"I don't understand them." Iselle knuckled her eyes. "Oh, Cazaril, it was
"No."
"Royina Sara," Iselle added, her mouth crooking, "says if dy Jironal finds Dondo's murderer, she plans to pay for his funeral, pension his family, and have perpetual prayers sung for him in the temple of Cardegoss."
"That's good to know," said Cazaril faintly. Although he had no family to pension. He hunched over a little and smiled to hide a grimace of pain. So, not even Sara, who had filled Iselle's maiden ears with details of shocking intimacy, had told her of the curse. And he was certain now that Sara, too, knew of it. Orico, Sara, dy Jironal, Umegat, probably Ista, possibly even the Provincara, and not one had chosen to burden these children with knowledge of the dark cloud that hung over them. Who was he to betray that implicit conspiracy of silence?
Had Cazaril the right to tell Iselle secrets that her natural guardians chose to conceal?
Was he prepared to explain to her just
He glanced at Lady Betriz, seated now on another stool and anxiously watching her distressed royal mistress. Even Betriz, who knew quite well that he had attempted death magic, did not know that he had succeeded.
"I don't know what to try next," moaned Iselle. "Orico is
Could Iselle escape this curse without ever having to know of it? He took a deep breath, for what he was about to say skirted treason. "You could take steps to arrange your marriage yourself."
Betriz stirred and sat up, her eyes widening at him.
"What, in secret?" said Iselle. "From my royal brother?"
"Certainly in secret from his chancellor."
"Is that legal?"
Cazaril blew out his breath. "A marriage, contracted and consummated, cannot readily be set aside even by a roya. If a sufficiently large camp of Chalionese were persuaded to support you in it—and a considerable faction of opposition to dy Jironal exists ready-made—setting it aside would be rendered still harder." And if she were got out of Chalion and placed under the protection of, say, as shrewd a father-in-law as the Fox of Ibra, she might leave curse and faction both behind altogether. Arranging the matter so that she didn't simply trade being a powerless hostage in one court for being a powerless hostage in another was the hard part.
"Ah!" Iselle's eyes lit with approval. "Cazaril, can it be done?"
"There are practical difficulties," he admitted. "All of which have practical solutions. The most critical is to discover a man you can trust to be your ambassador. He must have the wit to gain you the strongest possible position in negotiation with Ibra, the suppleness to avoid offending Chalion, nerve to pass in disguise across uneasy borders, strength for travel, loyalty to you and you alone, and courage in your cause that must not break. A mistake in this selection would be fatal." Possibly literally.
She pressed her hands together, and frowned. "Can you find me such a man?"
"I will bend my thoughts to it, and look about me."
"Do so, Lord Cazaril," she breathed. "Do so."
Lady Betriz said, in an oddly dry voice, "Surely you need not look far."
"It cannot be me." With a swallow, he converted
"We shall all think on it," said Iselle firmly.