"What's wrong, Lady Queen?" he asked.
"I had a bad dream," she told him, rubbing her face. "It was a dream of my father hurting my mother. Then I woke up and realized it was true."
Bann paused his sword to consider this. His calm eyes touched her, reminding her of the beginning of the dream, the part where Ashen had comforted her. "Dreams like that can be awful," he said. "I have one that recurs sometimes, about the circumstances of my own parents' deaths. It can torment me cruel y."
"Oh, Bann," she said. "I'm sorry. How did they die?"
"Il ness," he said. "They had terrible hal ucinations and said cruel things I know now they didn't mean. But when I was a child, I didn't understand that they were being cruel only because of the il ness. When I'm dreaming, it's the same."
"I hate dreams," said Bitterblue, angry now in his defense.
"What if you attacked your dream while you're awake, Lady Queen?" said Bann. "Could you act out what it would be like to fight back against your father? You could pretend I'm him and get your revenge right now," he said, raising his sword in preparation for her attack.
It did improve her swordplay for the morning, pretending to attack the Leck of her dream. But Bann was a big, kind man in the real world, and she could hurt him if she came at him too hard. Her imagination wouldn't quite all ow her to forget that. At lesson's end, she had a muscle cramp in her hand and she was still out of sorts.
IN HER TOWER office, Bitterblue watched Thiel and Runnemood shift carefully around each other with silent, stiff faces. Whatever argument they were having today, it was as big as a third person in the room. She wondered what to say to them about the truthseekers under attack. She couldn't claim to have accidental y overheard a detailed conversation about knifings and bloody street murders; that would border on the absurd. She would have to use the spy excuse again, but spreading false information about things her spies supposedly knew, could she put her spies in danger? Also, Teddy, Saf, and their friends broke the law.
Was it fair to bring that to Thiel and Runnemood's attention?
"Why don't I know more about my nobles?" she said. "Why are there hundreds of lords and ladies I wouldn't recognize if they walked through that door?"
"Lady Queen," said Thiel gently, "it's our job to prevent you from having to deal with every small matter."
"Ah. But as you're so overwhelmed with my work," she said significantly, "I think it best I learn what I can. I should like to know their stories and reassure myself that they aren't all mad like Danzhol. Are we three alone again today?" she added, then clarified, needing to force the point, "Is Rood having nervous fits and Darby still drunk?"
Runnemood rose from his perch in the window. "What an inconsiderate thing to say, Lady Queen," he said, sounding actual y hurt. "Rood cannot help his nerves."
"I never said he could," said Bitterblue. "I only said he has them. Why must we always pretend? Wouldn't it be more productive to talk about the things we know?" Deciding there was something she wanted, needed, she stood up.
"Where are you going, Lady Queen?" asked Runnemood.
"To Madlen," she said. "I need a healer."
"Are you il , Lady Queen?" asked Thiel in distress, taking a step forward, reaching out a hand.
"That's a matter for me to discuss with a healer," she said, holding his eyes to let it sink in. "Are you a healer, Thiel?"
Then she left, so that she wouldn't have to see him crushed —by nothing, by words that shouldn't matter—and feel her shame.
WHEN BITTERBLUE STEPPED into Madlen's room, Madlen was scribbling in symbols at a desk covered with papers. "Lady Queen," Madlen said, gathering her papers together and pushing them under her blotter. "I hope you're here to rescue me from my medical writing. Are you all right?" she asked, taking in Bitterblue's expression.
"Madlen," said Bitterblue, sitting on the bed. "I had a dream last night that my mother refused to let my father take me away, so he hit her. Only it wasn't a dream, Madlen; it was a memory. It's a thing that happened over and over, and I was never able to protect her." Shivering, Bitterblue hugged herself. "Maybe I could have protected her if I'd gone with him when he asked. But I never did. She made me promise not to."
Madlen came to sit beside her on the bed. "Lady Queen,"
she said with her own particular brand of rough gentleness.
"It is not the job of a child to protect her mother. It's the mother's job to protect the child. By all owing your mother to protect you, you gave her a gift. Do you understand me?"
Bitterblue had never thought of it this way before. She found that she was holding Madlen's hand, her eyes ful of tears.
Final y, after a while, she said, "The dream didn't start out bad."
"Oh?" said Madlen. "Did you come here to talk about your dream, Lady Queen?"
Yes. "My hand hurts," said Bitterblue, opening her hand and showing it to Madlen.
"Is it serious?"
"I think I was holding my sword too hard at practice this morning."
"Wel ," said Madlen, seeming to understand. She took Bitterblue's hand and explored it with light fingers. "That sounds easily mended, Lady Queen."
It did mend something, those few minutes of Madlen's gentle touch.
ON HER WAY back to her tower, Bitterblue encountered Raffin in the middle of the hal way, peering worriedly at a knife in his hands.
"What is it?" asked Bitterblue, stopping before him. "Has something happened, Raffin?"
"Lady Queen," he said, politely moving the knife far away from her and, in the process, nearly poking a passing member of the Monsean Guard, who jumped away in alarm. "Oh, dear," Raffin said. "That's just it."
"What's just it, Raffin?"
"Bann and I are taking a trip into Sunder, and Katsa says I must wear this on my arm, but I truly feel the danger is greater if I do. What if it fall s out and impales me? What if it flings itself from my sleeve and lodges in someone else? I'm perfectly content poisoning people," Raffin muttered, pulling up his sleeve and holstering the knife. "Poison is civilized and control ed. Why must everything involve knives and blood?"
"It will not fly out of your sleeve, Raffin," said Bitterblue soothingly. "I promise. Sunder?"
"Only briefly, Lady Queen. Po will stay here with you."
"I thought Po and Giddon were taking the tunnel into Estil ."
Raffin cleared his throat. "Giddon isn't desirous of Po's company just now, Lady Queen," he said delicately.
"Giddon is going alone."
"I see," said Bitterblue. "Where will you go after Sunder? Not back home?"
"As it happens, Lady Queen," said Raffin, "that is not an option. My father has made it known that members of the Council aren't welcome in the Middluns at the moment."
"What?" said Bitterblue. "Even his own son?"
"Oh, it's only political bluster, Lady Queen. I know my father, regrettably. He's trying to appease the kings of Estil , Sunder, and Wester because they dislike him even more than they used to, now that Nander has fall en at the hands of an organization that likely includes me and Katsa. I don't expect he could keep any of us out without making more of a scene than he wants to. But it's no inconvenience to us at the moment, so we won't protest. It'l chafe at Giddon most, if it continues. He never likes to be away from his estate for too long. Is it really supposed to feel like this?" Raffin demanded, shaking his forearm.
"Like you have a blade against your skin?" asked Bitterblue. "Yes. And if someone tries to hurt you, you must use it, Raffin. Assuming there's no time to respond with poison, of course," she added dryly.
"I've done it before," Raffin said darkly. "It's only a matter of information. As long as I know an attack is being planned, I can foil the whole thing as wel as anyone else. And Usually no one needs to die." Then he sighed. "How have things come to this, Lady Queen?"
"Have things ever been any other way?"
"Peaceful, you mean, and safe?" he said. "I suppose not.
And I suppose we may as wel be in the thick of the violence, trying to take some control over the way it plays out."
Bitterblue considered this prince, the son of a bul y king, the cousin of a firebal like Katsa. "Wil you like to be king, Raffin?"
His answer was in the resignation that came over his face.
"Does it matter?" he responded quietly. Then he added, shrugging, "I Shall have less time for mayhem. And, sadly, less time for my medicines. And I will have to marry, because a king must produce heirs." Glancing into her face, he said with a small smile, "You know, I would ask you to marry me, except that it's not a thing I would ask anyone without Bann present, nor would I actual y make you such an inadequate offer in earnest. It would solve a great many of my problems and create problems for you, hm?"
She couldn't help smiling. "I confess it's not a future I would wish for," she said. "On the other hand, it's no less romantic than any other proposal I've ever gotten. Ask me again in five years. Perhaps then I'll be in need of something complicated and strange that looks good to the rest of the world."
Chuckling, Raffin practiced straightening his arm, bending it, straightening it again. "What if I stick Bann by accident?"
he asked grumpily.
"Just open your eyes wide and look where you're stabbing,"
said Bitterblue cheerful y.
RUNNING THROUGH THE east city that night, she wasn't certain what she was running toward. With truthseekers and truth kill ers on her mind she was alert, trusting no one she passed, conscious of the blades on her own arms, of how quickly she could whip them out if she needed to. When a hooded woman passed under a streetlamp and gold paint on her lips caught the light, it stopped Bitterblue like a shock. Gold paint, and glitter around her eyes.
Bitterblue stood, breathing hard. Yes, it was late September; yes, it could very wel be the equinox. Yes, it did seem likely that some people in the city would celebrate, discreetly, those traditional rituals. For example, the same people who buried their dead and stole back truths.
For the merest instant, Bitterblue was uncertain. In that instant, she could have turned back. It wasn't thought; it didn't go that deep. It was in the fingertips she brought to her lips, and on her skin.
She ran on.
TILDA ANSWERED HER knock and pull ed her into a room she barely recognized, so ful was it of people and noise. Tilda bent down and kissed Bitterblue on the lips, smiling, wearing an ornament in her hair, more like a hat, real y, made of hanging, swaying drops of glass.