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Chapter no 13

The Wicked King (The Folk of the Air, 2)

โ€ŒThe Living Council gathers in the High Kingโ€™s enormous chambers, around a table inlaid with the symbol of the Greenbriar line, flowers and thorns with coiling roots.โ€Œ

Nihuar, Randalin, Baphen, and Mikkel are seated, while Fala stands in the middle of the floor singing a little song:

Fishies. Fishies. Putting on their feet. Marry a fish and life will be sweet.

Fry her in a pan and pick out her bones. Fishy blood is cold โ€™top a throne.

Cardan throws himself onto a nearby couch with dramatic flair, disdaining the table entirely. โ€œThis is ridiculous. Where is Nicasia?โ€

โ€œWe must discuss this offer,โ€ says Randalin.

โ€œOffer?โ€ scoffs Madoc, taking a seat. โ€œThe way it was delivered, I am not sure how he could marry the girl without seeming as though the land feared the sea and capitulated to its demands.โ€

โ€œPerhaps it was a trifle heavy-handed,โ€ says Nihuar.

โ€œTime for us to prepare,โ€ Madoc says. โ€œIf itโ€™s war she wants, it is war we will give her. I will pull the salt from the sea before I let Elfhame tremble over Orlaghโ€™s wrath.โ€

War, exactly what I feared Madoc would rush us into, and yet now it

arrives without his instigation.

โ€œWell,โ€ says Cardan, closing his eyes as though he is going to nap right there. โ€œNo need for me to do a thing then.โ€

Madocโ€™s lip curls. Randalin looks slightly discomposed. For so long, he wanted Cardan at meetings of the Living Council, but now he isnโ€™t quite sure what to do with his actual presence.

โ€œYou could take Nicasia as your consort instead of your bride,โ€ says Randalin. โ€œGet an heir on her fit to rule over land and sea.โ€

โ€œNow I am not to marry at Orlaghโ€™s command, only breed?โ€ Cardan demands.

โ€œI want to hear from Jude,โ€ Madoc says, to my enormous surprise.

The rest of the Council turns toward me. They seem utterly baffled by Madocโ€™s words. In meetings, my only value has been as a conduit between themselves and the High King. Now, with his representing himself, I might as well be one of the little wooden figures on a strategy board for all they expect me to speak.

โ€œWhatever for?โ€ Randalin wants to know.

โ€œBecause we didnโ€™t heed her before. She told us that the Queen of the Undersea was going to move against the land. Had we attended her, we might not now be scrambling for strategy.โ€

Randalin winces.

โ€œThatโ€™s true enough,โ€ says Nihuar, as though she is trying to think of a way to explain away this troubling sign of competence.

โ€œPerhaps she will tell us what else she knows,โ€ Madoc says. Mikkelโ€™s eyebrows rise.

โ€œIs there more?โ€ Baphen asks. โ€œJude?โ€ prompts Madoc.

I weigh my next words. โ€œAs I said, Orlagh has been communicating with Balekin. I donโ€™t know what information heโ€™s passed on to her, but the sea sends Folk to the land with gifts and messages for him.โ€

Cardan looks surprised and clearly unhappy. I realize that I neglected to tell him about Balekin and the Undersea, despite informing the Council. โ€œDid you know about Nicasia as well?โ€ he asks.

โ€œI, uhโ€”โ€ I begin, foundering.

โ€œShe likes to keep her own counsel on the Council,โ€ Baphen says with a sly look.

As though itโ€™s my fault none of them listens to me.

Randalin glowers. โ€œYou never explained how you learned any of this.โ€

โ€œIf youโ€™re asking whether I have secrets, I could easily ask the same of you,โ€ I remind him. โ€œPreviously, you werenโ€™t interested in any of mine.โ€

โ€œPrince of the land, prince under the waves,โ€ says Fala. โ€œPrince of prisons, prince of knaves.โ€

โ€œBalekinโ€™s no strategist,โ€ Madoc says, which is as close to admitting he was behind Eldredโ€™s execution as heโ€™s ever done. โ€œHeโ€™s ambitious, though. And proud.โ€

โ€œSpurn the Sea once, we will have your blood,โ€ says Cardan. โ€œThatโ€™s Oak, I imagine.โ€

Madoc and I share a swift look. The one thing we agree on is that Oak will be kept safe. I am glad heโ€™s far from here, inland, with both spies and knights looking out for him. But if Cardan is correct about what the line means, I wonder if he will need even more protection than that.

โ€œIf the Undersea is planning to steal Oak, then perhaps they promised Balekin the crown,โ€ says Mikkel. โ€œSafer for there to be only two in the bloodline, when one is needed to crown the other. Three is superfluous. Three is dangerous.โ€

Which is a roundabout way of saying somebody should kill Balekin before he tries to assassinate Cardan.

I wouldnโ€™t mind seeing Balekin dead, either, but Cardan has been stubbornly against the execution of his brother. I think of the words he said to me in the Court of Shadows:ย I may be rotten, but my one virtue is that Iโ€™m not a killer.

โ€œI will take that under advisement, advisors,โ€ says Cardan. โ€œNow, I wish to speak with Nicasia.โ€

โ€œBut we still havenโ€™t decidedโ€ฆโ€ Randalin says, trailing off when he sees the scorching glare Cardan levels at him.

โ€œJude, go fetch her,โ€ says the High King of Elfhame. Another order.

I get up, grinding my teeth, and go to the door. The Ghost is waiting for me. โ€œWhereโ€™s Nicasia?โ€ I ask.

It turns out that sheโ€™s been put in my rooms, with the Roach. Her dove- gray dress is arranged on my divan as though sheโ€™s posing for a painting. I wonder if the reason she rushed off was so she could change clothing for this audience.

โ€œLook what the wind blew in,โ€ she says when she sees me. โ€œThe High King requires your presence,โ€ I tell her.

She gives me a strange smile and rises. โ€œIf only that were true.โ€

Down the hall we go, knights watching her pass. She looks majestic and miserable at once, and when the huge doors to Cardanโ€™s apartments open, she goes inside with her head high.

While I was gone, a servant brought in tea. It steeps in a pot at the center of a low table. A cup of it steams in the cage of Cardanโ€™s slender fingers.

โ€œNicasia,โ€ he drawls. โ€œYour mother has sent a message for us both.โ€

She frowns, taking in the other councilors, the lack of an invitation to sit, and the lack of an offer to take tea. โ€œThis was her scheme, not mine.โ€

He leans forward, no longer sleepy or bored but every bit the terrifying faerie lord, empty-eyed and incalculably powerful. โ€œPerhaps, but you knew sheโ€™d do it, Iโ€™ll wager. Do not play with me. We know each other too well for tricks.โ€

Nicasia looks down, eyelashes brushing her cheeks. โ€œShe desires a different kind of alliance.โ€ Perhaps the Council might see her as meek and humbled, but I am not yet so foolish.

Cardan stands, hurling his teacup at the wall, where it shatters. โ€œTell the Queen of the Undersea that if she threatens me again, she will find her daughter my prisoner instead of my bride.โ€

Nicasia looks stricken.

Randalin finally finds his voice. โ€œIt is not meet to throw things at the daughter of the Undersea.โ€

โ€œLittle fishie,โ€ says Fala, โ€œtake off your legs and swim away.โ€ Mikkel barks out a laugh.

โ€œWe must not be hasty,โ€ says Randalin helplessly. โ€œPrincess, let the High King take more time to consider.โ€

I worried that Cardan would be amused or flattered or tempted. Instead, heโ€™s clearly furious.

โ€œLet me speak with my mother.โ€ Nicasia looks around the room, at the councilors, at me, before seeming to decide that sheโ€™s not going to persuade Cardan to send us away. She does the next best thing, turning her gaze only to him and speaking as though weโ€™re not there. โ€œThe sea is harsh, and so are Queen Orlaghโ€™s methods. She demands when she ought to request, but that doesnโ€™t mean there isnโ€™t wisdom in what she wants.โ€

โ€œWould you marry me, then? Tie the sea to the land and bind us together in misery?โ€ Cardan gazes at her with all the scorn he once reserved for me. It feels as though the world has been turned upside down.

But Nicasia does not back down. Instead, she takes a step closer. โ€œWe would be legends,โ€ she tells him. โ€œLegends need not concern themselves with something as small as happiness.โ€

And then, without waiting to be dismissed, she turns and goes out.

Without being ordered, the guards part to let her by.

โ€œAh,โ€ says Madoc. โ€œThat one behaves as though she is queen already.โ€ โ€œOut,โ€ says Cardan, and then when no one reacts, he makes a wild gesture

in the air. โ€œOut! Out. I am certain you wish to deliberate further as though I am not in the room, so go do it where I am not in the room. Go and trouble

me no more.โ€

โ€œYour pardon,โ€ says Randalin. โ€œWe meant onlyโ€”โ€

โ€œOut!โ€ he says, at which point even Fala heads for the door. โ€œExcept Jude,โ€ he calls. โ€œYou, tarry a moment.โ€

You.ย I turn toward him, the humiliation of the night still hot on my skin. I think of all my secrets and plans, and of what it will mean if we go to war with the Undersea, of what Iโ€™ve risked and what is already forever lost.

I let the others leave, waiting until the last of the Living Council is out of the room.

โ€œGive me an order again,โ€ I say, โ€œand I will show you true shame. Lockeโ€™s games will be as nothing to what I make you do.โ€

With that, I follow the others into the hall.

 

 

In the Court of Shadows, I consider what moves are possible.

Murder Balekin.ย Mikkel wasnโ€™t wrong that it would make it harder for the Undersea to wrest the crown from Cardanโ€™s head.

Marry Cardan to someone else.ย I think of Mother Marrow and almost regret interfering. If Cardan had a hagโ€™s daughter for a bride, perhaps Orlagh wouldnโ€™t have engaged in such martial matchmaking.

Of course, I would have had other problems.

A headache starts up behind my eyes. I rub my fingers over the bridge of my nose.

With Tarynโ€™s wedding so close, Oak will be here in mere days. I donโ€™t like the thought of it with Orlaghโ€™s threat hanging over Elfhame. He is too valuable a piece on the strategy board, too necessary for Balekin, too dangerous for Cardan.

I recall the last time I saw Balekin, the influence he had over the guard, the way he behaved as though he were the king in exile. And all my reports from Vulciber suggest that not much has changed. He demands luxuries, he entertains visitors from the sea who leave puddles and pearls behind. I wonder what theyโ€™ve told him, what promises heโ€™s been made. Despite Nicasiaโ€™s belief that he wonโ€™t be necessary, he must be hoping just the opposite.

And then I recall something elseโ€”the woman who wanted to tell me about my mother. Sheโ€™s been there the whole time, and if sheโ€™s willing to sell one kind of information for her freedom, maybe sheโ€™s willing to sell another.

As I think over what Iโ€™d like to know, it occurs to me how much more

useful it would be to send informationย toย Balekin, instead of getting information out of him.

If I let that prisoner believe I was temporarily freeing her to tell me about my mother, then I could drop some information in her ear. Something about Oak, something about his whereabouts or vulnerability. She wouldnโ€™t be lying when she passed it on; she would believe sheโ€™d heard true and spoke truth.

I puzzle further and realize, no, itโ€™s too soon for that. What I need now is to give the prisoner simpler information that she can pass on, information I can control and verify, so that I can be sure sheโ€™s a good source.

Balekin wanted to send Cardan a message. I will find a way to let him.

The Court of Shadows has begun to formalize the scribing of documents on the denizens of Elfhame, but none of the current scrolls deal with any prisoners in the Tower but Balekin. Walking down the hall, I go to the Bombโ€™s newly dug office.

Sheโ€™s there, throwing daggers at a painting of a sunset. โ€œYou didnโ€™t like it?โ€ I ask, pointing to the canvas.

โ€œI liked it well enough,โ€ she says. โ€œNow I like it better.โ€

โ€œI need a prisoner from the Tower of Forgetting. Do we have enough uniforms to dress up some of our new recruits? The knights there have seen my face. Vulciber can help smooth things over, but Iโ€™d rather not risk it. Better to forge some papers and have her out with fewer questions.โ€

She frowns in concentration. โ€œWhom do you want?โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s a woman.โ€ I take a piece of paper and grid out the bottom floor as well as I can. โ€œShe was up the staircase. Here. All on her own.โ€

The Bomb frowns. โ€œCan you describe her?โ€

I shrug. โ€œThin face, horns. Pretty, I guess. Youโ€™re all pretty.โ€

โ€œWhat kind of horns?โ€ the Bomb asks, tilting her head to one side as though sheโ€™s considering something. โ€œStraight? Curved?โ€

I gesture to the top of my head where I remember hers being. โ€œLittle ones.

Goatish, I guess. And she had a tail.โ€

โ€œThere arenโ€™t that many Folk in the Tower,โ€ the Bomb explains. โ€œThe woman youโ€™re describingโ€ฆโ€

โ€œDo you know her?โ€ I ask.

โ€œIโ€™ve never spoken a word to her,โ€ the Bomb says. โ€œBut I know who she is

โ€”or who she was: one of Eldredโ€™s lovers who begot him a son. Thatโ€™s Cardanโ€™s mother.โ€

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