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A Touch of Poison
Jaelithe Ingold
The rusty lock disengaged from the first set of barred doors, and
footsteps echoed on the floor above. Not just the single set from her
regular guardsman, but a group of people shuffling down the thirteen
stone steps to her cell.
Visitors. How unexpected.
Arys smoothed tangled hair back from her face and rubbed her sooty hands
against the thin fabric of her skirt. Her efforts made no difference.
Grit coated every pore on her body, from the tips of her raw, bony feet
to her itchy scalp.
The fools thought dirt could protect them from her touch.
She backed away from the door, retreated to the corner where she'd
scraped nine winters' worth of hash marks in neat rows. By their
footsteps, she counted five people. On rare occasions, when Callum
deigned to visit her, there were as many as two. Never five.
Arys watched the heavy, bolted door which had kept her from the rest of
the kingdom for so long. She'd known this day would come. There was only
one reason to lock her away while the others burned.
Someday, she might be useful. And Callum believed he could control her.
The footsteps halted.
"Back away." The raspy voice belonged to her usual guardsman. He never
smiled, never made eye contact, but seemed to have no fear of her. It
had been so long, perhaps he didn't recall what she was. Or what it used
to mean to wear green.
She leaned against the cool stone and tucked her hands out of sight as
the tumblers in the lock groaned. The door hadn't been opened since the
day she'd been escorted inside surrounded by a ring of swords.
Everything else had gone through a small hatch on the upper half of the
door. A bucket could be squeezed inside, but nothing larger.
Arys held her breath as the door swung open.
As expected, five men stood outside. Four of them were guardsmen, whose
presence she dismissed immediately. The fifth was Callum.
She let her breath out on a sigh. Lean and handsome as always. The black
doublet only emphasized his broad shoulders. His swarthy skin lay tight
against the aristocratic bones of his face, and his eyebrows were thick
slashes. Even now, she could recall with perfect clarity the feel of
those wiry brows when she'd traced them with her fingertips.
While she studied him, he returned her regard, but she refused to feel
shame. If she was somehow less than what she'd once been, it was his
fault more than any other. More than the Queen for making the decree.
More than the peasants who'd demanded death for her kind.
"Arys." His voice still held a trace of accent from the village they'd
both grown up in. "It is good to see you."
Liar.
"You want something." She couldn't bring herself to smile. It was always
like this with him. A favor. A simple favor that would make everything
better for both of them. Accompanying him to court had only been the
first. Then he'd asked her to take the test for the Catevari. Just to
show her support for the kingdom.
She'd been such a foolish girl.
Callum turned to the guardsmen. "Leave us."
The guards exchanged glances, but one stern expression from the Queen's
favorite consort had them retreating. Once they closed him inside,
Callum returned his gaze to her. He stepped closer, foolish man,
unafraid that she'd do anything to him.
"I have come to offer you something. A bargain."
"A bargain?" She rolled the word over her tongue, marveling at the taste
of it. No one had offered her anything in years.
Whatever he'd come to ask of her, she was bound to despise it.
"What do you have to offer me? Fresh linens?" She pointed to her soiled
pallet. "Better clothing?" She pinched the threadbare fabric covering
her chest. "Or perhaps some edible food?" She kicked the bowl which had
contained her daily rations. "And what would I have to do to earn such
kindnesses?"
His eyebrows drew together. "For one simple task, you could earn
freedom."
"Freedom?" The word felt as though it had been torn from her throat.
"Don't lie to me, Callum. There is no freedom for a Catevari."
"There could be." His voice was little more than a murmur as he drew
even closer. "For you, at least." Callum reached out and trailed his
index finger along her jaw.
Manipulative as usual.
Even so, Arys closed her eyes at the sensation. So familiar, and yet
unreal. Because he was touching her again. How many years had it been
since another person touched her? Long before she'd been imprisoned,
people had avoided contact. When she'd passed down hallways and streets,
men and women alike had given her as wide a berth as possible. They'd
stared at her hands like they would a viper in the sand. Like the poison
she'd wielded as a weapon for the kingdom was somehow contagious.
Superstitious peasants.
"The kingdom is a different place now. Most have forgotten all about
you."
In spite of everything, Arys smiled. "Not the Queen, I'd wager."
His hand dropped, and a strange expression crossed his face.
Arys understood immediately. "Ah. It's the Queen then, isn't it? That is
my one simple task, yes? To save your bitch. How apt."
His cheeks flooded with color. Protective, even after all this time.
"Were it just my lady Queen, we would not consider using you. But as it
is, a child's life is at stake too. Her unborn successor."
And Arys knew. With blinding clarity, she knew it was his child. His
child.
She tried not to let the agony show. The child might have been hers -
should have been hers - once upon a time. If things had been different.
If the Queen hadn't loved Callum too. If Callum hadn't been so
ambitious. "There are no other heirs?"
Callum shook his head. "My lady Queen has been unlucky."
Or perhaps it was punishment for all her sins. Satisfaction widened the
smile on Arys's face, while his expression turned wary. As well it
should.
She was a different person from the one who'd accompanied him from their
village to the court of the Queen. From the girl who'd become one of
the Queen's handmaidens, to the woman he'd once intended to marry.
The moment she'd been tested, everything had changed. The Catevari had
claimed her.
She'd gone from wearing blues, reds, violets and yellows to green.
Nothing but green. Callum had called it a sacred duty, so she'd accepted
the robes to an office she'd never wanted to acquire a life she hated.
While the life she'd desired with all her heart disappeared. And so had
Callum.
"You know what I require?" She watched him carefully. If he so much as
flinched, she'd turn him down.
But he didn't. He only nodded. "We have the gem. And we also have a
volunteer."
~
She was taken to an empty room on the ground floor of the castle. Once
there, she was brought several hip baths filled with steaming water,
along with a fresh change of clothing. Not for her comfort, but for the
Queen's. Only a sweet-smelling person was worthy to place her hands upon
royalty.
The garment was more like one worn by a lady's maid than a lady herself,
but Arys did not complain. The fabric felt soft against her newly
washed skin. The lemon-scented soap was sharp enough to make her eyes
water and her nostrils sting, but at least it had cleansed the sticky
grit away.
But for how long? Freedom was still a lifetime away, no matter how today
turned out. Callum had never been good about keeping his word.
A short rap sounded at the door, and her captor returned with his
retinue of guardsmen. He'd left her in privacy for the short time she'd
been given to bathe and don her new clothing. After everything that had
happened between them, his propriety was misplaced.
Of course, unlike most of the kingdom, Callum knew she was harmless
without the stone. Had he believed her dangerous, he wouldn't have left
her alone.
"You look much better." His eyes passed over her, and she resisted the
urge to brush against the skirt or to smooth back her combed hair. "Are
you ready?"
Arys nodded. "Where is it?"
He beckoned to someone behind him, and the guardsmen parted. Another
moved between them, holding a wooden tray with gloved hands. A wooden
box bound by rusted locks rested on top.
Even though she couldn't see inside, she could feel the gem throbbing
within its prison. It fell into rhythm with her heart. Its humming
energy coursed under her skin, like an itch she needed to scratch.
The jewel was happy to be near her again.
The sentiment was not returned.
The guardsman gently set the tray on top of a table. Then he backed
away. Callum made a gesture, and the remainder of the guardsmen
surrounded her with weapons held out in warning.
A precaution, of course. Just a precaution. But she wasn't offended.
As she drew closer to the box, her heart seemed to triple its beat. Her
palms began to sweat and shake, and Arys had to force herself to release
the locks and lift the lid. A collective hush fell over everyone as she
reached inside.
Her fingers wrapped around the thin chain and withdrew the amulet from
its prison. So ordinary in appearance. So deadly in reality. A dark,
vivid green stone shot through with white and yellow swirls. The stone
wasn't regularly shaped like a cut gem, but smoothed into an oval from
the press of hundreds of fingers harnessing its power for the good of
the kingdom.
Arys draped the stone over her neck so it fell between her breasts. It
pulsed with energy and warmed against her skin. A burning sensation
streaked through her blood as the poisons of the gem sought death for
their holder, only to be disappointed.
She was immune, like all Catevari. Not because their gods had found her
worthy like the peasants had once believed, but because the Catevari
sisters had picked Arys. At the behest of the Queen, no doubt. What
better way to rid herself of a rival for Callum's affection?
The Catevari had trained her body to move the poison. To harness the
stone. To take from one and give to another. A secret skill, not a gift.
The stone, like her, had been asleep for so long, but it wanted to be
alive again, to feed again. The painful streaks subsided, and the gem
settled its trembling, content to wait for now.
She turned to Callum. "Once I've done this simple task for you, what
assurances do I have that you'll let me go?"
He frowned. "I've already given you my word. You'll have your freedom."
"Convince me." She clasped the stone in her hand, and his eyes followed
the movement. "And don't play games. I know you too well."
One of the guards twitched, and Arys smiled. Before nightfall, the
gossip about their history would begin making the rounds again, and
Callum's life would be more difficult to defend.
And she would be gone. One way or another, she wasn't going back in that
cell.
~
The Queen was ensconced in the middle of a massive bed draped with red
canopies; her swollen belly formed a mound beneath the coverlet. She'd
grown fat over the years, no doubt stuffed with divine pastries and
meats while Arys survived on the dregs from the kitchen.
Her face was yellowed and sweaty, her breathing was shallow and quick,
and her eyes were closed. Sickness poured from her in waves. The stone
purred at being close to such a wellspring of disease. "How long has she
been like this?"
"A few weeks," Callum murmured. "None of our doctors have been able to
help. But they all believe she's dying." He reached up to smooth away
the Queen's hair from her face.
Affection? After all this time?
Arys struggled to control her emotions. She'd always believed Callum's
affection for the woman had been a means to an end. A method to gain
more power by a man who'd only ever had one goal. A consolation that
even if he'd never loved Arys, he'd never loved the Queen either.
But if that wasn't the case....
Then this awful woman really had taken everything from her. Her life.
Her freedom. Her Catevari sisters. And Callum most of all. How was she
supposed to squelch the desire to flood the Queen's veins with all the
poison contained within the stone? Unbearable. Unbelievable.
Unthinkable. Unfair.
Freedom. A life outside that cell. Freedom from the kingdom, from Callum
and the Queen. She had to do it.
She took a deep, calming breath. "Where is the volunteer?"
Callum's gaze returned to her, and he seemed oblivious to her inner
struggle. "On his way."
Arys nodded and kept one hand clamped around the stone, which was
trembling in her grasp. So eager to take from the Queen. "I'll need
privacy to do this."
He shook his head. "I'm staying."
She gritted her teeth. "Of course you're staying. I meant the guards
should leave. No one other than you, me, the Queen and the volunteer."
His brow furrowed.
"The lack of guards is my only proof that you intend to keep your
promise once I've finished. And if that isn't enough to persuade you to
do as I ask, then I'm perfectly willing to return to my cell. And just
as willing to allow your Queen to die."
At that moment, his beloved moaned in her sleep, and Callum immediately
clasped her meaty hand in his. "You'll feel better soon, my dear. I
promise." His eyes returned to Arys. "Fine. No witnesses, then." He
dismissed the remaining guards, and continued murmuring encouragement
into the Queen's ear.
Out of nowhere, pain sliced through her stomach. Arys had never felt the
gap between them so acutely. They'd started in the same place. Had come
here at the same time. His entire adult life had been spent in this
court, near this Queen, where he'd earned the love of so many.
While she was no better than a servant. Or a criminal.
Minutes passed before a new set of guards escorted a malnourished,
grizzled man into the chamber. His clothing was tattered and manacles
were locked around his wrists and ankles. The man's widened eyes kept
flitting from object to object in the room.
A thief, perhaps? That was the way her volunteers had been selected in
the past. A jailed criminal would be offered a lord's ransom in money to
be given to his family, in exchange for accepting the diseases and
poisons of an aristocrat.
Take from one and give to another.
The way of the Catevari.
While Callum sent the volunteer's guards from the room, Arys moved
toward the prisoner. A sour scent rose from his skin. He hadn't been
given the chance to bathe, because it didn't matter. Only Arys would
touch him.
And he was a dead man.
She met the thief's eyes. "Do you know what will happen?"
The man twitched. Sweat glistened on his dirty brow, and he kept rubbing
at the skin on his wrist. "I die to save her." He nodded towards the
enormous bed. "My daughters get all the money they need."
"And you accept this of your own free will?"
He hesitated, and then he nodded once.
Arys looked to Callum, who was frowning. He'd never understood why the
question was important to her. The volunteer had a family. People would
mourn him, even though he was a criminal.
The Catevari had claimed it was better to take a volunteer. Someone who
understood the sacrifice, but Arys disagreed. Why take the life of a
good person, even if that person was a criminal? Why take the life of
someone kind or loving enough to make that kind of sacrifice? Why not
take the life of someone who didn't care about anyone else? Why not take
the life from someone who wouldn't know what they were sacrificing? Why
shouldn't the Catevari decide which kind of person was worthy of life?
She bit back her arguments and thought of freedom. All she had to do was
this one simple task. Save the Queen. Kill the thief.
She beckoned the volunteer to the bedside, being careful not to touch
him. Callum moved to his Queen and took her hand again. With the other
hand, he stroked her swollen belly.
Possessively.
His child.
Callum's son or daughter would sit upon the throne. The only reason he'd
asked for her assistance, the only reason he'd risk bringing her back
into the kingdom. For the child to live, the Queen had to live.
In that moment, she hated him more than she'd ever hated the Queen.
"Don't touch her." Arys glared at him. "Unless, perhaps, you'd like to
volunteer yourself."
He didn't remove his hands immediately. Merely stared at her with that
insolent expression. Then he slowly lifted his hands away. His decision.
Not hers.
So easily, she could reach out and touch him. She could send poison
through his veins, but it wouldn't work fast enough. She wouldn't
incapacitate him before he'd take her head off with his sword. And even
if that weren't the case, how could she kill him?
She'd loved him once.
So she grabbed the thief by his wrist and placed her other hand against
the Queen's fleshy neck. Satisfied heat flashed through the stone.
Burning pain filled her as the toxins from the Queen's illness surged
into her body and coursed to her other hand, where it slipped into the
body of the thief.
The volunteer groaned as the first wave of sickness slammed into him.
When he staggered, Arys pushed him against the wall for additional
support, but kept her grip on both bodies. The Queen's yellowed color
warmed to pink, and Arys felt the life moving within.
A daughter.
Arys's arms turned yellow as the disease passed through her and to the
thief, who accepted it into his body. He groaned again when his skin
flushed with that unhealthy color. His legs gave out, and he fell to the
ground.
Arys held onto him even when the Queen's eyes began to flicker with new
life. The thief's heart began to stutter, and breathing became more
difficult. His mouth opened on a sigh. A final sigh, perhaps.
Death was another kind of freedom. For him and for her.
Callum's daughter upon the throne. What would happen to the kingdom
then? His influence had always been felt upon the Queen, but at least
she had been strong enough to make her own decisions. What could he do
with a child under his control?
She might not be strong enough to kill Callum, but she could still hurt
him. She could still hurt the Queen. And she could still hurt the
kingdom.
Take from one and give to another.
So Arys changed her focus. She willed the illness out of the thief's
dying body and into another, younger soul. A body which wouldn't know
the difference within its mother's womb. A life which could be claimed
and trained before Callum could do anything about it.
At the same time, Arys took her own ability to harness the stone, to
move the poisons, and she gave it to Queen's unborn successor, Callum's
unborn daughter.
Her new Catevari sister.
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