Authors: Nancy Yi Fan
In the airless vacuum left by fear, reason suffocates.
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FROM THE
O
LD
S
CRIPTURE
21
T
he banquet hall, as Dandelion flew past, had been abandoned. Only a few of the castle staff hurried here and there. The sound of their work clearing plates and forks echoed like the clattering of bones.
She'd sensed the clamor wind its way up to Fleydur's tower. After class had abruptly ended and eaglets had been whisked off by agitated parents, Dandelion had already started to hear piercing cries from the king's tower.
Eagles were streaming in the corridors. The physician brushed past Dandelion and sped toward the king's tower. “Can't be, his health was better ⦠can't die ⦔
When she had turned back to confront Tranglarhad, the owl had vanished. Now the next best thing to do was to find and inform Fleydur. She listened for noises from Fleydur's tower. There was no more shouting. As she neared his study, Fleydur's valet appeared in the doorway.
“He's been arrested, Dandelion,” Uri croaked.
“What?” cried Dandelion. “You don't mean forâ”
“Yes, they say he's the gemstone thief!” said Uri bitterly.
Dandelion threw her claws in the air. “How can he be? He has no reason to steal the gemstone! And he couldn't have been the intruder in his own room. Tranglarhad's the thief. Just now in class, one of his nails was missing. He's left the castle.”
“Nasty piece of work, that owl,” the valet said darkly. “But how can we prove he did it if he's gone?”
Dandelion needed somebird who had power to listen to her.
Queen Sigrid hired Tranglarhad
, she remembered.
Maybe she'll know where he might have gone.
To be sure, Sigrid did not like Dandelion much, but surely the queen would want to find the true thief and recover the eagles' Leasorn gem. “Do you think the queen will help me?” Dandelion asked the valet.
“No, don't go! The dangerâ”
“I have to do something!”
Dandelion swung around and flew down the hall toward the queen's chamber, hoping to find answers. Entering without knocking, she peered about in the gloom of the antechamber.
“Your Majesty?” Dandelion called out. She saw only abandoned teacups. She heard a sound behind her. The hummingbird handmaid was there.
“Where's Fleydur, do you know?” she asked. “I need to see him.”
The hummingbird made a gesture of shackles and then pointed at the floor below. Dandelion's heart sank.
“Who's talking in there?”
Dandelion spun around. Sigrid was in the hall.
“Fleydur's innocent!” said Dandelion.
“Get out,” said the queen.
“He didn't steal the gemstone, Your Majestyâ”
“Get out!”
“âI know who did.”
The queen froze. “What?” she said. Dandelion explained.
“Impossible.” Sigrid's eyes widened. She swayed on her feet.
“But he's disappeared. You know Mr. Tranglarhad, Your Majestyâ”
“Enough!” shouted Sigrid, her feathers puffed up in rage. “You accuse Tranglarhad, an esteemed educator, of such a heinous crime? Not one more word, you hear?”
“But Iâ”
“You have no right to talk back to me. Especially since you are no princess. Your title is revoked since the arrest of Fleydur.” The queen snatched the gold circlet from Dandelion's head.
“Your Majesty!” begged Dandelion.
“You have no power or place here,” said Sigrid. “Whatever you know amounts to nothing.”
Convinced that she'd get no help from the queen, Dandelion flew out of the room, banging the door behind her.
“Leave this mountaintop once and for all!” screeched the queen behind her.
Dandelion dashed up to her chamber. Injustice was not unfamiliar to her now. The only way to deal with it was to prove Fleydur was innocent. Though her heart was with Fleydur, she knew that even if she yelled herself hoarse and cried herself blind, she could not help him at all. She needed to take action on his behalf. If there was a trial, it would be impossible for her to testify for Fleydur effectively with Sigrid in control. Dandelion needed to track down Tranglarhad and retrieve the gemstone. It was the only way she knew out of this living nightmare.
Dandelion considered asking Olga, Pudding, or some of the other eaglets to join her.
But no
, she thought.
Though they love Fleydur, they aren't trained to fight. It is too much to ask of them. I cannot lead them away from their families and into danger.
As Dandelion tied Wind-voice's sword to her side with Cloud-wing's rope, she told herself that she was not afraid of what lay beyond the mountain. She would not hesitate to leave the safety of the castle, if she could save somebird's life.
She would go to Rockbottom. Cloud-wing was trained in swordplay and had friends there who could fight as well. He could help her rescue Fleydur.
Sigrid flew toward the king's tower. Emotions boiled inside the queen's chest, but the dominant one was painful incredulity.
Morgan cannot be dead!
She burst into the king's room. The physician and the castle staff tried to dissuade her, but she pushed past. Morgan was perched by an open window, his back to her, leaning over a piece of paper on his desk. He had a quill in his talons. And blood, a thin trickle of it, dripped, dripped, dripped from his beak.
A strange, twisted cry came from Sigrid's throat.
She rushed forward to touch Morgan on his shoulder. At the slight pressure he collapsed backward into her wings, his head lolling. His eyes were glazed, half closed, an expression of faint surprise in them.
Sigrid hugged her husband's body close to her. She glanced back at the blood-spattered paper and saw with shock what had been blocked from her sight by Morgan's body. One word scrawled in hasty, slanted writing, in the agony of death:
FLEYDUR
.
Was Morgan showing who had killed him?
At the emergency assembly, snow lashed the windows. The dead king's spirit seemed to linger and moan in anguish from every corner. Even through the walls, they heard a high singing noise, a horrible sound that went on and off like the whetting of a bladeâthe wind shrieking as the sharpened edge of Sword Cliff cut into it.
Torchlight flickered. Fleydur stood on the black-and-white checkered floor. Faces of those in the Iron Nest were fixed upon him, glimmering with tears. Only fifteen advisers were present in their chessboard formation. A court replacement for Simplicio had not been found, but there was no gapâSigrid stood, leading the Iron Nest. In a widow's black satin dress and a black veil, with a coral brooch glittering like a drop of blood at her throat, the queen pointed an accusing talon toward Fleydur.
“Let me see Father, please....” Fleydur was sobbing softly.
“Are you happy now? With what you've done?” said Sigrid, gritting her beak.
“Order!” shouted the secretary, Amicus. “Your Majesty, there are two charges made against Prince Fleydur,” he said, his voice shaking. He had to take a deep breath to continue. “First, the murder of the late king, a double offense: regicide and patricide. Second, the theft of the greatest treasure of the kingdom.” Through his own tears, he surveyed the members of the court. “As the king is no longer with us, by law we cannot hold trial for one as high as a prince.”
“Continue on. Somebird else must become king,” said the treasurer.
Another adviser spoke. “Who? The king left no complete will.”
“Then the eldest sonâ” began the general.
“No!” screamed Sigrid. “You cannot crown a crimâ” She stopped herself, took a deep breath, and addressed Fleydur without facing him. “You are under suspicion, Fleydur. You cannot ascend the throne unless you are proven to be innocent.”
Fleydur looked dazed. His beak opened soundlessly.
Glancing at Fleydur, Amicus frowned with uncertainty. “Then in order for tonight's trial to continue, we will ask the next in line for the throne, Prince Forlath, to assume temporary power.”
“Yes,” said Sigrid.
“No, I can't! I won't be able to â¦,” said Forlath. He lowered his head under Sigrid's gaze. “If ⦠if I must,” he whispered.
Noting that the theft seemed to have occurred before the king's death, the secretary turned to the subject of the gemstone, to get a better sense of how the night had unfolded. Like the snow heaping outside, evidence against Fleydur mounted. Numerous birds testified to his early departure from the hall, before the end of the birthday celebration. Two birds confirmed that they had seen Fleydur heading toward the rehearsal room.
“Do you recognize these birds, Fleydur?” Sigrid asked.
Fleydur nodded. “I saw them earlier this evening.”
“We were guarding the gemstone in the rehearsal room, during the performance,” declared one guard. “At intermission, two other guards relieved us. Just as we were leaving the door and headed for the banquet hall, we met Fleydur going in the opposite direction.”
“But I wasn't going to the rehearsal room,” said Fleydur. “I was going to see Father.” He was met with disbelieving looks. “Why would I want to steal the gem anyway?” he pleaded. “Why would I steal from my own tribe?”
A scholar beat his wings at Fleydur. “I overheard my grandson discussing Fleydur's last music lesson. He said that Fleydur believed that the Leasorn gem is not ours and shouldn't be in our treasury!”
“Guards from the second shift, step forward,” ordered Amicus. “How was the gem stolen while you were on guard?”
The queen listened as her hired birds rehearsed the answer she concocted. “We believe we were tricked. Fleydur's valet acted as the decoy, by crying about an intruder in the castle and begging our help! When we returned, the gem was gone. We were lured.”
“And don't forget, the gemstone cloth was found in Fleydur's room,” Sigrid added.
“Now answer me truthfully, Fleydur,” said Amicus. “Where is the gemstone now?”
“I don't know,” said Fleydur.
“He won't admit to the theft.” Sigrid turned to the secretary. “Ask him about King Morgan's death!”
“The staff in the king's tower said that you came over to see the king tonight, correct?” said Amicus.
Fleydur nodded.
“They tell us that you and your adopted daughter visited the king after he left the banquet hall. The king was fine before you came. They say he died shortly after you left. What went on between the two of you?”
“He told me how he loved the music. He wanted to know if I would stay.”
“Oh, really?” Sigrid said. “Then what about this?” Sigrid showed the court the paper she had taken from Morgan's desk. “See? Morgan himself named his killer!”
“Perhaps our late king was only writing Fleydur's name to announce His Majesty's heir. King Morgan did say he'd start on his will tonight,” said the general.