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Crown of Stars (Crown of Stars 7)

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“Accident, perhaps. The favor of the gods, perhaps. Do you know who I am?”

“I know who you are. Let me go free. Let me return to your son.”

“The rock that cages you is more powerful than the sorcery that runs in your veins.”

“Where am I?”

“You lie at the Heart-of-the-Mountain-of-the-World’s-Beginning. You can burn stone, I suppose, but not quickly. It will tire you. You will not work your way free of this place easily.”

“I will be dead of thirst and hunger before then. If that’s your aim.”

“It might be more effective than the snake’s poison, now that I think on it. You will find water and food against the wall.”

“Why keep me alive at all?”

“I have a use for you.”

“Show yourself.”

“I will not.”

“I could burn you!”

“If you did, you would still be trapped. You do not know the way out. Only I do.”

Liath rose, but she hadn’t the strength to keep to her feet. She left one rock shard to mark her old position and moved as quickly as she could, hoping to creep up on her enemy. She had to crawl, despite knees and hands already abused and scraped raw. It hurt to crawl, and the ache in her thigh was worse than before.

Five hundred hand paces from her starting point, she found a cache of leather vessels where there had been none before. The water was cool, and there was enough for several days, if rationed carefully. She drank first, almost weeping as she savored the touch of liquid in her parched mouth. She felt, then tasted, wedges of salty, dried fish, nibbled to test tough rounds of flatbread, and explored the oblong shape and smooth skin of a dozen sweet fruits. The softest proved easy to peel open with the edge of her rock scraper; its moist sweetness had a flavor she had never tasted before, like ambrosia, surely—the food of the gods in ancient Arethousa. She ate and drank cautiously, not sure if she would feel nauseated again, but the worst effects of the toxin had passed.

o;So he is. More than what he seems.”

“Cleverer than he looks?” the old abbess chuckled.

“So it appears from the news we have heard of the battle in Dalmiaka and these new tidings from Wendar, if it is all true.”

“tru lo tru lye tru la tru lee

where the river flows, did the deer flee”

“What will happen,” Obligatia asked in a low voice, “when we are come with Sapientia?”

“I don’t know. She does not seem capable of ruling.”

“Our chronicles tell us that fitness was no barrier to the kings of Salia and Aosta. There are here and there stories of feebleminded children raised up to the throne, and ruled by those who held their leading strings.”

“It is not true of the Wendish, for we Wendish have always demanded that our regnants be worthy of the name.”

“Is Prince Sanglant that one? Worthy of the name?”

“Laws are silent in the presence of arms, so it is said. Sanglant possesses the loyalty of the army. And, if the story is true, Henry’s blessing, and the luck of the king, without which no regnant can prosper. The rest of his claim is not as strong. According to the Lions, there is debate and dissension on the matter of his queen, who was excommunicated and is known to be a sorcerer. That cannot help him.”

Mother Obligatia considered these words, and at length touched the book Rosvita held on her lap. “Will we see her again? Do you think her lost?”

“Like the books?” Rosvita had forgotten The Book of Secrets, clutched against her. She was afraid to let it go, as if it would vanish once no part of her body grounded it to the Earth. “She is lost to us. We must leave, quickly, before we are attacked again. We must pray we reach Quedlinhame and the king’s progress safely. As for the rest, I cannot know. It is taught that the daimones of the upper air can see into both past and future. But we are mortal, you and I, bound to the present.”

“Mere clay,” agreed Obligatia, and the thought made her smile as she patted Rosvita on the hands in the same manner she would pat a child’s head to comfort it. Her gaze strayed toward the nuns busy at their packing and came to rest on Sister Diocletia, who was peering into a chest and counting something on her fingers: eleven. At the far end of the hall, a young nun hung shutters and locked them into place against the coming departure. It was a sturdy hall, meant to weather storms and years. When all this trouble passed, it would still be standing.

“I would be at peace, having met her at long last,” said Mother Obligatia, “but I have a few questions I must still ask her. Therefore, I am selfishly sure that she must still be alive and that she will return to us.”



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