The best thing Ablenkung could say for them was that they did get their work done, but the queensâ maids were a collection of back-stabbing, elitist brats. Heâd been observing them for⦠a month and a half now? Two months? Too long. Heâd lost track, and he was so sick of eavesdropping on petty squabbles, way too much gossip, much of which was slander on Betaâs name, and just⦠meanness. But, being mean wasnât a crime, nor was it evidence of a conspiracy. The maids remained above suspicion.
Ish.
Ablenkung still felt that he was missing something. It didnât help that once the maids went inside the dowager queenâs chambers, he couldnât see nor hear anything. If the dowager queen was the âsheâ from Erkundenâs overheard conversation, the evidence he needed was behind closed doors that he couldnât devise a sufficient excuse to breach.
Professorâs New Yearâs ball report on Ustrina had been tantalizing but also lacking any actual evidence. What were the odds that the queen would choose a rose and dagger motif for her costume? A motif that matched the black wax seal on the cryptic notes heâd found months ago in the relevant councilmenâs chambers? But circumstantial evidence was just that, and the evidence was thin besides.
Professorâs analysis on the dowagerâs profile was interesting; intelligence and bitterness had the potential to become a lethal combination, but the queen remained isolated in her room constantly. When Ablenkung got tired of eavesdropping on maids, heâd sometimes stake out the door to the queenâs chambers. It was extremely boring; apart from the maids coming and going, heâd only ever seen notes pass through that door â notes that he could not really see from the distance he had to keep. Most of the notes were ingoing, and the few outgoing notes heâd tracked to all sorts of different people all over the palace. He rarely got an opportunity to sneak peeks at the contents of those notes, and they never seemed to say much when he did. It was all very frustrating.
He sighed and slapped at his drowsy face while he waited for the maids to finish dusting the young queenâs room. He couldnât imagine what there was to dust in a room that the maids cleaned daily when no one was living there currently, but the maids were taking their time fluffing the pillows and beating the carpets.
Todayâs self-determined task: collect fresh samples of all the things in the queenâs room for testing⦠again. Yeah. The well of ideas was running dry. Which wasnât good. But it felt like they were close. They should be close â no â they had to be close. It was mid-February; the deadline was sometime in March. At that point, if they hadnât successfully uncovered the conspiracy, the mission would become as much about protecting the young queen and, hopefully, an infant as it would be about exposing those seeking to harm them. At that point, it would be a mess, and the stakes would be unacceptably high.
Finally, he grumbled internally as the maids began to file out of the young queenâs chambers, waiting for them to clear the area before leaving his hiding spot behind a door down the hallway.
Maid one: âNo, I donât think so. She hasnât been to see a doctor, at least.â
Maid two: âShe could be seeing a private doctor though. If it were me, Iâd be seeing a doctor every week until they could tell me something.â
One: âRegardless, her condition would become obvious eventually. You canât hide something like that. Thatâs my point!â
Two: âBut if you are waiting to see symptoms, you have to hope itâs not too late to do something about them. Thatâs my point. The medicine is only guaranteed effective when administered early.â
One: âWell, itâs all speculation either way, and until thereâs actual symptoms, thereâs nothing to be done for it.â
Two: âThen you need to catch it early. If she does âbecome symptomaticâ, how do you think that will affect the crew?â
One: âWell, I, for one, would take great pleasure in dishing out some overdue consequences, even if it breaks our crew up. Iâd love to see her disgraced and humiliated.â
Two: âYeah. Itâs her own fault putting herself in this situation.â
Maid three: âDisgraced and humiliated? Itâll never happen. Sheâs not an idiot. I think she knows exactly what sheâs doing, and Iâm sure she has a plan.â
One: âOh, let me dream!â
Ablenkung rolled his eyes at the squabbly gossip and made his move as the maids turned a corner. He entered the young queenâs deserted chambers and dumped a collection of small, cork-stoppered vials onto the bed, quickly getting to work sampling and labeling each and every product in her makeup vanity and the bathroom. He even collected articles of clothing in case the poison had been applied to her laundry somehow. And then he went to the bed and stole (and replaced) the fragrant pillowcase, because why not?! At this point, they were desperate. Shoving everything into a leather bag at his waist, he looked around for a final time. Maybe heâd missed something.
The nightstand. Last time heâd checked the nightstand, the single drawer had only contained a collection of books, letters, and pictures, but it couldnât hurt to look again. He knelt down, pulling the drawer open and rummaging around inside. Yes, everything was as he remembered it. Exceptâ¦
It was a small perfume bottle. Or something like it? That hadnât been there the first time heâd done this. Or maybe it had and heâd just missed it? And if it was new, there was no way of knowing who had put it there. He sighed and collected a sample in a fresh vial and labeled it. It smelled soapy and floral-y â kind of like the pillowcase. Maybe this was a pillow perfume? Ablenkung had never heard of such a luxury before, but then, heâd never before associated with royalty or even the nobility for that matter, well, apart from Professor.
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He stood up, and with another scan of the room checking to make sure he hadnât left a trace of his intrusion, he left. Dressed in the uniform of a stewardâs assistant today, Ablenkung simply strolled to the nearest set of stairs, descended to the ground-level servantâs floor, and exited through a back door. Moving with purpose while being too high in rank to ask for help with menial things and too low in rank to be in charge, no one looked at him twice.
The walk to the stables was a pleasant one despite the chilly weather. It was starting to warm up again. Spring seemed just around the corner. That was a disturbing thought. Heâd been in the Lion Tribe for seven months, and it felt like heâd accomplished so little. His brow pinched into a scowl as the familiar gardens, roads, and courtyards passed.
âAhem.â
He looked up, meeting a slightly pudgy and very welcome face approaching from the other direction, his pack of luggage still on his back from traveling. âStables,â he whispered in passing, and Buhne nodded once in acknowledgement in his peripheral vision. Ablenkung smiled to himself and continued on his way. It would be good to catch up with Parrot about Mrs. Parrot and the baby Parrot â something to look forward to.
***
The cages were crude but sufficient, especially for a transient project such as this. Steward Pax had been skeptical of the idea to breed rabbits but quickly gave Erkunden permission anyway as heâd been willing to tackle the job personally and it would take the pressure off the hunters and the local wildlife populations if it was successful. Apparently, previous breeding projects hadnât been worth much. Fortunately, this wasnât the first time Erkunden had bred wild rabbits, and heâd learned a few things from the first round, though the circumstances of his first round were classified.
The cages to the left were currently being nested by pregnant females. These were the unfortunate test subjects. Erkunden didnât quite have enough pregnant rabbits to test all the things that Ablenkung had sampled, so some of them were getting exposed to more than one thing in step one of a process of elimination method.
âThis one has the rouge and face powder,â Erkunden said quietly to Ablenkung who was jotting everything down in a slapdash effort to be marginally scientific about the process. âCage twelve is adding the pillowcase to her nest, and cage thirteen has⦠what is this, Shield?â
âUh⦠underwear,â Ablenkung muttered, refusing eye contact. Ekrunden snorted then released a bout of more potent laughter.
âYou rifled throughâ¦!â He checked his volume, dropping it to a whisper. âYou went through her underwear?!â
Shield shrugged and rolled his eyes. âIt was worth a shot.â
âA stab in the dark, more like,â Erkunden sighed. âA little over a month left?â
âYeah.â The humor was sucked clean out of the air. Suddenly, everything felt very heavy.
âHey, guys!â Shield perked up and turned to Buhneâs voice, and Erkunden was hardly less happy to see Parrot again. âHow are things?â
âI think weâd both prefer to hear how your paternity leave went,â Ablenkung reversed the question, and Parrot immediately launched into a well-deserved gushing about his little family that left Erkunden feeling homesick for his own wife and home.
âRuhe is⦠perfect. Treu is an amazing mom, which is good because I havenât got a clue,â Buhne laughed. âRuhe is a really good baby: calm and happy most of the time and actually sleeps pretty well at night. It made it hard to leave, but it also made it easier knowing that sheâll be good for Treu. Oh, sheâs so chunky!! Ruhe, not Treu. Her cheeks are justâ¦â Buhne puffed his cheeks out and gestured with his hands to indicate big, round chops. âYeah. Ruhe is just⦠so perfect, and Treu is amazingâ¦. Ok. Iâm done now. How have things been here?â
âWell, where were we at when you left?â Shield asked.
âErm.â Parrot frowned, trying to scrounge up what he remembered and then looking around to confirm they were alone before continuing in hushed tones. âWell, Professor and you, Stag, got confirmation of things with the targets. Shield, youâd found vague notes with the same seal in each of their rooms. You were looking for a female backer? If I recall correctly? And⦠thatâs it.â
Ablenkung deflated a little with frustration, his voice also dropping to a whisper. âYou havenât missed much. We still have no evidence for who âsheâ is, though Iâve been chasing a hunch that it might be the dowager queen. Right now, we are running a second round of tests looking for a source or delivery method for a poison or an abortion drug. Professor observed the same symbols as on the letter seal in the costume being worn by the dowager at the New Yearâs ball, but it is all circumstantial. End of the day, weâve got nothing.â
âNo one is targeting Beta after, you know, the rumors?â Parrot asked.
Erkunden shook his head. âNot that weâve been able to tell.â
âWow. Looks like Iâve got my work cut out for me. Maybeâ¦. No, never mind,â Buhne changed his mind mid-thought.
âWhat were you going to say?â Shield prodded.
âJust⦠nah, man! I donât even want to say it.â
âSpit it out anyway! We need fresh ideas.â
Parrot sighed heavily and checked the perimeter again. âI was going to suggest dangling Beta out as bait even more than she already is â making her a bigger target. Maybe she needs to, you know, get pregnant â not literally. But⦠if this is a conspiracy to prevent the birth of an heirâ¦. They havenât tried to kill the queen; theyâve only been sabotaging her pregnancies. If Beta were to become pregnantâ¦. But I donât like it. Somehow, Beta always winds up as the sacrificial lamb in these sorts of missions, and one of these days, itâs gonna catch up to her.â
âAgreed,â Erkunden added his two cents and returned to feeding his rabbits.
âI donât think itâs fair to ask that of her,â Ablenkung endorsed. âI was at the New Yearâs ball. As it is, sheâs taking a lot of heat for the mere suggestion of the affair. Lions are⦠cruel that way.â
âYeah.â Buhne returned to sighing. âWell, I need to report to my steward, let him know Iâm back from leave and see if I canât get my old job back. Iâve got a lot of work to do, it seems. It was good seeing you guys.â
âYou too,â Ablenkung returned, and Erkunden seconded it with a nod and half smile.
Buhne had been gone for two months, and they had practically nothing to show for all that time. He wasnât typically one given to despair and self-defeatism, but this case was exceptionally frustrating, and Erkunden was rather sick of the Lion Tribe. âDo you think we can do this?â he asked Shield after Parrot had left.
âHonestly? I donât know.â