DUNCAN TOOK A LAST BITE of his turtle steak and chewed it thoughtfully. He glanced at Mattie, who was pulling clumps of loose, shedding fur from the tiger’s chest and belly, aided by Fia. “I’ll show you how to make rope tomorrow,” he said to the old woman.
Mattie smiled. “That will be lovely, dear.”
“You’re not making rope for a boat, remember,” the princess said suspiciously. “Or a raft.” She poked at the fire with a long stick and raised its glowing end like a scepter. “That,” she added, “is a royal command.”
Duncan stared up at the night sky, pricked with thousands of stars. He could steer by the stars—he could steer all the way home. As long as he hit the Arvidian Current, he could drift—and if the wind was against him, that was exactly what he’d do. He’d lower the sail and float straight back to Capital City, or one of the populated islands that surrounded it. Before he got there, of course, he might even be picked up by a ship—farther north and east, the sea routes would be more traveled.
“I mean it,” said Princess Lydia, poking savagely at the fire. “I watched your father go down in the sea. I’m not going to watch it happen to you.” She picked up Fia and cuddled her as if in need of comfort.
“You could close your eyes,” Duncan suggested.
Brig growled, very low. “Her Royal Highness has given you an order, sir.”
Duncan stood up. “Remember, Brig, no attacking your superior officers. That’s rule number one.”
Lydia dropped her stick into the fire. “I’ll tell Brig to stop you!” she said. “I will!”
Duncan gave her his best court bow, with a flourish. “Might I have permission to leave the royal presence?”
“Granted,” snapped the princess, turning her back.
“Now, my lady,” Mattie began, but Duncan was already on the path up to the ridge and he didn’t hear any more.
He sat with his legs dangling, leaning back against a tall, flat stone, still warm from the day’s sun. The sky arched overhead, a deep cobalt blue in the west, and the sea spread before him, dark and inky and wide as the world. He might almost have been on the stone throne on the island of Dulle.
But this time, there was no Grizel purring contentedly beside him, and no mother waiting just up the cliff road. And this time, instead of longing for adventure, he was dreading the thing he had to do.
He had not told the princess he was afraid, of course. She was worried enough already. But Duncan had not forgotten what it was like to be adrift on the open sea.
It would be easy to stay safe on the island. The princess had told him that winters were passable—the lower portion of the island was sheltered from cold winds, and there were caves with hot springs, where the air was heated and warm.
Furthermore, Princess Lydia had ordered him to stay here, and she had a tiger to enforce her wishes. But all of these things were just excuses. If he didn’t at least try, he would know he was a coward.
A shuffling sound of feet on stone warned him that someone was climbing the path. With a rustle, the princess sat beside him and settled herself against the rock.
“I really don’t want you to go,” Lydia said in a low voice.
“You made that clear when you decided to give me a royal command, Princess.” Duncan picked moodily at a scab on his elbow.
The princess sighed. “If your father couldn’t do it, what makes you think you can?”
Duncan drew his legs up and crossed his arms over his knees. “I can’t just stay here without doing something to get us back home.”
“Yes, you can! That’s what I’ve been telling you! We’re happy enough here, Mattie and I. We have enough to eat, we’re warm and safe, and Brig hunts for us. We keep a lookout every morning and night, and someday we’ll see a ship coming our way.”
“Someday,” Duncan repeated incredulously. “You haven’t seen a ship in seven years, Lydia. We’re in a section of the sea where nobody goes.” Except the earl, he said to himself.
“It could happen tomorrow,” the princess said stubbornly.
Duncan gazed up at the stars. He could see the Huntress and the Crown, and there, just curling over the horizon, was the Cat and Kitten. The constellations moved, but he remembered what the sailing master had shown him: an imaginary line drawn from the Kitten’s tail, crossed with a line from the Cat’s right ear, gave a point due north that never moved. As long as he could see the stars, he could never be completely lost.
A chill breeze feathered his neck, and Duncan turned. The stars to the southwest were winking out, one by one. A storm was brewing in the Rift once more. Lydia was right; it was dangerous out there. But he felt uneasy, as if it were dangerous to stay on the island, too. And now, looking at the dark mass rising to cover the stars, Duncan suddenly was able to put his feeling into words. “It’s not just about rescuing you and Mattie; it’s bigger than that. Don’t you see that if you don’t return, the Earl of Merrick will be the next king?”
A small puff of wind blew Princess Lydia’s hair across her face, and she tossed it back impatiently. “The earl isn’t next in line for the throne. After the king, and then me of course, the ranks are duke, then earl, count, baron—oh.”
“Right. There’s no duke waiting to step in. So the earl will rule all of Arvidia once your father dies, and no one will try to stop him because the whole country still thinks he’s a hero!”
“But my father, the king—” the princess began.
“Your father trusts him, too!” Duncan smacked his hands together. “What do you think it’s going to mean for Arvidia if a traitor is trusted by the king—if a traitor will be the king?”
The princess did not answer. Far away, a gannet cried, and then another. The sea crashed against the cliffs below with muted thunder, and the air grew cooler still.
“That’s what the earl’s wanted all along,” Duncan said quietly. “He tried to get rid of everyone who was between him and the throne. First you; you were the heir. Then my father; he was next in line. And then me. Now there’s only your father to get rid of. And your father has been sick a long time.”
Lydia’s brow was troubled. “What are you saying? Do you think the earl has been poisoning my father?”
“I don’t know. But I don’t think the earl lets anything get in the way of what he wants. One way or another, he intends to be king.”
Princess Lydia buried her face in her hands.
“Don’t you see?” Duncan said quietly. “High rank doesn’t mean just dressing up and court manners. It means we’re responsible. We’re supposed to keep Arvidia safe.”
“You sound just like your father.” Princess Lydia’s voice was muffled.
“Well, good,” said Duncan.
A sudden gust buffeted them where they sat, swirling around the crags. Overhead the stars were almost all gone.
“Fine.” Lydia wiped her wet cheeks and tossed her braid over her shoulder. “Build your raft. But I’m helping.”
* * *
The lagoon at low tide was edged with seagrass, hot in the sun. Duncan stood thigh-deep at the shallow end of the water and cut the stalks where they joined the base. When he had a load, he bundled it together and tied it on Brig’s back. Then he walked with the tiger up to the home cave. Seagrass was scratchy stuff, but it made fine rope.
Duncan showed the princess and Mattie how to beat out the fibers from the dried seagrass, scrape them, and hang them to dry. Mattie’s gnarled but skillful fingers quickly learned the trick of twisting strands in one direction while wrapping them around another set of strands in the opposite direction.
“There!” she said proudly as she finished her first length of cord. “That’s easier than making lace. And clever, too. The twist going one direction and the wrap going the other keeps the rope from unraveling.”
“That’s right.” Duncan reached for the cord and doubled it back on itself. “And if you want to make a thicker rope, you use double and triple cords instead of fibers, and do the same twist-and-wrap, like this.”
Mattie patted Duncan’s hand with her age-spotted one. “I can see well enough to do close work, like this. If you young nobles will cut the seagrass and haul it up here, I’ll make the rope. You’ll have all you can do to build that raft.”
Young nobles! The words sang in Duncan’s head as he followed Lydia down the path to the lagoon. It was still a little surprising to realize he was one of the nobles of the land; he had lived poor and hidden for so long.
Rank wouldn’t matter much, though, if he couldn’t get off the island. He was thinking hard as he cut the next batch of seagrass. How should he build his raft? It was important to make it light enough. He had pushed boats out to sea, and he knew how heavy they were. A raft made of whole logs would be impossible to move.
Then he noticed the kelp at the far end of the lagoon. Brownish-green, the flat, rubbery leaves grew upward and then lay across the surface of the lagoon like long gloves with narrow fingers.
He could make floats out of kelp! He and some friends had done it for fun, on the island of Dulle. If you cut off one of the leaves and stuck your hand inside the opening, you could push aside the spongy tissue and leave it hollow. Then you could blow it up like a balloon, tie it off, and use it as a swim float.
What if he made a light framework of branches, crisscrossed together, with floats underneath?
He would need to rig some kind of mast. Mattie could weave a sail, and he would need a steering oar—that would be easier to make than a rudder, and it would help with leeway, too. Yes, it was all possible. He would have to be very careful, though, to stay on course. He could steer by the sun and stars, as long as it wasn’t cloudy. But a raft was difficult to steer at the best of times.
* * *
They constructed the raft in the sea cave. When it was ready, Duncan planned to wait for high tide and then shove it off the ledge. With rope, they could let it down slowly as the tide went out; when the water level had gone down enough so that the opening to the beach could be seen, Duncan would ride the raft out with the tide.
Mattie couldn’t go, of course—she was far too frail for such a journey. Lydia would have to stay on the island to take care of her. And Brig would have to stay on the island to hunt for them both.
The princess didn’t agree. “Brig goes with you,” she said. “Your father would have survived if Brig had been with him.”
Duncan had no intention of leaving the princess and Mattie without their hunter and guard. But he would have that all out with the princess later on. First, they had a raft to build.
* * *
Summer was ending, and the days were cooler. The morning fog was still swirling around the base of the island when Duncan stepped out on the path to the crags, telescope in hand.
Fia, more leggy now, but still recognizably a kitten, swished through the grass beside the path and dropped a mouse at Duncan’s feet. She nudged the limp body with her paw until it lay neatly, its tail perfectly straight, and looked up with pride.
“Er,” said Duncan. “Well done.”
“It’s fresh,” said Fia. “I caught it especially for you.”
Duncan had a sudden inspiration. “Can you catch birds, too?”
“Of course!” Fia leaped into the air to show her bird-catching prowess. “But I don’t bring you the birds. They’re not nearly so good as mice. Too many feathers to get stuck in your mouth. But a mouse—oh, a mouse is so tasty! So crunchy!” She laid a confiding paw on Duncan’s foot. “I eat their tails last of all, as a sort of dessert. You should try it.”
“Maybe someday,” said Duncan, closing his eyes briefly. “But listen, Fia. Humans actually like birds better than mice.”
“Truly?” Fia cocked her head to one side, her ears forward.
“I’m not lying. So if you would rather keep this mouse for yourself—”
“And bring the birds to you? Are you sure?”
“I’m absolutely sure.” Duncan smiled at the earnest triangular face that was lifted to his. It was only last spring that she had failed the mouse-catching portion of her kitten examinations. Fia had learned a lot since then. Would she ever, he wondered, catch mice on the island of Dulle?
* * *
Lydia joined him on his walk up to the crags. Brig, about to leap on a quail, stopped his hunt to salute. The quail made its escape in a scurry to the undergrowth.
“Sorry,” said Lydia, patting Brig between the ears as she passed. “Go! Quail!” She pointed at the scuttling bird.
Brig’s expression was pained. “I can understand words of more than one syllable, Your Highness,” he complained, but he turned to obey.
Lydia watched him with pride. “He understands everything I say, I think. And he’s very good at following orders.”
Brig growled a little over his shoulder. “Of course I follow orders,” he grumbled. “What else would she expect of a member of the Royal Order of Gemstone Tigers?”
“Royal Order of what?” Duncan growled back before he could stop himself.
“Why did you growl at him?” the princess asked, frowning. “There’s no need to be rude. I told you, he understands all our commands.” She started up the path again.
“I wasn’t being rude,” Duncan muttered as he trudged after her. Should he tell the princess his secret? She was the heir to the kingdom, after all, and he was her loyal subject.
But the princess, up on the crags, seemed to have forgotten the matter. She swept the glass from north to east to south, scanning the area where they might someday see a sail.
When it was Duncan’s turn, he looked to the west. The fog over the Rift was blowing away in great slow-moving swirls, the wind like a sky broom brushing the mists aside.
The water at the edge of the Rift seemed a different color—darker, more purple, with spots here and there that looked oddly turbulent. It was a treacherous place, he had no doubt. Twice now, he had seen a waterspout, a gigantic swirling funnel of water and wind moving over the sea like a searching finger. “Not much chance for a boat to cross that water,” Duncan murmured.
“Your father did it.” Lydia waved toward the west. “In a small boat, too. He crossed it and then he came back.”
Duncan lowered the telescope. “I thought you said his boat sank.”
“It did, later. But I’m talking about before, when we were still on the royal tour. You know about that.”
“You were visiting the islands of Arvidia,” said Duncan, remembering Friar Gregory’s lesson in the monastery school. “A bad storm blew up out of the Rift, and you rescued two men and their tigers. Are you saying my father crossed the Rift then?”
The princess nodded. “We had to stay at anchor to repair the ship after the storm, anyway. Duke Charles said he thought he could take the miners back home to Fahr in one of the small ship’s boats. Everyone thought he was crazy, but the earl encouraged him to go. I suppose the earl thought it would be an easy way to get rid of your father.”
Duncan leaned forward, frowning. “I never heard that part of the story. What made my father think he could cross the Rift?”
Something large crashed through the underbrush and snuffled on the path. Brig dropped a quail at Princess Lydia’s feet, and spat out a mouthful of feathers. “Bah! Birds are all the same—too much fluffery. Give me a fish or a good smooth seal any day.”
“Oh, what a beautiful quail!” Lydia patted Brig between the ears. “Good tiger!”
Brig sighed deeply. “I wish she wouldn’t patronize me. It’s so undignified.” He settled back on his haunches and began to clean his whiskers with his long, barbed tongue. “Oh, to answer your question,” he said to Duncan, “your father knew he could cross the Rift because he had a tiger to guide him. Namely, me.”
“Really?” Duncan leaned forward.
“Yes, really,” said Lydia, smoothing down Brig’s neck fur. “He’s such a good tiger, aren’t you, snookums?”
Brig choked on a whisker.
Duncan grinned. Poor Brig. His look of agonized pain reminded Duncan strongly of Mr. Fluffers, Betsy’s cat back home, who wanted to be known as Spike. Was Betsy still calling him Fluffy Wuffy? he wondered.
But he had to find out more from Brig. And since Lydia was there, he had to make it sound as if he were asking Lydia. Duncan said, “I wonder if one of the miners guided my father across the Rift.”
Lydia answered at the same time Brig growled, and Duncan had to listen to both at once, in stereo. It took him a moment to separate out that Lydia had said, “Maybe—I can’t think how else he would have gotten across,” and Brig had said, “Of course not, Fahrians can’t sense a rock under the water any more than they can sense a jewel under the ground. It’s only tigers who have stone-sense.”
“Stone-sense?” said Duncan, before he could help himself.
“What?” Princess Lydia looked affronted. “It’s not nonsense,” she said. “And if you know so much, why are you even bothering to ask me questions?”
“Sorry,” said Duncan. He put his head in his hands. “Maybe I just need to be alone for a while. All this talk about my father, you know…”
The princess got up at once. Duncan waited until she was well down the path before he turned to Brig and whispered, “What do you mean by stone-sense? And how did you guide my father across the Rift?”
Brig’s shoulders humped in a shrug. “Animals have instincts that humans lack. Tigers happen to have a feeling for stone, and what’s captured inside it. We can sense a vein of silver or gold, we know where gemstones are, and long ago we discovered that the Fahrians would dig out long, roomy caves in their search for such things. We tigers just tap the spots where they should dig, and when they’ve finished digging out the gems, we move into the caves. We developed a military, of course.”
“Why?” Duncan asked, fascinated.
Brig sharpened his claws on the crag. “To keep mine robbers away. We want the miners to keep working for us, digging those big, beautiful caves. If they had to do their own guarding, there would be twice as many of them, and they’d get half the work done.”
Duncan grinned. It was exactly like cats—to think that everything a human did was for their advantage.
“And, of course,” the tiger finished, “we can sense where rocks and reefs are in the sea, even when they’re underwater. We can hardly pat them with our paws, though, and the Fahrians never quite seem to understand when we try to say something like ‘half a nautical mile ahead and two points off the starboard bow.’ They’re lovely people,” he added hastily, “very fine diggers, but not one of them speaks Cat. The only human I knew who could, besides yourself, was your father.”
Duncan turned sharply. “My father spoke Cat?”
“Yes, indeed, though with a slight accent.” Brig’s whiskers lifted in a fond smile. “He listened very well, though, and it was a pleasure to guide him across the Rift—he took careful notes. I believe he made a chart.”