I watch the recruiterâs wispy eyebrows soar into his receding hairline.
âKastor,â he says, âLady Kathanhiel has chosen you as her esquire. Congratulations.â
Thatâs me. He just said my name. The slayer of Elisaad has chosen an esquire who canât swing a sword, canât string a bow, canât take a hit, canât run a mile without asphyxiating, canât hold conversations for longer than a minute, canât stop his head from spewing endless monologue â
âOhâ¦uhâ¦nice.â
In an attempt to act composed I swivel my head about like a startled rooster. Maybe the others have heard what the recruiter had said â that I should pack up and go home.
To my left sits the chivalrous knight with four last names that no one cares to remember. If not for the poison in his eyes and his eyebrows scrunching into a fleshy gulch filled with old sweat, he would be considered moderately handsome. His gauntleted hands are wound tight, as if about to snap an invisible neck.
To my right sits Haylis, Lady Kathanhielâs distant cousinâ¦allegedly. Sheâs in the middle of a deep-boring operation into her right nostril. From the experience of having seen her do this eleven times a day for fifty-odd days, this particular operation looks to be a success. This time sheâs using her index finger â got to keep track, might have to shake her hand later.
Both of them are finalists, same as I â chosen among two hundred other candidates that came to the winter palace for the final-round exams. Neither of them are saying a word, which has to mean â
The recruiter leans forward, slamming his hands on the desk. âKastor!â
âThe wha â the whatâ¦.?â
âEsquire to Kathanhiel. Do you accept?â
âDo you acceptâ? How many times do dreams come true with a salary of three hundred crowns a month?
âYesâ¦yes I do. Itâs an honour to thank you â I mean, sure, of course, categorically.â
The recruiter pulls out a thick scroll. âYour contract. Please sign here, here, initial every clause, and thumbprint underneath the red seal.â
There are more words on this scroll than the Makerâs scripture; I could spend a week going over the content and not comprehend half of it. Plus, nothing on here is going to change my mind.
Five minutes of scribbling later, I hand back the signed contract. The recruiter nods. âSeems to be in order. Now, Miss Haylis, if you would also ââ
âIâm not signing nothing,â she says. âAunt Kath said I donât have to.â
I put my hand up.
âSoâ¦excuse me, sorry butâ¦sheâs alsoâ¦â
The recruiter looks at me. âMiss Haylis partook in the application process at the behest of Lady Kathanhiel. She has been accepted regardless of her results, which are, incidentally, quite impressive.â
âAunt Kath invited me to be her esquire,â Haylis says. âThought you were special did you?â She crosses her arms and looks the other way, her hair spinning in cute curls. When swooning at an attractive woman, one must not overlook the details, such as her index finger rubbing on her sleeve and leaving a shiny streak.
The recruiter persists. âMiss Haylis, without a signature the treasury canât authorise your salary.â
âNope, not signing. You canât make me.â
At that moment the knight veritably explodes. âYou would choose ?! These should be Kathanhielâs esquire, not this -â gesticulating at me, â-
you picked up in the slums! And her!
Open your ears! Do you not hear how she speaks?! What kind of senile fool would pick these morons over me, I speak up because Iâm an idiot. âSir, thatâs unfair. We both worked as hard as you did.â
He stares at me like an angry goldfish, all pop-eyed and flushed red. âShut your mouth. You will speak when spoken to.â
Haylis is still looking the other way with arms crossed, admiring that plain white wall. Her fingers tap so fast on her lacy sleeve the threads are starting to come loose.
The recruiter rubs his face with one tired hand and rings a bell with the other. Two burly guardsmen enter. âEscort Sirâ¦whatever his name is, out of the palace. Make sure he does not return.â
The room overflows with curses, thumping fists, banging boots, sputtering spit, and colourful expletives that must be nascent amongst the entitled. Quiet awkwardness returns ten seconds later. Just the three of us in the room now.
The recruiter tries again. âMiss Haylis, if you would be so kindâ¦â
âI told you I wonât sign nothing.â
I speak up with the expert timing of a great comedian. âYou heard the lady. She wonât sign nothing,â
she turns around, eyes narrowed as if examining trash that was picked up from the slums.
The recruiter sighs, gathering up my contract. âFine. Come with me now Kastor. You will be presented to Lady Kathanhiel. She will see you in due time, Miss Haylis, so please remain here andâ¦be as you are.â
My hands are putting on a pathetic dance routine, shaking and gyrating and grasping at invisible eels. Repeatedly muttering âesquire to Kathanhiel, hero of the Realms, dragon slayerâ under oneâs breath doesnât seem to calm them down.
A few doors open, which lead to more corridors, which lead to more doors that lead to more corridors. The Kingâs winter palace has two hundred bedrooms and twenty-three baths, but thanks to a pair of twins from the Vassal States whose ignorant biceps were a little rough on the fixtures, only three are still functional, while the lower levels â servant quarters, baths, three cellars full of century-old wine â are left with ankle-high sewage. Itâs the fifth worst thing the applicants have done to the place.
Donât think the King would want to rent it out again, not even to the slayer of Elisaad.
We arrive at a final set of doors. The recruiter opens them.
To paradise.
Shining under the autumn sun is a half-garden half-zoo. None of the applicants have ever been to this part of the palace; they would have said something about the white peacocks roaming amongst myriad-coloured chrysanthemum, the spider monkeys swinging from one side of the vine-encrusted pergola to the other, the pair of yellow-eared caracals roaming underneath the arches and eyeing the monkeys hungrilyâ¦or at least mention the bronze-scaled dragonling dozing inside its gilded cage.
This pony-sized creature has a crocodile head, a thin, frail-looking neck, a ridged spine that merges into its barbed tail, and translucent insect-like wings attached to its forelegs. It actually looks kind of cute, yawning and baring its teeth like a sleepy cat, shooing away a curious spider monkey with a swish of its tail.
The garden path leads around the cage, up a sizable hill, and ends in a circular gazebo that overlooks the vast prairies of the kingdomâs heartland and the entirety of the winter palace.
What a view: an ocean of gold and green warmed by the distant embrace of sun-touched mountains, and at the fore, gleaming white spires around which birds of every colour and size gather to sing their songs.
I see none of it.
I see none of it because Kathanhiel is sitting right there, looking at me.
Looking at Before this moment, every day of my life had been the same: sitting at the same grimy dinner table every day, chewing stale bread, listening to the same folks nagging the same nags about the neighbours, the economy, the price of meat, talking the same talk about when Kastor is going to get a real job, why isnât he out there looking for a wife when heâs twenty-two and not touched a woman all his life...so on and so forth. Every day the same.
In that dreary repetition, reality becomes very well defined.
Coming home after a long day of being treated like a shovel with a mouth, sitting down at the table, hearing the talk, then immediately going to bed because thereâs nothing worth being awake for â that is real. An inescapable prison.
The tales of Kathanhiel, however â how she put a knife to the Kingâs throat and âborrowedâ from him three thousand troops to march on the lair of Elisaad; how the divine sword Kaishen came to her in a flash of lightning; how she slew the mad dragon by burying Kaishen through the nape of its neck â they are . Bards make a killing telling these stories over and over, because fools like me, sleepwalkers who never really wake up, keep asking them for more of the same.
In that timeless limbo between waking and sleep, when Iâm lying there with eyes closed trying to blur fantasy and reality in order to convince myself to get up tomorrow, sheâs always thereâ¦but of course Kathanhiel didnât really exist. Not for someone like me.
But nowâ¦
This opulent gazebo, with its golden columns and mosaic ceiling, has to be real; so is the woman with the perfect smile sitting in front of me. Sheâs wearing a white skirt and a sleeveless doublet that bares proudly her scar-riddled arms. Around her neck is a tooth pendant, a dragonâs incisor. Her eyes are an unknowable grey, and the faded scar over her right eyelid is almost glowing beneath her cropped golden hair.
âI appreciate the compliment,â she says.
Indecipherable sputters of a choking chimney spew from my lips.
She gestures to the seat opposite. âKastor, I look forward to working with you.â
I pinch myself on the thigh, then the face. Both hurt as they should. Not good. Why did I just pinch myself?
âKastor is rather prone to bouts of nervousness,â the recruiter says helpfully, âso please forgive him if he displaysâ¦.unorthodox enthusiasm.â
âYouâre Kathanhiel,â I speak politely with neâer a stutter, âand Iâm Kastor.â
Why is she smiling?