Authors: Marie Rutkoski
“Not on a paved road.” Roshar wasn't challenging Arin's strategy, just prodding it to test its solidity. “Their cavalry is superior. The general will take into account the soggy ter
rain
on either side of the road. Armed infantry fares worse than horses in mud. They'll try to flank us with cavalry.”
“Yes.” Arin tapped the map where he'd made notches on the even ground that bordered the road and ran open and smooth to the forest on either side. “Exactly.”
“What is it like,” Kestrel asked Risha as they rode, “to be gifted with weapons?”
Coolly, the princess said, “You've no proof that I am.”
But Kestrel remembered an archery contest on the palace lawn, and how Risha aimed arrows with studied mediocrity until one final arrow punched so hard into the target's center that it drove through the canvas halfway up its shaft. “I used to wish I were talented that way. Then I didn't. Now I do again.”
Risha shrugged. “It's gained me little.”
“Roshar was even younger than we are when he brought you into Valorian territory. When you were captured.”
“Betrayed.”
“You didn't agree to go with him?”
The princess shifted in her saddle. “I was a mere child, and eager to prove myself. Children seek to please. They try so hard. My brother and sister used that against me.”
“Roshar has suffered for it.”
“And so?” Risha twisted in the saddle to meet Kestrel's gaze. The princess's eyes burned, her brown skin was sleek with rain, her full mouth pinched.
“You could speak with him.”
Risha snorted. “You mean
forgive
. Forgiveness is so . . . squishy. Like all this mud.”
Kestrel
thought of her father's fire-lit face on Lerralen beach.
“It drags you down,” Risha said. “You know this.”
She had an uneasy feeling of not knowing what Risha would say next, but already not wanting to hear it.
“You, who seek your own father's death.”
The bodies lay tumbled in a ditch not far from the Sythiah vineyards.
The rain had washed away any tracks. Still, Kestrel understood the story.
It leached into her: how the emperor's company had seized the manor and dragged the Herrani who lived there out onto the grounds. Forced them forward. A girl in the ditch had lost her shoe. Her little foot was black with mud. The shoe . . . Kestrel searched for it in the rain, feeling a growing panic and need, as if finding a lost shoe could blot away the image of ashen corpses, the way a dead woman still gripped the child's hand. The inching insects. A shoe could take away the smell, the rot of it strong in the rain. A shoe could keep down the bile that rushed up Kestrel's throat.
But when she found the shoe, stuck in the root of a tree, the inner leather sole still held the shape of the girl's foot. Kestrel could feel its imprint.
The shoe took away none of the horror. It planted it deep in the bottom of Kestrel's belly, as solid as a grown man's kick.
They
crouched in the stubby vineyards with the other five Dacran soldiers. Risha eyed the manor's kitchen yard, the house's weakest entry point. Several of the house's windows glowed through the night rain.
Kestrel licked her sour lips and gripped the satchel. She imagined the game tiles rattling inside their velvet bag.
She remembered dining with the emperor. A dessert served with a disintegrating sugar fork. How encounters with him had always felt like that: as though every tool at her disposal was crumbling in her grasp. She remembered how, on the imperial palace grounds, after a hunt, she'd realized that the emperor would steal or maim her dog simply because she loved it.
My father needs for you to love him best,
Verex had said.
You need to watch yourself,
he'd said.
If you play against my father, you' ll lose.
A light hand touched her arm. “I don't know you well,” Risha's voice was low. “But I know what Verex has told me about you, and what I see for myself. You don't need to be gifted with a blade. You are your own best weapon.”
Kestrel stared back at Risha, who was almost pure shadowâa mere glint of eyes. Kestrel felt a slow, slight throb, a shimmer in the blood. She knew it well.
Her worst trait. Her best trait.
The desire to come out on top, to set her opponent under her thumb.
A streak of pride. Her mind ringed with hungry rows of foxlike teeth.
Later, at dawn, when the emperor pulled Kestrel's dagger from its sheath and touched its tip to her throat, she
remembered
that Sythiah's manor had always been a trap. The question had only been whether it was a trap she set for the emperor, or one that she'd fall into.
Kestrel touched Risha's hand. “Thank you.”
The seven of them moved through the dark to the house.
The dawn broke bright. Clear sky. A sheen of water wavered over the road toward Lerralen, deeper in the cracks between paving stones.
Arin and Roshar had moved the army as quickly west as they could. They had reached the location Arin had chosen.
The first task: to unload the hundreds of sharpened staves Arin had ordered made.
The second: to drive them into the sodden earth bordering the road.
The third: to set their last sacks of gunpowder on the road. A snug and deadly little bundle.
And the fourth: to wait, to try not to think about Kestrel, about how she must have already reached Sythiah by now, and might have already played Bite and Sting against the emperor, and had won or lost.
The seven of them wound their way through the night-shadowed corners of Sythiah's manor. Risha moved with ethereal fluidity, and when they encountered a pair of Valorian soldiers stationed in a hallway, her knife split their skin as smoothly as if cutting through cream. The Valorians
made
no sound. It was quiet enough to hear the drip of blood.
They accessed the upper floors and began checking bedrooms. Kestrel knew where they'd be situatedâHerrani architecture usually had bedrooms face east or west. Risha crept in alone, her posture stiffening with annoyance when the other Dacrans made as if to accompany her. She let out a low hiss. They didn't follow.
She'd return, her blade wetter than before.
“Enough of this,” she whispered.
“We must go quietly,” Kestrel reminded her. “We need to get to the emperor's room without waking the entire house. We can't fight them all.”
Risha snorted. “
I
can.”
The princess's impatience wore thin. The next time they encountered Valorian guardsâagain, a pair of themâshe let a Dacran soldier shoot one of them with a crossbow, but pulled the other Valorian out of the quarrel's path at the same time that her other hand came down on the woman's mouth.
Risha touched her knife to the fragile skin beneath the woman's wide eye. “Stay silent,” Risha whispered, “and you'll keep your eyes. Lead us to the emperor's suite.”
The soldier led them to a broad door made of tiger maple, the wood smooth in the Herrani style, with little carving other than the rippled doorjamb. An oil lamp glowed in the hallway's sconce, its stained glass casting a jeweled light over the wood's natural stripes.
“Here?” Kestrel asked. Light glowed through the door's keyhole.
The
woman nodded.
Risha killed her. The body slumped. Blood welled up to Kestrel's boots. She made herself remember the girl's lost shoe, the Bite and Sting set, Arin's scar, the way he heard the god of death because he believed he had no one else, the small houses in the wheatfields, the baring of her back to the cold tundra air, the way she had hoped that the nighttime drug would make her forget.
“Open the door,” she whispered.
One of the Dacran men, selected by Roshar for his skill at this, knelt and unfolded a leather-wrapped set of tools, then he inserted two of themâlong and thin, like knitting needlesâinto the keyhole. He poked, then levered the tools until they heard the soft
clunk
of the lock's tumblers releasing.
He eased the door openâsoftly, as if his hand were no more than a small gust of wind.
Risha first, and Kestrel behind her, they entered the suite's antechamber.
They were attacked by the emperor's personal guard, who had been waiting as they'd listened to the clicking of the picked lock.
Arin set the army into formation on the western road. He made the vanguard's ranks broad, running across the road and the bordering wet earth, all the way up to the trees. Behind the vanguard, the center ranks were confined to the road.
Roshar's horse flicked its tail, shifting. The prince eyed the forest. “Those trees turn this place into something resembling a ravine. We won't have much room to maneuver.”
“
Neither will they.”
The morning light was sheer and fresh, as pale as the flesh of a lemon. Arin imagined squeezing it down his throat. It would taste like how he felt: stingingly alive.
Kestrel couldn't count them, couldn't see how the guards carved open the bodies of the Dacran soldiers, couldn't fathom Risha's speed, the way the princess had shoved Kestrel against a wall, creating a halo of safety around her. The
snick
of Risha's knife against a windpipe. Her swivel and dance. Unerring strike. Counter. Bodies thumped to the floor.
“Hold,” someone called. “I want to see.”
The Valorians pulled back. Risha's knife flicked blood as it arced through the air. She had no intention of obeying the voice. Kestrel caught her arm. The princess spun, her face frustrated, as if she'd been listening to a voice whose last words had been lost in the interruption.
The emperor stood at the threshold where the antechamber flowed into the rest of the suite, his posture light and easy. For a moment, there was no sound but the rain on the roof. “You,” he said wonderingly as his gaze found Risha.
Then Kestrel.
His eyes widened in delight. “And
you
.”
He laughed.
The day blazed. The sun seemed to soar into the sky, all the way to its height.
Arin waited.
Nothing.
Waited.
Nothing.
He touched the hard leather shell of his armor. Hidden beneath it: his chest. His lungs. Skin. A speckled yellow feather tucked inside his tunic pocket, right above his heart.
Forget the feather,
death said.
You are the road.
The sun.
The sky.
The horse beneath you.
Comforted, Arin said,
The gods used to walk among us.
True,
said death.
Why did you leave?
Ah, sweet child, it was your people who left us.
“Lady Kestrel, you look like a dirty little savage. What
are
you doing here?”
She tried to speak.
“Did you hope to murder me in my sleep?”
Her throat was too dry.
“Maybe you've come for court gossip. Surely the barbarian princess has told you every thing of interest. No?”
Kestrel swallowed. She saw her hand gripping her dagger. The knuckles were white knobs.
“You want news of your father, I imagine. Let me tell you. He doesn't mourn you.”
Kestrel heard the emperor as if from far away.
Doesn't miss you.
He never did. You remember how little time he spent at
home.
How awkward he became in your company. You had to beg him to stay in the capital. Oh yes, I heard. And here, a secret for you: he was relieved when you were sent north. I saw how a burden had been lifted from his shoulders.
He looked lighter.
Younger.
Free.
The emperor looked from her to Risha to the Dacran soldiers, dead on the bloody floor.
“You're resourceful, Kestrel, I'll give you that. You've survived the mines, the tundra, the war . . . thus far. You've made”âhis gaze flicked again to Rishaâ“interesting allies. But my guard outnumbers you both, and it will take an instant for me to rouse the entire house. I don't have many regrets, but my decision to imprison rather than kill you smacks of squeamishness . . . or, shall I say, an unnecessary concern for your father's well-being. Do you know, he hasn't mentioned you once since he told me of your treason?”
“He wouldn't, no matter what he feels.”
“Regardless,” the emperor said softly, “I could have you killed right now and he'd never know. And if he did, why would he care? What would the life of one dishonorable would-be assassin mean to him?”
“I didn't come here to murder you.”
He bit back a thin smile.
She said, “I came to challenge you.”
“Oh?”
“One game of Bite and Sting. If I win, you'll end the war. Leave. Cross the sea with every last Valorian. Never return.”