“Even if it all simply slipped his mind in the excitement, people could still suspect that if I act in public,” he replied, thinking out loud. “If he
Winterhart nodded as Zhaneel looked from one to the other of them. She toyed with the necklace as she spoke. “It is almost as bad for the Haighlei to lose face as to
“If he is disgraced before his own people, might he not even declare war upon us in an attempt to show that he did not want Winterhart after all?” Zhaneel hazarded, her eyes narrowed with worry. “Oh, I wish that Skandranon were here!”
“In any event, if we do this in public, and everything came out
Winterhart clasped her hands together in her lap, around the cup of tea, and Amberdrake pretended not to notice that her knuckles were white.
“You are saying that we can’t do anything, then?” she asked tightly. “But—”
“No, what I’m saying is that this can’t be public. I spoke at length with Silver Veil, and she gave me another piece of advice—”That which is unthinkable in public is often conducted in private.’ Is there a way, do you think, that we could get Shalaman alone, without any witnesses to what we say to him?”
“I don’t see how,” Winterhart began. “He always has bodyguards with him, even when he gave me the Necklace and the Lilies—”
Makke cleared her throat, interrupting Winterhart, and all eyes turned toward her.
“A bride-to-be accepts her betrothed’s proposal in her own house,” she said carefully. “She does so in private. This is an old custom, and one that dates back to the days when the Haighlei were barbarians, and occasionally kidnapped women they wished to wed. By making the groom come to her, alone, she prevents being coerced into acceptance.”
“So—if I sent a message to Shalaman saying I wished to see him here, alone—” Winterhart began.
Makke nodded. “He would assume that you were going to accept the Necklace, and he would send away his guards, arriving at your door unaccompanied. He would, of course, expect that
“Would now be too soon?” Winterhart said, blushing furiously. “I—I wouldn’t want to seem too forward.”
“I suspect,” Makke replied, with a hint of her old spirit, “that our King is pacing the floor, hoping that
Winterhart smiled, but it was a tight, thin smile. “So I shall,” she said. “So I shall. . . .”
Skandranon, predictably, arrived just at the moment when they were about to send that carefully worded message to the King.
“I was on the roof,” he said, looking at all of their tense faces with puzzlement. “I was waiting for Kechara to contact me. I was concerned that there might be an off chance that there was someone capable of sensing mind- magic at work within the Palace.”
“Why go on the roof?” Amberdrake asked.
He shrugged. “If that was the case, I didn’t want anyone to associate the messages passing between myself and our little gryphon with
They had to explain it all over again to him, which took a bit more time. Amberdrake was a little worried that Skan might come up with another one of his wild plans instead of falling in with theirs. To his relief, Skan was in complete agreement with all of them.
“I must admit I didn’t expect you to go along with this without an argument,” Amberdrake finally said, as Skan settled himself into a corner with Zhaneel tucked under a wing.