“You know how Rasmira is. She keeps to herself! How was I to know?”
“Rasmira is important,” Father begins. I close my eyes, dreading this turn. I know that when I look at my mother, she’ll be livid. “She will be a warrior and will protect this village. She will lead our people after I am gone. Already she is the best of the apprentice warriors. Who else will carry my legacy but her?”
The last line was too far. Mother shrinks back. She never wanted to have children. I know because she’s said so more than once. She’d hoped to give Father a male heir and be done with it. But then girl after girl after girl was born. Six of us. My birth was the most difficult, and now she can’t have any more children. A blessing for her, but something my father is always throwing at her, as though it’s somehow her fault.
“I left of my own will, Father,” I say. “I’m to blame. Not Mother.”
He ignores me. “Do you have any idea how important tomorrow is for her? She will participate in the most difficult test we’ve ever devised, and afterward, she will finally become a ma—woman. A woman.”
“Father—” I try again.
“Go to your room, Rasmira. Get rested.”
“But you’re making the others stay up to guard the boundaries! What is my punishment?”
“Your eye is swollen shut. That’s punishment enough. The boys were fighting you in the woods. Their punishment is more severe.”
“Torrin wasn’t, though. He was on my side.”
“And is he the one who convinced you to sneak out of your bed tonight?”
My silence is answer enough.
“Go to bed. Now. The rest of you girls go to your rooms as well. Where is Irrenia? She should see to Rasmira.”
“Still out,” Mother rushes to say, glad to have an answer to something.
“All right. You can wait up for her and direct her to Rasmira’s room when she gets in. I’m to bed.”
Father pats me once on the shoulder before shuffling off. A sign of affection that Mother watches with a sharp eye.
“I’m sorry,” I whisper to her.
“Torlhon said you’re to go to bed,” she bites out. “So be off. Tomorrow we can finally be done with you.”
She sits herself in one of the cushioned chairs, staring fixedly at the door. My sisters go to their rooms, and I do the same, unwilling to be left alone with Mother.
My room is the last at the end of a long, empty hallway. Embers from the fire set the room aglow. Elda, the housekeeper, lit it before I climbed into bed—shortly before I climbed out of it and snuck out the window.
I don’t go to the bed now. If the boys are punished with a night without sleep, then I will be, too. I sit on the floor, reach under the bed, and pull out a small box.
Good thing Elda doesn’t bother with cleaning under the bed.
I open the lid and stare at the shiny contents.
My mother and sisters (save Irrenia) all chose jeweling as their professions. All the miners bring the best finds to Mother with the hopes of earning her favor. She’s also the most beautiful woman in the village—a fact she never lets me forget—and sometimes miners will seek her out when they don’t have jewels to sell. They shower her with compliments. No one has a larger section in the high goddess’s Book of Merits than my mother, I’m sure.
At the top of my jewelry box is a sapphire necklace, the centerpiece the size of the pad of my thumb. Salvanya, my eldest sister, gave it to me as a gift for my last birthday. Beneath it is a bracelet rimmed with rubies. That’s from Tormosa. Alara and Ashari made me matching ruby earrings.
I’ve never worn anything in this box outside the confines of this room. If my father saw me dressing in such finery, he’d be ashamed. Warriors do not wear jewelry. Even Torrin gets reproach for the sentimental bracelet he wears, which is why he tries to keep it hidden under his armor at all times.
And if my mother saw me, she’d laugh and probably make some comment about how gems could never hide how ugly and unfeminine I am.
I wade through more items: a turquoise choker, a topaz anklet, an emerald-dressed headpiece.
At the very bottom are two plain items, but they’re my favorite. I pull them out, even dare to put them on.
Black earrings. My ears were pierced by the time I turned six, but before that, I longed to wear beautiful earrings like my older sisters. Mother knew this, so she made me earrings out of special plain black rocks. She called them lodestones. Some natural reaction between the two ends draws them together, holding up the pieces with my ear suspended between.
I remember what she told me, how I was one end of the earring while she was the other, held together by a powerful force.
That was before I declared myself a warrior. Before my mother hated me. I wouldn’t dare wear them in front of her now. She might demand them back.
But I dream of wearing them in front of her, of her seeing them and remembering the words she once spoke.
I know it’s foolish thinking—nothing could sway her now. She wears her hatred like an armor fused to her skin, never to come off. It is the only thing that protects her from my father’s constant rejection.
She doesn’t realize I would give up his praise in an instant if it meant I could have a real mother. One like Torrin’s, who grieves every day for the child she never even knew.
A door slams, and I hurry to throw everything back in the box, pulling the stones from my ears and chucking them inside, closing the lid, and shoving it under the bed.
My door opens not even a second after the box slides out of sight.
“What did I miss?” Irrenia asks. She is only one year my senior and the sister I cherish the most.
“I snuck out of the house. Father blamed Mother for it.”
She opens her mouth, likely about to demand more details, but then she sees my face. “There’s a cut on your cheek, and what happened to your eye? Mother didn’t—”
“No. It wasn’t Mother.” She is not foolish enough to actually strike me. Not when I am warrior trained.
Irrenia enters the room fully, gets behind me, and steers me down the hall. “Tell me everything.”
I do so as she plunks me into a chair in her room and digs in one of her drawers for some sort of salve. She rubs it onto my swollen eye, and it begins to twitch from the stinging sensation caused by the salve.
“Ow,” I say.
“Oh hush. It’ll feel better in a moment.”
I close my other eye and take in the rich scent of Irrenia’s room. She does not work at the jewelers with everyone else. Irrenia trained to become a healer. She passed her trial just last year, but she’s already the best with medicine in the village. Her room is filled with her own concoctions, and it smells of soothing herbs. Lately she’s been experimenting with ziken venom, trying to find a way to make the warriors immune to their paralyzing bite.
Irrenia has the kindest spirit of anyone I know, which is why she is always home so late. She can’t bear to turn away those who are sick or injured. She continues to work each day until she has no more patients or until she drops from exhaustion.
Though I still cannot open my injured eye, the stinging sensation abates, replaced by a soothing numbness.
She rubs more salve onto the wound, and I finish telling her everything that happened tonight, leaving out no details.
“Sneaking out was stupid,” she says when I’m finished. “There are a hundred different ways you could have been injured or killed. I’m just relieved a punch to the face is the worst of your injuries. What if you’d run into the ziken in the wild? We wouldn’t have even recognized your remains in the morning! And what would happen to Father then?”
“Oh yes, poor Father. Whatever would he do without an heir to carry on his legacy?”
“He loves you, Rasmira. It would break him to see you go.”
Because of his own investment in me. It has nothing to do with me as a person.
“At least Mother would be happy then,” I say.
She flicks my swollen eye with a finger.