Authors: Amy Raby
He was out of the Imperial Palace and halfway to one of his bolt-holes when he realized that some days ago, when Augustan had murdered his father, Janto had unknowingly ascended the throneâfor whatever that was worth. He was now king of Mosar. It was almost funny.
R
hianne sat quietly in her receiving room, still in her ridiculous white gown, waiting for the maelstrom that was certain to arrive as soon as Florian extricated himself from the remainder of the ceremony. She hadn't
planned
on walking out. It had just happened. Morgan had said she'd had choices. It appeared that for better or for worse, she'd just made one. Probably for worse. She'd rebelled against Florian in dozens of clandestine ways over the years, but never had she challenged him openly. She could envision no scenario in which this worked out well for her.
A thump and a grating noise outside her door told her the bar was sliding back, granting someone entrance to her chambers. She swallowed. The door opened, and, no surprise, Florian stepped through, looking angry as a harassed hornet.
She leapt to her feet, a gesture of respect that had become as reflexive as blinking, aware of the irony after she'd shown him the disrespect of walking out of the ceremony. Perhaps it would appease him a tiny bit.
He strode toward her, stepping so close she was tempted to cower. She held her ground, trembling, as he towered over her.
“I was raised not to strike a woman in anger,” Florian grated through his teeth. “That's for the lower families. But
never
have I been so tempted.” He pointed at a chair.
“Sit
.
”
Wordlessly, Rhianne sat.
Florian took the seat across from her. “This morning's ceremony was to be Augustan's moment of glory, after nine months of hard campaigning. You spoiled it with your childish behavior. You shall
immediately
make amends. You shall sit down at your writing desk and compose a brief speech of apology. This you will show to me, and after I approve it, you will go to Augustan and, in front of his servants and top-ranking officers,
humbly beg his forgiveness
for the insult you delivered him in the hall this morning.”
“Uncleâ”
“This is not a negotiation,” said Florian. “I am giving you orders. We will follow your apology with a gift. I was thinkingâ”
“Uncleâ”
“Stop interrupting, girl! Must I call the guards and order you beaten for your intransigence?”
“I'm not marrying Augustan.”
For a moment, he was actually speechless.
Rhianne leapt into the opening of his stunned silence and spoke in a rush. “I hate him, and he doesn't care for me either. I cannot marry him. I'm sorry to disappoint you.”
Florian remained silent. A muscle bulged at the back of his jaw. After a moment, he turned his back on her, pacing the room. “Let me make something clear to you. Do you see all the fine things in here?” He swept his arm to indicate the furnishings.
“Yes,” she said softly.
“Take a moment to recall the other fine things you've had. Your horse and magical training, fine clothes, fine food, the imperial baths, the guards who protect youâ”
“Guards who
spy
on me.”
“For your protection,” said Florian. “Do you think I give you those things out of the goodness of my heart? No. You are here to serve a purpose, just as I serve a purpose, as Lucien serves a purpose. Your purpose, Rhianne, is marriage. Marriage to the right man, to strengthen the family line and strengthen the empire through the governance of a new vassal state.”
Rhianne drew up her knees and clutched them beneath her gown. What he said was true. She harbored no illusions about her role in the imperial family. And yet. “I never asked for these things. I never asked for this
life
. You took me. You brought me here, without my parents' consentâ”
His nose wrinkled in a snarl. “You were
always
meant for it, even if my sister, your mother, shirked her responsibilities.” He pointed at her. “
You
shall not shirk yours.” After a moment, he blinked and sighed, rubbing his face. In a gentler voice, he continued. “Why did you walk out on the ceremony? Was it because of the heads?”
Rhianne nodded. “Uncle, it's not right. Those were innocent people Augustan murdered for no reason except that they were in his way. I cannot love a man who thinks he should be praised for such a thing.”
Florian smiled sadly. “He should not have brought the heads to the ceremonyânot with a lady present. I'll speak with him about it, and that will pave the way for your apology. He was impolitic, but you were rude. Both of you were at fault. You must understand he has been at war a long time, and solely among men. He forgets that women are sensitive and have no stomach for war, especially its gruesome side.”
Florian didn't understand. It wasn't the gruesomeness of the heads that bothered her, but what they represented. Her country had done something horrid, and it shamed her. She couldn't write the apology he asked from her, because it would make her complicit in those crimes. Crimes against Janto and his people.
“Still,” said Florian sternly, “this nonsense from you must cease. Augustan killed those people on my orders, and I gave those orders for the good of the empire. I do not expect you to understand why I make hard decisions that you find unsavory, but it is not your place to question my commands. It is your place, as it is Augustan's, to obey them. Therefore I expect your written apology, for my review, within the hour.”
Rhianne blinked back tears. She couldn't do this. “I'm not writing it.”
His expression darkened. “Do not try my patience. Wedding plans are under way, and I've no time to indulge your childish whims. I was raised never to strike a lady, but I will not hesitate to order you beaten if that's what it takes to convince you of my seriousness.”
“Cancel the wedding,” said Rhianne. Gods, he was going to destroy her for this. “Forced marriages are illegal in Kjall.”
“My dear.” Florian's eyes narrowed. “I'm the emperor. Do you think you can tell me what is and isn't legal?”
Rhianne shivered. “The law applies to everyone.”
Florian laughed. “Your written apology. Until I have it, you are confined to your rooms. You will have no visitors, attend no events, and have nothing brought to you until you think better of your foolishness. And if you think these are the worst things that can happen to you, think again. My forbearance will last only so long.”
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Iolo and Sirali looked downcast when Janto met them in the usual spot beneath the trees. He supposed all the Mosari must feel as he did, though perhaps with less personal grief. Most of the others did not know the fates of their families back on the island.
“Is it true?” Iolo said softly. “The rumors about the king and queen?”
“They're dead,” said Janto.
“I'm sorry,” said Iolo. “That makes you king, doesn't it?”
Janto nodded.
Iolo inclined his head. “Your Majesty.”
Janto waved his hand. “It's meaningless. We have no country, not that I won't do everything in my power to win it back. How are the slaves taking the news?”
“Badly,” said Iolo. “There have been suicides.”
Sirali nodded. “While Mosar held out, we had hope. Now we have nothing.”
“I came to say good-bye,” said Janto. “I'm leaving Kjall.”
Their foreheads wrinkled with concern. “Where will you go?” asked Iolo.
“I've a ship that supports me,” said Janto. “I sent it away a few days ago to relay some information, and when it returns, I'm going to have it pick me up and find Kal's fleet. I'll join my brother, and we'll try to retake Mosar.”
Iolo's eyebrows rose. “Does Kal-Torres have the men to do that?”
“I can't imagine he does, but we'll sell our lives as dearly as we can. There's nothing else left for us. I only wish I'd accomplished more here.”
“Right, and you helped the slave women,” pointed out Sirali.
Janto nodded. At least there was that.
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Rhianne crawled through the hypocaust on hands and knees, ignoring the stifling heat and counting heat-glows as she followed her usual pattern. She wasn't running awayânot yet. That would take some planning. But she had to talk to somebody about her plight, and Morgan seemed the only option. He always talked sense, and Florian didn't keep a close eye on him the way he did Lucien. Morgan would help her figure out what to do.
She reached the access tunnel, where the ceiling became high enough to stand. She rose to her feet, approached the door, and eased it open, just a crack. There were the guards at the end of the short hallway.
Waitâwhy were they wearing orange? Those weren't ordinary guards. They were Legaciatti! Magical guards, immune to her spells.
She pushed the door gently shut, her heart thrumming wildly against her ribs as she prayed they wouldn't turn and see her. The hypocaust guards had always been ordinary palace guardsânever Legaciatti. Why the change? Did Florian know about her secret excursions from the palace? How long had he known?
She headed back into the hypocaust, dropping onto hands and knees as the ceiling angled sharply downward. There was nothing for it but to return to the prison of her rooms. She was trapped.
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Janto sat on the pier with his back to a post, invisible. Heavily laden boats sliced through the harbor waters, some loaded with supplies, others with troops. A battalion of soldiers massed on a nearby beach, awaiting the boats that delivered them, thirty at a time, to troop ships riding at double anchor.
A bosun's shrill voice carried on the wind. “Man the falls! Haul taut singly! Hoist away!” Janto turned to watch the shallow-draft frigate nearest him take sealed casks on board with its water-whip. Other men were up on the yards, doing something to the sails; still others clung to ropes slung over the stern. Across the water echoed the knocks of hammers and the scrape of an adze.
The fleet was preparing to sail again. He'd assumed they were going to Mosar, since Augustan was returning there with Rhianne, but it was odd they were loading so many soldiers. Why carry them all the way to Kjall just to send them back to Mosar? It didn't make sense.
Another thing that didn't make sense: he'd seen new cargo loadedâthings like warm cloaks and blankets. Why would anyone need those things on tropical Mosar?
No. The troops were going elsewhere. He needed to find out where.
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Rhianne lay prone on the settee in her rooms, trying not to move or even breathe too deeply. Florian had waited two days for her to change her mind, and when she hadn't, he'd made good on his threat. Her back, striped with a whip and still raw, hurt like she couldn't believe. Never again would she speak casually about someone receiving the lash as a punishment. There was nothing trivial about it.
She glanced up as the bolt slid back from her door. It couldn't be food. Florian was sending her prison rationsâbread and cheese and water, three times a dayâand it wasn't time for lunch yet. She wasn't permitted visitors, so it could only be Florian, whose presence she dreaded.
But it was Lucien! A pleasant surprise. She gritted her teeth and raised herself just enough to make eye contact. “I didn't think I was allowed to see you.”
“Florian thought I might talk some sense into you.” Lucien grinned and rolled his eyes. He looked again, perhaps noticing her awkward pose and loose clothing, and stopped short. The color drained from his face. “Did he have you
whipped
?”
“He did,” she grunted. “It was much worse than I thought it'd be.”
Lucien turned away, as if he couldn't bear to look, though her injuries were bandaged and covered. He limped with his crutch to the far side of the room. “I didn't think he'd go that far. How many lashes?”
“Ten.”
He rounded on her, his hands balled into fists. “That leaves scars.”
“Not if a Healer closes the wounds. He says he'll send a Healer when I start cooperating.”
Lucien scrubbed a hand through his hair and limped back to her. He sat, leaning his crutch on the chair. “What he's doing is wrong. You know it, and I know it. But you should do as he says. If this were a Caturanga match, he'd have you in every possible wayâhis Traitor behind your enemy lines, his Tribune under the Soldier's influence, and all your battalions and cavalry mired in terrain while he's got a clean run across the board. He has every advantage, and you have none.”
“I have my integrity,” said Rhianne. “And the law's on my side.”
Lucien smiled sadly. “Florian is subject to no law. But think on this, Rhianneâhe won't be emperor forever.” He lowered his voice. “When I ascend the throne, everything will be different. If Augustan mistreats you in any way, I'll send him packing the moment I become emperor. You have my word on it. And then you shall marry whomever you please. But until that day comes, you and I have to swallow our pride and accept our orders as they come. Florian destroys people who oppose him. I've seen him do it.”
“I know you mean well,” said Rhianne, “but Florian is healthy and strong. He could rule for another forty years.”
Lucien took her hand and squeezed it. “You speak as if you have a choice in this matter. You don't.”
“I could run like my mother did. I'd have done it already, except . . .” She sighed in exasperation. “There are Legaciatti guarding the hypocaust now. Florian must know. Or else it was a lucky guess.”
Lucien lowered his head. “Florian doesn't know. I put the Legaciatti there.”
“You!” hissed Rhianne. “Why would you put them there?”
His eyes glistened, liquid with guilt. “Because I knew you'd try it. And if you run, he'll find you. And that will only make things worse.”
Rhianne, realizing his hand was still holding hers, flung it back at him. “Of all the people I thought might betray me, I never guessed it would be you!”