Chapter Sixteen

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Niccola was quite sure that if not for her extensive self-training to rise with the sun each morning, she would not have woken before noon on the day after the ball. At least the same could be said of every other member of the household. Niccola hauled herself out of bed with a groan. She had made preparations for today's breakfast last night, so she would be able to leave the house in time to make it to the palace by ten. But she still had to actually cook the porridge and make the tea.

Even Lady Selah did not arise before Niccola laid out breakfast, swept the last corners of the house, and donned her coat. She threw a glance over the trees as she stepped outside, for any sign of her crow friend. The bird was nowhere to be seen. It had been this way for a week now, and the faintest tinge of worry crept into Niccola's chest. The crow had grown attached to her over the last three moons, but her absence was more than a loss of companionship. Something might have happened to her, and Niccola would never know.

Niccola shook off that thought with a shiver. The morning air was chill today. Mornings always fell to autumn first, their dew-soaked air cooling long before daytime temperatures fell far enough to hint at the turning season. Perhaps it was the night that told the trees to don their autumn costumes for their last dance before winter. The chill dispelled Niccola's tiredness as she walked briskly down the manor road. Her feet ached from last night's dancing, together with her trek to reach the palace, the Talakova, and the Bel Ilan manor once again. With errands to run and a prince to meet, she would go that far again today.

Traffic in the lowlands was sleepy for the time of morning. Most women of Calis had no doubt been at the ball until unearthly hours the night before, and those who were not sleeping moved slowly about the streets. Niccola slowed her walk. Her hair was down today, a cloud of black curls drawn back under a kerchief that kept them out of her face. She had taken care to differentiate her appearance from who she'd been at the ball, but she still twitched whenever eyes lingered on her for just a little too long.

She knew, logically, that there would be little way for the people here to identify her. Everyone at the ball had been masked, and she had fallen into her most regal gait the moment she's walked in the door. Her dress now, of course, was a far cry from the black-satin gown. Yet the worry nagged at her sufficiently that before she reached the market, she reached down and slipped a small stone into her shoe. It broke the gait she kept trying to fall back into, an echo of the pride and power she had felt at the ball. Maybe dancing with the prince for so long had been a mistake. Every prince-interested woman in the realm would be on the lookout for her now.

Thank the sky, nobody seemed to recognize her as she crossed the remainder of the lowlands and entered the market square. Niccola slowed. The place was nearly empty, and the low hum of the crowd told her something was wrong. Shoppers skirted stalls and hurried away with furtive glances. Further down the road, a steady trickle of people drained off the market's southern end towards something. Niccola followed them. She had errands to run and places to be, but anything near the Talakova's edge was of interest to her, whether related to her mission or not.

The people clustered at the bottom of the street, where the land gave way to the underbrush of the Talakova. Niccola was halfway down to it when the crowd parted. Two wayfinders emerged from the forest with a makeshift stretcher between them. They moved quickly, and people's gasps and cries at their passage were audible from all the way up the street. One of the bearers snapped at the crowd. People scattered. Niccola stopped at the street's edge with a tendril of dread creeping up through her as the two drew closer. When they finally passed by, one locked eyes with her.

"Get inside," he said, "and tell any family and friends you have to do the same. We're being hunted."

On the stretcher was a body, unidentifiable. Every part of its seemed collapsed in on itself, shrunken or wrinkled like all its blood had been drained. Its face was a skull cloaked in bare skin: lips gone, nose shrunken. Niccola's eyes followed it in horrified fascination. There was no sign of wounds, and no blood dripped below the stretcher. One of the body's arms rested beside it, thin as a branch, but the other was crossed over its chest, skeletal fingers clutching something that glinted in the sun. It was an unusual tool, like a four-sided birdhook, but too thick to be for birds. A fishhook, then. The tips of it were stained with blood. Before Niccola could get a better look, however, the stretcher-bearers broke into a nervous canter and whisked their burden away.

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