I can hear the thundering of footsteps before I see them, like some giant heart is beating under the forest floor. The trees heave themselves up out of the ground, with the groaning sound of a thousand limbs being wrenched, scattering dead leaves and seed hulls and small sour green apples. When they bed down again, there’s a narrow path snaking between their huge trunks, just wide enough for a man on horseback to walk through.
A moment later, the first Woodsman emerges from the tunnel. His horse’s dark coat is marbled with the late-afternoon sunlight. He pauses at the mouth of the woods, and behind me the throng of villagers presses in, waiting and watching as another Woodsman breaks through the tree line.
The wind whispers through the leaves, and the last horse trots through. On its back Gáspár sits slightly taller than his men, dressed in a black dolman with a fine embroidery of gold. A matching crown rests on his head, hammered thin into a circlet of gilded branches. He meets my gaze and I stare back, holding him there for a moment before letting him go.
“The king is here,” Boróka whispers, leading two young boys to the front of the crowd. “Do you remember all the stories?”
I must have told dozens of them, to anyone who would listen, feeling sometimes every bit as stubborn and ornery as Virág, miffed when my audience’s attention drifted or when their eyes glazed over important details. If I live to even half her age, I worry that I will eventually inherit her temperament.
“The black king,” says one of the boys. “Fekete.”
“He fought his usurper brother with a flaming sword,” says the other boy, and they both stare up at Gáspár, slack-jawed.
“It’s about time,” Virág grouses. “The stew is nearly cold.”
It’s no easy thing, Woodsmen and pagans sharing a feast table, the precarious inauguration of a new tradition. We have already killed three sheep in a sacrifice to Isten, and the Woodsmen clasp their hands to thank the Prinkepatrios for his bounty before picking up their knives to eat. It helps that they have brought carafes of wine in their saddlebags, and sachets of spices, and even skeins of dyed wool for weaving. Virág leads Gáspár to the head of the feast table and then sits at his elbow. We eat and drink until our lips are wine-stained and our bellies are too full under our tunics.
When evening lies over Keszi, the deep velvet blue of a rich man’s dolman, we push back the tables and one of our men starts plucking his kantele. It’s easier now that everyone is pink-cheeked, a little unsteady on their feet. We all know the same dances, even these city men and their king, the way that we all can recite the same nursery rhymes in Old Régyar.
I take Boróka’s hand and we spin together, laughing and dizzy, watching Gáspár turn to a dark blur in my periphery. He stands stiffly outside the dancing circle, speaking in hushed tones to Virág. When the song has quavered to its end, kantele strings twanging, I make my way over to him. My vision is still gleefully muddled.
“Won’t you join us?” I ask. “Or is there some grim prohibition on kings dancing?”
“There’s no time for dancing in Király Szek,” says Virág, only the faintest lick of true bitterness in her voice.
We get our news third-or fourth-hand in Keszi, from messenger hawks whose wings don’t tire on their long journeys from the capital, or from runners who can gulp enough courage to brave the dark tangle of the woods, but still I know there’s much work to be done. Király Szek has been flooded with war refugees from Akosvár, and the Merzani are still hungering along the border. But the surviving counts have been convinced to try for peace, and there are Merzani envoys in the palace now, hesitantly beginning armistice talks. The bey has warmed considerably to the idea, now that Régország has a king who is of Merzani blood. Gáspár has started to make arrangements to settle the refugees around the country, and new villages have sprouted up in all four regions. Some have even taken up residence just outside Ezer Szem, and there’s a Woodsman guard stationed there permanently, to make sure the forest creatures don’t do them any harm. Once, when there was a particularly bad attack, Virág even sent a few wolf-girls through the woods with their forged blades and healing magic, to keep the new villagers safe.
“We can find time,” Gáspár says, lips twitching. “Particularly if my new council wills it.”
In the full-moon light, the trees cast a cobweb of shadows over Keszi. Virág leaves us, padding over toward the hearth. She circles the fire and takes one last sip of wine. Gáspár’s face is limned with silver, same as it was any night we spent on the ice or in the woods together, our bodies curled in twin crescents under the white eye of the moon.