Red Queen: Chapter 10
King’s Cage (Red Queen Book 3)
Elara leaves me standing in the hallway, mulling over her words.
I used to think there was only the divide, Silver and Red, rich and poor, kings and slaves. But thereâs much more in between, things I donât understand, and Iâm right in the middle of it. I grew up wondering if Iâd have food for supper; now Iâm standing in a palace about to be eaten alive.
Red in the head, Silver in the heart sticks with me, guiding my motions. My eyes stay wide, taking in the grand palace both Mare and Mareena had never dreamed of, but my mouth presses into a firm line. Mareena is impressed, but she keeps her emotions in check. She is cold and unfeeling.
The doors at the end of the hall open, revealing the biggest room Iâve ever seen, bigger even than the throne room. I donât think Iâll ever get used to the sheer size of this place. I step through the doors onto a landing. Stairs lead down to the floor, where every house sits in cool expectation, their eyes forward. Again, they keep to their colors. A few mutter among themselves, probably talking about me and my little show. King Tiberias and Elara stand on a raised surface a few feet higher than the floor, facing the crowd of their subjects. They never miss an opportunity to lord over the others. Either theyâre very vain or very aware. To look powerful is to be powerful.
The princes match their parents in different outfits of red and black, both decorated with military medals. Cal stands to his fatherâs right, his face still and impassive. If he knows who heâs going to marry, he doesnât look happy about it. Mavenâs there too, on his motherâs left, his face a storm cloud of emotions. The younger brother is not as good as Cal at hiding his feelings.
At least I wonât have to deal with a good liar.
âThe right of Queenstrial is always a joyous event, representing the future of our great kingdom and the bonds that keep us strongly united in the face of our enemies,â the king says, addressing the crowd. They donât see me yet, standing on the edge of the room, looking down on them all. âBut as you saw today, Queenstrial has brought forth more than just the future queen.â
He turns to Elara, who clasps the kingâs hand in her own with a dutiful smile. Her shift from devilish villain to blushing queen is astounding. âWe all remember our bright hope against the darkness of war, our captain, our friend, the General Ethan Titanos,â Elara says.
People murmur over the room, in fondness or sadness. Even the Samos patriarch, Evangelineâs cruel father, bows his head. âHe led the Iron Legion to victory, pushing back the lines of war that had stood for nearly a hundred years. The Lakelanders feared him; our soldiers loved him.â I strongly doubt a single Red soldier loved their Silver general. âLakelander spies killed our beloved friend Ethan, sneaking across the lines to destroy our one hope for peace. His wife, the Lady Nora, a good and just woman, died with him. On that fateful day sixteen years ago, House Titanos was lost. Friends were taken from us. Our blood was spilled.â
Silence settles on the room as the queen pauses to dab at her eyes, wiping away what I know are fake, forced tears. A few of the girls, participants in Queenstrial, fidget in their seats. They donât care about a dead general, and neither does the queen, not really. This is about me, about somehow slipping a Red girl into a crown without anyone noticing. Itâs a magic trick, and the queen is a skilled magician.
Her eyes find me, blazing up to my spot at the top of the stairs, and everyone follows her gaze. Some look confused, while others recognize me from this morning. And a few stare at my dress. They know the colors of House Titanos better than I do and understand who I am. Or at least who Iâm pretending to be.
âThis morning we saw a miracle. We watched a Red girl fall into the arena like a bolt of lightning, wielding power she should not have.â More murmurs rise, and a few Silvers even stand. The Samos girl looks furious, her black eyes fixed on me.
âThe king and I interviewed the girl extensively, trying to discover how she came to be.â Interview is a funny way to describe scrambling my brain. âShe isnât Red, but she is still a miracle. My friends, please welcome back to us Lady Mareena Titanos, daughter of Ethan Titanos. Lost and now found.â
With a twitch of her hand, she beckons me closer. I obey.
I descend the stairs to stilted applause, more focused on not tripping. But my feet are sure, my face still, as I plunge toward hundreds of faces wondering, staring, suspecting. Lucas and my guards donât follow, staying on the landing. Iâm alone in front of these people once again, and Iâve never felt so bare, even with the layers of silk and powder. Again, Iâm grateful for all the makeup. Itâs my shield, between them and the truth of who I am. A truth I donât even understand.
The queen gestures to an open seat in the front row of the crowd, and I make my way to it. The Queenstrial girls watch me, wondering why Iâm here and why Iâm so important all of a sudden. But theyâre only curious, not angry. They look at me with pity, empathizing as best they can with my sad story. Except Evangeline Samos. When I finally get to my seat, sheâs sitting right next to it, her eyes glaring into mine. Gone are her leather clothes and iron studs; now she wears a dress of interlocked metal rings. From the way her fingers tighten, I can tell she wants nothing more than to wrap her hands around my throat.
âSaved from her parentsâ fate, Lady Mareena was taken from the front and brought to a Red village not ten miles from here,â the king continues, taking over so he can tell the grand twist in my tale. âRaised by Red parents, she worked as a Red servant. And until this morning, she believed she was one of them.â The accompanying gasp makes my teeth grind. âMareena was a diamond in the rough, working in my own palace, the daughter of my late friend under my nose. But no more. To atone for my ignorance, and to repay her father and her house for their great contributions to the kingdom, I would like to take this moment to announce the joining of House Calore and the resurrected House Titanos.â
Another gasp, this one from the girls of Queenstrial. They think Iâm taking Cal away from them. They think Iâm their competition. I raise my eyes to the king, quietly pleading for him to continue before one of the girls murders me.
I can almost feel Evangelineâs cold metal cutting into me. Her fingers lace together tightly, knuckles white as she resists the urge to skin me in front of everyone. On her other side, her brooding father puts a hand on her arm to still her.
When Maven steps forward, the tension in the room deflates. He stutters briefly, tripping over the words heâs been taught, but he finds his voice. âLady Mareena.â
Trying my best not to shake, I rise to my feet and face him.
âIn the eyes of my royal father and the noble court, I would ask for your hand in marriage. I pledge myself to you, Mareena Titanos. Will you accept?â
My heart pounds as he speaks. Though his words sound like a question, I know I have no choice in my answer. No matter how much I want to look away, my eyes stay on Maven. He gives me the smallest of encouraging smiles. I wonder to myself which girl wouldâve been chosen for him.
Who would I have chosen? If none of this had happened, if Kilornâs master never died, if Gisaâs hand was never broken, if nothing ever changed. If. Itâs the worst word in the world.
Conscription. Survival. Green-eyed children with my quick feet and Kilornâs last name. That future was almost impossible before; now itâs nonexistent.
âI pledge myself to you, Maven Calore,â I say, hammering the last nails into my coffin. My voice quivers, but I donât stop. âI accept.â
It carries such finality, slamming a door on the rest of my life. I feel like collapsing but somehow manage to sit back down gracefully.
Maven slinks back to his seat, grateful to be out of the spotlight. His mother pats him on the arm in reassurance. She smiles softly, just for him. Even Silvers love their children. But she turns cold again as Cal stands, her smile disappearing in a heartbeat.
The air seems to go out of the room as every girl inhales, waiting for his decision. I doubt Cal had any say in choosing a queen, but he plays his part well, just like Maven, just like Iâm trying to do. He smiles brightly, flashing even white teeth that make a few girls sigh, but his warm eyes are terribly solemn.
âI am my fatherâs heir, born to privilege and power and strength. You owe me your allegiance, just as I owe you my life. It is my duty to serve you and my kingdom as best I canâand beyond.â Heâs rehearsed his speech, but the fervor Cal has canât be faked. He believes in himself, that heâll be a good kingâor die trying. âI need a queen who will sacrifice just as much as I will, to maintain order, justice, and balance.â
The Queenstrial girls lean forward, eager to hear his next words. But Evangeline doesnât move, an obscene smirk twisting her face. House Samos looks equally calm. Her brother, Ptolemus, even stifles a yawn. They know who has been chosen.
âLady Evangeline.â
Thereâs no gasp of surprise, no shock or excitement from her. Even the other girls, heartbroken as they are, sit back with only dejected shrugs. Everyone saw this coming. I remember the fat family back in the Spiral Garden, complaining that Evangeline Samos had already won. They were right.
With a fluid, cold grace, Evangeline rises to her feet. She barely looks at Cal, instead turning over her shoulder to sneer at the crestfallen girls. She basks in her moment of glory. A smile ghosts over her face when her eyes fall on me. I donât miss the feral flash of teeth.
When she turns back around, Cal echoes his brotherâs proposal. âIn the eyes of my royal father and the noble court, I would ask for your hand in marriage. I pledge myself to you, Evangeline Samos. Will you accept?â
âI pledge myself to you, Prince Tiberias,â she says in a voice that is oddly high and breathy, contrasting with her hard appearance. âI accept.â
With a triumphant smirk, Evangeline sits back down and Cal retreats to his own seat. He keeps a smile fixed in place like a piece of armor, but she doesnât seem to notice.
Then I feel a hand find my arm, nails biting into my skin. I fight the urge to jump out of my chair. Evangeline doesnât react, still staring straight ahead at the place that will one day be hers. If this were the Stilts, Iâd knock a few of her teeth out. Her fingers dig into me, down to the flesh. If she draws blood, red blood, our little game will be over before it even has a chance to begin. But she stops short of breaking skin, leaving bruises the maids will have to hide.
âGet in my way and Iâll kill you slowly, little lightning girl,â she mutters through her smile. Little lightning girl. The nickname is really starting to get on my nerves.
To cement her point, the smooth metal bracelet on her wrist shifts, turning into a circle of sharp thorns. Each tip glistens, begging to spill blood. I swallow hard, trying not to move. But she lets go quickly, returning her hand to her lap. Once again, sheâs the picture of a demure Silver girl. If there was ever a person begging for an elbow to the face, it is Evangeline Samos.
A quick glance around the room tells me the court has turned sullen. Some girls have tears in their eyes and throw wolfish glares at Evangeline and even me. They probably waited for this day all their lives, only to fail. I want to hand my betrothal over, to give away what they so desperately want, but no. I must look happy. I must pretend.
âAs wonderful and happy as today has been,â King Tiberias says, ignoring the sentiment in the room, âI must remind you why this choice has been made. The might of House Samos joined with my son, and all his children to follow, will help guide our nation. You all know the precarious state of our kingdom, with war in the north and foolish extremists, enemies to our way of life, attempting to destroy us from within. The Scarlet Guard might seem small and insignificant to us, but they represent a dangerous turn for our Red brothers.â More than a few people in the crowd scoff at the term brothers, myself included.
Small and insignificant. Then why do they need me? Why use me, if the Scarlet Guard is nothing to them? The king is a liar. But what heâs trying to hide, Iâm still not sure. It could be the Guardâs strength. It could be me.
Itâs probably both.
âShould this rebellious streak take hold,â he continues, âit will end in bloodshed and a divided nation, something I cannot bear. We must maintain the balance. Evangeline and Mareena will help do that, for the sake of us all.â
Murmurs go through the crowd at the kingâs words. Some nod, others look cross at the Queenstrial choices, but no one voices their dissent. No one speaks up. No one would listen if they did.
Smiling, King Tiberias bows his head. He has won, and he knows it. âStrength and power,â he repeats. The motto echoes out from him, as every person says the words.
The words trip over my tongue, feeling foreign in my mouth. Cal stares down at me, watching me chant along with all the others. In that moment, I hate myself.
âStrength and power.â
I suffer through the feast, watching but not seeing, hearing but not listening. Even the food, more food than Iâve ever seen, tastes plain in my mouth. I should be stuffing my face, enjoying whatâs probably the best meal of my life, but I canât. I canât even speak when Maven murmurs to me, his voice calm and level in assurance.
âYouâre doing fine,â he says, but I try to ignore him. Like his brother, he wears the same metal bracelet, the flamemaker. Itâs a firm reminder of exactly who and what Maven isâpowerful, dangerous, a burner, a Silver.
Sitting at a table made of crystal, drinking bubbly gold liquid until my head spins, I feel like a traitor. What are my parents eating for dinner tonight? Do they even know where I am? Or is Mom sitting on the porch, waiting for me to come home?
Instead, Iâm stuck in a room full of people who would kill me if they knew the truth. And the royals of course, who would kill me if they could, who probably will kill me one day. Theyâve pulled me inside out, swapping Mare for Mareena, a thief for a crown, rags for silk, Red for Silver. This morning I was a servant, tonight Iâm a princess. How much more will change? What else will I lose?
âThatâs enough of that,â Maven says, his voice swimming through the din of the feast. He pulls away my fancy goblet, replacing it with a glass of water.
âI liked that drink.â But I gulp down the water greedily, feeling my head clear.
Maven just shrugs. âYouâll thank me later.â
âThank you,â I snap as snidely as possible. I havenât forgotten the way he looked at me this morning, like I was something on the bottom of his shoe. But now his gaze is softer, calmer, more like Calâs.
âIâm sorry about earlier today, Mareena.â
My name is Mare. âIâm sure you are,â comes out instead.
âReally,â he says, leaning toward me. Weâre seated side by side, with the rest of the royals, at the high table. âItâs justâusually younger princes get to choose. One of the few perks of not being the heir,â he adds with a terribly forced smile.
Oh. âI didnât know that,â I reply, not really knowing what to say. I should feel sorry for him, but I canât bring myself to feel any kind of pity for a prince.
âYeah, well, you wouldnât. Itâs not your fault.â
He looks back to the feasting hall, casting his gaze out like a fishing line. I wonder what face heâs looking for. âIs she here?â I murmur, trying to sound apologetic. âThe girl you would have chosen?â
He hesitates, then shakes his head. âNo, I didnât have anyone in mind. But it was nice to have the option of a choice, you know?â
No, I donât know. I donât have the luxury of choice. Not now, not ever.
âNot like my brother. He grew up knowing heâd never have a say in his future. I guess now Iâm getting a taste of what he feels.â
âYou and your brother have everything, Prince Maven,â I whisper in a voice so fervent it might be a prayer. âYou live in a palace, you have strength, you have power. You wouldnât know hardship if it kicked you in the teeth, and believe me, it does that a lot. So excuse me if I donât feel sorry for either of you.â
There I go, letting my mouth run away with my brain. As I recover, drinking down the rest of the water in an attempt to cool my temper, Maven just stares at me, his eyes cold. But the wall of ice recedes, melting as his gaze softens.
âYouâre right, Mare. No one should feel sorry for me.â I can hear the bitterness in his voice. With a shiver, I watch him throw a glance at Cal. His older brother beams like the sun, laughing with their father. When Maven turns back around, he forces another smile, but thereâs a surprising sadness in his eyes.
As much as I try, I canât ignore the sudden jolt of pity I feel for the forgotten prince. But it passes when I remember who he is and who I am.
Iâm a Red girl in a sea of Silvers, and I canât afford to feel sorry for anyone, least of all the son of a snake.