Takri rapped on the door to Mahleck's private chambers, once again a lump of trepidation rising in his throat as he waited for a servant to answer the door. He hated these summons to the King's side. Usually Baraz would be in attendance, but the poison left him weakened and recovering in his temple apartments. Tonight he would be alone with the King.
Instead of the expected servant, a small figure veiled in purple and gold silk opened the door and ushered him silently inside. Mahleck reclined on a low couch in a darkened corner of the room. The girl returned to him without as much as acknowledging Takri's presence.
"See how greatly your cousin cares for me?" He lifted the veil from her face, revealing his child bride's pale face. Her shadowed eyes flicked up to meet her cousin's gaze, but only for a moment. "Lilua, you need not veil yourself before your cousin Takri. We are family here. Soon your brother Zayaan will join us as well. Will that not make you happy?"
Lilua forced a smile to her lips before returning to her blank expression, her fingers tapping in uneven rhythms against her robes. Takri could barely make out the words blood and death among the folds of purple silk.
"My God and King." Takri bowed low and then address Lilua. "And my dear cousin. I hope you are well."
"She is most well," said Mahleck. "She has all a woman could desire: silks, jewels, the finest food and wine, and the pleasure of knowing she is my favored bride."
Takri nodded. "We are most blessed to be a part of your household, sire."
"Enough of these pleasantries, Lord Prince!" Mahleck laughed and rose from his place, clapping Takri on the back as he made his way across the room to an open bottle of wine and a waiting goblet. "I have in my possession a new Adyllian delight for you. A wine made from honey collected from the palace garden when the wild mountain roses bloom. It is most fragrant."
Wild mountain rose. Nasreen. Is he taunting me?
Mahleck poured the golden wine into a goblet and thrust it into Takri's hand. "I am sure you have never tasted the like."
Takri took a sip from the glass and swallowed. The wine smelled of honey and flowers and left him feeling warm as it slid down his throat. "It is very good."
Mahleck smiled and returned to his place next to his child bride.
"How fares Baraz?" asked Takri.
"The poison left him weak and his recovery will take some time," said Mahleck. "But I know now who the poisoners are. Despite what the temple women told you, it was not the Heresiarch."
Takri took another sip of the honey wine, feeling the warmth continue to spread through his body. "If not her, then who?"
"The girl who served as her Eyes colluded with the cook who made the stew," said Mahleck. "The girl has already confessed. She wished to be Baraz's body slave, but he chose your whore instead. What is her name again?"
"Nasreen," said Takri. "Her name is Nasreen."
"Ah, yes. Nasreen." Mahleck absentmindedly stroked Lilua's hair as if she were a favored pet. "Women are such jealous creatures, envious of one another and fighting among themselves for the favor of men in power. This is a valuable lesson you must learn, Takri. A man in power must never put his trust in a woman. Not even one as lovely and docile as my sweetest bride."
Lilua continued her unfocused stare, unflinching under the caress of her husband and King, her fingers folding and unfolding just above the silk. Lies.
"How do you know of this plot?" asked Takri.
"The Heresiarch," answered Mahleck. "While women cannot be trusted, some can be used. She lusts for power more than any man lusts for a woman, and this makes her useful to us. The people respect her, and she will help us to bring them to obedience."
Aisha followed the river out of the chamber and through a twisting passageway until it was too dark to see further than her nose. She stopped and lit the oil lamp with the flint from her bag. As the flame jumped to life, the walls of the cave appeared from the shadows as draped folds of fabric hung from the ceiling. The river, which had sounded like a crashing torrent after the silence of the holy lake now revealed its slow moving water with dry shores wide enough for two people to walk side by side.
She rearranged her bag and scroll case on her back and set off to follow the river, stopping when she was tired to eat a little from her rations and sleep, arms wrapped around the scroll case, and lamp lit against the dark. Once, the lamp burned too low as she slept and she awoke in darkness so deep she did not know if her eyes were open or shut. After that, she kept the flint in her hand and the lamp above her head as she slept.
Hours and days passed, but how many Aisha did not know. She only knew to keep following the river's current away from the city. The air smelled less of the hot spring sulfur now, and sometimes it seemed the river's current itself flowed backwards, righting itself a few hours later. Still she trudged onward, drinking from the river itself and refilling the now empty skin with fresh water as she needed. Sometimes she would see eyeless fish swimming in the shallows, the lamp light glinting off their scales like silver coins in the water.
It felt as if she were no longer Aisha or Irinya, only a being who slept, and ate, and drank, and walked through the dark. Sometimes she wept beside the river for her mother, father, and Nasreen. Sometimes she screamed her rage into the darkness, her echoes following her as she walked.
She refilled her lamp with oil twice before the bottle was emptied. She left it behind, hoping it would be enough to reach the surface, and yet she could somehow stay hidden in the darkness alone forever.