LOGINLady Amara and I helped Louis stand. We supported him as we walked deeper into the temple. The High Priest led us through corridors lined with silver and white, past rooms where priests chanted prayers. We reached a healing chamber. Clean beds lined the walls. The smell of herbs filled the air.
"Lay him here," an elderly priestess said, gesturing to the nearest bed.
We helped Louis lie down. The priestess began cutting away his blood-soaked bandage. The wound underneath was ugly, deep, and clearly infected.
"This needs to be cleaned and stitched immediately," she said. "He should have had this treated hours ago."
"We were a bit busy," Louis said weakly.
The priestess began her work. Louis gritted his teeth but didn't cry out.
I stood by the window, looking out at the temple courtyard. I could see Nasir's assassins still watching from beyond the gates.
"We can't stay here forever," I said.
"I know," Lady Amara replied. She'd cleaned her sword and was now sharpening it with a whetstone she'd borrowed from a priest. "But we need a plan. We can't just run blindly again."
"What about the king? Prince Louis's father? Can't he help?"
"If we can get word to him. But Prince Nasir controls most of the palace guard. Any message we send might be intercepted."
"So we're trapped."
"For now."
The High Priest entered the healing chamber. "Your Highness will recover, though he needs rest. That wound was deep."
"We don't have time for rest," Louis said from the bed. His eyes were clearer now, focused. "Nasir won't wait long. He'll find a way to force us out."
"The temple's sanctuary cannot be violated," the High Priest said.
"My brother doesn't care about laws. Sacred or otherwise." Louis tried to sit up and winced. "He wants the throne. And he wants her dead because she's the only other person with a legitimate claim to rule."
"I don't want to rule anything," I said again.
"It doesn't matter what you want. That mark on your face makes you a symbol. People would follow you just because of what you represent."
"What do I represent?"
"The old ways. The old dynasty. A return to how things were before my family took power." Louis looked at me seriously. "My great-grandfather won the throne in a civil war. He defeated your family and took the crown by force. Some people think that was wrong. Some people have been waiting for a century for someone with the Mark of the Warrior Moon to return and restore the old bloodline."
"That's insane. I'm nobody. I grew up as a servant."
"You're the granddaughter of a queen," the High Priest said quietly. "Your mother was Princess Amira, daughter of Queen Yasmin, the last ruler of House Rashad before the war. Your blood is as royal as any in this kingdom. More royal than the current dynasty, some would say."
My head spun. This was too much. Too fast.
"I need air," I said, and walked out of the healing chamber before anyone could stop me.
I found a small courtyard with a fountain. Sat on the edge of it. Put my head in my hands.
My mother. A princess. My grandmother, a queen.
All the stories my mother told me about warrior women and queens who ruled with wisdom and strength. I'd thought they were just stories.
They were her memories.
"You're handling this remarkably well," a voice said.
I looked up. An old priestess stood there, watching me with kind eyes.
"I don't feel like I'm handling anything."
"Trust me child, you are." She sat beside me. "I knew your grandmother, you know. Queen Yasmin. I was young then, training to be a priestess. She used to come to the temple to pray."
"What was she like?"
"Strong. Fierce. Kind when she could be, ruthless when she had to be." The priestess smiled. "You look like her. Same eyes. Same stubborn chin."
"Did she have this mark too?"
"All the queens of House Rashad bore the Mark of the Warrior Moon. It appears on the firstborn daughter of each generation. Your mother had it. Your grandmother had it. And now you have it."
"It's just gotten them killed. It'll get me killed too."
"Perhaps. Or perhaps you'll be the one who changes everything." The priestess stood. "Your mother made me promise something before she died. She made me swear that if you ever came to the temple, I would tell you the truth."
"What truth?"
"Your mother didn't just hide to protect herself. She hid to protect you. She knew that one day, the kingdom would need the Mark of the Warrior Moon again. She knew that you were meant for something more than serving in your stepmother's house." The priestess touched my birthmark gently. "This is not a curse, child. It's a calling. What you do with it is your choice. But know that your mother believed in you. Your grandmother believed in you. And I believe in you."
She walked away, leaving me alone with the fountain and my thoughts.
A calling. A prophecy. A choice that would determine if the kingdom stood or fell.
I was eighteen years old. I'd killed my first man today. I'd discovered I was the heir to a lost dynasty. And now princes and assassins were fighting over me like I was a piece on a game board.
Behind me, someone cleared their throat.
I turned.
A young priest stood there, looking nervous. "Lady Khalifa? Prince Louis asks for you. He says it's urgent."
I followed him back to the healing chamber.
Louis was sitting up now, his shoulder properly bandaged. Lady Amara stood by the window, her expression grim.
"What is it?" I asked.
"Nasir just sent a message," Louis said. "He's given us until sunset to surrender you. If we don't, he'll burn the temple with all of us inside."
"He can't do that. It's sacred ground."
"He's going to claim we're heretics. That we're plotting rebellion. That we're using the temple as a base for treason." Louis stood carefully. "He'll burn it and blame us for the fire. By tomorrow, we'll be remembered as traitors, and he'll be the hero who stopped us."
"How long until sunset?" I asked.
Lady Amara looked out the window. "Three hours. Maybe less."
Three hours to figure out how to escape.
Three hours to save our lives.
Three hours before everything ended in flames.
We left through the northern gate at the last of the daylight and hit the eastern road as full dark fell, and I rode with the letter folded inside my jacket and the specific focused silence of someone who has decided to stop thinking about the risk and start thinking about the destination.Safiya rode point with two of her soldiers she had selected by name from the garrison without explanation. Louis rode at my right shoulder in the position he had taken every time we moved through uncertain terrain, which I had stopped noticing consciously and started noticing only in moments like this when it was very dark and the road was unfamiliar and the fact of his presence at my right was so reliable it had become architectural.Lady Amara rode behind us with the third soldier and the small document case she had insisted on bringing, which contained the decoded correspondence and the Meridian archive letter and the copies she had made that morning of every relevant document because Lady Amara'
Louis held the letter in both hands and did not open it.I had not told him to do that. He had simply understood, when the soldier placed it in my hands and I looked at it with the House Rashad seal intact after twenty-three years, that this was a thing that needed a moment before it needed to be a piece of evidence.We were standing at the east gate post in the late afternoon with Safiya's soldiers fanning out through the district beyond the gate looking for a man who had a twenty-minute head start and the specific competence of someone who had been operating quietly inside this palace for two decades. The search would take as long as it took and I could not make it faster by standing there, so I stood still with the letter and gave myself the moment.My mother's name was on the front.The handwriting was not one I recognized. Small and precise, the kind of handwriting that belongs to someone who measures what they put on paper before they commit it.I broke the seal.The letter was
The letter my mother never received was not in the archive.I spent most of the morning searching it anyway, methodically, with Lady Amara working one end of the shelves and me working the other and Ibrahim hovering at the table in the center making lists of what we had already checked, and after three hours we had confirmed that there was nothing in the formal correspondence from the year before my mother's death that had been addressed to her or bore any marking that could be connected to her."Whoever has it, it was never filed here," Ibrahim said. "It may have been in the compound documents from Isam's operation.""Those are with Khalid's review team," I said. "I'll ask them today."But I already had a feeling about the compound documents that I could not explain precisely but was specific. The anonymous letter said the message was in this palace. Not in an archive, not in a captured document case. In this palace. Present tense.Someone had it.Someone was keeping it.I left Lady
We did not go back to Khalid's office.We went to the archive room directly, the one that held seventeen years of correspondence in floor-to-ceiling shelves organized by year and category, and Khalid met us there with the runner's decoded letters and a document case that I could tell from his expression contained something he had not entirely processed yet."Show me," I said.He set the decoded letters on the reading table first. The runner's handler had communicated in a cipher that Khalid's team had broken by working backward from two words in plain text that the runner had made the mistake of including in an otherwise clean coded message. The handler's coded name was a single word that I did not recognize from any of the Isam investigation."Meridian," I read. "That's the name.""It appears six times in the runner's correspondence," Khalid said. "Always as a reference, never in direct address. The runner was reporting to an intermediate who was reporting to Meridian. The runner him
I was in Khalid's office at the sixth bell the following morning with Lady Amara and the note from the provincial administrator and the full weight of the previous evening sitting on the table between us.Khalid had already been working. There were papers spread across every surface in a system that looked like disorder and was not, and he had that particular expression of someone who had been thinking through the same problem from multiple angles for several hours and had reached the point where company was actually useful."He moved on the crossing the same day the treaty was presented at court," I said. "Same day. Not even twenty-four hours.""He had been waiting for confirmation that the treaty was real," Khalid said. "The court presentation was that confirmation. He had the order drafted before we even sat down in the throne room.""Which means someone in the court told him what was happening in advance," I said."Or he was present in the court and sent the order the moment the k
The briefing on the three noble houses lasted two hours and forty minutes, which was longer than anyone had planned and exactly as long as it needed to be.Lady Amara laid out what she had observed in the throne room with the precision of someone who had been reading rooms for years and had no patience for softening what she found in them. Lord Danis al-Fadl, Lady Cyrene Voss, and Lord Taren Khaleel. Three old families with interlocking financial interests in the eastern route stagnation, interests that predated the current dynasty's involvement and had in fact been quietly cultivating that stagnation for the better part of two decades. They had not caused the war. But they had benefited from its aftermath with a consistency that was not accidental."The route reopening cuts their freight monopoly in the northern passage by approximately a third," Khalid said, pointing to the map on the desk. "They've been charging tolls on the only viable alternative since the eastern crossing closed







