"What would I have to do to get a piece of cheese?" I asked. I knew it!
Margg was the one leaking information about me, and now she wanted to use
me. Finally, some evidence.
"I have a source that pays well for information. It's the perfect setup for a
little rat," Margg said.
"What kind of information?"
"Anything you might overhear while you're scurrying around the
Commander's office or Valek's apartment. My contact pays on a sliding scale;
the juicier the news, the bigger the chunk of cheese."
"How does it work?" My mind raced. Right now it was her word against
mine. I needed proof I could show Valek. To be able to finger both Margg and
her source would be a sweet treat.
"You give me the information," she said, "and I pass it along. I collect the
money, and give it to you, minus a fifteen percent fee."
"And I'm supposed to believe that you'd stick to fifteen percent cut of a
total I'd be unaware of?"
She shrugged. "It's either that or nothing. I'd think that a half-starved rat
like you would pounce on any morsel, no matter how small." Margg began to
walk away.
"What if we went to your source together?" I suggested. "Then you'd still
receive your fee."
She stopped. Uncertainty creased her fleshy face. "I'll have to check." She
disappeared down the hallway.
I lingered outside the baths for a while, considering the possibility of
following Margg around for a couple of days, but dismissed the idea. If her
contact didn't like my suggestion, I'd scamper to Margg with my tail between
my legs, begging for another chance. She'd enjoy that! Then I'd follow her.
Revealing her as a traitor to Valek would be a pleasure.
My conversation with Margg had used up my bath time, so I headed to the
Commander's office. When I arrived, Sammy, Rand's kitchen boy, hovered
outside the closed door holding a tray of food. I could hear a muffled angry
voice inside.
"What's going on?" I asked Sammy.
"They're arguing," he said.
"Who?"
"The Commander and Valek."
I took the tray of cooling food from Sammy. No reason we both had to be
there. "Get going. I'm sure Rand needs you."
Sammy smiled his relief and sprinted through the throne room. I'd seen the
kitchen during dinnertime. Servers and cooks swarmed like bees with Rand
directing the chaos. Barking orders, he controlled his kitchen staff like the queen
bee of the hive.
Knowing the Commander disliked cold food, I stood close to his door,
waiting for a break in the conversation. From my new position I could hear
Valek clearly.
"Whatever possessed you to change your successor?" Valek demanded.
The Commander's soft reply passed through the wooden door as an
indecipherable murmur.
"In the fifteen years I've known you, you'veneverreversed a decision."
Valek's tone became more reasonable. "This isn't a ploy to discover your
successor. I just want to know why you changed your mind. Why now?"
The response wasn't to Valek's liking. With a sarcastic jab in his voice, he
said, "Always, Sir."
Valek jerked the door open. I stumbled into the office.
He wore a glacial expression. Only his eyes showed his fury. They were
pools of molten lava beneath an icy crust. "Yelena, where the hell have you
been? The Commander's waiting for his dinner." Not expecting an answer,
Valek strode briskly through the throne room. Advisers and soldiers melted from
his path.
Valek's anger seemed extreme. Everyone in Ixia knew that one of the eight
Generals had been chosen as the Commander's successor. In the typical paranoid
custom of the Commander's ruling, the name of the selected General was kept
secret. Each General held an envelope that contained a piece of a puzzle. When
the Commander died, they would assemble the puzzle to reveal an encrypted
message. A key would be required to decipher the note. A key only Valek held.
The chosen General would then have the complete support of the military and
the Commander's staff.
The theory behind the puzzle was that secrecy would prevent someone from
staging a rebellion in support of the chosen heir, since the heir was unknown.
The added risk that the inheritor might be even worse than the Commander was
another deterrent. As far as I could see, a change in the chosen General probably
wouldn't affect day-to-day life in Ixia. We didn't know who had been originally
selected, so the switch would have no bearing until the Commander died.
I approached Commander Ambrose's desk. He read his reports, unaffected by Valek's rage. I performed a quick taste of his dinner; he thanked me for the
food then ignored me.
On my way back to the baths, I wondered if the information I had just
overheard would fetch a decent price from Margg's contact. I quenched my
curiosity; I had no desire to commit treason for money. I just wanted to get out
of my present situation alive. And knowing Valek, I had no doubt that he would
discover any clandestine meetings with Margg. For that reason alone, I had to
prove that, no matter what Margg believed, I was not a spy. Just the mental
vision of Valek's burning eyes focused on me sent a hot bolt of fear through me.
A long soak in the bath eased my sore ribs. As it was still early in the
evening, I thought it prudent to avoid Valek for a while. I stopped in the kitchen
for a late dinner. After helping myself to the leftover roast meat and a hunk of
bread, I carried my plate to where Rand worked. He had an array of bowls, pots
and ingredients messily spread out on his table. Dark smudges rimmed his
bloodshot eyes, and his brown hair stuck straight out where he had run his wet
hands through it.
I found a stool and a clean corner on Rand's table and ate my dinner.
"Did the Commander send you?" Rand asked.
"No. Why?"
"I finally received the Criollo recipe from Ving two days ago. I thought the
Commander might be wondering about it."
"He hasn't said anything to me."
Two large shipments of Criollo, sans the recipe, had arrived for the
Commander since Brazell had left the castle. Each time, the Commander had
responded with a "thank you" and another request for the formula. As the
quantity received had been plentiful, the Commander had given Rand some
Criollo to play with. Rand hadn't disappointed. He had melted it, mixed it into
hot drinks, invented new desserts, chipped it and remolded it into flowers and
other edible decorations for cakes and pies.
I watched Rand stir a mahogany-colored batter with tight agitated
movements. "How's it going?" I asked.
"Horrible. I have repeatedly followed this recipe, and all I've gotten is this
awful-tasting mud." Rand banged the spoon on the bowl's edge to knock off the
pasty residue. "It won't even solidify." He handed me a sheet of once-white
paper smeared with brown stains and flour. "Maybe you can see what I'm doing
wrong."
I studied the list of ingredients. It looked like a normal recipe, but I wasn't a
cooking expert. Tasting, on the other hand, was becoming my forte. I took a
scoop of his batter and slid it onto my tongue. A sickeningly sweet flavor invaded my mouth. The texture was smooth and the batter coated my tongue like
Criollo, but it lacked the nutty, slightly bitter taste that balanced the sweetness.
"Maybe the recipe's wrong," I said, handing the sheet back to Rand. "Put
yourself in Ving's position. Commander Ambrose loves Criollo, and you hold
the only copy of the recipe. Would you give it away? Or would you use it to
manipulate a transfer?"
Rand plopped wearily onto a stool. "What do I do? If I can't make Criollo,
the Commander will probably reassign me. It'll be too much for my ego to
stand." He attempted a weak smile.
"Tell the Commander that the recipe's a fake. Blame Ving for your inability
to duplicate the Criollo."
Sighing, Rand rubbed his face in his hands. "I can't handle this type of
political pressure." He massaged his eyelids with the tips of his long fingers.
"Right now, I'd kill for a cup of coffee, but I guess wine will have to do." He
rummaged around in the cabinet and produced a bottle and two glasses.
"Coffee?"
"You're too young to remember, but before the takeover, we imported this
absolutely wonderful drink from Sitia. When the Commander closed the border,
we lost an endless list of luxury items. Of all those, I miss coffee the most."
"What about the black market?" I asked.
Rand laughed. "It's probably available. But there's nowhere in this castle
that I could make it without being discovered."
"I'll most likely regret asking you this, but why not?"
"The smell. The coffee's rich and distinct aroma would give me away. The
scent of brewing coffee can weave its way throughout the entire castle. I woke
up to it every morning before the takeover." Rand sighed again. "My mother's
job was to grind the coffee beans and fill the pots with water. It's very similar to
brewing tea, but the taste is far superior."
I sat up straighter on my stool when I heard the wordbeans."What color are
coffee beans?"
"Brown. Why?"
"Just curious," I said in a calm tone, but excitement boiled within me. My
mystery beans were brown, and Brazell was old enough to know about coffee.
Maybe he missed the drink, and planned to manufacture it.
My efforts to ferment the pod's pulp had resulted in a thin chestnut-colored
liquid that tasted rotten. The purple seeds inside the pulp had been sopping wet,
and covered with flies. I had closed the window and dried the seeds on the
windowsill. As they dried, the seeds turned to brown and looked and tasted like
the beans from the caravan. Thrilled to link the pods with the beans, my excitement had faded when I hadn't been able to learn anything further.
"Does coffee taste sweet?" I asked.
"No. It's bitter. My mother used to add sugar and milk to half of her
finished pots, but I liked it plain."
My beans were bitter. I couldn't sit still any longer; I had to find out if
Valek remembered coffee. I felt uncomfortable asking Rand, unsure if Valek
wanted him to know about the southern pods.
After bidding farewell to Rand, who stared morosely into the failed batter
as he drank his wine, I rushed back to Valek's suite. The sound of slamming
books greeted my entrance. Valek stormed around the living room, kicking piles
of books over. Gray rock debris littered the floor and clung to impact craters on
the walls. He clenched a stone in each fist.
I had wanted to discuss my coffee hypothesis with him, but decided to wait.
Unfortunately, Valek spotted me staring. "What do you want?" he snarled.
"Nothing," I mumbled and fled to my room.
For three days, I endured Valek's temper. He vented his ill humor on me at
every opportunity. Thrusting the antidote at me, speaking curtly, if at all, and
glaring whenever I entered a room. Weary of avoiding him and hiding in my
room, I decided to approach him. He sat at his desk, his back to me.
"I may have discovered what those beans are." It was a weak opening.
What I really wanted to say was, "What the hell's the matter with you?" But I
thought a soft approach more prudent.
He swiveled to face me. The energy of his anger had dissipated, replaced by
a bone-chilling cold. "Really?" His voice lacked conviction. The fire in his eyes
had extinguished.
I stepped back. His indifference was more frightening than his anger. "I…"
I swallowed, my mouth dry. "I was talking to Rand, and he mentioned missing
coffee. Do you remember coffee? A southern drink."
"No."
"I think our beans might be coffee. If you don't know what coffee is,
perhaps I should show them to Rand. If that's all right with you?" I faltered. My
suggestion had sounded like a child pleading for a sweet.
"Go ahead; share your ideas with Rand. Your buddy, your best friend.
You're just like him." Icy sarcasm spiked Valek's words.
I was stunned. "What?"
"Do as you like. I don't care." Valek turned his back on me.
I stumbled to my room, and then locked the door with shaky fingers.
Leaning against the wall, I replayed the last week in my mind to see if there had
been some clue to Valek's withdrawal. I could remember nothing that stood out.
We had barely said a word to each other, and I had believed his anger had been
directed toward the Commander—until now.
Maybe he had discovered my magic book. Perhaps he suspected I had some
magical power. Fear replaced my confusion. Lying on my bed that night, I stared
at the door. With every nerve tingling, I waited for Valek's attack. I knew I was
overreacting, but I was unable to stop. I couldn't erase the way he had looked at
me as if I was already dead.
Dawn arrived, and I moved through my day like a zombie. Valek ignored
me. Even Janco's ever-present good humor couldn't snap me out of my funk.
I waited a few days before bringing the beans along to show Rand. He was
in better spirits. A big smile graced his face, and he greeted me with an offer of a
cinnamon swirl.
"I'm not hungry," I said.
"You haven't eaten in days. What's the matter?" Rand asked.
I dodged his question by asking about the Criollo.
"Your plan worked. I informed the Commander that Ving's recipe was
wrong. He said he'd take care of it. Then he inquired about the kitchen staff:
were they working well? Did I need more help? I just stared at him because I felt
like I was in the wrong room. I'm usually greeted with suspicion and dismissed
with a threat."
"That doesn't sound like a good relationship."
Rand stacked a few bowls and straightened a row of spoons. His smile
faded. "My interaction with the Commander and Valek could be considered
rocky at best. Being rather young and rebellious right after the takeover, I
attempted every trick of sabotage possible. I served the Commander sour milk,
stale bread, rotten vegetables and even raw meat. At that point, I was just
looking to be a nuisance." He picked up a spoon and tapped it against his knee.
"It became a battle of wills. The Commander was determined that I cook for
him, and I was determined to either be arrested or be reassigned."
Thump, thump, thumpwent the spoon, and Rand continued his story, his
voice husky. "Then Valek made my mother the food taster—that was before
they implemented that damn Code of Behavior—I couldn't bear to have her taste
the garbage I served the Commander." Old sorrows pulled at Rand's features. He
twirled the spoon in circles between his fingers.
Words failed me. Dread crept up my spine as I contemplated the fate of
Rand's mother.
"After the inevitable happened, I tried to run away, but they caught me just
shy of the southern border." Rand rubbed his left knee. "They shattered my
kneecap, hobbling me like some damn horse. Threatened to do my other leg if I ran again. And here I am." He snorted, sweeping all the spoons off the table.
They clattered on the stone floor. "Shows you how much I've changed. The
Commander's nice to me and I'm happy. I used to dream of poisoning the
bastard, of taking that final step in our battle. But I have this weakness of caring
for the food taster. When Oscove died, I promised myself never to care again."
Rand pulled out a bottle of wine. "Only I failed. Again." He retreated to his
rooms.
I hunched over the table, regretting that my comment had caused Rand
pain. My pockets bulged uncomfortably with the beans. I shifted in my seat. Liza
would have good cause when she blamed this mood swing on me. Valek's
actions with Rand's mother seemed harsh from Rand's perspective, but when I
thought about it from Valek's point of view, it made sense. His job was to
protect the Commander.
I lived the next two days in a fog. Events blurred together. Tasting, training,
tasting, training. Ari's and Janco's curses and attempts to rouse me remained
unsuccessful. The news that I could start knife defense failed to produce any
enthusiasm. My body felt as wooden as the bow I held.
When Margg materialized after one of my training sessions to inform me
that a meeting with her contact had been scheduled for the following evening, it
was with great difficulty that I summoned the strength to rally.
I thought out each possible scenario, and each combination of events kept
leading me to one conclusion. Who would believe me if I reported the meeting?
No one. I needed a witness who could also act as a protector. Ari's name sprang
to mind. But I didn't want any suspicion to fall on him if something went wrong.
It was also possible that Margg's contact had a boss, or a whole network of
informers, and I could be getting in over my head. Dance as I might, there was
but one course of action, and it led to but one person: Valek.
I dreaded the encounter. My interaction with him had dwindled to the silent
awkward dispensing of my antidote every morning. But after tasting the
Commander's dinner, I sought Valek out, my stomach performing flips. His
office was locked, so I tried his suite. He wasn't in the living room, but I heard a
faint sound from upstairs. A thin slash of light glowed under the door to Valek's
carving studio. A metallic grinding noise raised goose bumps on my flesh.
I faltered at the entrance. This was probably the worst time to disturb him,
but I was to meet Margg's contact the next day. I had no time to waste.
Gathering courage, I knocked and opened the door without waiting for an
answer.
Valek's lantern flickered. He stopped grinding. The wheel spun in silence,
reflecting pinpricks of light that whirled along the walls and ceiling.
He asked, "What is it?"
"I've had an offer. Someone wants to pay me for information about the
Commander."
He spun around. His face was half hidden in shadows, but it was as rigid as
the stone he held. "Why tell me?"
"I thought you might want to follow along. This might be the one who has
been leaking information about me."
He stared at me.
I wished then that I held a heavy rock, because I had the sudden desire to
bash it on his head. "Espionage is illegal. You might want to make an arrest, or
maybe even feed this leak some misinformation. You know, spy stuff.
Remember? Or have you become bored with that, too?" Anger fueled my words.
I took a breath to launch into an attack, but it slid unvoiced past my
clenched teeth. There was a slight softening in Valek's face. Renewed interest
emanated from him, as if he had been holding every muscle taut and had just
relaxed.
"Who?" he asked finally. "And when?"
"Margg approached me, and she mentioned a contact. We're meeting
tomorrow night." I studied his expression. Was he surprised or hurt by Margg's
treachery? I couldn't tell. Reading Valek's true mood was like trying to decipher
a foreign language.
"All right, proceed as planned. I'll tail you to the rendezvous, and see who
we're dealing with. We'll start by feeding this contact some accurate information
to make you look reliable. Perhaps the Commander's change of successor would
work. It's harmless information that will be made public anyway. Then we'll go
from there."
We outlined the details. Even though I was placing my life in danger, I felt
cheerful. I had my old Valek back. But for how long? I wondered as wariness
crept back in.
When we were through, I turned to go.
"Yelena."
I halted in the doorway, looking back over my shoulder.
"You once said I wasn't ready to believe your reason for killing Reyad. I'll
believe you now."
"But I'm not ready to tell you," I said and left the room.