Scheherazade stood frozen as she stared at the exiled prince, her hands clamped firmly over her mouth.
Just as he had been the night she first saw him, Shahzaman was clothed all in black, a matched set of swords sheathed at his hips. But this time his face was not obscured by a dark mask.
Hazim's voice echoed in her mind as she took in the prince's visage:
He tortured him within an inch of his life before Shahzaman's allies helped him escape.
Tendrils of scorched tissue snaked up from beneath his clothing, covering his neck before continuing up his right jawline. She had seen burns before but never to this extent. His skin looked like melted wax that some blundering candlemaker had tried to push back into place.
Where his flesh was not burned, it was scarred. Lines of stitched flesh blazed forked patterns across his face like lightning.
The banished prince watched her taking him in quietly, his gaze unwavering as her sapphire eyes followed the trail of traumatised flesh until it reached where his right ear should have been.
"Did Shariyar do that to you?" She asked, her hands falling slowly from her mouth.
Shahzaman blinked in surprise. Of all the questions she could have asked — indeed, probably
should
have asked — he had not expected that one.
He looked down at the ground as if he was ashamed and ran a hand up his neck, his fingers hovering over the hole that marked where his ear had been.
"I suppose I should be more concerned with what you're going to do to me than what your brother did to you," she said, her tone sombre.
"I'm not here to hurt you," Shahzaman said, raising his silver eyes.
Scheherazade's memory had not distorted the sound of the prince's voice: it rumbled up from his throat like distant thunder, low and booming. It sounded like it belonged to a much bigger man than the one who stood before her.
"Then what do you want?" She asked.
"I promised I'd see you again," he said, turning his back to her as he walked towards the table and sat down.
"Why?" She asked, following after him.
"I wanted to meet you," he said, stretching his legs. "And perhaps while you were awake this time."
"Meet
me
?" She scoffed, her arms folded tightly across her chest. "Your brother's whore?"
"That may be what he treats you as, but that is not what you are."
"What am I then?"
"A piece of a puzzle," he said. "A player in a game."
"You mean a pawn," she muttered bitterly.
"I do not," he said. "I did not survive this long by being a fool."
She sat down in the chair opposite, eyeing him with suspicion.
"I don't want to use you," he said softly, glancing across the table at her.
Scheherazade scoffed aloud and sunk lower into her chair.
"I'm sorry you find that so hard to believe," Shahzaman said.
"And I'm sorry you risked your life just to lie to me," she glowered.
"I'm not lying to you," Shahzaman said.
"Oh really?" She asked. "Then tell me, in this
game
of yours, whose side should I be on?"
The prince shrugged.
"Whose side was Nasrin on?"
Shahzaman's silver eyes narrowed: "No one's but her own."
"That's not what I heard."
The prince let out a heavy sigh, his proud shoulders slumping: "What did my brother tell you?"
"He said that you convinced Nasrin to kill him because you wanted —
want
— to take the throne from him."
"I didn't and I don't," he said.
"His perceptions of reality seem to be the only ones that matter," she said.
Shahzaman ran a hand up his neck, his fingers following the line of his scars until it reached where his ear should have been: "I'm well aware."
The girl bowed her head and looked away.
"From what I hear, you have suffered at his hands too," he said gently.
He opened his mouth to speak again but, before he got the chance, she interjected sharply: "Wait — what do you mean "from what you hear"?"
"I still have friends here and there," he said.
He pulled a folded piece of paper from his shirt pocket and handed it to her: "Indeed, I think we have at least one mutual friend."
Scheherazade unfolded the sheet and gasped slightly when she saw that it was one of Hazim's letters.
"Hazim saved my life," he said, his voice low.
She eyed him silently for a few moments, and then began to speak: "I saw the way your brother reacted when he found out you had breached the palace walls. I am loathe to believe he could have imagined such a threat where one does not exist."
"And yet," she continued, musing aloud, "Hazim counts you as an ally."
"I never had any intentions towards the throne," Shahzaman said. "In my younger years I was content to bask in the fame and wealth that was my birthright. Believe me, Scheherazade, had you known me before, you would feel no sympathy towards me now. It's a wonder Hazim cares about what becomes of me at all."
"Hazim does not seem one to condemn easily," Scheherazade said.
Shahzaman searched for a hint of bitterness in her voice but found none. He shook his head in wonder.
"Scheherazade," he said, "when you discover who you are, and what you did to end up on this most unlikely of paths, I do not think you will be surprised."
The girl looked at him sharply: "Do you know who I am?"
"No," he admitted.
Scheherazade's shoulders slumped slightly in disappointment.
"But I have a guess."