Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $9.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Descendant of the Crane
Descendant of the Crane
Descendant of the Crane
Ebook433 pages6 hours

Descendant of the Crane

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Read preview
  • Family

  • Loyalty

  • Justice

  • Betrayal

  • Power

  • Mentor

  • Lost Heir

  • Secret Identity

  • Big Bad

  • Prophecy

  • Evil Chancellor

  • Hidden Identity

  • Evil Overlord

  • Forbidden Love

  • Lancer

  • Sacrifice

  • Deception

  • Identity

  • Secrets

  • Corruption

About this ebook

In this shimmering Chinese-inspired fantasy, debut author Joan He introduces a determined and vulnerable young heroine struggling to do right in a world brimming with deception.
Tyrants cut out hearts. Rulers sacrifice their own.
Princess Hesina of Yan has always been eager to shirk the responsibilities of the crown, but when her beloved father is murdered, she's thrust into power, suddenly the queen of an unstable kingdom. Determined to find her father's killer, Hesina does something desperate: she enlists the aid of a soothsayer - a treasonous act, punishable by death... because in Yan, magic was outlawed centuries ago.
Using the information illicitly provided by the sooth, and uncertain if she can trust even her family, Hesina turns to Akira - a brilliant investigator who's also a convicted criminal with secrets of his own. With the future of her kingdom at stake, can Hesina find justice for her father? Or will the cost be too high?
LanguageEnglish
PublisherTitan Books
Release dateJun 16, 2020
ISBN9781789094053
Author

Joan He

Joan He was born and raised in Philadelphia but still, on occasion, loses her way. At a young age, she received classical instruction in oil painting before discovering that stories are her favorite kind of art. She studied psychology and Chinese history at the University of Pennsylvania and now writes from Chicago. She is the bestselling author of The Kingdom of Three duology, The Ones We're Meant to Find, and Descendant of the Crane, her young adult debut novel.

Read more from Joan He

Related to Descendant of the Crane

Related ebooks

Fantasy For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Descendant of the Crane

Rating: 3.688524563934426 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

61 ratings7 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    All right strap in.

    I think my one misconception going into the book was that this would include way more action-battle fighting for the throne. Not sure WHY i thought that, but there you have it.

    In reality this is EXACTLY what I love about fantasy - this was a book of strategy, moral gray roads and decisions that you can't walk cleanly away from.

    Hesina spends so much of this book trying to do the right thing, trying to justify her wrong actions as being for the right reasons, villifying some people while idolizing others...to learn in the end the world is never meant to be so cleanly defined.

    How do you choose between the lesser of two evils? Is it better to commit a hypocritical act that you think will save the country you forfeited your future for or to admit you failed in every way to be the ruler your people needed and admit your misbegotten deeds?

    Our main characters - Hesina (newly coronated Queen of Yan), Caiyan (adopted brother & advisor to Hesina), Lilian (Caiyan's twin & Hesina's best friend), Akira (convict & Hesina's only chance at finding the truth) and Sanjing (Hesina's younger brother & General of the troops) all face a LOT of lesser evil decisions.

    And part of those decisions involve how little they all truly know each other and their motivations. Secrets upon secrets, promises made and broken, misunderstandings and long buried hurt feelings...how can anyone navigate these waters without causing consequences they couldn't guess at?

    The world is beautiful and so layered - close to when some inevitable and painful truths are revealed, Hesina reflects on deeper meaning that she missed. Clues left behind that she didn't think to tie together.

    This is a book that even if you are TOLD how it plays out in the end, you couldn't understand without following Hesina's journey. Every step she had to walk, every painful realization, every moment her world crumbled just a little more...you have to follow it.

    Love is a dangerous emotion - it blinds you, confuses you, makes you react in ways you skewer others for. For love of a father Hesina demands the truth, for love of a daughter a father dies, for love of a sister a brother betrays her trust, for love of a country lies are permitted to spread because the truth would destroy them all.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Four stars because it felt a little slow at times and I knew from the start who to trust and who not to trust. Four stars because I will absolutely be reading the sequel and am in fact really excited about where this one left off and promised to go. I loved characters having complex motivations, and few if any are who they seem to be on the surface.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is a young adult novel that was a free audio from AudioSyncFile this year. It is a fantasy where a young girl becomes a ruler and decides she needs to find her father's killer. There are many things in this book that can r/t current issues such as prejudices and censorship. The book is a romance also. The heroine is strong and determined young woman who doesn't know who she can trust in this story of intrigue within the kingdom. This was a debut novel, published 2019.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Princess Hesina of Yan, believing her father to be murdered, opens an investigation into his death. She’s driven by her aching grief and by her fierce desire for truth and justice -- for all her people, as well as in this matter of her father’s death. But the truth is much harder than she expects.

    I thought this was incredible, but sometimes stressful! Compelling characters, complex family dynamics (I especially liked the sibling relationships), intricate prose and worldbuilding, and startling twists that turned out to slot neatly in with the other puzzle pieces.

    Upon reflection, the revelations in the epilogue would have made a greater impact had they been kept for a sequel so we could learn of them when Hesina does. However, since it seems that the author (or, perhaps more accurately, the publisher?) is not planning a direct sequel, it makes sense to include those answers in the epilogue.

    What is truth? Scholars seek it. Poets write it. Good kings pay gold to hear it. But in trying times, truth is the first thing we betray.
    -- One of the Eleven on truth

    Truth? Why, it’s a lie in disguise.
    -- Two of the Eleven on truth
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    While I enjoyed "Descendant of the Crane" I found the pacing slow in a number of places due to all the court politics. However, the fact that the novel was seeped in Chinese culture and traditions made it an interesting read. There were lots of twists along the way and the murder mystery was handled well and kept me guessing.

    I also liked that the characters were neither good nor bad. They were all multi=layers with flaws and had motives for the way they behaved. By the end I didn't actually know who to trust and who not to. I liked the main protagonist, Hesima. She was complex and showed a range of emotions, and I was hoping she would get justice for her father's murder. She didn't always make the right decisions but she did try to do what was right. Akira was also an interesting character and from the start it was obvious he was going to be important to Hesima. However, their romance felt forced.

    After a slow start, "Descendant of the Crane" became quite a good novel but I don't think I'll continue the series despite this book's exciting finish .
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Knowing that this was a YA Debut, I went into this with some reservations, but I was completely pleasantly surprised by this book.

    The writing style is absolutely wonderful. Honestly I wouldn’t have guessed that this was a debut if I had just happened to pick it up without hearing about it. The writing style itself shows that author has put in a lot of work and practice into the craft. It’s great to read writing like this, especially after the last YA Fantasy Debut let me way down in terms of writing, and frankly if I were to recommend this book for one thing, it would be the writing itself.

    The plot was intriguing, and it’s not an idea I’ve seen done that often in YA fantasy. The idea of soothsayers not just being able to tell the future but to manipulate time using their magic is such a cool magic system, and the Chinese inspiration throughout the plot, the worldbuilding, and the magic was beautifully executed.

    However I felt like the pacing of it wasn’t quite right. Some places I was bored and ended up skimming, and other places I wasn’t sure I was actually keeping up with what was going on. There needed to be a little more balance in the execution, but otherwise I really enjoyed the plot of a young queen trying to fill her father’s shoes, while also attempting to solve the mystery of his death.

    The setting was just brilliant. I don’t have anything bad to say about it. The world felt so vivid and I just really enjoyed learning about the world. It wasn’t an intense exercise in worldbuilding by any means, but I’m hoping we’ll get more of that if she decides to write a second book.

    The characters, in my opinion, were the weakest link for me. It’s been less than a week since I’ve read this book and I forget pretty much all of their names already. None of the characters feel all that developed, except for Hesina, and I think more could have been done to develop them on the page. What’s strange is that I definitely didn’t feel this way when reading the book, but now that I’ve had a week to digest it, I’m definitely seeing that.

    That said, there were moments while reading that I felt the emotions that the author was trying to convey. I teared up twice while reading it. Even though some of the character’s didn’t feel developed, Hesina cared about them enough that when something happened to them I felt for her more than for them.

    I’d definitely recommend this, for the writing style, the unique and diverse setting, and just for a good time.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book exceeded any and all expectations I had before, during and after reading it!! I am absolutely floored by how quickly and completely it drew me in and ensnared me. If you're looking for a wild emotional rollercoaster ride with courtly intrigue and a gut punching plot? read on...

    There were a slew of things going on simultaneously and almost nothing was as it seemed on the surface. It wasn't until the epilogue that I got the full breadth and scope of the book. There was a regicide trial. There was a war brewing. There was a budding/highly unlikely romance slowly percolating. There were magical people being persecuted and there were rampant duplicitous actions abound.

    Our MC, Hesina, ascends the throne early on but who can she trust? Can she trust anyone? Can she even trust her fallible memories? She is young, malleable, impetuous, head strong, stubborn and a bit naive SO is she ready to rule? Is she ready to rule a country on the brink of war? With nefarious people and deeds amiss, can she navigate court and ferret out her father's murderer? I was swiftly swept up in the beauty of the writing, the plot, the world building and most of all the complex loveable/loatheable characters. There were twists and turns... even the turns had turns. I got to a point where I found myself saying (to myself) "I've read enough books in my life to see where this is going" I sat with a sneer on my face and then BAM!!! our MC was sitting in the dirt and the game totally changed. Not only didn't I see major plot twists ahead of time, I apparently had no idea what game was being played altogether. As you can imagine this left me wanting.. nay, needing more. I couldn't stop reading. I made excuses to hide away and read just a bit more. I waited in my daughter's car rider line, at school, an hour early just so I could continue reading. I read while the rest of the family watched t.v. together. I skipped meals and read through the dead of the night. I was addicted... in the best possible sense. I was a puppet on Joan He's strings and reacted just as she commanded. I loved then loathed then loved then felt conflicted right on cue... AND that ending... it slayed me!! I might have cried. Okay, I did cry but I dare you not to shed some (completely understandable) tears. I was swept up in all of the emotions. I am still reeling days after finishing the book. I let it sit and ruminate in my mind to see if the endorphin high would wear off but I am still just as touched and obsessed as when I read the very last word. I desperately wish I could start over again, naive to what lay ahead...experience this book anew. BUT alas...it will have to live on in my memories and of course in my favorites list.

    Over all: I LOVED this book!! It deftly elicited all the Feels. It ran me through the gamut of emotions and surprised me at almost every turn. I did guess one twist but that seems paltry compared to how many there were that I failed to foresee. This is going straight to my favorites list and I will wait until the end of time for book #2!! If you're still reading this... what are you waiting for?? Go and pick this one up toot sweet!

    ~ Enjoy


    *** I was given a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review ***

Book preview

Descendant of the Crane - Joan He

I

TREASON

A well-conceived costume is a new identity, the father used to say as he put on his commoner’s cloak. From now until I return, I am no longer the king.

Teach me how to make a costume, begged the daughter.

He did that, and more. By candlelight, he divulged every way he knew of escaping the palace, for King Wen of Yan loved the truth, and little was found within the lacquer walls.

ONE

WHAT IS TRUTH? SCHOLARS SEEK IT. POETS WRITE IT. GOOD KINGS PAY GOLD TO HEAR IT. BUT IN TRYING TIMES, TRUTH IS THE FIRST THING WE BETRAY.

ONE OF THE ELEVEN ON TRUTH

TRUTH? WHY, IT’S A LIE IN DISGUISE.

TWO OF THE ELEVEN ON TRUTH

No night was perfect for treason, but this one came close. The three-day mourning ritual had ended; most had gone home to break the fast. Those who lingered in the city streets kept their eyes trained on the Eastern Gate, where the queen would be making her annual return.

Then came the mist. It rolled down the neighboring Shanlong Mountains and embalmed the limestone boulevards. When it descended into the bowels of the palace, so did the girl and her brother.

They emerged from the secret passageways the girl knew well—too well, perhaps, given her identity—and darted between courtyard compounds and walled wards, venturing toward the market sectors. When they arrived at the red-light district’s peeling archway, an ember sparked in the girl’s stomach. Some came to the seediest business quarter of the imperial city to buy warmth. But she?

She had come to buy justice.

Her brother held her back before she could cross. Milady—

If he called her milady out here, he might as well call her Princess Hesina. Yes, Caiyan?

We can still go back.

Hesina’s fingers closed around the glass vial dangling from her silk broad-belt. They could. She could let her resolve fade like the wisp of poison bottled in the vial. That would be easy. Figuring out how to live with herself afterward…not so much.

Grip hardening, she turned to her brother. He looked remarkably calm for someone risking death by a thousand cuts—crisply dressed despite the rough-hewn hanfu, every dark hair of his topknot in place.

Having doubts? She hoped he’d say yes. At fifteen, Caiyan had passed the civil service examinations. At seventeen, he’d become a viscount of the imperial court. At nineteen, his reputation was unparalleled, his mind more so. He wasn’t renowned for making bad decisions—unless they were in her name.

How would you find the way? asked Caiyan, countering her question with one of his own.

Excuse me?

Caiyan raised a brow. You’re hoping that I’ll say ‘yes’ so you can proceed alone. But that wasn’t our agreement. I am to lead the whole way, or I don’t take you to this person at all.

Our agreement. Only Caiyan could make treason sound so bland.

I won’t be able to protect you. Hesina scuffed one foot over the other under the hem of her ruqun. If we’re caught… if someone sees us…

A man bellowed an opera under the tiled eave of a dilapidated inn, and something porcelain shattered, but Caiyan’s voice still cleaved the night. You don’t have to protect me, milady. Red lantern light edged his profile as he looked into the distance. He was my father too.

A lump formed in Hesina’s throat. She did have to protect him, in the same way her father—their father—had. You can’t possibly touch all the lives in this world, he’d told her that winter day ten years ago when he’d brought the twins—slum urchins, one thin girl and one feverish boy—into theirs. But if you can lift someone with your two hands, that is enough.

Hesina wasn’t lifting Caiyan up; she was leading him astray. But when he reached for her hand, she held on, to her dismay. The confidence in his grip grounded her, and they crossed into the district together.

They entered a world of slanted teahouses and inns, brothels and pawnshops clustered like reeds on a panpipe. Men and women spilled out of the paper-screened doors, half-clothed and swinging certain appendages. Hesina averted her gaze and pressed closer to Caiyan.

It’ll get better up ahead. Caiyan had once called streets worse than these home, and he guided them around peddlers with impressive ease. He didn’t pay any mind to the occasional beggar, not even the one who tailed them down the block.

Beware the night, cried the man, shaking coins in a cracked ding pot. Hesina slowed, but Caiyan tugged her along. Beware the rains, the crown, and the Sight!

Ignore him. Caiyan’s gaze glowed with focus. He speaks of the bygone dynasty.

But on a night like this one, the past felt uncomfortably close. Hesina shivered, thinking of an era three centuries ago, when peasants had drowned in summer floods and perished in winter famines. The relic emperors had pursued concubines, conquests, and concoctions for immortality, while their imperial soothsayers Saw into the future to crop resistance before it could sprout. As for the sick and the starving, too weak to resist, the sooths placated them with visions of the brilliant tomorrows to come.

And they did come—at the hands of eleven scrappy outlaws who climbed the Ning Mountains, crossed the Kendi’an dunes, breached the imperial walls, and beheaded the last relic emperor on his very throne. They emancipated serfs and set them to work on dikes and embankments. Storms calmed. Floods drained. They opened the doors of education to women and commoners, and their disciples circulated the former outlaws’ philosophies in a book called the Tenets. The people of Yan called them the Eleven. Legends. Saviors. Heroes.

Beware the devil of lies.

Of course, heroes cannot be forged without villains: the emperor’s henchmen, the sooths. The Eleven rooted them out by their unique blood, which evaporated quicker than any human’s and ignited blue. They burned tens of thousands at the stake to protect the new era from their machinations.

Whatever the reason, murder was murder. The dead were dead. Hating the sooths, as the people continued to do, made little sense to Hesina. But occasionally, like now, with the beggar barking ominous warnings, her pity for the sooths spawned into fear, eating away at her conception of a sooth until it collapsed and a new one rose in its place: a faceless head attached to a charred body, an eyeless, toothless monster straight from the Ten Courts of Hell.

By the time Hesina eradicated the image, the beggar was gone and another had taken his place, resuming the chants—in an all-too-familiar female voice.

Beware the one you leave behind.

Oh no.

Hesina whirled as a hooded figure strode toward them.

My, my. What do we have here? The newcomer circled Hesina. "I like the linen ruqun. Very commoner-esque. As for you…" She flung aside Caiyan’s cloak and frowned at the plain hanfu beneath. "This is how you try to pass as a sprightly nineteen-year-old in search of a romp? What are you, a broke scholar?"

Caiyan readjusted his cloak. We’re going to a music house.

The newcomer placed a hand against her hip. I thought you said ‘brothel.’

I said no such thing.

I could have sworn—

I thought, Hesina gritted out, overcoming her shock and glaring at Caiyan, "you were to say nothing about this to anyone."

Caiyan, in turn, glared at the newcomer. You said you wouldn’t come if I told you.

You should have known better! cried Hesina, and Caiyan pinched the bridge of his nose.

I know, milady. Forgive me.

Now there, Na-Na. The newcomer lowered her hood and fluffed out her braids. Pinned back like a pair of butterfly wings and woven through with bright ribbons, the braids were a signature part of Yan Lilian’s style. So was the mischief in her eyes, a shade of chestnut slightly lighter than her twin Caiyan’s. The stone-head tried. It’s not his fault that I blackmailed him. Besides, did you really think I’d let you commit treason without me?

Hesina wasn’t sure whether to be angry or miserable. This isn’t a game.

"You promised." Caiyan sounded mostly miserable.

Lilian ignored him and faced Hesina. Of course it’s not a game. It’s a dangerous, important mission befitting a threesome. Look at it this way: you need one person to hear this forbidden wisdom, one to watch the door for intruders, and one to beat up the intruders.

Send her away, Hesina ordered Caiyan.

Lilian danced out of Caiyan’s reach. "I could still tell all your high-minded court friends that the illustrious Yan Caiyan reads erotic novellas in his spare time. Who’s the latest favorite? Wang Hutian?"

Caiyan made a strangled sound. Lilian laughed. Hesina watched their shadows lengthen under the moonlight.

They were losing time.

Let’s walk, said Lilian, as if reading Hesina’s mind. She linked their arms. You can try to get rid of me on the way.

Hesina knew better than to try. They proceeded in silence, the low-lying shops on either side giving way to taller, pillared structures. The song of zithers and pipa lutes replaced drunken improvisations.

You shouldn’t have come, Hesina finally said.

What’s life without a bit of danger?

Be serious.

I am, Na-Na. Like a real sister, Lilian still used Hesina’s diminutive name long after she’d outgrown it. Father might be gone, but he won’t be forgotten. Not with us here.

That’s… Comforting. Frightening, that Hesina had more loved ones to lose. Thank you, she finished hoarsely.

"Well, we might not be here for much longer, since meeting with this person may end in death by a thousand cuts."

Lilian!

Sorry. Sorry. Pretend I didn’t say that.

Ahead of them, Caiyan stopped in front of a three-tiered building. From the outside, it resembled one of the celestial pagodas rumored to exist back when gods walked the earth. But inside, it was every bit a music house. Beaded curtains fell from the balustrades. Private rooms blushed behind latticework screens. The namesake music—plucked and bowed—gusted through the air, fanning Hesina’s anxiety.

Don’t look anyone in the eye, Caiyan instructed as they crossed the raised threshold and came into the antechamber. And don’t take off the hood of your cloak, he ordered, right before lowering his.

Welcome to the Yellow Lotus, said a madam, weaving toward them through flocks of painted girls and boys. Her smiling, moonlike face dimmed when she neared Caiyan. First time at this establishment, I presume?

Lilian coughed.

Let’s see… The madam scanned the courtesans. The White Peony might be to your liking—

We’re here to meet the Silver Iris, cut in Caiyan.

The madam frowned. The Silver Iris is our most highly sought-after entertainer.

So I’ve heard.

She has mastered the golden triad of calligraphy, music, and dance.

Again, so I’ve heard.

She is choosy with patrons and has limited hours. The madam leaned in and, with a long, emerald-varnished fingernail, extracted a loose thread from Caiyan’s cloak. Her gifts are wasted on the likes of you.

Hesina gulped.

Without batting an eye, Caiyan withdrew a brocade purse. Is this enough?

The madam snatched it, loosened the drawstring, and peered in. Hesina couldn’t tell what the woman was thinking, and as the madam bounced the purse up and down in her ringed hand, she sweated through her underclothes.

At last, the madam scrunched the purse shut. Come with me.

As she led them up a set of purple zitan-wood stairs and rapped on one of the many doors lining the second-floor corridor, Hesina pinched her own wrist. For five nights, she’d tormented herself with questions. Was it right to do this? Was it wrong? If it was, then was she angry enough, sad enough, selfish enough to see it through regardless? She didn’t know. She’d gotten this far, and she still didn’t know. But now only one question remained: Was she brave enough to hear the truth?

Hesina knew her answer.

The madam rapped again, harder, and a husky voice unfurled from within. Yes?

You have guests.

How many?

Two, said Lilian. She leaned against the wall beside the door. I’ll be right out here.

Have they paid?

The madam moistened her lips. They have.

Leave them, then.

Nothing happened immediately after the madam departed. The doors didn’t open. Demons didn’t descend from the beamed ceiling to exact their punishment, but as they waited, Hesina’s mind produced demons of its own. Maybe they’d been followed. Maybe someone had recognized her. Maybe—

The doors parted, and her demons fled before treason’s face.

It was an exquisite face. Ageless. Pearlescent. Silver-lidded eyes skimmed past Hesina and landed on Caiyan. Rose-tinted lips crimped in displeasure, and Hesina had all of a heartbeat to wonder how, exactly, Caiyan was acquainted with a courtesan before she was ushered past the doors. The courtesan bolted them, the ivory dowel falling into place like the final note of a song.

Hesina, unfortunately, was much too prone to nervous laughter. In an attempt to ignore the tickling tension in her chest, she fixated on the chamber. A gallery of pipa hung on the walls, their scrolled necks knuckled with ivory frets, strings drawn tight over their pear-shaped bellies. Four-word couplets papered the remaining space. To her embarrassment, Hesina only recognized one from her studies.

Downward unbridled water flows;

Upward unrealized dreams float.

I assume you’ll want to skip the tea.

Hesina nearly jumped at the Silver Iris’s voice, which was as metallic as her name.

That’s correct, said Caiyan, standing against the door.

Then let’s have a little demonstration, shall we?

That won’t be necessary, Hesina imagined saying with grace and magnanimity, but it was a lie, and the Silver Iris knew it. A hairpin was already in the courtesan’s hand. She pushed her finger into its needle-sharp tip, then held the pin over an unlit candle. A bead of blood fell and burst on the wick.

A wisp.

A spark.

A flicker.

The wick ignited into blue flame.

Hesina’s vision swam. The flame blurred, but stayed blue.

Blue. Blue. Blue.

A nice parlor trick, don’t you think? asked the Silver Iris. Her tone was conversational, but her gaze picked Hesina apart, straight to the core of who she was: a descendant of murderers.

Hesina’s stomach clenched. She wasn’t supposed to think the Eleven cruel. They’d built a kinder era, a fairer era—one where individuals were judged by their honest work, not the number of sooths and nobles they knew. Everyone was promised rights by the law—everyone but the soothsayers, who had manipulated the public for so many centuries. Death by a thousand cuts was considered kind for them…and for the people who employed the sooths for their gifts.

People like Hesina.

The Silver Iris sat and gestured for her to do the same. Weak at the knees, Hesina sank onto the silk-cushioned stool. She realized, somewhat belatedly, that she had yet to reveal her face. The disguise seemed silly now. A child’s game. She looked to Caiyan in question while the Silver Iris swaddled her finger with a handkerchief.

The courtesan spoke before Caiyan could. So tell me, Princess Hesina. She balled up the bloodied handkerchief and tossed it into the brazier at their feet, where it promptly burst into flame. What is it that you wish to see?

TWO

TOO MUCH OF A THING—BE IT SUCCESS OR POWER—ROTS THE HEART.

ONE OF THE ELEVEN ON SOOTHSAYERS

THEY HAD NO HEARTS TO BEGIN WITH.

TWO OF THE ELEVEN ON SOOTHSAYERS

With shaking hands, Hesina pushed back her hood.

She had come to see the future. The unknown. Yet for a second, all she could see was her father, lying in the iris beds, wearing his courier costume. She wasn’t sure how long she’d waited. Waited for him to rise and yawn, to tell her how lovely it was to stroll through the grounds in disguise. Waited for herself to wake when he never did.

That day, Hesina had watched as the Imperial Doctress took up a scalpel, splitting the dead king’s stomach like a fish. There was nothing to find, not at first. The Imperial Doctress concluded that the king’s death was of natural causes before puttering off to the adjacent chamber.

If only she had stayed a second longer to witness the golden gas rising from the slit. If she had believed when Hesina tried to show her the wisp in the vial, then Hesina wouldn’t be here. Her hands wouldn’t be clenched in her skirts just as they’d been clenched around the Doctress’s robes.

Her voice wouldn’t be so strained when she asked the Silver Iris, Who killed my father?

The Silver Iris blinked once. Killed?

Yes, killed! Hesina choked up. The king didn’t die a natural death. The decrees lie.

But she would show the kingdom the truth. With the Silver Iris’s Sight, she would find the assassin, press them into the tianlao dungeons, and maybe then, when she had a life for a life, this nightmare would—

I See golden gas rising from a pile of shards, the Silver Iris started. Hesina leaned in. But I can’t See who killed the king.

Hesina’s heart dove like a kite without wind.

What I can See is the person who will help you find the truth.

A representative? Hesina couldn’t mask her disappointment.

Yes. The Silver Iris smoothed an embroidered sash over her knee. You could call him that.

Hesina wound the cord connecting the vial to her broad-belt around her thumb. If she chose to follow a path of formal justice for her father’s killer, the Investigation Bureau would look into Hesina’s claim that he’d been murdered. Once they’d officially forwarded the case to the court, the Minister of Rites would assign a representative to both the plaintiff—in this case, her—and the defendant.

Well? prompted the Silver Iris. Would you like to hear?

Princesses were not so different from beggars. Hesina had learned to take what she could get. Yes.

The Silver Iris’s doe-like eyes roved over her. Hesina squirmed, well aware there was nothing impressive about her appearance. She lacked the hunger for knowledge that flamed in Caiyan’s eyes, the mirth of Lilian’s lips. A visiting painter had once said that Hesina had her mother’s face, but they both knew she’d never wear it as well as the queen. Hesina thought she heard similar sympathy in the Silver Iris’s voice when she finally said, A convict.

A…convict. The cord had cut the circulation to Hesina’s thumb. She unwound it, pins and needles replacing the numbness. Her father’s justice…handed to a convict.

She almost laughed.

I’m sorry. Hesina’s composure would have made her tutors proud. There must be a mistake.

The Silver Iris drew back. No mistake. A convict will represent you in court.

That’s impossible. Only up-and-coming scholars, selected from a pool of hopeful civil service examinees, acted as representatives in trials. The court was a stage on which to prove their intellect; the reward for winning the case was a free pass through the preliminary rounds of the examinations. The Eleven had made it so to give every literati a chance to rise, regardless of family background. But what did a criminal have to gain from such a system?

Hesina’s disbelief condensed. Please look again.

You think I’m lying.

What? No. Hesina didn’t believe the Silver Iris would lie, not really, for the same reason people trusted sooths in the past. Though books and libraries on the specifics of their powers had been destroyed in the purge, select legends had lived on to become common knowledge. One was that sooths couldn’t lie about their visions without shortening their life spans. How else, argued scholars, could the relic emperors have controlled them?

Why not? The Silver Iris rose and turned her back to them. A cascade of colors tumbled out from the hidden layers of her lilac skirt. Do you think I’m scared of shaving a few years off my life?

She loosened her sash, and the ruqun puddled onto the lacquered floor.

First came the hand-shaped bruises, flowering over her bare back. Then came the burn marks. Hundreds of thin, puckered lines, as if someone had bled her with a knife and watched her smoke for the fun of it.

Some would rather see us alive than cut to a thousand pieces or charred at the stake, she said as Hesina’s throat closed. You assume I tell the truth because I fear death, but the dead are lucky. They cannot squirm or shudder. She made for her wardrobe. Nor can they be forced to say the things you want to hear.

The brazier at Hesina’s feet was still spitting flame, but her toes had gone cold. She shouldn’t have come here. The Silver Iris had bled for her and Seen for her, but Hesina had given her no choice, just like the patrons before her. She staggered out of her seat.

I…I’m sorry. I never…I never meant…We’ll leave—

A convict. The Silver Iris slid on a different ruqun—this one sheer and crimson—and tied it shut with a braided cord. The one with the rod. That is all I can see. My blood is diluted. Few of us are as powerful as our ancestors. But you already knew that, didn’t you?

Meaningfully, she met Hesina’s gaze in the bronze mirror atop her vanity.

Hesina’s mouth opened and closed. No words came out.

A rap sounded at the door, then Lilian’s voice. Someone’s coming up the steps.

You should go now. The Silver Iris opened a drawer, withdrawing a tiny pot. She unscrewed the top and dabbed a fresh coat of silver over her lids. I have patrons to tend to.

Y-yes, stammered Hesina. We’ll go. I…I’m sorry.

She backed up. Caiyan joined her side. He held the door open for her, but suddenly Hesina couldn’t move. A question rooted her, climbing up her esophagus like a weed and choking her mind:

Why tell me anything?

What makes you so certain I haven’t been lying to you all this time? asked the Silver Iris, gaze chilly.

Because Caiyan said you wouldn’t. Because rumor said lying would cost you.

Because you showed me more than I deserve, said Hesina truthfully. And… She bit her lip and looked away. Naive, the Imperial Doctress had called her. Reckless. And because I want to trust you.

Because I feel sorry for you.

The Silver Iris sighed. Come here.

Hesina went over cautiously, and the Silver Iris held out her index finger.

The prick from the hairpin was gone. As small as the wound was, there was no way it could have healed so quickly, and Hesina goggled at the smooth, unmarred skin, flinching when the Silver Iris’s breath brushed her ear.

Your histories only tell you how our powers hurt us, whispered the courtesan. But there are benefits to speaking true visions too.

She drew back, leaving the shell of Hesina’s ear hot and cold all at once. Why are you telling me this?

When the Silver Iris studied her this time, the ice in her gaze had thawed to pity, as if she were the human and Hesina were the sooth. For the same reason you believe me: I am sorry for you.

* * *

They left the red-light district at two gong strikes past midnight. Left and right through the eastern market, merchants packed up their stalls, loading jiutan of sweet-wine congee and fried bean curd back onto wagons. Hesina drifted through the traffic, a ghost, as Caiyan pacified angry mule drivers and palanquin bearers.

Hey, watch it!

Are you trying to lose a leg?

I’m terribly sorry, said Caiyan. Excuse us. Pardon us.

Tell your missy to grow a pair of eyes!

Wait up, Na-Na, called Lilian.

Hesina didn’t stop. She needed to think, and she couldn’t think standing still.

A convict with a rod was to be her representative.

The Silver Iris had told the truth.

But now what?

Her feet brought her to the abandoned tavern from which they’d come. Her hands filled a pitcher at the counter pump. She dribbled water down the throat of the concrete guardian lion at the entrance, and the statue rotated aside at the base.

One by one, they descended the tight drop. The dark waxed over them as Lilian rotated the statue back in place, and Hesina suddenly knew her next steps.

I need to become queen. She made her declaration to the humble dirt walls of the underground passageway. Her voice echoed, hollow as the feeling in her chest.

Of course you’ll become queen, said Lilian, referring to the rites of succession that passed the throne from deceased ruler to eldest child.

When your mother returns from the Ouyang mountains, you can ask for her blessing, said Caiyan, referring to the tradition of parental validation that all heirs, imperial or not, observed before staking their claims.

The twins went back and forth as they walked down the tunnel. Rites. Traditions. Rites. Traditions. Neither seemed to realize that Hesina had said she needed the throne, not that she wanted it.

She envied Lilian, who was allowed to spend her days overseeing the imperial textiles. She envied Caiyan, who positively breathed politics. She even envied her blood brother Sanjing, who led the Yan militias. The throne never stood in the way of their hopes and dreams.

But for the first time in her life, Hesina had a use for power.

I want an official investigation. Her father would have wanted the truth delivered by the codes of the Tenets. That meant going through the Investigation Bureau, not a sooth. I want a trial. The ground rose beneath their feet as they approached the end of the passageway. I want the people to see the truth unfold in court.

So you really think there’s a convict with a rod? asked Lilian as they emerged from a miniature mountain range situated in the center of the four-palace complex.

There was only one way to find out.

Go on without me. Hesina turned north, toward the dungeons.

Caiyan caught her elbow. It’s best to visit at a less suspicious hour.

Lilian took her other elbow. For once, I agree with the stone-head. Commit one act of treason at a time.

Better yet, commit no treason at all.

Hesina shook them both off. "I didn’t say I was going to make him my representative right now."

If only it were that simple. To prevent the rich and powerful from hiring the best scholars and winning every case as they had during the relic dynasty, the Tenets ordered that plaintiff and defendant each be assigned a representative at random. As a result, Hesina couldn’t choose her own representative. It was treason. Convincing the only person in charge of the selection—Xia Zhong, Minister of Rites, Interpreter of the Tenets—happened to be treason too.

But that, Hesina decided, was another problem for another night.

What are you going to do in the dungeons, then? Lilian was asking when Hesina emerged from her thoughts. "Examine his rod?"

Caiyan cleared his throat.

Hesina patted Lilian on the arm. I’d save you the honors.

I’m holding you to that.

It’s late, milady, said Caiyan, changing the subject. The prisoners won’t be going anywhere. Wait for tomorrow, when your mind is clearer.

Don’t wait, growled the fear in Hesina’s belly. She’d been too late to save her father, too late to stop news of his natural death from circulating the kingdom.

But Caiyan had a point. The night was balmy with the last of the summer heat, and Hesina’s senses had begun to fog. Their trip into the red-light district felt like it’d taken place an eon ago, and she couldn’t hold back her yawn when they reached the Western Palace, home to the imperial artisans.

Under a medallion-round moon, Lilian bade them good night. The woodwork of her latticed doors was stained fuchsia and gold, bright like the textiles strewn, hung, and piled within. It was like looking into another world, a too-short glimpse of a life Hesina could not have. The doors slid shut, and Hesina and Caiyan continued on, traveling under the covered galleries that converged like arteries at the Eastern Palace, the largest of the four and the heart of court. The sunk-in ceilings dropped lower as they passed the ceremonial halls of the outer palace, the corridors narrowing as they approached the inner.

Caiyan stopped Hesina short of the imperial chambers. Lilian and I will stand by you no matter what you choose to do.

The words were bittersweet, reminding Hesina of something her father might say.

Thank you, she whispered. For everything.

Caiyan hadn’t doubted the gas in her vial. She’d run to his rooms in hysterics and he’d sat her down and outlined her options. Steady, reliable Caiyan, a friend, a brother, who received her gratitude with a short bow. Get some sleep, milady.

You too. But then Caiyan headed in the direction of the libraries, which made Hesina doubt he would.

Alone, she made for her chambers. The path to the imperial quarters was intentionally convoluted, designed to confuse intruders. Tonight, Hesina felt no better than one as the knit of lacquer corridors enmeshed her within the screened facades. Some of the images stitched upon the translucent silk were of water buffalo tilling rice paddies, but most were of the Eleven’s revolution. Gold thread fleshed out the flames engulfing the soothsayers and shimmered in the pool of blood spreading from the relic emperor’s severed head.

Hesina’s breath went ragged. Don’t fear the pictures, Little Bird, her father would have said. They’re simply art. But now she was as bad as the emperors of the past. She had used a sooth. Worse, her true heart sympathized, and she was too cowardly to speak it.

Hesina tried to look ahead. A mistake. The list of tasks awaiting her was daunting. Find the convict with the rod. Persuade Xia Zhong to choose him as her representative. Secure her mother’s blessing and commence her reign by telling the people their king had been murdered.

She would be an unforgettable queen—if she didn’t die by a thousand cuts first.

As Hesina neared her chamber, her blood slowed to a crawl. Light was seeping out from under the doors. She’d blown out all

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1