The Sharpest Blade (13 page)

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Authors: Sandy Williams

BOOK: The Sharpest Blade
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Good? God, Aren is such a coward, either for not trying to work through the life-bond issue or for not telling me the truth about what’s going on. I’m not going to wait around for him to grow a backbone. I’ll find answers myself, and I know exactly where to start asking questions.

Lena’s apartments are on the third floor. Hison is a long-winded fae, and I have no doubt he’ll still be there meeting with her, so I walk quickly through the governing wing of the palace and enter an ornate corridor. Magically lit orbs are set into silver sconces, and the blue-white light they cast highlight the carvings on the walls and ceiling. I receive a few questioning glances from the fae I pass—mostly aides to the high nobles, whose offices are also here—but no one asks where I’m heading. I might have disappeared for three weeks, but my reputation didn’t diminish at all. They know who I am, and they know I’m Lena’s ally.

The guards let me into her greeting chamber, a large, comfortable room with silver carpets and waves of blue silk on the ceiling. Plush couches are arranged in an inviting setup to my left, and to my right is a long desk made from a dark wood. Lena’s symbol—an
abira
tree with seventeen branches—is carved into its front, and rising from a chair behind it is Andur, a rebel I remember seeing with Sethan on more than one occasion. He acts as one of Lena’s advisors now.

“Lena’s meeting with Lords Hison and Kaeth,” he says in thickly accented English.

“I know.” I eye the door to his right, the one that leads into a small meeting room. When I start that way, Andur moves out from behind the desk.

“I’m sure she wouldn’t mind being interrupted,” I say before he can emit a protest.

“I’m sure she wouldn’t,” he says, trying but failing to hide a smile. He doesn’t move out of my way, though. No doubt, he knows Hison will be pissed if I walk in.

While he’s weighing the pros and cons of taking on Hison’s wrath, I pick up part of the muffled conversation behind the door. Or rather, the argument if I’m hearing the rise and fall of the voices correctly. I take a step closer to the door, then another when Andur doesn’t stop me. It’s not until I’m reaching for the handle that he says, “I’m strongly advising you not to enter.”

I freeze, expecting him to knock my hand away from the handle, but when I glance his way, he’s returning to the chair behind the desk. I start to give him a grateful smile, but then I hear a word that sends goose bumps prickling across my arms.

Garistyn.
They’re talking about the kingkiller.

Forgetting caution, I turn the handle. I haven’t forgotten the problem of the
garistyn
, but I have conveniently shoved it to the bottom of my list of crises to take care of, mainly because I didn’t think it would be an issue anymore. The high nobles were using the
garistyn
as an excuse to delay confirming Lena as queen, but I’d assumed they’d confirmed her anyway while I was gone. She
said
they would.

The door swings open silently. My gaze finds Lena first. She’s standing rigidly in the center of the room, facing Hison and Kaeth. Her expression is neutral, but I swear her face is a half shade redder than normal. She might sound and appear calm, but she’s not. I know her that well now.

“I want their names,”
Hison is saying.
“I want their locations.”

“I can’t help you,”
Lena tells him.
“I wasn’t there.”

“We will learn the truth despite your interference.”
Hison’s dark blue cape billows out behind him when he takes a step toward her.
“One of the witnesses is a very strong ward maker. The ledgers will lead me to him eventually.”

Witnesses? Who is he talking about? Someone who knows something about the
garistyn
? Only Kyol, Aren, and I know who slid the sword into Atroth’s back. The king had guards in his hall, but as far as I know, they’re all dead. Hison would have questioned them long before now if they weren’t.

Maybe that’s it, though. Maybe he and Lord Kaeth just now found out someone else survived.

“The ledgers?”
Lena says, ice in her whisper.
“You mean the books that Atroth forced every fae to record their magics in? The ones that are
completely
accurate because everyone was anxious to confess their abilities so that Atroth could conscript them into his service? I wish you the best of luck with that.”

Sarcasm. Rumor has it those ledgers are mostly false. Every fae was required to fissure to Corrist to write down their abilities in Atroth’s books. I knew about the ledgers when I shadow-read for the king, but I didn’t know how much the fae resented being documented or that the trip was forced upon them. Very few told the truth when they signed their names.
If
Hison has discovered there’s a witness to the king’s murder, it’s unlikely the ledger will lead the high noble to him. I hope.

“King Atroth saw the importance of knowing the magics criminals and false-bloods could throw at us,”
Hison says coldly, arrogantly.
“Maybe one day, you’ll learn so as well. Confirm the identity of the kingkiller, Lena.”

“You want to execute Jorreb,”
Lena says.
“That’s the only reason you’re insisting upon this.”

“This is about justice,”
Lord Hison says.
“If Jorreb didn’t kill King Atroth, you or he would tell me who did. You’re protecting him.”
His gaze swivels to me, standing here in the doorway.
“Or you’re protecting her. Lord Kaeth.”

Kaeth moves before my mind finishes translating Hison’s words. He’s on me in an instant, grabbing my shoulders and slamming me against the wall beside the door.

“Lord Kaeth!”
Lena yells.
“Release her!”

Kaeth ignores her, he ignores the bolt of white lightning that leaps from my skin to his, then he leans in close, and demands,
“Did you murder King Atroth?”

“What are you, Hison’s lackey?” I demand, but my voice quivers. A potent, debilitating fear rushes over me. I feel an echoing terror move through Kyol.

“Tell me who murdered the king.”
Kaeth’s voice slithers under my skin.

Kyol’s name is on the tip of my tongue. If I want to live, I have to say it. I have to tell Lord Kaeth what he wants to know.

“It’s magic, McKenzie,” Lena snaps. “Don’t say a word.”

Magic? My whole body trembles, filled with fear. Kyol’s sprinting this way now, and I can barely think with his terror mixing with mine. He doesn’t know why I’m afraid.

Hold on a second.

I
don’t know why I’m afraid.

My gaze locks on Lord Kaeth’s sharp silver eyes.

“Answer me, human,”
he hisses.

Oh, son of a—

I get my right arm free, then slam the heel of my hand into Kaeth’s nose. Bones crunch, and he staggers back, eyes wide. I don’t know if he’s more hurt or surprised that I, a mere human, struck him.

Kyol was right about fae underestimating me.

I twist the wrist he’s still holding as I jerk it back. As soon as he loses his grip, the artificial fear whooshes out of me. Lena steps between us before he recovers. Her hand is locked around the hilt of the sword sheathed at her hip, and the tension is almost tangible in the air. I’m not focused on it, though. I’m focused on the tension in Kyol and the fact that he’s heading this way.

I shut down my emotions as completely as possible, letting only a sense of calm assurance leak through our bond. I don’t want him anywhere near Hison and Kaeth. If the high nobles pressure him, if they threaten me or Lena and demand to know the identity of the
garistyn
, I’m afraid he’ll answer them. He’ll tell them the truth because he regrets killing Atroth, his king and his friend.

“Get out,”
Lena orders.
“Now.”

Unperturbed, Hison eyes her.
“Afraid the
nalkin-shom
will answer Kaeth’s questions? That would be difficult since she isn’t supposed to speak our language.”

Lena’s mouth tightens, and I suppress a curse and another wave of emotions. It’s forbidden for humans to learn Fae. The law has been around for decades, and Atroth enforced it just as religiously as the previous kings, but the rebels didn’t. They taught me their language. We’ve kept my knowledge of it under wraps because it’s just one more transgression the high nobles will hold against Lena.

Lena keeps her eyes locked on Hison’s.
“You have ten seconds to leave my apartments. If you don’t, you’ll learn my sword isn’t just an ornament.”

Hison laughs.
“You won’t harm us. The high nobles would never give you power if you did.”

I’m not as confident about that as he is, the Lena-not-harming- him part. The Lena I know, or the one I knew back before she became interim queen, wasn’t just some figurehead leader. She knew how to fight, how to kill and maim. The role she’s found herself in doesn’t fit comfortably. All she might need is an excuse to be who she was before.

“I want the name of the kingkiller or the names of the witnesses by sunset,”
Hison says.
“If I have to hunt the witnesses down myself, I’ll have your lord general and your sword-master arrested and you confined to your apartments. And in the end, I’ll still learn the kingkiller’s identity.”

With that, Hison departs, Kaeth following a step behind.

“Can he do that?” I ask when the doors close behind them. My voice is overly monotone because I’m still trying to quash my emotions. Kyol knows I’m not in danger now, but he wants to know what was wrong. He’s still heading this way, and I’m afraid he’ll cross paths with Hison and Kaeth.

“What?” Lena snaps.

“Can Hison arrest Aren and Kyol and keep you locked in here?”

She draws in a deep breath, calming herself, then moves to the window and peers out.

“Probably,” she says. “Maybe. I don’t really know. I don’t have enough support to oppose him.”

“Support from the high nobles?”

“From them,” she says, nodding out the window. “From the people. From everyone.”

“What happens if you never get their support?”

“What happens if I fail?” Her eyes look glassy when she meets my gaze. “Then my brother’s death meant nothing, and the fae who have fought and died for him and who now fight and die for me . . . it all means nothing.” She turns back to the window. “Atroth catered to the high nobles. They’re used to his favors. They hate me because I won’t make one group of people suffer just so they can prosper. They know I’ll lower and equalize the gate taxes as soon as I have the authority to do so. And they know that, once I have access to the treasury, I won’t use the
tinril
as bribes. I’ll use it to help the
tor’um
, the
imithi
. All the fae whom they’ve shoved aside and ignored.”

She looks at me over her shoulder. “Did you know there are fae living in the Barren?”

“I know fae shun the Barren,” I say. I crossed that strip of land not too long ago. Thrain collapsed the gate in Krytta ten years ago, killing thousands of fae and making it impossible to fissure in a third of Sarna Province.

“We think they’re
tor’um
,” Lena says. “We don’t know for sure, but they’ve been raiding stack houses that are near the Barren, stealing whatever is stored there before the merchants have a chance to load it onto their carts and take it to the nearest gate. Atroth had plans to send his swordsmen to Krytta to annihilate anyone they found there.”

I bite the inside of my cheek. I gave ten years of my life to that king. He never struck me as someone who was capable of mass murder, not even in the end, and every time I hear about something he did or planned to do, I feel like a fool for not seeing what he’d become.

“It was Lord General Radath’s plan,” Lena says, as if she sees the regret written on my face. “Taltrayn spoke out against it. Perhaps Atroth would have listened to him.”

And perhaps not. But she doesn’t have to convince me that she’s better for the Realm than Atroth was. She just has to convince everyone else.

“So you’re no closer to being confirmed as queen,” I say. “What are the high nobles’ alternatives? The false-blood?”

She shakes her head. “The false-blood would have to take over by force. The high nobles may not like me, but they won’t confirm a fae who won’t tell them his ancestry. No, they’ll rule by council until they find a weak-blooded Descendant who’ll agree to sit on the throne. It will be someone they can manipulate. Someone
Hison
can manipulate,” she amends bitterly. “He might have a candidate already. He’ll tell the others I can’t unify the Realm, but his puppet can.”

She looks so heavy-hearted. I want to rest my hand on her shoulder, assure her that everything will work out in the end, but I can’t promise her that. There’s too much uncertainty in the Realm right now. Besides, Lena isn’t the type of person to accept that kind of comfort.

“Thanks for stepping in when Kaeth grabbed me,” I tell her instead. “We’ve come a long way since you tried to kill me.”

She still has a death grip on her sword. When I eye it pointedly, she drops her hand to her side as if she’s been caught stealing. Heaven forbid she admit she was prepared to defend me.

“I never tried to kill you.” A small smile bends a corner of her mouth. “I tried to have others do it for me.”

That pulls a laugh from my chest, and it feels good, releasing a little tension.

Sobering up, I ask, “They’re going to find out about Kyol, aren’t they?”

Lena’s mouth flattens out again. “Two of Atroth’s guards survived our invasion. They laid down their weapons, and Taltrayn vouched for them. He wouldn’t let me kill them.” Her gaze slides to me. “Don’t get that disapproving look, McKenzie. They were my enemies. I had the right to give them a good, clean death.”

“I didn’t say anything,” I protest.

“It’s the way things are done here,” she continues, her voice firm. “But I took the advice of my lord general. I accepted their oaths of allegiance, then I sent them away. It was a temporary solution to buy me time. I’ve been trying to find ways to persuade the high nobles to approve me without giving them the
garistyn
, but I’ve run out of time. If word gets out that my lord general and sword-master have been arrested, and that I’m confined here, I’ll lose the little amount of support that I have.”

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