The Wrath and the Dawn(58)
“I’m sorry, but I cannot honor that promise.”
“Excuse me?”
“I’m sorry.” He stalked to the weapons rack and restored both the longbow and the recurve bow to their respective places.
“Jalal!” Shahrzad raced in his footsteps. “You can’t—”
He nodded to the Rajput, who began making his way over to Shahrzad.
Outraged, Shahrzad snatched a scimitar from a nearby weapons rack.
“Jalal al-Khoury!”
When he still refused to acknowledge her, Shahrzad raised the sword into the light with both hands, and the Rajput shifted closer.
“How dare you dismiss me, you horse’s ass!” she yelled.
At that, Jalal turned around, his stride off-kilter. She swung the heavy blade in a sloppy arc meant to goad him into taking her seriously.
He dodged her and reached reflexively for the scimitar at his hip. “What the hell are you doing, Shahrzad?”
“Do you think you can get away with treating me in such a manner?”
“Put down the sword,” he said in an uncharacteristically stern tone.
“No.”
“You have no business handling a blade like that. Put it down.”
“No!”
When she swung it again in another haphazard slice, Jalal was forced to deflect it with his own blade. The Rajput grunted loudly and withdrew his talwar, shoving Jalal away from her with a single push of his palm.
“Stop it!” Shahrzad said to the Rajput. “I don’t need your help.”
The Rajput sneered down at her with obvious disdain.
“Are you, is he—laughing at me?” Shahrzad asked incredulously.
“I imagine so,” Jalal replied.
“Unbelievable. What’s funny?”
“I would assume it’s both the sight of you wielding a sword in such an abysmal manner and the presumption you wouldn’t need his help when doing so.”
Shahrzad spun to face the Rajput. “Well, sir, if you’re really in the business of helping me, then, instead of laughing at my ineptitude, do something about it!”
The Rajput merely continued sneering at her.
“He’s not going to help you, Shahrzad,” Jalal said, seamlessly resurrecting his smug fa?ade. “I’d venture a guess that not many soldiers out here, save myself, would take the risk of getting within an arm’s length of you.”
“And why is that?”
“Well, by now every soldier in Rey knows what happened to the last guard who dared to put his hands on the queen. So if I were you, I’d give up on cajoling the Rajput into giving you lessons on swordplay. Even though you did ask him so nicely,” Jalal joked drily.
“Did . . .” Shahrzad frowned. “What happened to the guard?”
Jalal shrugged. “A bevy of broken bones. Your husband is not a forgiving man.”
Wonderful. Yet another attribute of note.
“So please put down the sword and go back to the palace, my lady,” Jalal finished in a firm tone.
“Don’t you dare dismiss me, Jalal al—” And Shahrzad’s rant died on her lips, before it even started.
She wanted to turn around.
Because she knew, instinctively, that he was there. There was no logical explanation for it, but she felt his presence behind her, like the subtle change in the seasons. A shift in the wind. This was not necessarily a welcome change. She did not suffer that kind of delusion. Not yet.
But even the moment when the leaves fall from their boughs—even that moment—has a beauty to it. A glory of its own.
And this change? This change made her shoulders tense and her stomach spin.
It was real . . . and terrifying.
“This moment could not be any more perfect,” Jalal muttered, glancing to his left.
Still Shahrzad did not turn around. She clenched the scimitar tight in both hands, and the Rajput stepped even closer, his talwar glinting with a silent warning.
“By Zeus, Shahrzad!” Despina cried. “Is this what happens when I leave you alone? You get into a sword fight with the captain of the guard?”
At that, Shahrzad twisted her head to the right.
Despina stood by Khalid with a look of worry and dismay on her pretty face.
Khalid was as inscrutable as ever.
As cold as always.
Shahrzad wished she could end it here and now, with the slash of a sword. She wished she could grab Khalid by the shoulders and shake a semblance of life onto his frozen countenance.