Katsa shot to her feet. “Yes,” she said. “Yes, in the name of the Middluns, please.”
Ror glanced from Skye to Katsa, and then to Bitterblue. “Queen Bitterblue,” he said, “if you’ll trust me to manage this situation in your absence, I see no reason to delay you.”
“Of course I trust you,” the child said, “and my men will defer to your judgment in all things while I’m gone.”
The captain and the nobles stared openmouthed at their new queen, half Ror’s height, dressed like a boy, and utterly dignified. They furrowed their eyebrows and scratched their heads, and Katsa was ready to scratch her own eyes out.
Ror turned to her.
“The sooner you reach Po, the better,” he said. “I’ll not keep you.”
“We need two horses,” Katsa said, “the fastest in the city.”
“And you need a Monsean guard,” Ror said, “for no one you pass will realize what has happened. Any Monsean soldiers who sight you will try to capture you.”
Katsa flicked her hand impatiently. “Very well, a guard. But if they can’t keep up with me, I’ll leave them behind.”
She swung toward Skye. “I hope you ride as well as your brother.”
“Or you’ll leave him behind as well?” Ror said. “And the Monsean queen – if she’s weighing down your horse, will you leave her behind? And the horse itself, I suppose, once it collapses from exhaustion and disuse?” He had drawn himself up very tall, and his voice was sharp. “Be rational, Katsa. You will take a guard, and it will ride before you and behind you. For the entire journey, is that clear? You carry the Queen of Monsea, and you travel with my son.”
Katsa practically spit back at him. “Do you imagine that I need a guard to protect them from the soldiers of Monsea?”
“No,” Ror snapped. “I have no doubt that you are more than capable of bringing the Monsean queen and my son and the rest of my sons and a hundred Nanderan kittens through an onslaught of howling raiders if you chose to.” He drew himself up even taller. “You will listen to sense. It does none of us any good at this juncture for you to barrel through Monsea with the queen of the kingdom on your horse, killing her soldiers left and right. What exactly would that accomplish? You will travel with a guard, and the guard will make your explanations and ensure that you’re not attacked. Am I clear?”
He didn’t wait to know if he was clear. He turned abruptly to the captain, who flinched at the entire exchange as if it hurt his head. “Captain, the four fastest horsemen in your guard,” he said, “and your six fastest horses, immediately.”
He swung back on Katsa and glared down at her. “Have you regained your reason?” he roared.
It was her temper she had lost, not her reason – or if it was her reason, it returned to her now, with the promise of four fast horsemen, six fast horses, and a thundering ride to Po.
———
They rode fast and passed few people. The Port Road was wide, its surface a mixture of dirt and snow tramped down under the hooves of innumerable horses. Banks of snow rose on either side of the road, and fields of snow beyond them. Far to the west, they could just make out the dark line of the forest, and the mountains beyond. The air was icy, but the child on the horse before her was warm enough, and content to be pushed harder than was comfortable.
The queen on the horse before her, Katsa thought, correcting herself. And Queen Bitterblue was very changed from the skittish creature she and Po had cajoled from the inside of a hollow log months ago. Bitterblue would make a good ruler someday. And Raffin a good king; and Ror was strong and capable and would live a long time. That was three of the seven kingdoms in good hands. Three of seven, however inadequate it seemed, would be a vast improvement.
———
There were towns along the Port Road, towns with inns. The party stopped occasionally for a hasty meal, or to seek shelter from the bitter late-winter nights. Their guard was the only thing that made this possible, for every soldier in every room they entered jumped up at the sight of them, hand to weapon, and remained in that guise until the explanations of the guard, and some words from Bitterblue, relaxed his vigilance. At one inn, the guard’s explanations came too slowly. A marksman across an empty room fired an arrow that would have hit Skye, had Katsa not jumped on the prince and knocked him to the floor. She was up again before Skye had even registered his fall, her body blocking the queen’s and her own arrow drawn; but the guards had intervened, and by then it was over. Katsa had hauled Skye up. She’d looked into his eyes and understood what had happened.
“He thought you were Po,” she said to Skye. “That archer. He saw the hoops in your ears, the rings, and the dark hair, and he fired before he saw your eyes. You should wait until the guards have spoken, from now on, before entering a room.”
Skye kissed her forehead. “You saved my life.”
Katsa smiled. “You Lienid are very outward in your affection.”
“I’m going to name my firstborn child after you.”
Katsa laughed at that. “For the child’s sake, wait for a girl. Or even better, wait until all your children are older and give my name to whichever is the most troublesome and obstinate.”
Skye burst into laughter and hugged her, and Katsa returned his embrace. And realized that quite without her intending it, her guarded heart had made another friend.
The party was swept upstairs to the briefest of sleeps. The archer was taken away, most likely to be punished soundly for loosing an arrow so close to a small gray-eyed girl who happened to be Bitterblue. And if the people living in the towns and traveling the roads did not yet know the details of Leck’s death, or suspect his treachery, at least it began to be understood in Monsea that Bitterblue was safe, Bitterblue was well, and Bitterblue was queen.
———
The road was clear and swift, but the road didn’t lead straight to Po. The party turned west eventually into fields piled high with ice and snow, and Katsa felt the slackening of their pace severely. The horses labored to break a path through snow that reached sometimes to their shoulders.
Days later the party burst under the cover of the forest, and this was easier going. And then the land began to rise, and the trees to peter out. Soon they were climbing. They swung down from their mounts, all except for the queen, and picked their way uphill on foot.
They were nearly there, nearly there; and Katsa drove her companions fiercely, dragging the horses, emptying her mind of everything but their ferocious progress forward.
“I believe we’ve lamed one of the horses,” Skye called up to her, early one morning when they were so close she could feel her body humming with it. She stopped and turned to look back. Skye gestured to the horse he was leading.
“See? I’m sure the poor beast is limping.”
The animal’s head drooped, and it sighed deeply through its nostrils. Katsa grasped for her patience. “It’s not limping,” she said. “It’s only tired, and we’re nearly there.”
“How can you say that when you haven’t even seen it take one step?”
“Well, step, then.”
“I can’t until you’ve moved.”
Katsa glared at him, murderously. She clenched her teeth. “Hold on tight, Lady Queen,” she said to Bitterblue, who sat on her horse. She gripped the animal’s halter and yanked the beast forward.
“Still doing your best to ruin the horses, I see.”