Get swept away by the sequel to the instant Sunday Times bestseller Spice Road! In this romantic, action-packed fantasy set in an Arabian-inspired land, Imani and Taha must save their home from an invasion after the magical enchantment that hid them from the world is defeated.
Imani is a magic-wielding warrior sworn to protect her land from the monsters that roam the desert. But an even worse enemy now threatens the Sahir. As the powerful Harrowlanders march south with their greatest weapon—spice magic—Imani knows it’s only a matter of time before their invasion of her land begins . . . and it will be a losing battle for her people.
But Imani also knows that one way to fight magic is with monsters. If she can restore Qayn’s stolen powers, together they can summon a supernatural army to defend the Sahir from the Harrowlanders. Forming an alliance with a djinni king is risky, but Imani will do anything to save her people, even embarking on a dangerous quest beyond the sands to find the magical jewels of Qayn’s lost crown.
As Imani journeys far from home, she will discover monsters that warriors have only heard about in myths . . . monsters that can strike at any moment. Meanwhile, her rival, Taha, has been captured and is on a dangerous mission of his own.
One wrong move could cost them their lives—and everyone they love. But they may find that there is more than meets the eye crossing the Serpent Sea . . . and betrayal cuts deeper than any dagger. In this richly imagined Arabian-inspired fantasy told from a riveting dual perspective, critically acclaimed author Maiya Ibrahim dives into the complexities of love and war.
Release date:
November 19, 2024
Publisher:
Delacorte Press
Print pages:
512
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In long grass, the serpent is king. If the lion is wise, he will take care where he steps. This is how you become strong: by knowing where you are weak first.
“Imani, it’s time.”
I rouse with a gasp, Baba’s lesson fading to memory. The shadow of my twenty-two-year-old brother, Atheer, leans over me. Abovedeck, sailors call, ropes and canvas shift, the ship rocks, and long, ominous bellows reverberate across the Bay of Glass. I lay a hand over my thrumming heart and inspect the bunk below me. Our sister, Amira, two years younger than me at fifteen, is snoring in it.
I sit up. “How long have I been asleep?”
“A few hours. Horns are blowing in the city.” Atheer gives me room to slide down from my bunk. “We’ll find out why on the way to the stables. We need to fetch the horses.”
“Is it wise for you to leave the ship when you’re the most wanted man in Taeel-Sa?” I ask him. “Glaedric’s men will be searching for you.” I sling my cloak over my shoulders, thinking of how we sprang King Glaedric’s prize prisoner from captivity last night and sank the royal ship in a blaze. But I should know my brother better by now. Brave to a fault.
“We’ll be cautious.” He waits for me to pull boots onto my aching feet and check that the bandage on my neck isn’t blood-soaked. We retreat through the cramped crew quarters.
“How about a tea ceremony to replenish our magic?” I suggest, sidestepping a tipped-over clay jug that smells of wine.
“Better not to risk the temptation of using it in Glaedric’s city.” He glances at me sideways. “I already made that mistake.”
And it got him arrested, imprisoned, and tortured. As we near the hatch leading abovedeck, the red afternoon light confirms that this Atheer is not the brother of my happy memories, in which we spar with wooden swords in the courtyard at home and later take our horses for a ride beyond Qalia’s walls. Neither is he like the warrior-heroes of folklore I’ve admired since childhood, immense figures who move mountains and swallow dust storms whole and never look the worse for wear. This Atheer is marked by bruises, scratches, and burns; he’s gaunt from starvation, his jaw sharp enough to cut steel, his brown eyes unduly large and framed by limp caramel-colored curls. This is my new brother in my new world.
Qayn waits for us by the mainmast, portrait-still in odd contrast to the sailors working the rigging around him and those extending the ribbed bridge from the ship to the pier. The Lion’s Prize has been moved from where it was anchored this morning into an isolated berth on the Bay’s edge, inhabited by barnacled fishing boats and tired, worm-eaten merchant dhows. A place no one willingly comes except to be forgotten.
The sailors repay Qayn’s attention with bashful glances. Though I’m more familiar with the djinni, I’m equally captivated by the symmetry of his angular features, and the way he comports his slender frame with both serious, regal grace and a casual, boyish ease. At dawn, he promised to save my people if I returned his stolen magic. Now I regard him as if he’s an oasis. Beneath my relief at finding a life-saving refuge, I feel the primal fear that I am being lured by a mirage to my death.
He greets us with a nod before glancing wryly over my shoulder. “Quite the motley company you’ve assembled, Atheer.”
Taha and Reza lurk in the recessed shelter under the gangway behind me, but the ropes that the sailors used to bind their wrists after they tried to kill us are nowhere to be seen. Sunlight touches Taha’s eyes, their color the pale green of drought-stricken fields; it finds the wounds I gave him last night, his split bottom lip and the welt on his cheekbone. How could I have ever craved his kiss? I was a trusting, foolish girl who cared too much what he thought of me. It’s clear now that during our entire journey here, he was only manipulating me to make his mission easier. In the prison, I even confessed that I wanted his kisses to mean something. And he was surprised, not because he’d assumed I’d been pretending to like him all along and was moved to discover that the opposite was true. No; it was because the thought of how I felt had never crossed his mind before.
I turn to Atheer. “What are you thinking, letting them go free? They tried to kill you barely ten hours ago!”
They also nearly buried me alive in the prison. I only escaped that place by falling down a chute onto . . . Don’t go there, I order myself, but I’m already seeing and feeling--smelling--the mountain of decaying bodies and polished skeletons I tumbled down in my own fight for life.
Atheer is frustratingly undeterred. “They won’t try again. Their mission orders no longer apply.”
“No!” I’d be embarrassed to air my outrage before the crew if bottling it up weren’t corroding my insides. “The only reason they didn’t kill you last night is because they were cornered! It was never about mission orders!”
“What was it, then?” Taha demands.
“Old-fashioned clan warfare against the ‘elitists’ and ‘parasites’ you despise,” I reply, echoing the hate-filled words he uttered in the prison. “The wellbeing of our nation is nothing more than a shield for you to hide your sordid truth behind.”
The light gutters in his eyes, giving rein to some waiting inner darkness. “You’re wrong. If I’d intended to kill your brother for any other reason, he wouldn’t be standing here now. I’ve only ever acted in our people’s best interest.”
“Is that why you ordered us to leave that defenseless woman to her fate back in Bashtal? I suppose innocent Safiya posed a threat to the Sahir too?” I push my cloak away from the dagger on my thigh. “Drop this embarrassing pretense and admit you don’t care about anyone or anything that doesn’t further your vile father’s ambitions.”
Taha’s nostrils flare. “I ordered you to leave that woman in Bashtal because I didn’t want to endanger our lives by alerting the soldiers. Remember Fey?”
My gut suspends at her mention, as if I’ve been thrown from a great height. “You mean my brother’s third assassin.”
“Fey didn’t know about Taha’s orders and was never going to,” Reza interjects angrily.
He startles me; I’m almost unaccustomed to hearing his voice. When I first met Taha’s cousin--older than Taha by six years at twenty-four--he couldn’t survive ten minutes without telling a crass joke to amuse their squadmate Feyrouz. He all but stopped talking after she was captured by the Harrowlanders in Bashtal.
I feign indifference, pulling my dagger from its sheath to inspect its polished blade. But while I do, I think of my promise that we’d find Fey after we found Atheer. An empty promise now, and I’m the liar who made it. “I remember that Taha forced us to leave her behind too,” I say.
“After you got her captured by refusing to follow my orders,” Taha retorts. “It’s easy now for you to criticize me and my decisions. You weren’t responsible for our safety, the mission, or any of the consequences. Not like you care about those. You only care about playing the hero.”
“And you only care to talk about fighting injustice,” I snap. “You see Alqibahi people suffering right in front of you and you try to punish my brother for helping them.” I use the dagger to point at him. “You, of all people, should see why that’s hypocritical.”
“Oh, why? Because I grew up poor and scorned?” He leaves the shadow of the gangway, sneering; the daylight burnishes his ebony hair in a fiery crown. “What’s hypocritical is how you’ve ignored the suffering of other Sahirans your entire life. You’re from a powerful, wealthy clan, Imani. Why didn’t you ever help them? They were right in front of you.”
My ears burn; I feel the eyes of the crew on the back of my head. “We donate generously to the needy on festival days,” I respond woodenly, the heat of humiliation seeping down my neck.
Taha grants me slow applause. “Well done. You applied a bandage to a mortal wound and then praised yourself for being virtuous. The Beya clan has almost never gone unrepresented on the Council of Al-Zahim. Why didn’t they do something more substantial to help? I’ll tell you.” He steps up to me, striking in his fearsomeness and undaunted by the dagger now hanging limply in my hand. “The real sordid truth is that wealthy clans like yours benefit in every way from the power structure that rules the Sahir. Why would they change it, and why would you ever protest their inaction? It’s easier to question my conscience and demand that I risk my Scouts’ lives and our people’s security to relieve your own raging guilt, now that you’ve realized you’ve been molded into the very person you denounce: someone selfish, ignorant, and privileged. But you’ll never admit that, because it hurts too much to look in the mirror and see the real you staring back.”
I suddenly remember something Qayn told me: You only use others to get what you want, and you are outraged when they refuse. You’re like the rest of your kind. Selfish.
“You’ve said enough, Taha,” Atheer warns.
But he could’ve said much less and I still wouldn’t have a retort for the most shameful dressing-down of my life. His razor-sharp words have skinned me, pared the gristle back, and bared my humiliated innards for all to see. Earlier I wondered how I could’ve craved Taha’s kiss. Now I wonder how he could’ve tolerated mine.
“You had your orders in the prison,” Taha says with less vehemence. “You shouldn’t have gotten Safiya involved.”
My heart is heavy; my eyes ache. “I was supposed to die alone.”
“As you said, Safiya was innocent.” Taha sighs, his stony expression softening. “Can we speak privately for a moment?”
I pretend my pulse hasn’t sped up at his request. I’m curious to know what he wants from me, but I refuse to reveal that I care or that I’m nervous. I gesture with my blade at the hatch. “Fine. You go first.”
I follow him with my fist wrapped tightly around my dagger. Atheer looks as if he wants to intervene in whatever’s about to happen, but he can’t. That would only contradict his earlier stance that the cousins no longer pose a danger to us. Instead, he tensely watches as we descend through the hatch into the gloom belowdecks.
I stare at Taha’s exposed neck as he goes down the steps. “You got your privacy. Say what you want, unless this was an uninspired attempt to lure me somewhere where you could finish what you started in the prison.”
He reaches the deck and twists to look back up at me. “I had to stop you, Imani, or you would’ve stopped me.”
I falter on the second-to-last step, imagining what I would’ve done if Taha hadn’t trapped me in the prison and I’d uncovered his intention to kill my brother. I would’ve driven this dagger into his chest to stop him, right through his duplicitous heart and out the other side, and I would’ve hesitated for such a brief moment beforehand that it wouldn’t even be worth mentioning.
“Don’t lie and say otherwise,” he starts, but I shake my head.
“I won’t,” I say quietly, because no truer words were ever spoken, and that’s what makes them so painful. We’re two people stuck on opposite shores of an impassable sea. Who put us here? Was it the Great Spirit? Taha’s father or mine? Our ancestors? Just us, perhaps? The answer doesn’t really change things. Taha accepted his fate regardless of who orchestrated it, and I would’ve too if Atheer’s life had demanded it.
Taha rises onto the step below mine, the sunlight restoring the familiar, arresting brightness of his gaze. “You said you wouldn’t accept my apology, but I’ll give it anyway. I’m sorry. I wasn’t happy about what I did to you or your brother. I was only trying to shield our people from the invader.”
It’s an apology I didn’t think I’d receive and don’t know what to do with. An apology that doesn’t triumph over those treacherous waters to reach me; it sinks below the surface just offshore, and that hurts so much worse than if it hadn’t tried at all. This is only an acknowledgment of the heartbreaking truth that Taha and I will never find peace together. The battle that raged between us last night will always be only a small twist of circumstance away.
My hand trembles as I stash my dagger. I try to do the same with my feelings as I silently rejoin my brother. Protecting our people is what matters most, isn’t it? The fate of the Sahir hangs in the balance while Taha and I stand around arguing. Suddenly a thick fog of fear rises in me. How do I distinguish the truth from the lie, my enemy from my ally? How do I know who or what to trust? Whether I can even trust myself ? The fog seeks to enshroud the future completely. I’ll have to wade through it, and there’s no telling whether what lies ahead of me is the precipice of a sheer cliff or the threshold of home.
A horn interrupts the tense silence. Perhaps Atheer knows that no explanation of what just happened between me and Taha will be given, because he doesn’t ask. He shares a kiss goodbye with Farida, the mid-twenties captain of the Prize and his sweetheart, and goes to the bridge. “Let’s head out,” he says. “We can’t leave Taeel-Sa without our horses.”
“After what I did to you, why not send others?” Taha calls after him.
Atheer pauses to contemplate the boats moored across the pier. “I think you and Reza must see things for yourselves,” he answers pensively. “Hurry now, and keep quiet.”
And then he’s gone, and such has always been Atheer’s power that people want to follow him. We leave the ship armed with only our wits, except for the ancient dagger hidden again under my cloak, though I pray I have no occasion to use it. After minutes of swift, silent walking, we reach the port of Taeel-Sa. It’s heaving with Harrowlander soldiers, sailors, and officials racing around in the dry heat to a cacophony of horns, harried by the burden of some urgent task.
Atheer navigates between them with the hood of his vine-green cloak pulled low. Back home he could go anywhere with his head held high. Sahirans called him the Lion of Qalia and shared tales of his skin-changing magic, his bravery in defending remote Sahiran settlements against monsters. But Atheer is no lion here; he’s a mouse scampering between pipe-smoking Taeel-Sani stevedores muttering about the mysterious blaze that took King Glaedric’s ship in the night, and soldiers who’ve descended upon the port like clouds of locusts on a wheat crop.
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