The Queen. Кира Касс

The Queen - Кира Касс


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her, heading into the bathroom. “I think it’s time for a change.”

      I didn’t dare to take a glimpse until it was all done. I listened to the metallic bite of the scissors over and over. I could feel as her snips got more precise, as if she was making everything uniform. Not long after that she stopped.

      “What do you think, miss?” she asked hesitantly.

      I opened my eyes. At first I couldn’t even tell a difference. But I turned my head ever so slightly, and a piece of hair fell over my shoulder. I pulled a strand over the other side, and it was as if my face was encircled by a mahogany frame.

      He was right.

      “I love it, Martha!” I gasped, touching my hair all over.

      “It makes you look much more mature,” Cindly added.

      I nodded. “It does, doesn’t it?”

      “Wait, wait, wait!” Emon cried, running to the jewelry box. She fished through several pieces, searching for something in particular. Finally, she came up with a necklace that had large glittering red stones. I hadn’t been brave enough to wear it yet.

      I lifted my hair, expecting her to want me to try it on, but she had other ideas. Gently, she laid the necklace across my head. It was so ornate, it was very reminiscent of a crown.

      My maids all sucked in a breath, but I stopped breathing completely.

      I looked at myself in the mirror, and along with imagining Schreave tacked on the end of my name, I placed princess right before it. In that instant I wanted him, the crown—every last piece of this—like nothing before.

      I HAD MARTHA FIND ME a jeweled headband to wear in the morning and left my hair completely down. I’d never been so excited about breakfast. I thought I looked positively beautiful, and I couldn’t wait to see if Clarkson felt the same way.

      Once breakfast was over, Clarkson left with the king, off to do whatever it was they did that made our country work.

      I sighed. Maybe tonight.

      The Women’s Room was quiet today. We had exhausted all the getting-to-know-you conversations and had grown accustomed to spending our days together. I sat with Madeline and Bianca, as I almost always did. Bianca came from one of Honduragua’s neighboring provinces, and we had met on the plane. Madeline’s room was next to mine, and her maid had come knocking on my door the very first day to ask my maids for some thread. Maybe half an hour later, Madeline came by to thank us, and we’d been friendly ever since.

      The Women’s Room was cliquish from the beginning. We were used to being separated into groups in everyday life—Threes over here, Fives over there—so maybe it was natural for that to happen in the palace. And while we didn’t divide ourselves exclusively by castes, I couldn’t help wishing we didn’t do it at all. Weren’t we made equals by coming here, at least while the competition lasted? Weren’t we going through the exact same thing?

      Though, at the moment, it seemed as if we were going through a bunch of nothing. I wished something would happen if only so we’d have something to talk about.

      “Any news from home?” I asked, trying to start a conversation.

      Madeline perked up. “What’s his caste? Is she climbing?”

      “Oh, yeah!” Bianca lit up with excitement. “A Two! I mean, it gives you hope. I was a Three before I left, but the idea of maybe marrying an actor instead of a boring old doctor sounds fun.”

      Madeline giggled and nodded in agreement.

      I wasn’t so sure. “Did she know him? Before she left for the Selection, I mean?”

      Bianca tipped her head to one side, as if I’d asked something ridiculous. “It seems unlikely. She was a Five; he’s a Two.”

      “Well, I think she said her family did music, so maybe she performed for him once,” Madeline offered.

      “That’s a good point,” Bianca added. “So maybe they weren’t complete strangers.”

      “Huh,” I muttered.

      “Sour grapes?” Bianca asked.

      I smiled. “No. If Hendly is happy, then so am I. It’s a little strange, though, marrying someone you don’t even know.”

      There was a pause before Madeline spoke. “Aren’t we kind of doing the same thing?”

      “No!” I exclaimed. “The prince is not a stranger.”

      “Really?” Madeline challenged. “Then please, tell me everything you know about him, because I feel like I’ve got nothing.”

      I inhaled to begin a long list of facts about Clarkson . . . but there wasn’t much to tell.

      “I’m not saying I know every last secret about him, but it’s not as if he’s any old boy walking down the street. We’ve grown up with him, heard him speak on the Report, seen his face hundreds of times. We may not know all the details, but I have a very clear impression of him. Don’t you?”

      Madeline smiled. “I think you’re right. It’s not as if we walked through the door not knowing his name.”

      “Exactly.”

      The maid was so quiet, I didn’t realize she’d approached until she was at my ear, whispering. “You’re needed for a moment, miss.”

      I looked at her, confused. I’d done nothing wrong. I turned to the girls and shrugged before standing to follow her out the door.

      In the hallway, she merely gestured, and I turned to see Prince Clarkson. He was standing there with that almost smile on his lips and something in his hand.

      “I was just dropping off a package at the mail room and the post master had this for you,” he said, holding up an envelope between two fingers. “I thought you might want it right away.”

      I walked over as quickly as I could without seeming unladylike and reached for it. His grin became devilish as he abruptly stuck his arm straight up in the air.

      “Come on now.”


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