Authors: Peter Lerangis
I
AWOKE TO
a sky of dimming stars. Below me, the city winked up through the gathering light, as the night's blackness slowly gave way to a silvery predawn.
You fool! You weren't supposed to sleep!
I bolted to my feet. Stealing the pomegranate had been exhausting, but there was no excuse for my letting down my defenses. I could have been discovered by guards. Or by hungry beasts. Was Zakiti awake by now? She would be crazy with rage if she knew I was missing.
I raced along the backs of the buildings and onto the quiet streets. Through open windows I saw rumpled sacks inside the abandoned housesâthe poor and neglected, Nabu-na'id's Nobodies. As I approached Zakiti's, I saw that the place was already lit by several lamps, which was odd for the early hour. I sneaked around back, assuming Zakiti was setting up for the day's work in the shop.
Frada was alone, lying on her pallet between two casks of wine. “Hello?” I said.
Her back was to me, and she turned slowly to reveal her face. Her eyes were shut, her features twisted, her hair matted by sweat. “Something . . .” she murmured “. . . approaches.”
I crept closer. Nico was nowhere to be seen. “Not somethingâsomeone!” I said cheerily. “It's me! Daria. How are you feeling?”
“. . . Not now, but in our lifetimes . . . we must not let it disturb our city . . .” Frada moaned. “The pomegranate brings . . . great change to us all.”
I crouched beside her, brushing the salt-encrusted hair from her forehead. The fever had broken. Her eyes blinked. “Frada,” I said gently, “it's all right. . . .”
As Frada stared at me, I could see fear draining from her eyes. “Daria . . . was it real? Was it real?”
I smiled. Her voice was stronger. I no longer heard a rattling in her lungs. “I don't know what you mean, dear Frada. You were dreaming. How do you feel?”
She sat up slowly, stretching her arms and legs, her joints popping. As her eyes darted around the room, I fought the urge to shriek with joy. Even these simple movements had been so far beyond her only hours earlier. “I feel . . . better.” A smile of disbelief spread across her face as she braced herself against the wall and slowly rose to her feet.
“Frada, look at you!” I said, wrapping her in a hug.
With a sharp bang, the alley door slammed open. I pulled away from Frada, nearly causing her to topple back onto the pallet. Zakiti hobbled in, sweating and breathing heavily. She had been out in the streetsâduring the day? It wasn't like her to leave the store after it had opened.
Her eyes bore into mine. “You did this to him!” she growled.
My heart dropped into my stomach. Nico. “Where is he?”
“Where were you?” Zakiti snapped. “Out getting ingredientsâfor the entire night? The boy was worried. He said he had fallen asleep, and when he woke you were gone. Impulsive fool!” As she paced the floor, I could hear her ancient joints cracking rhythmically. “He barely reached the end of the street when the king's guards took him. I followed. I told them I could not afford to lose a worker of his strength. I pleadedâ”
“But why did they take him?” I asked. “He did nothing!”
She grabbed my hand, lifting my own fingers to my face. They were still stained bright red from the magic juice. “This is what they saw, you foolâevidence of the stolen pomegranate on his hands!”
I felt my knees buckle. They thought Nico had stolen the pomegranate!
He would be hauled to the dungeons. Common thieves had their hands cut off. But someone who had broken into the King's Grove and stolen from his prized possessionâthis was worse than treason. This was like slapping the king's face. Nico would be executed. Painfully. Publicly.
“This is my fault,” I said. “I'll go to the captain of the guard and tell him that I was the one who stole the pomegranate. Nico is innocent.”
“You are a worse fool than I thought!” Zakiti shot back. “They'll just arrest you, tooâthen both of you will be thrown before the king. I will be left with no able-bodied workers at all, just a dying . . .” Her eyes darted toward Frada for the first time, and the words choked in her mouth. “My dear girl . . . you look so much better!”
Frada nodded weakly, looking toward me for guidance. “We can't let them destroy Nico,” she said.
“Of course not.” I bolted toward the door. “I'm going to rescue him from the dungeons.”
“How?” Frada asked.
“He's not in the dungeons, you muddleheaded girl!” Zakiti blurted out. “They would not be so merciful!”
I stopped in the doorway. The dungeons, merciful? What could be worse than the dungeons?
I thought of the beaten man at the edge of the Royal Gardens. The prisoner in the stocks. “The market . . .” I said, whirling toward Zakiti. “They brought him to the stocks, didn't they?”
She looked away, saying not a word.
As I fled the shop I could hear Frada's voice, still feeble:
“Be careful, Daria . . .”
H
E WASN'T IN
the stocks.
He was lashed to a wooden stake. The sun bore down on his bruised, bloody face. Above him was a plank of wood with a single word written on it. I may have been a street rat, but I had taught myself to read, and I recognized the script:
Thief
.
No. Not Nico. I'm the thief. It should be me.
I stopped dead in my tracks. I felt as though the air had been sucked out of my lungs. I wanted to run toward him, to untie him and drag him back. But I knew we'd both be dead by the time my arm touched the rope.
Still, I had to do something. I
was
doing something. Moving into the square, as if my legs had a will of their own. Every fiber of my being drew me closer to himâslowly, unobtrusively. My brain raced, trying to think of a plan. He would see me soon. Someone would notice.
A fist closed around my arm, yanking me backward. I lurched away, clenching my fists and ready to fight.
“Daria?” a lilting voice cried out.
I swallowed hard, looking into the deep brown eyes of my beloved singing instructor, Arwa. When I was a girl, she'd heard me singing in the streets and insisted on teaching me. For months, I had sneaked up to the conservatory's back entrance, where she would let me in secretly and teach me the technique of beautiful singing, how to support and relax, how to make words and melody fly like a spring breeze.
Now, in public, we had roles. She was a person of noble birth dressed in rich blue robes, an
awilum
. I was a street rat on the brink of despair. Our two classes of people did not interact in public. Ever. But she was pulling me along, touching the arm of an untouchable, in full sight of everyone. “T-that boy is Nicoâ” I stammered, digging in my heels, “my friendâ”
With a strength I would not expect her to have, Arwa pulled me into a side street, where a handful of people went about their daily routines. “Follow me,” she said. “It will appear as if you are my slave. And pretend we are having a routine conversation. You are a brilliant singer, Daria, and I will not let you sacrifice your life to your impulsiveness! Of course I know who the boy is. The guards have countless eyes on him right now. They're waiting to see if anyone tries to talk to him or help him. They know he did not take the pomegranate. They speak of someone with red hair. They suspect it may have been a small boy.” She turned and raised a chiding eyebrow. “Or a girl.”
We paused, shrouded in shadow, as I let her words sink in.
“Then I will sacrifice myself,” I declared.
“And play right into their plan?” said Arwa with a scoffing laugh. “Over my corpse you will. That tyrant's wretched piece of fruit is not worth harming a hair on your head or the boy's. I will help you.”
Arwa's eyes shone like torches in the shadow's darkness. I knew I should feel happy, grateful. But as good as I was at singing songs, I was never trained in the art of trusting people. Everyone in my life but Frada and Nico had failed me. “I am sorry, Arwa, but I do not need the help of othersâ”
She smiled. “You are as brave as you are talented. And as independent. But if you think I would betray my most beloved student to Nabu-na'idâthat misshapen excuse for a human beingâthen you don't know me.” Arwa dug a few coins from a pouch hanging from her belt and handed them to me, then gestured to my bare feet. “Buy sandals. The nicest ones you can afford.”
“Sandals?” I said. “But why?”
“No questions now,” Arwa said, looking nervously over her shoulder. “I will explain later. My students await. Meet me in the courtyard of the conservatory when my afternoon classes are over. If you have a clean appearance and are in good voice, my plan will work. We will free Nico.”
“Andâif it does not work?” I asked.
“The king will show you no mercy,” Arwa said. “It is a good thing you are an orphan, Daria. Because if we fail, the king would track down your entire family and have them slaughtered. But I trust that fear for your own life is sufficient motivation. I will see you in a short while.”
With that, she turned and walked away, leaving me slack-jawed in the dark alley.
T
RACK DOWN YOUR
entire family and have them slaughtered.
As I raced away, Arwa's statement seemed to echo like an evil taunt. What she did not realize was that I did have a family. To me, Nico and Frada were my brother and sister. No matter if I failed or succeeded in this mission, the king's men would know that I did it to save Nico. Would they then make the connection to Frada? Would they track her to Zakiti's shop? Someone would talk. Someone would give her away.
I knew I was supposed to go directly to the cobbler for sandals, but I had to see Frada. I had to warn her.
The sun was now climbing the eastern sky, but inside Zakiti's shop it could have been the middle of the night. The lamplight gave Frada's sleeping figure a halo of gold. Her breaths were soft and even, free of the snores and moans that had attended her sickness. The pomegranate had been miraculous. Even in the short time I'd been away, she'd improved. Soon she would be back to her old self.
I could not let them hunt her down like an animal. She would have to go with me. If I could learn to trust Arwa, Frada must also trust me. Surely she could help in Arwa's mysterious plan.
Gently I touched the side of Frada's face. Her skin was warm. “Good morning,” I said. “How are you feeling?”
“Daria?” Frada's eyes fluttered open. She sat up slowly, as if testing her own ability. “You're back! Did you find Nico?”
I quickly told her the story of his capture and of Arwa's offer to help. When I said I wanted to take her along, she did not hesitate to answer. “I will do it for you. For Nico. But, Daria, we must not forget about Zakiti. They will need to punish someone if we succeed. What if they come here and take their revenge on her?”
I admired Frada's deep empathy for others, but before I could think of a response, the old woman's voice cut through the murky darkness. “By the great Marduk, what is this I hear? Concern for old, broken-down Zakiti? You are leaving forever, to find that foolish boy, and you have a thought for me?”
Frada and I both froze. “IâIâ” I stammered.
“Does the
mushushu
have your tongue?” Zakiti asked. “You have been nothing but trouble since the night I took you in. I should have thrown you out then.”
“We are concerned, Lady Zakiti,” Frada said, “that the king's guards will come after you.”
Zakiti glared at her. “Concerned, are you? Tell me, who is our most regular customer? Give me his name!”
“Serug the Hunchback,” I said, thinking of the ragged little drunken man who reported to our front door once a week.
Zakiti nodded. “Where do you suppose Serug gets his funds? The king's guards pay him to sneak my Miracle Garden Wine to the palace. Those brutes would no sooner give that up than bathe in vizzeet spit! Many are those who appreciate my secret recipes, dear child. No, I should have thrown you out because . . . because I knew this day would come. I knew this shop could not hold a girl like you.”
“We will be leaving you without any workers,” Frada remarked.
“Do you suppose you are so very importantâthat I would not have my pick of people desperate for work? Pah!” the old lady declared. But as she turned away, I thought I could see her eyes moisten. “Stay here. I'll pack provisions. And may Marduk be with you.”