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Authors: Diane Stanley

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“What is all that shouting outside?”

“I believe they have spotted a sail.”

“A ship?”

“Yes. But there's no hurry. It'll take some time to get here.”

“We can stay a while longer, then?”

“I thought we might.”

And then it washes over him, and for a moment he is near to drowning in a wave of high emotion. It feels like desperation or unspeakable pain. But he's pretty sure it's neither one. “I never expected this,” he says, a sort of gasp. “I did not think it possible.”

“What—kissing?”

“A happy ending.”

“Oh, Alexos, wouldn't you rather think of it as a happy beginning, which will lead to a very long, happy middle, and finally, years and years from now when we're aged and crotchety—
then
we can have our happy ending?”

“I quite agree. A much better way to look at it.”

“Would you like to kiss me again?”

“Oh yes, Aria. I would.”

Coda

THEY STAND TOGETHER, THE
two old men, on a rise overlooking the harbor. Three ships flying the flag of Ferra are anchored offshore. The men and their gear will have to be ferried from the island to the ships in small boats. It will take the rest of this day and much of the next to get everything and everyone on board. But there's no sense of urgency. The weather is fair and looks to remain so.

The tents, already taken down and neatly folded, are piled up on the beach along with the cauldrons, trunks, barrels, boxes, and casks. Everyone will sleep under the stars tonight. The fog has gone for good.

“It's past believing,” Suliman says, gazing down at Alexos and Aria, standing apart from the others, arms about each other's waists, while Teo turns cartwheels in the sand. Every now and then he runs back to his brother and his sister to hug them in the wildness of his joy.

“Indeed,” Claudio says. “Here I am, sniveling like a child.”

“Will they marry?”

“Oh, yes. They'd do it tomorrow if I'd allow it. But Aria has lived a simple life here; it's all she's ever known. Now she's going to a brave new world, full of wonders and terrors. There will be so much to learn about—dressmakers, banquets, court manners; only imagine! She'll need time to adjust.”

“He'll wait however long he must. He's loved her since he was twelve.”

“Oh, I don't intend to torture them. It will happen soon. But it'll be a busy time—so much to do, so many changes. That should distract them for a while.”

“Yes,” Suliman says. “It'll be a brave new world for us all. Both armies disbanding, men going home, which of course will mean more hands to work the farms. If the old stories are true, we'll have fine weather once again, bringing rich harvests and prosperity. Good changes, all. But of course there will be decisions to make as to how Arcoferra will be governed.”

“Since we seem to have one king too many?”

“Well, yes. That is one of the complications.”

“I have given the matter some thought, Suliman.”

“I rather imagined you had.”

“To wit: I have grown weary of the heavy burdens of
great office, have become old and worn with care . . .”

“In two days?”

“Yes. Positively exhausted. See the lines in my face and the bags under my eyes?”

“Claudio, I believe you are quite demented with joy.”

“True. I have not been sleeping well. I wake in the night, laughing.”

“That
would
wear a man down.”

“Oh, it has. And so it has occurred to me that I might, as my nephew did, abdicate my throne.”

“In favor of Alexos?”

“No, Suliman. In favor of my daughter.”

“Oh. That is original—a queen!”

“I know it goes against custom—and possibly against the laws of Ferra—to choose a daughter as my heir over a son. But I can't claim Teo, not in any dynastic sense. He belongs to Arcos. And he has already refused that throne.”

“I understand you completely, Claudio. A very neat and generous solution: the queen of Ferra marries the king of Arcos, and just like that”—he makes an extravagant sweep of the hand—“we are one kingdom again, jointly ruled by a united royal family. And Teo will not have to part from father, sister, or brother.”

“You have it exactly.”

“Where will they live—in the north or the south?”

“I would think they'd spend the summers in Arcos and the winters in Ferra.”

“And with us around, they'll never lack for advisers!” They break into laughter at the same moment.

Down on the beach, Teo bounds up the slope and comes close to knocking his brother over. But Aria has such a firm grip on Alexos that the accident is averted. Now Alexos has the boy around the shoulders and they are linked, the three of them. It's a beautiful sight. Even from this distance, the men can feel their happiness, that much greater for being so unexpected.

Claudio looks over at Suliman and sees that he is weeping. He turns away, not wanting to intrude on a private moment. But Suliman knows he's been observed and he doesn't mind. He welcomes it, in fact, the long-missed opportunity of sharing his deepest feelings with a friend. He opens his heart.

“I had a wife once—long ago, before I came to Arcos.”

Claudio turns but does not speak.

“We had a beautiful son. He was three years old. I loved my wife very much and I doted on my boy. I was a prince, though a minor one, the youngest of seven. I had everything a man could desire: wealth and position, love and purpose. I am glad to say I knew at the time how fortunate I was.

“But then, when I had been away on some business
for my brother, I returned to find that there had been a fire and my family had perished in it.”

“Oh, Suliman!”

“I need not tell you what I felt. You have lost your own wife, so you will know. But after a time, those around me grew impatient with my mourning. ‘Find yourself a new wife,' they would say. ‘She will give you a new son.' But I had loved
that
woman and
that
child, and they were not replaceable. So I took my grief and withdrew from court and pursued my studies—medicine, languages, philosophy.

“Then, restless still, I decided to see the world. I eventually settled in Arcos and made a new life for myself. But I never spoke of my past. King Ektor knew who I was, of course, who my brother was, and where I'd been trained in medicine. But the most important things, the true and personal things, nobody knew. Not once since leaving my country have I spoken the names of my wife or my son.”

“Will you speak them now, to me?”

“I will. My wife was Laleh; that is also the name of a flower in the language of my people. We called our son Hami, which means protector, defender.”

“Laleh,” Claudio says. “Hami. I will remember.”

“It must already be obvious to you that Alexos has become my second son. I did not seek it, nor did he. It grew over time and we never gave it a name. But he is
my son and I am his father.

“It has been difficult, of course. His pain became my pain. And while there were times when I was able to ease his way and calm his fears, the very nature of his destiny meant that he must walk alone. As the long-awaited chosen one—we didn't know then that there were others—a lot was expected of him. It became clear over time that he was being tested.”

He pauses thoughtfully, takes a deep breath; his shoulders droop as he lets it out.

“There are words often used when speaking of the promise Athene made and the role her champion must play: dedication, selflessness, sacrifice. But no one really knew exactly what the boy was supposed to do.

“And so, being a scholar—as you are, Claudio—I made a study of the ancient scrolls that are kept in the sacred archives. They are written in an archaic form of your language, not easy to decipher. But I have been a student of languages all my life. With time and effort I managed to learn it.”

Claudio leans in closer now; Suliman's voice has dropped.

“I read the scrolls from beginning to end. And then, hoping I was mistaken in my translation, I read them again and again. But it was not a mistake. Claudio, the word
sacrifice
was literally meant—not merely in the sense of doing without or giving something up, but in
the same way we sacrifice a bull or a goat.”

“He was meant to die?”

“Yes.”

“When did you learn this?”

“He was very young, five or six years of age. Since that time I have waited and wondered—how and when would it happen? I prayed to Athene,
Let it be easy; let it be quick.
Then he was captured by Pyratos, and I understood. His death could not be easy and quick: this was a
sacrifice
; Zeus required suffering on an epic scale. Thus the false accusation, the prospect of a shameful trial and a public execution. It had to be horrible.”

Now he looks at Claudio with amazement in his eyes. “Yet now I see that Athene has managed, with the exceptional cleverness for which she is so famous, to put on such a stirring display of noble suffering and generous forgiveness that Zeus failed to notice that the ultimate price was never paid. Then, once absolution had been granted and the immortals had moved on to other things, she . . .”

He can't go on. So Claudio finishes for him. “She restored Alexos to life.”

“Yes. And so I weep with joy and gratitude, you see.”

They are silent now, thinking of their children,
thinking of the future, gazing out at the tender blue of the summer sky, the calm waters sparkling in the sunlight, the ships rocking gently, their sails ruffling in the breeze, and the little boats coming and going.

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About the Author

Courtesy of the author

DIANE STANLEY
is the author and illustrator of beloved books for young readers, including
The Silver Bowl
, which was named a best book of the year by
Kirkus Reviews
and
Book Links
Lasting Connections and was an ALA
Booklist
Editors' Choice;
The Cup and the Crown; The Princess of Cortova; Saving Sky
, winner of the Arab American National Museum's Arab American Book Award and a Bank Street College of Education Best Book of the Year;
Bella at Midnight, a School Library Journal
Best Book of the Year and an ALA
Booklist
Editors' Choice;
The Mysterious Case of the Allbright Academy
;
The Mysterious Matter of I. M. Fine
; and
A Time Apart
. She is also well known as the author and illustrator of award-winning picture book biographies.

Ms. Stanley has also written and illustrated numerous picture books, including three creatively reimagined fairy tales:
The Giant and the Beanstalk, Goldie and the Three Bears
, and
Rumpelstiltskin's Daughter
. She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. You can visit her online at
www.dianestanley.com.

Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at
hc.com
.

Books by Diane Stanley

The Silver Bowl

The Cup and the Crown

The Princess of Cortova

Bella at Midnight

The Mysterious Case of the Allbright Academy

The Mysterious Matter of I. M. Fine

Saving Sky

A Time Apart

Credits

Cover art © 2015 by Antonio Javier Caparo

Cover design by Sarah Creech

Copyright

THE CHOSEN PRINCE
. Text and map copyright © 2015 by Diane Stanley. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
www.harpercollinschildrens.com

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