The Embers of Heaven (27 page)

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Authors: Alma Alexander

Tags: #Historical, #Fantasy

BOOK: The Embers of Heaven
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The words were high-flying, and brave. But Amais had kept her journals too well, and in them she had noted what had happened when people had spoken out against Iloh in the past. When she wrote of the latest gathering in her journal on the night she came home from it, she had flipped back to an old notebook and read what she had written before, about the men who had tried to stem land reforms they had thought too harsh.

 

I wonder
, she wrote,
how much of this comes from Tang. Iloh has never needed people in the past to give his truth vindication. And I wish
, she added despondently after a short pause
, that it had not rained this time. Xuelian and her stories! I cannot seem to get rid of the image of Iloh and Tang drowning children of a long-dead Emperor in river waters that have lost themselves in the deep ocean hundreds of years ago…

 

“It will not last,” Xuelian had predicted, when Amais went back with a report of the proceedings. “Or, rather, let us say that it will last precisely as long as it takes for one person too many to say something Iloh does not like. Oh well—if there is anything I’ve learned in my days is that every dog has his day.”

 

“That is not fair,” Amais said.

 

Xuelian lifted a quizzical eyebrow in her direction. “Nothing,” she said, “is ever fair.”

 

“You hate him,” said Amais. “Don’t you?”

 

“I don’t think I hate anybody,” Xuelian said. “I spent all my hate a long time ago. I am too old now to waste my time on hating, it takes far too much of my energy and my time. But you have to admit, these days there are only two ways to feel about Shou’min Iloh—you either worship him, or you loathe him.”

 


You would have recoiled from me, or bowed to me
,” Amais murmured, very softly.

 

“What was that?” Xuelian said. “My dear, my hearing isn’t what it used to be. You need to stop muttering into your chin.”

 

“It was just… something he said once.”

 

“Who did?”

 

“Iloh.
Shou’min
Iloh,” Amais said, laying ironic emphasis on the title.

 

“Was that in the Golden Words?” Xuelian said. “I don’t remember it.”

 

“You’ve read the Golden Words?”

 

“And so has every one of my girls,” Xuelian said. “It would not do to be caught out not knowing them. But where was it that he said that people would either bow or recoil?”

 

“Your hearing is better than you think,” Amais said, unable to stop herself.

 

Xuelian’s mouth quirked.

 

“He knows exactly what he is,” Amais said, with a touch of passion she wasn’t even aware of coloring her words. She herself had questioned whether this directive had come from Iloh, but that was in the secret places of her journal, and out here, in the real world, she could not help rousing herself in his defense if someone else uttered the exact same sentiments. “He has always believed in what he knew to be true. He has never needed anyone’s praise or approbation to do what he believed was right. Look how far he has come…”

 

“He really did get inside you, didn’t he?” Xuelian said, looking at her pupil with sudden interest.

 

Amais dropped her gaze, bringing up both hands, with fingers that had gone icy, to cover and cool the hot blush that had leapt to her cheeks. “Oh,
Cahan
,” she whispered despairingly. “Is it that obvious?”

 

“I did not mean it in that sense,” Xuelian said slowly, “but
now
it is. Some adore him, some hate him… and then there’s one who loves him.” She reached out and tipped Amais’s chin back with one imperious hand so that Amais had to look at her, through eyes swimming in tears. “I’ve been doing all the talking,” Xuelian said, “perhaps too much talking. The best education always goes both ways, with the teacher always learning from the pupil—we both know how I came to be in the place that I am, but you will have to tell me just how a girl like you could have stumbled into being Shou’min Iloh’s lover.”

 

Seven

 

There were just voices, in the beginning—voices in the darkness, familiar voices both, raised in argument.

 

“But speaking out is what you asked them to do,” said the first voice, and it was Tang, with his unmistakable crisp clipped tones. “
It is your republic
, you said.”

 

“I did,” said the second voice, and it was Iloh’s—not the tinny, almost artificial voice familiar to thousands as transmitted through the microphones on the podium in the Emperor Square or broadcast through cheap radios, but the real voice, that rich, full, loamy dark voice that Amais had first heard in the ancestral burial ground near dead Xinmei’s house. “I asked for
help
, Tang, I asked for opinions, for visions of a way forward. Not an outcry in favor of returning to all those Imperial iniquities that we have done away with! Not a concerted front against every idea we’ve ever put forward!”

 


You
put forward,” Tang said, and the darkness was dissipating a little—he was visible, in his stark blue-gray uniform, a slight frown on his face. “Most everything we’ve done has been your vision—there are the Golden Words out there, you can read the story of the Republic in them. Iloh… you asked them to tell you what they thought.”

 

“That is not what I had in mind,” Iloh said, waving a thick sheaf of papers in Tang’s face. “I said constructive opinion, I wanted input on building up, not just cavils and complaints and ideas on how to tear down what we’ve achieved and go back to things that most people who propose them haven’t an inkling of what they would mean to society.”

 

“Perhaps you’ve been too harsh with them,” Tang said. “From the day you declared the Republic to now, they’ve had to live very different lives than those they have known before.”

 

“Baba Sung proposed most of these ideas before I did,” Iloh said stubbornly. “The only difference is that I’ve actually worked to make them a reality.”

 

“Still,” Tang said, “your primary directive is
serve the people
. You, yourself, said that every kind of service is noble. When they ask you for certain things and you refuse to even consider them, you are not living up to your own words, Iloh.”

 

“Do you
agree
with all those people?” Iloh said.

 

“Not all of them,” Tang said, and his voice was careful. “But some of them…”

 

“No, you’re right,” Iloh said. “It’s been useful, in some ways.”

“That’s something, at least,” Tang said.

 

“I know who is against me now,” Iloh said, and his voice was low and dangerous, almost fey. “I know who I have to deal with to make sure that the edifice of the Republic is not undermined even as it is being built. I have already made plans—people need to be educated.”

 

“Iloh…” Tang had a hand out, palm open towards Iloh, as though he was trying to ward off a premonition.

 

“Here,” Iloh said, snatching another file off the desk beside him and thrusting it at Tang, “This is what we are going to do…”

 

But the voices were fading. A glimpse of faces, one determined, one inscrutable but with a hint of appalled astonishment, and then the veil of darkness came down again, and it was all gone.

 

And Amais woke with a start, alone in her room, with her heart beating very fast, the dream still clinging to her inner eyelids as though it had been painted there, the voices still echoing in her ears.

 

She had not always been blessed with the facility to remember her dreams, but ever since the journey from Elaas to Syai, the endless days and nights on the ship upon the open ocean, she could recall some, the important ones, when she woke. It had become almost a problem-solving device for her over the years, one she had grown to rely on—because the remembered dreams often held solutions to current problems and impasses in her life, couched in the usual exaggerated and sometimes odd dream-metaphor, something she had had to work at learning how to interpret.

 

Some of the dreams had been vivid but unexplained and possibly unexplainable—visions about things that were yet to come in her life, perhaps, preparing her for something, showing her the way. But she had never yet had the kind of dream from which she had just woken, something so real and so clear, so much as though she had been there, physically present, rather than asleep in a bed across the city from where that conversation might have been taking place. But she had absolutely no doubt that she had somehow “heard” something that had really been said. It was as though that connection she had had with Iloh from the very beginning had suddenly been sharpened to something new and keen-edged, the kind of blade that sliced through the fabric of space and time and made a bridge out of air and darkness between two people so linked.

 

Perhaps that had been brought into focus by the simple fact that she had been talking about Iloh with somebody else for perhaps the first time ever since she had met him, trying to come to terms with his presence in her life. She had tried to explain to Xuelian, when the subject had come up—tried, and failed, because she herself was completely unable to rationalize her feelings for Iloh and the way they had been consummated. She constantly found herself surprised that the events of which she told had happened barely a year before. Sometimes it felt like centuries had gone by.

 

“You were sixteen years old,” Xuelian had said, “and he was a charismatic and powerful man in the prime of his life. It happens…”

 

“I did not know who he was when I first saw him,” Amais said. “And it didn’t matter, not in the least. I first thought he was just a local peasant, doing his chores.”

 

“But you found out that he was not,” Xuelian said. “Be honest—would you have gone back that night to meet that peasant, if that was who you still believed him to be?”

 

Amais hesitated, searching herself, wanting more than anything to give Xuelian nothing less than the truth. Xuelian noted the pause and—unusually, for the observant woman that she was—misinterpreted it completely.

 

“See?” she said, while Amais was still trying to find the right words. “It mattered—even if only just a little, but it mattered.”

 

“No, you’re wrong,” Amais said. “The only moment in which his true identity really made a difference was not the one in which I came to him. It was the one in which I left him.”

 

“How so?”

 

“Xuelian… this was not my fairy tale,” Amais said. “I stumbled into it, and it held me—more of a trap than a dream…”

 

“A honeyed one,” Xuelian murmured.

 

“However sweet,” Amais said, managing to dredge up a smile. But behind it, her eyelashes glittered with tears as though they had been strung with tiny diamonds. “He was not mine and could not be mine. He was just…
mine
.”

 

“Child,” Xuelian said, “you are making no sense at all.”

 

“Did you ever believe that one day you could marry your Emperor?” Amais said softly.

 

Xuelian reached up to caress the kingfisher comb in her hair, a motion that was totally instinctive, beyond any conscious intention or control, and when she realized where her hand had strayed she snatched it away as though caught in the act of doing something indecent.

 

“No,” she said, too quickly. And then looked down at her silk-clad lap, where both hands now lay with their fingers tightly laced, as though one hand was preventing the other from further betraying motion. “Yes,” she said, after a pause. “There are times… I still do.”

 

“But you knew…”

 

“Yes. Oh, yes. I knew.” Xuelian lifted her head again and skewered her pupil with a gaze that was at once savage and somehow astonished. “Child, how did you get to be so wise, so young?”

 

They had spoken of it many times, after—but it was not until some time later that Amais had mentioned her stay at Iloh’s farm, his concubine ‘stepmother’, and the half-sister who had vanished into the city.

 

“When Tang came to get the family, just before Republic Day, he hardly realized that it was going to be only a stranger masquerading as Iloh’s sister with whom he would return to Linh-an,” Amais said. “I promised her mother, you know—I promised her I would find her daughter and send word. And then Tang said that he would take care of that, and things happened, and I never did anything—but perhaps you would know… Youmei said her letters came from the city but with no return address, and I thought…”

 

“You thought that she might be here, on the Street,” Xuelian said. “Not impossible, but I doubt that anyone knows her real identity if she is Iloh’s sister. There would be few houses brave enough to take that on.”

 

“She might not have said anything,” Amais said.

 

“What was the name?”

 

“Yingchi.”

 

Xuelian blinked, and then inclined her head in a quizzical manner, like some bright-hued bird of paradise. “Oh, my,” she said.

 

“What is it?”

 

“I thought she might have changed her name, at least,” Xuelian said. “But I
do
have a girl here… how old did you say she would be?”

 

“I’m not sure, but I think in her early twenties. Something like that. Iloh was thirteen or so when she was born.”

 

“Oh, my,” Xuelian said again. She reached out with one glittering hand and rang a small silver bell that had been left within her reach on a side table lacquered in bright scarlet. A girl dressed in saffron-colored silk popped her head around the door.

 

“Xuelian-
lama
?”

 

“Is Qiying with anybody right now?” Xuelian asked, and Amais sat up as though she’d been stung. “No…? Then bring her to me.”

 

“Qiying?” Amais queried softly.

 

“It’s possible,” Xuelian said. “It’s a direct inversion. She might just have thought that was enough. We shall soon see.”

 

“You mean,” Amais said, almost stuttering in disbelief, “that… all the time… right here…?”

 

Xuelian turned back to Amais, and actually laughed out loud.

 

“You never asked for her by name,” Xuelian said. “And I certainly had no reason to think anything of it, under the circumstances—
she
certainly never said anything, not a word. She was a country girl from a farming family—that much I knew. But when you come to this place what you were ceases to matter very much. If you want to shroud your past, nobody will ask questions—but should it prove to be dangerous for the house you become a part of, and endangers you or your
jin-shei-kwan
, your house-sisters, you will be held accountable.” She paused. “And women have been. Make no mistake. We have our own code of honor here on the Street, and our own justice.”

 

There was a soft knock on the door, and Xuelian called out permission to enter. A girl with wide bright eyes and two coiled braids of long, lustrous black hair pinned so that they framed her face slipped into the room.

 

“You called for me, Xuelian-
lama
?” said Iloh’s sister.

 

“Why did you not tell me who you were, Yingchi?” Xuelian said calmly, without preamble.

 

Yingchi flinched as though she had been struck, and then dropped her eyes to where the toes of her embroidered slippers peeped out from under the hem of her silk gown. “Xuelian-
lama
, there are times I myself do not know who I am,” she said.

 

“But you do know who your family is,” Xuelian said. “That might not have mattered, had you been no more than the country girl you said you were when you came here. But you must know that knowing what I know now changes everything.”

 

Both Amais and Yingchi looked at Xuelian in pure consternation—the one because she had hardly wanted to be the one who would be responsible for turning Iloh’s sister out into the streets, and the other because women plying this particular trade as independents, with no House behind them to protect them should things turn ugly, usually led short and brutal lives.

 

Xuelian noticed both looks, and understood perfectly where both were coming from. She smiled, motioned for Yingchi, standing frozen by the door, to come inside.

 

“Don’t worry,” she said, “I did not know until now, and nobody else outside this room knows—and as far as I am concerned nobody needs to know. I could have wished that you’d thought to change your name, Yingchi-
mai
, if only to protect the rest of us. I do wonder, though—now that he is here, and that he is powerful, why did you make no attempt at all to contact him?”

 

“He does not know me, or anything about me,” Yingchi said, moving as though her legs were made of glass and then collapsing on a seat very suddenly, as though the glass had turned to jelly. “And… and he scares me, Xuelian-
lama
. I did not know if he would even see me, and if he did what he would do to me. What I am doing…” She ground to a mortified halt, glancing up at Xuelian, aware that she was passing judgment not only on her own lifestyle but on that of the woman who controlled her daily bowl of rice, the roof over her head, and such security as could be hoped for in this particular trade.

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