While the Seers performed their ritual in the throne room, the banquet hall a few doors down was hosting a magnificent party. Guests had arrived from all four corners of Ukatis, dressed in vibrant silks, answering the call to celebrate the summer festival in royal splendor. Servants bustled about, filling cups and serving appetizers, while musicians played instruments, filling the air with song.
At the center of the swirling maelstrom of light and sound and smells was King Horace von Cholmondeley. Seated in a hoverchair at the head of the table, he looked—to put it charitably—larger than life, a great bloated creature decked out in royal finery, a golden crown atop his head. The handsome young warrior who had won a kingdom was not to be found in his face, the bulbous nose and puffy cheeks reddened by the wine he had been sipping. But there was still a dangerous glint in his small dark eyes, which could uplift or condemn with but a look.
His gaze focused on a figure walking toward him: his chief minister, Meverell. “
You’re late.”
“Your Majesty.” Meverell swept into a low bow before the king’s hoverchair, removing his hat and then replacing it as he rose. “I apologize for the delay. I ran into the Patriarch of Axilla on the way here.”
A lady standing nearby peered at them from behind her fan, trying to hide her interest. Rather than let the likes of her overhear, King Horace grunted and gestured toward an archway. “
Come. Let’s talk.”
Meverell followed him into a separate chamber. A curtain closed them off from the rest of the party, and no servants came to bother them. “
Now, what did Father Lakota have to say?” Horace asked, positioning his hoverchair away from the entrance.
“He said he had heard a rumor that there was to be an attempt on your life today, and asked if it was true. I told him it was, but that the rebels knew that we knew, and therefore would not be so foolish as to actually attempt to harm Your Majesty.”
“
Our spies never figured out whose side Lakota was on,” Horace muttered. “
What do you think, Mev? Is His Holiness a traitor?”
Lakota and Meverell were not the sort of men who typically fraternized. Religion divided them—Lakota was a clergyman of the dualistic Church, whereas Meverell followed the old gods—as well as politics. The Patriarch had spent many years in exile due to his support for Horace’s predecessor, while Meverell, who had been born a commoner, rose to his station by serving the current king. Yet both men had come from humble beginnings, and they harbored no personal animosity toward each other. Meverell’s judgment would be fair.
“No, Your Majesty,” he answered after a few moments of consideration. “I do not believe he is disloyal. He may harbor negative personal feelings, but he is not so… idiotic, as to wish ill of you.”
His wording, however blunt, left much unsaid. But Horace understood. Ukatis’ bloody wars of succession were still within living memory. Lakota may not have liked the king, but he knew that as long as he remained alive, they would continue to have peace. Overthrowing him now, when there was no longer an heir to replace him,
would be idiotic.
Horace suddenly giggled like a child. “
Gods. We almost wish we could hang around as a ghost and watch as all this shit becomes someone else’s problem. But no.” He heaved a sigh and for a moment, forgot to use the royal
we. “
I don’t want to linger. I want a clean break.”
Meverell stared intently at his sovereign, his brow slightly furrowed. The guests outside had begun to dance, stomping feet and swirling skirts visible behind the curtain at his back. Horace smiled mirthlessly at his minister.
“
There came a time when the jewels ceased to sparkle, when the gold lost its luster, and the throne room became a prison... That was how it was after the queen died. All that was left was the father’s love for his child.” Horace’s gaze was distant, as if seeing into the distant past. “
But now even the child is gone.”
Caught off guard by the king’s confession, Meverell stood very still, quietly observing as Horace rubbed his face. Was he wiping away tears? Or was it only beads of sweat? “You could still name a successor, Majesty,” he said softly. “Surely I could find a few suitable candidates for you to choose from.” Gods knew finding a new queen to bear another heir had proven impossible, and the late Prince’s wife hadn’t had the decency to whelp before she pushed him off a balcony.
“
You’d make a splendid king, our beloved minister. But alas, you don’t have a drop of royal blood in your veins.” Horace waved a hand in dismissal. “
The ones who do have a claim are all shitheads. Not worthy to wipe our royal arse, let alone sit on our throne. No, no. When I go to hell, I will take the whole world with me.” His eyebrows rose. “
But I'm sure you'll manage, Mev. You always do."
Meverell didn't know what to say. So he stayed silent.
“
We’re getting thirsty. Let us go and have a drink.” With that, Horace swept aside the curtain and returned to the party.