The King of Attolia

Free The King of Attolia by Megan Whalen Turner

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Authors: Megan Whalen Turner
affected disinterest, the king shrugged his shoulders and palmed the coin from his sleeve. “Thank you, Relius, for your report. As always, I am grateful for your thorough presentation of the information.” He inclined his head, and Relius bowed himself out.
    The king rarely missed an opportunity to insult the Captain of the Guard, but to the Secretary of the Archives he was unfailingly polite. It made Relius feel ill. For now the king was a puppet of the Eddisians, but that would change. Within the year, some power inAttolia would pull his strings, and Relius was determined that the power would be the queen’s. Like Teleus, he would stay with his queen no matter the cost.
    He wanted to dismiss the coin toss as sleight of hand. Any circus performer could control the drop of a coin, but he’d been puzzled. The queen had been undismayed; she had seemed almost vindicated in her manner. It had been the king who had been more disturbed with each toss of the coin. He’d looked almost sick, Relius thought, by the time he put the coin away.
    Relius loitered in the arcade outside the audience room until the king left with his attendants. Walking away along the arcade that lay perpendicular to the one where Relius lurked, the king pulled the coin from his pocket. He looked at the gold stater in sudden disgust and pitched it hard between the columns of the arcade into the shrubbery that filled the courtyard garden. Perplexed, Relius returned to his work.
     
    When the palace was quiet, and it seemed only the royal guards could still be awake: “Baron Artadorus.”
    It was a whisper on a breath of air so shallow it wouldn’t have stirred a cobweb, but it combined with the touch of a blade on his neck and woke the baron instantly.
    The night-light was out. He could make out nothing but a dark shape leaning over him, close enough to putlips near his ear to whisper into it. Whoever it was wasn’t standing by the bed, but sitting on it. This intruder was in the royal palace, in the baron’s private apartments, in his bedchamber, sitting on his bed, and had arrived there waking no one, not even the other person in the bed.
    The blade was sharp, never mind how a man without a hand could hold a knife.
    “Your Majesty?” the baron whispered.
    “I have had a most interesting discussion with a man named Pilades. Do you know him?”
    “No, Your Majesty.” The steel was warming to the temperature of his skin. He could feel the edge biting.
    “He works in the Ministry of Agriculture.”
    “I’m sorry, I—”
    “He’s been telling me all about the grain that grows in different parts of the country.”
    “Ah,” the baron said weakly.
    “Ah, indeed. How long, Baron?” the king whispered, still leaning close enough that the baron could have taken him in his arms, had he been a lover instead of a murderer. “How long have you been misreporting the kind of grain that you grow? How much have you avoided paying in taxes?”
    The baron closed his eyes. “This was the first time, Your Majesty.”
    “Are you sure?” The knife-edge bit deeper.
    “I swear it.”
    “I remind you that there are records that can be checked.”
    “I swear it, Your Majesty, this was the first time.” His eyeballs strained to the corners of his eyes, striving to see the king’s face. “You will tell Her Majesty?”
    The king’s laugh was silent, no more than a puff of warm air against the baron’s cheek.
    “I am here in the night, holding a knife-edge at your throat, and you worry that the queen will learn about your error? Worry about me, Artadorus.”
    It was blackmail then, thought the baron. “What do you want, Your Majesty?”
    The king laughed again, without a sound. “For you to pay your taxes, for a start,” he breathed.
    He lifted the knife-edge away and rose noiselessly from the bed. He crossed the room as silently, but when he’d gone through the door, he closed it behind him with a snap. In the bed beside the baron there was a sleepy

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