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Chapter no 11: East

The Priory of the Orange Tree

โ€œThere it is,โ€ Estina Melaugo said, with a sweeping gesture toward land. โ€œFeast your eyes on the Draconic cesspit of Yscalin.โ€

โ€œNo, thank you.โ€ Kit drank from the bottle they were sharing. โ€œI would much rather my death was a surprise.โ€

Loth peered through the spyglass. Even now, a day after seeing the High Western, his hands were unsteady.

Fรฝredel. Right wing of the Nameless One. Commander of the Draconic Army. If he had woken, then the other High Westerns would surely follow. It was from them that the rest of wyrmkind drew strength. When a High Western died, the fire in its wyverns, and in their progeny, burned out.

The Nameless One himself could not returnโ€”not while the House of Berethnet stoodโ€”but his servants could wreak destruction without him. The Grief of Ages had proven that.

There had to be a reason they were rising again. They had fallen into their slumber at the end of the Grief of Ages, the same night a comet had crossed the sky. Scholars had speculated for centuries as to why, and to when, they might wake, but no one had found an answer. Gradually, everyone had begun to assume that they never would. That the wyrms had become living fossils.

Loth returned his attention to what he could glimpse through the spyglass. The moon was a half-closed eye, and they floated on water as dark as his thoughts. All he could see was the nest of lightsย that was Perunta. A place that might be crawling with Draconic plague.

The sickness had first oozed from the Nameless One, whose breath, it was said, had been a slow-acting poison. A more fearsome strain had arrived with the five High Westerns. They and their wyverns carried it, the same way rats had once carried the pestilence. It had existed only in pockets since the end of the Grief of Ages, but Loth knew the signs from books.

It began with the reddening of the hands. Then a scalelike rash. As it tiptoed over the body, the afflicted would experience pain in the joints, fever and visions. If they were unlucky enough to survive this stage, the bloodblaze set in. They were at their most dangerous then, for if not restrained, they would run about screaming as if they were on fire, and anyone whose skin touched theirs would also be afflicted. Usually they died within days, though some had been known to survive longer.

There was no cure for the plague. No cure and no protection.

Loth snapped the spyglass closed and handed it to Melaugo.

โ€œI suppose this is it,โ€ he said.

โ€œDonโ€™t abandon hope, Lord Arteloth.โ€ Her gaze was detached. โ€œI doubt the plague will be in the palace. Itโ€™s those of us you call the commons who suffer most in times of need.โ€

Plume and Harlowe were approaching the bow, the latter with a clay pipe in hand.

โ€œRight, my lords,โ€ the captain said. โ€œWeโ€™ve enjoyed having you, truly, but nothing lasts forever.โ€

Kit finally seemed to grasp the danger they were in. Either he was cupshotten or he had lost his wits, but he clasped his hands. โ€œI beseech you, Captain Harloweโ€”let us join your crew.โ€ His eyes were fevered. โ€œYou need not tell Lord Seyton. Our families have money.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ Loth hissed. โ€œKitโ€”โ€

โ€œLet him speak.โ€ Harlowe motioned with his pipe. โ€œCarry on, Lord Kitston.โ€

โ€œThere is land in the Downs, good land. Save us, and itโ€™s yours,โ€ Kit continued.

โ€œI have the high seas at my feet. Land is not what I need,โ€ Harlowe said. โ€œWhat I need is seafarers.โ€

โ€œWith your guidance, I wager we could beย outstandingย seafarers. I come from a long line of cartographers, you know.โ€ An outright lie. โ€œAnd Arteloth used to sail on Elsand Lake.โ€

Harlowe regarded them with dark eyes.

โ€œNo,โ€ Loth said firmly. โ€œCaptain, Lord Kitston is uneasy about our task, but we are duty-bound to enter Yscalin. To see that justice is done.โ€

With a face like a skinned apple, Kit seized him by the jerkin and pulled him aside.

โ€œArteloth,โ€ he said under his breath, โ€œI am trying to get us out of this. Because thisโ€โ€”he turned Loth toward the lights in the distanceโ€”โ€œhasย nothingย to do with justice. This is the Night Hawk sending us both to our deaths for a pennyworth of gossip.โ€

โ€œCombe may have exiled me for some ulterior purpose, but now I stand on the brink of Yscalin, I wish to find out what happened to Prince Wilstan.โ€ Loth placed a hand on his shoulder. โ€œIf you want to turn back, Kit, I will bear you no ill will. This was not your punishment.โ€

Kit looked at him, frustration etched on to him. โ€œOh, Loth,โ€ he said, softer. โ€œYouโ€™re not the Saint.โ€

โ€œNo, but he has got balls,โ€ Melaugo said.

โ€œIโ€™ve no time for this pious talk,โ€ Harlowe cut in, โ€œbut I do concur with Estina on the subject of your balls, Lord Arteloth.โ€ His gaze was piercing. โ€œI need people with hearts like yours. If you think you could weather the seas, say it now, and Iโ€™ll put it to my crew.โ€

Kit blinked. โ€œReally?โ€

Harlowe was expressionless. When Loth kept his peace, Kit sighed.

โ€œI thought not.โ€ Harlowe dealt them a cold stare. โ€œNow, get the fuck off my ship.โ€

The pirates jeered. Melaugo, whose lips were pursed, beckoned to Loth and Kit. As his friend turned to follow, Loth gripped his arm.

โ€œKit,โ€ he murmured, โ€œtake the chance and stay behind. You are not a threat to Combe, not like I am. You could still go back to Inys.โ€

Kit shook his head, a smile on his lips.

โ€œCome now, Arteloth,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat little piety I have, I owe to you. And he might not be my patron, but I know the Knight of Fellowship tells us not to leave our friends alone.โ€

Loth wanted to argue with him, but he found himself smiling back at his friend. They walked side by side after Melaugo.

They had to descend on a rope ladder from theย Rose Eternal. Their polished boots slipped on the rungs. Once they were settled in the rowing boat, where their traveling chests waited, Melaugo climbed in with them.

โ€œHand me the oars, Lord Arteloth.โ€ When Loth did, she whistled. โ€œSee you soon, Captain. Donโ€™t leave without me.โ€

โ€œNever, Estina.โ€ Harlowe leaned over the side. โ€œFarewell, my lords.โ€

โ€œKeep those pomanders close, lordlings,โ€ Plume added. โ€œWouldnโ€™t want you catching anything.โ€

The crew roared with laughter as Melaugo pushed away from theย Rose.

โ€œDonโ€™t mind them. Theyโ€™d piss themselves before they ever did what youโ€™re doing.โ€ She glanced over her shoulder. โ€œWhat made you offer up your services as a pirate, Lord Kitston? This lifeโ€™s not like it is in songs, you know. Thereโ€™s a little more shit and scurvy.โ€

โ€œA stroke of brilliance, I thought.โ€ Kit shot her a look of mock hurt. โ€œI take the Knight of Courtesy as my patron, mistress. She commands poets to beautify the worldโ€”but how can I, unless I see it?โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s a question Iโ€™d need a few more drinks to answer.โ€

As they drew closer to the shore, Loth took out his handkerchief and pressed it to his nose. Vinegar and fish and acrid smoke formed the rotten posy of Perunta. Kit kept up a smile, but his eyes were watering.

โ€œHow refreshing,โ€ he managed.

Melaugo did not smile. โ€œDo keep those pomanders,โ€ she said. โ€œWorth having, if only for comfort.โ€

โ€œIs there nothing we can do to protect ourselves?โ€ Loth said.

โ€œYou can try not to breathe. Folk say the plague is everywhere, and no one is sure how it spreads. Some wear veils or masks to keep it out.โ€

โ€œNothing else?โ€

โ€œOh, youโ€™ll see merchants peddling all sorts. Mirrors to deflect the foul vapors, countless potions and poulticesโ€”but you might as well swallow your gold. Best thing to do is put the afflicted out of their misery.โ€ She maneuvered the boat around a rock. โ€œI canโ€™t imagine you two have seen much death.โ€

โ€œI resent your assumption,โ€ Kit objected. โ€œI saw my dear old aunt upon her bier.โ€

โ€œYes, and I suppose she wore a red gown for her meeting with the Saint. I suppose she was as clean as a licked kitten and smelled of rosemary.โ€ When Kit grimaced, Melaugo said, โ€œYou have not seen death, my lord. You have only seen the mask we put on it.โ€

They sat in silence from then on. When the water was shallow enough to wade in, Melaugo stopped rowing.

โ€œIโ€™ll go no closer.โ€ She nodded to the city. โ€œYouโ€™re to go to a tavern called the Grapevine. Someone should collect you.โ€ She pushed Kit with the toe of her boot. โ€œGo, now. Iโ€™m a privateer, not a milk nurse.โ€

Loth stood. โ€œOur thanks to you, Mistress Melaugo. Your kindness will not be forgotten.โ€

โ€œPlease forget it. Iโ€™ve a reputation to uphold.โ€

They struck out from the boat with their chests. When they were both on the sand, dripping wet, Melaugo sculled back to theย Rose Eternal, singing in quavering Yscali.

Harlowe might have taken them both. They could have seen places that no longer had names, oceans that had never been cross-stitched by trading routes. Loth could have found himself at the prow of his own ship one dayโ€”but he was not that man, and never would be.

โ€œNot our most dignified entrance.โ€ Panting, Kit let his chest fall. โ€œHow do you suppose we find this tavern?โ€

โ€œBy . . . relying on our instincts,โ€ Loth said, unsure. โ€œThe commons must get on well enough.โ€

โ€œArteloth, we are courtiers. We have no useful instincts.โ€

Loth had no counterstroke.

They made slow progress into the city. The chests were heavy, and they had neither map nor compass.

Perunta had once been known as the most beautiful port in the West. These mud-clotted streets, overflowing with fish bones and ashes and swill, were not what Loth had imagined. A dead bird writhed with maggots. Cesspits overflowed. In one unlit square, a sanctuary lay in ruins. Sabran had heard reports that King Sigoso had executed the sanctarians who would not renounce the Saint, but she had not wanted to believe them.

Loth tried not to breathe as he stepped over a rivulet of dark liquid. He dared not stray too far from Kit. People jostled around them, shrouding their faces with veils or cloth rags.

They saw their first plague house on the next street. Boards had been nailed over the windows, the oak door stained with scarlet wings. Yscali words were chalked above it.

โ€œPity this house, for here we are cursed,โ€ Kit read.

Loth looked askance at him. โ€œYou read Yscali?โ€

โ€œI know. Youโ€™re shocked,โ€ Kit said gravely. โ€œAfter all, I am such a master of Inysh, such a prodigy of verse, it seems impossible that I could have room in my skull for another language, butโ€”โ€

โ€œKit.โ€

โ€œMelaugo told me the translation.โ€

The darkness was disorienting. Few candles were lit in Perunta, though braziers fumigated the broader streets. By dint of striding about with as much confidence as possible, Loth and Kit finally happened upon the tavern where they were to meet their escort to Cรกrscaro. Its sign displayed a bunch of succulent black grapes that had no business in this sump.

A coach waited outside. Built of what Loth was quite sure was iron, it terrified him even before he wondered what sort of horse could draw such a thing. Then he saw.

A great wolfish head turned to look at him, and a massive jaw, packed with teeth, slackened to let slip a rope of drool.

The creature was larger than a bear. Its thick neck tapered into a serpentine body, which could be moved by its muscular legs or a pair of bat wings. At its side was a second monster, this one furred with gray. Their eyes were identical. Embers from the Womb of Fire.

Jaculi.

The offspring of wyvern and wolf.

โ€œStay still,โ€ Kit whispered. โ€œThe bestiaries say that sudden movements make them pounce.โ€

One of the jaculi growled. Loth wanted to make the sign of the sword, but he dared not move.

How many Draconic creatures were awake in Yscalin?

The driver of the coach was an Yscal with oiled hair. โ€œLord Arteloth and Lord Kitston, I presume,โ€ he said.

Kit made an incoherent noise. The driver pulled a lever, and a set of steps unfolded. โ€œLeave the chests,โ€ he muttered. โ€œGet in.โ€

They obeyed.

Inside the coach, they found a woman awaiting them, dressed in a heavy crimson gown and a veil of black drum lace. She wore long velvet gloves, frilled at the elbow. A filigrain pomander hung at her side.

โ€œLord Arteloth. Lord Kitston,โ€ she said in a soft voice. Loth could just make out dark eyes through the veil. โ€œWelcome to Perunta. I am Priessa Yelarigas, First Lady of the Bedchamber to Her Radiance, the Donmata Marosa of the Draconic Kingdom of Yscalin.โ€

She was not afflicted. No one tortured by the plague could speak with so gentle a tongue.

โ€œThank you for meeting us here, my lady.โ€ Loth endeavored to steady his voice. Kit squeezed into the coach beside him. โ€œWe are honored to be received at the court of King Sigoso.โ€

โ€œHis Majesty is honored to receive you.โ€

A whip snapped outside, and the coach jolted forward.

โ€œI confess myself surprised that Her Radiance would send such a high-ranking lady to meet us,โ€ Loth said. โ€œSince this city is so full of the afflicted.โ€

โ€œIf the Nameless One wishes me to surrender my life to his plague, so be it,โ€ was her even reply.

Loth clenched his jaw. To think that these people had once professed loyalty to Sabran, and to Virtudom.

โ€œYou will be used to horses drawing a coach, my lords,โ€ Lady Priessa continued, โ€œbut it would take many days to cross Yscalin that way. Jaculi are fleet-footed and never tire.โ€

She folded her hands on her lap. Her fingers were home to several gold rings, fitted over the gloves.

โ€œYou should rest,โ€ she said. โ€œHowever swift our coach, we have some way to go, my lords.โ€

Loth attempted a smile. โ€œI would prefer to watch the scenery.โ€

โ€œAs you wish.โ€

In truth, it was too dark to see a thing out of the window, but he would not sleep with a wyrm-lover so close.

This was Draconic territory. He would rise from the silk pillow of nobility and find the spy within. He would harden himself to the dangers of his mission. So while Kit nodded off, Loth sat as still as he could, eyes propped open by sheer force of will, and made a promise to the Saint.

He would accept the road he had been thrust on. He would seek out Prince Wilstan. He would reunite his queen with her father. And he would find his way home.

He could not tell if Priessa Yelarigas slept, or if she watched him all night long.


There was smoke in her hair. She could smell it.

โ€œWhere in Virtudom did you find her?โ€

โ€œThe belfry, of all places.โ€

Footsteps. โ€œSaint, itโ€™s Mistress Duryan. Send word to Her Majesty at once. And fetch a physician.โ€

Her tongue was an ember in her mouth. When the strangers let go of her, she plunged into a fever dream.

She was a child again, shaded from the sun by the branches of the tree. The fruit hung above her head, too high for her to reach, and Jondu was callingย Come here, Eadaz, come and see.

Then the Prioress was lifting a cup to her lips, saying it was the blood of the Mother. It tasted like sunlight and laughter and prayer. She had burned like this in the days that followed, burned until the fire melted away her ignorance. That day she had been born anew.

When she woke, a familiar woman was at her bedside, pouring water from a ewer to a bowl.

โ€œMeg.โ€

Margret turned to her so quickly she almost knocked the ewer over.

โ€œEad!โ€ With a laugh of relief, she leaned in to kiss her brow. โ€œOh, thank the Saint. Youโ€™ve been insensible for days. The physicians said you had an ague, then the sweat, then the pestilenceโ€”โ€

โ€œSabran,โ€ Ead rasped. โ€œMeg, is she well?โ€

โ€œWe must first establish ifย youย are well.โ€ Margret felt her cheeks, her neck. โ€œDoes anything hurt? Should I fetch a physician?โ€

โ€œNo physicians. I am perfectly all right.โ€ Ead wet her lips. โ€œHave you anything to drink?โ€

โ€œOf course.โ€

Margret filled a cup and held it up to her mouth. Ead swallowed a little of the ale inside.

โ€œYou were in the belfry,โ€ Margret said. โ€œWhat were you doing up there?โ€

Ead pieced a lie together. โ€œI took a wrong turn in the library. I found the door to the clock tower open and thought I would explore, and there I was when the beast came. I suppose its . . . dreadful fumes gave me this fever.โ€ Before Margret could question this, she added, โ€œNow, tell me if Sabran is all right.โ€

โ€œSabran is as well as I have ever seen her, and all Inys knows that Fรฝredel himself could not touch her with his fire.โ€

โ€œWhere is the wyrm now?โ€

Margret returned the cup to the nightstand and soaked a cloth in the bowl.

โ€œGone.โ€ Her brow pinched. โ€œThere were no deaths, but he did set fire to a few storehouses. Captain Lintley says the city is on edge. Sabran sent out heralds to reassure the people of her protection, but no one can believe that a High Western has woken.โ€

โ€œIt was bound to happen,โ€ Ead said. โ€œSmaller things have been stirring for some time.โ€

โ€œAye, but never one of the overlords. Fortunately, most of the city has no idea that what they saw was the right wing of the Nameless One. All the tapestries depicting him are hidden away in here.โ€ Margret wrung out the cloth. โ€œHim and his infernal kin.โ€

โ€œHe said Orsul had already woken.โ€ Ead took another sip of ale. โ€œAnd Valeysa soon.โ€

โ€œAt least the others are long dead. And of course, the Nameless One himself cannot return. Not while the House of Berethnet endures.โ€

When Ead tried to sit up, her arms shook, and she slumped back into the pillows. Margret went to the door to speak to a servant before returning.

โ€œMeg,โ€ Ead said, while Margret dabbed her brow, โ€œI know what happened to Loth.โ€

Margret stilled. โ€œHe wrote to you?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Ead glanced toward the door. โ€œI overheard the Dukes Spiritual speaking with Sabran. Combe claims Loth has gone to Cรกrscaro as a spyโ€”to find out what is happening there, and to look for Wilstan Fynch. He said Loth went without permission . . . but I think we both know the truth of it.โ€

Slowly, Margret sat back. Her hand came to her middle.

โ€œSaint save my brother,โ€ she murmured. โ€œHe is no spy. Combe has sentenced him to death.โ€

Silence fell, broken only by the birds outside.

โ€œI told him, Ead,โ€ Margret finally said. โ€œI told him a friendship with a queen was not the same as any other, that he needed to be careful. But Loth never listens.โ€ She raised a sad, wry smile. โ€œMy brother thinks that everyone is just as good as he is.โ€

Ead tried to find some words of comfort, but had none. Loth was in too much danger.

โ€œI know. I tried to warn him, too.โ€ She took her friend by the hand. โ€œHe may yet find his way home.โ€

โ€œYou know he will not last long in Cรกrscaro.โ€

โ€œYou could petition Combe to bring him back. You are Lady Margret Beck.โ€

โ€œAnd Combe is the Duke of Courtesy. He has more influence and wealth than I ever will.โ€

โ€œCould you not tell Sabran yourself, then?โ€ Ead asked. โ€œShe clearly has her suspicions about the story.โ€

โ€œI cannot accuse Combe or anyone without proof of a conspiracy. If he told Sab that Loth went by choice, and I can present no evidence to counter him, then even she can do nothing.โ€

Ead knew Margret was right. She tightened her grip, and Margret released a shaking breath.

Someone tapped on the door. Margret murmured to whoever was outside. Now her siden was quiet, and her senses blunted, Ead could not hear what they said.

Her friend came back with a cup. โ€œCaudle,โ€ she said. โ€œTallys made it specially. Such a kind girl.โ€

The hot gruel, sweetened to the point of sickliness, was the answer to everything in Inys. Too weak to grip the handles, Ead let Margret spoon the awful stuff into her mouth.

Another knock. This time, when Margret opened it, she fell into a curtsy.

โ€œLeave us a moment, Meg.โ€

Ead knew that voice. With a glance in her direction, Margret left.

The Queen of Inys stepped into the room. Her riding habit was the dark green of holly.

โ€œCall if you have need of us, Majesty,โ€ said a gruff voice from outside.

โ€œI do not think a bedbound woman poses too great a danger to my person, Sir Gules, but thank you.โ€

The door closed. Ead sat up as best she could, conscious of her sweat-soaked shift and the sour taste in her mouth.

โ€œEad,โ€ Sabran said, looking her over. A flush touched her cheeks. โ€œI see you are at last awake. You have been absent from my lodgings for too long.โ€

โ€œForgive me, Your Majesty.โ€

โ€œYour generosity has been missed. I intended to call upon you earlier, but the physicians feared you might have the sweat.โ€ The sun lightened her eyes. โ€œYou were in the clock tower the day the wyrm came. I would like to know why.โ€

โ€œMadam?โ€

โ€œThe Royal Librarian found you there. Lady Oliva Marchyn tells me that some courtiers and servants use the tower for . . . venery.โ€

โ€œI have no lover, Majesty.โ€

โ€œI will brook no lewdness in this palace. Confess, and the Knight of Courtesy may show mercy.โ€

Ead sensed the queen would not swallow the story about taking a wrong turn. โ€œI went up to the belfry . . . to see if I couldย distract the beast from Your Majesty.โ€ She wished she had the strength to speak with more conviction. โ€œBut I need not have feared for you.โ€

It was the truth, stripped of its vital parts.

โ€œI trust that Ambassador uq-Ispad would not ask for a person of loose morals to be accepted into my Upper Household,โ€ Sabran concluded, โ€œbut do not let me hear of you visiting the clock tower again.โ€

โ€œOf course, madam.โ€

The queen walked to the open window. Setting a hand on the sill, she looked out at the palace grounds.

โ€œMajesty,โ€ Ead said, โ€œmay I ask why you went out to face the wyrm?โ€ A clement breeze floated in from outside. โ€œHad Fรฝredel slain you, all would have been lost.โ€

Sabran did not reply for a time.

โ€œHe threatened my people,โ€ she murmured. โ€œI had stepped out before I had considered what else might be done.โ€ She looked back at Ead. โ€œI have received another report about you. Lady Truyde utt Zeedeur has been telling my courtiers that you are a sorceress.โ€

Damn that red-haired gurnet. Ead almost admired her mettle, ignoring the threat of a curse.

โ€œMadam, I know nothing of sorcery,โ€ she said, tinging her words with a hint of scorn.

Sorceryย was not a word the Prioress much liked.

โ€œDoubtless,โ€ Sabran said, โ€œbut Lady Truyde has a notion that it wasย youย who protected me from Fรฝredel. She claims she saw you in the clock tower, casting a spell toward me.โ€

This time Ead was silent. There was no possible argument against the accusation.

โ€œOf course,โ€ the queen said, โ€œshe is a liar.โ€

Ead dared not speak.

โ€œIt was the Saint that drove back the wyrm. He held forth his heavenly shield to protect me from the fire. To imply that it was cheap sorcery comes very close to treason,โ€ Sabran stated, her voice flat. โ€œI have half a mind to send her to the Dearn Tower.โ€

All the tension rushed out of Ead. A laugh of relief bubbled in her, threatening to brim over.

โ€œShe is only young, Your Majesty,โ€ she said, forcing it down. โ€œWith youth comes folly.โ€

โ€œShe is old enough to accuse you falsely,โ€ Sabran pointed out. โ€œDo you not crave vengeance?โ€

โ€œI prefer the taste of mercy. It lets me sleep at night.โ€

Those stone-cold eyes ran her through. โ€œPerhaps you imply that I should show mercy more often.โ€

Ead was too exhausted to fear that look. โ€œNo. Only that I doubt Lady Truyde meant insult to Your Majesty. More likely she has a grudge against me, since I was promoted to a position she desires.โ€

Sabran lifted her chin.

โ€œYou will return to your duties in three days. I will have the Royal Physician take care of you until then,โ€ she said. Ead raised her eyebrows. โ€œI need you well,โ€ Sabran continued, rising to leave. โ€œOnce the announcement is made, I will need all my ladies by my side.โ€

โ€œAnnouncement, madam?โ€

Sabran had turned her back to her, but Ead saw her shoulders tense.

โ€œThe announcement,โ€ she said, โ€œof my betrothal to Aubrecht Lievelyn, High Prince of the Free State of Mentendon.โ€

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