her garments with protections. Indeed it would make sense if heโ€™d magicked the gown to protect her identity from those who wished her harmโ€”for what else might explain why so few people at the ball had been able to identify her? What else would explain Cyrusโ€™s cryptic statement, his subtle accusation that Kamran couldย seeย her?

Alizehโ€™s gown had been incinerated, twice, as she entered and exited the fire. Perhaps in the process the frock had lost some of its effectiveness, blurring her from the crowd instead of blotting her out altogether. This might explain why Kamranโ€™s eyesight had failed him with such inconsistency, why sheโ€™d seemed to fade in and out of focus before him; as Alizehโ€™s betrayals were revealed, heโ€™d swung wildly between hatred and longing, wanting at once to kill her and save her.

The magic had perhaps reacted to his warring emotions.

If Alizeh had thought her identity was protected, this would explain, too, why sheโ€™d not felt the need to wear her snoda. It did not, however, explain why sheโ€™d physically assaulted the young man sheโ€™dโ€”allegedlyโ€” agreed to marry.

Kamran grit his teeth; he felt then the onslaught of a powerful headache, pain gripping the base of his skull.

He didnโ€™t know what he felt most in the face of these reveals: anger or relief or confusion. Perhaps some mixture of the three. For while, on some level, these answers exonerated Alizeh, they also proved that sheโ€™d lied to him; sheโ€™d pretended not to know Cyrus while she was all the while allied with the Tulanian king. Sheโ€™d accepted his help, his magic. Sheโ€™d worn his gown; theyโ€™dย had a plan. Kamran couldnโ€™t conquer the chasm of uncertainty yawning open under his feet, for there remained a great deal to doubt about Alizeh, including her betrothal to Cyrus, her alliance with the devil, and her escape from the palace on the back of a Tulanian dragon.

He felt at sea, drowning in doubt, and his frustration only intensified. This anger was directed toward himself, toward his grandfather, toward the circumstances that now defined his life.

That King Zaal had died at all had been reason enough for Kamran to rage, but it was the aftermath, he realized, that had broken him the most, for in the wake of his grandfatherโ€™s murder, fear and grief had muddled the princeโ€™s otherwise inviolable instincts, causing him to question everything thatโ€™d felt so certain only hours prior. Once again, his emotions had overruled him.

Of all the trials ahead, Kamran was beginning to fear that his greatest obstacle would be overcoming himself.

โ€œYour Majesty,โ€ came Deenโ€™s sharp voice, returning the prince to the present. โ€œI beg you: please dismiss me from this circus. I shouldโ€™ve been home for dinner by now, and my loved ones will begin to fear for my safety

โ€”โ€

โ€œLoved ones?โ€ Mrs. Amina made a sound of contempt. โ€œYouโ€™ve got loved ones, have you? While the rest of us must marry our work, warm our beds with pain, and give birth only to bitternessโ€”โ€

โ€œEnough,โ€ Kamran practically roared.

In a hundred ways heโ€™d been tested throughout his lifeโ€”in battle and death and devastationโ€”but there was something about being forced to stand still and listen to a pack of idiots speak nonsense in front of his face

that made him want to self-immolate. โ€œI donโ€™t want to hear another word,โ€ he said in a deathly whisper. โ€œFromย anyย of youโ€”โ€

The words died in his throat.

An eerie wave of sensation flared along his tortured skin as his heart thundered in his chest, the sound of his own breathing intensifying in his ears. He turned slowly, expecting to see a Diviner, and instead discovered Zahhak, the slippery man slinking toward him now with a cloying smile.

The defense minister came to a stop before him, clasping his hands as if in prayer. โ€œI thought I heard a commotion,โ€ he said, taking in the broad details of the unfolding drama with no apparent interest. He returned his blank eyes to Kamran. โ€œIโ€™ve been waiting for you all day, sire. Perhaps now, we might finally speak.โ€

Another tremor of sensation awoke along the princeโ€™s golden veins, just as three Diviners drifted suddenly into view.

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