“Then you don’t know plants?” she asks, a new fear creeping into her voice. “You don’t grow and mix herbs for the Monstrous?”
“We are the Desert People.”
But why would she give her name? In her eyes, I’m an animal. My only hope of becoming anything more, of gaining enough freedom to escape the domed city, is to win the Smooth Skins’ trust. So far, none of them have bothered to speak to me. Only this girl. But she is the princess—no,
My father isn’t a stupid man. There must be a good reason for his lie.
If I weren’t on the verge of committing murder, I could probably think of it.
I relax my grip. Almost immediately, my head clears—
“I know plants. And herbs.” I retract my claws. The queen gives a shuddery breath. “Why?”
“I have … a field. A large one,” she pants, hands fluttering at her neck. “I want you to help me plant it with healing herbs, especially those that the Mon”—she clears her throat—“that the Desert People use to ward off further mutation.”
Herbs to ward off mutation? There is no such thing. At least, not that I know of. But just like my lie about the poison in my claws, this lie must serve a purpose. If I agree to assist this girl, I will find out what it is.
“All right,” I say. “I’ll help.”
“Good.” She stands, wobbling in her narrow dress. “I’ll talk to Junjie and have guards sent to fetch you in the morning. You’ll be bound when you leave this room, but the chains will be loose enough to allow you to work.” She goes to the door but turns back almost immediately. “When the guards come, tell them nothing about what we’ll be growing. I don’t want my people to know. Not yet.”
“Why?”
She pulls a silver key from a pocket near her hip. The sight of it makes my damaged legs ache. If I were whole, I could rush her and take the key.
But I’m not whole. Thanks to this girl and her men.
“You seem like a clever beast,” she says, fitting the key in the lock.
“I’m sure you’ll understand. Sooner or later.”
Tomorrow, I will serve and obey. I will be on my very best behavior. I will use only Yuan words and keep my claws sheathed. But tonight I will close my eyes and pretend I am not her prisoner.
Tonight I will remember the fear in her eyes and let it fill my mouth with a taste as sweet as her rose-and- sugar breath.
5
ISRA
“YOU were missed at the harvest feast last night.” Junjie hovers so close to my side, I can smell the oil he uses to shape his mustache.
Needle tells me his lip hair is as long as my hand from palm to fingertip and as big around as my thumb. I take her word as truth. The thought of asking permission to touch Junjie’s face makes me fidget with nerves. Of all my advisors, my chief is by far the most intimidating.
“I wasn’t feeling well.” I bring two fingers to my forehead, faking the ghost of a headache I never had.
“Then you should have called for the healers,” he says. “Your health is too important to the city to take any chances, Isra. You know that.”
“I know,” I mumble, wishing I had arranged to meet the Monstrous and his guards in the field, instead of coming with the soldiers to fetch the beast.
It has been only three weeks since I became queen, and already I grow tired of my newfound “freedom.” Each time I dare set foot outside my tower, fretful, bossy old men shadow my every move. Junjie and the other advisors would obviously prefer that, until I’m married, I pass my days alone in my bedroom surrounded by mountains of pillows. I’m treated like a foolish child with bones made of glass, and I
I long for my walks alone in the garden, for the velvet night sounds and the gentle light of the moons. I long for the time when my ugliness was a secret guarded by the father who loved me. Now no one loves me, and my secret is a scandal that has set the entire city talking.
“I will have a healer appointed to the tower,” Junjie says. “A woman, so that she may sleep there with you and—”
“Sleep there? In the tower?” I ask, horrified by the thought of a stranger invading my last safe place. “But where would we put her? Needle and I already share my bedroom.”
“She can sleep in your dressing room. There’s enough space beside the bath for a small cot, and she can keep her clean uniforms underneath.”
“Please, Junjie,” I beg. “I don’t need a healer sleeping in my dressing room. I’m not an invalid. It was only a headache.”
“The kingdom would sleep better knowing a healer is minutes from your side.”
“The kingdom is safe. I’ll call for someone next time I have the smallest ache or pain. I promise,” I say, wishing Needle would hurry and get back with word from the Monstrous’s cell and save me from Junjie. The guards went to fetch the creature from the prisoners’ floor of the infirmary nearly twenty minutes ago.
What’s taking so
“Very well, but the people need assurance that you are in good health and fit to rule. It’s time you dined with the nobles at court, at least during special celebrations,” Junjie says, disapproval clear in his voice. I may be queen, but in his eyes I’m still the naughty little girl who threw paint on the king’s best fur when she was four years old. “You owe it to the city to honor its traditions.”
“I know. I just couldn’t. Not last night,” I say. “I’m sorry.”
When I was younger, I used to beg to be allowed to accompany Baba to the harvest banquet, but he always said no. It seemed wrong to go last night without his permission, without
We’re all in mourning, the entire city grieving the loss of their king.
Needle tells me Yuan is painted with loss: tables covered in red cloth, mirrors draped in white, and men with black scarves tied around their arms, and I myself wearing green and only green until the first day of spring, as is tradition for a child in mourning.
“I understand,” Junjie says in a gentler tone, reminding me that there is a heart beneath his gruff exterior. “But remember, you are not alone. I am here to support your rule. I served your father well for twenty years; I will serve you just as faithfully.”
In ten years—or seventeen, if I’m lucky and the city’s magic holds strong—it will be my turn. If Baba had lived and remarried, things would have been different, but he’s dead and they aren’t. The fact hangs around my neck like a stone, making it harder to pull myself from the pit of my grief.
The healing garden is the only bright spot in my darkness. When the Monstrous boy’s father first told Junjie