โThe Living Council was assembled during Eldredโs time, ostensibly to help the High King make decisions, and they have calcified into a group difficult to oppose. Itโs not so much that the ministers have raw individual powerโ although many are themselves formidableโbut as a collective, it has the authority to make many smaller decisions regarding the running of the kingdom. The kind of small decisions that, taken together, could put even a king in a bind.โ
After the disrupted coronation and the murder of the royal family, after the irregularity with the crown, the Council is skeptical of Cardanโs youth and confused by my rise to power.
Snapdragon leads me to the meeting, beneath a braided dome of willow trees at a table of fossilized wood. The ministers watch me walk across the grass, and I look at them in turnโthe Unseelie Minister, a troll with a thick head of shaggy hair with pieces of metal braided into it; the Seelie Minister, a green woman who looks like a mantis; the Grand General, Madoc; the Royal Astrologer, a very tall, dark-skinned man with a sculpted beard and celestial ornaments in the long fall of his navy blue hair; the Minister of Keys, a wizened old hob with ramโs horns and goat eyes; and the Grand Fool, who wears pale lavender roses on his head to match his purple motley.
All along the table are carafes of water and wine, dishes of dried fruit.
I lean over to one of the servants and send them for a pot of the strongest tea they can find. I will need it.
Randalin, the Minister of Keys, sits in the High Kingโs chair, the wooden
back of the throne-like seat is burned with the royal crest. I note the moveโ and the assumptions inherent in it. In the five months since assuming the mantle of High King, Cardan has not come to the Council. Only one chair is emptyโbetween Madoc and Fala, the Grand Fool. I remain standing.
โJude Duarte,โ says Randalin, fixing me with his goat eyes, โWhere is the High King?โ
Standing in front of them is always intimidating, and Madocโs presence makes it worse. He makes me feel like a child, overeager to say or do something clever. A part of me wants nothing more than to prove I am more than what they suppose me to beโthe weak and silly appointee of a weak and silly king.
To prove that there is another reason for Cardan to have chosen a mortal seneschal than because I can lie for him.
โI am here in his place,โ I say. โTo speak in his stead.โ
Randalinโs gaze is withering. โThere is a rumor that he shot one of his paramours last night. Is it true?โ
A servant sets the asked-for pot of tea at my elbow, and I am grateful both for the fortification and for an excuse not to immediately answer.
โToday courtiers told me that girl wore an anklet of swinging rubies sent to her as an apology, but that she could not stand on her own,โ says Nihuar, the Seelie representative. She purses her small green lips. โI find everything about that to be in poor taste.โ
Fala the Fool laughs, clearly finding it toย hisย taste. โRubies for the spilling of her ruby-red blood.โ
That couldnโt be true. Cardan would have had to arrange it in the time it took me to get from my rooms to the Council. But that doesnโt mean someone else didnโt arrange it on his behalf. Everyone is eager to help a king.
โYouโd prefer heโd killed her outright?โ I say. My skills in diplomacy are nowhere near as honed as my skills in aggravation. Besides, Iโm tired.
โI wouldnโt mind,โ says the Unseelie representative, Mikkel, with a chuckle. โOur new High King seems Unseelie through and through, and he will favor us, I think. We could give him a debauch better than the one his Master of Revels brags over, now that we know what he likes.โ
โThere are other stories,โ continues Randalin. โThat one of the guard shot High King Cardan to save that courtierโs life. That she is bearing the royal heir. You must tell the High King that his Council stands ready to advise him so that his rule is not plagued by such tales.โ
โIโll be sure to do so,โ I say.
The Royal Astrologer, Baphen, gives me a searching look, as though reading correctly my intention not to talk to Cardan about any of this. โThe
High King is tied to the land and to his subjects. A king is a living symbol, a beating heart, a star upon which Elfhameโs future is written.โ He speaks quietly, and yet somehow his voice carries. โSurely you have noticed that since his reign began, the isles are different. Storms come in faster. Colors are a bit more vivid, smells are sharper.
โThings have been seen in the forests,โ he goes on. โAncient things, long thought gone from the world, come to peer at him.
โWhen he becomes drunk, his subjects become tipsy without knowing why. When his blood falls, things grow. Why, High Queen Mab called Insmire, Insmoor, and Insweal from the sea. All the isles of Elfhame, formed in a single hour.โ
My heart speeds faster the longer that Baphen talks. My lungs feel as though they cannot get enough air. Because none of this can be describing Cardan. He cannot be connected to the land so profoundly, cannot be able to do all that and yet be under my control.
I think of the blood on his coverletโand beside it, the scattered white flowers.
When his blood falls, things grow.
โAnd so you see,โ says Randalin, unaware that I am freaking out, โthe High Kingโs every decision changes Elfhame and influences its inhabitants. During Eldredโs reign, when children were born, they were perforce brought before him to pledge themselves to the kingdom. But in the low Courts, some heirs were fostered in the mortal world, growing up outside of Eldredโs reach. Those changeling children returned to rule without making vows to the Blood Crown. At least one Court has made such a changeling its queen. And who knows how many wild Folk managed to avoid making vows.โ
โWe need to watch the Queen of the Undersea, too,โ I say. โSheโs got a plan and is going to move against us.โ
โWhatโs this?โ Madoc says, interested in the conversation for the first time.
โImpossible,โ says Randalin. โHow would you have heard such a thing?โ โBalekin has been meeting with her representatives,โ I say.
Randalin snorts. โAnd I suppose you have that from the princeโs own lips?โ
If I bit my tongue any harder, Iโd bite clean through it. โI have it from more than one source. If their alliance was with Eldred, then itโs over.โ
โThe sea Folk have cold hearts,โ Mikkel says, which sounds at first as though heโs agreeing with me, but the approving tone of his voice undermines it.
โWhy doesnโt Baphen consult his star charts?โ Randalin says placatingly.
โIf he finds a threat prophesied there, we shall discuss further.โ โI am telling youโโ I insist, frustrated.
That is the moment that Fala jumps up on the table and begins to danceโ interpretively, I think. Madoc grunts out a laugh. A bird alights on Nihuarโs shoulder, and they begin gossiping back and forth in low whispers and trills.
It is clear that none of them wants to believe me. How could I know something they do not, after all? I am too young, too green, too mortal. โNicasiaโโ I begin again.
Madoc smiles. โYour little friend from school.โ
I wish I could tell Madoc that the only reason he still sits on the Council is because of me. Despite his running Dain through with his own hand, he is still the Grand General. I could say that I want to keep him busy, that heโs a weapon better deployed by us than against us, that itโs easier for my spies to watch him when I know where he is, but a part of me knows he is still Grand General because I couldnโt bring myself to strip so much authority from my dad.
โThere is still the matter of Grimsen,โ says Mikkel, moving on as though I have not spoken. โThe High King has welcomed the Alderkingโs smith, maker of the Blood Crown. Now he dwells among us but does not yet labor for us.โ
โWe must make him welcome,โ says Nihuar in a rare moment of sympathy between the Unseelie and Seelie factions. โThe Master of Revels has made plans for the Hunterโs Moon. Perhaps he can add an entertainment for Grimsenโs benefit.โ
โDepends on what Grimsenโs into, I guess,โ I say, giving up on convincing them that Orlagh is going to move against us. I am on my own.
โRooting in the dirt, mayhap,โ Fala says. โLooking for trifles.โ โTruffles,โ Randalin corrects automatically.
โOh no,โ says Fala, wrinkling his nose. โNot those.โ
โI will endeavor to discover his preferred amusements.โ Randalin makes a small note on a piece of paper. โI have also been told that a representative from the Court of Termites will be attending the Hunterโs Moon revel.โ
I try not to let my surprise show. The Court of Termites, led by Lord Roiben, was helpful in getting Cardan onto the throne. And for their efforts I promised that when Lord Roiben asked me for a favor, Iโd do it. But I have no idea what he might want, and now isnโt a good time for another complication. Randalin clears his throat and turns, giving me a pointed look. โConvey our regrets to the High King that we were unable to advise him directly, and let him know we stand ready to come to his aid. If you fail to impress this
upon him, we will find other means of doing so.โ
I make a short bow and no reply to what is clearly a threat.
As I leave, Madoc falls into step alongside me.
โI understand youโve spoken with your sister,โ he says, thick eyebrows lowered in at least a mimicry of concern.
I shrug, reminding myself that he didnโt speak a word on my behalf today.
He gives me an impatient look. โDonโt tell me how busy you are with that boy king, though I imagine he takes some looking after.โ
Somehow, in just a few words, he has turned me into a sullen daughter and himself into her long-suffering father.
I sigh, defeated. โIโve spoken with Taryn.โ โGood,โ he says. โYouโre too much alone.โ
โDonโt pretend at solicitude,โ I say. โIt insults us both.โ
โYou donโt believe that I could care about you, even after you betrayed me?โ He watches me with his cat eyes. โIโm still your father.โ
โYouโre my fatherโs murderer,โ I blurt out.
โI can be both,โ Madoc says, smiling, showing those teeth.
I tried to rattle him, but I succeeded only in rattling myself. Despite the passage of months, the memory of his final aborted lunge once he realized he was poisoned is fresh in my mind. I remember his looking as though he would have liked to cleave me in half. โWhich is why neither of us should pretend youโre not furious with me.โ
โOh, Iโm angry, daughter, but I am also curious.โ He makes a dismissive gesture toward the Palace of Elfhame. โIs this really what you wanted?ย Him?โ
As with Taryn, I choke on the explanation I cannot give.
When I do not speak, he comes to his own conclusions. โAs I thought. I didnโt appreciate you properly. I dismissed your desire for knighthood. I dismissed your capacity for strategy, for strengthโand for cruelty. That was my mistake, and one I will not make again.โ
I am not sure if thatโs a threat or an apology.
โCardan is the High King now, and so long as he wears the Blood Crown, I am sworn to serve him,โ he says. โBut no oath binds you. If you regret your move, make another. There are games yet to play.โ
โI already won,โ I remind him. He smiles. โWe will speak again.โ
As he walks off I canโt help thinking that maybe I was better off when he was ignoring me.