On the fifth afternoon, while handpicking the swiftest archers from a group of exiles, Finnikin found himself being watched by Sir Topher and the priest-king. He had kept his distance from his mentor since the day they entered the Valley. The knowledge that Sir Topher had been aware of Evanjalin's identity stung Finnikin like a betrayal.
'Sir,' Finnikin said politely. 'Blessed Barakah.' He felt the sharp gaze of the priest-king on him.
'I'll answer your question, Finnikin,' Sir Topher said.
'I haven't asked one,' Finnikin said gruffly.
'But you've wanted to,' Sir Topher said gently, 'from the moment it was revealed to you who she was.'
Finnikin sighed. He gazed around the Valley, where many of the exiles were reacquainting themselves with their neighbors as they had their names recorded in the
'Sefton, can you take over?' he called out. He led Sir Topher and the priest-king away from the training ground, toward the camp.
'Did she tell you, or did you work it out yourself?' he asked bluntly as they approached the secured area where the queen was staying.
'She suspected I knew,' Sir Topher said truthfully, 'but I never imagined that the youngest child of the king and queen would survive. That the tiny creature overshadowed by such brilliant and fearless siblings would be the one to live. Who would have thought?'
'Was it the ring?'
Sir Topher shook his head. 'No. The ring was stolen in Lumatere years before the unspeakable. At first I thought her father must have been the thief. Trevanion explained the story she told about winning it back in Sarnak.' He paused. 'I began to suspect from the moment I truly looked at her face in Sprie. I was there, you see, when the king brought home the queen as a young woman, and each day for the next twenty years I looked across at both their very dear faces. I knew the queen's mannerisms, the king's expressions, the other children's traits. But then in Sorel, when you were imprisoned, she said something to me that I'd heard the king say more than once to each of his children. 'Be prepared for the worst, my love, for it lives next door to the best.''
'You never questioned me about the messenger who directed us to the cloister in Sendecane,' Finnikin said.
'Because there was such conviction in your voice. I trusted you, and look where that trust has brought our people. We have achieved what we always wanted, Finnikin. Our exiles together on a piece of land. That itself is enough to give thanks for.'
'But you didn't trust me enough to tell me what you suspected.' Finnikin could not keep the hurt and anger out of his voice.
'Because I needed you to choose our path, Finnikin, and I was certain that the moment you knew that one of our beloveds lived, guilt would force you into retreat. A childhood delusion makes you believe that somehow your ambition and desires caused their slaughter. Whereas I always believed you were born with the heart of a king. A warrior. The true
Finnikin shook his head.
'But I do doubt you,' Sir Topher went on. 'Because you doubt yourself. Isaboe isn't just a queen, Finnikin. She is a valuable asset. A tool to use, and she knows that more than anyone in this kingdom. She was born with the knowledge, as were her sisters. If you choose not to be her king, then we will need to make the throne secure through alliances with Osteria or Belegonia.'
Finnikin clenched his fist, and the arrow in his hand snapped in half. Sir Topher looked at him with such concern that it made Finnikin's eyes sting with tears.
'While you've been fighting the possibility of wearing the crown, perhaps others have been preparing you for it,' the priest-king spoke up.
'A stolen crown, blessed Barakah. A dead boy's crown,' Finnikin said fiercely. 'Is it beyond my control? And hers? Have I meant nothing more to her all this time than the fulfillment of a prophecy?' He shook his head bitterly. 'The gods make playthings of us, but I would like to have some control over the events of my life.'
'Have you not done things according to your own free will, Finnikin?' the priest-king asked. 'Because I heard a tale today. Of a twelve-year-old boy, who on a visit to Osteria, as a guest of our ambassador, came across his first exile camp. Nothing ever prepares you for that, does it, lad? You notice the strangest things. You see children whose thickest part of their body is their knees. I could never understand what kept them standing. This boy turned to his mentor that day and said, 'Tell me how to say,
Finnikin cast his eyes down.
'Look at me, lad,' the priest-king said firmly. 'Those people were fed, weren't they, Finnikin? Because grown men, including a king, were shamed by a twelve-year-old boy. And from that day on, the king's First Man taught his apprentice to speak the language of almost every kingdom in the land. True?' Finnikin nodded reluctantly.
'The gods do make playthings of us,' the priest-king acknowledged. 'But it is we mortals who provide them with the tools.'
As Finnikin approached the queen's tent, he saw Aldron standing guard.
'I need to see her,' he said coldly.
'You're not on my list of people who are allowed in,' Aldron said.
'Then may I ask where this list is?'
Aldron tapped his head. 'It's up here.'
'It's good to know that something is.'
Aldron smiled in spite of himself. 'I will notify her of your presence and ask if she is interested in seeing you.' He turned his back for a moment and Finnikin swung him round, his face an inch from Aldron's, anger in every muscle of his body.
'Don't you
Suddenly Lord August and Sir Topher were there, pulling him away. 'What is going on here?' Lord August demanded.
Aldron stared at Finnikin, shrugging his clothing back into place while the others waited for a response. He nodded to Finnikin as if in acknowledgment.
'Nothing,' Aldron said quietly. 'My mistake.'
Inside the tent, Evanjalin stood in a corner, her body tense. A wife of one of the dukes, a self-appointed chaperone, stared at Finnikin with a stony countenance. Evanjalin was dressed in the same plain calico gown her
'I will find a way,' he said, his voice husky, 'to go through the main gate without your having to risk—'
'Finnikin, stop,' she said quietly.
'I will find a way,' he said angrily, gripping her arms. 'To keep you safe.'
'This is what I always feared,' she said. 'That you would put me in an ivory tower and keep me hidden. Thank the goddess I didn't reveal the truth six months ago, Finnikin. I would still be in the cloister of Sendecane, or in some boring foreign court being protected.'
'It's not right for you to be in here, young man,' the duchess called out. 'To be touching the queen in such a way!'
Finnikin ignored the woman and kept his eyes on Evanjalin. She was an asset. An article for trade. A commodity to sacrifice. He remembered Sir Topher's words in Lord August's home.
'Lady Milla, would you be so kind as to leave us, please,' Evanjalin said.