Long May She Reign

I hit my hip against the corner of a table, and fought the urge to swear. We couldn’t hide in here. The attackers had seen us come in, they’d find us. How long would it take for the rest of my guards to realize something was amiss? Until morning? Or did they already know? Were they all against me?

I hoisted Dagny into the crook of my elbow so I could hold her with one hand, and began to search the room. Dagny meowed in my ear, her claws kneading my upper chest.

My fingers brushed behind worn tapestries, but I only found more stone. I found a wardrobe, but it was slightly away from the wall, with no secret passageways behind its doors. If there was another way out of this tower, it wasn’t in this room. And the longer we spent searching, the less chance we had to form another plan, to hide, to do something . . .

“We have to go out of the front door,” I said. “That’s the only way out.”

“But they’re out there,” Naomi hissed. “They want to kill you.”

“And I won’t hide in here until they break in. You heard Madeleine. No one’s coming for us.” I began to pace. “They won’t expect us to burst out and run toward them—”

“Because it’s suicide!”

“It’ll give us an advantage.”

“Against swords?”

“We have to do something.”

“Can you make something?” Naomi said. “A—a weapon, or a bomb, or something?”

“Not without my equipment. Not in the dark.”

I glanced around the room again. The window was tiny. None of us would fit through it, even if we weren’t high in the air. Even during daylight hours, the room would be dingy, too dark to properly see. “There have to be lanterns in here somewhere,” I said. “And a way to light them. We have to find them.”

We scrabbled against the walls again, hands sweeping over the tables, looking for any strange shapes that might provide light.

A metallic thud, and a hissed cursed from Naomi. “Here. But I knocked it over, I think the oil is pouring out.”

“Then pick it up,” Madeleine hissed back. “And light it.”

“I can’t see—”

I scrambled over, trying to balance Dagny with one hand as she began to squirm. The lantern was the usual oil sort, like thousands of others in the city. I reached under the base, brushing over the sandpaperlike material that coated it until I found the small compartment of matches. One scrape against the base, and the match was lit. Even that small amount of light seemed too bright in the darkness.

The glass door on the side was already open, so I tossed the match inside and slammed it closed against the rush of fire. It singed my fingers, and I flinched, but the lamp was lit, there was light in the room.

I passed it to Naomi so I could clutch Dagny closer to my chest. She was fond of hugs, for a cat, but not fond enough to put up with being held through all this noise and chaos. “Shh,” I murmured, stroking her back. She nipped my wrist in protest.

Naomi raised the lamp higher. Now I could see her fearful face, Madeleine’s stubborn calm—and another door, half concealed behind some crates.

“There!” I scrambled toward it. Naomi and Madeleine heaved the crates aside and pulled on the door handle. It resisted once, twice, sticking in the frame, but one final pull and it flew open, slamming into us.

The swinging light illuminated the space beyond the door at intervals. It was a narrow stone staircase, twisting down out of sight. Cobwebs stretched between the walls, and the worn steps were coated with dust. They looked like the slightest weight would make them crumble away.

“Go!” I said, jerking my head toward the space. Dagny squirmed again, hitting me in the chest with her tail, but I wasn’t going to let go now. “Quickly.”

They didn’t argue. Madeleine ran ahead, and Naomi gestured for me to go between them before pulling the door closed.

The floor was like ice against my bare feet, and the autumn chill settled through my nightgown, making me shiver. Cobwebs tangled on my arms as we ran down and down, praying the staircase was safe, praying more men were not waiting wherever it let out, our elbows bashing against the jagged stone walls. The passage was clearly one of the oldest parts of the Fort, not renovated even after a thousand years.

Ahead, Madeleine gasped. Naomi raised the light higher.

Water filled the narrow corridor below. It did not look too deep, but that could be deceptive, especially in the dark. Who knew how many steps it covered before it reached the floor?

“It must have come in from the moat,” I said. “Are we that far down?”

Madeleine stepped tentatively forward, holding her skirts high. She was wearing heels, I suddenly noticed. “There should have been a boat here,” she said. “It would have been tied there, look.” She gestured at a metal ring on the wall. Assumedly it had been there to stop the king from getting his feet wet if he ever had to flee his chambers. But there was no boat now. I peered into the darkness, as though it might be floating just out of reach, but no. Nothing.

“We’ll have to swim,” I said. Swim, with an oil lamp and a cat, in our nightgowns and Madeleine’s heels. But we had to do it.

“Or not.” Naomi followed the steps down, her white nightdress floating around her as the water rose to her knees, and then her waist, and then the bottom of her chest, and then . . . stopped. “We can walk. Come on.”

I wasn’t going to argue. I hoisted Dagny a little higher, but if the water reached Naomi’s chest, it would only come up to my waist. We’d be safe, as long as it wasn’t too full of disease. The water must have been down here a long time.

“It used to be deeper,” I said, nodding at the walls. There were lines about a foot above our heads, a difference in the color of the stone. “It must have drained somehow.” The water pushed against my waist, weighing me down, making every step a struggle. My white nightgown had puffed up around me. At least it was a fashionable size now, I thought distantly, and snorted despite myself.

Something skittered against the wall, and Dagny pricked up her ears. I didn’t pause to see what it was.

We passed the ruins of a boat once the stairs were no longer in sight. At least, I assumed it had once been a boat. Only rotten scraps remained.

A few minutes beyond that, stairs rose ahead of us again, eroded by the now-drained water. I stopped to listen. No voices, no signs of chaos ahead.

“Have we left the Fort?” I asked, as we picked our way onto the steps. The cold air hit me again, and I shivered. My skirt stuck to my skin, outlining my legs. Madeleine’s silks were stained by the water, but they were less see-through, at least. And she still wore those heels, apparently without concern.

“I don’t think so,” she said, looking ahead. “I don’t think we’ve gone far enough.”

I looked back over the water. The tunnel had vanished into darkness again. No sign of pursuit.

“We could wait here,” Naomi said, peering into the darkness as well. “It’s probably safe.”

Rhiannon Thomas's books