The Unbroken by C. Clark (best novels to read for students TXT) š
- Author: C. Clark
Book online Ā«The Unbroken by C. Clark (best novels to read for students TXT) šĀ». Author C. Clark
The princess bowed her head solemnly. āArrangements have already been made. The pyre will be ready by sundown. Rest. Iāll send someone to collect you when itās time.ā
For a second, she looked like she wanted to say something else. Touraine was glad when she didnāt. She dragged herself down the stairs and into her new room. A small bed rested against each of the three walls, each with crisp, clean bedclothes and pillows.
It was wonderfully, terribly empty.
Touraine stayed quiet in the carriage on the way to Ćmeline and Thierryās funeral. Luca let the heavy silence hang, and Touraine was grateful. Touraine had avoided thinking about her friendsā deaths, letting the grief crouch at the edge of her mind, waiting until the shock of the last week wore off. It was unavoidable now. She hadnāt even begun to contemplate what it would mean to leave her squad.
Their pyre was built out in the desert just beyond the compound. The night was deep, and Touraine would have been able to see the stars if not for the lanterns and torches.
The princess and her retinue hung back. Gracious or indifferent?
There was barely enough wood for the pyre to be ceremonial. However, by chance or by choice, the scent of burning pine sap eased the smell of the fireās main fuelāthick patties of camel shit.
And the bodies.
When the fire was set, Touraine went to her soldiers.
AimĆ©e didnāt hesitate. She scooped Touraine into a great hug that made Touraine cry out. AimĆ©e never was cautious about affection. She eased out of the embrace but supported Touraine with an arm at her back.
āFuck me, sorry, Lieutenant. We just thought youād beāā The sudden flash of joy was gone.
āGood to see you, too, AimĆ©e.ā
And it was. Touraine let herself be passed around her squad, to arm clasps and shoulder squeezes and tender head ruffles. She wanted to enjoy the loveāand a part of her didābut she knew it wouldnāt last. After the funeral, she would be alone again, with the princess and her āsmallā house and her guards and servants.
This was the fairness sheād wanted. The future queen standing vigil over Sandsā funerals. And Touraineās promotion wasnāt a soldierās rise, but sheād never dreamed of wearing a silk shirt as a soldier. When the princess stood over her in the jail, that lantern hanging from her fist as she sized Touraine up, Touraine had calculated.
She was always good at the hard math.
Death and nothing out of it, or life and the chance to better the Sandsā lots.
That wasnāt even a question.
At the end of the line, her sergeants waited, and everyone else fell back. Tibeau stared into Ćmelineās fire with his arms crossed, and Pruett stood close beside him, arms at her sides. Tears glistened amid Tibeauās stubble. Touraine wanted to wrap him in her arms and hug him to her chest. She settled for a hand on his shoulder.
āIām so sorry, Beau,ā she whispered.
āWe heard the princess got a new concubine.ā Tibeau turned his head to look her up and down. He didnāt even try to hide his distaste.
āConcubine? No.ā Touraine spoke to Pruett instead, searching the carefully blank look on the other womanās face. āIām just an assistant. Cantic stripped my rank. I canāt wear a uniform anymore.ā It sounded unbelievable, even though sheād spent half the day saying it to herself and trying to figure out where she belonged. Iām not a soldier anymore.
āShe really did court-martial you, then,ā Pruett said in soft surprise.
āFor treason. And murder.ā
Tibeau squinted. āAnd youāre still alive? Thatās gonna cost.ā
Touraine glanced over her shoulder. Princess Luca and her guards waited patiently, for now.
āThe cripple queen.ā Tibeau sucked his teeth.
āPrincess Luca promised to help me change things for usāfor the Sands.ā Balladaire owes the conscripts a great deal of thanks, the princess had said.
āTour, youāre missing the point.ā His wide hand slashed the air. āYouāve always missed the point. I want to be free of them. All of them. This includes their āhelpā and anything else that comes with a collar.ā
āLike their food? Their money?ā
āStarve me, then. Been close enough to it on campaign. Give me hunger on my own terms.ā
āYou want to go die by yourself? End up some generalās boy when they catch you? Or would you let Pru hang you for a traitor? You go, and you bring every other one of us down with you.ā
Tibeauās face purpled and he opened his mouth, but Pruett stepped in with a hand on each of their chests.
āFucking shut it, you two,ā she whispered harshly. āWeāre not in the barracks. Donāt wave your shit stains in front of the whole sky-falling army.ā Her breath came heavily. āWeāre safer together, and right nowāāshe moved her hand to Tibeauās face to stop his interruptionāāweāre safer with the Balladairans. And not because theyāre looking out for us. No one is looking out for us. Not them, not the QazÄli. No matter what either of you do, we only have each other.ā
When Pruett locked Touraine in her sights, though, her voice was bitter. āWhatās she offering, hein? This pretty funeral?ā
Layers in the question, in the voiceāmeasured mediation over cold iron over a tremble.
āSheāll intervene for us.ā Touraine gestured to the fire. āShe already has.ā She met Pruettās eyes, pleading. āI can change things. I know what to say to them. I can do what they want me to do.ā
Tibeau sneered. āYou really are their pet monkey.ā
The insult cracked like the whips of their youth. Like the whips, the epithet was a memory Touraine tried to keep buried. Tibeau had been the first to call her that, and it had clung to her with every test sheād passed with high marks. The Balladairansā pet monkey, ready to dance for them. Even after the three of them became friends, he and Pruett teased her with it occasionally, but it hadnāt bit like this for years.
āBeau!ā Pruett rounded on him and pointed to the other Sands. āFucking leave.ā
For a moment, Touraine thought heād apologize. Instead, his
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