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Mark Lawrence - King of Thorns

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Mark Lawrence

King of Thorns

PROLOGUE

I found these pages scattered, teased across the rocks by a fitful wind. Some were too charred to show their words, others fell apart in my hands. I chased them though, as if it were my story they told and not hers.

Katherines story, Aunt Katherine, sister to my stepmother, Katherine who I have wanted every moment of the past four years, Katherine who picks strange paths through my dreams. A few dozen ragged pages, weighing nothing in my hand, snowflakes skittering across them, too cold to stick.

I sat upon the smoke-wreathed ruins of my castle, careless of the heaped and stinking dead. The mountains, rising on all sides, made us tiny, made toys of the Haunt and the siege engines strewn about it, their purpose spent. And with eyes stinging from the fires, with the winds chill in me deep as bones, I read through her memories.

From The Journal Of Katherine Aps corron

October 3rd, Year 98 Interregnum

Ancrath. The Tall Castle. Fountain Room.

The fountain room is as ugly as every other room in this ugly castle. Theres no fountain, just a font that dribbles rather than sprays. My sisters ladies-in-waiting clutter the place, sewing, always sewing, and tutting at me for writing, as if quill ink is a stain that cant ever be washed off.

My head aches and wormroot wont calm it. I found a sliver of pottery in the wound even though Friar Glen said he cleaned it. Dreadful little man. Mother gave me that vase when I came away with Sareth. My thoughts jump and my head aches and this quill keeps trembling.

The ladies sew with their quick clever stitches, line stitch, cross-line, layer-cross. Sharp little needles, dull little minds. I hate them with their tutting and their busy fingers and the lazy Ancrath slurring of their words.

Ive looked back to see what I wrote yesterday. I dont remember writing it but it tells how Jorg Ancrath tried to kill me after murdering Hanna, throttling her. I suppose that if he really had wanted to kill me he could have done a better job of it having broken Mothers vase over my skull. Hes good at killing, if nothing else. Sareth told me that what he said in court, about all those people in Gelleth, burned to dustits all true. Merl Gellethars castle is gone. I met him when I was a child. Such a sly red-faced man. Looked as if hed be happy to eat me up. Im not sorry about him. But all those people. They cant all have been bad.

I should have stabbed Jorg when I had the chance. If my hands would do what I told them more often. If they would stop trembling the quill, learn to sew properly, stab murdering nephews when instructedFriar Glen said the boy tore most of my dress off. Certainly its a ruin now. Beyond the rescue of even these empty ladies with their needles and thread.

Im being too mean. I blame the ache in my head. Sareth tells me be nice. Be nice. Maery Coddin isnt all sewing and gossip. Though shes sewing now and tutting with the rest of them. Maerys worth talking to on her own, I suppose. There. Thats enough nice for one day. Sareth is always nice and look where that got her. Married to an old man, and not a kind one but a cold and scary one, and her belly all fat with a child that will probably run as savage as Jorg Ancrath.

Im going to have them bury Hanna in the forest graveyard. Maery tells me shell lie easy there. All the castle servants are buried there unless their families claim them. Maery says shell find me a new maidservant but that seems so cold, to just replace Hanna as if she were torn lace, or a broken vase. Well go out by cart tomorrow. Theres a man making her coffin now. My head feels as if hes hammering the nails into it instead.

I should have left Jorg to die on the throne-room floor. But it didnt feel right. Damn him.

Well bury Hanna tomorrow. She was old and always complaining of her aches but that doesnt mean she was ready to go. I will miss her. She was a hard woman, cruel maybe, but never to me. I dont know if Ill cry when we put her in the ground. I should. But I dont know if I will.

Thats for tomorrow. Today we have a visitor. The Prince of Arrow is calling, with his brother Prince Egan and his retinue. I think Sareth would like to match me there. Or maybe its the old man, King Olidan. Not many of Sareths ideas are her own these days. We will see.

I think Ill try to sleep now. Maybe my headache will be gone in the morning. And the strange dreams too. Maybe Mothers vase knocked those dreams right out of me.

1

Wedding day

Open the box, Jorg.

I watched it. A copper box, thorn patterned, no lock or latch.

Open the box, Jorg.

A copper box. Not big enough to hold a head. A childs fist would fit.

A goblet, the box, a knife.

I watched the box and the dull reflections from the fire in the hearth. The warmth did not reach me. I let it burn down. The sun fell, and shadows stole the room. The embers held my gaze. Midnight filled the hall and still I didnt move, as if I were carved from stone, as if motion were a sin. Tension knotted me. It tingled along my cheekbones, clenched in my jaw. I felt the tables grain beneath my fingertips.

The moon rose and painted ghost-light across the stone-flagged floor. The moonlight found my goblet, wine untouched, and made the silver glow. Clouds swallowed the sky and in the darkness rain fell, soft with old memories. In the small hours, abandoned by fire, moon, and stars, I reached for my blade. I laid the keen edge cold against my wrist.

The child still lay in the corner, limbs at corpse angles, too broken for all the kings horses and all the kings men. Sometimes I feel Ive seen more ghosts than people, but this boy, this child of four, haunts me.

Open the box.

The answer lay in the box. I knew that much. The boy wanted me to open it. More than half of me wanted it open too, wanted to let those memories flood out, however dark, however dangerous. It had a pull on it, like the cliffs edge, stronger by the moment, promising release.

No. I turned my chair toward the window and the rain, shading to snow now.

I carried the box out of a desert that could burn you without needing the sun. Four years Ive kept it. Ive no recollection of first laying hands upon it, no image of its owner, few facts save only that it holds a hell which nearly broke my mind.

Campfires twinkled distant through the sleet. So many they revealed the shape of the land beneath them, the rise and fall of mountains. The Prince of Arrows men took up three valleys. One alone wouldnt contain his army. Three valleys choked with knights and archers, foot-soldiers, pikemen, men-at-axe and men-at-sword, carts and wagons, engines for siege, ladders, rope, and pitch for burning. And out there, in a blue pavilion, Katherine Ap Scorron, with her four hundred, lost in the throng.

At least she hated me. Id rather die at the hands of somebody who wanted to kill me, to have it mean something to them.

Within a day they would surround us, sealing the last of the valleys and mountain paths to the east. Then we would see. Four years I had held the Haunt since I took it from my uncle. Four years as King of Renar. I wouldnt let it go easy. No. This would go hard.

The child stood to my right now, bloodless and silent. There was no light in him but I could always see him through the dark. Even through eyelids. He watched me with eyes that looked like mine.

I took the blade from my wrist and tapped the point to my teeth. Let them come, I said. It will be a relief.

That was true.

I stood and stretched. Stay or go, ghost. Im going to get some sleep.

And that was a lie.

The servants came at first light and I let them dress me. It seems a silly thing but it turns out that kings have to do what kings do. Even copper-crown kings with a single ugly castle and lands that spend most of their time going either up or down at an unseemly angle, scattered with more goats than people. It turns out that men are more apt to die for a king who is dressed by pinch-fingered peasants every morning than for a king who knows how to dress himself.

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