Arran tossed sweaty-footed in his bed for what seemed like hours. The deadly beans lay hidden within his closet, but they might have been in his hand for the quality of sleep that he was getting. Dragging a blanket from the foot of the bed, he squirmed from between his hot covers and attempted to make himself comfortable on the floor.
He slept for a time, but soon awoke shivering from the coldness of the flagstones. Pulling the blanket around his shoulders, Arran padded barefoot from his room, seeking the hallway window.
Darkness still shrouded the sky, and the North Wind blew in at him, but distant—distant and sober and terribly bright—the old one, Mor, gazed down. Arran could only see a hint of his features. This window was hardly meant for sky-watching.
Stretching his head through the small window, he gazed toward Mor with burning eyes. Mor seemed to dip his head, and then he flew under the horizon in a wide swathe of silver. The oldest star had nothing to tell him. Eliane was probably dancing her last star-steps to greet the morning: the eastern sky seemed gray. But Eliane herself was hidden from his view by the stone ramparts of the castle.
He touched his sore neck gingerly. His assailant had been wise in his method of choking Arran: the forearm against his windpipe left fewer marks than would have shown had the man used his fingers. Probably no bruises would appear at all. Only his burning throat and tender stomach remained of the assault, but for the beans.
I
f I hide them— He banished the thought from his mind. The assailant was no passive player in the power-grabbing games that unsettled the Axelarrain from time to time. To wait until Arran felt safely in control of himself would be foolish.
______________________________________________
“Soldor? Soldor!” Arran banged his fist against the wood of his brother’s door.
A dim clattering echoed from the first floor. One of the servingmaids had knocked something over as she prepared the table for breakfast.
“Seriously, Soldor! I need to talk to you!”
A thump sounded behind the door, followed by silence.
“Soldor!”
A muffled objection. Arran waited.
Soldor dragged back the heavy oak door and stood there, clumsily wrapped in a robe, his hair duck-tailed. “What,” he said shortly.
In answer, Arran shoved forward his handful of beans. They glittered like jet in the light of the torch bound in brackets to the wall.
Soldor’s brows jolted. Gingerly, he lifted one bean from Arran’s palm and touched it briefly against his tongue before jerking it back. He stared wild-eyed at Arran. “Where did you get these?”
“Someone—held me up in the hall last night.” Arran pushed the beans into Soldor’s hand. “He tried to threaten me into putting these—”
“Pardon me if I think this whole thing is a little odd,” Soldor said flatly. “What do you gain by telling me all this?”
Arran’s neck began to throb.
“What did the man look like?”
Arran swallowed painfully. “He was wrapped in a horsehair cloak so I couldn’t see him well. He was wearing boots, I think. Not a young man, by the sound of his voice.”
Soldor’s eyes met Arran’s and held them. Arran did not dare lower his gaze. He stared at Soldor’s face, the deep brown eyes so like Anlaida’s, until Soldor spoke again. “You said the man threatened you. How?”
“He didn’t say anything specific,” Arran faltered. “Only that I had two weeks.”
“Frightening.”
“He was blocking my windpipe. Do you call that pleasant?”
“Have you seen him before?” A lock of Soldor’s hair dropped over his left eye. He shoved it back.
“He left me notes. Wanted me to meet him on my own. I avoided the places he said. So no. I haven’t seen him.” Arran dug his toes into the soles of his shoes.
“Do you know the kind of beans these are?” Soldor spread them in his fingers. “They grow somewhere past the Southern Downs. Used to sedate animals, I’m told. One bean will put a grown horse to sleep for days and kill anything smaller than a dog. Two and the animal—or man—is never right again. Three, and whatever takes them is dead, man or beast.”
In the histories, they were called death’s-mouth. Arran watched the beans glint in Soldor’s hand. “I’ve heard of them.”
Soldor’s eyes locked on his. “Where did the man supposedly stop you?”
Arran gritted his teeth. “The upper passages. I don’t know how he got in.”
“I’ll ask the guards.” Soldor studied Arran’s face closely. “And you had better not be lying to me, or I’ll see you regret it.”
Silently Arran shoved his good hand into his pocket. The smell of hot meats drifted up the main stairway and into the hall. He turned away.
Soldor raked a hand through his duck-tailed hair and jerked the door shut.