Tug joins us, expression neutral, though his eyes linger on Sixe, and I imagine he wonders whom in the name of the Gods we are dealing with now.

"The less you know," I say to Calmi, "the safer we will all be."

Sixe leads us down spiral staircases, passages hidden between walls, empty, neglected reception rooms, a ballroom and servant quarters, until we are on the first level of the palace.

We stand in a narrow corridor sandwiched between mould-infested walls. I remember how he lurked in the little rat-holes of Strik's castle. He stares at me, seeing the memory in the mind-world. An instant later, an image he is recalling swims on my inner-eye.

Queen Usas stands on a balcony, looking down over an enormous grass square. Over a hundred mourners have already gathered. They lay candles in a spiralling circle around a great stone pyre. They stand with heads bowed. A body wrapped in white cloth lies on the great pyre, and all around the square on huge poles, flags flap in the breeze.

"He said it was urgent, Your Royal Highness," her trusted officer says. "He will not leave the throne room until he has seen you."

Her hands grip the balcony railing. "What news of the council?" she asks.

"They refuse to meet without the Prince and the Duke present."

And then:

She glides through the palace surrounded by guards. The officer who informed her of the Prince's arrival strides by her side, talking in low, urgent tones.

"I request most respectfully that you do not enter until we have secured the hall."

"He is not courageous enough for a head-on confrontation," she says. "I am far more likely to be poisoned by his pretty little friend, or stabbed in my sleep. Get the Council!"

Queen Usas is on her way to meet Jakut. I have not got long.

"Stay here," I tell Tug. The minutest flexion in his facial muscles shows his resistance to being ordered about. Particularly by me. "Please," I add.

"What's happening?"

"The Prince has requested to speak to the Queen in the throne room. You want me to trust you? Well trust works both ways, or not at all." Tug's grip on his scabbard tightens. His jaw clenches. "I need to speak to the Prince alone."

"If the Queen finds you with Prince Jakut—"

"I know." We will never convince her to leave the Red City and save her life and the life of her unborn child.

I slip down the passage and halt at the edge of the great hall. Sunlight streams through an enormous bay window behind the canopied thrones. Beyond the window, a vast mountain range meets a dazzling blue sky. Gold on the cornices and umber columns gleams like the hall has been set on fire.

The Prince kneels before the dais steps, crowned in a brilliant haze that shafts through a domed ceiling window. His head is lowered in prayer. A strange peacefulness fills the hall's magnificence as though he is communing with the Gods themselves.

"Your Royal Highness," I say.

He looks up, the myriad shades of hazel in his eyes differentiated and contrasted by the sun. But the sun cannot eclipse the pain and torment written in their expression. He watches me for an instant, then he lowers his head, and closes his eyes.

I pad into the veiled stillness of this odd sanctuary. Last night, the throne room's grandeur was threatening, imposing, accusing. The unsettling memory of my dream scuds across my thoughts. But as I look around, a serene beauty stirs the lost corners of the palace room.

Why is Jakut here? Why the anguished torment? Has he remembered something? What is so pressing he has requested to speak with the Queen an hour before the departing ceremony?

"Jakut," I say, moving closer.

"Leave."

"What has happened?"

"I said leave!" He has never raised his voice in anger. Not even when I accused him of being a traitor.

"I will not leave," I say. "I have risked everything to be here. To help you. You are not giving up!"

"Leave, Mirra." His voice is imploring, begging. I kneel before him. There is such brightness around him I must squint to see his face. "Why have you requested an audience with the Queen?"

"So she may arrest me." He looks up, regret and disgust in his eyes. "I am a traitor. Just as you told me that night in Lyndonia. I told you what I would do if I discovered it was the truth."

"No." I shake my head. "No, no. I was wrong. You did not condone the slaughter of your escort."

His eyes glass over, sorrow and regret consuming him. "It is worse. I have done worse."

In the mind-world, the Queen sweeps through an arcade of green and white diamond tiled walls. I recognize the cloister from the Duke's boyhood memories. Sixe shows me what he sees from inside the Queen's mind. She is close.

"Come with me," I say. "We will discuss this elsewhere."

"I am sorry, Mirra. I cannot help the Uru Ana."

I lean in to him, rest a hand on his slim shoulder, squeezing a little so he cannot drift back into his refuge of prayer and regret. "You brought me here to see what you could not. You must give me the chance to share with you what I have seen before you throw everything away."

"We are very, very different. You accept the darkness that wars inside a man. You accept a man's failings, hoping he may rise above them. You accepted my failings. But I... I cannot."

So Jakut remembers betraying his father, and the Carucan army. But he cannot remember why. He doesn't know enough about Lord Strik to understand why killing him could be an act of greatness, and there isn't time to explain.

"You will accept your failings," I say. "You have made bad choices. We've all made bad choices! But more than one destiny lies in your hands, and if you act now out of some mistaken sense of supreme morality, we will all die."

"I betrayed my own father!"

"Well perhaps you should take the time to find out why. Queen Usas will walk through the throne room doors any second now. If you don't come with me and let me explain what is going on, the rest of your numbered days will be in a turmoil of remorse and regret far greater than any you feel now."

He hands me a note. It bears the seal of the emerald ring, which has been in his possession since waking from the winter long-sleep. I do not know where he has got it from, or if it proves he was in league with Lord Strik. It doesn't matter. I rip it in half.

A clunking sound reverberates from the end of the hall. The guards are opening the outer throne room doors.

I lay my hand on his cheek. His skin is warm against my cold fingers. I draw away at once, as though I have been singed. Something passed through him into me. Something as inscrutable as the diamond sparkles on an ocean bathed in sunshine.

I clear my throat. "You have not betrayed your soul," I say. "Or your Gods. But if you stay and confess your crimes, you will do. You have yet to accomplish your greatest and most difficult task."

Then I am on my feet, running to the concealed gap in the wall below the dais steps. Boots stomp across the far end of the stone hall. In the shadows, I clutch my aching rib. The whites of Sixe's eyes shine, fixed on me.

"Where is he?" Tug growls.

"He is coming," I say, sounding more certain than I am. "Prepare yourselves. He may not be alone."

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