didnât banish them. She knew there was only one thing to cure this sickness of curiosity. Just one sure tonic.
Answers
.
So, that morning, sheâd thrown herself into the books. Sheâd climbed countless stairs, visiting each of Sorin Towerâs twenty floors to recover the dustiest, most ancient tomes the mammoth library held. Sheâd curled up in different corners, resting books on her raised knees, and struggled to translate forgotten languages she barely recognized. Sheâd pored over ancient scrolls so brittle and faded, she hadnât dared sneeze and risk scattering them to dust. In everything sheâd read thus far, in everything sheâd learned, only one fact seemed to hold true.
The Carse didnât exist.
Not officially, anyway. No history revealed its origin. No royal biography mentioned its significance. In all, Jeniah examined nearly eighty textsâsome rumored to be as old as the land itselfâand only three mentioned the Carse. Those three tomes told her what she already knew:
if any monarch enters Dreadwillow Carse, then the Monarchy will fall.
Exhausted after hours of reading, Jeniah slumped over a table. Sheâd just closed her bleary eyes when a thunderous crack announced the opening of the library door. She looked up, startled. Sheâd asked the servants not to disturb her. So who would possibly . . . ?
A short, round man with sickly pale skin bounded into the room. The princess blinked at the sight. The man wore ratty old furs tied to him with frayed bits of rope. Jeniah almost couldnât see his face for the salt-and-pepper hair that engulfed his head. His bare feet were coated in an inch of oily black mud that squished with every step he took. A weathered leather glove covered most of his outstretched left forearm. A sleek falcon with feathers that matched the manâs hair color gripped the glove with shiny white talons.
Was this . . . ? It couldnât be.
In her drive to learn all she could about the Carse, Jeniah had forgotten about the new tutor her mother had promised. And even if she had remembered to expect him, nothing could have prepared her to expect . . .
this
.
The man, who had a distinct waddle when he walked, stopped next to Jeniah. A strong odor of lavender and sulfur hovered about him. He smiled broadly, revealing crooked teeth, one of which was framed with a thin strip of gold. âYou must be Jeniah.â
The princessâs eyes narrowed. Typically, anyone who approached her did so with a bow. Called her âYour Highness.â At the very least, referred to her as
Princess
Jeniah. Sheâd never really liked the formality. But its absence was peculiar.
The man flicked his wrist. The falcon cawed, flew into the air, and perched atop the nearest bookcase. âI believe youâre expecting me.â
No
, the princess thought.
No, I really wasnât
. But she nodded hesitantly. âYouâre my new tutor.â
When the man squinted at this, his eyebrows swallowed his eyes. âIf you like.â
Jeniah started to wonder if an intruder had entered the castle. Her past teachers had worn the long, flowing robes of a scholar. Theyâd carried sacks full of books, assorted quills, and dioramas depicting key events in the history of the Monarchy. This man had nothing. Except his glove. And the bird.
âI donât believe,â she said, eyeing the falcon above, âthat animals are allowed in the library.â
âAnd why not?â the man demanded, scratching his thick beard. âGerheart up there? He has as much right to learn as anyone.â
âBut he canât read.â
âReading,â the man said, pulling up a chair, âis just
one
way of learning. For example, my name is Skonas. There, you learned something by hearing. True?â
Jeniah found herself gripping the sides of her chair tightly. What sort of tutor was this? âMy mother said you would teach me how to be