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Authors: K. D. Castner

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“Good. The rebellion scare is stupid.”

“Caution isn't stupid when lives are in danger.” (Thanks, Mother.)

“Yes, everybody is out to get you, Rhea.”

“Not me, him. Or have you forgotten?”

(She meant Tola. The one who broke the oath of peace and tried to assassinate Declan.)

“He cares about you like a daughter, you know,” said Rhea, full of condescension and false sympathy. Suki almost lunged for the witch's throat.

I
have
a father.
(Suki didn't say that (but thought it).) Though, in truth, she didn't remember him very well. The emperor would never send envoys to her (or any correspondence), because it would be like begging and admitting defeat over and over again.

“He just doesn't want you to end up like her,” said Rhea.

“Just shut up.”

Suki had run back to her room like a child.

Embarrassed that she couldn't hold them in (the tears) in front of Rhea.

Embarrassed that she had been found waiting for him (Endrit) when he didn't even know she was there.

Embarrassed when she should have been enraged. She knew Rhea was sheltered, but she had to have recognized a death threat when she delivered it (did it matter if she didn't?). What in the world were they doing here, if they weren't a bunch of girls held hostage under constant threat? And how could Rhea pretend otherwise? Was she willfully
this
deluded?

(Suki had said as much over breakfast that morning, before Rhea joined them (Iren, as usual, listened, ate her berries, offered nothing (and sweet Cadis, always appeasing, always trying to prove her loyalty, refused to believe that Rhea would ever threaten Suki's life, “it was late and you were on edge, I'm sure. It was just a misunderstanding and . . . Let's just focus on today.”)).)

Suki jumped another gate and lopped the heads off another set of bundles. Charging faster, riding around the arena. At times her off hand dragged the sword in the ground, cutting up a trail of dirt.

Suki seethed at the insults (and the threats (and the embarrassment)).

She missed everything she remembered about home (which was little), the PilanPilan orchestra, the red tapestried city, the painted walls. She didn't remember many people, though, and feared more than anything that they didn't remember her.

When she finished with a final acrobatic handstand into a sidesaddle (and a two-handed cut on a full phalanx of bamboo stalks), she didn't even acknowledge the king's balcony as the crowd cheered (and she didn't bother to stop as the cheering faded uncomfortably (when they realized she had carved the name “Tola” into the arena floor)).

From her mount, Suki threw her long swords like javelins (each lanced into the ground on either side of her sister's infamous name (Rhea could shove her threats)).

She trotted to the horse gate (Good boy, Helio), slid off the saddle, and marched out, glancing back only once over her shoulder (looking for Endrit), which she shouldn't have done, because it would have looked much more regal if she had been flawless and focused (and not distracted by anything (and didn't care about anybody)).

CHAPTER FOUR
Iren

The last condescended from Academy spires

Pretended at life with a cold, dead heart

Face like a crypt, from a family of liars

Quietly, quietly played . . . her . . . part.

—Children's nursery rhyme

C
adis always stared at the point she would attack.

An archer's habit.

A bad one in melee.

Too earnest.

She brought her cutlass down at Iren's head.

Iren stepped left and struck the side of Cadis's heavy blade with her light daggers.

Cadis hid her stumble with a quick-footed turn back to guard.

Iren didn't bother to lunge.

The daggers were short and thin.

Good for tight quarters, like the stairs of a mountain pass.

In the open Iren was disadvantaged.

On paper anyway.

To the amateur eye.

Iren waited.

Cadis would press the fight.

She was trying too hard to give them a show.

Her swings were bombastic.

Giant broad strokes.

She wanted the peons in the mezzanine to feel it.

But they both knew combat was a game of inches.

A killing blow was most often subtle, unromantic, even banal.

Iren crossed the daggers and blocked another overhead swing.

Her wrists took the impact.

She sprang back, and the falchion continued down to the ground.

From the leaning position, Cadis would try to fake one way and go another.

It worked on Endrit far too many times.

He was too concerned with their well-being.

If you were watching her hips or feet or shoulders, she'd have you swiping at air.

But Iren watched the belly button.

Cadis feinted left. Shimmied right with her shoulders. Then struck left.

Her waist never faltered.

In a real fight, Iren would have stepped in and stabbed her dagger up through Cadis's chin, through her mouth, into her mind.

But then in a real fight Cadis wouldn't have been so sloppy.

She wanted something.

Respect.

Or if not respect, at least forgiveness for humiliating Rhea in front of them.

Wanting something like that, in a full-contact fight speed match, was a weakness too obvious for Iren.

Cadis thrust forward.

Iren stepped in and punched Cadis in the face.

The dagger hilt weighted her fist.

It crunched Cadis's nose.

Blood spray.

A roar from the crowd louder than any all day.

Cadis's head snapped back.

Iren hammered the hilts of her daggers down onto Cadis's shoulder.

She screamed and dropped guard.

Iren swung again and smashed her in the eye socket.

Cadis stumbled.

Iren pounced forward.

Iren swept the hilts down and scooped under the back of Cadis's knees.

Cadis fell back and hit the dirt.

The crowd stood and leaned over the railing.

Even Declan.

They wanted more blood.

They wanted her broken for all the crimes of Findain.

For their lost king.

Iren kicked her in the ribs so hard the peons in the mezzanine heard a crack.

A cheaty thing to do.

They would have expected it out of the Fin.

Cadis was hurt, but didn't stay down.

She somersaulted backward and got to her feet.

Her eye was swelling. Nearly shut.

Her teeth were bloody.

Some in the crowd cheered.

A good show.

The Fin had grit.

They had to give her that.

Cadis wobbled, but held her cutlass in front.

Iren let them drink in the sight of Findain bleeding.

She closed one eye against the sun.

Then Iren threw a knife.

A little boy screamed.

Right before all of Meridan, at the Revels of the Pax Regina, the princess of Corent took a kill shot at the archana of Findain.

Gasps and whispers.

It was not a declaration of war.

It was an assassination.

Cadis flinched and lifted the flat face of her cutlass just in time.

An audible sigh of relief.

Iren had gone too far.

A dead queen would mean war.

Iren made an effort to grunt.

A frustrated sound for people to hear.

She was down to one dagger.

Cadis's nose was broken.

The blood loss had her dizzy.

Her swollen eye blinded her on the left side.

Iren shifted the dagger to her right hand, where Cadis couldn't see it.

A little boy in the fourth row shouted, “You can do it, Caddy!”

His mother quickly pulled him away from the railing.

It was forbidden to be so casual with a queen.

Cadis caught her breath and swung again.

The crowd erupted, this time in admiration.

She was brave.

And she could take punishment.

Iren ducked the blade.

Cadis wheeled around with a kick.

Iren took the boot on the chin.

She heard a pop as she fell.

The pain was more of a numbing sensation all along her neck and cheek.

Iren rolled over.

The sky was cerulean blue.

The color of Corent.

The sun was summer white.

Here in Meridan, it felt impossibly far away.

The shadow of Cadis blotted out the sky.

Iren tried to lash out with her dagger, but her arm was pinned under a knee.

She dropped her weapon.

Before Cadis could strike, Iren put up two fingers in surrender.

The roar was deafening.

Iren closed her eyes.

She thought of her room in the high spire of Corent.

She missed her mother.

When they arrived back at the great hall at the center of all their private chambers, Cadis and Iren released the maids.

Cadis collapsed onto a couch by the wall. Iren poured water from a carafe on the center table into two glass cups.

“Here,” she said, and handed one to Cadis.

Cadis looked out from under the wet towel she held over her swollen eye. She took the glass. “Thanks.”

“You're welcome.”

Cadis laughed, then winced.

It must have been funny to say, “You're welcome,” in that moment.

“You've been practicing,” said Cadis.

Iren shrugged.

Cadis lay back on the couch and covered her face. “You're dodging me.”

“All day.”

“Was that a joke? From silent Iren?”

“I thought we were being funny.”

“Truly, when did you become so—”

“Good?”

“Vicious.”

Iren drank her water.

“In the ring, I mean,” said Cadis.

“I've been practicing,” said Iren.

It would be sufficient excuse for the others—the king, the magister, the Meridan nobles. To them she was just lucky. A few landed strikes, some dishonorable play, no real evidence of greatness.

But Cadis had seen it up close. The speed of her punch, the control. When they grappled, only Cadis could know the taut-cord strength of Iren's lean frame. Only Cadis could know that Iren was nothing like she seemed.

“Fine,” said Cadis. “Keep your secrets.”

That was a hurtful thing to say,
thought Iren. She put her glass on the table and walked toward her room. She would need her needlework for the next exhibition.

“Hey,” said Cadis. “Hey, Iren.”

When Iren turned, Cadis was sitting up. Her face was a mess, but she'd heal.

“Thank you,” said Cadis. “I know what you did.”

The mob of Meridan had better gristle to chew.

Iren nodded. She smiled for a short second.

It was nice to share some secrets.

The afternoon Revels took place on the palace green and had a convivial tone. Streamers hung from the trees. Cooks worked at fire pits. Flower dancers twirled to the tinkling of lutes. Only the court, the
homo nobilis
, and the patrician families were invited.

Even fewer would attend the ball that night.

The entire day was a thinning procession to the foot of Declan's throne.

Iren sat in a gilded tent crocheting the final corner of a bed-length tapestry as nobles paraded through.

Like animals in a menagerie.

They didn't realize that they, too, were being watched.

Iren preferred it so.

The tapestry depicted the scriptorium of the Academy, where initiates sat at tables and transcribed from the archives. Stitching every codex on the shelves in the background had taken her the better part of the year.

“Why can't she do a nice pastoral scene?”

“You know how the Corentine are—always declaring themselves the smartest in the room.”

“Would it kill her to have some nymphs in a glade or something?”

The nobles had nothing interesting to say. Not even to one another.

BOOK: Daughters of Ruin
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