Chapter 1
IT WAS AT DUSK on a warm summer evening that Queen Johanna of Saarland walked through the palace hallway accompanied by two guards, each carrying an oil lamp to light her way. She had been sitting in the private sitting room when the guards had come to call her. Apparently a visitor had come to the palace. The guards wouldn’t say who it was, only that he waited in the garden room.
As she followed the guards across the hall into the large ballroom, where their footsteps echoed in the empty space and the flapping flames of lamps in sconces did weird things with shadows, several scenarios played in Johanna’s mind, none of them pleasant.
It could be a representative of the Belaman Church, unhappy with the accusation that they had been trying to control Saardam through a magical relic. That accusation had proven very hard to kill, even if Johanna herself didn’t believe there was much truth in it. Yes, the relic had come from the holy city of Seneza and had been sent to the Shepherd Victor, leader of the Church of the Triune in Saardam by someone dressed as a monk, but Johanna refused to believe that the Most Holy Father Severino of the Belaman Church would sanction such a thing. Or if he did, he could not possibly be terribly holy. Which, in itself, would be a scandal of the first order.
It would be better then, that the visitor was someone from Saardam’s nobles, who were still sour over their loss of position when King Roald had taken the throne, and more recently, the death of one of their young men. Young Auguste had fallen off the deck of a ship where he wasn’t supposed to be, and although the nobles wanted to accuse someone of his murder, all the signs showed it had been an unfortunate accident revealing some of the young man’s illegal activities. Johanna didn’t think the nobles had any reason to accuse, nor draw attention to the young man’s activities.
But maybe the visitor was an envoy from any of the guests about to arrive in the city to negotiate potential investment in Saardam’s gutted port. They were kings and barons and princes, as well as a slew of folk with commercial interests who would be tagging along.
But it was the first group—the foreign nobles—that had taken Johanna a disproportionate amount of time to deal with. Heaven knew King William had been difficult enough already, almost to the point where Johanna wished he’d declined involvement in the project—and he hadn’t even arrived in the city yet.
The start of that meeting was less than a week away. The men and their entourage were about to arrive in Saardam, to gawk, to bicker, and hopefully to agree on a few things or put down sorely needed deposits on sorely needed facilities.
The palace was being readied for that event. For weeks, the palace servants had been run off their feet, building, painting, fixing, cleaning, furnishing.
Already, they had put tables and chairs in place for the dinners that would be held in the formal ballroom, the hall that Johanna now traversed in the darkness and where the large space echoed her footfalls and those from the guards’ hard-heeled boots.
The tablecloths were still in the linen cupboard, safe from the sparrows that lived in the bay window inside the domed roof where no one could reach them and came into the room when the doors were open, and that would leave little reminders of their presence on the pristine white cloth.
The guards led Johanna through the doors to the side of the hall into the garden room. Looking towards the west, the many windows and glass doors of garden room caught the last of daylight, a mere orange glimmer on the horizon.
Every time she came here, a little shiver went over her. This was where she had seen so many men killed during the first attack on Saardam by Alexandre’s bandits, and where she had seen the ghost of Princess Celine crack the stone slab in the ground and rise from the grave. The bodies of the soldiers had long since been removed, the broken glass swept up and the headstone replaced, but the foul magic atmosphere lingered as if something had died here and the decomposing juices had seeped into the stone, and could not be removed by any amount of scrubbing.
A single lamp burned in the room, casting a pale yellow glow over the floor and stone that marked Princess Celine’s grave. A bench stood there these days, for Johanna came to sit here in the afternoons when the low sun set beyond the wide expanse of the river, behind the marshy shore on the other side and the sand dunes that sheltered Saardam from the force of the sea. She would sit, pray to the holy Triune and contemplate all they had lost and all that needed to be done. It was not a pleasant thing, to come here, but she felt she owed it to Roald’s sister and his parents.
Today, someone else sat on that bench.
As Johanna came in, the dark-haired young man turned around and rose at the same time. The orange glow from the flame showed his olive-skinned face with a pair of clear, alert eyes the colour of the night.
His mouth spread into a smile.
“Oh,” was all Johanna could say. Her heart jumped.
She hadn’t seen Li Fai for over two months, had been avoiding him because . . . because that subtle, polite smile ignited a warm feeling in her that reminded her of all the reasons why she was avoiding him.
And by the Triune, she understood why she was avoiding him: because in his quiet, unassuming way, he was heart-stoppingly handsome.
He wore locally made clothes that were classy because of their understated simplicity. No excessive frills on the collar, no garish patterns on the trousers. He’d also done away with the jacket and wore only a plain waistcoat. It was warm enough.
“You look . . . different,” he said.
“What, this?” She put her hand on her swollen stomach. It had grown very big and round. She would joke that her dress could double as an army tent. At any rate, she had said goodbye to her toes and would not be able to see them until after the child was born. Still a month to go, Helena said. Just enough time to get these meetings with kings and barons and dukes over and done with.
Li Fai said, “I haven’t seen you for so long. I wanted to teach some magic, but you are always busy.”
“I’m sorry. I have a lot of work to do. The city is in a big mess.” She was such a liar.
“I understand.” He looked down. The light gilded his face, the skin soft and smooth. He was about as tall as she.
A little uncomfortable silence followed, in which she would have liked to say something about how much she enjoyed learning about magic and hearing the stories about the “art” boxes that children in his country received if they had any magic capability. But she couldn’t say that because the guard stood behind her, and she was unsure how much the guards knew about magic, or how much they knew about all the other things that had gone on in the Shepherd’s house or before.
And the silence was painful because she didn’t want it to be so awkward and uncomfortable. She wanted to talk and laugh, and practice magic.
She finally found something to say. “I still . . . have the box.” Her cheeks glowed. “I keep it on the shelf in my study.”
“Do you open it?”
“Sometimes, when no one is looking. The tree grows in it every time.” That tree had saved her life when facing the ancient relic sent by the church.
Li Fai smiled again, and that smile almost made her cry. If life was simple, if she had been ordinary Johanna Brouwer, living with her father and being reminded that she should get married, she might have smiled back, and batted her eyelids. She might have hoped that he would ask her to come and visit his family at the iron ship, or go for a walk along the canals.
But she was the king’s wife, even if the king was far more interested in frogs than ruling the country, and life was altogether far more complicated.
And she really had no time for this kind of nonsense. She should stay distant and royal, like a real queen. “Do tell me why you have come to see me.”
“I’m very sorry about the time of day. This is a quite disturbing matter, though.”
“Please sit down.”
He sat on the bench.
Johanna hesitated, but the bench had a soft comfortable cushion. Her legs tended to hurt when standing too long, so she sat carefully, at the very far end of the bench, so as not to give that guard whose name she didn’t know—where had he gone anyway?—a reason to raise his eyebrows.
Only then did she notice the plain cloth bag that lay on the seat next to him.
He picked it up and inserted his hand into the cloth.
He extracted an object consisting of a dark wooden handgrip with a metal tube that reflected the light from the lamp.
“Is this. . . ?”
“A gun, yes.”
She had seen powder guns before. Johan Delacoeur, a military man, scoffed at guns. He always said that he could do so much more with ten good archers and swordsmen than with twenty men with guns. But clearly, inventors improved the weapons all the time, and this didn’t look like any kind of gun she had seen. Those had been awkward things with long barrels that had a little lever at the back that contained a burning match. Johan said that the smell of the burning match gave away the position of a marksman.
This weapon’s barrel was quite short. It had a little metal lever on top, but was otherwise smooth.
Li Fai turned it over. Embossed in the wood was a little sign. He held it up to the light and Johanna could make out the dragon symbol that his father, the eastern merchant Li Han, used to mark goods sold through his company.
“Your father’s?”
Li Fai shook his head. “There are twelve of these, all of them with our stamp. Or something that looks like our stamp. We didn’t put it there. This weapon is not bad, but not of a quality that my father would consider selling.”
Only then did she fully comprehend what he was telling her: even after they had unmasked the lame efforts by Auguste LaFontaine, someone was still smuggling.
“How can that be?” The group of Auguste LaFontaine and his friends had been unmasked, their fake stamps taken away, and any goods confiscated. There hadn’t been that much to begin with. It had been, Anton of the guards had assured her, a very amateur operation.
She met Li Fai’s eyes. “Where did you find this?”
“We didn’t. The harbourmaster’s diligent staff found it. Since we found those other falsified stamps, they have been looking out for this sort of thing.”
“Where did they find it?”
“Packed into crates being unloaded from a Burovian ship that arrived from Florisheim. The captain says he’s just carrying stock and doesn’t know anything about it.”
“Do you believe him?”
Li Fai shrugged. “It’s bad form to open cargo that you’re contracted to carry.” Which wasn’t really an answer. It was, however, how the Church relic had made it to Saardam on board Li Han’s ship. To a captain, honour was often more important than law. Even if you knew that cargo might be illegal, you did not open crates and look in bags, if you wanted repeat business and if you wanted to keep your good name.
“Yes, but he should have found it suspicious, with this shipment coming from Florisheim with your stamp already on it. The crates would have had your stamp, too.”
“They did, and the captain still may not have had any reason to question it.” He sounded like he would have questioned it. It sounded like he would not have carried the freight without a good explanation. “He should have questioned it. I believe that if the captain or the guards had the wood art, they would have seen why they shouldn’t have carried it.”
Ah. There was the reason that he had come. Li Fai, of course, didn’t see things in wood. She reached out for the wooden handgrip of the gun.
“Not that one. It has been handled by too many people in the last few days.”
He put his hand back into the bag and retrieved a piece of wood. It was a splintered piece the length of her hand. The wood was roughly cut and unpolished.
“I took this from the crate’s lid. I had to be quite forceful with the wood to remove it, but I didn’t touch it with my hands.”
Johanna took it from him. The moment her hands came into contact with the rough wood, her mind filled with images.
Li Fai swinging an axe. It hit the wood with a giant thunk. Ouch.
Then two guards carrying the crate. One of them was complaining about how heavy it was.
The crate sat on a table in the harbourmaster’s office. Li Fai stood over it, looking, wide-eyed at its contents.
Then a much vaguer scene. It was dark, and two men were carrying the crate up an incline that was possibly the ladder out of a ship’s hold. They spoke in rough, foreign voices. Another man met them on the deck, also speaking in a foreign language, possibly Burovian. The men set the crate at the man’s feet. He wore a dark cloak and boots with silver buckles. This man looked like a noble.
He argued with the ship’s captain. Johanna had taken some lessons in Burovian, and she thought she heard the word for p*****t. Was the noble taking the crate off the ship? Was he delivering it? Buying it?
Then the arguing men suddenly fell quiet. The two men who had carried the crate hid behind a stack of different crates. The noble scurried down a little set of stairs into the door to the ship’s cabin.
On the quay, someone shouted in the darkness, “Halt. Who goes there?”
No one replied.
Then the images faded.
Johanna again faced Li Fai in the darkness of the garden room, the expression on his face eager. She shook her head. “I can’t tell. Too much has happened since for the memories to still be clear enough to identify people.”
Disappointment showed in his face.
“Sorry. Maybe you could find something from the warehouse where the crate was going? Surely there would have been other cargo.”
“I could, except no one knows which one it is. It looks like the rest of the shipment was delivered direct to another part of town. A witness saw a wagon being driven away from the quay that night.”
Just a wagon, of course, meant little. Plenty of wagons used the streets at night. Johanna remembered lying in bed in her room at the front of the house and hearing the sound of horse’s hooves on the cobblestones. Wagons would come at night to pick up scraps, and sometimes even the peat man would still come after dark.
The memory was like a little stab of homesickness. Up here in the palace, she was so out of touch with those things. The best quality peat just appeared in the basket next to the hearth and she rarely even saw who put it there.
“Thank you for warning me about this,” she said to Li Fai. “We will do our best to find out who the owner of this shipment is.”
He made to get up, but hesitated.
“Is there anything else?”
“No, but . . .” He sighed. “My father asks that the guards punish those who are so keen to make us look like smugglers. Everyone in town seems to think that we’ve done some bad thing. When I walk in the street, mothers pull their children out of the way. People won’t speak to me and scurry back into their houses.”
“I don’t think you’re smugglers.”
“No, but other people do.” He took a deep breath and continued, “My father says that if you want his money, you should be more careful with who you let into your town.” He looked at her when he said that, and there was an intense expression in his eyes.
“Just your father or do you speak for yourself as well?”
Did she see a flinch? “My father decides about our business. He does not like being accused of things we haven’t done.”
“But you know that this accusation of you is none of our doing?”
“I do.” He flinched again and said, “But my father says it is made possible because your husband is a weak king.”
Johanna could agree with that.
He took another deep breath and added, “He says you’re a weak queen.” Now he averted his eyes to the hands he held on his lap. His voice had lowered. “I’m sorry, that’s what he says, whether I like it or not. He ordered me to say those things, so I have done right by him and said them.”
Then he said in a lower voice, “My father does not understand. My father has no love for the art even if he employs sailors who have wind art for their advice on how to avoid storms and other hazards. He doesn’t like the art and doesn’t think that kings and emperors should get involved with it.”
“Do you think I’m a weak queen?”
He said nothing for a while. His cheeks were red. Johanna’s heart was thudding. She was a weak queen, dependent on the King’s Council as she was. Because the nobles on the council didn’t trust her, and because Roald wasn’t going to make any decisions himself. And because they wouldn’t let her make any decisions because she was a woman and they thought that she was stupid.
Li Fai said, “I prefer not to pass harsh judgement on people who treat us honourably.”
In other words: he agreed that she was a weak queen.
“Tell me then, what should I do in your father’s eyes? What does he say about me at the dinner table?”
“He says things that would not be wise to repeat.” His cheeks grew red. “We are, in our culture, very open. We do not pretend things are better than they are. We do not say a thing to please someone, especially if that person is a friend.”
The intense expression in his eyes made her squirm. “I am a weak queen. I would do so much more, but these men control every step I take, every decision that has to be made. I have to ask them to approve everything I want to do. Half the time, they don’t. the other half, they dither until it is too late.”
“My father says you should get rid of them.”
Johanna snorted. “That’s a lot easier said than done.”
“He didn’t say it would be easy either. He likes to work with strong rulers.”
And she, clearly, didn’t fit the bill.
A cold hand of panic clamped around her heart. Li Han might not even be interested in the investment in Saardam at all. He might simply hang around because King William and other royals were coming. Li Han might want to negotiate with them for better conditions of stay and hire of an office in Anglia or Lurezia.
Li Fai met her eyes and the look in them disturbed her. He reached out, briefly putting his hand on hers. He said, his voice low, “I want to stay. I think you’re honourable. I think it is a great asset that you are not part of the royal families of the lowlands who are all related and intermarried, and who are all only interested in their own wealth. I would like to see you succeed.”
His father, clearly, did not believe she could.