Read The Winner's Crime Online
Authors: Marie Rutkoski
Kestrel looked at Elinor again, at the solid, intelligent
way of her. Kestrel had a faint memory of kneeling by the
fountain in her Herran villa and tipping red dye fi lched
from the slaves’ workroom into the fountain. She’d been
curious. She had overheard a word at dinner the night be-
fore, while her father talked with his guest.
Dilution
. It was
a word she didn’t know.
“I dyed our fountain pink because of you,” Kestrel told
the engineer.
“Really?”
“I was trying for red, but I didn’t have enough dye.”
Kestrel pressed her thumb into the pattern cut into her
crystal glass and said, “Why were you in Herran then? Did
you live there?”
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“No, I designed the city acqueducts. The Herrani sys-
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tem of running water was too primitive.”
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“Have you been to Herran recently?”
“No,” said the engineer, but she was looking away.
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“Why would I?”
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“Oh, I don’t know. Maybe I wish that you had, and
that we could talk about it. Sometimes I’m homesick.”
Elinor frowned. “Herran is a colony.
This
is your home.”
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“Herran
was
a colony. Now it’s an in de pen dent terri-
tory.”
“By the grace of our emperor.”
Quietly, and helplessly, the way one reaches for a lost
thing that had always been there before, Kestrel said, “I
miss the birds that sing there this time of the year. They
carried straw in their beaks and built nests under the eaves.
I miss the fl ickering light of the horse paths.” The engineer
was staring with disapproval. Kestrel didn’t care. The words
were said to Arin, who wasn’t there, and Jess, who wouldn’t
listen, and Ronan, who was leaving, and her father, who
had shared her home. She spoke to the southern isle slave,
who had probably been born and sold and raised in the
capital, and had never known her home, and so had been
robbed, along with everything else, of homesickness. “There
was a hill in the orange grove,” Kestrel said. “When I was
little, I would lie there in summer and look at the fruit
hanging in the trees like party lanterns. Then I was old
enough to go to parties, and my friends and I would stay
up until even the fi refl ies went to sleep.”
“How nice.” Yet the engineer’s voice was cold.
“Herran is beautiful.”
“The problem has never been Herran. It’s the Herrani.”
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Then, as if neither of them noticed the great fault line
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that had opened up with their words to split the ground
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between them, Elinor said, “Do try the berries, my lady.
They are very sweet.”
MARIE RUTK
When the general was well enough to leave his rooms, the
emperor insisted on a celebration. A mock sea battle was
staged at night on the man- made pond in the Spring Gar-
den. Two small boats were painted to look like ships of war
and loaded with courtiers who shot off fi reworks.
“You don’t like it?” the emperor said when General Tra-
jan remained silent during the applause.
“Fireworks are a waste of black powder.”
“Valoria has more than enough. Our enemies will never
be able to compete with our cannons. Our stores of black
powder are vast.”
“Every resource has its limits.”
“He’s always like this in the capital,” the emperor told
Kestrel cheerfully. “He’s never happy unless he’s in the
fi eld.”
Kestrel wanted to say that he had been happy in their
home in Herran. In truth, though, he’d rarely been there,
and she’d never dared to ask after his happiness.
The general shifted in his wrought-
iron chair. The
walk to the garden had exhausted him, Kestrel could tell.
Though the court physicians packed his wound with less
gauze every day, it hadn’t yet closed.
“Where’s Verex?” Kestrel wished he were there.
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The emperor shrugged.
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A fi rework popped into a shower of gold. It illuminated
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the crowd gathered around the pond. Its light glimmered
on Risha’s face, and on Verex, who sat next to her on the
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other side of the pond.
’S
The emperor saw them, too. Kestrel was coming to un-
derstand that the emperor’s anger tended to coil itself
tightly. It was the kind that could seem to sleep. Inevitably,
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though, it lashed out.
“I hear that you paid a call to my water engineer,” he
said to Kestrel.
Another fi rework went off . It seemed to thud inside
Kestrel’s chest. The emperor was looking at her in the same
way he had looked at his son: as if he didn’t like what he
saw.
Kestrel said, “I thought that maybe I could convince
her to return to the east with my father.”
A fi rework lit the emperor’s face with exploded light.
“That is
my
decision.”
“It was just an idea. In the end, I said nothing about it
to her.”
“She tells me, however, that your conversation was
nonetheless interesting.”
The smell of sulfur was strong. The smoke burned Kes-
trel’s lungs. And she knew, from the threat in the emperor’s
voice, that she
had
been prodding at a secret about the
water engineer.
She looked at her father. He was staring straight ahead,
watching as a drunk gentleman stood in one of the boats,
teetered, and fell into the water. The crowd laughed.
Kestrel held her breath. The fi reworks cracked and
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burst inside her. She waited for the emperor to speak again.
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She worried that her father would say that he had told
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Kestrel not to go to the engineer’s house.
“Perhaps the capital isn’t entertaining enough for you,”
the emperor said to Kestrel. “I hear that you long for Her-
ran.”
MARIE RUTK
“Why wouldn’t she?” General Trajan said curtly. “She
grew up there.”
The sky rained green and red. The two men looked at
each other. Kestrel knew that expression on her father’s
face.
Her fear slowed. She breathed again. Though the spring
night was chilly, she felt suddenly warm. She felt the cloak
of her father’s protection. She pulled it tightly around her.
“Of course,” the emperor said silkily, and turned to
watch as another fuse was lit.
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31
WHEN THE GENERAL’S WOUND FINALLY
closed, the emperor gave him a gold watch.
Kestrel stood with her father and the emperor on the
pale green lawn of the Spring Garden. Archery targets had
been set up, and courtiers took their turns. The sky was
heaped with whipped- cream clouds. The wind blew soft
and warm. Kestrel’s maids had packed away her winter
clothes and brought out dresses of lace and toile.
She thought of Arin in his twinned rooftop garden in
Herran. She wondered what bloomed for him there now.
The watch struck the hour.
General Trajan raised his brows. “It chimes.”
The emperor looked pleased, and Kestrel supposed that
it might have been easy to mistake her father’s expres-
sion for wonder. But she saw the uncomfortable line of his
mouth.
“Don’t be jealous, Kestrel,” said the emperor. “I haven’t
forgotten that your birthday is coming up.”
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She would turn eigh teen. Her birthday was near spring’s
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end: right before the wedding. “It’s more than two months
SKI
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from now.”
“Yes, not so far away. Trajan, I insist that you stay in
the capital right through until the wedding.”
The general shut the watch. “We just seized the eastern
MARIE RUTK
plains. If you want to hold them—”
“Your lieutenants can manage. You’re barely healed.
You can’t expect to lead a regiment in battle, and quite
frankly, you’re no good to me dead. You’ll stay here. We’ll
celebrate Kestrel’s birthday together.” With the air of some-
one presenting the best idea in the world, he added, “I
thought that she could perform for the court.”
There was the soft, faraway thump of an arrow hitting
canvas.
The general said nothing. Kestrel watched his mouth
harden.
“She has such a gift for music,” said the emperor, “like
your wife did.”
The general’s hatred of Kestrel’s music had always
been clear. It embarrassed him: her love for an instru-
ment that one bought slaves to play. Sometimes, though,
Kestrel thought that it wasn’t just that. The piano was
his rival. He had wanted her to enlist in the military. She
wouldn’t. He wanted her to stop playing. She wouldn’t.
The piano became her way of refusing him . . . or at least
this was how she had thought he saw it. Only now did it
occur to her that he hated to hear her play because it
hurt.
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“I confess,” the emperor said, “that I want to show Kes-
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trel off . I want everyone to see what talent my future
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daughter has.” With a smile, he excused himself to speak
with the Senate leader.
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General Trajan’s hand closed around the watch.
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What a silly gift to give a man who led nighttime as-
saults where stealth could mean the diff erence between life
and death. “Give it to me,” Kestrel said. “I will fi nd a nice
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con ve nient rock to drop it on.”
The general smiled a little. “When the emperor gives
you a gift, it’s best to wear it.” He glanced at the new dag-
ger at Kestrel’s hip. “Sometimes what he gives is actually a
way of saying what’s his.”
I’m not his,
she wanted to say, but her father was al-
ready gone, walking slowly across the lawn to greet an off -
duty naval offi
cer.
Someone must have struck a target’s center. She heard a
smattering of applause.
“Are you going to shoot?”
It was Verex. He had approached without her noticing.
“Not today.” The wind was tricky and her father was
here. She didn’t want to miss.
Verex off ered her his arm. “Let’s see who wins.”
As they walked together, Kestrel said, “You seem to
know a good deal about medicine.”
He shrugged.
“Would you rather be a doctor than an emperor?”
Verex peered down the low slope. He didn’t say any-
thing. Kestrel wasn’t sure if it was because he had been of-
fended by the question or because he didn’t know how to
answer it. Then he said, “The Herrani minister of agricul-
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ture is looking at you.”
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Kestrel glanced to see Tensen sitting in a chair under
SKI
O
the trees, folded hands resting on the cane planted into the
grass in front of him.
“No, don’t look back,” said Verex. “Be careful, Kes-
trel.”
MARIE RUTK
Her step faltered. “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“You know why my father keeps him at court, don’t
you?”
Slowly, Kestrel said, “To watch him.”
“What will my father think if he watches that minister
watch
you
?”
Kestrel swallowed a bubbling ner vous ness. Her hands,
though lightly gloved, were very cold. But she strove to
sound confi dent and careless. “People look at me all the
time. I can’t help it.”
Verex shook his head and turned to eye the archers.
“I assure you,” she said, “I care nothing for Herran’s
minister.”
He gave her a sidelong, reproachful look. “Kestrel, I
know what you care about.”
She tried for a teasing tone and change of subject.
“Since we’re gossiping about who watches whom, don’t you
think it’s time you told me which of my maids is in your
pay?”
“What would that change? Don’t you realize by now
that
all
of them are watching you? I bribe one, but who