The Burning Stone
The prize.
It had never meant anything to Alain before, prizes, alliances, the ties of blood. But now it came clear: Tallia’s blood and rank would draw them to Lavas like flies to honey. Tallia had called herself a pawn because more powerful hands moved her where she did not want to go, but he had learned the rules of the game called chess this past year. The pieces called Lions were also called pawns because they were men-at-arms, common-born and expendable—like Julien. But Tallia was not a pawn. She was the granddaughter of kings and queens.
In the game of chess, that made her a Regnant.
3
They camped that night out of sight of the corpse, but Anne set a servant to watch over it. They had been dogged by miserable weather, and it drizzled now. Liath had twisted her ankle when she’d slipped while dismounting, but she dealt with her misery by becoming increasingly silent. In truth, Sanglant was glad of it. He’d known soldiers who suffered loudly and those who suffered silently, and although he knew God enjoined humankind to feel compassion, he preferred the silent sufferers.
Right now he crouched over a fire that he coaxed to stay alive despite the rain. Earlier he’d gathered comfrey along the banks of a stream. Now it steeped in boiled water. Anne came up behind him. She had an odd step, decided, as if she knew where she was going, but not at all heavy, as if she meant to tread lightly so no footprint would be left behind. Her robes smelled of rose oil. “You are learned in herb lore, Prince Sanglant? I thought you merely a fighting man.”
“I know a little,” he said cautiously. “It’s always wise to observe, to learn what’s useful. I can treat wounds and a few illnesses, such things as we see on campaign.”
Later, when Liath sniffed at the poultice, she said “comfrey” in a choked voice, then shut her eyes and sucked in air as he pressed it gently over her ankle. He settled down behind her so that, back against back, they braced each other. It had stopped raining but now and again drops sprayed his face, spilled on a gust of wind. The dog snuffled along the ground, then flopped down beside him. It was so thin, and it never seemed to get any stronger. Sometimes he felt as if he were the thread drawing it forward, that otherwise it would simply lie down and die.
“Da always said comfrey for sprains and aches,” murmured Liath. “People would come to him when they were sick. I never paid attention to how much he knew.”
Sanglant shut his eyes. He was comfortable with her as counterbalance against his back. His fingertips brushed the dog’s ears Its hide had such an odd texture, not at all comforting like a real dog’s coat but dry and rough. Still. It grunted and whined, tail thumping as he scratched its head. He felt himself dozing off, his awareness like the thread that bound the dog to him just as he was bound to his father by an intangible cord that gleamed as softly as starlight. Yet that connecting thread wound farther back, beyond, to a place unremembered but felt in the pulse on his heart, so faint that he had to smell it and hear it more than see it, a binding made by the pull of blood.
He grunted, coming awake to see a fire snapping brightly a body’s length from them.
“I’m better at controlling fire,” she said. “It helps that it’s wet. The damp is like a shield—”
Such a bitter regret washed over him at the thought of the soldiers he’d left behind at Werlida that he winced, then struggled up to his feet.