My head whips up.
I need . . .
I almost choke on grief and gladness and terror as my gaze snaps to Hector’s.
I need to marry Hector.
Inheritor of a southern holding much more powerful than Tristán’s. A war hero. The best leader I know. Before, marrying him would have been foolish, for he was already my staunchest supporter. But now that my kingdom is about to split apart, a very public alliance with him could be the thing that holds it together.
“Elisa?” he says softly. “What is it?”
I stare at him, at his precious face. I love his dark eyes, the way his hair curls slightly around his ears, his strong jaw, his beautiful lips. I know exactly what those lips feel like against mine.
I could ask him. Right now. But he might say no. Or I could command, and he would obey, but he would never forgive me.
But maybe, just maybe, I will ask and he will say yes.
How, exactly, does a queen propose? Is there an etiquette to observe? A document to sign? I look around the room in panic. Everyone gazes back, puzzled.
I hear shouting. Stomping footsteps, the ring of steel on steel.
Soldiers pour into the dining hall from all three entrances. They are dressed in the crimson and gold of Conde Eduardo’s countship.
Everyone at the table shoots to their feet, drawing their weapons, even as a strong arm wraps around my shoulders and the cold point of a dagger presses against my throat.
Eduardo’s soldiers ring the room. We are outnumbered three to one.
“Drop your weapons,” says a sibilant voice in my ear.
Hector looks to me for instruction, and more than the arm holding me captive, more even than the dagger at my throat, the desperation in his face sends terror shooting through me. Never have I seen him so frightened and helpless.
If they defend me, we will all die. But if the assassin kills me without a fight, maybe he’ll let them live. “Do what he says,” I say calmly. “Lower your weapons.”
They do, reluctantly, plunking them onto the dining table.
Without turning to face my captor, I say, “Hello, Franco.”
“Well met, Your Majesty,” he says with equal calm. “You have given me an enjoyable and challenging chase. Thank you for that.”
“How did you find me?”
“We followed the old lady.” Ximena’s mouth drops open. “We knew you’d rendezvous eventually.”
“Are you going to kill me, then?” I ask, preparing to send my heel into his instep, the way Hector taught me.
“Possibly not.” He steps back and lets me go.
I turn to face him. Up close, I don’t know why no one saw him for an Invierno. He is too tall, too preternaturally beautiful, to be anything else. His slicked-back hair is a shade or two lighter at the roots, and his eyes are a startling gold—a rare color among Joyans.
But maybe that’s why we never met, why he conveniently absented himself when I summoned him. Because more than anyone, I was likely to recognize an Invierno among us.
“Then what do you want?” I ask, even as I pray silently, drawing power through the earth, into the Godstone. It comes slowly, a mere trickle, but it comes.
“Don’t you dare,” says Franco. “If you try to work the magic of your stone, I’ll kill every single person in this room.”
And just like that, the power dribbles away, leaving me empty and hollow.
“Better. Now, if you want your people to live, you must come with me.”
“Come where?”
“Invierne, of course. As a willing sacrifice. It is very important that you come willingly, in accordance with God’s will. Failing that, my secondary objective has always been to kill you, which I did attempt, but you have proved wily.”
I don’t understand what my willingness has to do with anything, though I can’t help but note the eerie similarity to Leaf’s words about the gatekeeper. A living sacrifice. I’ll have to think about it later.
“You’ve been pulling the strings the whole time, haven’t you?” I ask. “Invierne meant to weaken me with a very public martyr and set the stage for a civil war. You want us to tear ourselves apart so you don’t have to.”
His edged grin gives me shivers. “We did say we would come at you like a ghost in a dream.”
“Does Eduardo know you’re an Invierne spy? Does he know he’s being manipulated?”
He shrugs. “He knows. But his ambition allows it. I have promised to rid him of you, another weak ruler in a long line of them. The rank fool thinks he betrays you in service to his country. So, Your Majesty, will you come?”
Ximena rises to her feet. Swords ring her neck instantly, but she puts her hands out, palms up, to show that she means no harm. “I have a better idea,” she says.
“Ximena? What are you—”
“The queen still has supporters. If you take her now, Joya d’Arena will rise up against Invierne. So take him instead,” she says, pointing to Hector. “If you let everyone go and take him, she will follow. Willingly. She loves him.”
I stare at my nurse, shocked and sick. What is she doing? What is she thinking?
“Is it true, little queen?” Franco asks eagerly. “Do you love that man? Such a thing would be even more pleasing to God—for you to follow, intending to give yourself up for him. No one has greater love than he who gives his own life.”
I hate Franco for quoting that verse, the one I used to heal Hector. Swords ring Hector’s neck now. His eyes on mine are steady but dark with fear—for me, not himself. He nods once, almost imperceptibly. He wants me to say yes. He hopes they’ll take him away, leaving me alone and safe. Don’t ever give your life for mine, he once told me.
Without breaking his gaze, I whisper, “Yes. I love him. Enough to follow him anywhere.”
And then Hector realizes his mistake because he gasps like a dying man and closes his eyes against the pain of it.
I turn to Franco, and my voice is clear and cutting when I say, “Hector is a Quorum lord. Taking him hostage is an act of war.”
Franco grins. “Stupid queen. We never stopped being at war, your country and mine. Invierne merely retreated.” He gestures to the men surrounding Hector, and they grab his arms and haul him roughly away from the table. Hector does not resist.
“You have two months,” Franco says. “I expect to see you in our capital by then. Come with no thought to returning, for this is pleasing to God. You may bring a very small escort, but no soldiers. Otherwise, he dies.”
“If you kill him, I’ll destroy you.” Actually, I think I’ll destroy him anyway. Yes, I most definitely will.
But Franco ignores me. “Let’s go,” he says to his men. To Tristán he says, “If your soldiers follow, he dies.”
They are halfway out the door when I cry out, “Wait!”
Franco whirls.
My anger, my resolve . . . it has melted into anguish, and all I can do is beg. “Let me say good-bye? Please?”
Franco looks back and forth between us, amused. He shrugs permission, and the soldiers loosen their grip on Hector.
I fly into his arms. He holds me close, stroking my hair, pressing his lips to my temples, murmuring words I can’t take in.
“I’ll come for you,” I whisper.
“Elisa, no.” He pushes me away, holds me at arm’s length. “Let me do my job this one last time. Take my advice.”
“I need you to survive this. Stay alive for me, Hector. Please? And be ready.”
And then they’re dragging him away, and it feels like I’ve been gut punched, for I can’t force my lungs to draw breath. I fall to my knees, clutching my stomach. God, how did everything turn out so wrong?
A hand squeezes my shoulder. It snakes around my neck, pulls me close. “I’m so sorry, my sky,” says Ximena. She draws me against her breast, the way she did when I was a little girl. I clutch at her bodice, taking in her familiar scent as she strokes my hair.
“I hope you find comfort in the fact that he sacrificed himself for you,” she murmurs. “As I always knew he would. He loved you very much.”
I lurch away from her and stare, puzzled, my skin crawling.
“Oh, my sky, the pain will fade. I promise. Just like it did with that boy from the desert. I know it’s hard to understand now, but your destiny is so glorious, Elisa. You are a bearer and a sovereign. Twice chosen by God. And someday, all this will pale in your memory.” She holds her arms out for another embrace.
I rise to my feet, wiping at tears I don’t remember shedding. I look down at my nurse. My guardian. The closest thing I’ve ever had to a mother. It seems as though she kneels at my feet.
“Ximena,” I say with imperturbable calm. “You have killed for me. You have kept things from me. You have sacrificed one of my dearest friends. You did all this without consideration for my will.”
Her black eyes are hot with conviction. “I have only ever done what is best. You’re just seventeen! You need—”
“I am a grown woman and a queen. And you are dismissed.”
She gapes at me.
“Go home, Ximena. To Orovalle. I’m sure Papá and Alodia can find a post for you.”
“No! I’m your guardian! Elisa, my sky, I love—”
“Tristán, would you please have my former nurse escorted to the nearest passenger ship?”
“At once, Your Majesty,” he says coolly, and he gestures toward a handful of men.
Ximena rises, smooths her skirt, then folds her hands together in perfect composure. As they lead her away, she glances over her shoulder at me and says, “I’ll always be your guardian. No matter what. It is God’s will.”
I turn my back on her, sickened and sad, but well and truly ready to be the queen my people need.
“Tristán. Are you still willing to take a position as Quorum lord?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
I fish one of the Godstones from my pocket. It glitters more deeply than any jewel, in spite of its lifelessness. “Take it. It should fetch a high enough price for a whole garrison. I’ll validate it as an authentic Godstone from my personal collection, with a document bearing my royal seal.”
His fingers pause in the air above my hand for a moment before he takes it. “Thank you.”
I gesture for Fernando to approach, and then I pull out another Godstone and lay it in his palm. “Take this to Captain Lucio. Recruit more guards to defend the palace, if it is not overrun already. If it is, you must go into hiding and rebuild the Guard in secret.” I close his fingers around the stone. “Fernando, make me an army of my very own.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” He stares at his fisted hand.
“Belén!”
He approaches, his face dark.
“You are now my personal guard. You will see to my safety above all else.”
He nods acceptance, then peers down into my eyes. “You’re planning something dangerous and brilliant again.”
In spite of everything, I smile up at him. Indeed, the threads of a strategy are patterning together in my mind, and I’m heady with the power of it. The kind of power I really need.
“I want messages sent to Crown Princess Alodia and Queen Cosmé,” I say to no one in particular. “Multiple copies, to be safe. See if they’ll agree to meet me in exactly three months’ time in Basajuan, for the world’s first parliament of queens.”
I resume pacing, right where I left off when Franco’s men barged in. “I’ll send a message to Ventierra, to Hector’s father, commanding that he reinstate Hector as his sole heir. And I need a proclamation—Mara, did my wax and seal survive our journey?” When she nods, I say, “A proclamation announcing my betrothal to Lord-Commander Hector, heir to the countship of Ventierra.” That should stall Conde Eduardo’s efforts to discredit me with the southern lords. All I need is a little time.
Mara hurries over and takes my hands. “Er, congratulations on your pending nuptials?”
I whisper, “He’ll be so angry when he learns I have engaged us without his knowledge.”
“Yes,” she says. “Definitely. But you’ll convince him.”
Belén says, “When do we all leave?”
“We all?”
“We’re going to Invierne with you, of course,” Mara says.
Of course, she says. As if journeying deep into enemy territory is no more than a quick jaunt through the market. I blink against tears. “I need a few days to make arrangements and set things in motion. Then we go.”
Clanking chains echo through the dining hall as Storm rises to his feet. “I’m going, too,” he says. He has been near invisible the whole time, huddled beneath his cowl. “You need a guide. And it’s time I stopped hiding like a frightened rabbit.”
I nod, knowing he offers in friendship this time, that he truly is my loyal subject. “The four of us, then.”
“You should have five!” Tristán protests. “For blessing and protection. It’s the holy number.”
I draw myself to full height, and my voice rings clear when I say, “The fifth place is for Hector.”