How the King of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories

Under Balekin's tutelage, Cardan remade himself. He learned to drink a

vast variety and quantity of wines, learned how to take powders that made

him laugh and fall down and feel nothing at all. He visited the weavers and tailors with his brother, choosing garments with cuffs of feathers and

exquisite embroidery, with collars as sharp as the points of his ears, and

fabrics as soft as the tuft of his tail—a tail he tucked away, for it showed too

much of what he schooled his face to hide. A poisonous flower displays its

bright colors, a cobra flares its hood; predators ought not to shrink from

extravagance. And that was what he was being polished and punished into

being.

And when he returned to the palace dressed magnificently, behaving

with perfect deference toward Eldred, shown off by his brother as though he

were a tamed hawk, everyone pretended he was no longer in disgrace.

Balekin relaxed his rules toward Cardan after that, allowing him to do what

he wished so long as he didn't draw the ire of their father.

That spring, Elfhame bustled with preparations for a state visit from

Queen Orlagh and had little time to consider an errant prince anyway There were whispers that if Orlagh, known for her brutal and swift

conquests over her rivals in the Undersea, didn't already control everything

beneath the waves, she soon would. And she had announced that she

wanted to foster her daughter on land. In the High Court of Elfhame.

An honor. And an opportunity, if someone was clever enough to exploit

it.

Orlagh hopes the girl will marry one of Eldred's offspring, Prince

Cardan overheard a courtier say. And then the queen will scheme to make

that child the next ruler of Elfhame, so her daughter, Nicasia, may rule land

and sea.

After which, the spouse will likely meet with an accident, put in another.

But if that was what some thought, others saw only the immediate

benefits of such an alliance. Balekin and two of his sisters determined they would be the ones to befriend Princess Nicasia, imagining that friendship

could change their balance of power in the family.

Cardan thought they were fools. Their father already favored his

second-born child, Princess Elowyn. And if she wasn't chosen as his heir, it

would be Prince Dain, with his machinations. None of the others had the

shadow of a chance.

Not that he cared.

He decided he would be thoroughly unpleasant to the girl from the sea,

no matter how Balekin punished him for it. He would not have anyone

think he was a part of this farce. He would not give her the opportunity to

disdain him.

By the time Queen Orlagh and Princess Nicasia arrived, the great hall

was draped in blue cloth. Dishes of cold, sliced scallops and tiny shrimp

quivered on trays of ice beside honeycomb and oatcakes. Musicians had

taken up playing merfolk songs on their instruments, the music strange to

Cardan's ear.

He wore a doublet of blue velvet. Gold hoops hung from his ears, and

rings covered his fingers. His hair, dark as the sloes of a blackthorn,

tumbled around his cheeks. When courtiers looked at him, he could tell they

saw someone new, someone they were drawn to and a little afraid of. The

feeling was as heady as any wine.

Then the procession arrived, clad like a conquering army. They were

draped in teeth and bone and skins, with Orlagh leading them. She wore a

gown of stingray, and her black hair was threaded with pearls. Around her

throat hung the partial jawbone of a shark.

Cardan watched Queen Orlagh present her daughter to the High King.

The girl had hair the deep aqua of the sea, drawn back with combs of coral.

Her dress was gray sharkskin, and her brief curtsy was that of someone who

had never questioned her own value. Her gaze swept the room with

undisguised contempt.