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Book
Information:
Genre:
Epic Fantasy
Author:
Curt Benjamin
Name: Prince
of Shadows
Series:
Volume One of the Seven Brothers Trilogy
======================
PART
ONE
Chapter
One
LlESHO!
Has anyone seen Llesho!“
The healer Kwan-ti stuck her head out of
the thatch-and-bamboo longhouse and scanned the slave compound. Waves of pale
gold sand lapped the shed where the pearl washers worked to the pounded rhythm
of their feet on the wood floor and some chantey song of lovers and pearls, but
Llesho’s voice was not among them. At the edge of the sandy clearing where the
camp was raised, pearl sorters crouched under the broad fronds of palm trees, shaking
their baskets in a steady circular motion, but Llesho did not sit among them.
He was not abed in the longhouse, nor did she see him in line for his lunch
with the cooks and their cauldrons.
No Llesho. Old Lleck lay dying on his
pallet in the longhouse, calling for the boy in his fever, and Llesho was
nowhere to be found. She rested her strained eyes on the distant but ever
present cloud bank where sky met the bay, but the murky slate of the
rain-drenched horizon offered no solutions. Lord Chin-shi didn’t bother to
shackle his slaves, which made him a better master than many, but sometimes she
would have made an exception for Llesho, who could disappear faster than a
magician when the rent was due.
Still, the boy couldn’t have gone far.
Figuring where Llesho was not didn’t help find him, however, so
Kwan-ti tucked a lock of faded hair back into its knot and stepped out into the
drizzle. “Have you seen him, Tsu-tan?” she asked the man squatting under the
protective shelter of a coconut palm with a pearl basket in front of him.
“He’s tending the beds, old woman.” Tsu-tan
didn’t bother to look up from the flat basket in which he was sorting pearls by
size. “You won’t see Llesho on dry land until his quarter-shift is done.”
“That will be too late.” Kwan-ti smoothed
her tapa-printed skirts with worried hands. Although the pearl beds lay well
beyond sight, Kwan-ti stared in their direction as if she could conjure
them—and the boy, Llesho. Which perhaps she could, if she wanted to take a swim
with an anvil chained to her neck. Chin-shi, the Lord of Pearl Island, frowned
on conjuration, however, so no one knew for certain whether Kwan-ti had such powers
or simply followed her mother’s recipes for medicines like a good Islander.
“Always too late,” she muttered under her
breath.
Tsu-tan, shaking his basket in gentle
circles, paid close attention to Kwan-ti’s muttering even though he pretended otherwise.
He did not know what she meant, what other time Llesho had been too late, or if
the old woman thought that she had come too late to call the boy, or to cure
the old man’s fever. Still, it was one more clue. He hid it away with the
others in the puzzle box of his mind he reserved for witch-finding, which was
his true calling.
Returning to the longhouse that served as
slave quarters for the pearl fisheries, Kwan-ti made her way to the low pallet
she had set up in the corner for the old man. The boy would be too late, of
course. Already the old man’s skin had grown ashen and powdery with the dry
heat that burned him up inside. He picked fretfully at his blanket and his
eyes, long glazed over with the hard white shells of cataracts, wandered in his
head as if they could find the boy and see him one more time before he
exchanged this life for his next on the wheel.
“Llesho?” Lleck’s voice rattled in his
throat. He gasped for breath, exhausted by the effort it took him to call for
the boy. As soon as he was able, he called again, “Llesho! You must find them!”
“Who, Lleck?” Kwan-ti asked him softly.
“Tell me who I must find.” Llesho’s voice had not fully deepened yet; she hoped
that the old man might mistake her own voice for the boy he called so
piteously.
“Your brothers.” Lleck grasped her hand and
pushed it away again, seeking the longer fingers and callused fingertips of the
boy. “You must find your brothers.”
“I will, old friend.” Kwan-ti took his hand
in a firm clasp and stilled its seeking, stroked the forehead burning with dry
heat. “Rest easy. I will find them.”
“Goddess go with you.” With a last
whispered breath, the old one cast aside the shell of his worn-out body,
leaving Kwan-ti to wonder, what brothers had the boy Llesho, and what mischief
might she unwittingly set in motion if she gave the boy his mentor’s message?
The two had not arrived in the camp
together. Thebin, high in the mountains of the mainland, bred a short, sturdy
people accustomed to the thin cold air of the heights. The children, if
carefully trained in the richer atmosphere near the sea, had the breath to
remain underwater for up to half an hour without surfacing to refill their
lungs. To the ignorant, the skill was a sign that the children had magical
powers born of a sea that the gods had raised higher than the mountains of Shan
to make the door to heaven. Pearlers knew the Thebins to be as human as any
man, but with a skill for breathing that made them efficient at scooping pearl
oysters out of the bay.
Llesho had come to
Gradually, awareness of his surroundings
had returned to Llesho’s eyes. Then, one day he laughed at one of Lling’s
jokes, and his recovery from whatever had stunned his brain seemed complete. If
he held his head at too arrogant a tilt or his eyes sometimes glittered with a
light too hard and bleak for his youth, a joke or a curse would remind him of
his place. Over time he passed out of notice, just another Thebin slave child
with salt water in his hair and sand between his toes.
When Llesho reached the age of ten, Lleck
appeared. Chin-shi had purchased the aging Thebin for his claims to understand
the special ailments of the pearl divers. Lleck quickly made himself useful
about the camp, tending to the needs not only of the Thebins, but of those Pearl
Islanders willing to accept the advice of one who, it was whispered, had
trained in the secret knowledge of eternal life to be found in the far
mountains. From his first day in the camp, Lleck had taken a special interest
in the boy Llesho, teaching him to read and write using a stick in the damp
sand, and showing him the way of herbs in Thebin healing. Some felt that Llesho
must pay for this attention with his body, but the longhouse offered no
privacy, and pairings of every kind were both visible and audible to whoever
had a bed nearby. No one had ever seen Lleck visit the boy Llesho in the dark,
nor had Llesho ever been seen to make nighttime visits to Lleck.
The women, for the most part, felt that
Lleck must be the boy’s true father. Lleck, they reasoned, had followed his son
into slavery to protect and raise the boy even at the cost of his own freedom.
They admired such devotion of father and son, and while some grew jealous of
the two, for the most part the connection between them remained hidden, one of
the small conspiracies that all slave compounds nurture in defiance of their
masters. And now, Lleck was dead. Kwan-ti remembered the arrogance and the
bitterness that lay dormant at the heart of young Llesho, and a shudder of
foreboding rippled through her. “Find your brothers.” What was the old man
unleashing with his message? How could the boy, tied for life to the pearl beds
and the island, obey his mentor’s strange command?
At that very moment, Llesho had finished
his half hour of rest in the pearl harvesting boat, and was returning to the
bay for his next half hour in the water. Naked, as were all the pearl-divers,
he sat on the red-painted deck of the harvest boat and snapped the iron
shackles around his ankles. The collar chain that tethered him to the boat
never came off during his quarter-shift, but the shackles around his ankles
were his own choice. The extra weight helped to steady him when he walked the
floor of the bay. At the end of his half-hour shift underwater, when he had not
enough air in his lungs to swim to the surface under his own power, he would
run the chain through the shackles and let the winch draw him up by his feet.
On his first day in the bay Llesho had scorned the shackles, but he’d only
needed to be dragged onto the boat by his neck once to realize the wisdom of
using the ankle chain.
With the shackles in place, he stood at the
edge of the boat and waited for the foreman to hand him the tool he would use
this shift. A bag would mean he was collecting the oysters most likely to hide
pearls, but this time Shen-shu handed him a muck rake. With the implement in
his hand, he took one, two, three deep breaths, and stepped off the side of the
boat. When his feet touched water, he raised his arms over his head, the rake
held close to his side, and plunged like an arrow to the bottom of the bay.
Lling was already there, staking out their piece of the oyster beds and
protecting it from the encroaching teams that worked about them. She raked up
the muck so that the nutrients filled the water with a roiling cloud. Hmishi
followed after, landing almost on top of Lling’s shoulders. Soon Llesho’s two
companions had turned the chore into a game of tridents, clashing their rakes
together in mock battle while Llesho watched from just enough distance to set
him apart from the game. Early in his training his watchful, quiet nature had
earned him the fear and suspicion of his fellow slaves.
But he spoke to the foreman and guards no
more than he did to his fellow divers, and eventually they accepted the
distance he kept as part of his personality. Better that than question the dark
shadows in his eyes that occasionally blotted out the here and now. The growing
acceptance of his fellow captives seemed to creep into Llesho’s bones and make
him over as a part of them.
The mock contest of trident-rakes stirred
up as much of a silty cloud as if the combatants had applied themselves to
their task with all the seriousness they showed when the foreman Shen-shu dove
into the bay to check on them. Today, however, Shen-shu had worn a fresh white
robe and shoes on his feet, a sure sign that the workers in the water below
would have no surprise inspections on this quarter-shift. That left the Thebin
slaves to their contest, and to the more difficult task of making Llesho laugh.
Hmishi had taken the offensive and tangled
the teeth of his rake in those of the tool Lling flung about as a weapon. Lling
lost control of her rake and waved her hand in submission for this round. Her
eyes burned with the curses bursting to explode from her lips. Llesho winked,
giving her the advantage in the second contest: he wanted to laugh, but fought
the impulse for the same reasons Lling fought her desire to swear—they needed
to conserve air, and Hmishi would not have heard them anyway through the
bubbles they would release in the attempt.
Still struggling against the urge to laugh,
Llesho turned away from the antics of his friends. He was shocked to see an old
man drifting toward him over the low mounds of pearl oysters. The old man wore
many layers of robes and gowns that floated about him like a school of
multicolored fish. He had dark hair and clear blue eyes that reminded Llesho of
a distant sky, as unlike the sky over
Lleck’s cataracts. That he was Lleck, or
some transformed apparition of Lleck, was~certain, however, and Llesho gasped
in horror.
The sudden breath should have killed him,
since both he and the ghost were floating underwater. Instead of the terrifying
pain of drowning, however, Llesho felt only crisp, clean air. Thinner than he
had grown accustomed to at sea level, the breath that invigorated him reminded
him of home—the mountains, the snow, the overwhelming cold. The spirit in the
water drew closer, and Llesho shook his head, refusing to believe the truth
this apparition forced upon him: Lleck was dead.
“Forgive me for leaving you, my prince.”
The youthful spirit addressed him in Lleck’s voice, using the title Llesho had
not heard since the Harn had invaded Thebin and sold the princeling child into
slavery. Llesho heard the words clearly, as if he stood on Thebin’s high
plateau, taking his lessons in the queen’s garden and not among the sea
creatures of the bay. He wondered if he, too, had passed into the kingdom of
the dead.
“I had hoped to live to see you grown, to
know that you had been returned to your rightful place. But age and fever have
no respect for an old man’s wishes.” Did the spirits of the dead feel remorse?
It sounded as if the king’s minister might, but Lleck was smiling at him, a wry
acknowledgment that life and all its hopes and concerns were behind him now.
“I have no rightful place,” Llesho answered
bitterly, his words as clear as the spirit’s, and he felt no lack of air to
argue further. “I am the last of an old and broken house, destined to die at
the bottom of the bay.”
“Not the last,” Lleck told him. “Your
father they killed, yes. But your brothers still live, carried into distant
provinces and sold into slavery, each told the others had been slain.”
Since that described Llesho’s own fate, he
found his mentor’s words difficult to deny. A new feeling kindled in his
breast, so alien to his experience that Llesho did not recognize it for hope.
“My sister?” He could not look the spirit
of the minister in the eye, for fear of what he would see there. As a small and
spoiled prince he had hated Ping, the infant who had taken his place in his
mother’s lap. When Llesho was five, he had created an uproar in the court by
stealing out of the Palace of the Sun with the intent, he informed the
gatekeeper, of setting the newborn princess on the mountainside as a gift for
the gods. When the guard had advised him that tigers were more common than gods
on the mountain, Llesho had informed him that a tiger would do.
Lleck-the-spirit shook his head. “Beaten,
and thrown on the rubbish heap is what I heard,” he said, “I do not find her
spirit in the kingdom of the dead, but I know not in what shape or country she
has been reborn.”
It was an old grief, but Llesho found it
could still hurt, and the more because he had in that same moment learned to
hope. “My mother?”
Again Lleck-the-spirit shook his head, but
his brow creased in some question. “Your mother, the queen, is not among the
spirits of the dead,” he said. “She was taken in the raid that killed your
father, but no report of her came to me after. They say that she ascended into
heaven as a living being to beg the mercy of the gods on her country, but that
her beauty so entranced the heavenly creatures that they would not let her
depart again.
“I think this is good storytelling, but bad
history. If she has not crossed into a new life, she must be a prisoner still.”
Llesho said nothing. He was far too old to
cry about his dead, had never given his enemies that satisfaction even as a
small child.
“Find your brothers, Llesho,” the spirit
pleaded with him. “Save Thebin. The land itself is dying, and the few of her
people who remain are dying with her.” Sorrow ran from Lleck’s dead eyes, salt
tears returning to the salty bay. “I would have stood at your side if I could.
Now, I have only this to offer—” The spirit held out to him a pearl as big as a
walnut and as black as Foreman Shen-shu’s eyes. “The pearl has magical properties
of long life and various protections. Keep it with you, but use it only at most
dire need.”
At this, Llesho wondered if the spirit in
front of him was not Lleck after all, but an imp sent to trick him into
witchcraft. “A good trick,” he taunted the spirit, “but Lleck would know that I
can’t possibly carry a pearl out of the bay—I have no place to hide it.” He
gestured to his own naked body. “And Foreman Shen-shu will search the cavities
of our bodies for stolen treasure with as much vigilance today as he does after
every quarter shift in the pearl beds. As for swallowing a pearl that big, if
it were possible to do so without choking to death, even Lord Chin-shi’s guards
would notice a slave from the pearl bay searching through the privy trench!”
“Have some trust, young prince.”
The reminder of his former state from the
lips of his teacher’s spirit raised tears that stung the corners of Llesho’s
eyes, but he refused to shed them. He found little to trust in a world that had
taken this last and only comfort from him. “How can I trust what you say, old
man?” In the pain of his heartache, Llesho knew only to attack its source. “You
said you would stay with me, and protect me. Now you are dead, and if we are
truly having this conversation at all. I must be dying as well!”
Lling and Hmishi had long since tugged on
their chains and returned to the surface. Llesho knew he could have no air left
in his lungs, could not breathe or speak underwater, and yet he did have air,
was both breathing and speaking. Surely, he must be dead, or in that stage of
drowning when the mind plays tricks on the body.
“Trust,” the old man said, with tears
glittering in his eyes. He put one ghostly hand on Llesho’s neck and with the
other hand he held up the black pearl. Using thumb and forefinger, he squeezed
the pearl until it was no larger than a tooth.
“Open,” he instructed, and when Llesho
opened his mouth, Lleck popped the pearl into the empty socket where Llesho had
lost a back tooth. “You should have that seen to one of these days,” he said,
and then he disappeared, like a cloud dispersing in the water.
Watching the cloud spin away in eddies of
disturbed currents, Llesho’s mouth was suddenly filled with all the things he
wanted to say to the old man, all the words of gratitude and love that he had
taken for granted all the years of their captivity together.
“Come back,” he cried, but only bubbles
formed in the water around him, and he realized that his lungs were ready to
burst, and that his fingers had gotten clumsy. Somewhere he had dropped his
rake, but he could not see it in the swirling muck. He struggled against panic
and his own awkwardness to link the neck chain to his ankles, and tugged, hard,
to alert the slave at the winch to pull him up. He would have given a sigh of
relief when he felt the slack tighten and his body turn upside down, but to
vent his emotion now would invite death at the very moment of his rescue. Then
he was out of the water, hanging naked and upside down above the boat, coughing
and choking, sneezing to clear the water from his nose.
“Where’s your rake?” Shen-shu, the foreman,
asked. Llesho pointed below him, to the bay. He saw the pinched, anguished
expressions on the faces of his shift-mates, and then the winch was lowering
him again.
“Find it. You are wasting time,” Shen-shu
warned him, and then he was plunging headfirst into the bay almost before he
could grab a breath, dropping, dropping. There it was. He had the rake in his
hands, but he was exhausted, and hanging upside down, and he could not reach up
to take hold of the chain above his feet, nor had he slack to tug on. Llesho
wondered how long the foreman would leave him in the bay, and if he would
survive. Black specks filled his vision, and the laughter of spirits in the
kingdom of the dead filled his ears.
Then Lling was beside him, and Hmishi, and
they held his shoulders, trying to lift him. Hmishi pried the rake from his
numb ringers and swam for the surface, and the winch grabbed his chain. Llesho was
rising. Lling, at his side, breathed air from her mouth into his own, until
finally they broke the surface.
“Don’t fling him about!” Lling shouted as
she clambered over the side of the boat. She and Hmishi took his shoulders
again, as the winch released his chain. He fell, feetfirst, to the deck.
“What did you see down there?” Lling
whispered, but Llesho could only gasp like a landed fish. Rolling to his
stomach, he vomited salt water over the side of the boat, and hung there,
draped across the gunwales, gathering his strength with each choked breath and
trying to see his future in the gentle ripples of the bay. He was so exhausted
that he hardly noticed when the foreman searched his body, probing in his mouth
for hidden pearls after he had done the same to the other cavities for the
pleasure of a minor cruelty. “Rotten teeth!” he grunted, and Llesho realized
that yes, the black pearl was real, and that perhaps the spirit had told the
truth after all. His brothers were alive somewhere on the mainland. But how was
he to find them?
Chapter Two
“WaKE up. You need to get off the boat.”
Lling shook him by the shoulder, rousing Llesho from the questions going around
in his head.
“I’m coming.” He bestirred himself, but
found he could not control his arms or legs. The boat rocking gently beneath
him seemed distant, his body not quite real except for the tight buzzing in his
head.
Hmishi offered a hand, and pulled him to
his feet, but Llesho’s legs seemed to have turned to water. He stumbled,
grateful for the shoulder propping him up while he made his wobbling way to the
shore. Familiar hands reached for him and hauled him into the slat-sided wagon
for the ride back to the slave compound. Llesho found an empty corner on the
flat bottom of the wagon and curled in on himself. Lling followed, and then
Hmishi, each taking up their post to either side of him. Secure in their
protection, he let his eyelids fall, lulled into a shallow sleep where the
afternoon puzzled itself out in his drifting mind.
Sometimes, he knew, divers who had suffered
enchantment of the deep and survived to tell of it described vivid waking
dreams that came- to them as consciousness fled. Llesho had not felt like he
was losing consciousness while he talked to the spirit under the bay, but his
mind must have been starved to convince him Lleck had appeared to him and that
he had spoken with the spirit of his old mentor. His heart told him otherwise.
Desperately he wanted to confide in
someone, to ask if any of it could be true, but he knew better than to take
such a risk, even with Lling or Hmishi. The Harn hadn’t always needed to steal
Thebin children for the slave trade. The Thebin pearl divers on his
quarter-shift all came from small-claim farms scratching out a marginal living
on the fringes of the Thebin landhold. Harn raiding parties had robbed their
homes and burned their crops, leaving them with nothing but their children and
an agonizing decision. They needed the money that selling their children would
bring just to feed the younger ones until they, too, were old enough to send to
market. He once asked Lleck why the king did nothing to help his people. “In
some ages, the gods favor their people, and in others they turn their backs.”
The minister had wept softly after that. Llesho hadn’t understood, but he’d
started a list right there of questions he would ask when he met the gods.
For the children trained to dive for
pearls, however, slavery was little worse than the devastation they left behind
them in the mountains. They knew nothing of kings or princes or palaces laid
waste in that last great and terrible invasion. How could they understand his
need to rescue his brothers when they could not imagine any rescue for
themselves, or any reason to expect one? If they did not believe Llesho mad,
they would believe him a danger. It surprised him to realize that he could not
bear to lose the only companions he had left in the world.
“Kwan-ti will know how to help you.” Lling
touched his“ arm, for comfort and for strength. The jokes and challenges that
usually marked the trip home from the bay were silenced today, the pearl
fishers watching him somberly. Llesho remembered the first time he had seen a
drowning, when Zetch, a diver well past the age at which most had fed the pigs,
had stayed below for almost an hour. When they brought him up, his sack was
full of pearls, but so were his mouth, his nostrils, his ears, and he had
jabbed mother-of-pearl shells into his eyes. Gone mad, the foreman had
announced, but the Thebins knew better. The pearls in Zetch’s body would pay
his rent in the kingdom of the dead, and buy him a new body—a free body—for his
next turn on the wheel.
“I had a dream,” Llesho said, but gave no
description of his conversation with the spirit. Lord Chin-shi, it was said,
feared witches, and dreamers could sometimes fall within the web of his
superstition. For his part, Llesho wondered if he must be a witch, to have the
dead visit him in waking dreams, but he dared not ask. The question alone would
be enough to send him to the flames. So he only said, “I didn’t mean to
frighten you. I must have let my mind wander.”
“We’ll talk about it later,” Lling
answered. “Kwan-ti will know what to do.”
Llesho knew her to mean that he should say
nothing more in the crowded wagon. Good advice, and easy to follow. He leaned
his head against her shoulder and closed his eyes.
“Be careful with him. We could lose him
yet.”
Kwan-ti, that was, and with a tone of
command she only assumed when real trouble threatened. For a moment, Llesho
wondered what had happened. As his companions jostled him awake, however, he
realized that he must be the emergency.
“I’m all right,” he protested, struggling
to disentangle the hands that reached to gather“ him up.
“No, you are not,” Lling contradicted in
tones almost as commanding as those of Kwan-ti. “His mind drifted down below,
during quarter-shift,” Lling explained to the healer, her voice shrill with her
anger. “Then, because he’d dropped his rake when he was fading, Shen-shu
lowered him back into the bay to find it. If I had not breathed into his mouth,
he would have died with his head stuck in the mire.”
“Lleck would have saved me,” Llesho
objected.
Lling took this as a sign of his condition.
“See,” she said, “He thought he saw his father below.” Like many of the women
in the camp, Lling believed that Lleck was the true father of the slave Llesho.
And what would be more natural than that the son, dying, should see a vision of
his father come to save him?
But Kwan-ti had gone very still; Llesho
could feel her tension, like the fizz of lightning about to strike. “When did
this happen?” she asked.
“On second quarter-shift,” Hmishi gave the
answer. “The second hour of the quarter.
“I see.” Something of the tension faded,
but Llesho felt, though he could not explain why, that Kwan-ti still listened
for something the rest of them could not hear. “Bring him inside,” she finally
said, and Llesho found himself tumbled out of the wagon into the arms of his
Thebin shift-mates.
“I can walk,” he said, and squirmed out of
their grasp. He nearly sank to his knees when his legs would not quite bear his
weight.
Kwan-ti raised him by the elbow. “I see you
can,” she said tartly, and then turned to his companions. “I’ll take care of
him. You may come by to see him after you have dressed and had dinner.”
Hmishi took her at her word, and turned
toward his own bed and the clothes basket at its foot, but Lling was not so
easy to convince.
“Are you sure?” She touched his arm again,
the question in her eyes for Llesho and not for the healer.
“About the clothes? I’m sure.” Llesho tried
to lighten the worry in her eyes. “It’s hard to forget you are a girl when we
are on dry land.”
“Hard seems to be the operative word,”
Lling admitted with a teasing glance at places on his body girls were not
supposed to look. “I suppose you will live after all.”
“Reassure his shift-mates in that regard.
Unless he decides not to follow orders, of course.” Kwan-ti smiled to take the
sting out of the mock threat.
Lling turned to do as she was bid, but
swayed her naked hips like an invitation when she walked. After a few choice
paces she looked back at Llesho with a little laugh before running to find her
clothes.
When Kwan-ti was sure that the girl had
turned her attention elsewhere, she sighed heavily. “Come on, boy. We have to
talk.”
Llesho allowed her to lead him to the
corner of the longhouse where she isolated the sick, but he would wait no
longer for news. “Lleck is dead, isn’t he?”
“Yes.” Kwan-ti pushed him down onto a fresh
bed just a short distance from the one where Lleck had died. “He wanted to see
you very badly before he died, but I don’t have the authority to interrupt a
work shift, unless a diver is at risk. Now I wish I had tried anyway. I might
at least have spared you from drowning.”
The healer covered him in his bed with a
light cloth. “You’re shivering,” she said, and added a blanket.
Llesho realized that it was true, but he seemed
less to feel it than to observe it from a distance.
“Rest,” she ordered. “You can explain it
all to me after you’ve had some sleep; you’re too tired to make sense now.”
Llesho stopped her before she could leave
him alone. “He left a message for me, didn’t he?”
“Yes.” She said nothing else, and hesitated
even before saying that much.
Kwan-ti had always made Llesho nervous,
though not as an enemy might. She had a way of going completely still and
looking at him with eyes as sharp as a hawk’s that made him think she was
reading his soul. In some ways Kwan-ti reminded him of the way his mother had
looked at him when he was six and he had sworn he hadn’t broken the vase in the
great hall. It had comforted him, as a child, to feel in her gaze that his
mother could see everything, and love him in spite of his crime. Kwan-ti did
not love him, however. He closed his eyes to hide his soul, afraid that it was
too late, but with no strength to do more.
“Your secrets are safe with me, Llesho,”
she whispered. “You don’t have to be afraid.”
Fear had kept his mouth shut and his
identity hidden all the years of his slavery. Lleck had made it clear that only
his secrecy kept him alive. But he wanted to believe the healer, and he
wondered, as he drifted into sleep, if it could hurt him, just this once, to
trust someone.
That night Lling and Hmishi did come to
visit, with others from their shift, but Llesho was sleeping, so they went away
again with a promise to return. In the morning Llesho still slept, and Kwan-ti
sent word to Foreman Shen-shu that her charge had suffered enchantment of the
deep, that state in which a diver forgot the difference between air and water,
and became a danger to himself and his shift-mates. Foreman Shen-shu sent a message
back that Lord Chin-shi had no use for a pearl fisher who could no longer walk
the oyster beds, but Kwan-ti ignored the threat, for now at least. With his
dying words, Lleck had convinced her that the young Llesho had more pressing
business to attend than plucking pearls from their homes in the mouths of
shellfish.
When Llesho finally awoke, it was to
sunlight breaking through the clouds high overhead. He could count on one hand
the days when full sunshine parted the clouds over
“May I have my clothes, please?”
“Of course.” Kwan-ti handed him a set of
bleached and faded trousers and shirt, and politely turned away while he pulled
them on. Llesho piled into his clothes as fast as he could.
“You can turn around now,” Llesho called,
and Kwan-ti rejoined him, taking a seat on the bed next to his.
“You said he left a message. . . .” When
Llesho thought of Lleck, so many conflicting emotions filled him—anger and
sadness and wonder—that his throat tightened on the name. But of course,
Kwan-ti knew what he meant.
“Your father loved you very much,” she
began, but Llesho stopped her with a gesture. “My father is dead.”
“Yes—”
“No,” he contradicted her. “My father was
dead before Chin-shi’s men ever brought me here.” She had to know that his
father would not have permitted a single day to pass with his sons in slavery
if he’d lived. “Lleck was a family servant. I loved him, but he was not my
father.” He’d said too much and now he tried to keep the panic off his face.
She would know that Thebin hardscrabble farmers didn’t have servants. “And he
loved you,” Kwan-ti said slowly, seeming to ignore the second part of his
statement. She looked into his eyes with that hawklike gaze. Then, as if the
sun had touched her, she seemed to open up in front of him, her eyes wide with
sudden insight, a tiny sigh escaping her lips before she clamped them closed
again, lest she say something out loud that should not be spoken at all.
“I have to find my brothers,” Llesho said
tentatively. Kwan-ti nodded. “So he said to me on his deathbed.”
“So he said to me in a dream beneath the
bay.” he agreed.
“You cannot go back to the oyster beds now.”
“What am I to do?” he asked; this
conversation with the healer felt more like a dream than the one he had with
the spirit under the bay. Something about Kwan-ti’s eyes, the gentle touch of
her fingers on the back of his hand, slowed time to a walk.
“For the present, you must consider what
you can do that will not kill
your soul in the doing,” she answered, and the spell was broken. She rose and
spoke to someone behind Llesho in the longhouse. “Are you feeling ill,
Tsu-tan?”
“Not at all.” The hopeful witch-finder
bowed his head over the pearl basket he carried. “I just came to see how the
young diver was faring. Shen-shu will want him back on the boat tomorrow.”
“Then Shen-shu can speak to me tomorrow.
Now, we must permit young Llesho to rest.”
“Of course, of course,” Tsu-tan bowed and
scraped his way out of the longhouse. He returned to his place beneath the
coconut palm and took up again the pearl sorting basket never long out of his
hands. He could see all the comings and goings of the longhouse from there,
Kwan-ti knew, as she also knew he was watching her for evidence of witchcraft.
She feared that Tsu-tan would now turn his attention on the young Llesho as
well.
For himself, Llesho felt no inclination to
rest. He had not regained his full strength, but he felt well enough to take a
walk on the shore and watch for the red harvest boats to come in from the bay.
So he left the longhouse while Kwan-ti was occupied in bandaging the cut foot
of the cook’s assistant, and wandered out past the cookhouse, onto the road.
Few slaves traveled the road at
If the apparition had been a dream
concocted by his own starved mind, how had he known the minister had died? And
if it was a dream, how could he explain the same message delivered to Kwan-ti?
It must be true then: his brothers still lived, in servitude as he did himself.
Llesho had to rescue them and together the brothers must free Thebin from the
killing grasp of the Harn. If their mother still lived, languishing in the
dungeons of her own palace—The thought stuttered out. Llesho could not imagine
his beautiful mother reduced to squalor and filth, but the image of his
battered sister bleeding into the refuse heap struck him to the heart. He
hadn’t wanted her dead, not really, he’d just wanted his mother back. By the
time
Since he had arrived on
Trying to figure out Lleck’s reasons wasn’t
helping him decide what to do. Llesho had walked all the way to the docks
without even seeing the road he trod upon, but had only confirmed the impossibility
of ever completing the spirit’s quest. Who left the island, ever? Lord
Chin-shi, of course, and his wife and daughters. Lord Chin-shi’s son had not
been seen on the island since before Llesho had arrived. The foremen, Kon of
first quarter and Shen-shu of second quarter, sometimes accompanied their
master to the slave markets to acquire new pearl fishers. But Shen-shu was the
older of the two, and he was scarcely thirty. Neither was likely to give up
their privileged position any time soon.
Pearl fishers never left the island, not
living or dead. If they died of disease, they were cremated immediately to
curtail the spread of infection. Rumor had it they did not always wait for
death before feeding the fire with the struggling remains. When they drowned,
or grew too old to work at all, they were fed to the pigs.
Kwan-ti had been right, though, he could
not go back to the oyster beds. His lungs were fine, he could survive
underwater as long as he ever could. But if he were visited by a vision again,
he would surely drown while he argued with the demon who accosted him. He
needed a second skill, one that would keep him out of the pig trough and get
him off the island.
While he sat on the dock, thinking, the sun
had dropped low, and he heard the taunting challenges of the pearl fishers
returning home from the quarter-shift. He looked up, vaguely embarrassed to be
wearing clothes when Lling and Hmishi and all of his fellow pearl divers were
naked from work. He forgot all about the incoming divers, however, when he
recognized the device on the prow of the harvest boat: tridents crossed over a
round shield. Of course! Lord Chin-shi made his fortune on the pearl fisheries,
but he spent his fortune in
the arena. Renowned even in the longhouse for their prowess, Chin-shi’s
gladiators competed in arenas almost as far away as Thebin itself. And
gladiators were given a cut of the purses they won. If a gladiator was good,
and survived his battles, he might pay his way free before age and injury cut
him down.
Llesho elbowed and apologized his way past
his companions who were swarming off the boat, mocking him for his clothing and
asking after his health. When he reached Foreman Shen-shu at the prow of the
boat, Llesho fell to his knees and knocked his forehead on the dock in the
formal style of a petition. “Honorable Foreman, sir, I respectfully request
that you take my petition to your master, Lord Chin-shi of
“The witch forbids you to go back to the
beds, doesn’t she, pig food?” Shen-shu answered.
Llesho lifted his head from the dock and
sat back on his heels, his palms resting on his knees. “I know of no witch,
Master Shen-shu,” he said, ignoring the more pertinent part of the foreman’s
statement for that which he could truthfully refute. “I come to you with a
petition to Lord Chin-shi that I may train as a gladiator for the ring.”
For a moment the entire dock went quiet, as
Foreman Shen-shu stared at him in amazement. Then the foreman began to laugh.
“A gladiator, pig food? A short contest with the pigs, perhaps.” In the
silence, Shen-shu’s words rang sharply. “You pearl fishers are so skinny, Lord
Chin-shi’s gladiators will use you to pick their teeth.”
Llesho reddened to the roots of his black,
wavy hair. Beneath his clothes, he knew himself to be as skinny as his
companions, whose bones he could plainly see pressing against the thinly
stretched flesh that covered them. He imagined the gladiators to be huge men,
taller than mountains with muscles like carved rocks, and knew he could not
compete against such specimens of manhood. But, he reasoned, even gladiators
must once have been boys. They could not have been born with all that muscle
and sinew, and they didn’t have a Thebin’s natural endurance. If they could
become great fighters, so could he.
“If I am so skinny,” Llesho argued, “the
pigs won’t miss me, and the gladiators will have some fun breaking me into
pieces.”
“That they will, boy, and feed you to the
house dogs when they are done.” Shen-shu, who almost never displayed any sign
of good humor, slapped his knee and laughed in agreement with Llesho’s
assessment of his chances.
“Forget about the old witch and her threats
and warnings,” he chided with more of that good humor so alien to his nature.
“Your shift-mates miss you, and it makes them inefficient.”
“They must learn to do without me,” Llesho
countered, “because I am determined to be a gladiator.”
“You are a fool, do you know that, boy?”
Shen-shu was no longer laughing.
Although at a disadvantage, being still on
his knees, Llesho looked up at the foreman and held his gaze steadily. A good
strategist knew when to hold his ground. “Then I am a fool,” he accepted. “But
I am a fool who will die as a gladiator, not as a pearl fisher. Nor as food for
the pigs.”
“We’ll see.” Foreman Shen-shu would say no
more. With his authority over the pearl divers came the responsibility to
mediate their rare petitions. Those he could not negotiate to a standstill must
be referred to the Lord Chin-shi. And the boy Llesho was clearly not going to
negotiate.
“Your humble slave gives thanks for your
beneficence, in taking this petition to your master,” Llesho answered,
completing the formal petition ceremony.
His shift-mates, who listened silently
while he argued his case with the foreman, stood apart from him with confusion
and even fear on their faces. Llesho looked from one to the other, but found no
understanding or support, not even from Lling, who turned away from him when he
tried to catch her gaze. For the first time in his life as a slave, Llesho
found himself embarrassed to see his Thebin shift-mates naked.
/ am
your prince, he thought, you
owe me more than this. But they didn’t know, and he couldn’t tell
them, nor did he expect that they would thank him if he did. He turned his eyes
to the ground and walked away, ignoring the wagon that silently filled with the
divers going home.
Chapter Three
Llesho’s strength returned quickly, and
with it the need for movement. He missed work, realized that the danger of the
pearl beds had kept his mind sharp and his attention focused. And he
discovered, to his surprise, that he missed his shift-mates. He had never
thought of them as friends when they spent each quarter-shift together in the
bay. In the days since he had seen the spirit of Lleck and nearly drowned,
however, the pearl divers had begun to distance themselves from Llesho. The
experience had set him apart as his secretive reserve had not. The usual
quarter-rest banter that bound the group with petty griefs and shared workaday
mishaps could not absorb so great a challenge, could not take in this new shape
of him and make it ordinary. Llesho recognized the sudden emptiness where
Lling’s smile used to be, and the ab-sence at his back that Hmishi used to
fill. It seemed that he had been wrong on all counts. Not friendless and,
according to Lleck’s spirit, not without a family either. And not aware of any
of it until he found himself well and truly alone. Well, damn.
To fill the hours, he ran. Not fast at
first, but as he recovered, his runs grew longer: around the island once,
twice, before he stopped, gasping. Even Thebins needed to catch their breath
eventually. Some days he had heard the measured tramp of feet falling in unison
to a deep voice rumbling out the time—now faster, now slower, while the feet of
running men kept the beat. Llesho had kept ahead of them easily, and soon
enough they changed direction, moved off on a path Llesho never took, up the
hill to the training compound at its height.
Mostly, the running kept him focused on the
moment: on the smooth, pale sand shifting underfoot and the fronds of dense
foliage grown too close to the path that brushed against him as he passed,
marking his skin with the scent of rain and mold and the broken promise of
sunlight. The chitter of birds deep in the forest paced his own heart, but
couldn’t take the place of absent friends. Alone in his weary orbit of the
island, he wondered how long he would be left adrift between lives.
In the third week after Llesho presented
Foreman Shen-shu with his formal petition, a messenger came to summon the
healer Kwan-ti to the main house. Lord Chin-shi had never summoned the peasant
healer before. He had his own doctors, and the house servants took care of
their own. Sometimes, when the wounds of Lord Chin-shi’s gladiators healed over
on the outside but festered inside, Kwan-ti would receive a caO to treat them.
But she had always stayed in the longhouse before, listening to the description
of the wounded gladiator’s condition, and sending the messenger back with instructions
and a notion or packet of herbs. This time, Kwan-ti herself had gone with the
messenger, leaving her bag of herbs and healer’s pouch behind. Her quick
glance, resting lightly on Llesho in passing, told him that he was the object
of the summons. Lord Chin-shi, or his trainer, would want to judge her answer
for himself when he asked what chance a half-drowned Thebin boy had to survive
the rigors of gladiatorial training. She would need no tools of her trade for
that.
Wondering what she would say just made him
sick in the pit of his belly, so Llesho ran, as fast as he could manage this
time. When he reached the landward side of the island, he plunged into the sea.
He swam until his legs felt too heavy to propel him forward and he could not
lift his arms to pull himself through the water. Alone and at the limit of his
strength, he rolled over on his back and let the sea carry him, cradled in its
warmth. So far from land, the sounds of
The water seemed to take Lleck’s side of
the debate. The current pulled him away from the mainland that had grown no
more distinct for all his efforts to reach it. After a while, Llesho executed a
neat roll and began kicking strongly again, cutting through the water toward
Too late, he realized that he’d swum out too
far. . The island was too far away and his legs were leaden, his arms numb.
Llesho should have been afraid, but dying didn’t frighten him anymore. He’d
long ago come to terms with the gray depths as an enemy to his freedom; now he
embraced the gentle side of the sea’s strength, another friend he was leaving
behind. Something nudged his side, and the bumpy, grinning face of a water
dragon broke the surface in front of him. Spume ran off her sides as her
green-and-gold-scaled back rolled past him, never more than a tiny fraction of
her length visible above the sea. She wrapped a loose coil around his waist.
Her delicate forked tongue flicked out, touched his face, his hand; Llesho
wondered if she planned to eat him for lunch. He thought he read laughter in
her slitted eyes, however; she butted him gently with her tiny curled horns and
disappeared, the soft, scaleless skin of her belly sliding effortlessly across
his body. Even the water dragon had been company, once he figured out she
didn’t plan to eat him. But then, just ahead of him, the dragon’s head rose out
of the sea, coils glistening like gold and emeralds in the sun and the water.
She dove, vanishing again into the sea, and he felt himself lifted on her
strong back, and carried toward
“I’m going,” he told her, “I get the
point.” The dragon seemed to understand. She gave her back a wriggle, and
laughed at him between sharp curved teeth. The human sound of that laughter,
feminine and musical, should have surprised him more, except that Llesho had
grown to expect the impossible from the sea. So he laughed in turn, ran a hand
down the gleaming flank of his companion, and nudged her gently with his knees,
the way he had directed his pony forward when he was a child in Thebin. When
they grew too near the shore for her great size, the dragon dipped her head
beneath the waves, and Llesho released his hold. He was close enough now to
make the shore under his own power, and he struck out with strong strokes,
leaving almost no wake from his smooth kicks. He soon reached the shore, and
sat panting and looking out over the water he had just crossed, but the water
dragon was gone.
When he returned to the longhouse, spent
but at peace, Kwan-ti was already there, tucking stray tendrils of wet hair
into her glistening bun. She said nothing to him of her day’s errand, nor did
she question him about the lateness of the hour. For his part, Llesho made no
mention of his attempted escape or the way the sea itself had comforted him and
turned him back to face his future on
On the third day after Lord Chin-shi had
summoned Kwan-ti, a boy not much older than Llesho himself, but a head taller
and with pale gold skin, presented himself at the longhouse with the message
that Llesho should gather up his possessions and follow. Since Llesho owned
only the clothes on his back and the basket he had kept them in while at work
in the pearl beds, he used his few moments to say good-bye to the healer, and
to leave a parting message for Lling and one for Hmishi. He would miss them,
and for a moment the thought of entering the gladiators’ compound, where he
would see no Thebin faces, daunted him more than any fear of the danger his new
trade might hold. But Lleck had taught him that all of life was a circle. You
couldn’t go forward for long without meeting your past. Llesho had always hated
that saying because he could think of little in his past that he wished to
revisit. It surprised him to discover he took comfort in it now.
The messenger was eyeing him doubtfully
when Llesho joined him. “I wouldn’t want to be you for all the pearls in old
Chin-shi’s bay,” was all he said, though, and the two boys climbed the rise at
the center of the island with only the crying of the birds for commentary.
Llesho had seen the gladiators’ training
compound from a distance, but he had never been within the stout wooden
palisade. Up close, Llesho could see the wall as individual tree trunks set
upright, side by side, and snaggled at their tops like a hag’s teeth. Such
precautions seemed unnecessary—if a Thebin trained to the bay could not escape
Pearl Island, no soft servant or overmuscled gladiator would do better—but he
figured that gladiators must, by trade, be violent men. And they might even be
able to handle a boat. For whatever reason, it was as difficult to get inside
the compound as it seemed to get out. At the postern gate, the boy who
accompanied him spoke to a guard with an empty tunic sleeve tied up in a knot,
who opened the gate with his one arm and herded them into a passageway so
narrow that the shoulders of a larger man would brush each side as he passed
through. Llesho clung to the rough palisade that made up the outer wall of the
passageway. The inner wall was also constructed of tree trunks set upright in
the ground, but peeled of their bark and smoothed of knots and other irregularities
so that they fit snugly one against another. A broad polished band showed that
most of the men who passed through these gates brushed against the smooth inner
wall. But the sounds of grunts and curses and the clashing of weapons beyond
that burnished palisade unnerved him, and Llesho pressed against the scratch
and grab of the undressed outer logs for even the few inches of additional
safety it afforded him from the sounds of battle within. Combat was part of his
life now, but he shied away from the overwhelming reality of his decision as he
followed his guide down the passage.
Llesho figured they had traveled halfway
around the compound before they came upon a second guard, apparently whole, at
an inner bar to their entrance. This man seemed to know Llesho’s escort and
wordlessly opened his gate. He raised an eyebrow over a twisted smile when he
thought Llesho didn’t see, but quickly turned back to his work with awl and
leather and whipcord when Llesho answered with a puzzled frown. The man didn’t
look like a fighter, but then, neither did the golden boy at his side.
Before Llesho could give this more than a
passing thought, however, his companion had pushed him through the gate and he
stumbled on the unfamiliar surface of sawdust under his feet. The smells of
blood and sweat, and the sawdust itself, confused him, as did the flash of
weapons and the deadly anger that seemed to crackle in the air around the
fighting men. Llesho thrust one foot ahead of him, trying to regain his
balance, and tripped over a piece of broken metal with bits of flesh clinging
to it. With a squeal of surprise he fell face first into the training yard.
“Pick up your feet, fool!”
The words came from somewhere above a pair
of darkly tanned sandaled feet that had planted themselves inches from Llesho’s
nose. He needed to pick up more than his feet, and he didn’t want to guess what
had made the wet splat soaking into his shirt. Llesho closed his eyes, wishing
he could disappear, but his escort wouldn’t let him.
“It’s the new chicken,” the golden boy
commented over T.leshn’s fallen bodv.
“Master’s pet?” the unknown voice asked
doubtfully while Llesho dragged himself to his knees and finally to his feet, a
better angle to follow the conversation. The boy who had brought him shrugged.
“Don’t know,” he said, and “didn’t ask,” in a tone that clearly indicated
Llesho was not his problem and he would just as soon keep it that way.
“Go back to work, then, unless Master
Markko wants you to bring him in yourself.”
“Didn’t say so.” The boy was already
heading away from his charge, and Llesho realized he still didn’t know the
other boy’s name. Not a good time to ask, he figured, and tried to look regal
for the man standing in front of him, while muck dripped off his tunic. The
stuff stank with a pungent tang at the back of his throat, and Llesho crinkled
up his nose, trying to identify the mess without sneezing.
“Paint and straw this time,” the stranger
offered, and Llesho finally noticed the straw man lashed to a post, with bolts
jutting from the place his chest used to be and bits of him scattered in a
circle of sawdust.
The last time Llesho had seen a crossbow
bolt, he’d been seven, and the bolt had been sticking out of his father’s
throat. He closed his eyes, but that made it worse, not better. Regal just
wasn’t working for him today. Hadn’t, actually, for the past nine summers, but
he still drew on old lessons in distress.
“Better vegetable than animal, but don’t
count on that for next time.” The stranger was watching him with sharp features
set in a stern, forbidding frown below eyes that were judging Llesho to the
soles of his feet. “What are you, boy, and what the hell are you doing here?”
“I’m a Thebin,” he answered, though the
quirk of a smile, quickly suppressed, suggested that the stranger hadn’t meant
for him to answer the question. “My name is Llesho. I was sent for. To be a
gladiator.” He hoped. It was that or pig food, and if he’d been summoned for
the trough, he wasn’t going to remind anyone.
“Llesho.” The stranger paused and seemed to
be trying to remember something that escaped him before he could catch hold of
it. “I’m Jaks, but you will learn all you need to know about me soon enough.”
The stranger was taller than Llesho, but not as tall as the boy who had brought
him here. His skin was brown and smooth, and he had broad shoulders and
powerful arms with the line of each muscle carved sharply in the flesh. The
left arm had six tattooed bands, the simplest ones faded with age and more recent
ones in increasingly complex designs. Jaks wore a leather tunic with the
history of old battles written in the bloodstains that marked it, and a belt
with a sheath for a knife at the waist. Metal guards covered his wrists and
forearms. He was obviously dangerous, but for some reason which Llesho couldn’t
quite grasp, Jaks did not terrify him as he thought the man should, given the
situation and a grain of common sense.
But common sense couldn’t explain why the
tension drained out of Llesho at the sight of the gladiator, or why his head
came up at a more confident angle. A memory returned to him then, forgotten
like so many things about home. His father had hired men like this at court to
protect his family. Those men had died, pressed step by step into the heart of
the palace, loyal to the last. The man who had guarded Llesho from his birth
had looked very much like this Jaks, until he lay dead at the feet of the
terrified child. The memory sent a shudder through him, which the gladiator
must have taken for fear of his new life.
“I don’t know what he was thinking,” Jaks
muttered under his breath, and Llesho figured he was talking about his petition
to train as a gladiator, and didn’t like the way the man dismissed him out of
hand. But one problem at a time. The gladiator rubbed his neck with a mindless
gesture that spoke of old injuries, or—
Llesho’s father had done that when faced
with a particularly thorny problem. “Right now,” the gladiator said, “you need
to change your shirt and check in with the overseer, Master Markko.”
“Change my shirt?” At first, Llesho thought
Jaks meant with magic, and he almost asked what he should change his shirt
into. Not that he could do anything of the sort, of course, but he could try,
if magic was required of gladiators—he didn’t want to begin by showing any more
ignorance than he already had. Then he realized, not change the shirt, change
himself, by putting a clean shirt on. In Thebin he’d had a clean shirt for
every day of the week, and special shirts made of yellow silk embroidered with
bright colors for holidays and feast days, for banquets and for public days.
Since he’d been a slave, though, he’d had one shirt and one pair of pants,
nothing to go under them, and one day a week to wash them in, after which, for
modesty, he would wear them wet until they dried. But he didn’t think Jaks
wanted to know about the domestic arrangements of pearl divers.
“I don’t have another,” he said, and waited
while the gladiator blew out another gust of annoyance like a belch. “Stupid to
even think it,” Jaks muttered. Llesho held his tongue with an effort rewarded
when Jaks finished, “Of course, Markko doesn’t know what he is doing. Not a
single freaking clue.” Llesho waited out the storm as it broke harmlessly in
another direction.
“You can’t see the overseer like that,”
Jaks pointed out as if it should be obvious. “We’ll have to find something for
you to wear.” The gladiator led him across the practice yard to a low building
made of coral blocks. A covered porch ran along its length to keep out the sun
and provide a cool place to rest after a day of practice in the yard.
It was more solid than the longhouse of the
pearl divers, but obviously meant for the same purpose, which Jaks soon
confirmed.
“This is the barracks,” Jaks told him,
“Master Markko will decide where you will sleep, but you’ll need to be able to
find the laundry wherever he puts you.”
The laundry was actually several rooms
clustered at the end of the barracks, each devoted to a particular task in the
process of keeping the competitors dressed and supplied with protective
coverings. They passed through the leatherwork shop but did not stop, though
the strange scents drew Llesho like an old dream. Not fighters, but horses. He
remembered horses, and the image in his mind when he thought of that word made
him want to weep. But Jaks was leading him through an open courtyard cluttered
with vats of soapy water and ladders of vines with clothes and long stretches
of plain white cloth pinned to them. The steam pulled the heat up into his face
and he felt the slick of sweat on his temples, dripping down his nose and over
his lip.
A man with more rolls of fat than Llesho
had ever seen sat on the edge of a bubbling vat. Naked to the waist, he reached
in to his elbow and drew out bits of clothes, some that Llesho recognized and
some that he didn’t. The water smelled clean, and the bubbles released their
own sharp scent when they burst, tickling Llesho’s nose. Curious, Llesho
trailed a hand into a vat for himself and pulled it out again, shaking the
burned fingers.
“Where did the midge come from?” the fat
man asked, and Jaks answered, “Thebin, originally. The pearl beds more
recently, and without a stitch to wear.”
Jaks was laughing at him with this strange
man, who gave a clipped bark of his own laughter. “Madness,” the stranger gave
his opinion with a little shake of the head, then gave Llesho one of those
long, measuring looks that made him squirm. This man seemed to have no status,
but Jaks treated him like a confidant, and the man himself looked at Llesho as
if he were something discovered on the bottom of his sandal.
“Thebin, eh? Well, he won’t be easily
winded. That’s one thing in his favor.” The washerman scratched thoughtfully at
his backside. “As far as I can tell, that’s the only thing.”
Regal was easier in front of an obvious
servant, and Llesho’s jaw came out, his head tilted just so, his shoulders
straight and at ease.
Both men stopped laughing. “It can’t be,”
the washerman whispered.
“Madness,” Jaks agreed softly, and added,
for Llesho, “Pull it in, boy, if you want to stay alive.”
Danger. Llesho remembered the precise
timbre of a warning rippling through time at him, and in reflex his eyes
darted, looking for a place to hide.
“Dear Gods,” the fat man muttered,
expression broken in shards of fear and denial. “Have you been on
Llesho did not answer. He figured the men
must know that, and he wanted to understand what they were up to before he said
anything in their presence. He had a feeling they’d know his whole life story
if he opened his mouth at all.
“Does Markko know, do you think?” the fat
man asked Jaks, as if Llesho were not in the room. “What do you suppose he
wants with the boy?”
“Get him a shirt, Den,” was all Jaks said,
but his voice had gone completely blank. “Not a new one. Old, patched.” So the
washerman had a name.
“Pathetic,” Den muttered, but Llesho did
not quite understand who or what was pathetic, so he decided to keep his mouth
shut.
Den stood up, wearing nothing but a cloth
wrapped between legs as thick as the logs in the outer palisade and covered
with their own forest of coarse hair. “Off with it, then,” he said, and wiggled
his fingers until Llesho had stripped off his shirt and handed it to him.
“We don’t have anything in his size.” The
mountainous launderer wandered ponderously between the ranks of hanging cloth.
“But this should do until I can get the stitchers on it.”
Llesho had lost track of the washerman
somewhere behind him when the scuffling footsteps faded out of his hearing, and
so he jumped when a thick arm reached over his shoulder and handed him a shirt.
Not ponderous unless he wanted to be, then. Llesho stored that away for future
reference while he pulled the clean shirt over his head and smoothed it into
place. It came almost to his knees, and his hands were lost in the long
sleeves. He made a face, but Jaks ignored it.
“That will do,” he agreed. A look passed
between the two men that Llesho had the good sense to worry about, but Jaks
took him by the shoulder and backtracked them through the laundry. When they
were outside again, the central practice yard had emptied of men, leaving only
the broken tools of combat behind. Jaks crossed the space without a glance or a
word, and opened a door into a small stone house that sat a little apart from
the sleeping barracks and equipment rooms.
“The pearl diver has arrived,” he told the
man who sat at a desk in the elaborately decorated room. “What do you want me
to do with him?”
“Leave him here. You may go.”
Jaks did so at once, and again Llesho found
himself facing a stranger who looked at him with cool, incurious eyes. This
must be the overseer, Master Markko, he figured, since that was the name the
boy had given, and the same that Jaks had mentioned to Den in the laundry. From
the way people had spoken of him, Llesho had expected someone huge and
powerful, or erim and forbidding at least. In fact. Llesho could find nothing
of distinction about the man at all. He had the golden skin and the dark hair
of the boy who had come to fetch him, but Llesho could see no family
resemblance beyond the most common ties to a place and a people. Master Markko
seemed to be about as tall as the boy with no name, but with his full height,
while the messenger had overlarge hands and feet, like a puppy who would be a
much larger dog. The man, Markko, wore several layers of plain robes that
marked him as a minor official in the lord’s household.
He seemed to be ascetically slim beneath
the robes, but his face showed no feature of remark, nor could Llesho find any
sign about his person that he was or had been a gladiator, or had ever fought
in any way.
Markko looked up briefly from the work that
lay scattered on his desk. “We’ve already had an offer for you, from Lord
Yueh’s trainer;” he said. “Do you suppose you are worth such a lordly sum?”
“I don’t imagine so, sir,” he answered. He
didn’t know how much Lord Yueh had offered, or what it meant in the scheme of
the buying and selling of gladiators. However, Llesho didn’t want to go
anywhere they knew enough to offer for him when he had no obvious skills or
value.
“I suspect you are right,” the overseer
said. “His lordship has declined the offer, which means you will be under my
direction.”
“Yes, sir.” Llesho couldn’t think of
anything else to say, so he hung his head as submissively as possible, and
hoped that the overseer would soon tire of him.
After another penetrating look through eyes
like chips of flint, Markko returned his attention to the paper on his desk.
“The mop is in the corner,” he said. “You
can fill the bucket at the laundry, and begin with this room. Then the barracks
floors need washing. When you are done, you may report to the cookhouse for
dinner before you return here.”
“There must be some mistake,” Llesho
suggested, hoping it was true. “I don’t know anything about washing floors.”
“How difficult can it be?” Markko asked him
reasonably, “Mop, bucket, water, floor. In that order.” He turned back to his
desk, but looked up when Llesho did not move.
“But I thought I was here to become a
gladiator.”
Markko looked him over with a critical eye,
as if he were buying fish in the market. “Do you like to bed men, boy? Large,
hungry men with the bloodlust still running in their veins?”
“That would not be my choice, sir.”
“It is, however, the only choice I have to
offer you,” Markko explained to him reasonably. He had hot changed his tone of
voice, but Llesho realized suddenly that the mildness was a mask, that Master
Markko already knew too much about him, and that this was one person he did not
want to challenge. He ducked his head and looked as pitiful as possible in his
patched and oversized shirt until Markko dismissed him with a wave of his free
hand. Then Llesho picked up the bucket and the mop and crept out of the room,
unwilling to turn his back on the man who had stared at him with no feeling in
his eyes. That, Llesho decided, was what made this man dangerous. He had no
feelings at all.
Chapter Four
LESHO spent his first day as a gladiator in
training learning how to scrub barracks. He hadn’t been exactly surprised when
he found himself on mop duty. A long time ago, it seemed, he’d been the new
pearl diver in his quarter-shift. For weeks he’d cleared out dead oysters with
empty shells while his shift-mates gathered the pearls that should have filled
his sack. Shen-shu had beaten him after each shift from which he returned
empty-handed, but that too seemed a kind of initiation with no real anger
behind the blows. After a period of testing, the divers had accepted him as one
of their own. Llesho had expected no less from the gladiators, and had braced
himself for much worse than a mop when he followed the messenger up the hill.
Still, he was exhausted when he returned
from cleaning the floor of the latrine, just in time to see the golden boy
leaving the stone cottage. The overseer sat at his desk as if he hadn’t moved
all day, but set his pen down when Llesho bent his head and stood in a proper
submissive silence at the center of the room.
“Lord Chin-shi has requested my presence,”
Markko told him, and rose from the desk with majestic grace. “I will be at Lord
Chin-shi’s house for much of the evening. You will doubtless wish to sleep
before I return, but as you can see, I am ill-equipped for housing boys here.
You will have to make do with a corner of the workroom in the back—” Markko
gestured at a closed door shrouded in shadows under the stairs. “Don’t touch
anything, and don’t go upstairs.”
“Yes, sir.” Llesho did not look up until he
heard the door open and close again behind the overseer. With a careful, darted
glance to make sure Master Markko had actually departed, he raised his head and
reached for the timbered ceiling in a great stretch to unkink his back. He
looked at his hands ruefully. He had worked hard in the pearl beds, but his new
duties with mop and pail left him with peeling blisters butting up against old
calluses. His feet hurt, his back hurt, and his arms hurt, but none of that was
going to keep him awake past his exhaustion. Not even his excitement that he
seemed to be one step closer to escaping
After another careful stretch, he looked
around him, wondering why he was supposed to stay clear of upstairs. Curiosity
was one of Llesho’s greatest weaknesses, but the looming shadows painted on the
still and dusty air dampened any interest in exploring the upper region of the
cottage. He did not want to know what cast those shadows, and so he ducked
under the stairs and opened the door.
The workroom was the same size as the
office. An L-shaped worktable ran the length of two walls. Above the long side
of the worktable, a window with its shutter propped open let in the damp
evening air. Shelves ranged above the short side of the table and from floor to
ceiling on both sides of the doorway were packed with tools and pots and jars
and strange mechanical devices and scrolls and codices. Everything seemed to be
neatly in its assigned place, but the workroom felt cluttered. Over everything
hung the faint scent of purgatives and something more ominous.
That sensation of clinging corruption
deepened as the night darkened around him. The weights and balances, mortar and
pestle, compounding beakers, all seemed to blossom like mushrooms in the
shadows, growing heads with horns on them, and leering grins. Sleep. Llesho
remembered sleep, something one did with the rustle of palm thatching overhead
and the muttered dreaming of fellow divers in the longhouse. If gladiators were
supposed to be able to sleep in a place like Markko’s workroom, Llesho figured
he’d already failed his first test.
But the muscles in his legs trembled and burned
their determined message: they’d had enough for the day. So he found himself an
empty corner and curled up like a badger with his back pressed into the wall.
Moonlight streamed through the window, casting shadows that loomed over him in
his corner and crept across the floor. Llesho curled himself a little more
tightly and slitted his eyes to keep guard against the night.
When the moon had set, Llesho still lay
awake, tensed to repel whatever oppressive thing waited for him in the dark.
Toward dawn he fell asleep at last, only to be wakened by faint scratches at
the door. Ghosts, he thought,
and shivered, refusing to close his eyes again in case the thing came for him
in his sleep. So he was partly awake when a sandaled foot came into view at
nose-level. This, at least, was growing tiresome.
“Time to rise, rodent.” So was that voice.
The golden boy, the messenger. “Master Markko has already gone out. He charged
me to get you to morning prayer forms and breakfast. Said you could start in
with the mop again. He will summon you if he needs you.” The boy seemed to
study him for a minute, his face twisted in a sneer of contempt. “I wouldn’t
hold my breath. Oh, I forgot. That’s all you can
do.”
Llesho wondered what he’d done to win the
boy’s anger. A pearl diver would take his asking as a direct challenge, and the
glare that greeted his blurry nod promised a foot in his ribs as the only
answer he was likely to get in this new place. Llesho bit his tongue to keep
his questions backed up behind his teeth. He understood breakfast, though, and
he decided he’d find out what prayer forms were soon enough, and with a lot
less pain, if he waited until they presented themselves and figured it out
then. Golden Boy wasn’t staying for questions anyway. He was already on the
threshhold when Llesho stopped him with the one question he really needed an
answer to right away.
“Privy?” He was hoping the answer didn’t
send him across the practice yard and behind the barracks where he’d found—and
scrubbed—the latrines yesterday.
The boy pointed out the back. Better than a
long trek through the entire compound, but he’d have to go past Golden Boy to
reach it. And he was getting sick of thinking about the messenger by his job
and his face.
“Do you have a name?” he asked, trying to
sound cool and in control as he squeezed passed in the doorway.
“It’s Bixei.” The boy stuck out a foot to
stop him, nose to nose. “Are you the Grand Inquisitor now?”
“I can call you asswipe if you’d prefer,”
Llesho answered evenly. He would rather not have a full bladder in a
confrontation with the bigger and better trained boy, but he knew he had a
choice. He could stand up to the bully from the first, or he could learn to
like eating mud, because he’d be spending most of his days facedown in it with
Bixei’s foot in his back. So he held his ground and waited for Bixei to take ud
the challenge.
“Bixei, rodent, and don’t you forget it.”
Which was pretty weak as a comeback, but
beat a punch in the nose. Llesho shrugged as he passed the boy. Bixei stopped
him with a reminder, “Prayer forms start in thirty seconds. And Master Den
hates laggards. Enjoy your piss.”
The messenger swaggered out, and Llesho
followed as far as the front door, turning to complete his own errand around
the back. Whatever prayer forms were, he decided, they wouldn’t be hard to
find. It looked like the entire compound was shaping itself into ragged rows in
the practice court.
He arrived a minute late, enough to draw a
sharp frown from the washerman who stood in his breechcloth at the front of the
rows of gladiators.
“The Gods are waiting,” Den gave him a
meaningful frown. Llesho had the distinct impression that he meant the words
exactly and literally, as if he had one of the Seven at his back, tapping a
naked foot impatiently in the sawdust. Llesho quickly took a place at the end
of one line, only to discover, too late, that Bixei stood at his right hand.
Great.
Once Llesho had drawn himself to attention,
matching his stance to the men in front of him, Den made his formal bow and
began to mark off the forms, each with a name to describe the action. The name
and the action together formed a focus of contemplation, and the form itself
became a prayer. At least it did when practiced correctly.
“Flowing river,” Den said, and though he
seemed to show no particular grace, still his large body made the form look
simple, like pulling shirts from the washing vats. Llesho tried to copy the
motion, summoning the image of a stream, and overbalanced. He flailed his arms
to catch himself, and fell backward into the sawdust. With trained instincts,
the men ranked behind him took one step to the side, neither catching him nor
jostled out of the form by his crashing fall.
Den halted the company to frown down at
him, but said only, “Watch the shirt, boy, it’s almost new.” Mention of the
patched and ill-fitting shirt flamed Llesho’s cheeks with embarrassment. The
laughter of his fellows seemed good-natured enough, however, and the man in the
line in front of him helped him up with a slap on the back.
“You’ll learn, chicken,” he said with a
grin, and turned back to complete the form “
Llesho struggled with the next form and the
next, caught one foot around the other and wrenched his ankle in “Twining
branches,” then tried to lift both feet at once for “Butterfly,” and fell flat
on his face. But gradually he began to feel a rhythm in the passage from one
pose to another, movement gliding from foot to ankle, ankle to knee to hip, up
through his spine to be contained between his outstretched hands. When he
imagined performing the complex patterns underwater, in the bay, his movements
became slower, more precise, more fluid. He visualized the sea at his back, and
did not fall. By the time the exercise had ended, he was earning nervous
glances from his fellows. Only Den, and Llesho himself, were breathing easily.
Den bowed to the assembled company, freeing
them to their morning meal. As the company broke up, he sought out Llesho for a
slight nod of acknowledgment. “You are agile enough, and you learn quickly,” he
said, too quietly for the departing men to hear. “Just be careful not to learn
too quickly. All useful skills are acquired with effort.”
“Yes, sir,” Llesho agreed. He had to be
more careful here among strangers, who may have heard stories of Thebin but who
had never actually met someone from the high mountain country. Lowlanders often
mistook for magic the simple facts of a body con-structed to survive the
airless peaks. He knew that, but he needed time to discover what weaknesses he
must pretend so that no one suspected him of supernatural gifts. And he’d have
to figure out what strengths he could develop to compensate for his small
stature.
“The gods never call us without giving us
the means to succeed,” Den said, and Llesho wondered what he’d shown on his
face: not the Seven, perhaps, but a cranky old minister who wouldn’t stop
giving him orders even after he was dead.
“Give it time,” Den said, and patted him on
the back before moving off toward the laundry.
Time indeed. His plans had taken him this
far; now Llesho had to figure out how to survive the training and earn a place
at the competitions on the mainland. His stomach growled, and he sighed. Among
Lleck’s Thebin proverbs, “Listen to your belly” was the simplest, and came down
to the lesson, “Don’t try to think when you are hungry; all your answers will
be food.” So he followed the retreating backs toward the cookhouse and the
smell of boiled grain and fish. The man who had picked him up after his first
humiliating fall that morning caught sight of him and gestured for Llesho to
take a place in front of him. The line snaked toward a long table laden with
vats of food still in their cooking pots. Llesho hesitated, but the waiting men
sorted themselves out to leave a space for him. So he went, grateful when
someone pushed a plate and a spoon into his hands.
“I’m Stipes,” the gladiator said. “Short
sword and net, trident if that is the only contest on offer.”
“Llesho.” He followed the lead of the other
men, filling his plate with boiled grain mush and a double dip of fish heads
steamed with palm leaves in the pot for flavor. And in the spirit of the other
man’s introduction, “I am pretty good with a muck rake, and I can hold my
breath underwater.”
Stipes laughed at that and led him to a
bench where two empty places waited for them. All but one were strangers to
Llesho, but Bixei stopped him with a look that would have killed if he had the
knack of it.
“Thanks.” Llesho gestured with his plate to
show his meaning, and turned to find another bench, but Stipes pulled him down,
nearly dumping the plate of food on Bixei’s lap.
“Not so fast. I thought, if you wanted to
come to the barracks tonight, you might share my bunk.”
It wasn’t the first such offer Llesho had
received in his life. In the longhouse new boys or girls his age were called
“fresh fish” until they made their own preferences clear. Among the gladiators,
the young trainees were apparently called “chickens,” but a polite offer
deserved a polite answer in both places. Bixei’s poisonous glare wasn’t the
first of its kind he’d seen either, but it put things in perspective. He didn’t
know what they called it here, but he had no intention of treading Bixei’s
waters even if he were inclined to accept the offer. Which he wasn’t. Made
virtue easier that way.
“Thank you,” he sat, and Bixei’s knuckles
whitened around the handle of his spoon. “But I have promised myself to a
woman, a pearl diver. She’s Thebin, like me. We’ve known each other since we
were seven.” He smiled. The memory of Lling, slick as a seal under the bay,
lightened his heart. He could imagine her expression if she heard his
declaration, the way she would raise one eyebrow and pucker her lips like she’d
eaten something sour. She’d punch him, no doubt, for the outrageous lie, and
neither of them would ever admit how close to the truth he swam. Laughter
sparkled in his gut, and he set it free. “We’ve been workmates half our lives.”
Stipes shrugged good-naturedly. “Then
you’re best off staying where you are,” he advised. “His Honor won’t ask, and
some in the barracks would make their offer with a fist in your belly. Best to
have some friends about you and a bit of a name in the ranks before you take on
those offers.”
Llesho knew good advice when he saw it, so
he gave a little nod of agreement and dug his spoon into the mess on his plate.
The fish was passable, the mushed grain tasteless, but he watched Stipes mix
the two and found that, when taken together, the food wasn’t bad at all.
Llesho noticed that Bixei’s knuckles had
returned to a more natural color since he’d rejected Stipes’ offer, but the
other boy hadn’t said anything for most of the meal. When Llesho had almost
finished, though, Bixei asked a question, tinged with contempt. “You work with
women?”
Llesho almost answered with his own challenge,
but he saw the gladiators lean closer over the bench and realized that Bixei
asked for them all, and that the disdain covered a real curiosity. He relaxed,
then, like he’d fitted a puzzle piece into place, and smiled. “Every
quarter-shift. Lling saved my life. I had run out of breath and would have
drowned.” The memory of hanging upside down from Shen-shu’s chain, his strength
gone with the last of his breath, shivered through him with the terror he’d
been past feeling when it happened. “Lling breathed into me, and brought me to
the surface. Without her I’d be dead.”
Fighting men, it seemed, could understand
living or dying by how loyal a man could count his friends, but they still
looked doubtful that a woman could share something as complex as honor. Stipes
asked the next, and most obvious question. “But isn’t it ... distracting?”
Llesho shook his head ruefully. “Not after
the first black eye,” he said, and the laugh that earned him seemed directed
not at his own defeat in the field of romance, but at Stipes himself, and
Bixei, both of whom received nudges in the ribs and a few waggled eyebrows
along with the hoots of derision. Bixei flamed red in the face, but raised his
chin to defy them all. “And don’t forget it, either, Stipes,” he said, confirming
Llesho’s suspicions and giving Stipes a new warning as well.
“Not likely to, am I, boy?” As an apology
the words might seem lacking, but they were said with enough fervor to earn
Stipes a nod of acceptance.
Llesho had finished his breakfast and
waited only for a pause in the brief conversation to make his excuses. Bixei
was the next to stand as the rest of the bench also began to clear. He seemed
less hostile, but said nothing more to Llesho and left quickly.
“You’ll do, boy.” Stipes gave Llesho a slap
on the back, and followed as Bixei cut through the throng for the exit.
“Sure, I will,” Llesho muttered under his
breath, though he doubted every word of it. He wished Lling were here now, and
Hmishi. Together they might take on the world, but alone he didn’t know how he
would make it as a gladiator. He wasn’t even a good mop boy. But he’d learn. He
always did. And there was a mop with his name on it waiting for him at
Markko’s—His Honor to the fighters, apparently— cottage.
When Llesho returned to the cottage, the
overseer was sitting behind the desk folding a sheet of paper. Bixei had
arrived ahead of him, and was standing at Markko’s right hand with a message
pouch hanging from a strap that crossed from his left shoulder to his right
hip.
“I won’t be needing you for the rest of the
morning,” Markko said without looking up. He gestured at a tray with a teapot
and plate of broken biscuits on the corner of his desk. “Take these things with
you, I’ve finished with them. And, after you have mopped the barracks to Master
Jaks’ satisfaction, come back here. I may have something for you to do then.”
Bixei looked down on him with haughty
disdain while Llesho collected the overseer’s breakfast things, but something
in the look and the posture made Llesho wonder what he was so afraid of losing.
If Bixei wanted to be Markko’s servant, he was welcome to the job. The least of
Thebins made poor ones of it— they were a proud people, but mostly proud of
their independence, which they had nurtured and protected for generations on
their mountaintops. Until the Harn had come. Unfortunately, Thebins also made
poor soldiers. Llesho was going to change that, but not as a servant to a
second-rate official in the employ of Chin-shi, Lord of Pearls.
Something of what he was thinking must have
communicated itself to the golden boy, because the haughty pride slipped a bit.
But Markko had a rolled-up paper to go into the pouch, and Llesho ducked away
without attracting further notice.
Chapter Five
TWO weeks after he made the trek from the
pearl beds to the gladiator’s compound, Llesho took his place in the barracks
with a bachelor group who showed no interest in him for conversation or
anything else. He had grown skilled in the use of the mop and bucket and the
prayer forms were coming more easily to him.
As Llesho began to understand the forms,
his respect for his teacher grew as well. Built like a mountain, with the
warmth of the summer sun in his eyes, the humble washerman was the very image
of the Laughing God, who had not walked the earth, it was said, for many human
generations. Nor would he return while the Harn held the gates of heaven.
Den’s attention seemed everywhere, while
his body and soul centered into the action: sinking his weight into the ground
for the earth forms, and flowing through the water forms. In the air forms, he
seemed almost to take flight, which should have looked absurd on his large
body, but didn’t. When he demonstrated the water forms, Llesho caught glimpses,
like double vision, of Kwan-ti at her workbench. She mixed elixirs and shaped
little pills in his mind’s eye as Den moved from position to position. Llesho
knew to trust the almost-visions that left impressions, like intuition, in
their wake. Experience had taught him to keep the flashes to himself, but he
determined to watch the teacher carefully, and found comfort in the memory
overlaid upon the washerman’s movements.
He had realized on that first embarrassing
day that the prayer forms demanded freedom of him. His body could not soar with
heart and soul tied to the slave block and his chains. To succeed, he must free
that part of him the gods owned. So each morning as the students lined up with
the least experienced in the front, he found his place quickly. Closing his
eyes, he took a moment to imagine himself at home among the mountains that rose
above Kungol, the capital city where he was born. His brother, Adar, had kept a
clinic in those mountains. Llesho remembered the cold, thin air that forced a
human being to move cautiously so close to heaven, and the measured, gentle
movements of the healer. He imagined Adar at his back, guiding him through the
motions of the prayers; soon he was passing effortlessly through the exercises,
wrapped in the warmth of Adar’s smile.
At the end of his first month at the
compound, and just as Llesho was beginning to think that he would remain a
slave to the mop forever, Den pulled him aside after prayer forms.
“You are doing well,” he said, and Llesho
gave him a little bow, receiving the compliment with humility. “Are you
settling into the barracks well?”
“Yes, sir, Master Den.” Llesho had learned
the proper form of address for his teacher, and he used it now, waiting for the
master to reveal his purpose. He knew that he showed too much of his relief to
be out from Under the overseer’s evfi anH nprhane ton murh of his impatience as
well, because Master Den chuckled at him.
“And I suppose you are wondering how prayer
forms and mops will make you a gladiator.”
“Yes, Master Den.” He met his teacher’s
eyes with a dare in his own.
“Shut that down right now, boy, unless you
want to spend the rest of your days in Markko’s clutches.” Master Den managed
to frown at him without ever changing expression, which Llesho didn’t
understand, except that he dropped his own eyes, and scuffed his feet in the
sawdust with all of the confusion he really felt.
The washerman studied him for a moment
before releasing a sigh. “Very well,” he said, answering the silent demand.
“After your work detail, you may join the novices at hand-to-hand combat
training. Ask Bixei the way.”
Master Den knew that Bixei hated the
newcomer, and he challenged Llesho with a crinkle of humor in his eye. “Be nice
to your enemy, this time,” that look seemed to say, “or stay a slave to the mop
forever.”
Llesho asked. Bixei wasn’t happy, and
Llesho wondered if it was another trick when the golden boy led him away from
the large central practice yard where the experienced gladiators went about
their training. He was more certain of it than ever when they entered the
laundry, but Bixei kept going, out the back and through the drying yards to a
corner where the other novices waited for them.
Radimus, a member of Llesho’s bachelor
group, nodded a greeting. “
Up close,
Though new to gladiatorial combat, Radimus
and Pei were both fully grown and Master Den paired them for practice, which
left Bixei to spar with Llesho. As he picked himself up from the dirt for what
seemed like the thousandth time that afternoon, Llesho gave a prayer of
gratitude that no one but his small band of beginners could see his clumsiness
or his repeated defeats at the hands of his rival.
Den never scolded him for his ungainly
efforts, but repeated his instructions patiently. He taught efficiency over
drama, elegance in simplicity, took Llesho’s hand and positioned it just so,
nudged his knee into the proper stance, and nodded approval when he had it
right. Then he demonstrated how the clean, deadly moves could be decorated to
impress the arena crowds while inflicting little damage to his opponent. Llesho
quickly realized that, while Bixei seemed to grasp the underlying deadly
purpose of the training, the point of not doing damage to his opponent never
seemed to penetrate his skull. As long as his opponent’s skill remained
superior to his own, Llesho figured he’d be spending his afternoons with his
face in the dirt and his arms twisted in knots at his back.
Things didn’t much improve until prayer
forms one morning at the end of Llesho’s first week of hand-to-hand combat
training. His body passed through the forms under Den’s watchful eye until,
halfway through the Flowing Water form, he stumbled. His body was trying to
perform two completely different moves at that point in the exercise and the
realization stopped him dead in the middle of the form.
Den saw; the muscles in his face relaxed
into a smile that never showed itself upon his lips, and Llesho knew he was
right. Prayer forms and hand-to-hand were one, each growing out of the same
body, the same nature, but leading to different conclusions: peace, or war. The
move that he had stumbled on made sense then: he had reached the place in the
form where a man must choose one path or the other, and when he had come to
that place, Llesho had not known which path to take. But he did now. He completed
the morning prayers with no further mishaps, and in the afternoon, in the shade
of the drying yard, landed Bixei on his back for the first time. As a warning,
he brought the blade of his hand perilously close to the throat of his enemy,
then shifted into the more decorated style that would do no harm. The next
morning, as he was putting away his mop and pail, Bixei came to him with a
summons from Jaks to the weapons room. He was going to be a real gladiator at
last!
Me knew the way, but Bixei insisted that
he’d been told to bring him, which he did. “Good luck,” he muttered at the
door, and then he was gone, walking away as fast as he could without seeming to
run, and in the direction of the barracks. To spread the tale, Llesho figured,
and he opened the door and entered alone.
The weapons room was long and narrow, with
a beaten dirt floor and a single table running the length of it. Brackets set
into all four walls held long-shafted weapons: pikes and staves and tridents,
slim spears with gleaming heads as long as his hand and thicker ones hooked at
the end of the blade. On the table, all manner of swords and knives and hammers
and axes lay waiting next to nets and chain whips. Master Jaks stood rigidly
straight, to the right of a door which led into the smith and repair shops
ringing with the clangor of hammer on bronze and iron. Llesho hadn’t seen him
since his first day in the compound, but he looked more terrifying and bleak
than Llesho remembered, though only the occasional flex of the tattooed bands
on his upper arms showed any of his tension. When Llesho had made his bow, Jaks
turned to the door and rapped two sharp taps upon it.
Den came through the door first and settled
himself to the left of the jamb. A woman followed him. She wore the plain
clothes of a servant covered by a coat with wide sleeves that fell away at her
elbows. Llesho figured that for a disguise. She carried herself with haughty
assurance, demanding a degree of deference his teachers would not owe a woman
of her apparent youth in the lower ranks. Den’s mobile features, set in a
frozen mask, told Llesho that the woman’s presence deeply disturbed him. It
disturbed Llesho as well.
“Are you a goddess?” he asked, and wondered
if he could be any stupider, to draw her attention with a question that marked
him as an uneducated fool, or as a Thebin raised at the center of a religious
culture. A slave boy should have no knowledge of the gates of heaven, or the
gods and goddesses who passed through them when they visited the living earth.
“He is impertinent,” she said to Master
Den, but turned the dark, thoughtful pools of her eyes on Llesho and, he saw in
them not age but history, and deep, deep, timeless knowledge.
The woman turned to Jaks and touched a
finger to the most elaborate band of tattooing on his arm, as if she was
reminding him of a secret. “Test him,” she said, and withdrew her hand into her
voluminous sleeve. Jaks uttered no word that might identify the woman, but
bowed deeply and stepped forward. He smiled to allay Llesho’s nervousness.
“Don’t worry, boy. Nobody is going to hurt
you. In weapons combat it helps to start with a natural inclination, if you
have one. We are here to find out what that might be for you.”
“Yes, sir,” Llesho said, as firmly as he
could to show that he did understand and that he wasn’t afraid, though neither
was true. The concept made sense, of course, but the woman’s presence suggested
that more was going on than a simple aptitude test.
Jaks gave a single curt nod to accept the
answer, though the ghnt in his eyes told Llesho he saw more of those doubts
than he let on. “We will start with long weapons,” Jaks said, and gestured at
the walls around them. “Take your time. Pick up whatever attracts you. Give it
a chance, but if it doesn’t feel comfortable in your hand, put it back.”
Den interrupted then, with as much
explanation as he was going to get. “Don’t watch us to find your answer, boy.
The right answer for Jaks or me is bound to be the wrong answer for you.”
Llesho nodded and began to mark the
perimeter of the room. At first he kept his hands clasped behind his back, but
he quickly forgot his reticence as he handled the weapons. The pikes annoyed
him. He tried several lengths of shaft, but the heads felt overbalanced and
clumsy. Staves he handled well enough, but he quickly lost interest in them.
The trident went to his hand with the easy fit of long practice. After a few
awkward passes he centered himself, thought of water, and made a few smooth
thrusts and feints, twirled the weapon in a wide circle around one hand and
flung it to bury its teeth deep in the dirt at Jaks’ feet.
Jaks wrenched the trident out of the dirt
with a wry smile. “No surprise there, I guess. Anything else?”
Llesho shrugged, and continued his circuit
of the room. He approached the spears with curiosity, but one with a shorter
shaft than the others drew him with a fascination so strong he glanced about
him to be certain no one in the room had cast a spell on him. That was foolish.
No one in Lord Chin-shi’s realm would dare to practice magic in the open like
this. But the intent expressions on his three testers made him wonder how open
this occasion really was. He reached out to it, and the room itself seemed to
hold its breath. The weapon felt old, and Llesho could almost hear the high,
thin wind of Thebin whistling in his ears when he touched it.
It felt . . . right. Not familiar, like the
trident, which reminded him of the rake he used to play at battles with in the
bay. When his fingers closed around the shaft of the spear, he felt the “click”
of a soul finding its completion, hand meeting matching hand. Mine. He knew he
had never held such a weapon before, just as he knew he would not willingly
give it up now that he had found it. Not even if he died. Memories far older
than the body he wore stirred in the back of his mind, roiling in the muck of
time and terror. That part of him that was here and now, a slave with fifteen
summers, could not shake the sick feeling in the pit of his stomach; the spear
was poisoned, old memory whispered. He threw it away from him, shuddering in
disgust even as a longing he did not understand urged him to snatch it up
again.
Compelled by that terrifying desire, Llesho
crouched to retrieve the spear. Poised, but certain now that the test was,
indeed, a trap, and it had just closed on his neck, he tightened his hand into
a fist, grasping only air. Master Den watched him out of deep sorrowful eyes,
but Jaks picked up the spear where Llesho had let it fall and pointed to the
table with it. “Trident, but we’ll hold off on the short spear,” he said in his
most efficient voice, passing the spear to the woman, who slipped it into her
sleeve. “Now try the close-in weapons.”
The woman watched Llesho with the hypnotic
fascination of a cobra, and with about as much emotion. Llesho gave Den a
pleading glance, but his teacher’s blank mask did not change.
“No one is going to hurt you,” Jaks urged
him. “We just want to know how to train you that most ensures your success.”
That was only half the truth. Llesho didn’t
know where the other half lay, but he knew he couldn’t see his way to it
through the secrets clouding the air between them. He followed the direction
Jaks indicated with the tilt of his head, and considered the weapons spread out
on the table. A knife rested there, older than the others, with a haft that
seemed alien among the scattered blades. He reached for it, felt the weight
settle in his hand, flipped it to an overhand grasp, and held it above his
head, shifting through an exercise that reminded him of the prayer forms Den
led in the morning. Knife and hand were one, flowing into his arm, and he
stepped though the form with slow grace, then snapped through it with lightning
speed that surprised even himself. When he had come to rest again, Jaks took
the knife out of his hand and set it down. “No knifework,” he said with
finality, “What else suits you?”
But Llesho would not let it go this time.
That knife was a part of him, and he wanted, needed to know how. “What is it?”
he asked Jaks, seizing the knife from its place on the table and holding it up
in confusion. “I know this knife! But I don’t remember—”
The woman reached across the table and
touched his wrist with the same stroking fingertips that had brushed the tattoo
on Jaks’ arm. “You will,” she said, with something like hunger in her voice.
She wrapped her fingers around the blade of the knife and tugged it from his
hand. Llesho released it quickly, shrinking from the cold, white fingers that
did not bleed though the knife should have cut them deeply. When the blade had
disappeared after the spear into her sleeve, Jaks took him by the shoulder and
turned him back to the table.
“Try something else.”
Llesho glared at him. He wanted answers he
could understand, but the hand on his shoulder triggered one of those flashes
of almost-vision, confused images like memories of things he’d never seen. This
one showed him Jaks’ arm, but clean of the marks that banded it. Somehow, the vision
related to the woman and the knife.
“Your arm,” he nodded at the tattoos on the
arm that held his shoulder. “What do the tattoos mean?” He couldn’t believe
he’d asked, but the visions drove him with their own need, and he gritted his
teeth and waited for the next flash, or for his teacher to knock him into the
dirt for his impertinence.
Jaks refused to answer, but his expression
turned to stone.
“They are his kills.” The mysterious woman
answered his question and he shivered, wishing she had ignored him as well.
“Each stands for a death.”
“In the arena?” Llesho turned to face Jaks,
wanting explanations from his teacher, not the cold threat in the voice of the
stranger. And he wanted the answer to be yes, clean kills, in equal combat.
The
woman shook her head, once, slowly, her cobra eyes devouring him with their
cold stare. “Assassinations,” she said. “The simple bands for lower ranked
targets, the more complex bands for targets of a higher rank.” She smiled.
“Jaks excels at his profession.”
Llesho trembled. He was out of his depth,
way out of his depth, and had been since Lleck’s spirit had appeared to him in
the waters of the bay.
“What do you want of me?” he asked, though
he dreaded the answer. He’d been on the wrong end of an assassination attempt
when he was seven, and he couldn’t imagine doing that to someone else’s child.
He would die first, even if it did sink Minister Lleck’s plans for him.
The woman smiled, and something eased in
her eyes, which did not come alive, but ceased, at least, to suck him into the
black darkness of her soul. “Survival,” she said, though he couldn’t tell
whose, or why. “Shall we continue?”
Jaks turned to the table of weapons and
held up two short swords. “Try this.”
None of the other weapons triggered a
response like the knife or the short spear, but Llesho found himself generally
at ease with the blade weapons, and awkward with the hammers and axes, more
inclined to trip over his own net than trap an opponent, and for no reason he
could set to words, just a feeling that set his external organs clawing their
way up inside him that he would not, could not, touch the chain whip. He passed
over it three times, and thankfully, Jaks did not pressure him to pick it up.
When they were done, the woman took him by the chin and smiled. “We have before
us a pearl of great value, Masters. Let us take care that he does not wind up
food for the swine.”
Llesho’s entire body froze beneath her
hand. Did she know about the treasure Lleck had given him, that sometimes
pulsed in his mouth like a sore tooth? Or had the comment landed like a stray
bolt from a crossbow shot into the air? He doubted that the lady ever spoke
without thought. She released him without another word, however, and gave a bow
to the masters before slipping out the way she had come.
Jaks visibly relaxed when she had departed.
He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Tomorrow, after breakfast, report
for arms practice with the novice class.” he said to Llesho, and added, “Ask
Bixei—he will show you.”
Den frowned from his place by the door, but
said nothing, which was just as well. Llesho didn’t need a warning to keep the
woman’s presence secret. He wanted an explanation if his teachers expected his
silence for very long, but at the moment, he felt unready for any answers they
might give him. Better to pretend the afternoon hadn’t happened. Something of
this must have shown on Llesho’s face, because Den’s frown smoothed into his
more usual bland nonexpres-sion. He didn’t look happy, though, which Llesho
found more reassuring than not. And then he was gone, through the door into the
smithy and back to his laundry, and Jaks was staring down at the table covered
with small arms as if it held the secrets of the universe.
Llesho gave a perfunctory bow, although
Jaks wasn’t looking, and went out into the practice yard. The heat danced in
waves off the sawdust, but the stir at the corner of his eye was more than an
illusion of hot air. The figure disappearing around the corner of the barracks
looked like the guard who had greeted Bixei at the inner entrance to the
compound on Llesho’s first day, but what the man would be doing skulking around
the weapons room at rest time he could not figure, except that he didn’t trust
the man, and hadn’t from his first sight of him.
The tense session in the weapons room had
set his nerves on edge; Llesho knew the man could be completely innocent of
everything but an unpleasant disposition, but it couldn’t hurt to keep a
watchful eye on him. Some plot was moving in the camp. The woman was one clue.
The guard could be her creature or set to spy on her by an enemy. Where one
faction stirred, however, he knew that another was surely nearby.
Whatever that meant to the plotters, Llesho
figured none of it was good for him. The awareness that he was unskilled and
vulnerable, surrounded by professional killers, prickled his skin. The sooner
he became one of them, the better for his survival. The word, crossing his
mind, reminded him again of the woman’s answer to his question, “What do you
want of me?” As a means to an end, he believed she meant him to survive. Safer,
he knew, to go unnoticed, but if factions were forming in the camp, he was glad
to know that he had allies—formidable ones, if his teachers’ reactions were
anything to go by—whatever his side turned out to be. And whatever interests of
their own motivated them to care.
Powerful or not, however, he would have
traded the mysterious woman for Lling at his side any day. At least he understood
Lling’s motives, could anticipate her. Didn’t worry that she’d decide he was
not as valuable as she’d thought and send an assassin to dispose of him in his
sleep.
He didn’t realize how much time had passed
in the weapons room until the smell of dinner wafting on the late afternoon
breeze reminded him that he was hungry. Resting on the long porch that fronted
the barracks, Stipes waved a cheerful arm for him to join them, which Bixei
accepted with just a fleeting glint of resentment in his eyes. Llesho dropped
onto a bench and tried to let neither his uneasiness at the strange afternoon
nor his excitement at finally becoming a gladiator show. “Jaks is starting me
on weapons tomorrow.”
A hungry gleam settled in Bixei’s
expression then. “That will be fun.” He smiled a shark’s grin full of teeth and
promise. Llesho hoped that Jaks would not let the other boy kill him—at least
not on the first day.
Chapter Six
The novices themselves stood weaponless and
at formal attention while the sun beat down on their bare heads. Sweat beaded
under Llesho’s hair and ran down his face to fall unceremoniously from the tip
of his nose. Like his companions, however, he did not move until Master Jaks
had joined them with a ceremonial bow. They returned the bow, and Master Jaks
began his instruction. “Long sword.” He lifted the sword, turned it so the sun
ran down the curve of blade like liquid gold, and demonstrated a
slash-and-thrust move before putting it down in favor of two shorter, fatter
blades with a dull gleam on their rough surfaces. “Paired swords,” he said, and
the blades twirled in his hands, faster than Llesho could see, while Master
Jaks moved forward, then leaned back so far that his head brushed the sawdust
on the practice yard. Leaping up off the ground, he executed a turn in the air
and landed again without breaking the rhythm of the crossing blades. Llesho
made a mental note to learn that trick.
“Pike.” Master Jaks set the swords down on
the table and took up the long-shafted weapon set with a curved hook at its head.
He made several lunges and turns with it, spun it overhead, and brought it down
again. “Trident.” He replaced one weapon and took up the other, and Llesho saw
how foolish he must have seemed with his companions, playing at tridents with
their muckrakes in the bay. The pearl divers had bashed gracelessly at each
other: Master Jaks did a precise dance of death. In fact, Llesho concluded,
work with the long weapons compared closely with dance, while short weapons,
like hand-to-hand, evoked the prayer forms.
After his demonstration, Master Jaks took
the measure of his students, leveling a piercing stare on each in turn. He let
that burning gaze rest on Bixei as he explained, “Part of weapons work is
knowing how to kill; the greater part is knowing how to control one’s own
impulses, by the use of superior technique to control both weapon and opponent
without doing harm.”
Bixei would have spoken out in his own
defense, but Master Jaks put up a hand to forestall him. He left them briefly
to pass through the ranks of fighting men, tapping a shoulder here, whispering
a word in an ear there. He returned with four hardened gladiators, Stipes among
them, and took his place again in front of his class.
“Show me what you can do. Bixei?” Master
Jaks stood aside while Bixei chose his weapons, paired swords, with one of his
shark’s grins, which disap-peared when Master Jaks added, “Your practice
partner today will be Stipes.”
The grin disappeared. Stipes quirked an
ironic eyebrow at his companion, inviting him to accept what everyone in the
camp would know. Bixei would have no opportunity to practice deadly arts on
Llesho until he had learned the skill and the control on which Master Jaks
insisted. Stipes carried a stave, and took his stance while Bixei changed
weapons for a stave himself. But Master Jaks stopped him, with a shake of the
head. “First choice always,” he said. Llesho saw the panic bloom in Bixei’s
eyes, but neither his partner nor his teacher acknowledged that the first hit
had gone to Master Jaks. Bixei returned the stave and took up the lethal
blades.
Llesho stared at the last unpaired training
partner with dismay. He was a stranger, fully head and shoulders taller than
Llesho, and heavily muscled. “I am going to die,” Llesho thought, and reached
instinctively for the knife, but Master Jaks forestalled him.
“Never use a short weapon against an
opponent with a longer reach,” he said, and handed Llesho the trident. Instead
of pairing him with the stranger, however, Master Jaks explained, “As youngest
novice, you are stuck with your master. Madon will oversee the practice.” With
a nod to the gladiator, Master Jaks took his stance with a long sword and
jabbed at Llesho, who knocked aside the blow with his trident.
Master Jaks was circling him, forcing
Llesho to follow his movements by turning in a tight spin. Llesho thought
quickly: if they were competing short weapon against short weapon, he could
have devised a defense based on the prayer forms. If both used long weapons, he
could protect himself by making his moves like dance. But the defense that
might come out of the weapon dance would not suit the forms of the sword which,
coming at him again, broke his concentration and brought him back to the
moment. He was getting dizzy. If he didn’t come up with something soon, he
would win by disgusting his opponent when he vomited.
His clothes were damp on his back,
scratchy, and the sweat blurred his eyes. Even the sawdust underfoot burned
through the soles of his sandals, and the light flashing off Master Jaks’ blade
was making him squint and flinch with every step—deliberately. Master Jaks was
using the sword to intimidate, the glare to blind his opponent. Llesho had to
do something, right now. So he decided: he would act as his weapon dictated,
and pretend the man in front of him also carried a long weapon that just
happened to be ... short. He would make the rules of the battle, force Master
Jaks to take the defensive.
Action followed thought on the instant;
Llesho committed to the form of his weapon, felt his body shift into the
position of a dancer. He leaped and tumbled with the trident held close to his
body for protection and control. With the sun at his back, he planted the shaft
of his trident in the sawdust and, clutching it like a pivot with both hands,
he swung his body high over the weapon of his opponent. When he landed, he
flipped the trident around, cracking the shaft down hard on Master Jaks’ sword
arm and turned the weapon again, like lightning, to force the gladiator back
with the knifelike tines of the trident pressing against his throat.
The wrist guards Master Jaks wore protected
him from the blow, but he could not match the reach of the trident with his
sword, nor could he angle out of danger without risking death. He dropped his
sword with a smile. “Good,” he said. When Llesho continued to hold him at bay
with the trident, he added a little reminder, “You won. You can rest your
weapon now.”
“I won?” Llesho looked around in confusion
as the practice yard came back into focus, and he realized that he was
breathing heavily, the residual effect of adrenaline and fear. For a moment, in
the heat of the competition, he had lost himself in a terrifying past, when men
with swords had come for him and carried him away to slavery. He had been
seven, frightened and alone among his dead. His hands tensed around the shaft
of the trident: even now he wanted to kill the man in front of him, to prove to
himself that he was helpless no longer.
“Llesho.” Master Jaks stood perfectly
still, except that he moved his left hand slowly over his right, slipped out of
the wrist guards and dropped them to the ground next to the sword.
The seconds beat in the pulse at Llesho’s
temple; the sound of the blood rushing through his body drowned out the
trumpeting glare of the sunlight. No other sound existed. The gladiators
practicing in the yard had fallen still, as if a spell had paralyzed them all.
Then a voice reached out to him, pitched to catch the attention of a small boy.
Llesho wondered how he had let the enemy draw so close.
“Let it go, child.” Not an enemy. Master
Den, the washerman. Suddenly the trident burned in his hands, and he dropped
it, horrified at what he had almost done. But Master Den was there, with a hand
on his shoulder and he turned into the warm comfort waiting for him, and cried
against the broad fleshy shoulder as he had not cried in all the years of his
captivity.
When the tears had exhausted themselves, he
let out an exhausted sigh. Couldn’t keep his face buried in Master Den’s
shoulder forever. He had to face the camp. He would never—not ever—live this
down. But when he pulled away, the practice yard was empty.
“Master Jaks is in the weapons room,”
Master Den said softly, with a reassuring pat. “Find him and apologize. Then go
to dinner.”
Llesho bowed his head in submission to his
teacher’s wishes. As he turned to go, Den added, “I think you’ve had enough of
mops. Tomorrow, you will start in the laundry. I’ll clear it with Markko.”
Numb, Llesho nodded with none of the
enthusiasm he would have shown before weapons practice. Then, he would have
jumped at any chance to get out of mop duty. He was still grateful, but now he
yearned only for the peace that seemed a part of the washerman. In the laundry
he could hide from the derision of his companions, and from their fear of the
“mad” student.
“Go on. Master Jaks will be expecting you.”
Den sent him on his way still heavy of heart, but with hope and no little
terror. He had to face Master Jaks and explain, somehow, why a lowly student
and former pearl diver had nearly killed him in weapons practice, after the
competition had been ceded. And without revealing his past, or what there was
of it that his owners might not already know.
Taking a deep breath, Llesho entered the
weapons room so quietly that Master Jaks, sitting with his head bent over a
sword he worked with a polishing cloth, did not hear him come in. “Master,” he
whispered, and Master Jaks looked up at him, his face empty of all expression.
“I am sorry, Master.” What was he supposed
to say next, he wondered, that would make it better? “I am sorry I tried to
murder you” seemed somehow inadequate, and “I don’t know why I tried to skewer
you during practice” would confirm that he was mad.
Master Jaks put down his sword and folded
the polishing cloth carefully before addressing his student. “Sometimes the
enthusiasm of the battle overtakes us, even in friendly practice,” Master Jaks
said. “That is why the master always takes the newest student for his partner.
If anyone deserves to die of a student’s enthusiasm, it is the teacher who
inspired him.” A smile twitched at his lips, and Llesho wondered if perhaps he
was not the first student to best his teacher by surprise. Llesho doubted those
other students had held their instructor at trident point long after the bout
had ended, however.
While he could not trust his story to anyone,
Llesho owed this man he’d almost killed much more than he had given. He bowed
deeply, abjectly, and felt the tears form again. Not now. He couldn’t cry in
front of the weapons master. Not again. Too mad for the pearl beds, and now too
mad for the arena: they would feed him to the pigs for sure.
“I did not mean to hurt you, Master,” he
blurted. “For a moment I was elsewhere, but it won’t happen again, I promise.”
Master Jaks had come around the table to
stand face-to-face with his student. He was shaking his head, and Llesho
stopped breathing. His apology was not accepted. He was lost. But then Master
Jaks took his chin in his hand and tilted his head up. With the thumb of his
free hand he wiped the tears from the hollows beneath Llesho’s eyes. “I know
where you were,” he said. “And I am the one who is sorry. You reacted exactly
as Den told me you would, and even warned, I was not ready.” He released Llesho
with a sigh. “Den was right. We can’t afford many mistakes with you.”
For Llesho, the world stopped turning with
his teacher’s words. What did Master Jaks know? What did he intend to do about
it? His gaze fell on the knives on the table, lingered there.
“Are you going to sell me to the Harn?”
“I don’t buy or sell anybody, boy. I train
fighters for the arena.” Master Jaks’ voice took on a hard edge. “And the Harn
are unlikely to care overmuch about a peasant turned pearl diver, poorly
trained into the semblance of a gladiator, now are they?”
“No, Master,” Llesho agreed. Perhaps he had
misunderstood everything that had happened to him in the past two days, or
perhaps Master Jaks was telling him that he had allies in the camp. He figured
he was safe at the moment, anyway—from the Harn and the pigs—and obeyed with alacrity when Master Jaks sent
him off to his supper.
His apologies had taken him into the dinner
hour, and the gladiators and novices had all made their way to the cookhouse
when Llesho left the weapons room. He felt peaceful, in the way the sea was
calm after a storm. He knew he had to face the ridicule of Bixei and the
others, but lingered in the practice yard to hold onto that precious sense of
peace as long as he could. So he was alone when he saw a man creep into the
stone house of the overseer. He would have thought nothing of it—messengers for
the overseer came and went at all hours of the day—except that he was sure he
recognized the man. But what business could Tsu-tan, the pearl sorter, have
with the overseer of the gladiators? The question was on his lips when he
joined his bench mates at dinner.
“That is not the frown of a man being sent
to market,” Stipes noted. “What’s up, Llesho?”
“I just saw someone I thought I knew, from
the pearl beds.”
Deep inside, Llesho felt that the puzzle of
Tsu-tan was more important than his own embarrassment on the practice field,
though he could not have said how he knew. Bixei seemed on the verge of drawing
the conversation to Llesho’s lapse in weapons’ practice, but Stipes jabbed him
in the ribs, and he shrugged with a sullen glare, then turned to the question
at hand. “Maybe another pearl fisher has figured out that a fighting life would
at least keep him dry.”
“Tsu-tan isn’t a pearl diver, he’s too old,
and not
Thebin to begin with. He’s a pearl sorter.“
He didn’t say what he’d long thought: that Tsu-tan was a worm of a man with an
evil eye who almost never left his pearl basket, but sat under the palm tree
that faced the longhouse like a scruffy spider at the center of a dusty web.
“Tsu-tan.” Stipes frowned. “A creature with
the look of a weasel and an eye that would shrivel a man in his britches?”
“That’s him.” Llesho almost laughed at the
description, so much like his own impression.
“He’s the overseer’s witch-finder,” Stipes
said, “and sly as they come; I’ve heard it said that he is no man at all, but a
demon who lives on the screams of Markko’s victims. If he’s here tonight, you
can be sure there will be a burning before the week is out.”
Kwan-ti.
In his mind’s eye, Llesho could see the evil man sitting with his back against
his tree, his eyes following the healer with avid fascination. He had to warn
her. But in his months of training, he had not once received permission to
leave the compound. There had to be a way. He considered his companions at the
table, but could not ask them for help. He already owed too many explanations,
and he couldn’t expect men who depended on Markko for their well-being to risk
the overseer’s wrath by helping Llesho warn his prey. There had to be a way,
but dinner ended and he still hadn’t figured out what to do.
He followed his bench mates to the long
covered porch that fronted the barracks, where the gladiators rested in the
cool breeze of the evening. Radimus was there, tossing bones in a gambling game
for favor-chips; Bixei joined him, but Llesho moved on to investigate a noisy
group that had formed a knot at the far end of the porch. Pei sat on a solid
chair at the center of the laughing and hand-clapping circle, thumping his
broad foot in a steady rhythm on the floorboards. Joining the circle, Llesho
picked up the rhythm with his clapping hands, encouraging the champions to
begin a song contest. Madon finally stepped forward with a bow.
Placing his hand over his heart, Madon
recited his challenge in time to the beat of the clapping hands and tapping
feet:
“The
Seven watch over the fighter, who swings his sword in their praise who sleeps
with his sword like a lover And carries his sword to his grave.”
The circle of fighters cheered wildly.
Madon signaled his victory with a wave of his fist in the air and bowed an
invitation for his opponent to begin. A stranger stood away from the railing on
which he had rested arid set a hand to his breast like Madon had done before
him. As Pei picked up the beat again, the challenger intoned his response:
“The
Seven watch over the fighter who vanquishes foe in their name who conquers with
net and with trident And lives beyond death in their fame.”
The stranger’s side of the circle exploded
in cheers to support their combatant, but the contest went to Madon, whose
lines were closer to the classic rhyme pattern of the ancients than his
opponent’s effort. Grumbling, the challenger vowed retaliation in a limerick
that made outrageous claims about the parentage of the victor, and promised
retribution in fair competition, which any could see had not happened here. No
one took offense at the classic challenge, but many returned the insults in
less poetic form.
Llesho laughed along, but he soon abandoned
the group, slipping away to find his own bunk. Grateful as he was that no one
had reminded him of his blun-der on the practice field, he could not shake the
sense of disaster that had hung over his head since he had seen Tsu-tan enter
the overseer’s cottage. He had plans to lay if he hoped to warn Kwan-ti in
time. But the day had been long, and too fraught with emotion for Llesho to
think about strategy. He soon fell asleep, where evil dreams pursued him, of
Kwan-ti burning and Tsu-tan leering at the fire. Sometimes, Llesho was at the
center of the dream fire, and Markko stood in the doorway of the stone cottage
with a beaker of poison in one hand and a leash in the other, a hellhound with
Tsu-tan’s face lying at his feet. Llesho rested little, and woke with a start
at dawn.
After prayer forms and breakfast, Llesho
made his way to the laundry where Den greeted him with a sour pucker of his
lips.
“I don’t suppose anyone ever taught you how
to wash shirts?” he asked.
Llesho shrugged. “I’ve washed my own shirt
every rest-day since I was seven,” he said, “But the water came from what I
could save out of my drinking ration over the week. I don’t suppose that was
what you had in mind.”
“Not exactly.” Den introduced him to the
pump handle and showed how, when he worked it up and down, hot water from an
underground spring gushed out of a curved spout, bubbling and steaming as it
filled the vat. Mesmerized by the waves that lapped away from the point where
the water fell, Llesho’s thoughts drifted back to the pearl beds and the
long-house. The hiss and roar of the tide as it rose and fell with the crossing
of the moons had underscored his every move, every thought since coming to
Pearl Island. Now the sound, in small, reminded him of Kwan-ti, and the death of
Minister Lleck.
Lleck had trusted Kwan-ti, had known the
healer would protect his secrets and the boy in his care. He wondered if he
could do the same. Could he trust
Master Den with this secret, that he knew
who Tsu-tan, the witch-finder, sought? When he realized that he was hesitating
not out of concern for Kwan-ti, but for fear that he would draw Markko’s
attention to himself, Llesho knew what he had to do.
As if reading his mind, Master Den dropped
a heavy hand on Llesho’s shoulder. “I have broad shoulders, if you need help
with that burden,” Den said, and Llesho understood that the washerman did not
refer to the sacks of laundry waiting to be tumbled into the washing vats.
“I have to get outside the palisade.”
Llesho sat on the edge of the washing vat, his brow drawn down in a worried
crease. “I have to warn—someone—that they are in danger.”
“From the witch-finder?” Den asked. He sat
heavily next to Llesho and nodded for emphasis. “Tsu-tan has been creeping
around again; I wondered if you had seen him, or knew what he was about.”
“I have to warn her,” Llesho insisted, “I
owe a debt of trust.”
“Have you considered, Llesho, that the
charge against your friend may be true?” Den seemed to be looking for more than
he said in the question, but Llesho had enough of puzzles and secrets of his
own.
“She is no witch,” he said. “I have known
her for all my seasons on Pearl Island.”
The washerman did not remind him that his
seasons measured very few in the schemes of witches and spirit demons, but
pointed out what must be obvious to a pearl diver:
“Think, Llesho. If she is guilty of
witchcraft, her magic puts her beyond the power of the likes of Tsu-tan and
Master Markko. But if she is innocent, she is trapped already: there is no way
off Pearl Island without Lord Chin-shi’s blessing—or his boats.”
It hurt to realize Den was right. He would
risk ev-ervthine—his life, even his kingdom—in a pointless display of misplaced
chivalry that could have no good outcome. It hurt even more to know he was
going to do it, or die trying, anyway. Master Den saw the decision harden the
expression in Llesho’s eyes, and seemed himself to come to a decision.
“I have a message for the healer, Kwan-ti,”
Den said, and pulled himself upright. He left the washroom for a moment and
returned with a small parchment, tightly rolled and tied with a ribbon and
seal. “Show the seal at the gates, it will give you safe passage. But come back
as soon as the message is delivered. No dawdling.”
“Thank you, Master Den.” Llesho bowed low
in gratitude, and Den sighed.
“In the long run, it may comfort you to
know that you did your best to help your friend. But learn this lesson well:
only a warrior who suffers failure with fortitude can accept the accolades of
success with grace and humility.”
“Yes, Master.” Llesho bowed again, but in
his heart he admitted no possibility of failure. Then he turned and ran,
through the laundry and the leather works, across the practice yard, and to the
first gate, where the guard looked at him with suspicion and inspected the
rolled parchment from every angle to assure himself that the seal was authentic
and had not been tampered with.
The outer gate was easier. Madon was on
duty, and waved Llesho through with a cursory glance at the seal. Madon was no
fool, and if he had any suspicions about the message, he kept them to himself.
He merely pointed to a less worn path leading away from the compound,
suggesting, “You could take the long run, but this is a shortcut to the bay.”
The shortcut required greater
concentration, since it was less well tended and air roots and trailing vines
frequently snaked across the path to trip up the unwary. Llesho had to make a
few incautious leaps to avoid a twisted ankle, but he reached the longhouse in
short order, and unseen. To his dismay, however, he could not find Kwan-ti. His
own quarter-shift mates were at work in the bay, but he asked the divers on
quarter-rest, and the old men who fished and the old women who gathered fruits
and vegetables to flavor the grain food Lord Chin-shi supplied for the
cookhouse. No one had seen Kwan-ti since the night before. All the boats were
accounted for, so she could not have left the island, but still, no one could
find her.
Finally, taking his courage in his hands,
Llesho approached the witch-finder, who curled in a brooding huddle beneath his
palm tree.
“I have a message from Master Den for the
healer,” he said, pretending not to know of Tsu-tan’s nocturnal visits to
Master Markko. “Did you see where she went?”
“I did not,” Tsu-tan snapped. “And if you
don’t want to roast on a spit yourself, you will mind your own business, pig
food.”
Llesho thought the witch-finder’s voice
shook a little. If Tsu-tan was afraid, so much the better. But Llesho refused
to believe what he heard whispered in the longhouse: the witch had gone, called
a dragon from the sea to take her away from the Island and the witch-finder and
his virtuous Lord, Chin-shi. Once, a water dragon had rescued Llesho, convincing
him without words to cling to life and to his faith. The creature had laughed
her joy with him, a human sound, with the voice of the healer. He could believe
no evil of Kwan-ti, but he could not deny that she was gone, and by her own
power, not spirited away to await death at the hands of the witch-finder and
his employers. How or why, he refused to think, for fear of where his own
evidence would take him.
Still carrying Master Den’s message, Llesho
returned to the compound. Madon still guarded the gate and waved him in with a
smile. A new man sat at the inner turnstile, however, someone he knew by sight,
who delivered a message of his own.
“Overseer Markko wants to see you as soon
as you return.”
Llesho nodded to acknowledge the order, but
his heart froze. What did the overseer know of his errand, and what would he do
about it?
“I have done nothing wrong,” Llesho
reminded himself, “I only acted as a messenger, as befits my station, to
deliver Den’s message—” He would be lying to himself as well as the overseer,
he realized: was this what Den had meant about suffering failure? He knocked on
the door to the stone cottage, determined to answer truthfully any question the
overseer asked of him.
Master Markko was at his desk, as usual,
with Bixei standing at attention while the overseer sprinkled sand on his
writing and tapped it clean. He rolled and sealed it, and handed it to Bixei,
who left them with a last cold glare at Llesho. Llesho ignored the animosity of
the other boy; Markko was looking up at him with false concern oiling his
frown.
“Let me see it, boy.” Markko held out his
hand. “You had a message from Master Den for the witch. I want to see it.”
In a cold sweat, Llesho wondered if he
could withhold the parchment roll. Kwan-ti was lost to him, but perhaps he
could save Master Den from the stake if he took responsibility for his actions.
“It was my fault,” he said, “I wanted to see Kwan-ti. Master Den tried to
persuade me not to go, but I persisted, and so he made it possible for me to
visit the longhouse.”
“And did you see the witch?”
“I have never seen a witch,” Llesho
answered with precise honesty. No one had ever identified themselves to him as
a witch. If required, he might have guessed the woman who had watched him that
first afternoon in the weapons room practiced the evil arts. He would have
offered his own life, however, as surety that Kwan-ti had no evil in her.
“I see.” Master Markko considered him
thoughtfully. “But I would still like to see the message Master Den gave you
for the woman.”
“Yes, Master.” Shivering, though the day
was warm, Llesho held out the parchment. He paled when Markko took a small
knife and carefully lifted the seal. Unrolled, the parchment revealed only a
request for a simple poultice. Markko frowned at it, then he lit the candle on
his desk and held the parchment over it. The edges began to curl and smoke, but
still no words appeared on the parchment. Flicking the false message at Llesho,
he asked, “What do you make of this?”
“I
don’t understand.” Which was true, except that Llesho thought he might be
figuring it out, though he wished he had Lleck at his side to guide him through
the twists of what began to take on the outlines of a game of Go played by
masters. He knew he wasn’t up to the mettle of the players, but he suspected it
would prove no easier to be a stone.
The overseer carefully brushed the burned
edges off the parchment and rolled it again. Markko picked up the seal, which
he had lifted whole with his knife, and held it over the candle.
“If you feel ill again, come to me,” Markko
said as he watched the wax of the seal soften. “You are too valuable to our
lord—as a gladiator in training, you understand?—to rely on superstitious old
women for your care.”
A
scent like illness, but with more of death in it, clung to the air in the
overseer’s cottage. It tickled a warning at the back of his nose, and Llesho
determined he would have to remain very healthy from now on%He
nodded, willing to agree to anything if it would get him out of the cottage.
“Just so we understand each other.” The
overseer nressed the seal back into place over the ribbon on the roll of
parchment and handed it back to Llesho. “You never stopped here,” he
instructed, “and I never saw this.”
Shaking, Llesho took the scroll. “But,
honored sir, Bixei has seen me. Won’t he tell the others?”
“You needn’t worry about Bixei. At least,”
Markko added with a sly smile, “in the matter of my secrets.” Dismissed, Llesho
bowed and made his escape to the practice yard. With a deep breath to settle
the trembling that had started in his whole body, he tried to set his mind to
the promise he had made to the ghost of Thebin’s minister, Lleck.
As the youngest prince of Thebin, Llesho
knew he’d been born a stone in a game whose board spanned whole kingdoms. He’d
been swept from the board once already, and he didn’t relish the idea that he’d
been put into play again without knowing if he was cast as the white or the
black. He wished, badly, to rest his fears and questions and promises on those
broad shoulders Master Den had offered. Even a stone in a game he does not
understand wishes to survive, he figured, but the people Llesho trusted were
disappearing at a rate that did not bode well for any new advisers he might
adopt. For now he would keep what secrets he possessed.
When he put the scroll into Den’s hands,
therefore, he told him only that no one had seen Kwan-ti, and did not mention
his audience with Overseer Markko. Master Den did not speak of his errand, or
what the healer’s absence must mean. He returned the scroll to its place among
the clean shirts without looking at it, and picked up a rake that looked very
much like the muck rake that Llesho had used in the pearl beds. This one had smoother,
rounded ends to the tines. “You use this to agitate the water and stir up the
shirts,” Master Den explained. “Not too energetically, or you will tear the
fabric, but enough to keep the cloth moving, so the dirt doesn’t settle back
again.”
The technique was easy to pick up after
seasons in the oyster beds, and gradually, Llesho relaxed into the work.
Almost, he could believe that the interview with the overseer had not happened.
Almost, he could believe that Kwan-ti the healer was not a witch.
Chapter Seven
L<LESHO discovered that he actually
enjoyed laundry duty. Den taught him the simple tasks of washing and hanging
and darning and sizing with a wellspring of patience that reminded him of Adar,
who had been much thinner, but who shared the love of humble work. “If a digger
of ditches receives a ”pittance for his service to the land, how much more must
a king serve his people to merit the honors they bestow on him?“ Adar had
asked. When Llesho was six, spending a chill afternoon in the mountain clinic,
the answer had included a broom.
Master Den had lessons for him as well,
which he taught through the stories he told as they worked: stories with a
moral Llesho was supposed to understand but usually didn’t. Neither of them
minded much, since the stories were interesting anyway. When the time came that
he needed the lessons, they both knew Llesho would figure it out, like he’d
learned the mopping and the laundering, and the prayer forms before breakfast.
Den himself was a puzzle. Everyone in the
training compound bowed to the washerman and called him master. He led prayer
forms every morning, and the most skilled among the fighters came to Master Den
for instruction. None of his stories touched on the master’s own history,
although the names of many famous gladiators wandered through the tales. Master
Den told his tales with an air of authority, as one who had seen the events and
knew their actors, which Llesho supposed he must have done. After all, when the
compound emptied for the competitions on the mainland each month, Master Den
disappeared with the fighters. He wasn’t doing laundry at the games; that came
back in stinking bales to be cleaned and mended on Pearl Island.
Llesho could not imagine anyone of Master
Den’s girth fighting in the arenas, but he’d never seen the man bested at
hand-to-hand either. When Llesho asked about his master’s place in the stories,
however, the launderer would shake his head and insist, “They are only tall
tales, boy,” as if Llesho had let the famous names distract him from the
purpose of the story. Which, he eventually figured out, he had.
For all his skill, Den worked at one of the
lowliest jobs. So had Adar, of course, cleaning up the slops of his patients
with his own hands. And Shokar, eldest of the princes, had worked the land as a
farmer when their father had not needed him for statecraft. That Master Den was
involved in Pearl Island‘s own narrow struggles of statecraft seemed clear.
Before the old minister, Lleck, had died, he had taught his young prince enough
of strategy to understand that Overseer Markko played some game of power and
nerves with the humble teacher, but why or with what stakes he could not guess.
In a lot of ways, Master Den reminded
Llesho of Lleck, though the old minister, like most Thebins, was short and
slight with a round bronze face and Master Den was tall and pale as the belly
of a whale, with a shape like a mountain. Like the minister, though, Master Den
spoke most softly when his words were most valuable and taught using stories
that meant more than they appeared on the surface to be. Over the months he
spent in the laundry, Llesho came to believe that, like the minister in the
longhouse, Master Den hid a whole life and identity beyond the washing vats and
drying lines. When he asked the older gladiators questions about the master,
however, he discovered that no one knew anything about his past. Den had always
been a part of Lord Chin-shi’s stable of fighting men, according to the oldest
of the active gladiators. Master Jaks might know more of the washerman’s
history, but when Llesho considered asking the weaponmaster, he decided that
his answers might cost him more than he could pay for them.
In spite of his unsatisfied curiosity,
Llesho found that he actually enjoyed the three months he spent in the laundry.
His lessons in combat kept his mind £s well as his body sharp, and during their
time in the steaming washroom, Master Den was starting to fill the great gaping
hole in Llesho’s defenses where Minister Lleck used to stand. Llesho didn’t
fool himself that his teacher felt the same devotion to Thebin and its prince
that old Lleck had. If it hadn’t been for hand-to-hand practice, Llesho would
have believed Master Den liked him.
Standing in the shade of a billowing length
of cloth on the drying lines with Bixei and the other novices, however, Llesho
concluded that the teacher must surely hate him, and simply hid it well during
laundry duty. If he could have figured out the problem Master Den had with him,
Llesho would have changed it. But the harder he tried, and the better his
skills became, the more he met with the sharp side of Den’s tongue.
“Don’t think, boy! Move! A decent opponent
will have you on your arse before you decide to hit him at all.” A shift of his
weight, a flip of one wrist, and Master Den had demonstrated the fault by
dropping Llesho to his knees. Then he moved on to Bixei. and his tone softened;
Master Den played out the same move, but slowed many times so that the students
could see how the wrist twisted and how a nudge with the side of one foot
brought the man down. “Good,” Den said, and slapped Bixei on the back while
Llesho seethed.
He had thought that his swift improvement
would win him the praise of his teacher, but in fact Master Den ignored him
much of the time, except to correct him for imperceptible flaws in his
technique, while calling upon Bixei to partner him when the master wished to
demonstrate a new combination. Llesho had stopped trying to impress his teacher
weeks ago, and found that the forms came even more easily now, when he didn’t think. If Master Den had shown
some appreciation of his skill, the students might have shaped their attitude
toward him around their teacher’s good opinion. But as Master Den became more disapproving,
his classmates became more distant. Llesho could have ignored the others,
except for Bixei.
Bixei had two things which Llesho did not:
Stipes, and his work assignment as Markko’s messenger and servant. He protected
both against the newcomer, and Llesho could not convince him, no matter what he
said or did, that he wanted neither Stipes’ attentions nor the favorable eye of
the overseer. The laundry suited him just fine, and he preferred girls.
His move to the laundry had come to him with
deceptive casualness, just a word at the end of a practice session as if
nothing important had happened at all. Llesho was therefore unprepared for the
way his whole life seemed to shudder and tilt on its axis when Bixei arrived
late for instruction with the announcement, “His Honor the overseer wishes to
summon the novice Llesho to serve him for the coming cycle.”
Expressionlessly, Den bowed to acknowledge
the command, which Llesho himself heard with dread. Llesho would take Bixei’s
position with the overseer, while Bixei himself would rotate to weapons. With
one announcement, Llesho made two enemies: Bixei, who had already passed
through weapons repair, resented his loss of position. And Radimus, who should
have rotated to the overseer’s office, likewise resented his return to mop
duty.
“I am content to work in the laundry,”
Llesho said with a humble bow, his eyes downcast to hide his very real fear at
the change. Since his first days in the compound he had avoided the overseer’s
cottage, which had terrified him from the start with its vague sense of
watchful evil. Since he had seen the witch-finder skulking around it, he’d put
a face and a reason to his dread. And it was Bixei’s task assignment, or had
been. The other boy was not pleased.
However much of this Master Den understood,
he said nothing, but pointed out with an arched eyebrow, “Lord Chin-shi is not
in the habit of giving slaves their choice of assignments. One does, however,
have the option of taking up one’s task with a beating or without one.”
“Without, Master. I apologize for my
pride.” Llesho fell to his knees and knocked his head into the sawdust of the
practice area. Master Den accepted the apology with a small bow and broke the
class into partners to practice the most recent lesson, Llesho found himself
alone and staring into the face of the golden boy, Bixei, who glared back with
a cold glitter in his eye. It was worse even than Llesho had guessed.
“Are you going to strike me down with your
witchcraft, pearl diver, or will you pretend to use the arts Master Den
teaches?” Bixei asked, his arms folded across his chest. So much for the
overseer’s opinion of him.
“I am no witch,” Llesho stood up to face
his accuser.
“Witch,” Bixei repeated. “Everyone knows
you consorted with a witch who now stands accused, and that you use the magical
powers she taught you to conquer your opponents rather than fight fairly.”
Bixei meant more than the training exercises: he was furious to have lost his
position in the overseer’s office. Llesho thought he might even believe the
charge, which frightened him more than his opponent’s jealous fury.
Witchcraft had an evil reputation in the
camp. Llesho had attempted to warn a hunted witch and had spoken to spirits.
But his own present danger meant nothing: Llesho reacted to the taunt with all
the rage and the pain of a lifetime of losses knotting his hands into fists.
His home was gone, his brothers scattered, his sister murdered. And Lleck was
dead, nothing left of him but his demanding spirit. Kwan-ti was gone,
disappeared just ahead of the witch-finder, though only the gods knew how she
had escaped. Without realizing it, Llesho had reached out to Master Den for the
kindness he had lost, but his teacher watched him as if he was one of Master
Markko’s experiments, and said nothing in his defense.
“Lord Chin-shi has put a bounty on her
head, and you will be next. You will burn in her place.”
“No!”
Technique fled in the face of Bixei’s
shattering denouncement. Looking into the eyes of his opponent, Llesho felt in
his blood that it had come to a killing moment between them. He reached for his
accuser with his fists, not to knock Bixei down or control him or even kill him
with one clean blow. He wanted to tear the golden boy apart with tooth and
claw, to stomp his flesh into a pulpy stew in the sawdust and rip the pieces
into shreds when he was done. But his rage made him clumsy; Bixei deflected his
blows, though he had to struggle to match the insane speed with which Llesho
attacked.
“She’s not a witch,” he growled, and landed
a blow that knocked the wind out of his opponent.
Bixei had been waiting for the moment,
luring him in, and even while Llesho was glorying in the feel of his fist
impacting on the body of his foe, Bixei grabbed the extended hand and twisted
his arm, flipping him on his back with an elbow in his throat.
Llesho thrashed on the ground, ignoring the
pressure on his throat and trying to get a purchase on his enemy.
“What is she, then—your lover?” Bixei
taunted while the students, and Master Den himself, looked on. Llesho shook his
head, though the motion ground sawdust into his hair and brought Bixei’s elbow
closer to strangling him. “Teacher,” he gasped, and Bixei smiled as though his
teeth were a trap that was about to close on its prey. “Are you her sorcerer’s
apprentice, then?”
“She was good,” Llesho insisted. He knew
Bixei would consider him a fool if he said any more, and probably the other boy
would be right, but he had to try and make him understand. More important, he
had to make Master Den understand. “She taught me that goodness could still
exist in a world I thought the gods had abandoned.” He looked into Bixei’s eyes
when he said it, willing the other to understand something he didn’t quite
understand himself.
“It’s a shame she didn’t teach you how to
fight.” Bixei pressed his elbow tighter against Llesho’s throat, so that he
stopped his opponent’s breathing altogether. Then, having won his point, he
released Llesho and offered him a hand up. “She tricked you. Evil rules the
world now, and she is part of it.”
It was hard not to believe, with Thebin
under the power of the Harn and everyone he had ever loved dead or lost to him.
But the spirit of his mentor had given him hope. So he took the hand Bixei
offered, and kept hold of it when he was on his feet again.
“First we take the world back,” he said,
“and then we see who helps us and who tries to stop us.” It felt like a pledge,
and Bixei met his level gaze uneasily.
But he offered his other hand, and they
clasped, their wrists crossed in the age-old symbol of allegiance. Neither knew
exactly where it would take them, nor how soon the unspoken pact would be
tested. They both knew in their hearts, however, that this was something slaves
did not do. Llesho expected Master Den to stop them with a lecture on humility,
but their teacher watched them with the look of a merchant toting up a trade in
his eyes.
Where success had earned him fear and envy,
Llesho’s failed attack on Bixei had created a wedge of sympathy that Llesho was
quick enough to foster with occasional well-timed lapses in his performance.
Master Den no longer watched him with faint disapproval, and even pulled him
out of the class on occasion to demonstrate a new move or an improvement on an
old one for his classmates. Llesho hated his new assignment in the overseer’s
service, but even that worked to his advantage. If Bixei was still jealous, at
least he didn’t blame Llesho for his lost status. They might never be friends,
but Bixei seemed to have abandoned the feud he’d waged since Llesho arrived at
the compound. He could imagine their uneasy alliance more easily in moments
like this, however, when Bixei was not present.
Llesho was sitting on the covered porch with
Radi-mus and Stipes and others from his bachelor group and dinner bench. His
chair was tilted on two legs so that the narrow, slatted back rested against
the coral blocks of the barracks wall. Bixei was still at work in the weapons
room, so Llesho had relaxed more than usual, listening to the others trade
stories when Radi-mus, who leaned against the railing to watch him, asked, “Why
a trident? That’s a tall man’s weapon, like the pike.” Radimus, who preferred
the pike, pulled himself away from the railing and straightened to his full
height as a demonstration.
He’d let his guard down too soon, Llesho
realized, setting his chair down on its four legs with a thump. He knew,
without being told, that the story of his choice of arms in the weapons room must
remain secret. Llesho had never again seen the woman who watched him there,
nor, since that day, had he seen a knife like the one she had slipped up her
sleeve. But he remembered the tension that had clenched in his stomach, and it
was doing a return appearance under the curious eyes of his companions. Better
to offer a lesser truth, he decided.
“The food the pearls like best tends to
settle to the bottom. You use a long-handled rake to stir it up.” He twitched a
shoulder to acknowledge that they would surely find his story foolish.
“My quarter-shift mates and I would imagine
our rakes were tridents, and would wage mock battles in the water. We stirred
up the bottom enough with our scrabbling feet, and had more fun than applying
the rake head to the muck. When Master Jaks told me to choose my weapon, I felt
awkward with a sword, but the weight of the trident isn’t much different from a
muck rake, and it didn’t feel all that different to my hand, after I got used
to being on dry land.”
“I’m sure Master Jaks can find you a muck
rake if you really want one,” Stipes suggested.
The gladiators laughed companionably at the
story and Llesho wondered if they each had an equally harmless tale to tell—a
sword that reminded one of a cooking knife, or a stave that felt to the hand
like a drover’s prod. Llesho’s explanation quickly turned into the story of how
his friends saved his life, though he didn’t mention the spirit of his old
mentor—
“And I came out of the water dangling from
my ankles like a pig on its way to slaughter. Foreman Shen-shu took one look at
me and said. ‘Where’s vour rake, boy?’ and down I went again, sputtering with
water up my nose to look for the damned rake.”
“I’d think after that you would avoid the
trident like it had a pox on it,” Stipes remarked.
Radimus laughed. “Master Jaks probably
assigned him the trident because he knew it was the one weapon that Llesho
wouldn’t ever lose.”
Llesho expected the joke when he told the
story, but this was close enough to the truth that Llesho flushed when he heard
it—not because the rake was the reason he chose the trident, but because Jaks
had directed him to the weapon and away from the knife that went to his hand
like an extension“ of his body. He laughed quickly enough that his companions
took the blush for embarrassment, except for Stipes, whose sharp gaze seemed to
be looking for a chink in the face Llesho wore. He wouldn’t find one, Llesho
determined. The trick to keeping secrets, he had learned from Master Den
himself, was in not appearing to have secrets at all. So Llesho smiled blandly
at the gladiator and greeted Bixei when he joined them on the porch.
“ ‘Lo, Bixei,” he said. “You just missed
the story of my heroic rescue from the briny deep.”
Stipes kicked a chair over to where his
partner stood, but Bixei rejected the offer, while giving Llesho a warning
about his tale: “Don’t tell Master Den, or he will start having practice in the
bay,” he said, rubbing at a bruise the size of a coconut on his backside. Finding
a support post to lean on, he grumbled his complaint, “That would make as much
sense as hand-to-hand combat practice.”
Madon, who still worked with the novices at
weapons exercises, heard the complaint as he passed on his way to a group of
senior gladiators spending their rest time with similar stories on the other
side of the porch. “We can all see that you have a deep-seated aversion to
unarmed combat. Bixei,” he drawled. “Something
Master Den really should get to the bottom
of, before it interferes with your training.“
Llesho tried to keep a straight face, but
even Stipes was snickering, and Bixei’s face turned so red it seemed to glow of
its own light.
“I don’t mind taking an injury in practice
if it teaches me something useful,” he complained heatedly, and Llesho wondered
which injury angered Bixei more: the one to his fundament, or the one to his
pride. Since he was the only person on the porch who was smaller in build than
Bixei, and had also been present when Master Den dumped Bixei in the dust, he
decided not to ask. Bixei wasn’t giving anyone a chance to interrupt him,
however.
“Weapons practice makes sense, even
equipment I don’t plan to compete with. A gladiator has to understand his
opposition and use that experience to devise a counterattack. If a fighter
should lose his own weapon during a battle, he has to be able to pick up his
enemy’s and take the day with it. But an unarmed man cannot compete against a
trident or a pike, or a sword. So why does he waste our time with something
that will never serve us in the arena?”
“You think you cannot save your life with
your own hands?” Madon rolled up the right sleeve of his shirt to reveal a
jagged scar that tore across his biceps. “The shaft of my pike had a flaw in
the wood and broke with the first thrust of my opponent’s sword. His second
thrust did this.”
“See—” Bixei tried to interrupt, but Madon
silenced him with a look.
“I lured him inside my guard, and when he
was committed to the strike, I did this—” with his left hand Madon lashed out
in the “striking snake” move, stopping with the curved knuckles a whisper of
air away from Bixei’s throat—“I suffered a wound, but the swordsman died.” ;
Llesho stared at the man in wonder. Madon looked
like a hero out of legend, so he didn’t
know why it surprised him to discover that the gladiator was a hero in fact.
Bixei, however.had turned deathly pale in contrast to the recent angry blush.
“Of course, that was pure luck.” Madon
relaxed his striking hand and examined his knuckles as a warrior checks his
weapons for nicks or damage from the damp. “Master Den teaches hand-to-hand as
an exercise in concentration and control; I wouldn’t depend on it to save my
life against a trident. Unless, of course—” he gave the younger group a sly
smirk— “Llesho here was holding the trident!” Laughing, he left them to return
to his own bench where more laughter soon rippled out from the senior warriors.
Bixei was seething, but Llesho gave him a
smug grin. “We’ll get him,” he said. “Just give it time.”
Bixei didn’t want to listen, but with
Stipes to tease him out of his brooding, he soon entered into the outrageous
plans for taking down the hero. Mud featured in many of their plans, as did pig
slop. The night ended in laughter. Llesho would not hear that sound again for a
very long time.‘t
Chapter Eight
HE new assignment worried Llesho. Bixei had
run errands to Lord Chin-shi’s house, fetched and carried about the compound,
and he’d even been sent to bring Llesho himself from the pearl fishery, all
tasks for someone who had earned Master Markko’s trust. In the first week of
his new service, the overseer hadn’t said anything about Kwan-ti, or
witchcraft, but he hadn’t sent Llesho out of the compound with messages either.
Instead, Llesho swept out the workroom and the front office, then, up the
narrow staircase, he scrubbed the loft room under the steeply sloping roof
where Master Markko slept.
The sleeping chamber held a single bed and
two chests. The larger held the robes and breeches that Llesho was forbidden to
touch; a servant came daily to tend Master Markko’s personal needs, and
disappeared again to whence he came before the minor sun had joined its fellow
in the sky. The second, smaller chest, was covered in a thick layer of grime
and stuffed in a dark corner under the slanted eaves, as if forgotten. But when
Llesho had tried to explore it, he found the chest bound with straps and locked
with a complex mechanism he had never seen before and could not open.
Llesho brought his master breakfast and a
midday meal from the cookhouse, and sat in a corner when he wasn’t needed,
trying to fight the boredom that pulled at his eyelids. With an occasional
bland smile that didn’t help at all to hide the calculation in his eyes, Master
Markko watched for Llesho to slip up and reveal himself as a witch. Since he
knew nothing of magic, he couldn’t very well slip up there, which was almost a
relief after his trial in the weapons room. So he wasn’t prepared for the day
when everything changed.
The overseer was not in his office when
Llesho arrived, so he called out, “Master Markko, sir?” as humbly as he could.
“In here, boy.”
Llesho followed the answering summons to
the back room, where he found Master Markko setting tightly lidded jars on a
shelf over the worktable, marking each one off on a list in front of him.
Llesho recognized some of the herbs hanging in bunches from the beamed ceiling,
but others were foreign to him. He remembered Kwan-ti’s warning about touching the
unknown plants in her healer’s pouch—the cure for one person might prove to be
a poison to another—so he kept his hands clasped behind his back.
“You have finally honored us with your
presence,” Markko said, his voice dripping sarcasm.
They spent the day mixing compounds that
Llesho did not recognize. While Master Markko had his midday meal, Llesho
cleaned the noxious herbs and powders from the worktable with a basin of pure
water and a soft cloth. After weapons practice, Llesho took instruction from
Master Markko in the storing of the various potions they had prepared that day,
and then learned how to bury the cloths they had used in a patch of dead weeds
behind the privy. Poisons, then, and likely no use for healing any sickness but
that of life itself. When he had carefully cleaned his hands, Llesho returned
to the workroom and presented himself to the overseer, his head bent in due
humility.
“I am finished, Master, if there is nothing
more?” He sincerely hoped the overseer would find no late tasks for him to do
before he left for his dinner and a well earned bed. On this day, however,
Master Markko measured Llesho from top to toe with his cold, cold eyes.
“Your predecessor in the post was born of
slaves, and knows nothing but Pearl Island,” Markko said. “And, of course, he
does not consort with witches. He valued the small freedoms his work with me
afforded, and his gratitude made us friends as well as slave and master.”
The overseer gestured at the shelves
crowded with jars full of potions and herbs. “I had hoped that if I revealed to
you our mutual interest, we would likewise become friends. But that hasn’t
happened, has it?”
Llesho said nothing, but he had begun to
tremble, fine tremors that shook him from his heart to his fingertips. He knew
the identity of Lord Chin-shi’s witch now: Master Markko could kill him for
that knowledge at any time.
“I am
sorry, but if you are going to be of any use to my real work, I will have to be
more cautious with you.” As he said this, Markko set an iron collar around
Llesho’s neck, and clipped a chain to a link at the throat. Then he took the
other end of the chain and snapped it into a ring newly set into the floor in
the corner of his workroom.
“I have informed Master Jaks that I will need
more of your time than I found necessary when Bixei worked for me. I did not
accuse you of malingering at your tasks, of course. But it must be understood
that one so new to my needs would not work as quickly or as efficiently as
another more experienced in the ways of this compound. You will, therefore,
make your bed here.”
Llesho felt the protest well up in his
throat, but he clamped his jaw and refused to let the words escape. He was,
after all, in the power of a master poisoner and a witch. And so he waited to
see what Master Markko had in store for him.
“Good.” The overseer noted the wary
question in his eyes and smiled. “You are learning already.
“I have sent word to the washerman that you
have withdrawn from unarmed combat training to spend more time learning your
duties.” He sneered when he mentioned Master Den. “You may, of course, continue
weapons training for the arena, provided you keep silent about all that passes
in this house. If you say a single word that does not relate to the weapon in
your hand, however, you will remain here, tethered like a dog the day and night
together, until you have given me what I want from you.”
Llesho didn’t have what Markko wanted—the
whereabouts of Kwan-ti and the secrets of her witchcraft— but he could die of
Markko’s efforts to extract them, and he had truths of his own he could not
share with this man. So he obediently dropped his gaze, letting none of his
terror show. The overseer gave him a cold, cold smile, and abandoned him to his
chains and the darkness that would become his whole existence.
As days passed into weeks, Llesho’s silence
deepened. When Markko grew tired of his stubborn refusal to speak, he would
beat Llesho with the chains that bound him to the workroom. The beatings grew
less insistent as he learned to perform each task to the overseer’s
satisfaction, however, and Llesho began to hope that Markko was tiring of him.
Then he woke drenched in sweat from a terrifying dream he could not remember,
his muscles in knots and his guts heaving.
“How does that feel?” Markko crouched down
beside him, tapping with a stylus a muscle in his thigh that lifted in a rigid
band at the touch. Llesho could not answer, could not breathe, could not
catalog the ways and places that he hurt.
“Good.” Markko tapped the stylus on Llesho’s
belly, triggering a spasm that twisted the body beneath it in wrenching knots
of agony. “We’ll just see how this goes.”
He sent word to the practice yard that
Llesho had fallen too ill for prayer forms or weapons practice. When the worst
of the pain had subsided, he ordered delicate food from the cookhouse which he
fed to Llesho by hand, all the while asking, “Was it undetect-able, boy? Did
you taste the bitterness in the brew?”
His voice a rusty whisper, Llesho broke his
silence to confirm what he already suspected: “What did you do to me?”
Master Markko shrugged a mock apology. “You
were never in danger. I gave you a small dose, so that I might judge the
efficacy of the intended measure. On the whole, I think our client will be well
pleased with our work.”
No less than he had imagined, the overseer
worked a side business as a poisoner. It made no sense to Llesho that a man who
feared a simple healer, as Lord Chin-shi seemed to do, would keep a man of
Master Markko’s trade in his service. He suspected that as a poisoner’s test
subject, he would not live long enough to puzzle out an answer to the question.
Markko let him recover before trying out
any new compounds on him, but Llesho grew wary of eating any food from the
overseer’s hand. He weakened, but feared murder if he told anyone the dark
secrets of the overseer’s back room. Weapons practice might have tested his
resolve, but the apprentices now worked with the general population. Llesho often
found himself matched with men he did not know, who were not inclined to talk
if he had wanted to.
Most of his day he spent bound to the
workroom, tending to his master while he mixed the potions for which strangers
called at the back window after the suns had fallen. When the day’s work was
done, Llesho lay in silence, waiting to discover if another poison from
Markko’s bench had found its way into his food. Exhaustion warred with fear of
the vaporous creatures of twisted evil that had come to inhabit his dreams, but
his body could not long endure the strain, and he slept despite his fervent
desire to remain on guard for his own sleepless rest.
The dream began with the memory of white
light: the sun rising through the gates of heaven, pierced the eye of the
needle atop the Temple of the Moon and shed its light on the gleaming mud walls
of the Palace of the Sun. Along the path of light walked the goddess with the
face of his mother, her smile as warm as the sunbeams she trod upon. Llesho
reached for her, and fell into a garden rich with fruits and flowers.
“What are you doing on your bum, little
brother?” Shokar strode between rows of plum trees, a rake over one shoulder,
and stopped to lend him a hand to rise.
“I thought you were dead,” Llesho told him.
The dream Shokar dropped his shaggy head so
that his chin almost rested on his broad chest. “I thought the same of you.”
“The rest of our brothers—are they here
with you?”
“Where is here?” Shokar’s voice remained,
but his thick farmer’s body faded like a mist, and behind him Adar and Balar,
Lluka and Ghrisz, and Menar, who was a poet, stood together, straining their
eyes, as if they were searching, but couldn’t see him.
“Adar!” he called out in his sleep; and,
“Menar! I’m here!” But his brothers broke into a mist and tangled milky strands
among the plum trees.
“Adar!” He woke with a start, tugging on
the chain that ran from the collar around his neck to the ring in the floor.
His brothers were gone, and Llesho was alone again with the terrors of the
night and the worse nightmare of the waking world.
Llesho’s body shook all the time now, and
waking to another day in Master Markko’s clutches, he wished that he had died
beneath the bay, following old Lleck to a new life in the great cycles of
creation. When he thought of the spirit that had come to him in the bay, the
black pearl in Llesho’s mouth throbbed like an aching tooth. Lleck and his gift
both had been real, though neither offered much in the way of comfort. Llesho might
buy his way free with that pearl, but Markko would doubtless take it from him
if he knew about it. If he reported Llesho for theft, Lord Chin-shi would have
Llesho’s hands cut off. Or the overseer might use it for proof of witchcraft;
Llesho would find himself burning on the pyre the overseer had planned for
Kwan-ti.
It seemed that, with the pearl, Lleck had
given him one more torment and Llesho wondered how much he was supposed to
endure. He did not want to imagine a greater need from which the pearl was sent
to rescue him, when the overseer was killing him hourly and by inches.
Surrounded by Markko’s poisons and the tools of his loathsome trade, he knew
only that he could not reach any one of them to end his misery.
Markko had seen to that and Lleck, in his
own way, had bound Llesho to this wretched life with the hope of an impossible
quest. He wasn’t alone in the world. He would find his brothers, if Markko
didn’t kill him first. Llesho wept until the tears had wrung out his heart, and
when he slept again, the monsters came and pulled him down with them into the
darkness.
Worning began like all the others since he
had come to Markko’s service. The overseer rattled his chain as he unlocked the
collar. “Go,” Markko said, the only word they shared before noon, and Llesho
bowed deeply as he had been taught. When the overseer left the workroom, Llesho
slipped into his shirt and pants to fetch his master’s breakfast, a few dry
rolls and a pot of green tea, which he placed on the desk where Markko was
working.
Prayer forms had been his one comfort,
leaving his mind blank and his body free among men he had come to count as
friends and under the bright sun. As he weakened, however, his technique
faltered. Llesho stumbled on the simple Flowing water form; in the weeks he had
served the overseer his forms had become increasingly clumsy, as if the burden
on his soul tripped him up at each move. Frustration brought him close to tears
again, but no one laughed now. Radimus pulled him up from where he had fallen
and brushed the sawdust off his back with reassuring pressure, but said nothing
as his eyes slid away from the iron collar around Llesho’s throat. Bixei, who
had resented his own rotation out of the overseer’s service, watched him with
confusion, and even guilt in his eyes.
Llesho turned away; almost, he would rather
remain chained in Markko’s workroom than suffer the public exhibition of his
humiliation. But Lleck was counting on him to find his brothers and win back
his country from its conquerors, so he struggled to regain his sense of
balance, and pushed through to the end, grateful when Master Den let his arms
drift to his side in completion of the final form.
“Llesho—” Master Den called as Llesho
turned toward the overseer’s cottage. Llesho stopped, but did not turn around,
and finally, with a deep sigh, Master Den released him. “Go. bov. Don’t let me
keen vou.”
“I wish I could,” Llesho thought to
himself. He risked a deep breath, thick with the smells of sawdust and sweat
and sunshine, and a tension that grew more pungent each day, like monsoon
weather crackling in the air. Bad times were coming for all of them, he
figured, and he longed for the storm when everything would be overturned. For
him at least, any change had to be better than what he had.
With a last gaze into the sky soft with
morning haze, he ducked back into the stone cottage. Markko awaited him in the
workroom, where he crushed some noxious element that released a sickening smell
of rot into the air.
“I have to go out,” he said, never stopping
his slow, patient grinding. “But I will return before weapons practice is over,
and I will want to speak to you.”
A tremor passed through Llesho’s body at
that— more questions he could not answer, more threats. Markko would beat him,
as he had in the past. But Llesho would tell him nothing.
Markko cocked an eyebrow at him. “You think
you won’t talk now, but you will.” With a brush prepared for the purpose, he
scraped the yellow powder into a shallow cup that rested on a tripod over a
brazier filled with hot coals. Then he stirred the mixture gently with a silver
wand for a moment before putting a lid on the cup. “Pour for me,” he said, and
Llesho picked up the pitcher of clear water and poured it over Markko’s hands.
The water ran into a basin that discolored in pinpricks of corrosion as the few
stray grains of powder sank to the bottom. As Markko dried his hands carefully
on a clean white cloth, Llesho noticed that the skin had mottled patches where
the powder had found it, but the overseer ignored the tainted spots. “Dispose
of these in the dead garden,” he said, tossing the cloth over Llesho’s arm.
Llesho cringed away from the cloth. The
dead garden. Only the most perilous of Markko’s elixirs went to the dead garden.
Llesho took a second cloth and carefully wiped off the mortar and pestle that
Markko had used to grind his ingredients, and set them aside to purify. He took
both cloths and the bowl into a patch of garden where even the rankest weeds
wilted in deathlike colors. A short-handled shovel set with its point in the
ground marked the most recent burial place. Llesho took the shovel in hand and
moved two paces, and then he dug a deep hole. First the cloths went in, and
then the water. Then he scrubbed out the bowl using the freshly turned earth to
absorb the corrosives that pitted the glazed surface already. When all of the
poisoned materials had disappeared into the hole, Llesho rubbed his hands
thoroughly with the dirt before shoveling it back into the hole again. When he
was finished, he stamped on the ground to level it.
His work in the dead garden meant that
Llesho was running late. He had a choice—food or weapons practice—that he’d had
to make too often since Markko had called him into his service. As usual, he
chose practice. Llesho ran as fast as he could and reached the weapons room
just as the last group of gladiators filed through to select their weapons.
Llesho knew them all. It surprised him a bit until Stipes passed him a small
loaf of bread instead of his trident. No words passed between them; they might
not know why, but his fellows had come to understand that Llesho’s safety
depended upon his terrible silence. Stipes’ anger was clear, however, and tears
that Llesho feared to shed choked him as he tried to swallow the bread.
Jaks watched him with eyes of stone, but a
decision had been made; the master looked down at the small arms table, and
Llesho followed the glance. For the first time since that day when the masters
had tested him in the presence of the mysterious woman, Llesho saw the
strangely shaped knife lying among the swords. He picked it up, feeling his
body settle around the weapon, become a part of the weapon. Jaks nodded with a
satisfaction so grim that Llesho shuddered.
Bixei looked at him with surprise. “You
should have picked the knife before,” he said, but Stipes put a hand on his
partner’s shoulder, his eyes wide with a question turning to certainty.
“You never saw the knife,” Stipes told him.
“Come on, Madon will be waiting. I’ll spar with you today.”
“Madon?” Bixei started to ask the question,
but stopped, frowning, when Stipes increased the pressure on his shoulder.
“Everybody else knows what is going on. Why not me?” he grumbled.
Llesho sighed, letting some of the tension
go with the breath. “Not everybody,” he said. “I don’t understand it either.”
Bixei seemed to accept that for the moment.
He shook his head and muttered something halfhearted about favorites that
brought a blush to his face when he looked at Llesho. Then he took up his own
weapon and followed Stipes into the practice yard.
“Sit down.” Jaks pushed a three-legged
stool toward him, and Llesho absently tucked the knife into the cloth belt that
tied his shirt. The belt split and fell at his feet along with the knife.
“Sorry.” He flopped down on the stool and
put his free hand over his eyes. “I can’t believe I did that.”
“I can.” Jaks didn’t smile. “A long time
ago, you carried a knife like that in a scabbard at your belt.”
“I did?” Llesho took a bite of his bread
and chewed without thinking about it, giving his teacher his full attention.
When he had swallowed, he asked, “So why don’t I remember it?”
“I don’t know.” Jaks kicked another stool
over and sat so that he faced Llesho, locking gazes with the youth. “It might
hurt too much to remember.”
Llesho gave him the snort that deserved. He
remembered the Harn soldiers coming for him, his bodyguard dying, the weeping
of women in the corridors as his captor carried him out of the palace. He
remembered his father, dead with a crossbow bolt in his throat. How could the
knowledge that he once carried a knife hurt more than that?
“You were very young when you were taken to
the slave markets, weren’t you?” Jaks asked him.
“Seven summers.” He’d used the Thebin measure— trading seasons rather
than the cycles of the lesser sun. Master Jaks seemed to understand anyway.
“And yet, you wore a knife—not just any
knife but the ceremonial knife of Thebin. Someone trained you well in its use,
too.”
That scared Llesho more than Markko had
managed to do. He wouldn’t ask the question that terrified him—do you know who,
what, I am?—but he thought
maybe Jaks knew the answer to that better than he did himself.
“I think someone hid the knowledge from
you, to protect you,” Jaks said. “When it is time, you will probably remember
it.”
“Do you
know what it is I’ve forgotten?” It took more courage to ask than he’d ever
summoned in his too eventful life, but he held his teacher’s gaze, implying the
question: “Am I safe with this knowledge in your hands?”
As answer, Jaks took a sword from the
weapons table and knelt on one knee before Llesho. He bowed his head, and when
he looked into Llesho’s eyes, his own burned with a fire of regret that stunned
the young prince.
“We will not fail again,” he said. He
started to reach out, then withdrew his hand, veiling with downcast lashes
something fierce and personal in his declaration.
“You were there,” Llesho whispered, but
when Jaks spoke again, he had set the question aside.
“Master Den has missed you. Let him take a
look at you, get a new belt, and come back here when he is done with you.”
Llesho blinked, trying to catch up to the
shifting conversation, but Jaks was speaking again, warning him, “Don’t tell
anyone what you know, or what you suspect. And watch yourself around Markko.”
Llesho didn’t need Jaks to tell him that.
But Jaks was gone, into the practice yard where he snapped an order for Bixei
to pick up his pike, and not to treat the weapon like a plow.
Llesho found Master Den in the laundry. The
washerman took one look at the shirt hanging from his shoulders like the
clothes on a scarecrow and sighed. “Eat your bread,” he said, and pulled a band
of cloth from a cubby. “Then wrap this around your waist.” When he had done as
he was told, Llesho followed Master Den into the private area where Den had
taught unarmed combat to the novices. A wide sword rested against the fence;
Master Den picked it up and took an attack stance.
“I’m taller than you are, and my weapon’s
got reach on you—what do you do?”
“Run?” Llesho suggested.
“Try it.”
Llesho turned to escape, but before he
could take a step, the flat of Master Den’s sword came down on his shoulder.
Den wouldn’t hurt him. Llesho knew that instinctively. But the touch of the
sword on his shoulder snapped him into the past, swords flashing, blood
spurting. Llesho wanted to curl into a screaming ball, but a memory moved
within him and he snarled, slipped under the sword and inside its guard,
brought the knife up. He came to himself with the sword on the ground and
Master Den’s hand tight around his wrist.
“A loneer reach is onlv useful when the
opponent stays outside of it.” Den gestured approvingly to where Llesho’s knife
rested just below his own sternum, pointing upward. “To counter, move inside
the reach.”
A killing stroke. When Llesho realized what
he had almost done, he dropped the knife into the sawdust and drew his arms
tight against his chest. His face crumpled, but he’d learned not to weep in the
daylight, so he waited with his eyes grown huge and glittering with shock.
“It’s all right, child.” Master Den wrapped
him in a huge hug that soaked the trembling out of him like a warm blanket.
“No damage done,” Den whispered. “We had to
find out how much you had learned before you came to us.” He pulled Llesho away
just far enough so that he could look into his student’s eyes. “Trust me. I
won’t let you hurt anyone by accident.”
That last was said with an ironic twist of
a smile, and Llesho wondered who the teacher expected him to hurt on purpose.
But he’d leave that for another day. He was simply too exhausted to think about
it now. Den read the droop of Llesho’s shoulders, and tousled his hair.
“Clean the knife,” he said, “and we’ll have
a little visit.” Den did not seem to mind that Llesho said nothing; the teacher
had enough stories, and when he finally heaved himself back onto his feet with
the announcement, “Weapons practice is over; you’d best get back before you are
missed,” Llesho returned to the overseer’s cottage with a lightened heart.
His mood sank almost immediately. Markko
stood behind a thin, narrow-eyed man in the robes of a noble who had taken the
overseer’s place behind the desk. In an elaborate chair that Llesho had never
seen before sat a woman, much older but with robes as elaborate as the man’s.
Had they come to expose him?
Llesho wondered. Markko smirked, fawning
over the seated noble, but said nothing about his suspicions.
“Lord Chin-shi and his consort have come to
ask you some questions of their own about the witch, boy.”
“No one is going to hurt you, boy.” Lord
Chin-shi sat forward with his forearms crossed in front of him on the desk and
his hands tucked into his wide sleeves. “Can you tell us your name?”
Behind their lord, Master Markko nodded his
head, signaling his permission for Llesho to speak. Briefly, Llesho wondered if
Lord Chin-shi would recognize him by his name, or if he knew it and was waiting
only to trap him in an untruth. But Markko knew already, so lying wouldn’t
help.
“Llesho, of Thebin, my lord,” he answered
and bowed low, first to the lord behind the desk, and then to his lady in her
chair.
His lordship nodded encouragingly. “That
didn’t hurt, did it?” he asked with a thin smile. “Did you know that Thebin is
infamous for its witches, Llesho?”
“It is not so in Thebin, my lord. Or was
not when I was taken away.” Llesho looked at him curiously. “Perhaps it is the
Harn witches who give Thebin its reputation?”
Lady Chin-shi frowned at him. “Don’t be
impertinent, boy. You can still be hanged for treason.”
“I am sorry, my lady.” Llesho bowed deeply
again, “But I don’t see how I can be of any help. I know nothing of witches or
witchcraft.” And he would have sooner believed that Master Markko was a witch
than Kwan-ti.
Markko himself made a bow, and spread his
hands as if to demonstrate a point. “I beg your indulgence, my lady, but I did
mention that the boy was soft in the head. He is small, but physically quick,
and Theb-ins are known for their endurance, which will make him an asset in the
arena. But Llesho had a mishap in the pearl beds, and it addled his brain. He
can answer simple, direct questions, but he has little subtlety of wit.”
“If you can do better with the boy, please
do so.” Lady Chin-shi waved a hand impatiently. “I plan to watch unarmed combat
practice this afternoon, and wish this matter disposed of.”
“I presume that means I will be spending
the evening alone?” Lord Chin-shi asked her, and Llesho ducked his head, trying
to pretend he wasn’t there. But Markko walked over to him and lifted his chin.
“The boy is quite innocent,” he commented over his shoulder. “It comes of a
simple mind. Perhaps his lordship would like to question him at his
convenience—alone?”
“A good idea.” Lord Chin-shi rose from his
chair, and beckoned with long fingers. “Come with me. We will leave my good
wife to her shopping.”
Chapter Mine
OUTSIDE the palisade a sumptuous sedan
chair and its six bearers waited for Lord Chin-shi. The bearers stood in rigid
silence until their lord had entered the chair and arranged its brocaded
curtains to keep out the dust. Then, in one smooth motion, they lifted him to
their shoulders and carried him up the hill. Llesho followed: through the last
of the dense wild vegetation on the hillside, across the wide lawn smooth as a
knotted silk carpet, to the gracious house of three levels that rose above the
island on the hilltop. The procession stopped at an entrance overhung by
elaborately curled eaves and flanked by two guards of stony countenance and
ready weapon. A house servant ran forward to open the curtains of the sedan
chair, and Lord Chin-shi alighted.
Llesho followed his master into a hall
decorated in mother-of-pearl and pale-veined jadeite, with characters painted
on the elaborately carved ceiling. The palace at Kungol had looked very
different, but the sense of quiet power was much the same. So were the guards.
He could have warned Lord Chin-shi how fragile such peace could be, that his
guards would serve little purpose if he found his palace overrun by the Ham.
His experiences since the slave market had shown him that no one listened to a
child and a slave, however, and that he was safe as long as they didn’t notice
him.
A servant dressed as elegantly as a duke
came forward and bowed low. “My lord,” he murmured softly.
“I will show our guest the way myself,”
Lord Chin-shi said, “We will be in my apartments—send someone with a tray, and
then make certain I’m not disturbed.” He dismissed the servant, who bowed low
over a smirk that made Llesho squirm.
Up a broad flight of stairs, down a
corridor, and up again, this time they climbed a more modest staircase, each
level flanked by its set of matching guards. Lord Chin-shi finally stopped at a
room with a bed that looked big enough to sleep the entire barracks in the
gladiators’ compound. Llesho dug in his heels. He knew how little choice a
slave had in matters of his personal disposal, but if he made himself
inconvenient—
Lord Chin-shi did not stop at the bed, but
went through the room to a door in a corner. “Come along,” he said, and slid
the inner door open before motioning Llesho forward with a distracted wave of
his hand. Llesho obeyed, and found himself in a workroom like Markko’s but
brighter, and with a fresher scent that reminded him of Kwan-ti. He smiled
without realizing that he had done it.
“Sit.” Lord Chin-shi pointed to a chair in
the corner, by an open window with wildflowers drying in the breeze. Llesho
studied the floor, but found no iron rings for chaining slaves, so he sat, and
found himself relaxing into the pleasure of the sun on his face, and the soft
wind carrying the fragrance of the drying flowers on the air. Lord Chin-shi
himself pulled up a three-legged stool and sat, his elbows propped on his knees
and his chin resting on the arch made by his clasped hands. He studied Llesho
with a thoughtful, but not threatening, frown. It reminded him of Master Jaks,
and their conversation in the weapons room. Llesho suspected that it would be
too easy to forget that he was a slave and in danger if his identity were known
to this man. He tried blinking stupidly, but Lord Chin-shi just laughed softly.
“Who are you?” he muttered to himself, not
waiting for an answer he would not receive. “A slave from the pearl beds who
sits as comfortably in a nobleman’s laboratory as he does on a gladiators’
bench. A boy smart enough to know that playing the idiot is better protection
than the wisdom of the sages.”
“I don’t play at the idiot.” He felt the
need to defend himself on that one, even if it did mean he was talking. “People
who ask stupid questions should not blame others if the answers they receive
are stupid as well.”
“Fair enough.” Lord Chin-shi stood up and
wandered over to a clean table on which a beaker full of a red liquid stood. “I
shall try not to ask any stupid questions.”
Llesho blushed with embarrassment, and no
little fear. He hadn’t meant to insult Lord Chin-shi, but knew his lordship
might easily have taken it that way. The lord laughed, softly again, as if at a
private joke, however. It seemed strange that the lord of the island should
need to dissemble in front of his own slave, which Markko was as surely as
Llesho or Master Den. Before he could set to serious work on the question,
however, Lord Chin-shi had returned, carrying the beaker, and all humor was
gone.
“Do you know what this is?” He handed
Llesho the beaker with deadly seriousness.
“Blood?” Llesho waved a hand over the
beaker to waft a safe measure of the fumes under his nose. “Not blood,” he
corrected himself. “It smells like seaweed.”
“Not stupid,” Lord Chin-shi commented. “It
is called the Blood Tide in the Chronicles.”
He took the beaker into his own hands then, and stared at it with the grim
fascination that Llesho reserved for the soldiers of his enemies. “It invades
the living sea like a goiter and smothers everything that lives there. Already,
the pearl beds are dying. Strange creatures of the deep wash onto the bloody
shore and gasp their dying breath out on the land.”
Lord Chin-shi’s voice dropped, thick with
sorrow. Llesho remembered the water dragon that had saved his life, and imagined
her lying dead upon the beach. He bowed his head, sharing a new grief with his
master. So the lord’s next words slipped under his guard like a knife:
“Master Markko swears that the Blood Tide
is the curse of the witch, Kwan-ti. He says we must find her, and burn her, to
restore the balance of heaven and earth. Only then will the sea flourish
again.”
“If you are looking for curses,” Llesho
snapped, “I suggest you seek closer to home and leave your healers to their
work.”
“Master Markko also says that you
disappeared from the compound on the day the witch vanished, and that you know
where she has gone.”
Lord Chin-shi’s fingers had gone white
where they wrapped around the beaker of red death. Llesho winced, and the lord
frowned in concentration, carefully easing his grip on the beaker and setting
it on the floor between them. “Tell me where she has gone, boy.”
Llesho grew dizzy with sudden fear. He had
forgotten his position; lured by his master’s calm, and a sense of well-being
that rested lightly in the sunny room, he had forgotten how dangerous the man
in front of him was. Lord Chin-shi could have him put to death with a word, and
no one would deny his right to do so. But the pain for the dying sea in the
man’s eyes was real. Llesho reached for that fact: Lord Chin-shi loved the sea,
and it was dying, and Lord Markko had told him that Llesho could make it stop.
The only problem was, he couldn’t.
“I don’t know where she is,” he said. “I
did try to warn her, that’s true, but she was gone before I left the compound.
No one saw her escape, or would tell me anything about it.” He sat up
straighter in his chair as he had seen his father do countless times in the
palace at Kungol, though he scarcely remembered that now, and willed his lord to
listen and believe him. “Kwan-ti is no more a witch than you are, and she would
no more hurt the sea.”
Lord Chin-shi gave a guilty start at that
and Llesho followed his glance to the beaker on the floor. He did not comment
on the similarities he saw, but added, “Kwan-ti is a healer. And you need a
living healer a lot more than you need a dead witch.”
“It seems, however, that I shall have
neither.” Lord Chin-shi picked up the beaker and rose from his footstool. He
led Llesho to the bedroom, where a tray waited on a carved and lacquered table.
“You must be hungry—take what you want. For your personal safety, you will
spend the night in these apartments and return to the compound in the morning.
Rest— no one will disturb you. Do you read?” Llesho nodded, though he realized
afterward that he had given too much away with that admission. Lord Chin-shi
did not seem to notice Llesho’s sudden unease, but pointed to a third door in
the bedroom. “There is a library through that door if you are bored.” With that
the lord took a small plate of fruit from the tray and returned to his
workroom. Llesho found himself alone with the food-laden table and the big, big
bed.
He succumbed first to the lure of the food:
thin pancakes filled with scallions and herbs, cold dumplings and hot ones,
rice and millet and pig flesh in half a dozen different sauces, fruits that
grew wild on the island, and fruits carried down the long trade roads from far
inland. Tea, and a liquor that burned and made him cough and his nose run.
With
his stomach full, he wandered around the bedroom for a while, examining the
country scenes lacquered into the doors of the wardrobes and running fingers
lightly over the carved figures of jade and crystal and ivory scattered on
fragile tables about the room. He avoided the big bed in his explorations,
turning to the library when he had exhausted all the other niches and alcoves
in the master’s chamber.
He had resisted the pull of the library,
because the memory of books always brought with it the image of his mother, and
he did not want Lord Chin-shi to find him weeping over some philosophical text.
But it was still early in the night, and only the one door remained. He slid it
open along its groaning track, and stepped inside while an invisible hand
seemed to wrap cold fingers around his throat. A desk filled the center of the
room, with a low bench behind it and a soft, thick carpet in front. Beneath the
room’s single window, shaded with an oiled parchment screen, a low, cushioned
divan sat next to a table with an oil lamp on it. Shelves covered the walls
from floor to ceiling of a narrow gallery that wrapped the room and continued
the shelves right up to the roof, where a square of tiles had been removed for
a wide glass pane. A stout wooden pole propped open a trapdoor that would cover
the sky window to protect the contents of the library during storms.
The shelves on the floor of the library
were divided into wedges and stuffed with scrolls of parchment and rolled
bamboo and heavy silk. A room in his mother’s library had likewise been fitted
for rolled documents. Thebin stood at the top of the world, where heaven and
hell touched on the heights of the mountains that held the capital city of
Kungol. Through its mountain passes all the trade of the living world traveled,
most especially that of learning. His mother had loved knowledge. To the king’s
mock astonishment, she had asked only gifts of writing from the many travelers
who stopped in the capital city to rest on their journeys to foreign lands.
Like his mother, Llesho had prized the books and scrolls and rolls that came to
them from distant lands. He’d loved to touch them, despite the many attendants
who shooed him away while they polished and dusted.
Someday, his mother had promised, he would
learn to read them all, as Adar and Menar had done. A healer and a poet, those
brothers had teased that he must be the mathematician, since their mother was
the priest, to make the set of scholars complete. Time had seemed limitless
then, of course, and he had looked forward to many years of study with his
mother and his brothers. Then the Ham came.
Llesho took down a rolled bamboo and spread
it out on the desk. Lord Chin-shi’s library, he decided, had too much dust, too
much light. Perhaps he would warn his master of the damage the elements could
do to fragile materials: already, the images were fading. In the upper
right-hand corner, in pale shades of blue and green, the artist had depicted a
mountain waterfall, with a deity sitting cross-legged at its foot. A small
tripod stood in. front of the deity. In one hand, he held a short wand over the
tripod and in the other hand he held a vial of pills. Ancient characters filled
the scroll beneath the image, as beautifully painted as the work of art.
Unconsciously he curled his fingers away from the surface, however. He could
not read the text, but he recognized the symbols of an alchemist in the painted
decoration, and took it for a warning. No one was what they seemed, Lord
Chin-shi least of all. With a wistful sigh he rolled the bamboo up again and
replaced it in its place on the shelf. Had the Lord of Pearl Island read every
one, he wondered, or merely hoarded them like a drason on a heao of bones?
Up an open wooden stair he found the
gallery ranged with codices: books with wooden covers or leather ones, with
long sheets of paper folded between them like a fan. Llesho took one down, then
another, but the letters ran together, foreign and impenetrable. Another,
another. A low shelf in the far corner of the gallery held some dusty books and
Llesho went to them with a noise of disgust in his throat for their shabby
treatment. When he reached to take one in his hands, his fingers tingled, and
when he lifted it from the shelf, he saw the dust clung only to the parts that
one could see from the ground. In all other respects, it appeared that someone
had treated the “codex with great care, oiling the leather-covered boards and
cleaning its pages.
Its pages. Opening the codex, Llesho wept.
The writing was Thebin. At first, he could not read it at all, for he had
forgotten what he had learned before the raid, and the letters looked different
on paper than they did scratched into wet sand on a beach. But gradually, the
shapes came into focus on a prayer his mother had taught him when he was a
baby, and had recited over him every night before he left her side for bed,
until the day his world had ended.
Mother
Goddess watch this child Protect his eyes from cruelty His fingers from
mischief His heart from sorrow.
Let
him grow in courage Search with wisdom Find his destiny.
The book had many prayers, which he read
with his fingers as well as his eyes, touching each page with reverence and
love. A few he knew, most he did not, for they concerned matters of an adult
nature unsuited for the child who had lived that life of temple and palace.
Prayers for a lover, a dying parent, to bring children or the thaw. As he read
each one, he heard his mother’s voice, softly just for his ears, or ringing to
fill the Temple of the Moon, where the goddess dwelt. And he remembered her in
her robes and glory, looking out across the city square to the Palace of the
Sun where her husband waited for her to come to him in darkness.
It hurt too much to remember, but he could
not bring himself to return the book to its shelf. Curled over it, his fingers
caressing the prayers he found there, he fell asleep. Sometime in the night, he
felt hands lift him and arms carry him down the wooden stairs. When he was
settled on the thick mattress, those hands covered him in blankets of silk, and
went away again. The comfort seemed to leech the last bit of strength from his
bones, and he let himself sink back into nothingness. For the first time since
Markko had dragged him out of the barracks to spend his nights on the workroom
floor, Llesho slept long and deeply, without nightmares.
When he awoke, the sun was shining in his
face and he felt more at peace than he had since the Harn raid. Then he
realized that he was no longer alone. Lord Chin-shi slept like the dead on the
far side of the bed. More to the point, however, the lord’s consort stood with
her face inches from his own. Startled, Llesho jumped to a crouch in the middle
of the bed, cursing himself silently for letting his guard down. From that
position he could see that Madon, his face completely blank of expression,
stood in the center of the room, while Radimus lingered in the hall with a
smirk on his face and a small but weighty money pouch swinging from his
outstretched fingers.
The disturbance must have awakened Lord
Chin-shi, who rolled over, muzzy-lidded and bumped into Llesho, who leaped
again, this time for the foot of the bed and escape.
“Don’t let him send you back without your
tip, Llesho.” Radimus gestured with the swinging purse, and Lady Chin-shi
followed this advice with a cackling laugh that set Llesho’s teeth on edge. He
looked to Madon for an explanation, but the gladiator turned his head and
pretended not to see.
“Fighting and dying you do for nothing,
because they own you,” Radimus explained. “Anything else, they pay for. It’s
tradition.”
A system that paid a slave for eating and
sleeping, but not for the hard work he did every day seemed strange to Llesho,
but Lord Chin-shi reached over and picked something up from the floor next to
the bed.
“Don’t ask questions,” he said. “Just take
it and go.” And he thrust four silver coins into Llesho’s palm.
Llesho scrambled from the bed, grateful for
the permission to leave more than he appreciated the coins. Even as he was
heading for the outer hall, however, he yearned to turn and enter the workroom
behind the far door instead. Madon was watching him carefully, but said only,
“You haven’t had breakfast.”
Before Llesho could speak, Lord Chin-shi’s
voice interrupted from the bed. “Take whatever you want.”
Madon bowed. “Thank you, my lord,” he said,
and filled his hands with pieces of fruit and bread, which he passed to Llesho
as they walked. When they were halfway down the hillside, and well away from
anyone who might overhear, Madon asked him, “Are you all right?”
Llesho thought for several minutes before
he answered. Finally, he had to admit, “I don’t know. I wish Kwan-ti was here.”
“The witch?” Radimus asked him, and Llesho
shook his head. “Not a witch—” and he was getting
THE PR1F1CE OF SHADOW
tired of saying it—“but she may be the only
one who can help us.”
“Don’t say that around Master Markko,
unless you want to take the witch’s place at the stake,” Madon warned, and gave
him a sharp smack on the back of his head for emphasis.
“I know,” Llesho answered. But he still
wished for the healer. He was not so blinded by Lord Chin-shi’s kind manner
that he put his owner’s interests in the dying pearl beds ahead of his own
survival, but he knew that the healer would not allow the sea to die if she
knew about it. He kept his mouth shut around the news of the Blood Tide,
however, adding it to the well of secrets he carried about with him.
In the afternoon, as Llesho joined the
gladiators in armed contest, training with the trident, word came down from
Lady Chin-shi. The school would travel to Farshore on the mainland for the next
competition. And at Farshore, the school must be broken up, its competitors and
students sold to pay his lordship’s debts. The pearl beds, men whispered to one
another, had given up no pearls since the witch, Kwan-ti, had set her curse
upon them before disappearing into the wind.
Llesho was going to the mainland. He would
win his freedom there, and find his brothers, and free Thebin, as Minister
Lleck had bid him. He did not know how he would do all this, nor how he would
reach Thebin, at the end of the thousand-li road, but here, today, he had
silver in his pocket, and he took his first step.
PART TWO
FARSHORE
Chapter Ten
L«LESHO watched the shoreline grow closer
as Lord Chin-shi’s yacht cut through the Blood Tide. When he began his
training, he had thought only of what would come after, reaching the mainland
and searching for his brothers as a lowly freelance. He hadn’t known how
terrified and proud he would be to don his own first set of leathers: tunic and
leg wraps and cuffs to protect his wrists. This was his first step on the road
to freedom and to the salvation of his people and his country. And all he had
to do was kill other men, slaves like himself, for the pleasure of their
masters. Someday soon it would come to that, he knew; he would kill or die for
the money in his purse. As a novice with but the rudiments of his training,
however, Llesho would not fight in this, his first competition, but would
participate in a demonstration of armed combat forms with the trident. But he
knew he was saying good-bye to the only life he had known since his seventh
summer, when the Harn had sold him in the marketplace. Until he had come under
Overseer Markko’s scrutiny, he’d had a hard life, but not a bad one. He’d had
friends, and work, and the security of a guiding hand, first in Minister Lleck
and Kwan-ti the healer, and later in Master Den, and even Master Jaks.
Now all of that was changing. Lleck was
dead, Kwan-ti vanished. The pearl fishers had gone to market weeks before,
unable to earn their keep in the dying oyster beds. He could smell the rot
rising from the dead fish and the bodies of larger creatures floating on the
surface of the sea, and he prayed the Flowing Water form in memory of the water
dragon that had saved his life so long ago it seemed, though it had been less
than a full turn of the seasons.
Alone on the polished aft deck, he moved
into the prayer forms that evoked the earth to calm him. Today, Lord Chin-shi
would offer his gladiators for sale in the arena. They would compete, and Lord
Chin-shi would take home purses or lose them on the contests, but he would
return to Pearl Island without his gladiators. Some of the men he thought of as
friends would die today, and others would find themselves traded far away.
Llesho wondered who would waste their money on an untrained boy with no
prospects of height or weight ahead of him. He remembered the lady in servant’s
clothing, who had watched while he revealed too much of himself with the short
spear and the knife, and shivered. Whatever her interest in him, he hoped it
did not include his performance in the arena.
“You will do fine, you know.” Master Jaks
wandered up from belowdecks and braced himself with both hands on the
guardrail. Looking out toward the land, so that Llesho didn’t have to meet his
eyes, he added. “Lord Chin-shi will make sure of that.”
“I don’t understand him,” Llesho
acknowledged. “He did not bed with me, although he wanted the others to think
it.”
He stole a glance at Master Jaks, who did
not look surprised at this revelation.
“He was kind to me.” Which had confused
him, after weeks as the overseer’s prisoner.
Master Jaks nodded sagely, but did not turn
his head to look at Llesho. “As kind as a man can be who would burn a witch,
and who sets his slaves to fight and die in the arena for his pleasure.”
“I thought that was Lady Chin-shi’s doing,”
Llesho admitted. The Lord of Pearl Island had fed him gentle foods, and put him
to bed when he had fallen asleep on the floor among the books. His workroom had
none of the smell of death that soaked into the very walls of the overseer’s
cottage. He could not reconcile in his head the man who had shown him such
mercy with the buyer and seller of children in the marketplace.
But Jaks shook his head. “Lady Chin-shi
certainly takes an interest in the gladiators,” he said, “but she is less
interested in the arena of combat. Lord Chin-shi would not, perhaps, wish to
see his people come to harm, but like many good men he has a weakness for the
display of martial skill, and too much liking for a wager.”
“Is he really afraid of witches?” Llesho
wondered what had drawn the lord’s attention to him, he who had little skill as
a warrior and none at all for magic.
Jaks’s answer didn’t help. “I think his
lordship knows that there are wicked practitioners of the dark arts in the
world, and would protect his home and lands from them. But if you mean, did he
believe Kwan-ti to be a witch, I think not.”
“Then why did he summon me?” Llesho knew
why Lady Chin-shi had wanted Madon and Radimus delivered to her quarters, and
he figured most of the servants in the lord’s house thought his lordship had
the same kind of interest in him. Except he hadn’t—he’d asked some questions,
and then left Llesho to his own devices while he worked.
Master Jaks turned away from the sea to
study Llesho’s puzzled features. “I don’t know,” he said. “Perhaps he has
learned that you are more than you appear. But if that is so, I don’t know why
he didn’t sell you to your enemies, or kill you for the threat you pose.”
Llesho said nothing. He knew what lay in
wait for him if the enemies of Thebin knew he was alive and planning to take
back his homeland. If Lord Chin-shi meant him harm, or even wished to squeeze
the greatest profit out of him, there were simpler ways than putting him in the
arena. Jaks might be able to tell him, but in all the summers since the Ham had
invaded Thebin, he had never spoken aloud his identity. Whatever his masters
knew or guessed of his origins, he could not relax the habits of caution to
confide in them. So he looked out across the water, where his future drew
nearer with each surge of tide and wind. A hundred questions bubbled up behind
his tongue: How did you come here? What do you know about me, about Thebin?
What am I to you, and to the lady who watched too closely in the weapons room?
And who is she, and what is she to me? But he could not ask. With no choice
that he could see, he kept his silence and waited for a moment when the
questions might be taken out and examined in safety.
“The city is called Farshore,” Jaks told
him, accepting that their personal conversation had ended. “Shan, the capital
province of the Shan Empire, is almost as far inland as Thebin. Generations
ago, when the first emperor reached out across the land, his grasp ended here,
at the place they called Farshore. It was thought then that the world ended at
the sea, which must go on forever, since no eyes could see a farther shore. The
sight so terrified the emperor’s armies that the generals had to stand behind
them with spears and swords, and cut down their own men who tried to flee.
Later, of course, the empire learned to build boats that could dare the ocean
crossings. But the city still carries the legacy of those old times in its
name.
“How far is it to Thebin from Farshore?”
Llesho asked him, and Jaks gave him a warning glower.
“Too far. Don’t even think of escaping.”
Llesho didn’t tell him that he thought of
nothing else, and had since the ghost of Minister Lleck had appeared to him in
the pearl beds. Everything since that day seemed to conspire to move Llesho
farther along the path to Lleck’s goal. He had no doubt that he would go home,
and felt the presence of the gods at his back, like the wind in the ship’s
sails, with each step toward his objective. But he still wondered how long the
journey would be.
“It’s like a dream,” he noted, looking out
toward the many-tiered city. The sharply steeped roofs and elaborately curled
eaves grew more solid as they approached.
“Shan is bigger,” Jaks said, and Llesho
wondered if he realized that he was revealing himself in his words. “The palace
there is one of the great wonders of the world. But Farshore has the courage of
its contradictions. The tallest buildings you can see are its temples— see the
roofs, rising like umbrellas over the city to protect it from the might of the
sea, while to the west, the city huddles beneath the walls that protect it from
the invasions that invaders always fear. In all the years of the empire,
Farshore has never relaxed its vigilant watch on the West.”
Thebin lay to the south while Shan, the
jewel at the heart of the empire, lay to the north. Both were west of the
easternmost city of the imperial expansion, and between them lay the Harn.
Llesho wondered if the Farshore walls were meant to beat back an invasion from
the Harn, or were a reminder to the conquerors who had come out of the north.
Who did Farshore fear most?
The yacht nudged its way into its berth at
the bustling docks, and Llesho found himself suddenly surrounded by the
gladiators come above decks to watch the boat reach shore. Jaks was nowhere to
be seen, but Master Den moved among the gladiators, dressed, for a change, in
loose breeches that came to his calves and an equally loose white shirt crossed
over his ample stomach and held in place by a wide cloth belt woven in the
colors of Lord Chin-shi’s house. Master Mar-kko, in the long robes of his rank,
commanded the forward deck to sort out his gladiators and begin the procession
to the arena, setting the cymbal players and the drummers at the front, and
ranking the fighters from foremost to least, where Llesho found himself paired
with Bixei.
“Good luck,” Llesho said as they stepped
onto dry land. Bixei nodded his acknowledgment, but said nothing.
He, too, was wearing his first set of leathers,
but today Bixei would participate in his first true fight in the arena, an
equal match, and specified to first blood rather than to the death. Both boys
knew that accidents happened in the heat of battle, and sometimes not accidents
but old scores found themselves settled on the bodies of the fighters. Llesho
did not speak anymore, busy trying to maintain the stern features and fierce
demeanor that the marching gladiators affected to draw the poorer audience to
the upper decks. As they paraded, they left the warehouses and docks behind
them, and wound their way through narrow streets with ramshackle houses
pressing over them, lined with cheering and jeering mainlanders. Finally, they
came to a wide thoroughfare that crossed the city like an arrow, smooth and
straight, and lined with trees laden with fragrant blossoms. Bixei jabbed him
in the ribs when his eyes grew too wide, but Llesho could not tear his gaze
from the riches spread out before them on the thoroughfare. On each side, set
back as if the road were not worthy to touch the hem of the rich garments on
either side, tall iron gates barred high walls. Inside the private barricades,
the wealthy of Farshore waited out the heat of the day and defended themselves
from their own poor at night.
At the city limits farthest from the sea,
the thoroughfare ended at the arena, an open area of sand and sawdust, with
tiers of benches rising on both sides, and boxes for the owners and wealthy
patrons ranked at each end. The Governor’s box, and the Mayor’s box, at the
center of the long north axis were covered with bunting of red and yellow and
the whole was ranked around with banners on poles like soldiers standing at
attention. Jaks led the procession of Lord Chin-shi’s house to the eastern rank
of benches, where a wooden door both tall and wide lay open to admit them.
Under the seats, Llesho discovered, were benches for the fighters, and barrels
of water, and heaps of bandages. Against the wall next to the open door rested
a stack of leather slings stretched on long poles, to carry the wounded and the
dead of their house off the field. Llesho’s stomach clenched at these reminders
that the arena was a game only to the spectators: to the men who fought, it
meant life or death.
Once they had stowed their small bits of
personal gear under the benches, Master Den led them out onto the field where
the contests would be held later in the afternoon. Lifting his arms in an
offering to heaven, he began the prayer forms, and the gladiators fell into
their ranks and followed through the cycle of prayers to water and air and
earth and fire, to sun and moon and rain and falling snow, to the growing
millet and the rice floating in paddies of water, to the lotus rising out of
the muck, and the snail on its belly and the butterfly, sacred among gladiators
who likewise grew in secret to burst forth in glory for one day, and die.
When they were done, and Master Den had
dismissed them with a low bow, Master Jaks broke them up into pairs and teams
to practice weapons forms. Llesho went through the exercises with his trident,
leaping and stabbing, twirling somersaults over the axis of the staff of his
weapon. After the workout, Master Jaks gathered the gladiators together for the
blessing of the warriors, and then he led them under the stands again, where a
trestle table had been set up and laden with the most blessed foods to sustain
a man in combat. Llesho had no appetite. His terror at all that was strange and
new around him clenched his stomach tight, but he filled his plate anyway, like
the others, so that no one would know that he was afraid.
Bixei sat alone, looking out onto the
playing field with grim determination setting his jaw. Llesho would have shared
his own plate with his sometime enemy, but Stipes already carried an extra for
his partner. So he followed, and took a seat on Bixei’s left, leaving the right
side for Stipes while putting himself at a distance from the object of Bixei’s
jealousy.
“You’ll be fine, Bixei. The cooks say that
we will compete against the house of Lord Yueh today.” Stipes ate for a moment.
“Lord Yueh lost many of his best men to disease last season. He wishes to make
a number of purchases from Lord Chin-shi, and has wagered each match to the
first blood only, as he does not want the merchandise too badly damaged.” He
noted Bixei’s glum face and added, “Of course, as a novice, the rules of your
own competition already demanded blood only. But it means I don’t have to win
my own bout to keep my head.”
Bixei nibbled on his bread, but finally
threw it down in disgust. “Lord Yueh is not the only buyer in attendance, and
he needs experienced fighters to rebuild his ranks, not a novice fresh from his
first fight.” He sighed deeply. “I knew, even before Lord Chin-shi lost his
fortune, that one or the other of us might be sold or that in some future bout
one of us might have to watch the other die. But Master Jaks sets all of his
lordship’s bouts, and he never sets old partners against each other in the
arena. Lord Yueh is known to do so to increase his sport.”
“I won’t ever kill you in the arena, boy.”
Stipes cupped a hand around the back of Bixei’s neck and gave it a
companionable shake. “And you’ll never be good enough to take me, so we are
safe as can be.”
Bixei didn’t snap at the bait offered in
that taunt, but abandoned his plate to stand by the open door and watch the
audience filing in. Llesho watched him go, so intent on the tension screaming
from every muscle that he forgot Stipes until he dropped a hand on Llesho’s
shoulder. “It will be all right,” he said, but Llesho could tell from the
pensive frown that the gladiator didn’t believe his own words. Overhead, the
sound of eager feet and the settling of benches marked the presence of the
growing crowd.
“Lord Yueh wants to buy Master Jaks,”
Stipes said. “He must believe that Lord Chin-shi’s trainers are better than his
own. We must prove to him that they are.”
With that last word of encouragement, he
dropped his half empty plate on the trestle table and went to join Bixei at the
open door. They argued for a moment, and then wandered away together into the
shadows. Llesho watched them go, then he put his own plate back and strolled
outside to watch the crowd pour in. Soon, the riser in front of each bench was
filled with stamping feet as the crowd clapped and shouted for the games to
begin.
Suddenly, a hush fell, and a dozen
trumpeters at the entrance to the arena heralded the coming of the governor.
Master Markko called to Llesho to take his place in the grand march around the
arena, the crowd’s last chance to view the competitors before betting closed.
He responded in a daze. Thebin did not have such games, and Llesho had not, in
his entire life, seen so many people gathered together in one place for
anything. Soon he would be a part of it. He took his place at the end of a
line. At a tone that Master Markko had been waiting to hear, the gladiators of
Lord Chin-shi’s house strode out into the sunlight and the sawdust.
A shout went up from the crowd, and
colorful banners waved at them. At Master Markko’s command, the gladiators all
raised their right hands over their heads and shook their fists in the air as
they circled the arena. The competing houses of Farshore’s lords did likewise,
some marching in the same direction and some parading counter to them. The two
lines met at the center of the arena, and spread out to face each other. A
fanfare sounded again, and the gladiators dropped to the ground and kowtowed
deeply, with their forelocks in the dust, forming a living promenade of backs
offered to the master’s lash. As he passed, the governor flicked the ceremonial
willow switch above the fighters with words like “courageous,” and “valiant,”
and “dauntless” to exhort them in their battles. In this manner the governor made
his way to the official box, with his consort following.
By tradition, the youngest gladiator to be
blooded on that day would receive the favor of the governor’s consort.
Accordingly, the lady lifted Bixei to his feet; with a smile, she set her ribbon
upon his right-hand sword and a kiss upon his lips. “Win for me, today,” she
said.
Llesho recognized that voice, and when he
looked up from his ceremonial kowtow, a woman with a cool face and eyes much
older than her years was offering a smile of the mouth only to Bixei, who
blushed red under the attention. It was the woman who had tested Llesho with
the spear and the knife in the weapons room on Pearl Island. She showed no
recognition of Llesho, but returned to the side of her husband, who invited the
audience to rise and meet their new hero,
Bixei of the house of Lord Chin-shi. The
governor bowed graciously to the young champion of his lady, who held out her
hand to him. Bixei touched his forehead to her fingers in the ceremonial
pledge, to fight valiantly in defense of her favor. The couple bowed to the
mayor and his guests, and ascended the carpeted risers to the official box.
Together the governor and his lady took their places beneath a silk umbrella
with many tiers in recognition of their rank.
The trumpeters again blew their fanfare,
and the directors of the bout met between the two mock armies to assign each
man to his predetermined foe. Llesho had only a moment to see Bixei drawn away
to face a boy much the same age and build, but carrying a pike. “Fight inside
his reach,” Llesho thought to himself, but then he was called to attend to his
own demonstration. He would go through the motions of a bout, while his
opponent would do the same. Because of their youth and limited training, however,
they would not engage each other with their weapons, but perform the exercises
that would display their skill level at a distance of a few paces from each
other.
His opponent carried her knife and sword
far differently than Llesho did in his own training, but he quickly picked up
the rhythm of it, and moved to counter and attack with his trident. She was
good, and Llesho wondered again why Lord Chin-shi trained no women fighters.
She came at him, a little close on the next pass, and he could see that she
knew his attention had wandered, and that it annoyed her. “Like dance,” he
thought, and picked up the tempo of his action, meeting her next slash with the
move of his own devising he had practiced to smoothness—using the staff of his
trident to support his vault, he leaped high over the sword and landed lightly
behind her swing. Her right side was exposed to the blades of the trident he
brought to bear with lightning swiftness.
A ripple of applause followed the move and
Llesho looked around, to see who of the more experienced fighters had landed
the admired blow, but his opponent was bowing respect to his strike, before
taking her stance again. This time, she moved inside his reach, and rested her
knife lightly against his gullet. “Not so pretty a move,” she conceded, “But
you would be dead, and not merely blooded, if I chose to press my advantage.”
She did put a little more pressure behind the knife, and Llesho froze,
immobilized by the surprise, and his fear that she would truly slit his throat if
he should move.
But her arm seemed to sag a little, and so
he knocked her hand aside, feeling the burn as the point of the knife scratched
its way across his throat, and when he felt the metal clear of his body, he
brought the trident up, set to skewer her on its three sharp blades. When he
stepped back to clear her reach, she followed him in; she twisted and ducked
under his weapon and swept one foot in a low circle in front of her, taking
Llesho off his feet. He bounced back again before she could immobilize him with
her sword, grateful for Master Den’s lessons in unarmed combat. The
hand-to-hand forms worked just as well, he realized, in combination with his
weapons training.
Their bout came to a halt when a monitor
blew the whistle. Llesho analyzed his bout as he had been taught. His opponent
sucked in air harshly, in broken gasps, while Llesho still breathed normally,
if perhaps a little faster than he would at rest. Clearly, if the monitor
hadn’t stopped the bout, he would have won it, thanks to his Thebin capacity to
control his breathing. But in a true bout, the results would have been less
certain. He would have had first blood when he caught her by surprise with his
trident leap, but she would have taken the prize in a fight to the death.
He thought that, as he had tricked her with
a move she had never seen, she had also tricked him with her sex. He didn’t
expect a woman to be able to fight, and had not guessed that her fight would be
different from a man’s, going for the quick kill rather than a wearing down and
wounding over the course of an extended bout. Her strategy made sense, but he
knew he would have to work hard at making up for his lack if he wanted to
survive in competition to the death. And his plans called for staying alive long
enough to win his freedom.
He bowed respect for his opponent’s skill,
as she bowed to his. Then she shocked him to the core of his being when she
turned to the monitor and said, “I’ll take him. Lord Chin-shi may have his
price; have him cleaned up and delivered before the victory banquet tonight.”
The monitor bowed low and she departed, not
toward the staging area under the benches, but up the carpeted risers to the
governor’s box, where she took a seat behind the governor and his consort. Llesho
could see that she was still breathing heavily, and she wiped her arm across
her brow to clear the sweat streaking it, but the governor made no comment,
just raised a sardonic eyebrow at her and leaned over the balustrade to examine
her purchase. Llesho stared up at them, dumbly, until the monitor of his bout
took him by the arm.
“Come on, boy, you are in the way here,” he
said, and nudged Llesho in the direction of the door that would take him into
the staging area below the eastern benches. “Wait with your own house; someone
will be down to fetch you soon enough.”
The smell of blood under the benches almost
covered the smell of sweat and the body’s fighting humors discharging in vapors
off the skin of the gladiators. Bixei lay on the trestle table. A bandage
already wrapped his forehead, with an extra thickness over his right eye and a
piece of leather clenched tightly in his teeth. He grimaced as Master Den
cheerfully bound up a wound on his thigh. “That pretty face of yours will heal
clean,” Master Den commented as he wrapped the thigh with bandages, “But your
new master will enjoy playing ‘find the scar’ with this one. And I hear that he
tips very well.”
Stipes, with no sign of injury on him, was
glaring at Master Den, but before the bandaging was done, a guard poked his
head through the open doorway to announce the arrival of Lord Chin-shi with
Lord Yueh. Lord Yueh entered with the boastful swagger of a man who judges his
own courage and skill by the success of his gladiators, and who has thus proved
himself victor. Lord Chin-shi followed with the desperate look of a man who has
lost everything on the toss of a coin, and now asks himself how he could have
been so foolish as to gamble against a crooked house.
Their two very different consorts followed
behind: Lady Chin-shi boldly examined the gladiators in their various states of
nakedness and coverings of bandages, while the much younger Lady Yueh trembled
in the wake of the party, her sad eyes downcast and her cheeks red with
embarrassment. She looked, Llesho thought, like a slave newly brought to
market, shamed by her newfound station in life and unsure what that station
would bring. Her husband was pointing among Lord Chin-shi’s gladiators. Master
Markko took his place at the side of his lord to record the sales.
“Madon, of course.” Lord Yueh pointed to
the gladiator, who sat resting his weight on the table. The wound on his chest
had not yet been tended; it leaked a red trail down his naked torso, but he did
not seem to notice it. “He is mine by the rules of the contest,” Lord Yueh
added with a smirk. He seemed to enjoy Lord Chin-shi’s discomfiture.
Madon stared at his new owner with
predatory aggression stamped upon his jaw, the reek of battle and blood
stinking on his damaged muscles, and Llesho permitted himself a tiny shudder.
The rules of gladiatorial combat were clear. If, in a fight to the blood only,
a competitor should kill his opponent, his own person was forfeited to the
offended lord, whose property had been taken from him in the unfair contest. In
such cases, the primary owner had the right to punish his slave for the damage
he did to the honor of his house, and for the cost to his house of the
gladiator’s flesh and skill. It was not unusual for the offending gladiator to
die of his chastisement, with his dead body presented to the holder in payment
of the blood debt.
It made no sense. Madon, rumor had it, had
refused all deadly combat since a lord with too many gambling debts had shifted
the order of his own gladiators to give Madon a battle to the death with his
old lover. They were both good, and his lover had not died quickly of her
wounds. After days had passed, when Madon had realized that she could not
recover, he had sneaked into his opponent’s encampment at the outskirts of the
city and had slit her throat while she thrashed in the fever nightmares that
boiled her brain. Madon had returned half mad, the barracks story was
whispered, and had recovered slowly. He had made a vow that he would not kill
again, and it was said that Lord Chin-shi had honored his vow. As little as he
knew Madon, Llesho was sure that he had not broken his vow deliberately. Lord
Yueh, it seemed, had found a way to break it. And now Madon belonged to Lord
Yueh.
His lordship, however, had passed on from
an examination of his prize. “That one,” he said, pointing at Stipes. He
skipped over Pei and Bixei, seemed not to notice Llesho at first, and gestured
at Radimus. He sorted out the rest of the stable in a manner that seemed
unthought but left him with the most experienced of Lord Chin-shi’s stable, and
Radimus, whom he chose with a thoughtful gleam in his eye. Of his selections,
only Madon had a wound.
Lord Chin-shi examined the list, and nodded
his head in agreement. “Radimus will need further training before he is ready
for a fight to the death,” he said. “He is full grown, but new to the arena.
Madon should do well as a teacher, he has studied with Master Jaks and Master
Den for many years, and knows their techniques well. And in terms of skill, he
is the equal of Jaks, and inferior only to Master Den in hand-to-hand.”
“I intend to fight Madon in the arena for
at least another year or two, if he survives,” Lord Yueh said with a twisted
leer. He clearly expected Lord Chin-shi to kill the man who may have ruined his
chances at financial recovery with the deathblow in the arena. “I had hoped to
purchase the teacher, Master Jaks, to replace the trainer I lost to the fever.”
“You should have spoken sooner,” Lord
Chin-shi bowed apologetically. “Another bidder made an offer, and the contract
has already been signed.”
“Am I come at an inopportune time, honored
sirs?” A stranger dressed in the sumptuous layers of a lord, but with a thin
gold chain around his throat that marked him as the personal slave of some
great house, joined the lords at their negotiations.“
“Not at all,” Lord Chin-shi gave the
stranger a thin smile. “I was just explaining to Lord Yueh why Master Jaks is
not available for his purchase.”
Lord Yueh bowed deeply to the newcomer, and
his face when he straightened had grown very pale. “I understand completely, my
lord.”
“Still and all,” the stranger said with a
pointed glance in Madon’s direction, “you seem to have done well enough for
yourself today, Yueh.”
“Yes, my lord.” To Llesho’s astonishment,
Yueh bowed again, almost groveling at the feet of the wealthy house slave.
“Who is he?” Llesho whispered to Stipes,
who answered, “With luck, you will never find out.”
If luck were involved, Llesho thought, he
was in trouble. Lord Yueh, who had ignored him in his first hunt through the
ranks, had returned to face Llesho. He was now looking at him with the hungry
eyes of a wolf. “Throw the boy in and we will call all debts canceled,” he
said. “Not worth the value of the debt, of course, but he appeals to me.”
The stranger cast a careless glance at
Llesho in his corner. “I think he’s mine as well,” he said, and with a last
look around caught sight of Bixei with his wounds newly dressed on the table.
“And I’ll take this one on his excellency’s authority. We can arrange the fee
at your convenience.”
Bixei started to rise, but Master Den
pushed him back down again. “The boys are much in need of further training
before they will be of use to you,” Den said.
The stranger gave him a soft smile. “And
they don’t like each other much, do they?” he asked.
“Not really.”
“Time will change that.” The stranger bowed
to Master Den, but gave only the slightest tilt of his head to the lords, who
returned the gesture of respect.
Lord Yueh hesitated, as if he was hoping
the other man would leave first, but the stranger waited patiently. Finally,
Lord Yueh made another bow.
“Send my property along before nightfall,”
he said of his purchases. With a last furtive glance at Llesho, he darted out
from under the benches and made his way to his box, leaving his consort to
follow as best she could.
Lord Chin-shi’s competitions were over, his
house crashed about his head, but other houses remained, offering higher
stakes. Lord Yueh was well known for betting death matches.
When Yueh had gone, Madon leaned heavily on
the table for a moment before pushing off and presenting himself to his lord.
He fell to his knees, his eyes round as copper coins with the shock, and bowed
his head, waiting for his fate.
“His man was drugged to induce madness, you
know.” The stranger addressed Madon, who made no move to rise or answer the
stranger.
“On balance,” the stranger continued, “his
excellency decided that the lives of two men could not stand in the way of
peace in the provinces.”
Lord Chin-shi set his hand on Madon’s
shoulder, but addressed the stranger: “The Blood Tide?” Llesho recognized that
soft tone, saw the wheels within wheels in Lord Chin-shi’s eyes and the ironic
half-smile that accompanied the stranger’s shrug.
“The source of that plague, like the source
of fever in Yueh’s compound, remains hidden to us.”
“It was none of my doing,” Lord Chin-shi
assured him, and the stranger shook his head. “I thought not. Had it been so,
of course, the peace would have been broken, and we would be at war, and not
sharing entertainments together.” He spoke ironically, his eyes fixed on the
back of Madon’s head, but his false smile held a warning. The governor had
weighed the life of an honorable gladiator and the fortunes of one lord against
the threat of war in the province, and he had decided. He put out his hand, and
into it Lord Chin-shi placed the strangling rope.
“Relax,” the stranger said, and tipped
Madon’s head back to rest upon his leg. Then with a movement Llesho could
hardly follow, the cord was around Madon’s throat, and the harsh “snap” of bone
cracking cut the air like an ax. “I’m sorry,” the stranger said, and when he
released the cord, Madon fell dead at his feet. “Have him delivered to Lord
Yueh with my regards.”
He strode to the open doorway without
looking at the body on the ground, but turned to Master Jaks almost as an
afterthought.
“Bring the boys,” he said, and for a moment
he was nothing but an absence in the light of the doorway. Then he was gone.
“Who is he?” Llesho whispered to Stipes in
the frozen silence that followed, but it was Master Jaks who answered the
question. “His name is Habiba. He is the governor’s witch.”
Lord Chin-shi shivered in his heavy robes.
In the corner, his consort wept silently, her arms around Radimus’ neck. “We
are ruined,” she moaned into the sweaty leather that covered his chest,
“Ruined. And that Yueh is to blame.”
“Not Yueh,” Lord Chin-shi corrected her
carefully, his attention fixed on the body at his feet. “But fate. What man can
wage war against his fate?”
“A true man,” his wife taunted him. She let
her arms slip from Radimus’ neck, trailed questing fingers down his arm until
she could catch his hand in hers, and led the gladiator deeper into the
shadows.
Lord Chin-shi did not look away from
Madon’s body. “You’d better go,” he said, with a vague gesture at Master Jaks.
The teacher bowed, though his lordship did not see him or anything beyond the
inward vision of his eyes as he walked «way, into the sunlight of the arena.
“Damn,” Stipes muttered. He helped Bixei to
stand and supported him to the door, where Master Jaks commanded a leather
sling and two servants to carry him. Llesho followed through a silence that had
grown thick in the air, like a coming storm.
As he moved from under the benches and into
the sun, he saw a splash of brightly colored silk crumpled in a scarlet pool
that was quickly soaking into the dust. Lord Chin-shi lay dead, his own knife
buried in his heart. Master Jaks did not stop, or even slow his small
procession, but stepped past his former lord without looking down. Llesho
swallowed hard, and tightened his hands into fists, but followed the lead of
his teacher. Bixei gritted his teeth, but the tears leaked from his eyes
anyway. Llesho didn’t know if he cried for Stipes, gone from his life forever,
or for his lord, now dead at his own hand, or for the fate that awaited them in
the wake of the governor’s witch.
Llesho almost felt guilty that he still had
Master Jaks, his teacher, while Bixei had nothing. But Minister Lleck had
taught him to plot his course and then take one step toward it at a time,
focused on that one step completely until the next. He was a gladiator, more or
less, and off Pearl Island—steps one and two on his path—but an empire’s reach
from Thebin. Before he could decide his next move, he had to figure out where
this last one had taken him. With Lord Chin-shi dead, there was certainly no
way back.
Chapter Eleven
HE stranger, Habiba, led them to a door in
the thick wall that circled the arena. He handed Llesho a torch and, with a
snap of his fingers, set the fuel-soaked end of it on fire. The bearers
carrying Bixei followed, then Master Jaks, who closed the door before lighting
his own torch at Llesho’s flame. They were in a long tunnel that sloped gently
until Llesho was sure they were no longer inside the wall, but were under the
arena itself. The roar of the crowd was muted here, though the pounding of so
many feet thundered over their heads and shook dirt into their hair. Llesho
wondered if the roof of the tunnel would hold, but neither Habiba nor Jaks
seemed concerned, so he turned his attention to figuring out where they were
going. Away from the main entrance, that was clear. Since he hadn’t seen
anything beyond the arena at the outskirts of the city, he couldn’t tell much
other than that they were heading away from the direction in which they had
come.
They passed other tunnels feeding into the
one they followed. One, with a heavy door barring their entrance, Llesho
thought must lead from the official boxes of the governor and mayor of Farshore
province and city. Just as he had started to wonder if the whole trip would be
taken underground, the floor of the tunnel began to rise again, until they
faced a closed door and nowhere else to go. The door had no handle. Llesho
pushed, but the door didn’t budge.
“Locked,” he said, and Habiba moved past
him with a tight little smile.
“Aren’t we lucky we have the key?” he
asked, though he carried nothing but a lit torch.
Habiba waved his hand over the door and
muttered a phrase that Llesho couldn’t hear. Then he gave the door a light tap.
It opened inward and Llesho jumped back, crashing into Bixei’s litter in his
effort to avoid being hit by the door.
“Get off me!” Panic edged Bixei’s sharp
voice, and he gave Llesho a shove that overbalanced the already precarious
bearers and propelled Llesho out into the gloomy light of the minor sun. He was
standing alone in a wood of low, gnarled ginkgo trees that stank of fallen
fruit in the quickening breeze of nightfall. A moment later, Jaks exited the
tunnel, followed by Bixei on his litter. Habiba came last; when they had all
assembled outside the secret passage, he turned to secure the door with another
wave of his hand. Again he accompanied the flourish with a muttered charm, but
Llesho wondered if it wasn’t really the tap on the door itself, at the center
of a coiled dragon carved into its surface, that sealed the tunnel.
Jaks seemed to know the way; he led their
little band no more than a quarter li to a lane canopied by the twisted
branches of ancient trees on each side. The lane’s deep, sinuous curves snaking
through the forest hid them from anyone coming up from behind, but likewise hid
from their sight anything waiting for them ahead. At first, when Llesho could
see no houses or temples, he thought they must be leaving the city. Then the
stranger rounded a bend and disappeared between two ordinary looking trees at
the side of the road. Master Jaks followed, with the sling carrying Bixei right
behind him, and Llesho took a deep breath and slipped between the same trees.
He found himself on a carefully manicured
path set with flagstones of varying sizes that artfully mimicked the meandering
flow of a stream. The flagstone walk led them to a series of low-roofed
structures. A network of ponds and waterways separated the buildings from each
other while a series of gracefully arched bridges connected them again. The dim
light of the minor sun wrapped the whole in a soft green slumber. Dumbfounded,
Llesho stared back the way he had come and saw behind him a stone wall rising
higher than his head. From the lane that wall had been invisible. Not just out
of sight, he realized, but invisible,
hidden by some spell that buried the quiet garden in deeper privacy than even
the high stone wall. Bixei had likewise looked back, and he met Llesho’s
astonishment with an attempt to look worldly, but missed.
“What have we got into?” Bixei asked him
with a look, and Llesho’s answering glance said, “Trouble.”
That Master Jaks showed no surprise at all
only made matters worse, as far as Llesho was concerned. The governor’s witch:
Llesho wanted to know what his teacher knew about witches and witchcraft, and
why he had let Llesho suffer through months of Overseer Markko’s torment in
search of answers Master Jaks could have given him for the asking. But they
were crossing one of those fragile looking bridges, over a pond on which
pink-and-white lotus flowers rose on stems above the water, swaying in the
slight breeze.
On the other side, they passed under the
roof of a gatehouse that led them into a private garden where a pale, cold
woman waited to greet them. Llesho recognized her. She had tested him with the
short spear and the knife in the weapons rooms on Pearl Island, and she had
accompanied the governor when he greeted the gladiators in the arena. Master
Jaks bowed with bland courtesy, as if to a stranger, so Llesho did the same. He
trusted Jaks, though he was beginning to wonder why, as he worried about what
plot not of his choosing he had unwittingly fallen into.
The woman opened her arms to greet them
with a calculated smile that warred with something darker in her eyes. “The
governor of Farshore Province welcomes you to his service,” she said. “You will
need rest, of course—especially the young one with the wounds. Habiba will take
care of your papers and show you to your quarters. And he will answer your
questions.”
The governor’s lady gave a slight nod of
dismissal, then she turned and entered one of the low wooden houses that
surrounded the garden. When the door slid into place behind her, Llesho could
not tell where it had been.
The stranger, Habiba, bowed to Master Jaks
and smiled at the boys. “This way,” he said, and gestured toward another
bridge, leading deeper into the complex of houses and waterways. Over the
bridge, down a path between two slightly larger buildings with two tiers of
curled roofs they followed him, to a small house with fragile, greased
parchment screens for walls. Habiba slid a screen aside, and they entered the
office of an overseer. The bearers of Bixei’s litter set him down and departed,
leaving the novices alone with their teacher and the governor’s witch.
Habiba went to the elegantly fragile desk
and pulled out a sheaf of papers, turning first to Master Jaks. “Do you have
your prize-book?”
Jaks reached into his leather tunic and
pulled out a worked leather case that hung by a cord around his neck. From the
case he pulled a small book, which he handed to the overseer.
Habiba opened Jaks’ prize-book and studied
it for a moment. “You were close to winning your freedom when Lord Chin-shi put
an end to your aspirations, Master Jaks.”
“Lord Chin-shi pulled me from the arena
before I had earned my price,” he confirmed. “His lordship valued my skill as a
teacher, and did not wish to lose my services to death or manumission.” Master
Jaks recited his history in a flat voice, but Llesho saw the muscles in his
teacher’s throat tighten with restraint. Manumission: the freeing of a slave.
What emotions the master hid, Llesho could not see, but he imagined them much
as his own at his captivity: a helpless rage more suited to a child than the
powerful man-at-arms.
“Some day you must tell the tale of how a
hero with the bands of an assassin on his arm landed himself in the arena at
all,” Habiba commented, “and how it was that your kin allowed the slight to
remain on their honor for so long.”
“I have no clan,” Master Jaks answered with
a voice like stone falling on stone. “My family all lie dead.”
Llesho remembered the bodyguard who had
died to keep him safe. Was he your
brother? he wanted to ask. Your
family, did they all die fighting at Kungol, too few against the invading
horde? But he could say nothing in front of Bixei or the governor’s
witch, who flitted an expressionless glance over Llesho before returning his
attention to Master Jaks in front of him.
“So I have heard.” Habiba reached for a
chop and an inkstone, as if the conversation had revealed the likelihood of
rain, not the destruction of a clan of mercenaries and assassins.
“Her ladyship’s family rules, in the
emperor’s grace, at Thousand Lakes Province, where slavery is outlawed,” Habiba
explained, his voice soft but commanding, and terrible in its quiet anger.
There was no comfort in his voice—a warrior would acknowledge no need of
comfort—but Llesho felt the softness of his words tame some hurt he felt in his
own breast.
Master Jaks inclined his head, an
acceptance of comradeship if not peace.
“According to her marriage contract with
his grace, the governor of Farshore Province, her ladyship’s household shall
always be a mirror in which she may see the Thousand Lakes reflected. No one
serves here as a slave.”
He stamped Master Jaks’ prize-book with the
governor’s chop and returned it solemnly. “The gift to his lady of your freedom
has cost his excellency very little.”
Habiba then held out the contract with its
blue seal. “Your manumission papers,” he said, andadded, “her ladyship would
like to hire you, Freeman Jaks, to train the warriors for her house. The
contract is here,” he offered a second folded packet. “If you need someone to
read it to you, a scribe will be supplied for you.”
“I can read,” Jaks informed him.
Habiba nodded. “In that case,” he said,
“shall I offer you rest in the guards’ quarters, or in the guest quarters?”
“In the guest quarters, until I have read
the contract.”
Habiba gave them the blank smile of
officials everywhere. “If you choose to accept the contract,” he said, “this
will be yours.” He handed Master Jaks a slim gold chain like the one he wore
around his own neck. “It marks one as being in his excellency the governor’s
service, and should be worn at official functions and when representing the
household in a formal capacity.” The overseer’s smile seemed more genuine when
he added, “Her ladyship does ask that you leave it at home if you decide to go
pleasure-seeking in the city, so that no scandal may fall upon his lordship. At
any other time, you may wear it as you choose for the protection this house may
afford you.”
Master Jaks took the gold chain and slipped
it into the leather case where his prize-book had rested. “I
THE PRlfiCE OF SHADOW
will keep that in mind,“ he said, and bowed
his thanks for the papers he now held in his hand.
So the gold chain had not marked Habiba as
a slave in this household, as Llesho had believed. He wondered how much
difference there truly was between a free man who acted the slave, and the
slave he pretended to be, but Habiba did not look like he invited the question.
“As for the boys,” Habiba continued, “her
ladyship faces a dilemma and must, for a time, bow her head to the decree of
the land. His divinity, the Celestial Emperor, has foreseen the possibility
that the unwanted infants of slaves may be cast upon the mercy of the empire
for their upkeep. The empire has enough prostitutes and thieves already, and
further has no wish to act as nursemaid to the castoffs of its lords and
nobles. The law therefore requires that children born or bought into slavery
must remain the property of the slaveholder, with all the responsibilities that
entail to property ownership, until the youthful slave has developed the skills
to sustain his or her own life at no expense to the empire.”
“I don’t understand,” Llesho said, though
it terrified him to speak up in front of the governor’s witch. “What does all
of that mean?”
The witch, Habiba, leveled the full power
of his gaze on Llesho, and Llesho quaked on the inside but held his ground. He
had a destiny, and had better start acting like it or he’d spend the rest of
his life hiding like a rabbit.
“It means, Llesho, that in the eyes of the
law, you and your friend will remain the private property of her ladyship until
you pass your seventeenth summer. During that time you will each choose a trade
according to your talents and needs, and at the end of that time, when you have
proved to the governor, in accordance with the laws of the empire, that you can
provide for your own needs, you will receive these—” he lifted from his desk
two packets sealed with blue ribbons. Manumission papers. Freedom. And already
signed, or they would not have the governor’s seal on them.
“What do you want to do with your life,
Llesho?”
Llesho met the witch’s gaze. The man would
think him a fool if he told him the truth, or he would think him a spy and a
traitor. By law, the entrails of a spy were torn out in the public square,
their place in the spy’s body filled with hot coals, and the flesh sewn
together around the coals with whipcord. The coals cauterized the wounds while
they burned the hidden flesh; it took a long time to die. Llesho had already
seen the witch’s idea of mercy—Madon was dead—so he said nothing about his
quest.
“I only wish to serve,” he said.
Habiba studied his face for a long moment.
He must have seen the color disappear, the life fading behind the stone of
Llesho’s eyes, because he sighed and broke the contact to glance over to Bixei,
including him in the questions to follow.
“Can you read and write?” he asked, and
Llesho answered, “Yes,” while Bixei shook his head.
“Sums?”
“A little bit,” Llesho said, and Bixei
shook his head again. No one trained slaves destined for the arena in the arts
of the nobility, and Llesho little knew how much he had given away about
himself with his simple assertions of truth.
But Master Jaks did understand. “An
educated slave, a prisoner taken in battle from the same land as Llesho, took
an interest in the boy when he worked in the oyster beds. He taught the boy a
little of reading and arithmetic.”
Which
gave scant credit to Llesho’s palace tutors, and shied the truth a bit about
Lleck’s captivity—not a battle, but an invasion, the few left alive dragged
into captivity behind the horses of the conquerors.
Llesho kept his mouth shut about that, too.
He liked his guts exactly where they were, thank you. Liked his head in its
current position, too, though beheading as an enemy of the state was preferable
to the end of a spy.
Habiba accepted Master Jaks’ explanation
with a wry twist of his mouth around the sour taste of doubt.
“Can you fight?” he asked. Bixei, from his
litter on the floor, answered “Yes!” while Llesho shrugged his shoulders and
said, “A little.”
“Spells? Incantations?”
“NO!” both boys answered in unison. Bixei
responded with the usual horror of the unknown, but Llesho could not hide the
shuddering dread of the months he had spent chained in Markko’s workroom.
Suddenly, it was too much for him, and his traitorous legs betrayed him. He
sank to the floor in front of the governor’s witch, and covered his face to
hide his shame. “I don’t know anything,” he cried. “Nothing!”
Cringing at the humiliation, he did not at
first feel the gentle hand on his shoulder, the man reaching to draw his palms
away from his eyes. Habiba, the governor’s witch, knelt before him, all the
irony and formal distance fled from his eyes, which were warm, and sorrowful,
and full of understanding that ran deeper than Llesho understood himself.
“It’s all right,” Habiba said. “Mistakes
were made with you, but no one will hurt you here.”
When the witch rose to his feet, he seemed
more tired, older than he had just moments ago, and when he shook his head,
Master Jaks looked stricken and guilty, though why, Llesho didn’t know.
“Maybe later, when we gain his trust,”
Habiba said. “We’ll see what Kaydu can work with him, but he may never realize
his potential.”
“Her ladyship will be disappointed,” Master
Jaks pointed out, and Habiba sighed again.
“Before we make any decisions, let’s see what
Kaydu can accomplish. Have you thought
enough about her ladyship’s offer of employment?“
“I haven’t read the contract yet,” Master
Jaks replied, with a bitter laugh. He gave Llesho a long, thoughtful look.
“But, yes, I agree to her terms. Whatever they are.” He drew out the packet and
opened it, took the pen Habiba offered, and quickly sketched the characters of
his name.
Habiba smiled, gracious in victory. “I’ll
have the servants put you in guards’ quarters after all. As your first duty, you
will work with Kaydu on training.”
Master Jaks nodded. “I suppose I’ll have to
keep her chain, now.”
“In time, you will find that it weighs
lightly at the throat,” Habiba replied. “It is the chains you cannot see that
bind you.
“For the boys, silver.” He held out a chain
to Bixei, who set it around his neck as if it had been a gift, and not a symbol
of his servitude. He did not offer the chain to Llesho’s hand, but settled it
himself around the neck of the boy. And something in his eyes told Llesho that
the last words to Master Jaks had been meant for him as well. Not the chains he
could see, but the ones he couldn’t. Still, the one he could see was coming off
just as soon as he was out of the overseer’s office.
“Bixei,” the overseer asked, “does the life
of a warrior suit you?” and Bixei answered, “Yes, sir,” with speed and a bit of
arrogance considering that he could not, at that moment, stand under his own
power. “I am a fighter by trade, sir.”
“Perhaps not yet,” the overseer commented,
“But with time. I think you have, indeed, found your calling. Take him to the
infirmary,” he said to Master Jaks. “When he is healed of his wounds, we will
decide where to put him.”
“Yes, sir.” Master Jaks managed to make his
bow ironic. Llesho wished he could do that, and decided that he was in enough
trouble as it was.
“As for you.” He studied Llesho’s closed
face with a serious frown. “I have been led to believe that you will be pleased
with your accommodations. You can train with the guards, and then come here for
scribal training with the clerks. Once you settle in, we’ll see.”
Llesho didn’t like the sound of that “We’ll
see.” Habiba had said nothing about sending him off to decorate his lordship’s
bed or chaining him with the poisons in an alchemist’s workroom, which meant he
was already ahead of where he’d been. With an effort, therefore, he subdued his
panic, determined to wait and see where this next step would take him. In the
meantime, he would learn all he could. But he seriously wondered how this put
him any closer to his goal.
Chapter Twelve
FlABIBA summoned the litter bearers and
instructed them to take Bixei to the infirmary. As they left the overseer’s
office with their burden of objecting gladiator-in-training, a young woman with
dirt streaking her nose and sweat beading at her temples squeezed past them in
the doorway and bowed carelessly. Then she wrapped her arms around Habiba’s
neck for a quick hug. Presently she released his neck, but held onto his arm
while she gave Llesho a swift glance that inventoried him down to his toes
“So you found him,” she said, and grinned.
Llesho stared at her like she’d sprouted a
second head, while the color rose in his face.
“Let me introduce my daughter,” Habiba
said, “Kaydu, Master Jaks. I believe you have already met our young friend.”
“Yes, indeed,” she said. “I’d put my money
on his skill in a blooding fight, but in a fight to the death, I would bet on
his opponent even if it was my great aunt Silla.”
As a slave, Llesho realized he shouldn’t
have been surprised that what seemed to be a courtesy introduction quickly
turned into an analysis of his potential in the ring, but it rankled. He
straightened his spine with a bit of the regal tilt to his chin he reserved for
humiliating situations. Master Jaks shot him a warning glance, though, and he
lowered his eyes, chastised. Until he decided for himself whether he was among
friends or foes, he knew it wasn’t safe to give the sharp-eyed witch and his
daughter any more to study about him than they already had. But Master Jaks
rolled his eyes with a slight shake of the head. Too late, then. Habiba had
already seen, and had already drawn his own silent conclusions behind sharp,
hooded eyes.
“You think he won’t kill?” the witch asked
his daughter, as if Llesho weren’t even in the room.
“I can hear, and speak,” Llesho reminded
them. “If you want to know something, ask me.”
“Llesho—” Jaks began with a stern frown.
Habiba raised a hand to stop the teacher, and turned the blazing intensity of
his scrutiny upon Llesho for a moment before the naked calculation disappeared
behind a blandly polite facade. He tsked a reprimand, but did ask, “Have you
ever killed a man, Llesho?”
“No, but—”
“Then you don’t know how you will react
when the time comes.”
“Neither does she—”
At Habiba’s silent command Master Jaks had
stood a little apart from the verbal skirmish, his arms crossed over his chest
as if to hold in check his own worried response to the questioning, but he
spoke up now. “Kaydu is right, of course. At least, he would not kill in the
games—I am sure of it.”
“We don’t train gladiators here, as you
well know, Jaks. We need to know if he could kill in battle, or to save his
life, or the life of his charge against assassins.”
Llesho would have objected again that they
were still talking about him as if he weren’t there, but Habiba’s words robbed
him of anything to say. Assassins?
“I don’t think he would kill at all, for
any reason, now,” Kaydu continued her assessment. “Certainly not to save his
own life—he’s been taught he’s worthless for more than half of it. Maybe,
though, to save someone else, but it might destroy him if he had to do it.”
“You haven’t seen him work with a knife,”
Jaks said. “He only knows one way to handle the traditional Thebin blade; I
suspect he was lethal even at seven. And I’m not sure he hasn’t killed before,
though he certainly hasn’t since he came to Pearl Island.”
“If he has, the memory is buried deep,”
Kaydu said. “I saw no evidence of the knowledge of death by his hand when we
fought.”
Without warning, Master Jaks reached back
with his right hand and slipped a Thebin blade from a sheath at the back of his
neck. He threw, his aim perfect and centered on Llesho’s heart. Instinctively,
Llesho adjusted his stance, and when the knife approached, he had turned his
side to it and stepped out of its way. In the same motion, he plucked the knife
out of the air and sent it spinning back at the thrower. Jaks was prepared for
the move, but still the blade nicked him midway up his bicep before embedding
itself in a wooden beam in the wall. If Jaks had not moved when he had, the
knife would have pierced his heart, the same target he had aimed at himself.
He clenched the fingers of his left hand
over the wound in his right arm. “Den’s been working with him,” he said, “But
he came to us with that and other equally deadly moves for close work in his
bag of tricks. As far as I can tell, with a knife he knows only how to kill.”
Aghast, Llesho stared at the blood dripping
from his teacher’s arm. Never, in all the weeks of Den’s instructions, had he
ever drawn blood with the blade. He had become so secure in practice that he
had stopped thinking of it as weapons training at all; he had worked the knife
as a pure form, like prayer, to be perfected for its own sake. Killing was the
part of being a gladiator that he hadn’t taken into consideration when he’d
decided to follow this course to freedom. And Master Jaks could have paid with
his life for the oversight. Llesho’s mind rejected the nagging insistence that
Master Jaks’ thrown blade might have killed him instead. The teacher had known
what would happen, and still, he had put his life in Llesho’s hands. And Llesho
had almost taken it from him.
“I’m sorry,” he stammered, and clamped his
hand over his mouth. “I am going to be sick.”
“Don’t!” Kaydu took his arm and ran with
him out of the overseer’s office, to a corner of the house crowded with green
growing things. “Now, you can go ahead—no one will see you, and you won’t be
the first to honor these bushes. You don’t ever defile his house, though. It
would take weeks to purify it again, and the time could cost us dearly.”
She spoke to him more as an equal now, and
he wondered if he’d somehow won her respect under false pretenses. He hadn’t
killed, and even the thought of doing so left him squatting in the bushes
bringing up his tonsils like a baby. But she crouched beside him and shook his
arm to get his attention.
“It’s nothing to be ashamed about,” she
gestured with a shift of her shoulder at the bushes he had poured his graces
out on, “I won’t fight with a man who could come that close to killing a friend
and remain unmoved.”
Llesho supposed that she meant to comfort
him, but her words had the opposite effect. He had come within inches of
killing Master Jaks; only the fact that the teacher knew he would react with a deadly counterattack had kept
Jaks alive. Llesho started to shake. His teeth clicked with the spasmodic
clenching of his jaw that caught his tongue and bit to the quick.
“No,” he said, rocking himself to ease the
trembling while his arms wrapped his belly, which threatened to turn itself
inside out again. “No, no, no, no, no.”
“Shock,” Kaydu informed him, and dragged
him to his feet. He managed to follow her, putting one foot in front of the
other even though he couldn’t feel his arms or legs anymore. She led him to the
door of the overseer’s office again, but did not go in.
“He needs something hot to drink, and about
ten hours of sleep,” she informed the two men inside.
“Take him, by all means, and get him
settled,” Hab-iba said. “I’ll explain his absence from the formal audience with
the governor somehow.” .
Master Jaks said nothing, but he lowered
his eyes when Llesho caught his glance. Before he’d hidden his feelings Llesho
caught regret but not apology in the teacher’s eyes. From somewhere in the
terrified fragments of his past, a Thebin teaching surfaced in his mind. “You
can’t force self-knowledge. You can only make an opportunity for the seeker to
find himself.” Was that what Master Jaks had been doing with that little trick?
Making an opportunity for Llesho to know himself as a killer, trained to be so
from the cradle— the murderer of a friend? He did not want this knowledge,
refused to embrace it as part of himself. He did not, would not, kill. Kaydu
had said it, and Habiba had agreed with his daughter. Only his teacher marked
him as a taker of life. Only the man who had trained him, and watched him, and
knew him.
If the pond beneath the bridge they crossed
had been deep enough, he would have thrown himself in and drowned. The water
was shallow and reed-clogged, however; he would only succeed in humiliating
himself and ruining the only clothing he had. So he followed Kaydu to a low
house on short stilts with a green curled roof and paper windows propped open
to the fading light. The house had one room and little furnishing: four narrow
beds, four chairs, a small cook-ing hearth gone cold in the afternoon, and an
assortment of hanging baskets with the various linens and supplies of the
household.
Two of the chairs were occupied when Llesho
came in. Their occupants looked up from what appeared to be a cheerful argument
over mending, and let out twin squeals of surprise and joy. “Llesho!”
Lling was the first to jump up and come to
him, giving him a hug before wrinkling her nose. “You need a bath.”
Hmishi followed her to crowd around him.
“They said in the cookhouse today that you bested Kaydu with the trident!” he
said, and Kaydu cuffed him in the head. “Because I let him,” she answered back
with a laugh.
“No, she didn’t.” Llesho managed a smile.
“I taught her a thing or two of my own devising, and we called it a draw.”
“Actually, he won,” Kaydu contradicted,
“But a little thing like victory shouldn’t impress you. It was a lucky break.”
Llesho knew she was teasing, that she meant
his friends to know that he had conducted himself well in the arena, but he was
too tired to trade banter, and the part of his mind that was processing the
afternoon in the overseer’s office was demanding greater and greater amounts of
his attention.
“I have to lie down,” he said. “Which beds
are taken?”
“You are to have that one,” Kaydu said, and
pointed to the bed farthest from the door and set away from the wall.
He nodded and shambled over to it,
unbuckled his belt, and pulled his leather tunic over his head. Since he didn’t
know where to stow his gear yet, he dropped it on the foot of the bed and
followed after it, pitching into a darkness thicker than tree sap.
When he awoke again, the light had a
sweeter taste to it. Morning filtered through the fall of weeping willow
branches swaying in the breeze outside the window and painted dappled shadows
on the walls. Even the air smelled of renewal. And soap. Someone had washed him
while he slept, and covered him with a soft blanket. Off in the center of the
room he heard the shuffle of sandaled feet, and the clink of crockery, the
sound of water pouring, and then the pungent vapors of tea rising on the
sunlight. When he pushed himself up on his elbows, Lling was squatting next to
his bed with a worried frown crinkling her brow.
“He’s awake,” she called to her companion,
and when Llesho croaked, “Tea, please,” she smiled and amended her news to,
“and alive.”
“We wondered if you were ever going to wake
up.” Hmishi handed him a steaming cup of tea, then steadied it with a
supporting hand when it trembled in Llesho’s fingers. He waited until Llesho
had drunk, then answered the curious frown with a relieved smile. “You’ve slept
the day around, and another night. You didn’t even wake up when Habiba washed
you. He’s the healer around here, as well as the overseer. He told us to let
you sleep, that you needed to heal, though neither Lling nor I could see
anything wrong with you on the outside.”
“I figured it must be something like
enchantment of the deep,” Lling said. “It takes a healer to see it because the
wound is so deep that it’s hidden on the inside. Habiba’s been in to check on
you a dozen times at least, and Kaydu, his daughter, almost as often.” Lling’s
voice seemed to etch the name of her rival in acid on the air.
Hmishi interrupted her then with a warning
glance, and Llesho wondered if they had been told not to trouble the patient.
“A man who said his name was Jaks spent a long time watching you from the
corner of the room. He didn’t move much or say anything once he’d introduced
himself, but he waited through most of the day, and a good part of the night
before he finally left.”
“I don’t think he would have left at all,”
Lling added, “except that we made it clear we were watching him as long as he
watched you. When the moon had nearly set, he gave a funny little sigh—”
“He laughed at us!” Hmishi interrupted,
remembering the indignity.
“—and he told us to get some sleep. Then he
left.” Lling finished on a yawn.
“I expect he won’t be gone long,” Hmishi
added. “If you want to get dressed, visit the outhouse before he gets here—”
“Tell us who he is—”
“I’ll help you up—”
Llesho realized that he was naked, and
flinched when Hmishi reached to lift his blanket. “Lling, perhaps I could eat a
fresh bun from the cookhouse.” He gave her a wan smile, and she was up,
bouncing on the balls of her feet, almost before the words were out.
“I’ll leave you two to make Llesho decent,”
she agreed, and Llesho knew he’d hidden none of his embarrassment from her.
“But first, I want to know if we have a problem with that man Jaks.”
“He’s my teacher.”
Lling accepted that, though only Llesho
knew how little that explanation answered her question. Jaks had his own agenda
for Llesho, as, apparently, did the governor’s lady and his witch. How closely
that tied into Llesho’s own task set for him by the ghost of his father’s
minister, he did not yet know.
“First, clothes.” Hmishi brought his mind
back to the present, holding out a pair of loose trousers. “We each have an
extra set here. These are mine, but you can borrow them until they’ve fitted
you out. The shirt is Lling’s; we thought it would fit, but your shoulders are
bigger than they used to be. It looks like you’ll have to settle for the
trousers.”
Llesho took them from his friend’s hand and
slipped into them. “Outhouse?” he asked, and Hmishi pointed the way. When he
returned, Master Jaks was waiting for him, and so was Habiba.
“You are looking better.” Habiba smiled at
him, and Llesho wondered what he looked better than. He hadn’t been wounded, or
sick. But he realized that the tight knots between his shoulder blades were
gone, and that the tension had smoothed away from his forehead. He did feel
better, though he could couldn’t quite figure out how the unclenching of
muscles all through his body had been accomplished, or why the mere fact of it
made him feel so much freer when he still wore the governor’s silver chain
around his neck.
“Yesterday was rest-day,” Habiba continued,
“But you missed it. Her ladyship wishes me to inform you that she grants this
one day of celebration for, your safe delivery. Use it well.” He smiled then.
“And give her ladyship’s announcement to your companion, Lling, when she comes
in.” He left then, with a little bow in Llesho’s direction that drew a warning
frown from Jaks and sent a pained look across his face. Hmishi turned to him in
amazement. “I don’t get it,” he said. Llesho shrugged, unwilling to trust his
secrets to voice and air.
Master Jaks watched the healer leave and
then came forward himself. “Here in her ladyship’s gardens, you are as safe as
you can be in Farshore Province,” he said. “But soon it won’t be safe anywhere.
Learn what you can in the time you have, but if it comes to a choice, choose to
heal.”
“Tell that to Kaydu,” Hmishi interrupted.
Kaydu picked that moment to enter the low
house with Lling in tow and a white-faced monkey with soft brown fur on her
shoulder. The monkey wore a practice shirt tied with a warrior’s knot and a
tiny wizard’s hat upon his head. The monkey’s hands wrapped around Kaydu’s
chin, and his long, supple tail curled over her opposite shoulder.
“He doesn’t have to tell me,” she said,
“Habiba already has.”
The monkey shrieked and jumped up and down
on Kaydu’s shoulder. Master Jaks gave her a pained expression, but ignored the
monkey. “Will that stop you?” he asked her, and she laughed.
“Nope. I’ll push him until he cries uncle
or until he pushes back. That’s my job.
“Oh, and by the way, I caught a spy.” Kaydu
reached behind her and dragged Lling into the room, causing the monkey to
screech again and lunge for Lling’s hair.
“I’m not a spy!” Lling twisted her arm out
of Kaydu’s grip with a glare of special loathing for the monkey. “I was keeping
watch. And you didn’t catch me; that horrible creature did.”
“No better a guard than a spy, to let
Little Brother find you out!” Kaydu taunted.
“If you’d meant Llesho harm, I’d have
killed you with my bare hands, and your stupid monkey, too.”
The monkey seemed to understand, because he
screamed at her again and jumped up and down on Kaydu’s shoulder in a flurry of
agitation. Llesho figured Little Brother still wasn’t safe from Lling’s wrath.
Kaydu studied her intently, then smiled.
“This one will kill.”
“Kill?” Hmishi whispered.
Kaydu
raised a scornful eyebrow. “His excellency wasted his money on that one, should
have left him to Yueh.”
“Not if you want anything out of me,” Lling
warned, and moved to stand at Hmishi’s left shoulder.
Llesho didn’t understand the argument, but
he knew where he stood on it. “Nor me,” he said, and took up his position at
Hmishi’s right. “We are a team.”
Exasperated, Kaydu looked to Master Jaks
for support, but he shrugged. “As familiars go, a pearl diver is at least one
step up from a monkey.” A smile tried to escape his tightly pursed lips, and he
didn’t work very hard to suppress it. With a last nod to Llesho’s companions,
he ducked out of the house, leaving Kaydu and her monkey to level matching
glares at Hmishi.
“If you screw up,” she said, “I will feed
you to Lord Yueh’s men on a platter.” The monkey screeched his own disdain
before leaping from Kaydu’s shoulder and scuttling away through the open
window. Secure in having had the last word, Kaydu followed Master Jaks out the
door.
To Llesho’s surprise, Hmishi was the first
to collect his wits about him. “What have you got us into, Llesho?”
They were both looking at him now. Llesho
considered telling them the truth: who he was, what Master Jaks thought he had
done, and even the vow he had made to Lleck’s ghost in that terrifying hour in
Pearl Bay. But he still hadn’t figured out why he was here, or how much any of
those who wove their plots around him actually knew. So he threw himself on the
bed, sat cross-legged with his elbows on his knees and his chin in his hands,
and shrugged. “I don’t have the slightest idea.”
“Well, that’s just great.” Hmishi sat
beside him, his own hands clapped to his forehead. Lling joined them, so they
were like three monkeys sitting in a row. “But if you need anyone killed, it
seems I am your girl.”
The two boys grunted their indignation. But
none of them could think of anything else to say.
Chapter Thirteen
VVHEN the three friends were alone again
with the promise of a day off, Hmishi turned to Llesho with a crooked smile.
“Time for the grand tour,” he said. “Lling can protect us both if we come
across any assassins in the cookhouse.”
Lling cocked her head at a superior angle,
but followed Hmishi out of the wooden house. They wandered along a flagstone
path that snaked between ferns and clumps of bamboo, winding beside one of the
narrow canals that threaded the compound. First they took Llesho to the
cookhouse. A lean tyrant with a stick in his hand ordered his undercooks with the
precision of a military review while the Thebin friends raided his pantry for
cinnamon buns. They found no assassins, though Llesho wondered about the cook.
Juggling the hot buns from hand to hand
between bites, Hmishi and Lling showed their companion the practice yard, a
small island cut off from the rest of the compound by dreamy pools of dark
water adrift with water lilies and lotus blossoms. Two small footbridges gave
access to the island, where a cadre of the governor’s guard were drilling spear
exercises. Llesho recognized the forms, and his muscles jumped in sym-pathetic
flexure to the grunts and curses of the fighters.
“Jaks taught us to do that one a little
differently,” Llesho commented, watching the guards go through their passes,
“though I work better with the trident than with the spear.”
Hmishi snorted around a mouthful of sticky
bun. “Kaydu says I’d be better off with a rake and a hoe, but she’s trying to
teach me trident and spear. Lling is the one you have to watch out for. She fights
like a demon.”
“Only compared to you,” she parried with a
sniff of derision. Then she asked Llesho, “What was it like to actually fight
in the arena?”
“You’ll find out soon enough.” Llesho tried
to sound more superior than he felt about his demonstration bout.
“No, we won’t,” Lling corrected him. “Only
slaves fight in the arena. Since the governor’s house keeps no slaves, it
fields no stable of gladiators.”
“I fought Kaydu in the ring myself,” Llesho
reminded them, licking the last of the sticky cinnamon from his fingers.
Hmishi shrugged. “That was a demonstration
bout. At some point she tests us all. I don’t think it is just a fighting test,
though, or I wouldn’t be here. She’s a witch, like her father.”
Llesho hadn’t needed anyone to tell him
that. But he wasn’t convinced about Her Ladyship’s good intentions. He lifted
the silver chain he wore at his throat. “What about this?”
Hmishi shrugged. He didn’t need more
explanation of Llesho’s question—he had a similar chain around his own neck, as
did Lling. “Something to do with the law, and that we need a legal guardian or
owner until we are of an age of independence.”
“There was a big argument when they first
brought us here,” Lling added, her attention bent on catching a raisin that had
leaped from her bun when she bit into it. “Her ladyship wanted an adoption
contract or a guardianship for another couple of summers. The governor wouldn’t
hear of it, of course. He made a few pointed remarks about dragging every pig
farmer and dirt scrabbler from Thebin over his threshold to stain the honor of
his house. Habiba was on the governor’s side for that one, and her ladyship
seems to take his advice more often than not.”
“He’s the governor’s witch,” Llesho stated,
referring to Habiba, who hadn’t seemed that frightening except in the power he
wielded. “Even the governor’s lady must be afraid he’ll put a spell on her if
she opposes him.” But he didn’t believe that for some reason. Nothing about the
lady testing him in the weapons room led him to believe she would back down
from anyone, not even a witch. Lling seemed to read his mind.
“I think maybe he’s her ladyship’s witch,
actually,” Lling said. “She’s not afraid of him, that’s clear.”
She thought about the question for a moment
before she gave a further explanation. “It is more like she understands that
bringing her father’s position against slavery to Farshore is a political
weakness that leaves her husband vulnerable. Habiba doesn’t like slavery
either, but he doesn’t let that cloud his judgment. There is more going on than
philosophy between them—get your mind out of the outhouse, I don’t mean that.”
Hmishi gave her a less than chastened nod.
They hadn’t spent months in Markko’s back room, or a night in Lord Chin-shi’s
bed while the lord struggled with the Blood Tide destroying Pearl Island,
however. They hadn’t taken weapons testing under her ladyship’s cold eye, or
watched Habiba kill a good man with sorrow in his eyes but no hesitation in his
hands.
“Her ladyship is playing a deeper game than
we know, I think,” he advised his companions, uncertain whether he helped or
hurt them with the knowledge. “I suspect that Farshore doesn’t matter much in
her plans at all. So I wonder why we do
matter, and why we remain slaves if our freedom was important enough to bring
three fairly useless pearl divers into the governor’s house guard.”
“Slaves in name only,” Hmishi objected.
“His excellency showed us the papers, already signed, but dated for our
seventeenth summers.”
He could have argued that the governor
could tear up those papers as if they had never existed. When He thought about
it, though, he had to admit that whatever plots her ladyship wove with her
witch, she was still alive, and so was Llesho, which was more than he expected.
Markko would have burned Kwan-ti to death
in the training compound at Pearl Island, and Lord Chin-shi would have let him.
Now Lord Chin-shi was dead and Kwan-ti was gone, vanished like a god from the
roadside. If Llesho had to choose, he’d take the witch over the poisoner. It
still left them with the governor’s silver chains around their necks, however,
and the governor’s lady laying her plots around them.
“Whatever we will become at seventeen, we
are slaves now,” Llesho argued. “They can use us, or throw us away in the arena
any time they want.”
“Not the arena,” Lling insisted. “Kaydu is
training us to be soldiers. I heard her talking to her father when they brought
you in; the governor bought the freedom of the man you call Master Jaks because
he wants to hire him on contract to train us. Kaydu doesn’t have the time to
train novices; she is needed to run the standing guard through its paces.”
She didn’t volunteer how she had heard
this, and Llesho carefully didn’t ask, but let her distract him with a finger
pointed at the fighters now divided into pairs and thrashing at each other with
swords. Some of them, Llesho noticed, were women, though all were older than he
and his companions. Their swords were curved differently than the one Llesho
was used to, and they worked with a buckler on the weaker arm rather than a
knife in hand, but the stances and motions seemed familiar, if combined
strangely.
Curious, he rose from his place beside his
friends and slipped over the narrow footbridge, sliding around the perimeter of
the combat area, until he came to the thing he was looking for, a rack of
swords and bucklers, and a smaller collection of knives. He picked up a knife
and a sword, and danced them through their paces. He became so lost in the
motion and the weapons in his hands that he did not notice the experienced
house guards falling still around him. Finally, no sound could be heard in the
practice yard except for the frenzied dance of thrust and parry and underhand, overhand,
sidewise slashing strokes of Llesho’s knife.
He ended his exercise up on the ball of his
right foot, his left poised like a crane about to take flight, the sword held
high over his head for a downward penetrating strike while the knife flicked at
the end of a curved sweep that protected his belly. Going still at the apex of
his thrust, he blinked as the silence filtered into his consciousness. Six
months ago, this sudden awareness of the rapt audience would have sent him
scurrying in embarrassment for anonymity at the back of the crowd. Or, he would
have pulled about him the dignity of his father, the tilt of his chin and the
cold stare he had perfected by seven. Six months of training with Masters Den
and Jaks had set new instincts into his muscles, however; he looked about him
with the flinty challenge of a warrior in his eyes.
At first, it appeared that he had no
takers, and he began to relax his stance. But then, Kaydu herself came forward,
armed as he was with knife and sword and the same look in her eyes. She threw
down the sword like a dare and he did likewise, shifting his stance, curving
his spine to draw his gut as far from the reach of her arm as possible, his
knife held in a horizontal line like a fence between himself and his foe. Then
his wrist turned and his body shifted around the axis of his knife arm to
present a narrow sliver of a target. His knife snaked forward, curved under her
guard, and rested with the point wedged beneath her chin.
Kaydu stared at him, wide-eyed, while her
knife hand opened of its own volition, to offer the knife on the flat of her
palm. Llesho flicked his eyes once, groundward, and she let her knife drop.
Only when she stood unarmed before him did he shift his own knife from its
threatening position, but then her hand was flashing again, coming at him with
a knife she had secreted in the cuff of her wrist guard, and his own knife
flashed up, in reflex, and he would have severed the hand from her body and
followed up on her throat without thought. Master Jaks stopped him—slapped his
arm down and held on when Llesho would have twisted the knife into his
teacher’s gut.
“Llesho!” Jaks called to him, and Llesho
became aware that the silence had given way to a low rumble, that his friends
stared at him with mouths agape, and that Jaks was gazing deeply into his eyes,
as if checking him for fever. Then he realized that he still held the knife in
his cramped fist, and he dropped it with a dazed grunt.
“She tried to kill me,” he explained
shakily, fighting the urge to vomit.
“I was testing you.” Kaydu rubbed at her
own wrist, shaking as much as he was. Jaks glared at her.
“I told you not to test him on the knife,”
Jaks reminded her with a warning in his voice. “He cannot overcome the reflexes trained into him. You would
have been lucky to lose a hand. He might not have been able to stop even after
you were disabled.”
Kaydu studied him through adrenaline
nerves. Llesho recognized the feeling; he had it himself. “What did you do to
me?” he asked, stunned at what he had almost done, at what Jaks intimated he
would have done. Jaks shook his head slowly. “Not our doing,” he said. “We
couldn’t reverse the early training, so we honed it. Your knife battles will
still be to the death, but we wanted to give you a fair chance of being the one
standing at the end of them.”
“It seems you succeeded,” Kaydu said, more
matter-of-factly than Llesho could manage under the circumstances. “Can you
teach it to me?”
“I wouldn’t,” Jaks told her, “even if I could.
And your father would have me killed if I tried.”
“Why?” She almost seemed to be sniffing at
the scent of the secret, but Jaks smiled knowingly and shook his head.
“Ask your father,” he said, with a warning
glance at the fighters watching them in their various stages of arrested
sparring. She relaxed into a gesture of submission then, and bowed to Llesho
with the time-honored formula of respect. “The teacher becomes the student.”
Llesho gave Master Jaks a look that told
him he would not settle for nonanswers. But first, he had to ease the fears of
the guards who had seen the fight, and would now hesitate to engage with him in
his own practice sessions. “However,” he said, “the student handles the trident
and the spear like a rake and a hoe.”
Somewhere in the crowd someone snickered,
remembering the insult to the skills of the Thebin pearl divers. He smiled,
with deliberate mischief in the grin, and bowed to the guards in their training
class and to their teacher. When he looked around, Master Jaks had disappeared.
From across the narrow watercourse, Hmishi and Lling were watching him with
solemn, dark eyes. Llesho didn’t bother to smile at them—no point in it, since
he had no consolation to give them, not even the secrets that would only have
made them more afraid. With a last bow, he withdrew across the footbridge and
rejoined his companions.
“Where is the infirmary?” he asked.
“That way.” Lling pointed to an airy
building with white cloths blowing at the windows, down another path and across
another tiny bridge. Llesho decided that, pretty as it was, he could quickly
get quite sick of all the water standing in the way of a straight line to
anywhere.
“Do you want us to go with you?” Hmishi
asked, but he had taken a protective stance at Lling’s shoulder, and Llesho
could see the hesitation, the stubbornness in the set of Hmishi’s chin.
It hurt that his old friends looked at him
with fear and mystery in their eyes, but he could think of nothing to say that
would make things the way they were before. He shook his head, and answered
with an effort, “No. I just want to visit a friend.”
They did not ask him who that friend was,
or how he came to have friends other than themselves in the governor’s
compound, when he had been there just two days and had spent all of that
sleeping. He wondered if they were afraid he only had unearthly answers for all
their questions now, but watched them go without a word. Then he headed for the
infirmary.
The infirmary reminded him of his brother’s
clinic, and almost he could remember the feel of the cold mountain air on his
cheeks and the awkward weight of a too-large broom in his hands. Adar had taken
a very literal approach to serving his people. There were no mountains in
Farshore, of course, and the breeze blew warm and thick with green and growing
things. But each place showed the hand of a healer of the soul as well as the
body. The floor and walls were pale, scrubbed wood, the screens left open to
the light and the air. The bitter tang of healing herbs and the sweet smells of
soothing medicines mixed with the smell of scrubbed wood and boiled linen. He
half expected to see Adar himself at the polished workbench, and the reminder
of how impossible that was pricked tears at the back of his eyes.
Bixei was sitting up in bed, Kaydu’s monkey
asleep in the circle of his legs, when Llesho found him.
“There you are!” he said when Llesho poked
his head through the open window. “I was beginning to think you were dead!”
“Not dead, just sleeping.” Llesho popped
through the window, not bothering to look for the door, and flung himself at
the foot of the bed. Bixei winced, and the monkey leaped away as if it had been
shot from a springboard, screaming monkey obscenities down at them from his new
perch on a crossbeam in the rafters.
“Sorry,” Llesho said.
“No big deal,” Bixei answered. “But you
will have to apologize to Little Brother if you don’t want him throwing
excrement through your window at night.”
“Manners like his mistress,” Llesho
commented.
Bixei was holding onto his bandage
protectively. After a moment during which Llesho ignored his questioning frown,
Bixei shrugged. “Habiba has a woman apprentice and all her potions smell like
flowers,” he complained, wrinkling his nose.
“She’s not likely to poison you, though,
which is an improvement,” Llesho said, and Bixei laughed in agreement. “Her
cures don’t hurt as much as Markko’s, that’s for sure. But she has a temper. I
heard her peeling the bark off Master Jaks. He was meek as a babe while she
blistered him with her tongue. When she was done, he slunk away like his
knuckles were smarting. Wouldn’t give you up to her, though, no matter what.”
Llesho heard the question in the gossip,
but he didn’t know what to say. “I was just sleeping.” Didn’t seem worth
fighting about to him.
“Little Phoenix—that’s Habiba’s
apprentice—said that you’d been badly mistreated, that you needed care. Jaks
said you needed your Thebin friends more, that you would need them around you
if you were ever going to feel normal and safe again.”
Bixei was watching him for a reaction. When
he didn’t get one, he pushed a little more. “So where are they, your Thebin
friends?”
“They’re around.”
Oh,
hell. He’d kept it together, hadn’t thought about it or let it tear
him down until now, but suddenly he couldn’t stop the shaking. He wrapped his
arms tightly around his stomach and glared out into the infirmary while he
fought the tears under control.
“What did he do to you?” They both knew Bixei
meant Markko, and the months spent in his workroom.
Llesho shook his head, embarrassed enough
for one day. He still wasn’t sure if they were friends or enemies, or if Bixei
would believe him. After all that had happened to him, the months in Markko’s
workroom were such a little thing. . . .
In spite of his effort at control, Llesho
started to cry, tears falling silently and unstoppably down his copper cheeks.
“I was afraid all the time. That he would misjudge the dose and kill me with
his poisons, or that he wouldn’t, and I’d have to go through it all again,
puking up my guts on his floor while he took notes on how long it took for my
legs to uncurl from the back of my head.
“Sometimes, he threatened to burn me for a
witch if I didn’t give him the healer Kwan-ti, but I didn’t know where she had
gone.”
He never would have given the healer up to
Markko. Not ever.
“Sometimes I wondered,” he said to the
distance, as if he could see the past like a play acted out on the surface of
his eyes. “If Markko himself did not invent the Blood Tide, for his own
purposes. Maybe it was all a game to destroy Lord Chin-shi from the start and
Kwan-ti never mattered to him at all, except as a name to burden with his own
crimes. ”
“I was afraid of him, too,” Bixei admitted,
offering what comfort he could, though the shock that widened his eyes made it
clear he had never guessed how bad it was for Llesho. “I don’t think that makes
either of us weak.”
The image of Lord Chin-shi dead by his own
hand in the dirt of the arena filled Llesho’s mind with questions, and a
warning. “I think that makes us smart.”
Jaks chose that moment to make his presence
known at the same window Llesho had entered through earner. “I think you are
right,” the teacher said. He rested his forearms on the windowsill, but did not
pull himself through as his student had done. “Has Bixei been telling tales
again?”
“Half the compound must be telling tales
about your arguments with Little Phoenix,” Bixei returned. “You were loud enough
that I’m surprised you didn’t wake Llesho out of his trance.”
Jaks looked uneasy. “Trance may be more
than a joke, so don’t repeat it, please.”
Bixei hung his head, though Llesho wasn’t
sure whether he did so out of submission to his teacher’s will or out of
resentment. Jaks held out a bit of news as a peace offering: “Master Markko has
disappeared.”
“Was he a spy for Lord Yueh?” Llesho asked.
“Yueh may think so,” Jaks answered, “but I
doubt Markko considers himself a servant to any man. Lady Chin-shi has also
disappeared. It is unlikely she still lives.”
Llesho knew what that meant. Lady Chin-shi
had been Markko’s champion, against her husband. But
Markko returned no feelings of loyalty to
his patron, who would have become an inconvenience and an impediment to his
escape once his mischief had been done.
“There’s my other patient. You have brought
him to me after all, Master Jaks?”
A small golden woman with straight dark
hair entered the infirmary through the door and tsked at the monkey chattering
in the rafters. She wore the plain coat of an apprentice healer, so he wasn’t
surprised when Master Jaks introduced her.
“This is Little Phoenix. She assists Habiba
in the matter of cures and potions in the governor’s house.”
“I won’t hurt you.” She took his face in
her hands and stared into his eyes. “I hadn’t heard that Lord Chin-shi used
torture on his slaves,” she commented to the weaponmaster, who had dropped back
as if he wished to escape this part of the conversation. For Llesho’s benefit,
she added, “Open your mouth and stick out your tongue.”
Llesho clenched his jaw around the black
pearl caught between his teeth, but Master Jaks twitched an uncomfortable
acknowledgment. “His lordship learned, to his regret, that one welcomes such as
Master Markko to the bosom of his home at the peril of all he holds dear.
Llesho paid attention with both ears to the
healer’s question and Master Jaks’ answer. He’d only thought of it as misery
when he’d been going through Master Markko’s torment, hadn’t given it a name or
known that it showed.
“Perhaps, if he is fortunate, he will carry
the lesson into his next life, where it may do him some good— your tongue,
boy.” She managed to scowl at both of them while tapping her foot impatiently.
Llesho slid his tongue out, but kept his teeth as close together as he could.
He opened wide when she took advantage of the small opening to insert a wooden
wedge and press his mouth open wide.
“You’re lucky he has a brain or a heart, or
can stand on his legs at all, Master Jaks. The monster has been feeding him
poisons; you can see by the discoloration here, and on the roof of his mouth.”
She gestured with the stick in his mouth, but withdrew it before Jaks could
take a look. “Fortunately, he comes to us with protections of his own. Den’s
work?”
Jaks shook his head. “Not until the very
end.”
“Someone, then, has done you a favor. If he
relied on the protection of his master, he’d be dead by now. I don’t know what
Markko was thinking, but this boy should be dead.” Taking the stick out of his
mouth, she nudged his chin up with the palm of her hand, asking Llesho neither
for an explanation of Markko’s thinking nor for the source of the pearl between
his teeth.
“He needs pure food and warmth and rest,
maybe a tincture to leech the poisons from his bones. And I want him here,
under observation, for tonight at the least.”
“No. I’m going home.” Llesho stopped
breathing, brought up short as he surprised himself. He did not see in his
mind’s eye the house he now shared with Lling and Hmishi when he said, “home.”
Didn’t see the barracks at Pearl Island, or the longhouse where the pearl
divers slept. He saw Thebin’s high, sere plain, its stunted trees twisted in
the thin cold wind, and the snow, drifting to the roofs of the scattered farms
and cottages. In memory he looked out at the city from the balcony of state at
the Palace of the Sun. He saw temples to the gods of a hundred different
faiths. The largest, devoted to the Goddess of the Moon and the symbolic home
of his mother the queen, glowed in the rose of a sunrise spearing through the
mountain passes to the east.
Somehow, Master Jaks saw where his mind had
taken him. “It appears that Llesho has other plans,” he said, but the set of
his mouth and the hard determination in his eyes promised more.
“And Bixei?” Llesho asked.
“That boy is going nowhere,” Little Phoenix
complained. “He has dressings to change, and wounds that need healing.”
“We don’t know who we can safely trust
here,” Bixei seemed to be weighing something in the way Master Jaks centered
all his attention on Llesho. Finally he decided. “Somebody’s got to watch the
pearl diver’s behind out there.”
So. Friends, then. Something settled
quietly into place for Llesho. He gave the other boy a mock frown and a tart,
“Keep your eyes off my
behind.”
Then he grinned. With Bixei at his back,
and his Thebin friends around him, he could ignore for a time the sense of
powers closing in on him. “Girls
fight in the governor’s army,” he said with glee.
“No boys?” Bixei demanded, even as Master
Jaks was advising, “They are women. I’d suggest you remember that if you want
to finish your training with all your parts in working order.”
Little Phoenix took pity on him. “Yes,
Bixei, there are men in the guards as well, but you will have to ask for the
first date.” She ruffled his hair affectionately. “The rules of the governor’s
house don’t permit active guardsmen to take advantage of the novices.”
“Kaydu can take advantage of me if she
wants,” Llesho volunteered just to make his teacher take that playful swat at
his ear. Bixei looked doubtful.
Jaks seemed to understand his hesitation.
“I’ve never seen a will that didn’t find a way,” he offered. Something seemed
to pass between them then, assurance and warning, and acceptance of both. Then
Bixei gave one sharp nod.
“All right, then. I’m ready to leave.”
Little Phoenix glared at Master Jaks,
blaming him for the flight of her charges.
“Not a bit of sense if you put all your
brains together. Well, take him if you must, but bring him back in the morning
to check those wounds. Habiba will have all our heads if we bring infection
into this house.”
“Yes, Mistress Little Phoenix.” Llesho knew
when he had gotten off more lightly than he deserved, and he bowed deeply. Even
Master Jaks at the window gave a respectful nod of his head.
Bixei could not bend without pain in his
leg, but he dropped his eyes in an appropriate display of submission. With
Llesho supporting him under one arm, he walked slowly back to the novice house
they would share with the Thebin pearl divers turned provincial guards.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” Bixei
said as he looked around the water gardens. Llesho didn’t say anything. He was
thinking about his mother’s gardens, hardy plants that defied the winter and
the hard land that ran with water only during the spring thaw. Jaks said
nothing, but set his lips in a grim line. Llesho wondered what gardens the
teacher saw in his head, and if he missed wherever his home had been before
slavery and the arena brought him to Farshore.
“Where are you from?” Llesho asked his
teacher, filling the silence. The question broke half a dozen taboos between
slaves, but the infirmary seemed a place out of time somehow, and made many
impossible things seem reasonable—like asking a weapon-master a personal
question. “Farshore.”
Bixei gasped, but Llesho met his gaze
levelly and said nothing more. Slaves came from three sources: conquest,
prisons, and birth to a slave. Bixei had been born into slavery. He struggled
to better his condition in the arena, but none of his actions revealed any
fragments of a lost past. He’d assumed that Master Jaks, like himself, had been
captured in a battle or raid, but Farshore had been a part of the empire since
before Llesho’s grandparents were born. That left prison.
There were hundreds of laws that could lead
to indenture or slavery, including treachery and treason. Unbidden, speculation
tickled at Llesho’s mind. He looked at the six tattooed rings on Master Jaks’
arm, visible marks on his body that warned all who saw him of the six men he
had murdered as an assassin. Her ladyship had shown no sign of disapproval when
she spoke of Master Jaks’ kills. Nor did murderers find their way to the slave
markets, being considered too dangerous. So how had the man come to be a slave
and a weaponmaster? Why had Llesho trusted him from the first moment he set
eyes upon him? That wasn’t even a question. He had known Jaks, not personally
or for the skill that named him master, but by the uniform he wore and even the
rings on his arm. The king of Thebin had trusted his family and his nation to
this man’s kind, of course, and had lost it all—nation, family, life itself.
Could Llesho afford to trust again?
Jaks said nothing, daring him to ask. Not
today, he decided. Not until I understand what plots the governor’s lady is
scheming and how a mercenary assassin turned weapons teacher fit into them.
Knowing might make the asking easier, but Llesho thought it might just make the
trusting harder. So he waited.
Chapter Fourteen
WITH Llesho awake, and Bixei added to the
novice house, alliances shifted and clashed in ways that drove Llesho out into
the night just to avoid the quarreling. Bixei, in his usual way, wanted to lord
it over the house because he was older by a year, and bigger than the Thebins.
Hmishi looked to Lling for direction. Lling wanted them all to shut up so that
Llesho could rest, but Bixei wouldn’t listen to a girl even if he knew she was
right. Llesho left them to bicker among themselves, hoping they’d come to some
sort of agreement before he came back. Putting the din of his housemates behind
him, he drifted down the flagged path toward the practice field, silent and
empty at this time of night. Perfect for thinking.
The fight with Kaydu had shaken him. If
Master Jaks hadn’t stopped him, he would have maimed or even killed her. It
wasn’t her fault, or even her failure of skill. Kaydu, after all, had thought
they were sparring, and did not fight as she might in a battle to the death.
That mistake had almost ended her life. Until the fight with Kaydu, Llesho
hadn’t realized how completely focused on killing his knife training had been.
He had heard the warnings, but Master Den and Master
Jaks both had taken care never to let him
get the upper hand in their sparring practice. Just when he thought he was
getting close to a win, one or the other of them would disarm him before he
could do any damage. He hadn’t realized that the only follow-through he had was
deadly. Jaks believed that Llesho had already killed. If it was true, he was
glad he didn’t remember.
He shivered at the reminder, but something
rattled loose in his mind in spite of his heartfelt prayer to forget: a guard,
dressed like Master Jaks in figured leathers and a beaten brass belt and wrist
guards, but with a bloody smile where his throat should have been. A Harn
raider lay across the body, his eyes wide and glassy, Llesho’s knife buried in
his back. The guard’s name was Khri, and he’d shoved Llesho behind a wall
hanging that draped soft folds across a window overlooking the palace gardens.
Beside the window was one of the fragile chairs scattered about the halls for
the convenience of the old men and women who advised the king. Hidden by the
draping of the wall hanging, Llesho had climbed up on the chair. He drew his
knife from the soft belt where his scabbard always hung, and waited until the
battle for the hall had turned its back on him. Then he’d struck.
At seven summers he hadn’t had the strength
to stab a raider through his heavy clothing, not even with a knife as sharp as
the Thebin blade he had carried. But the chair had slipped and sent him flying
after the knife. With trained instinct, he’d turned the blade sideways and felt
it slide between the raider’s ribs. The man had died, blood bubbling from
between his lips. Too late to save Khri. Too late to save his father. Or his
sister. Maybe too late to save his mother. The memory got all mixed up in his
head with Lleck, floating in front of him in the bay, telling him to find his
brothers. Not too late to save them, maybe.
When Master Jaks said that he had killed,
Llesho had wanted to deny it, to separate himself from all the violence and
mayhem that had marked his life, right up to the Blood Tide and Master Markko’s
poisons and Lord Chin-shi, who had treated him kindly one night and then died
at his own hand. With the new memory, however, had come the tactile recall of blood
slick on his knife, his fingers, and the pure fire of rage that had lit his
young heart. If he’d been older, if he’d been trained in all the weapons of a
warrior, he would have raged through the palace with the wrath of the ages,
cutting down the Harn raiders like wheat in a storm. After all these years, the
desire to fight his way to the throne room and stop the slaughter returned to
him so powerfully that he pulled the knife from his garments and slashed around
him in a wide swath, imagining the necks of raiders in its path.
“Whoa.”
He stumbled, didn’t recognize the voice
until Kaydu added, “It’s only me!” Then he dropped the hand that held the knife
like it was made of stone.
“I’m sorry,” he said, and bowed low to her.
“I didn’t know anyone else was out.”
“I’ll leave you alone if you want.”
He shook his head and Kaydu walked past him
to the center of the footbridge that led to the practice field. Dropping to its
wooden surface, she let her feet dangle almost to the water.
“Where is your monkey?”
Kaydu gave a soft laugh. “He would say that
he keeps guard over my possessions, if he could speak. Actually, though, he is
sleeping in the rafters of the guardhouse, enjoying his monkey dreams.”
Llesho thought it would be impolite to let
his relief show. Little Brother had not, so far, made a favorable impression on
him. He sat down next to Kaydu on the bridge, but kept his feet tucked up under
him while he watched the carp come up and nibble at her toes.
“I’m not supposed to feed them,” she said,
aiming a bread crumb at the head of the largest fish. Distracted, the carp
chased after the bread, as did his fellows. Llesho said nothing, but took the
bit of loaf Kaydu offered him and sent a crumb after the fish as well. Kaydu clucked
at him and mockingly chastised, “You will make that old fellow fat as fat if
you don’t stop that. I’ll have to dig him a new pond!”
“I can’t imagine your father saying such a
thing!” Llesho chuckled in spite of himself.
“Nor can I,” she admitted. “He is more
likely to say, ‘Actions have consequences, daughter. Decide if you can live
with the last step before you take the first step.’ The governor, however, is
more down to earth, and cares more about his fish than philosophy.”
“But you don’t agree with him?”
“Oh, his excellency is right, as always.
The old carp will get too fat.
And we will need to deepen and widen the pond to keep him.” She grinned at
Llesho. “It’s a game between the two of them, carp and governor. I am on the
carp’s side.”
“You are very strange,” Llesho pointed out
to her. But he threw another bit of bread at the carp, making his own
allegiance known.
“Comes of being the daughter of the
governor’s witch,” she said, a reminder that he didn’t need, then asked him, “What
were you doing when I came along?”
“Avoiding my housemates,” he admitted. “I
am hoping that by the time I return, the trumpeting and beating of chests will
have ended, they will have decided on a winner and a loser, and I can sleep in
peace.”
“You’re supposed to be getting rest, not
running away from quarrels. Little Phoenix will have their heads if she finds
out.”
“But she won’t. Find out, I mean. Will
she?”
Kaydu studied his face for a moment before
she shrugged. “Not from me. That isn’t what I meant anyway. What were you doing
with your knife?”
“Remembering.” He pulled it back out of its
scabbard and weighed the heft of it in his palm. “Master Jaks was right. I
killed the Harn raider who murdered my guard. Khri was a lot like Master Jaks.
Looked sort of like him, wore the same decorations on his wrist guards. No
tattoos on his arms, though.”
“Master Jaks is a very dangerous man,”
Kaydu pointed out.
Assassinations. He wondered if she knew.
“So was Khri. I couldn’t save him, but he gave me time to save myself. Since
that’s what he was dying for, I guess it was enough.
“I was only seven,” he added. “I couldn’t
save anyone but myself. They assassinated my father, killed my sister, and
threw her body on a rubbish heap. The rest of us they separated and sold.
Still—” he held the Thebin knife up, watched moonlight play along its blade—“it
could have been worse.” It had been, for Khri. “If the governor’s lady keeps
her word, next summer I will leave here a free man, a warrior.”
“Who are you?” she asked.
Llesho blushed and dropped his head. For
eight summers he’d kept his secrets to himself, but he couldn’t remember to
keep his guard up around her. Now he’d said too much, and he couldn’t figure a
way out of what he’d revealed.
“Nobody,” he said.
“I don’t think so.” She rejected that with
a skeptical eyebrow, raised and waiting for a better answer. Too late, he
remembered what Lleck had always said, that lips once opened could be shut, but
the words couldn’t be stuffed back inside and forgotten. Words always had
consequences. Seemed like the old minister had a lot in common with Habiba, the
governor’s witch. Both were better at philosophy than practical advice, like
what did you do when a pretty girl who could beat you at tridents set the words
tumbling like rose petals offered at her feet.
“Once, maybe I was something,” he admitted.
“Now just another Champion of the Goddess.” Even here in Farshore they knew
about the Champions, half priest, half knight, and all mad, who wandered the
length and breadth of four empires committing strange acts of chivalry and
daring in the name of the goddess. It was considered a sin to send a Champion
hungry from your door, but no one sent out invitations, and they were
considered well rid of when they went on their way. Kaydu laughed, as she was
meant to do, but she hadn’t stopped thinking.
“Thebin’s Deliverer,” she said. “That’s
what my father calls you. Master Jaks tells him not to count his worms and call
them fishes.”
Llesho’s head dropped. From the moment the
governor’s lady had appeared disguised as a peasant in the weapons room at
Pearl Island to watch him with the knife, his secrets had belonged to others.
Perhaps not all of them, however. He met Kaydu’s serious gaze with one more
dire. “Retribution,” he said. He slid the knife home and met her curious gaze,
held it. “Don’t tell.”
“I won’t.”
She got up and left so quickly that he
didn’t register what direction she had gone. With a deep sigh he did the same,
turning toward the novice house with considerably slower feet. When he arrived,
peace had descended; his three companions waited for him in the dull glow of
the stove.
“We talked,” Bixei said, but Llesho noticed
that Hmishi had a puffy wedge under his eye that was growing darker by the
minute, and blood dampened Bixei’s bandages.
Lling had no signs of bodily damage, but
she watched Hmishi with that short-leash expression that meant she wasn’t
taking any more nonsense from the males in this group, not even from her own.
“We figured out that you are the only thing we have in common,” she said, and
he didn’t like the way she said it.
“I won’t—” he began, but just then Kaydu
popped her head in the door, and followed it with a bedroll and a small bundle
that chimed out of tune like the bell of a clapper wrapped in cloth.
“Who’s she?” Bixei asked. Hmishi and Lling
were passing horrified glances as if they thought the others in the room
couldn’t see them.
“I’m Kaydu,” she said, unrolling the bundle
and taking out a wind chime, which she hung in the open window. “And I’m moving
in with you.” The wind stirred the chimes, and she gave them a satisfied nod
before spreading her bedroll on the floor by the door.
“I suggest we all get some sleep now. The
morning will be hard enough on you babies.” She gave the Thebins a grin with
too many teeth showing, but no one moved. Instead, they looked to Llesho, who
stared belligerently back at them.
“I’m tired,” he said, and dropped into his
bunk with a sulk coming on strong. He did not ask for this, did not want this,
and didn’t even know why it was happening to him. But he’d be damned if he’d
let worrying about it keep him awake. He closed his eyes with stubborn
determination. For all his display of resting, however, he was the last left
awake, long after the glow in the stove had dimmed to gray ash. Eventually,
however, his body gave in to the orders his brain was sending, and he slept to
the peaceful sound of the wind chime in the night.
Llesho spent a restless night haunted by
the specters of Harn raiders drifting like shadows through the halls of the
Palace of the Sun, their horsetail decorations hanging motionless down their
backs. In his dreams,
Llesho walked the same halls with blood on
his hands, looking for water to wash them in. At each stop he came upon the
body of someone he loved or knew— his mother, Master Den, his guard, Khri, his
brothers— and knelt and tried to wash his hands in their blood, like a ritual
that never ended. He did not know if he washed away his sins, or bathed in the
guilt of surviving when all about him had died. Huddled at the base of the East
Gate he found his companions, Lling and Hmishi, Bixei and Kaydu, all dead with
the marks of their wounds drying in the harsh wind. The governor’s lady stood
over them with a terrible fire in her eyes.
He moaned and pulled out of sleep to find
his companions still alive and gathered around his bed in the chill dawn light.
“You were calling out in your sleep,” Kaydu
told him. Little Brother had found her, and he lay curled in her arms, watching
Llesho out of deep, dark, accusing eyes.
Bixei fixed a sharp look on him. “What
language was that?”
Llesho glared at him. “I don’t know,” he
said, “I was asleep at the time.”
“High
Thebin,” Lling said. She stood her ground, though her voice shook. Hmishi had
already dropped to his knees, his head to the floor, where he set up a low
keening that seemed to wrench from his throat. Even Kaydu bowed her head to
him, though Bixei looked from one to the other with the growing anger with
which he always met confusion.
“You must be mistaken,” Llesho objected.
His Thebin companions would not meet his gaze. Kaydu twisted an eyebrow in a
show of ironic disbelief, although he was actually telling the truth as far as
he knew it.
High Thebin. The language of priests and
the law. The language of his Thebin gods, of prophecy. No one used High Thebin
for normal conversation, not even in the palace, though his companions wouldn’t
know that. Llesho had forgotten all of it he’d ever known years ago in the
pearl beds. Lleck, perhaps, would have continued his education in the high
language, except that it had been too dangerous with a witch-finder in the
longhouse and politics in the overseer’s cottage. He wondered what had dredged
the language from the back of his mind, and didn’t like the only answer he
could think of: the gods were angry that he had not yet rescued his brothers.
Pointless to ask what he had said, though; no one else in the room spoke the
language. Llesho was considering what the governor would do to him if he
escaped the compound when a servant appeared and bowed in the doorway. For a
moment Llesho wondered if his excellency, or his witch, read minds, but he
shuddered the notion out of his thoughts. Coincidence.
“His excellency the governor wishes the
presence of the young gentleman Llesho at his convenience,” the servant said,
and waited patiently for Llesho to dig himself out from under his blanket.
“I will follow in ten minutes,” he assured
the servant in a less than steady voice. The servant bowed again and departed
with his message.
“I don’t know what you are thinking,”
Llesho said to his companions, who continued to watch him as if he might sprout
wings and fly. “But it will have to wait.” He pushed through them, grabbing his
clothes as he passed, and headed for the outhouse and the baths in that order.
Maybe he’d learn something in his audience with the governor that would clear
up why he was here. And why he had suddenly started dreaming in High Thebin.
When he arrived in the audience chamber,
Llesho saw that Kaydu had arrived ahead of him. She stood beside her father’s
chair at the left hand of the governor.
Master Jaks stood a little to the right,
watchful but not participating in the debate at the center of the room. The
governor and his lady had abandoned their high platform seats of state for
straight-backed chairs set in front of a large table on which maps were spread.
The governor looked up absently when Llesho was announced and motioned to him
to come forward and study the map.
“Tell us all you can about the Harn,” he
said without any warning, and Llesho felt his mouth drop open.
“Bumpkin,” he chided himself, and stood a
little straighter. He sneaked a sideways look at Master Jaks, who seemed
impassively approving, so he took a chance and put on his “royal” mien: spine
stretched, shoulders back, chin out, and rested his fingers splayed over the
map. “What do you want to know?” he asked, and added, to qualify his answers,
“I was very young when the raiders came, and I don’t remember much of what I
did see.”
Habiba, the governor’s witch, spoke up
then. “You will,” he said. Llesho caught his level gaze, and could not look
away. This, he thought, is what it must be like to meet the cobra. With a
purposeful gesture at the map, Habiba released him, and Llesho discovered that
he could breathe again.
Her ladyship interceded with a mild reproof
for the witch. She smiled at Llesho, and he trusted that less than he had the
stern-faced judge she had shown him in the weapons room. “Start with what you
know, child.”
He let out a deep sigh, ordering his
thoughts, then pulled himself together again to address the company. “They are
evil.”
He thought about the evil he had
encountered since then, great evil in the slave market, and petty evil in
Tsu-tan the witch-finder, and the evil of a grasping poisonous spider in
overseer Markko, and they all shared the same feel, like slime on the eyeballs just
from looking at them.
“They live out on the plains, in tents, and
raise horses. They hate cities. They hate beauty. They measure their worth
against each other—who has the most wealth, the most horses, the most kills.
When they kill, they cut off the hair of their victim, and tie it like a
horsetail, and sew it to their battle dress.” Llesho’s mind had passed out of
the governor’s audience chamber at Farshore, and wandered again the halls of
the Palace of the Sun, echoing with the terrified screams of the victims and
the lust-filled cries of triumph of the Harn raiders, who shouted with joy and
exultation when they killed. “I saw a Harn raider kill my lady’s first
attendant in the throne room. He cut off the braid of her hair with its jeweled
decorations still in it. Then he sat himself on the throne—” Llesho stumbled,
almost said, “my father’s throne,” but kept that part of his secret. They knew
he came from the palace, but perhaps they did not know on what pillow his head
had lain. “He sat on the throne, stitching the braid to his chest while the
lady herself lay dying at his feet.”
When he looked up, the governor flinched,
but her ladyship met Llesho’s ravaged shock with the cold calculation he
remembered. This time he found it comforting; she did not shy away from the
horror of his story, but took it in, and measured his worth in his survival. He
remembered the look on Khri’s face when his guard had tucked him behind the
curtain with a warning to be still, and he found something of that same determined
acceptance of the deadly battle in her ladyship’s eyes. Oddly, she reminded him
of Kwan-ti for a moment. But Kwan-ti was gone, along with everything that had
ever given the young prince comfort in exile, including now friends and
shift-mates, driven away by the strange language that escaped him in his
dreams.
Her ladyship acknowledged all his losses in
the tilt of her head, but gave him no pity, and so he was able to go on.
“They killed anyone who opposed them and
stripped the palace to the bare mud walls. Then they gathered together everyone
who was left. The babies and the very old—anyone who could not walk to the
slave markets on their own feet—they murdered in the square, and threw their
bodies in piles like garbage. The rest of us they herded like their horses to
market.”
Habiba slipped a quiet question into his
reverie: “I thought that Thebin had no slave markets.”
Llesho nodded. “Thebin was free, ruled in
the name of the gods of the earth and the goddess in heaven. We walked to
Shan.”
Kaydu answered his claim with a snort.
“That’s impossible. Shan is thousands of li from Thebin. No child could walk
that far.”
“Not impossible.” Habiba set his elbows
carefully on the edges of the map and buried his face in his hands for a moment,
as if to wash away all expression. “Most Thebin slaves are seized out in the
provinces and brought to market in carts or by river. To the Ham, they’re just
property and receive the care necessary to bring a profit. They didn’t really
care if anyone from the holy city survived to reach the market, however. The
Long March served as a warning to others who would oppose them.
“We were ten thousand when we left Kungol,
the holy city,” Llesho continued, “and fewer than a thousand when we came to
market in Shan. Of those, the Harn decided half were unfit, and slit their
throats. The rest of us, they sold, dispersed throughout the empire as a
reminder as much as for the money, I think.”
“But you survived,” Habiba prodded, though
he would not meet Llesho’s eyes.
“Yes. I survived.” Llesho kept his chin
high as a prince of Thebin must, even when his heart was shivering into pieces
at memories he could not bear. He would not tell them how, though he figured
they could guess. Must have guessed, because the governor looked away, and
Master Jaks had disappeared completely somewhere inside his own head. Kaydu
still stared at him as if she did not yet believe him. Only her ladyship met
his glance without flinching or looking away. It felt like he was falling into
her eyes, swimming in depths as dark and hidden as the sea. She did not ask,
and he did not offer, that he had lived on the lives of others, eating their
food when his own ration would not keep a flea alive, and passed from hand to
hand, carried when the guards could be distracted to other parts of the long
trail of dying Thebins. He deserved no credit for surviving, buying his own
life as he did each day with the lives of his people.
Her ladyship did not condemn him, though he
saw in her eyes all the deaths his life had cost. “If you wish to be a
general,” she said to Kaydu, though Llesho knew the message was for him, “learn
this lesson. When everything is lost, down to the last hope of the soul, a good
leader will lay down his life for his people. A great leader will continue to
live, to give the people hope in spite of the despair that may have seized
him.”
He would have told her that he had earned
no praise for surviving for his people, since they had not let him die. But her
ladyship set a hand upon her husband’s sleeve.
“Yes, dear.” He wiped a tear from his gray
face. “That is enough for now, I think. You may go.”
Llesho bowed low to depart, but her
ladyship detained him. “Meet me at the dinner hour, in the grove,” she said.
“It is time you learned the art of archery.”
Llesho wondered if she meant before or
after dinner, she seemed to read his expression if not his mind, because she
smiled and added, “We will dine on peaches from the orchard.” With a final
obeisance, Llesho took his leave.
Chapter Fifteen
HE grove where Llesho met with the
governor’s lady smelled of peaches and ripe plums in the late afternoon sun.
Since he had neither bow nor arrows, he came with empty hands and waited,
watching the golden coins of sunlight dapple the grass beneath the trees. He
did not wait long, however, before the sound of chimes reached him, and the
lady entered the grove carrying an empty bowl. One servant came ahead of her,
ringing the bells that heralded her arrival, and four servants followed. Two
carried bows as proudly unbent and almost as tall as the lady herself, and two
bore elaborately embroidered quivers, each with twelve arrows in it. The lady
set the bowl on the ground beneath a tree and smiled at him.
“We will work for our supper tonight,” she
said with a smile. Then she motioned forward the servants. “You will learn the
Way of the Goddess with the bow.”
Llesho blushed a deep crimson. The Way was
sacred to his people, the path of the goddess known only to her handmaidens and
her chosen consorts. As a prince of the sacred blood, his own life belonged to
the goddess, who might accept or reject him as her consort during the vigil
celebration of his sixteenth natal day. That day approached, but he had not yet
offered his manhood as husband in heaven, nor did he know how he would do so
when the time came.
As an unfledged prince, he had no right to
anticipate the pleasure of his goddess by learning her Way, and it shocked him
to find the secrets of his own culture in a Farshore orchard. “I did not know
the people of Farshore followed the goddess.”
“My lord the governor allows me a small
shrine at the back of his gardens, as he wishes in all things to please me.”
Her ladyship spoke as if this will to her pleasure came as her due. Her
explanation left more questions than answers between them, not the least of
which was how one who knew the sacred Way of his culture could offer the
knowledge to him as if it were no more than gladiator training for the arena.
Therefore, he bowed his head very low, and his voice shook with terror when he
objected, “If you worship the goddess, then you must know that what you suggest
is improper for me to learn.”
“The Way belongs to all people who
believe,” she chided him, “Don’t let the ignorance of priests who crave their
own power blind you to the truth.” As a slave, her remote glance reminded him,
he had no right to question his master’s wishes.
“As you wish.” He bowed to her again, in
proper submission, and offered his silent repentance to the dead priests of the
Temple of the Moon, and to the goddess whom they served.
Her ladyship returned his bow with a nod of
acknowledgment, and began her instruction.
“The bow is like the will. The man who does
not bend, who cannot yield, stands alone and apart from nature. He is powerful
only when he bends his will to the string.”
She took the first bow in her hands and
pulled a coil of twisted gut from a deep pocket in her outer coat. “Choose your
bow as you would choose a war-horse,” she said. “It must be strong and sure,
and yet, must bend to your will.”
She showed him how to string the bow she
held and then handed him the second bow and a second coil of gut. “Likewise,
the man must bend his will to the bow, become the yielding string that subdues
the bow to its flexible strength.”
Llesho fumbled the task. No bolts of
lightning descended from the blue sky to strike him dead, so he let himself
relax into the bow, bending his own soul to the will of the goddess as the bow
bent to the string.
Next, her ladyship took an arrow from the
quiver offered by a waiting servant and held it out on her extended palm.
“The point, or head of the arrow,” she
said, making a graceful gesture with her free hand to draw his attention to the
stone chip affixed to one end of the arrow, “must be cunning and sharp. Making
arrow- • heads requires rare skill. You may develop the knack, but it is better
to acquire them from a maker than settle for second best, even if they are your
own. The true archer never pollutes his arrow with spell or potion, but trusts
to the well-cut stone, the clear eye, and the strong arm.
“The shaft—” She ran a finger along the
wooden length of the arrow. “It must be perfectly straight. Learn to carve your
own, for only then can you be certain that your arrow will follow the flight of
your heart. Be careful what prayer you carve into its woody flesh; your heart
should be as straight and uncompromising as the shaft of your arrow.
“Fletching—” She held up the arrow between
two fingers and directed his attention to the feathers at the nether end. “It
stabilizes the arrow and gives it flight. Learn the language that the fletching
speaks: hawk feathers for war; dove for peace. Fletching of swan’s feathers
swear the true love of the archer.
“Think of the completed arrow as an egg.
All that the bird will become in flight is contained in its birth. If the wings
are unformed, the bird will not fly. If it is too easily buffeted by the wind
and turned off its course, it will never reach its destination. If its beak
does not harden, it cannot crack open seeds, and it will die. So you must
ensure that each arrow is perfect, like the egg, so that the arrow’s flight
will be perfect, like the bird’s.”
She did not demand that he learn to
construct arrows on the spot, fortunately, but moved on to the next step.
Putting the strung bow in his right hand and an arrow in Llesho’s left hand,
she stood at his back and wrapped her arms around his arms, her hands around
his hands, so that they clasped the curved wood before them with their entwined
fingers. “You can fight the bow,” she said, “or you can be the bow,” And she
fitted the arrow to the notch of the string and pulled.
“You can let the arrow go, or you can
release your heart with the arrow, and be its flight—” He could feel her smile
skim his ear as she let the arrow fly into the tree beneath which her bowl was
positioned. And into the bowl fell a peach, freed by the arrow. “Try it.”
Llesho took his own bow in his hand, and
set an arrow, pulling back on the string. He felt as if he were pulling against
his own weight in the bow; it did not yield.
“You are trying to force the bow,” her
ladyship corrected him. “You must caress it, not overpower it. Become the bow
and find it in your will to want
to bend. . . .”
She did not touch him, but her voice
caressed him like fingers on his spine. Llesho took a deep breath, let it out
again, and let the feel of smooth wood bow and taut gut string sink into his
being. “Like the willow,” he thought, “bending before the storm, en-folding the
stream—” and as he thought, he drew back on the string until the arrow poised
on a line with his eye, and he felt the goal in his nerves and his being, the
stem of a ripe peach high in the lady’s tree. Fly, he thought, and felt his spirit fly, spin unerringly
out into the universe, twanging by the stem of the peach which fell as he
passed it, reaching out to the top of his flight, and curving back to earth.
When he returned to himself, the bowl held
a second peach, and the governor’s lady had fixed a sharp but approving eye on
him. “Can you tell me where the arrow fell?” she asked.
Llesho nodded and closed his eyes. “There,”
he said, and pointed to the place where the arrow had plunged to earth, its
head buried in the ground, its fletching upright like a banner.
“Again?” she asked, and he nodded, unable
to form thoughts into sentences while he lived the graceful curve of wood and
the teasing tension of the string. Carefully he set the arrow, and studied the
tree. Then he closed his eyes, pulled back on the string with two fingers
bracketing his arrow—his heart—and let himself fly. His body did not relax back
into itself until the peach hit the bowl with a soft thunk, and the lady at his
side laughed.
“Tomorrow, on horseback,” she said. Llesho
could not tell her that he had never ridden a warhorse, but only the shaggy,
ill-tempered Thebin pony that had hated its caparisons as much as Llesho had
hated the thin beaten plates of his child’s armor. They had been but poor
reminders of an ancient time when the Harn would not have dared to cross the
Thebin border.
He’d cross that bridge tomorrow—an apt
metaphor, he realized, given the number of bridges scattered about the
governor’s compound. Her ladyship walked over to the peach tree and sat beside
her bowl of peaches.
“Tell me about Pearl Island,” she said,
holding a peach out to him. He sat beside her, his legs crossed in front of
him, thinking he might be falling under a spell she cast over the orchard. Then
he remembered the cold, sharp expression she had worn when Master Jaks had
tested him on the Thebin knife. He took the peach, therefore, but decided to
remember that she was, after all, the governor’s lady, and a dangerous person
by any lights.
“What do you want to know?” He bit into the
peach, so sweet and ripe that the juices spurted on his chin, and he ducked his
head and wiped his face with his sleeve.
She spoke casually when she answered, as if
she hadn’t seen the sticky juice decorating his chin.
“Tell me about your life. How you came to
be in training as a gladiator.” She did not ask him about Thebin, and Llesho
was grateful for that. The governor’s questions had felt like poking at
unhealed wounds, and he wanted to think of anything but the bloody body of his
dead father, his sister bleeding out her life on a pile of refuse.
“I don’t know.” Llesho shrugged his
shoulders, almost! as embarrassed at the question as at the mess he was making
of the peach. “At first, I lived in the longhouse with Lling and Hmishi, and
the others who worked in the pearl beds. We aren’t from the same part of
Thebin, but we got along once Hmishi and I fought over who would be leader.”
“Who won?”
“Lling, of course.” He laughed. “She is
smarter than both of us, and she fights dirty. And winning really mattered to
her; she wouldn’t give up until we admitted she had won.”
“Good for Lling,” her ladyship said softly,
but with real admiration in her voice. “What happened to the pearl beds?”
Llesho shrugged, but he felt his entire
body grow cold. “I don’t know,” he said, “I was gone by then, into the training
compound to be a gladiator. Sometimes, when a diver stays below too long, he
begins seeing visions, If he survives the first time, he is likely to do it
again, and again, trying to get the visions back, until he drowns—”
“And you saw visions?”
He nodded.
“And were they the figments of an
oxygen-deprived mind?” she asked him, and he stared at her, afraid to answer
the question. She would think he was mad, or a witch, if he gave her the truth,
and know he was lying if he didn’t. While admitting to being a witch didn’t
seem as deadly in the governor’s compound as it would on Pearl Island, he was
no Habiba, and didn’t want her getting funny ideas about him. She honored his
privacy, or accepted his silence for her own reasons, and brought him back to
the original question: “Even in the training compound, you must have heard
rumors about the pearl beds.”
When she looked into his eyes, Llesho
remembered what she had said about the feathers on the arrow: her glance
pierced him, like a hawk, and he wondered what war he had stumbled into.
“Yes,” he said, nodding. “Lord Chin-shi,
they said, was afraid of witches. Master Markko, the overseer, convinced his
lordship that our healer, Kwan-ti, was a witch, but she disappeared before he
could gather evidence to prove any crime. Soon after that the Blood Tide came
and killed everything in the surrounding sea. Master Markko declared that
Kwan-ti had created the Blood Tide to punish Lord Chin-shi for his actions
against her.”
“Kwan-ti disappeared before the Blood
Tide?”
Llesho nodded. “The Blood Tide came soon
after. But I never saw her commit an evil act. I don’t think she was able to do
evil, even to save herself.”
“I think you are right. But if not Kwan-ti,
who ruined Lord Chin-shi with the deadly tide?”
“Did it have to be a person?” he asked in
return, “Might it not have been a freak of the sea itself?”
“No,
Llesho,” she answered carefully, and he wondered if she thought the truth would
frighten him or turn him against her. “The sea behaves in certain ways,
according to its nature and the seasons. To create the Blood Tide, someone had
to change the nature of the very sea—to poison it with devouring life that does
not occur naturally in these waters—where it touched upon Pearl Island. Who do
you think would have wanted to do something like that?”
Llesho remembered Lord Chin-shi’s chambers,
his lordship’s pressing questions and his own regret that he had no answers to
give. He had fallen asleep while Lord Chin-shi struggled through the night to
find an antidote for the poisoned bay. Lord Chin-shi had failed, losing
everything, and had died by his own hand. Llesho could not help feeling that
the failure was somehow his own. “I think Lord Chin-shi believed I might be a
witch, or that if Kwan-ti was truly a witch, she had taught me her spells, and
that perhaps I could stop the Blood Tide,” he said. “But I’m not, and I
couldn’t.”
“You could have, Llesho,” she said, and
touched a tentative hand to his cheek. “You are the favored of the goddess, had
you but known to entreat her.”
“No,” he said, shaking his head, denying it
to himself as much as correcting her ladyship’s misunderstanding. “My only
talent seems to be surviving disasters; I can’t do a thing to prevent them, and
for all I know, something about me calls disasters down on my head. But I don’t
have anything to do with it. It just happens.”
“Surviving is perhaps the greatest talent of
all, child. But if not Kwan-ti, who killed Chin-shi’s pearl beds?”
Her explanation of the tide had shed a
different light on Lord Chin-shi’s fall. If fate and the sea had set the plague
on the oyster beds, the worst any of them had done was let it happen. He knew
that Kwan-ti had not seeded the plague when she left, but she might have been
healing the bay, holding off disaster until staying even a day longer meant her
death. Freed of her restraining touch, the poison had quickly taken hold. And
Llesho knew about poisons.
“Master Markko,” he said. “His workroom
smelled of poisons and rot, and dead things.” He truly didn’t want to think
about Markko, or the workroom where the overseer had chained him to the floor.
He didn’t want to see Lord Chin-shi dead in the sand of the arena, either, but
that had happened, too.
“I think Lord Chin-shi was himself a
witch,” Llesho ventured, “but he couldn’t find the cure for the pearl beds.”
“Not a witch,” the lady corrected him, “but
certainly an alchemist, which is much the same thing and probably what your
Kwan-ti was, more or less.” She stood up then, and handed the peach bowl to a
servant while Llesho jumped to his feet.
“Master Markko has passed to Lord Yueh, who
held many of Lord Chin-shi’s debts,” she added.
It made sense, all except for why she was
telling him, which he asked her pointedly.
“Because you need to know,” she answered as
if it were the most obvious thing in the world, though he couldn’t imagine why.
“I hope we are not already too late.”
She left him there with one of the bows,
and a quiver of arrows. He watched her go, unable to drive from his mind either
their conversation or the fear that seemed to grip her at the last. Too late
for what?
In the weeks that followed, the novices
trained together in weapons and in unarmed combat. Her ladyship herself led
them in archery on many days, and Llesho found that he excelled at the weapon.
As he grew in skill he found his thoughts moving more
r
deeply and more slowly, whereas his
reflexes reacted like lightning. Kaydu taught a sharper, faster, dirtier form
of hand-to-hand than Master Den had done, and she included deadly moves that
grew out of forms that assumed a larger opponent with intent to kill.
Master Jaks took up the teaching of armed
combat without the rules of engagement that governed the arena, but that was
suited to working in pairs and groups to attain one goal. Extraction and
infiltration became a part of the training, skills that no gladiator would
need, but that turned them into soldiers capable of moving at the forefront of
a massed troop, or running and fighting in small bursts of guerrilla action. Or
working as assassins in the enemy camp.
It seemed natural that the novices should
train together. They soon learned each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and
forged a purpose with Llesho at its center. Kaydu joined them when she could
free herself from her own teaching duties, acting as student and as teacher
under Master Jaks’ instruction. Llesho grew confident in wielding his small
cadre as a force, sending Bixei to the front with a glance when strength and
intimidation might avoid bloodshed, unleashing Kaydu for stealth attacks; she
could move soundlessly through dry reeds, and her combat skills fit her like
her skin. Lling he begged with his eyes to talk them out of trouble, or to hold
ground if talk did not work.
Hmishi, it turned out, was the fiercest
fighter of them all, but only if the life of a companion was at risk. In
practice his moves were hesitant and laden with apologies and the wounded pain
of doing harm to others. When, in exasperation, Master Jaks pulled him in front
of the troops at practice and told him to fight or die, Hmishi had stumbled and
mumbled, absorbing the jeers of the guards and the curses of his teacher. Then
a knife caught him in a deep downward slash across the cheek, and he realized
that Master Jaks had meant every word. They weren’t playing at tridents with
their muck rakes anymore, and Master Jaks would kill him dead where he stood
rather than let him be a burden on his team.
Kaydu said later that Hmishi would probably
have died rather than hurt his teacher in that artificial setting of
make-believe combat, but Llesho had refused, utterly, to lose a friend to that
sort of game. He would not let them make enemies of each other, and he knew he
could never trust Master Jaks again if Hmishi died at his hand. So he lunged at
the master, latching on to his knife arm, and clinging to it while he shouted
to Hmishi to run, to get away. Master Jaks had shaken Llesho loose and turned
on him, a dreadful light in his eyes. Growling deep in his throat, Hmishi had
attacked with a savagery that almost took the master down before he tumbled out
of the way and set himself for defense. They battled then in earnest, Master
Jaks’ years of experience and cunning matched against the force of Hmishi’s
will focused on the death of his opponent. Master Jaks would have died in that
battle if three hefty guards had not risked Hmishi’s blade to knock him down
and hold him while a fourth disarmed him.
“I don’t care who you are,” Hmishi had
screamed, straining against the arms that held him down. “If you hurt him, I
will kill you. Anywhere. Anytime. I will kill you.”
For Llesho, time slowed to a frozen agony.
Nothing moved but the blood dripping from the cut on Hmishi’s face, and from
another, shallower mark under Master Jaks’ ear. Llesho thought he might walk
unseen among them, like a wraith among mortals, tasting their blood and
choosing who would live and who would die. He wanted to kill Master Jaks
himself then, for what they both had done to his friend. But Master Jaks was
watching Hmishi with relief touching the edges of a tension that had become a
part of him over the weeks of training.
“You’re ready,” he said. “Have your face
seen to, and be prepared to march. All of you. We leave for Thousand Lakes
Province in the morning.”
Ready. Tomorrow would be Llesho’s sixteenth
birthday. In Thebin, he realized, he would be going to his purification rites
now. The eve of his natal day would have been spent in silent meditation and
prayer, fasting and offerings of incense and fruit in the Temple of the Moon.
His brothers had told stories of how the scent of the fruit would come to fill
the world as the night lengthened and their hollow stomachs complained. And
he’d heard the servants laughing at the bites in the plums they found after
Adar passed the eve of his sixteenth birthday sampling the offerings.
But the jokes and the ceremony were only
the surface of the rite. During the long night, the betrothed prince became the
true husband of the goddess in all ways, and received from her hand the
bridegroom gifts of the spirit that would mark his soul forever. Those gifts
brought with them powers of sight and the shared dominion over the living
realm. Or the goddess would pass over him, and he would leave the temple in the
morning changed only from a boy to mortal man.
Llesho had no expectation that the goddess
would choose him as her husband, but he did not want to enter into this new
phase of hardship in his life still a boy. Tonight, therefore, he would observe
the rites of the god-king to prepare for both journeys: into manhood, and then
into the unknown. He left his companions on their way to the cookhouse, and
followed one of the compound’s many pathways, over several of the ethereal
bridges, to the small shrine deep in her ladyship’s gardens. Bowing low to the
gods who lingered about the place, he drew his Thebin knife and lay it on the
altar, the length of the blade stretching from knee to knee of the seated
goddess. With an abject kowtow that she might accept him in his unwor-thiness,
Llesho settled himself in the proper form for meditation, and began his long
watch alone.
Chapter Sixteen
/‘tS the darkness settled around him,
Llesho’s doubts seemed to curl themselves in the corners of the shrine, peeping
out at him with hot, fierce eyes. The priests were dead, none left to call the goddess
to her husband with their prayers, and her ladyship’s shrine was small and far
from the gates of heaven where the goddess dwelt. How would she find her
betrothed, how would she even know to look for him, so far away and with none
to herald his time?
With an effort he set aside his misgivings.
Only rats lurked in the corners, attracted to the cool shelter of the stone
altar. Like them, he must put his life in the hands of the goddess and trust to
her decision. Sitting cross-legged in front of her stone image, Llesho had lost
himself in the silent meditation of his past life that made up the long night
of passage for a young man entering manhood. His mother in her library in the
Temple of the Moon, holding him on her lap, and his father, sitting in judgment
on his throne in the Palace of the Sun, the two sides of heaven always in each
other’s gaze across the city. The Long March, and slavery, Lleck speaking to
him from beyond the grave, and Lord Chin-shi desperate to heal the dying sea,
and spilling the blood of his regret upon the sand. Her ladyship, watching him
at weapons, questioning him at the side of her husband, teaching him the
forbidden secrets of the Way.
Sinking deeply into his own mind, he sifted
through the details of his life. Where had he failed, and where had he striven
to serve with all he had to give Her whom he worshiped? In the balance, did he
prove wanting, or would the goddess cast her favor upon him? At midnight he was
disturbed by the presence of another in the shrine: her ladyship, come with
gifts of fresh peaches for the goddess.
“Peace is the most precious gift the
goddess may offer us,” she said, holding up a piece of the fruit so that it
glowed a rich gold in the candlelight: “Some say it is the one gift that man only
appreciates when looking back in longing after he has rejected it. Others say
the gift has no value except as a reward for strife. What do you believe,
Llesho?”
She offered the peach and he took it,
considering its soft richness, so unlike the cold white woman who offered it.
“I believe,” he said, “that each gift is a test, and with each test met we go a
little farther upon the Way of the Goddess. And we cannot know what the purpose
of the gift or the test is until we reach the end of the Way.”
“Even peace?” she asked him.
Remembering the Harn descending upon
Thebin, Llesho nodded his certainty. “Especially peace,” he answered.
Her ladyship studied him for a long moment,
with eyes as sharp as Llesho’s Thebin knife. Then she let out a sigh, so gently
that Llesho almost could believe he hadn’t heard it at all.
“Know the goddess loves you,” she said, and
rested a cold hand over his heart. Llesho bowed his head, and heard but did not
see when she stood and departed.
Alone again with the night and the rats
with their glowing red eyes, he tried to settle into his meditations again, but
the lady’s words had disturbed him. The goddess might love him, as she loved
all that lived within her dominion, but the night grew long, and she did not come.
In the deepest dark, when even the moon had
set, meditation turned to memory and turned back on itself to mingle past and
present in troubled patterns. He was grown, as now, but at home in the holy
city of Kungol, alone and lost in the twisting mazes of the Temple of the Moon.
From every wall remembered images of the goddess smiled down at him, but now
they wore the face of her ladyship, the governor’s wife. Somewhere in the
distance, he heard his mother cry out, but when he tried to reach her, her cries
seemed to grow more distant instead of closer, and the images on the walls
seemed to grow colder. Through the dream-laced memories wove the screams of the
dying, and the smell of smoke from the burning marketplace in the city.
“No!” His own voice broke the self-imposed
spell of his meditation, but the sounds of pain and anger remained. The shouts
of the watch summoning the guard and the slap of running feet were real. Here,
now, in the governor’s own gardens, it was happening again.
Llesho rose awkwardly to his feet, knees
and ankles protesting the hours spent in their strained position. Grabbing his
knife from the altar of the goddess, he hobbled to the door of the shrine.
Fire glinted from the rooftops of the
wooden houses of the compound closest to the road. A soldier wearing the neck
chain and wrist guards of the governor’s house guard ran by, stopping long
enough to push him back from the open door with a hand to his chest.
“Get back inside,” she ordered him. “We’re
under attack!”
“I
can fight!” Llesho returned, and raised his knife to show that he was armed. An
arrow whipped past his ear and he ducked as it embedded itself in the thick
lintel.
“Find your squad, then,” she said, and ran
to join the fray.
Llesho slipped out of the shrine, keeping
low, his knife held lightly in his steady fist. This time he was not a child;
he had both the skills and the strength to defend himself. But the guard had
been right: he had to find his squad. Master Jaks had trained them to fight as
a unit, and he felt naked without his friends at his side.
Crouching in the shadows of the reeds and
low plant life that bordered the lawns and canals, he made his way back to the
house he shared with the other novices. Before he could pull himself over the
threshold, however, a voice he dreaded sounded nearby.
“Search everywhere—I want the Thebin!”
Overseer Markko’s insistent shout came from a more solid mass of shadow just
steps away, silhouetted by the rising flames. “He’s here somewhere!”
Llesho froze, paralyzed by that voice. Master
Markko had gone to Lord Yueh at the death of Lord Chin-shi, but what had driven
Yueh’s army to attack the governor’s compound? Why was Master Markko looking
for him? To kill him outright, or to throw him into chains again? What did the
overseer, or his new lord, know or suspect about Llesho’s true identity that
they would seek him out in the midst of battle?
Llesho had no time to ponder the answers to
his questions; the sounds of fighting were getting closer. Suddenly, a hand
snaked out of the window of his house, grabbed him by the arm, and pulled him
into the large room. Bixei. Lling and Hmishi stood back to back in the center
of the room with their knives drawn. Kaydu was missing.
“Where have you been?” Bixei hissed.
“The shrine in the garden,” Llesho hissed
back. “Where did you think I was? Opening the gates for Lord Yueh?”
Bixei didn’t have to say anything; it was
clear on his face that the accusation shocked and offended him. “What, then?” he
asked.
They looked at each other, and it was clear
they each had unanswered questions. Lord Yueh’s armed guard wouldn’t be tearing
the governor’s compound apart to find a common slave, but they had all heard
Master Markko order his troops to look for Llesho.
“Who are you?” Bixei pushed for an
explanation in spite of the danger they were in, “What does Markko want?”
Llesho uttered a single Thebin curse. He
didn’t want to know what kind of rumors had spread. “We can talk about this
later.” If there was no later, explanations wouldn’t matter anyway. “If you
want to live, we are going to have to fight or run now.”
The attack had come through the main gate,
the only way in or out that Llesho knew. “Where is Kaydu?”
Little Brother chose that moment to swing
from the roof by his tail and pop through the open window with a cluttering
rebuke for their tardiness. Their young instructor followed him. “I’m right
here. Let’s go. Jaks has horses waiting.” She disappeared again.
Llesho ran for the window and would have
been first out, but Bixei held him back. “In case of ambush,” he said, and
darted out the window after Kaydu. Llesho followed, and turned around as Lling,
and then Hmishi spilled out of the novice house. Kaydu said nothing, but gestured
for them to keep low as they crept along the side of the house, hidden by the
reeds and bushes.
Kaydu moved so silently that Llesho was
surprised to hear the clatter of heavier feet when Bixei followed her over the
footbridge. He tried to imitate Kaydu’s silence with no success, but had to
turn around to be certain Lling was still behind him. She was, and Hmishi next
to her. Hmishi stumbled and came up again with a sword in his hand. Already a
battle had passed through here, leaving its scattered dead and their weapons
behind. Lling hunted around until she, too, had a sword in her right hand,
switching her knife to her left. Bixei gathered up a spear, and a short sword
which he wedged into his belt.
Llesho remembered his own knife in his
hand, and realized—damn!—he’d left his scabbard by his bed, along with the few
possessions he had acquired while at the governor’s compound. Once again, he
was starting out with nothing. But he was starting out alive. Llesho scrounged
among the dead as well, and found a short spear that he took up in his free
hand. He had begun to think that they would make their way clear when a sound
to his right was followed by the flare of torches.
The oiled parchment screens of a small
house burst into flame. A shout rose from the fire, and shadows formed around
it, resolved in the light into men on foot. Yueh’s men, dark against the fire
that backlit them, had seen Llesho’s squad. Soldiers ran toward them
brandishing weapons. Bixei caught the first across the ribs with the staff end
of his spear, turned the long weapon quickly and finished his man with a
lunging stab to the breast.
Lling and Hmishi slid to either side of
Llesho, swords poised high, knives pointed low. They joined the battle with a
flurry of clashing swords, vanquishing their attackers, who fled with screams
on their lips that they had been bested by demons. Llesho gave a grim laugh,
but did not count his victory too soon. A horse loomed out of the darkness. Its
tall rider urged the beast up on its hind legs to lash out at the Thebins with
its sharp front hooves.
With an enraged howl, Hmishi leaped to the
defense, driving his sword into the rider. The sword passed through the man,
who tossed him aside and laughed with the sound of ice breaking in his voice.
Master Markko—Llesho recognized him even in the dark—bled from no wound, though
Hmishi’s thrust should have sliced him in two.
“You are mine, Thebin!” The magician
pointed a short spear at Llesho, and cold terror pierced his heart. Frozen, he
could not have moved, except for the warmth radiating from the short spear he
held in his own hand. He raised the weapon between them, and it seemed to glow
in the light of the silver moon. “Never again, witch!” he shouted, and Markko’s
spear burned and shattered. The magician growled his wordless rage and brought
his horse around to attack, but the animal bucked and fell, screaming, with the
point of a spear buried in its flank.
“Move!” Bixei shouted, and Hmishi was
pushing him, and Lling was pulling her knife out of the gullet of a soldier who
stared up at the sky with blank, dead eyes.
Kaydu ghosted up to Llesho and whispered,
“This way—Jaks has the horses.” They had entered the peach gTove, the smell of
the ripe fruit cloying over the sickening reek of blood and burning flesh and
sweat and fear. Llesho followed the direction she pointed, moving deep into the
darkest corner of the grove.
Around them, troops were mounting up, too
many for Llesho to judge in the dark, but it felt as if the whole household
must be saddling to fly. Shadowed by a thick growth of trees and hedges, Master
Jaks awaited them with their mounts. Fortunately, their warhorses were
intelligent and trained to battle; the creatures stirred restlessly at the
smell of blood on the hands and clothes of Llesho’s squad but did not balk when
they gathered their reins and mounted. Llesho noticed with satisfaction that
someone had strapped his cavalry-style short bow and a quiver of arrows to his
saddle. The governor’s lady had been as good as her word, and his squad could
ride now, and shoot from the saddle as well as on foot. They might need to
before this night was out.
Kaydu took the lead of their small party,
finding their place at the center of a longer train of mounts and pack animals
moving quietly in single file through the grove. Llesho allowed his horse to
fall in step behind her, with his three companions following. When he saw where
they were heading—toward a place of thicker shadows in the garden wall—he
wondered if it were a trap.
“Master Jaks!” Llesho turned around in his
saddle to throw a whisper into the black on black murk, but he received no
answer. There had been no sixth horse waiting; Jaks was staying behind. Llesho
smelled blood, and saw the face of his teacher on the dead corpse of his
bodyguard, and he knew that Jaks would die if he did not come now. Unthinking,
he communicated his distress to his horse, which quaked under him in fear of
the night and its shadows, and the dark emotions of its rider. Llesho rested a
calming hand on the horse’s neck while his thoughts spun in turmoil. He knew
right to the core of his being that the memory-vision was true. Time itself
skittered out of control, the past and future colliding in the vision of Master
Jaks, dead. The house guard could not hold the compound against the fires of
the attackers, and Master Jaks would give his life to hold the attackers at bay
for their escape.
“I’m not through with you yet,” he muttered
to himself. Turning his mount out of the column, Llesho headed back toward the
low fires that marked where graceful houses had dotted the watery space.
“Where are you going, boy?” An outrider
caught his horse by the bridle and stopped him, staring hard into his face
until it registered who Llesho was. “The midnight gate is the other way!” He
turned his horse around to lead Llesho back the way he had come, but Llesho
pulled back on his reins to bring his horse to a stop.
“Where is Master Jaks?” he said, using his
best imitation of his father.
The outrider jerked his head in the
direction of the burning compound but continued to urge Llesho’s horse toward
the bottom of the orchard.
Llesho dug in his heels and refused to be
moved. “I am not leaving without him.” He kept his jaw firm and hoped the man
couldn’t see the shaking of his hajids in the dark.
“The lady will have my head,” the outrider
muttered, but he turned his horse. “He went this way— I’ll take you.” They rode
back, into the chaos and the fire, toward a tight knot of grunting bodies and
clanging swords. The fighting was on foot and the outrider made quick work of
it. He swept into the fray with a blood-curdling battle cry, cutting down one
attacker and sweeping another under the hooves of his charger. Then he angled
his horse between Master Jaks and the fires lighting a hundred battles like the
one he had just fought.
The outrider slipped from his horse and
held out the reins. “His excellency wants that boy out of here, and the boy
says he won’t go without you.” With that he was gone, lost to sight in the
fray.
Jaks lifted himself into the saddle,
swearing softly under his breath. “Now, Your Highness?” he asked. The words
dripped with sarcasm, but even so they served as a reminder to both of them.
Llesho tilted his chin at the exact angle
to receive his title, letting Master Jaks know in the doing of it that he read
all the levels of anger and submission in his words. If they were going to use
him for their own secret agenda, however, they would have to accept him at his
rank, and not as just another stone in their game. He would not go quietly to
anybody’s slaughter.
Master Jaks dropped his head. “I know,” he
said, and Llesho thought that maybe he did, too.
Together they entered the shadows at the
bottom of the peach grove, and passed through a hidden gate that opened to the
country northwest of the city. Outriders galloped up and down the line now, and
when the last of their party had come through the gate, the order to ride hard
came with the slaps of the outriders on the rumps of the trailing horses. For a
moment Llesho felt wrenched in time, a small boy again, and Jaks was wearing
the bloody uniform of his dead bodyguard and the travel stained clothes of the
long march.
But the horses stirred restlessly, reminding
him that he was not alone, and not helpless. He had an army at his back. And,
if they were fleeing by dead of night, at least they were running toward help,
and not into greater danger. Llesho kicked his own horse to a faster gait and
quickly found his squad again.
“We ride for Thousand Lakes Province,”
Kaydu informed them, “Pray that we are not too late.”
Gradually, the outriders herded the
refugees into a tighter, more defensible group plodding slowly toward the inner
provinces. Llesho fretted anxiously about their pace. Once the decision to flee
had been made and acted upon, he wanted to put as much distance as possible
between their makeshift caravan and Lord Yueh’s troops. But the outriders kept
them at a pace that protected the mass of the household and the servants who
had fled on foot. Gradually, however, fatigue ate away the desperate compulsion
to run that coursed through his bloodstream.
Farshore lay on a sandy flat, but beyond
the city limits, to the west, the foothills stretched north and south as far as
the eye could see. Llesho felt the road angle upward into the hills and fell
forward over the neck of his horse to balance himself into the ascent. His legs
were sore from riding, and his horse was setting down its feet with the heavy
indifference that spoke of exhaustion louder than any words of its human rider
could do.
“How far to Thousand Lakes Province?” he
asked Kaydu.
She shook her head, eyes grim, and curled
one hand around Little Brother, who rode tucked close to his mistress’ body,
his arms clinging to the rise of her saddle. “Too far. More than five hundred
li.”
Llesho looked around them at the shuffling
horde pressing into a narrow line again on the mountain road. His nose
wrinkled, assaulted by the moist warmth of animals and humans, fear mixed with
the dust of the road in a pungent taunt at his sinuses. He remembered another
long march, staggering through the night until strange arms swept him up,
passed him on, as the road stretched in a neverending blur of light and dark,
hunger and thirst. Out of memories he’d long tried to submerge, images arose of
bodies dropping by the wayside, beaten into the dirt by the hooves of the
Harnish horses. So powerful were the old feelings that Llesho braced his body
for the staggering jolt of a horse stumbling over a human obstacle in its
march.
/ can’t
do it again, he thought. But he said, “When Yueh realizes that the
governor has escaped, his army will follow us.”
“The governor didn’t escape,” Kaydu said,
and her voice choked on the words. “He stayed behind, to keep Yueh occupied in
the capital. Her ladyship leads us.”
Llesho wondered if her father had stayed
behind as well. Kaydu’s set face did not invite the question, and Bixei was
looking at him as though he’d been struck. “What makes you think it was Lord
Yueh who attacked?”
“I heard Master Markko call out—” Llesho
began his answer just as Kaydu interrupted. “There is a resting place beyond
this pass, with grass for the horses and a stream for water. The hills will
hide us from Yueh’s scouts and spies. Her ladyship will stop for the night when
we reach it, and we can talk there.”
Lling was riding at Llesho’s shoulder,
listening quietly to their conversation. At the mention of rest, she sighed,
but didn’t relax the watch she kept on the road and the hill that rose at its
shoulder. “He’ll know that at least some of the governor’s household escaped.
Will he send an army after us?”
“Probably,” Kaydu admitted. She did not say
aloud what Llesho already knew from past experience: they could not escape at
their present rate of travel. Already the very young and the less hardened
among the household suffered from the journey. “But enough of the house guard
stayed behind that Yueh may not realize we have escaped until he has searched
among the dead for our bodies. With any luck, they’ve bought us some time to
regroup and make plans. If our scouts report back that we are followed, we may
have to run, but her ladyship will want everyone to rest while they can.”
If it came to a midnight scramble, those on
horseback might have a chance, but Llesho knew about being frightened and weak
and on foot. Most of the people who slept tonight at the resting place in the
hills would die tomorrow or the next day or the next, running from certain
capture into the arms of exhaustion, hunger, and thirst. Armies did not march
with children and the sick in tow. Those who did had no chance of outrunning
trained and hardened fighters.
When the outriders passed the word that they
were stopping ahead, Llesho wanted to urge his own companions to continue, to
outstrip the reach of Yueh’s army. He had his own purpose set upon him by the
ghost in the pearl beds: his brothers to find, and his country to save. But a
child stumbled as he passed, and he scooped her up and set her in front of him
on the horse, and when the outrider called a halt and directed them down into a
hollow cradled in a circle of hills rich with the scent of pine trees, he set
the child down with her mother and followed his companions to a grassy plot
they chose for their camp. They dismounted and led their horses to the bottom
of the hollow where they found the stream Kaydu had promised. Hmishi took the
reins from his companions, and followed them as they made their own way to the
stream and water. When they had drunk their fill, he staked the animals in a
soft stand of grass and began to unbuckle their saddles.
After a moment in which they all stared
dumbly as Hmishi worked, Lling sighed and offered, “I’ll get wood for a fire.”
Bixei dragged himself to his feet and followed her into the nearby forest to
help her look for fallen branches. Kaydu tucked her sleeping pet into a sling
she wore around her neck and hunted for stones to ring their fire pit. Llesho
sat, thinking. He was deep in the puzzle of their survival when Kaydu
interrupted.
“Anything I can do for you, Your Highness?”
“No, thank you,” he said, so caught up in
wrestling with the problem in his head that he didn’t notice her sarcasm, or
the pointed hint that he should rouse himself to help set up the camp.
“Would you mind explaining that answer?”
Bixei asked the question. Kaydu looked uncomfortably like she was just
confirming what she already knew, but she silently dropped down beside him on
the grass. Lling and Hmishi had also finished their self-appointed chores, and
they, too, watched him, more frightened than they had been when they fought
Master Markko and Yueh’s provincial guard for him.
Not
now, he silently begged. He was too tired to deal with questions,
too tired to stand and face them but unwilling to try to explain while they
were looking down on him—it felt too symbolic.
“I’m nobody, just Llesho,” he said.
“Where were you when Master Markko
attacked?” Bixei demanded, but Lling stopped him with a hand on his arm.
“Not selling out the governor to my worst
enemy,” Llesho answered sarcastically. He stared down at the grass between his
feet, pulled up a leaf, and twisted it around his finger, contemplating how
quickly friends became strangers in the presence of a secret. “Tonight is the
eve of my sixteenth summer.” He tried to sound as if it meant nothing when he
added, “By custom, that time belongs to the goddess.”
In Kungol, the royal family had played out
its most intimate existence for the honor of the people: the royal chambermaids
would hang the first marked sheets of prince or princess from the celebrant’s
bedroom balcony. Royal couples consummated their marriages while a choir of
monks at the bedside intoned the heavenly praise of the families brought
together in the union. If he had grown to face the eve of his manhood in the
Palace of the Sun, like his brothers, all the males of the royal family and
their priests and retainers would have escorted him to the Temple of the Moon
for his vigil. They would have sung ribald songs of his prowess with the
goddess. In the morning trumpets would have sounded with the gay dances of the
wedding feast while he rode through the streets to his breakfast at the right
hand of his father. All of Thebin would acknowledge him as the husband of the
goddess, or jest about his luck as a free man, ungifted and unwed, but a man
nonetheless.
In his captivity, Llesho’s determination to
complete the sacred rites of adulthood in her ladyship’s garden shrine seemed
foolish and self-important. Certainly the goddess had not come to him in the
night, had not accepted him as a man and a husband of the Thebin royal line.
With Kungol a thousand or more li away and Thebin in the hands of the enemy, he
didn’t want to share the ceremony of meditation and fasting, or his failure,
with strangers. It embarrassed him now to think that he had tried to complete
his ritual of manhood alone and in a foreign land that still saw him as a boy
and the property of another. No wonder he had been found lacking—the body he
offered to his goddess was not his to give. But he had already said too much.
To his Thebin companions, the ritual identified him as a prince of the Royal
House more completely than anything else he could have said. Lling and Hmishi
understood at once the import of his words, and dropped to their knees with
bent heads. Just exactly what Llesho did not want in the middle of a crisis.
He gave vent to a disgusted sigh before he
ordered, “Get up! The Harn rule Thebin now; I have no claim on your
allegiance.”
“What are they doing?” Bixei crinkled his
nose in confusion, but he was determined to understand what everyone else
seemed already to know.
“He’s the king of Thebin,” Kaydu answered
for him, and looked at Llesho with a newfound uneasiness.
“I was
a prince,” he answered, exasperated, “more recently a slave, and soon to be
dead if Yueh’s troops catch us here.”
“But the old king is dead, they say,” Lling
dared to correct him; Hmishi still trembled at his feet.
“I have six brothers, all older than me,”
he answered, grateful to see that Bixei had finally sunk down beside them. He
seemed unconvinced, but he was listening. “And any one of them may be the
chosen of the goddess.” He did not add that he had not been so chosen.
Bixei fed a branch to the fire. “The
deadfall is dry enough- We shouldn’t lack for a fire,” he said, and added, when
Llesho had begun to think he had escaped the conversation, “Is it true? About
being a king?”
“A prince,” Llesho corrected him. “And not
that since my seventh summer. Now I am a slave like any other.”
“It could be true.” Lling gave him a
disapproving frown that for some reason reminded him of his mother, though the
two looked nothing alike.
“There was
a Prince Llesho, seventh son of the king and the lady-goddess in the capital.
Half the babies born that year were named in his honor.”
“She’s right,” Hmishi explained to Kaydu
and Bixei. He still watched Llesho carefully as if he might turn into a dragon
and fly away, but Llesho hadn’t struck anyone dead yet, so he risked the
conversation. “I always figured Llesho was one of the namesakes, but I suppose
he could just as well be the prince as a farmer’s son with a name above his
station.”
“Is that why Yueh is after us?” Bixei
asked. “Did he know about the prince thing already?”
Kaydu shrugged. “Maybe. Markko must have
suspected. Llesho made himself as obvious as the lighthouse on Farshore Point
when he had visions in the deep and then petitioned to be a gladiator.
Something was going on, and he’d want to get his hands on it, whatever it was.”
“Do you think we brought any food? I’m
starved.” Hmishi distracted their companions with a more immediate concern. He
rummaged in the blanket roll he’d taken from his horse and drew out a flat
spiral of chewy bread. “Food. Somebody knew we were going to be on the run.”
“Her ladyship knew,” Llesho told them.
Hmishi frowned, not quite following. “That
Yueh would attack the governor’s compound?”
“I think so,” Llesho agreed. “And I think
she knew who I was before anyone else did. She came to Pearl Island for my
first weapons test.”
Bixei’s eyes grew wider. “She did?”
Kaydu nodded. “It makes sense. My father
said she was most particular about keeping Llesho out of Yueh’s hands. And she
is always very cunning at knowing what to keep hidden.”
Llesho didn’t question the comment. The
governor’s lady had many faces, and more people than Llesho knew it. “Jaks was
expecting an attack. He told me to be ready to ride.”
“The governor knew what Yueh was up to,”
Kaydu confirmed. “He just didn’t expect Yueh to make his move so soon. Father
thinks that Lord Yueh subverted Master Markko years ago, waiting for his chance
to strike. Lord Chin-shi already had gambling debts, and Lord Yueh bought them
up and demanded payment. Markko’s witch-hunt was to cover his own evil magic;
he probably created the plague that killed the pearl beds himself, so that Lord
Chin-shi would have no way to pay the debts.
“Lord Yueh seized Pearl Island and its
properties in payment; Habiba anticipated him, though, and made his purchases
in the governor’s name before the contest.”
Bixei was still troubled. “No one would
start a war over one slave, even the former prince of someplace I’ve never
heard of.”
“I don’t know why her ladyship wants him,”
Kaydu said, “or even if she
wants him. But she won’t let Yueh have him.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Llesho protested
grimly. He didn’t like the conclusions he’d drawn, but he was pretty sure he
was right.
“If it doesn’t matter,” Bixei pointed out,
“you can raise the tent.”
“You don’t get it,” Llesho snapped. “I’ve
done the Long March before. I know how fast we can move, even when the pace is
forced with whips and jackals. We can’t escape a trained army, and I don’t see
her ladyship imposing a death march on her people with torture.”
“But if the governor is still in Farshore—”
Lling objected, remembering the conversation on the road.
“Yueh can’t let her ladyship reach Thousand
Lakes Province. She would report his treachery, and her father would have to
offer his own guard to rescue his daughter’s husband. From Thousand Lakes
Province she can send messengers to the Emperor and beg him to come to the governor’s
aid as well.” He looked into the eyes of each of his companions in turn, until
he was certain that he had their full attention. “Lord Yueh won’t be safe until
we are dead, or returned to him in captivity. And I, for one, don’t intend to
let Master Markko get his hands on me again.”
“What can we do?” Hmishi asked him.
Run,
Llesho thought, run now, as fast as we
can, and don’t stop, ever. But he dropped his head back against the
saddle he leaned on and shut his eyes.
“I don’t know,” he said, because he could
not admit to the cowardice that whispered, “Run,” into his ear. “I don’t know.
But I’ve done the Long March before, and I won’t do it again. I’ll make him
kill me first.” He didn’t open his eyes, but felt the tension of his companions.
“It’s better to be alive,” Kaydu objected.
Kaydu, the daughter of a witch, who had never been a slave. If Master Markko
had any say in it, she would see her father burned alive in the same
marketplace where Yueh sold her body.
He did open his eyes then, dark with bleak
memory. “No,” he said, “It’s not.” He closed the coffins of his soul, let them
think he was sleeping. Let them think what they wanted as long as they didn’t
require his presence in their schemes. But they fell quiet, and Llesho found himself
lulled by the crackle of the fire and the scents of the night—grass and horse
and pine, human sweat and exhaustion blunting the pungent odor of fear.
Chapter Seventeen
fiE must have slept, because the sky was
gray and the grass was damp when a hand shook him. “Llesho!” Master Jaks shook
him again. “Find yourself a bush, and then follow me.”
“What?” Mornings made him stupid, but
Master Jaks answered as if it had been a real question.
“Her ladyship requests an audience.”
Llesho figured he must be stupider than he
thought, because he couldn’t detect any irony at all in his teacher’s voice.
“Just a minute.” He rolled over, cracked
open his eyes enough to see that his companions still slept soundly. Lling and
Hmishi had moved closer to each other in their sleep, and foolish as it was to
let it happen, the sight twisted in his heart a little bit. At first, out of
the modesty that grew between diving mates, he’d worked hard to keep Lling from
intruding on his thoughts. Later, after the ghost of Lleck had appeared to him
with a reminder of his duty, he’d determined to go to his vigil night with a
clear heart to offer his goddess. Now, when he found himself free of every
obstacle between them, Lling herself was turning to another.
Master Jaks followed the direction of his
thoughts with a wry quirk to his mouth. Llesho answered with a pointed glare.
Maybe someday, when he was as old as his teacher, he’d be philosophical about
it, but right now he didn’t want to hear it. Didn’t want to be up before it was
time either. Even Little Brother still slept, his tiny paws curled under his
chin, his tail curled lightly around his mistress’ throat. Not an immediate
threat, or a general call out to mount and ride, then; a more personal disaster
pulled him out of his bedroll.
Wondering why catastrophe seemed never to
arrive in the wake of a full stomach and a good night’s rest, Llesho staggered
out of the sleeping camp to water the bushes. He returned a moment later, only
slightly more awake, to follow Master Jaks between the ragged knots of sleeping
refugees to her ladyship’s tent.
Someone, he realized, had been preparing
for their flight long before they had actually left Farshore. The tent was as
large as the governor’s audience hall, with yellow silk walls and a red and
blue striped awning for a roof. Inside, the floor was covered in thick carpets.
Graceful hangings separated the private parts of the tent from the public area
where her ladyship sat upon a high seat, surrounded by her generals. He wasn’t
overly surprised to see Master Jaks take his place at their head. Minions of
less determined station, with the opaque eyes of spies, hovered nearby, in
shadowed corners. In her ladyship’s right hand, resting across her lap, she
held the ancient spear that Llesho had last seen on Pearl Island.
As it had then, the spear sent a chill
through him, and he felt a faint dislocation when he looked at it: nausea, like
the way he felt in the pearl boat on a stormy sea. At her feet he saw a map he
had at first mistaken for a carpet. He tried to focus on the map instead of the
spear, and found that his stomach settled and the map stayed where it was
without troubling his vision.
Tall, narrow tables scattered at her
ladyship’s left and right held the remnants of a meal: a teapot and cups, and
various ornaments that the lady fondled thoughtfully before turning the sword’s
point of her gaze upon Llesho.
“Tea?” she asked.
When he answered, “Yes, please,” she put
the short spear aside and poured with her own hands from the pot into two
unmatched bowls. One was of jadeite, so thin that the light of early morning
shone through its intricately carved design, laying patterns of light and
shadow on the table. The other was of finely thrown porcelain, with gilt around
its rim and decorated on the bowl with a portrait of a lady in a garden.
Her ladyship waited, as if she expected
something of him, and Llesho hesitated, his hand poised over the porcelain cup.
But the jadeite bowl called to his touch with the whisper of old memories he
knew were not his own. Slowly he let his hand drift over to it, and gently he
traced with his fingertips its carved designs.
“I know this cup,” he said. The smile that
stretched his lips felt alien to his mouth. He could not know it was the smile
of a man long dead, but when her ladyship looked into his eyes, her wistful
sigh fell strangely on his ears, as if for that moment she saw in him a memory
he did not share.
When he had finished his tea, she gestured
for a servant to wrap the jadeite cup safely for the journey. Then, taking the
package, she held it out to him. “Take it with you. Keep it safe for your
children.”
“I couldn’t,” he answered, and left it
sitting on her outstretched palm.
“It is yours. It always has been.” She
tucked the bundle carefully into the folds of his shirt. “The governor is
dead,” she informed him, and Llesho wondered at her control, to drink tea with
a fallen princeling with the wound of her husband’s death still fresh on her
soul. “Yueh moves on Thousand Lakes Province, with Master Markko at his right
hand. Habiba rides before us, to warn my father of the coming storm. I wish we
had more time, but our fortune is cast, and we can but play out the fall of the
rods.”
Taking up the spear she had set aside, she
looked at him out of eyes grown cold with the baleful mystery that made him
cower within the shell of his own body. He let himself relax only a little when
she turned to the map between them.
“Tell me again about the Harn.”
His throat went dry. He had thought the
lady would ask him about Lord Chin-shi, or Yueh, or Overseer Markko, but
instead she studied the map before her avidly for the more distant danger.
Llesho darted a glance at Master Jaks, who said nothing but showed no surprise
at her question, either. There would be no escape from that direction.
“I was just a child.” What could he know of
value to the governor’s lady? “I don’t understand what you want me to do.”
“You are a prince, and the beloved of the
goddess.” She touched a single finger to his breast, and he burned there,
falling into eyes large and dark as the pearl Lleck had pressed on him in the
bay.
As if thinking of it woke the pearl from
its hiding place, it throbbed as if it were trying to regain its original size.
The small pain distracted him and he pulled back, disturbed by how easily he
fell under the spell of her gaze.
The lady nodded, as if something in his
response settled the doubts in her mind. “When the time comes, you will act
according to your birth and nature.”
He knew by her actions that the tense was
not a mistake, that she didn’t speak to the pearl diver or the novice
gladiator, but addressed the scion of a house as noble as her own. In spite of
his exhaustion, his spine straightened, his chin came up, and he returned her
level glance, aware only at a distance that the ache in his jaw had subsided.
“They use promises of riches and shared
power to lure their spies.” He didn’t know why he told her that first of all the
things about the Harn he knew or guessed. When she closed her eyes and bowed
her head, he saw that it was what she feared but had expected. Yueh. It made
sense. The Harn were a plains people who went on horseback more often than
afoot and had no temperament for cities. They ruled by indirection, putting the
traitors of one captive people in positions of power in the captured lands of
another, so no fellow feeling would grow between the conquered and their
overseers. The Harn themselves came and went at wilL.took what they wanted in
lives and wealth, and returned to the smooth round tents that sprouted like
leather-cased mushrooms wherever they passed.
Her ladyship gestured to the map at their
feet. Llesho fell to his knees to study it more closely, and he felt the breath
of Master Jaks leaning close over his shoulder, following the play of Llesho’s
fingers across the map. He recognized bits of it from school in Thebin, but
that had been years ago, and much of what he hadn’t forgotten had changed.
“Thebin,” she gestured with the point of
the short spear in her hand to a dusky orange blotch scarcely bigger than his
two fists set side by side. “Harn proper—” a large sweep of green for
grasslands, Llesho supposed, lapped around Thebin on the north and swept up to
a yellow square, perhaps a little bit larger, to the east. Yellow dominated the
eastern portion of the map all the way to the blue that Llesho figured must
represent the sea. “And the Shan Empire,” he supplied.
Shan was the name of the capital city and
the empire it directed. Trade routes, he knew, had always run along the length
of the yellow—the Shan Empire— through Thebin, and into the red that
represented the unknown kingdoms at the end of the trade roads to the West.
Trade passed up and down the road for the three months of summer and stopped
again when snow blocked the mountain passes through Thebin for the ten months
of winter. Llesho had lived seven summers in Kungol, the Thebin capital and
holy city, and he still counted the years of his life by the imagined ebb and
flow of caravans through the passes.
Sixteen summers, and most of them spent far
from home. But the sights and smells of the caravans, and the bustle of the
trade centers, remained with him still. The mountain passes had made Thebin
rich, but that all changed when the Harn came. Now the horsemen controlled the
western end of the trade route. And he saw what he had not realized before.
Marked on the map, the city of Shan rested not a hundred li from the border
between Harn and the Shan Empire. As far south of Shan as it was west of
Farshore, the Thousand Lakes Province, outlined in red stitching on the map,
lay like a glistening jewel set above the Thousand Peaks Mountains. And on the
western side of those mountains, lay the green of Harn.
Somewhere behind him, Llesho heard the
grunts of servants and the rumpling of silk being taken down and folded, the
denser sound of rugs being rolled. The sun must be up. The thought slipped
through his mind, and with it the knowledge that they must ride soon, or die.
But he could not take his eyes off the map. He reached for it, slid from his
chair to kneel, and touched his fingertips to the line of embroidered mountains
curving in a crescent along the western edge of the Shan Empire. He stopped
when his fingers came to the dusky orange of Thebin. The map could not show how
high the mountains thrust into the clouds, or how airless those highest peaks
were—how no man but a Thebin born could travel them. Children of Heaven they
called themselves, who alone could reach for the garden palaces of the gods
whose seed had set in the soil of the Thebin people. Outlanders stayed to the
relative lower altitudes of the capital city, following the three major passes
through the mountains. Llesho longed for the heights.
“You look like you are seeing God,” her
ladyship whispered, and Llesho looked up at her with a tiny smile, sharing the
secret.
“I am god.” Or should have been. He could
not meet her eyes at the thought. His ritual had failed.
Master Jaks didn’t bother to hide his
skeptical snort, but her ladyship nodded, as if his words hadn’t surprised her.
“Can you save us?” she asked.
Llesho shook his head. “I cannot even save
myself. The goddess did not come.” He didn’t think she would understand his
explanation, but she took his chin in the curve of her fingers and lifted his
head, kissed each eyelid closed against her piercing gaze.
“Yes,” her ladyship said. “She did. You are
alive.”
Cool as a goddess, she terrified him. But
her kiss sparked fire in his body, desire rising at the touch of her lips. He
reached a hand to stroke her skin, and blushed with embarrassment when she
withdrew into her chair. “I’m sorry,” he said after a long silence. / am not a man. I don’t know what to do.
He didn’t say it, didn’t know himself which of the myriad things he had to
regret he meant: for the death of her husband, or because he could not save her
from her own fate? For reaching out to her, or for not knowing what to do about
it if she had moved into his touch instead of away?
Llesho could feel the army of Lord Yueh
entering the foothills in pursuit of the weary refugees, could hear the beat of
distant hooves on the grasslands, and he knew what troubled her ladyship
because it had started the same way in Thebin. Travelers harried on the road,
minor raids on outlying farms, spies bribed with promises. Yueh pressing from
the east, the Harn pressing from the west, and Thousand Lakes Province between
them, peaceful, fertile, free. But none of those things for long. He turned to
leave her ladyship with her knowledge of doom, but she stopped him with a word.
“Take this.” She held out the short spear
to him. He shuddered but did not take it. “Like the cup, it belongs to you.”
“It killed me once,” Llesho objected,
though he didn’t know how he knew. His arms wrapped instinctively around his
middle, feeling the jade cup nestled in its wrappings under his coat. “I think
it means to kill me again.”
“I cannot keep it for you any longer.” She
held it out, watching him through eyes that held no hope, but endless
calculation, and he took it from her, though he believed he would have been
safer accepting a viper from her hand. Then she offered him what he wanted most
in the world: “You are free now, of all but your own quest. Find your
brothers.”
He didn’t ask—she saw the need in his face,
and gave him this prize with no promises in exchange.
“The records are in Shan and so is the one
they call Adar.” Adar. Llesho bowed. Adar. The name slid through his mind like
sunlight and peace, and he wanted his past back so much it hurt to think of it.
But he let none of that show.
The servants had taken the tent down around
them, had packed up most of the rugs and waited for her ladyship to finish the
audience so they could pack the last of her furnishings. “Our paths divide
here.” She physically withdrew, hiding her hands in the sleeves of her robe.
“Go now. Take my prayers with you, and my general, Master Jaks, for guidance
and protection on the road.”
Llesho left them together, to find the camp
in an equal state of hurried preparation. When he reached his own companions,
they had packed his blanket roll and saddled his horse.
“We are ready to ride as soon as we receive
the signal,” Bixei told him, but Llesho shook his head.
“We ride now,” he said. And to Kaydu, “Can
you guide us to Shan?”
“I’ve never been that far,” Kaydu objected.
“My father had hoped that Master Jaks would ride with us as our guide.”
“I don’t intend to give him that option.”
“Why not?” Kaydu studied him for a long
minute. “Master Jaks has sworn on his honor to see you home. The governor
accepted this debt of honor in his contract—to deny him would be to dishonor
him.”
“The governor is dead,” Llesho informed his
companions. “And Master Jaks owes the greater debt to his lordship to keep his
lady safe. Either way he chooses, Master Jaks must sacrifice his honor. Unless
we take the decision out of his hands.”
Kaydu closed her eyes to hide her sorrow,
but a tear leaked from under her lids and ran down the side of her nose
unhindered. “I see.” She nodded and pulled herself lightly into her saddle, but
Hmishi took the reins of Llesho’s mount and refused to move. “What is in Shan?”
he asked.
“Prince Adar.”
Lling’s eyes opened wide. “The healer
prince?”
“My brother. I ride to find him, and the
others.”
Hmishi stood out of the way then, and
cupped his hands to help his prince into the saddle. Lling scrambled onto her
horse without another objection, but Bixei stayed where he was. “I can’t
leave,” he said, “Stipes . . .”
“I know,” Llesho agreed. Yueh had purchased
Stipes for the arena, but he would use every trained fighter he had to invade
Thousand Lakes Province.
Bixei would not leave Stipes to the enemy.
“Tell Master Jaks that if he delivers her ladyship safely to her father, then
all his debts of honor are paid. My own fate is in the hands of the goddess.
Good luck.”
Llesho set the short spear from the lady at
his back, though it made him tremble to touch it, and turned his horse. Kaydu
nudged her own mount with her knees, urging him to the front of their little
band.
“This way,” she said, and guided them to
the bottom of the clearing. Little Brother caught up with them at the stream,
chattering indignantly to be taken up with his mistress. Kaydu pulled the sling
from her pack and wrapped it over her shoulder, holding it open for the monkey
to scramble in and make himself comfortable for the journey. When he had
settled, they crossed the stream and entered the forest that rose on the other
side.
PART THREE
THE ROAD TO SHAFI
Chapter Eighteen
THROUGHOUT the morning Llesho’s tiny band
pressed more deeply into the forest, making brief stops only to water and graze
the horses in the occasional grassy breaks in the trees. When the path grew too
steep for them to ride, they walked alongside their animals, leading them by
the reins. By midafternoon, however, the horses were stumbling with exhaustion
and the humans were doing no better. Llesho would have urged them to continue,
staggering until he dropped, but Kaydu pulled him up short with a tug on his
arm.
“Enough,” she said. “We will rest here, and
eat. The horses need a break as badly as we do.”
Llesho stared at her, not understanding. He
had only one model for such a journey—walking until his legs gave out then
going on, carried in the arms of another until that one dropped in the dust of
their passage.
“If we stop now, we can travel again for a
few hours before the sun sets, and make better time for the rest.” Kaydu was
watching him for some sign that he understood, so he nodded and dropped to his
knees.
Only then did he hear the rush of water
over rocks. A stream, and fresh, from the sound of it.
Rest. Why hadn’t he thought of that
himself? He wasn’t, after all, a Harn raider. Not a very good prince either,
apparently, but he’d have to pretend for a few minutes longer. His three
companions—four, if you counted Little Brother peeking out of his sling—were
watching him expectantly. Lling spoke up in the silence.
“Should we scout the area, post a guard in
case Lord Yueh’s men have followed us?” she asked.
Kaydu took the suggestion for a call to
informal council, and shook her head. “We can take turns at guard duty,” she
said. “We can fight if we have to, but we’d do better to run if Markko has sent
a party to track us.” She looked at Llesho. They were all weary, but they could
probably push on, except for him. He was the only one of them carrying a
child’s memories of the Long March on his back. Once again others were making
decisions based on his survival above their own.
“We have to know if Master Markko is
following.” Llesho hardened his voice to keep the words from shaking on his
lips. “And if he is, we run until we fall, and then fight until we die.”
The looked their unspoken questions at him,
and he returned their gaze with his own bleak glare. “I will not be his
prisoner again.”
Hmishi tipped his head in silent obedience
to his prince and slipped away, into the trees. Lling needed more convincing.
She was Thebin, and she would follow wherever her prince led. Her analytical
mind, however, craved reasons.
“He’s a powerful magician,” Llesho
explained, “with a particular interest in poisons.”
Her eyes went wide. Wordlessly she picked
up her bow and a quiver of arrows. Scouting for a secure lookout point, she
picked a tree and climbed high into its branches.
“What did he do to you?” Kaydu asked.
“Terrible things,” Llesho answered with a
shudder. “But if that were all, it was nothing so bad that I would risk your
lives over it.”
“Then why?” Kaydu persisted.
He wished Lling was there to do the
explaining. From Llesho himself, to someone who did not know the ways of
Thebin, it sounded ... he didn’t know how it sounded, but he didn’t want to see
the disbelief on her face.
“Tell me.”
He shrugged as if it were nothing—only my
life, the life of my people, he thought—and struggled to find a way to tell the
outlander the most private secrets of Thebin’s theocracy. That somehow, the
governor’s lady had already known.
“I am Thebin’s seventh prince of my
father’s body,” he said, and Kaydu waited.
“In Thebin, princes are wedded to the
goddess on their sixteenth birthday. The prince is then considered a man full
grown, but he is also a godling. If the wedding night goes well, the goddess
may reward her new husband with gifts.”
Kaydu waited still, expecting something
more. When it didn’t come, she offered, hesitantly, “According to my father,
many lands have rituals of symbolic union with their gods and goddesses—”
“Not symbolic,” Llesho blushed. He would
explain in words even an outlander could understand if he had to, but he could
not, would not look at her.
“The prince takes his vigil in the temple,
and the goddess comes to him. Dressed in the flesh he most covets. And they ...
she ... if he pleases her body, he will find himself changed in the morning.
Not that anyone can see, at first,” he rushed to explain, “but gradually, he
develops some gift, a skill or power from the goddess. Adar is a healer. Balar
centers the universe. Lluka sees the past and the future.” He laughed a short,
familiar snort. “Three of my brothers fell asleep and did not please the
goddess. They are ordinary men. They say, of course, that they pleased Her best
of all, and their gift is to live in peace within their own heads.”
He wondered what peace his brothers had
found in the years since the fall of Thebin, but Kaydu stirred restlessly.
“What do the religious beliefs of Thebin
have to do with Lord Yueh’s traitorous magician?”
“ ‘The seventh prince is blessed beyond
measure,’ ” he quoted, “ ‘most favored of the goddess, his gifts are beyond
compare.’ Yesterday was my natal day. I was in the shrine when the attack
began, but there wasn’t enough time to complete my vigil.” He pleaded with her
to understand, “The goddess did not come! Or I thought not, but her ladyship
says she did, and that she was pleased with me, though I did not give her
pleasure as a prince must. But if she has given me the powers of the seventh
prince, then better that you kill me now than Master Markko have the shaping of
them. Because he is evil, and everything he touches he bends out of true. I don’t
know who he serves— not Lord Chin-shi, who is dead, or Lord Yueh, who carries
the serpent at his breast and believes he is the master when he is just another
servant of Master Markko’s ambition.
“Somehow, Markko knows what I am. If he
captures me alive, he will wield my soul like a weapon, and my people will die.
Your people will die as well. Better to kill me here, now, than let that
happen.”
He let himself fall back against his saddle
and shut his eyes, recognizing the light-headed drift away from his body that
he felt in times of greatest weariness. In that state of separation from his
surroundings he didn’t really care that she didn’t believe him. As long as she
let him sleep. He didn’t mention the promise he had made to the ghost, though, figuring
one shock at a time was all either of them could handle.
“Damn!” Kaydu’s voice, drifting out of
dreamy distance, surprised him. “My father knew Master Markko was powerful,”
she explained when he cracked a heavy eyelid to look at her; and even from the
far place where he floated he could see the worry in her frown. “How strong is he?”
Llesho thought about that. “In Thebin,
there is a saying. ‘Apprentices do magic. Around masters, things just happen.’
Also, ‘A good magician leaves no tracks on dry ground. A bad magician leaves no
tracks in the snow.’ To a Thebin, magic you can see is poorly done. It is
difficult to tell a great Thebin magician from someone with no gifts at all who
stands, by some coincidence, near the center of great moments.
“Markko isn’t Thebin, of course, but if he
knows what I think he does, and if he has set in motion the deaths of Lord
Chin-shi and the governor, and her ladyship’s flight for Thousand Lakes
Province, as I think he has, then he is very, very strong.”
“Stronger than my father?” she asked him,
and Llesho saw the fear within the question.
He shrugged, his shoulders rubbing against
the leather of the saddle propping his head. “I don’t know, I’m not a magician
myself, I just know the sayings.”
“Among the witches of Shan, there is also a
saying,” Kaydu told him. “A good witch should always wear a bell around her
neck.”
“The question is,” Llesho suggested, “how
much between them is difference of philosophy, and how much a difference of
art?”
“My father should wear a bigger bell,” she
admitted, and he figured that meant that he didn’t let all his so, maybe they
had a chance, too. The thought gave him some comfort.
“Wake me in an hour to take my turn at
guard duty,” he mumbled, then rolled on his side and fell soundly asleep.
Llesho woke to the snuffling of hot breath
against his neck. “Stop it,” he insisted. Still more asleep than awake, he took
a random swipe at the direction from which the annoyance seemed to come. His
hand connected with a hard snout, slid down over long, sharp teeth. Not Kaydu,
then. He opened one eye, and gulped. A bear stood over him, its muzzle wet and
its fangs still colored with the blood of its last kill.
“Don’t move,” Lling instructed in hushed
tones. She stood next to the tree she’d been sitting in, her bow drawn taut,
arrow seated, waiting for a clear shot. Standing over Llesho’s terror-frozen
body, the bear shook its head at her. Opening its bloody maw wide, it roared a
challenge across the grassy clearing. Kaydu jerked awake at the deep-voiced
growl. She rolled away from the bear, coming to her feet with a short sword in
her hand.
The bear pushed at Llesho’s shoulder with
its nose, whoofing a mournful tone in his ear. It was a very small bear, he
realized, scarcely more than a cub; he wondered if the mother was around
somewhere.
“Lleee-sshoo!” the creature sneezed. It
sounded like his name, in spite of the bear spittle running down his neck.
Looking into the glowing coals of the ferocious creature’s eyes, Llesho found
an ageless wisdom there, and perhaps a hint of rueful humor as well.
“Where is Little Brother?” Kaydu drew their
attention to the fact that the monkey would have awakened them with his own
high shrieks if he’d still been alive. Lling pulled her bowstring a little
tauter.
Llesho sat up, his arms outstretched
protectively.
“Wait!” he cried to his companions, and the
bear raised its head, gargling a high-pitched growl of gratitude.
“Let me kill it,” Kaydu whispered, though
Llesho figured the bear had better hearing than any of them. Nobody moved,
especially not Llesho, and she could not reach the bear without endangering its
protector.
The bear sneezed again: “Lrlrl-eck!” it
spewed at Llesho, and took a swat at his head with the pads of its paw.
“He could have taken your head off,
Llesho,” Lling hissed at him.
Llesho shook his head. “Could have, maybe.
But he didn’t. He retracted his claws before he hit me.” He reached out and
touched the bear. “Lleck?”
The bear tossed his head in a semblance of
an affirmative, and emitted another high gargle of support before nuzzling at
Llesho’s hand with his nose.
“See! He knows me!” Llesho reached up to
scritch behind the bear’s ear. “He’s just a baby,” he said, and added, for
Lling’s benefit. “It’s Lleck. I don’t know what he is doing here in the body of
a bear, but I know it’s him.”
The cub howled his agreement, bobbing his
head up and down to emphasize the truth of Llesho’s explanation. “Ll-üüing!” he
said, and the sound of her name, coming from the wide open jaws of the bear, so
startled her that Lling let the bow fall to her side, and gaped at him.
“Is it really Lleck?” she asked Llesho.
Released from the immediate threat of death
from his allies, the bear who had been Lleck lumbered across the clearing in
the direction from which they had come, then galloped back again. He repeated
this dance several times, honking a series of high, panicky tones answered by
the hysterical chattering of a monkey high in the walnut tree where Lling had
been hiding. At least for the moment, Lleck was freed of suspicion of eating
Little Brother for lunch, but the horses tossed their heads and added their
nervous whickering to the clamor. Something was coming.
Llesho jumped to his feet, reaching for the
knife and sword fastened to his saddle, just as Hmishi crashed through the low
brush around them.
“Yueh’s ... men ...” Hmishi gasped. “One of
his forward scouts, dead, back there, mauled by an animal—” He pointed back in
the direction he’d come from, then stooped with his hands on his knees,
whooping for breath. The bear cub who had once been Lleck the minister joined
his noisy warning to Hmishi’s.
“Goddess!” Hmishi swore and reached for his
knife, but Kaydu shook her head.
“Llesho has strange allies.” She shrugged,
as if the explanation made no sense to her either, but was nevertheless the
only one she had, and started toward the horses.
“No time to run.” Hmishi pulled her up
short with the warning. He drew his bow and arrows and turned toward the sound
of men on horseback shouting to each other and to their animals as they crashed
through the forest. Lling moved up to Hmishi’s right flank and Kaydu stood at
his left. Lleck the bear ran awkwardly across the clearing and disappeared into
the afternoon shadows creeping over the forest.
Llesho stood a little apart from his
companions, his knife and sword both drawn and held at the ready. A scream
arrowed through the clearing, and another, despair and terror gurgling to a wet
end that sent a chill through the lonely young defenders. Then a horse broke
from the forest, an ax swinging from the fist of its rider. Llesho ducked and
raised his sword, but the rider was already falling, Lling’s arrow in his
throat. The horse, a roan bred for battle on flat open territory, reared up in
terror, froth flying from her nostrils, her eyes rolling with her panic. Hmishi
reached for her dragging reins, but she tossed him aside and crashed away into
the forest again. They heard an animal scream of terror, and the fading sound
of her hooves growing more distant.
Then the next and the next of Yueh’s
soldiers were upon them, and Llesho had cut the legs from under the horse that
thundered by him, and finished off the fallen rider with a knife to his breast.
Kaydu dragged the next from his seat and crushed his windpipe under her foot as
she swung a sword in the path of the soldier who followed him.
Llesho heard the high battle cry of the
bear cub at his side, darted a quick look to where the creature stood at the
center of the clearing, blood dripping from his muzzle and bits of flesh and
hair and cloth hanging from the claws of his outstretched forepaws. A mad light
shone in his beady black animal eyes and the straggling few soldiers left alive
turned and fled in terror at the sight of the savage beast fighting at the side
of the magician’s enemies. They were trained to fight and kill human beings,
with capabilities no greater than their own. Only the fear of their master,
following hard after them, could have induced the soldiers to confront the
young witch and her Thebin team.
The bear was more than their terror could
endure, and so they ran, not back to report to their master, but scattering for
escape in every direction, the bear cub snapping at their heels. It seemed as
good a plan as any to Llesho, who rapped out his order, “Mount up, we move now!” and reached for his own saddle.
His hand slid on the pommel, and he gave the wet red smear an annoyed frown for
a moment, before checking his hand for the source of the blood.
“Llesho!”
He turned at Lling’s call, and noted her
sudden pallor. She reached a hand to him across the clearing. “You’re hurt,”
she said, and ran to his side. He didn’t remember being wounded, but an arrow
pierced his breast. Lling’s words seemed to cut through the fog of adrenaline
and shock, and Llesho realized that it hurt, deep in his chest. Suddenly, it
hurt a lot.
“Lling?” The clearing tilted, trees turning
sideways in his vision. What was happening to him? He fell to his knees, sat
back on his heels with a grunt as the jolt shivered pain through the arrow
jutting out of his chest. His comrades gathered in a claustrophobic circle
around him, and Llesho glared up at them. “Stop it,” he said, “I’m not ready to
have my throat cut yet.”
“Nobody’s going to cut your throat,” Lling
responded tartly. Llesho didn’t notice what Kaydu was about until the pressure
against the arrow brought him back to himself.
“We can’t take it out now; you would bleed
to death before we could find help for you.” Kaydu snapped the shaft off an
inch or so from where it entered Llesho’s tunic. He screamed, a high shrill
sound that tore at his throat. A part of his mind that stood outside his body
wondered what animal was being slaughtered in the forest. A prince, the part of
him in agony answered himself. A prince is dying. The daylight dimmed, and he
fought unconsciousness while the pain thrummed in him like the arrow was a live
thing, digging its way through muscle and bone.
“Lord Yueh, or his servant, won’t be far
behind his scouts. He’ll send a bigger force when the patrol doesn’t come
back,” Kaydu said. He knew what that meant: ride or die.
“We ride,” Llesho gasped. “Help me to my
horse.”
Hmishi and Lling each slipped under an arm
and grabbed hold of Llesho’s belt.
“One, two, three,” Lling counted, and on
the mark of three, they hoisted him to his feet, then to his stirrup. He
managed to swing his own leg over the horse’s back, and Kaydu settled his foot
on the other side.
When he was set, Kaydu teased Little
Brother from his walnut tree but did not tuck him back into his sling. Instead,
she took his hat and coat so that he would look like the wild monkeys that
populated the forest, and slipped a thin band around his body, under his arms.
“Find Father,” she instructed. “Give him this message.”
She tried to lift him from her shoulder to
a low branch of his hiding tree, but Little Brother clung to her neck, his
little face grave and fearful. Kaydu sighed heavily, but she untangled the
monkey arms from around her neck and chirped at him in the strange language
they shared.
“Llesho is hurt,” she murmured, “Find
Father, bring him,” and this time Little Brother leaped into the tree with a
shrill stream of monkey curses. As they watched, he scurried out to the edge of
his branch and flung himself into the next tree, and the next, his cries
disappearing into the answers of the wild monkeys shaking their branches as he
passed.
Llesho peered into the forest. His vision
blurred, and sweat ran down his brow into his eyes. Something within him was
drawing him farther away from his surroundings. He hoped to see the bear cub
that had warned them of their danger but he didn’t have the strength, and his companions
lacked the time, to search for the cub.
Kaydu took the reins of his horse and led
them out of the clearing. After a while, when their camp had fallen behind and
only the deep woods surrounded them, Llesho thought he heard the sounds of an
animal in the underbrush. He could see nothing but the occasional sway of a
branch in the windless air, however, and gradually his sight faded to a twilit
gray tunnel down which he staggered for an eternal afternoon. When he felt
himself falling into the darkness, he called out to his old teacher, Lleck,
though he had no idea how much of Lleck remained alive in the mind of the bear
cub, or how much of his teacher had reverted to the wild nature of the bear. In
the clearing they’d needed the savagery of the bear, but now, with his own life
fading with the daylight, he missed the wise teacher.
“Help me, Lleck,” he called, and the sound
of his voice reminded him of other times, another march. When his horse
stumbled, and he fell from his saddle, he struggled to rise lest he be trampled
underfoot. “Mama,” he thought at first, but remembered she was dead, “Adar!” he
called for the brother who had soothed his fever when Llesho was a child.
Healer king. Adar, where are you?
Chapter nineteen
UNTIL their flight from the governor’s
compound at Farshore, Llesho had never seen a mountain or a forest. There had
been the tangle of sand-loving trees and vines that crowned the hill at the
center of Pearl Island, of course, and Llesho had once thought of that as a jungle
or wood. But nothing had prepared him for the cycle of life and death played
out in tones of black and gray in the night forest. Vaguely, through the fever
that radiated from the arrowhead lodged in his chest, Llesho remembered that
he’d once thought the forest must be silent at night, not this rackety clatter
of birds calling and monkeys chittering and a thousand different kinds of
insects chirping to each other with the clicking of their wings.
The sounds at a distance were a comfort.
Those same creatures had fallen silent where they passed; that they resumed
their nightly concert meant Master Markko’s soldiers were not following yet,
would not be looking for them until morning when his patrol did not return.
But the skulking hiss of predators keeping
pace with their party over the leaf fall on the floor of the forest, and
slinking from tree to tree overhead, raised the hackles of Llesho’s neck. He
sweated hot and cold by turns, fear and the oppressive heat of the forest
confusing his damaged body. The creatures knew by smell that he was weak and
waited only for his companions to let down their guard, and then the jaws of
some huge cat or flying monster would seize him. Llesho could feel the prickle
of anticipation in his legs, his shoulders, his neck. His flesh seemed to reach
for the tooth and the beak in the eager rise of the hairs on his body.
As his fever rose, the sounds blurred,
changed, and he heard skirts brushing through the grass, the cough and wheeze
of old men driven beyond their strength. In Llesho’s mind, the wail of a
predator celebrating its kill mingled with the death cry of its prey, and he
heard it as the curses of the guards and the death of another child strangled
for its misery on the Long March. A keening wail for his mother and his father,
dead and lost to him forever, started in the back of his throat. He wanted his
brothers to hold him and tell him it was a bad dream, but no one came. He
pressed onward through the night, through the pain and the numbness that was
creeping across his shoulder and down his arm, and through the terrible,
terrible grief of a seven-year-old child with the blood of his first murder
still on his hands.
He knew he must not let his screams out,
that if he started screaming the guards would come and they would stop him with
their huge hands wrapped around his throat, and his eyes would bug out, and his
tongue would turn purple, and they would throw him by the wayside to appease
the jackals that fought with each other and yapped their selfish demands for
the carrion left in the wake of the Long March. He did not want to be set upon
his own feet, gradually to drift to the rear, where the lions who paced the
human herd roared their challenge and watched for the weak, the small, the
sickly, to fall behind. He had seen a lioness attack a child fallen on the
trail, how quickly the tawny cat sneaked up on them and snatched the child away
before its mother rightly knew her precious burden was gone.
“The lions,” he whispered to his
companions. Better prey than carrion. “The lions, not the jackals.” And then he
fell.
“Llesho!” A voice he
recognized—Lling—called to him, too late. He heard the sound of horses, and
cringed within himself. The guards would take him, and they would strangle him
for the jackals. “The lions,” he murmured in his fever.
“Llesho, it’s me, Lling. Can you hear me?”
Small hands with hard calluses brushed the
hair from his forehead. “He’s really sick, Kaydu. I don’t care how much
daylight we have, he can’t go any farther.”
Daylight? “Dark,” Llesho objected, “Adar?”
He wanted Adar, wanted his brother, the
healer prince, to hold him and tell him it was just a dream, a nothing fever
that he would bathe in herbs and whisper gentle prayers over. But Adar’s hands
were soft as were none of the hands that touched him now, and the air was too
thick to breathe, not the cool, sharp air of Adar’s dispensary, tucked into the
high mountains overlooking the Great Pass to the west. He coughed and felt
liquid bubbles shift in his chest, coughed harder and couldn’t stop. Another
voice in the darkness—not Adar, but male, and scared, muttered, “He’s coughing
up blood, prop him up so that he doesn’t choke to death.”
They moved him, and he screamed. He
couldn’t help it, though he knew it was dangerous, and the guards would come. A
breathy “Shhh” warned him, but he couldn’t hold it in, couldn’t even form the
thought to fight it, and the scream went on endlessly, until even Thebin lungs
held no more. Llesho gasped and struggled for air that he sucked in with
desperate rattling wheezes, but his blood was filling up his chest cavity
faster than his indrawn breath could replace itself. He coughed and choked and
vomited blood on himself until the hands on his shoulders rolled him onto his side
and a voice above him swore softly. “Oh, Goddess, what are we going to do?”
“Make him drink,” Kaydu said, and something
fell next to him, was picked up and offered, and he reached for it with his
lips like an infant reaches for his mother and the water poured over his mouth,
and he tried to swallow, but felt the water coming back up thicker than it went
in. Oh, Goddess. If this was
her favor, then Llesho did not ever want to anger her.
“I’ll go for help,” Lling’s voice, close to
him, said, and he muttered, “Adar,” through the chattering of his teeth. He was
so cold all of a sudden; he felt his body shiver convulsively, and he grasped
at the tunic of the person who held him. “Cold,” he managed, and Kaydu was
arguing with Lling, “Where will you go? Who do you expect to find out here but
Master Markko’s men? You know what he said about being taken again—he’d rather
be dead.”
“That doesn’t mean he wants to be dead. I’ll ride ahead. We’re
on a path, there must be a village somewhere.”
Lling went away then, and someone put a
blanket over him. The blanket smelled like horses, and he tried to cringe away
from the hands that held it there, but the voice he knew as Hmishi hushed him
with soothing words, and the words turned into a song, the prayer song for a
sick child. He knew the words:
Free
this child of his pain, Let him laugh and sing again. Lady of the crimson west,
From his fever give him rest.
It was a simple prayer; Adar knew much
better ones, with harmonies sung with the lower throat voice while the upper
nose voice sang the rhythms, broken by the ring of finger cymbals between the
choruses. For state occasions, the birth of a prince or princess, or a plague,
prayer wheels and gongs would join the song, and the entire order of healers would
sing together in polytonal synchrony. Llesho had listened with wonder as his
brother led the healing monks in petitioning the goddess to ease the birth of
their sister. They’d been too successful for Llesho’s young taste, and the
little princess had been stubborn and loud from the moment of her birth. Llesho
didn’t want to think about that, though, because then he would have to remember
that she was dead on a garbage heap somewhere and not even given the honor of a
funeral. How would she ever find her way back to the world if she didn’t know
how much she was missed, how they had mourned her?
Why hadn’t Adar saved her, if he was alive?
He was a healer, after all, and knew all the chants and songs, and all the ways
of herbs and the power of touch that only the most gifted healers practiced.
Why hadn’t he saved their sister? “Adar! Adar!” he called, while the voice over
him broke from its song to whisper, “Hush, hush, hush.”
“Hot,” Llesho fretted, and pushed at the
blanket.
“Take it off him,” the voice of Kaydu said,
and he could see her, standing over him with a sour frown on her face.
“But he was cold a minute ago,” Hmishi
objected.
“Fevers do that sometimes, if they are high
enough,” Kaydu answered, still frowning, but she didn’t sound as severe as she
had a few moments ago, and Llesho was grateful when the blanket was taken away.
He was still too hot, but without the blanket to hinder him, his restless limbs
could move. “He’ll complain that he is cold soon enough,” she continued. “When
he does, use this—” she handed over a head-cloth so fine he could see her face
through it. “Drape it over his shoulders, to comfort him, but don’t cover him
for warmth. Let the air cool his skin.”
But neither of them was Adar, and as the
chills seized him again, he called out for his brother, gasping his cry, “Cold,
Adar, cold.”
Hands that were not his brother’s covered
him with a wisp of cloth and he wrapped his hands in it and curled himself
around it, trying to warm himself in its folds, but he couldn’t get warm,
couldn’t get warm, and he rocked himself, and the arrow bit deeper when he
moved.
“Lions,” he said, “lions, lions, lions,”
and he would have shouted if he could, because they would not understand. He
wanted to go to the lions now, not wait until he was food for the jackals, and
he heard the wind in the grass, and the moans of the women and the old men
driven beyond endurance in the Long March. And he heard the crying of the
children, and knew he was one of them, but he was a prince and must not cry,
must not cry, but his face was wet, not a prince after all, but a slave. Were
slaves allowed to cry?
Horses then, and Lling, saying: “There is a
village about a mile down this track. I found a healer. She said she would
come.”
Then Llesho heard the robes of a woman
stirring the underbrush, the smell of herbs and sunshine on her hem.
“The boy is sick?” she asked. Kwan-ti. He
looked up at her and smiled. “I knew you would come,” he said, and closed his
eyes. He was safe now, though she was not Adar, and he had thought her dead.
“Are you a healer?” Hmishi asked, and
Llesho would have laughed at him if he could have. Didn’t he recognize Kwan-ti,
their old healer from Pearl Island? But Lling did not correct him, and Kaydu
was explaining Llesho’s wound as if to a stranger.
“An arrow, here.” Kaydu gestured to her own
body, to a spot just above her left breast. “We did not take it out, afraid
that he would bleed to death, but the wound has sickened, and he has fever and
coughs up blood.”
“He’s conscious some of the time,” Hmishi
said. “But he makes no sense when he talks.”
“We’ll see what we can do.” The healer
knelt down at his side and touched the stub of arrow jutting from his chest. It
should have hurt like fire piercing his heart, but it didn’t. All he could
think about was the cool touch of her fingers, and the scent of mint and
honeysuckle that clung to her like a perfume.
“The village is more than a li distant, his
condition too serious to carry him so far,” she said, “But I have a small house
here in the wood that I use when I need to replenish my supplies. It’s just
this way—”
Llesho did not open his eyes to see what
she did, but her hand disappeared from his chest, and he guessed she must have
pointed, for she added, “The first bit is uphill, but it is only a short hike,
and then the way is level. Lift him onto a blanket, and we will each take a
corner. You can come back for the horses when we have a roof over his head.”
Hmishi’s hand on his shoulder tightened,
and he heard his friend say, “You did not ask who we are, or how our companion
came to have an arrow in him.”
Why did Hmishi sound so suspicious? Surely
he knew the healer as well as any of them. “Kwan-ti,” Llesho called out to her.
“She’s not Kwan-ti,” Hmishi murmured a
quiet warning, but the healer contradicted him with a mild rebuke:
“It will not hurt to let him think I am
someone he knows, and if he wishes for her presence, perhaps it will help him.
Come, before it rains, or worse. Your attackers may have reinforcements
nearby.”
She moved away briefly, but after a moment
returned. “We have to lift you now,” she whispered. “It will hurt, but just for
a few minutes, and then we will try to make you more comfortable, yes?”
He nodded to signal he was ready, and she
favored him with a smile in reply. “Now,” she said, and his companions lifted
him and set him on the blanket. He gasped, still shocked at how much the wound
could hurt when he moved, but he stuffed his fist in his mouth to stifle the
scream. He would not give their position away to the guards. But he couldn’t
quite remember what guards he was watching out for, so he let his head fall to
the side, and escaped the pain into a dark well of oblivion.
Chapter Twenty
YOU’RE going to be all right, Llesho, but
this will hurt. I’m sorry.“
Kwan-ti’s voice reached him from somewhere
in the fog that dimmed his eyes and clogged all his thought processes. He
thought she was wrong, though. He could feel Master Markko’s poison burning in
his veins, and he knew he was dying. Llesho smiled at her anyway. The bed was
soft and smelled of sweet grasses, and when she spoke, her voice held the dark
at bay. The paste she smeared around the arrow jutting from his chest chilled
him to the bone, but with that icy contact, the pain went away.
“Kaydu, Hmishi,” Kwan-ti called to his
companions in the voice that demanded instant obedience. “Tie these.”
Soft clothes wrapped Llesho’s wrists and
upper arms, wrapped his legs and his torso so that he couldn’t move.
“No!” He started to panic, but Kwan-ti
settled him with a hand on his forehead.
“I have to take the arrowhead out, Llesho.
“Lling, bring the knife from the fire, and
plenty of cloths. Kaydu, bring the tub of hot water, and Hmishi, bring the jar,
there in the window.” She never stopped stroking his brow, but Llesho heard the
scurry of footsteps away from his bed and back again, felt cloths draped over
his shoulder, heard the hiss of a hot knife in water.
“Hold him,” she said, and the knife pierced
Llesho’s breast, cut deep, past the blessed ice of the surface, into the pocket
of infected, rotting flesh, and deeper, until the tip of the knife scraped
bone, and Llesho was straining against the restraints that held him, screaming
as if his throat would turn itself inside out. Oh, Goddess, what had he done to
deserve this? Why wouldn’t she just let him die in peace?
Hands left him. He heard footsteps running,
and a door opened and banged shut again. The hands that remained still held him
immobilized for the healer’s knife, but they shook. It must have been Lling who
sobbed at his feet, because he recognized Kaydu’s voice growling prayers and
imprecations at his head, subsiding after a while into a muttered string of words,
“Finish it, finish it,” over and over like a mantra. So Hmishi must have run
from the house.
Then the arrowhead was out, lifted away,
and Kwan-ti called for boiled cloths and stroked the weeping shme from his
body, dipping into the wound itself to clean out the poison.
“Could be worse,” she muttered through
gritted teeth. “Just a bit of fecal matter smeared on the tip of the arrow. A
soldier’s trick, not the work of a magician. Deadly enough if left untreated
any longer, but we caught it in time, I think. Now, hand me that jar.”
Kwan-ti’s hands went away. Llesho heard the
grind of a stopper being pulled from the jar in question. Kwan-ti smeared
something into the wound that crawled over his flesh like jackals over carrion.
With a sick moan, Lling followed Hmishi out the door.
“What are you doing?” he demanded. “What is
it?”
Llesho squirmed while she pasted a cool
mash of leaves and moss over the mess and wrapped a bandage tightly over the
whole strange patch in his flesh.
“Something to help clean away the dead
flesh,” she answered, the cool humor in her voice at odds with her earlier
tension. “We’ll leave the packing in until the maggots have done their work,
and then we’ll see what we have.”
Maggots! If he’d had the strength, Llesho
would have been beside his friends outside, vomiting his disgust along with his
dinner. But he hadn’t the strength to lift his head nor had he had any dinner.
When he reached to tear away the bandages and their foul infestation, the soft
ties still held his arms trapped at his sides.
“Relax, Llesho.” Kwan-ti’s fingers left
cool traces where she touched his forehead, and he found himself sinking back
into the bed of sweet grass and herbs. “Your own dead flesh was producing the
poisons that were killing you,” she explained. “My little ones will eat the
corruption and leave the healthy flesh to grow strong again. They are less
painful and more sure than my knife, and they will not injure the living body
as the knife has done.”
As she spoke, Kwan-ti bathed his side, his
arm, his neck. The feel of the damp cloth against his skin distracted him from
the crawling sensation beneath the bandage. When she had finished and left him
to rest, Llesho lay awake, waiting for the sensation of fat white maggots to
gnaw through to his heart. It seemed like an eternity before he decided to let
the terror go. If he had come so far only to die hideously at the hands of a
friend, he’d rather not know. So he gave in to the pull of exhaustion and fell
into a deep sleep haunted by dreams of Harn raiders storming through the palace
and the Long March. In his dreams he heard the mocking cries of the jackals
drawing near.
When he woke again, sunlight cast soft
beams through the pollen that floated in the air of the little house. His
companions had carried him here in the dark of night, he seemed to remember. He
didn’t know if the house looked east or west, if it was morning or afternoon.
He had no idea how long he had lain between normal sleep and fevered delirium
in the healer’s house, or how long it had been since he had eaten. He heard the
murmur of soft voices nearby, and the chink of cups on saucers, however, which
triggered the juices on his tongue. He was hungry. Starving, in fact. He could
eat a bear.
Which reminded him that he hadn’t seen the
bear cub since their battle with Master Markko’s scouts in the woods. Had
something happened to him? Was it really the spirit of Master Lleck, his old
teacher and his father’s minister, or was that just another of his fevered
dreams? Very little seemed real to him right now. Not his life as a pearl diver
or as a novice gladiator, or his training as a soldier in the governor’s
compound. His recent experience with the infected wound seemed to have stripped
everything away but the Long March. He wondered if that meant he was dead, or
that his whole life had been a dream while he marched across an endless
grassland in the arms of his dying people.
If the bandage still covered his left side,
he bargained with himself, that would prove with the evidence of his own body
that he was alive. He didn’t know how he was going to test this theory, since
Kwan-ti had ordered his arms tied down and Kaydu had tied the knots. When he
lifted his right hand experimentally, it moved freely—in fact, it seemed to
float above him of its own accord. Llesho had to speak sternly to it in the
privacy of his mind before it would settle over the bandage.
The cloth was still there, bound tightly
around the place where Kwan-ti had carved out the arrowhead, so, perhaps he was
still alive. The crawly feeling of flesh-eating vermin was gone, however, that
could mean they had transformed into some other form of creature now invading
his body for the kill, or that
Kwan-ti had removed them while he had slept.
He wasn’t sure he cared which was true, so long as he could keep this feeling
of floating free of his body and its pain.
“You finally decided to rejoin us!” The
healer had noticed his hand drifting above his eyes. She filled a cup from a
kettle that simmered over a three-legged brazier by the window and carried it
over to him.
“Drink, boy. You need the nourishment.”
She gave him an encouraging smile, but
Llesho could not hide his disappointment when he took the cup from her hands.
She wasn’t Kwan-ti at all, but a stranger. With his head cleared of the fever,
Llesho wondered how he could have mistaken her for the healer on Pearl Island.
This woman was much older, her face seamed with the effects of weather and
time. Her gait was steady and quick, but her back was bent forward so that she
seemed always to be getting a little bit ahead of herself, as if her head could
not wait to arrive where her feet were taking her. She had a cheerful smile,
and eyes . . . she had Kwan-ti’s eyes as surely as Llesho breathed air and
drank tea.
“Kwan-ti?” He barely breathed the question,
though he knew, logically, that it couldn’t be true.
“If that is who you wish me to be, young
princeling.” There was more to her answer than the wry humoring of a sick patient,
but he couldn’t read the truth of it, or why a woman of the Celestial Empire of
Shan would call him by his title, even as a pet name.
The dusty, unused sound of his voice had
drawn the attention of his companions. Lling reached his bed first, with Hmishi
close behind, exclaiming their surprise and encouragement so that he could not
dwell on his questions.
“Llesho!”
“You finally woke up!”
“I thought you were going to sleep
forever!”
Llesho smiled, drunk with that haze of good
feeling between the breaking of a fever and the measuring, in the ache of
movement, the losses the body had suffered.
“Give him space to breathe,” the healer
warned. “Don’t get him excited; he’s still weak.”
His two old companions withdrew a few
steps, punching each other in the shoulder and bobbing on the balls of their
feet. But he did not see Kaydu anywhere in the cottage.
“Where’s Kaydu?”
Lling shrugged her shoulder. “She was
afraid that we might be trapped in this cabin if Lord Yueh sent reinforcements
after us. So she left, late last night, to scout the area.”
“When I went out to tend to the horses this
morning, I thought I saw dragons in the distance—two of them, flying too high
for me to be certain. Mara says that she will be safe enough, since the local
dragons haven’t eaten people for several generations.” Hmishi twitched a
shoulder in a companion gesture to Lling’s shrug. Neither wanted to think about
what might have happened to Kaydu alone in the forest with dragons in flight
and enemy soldiers on the ground.
Only the healer seemed unconcerned. “I am
Mara. I would have introduced myself when we met, but you seemed to need
someone else in my place, and I didn’t want to disturb your recovery with a
little thing like a name.”
She eased herself down onto a low
three-legged stool beside his bed and urged the cup to his mouth. “Don’t forget
to drink,” she ordered him, but Llesho put up a hand to stop the cup from
coming any closer.
“Kaydu,” he said.
“Will be fine. She’s a smart girl, and full
of tricks. Don’t you worry.” Mara, the healer, held out the cup again, more
insistently, and this time Llesho drank as he was told.
He expected something sharp and smelling of
io-dine, as Kwan-ti’s potions often did on Pearl Island, but this was sweet and
light and smelled of flowers good enough to eat. When he would have drunk too
fast she tilted the cup away from him with a warning, “Slowly, princeling, your
body isn’t used to taking nourishment any more.”
By the time she had spoken her warning and
he had nodded understanding he really didn’t have, he was ready to drink again.
When she offered the cup, he slurped noisily, trying to take in as much as he
could before she took it away. His childlike cunning made her laugh.
“Definitely improved,” she decided. “And
well enough that I can afford to leave you in the care of your traveling party
for a few hours. I have patients I need to see in the village, and they will
have missed me by now.”
“What do you want us to do?” Lling stood
between the healer and Llesho’s bed, looking down at him with concern hunching
her shoulders.
The healer offered her the cup. “Get as
much of this into him as you can, slowly at first, then let him set his own
pace. If I am not back by evening, he can have some of the boiled fowl from the
icehouse.”
She stood up and stretched out her back.
Hmishi drifted over to listen as she gave her instructions. “He should sleep
most of the day, but if he gets restless, you can prop him up on pillows—don’t
let him try to sit on his own. When he needs to relieve himself, bring him the
jar—he is not to get out of this bed until I say so!
“If he isn’t careful, he will tear the
healing flesh.” She smiled to take the sting out of the warning. When she was
certain she would be obeyed, she untied her apron and hung it on a hook. She
put on her bonnet and tied it under her chin. Then, taking a cloak of mottled
green from the peg beside it, she issued her final warning, “Don’t chatter too
much, you will tire him. Remember, a relapse is always harder to treat than the
original fever.”
With that she opened the door and went out,
closing it softly behind her.
When the healer had gone, Lling moved
purposefully out of his range of sight, and Llesho heard a clatter on a
staircase he could not see, followed by footsteps overhead. Lling soon returned
with a huge bolster full of goose feathers, and Hmishi lifted him up so that
she could put the bolster under his shoulders. When his two companions had
settled Llesho against the bolster, they sat cross-legged on the floor next to
his bed. They could talk this way without looking down at him, and Llesho could
see them without craning his neck.
He knew they were waiting for his
questions, but first he gave a luxurious sigh and took stock of his
surroundings. The house appeared to be small but comfortable for its occupant.
He dismissed the upper loft, which he could not explore in his present
condition, and which must contain few dangers to concern him if Lling could root
around up there without setting a guard. The main floor was one tidy room with
a single door and one large window with its shutter propped open with a stick.
When he was sitting up like this, he could see most of the room. A fireplace
and a table and chairs stood at one end, with shelves knocked into the wall
next to the fireplace. In the corner by the door sat a three-legged stool and
the low, grass-filled bed. Through the window, sunlight filled the space and
left the silhouettes of pine boughs brushing the floor.
The light troubled him. He’d been awake for
long enough that the quality and direction of it should have changed, but it
stayed bright and soft as early morning. He didn’t want to let go of the
delicious weightlessness he felt basking in the warmth of it, but they had been
running from danger, and he didn’t think that danger had gone away just because
he needed time to heal.
“Where are we?” he asked. “How long have we
been here?”
Lling took the first question. “We’ve come
about seventy li from Farshore. We were moving away from her Ladyship’s party
at an angle, but we are still a hundred or so li from the outer border of
Thousand Lakes Province, more than twice that far from the provincial capital.
If her ladyship kept ahead of Lord Yueh, the refugees should have passed the
border two days ago, and by now her ladyship’s father must have sent his own
troops to escort her home. They may be watching for us along the frontier, but
Thousand Lakes Province can’t do much for us unless we cross its border, which
we don’t plan on doing if we can help it.”
If the refugees had already covered more
than seventy li, he’d been asleep too long. Hmishi confirmed that assessment as
he answered the second question. “We brought you here three days ago, I think.
It’s hard to keep track.” The tremor in his voice gave him away. They had given
up hope that Llesho would ever awaken. He wondered what had kept him asleep so
long, but could remember only the fading dreams of another life. Which was
real? he wondered. Was he sleeping now, dreaming of friends and feather
pillows? Would he waken again to the Long March when he hit the ground, another
Thebin subject dead beneath him, another taking him up in her arms and walking
on?
He thought he could hear the whisper of the
long grass in the distance, and shuddered. This was real: Lling and Hmishi,
Kaydu gone to scout for trouble, and the sunshine casting bars of
bough-patterned light against the old and weathered floor of the house in the
woods. But this reality, he remembered, had a monkey in a coat and hat in it,
and a bear cub that said his name, which sounded as unreal as any dream. He
closed his eyes, too confused to take it in, too frightened of the alternative
if this world wasn’t real. He’d almost died in this world, too, of course, and
he wondered if the goddess left any path open for him on which he lived to
reach his majority. She must have been really pissed off at him for the
interruption of his birthday vigil.
Lling gave him a moment to regain his
composure, then laid out their choices. “Our next step depends on what Kaydu
finds during her reconnoiter. If Lord Yueh was pursuing the refugees and the
scouting party stumbled upon us by accident, his army may not have stopped at
the border. Thousand Lakes Province may be under attack even now, and we will
find no sanctuary there. If the scouts were looking for us—” she did not say
it, but they all knew she meant Llesho—“it is unlikely that we can outrun a
trained army.”
Again, Llesho knew he was the obstacle to
their escape. The others could run, or hide, but Llesho couldn’t sit up under
his own power, let alone escape a pursuing army.
“Sky Bridge Province is closer,” Hmishi
continued, “not more than thirty li to the south, but the mountain passes are
more difficult there. We would have to trade the horses for donkeys, and any
spy who learned of it would know immediately that we had changed our route.”
“We’d be moving away from Shan and not
toward it,” Llesho objected, still determined to reach the capital city and
find Adar as soon as possible.
“But we’d be heading toward Thebin. Whatever plan we make
will have to wait on Kaydu’s report.”
Llesho nodded his agreement, though what he
expected to accomplish with just the four of them, all too young for legal
freedom and Llesho with a hole in his chest, he didn’t rightly know.
Lling focused her gaze on the edge of
Llesho’s bandaged side where it had escaped the blanket. “We don’t have to
decide yet,” she said, “not until Kaydu finds out whether Master Markko is
still looking for us, or if Lord Yueh has pulled off all his men to attack
Thousand Lakes Province. In the meantime, Llesho needs to heal.”
Waiting sounded like a good idea to Llesho;
he needed his friends working and thinking together when they went after Adar.
He didn’t have the energy to persuade them to go to the capital city of Shan
anyway—didn’t think he’d have much luck trying when he couldn’t stand up under
his own power. But he wasn’t sure that they could stay where they were either.
“Do you think Kaydu is coming back?” he
asked, and meant not, Has she betrayed us
to our enemies? but, Has she
been captured? and, Do we have
to run now, before her captors find us, and while I am not yet sure which world
I live in let alone what route we should take to freedom?
Lling frowned in a way that made Llesho
think she had figured out the shades of meaning in the questions he was really
asking.
“We’re as safe as we can be,” she said. “Or
we have been, until now.”
Until
now. Llesho wondered about that. Lling answered his frown without waiting for
the next question: “We are still free, more or less, though Mara— the lady
healer—hasn’t had much chance to betray us to Lord Yueh. She has stayed with
you night and day since she brought us here.”
Thus the “until.” Whatever Kaydu’s fate,
Lling didn’t think she’d give them up to Master Markko or Lord Yueh. The
healer, Mara, however, could be reporting them to authorities in the village at
this very minute. Those local officials might hand them over to anyone
happening by with a provincial government badge on his cap.
“You don’t trust her?” They both knew which
“her” he meant. Llesho wasn’t sure he could ride yet, but he could send his
companions on ahead, out of harm’s reach, if he had to, and find his own way
out of Lord Yueh’s trap. There was always the one final escape open to him,
though he regretted the pain and exhaustion he had already invested in
recovering from his injury.
Lling wouldn’t meet his eyes, but raised
her eyebrows in question at Hmishi, who hesitantly took up the answer.
“I think she would do anything in her power
to keep you from harm,” Hmishi began, “but she’s not Kwan-ti.”
The first part of Hmishi’s answer surprised
him. Llesho had already figured out the second part for himself. “Has she told
you who she is?” He didn’t mean the name, of course, but Hmishi repeated it
anyway.
“Her name is Mara, and she says she is
local to the village, and only uses this house when she is foraging in the wood
for herbs and fungi to use in her medicines.”
“But the house had all the signs that
someone had been living in it recently,” Lling observed. “No dust on the
tables, the bed made with grasses still green from the plucking when we
arrived. And there were fresh fruits and vegetables in the bins.”
“She had the medicines she needed for your
wound right to hand,” Lling added.
Llesho did not look happy, but he admitted,
“I know it doesn’t make sense, and you’ve both seen a lot more of the healer
than I have, but I trust her.” He glared at his companions, defying them to
contradict him. “It was something about her touch—I could feel it. I think
that’s why I mistook her for Kwan-ti. There was something about her touch that
just felt like a true healer.” They couldn’t object, however; they had all
grown to like her, and for many of the same reasons.
“At first, when she cut out the arrowhead,
I thought we’d made a mistake,” Hmishi said. “She seemed as cold as her blade,
and even more unbending. I couldn’t even watch, but she didn’t flinch once, not
even when you screamed that horrible scream and only the cloths tying you down
kept you from rising right out of the bed.”
Llesho remembered that part, dimly, and it
still had the power to turn his stomach. His companions seemed to feel the same
way, for they had turned matching shades of green.
“And when she did that thing with the—”
Hmishi couldn’t finish, just shuddered in revulsion, and gestured loosely at
the bandages. Llesho remembered that part, too, and was regretting that he’d
drunk so much of the healer’s potion so recently. He had a feeling it wouldn’t
be pleasant on the return trip.
“I’d heard Little Phoenix mention the use
of the carrion eaters as a battlefield treatment for rotting wounds,” Lling
interrupted, “but I’d never actually seen it done. Hope I don’t again.”
Hmishi shook his head. “I don’t have to
like it, but I can accept that it was necessary.”
Llesho knew he wasn’t in the best shape for
logic, but even he could see that Hmishi was making a better argument for
distrusting Mara than for trusting her. “So you like her, even though you don’t
trust her and think she might be trying to kUl me?”
He didn’t like the sound of that, but it
was how his tired brain chose to phrase it.
“It was afterward,” Hmishi said. “She
bandaged you and then gave us all instructions for keeping you cool. She told
us what to say if you cried out in your sleep, and asked us to watch you while
she cleared her mind. And then she went outside.
“We were all nervous then,” Lling said,
“because we thought she had gone to find Lord Yueh’s men, to hand us over.”
“So I followed her,” Hmishi admitted. “I
would have killed her before she gave away the location of this house, but she only
went as far as the trail. She brushed away the marks of our boots and the
horses’ hooves, and scattered fresh branches to erase all the signs of our
camp. She was angry. It took me a few minutes to realize that she was praying
while she worked, and that she was addressing heaven in that tone of voice
mothers use when you leave the gate open and the goats get loose in the
vegetable garden.
“She was furious because you’d been so
hurt—I’ve never seen a healer threaten the gods before, but that’s what she
seemed to be doing. So, I don’t think she is going to turn us over to Master
Markko, or to Lord Yueh’s soldiers.”
Hmishi shrugged, unwilling it seemed to
explain why he would trust their safety to the curses of a madwoman. “I wasn’t
sure of her skills as a healer until yesterday. Your fever broke, and today you
woke up. I don’t think she is likely to poison us, not after spending so much
time on making you better. But I don’t know how safe she will be, or us, if the
villagers tell Lord Yueh’s men about this house.”
Llesho could feel the smile stealing over
his face. The sunlight would never make sense,
but perhaps there was a reason
for the eternal morning. “I don’t think anyone will find this place unless she
wants them to.” Still smiling, Llesho drifted into a peaceful sleep.
Chapter Twenty-one
L<LESHO rose out of troubled dreams to
find that the sunlight had faded into evening. He’d missed another afternoon
and so, apparently, had his companions. Hmishi and Lling lay asleep on the rug
by the fireplace, tucked up close to each other as if to ward away the cold.
“What time is it?” he called. “Is anybody
here?” It gave him a moment of satisfaction when the sleepers started up with
foggy expressions of guilt on their faces.
“Sorry. Fell asleep.” Hmishi rubbed his
eyes in an effort to look more alert. “Do you need something?”
“Have you noticed something strange about
this place?”
Lling gave him a slow smile. “I like it
here,” she said around a yawn and a stretch. “It’s warm, smells nice—”
“Nobody whacking at us with swords or
pikes,” Hmishi added.
“What about the missing afternoons?” Llesho
would have asked the question but a commotion at the door drew all three
Thebins to their feet.
“Home! And not before time, as I see.” Mara
entered the cottage trailing a dirty and bedraggled Kaydu, who looked around
the little house with suspicious, darted glances out of eyes that seemed
charged with feral nerves. Little Brother crouched on her shoulder, his arms
wrapped around her neck, but made no sound.
“Kaydu—” Llesho began, just as the healer
spoke up, chiding him with a “tsk” in her voice.
“You should be resting. I thought you two
had sense enough to keep him lying quietly.”
“We did.”
Llesho slumped back on his feather bolster,
more wary than ever but resigned to wait until they were alone again to discuss
this matter of lost time. It seemed more important now to find out why Kaydu
looked like she’d been on the Long March and why she slumped onto the three-legged
stool with relief when her glance fell upon him propped up in his bed.
“I couldn’t find you! I thought you must be
gone, or dead—”
“None of that!” The healer interrupted
Kaydu’s stammered plea with a sharp order, “Out! Your father taught you better
than to track mud into a house where the injured are healing.”
Kaydu took a deep breath, as if she wanted
to argue the point, but no words came. Taking belated notice of her disarray,
she shuffled out the door again, Little Brother still clinging to her neck,
while the old woman’s tart promise followed: “You can talk all you want when
you’ve had a wash at the pump.”
When Kaydu had gone, Mara shook her head,
as if in disapproval of the returned scout, or at some news from the village
that troubled her. She hung her bonnet on its hook and took up her apron with a
reverent hand, stretching and sighing with a shake of her head as if she was
setting her day aside with her cap. After completing the little homecoming
ritual, she dragged the three-legged stool over to Llesho’s bed and dropped
down onto it. Her smile couldn’t hide the weariness that deepened the lines
between her eyes, but she seemed genuinely pleased at his condition. “You look
better, Llesho. Did you behave yourself today?”
“If you mean did I sleep the day away, yes.
I didn’t have much choice about it.”
“I don’t suppose you did. But you needed
the rest, and I wanted to take no chances that you would do something foolhardy
while I was away.”
Until she said that, Llesho had not suspected
the delicious drink his friends had pressed on him all day. When he realized
that she had drugged him, he blushed, a little angry at her for tricking him,
but more at himself for not suspecting the potion. Adar had taught him long ago
how foolish it was to judge a medicine by its sweetness. But Kaydu’s anxious
glances needed his attention now.
“What happened to Kaydu?” He asked. “Have
Yueh’s soldiers found us?” His companions, at least, might escape—
“You are safe for the time being.” The healer
made a sour face. “No one has seen any soldiers in the village yet, though some
of my patients reported strangers creeping around asking questions about
comings and goings at the crossroads. I didn’t tell anybody you were here with
me, however, not that they would have talked to the spies if they knew. We are
not a trusting people hereabouts.”
Llesho kept to himself the reminder that
Lling had gone into the village to seek help in the first place, and that Mara
herself had trusted his companions enough to bring them into her home and heal
his wound without question. He figured she had ways to protect herself.
Something had unsettled Kaydu’s mind, which
not even Yueh’s surprise attack and their flight under cover of darkness had
managed to do in the past. He didn’t want to know what had put her in this
state, but suspected that, in the absence of the enemy, she’d run afoul of the
protections of the healer. She had left to find the pump easily enough once
she’d assured herself that Llesho was safe, though. He didn’t think she would
have done that if Mara posed a threat to them, but he wasn’t quite ready to
give up his own suspicions yet.
“I did hear a strange tale about a bear
cub,” Mara continued. “The villagers say that the creature takes careful
nibbles of food offered from the hands of small children, and that he says,
‘Thank you’ when he is done, but one can’t believe everything one hears.”
She tilted her head in a question, giving
him the opportunity to come clean with his story, but he wasn’t ready to grant
her Lleck’s secret yet.
When he said nothing, she added, “The
village elders didn’t believe the story either, having their own experience
with bears. They were gathering a hunting party to find him and kill him.” She
saw his look of dismay and her smile developed a wry pucker. “Fortunately, this
particular children’s story followed me home.”
Llesho tried to rise from his bed, torn
between chagrin and the need to see his teacher, even in his new form. But the
healer pushed him down again. “He’s outside. Master Lleck’s manners, like those
of your guide, currently leave much to be desired. You must trust to the forest
to keep him safe, at least until tomorrow.”
“You don’t mean Kaydu to sleep outside as
well!” he demanded.
“Of
course not, child! I am sure she will be her usual self as soon as she has had
a good wash, and then she may come in and visit you and sleep by the fireplace
or in the loft as she chooses.”
Only then did Llesho realize that not one
of his three human companions remained in the house.
“They are having a chat with your furry
brown friend.” Mara seemed to read his mind, although the question, and the
fear, had marked themselves pretty clearly on Llesho’s face.
Fortunately for his peace of mind, he
didn’t have to rely on her assurance about their safety for long; the door
opened onto growing shadows, from which Kaydu tumbled, looking more herself
with the mud washed away and fresh clothes replacing her damaged ones. Hmishi
and then Lling followed, with Little Brother chattering in her arms. They all
talked at once, in a shorthand that left unspoken the experiences they had
shared while Llesho had lain unconscious from the effects of the tainted arrow.
He felt a sudden pang of jealousy, that they had formed a unit while he slept.
They had seen and talked with Lleck while he lay on his bed like a wet noodle.
Mara seemed greatly distracted by the sudden clamor, but she focused keenly
enough on the door when Lleck tried to sneak past under cover of their
commotion.
The healer was on her feet faster than
Llesho could see her move, elbows akimbo, her hands in tight fists perched on
her hips. “Not in my house, master bear!” She glared at him, tapping her foot
all the while.
The bear cub uttered a mournful cry and
ducked his head so that he could cover his eyes with a forepaw.
“That won’t work on me, you old reprobate.
We settled that on the way home.”
“Please?” Llesho asked weakly from his bed.
He needed to know that, however changed, his old mentor was still safe and
whole.
The healer turned her glare on him, but
Llesho didn’t flinch or look away. He had to see Lleck. If he couldn’t do it in
the cottage, he would get out of bed and sleep in the forest, whatever it did
to the wound healing under his bandages.
“Stubborn,” she remarked. “I almost feel
sorry for him.”
She measured the determination in Llesho’s
face a moment longer before throwing her hands in the air and leaving his
bedside. “Just a quick hello,” she insisted. “Then it is outside for him. He’ll
be more useful as a guard if he can roam a bit, and I’m not cleaning up after a
bear in here. Bad enough with the four of you.”
Embarrassed that she had seen through their
covering commotion so easily, his companions likewise moved away from the door.
“Kaydu, please bring the chicken from the
icehouse.”
Kaydu dropped her gaze and backed nervously
out the door as Mara gave further instructions, “Lling, there are carrots and
potatoes in the root bin in the cellar; would you please fill this sack with
equal numbers of each.” She held out the sack, and when Lling had taken it,
picked up the water bucket. “Hmishi, you may bring water from the pump.”
Lleck waited until his human companions
left the cottage to do the healer’s bidding, then he lumbered in over the
doorstep.
“Llle-sshhooo!” he wailed, and Llesho held
out a hand to him.
“Lleck!”
The cub neared him suspiciously and sniffed
his hand. Lleck’s muzzle was cool and moist, his fur soft. Llesho pulled himself
up in his bed enough to wrap his arms around the bear’s neck. “Lleck,” he
sighed, and dropped his head on top of the bear’s low skull, resting his
forehead between the laid-back ears. After a long minute he raised his head and
let the cub lick the salt from his cheek, whuffling in his ear.
“I’m not heartless, you know,” Mara
commented while she set two lamps on the table. She trimmed the wicks, then lit
them. One she hung from a hook near the bed, and the other from a similar hook
above the table.
“A house is no place for a bear. He really
will be more comfortable out-of-doors.” She cast him a chid-ing look, then
shifted her attention to the shelf by the fireplace, from which she selected
first a handful of herbs dried in jars and then some spices twisted in little
packets.
“I need to know he is not just a dream,”
Llesho tried to explain how he felt about the miracle that had brought his dead
teacher to his aid in the forest. Even with his arms around the bear cub’s neck
he could not shake the fear that none of it was real. What if he hadn’t wakened
from his delirium at all, but still lay dying by the roadside?
“I know, boy.” Mara sighed. “That’s why the
old reprobate is sitting by your bedside and not outside as he ought to be.”
Kaydu returned with the fowl, already
plucked and boiled and waiting for dish-cooking, and Lling returned with the
carrots and potatoes.
“But bears are solitary creatures by
nature; to keep him near, you must not hold him too close.” Mara took down her
big, sharp knife and talked while she energetically chopped the vegetables.
Returning in time to hear this last
comment, Hmishi set down his filled bucket. “He’s not really a bear, though,”
he insisted, with a doubtful glance in the direction of Llesho’s animal
companion.
“You’re wrong, Hmishi.” Mara’s expression
seemed more sad than anything else when she corrected him. “In this lifetime,
he is a bear. He fights the
impulses natural to this new form because his spirit still yearns to protect
the princeling as he could not protect the king in his former life.”
“If you can make the afternoons disappear,
why can’t you change him back into Lleck?” He had determined not to speak out
about his suspicions until he was alone with his companions, but Lleck’s
presence at his side gave Llesho the courage to confront the healer with her
magic.
“I don’t know what you mean, Llesho,” Mara
an-swered. “Sleep is the only thief of time in this house. Sick people often
take strange fancies, however, and I recommend that you put this one right out
of your mind.” She stirred some broth into the pot, filling the room with
delicious odors that went right to the heart and warmed the body from the
inside.
Kaydu sat up straighter. “He’s right,” she
said. Her voice had grown stronger now that she had cleaned her face and put on
fresh clothes, as if the whole weight of civilization shored up her flagging
courage. “You are doing something to our minds, or to the flow of time. How
many days have passed in this house while I have been gone? Far less than for
me out there, I’ll warrant, or you would have shown more surprise when I turned
up on your doorstep. Instead you greeted me as if I had stepped out that door
just yesterday.”
“It was just yesterday,” Hmishi pointed out.
No one was listening to him, however,
because they were watching Mara, who wiped her hands on her apron and directed
a sorrowful frown not on Kaydu, ! but on Lleck, the bear.
“I have some small powers, to aid in
healing, or to give rest. I did not shape the mysteries of this glen, but I
have the power to enter into them and to protect those in my care by use of
them. Even here, day passes into night, however, and no matter how he might
wish it otherwise, Lleck will live out this turn of the wheel as a bear is
meant to do.”
“But not today?” Llesho objected, his arm
still tight around Lleck’s neck.
“Yes, Llesho, today. He will catch and kill
his own dinner, and sleep in the arms of the trees tonight. But no harm will
come to you as long as he is nearby.”
Lleck dropped his head, accepting Mara’s
words with a low cry, “Lleee-sho!” He gave his pupil’s face a farewell lick and
walked slowly to the door.
When he was gone, Lling wrinkled her nose,
a ques-tion in the gaze she passed from the healer to Kaydu. “Lleck must think
we are safe or he wouldn’t leave Llesho for anything. I trust him, if not you.
But how long was Kaydu gone?”
“Time doesn’t mean much in these woods,”
Mara returned to her cooking with a smack for Hmishi, who plunked himself down
at the table and snatched a bit of carrot that escaped her flashing knife. “One
day is very like another, just as one tree looks very like another if you
aren’t familiar with the forest.”
“Six days.” Kaydu had returned to the
three-legged stool, her arms dangling between her knees. “I found my father.”
“And Little Brother.” That still bothered
Llesho.
“And Little Brother. Habiba said that
Master Jaks is furious with us, and is likely to blister our hides for sneaking
away without him, but that Lord Yueh caught up with them before night on the
day we sneaked away. We were probably safer alone than we would have been if
we’d stayed behind. Master Jaks led the counterstrike and saved her ladyship,
which he could not have done if he had come with us, so Father is not as mad as
Master Jaks. They are on their way, but they can only travel as fast as their
horses. Father said not to wait, but to run as soon as we can.”
Hmishi held out a bit of carrot that had
escaped the pot. Kaydu’s pet abandoned Lling to take it from his fingers.
“Maybe they should leave their horses behind. You seem to have made better time
without one.”
Lling sidled closer to Llesho’s pallet, her
hand falling to her belt, where her sword usually hung. “That would only work
for Habiba. Master Jaks can’t travel the witch’s road, can he?”
“I am beginning to think you are fools, the
lot of you,” Mara waved her stirring spoon at them to emphasize her anger.
“You may not understand Habiba’s gifts to
his daughter, but you still need them. Didn’t you ever wonder why Master Markko wanted so badly to rid
Pearl Island of witches?”
Llesho didn’t have to wonder. “The Blood
Tide,” he said. “A witch might have saved the pearl beds.”
“Very likely one did, until it became more
than her life was worth. As graceless a thank you as I’ve ever heard, but
accepted. Can we return to the matter of escaping Master Markko’s clutches now?
Have you anything else to tell us?”
Llesho wondered at the pronoun. When had
Mara become a part of their quest? But Kaydu looked worried, and not about the
healer.
“Lord Yueh went after her ladyship, but
Master Markko followed us. I
saw him at the crossroad, trying to pick up our trail. He almost caught me, but
I hid in a fox’s abandoned den until they had searched the area and moved on.
Then I reported back to Habiba and returned here, but I couldn’t find the
clearing or this house. I would still be stumbling around in the woods, except
that I hid myself to watch by the road, and when Mara left the village, I
followed her.
“You’ll feel better with a good meal in
you.”
He’d recognized everything she’d put in the
pot by its smell if nothing else: rosemary and thyme, and a bit of
lemon-flavored grass that made the whole dish smell like a country garden.
Still, he hesitated, wondered if the healer had drugged the food as she had the
potion.
“Come now,” the healer reminded them, “if I
wished you harm, I had only to leave you where I found you.”
“Or you may have your own reasons for
keeping me here,” Llesho suggested.
“I might. But since I must fatten you up if
you are to make an attempt to escape my clutches, it would seem that our
immediate goals are the same.”
She was making fun of him. He might have
resisted the food anyway, with a thought to self-preservation in the presence
of magics he did not understand, but his nose overruled him. It tasted even
better than it smelled—fowl braised with the vegetables in a thin broth of the
herbs with a dash of spice. Mara brought a chunk of bread out for dipping in
the broth so that not a drop of the delicious flavor was wasted. In spite of
his stomach’s uneasiness with solid food, Llesho felt better. He sank into the
now-familiar curves and dips in his grassy bed with a full stomach, jostled
only slightly when Lling sat down beside him and leaned against his pallet for
support. Hmishi remained at the table, his head resting on his arms, and Kaydu
sat on the three-legged stool, staring thoughtfully into the fire. He was too
comfortable, he decided, to work up a suitable terror about Mara’s intentions,
and closed his eyes. He had almost fallen asleep when the mournful cry of a
bear rose from the forest. Lleck, defending the little house, he thought with a
smile. But the tone of the bear’s complaint changed, grew more angry and more
desperate.
Llesho tossed in his bed, aware that he had
in fact been sleeping, and that Mara tended him with cold compresses. “You are
safe, Llesho,” she crooned. “No one will find you here.”
The cry of the bear cub subsided into
whuffling plaints of curiosity, and then faded entirely.
“No one can hurt you under this roof; you
are in the land of dreams now.”
With Mara’s words echoing softly in his
last fading thoughts, Llesho drifted off again. When he awoke, his companions
had disappeared.
Ifllara was standing over the table with
her arms sunk to the elbows in a bowl of yeasty dough the color of butter. He
knew that for sure because a pale yellow brick of the stuff sat on a plate
beside the kneading board.
“Your friends are out with Lleck, scouting.
They will be back soon, looking for breakfast.” She extracted one hand and
peeled the dough from her fingers, then reached for a jar of raisins,
sprinkling in a generous handful before punching the dough back down and
covering the bowl.
“Do you think you can stand?” She gave him
her full attention, fists braced on hips, a measuring frown on her face.
“I think so.” The wound itched more than it
hurt under its clean white bandages, but lifting his head was an effort. His
limbs, too, seemed to have developed a will of their own while he’d slept.
Mara nodded. “Time you tried, at least.”
She wiped her hands and arms clean with a damp cloth and walked briskly to his
bedside. “Let’s see what you can do.”
Llesho sat up and swung his body around so
that his back rested on the wall and his legs dangled off the side of bed. He
stopped there, dizzy for a moment, and closed his eyes. When the room stopped
spinning, he opened them again. Mara watched him calmly, evaluating his
progress. Llesho figured he wasn’t supposed to see the urgency lurking behind
the calm, but it goaded him forward anyway. He pushed off the bed with his arms
and stood up under his own power, though he swayed on his feet, almost overcome
by nausea.
“Good. Let’s try for the door, shall we?”
Llesho wondered if the healer had lost her
mind. He was disoriented and dizzy; he couldn’t imagine lifting a foot off the
ground and not replacing it with his butt. The healer had already taken a step
backward, however, and she had a tight grip on his elbow, which didn’t leave
him a lot of choice in the matter. One step, then another, and Llesho reached
the open door, where the sun shone on his face and the scent of pine sap and morning
fizzed in his nose. He smiled in spite of himself. It was a beautiful day.
“Outhouse?” he asked.
The healer quirked an eyebrow at him but
pointed at the little cabin a few yards away at the edge of the clearing. “Do
you want help?”
He didn’t dare shake his head, or he’d be
on his face at that instant, but he said, “No. I can manage.”
She released his elbow and Llesho set off.
The outhouse seemed to get farther away as he staggered toward it, but finally
he made it, and without falling in the process. It took almost more courage
than he possessed to let go of the door when he was done and totter back to the
cottage. In spite of his misgivings, he made the return trip successfully, with
less vertigo, but no breath left to spare. When he finally dropped onto his bed
again, he felt as if he had run all the way from Farshore, but he felt vaguely
proud of himself as well. Mara hadn’t expected him to manage this much on his
own, but he’d proved himself stronger and more determined than she thought. He
wasn’t certain why that was important to him, except that she seemed to expect
greatness of him and he was pretty sure he’d disappointed her so far.
Mara hadn’t been idle during his trek to
the edge of the clearing. She had prepared a tray of buns with raisins
enticingly bursting from the dough and had pulled open the door to a bake oven
over the fireplace. She slid the tray into the brick cavern and closed the door
again before acknowledging his prowess: “You’ll be keeping up with Master Lleck
in no time.”
“Do we have even that much time?” Llesho
asked.
She didn’t pretend to misunderstand. “Not
as much as I had hoped. But maybe, enough.” Mara grinned at him, all teeth,
with a warrior’s glint in her eye. “The Ham underestimated you once, and so did
Lord Yueh. I hope I am not counted in their number when the day is done.”
“I could say the same,” Llesho pointed out.
The healer knew far too much about him and his business, and he wondered who
she really was and what side she was on. He also wondered where his companions
had got to, but a commotion at the door answered the second question.
“The same about what?” Lling asked. She
entered the little house with an arrow held as far from her body as she could
reach. Hmishi and Kaydu followed, keeping their own careful distance from the
arrow while Lling finished her report.
“We found this in the bushes at the edge of
the clearing. It looks like whoever shot it came upon Lleck while he was
sleeping.”
Mara took the arrow with equal care and
sniffed at the tip. “Did it break his skin?” she asked.
“He says not,” Hmishi answered. “He had
blood on his muzzle, but I got the impression it wasn’t his blood. I expect
whoever shot the arrow is limping today.”
“Can Lord Yueh’s men find us here?” Kaydu
asked with a darted glance at the door. “I thought they gave up and went away.”
Mara set the arrow on a shelf with great
care. She looked worried. “I would say Lord Yueh’s lackeys could not find this
place,” she said slowly. “But if they have Master Markko with them, and if it
is the magician’s intent to find Llesho, then I can’t be sure. Markko’s power
is strong, and not always predictable.”
“Then we ride,” Llesho decided. Kaydu
frowned at him. “You’re not strong enough.” “I’m not strong enough to stand
against him, and I won’t be his slave again. Ever.” Llesho turned Kay-du’s
objection around on itself. He couldn’t fight yet, but maybe he could ride. If
the choice was that or capture, he would take his chances with a horse, even if
it meant he would die.
After a long minute spent studying his
face, Mara nodded her reluctant agreement. “But tomorrow is soon enough.” She
went to the window and whistled a strange, quavering note. Then she waited.
Soon a bright-eyed swift fluttered into the room and came to rest on her
outstretched finger. She whistled again, and the swift pecked at her knuckle.
Then it took to wing with a warbling cascade of notes to which Mara listened
sharply before she turned away with a sigh. “Let’s see what the wind turns up
first. In the meantime, there are warm buns to eat.”
Llesho took a deep breath, and a smile
bloomed on his face without conscious thought. The rich scent of raisins and
cinnamon filled the air, and his mouth watered. His stomach wanted filling, and
as Mara reached into the oven with a heavy cloth to remove the buns, Llesho’s
fingers itched for the drippy feel of hot butter and soft bread. Hmishi did
more than yearn, however, and his darting theft earned him a cuff on the ear.
“Sit and eat like a civilized being,
Hmishi, or I’ll send you out to forage with Master Lleck.”
Hmishi dropped the bun onto the plate as if
it had burned his fingers, which it probably had. Then the healer turned to
Llesho with a question, “Would you care to join us?”
Hot buns in front of him was an even better
incentive than Yueh’s magician behind him. He pushed himself off of the bed and
tottered to the table to the applause of his companions.
“How long have you been able to do that?”
Lling asked him, and Llesho blushed. “Just since this morning,” he said. But
he’d resisted temptation long enough and abandoned discussion for the more
serious work of putting as many buns inside his stomach as he could comfortably
hold, and then finding space for a last greedy mouthful.
“That much effort deserves a nap,” Mara
observed. Her tone was broadly disapproving, though her smile told him that she
didn’t disapprove at all.
Llesho did need a nap, though. He made it
back to his bed with no help, but was glad to lie down at the end of the short
walk. When he woke up again, night had fallen. The fire in the fireplace had
dropped to ashes and embers, and his companions had found their own temporary
beds. All but Mara, who stood at the window in secret conversation with an owl.
Llesho couldn’t make out what she said, but he could hear the terrible sorrow
in her voice. He sat up, uncomfortable at the thought that she might think he
was spying on her, and wished he could help with whatever had upset her so.
“Mara?” he asked when the owl had flown
away.
“Shh,” she turned from the window. “Sleep
now. You will need ”all your strength in the morning.“
The healer passed a hand over his eyes, and
Llesho felt a heavy weight pulling his eyelids down, down, until the darkness
was complete.
Chapter Twenty-two
LESHO had awakened to the sound of birdsong
while the sky still closed its darkest night around the cottage. Mara stood at
the window, a jar forgotten in her hand while she listened intently to the
shrill cries of a swift that had lit on the sill. After a moment the healer
trilled a reply and the bird flew away.
“Kaydu! Wake your company, and hurry!”
She resumed her search of shelves and
cupboards with renewed urgency, reaching with more speed than care for a jar of
salve, a twist of paper filled with a yellow powder, a small bottle of oil with
cloves and peppers floating in it, half a dozen pouches of drying herbs that
crinkled when she thrust them into her pack.
“What?” Kaydu rolled from her mat into a
defensive crouch with a knife in her hand. “What is it?”
“What’s all the noise?” Hmishi struggled
upright, with Lling right beside him. Llesho said nothing about the single
blanket that had covered them.
“Your Master Markko is on the outskirts of
the village. Privy, and pack. Hmishi, get the horses.” She thrust another
packet into the pouch at her waist. “Llesho, can you ride? There are branches
and tarps for a drag travois if you don’t think you can manage.”
They both knew there was more to the answer
than pride. If he slowed them down, he gave Master Mar-kko an advantage. And
Master Markko would kill them. So he said, “I’ll ride.”
Hmishi ran for the horses, with Kaydu to
help him, while Lling threw their few possessions into a pack. The healer stood
in the doorway of the house, her pack over her shoulder and her eyes pinched as
if she were trying to see through the trees to the threat beyond. Lleck poked
his nose past her skirt in a thwarted effort to reach Llesho, but subsided with
a moan when she did not let him pass.
“You can’t mean to travel with us, healer!”
Lling glanced up from her packing with a worried frown. “We are riding into
danger, and you don’t even have a horse.”
“One finds danger staying or going.” Mara
straightened under her pack and pinned the Thebin with a ferocious glare. “I
choose to find it in Shan, where my daughter now lives.
“As for a horse, we will be traveling
difficult terrain today; I will keep up well enough on foot. And tomorrow,
Master Lleck’s paw will be healed enough that he can carry me.”
The bear cub moaned his objection to this
plan, but Mara ignored him. It was more difficult to ignore his prince.
“How bad is it?” Llesho asked—no,
commanded— pinning her with his sharpest, most imperious gaze. He thought she
might put him off, or lie, but she didn’t. “Lord Yueh’s men attacked the
village last night,” she said. “There may be survivors scattered in the woods,
but the carrion birds are feasting today.”
“Then it isn’t any safer to stay behind.”
Master Markko had powers of his own. He would penetrate the mysteries of the
glen for his new lord, perhaps already had.
“It seems your small war party continues to
grow.”
“I didn’t know that’s what we were.”
“Oh, yes.” A long staff rested against the
doorjamb, and she wrapped a hand around its middle, leaning into it to take
some of the weight of her pack off her feet. She seemed more substantial with
the wooden shaft in her hand, and the house seemed less so. Llesho shook his head
with a silent warning not to let his imagination run off with him, but he
couldn*t quite shake the queazy sensation that the ground had tilted. He still
felt light-headed, but decided, wisely or not, to keep that to himself.
Hmishi drew up next to the cottage with the
horses saddled and ready. Mara gave him a satisfied nod before setting off down
the path that led away from the cottage. “We can eat when we are well away.”
When they came to a turning in the path,
Llesho looked back. The clearing was there, more tangled and thorn-shrouded
than it had seemed when they had ridden through it. He could not see the little
house at all, and wondered if it had ever really been there.
The road wound steeply through the
mountains with dark forest pressing in on either side. By Farshore standards it
was little more than a glorified trail and only wide enough for two to ride
abreast. Two wagons could not pass each other, but one must withdraw to a
lay-by carved out of the dark woods until the other had gone past. The
authorities in each district took their responsibility to maintain the route
seriously, however. The road was smooth and clear of encroaching underbrush,
and the company made good progress. Llesho wondered what would happen now, with
the governor dead and his ladyship put to flight, but order still held out here
where news traveled slowly.
By late morning the party had settled into
a steady pace. Lling and Hmishi led the way on foot, walking the horses that
needed resting in rotation. Llesho followed on horseback, accompanied by Mara,
who walked at his side to watch him for signs of exhaustion or weakness. Kaydu
rode behind, bow strung and arrows at the ready. They all knew a single bow
would not protect them if Lord Yueh’s army came upon them, but it might give
the party the moment they needed to scatter into the forest. With Little
Brother riding on his back, Lleck tracked them from the shelter of the trees
that overhung the road. He barked the signal for friendly travelers once or
twice but had no cause to howl a warning of enemy soldiers on the road.
With more bravado than sense, Llesho had
assured his friends that he was strong enough to travel. Mara had seen through
his claim. She’d bound his upper arm to his side and tied his forearm in a
sling against his middle to support his wounded side. It was enough to dull his
awareness to a throbbing discomfort. Llesho reminded himself that he didn’t
trust her, really. He wouldn’t be surprised when it turned out that she had
saved his life for her own purposes, much as Master Markko had kept him alive
only to poison him again and again. Until she showed her true intentions,
however, it wouldn’t hurt to take advantage of whatever comfort she afforded
him. So he surrendered himself to his exhaustion, drifting in and out of a
light doze while his horse plodded on, his reins in the hands of the healer.
The sun had nearly set when Llesho slid out
of his saddle with the thought that he’d had it good when he didn’t remember
the afternoons. Mara had insisted they halt for the night after Llesho had
nearly fallen from his saddle as she strode beside him. She’d led them to a
stopping place with fresh water and enough cover to protect them from any but a
determined search. As he dropped numbly to the mossy ground, Llesho had to
admit that the problem wasn’t his companions or the mysterious healer, or even
the forces of Lord Yueh. Llesho was the problem: a relatively useless former
and completely unnecessary prince of a vanquished country. All he had to do was
surrender and his companions would be free.
Hmishi cast him a concerned frown as he
unsaddled Llesho’s horse.
“I’m sorry I got you into this,” Llesho
told him.
“My father sold me to the Harn for the
price of a loaf of bread when you were six years old,” Hmishi answered. “I
don’t see how even you can take credit for that.”
“But—”
“Did you kill the pearl beds or cause Lord
Chin-shi to take his own life? Did you attack the governor’s compound in the
dead of night? You were not the cause of my problems when I was six years old,
and you are not the cause of them now. Or do princes tax evil the way they tax
grain?”
With a skeptical smirk on his round dark
face, Hmishi dared him to agree, but he was too tired to explain. He didn’t
think Hmishi would listen anyway. It didn’t seem worth the effort it was taking
to keep his eyes open, so Llesho let his eyelids slide shut.
“Do you need Mara?”
“I’m fine.”
After a long pause, Hmishi led the horse to
the little stream that flowed nearby. Llesho was almost asleep when a boot
nudged him gently in the side.
“What now?” he asked with more snap in his
voice than seemed appropriate, given his remorse a few short minutes ago. He
opened his eyes with an apology ready, but Hmishi just winked, a rueful grin
plastered on his face. Sort of like the mud plastered all over his boots and
leggings.
“Boggy springs,” Hmishi explained with
chagrin as he rubbed at his leggings with a fistful of spongy moss. “Lling and
Kaydu are going to mark them out so we can move about safely. Just don’t go
wandering in the dark.”
That explained why Mara had seemed so sure
when she announced that she had found them a perfect campsite for the night.
Anyone trying to sneak up on them was likely to sink knee-deep into quicksand.
The warning seemed irrelevant, though.
“Do I look like I plan on taking a moonlit
stroll?” he muttered. He rolled over onto his strong arm and closed his eyes,
putting an end to the discussion.
Cradled in soft moss rooted in a rich mulch
smelling of green woody things, his exhausted body began to relax, only to
discover a new set of discomforts. He realized that he had a full bladder and
an empty stomach, and he’d have to do something about both before he could
sleep. Neither seemed urgent enough to force movement back into his leaden
muscles, however.
“He’s not moving!”
Hmishi’s call drew the attention of the
healer as it was meant to. Llesho heard the swish of her skirts, then felt a
cool dry hand on his forehead.
“Can you move, Llesho?” she asked him
softly, brushing the hair from his eyes with a gentle fingertip.
He would have told her “No,” but he
couldn’t open his mouth, or move his tongue to form the word.
Her hand left his head, and he heard more
rustling about as she searched her bag of medicines. “You can rest soon,” she
promised him. He would have told her that he was resting already, but she
crushed a pinch of leaf between her fingers and waved it beneath his nose.
Tears sprang to his eyes, and his nose twitched at the pungent odor that
assailed him, but he found he could move his head again, and after a moment
could uncurl his whole body and drag himself back to his feet. He swayed
between them until Mara gave him a nudge in Hmishi’s direction.
“Find him a tree,” she ordered Hmishi.
“We’ll be ready to eat when you come back.”
Llesho had to admit he felt much better
when he returned to the camp, but the gnawing at the pit of his stomach had
turned into a determined demand for food. He sat with his back against his
saddle, and Lling handed him a bun and a thick slice of cheese while Kaydu
portioned out some fat berries she had picked in the forest.
“Cold collation tonight,” Mara explained as
each drank his or her fill from a pot of fresh springwater she handed around.
Kaydu nodded her agreement. “We light no
fire and set guards, two and two, until morning.”
“I would offer to serve first watch, but
Llesho is not the only one whose heart outpaces his body.” Mara smiled, giving
Kaydu the point. “I must have sleep now, I am afraid, if I am to be any use
later.”
Llesho wondered if the healer referred only
to her turn at watch, or to other uses of her powers that might sap her hoarded
energy. When he would have asked, however, Mara had disappeared into a blanket
the color of the forest floor, shades of green and black that changed as she
moved in her sleep. Only the low snore that punctuated her rest gave her
presence away.
Sleep seemed a really good idea, and Llesho
slid down where he sat, embarrassed when Lling drew a blanket over him. Not too
embarrassed to smile his thanks before he closed his eyes, though. He pulled
the blanket up tight around his ears, curled on his good side in the moss
again, and felt the tension flow out of his muscles. Tomorrow would be better.
He could feel it in the clean exhaustion, so different from the fevered crash
of his failing body a week ago. And if he lay really still, he could imagine
that the moss that held him was a soft puddle of velvet, the hem of his
mother’s gown. He used to curl close to rnh tbp
soft fabric against his face and listen
quietly to the murmur of her voice and the silver call of her laughter. The
memory put a smile on his lips as he slipped into sleep.
Hard midnight held the forest in its dark
hand when the whisper threaded its way into Llesho’s sleep. It nagged him out
of dreams of winter in the palace, when the caravans had gone and a blanket of
snow wrapped Thebin in a hushed, expectant peace. Llesho woke breathless from racing
down the long hall in search of his brothers, but he could still hear Master
Markko’s voice.
“I’m here, waiting for you, boy. We need
each other, you and I. Together we will rule heaven and earth.”
The words made no sense. Llesho was a runaway
slave. No one but Llesho and the spirit of his teacher knew that Llesho’s
journey did not end at Shan, but truly began there. Most of the time he didn’t
believe that he would succeed in his quest to regain Thebin. He couldn’t figure
out why Master Markko would care about Thebin or its princes anyway. A thousand
li and two imperial powers separated Llesho’s country from Farshore, and that
didn’t count the seven li straight up the side of a mountain range to the
plateau where Kungol stood.
His companions slept on, undisturbed by any
sound, and Llesho wondered if he had imagined the voice in his dreams. But no,
there it was again, sweeping over his mind like the mirrored flame of a beacon
tower. “You are mine, body and soul, boy. You cannot escape your destiny.
Didn’t I show you that on Pearl Island?”
Llesho shuddered. The voice was in his
head, and he felt the iron collar on his neck, the chains that weighed him down
with despair. He could never es-cape those chains; they drew him from his bed
in the moss, choked him when he would have resisted, and he followed the voice,
and the pull at his throat. One step, two, past the huddled lumps of his
companions wrapped in their blankets. Dimly, Llesho recalled that they had
agreed to keep a watch, but he counted four sleeping bodies. When he stumbled
over the last, however, the pain in his toe made him gasp. A log! He wondered
if all the rumpled blankets hid firewood, but one of them moved and snorted in
its sleep. After a moment Llesho released the breath he held and moved again,
quietly, toward the voice in the forest.
“Where are you going, Llesho?” Unyielding,
Mara stood before him. She wore a shawl over her shabby dress, wrapped tightly
around herself and held in place by both of her arms crossed firmly under her
breasts. She looked younger in the moonlight, or ageless, and terrifying, as if
she were living stone come to life in front of him.
“I need to find a tree.” He stammered out
the lie and hung his head, unable to meet her eyes.
“The chains are gone, Llesho.”
He did look up then, and met her grim-faced
challenge: “He cannot make you come to him, he can only hope that you are fool
enough to heed him when he calls.”
“I’m not a fool.” He wasn’t sure of that,
now that the voice was gone from his head and he thought about what he’d almost
done. But it still made a terrible sense. “If I go to him, he’ll leave the rest
of you alone. If I try to escape him, he will kill you all, and take me back
anyway.
“Only if he catches you.” She smiled at
him, and he took no comfort from it at all. “Give us tomorrow, at least. Until
we reach the river.”
“I can’t,” Llesho pleaded with her to
understand. “He’s in my head.” He hadn’t realized that he’d raised his voice
until his companions stirred and begin to sit up in their bedrolls, guilty to
be caught sleeping when they had agreed to post a double guard. Llesho figured
that was Markko’s doing as well, but he kept his conclusions to himself, like a
guilty secret.
Hmishi and Lling came to him and took up
guard positions. Hmishi stood slightly in front of him and to his right with a
sword bared in his hand. Lling settled behind his left shoulder, an arrow
nocked below his ear.
“Are we being attacked?” Kaydu wanted to
know.
“Not anymore.” Mara was looking into
Llesho’s eyes when she spoke: Master Markko would not disturb his sleep again
this night. The healer believed she could protect them from the mental assault
of his pursuers. In the moonlight her dark eyes seemed to reflect infinity, and
Llesho was tempted to trust that she was right. He gave her the barest hint of
a nod, enough to know that he would take her advice for now.
She accepted his decision with an equally
subtle nod. “Get a few more hours’ sleep,” she said to his companions. “We ride
before daybreak.”
Hmishi and Lling followed him back into the
camp, but Kaydu joined Mara on guard, her face still troubled by her failure to
fulfill her duty. He’d have to explain that it wasn’t her fault. They were all
easy prey for dark thoughts at midnight, and Markko had taken advantage of
that. The magician had seized their wills before they knew what was happening.
Given that her father had been the governor’s witch all of her life, he didn’t
think Kaydu would have much trouble accepting as fact what Markko had done. He
just wasn’t sure what she would decide to do about it. And he was too tired to
deal with it now.
“Sleep,” he muttered to himself, and
reached for the soft comfort of his mossy bed again.
Why is Master Markko so determined to get
you back?“ Kaydu wrinkled up her nose in displeasure, and Llesho understood
why. During the night he had tossed and turned under the burden of his secrets,
until he finally decided that they couldn’t afford to hide things from each
other if they hoped to survive. While they prepared for the morning’s trek,
he’d told his companions everything, starting with who Lleck was in Thebin and
his apparition as a ghost in the pearl bay, how Master Markko had poisoned the
bay with the Blood Tide and set the blame onto the healer Kwan-ti. He told them
about the terrible months when the overseer had beaten him and held him in
chains and used him as an experiment to test his poisons on. He admitted the
sick dread he had of ever being returned to the master’s evil workroom. Hmishi
and Lling had known some of it, Kaydu a little as well, and Mara, they thought,
none at all. Only the healer was not surprised to learn that Master Markko had
come to him in his dreams last night, however. Mara had nodded her gray head to
confirm his suspicion that Markko had affected them all, putting them to sleep
when they should have kept watch.
By the time he was finished, Mara was
stamping with impatience, but ignorance of Master Markko’s power, and of his
intent, could kill them more surely than an hour’s delay. Llesho stared levelly
into her eyes and then went back to stringing his bow and checking his arrows.
He knew why they had fallen so quickly back to sleep after the midnight call,
and he knew why Markko had made no return in his later sleep. He had no
evidence, not even logic to back his intuition, however, so he accepted her
silent command that he keep his guesswork to himself.
Kaydu had spoken aloud the question that
had bothered him since he realized that Master Markko was still looking for
him: Why? When she didn’t get an answer, she offered her reasoning. “I mean, I
know you were once a prince and all, but it’s not like anybody is offering to
pay a ransom for you.”
Strategically, it made no sense, and she
tried to explain that to Llesho without hurting his feelings, he was sure. She
couldn’t know that Llesho had asked himself the same questions ever since
Markko had first snapped an iron collar around his neck. “Can you do magic or
anything like that?”
“I
can hold my breath underwater,” he said with a perfectly straight face. “And I
can, or could, execute a nearly flawless Wind Over the Mountaintops prayer
form, though I tend to stumble in the middle of the related fighting stances.”
Mara choked and made a display of holding
her hands over her head and pointing to her throat. But she hadn’t been eating
at the time, so Llesho wondered. When she had settled a bit, she motioned to
them to go on, and walked purposefully into the trees.
Lling jabbed him companionably with her
elbow just then, declaring, “I don’t know anything about prayer forms, but I’ve
seen you fall over in the middle of a fight sequence.”
Llesho nudged her back; neither of them let
the moment turn into a full roll-and-tumble play session, but the momentary
distraction relieved the tension. It couldn’t drive out the feeling that
someone was drilling holes between his shoulder blades with their eyes, though;
he sobered quickly.
“I don’t get it either,” he said. “If I had
completed the vigil on my birthday, maybe I would have some influence with the
goddess. But I didn’t.”
“Maybe that was part of his plan,” Kaydu
suggested, “He may have feared he couldn’t control you once you had
successfully completed your vigil.”
Her ladyship said that he had gained the
favor of the goddess. Llesho didn’t think that was a secret in the real sense,
since he personally didn’t think it was true. He squirmed a bit when he evaded
the question, though. “For all I know, he just likes the idea that he has a
prince on a leash instead of one of those fluffy dogs Lady Chin-shi was so fond
of. I don’t really care why
he’s after me. I just want to make sure he doesn’t catch me.”
“Then we had better get moving.” Mara had
returned with Lleck following her and she gestured in the direction from which
she had come. “We are not far from the Golden Dragon River where the Dragon
Bridge crosses. Markko is likely to know about the crossing himself, and he
will make for it just as we do, so we shouldn’t return to the road. I noticed
this track, however—” she pointed to the ground near her feet where the grass
seemed beaten down but otherwise no different from its surroundings “—and
followed it to where it comes out on the riverbank just a stone’s toss away from
the bridge. Once we break from cover of the forest, we must mount and ride as
fast as we can. It will be a run for our lives if we are to reach the river
ahead of him, but reach it we must.”
The forest growth was close on either side,
with branches hanging to form a low canopy overhead and undergrowth grabbing at
their legs as they passed. The company led their horses in single file, with
Mara in the lead, and Lleck rumbling behind. In spite of their danger, Llesho
found himself enjoying the stretch and pull of his muscles, the feel of his
body doing work again. The sense of being watched had passed; Llesho wondered
if Mara had something to do with that as well. He also wondered what good it
would do them to cross the river if Master Markko was following right behind.
Determined to confront the healer, he
dropped the reins. Horses were stupid, but they would follow where they were
led, and there wasn’t really anyplace but forward a horse could go in the thick
wood. Before he had taken two steps, however, Kaydu had raised her arm to
signal a halt.
“Mount up,” she said.
Mara had slipped into the woods. She would
wait until Lleck came up to her position, then ride on his shoulders. Llesho
set his foot in his stirrup and slung his free leg over the back of the horse,
keeping his head bent low over the animal’s neck. He darted a nervous glance
around him, then took his bow in his hand, ready to run or to fight. They broke
into the clearing.
Chapter Twenty-three
HE sun had not yet appeared over the
treetops, but when the companions broke from the shelter of the forest they
discovered the riverbank was already bathed in a golden wash of sunlight.
Llesho winced at the sudden shock of bright light, but he had little time to
adjust. Kaydu’s voice rang in the still morning air:
“Ride!”
She kneed her horse into motion, and Llesho
did the same, snapped into action at the familiar command in her voice. Lord
Yueh’s troops, about fifty men on foot and a dozen on horseback, waited for
them no more than a hundred paces up the riverbank. At first Llesho wondered
why they did not leap to the attack, and then he saw that they were staring
with amazement at the bridge that rose up in front of them. Llesho would have
done the same if he’d had the time: Golden Dragon Bridge arched in glory high
over the churning water below.
Ancient artisans had carved it in the shape
of the legendary dragon from which the muddy yellow river took its name. They
had given the bridge two ridges of scales across its back to keep men from
falling off in dark or windy weather, with space enough for four men walking,
or a good sized wagon, to pass between them. True to its name, Golden Dragon
Bridge glittered its burnished glory in the sunlight. But the bridge shouldn’t
have been there at all.
According to legend, a war between the
giants had, in an earlier age, destroyed the wondrous bridge. No man living had
seen the broken remains. Supposedly, no one even remembered where the bridge
had stood. Some stories said that when giants walked the earth again, the
bridge would rise out of the mist of the river and the past glory of that age
would return. Llesho didn’t see any giants. The carved head of the dragon
bridge, however, rested on the near shore, submerged to the realistically
carved nostrils. Huge fringed lids shuttered its eyes, as if the masons and
carvers had known that to portray in stone the living gaze of the dragon was to
risk conjuring the creature itself out of myth.
The legend hadn’t been completely wrong,
however. Some great cataclysm of a former age had torn the bridge loose from
its moorings on the far side of the river, because the arch disappeared under
the water an arm’s reach from the shore.
Mara crouched below a carved nostril of the
sleeping dragon. She beckoned them to hurry when they would have frozen where
they stood, in the same stupefied amazement that ensorceled Lord Yueh’s troops.
Llesho kicked his horse into a gallop; someone in the enemy ranks shouted, and
he faltered, trembling, as Yueh’s men parted. Master Markko made his way on
horseback through the troops, looking for something. Me, Llesho figured. Their eyes met; he
could not break that contact, but his body responded to his training even when
his mind did not. As her ladyship had taught them, he fastened the reins to his
saddle, controlling his horse with his knees, and drew his bow and an arrow
from the quiver at his back.
Arrow nocked, he stood in his stirrups,
body turning to hold the gaze of his target. Steady, steady. Allow for the
gallop of the horse—the changing distance and the uncertain elevation. He let
the arrow fly, watched as Master Markko reached out and snatched it out of the
air inches from his breast. Markko smiled, and the arrow burst into flames in
his hand.
Bad move, Llesho saw. That sudden whoosh of
fire had startled his horse into a faster gallop, but it had terrified Lord
Yueh’s soldiers, who scattered as if Markko had dropped the burning arrow among
them. Those nearest their leader surged forward to overtake the fugitives, but
those out of the direct line of the magician’s fierce glare ran back into the
forest from which they had come.
No point in wasting another arrow; Llesho
tucked his bow into the strap of his quiver. He bent low over the neck of his
sturdy little horse and urged it to close on the bridge that frightened the
animal as much as it awed him.
But Mara was standing now, still dwarfed by
the massive size of the dragon, but urging them to cross. Kaydu stormed onto
the bridge first, Little Brother tucked into a pack strapped to her back.
Hmishi and Lling followed right behind her, the hooves of their horses ringing
like a demented carillon on the gold paving stones, and Llesho came next,
pounding up the steeply sloped spine of the bridge until he was high over the
river, looking straight ahead because he didn’t have the nerve to check behind
him for pursuit. And then he was on the downward slope, horse stretching out
over the last broken arm’s length, and there was water under them, no bridge at
all.
The jolt of solid ground shuddered through
him. A stone wall lay in front of them, with the twisted branches of fruit
trees rising above it. A perfect place for an ambush, but they were out of
choices. Whooping a battle challenge, Kaydu bent into the jump, and her horse
leaped, leaped, and was over the wall.
Hmishi and Lling jumped next. Llesho gave
his horse its head and it soared, cleared the wall, and ran out its momentum
between the rows of fruit trees. When it stopped, Llesho saw that he was
surrounded, with hundreds of soldiers closing in on him.
Llesho’s stomach clenched like someone had
reached inside with a fist and squeezed. He reached for his bow, but a hand
stayed him: Master Jak’s. Llesho hadn’t seen or heard him, and he shivered,
knowing that if the assassin-soldier had wanted it, he’d be dead. The six
tattooed rings around Jaks’ arm told their own story about that, but Llesho
hadn’t and still didn’t want to think of his teacher as a man who sneaked up on
people and murdered them for cash. Someday he would press the man for his
stories, but not now. Now he would be grateful for this man’s skills.
“How did you find us?” Llesho didn’t need
to ask how they knew to come. Kaydu was a few feet away, wrapped in the arms of
her father. Little Brother chit-tered and screamed from a branch over their
heads.
“How did you find the bridge?”
“A little bird told us.” Jaks followed his
gaze with a wry smile.
Llesho nodded. Mara had known and sent word
by the swift he’d seen at her window. He wanted to thank her, but he couldn’t
find her among his companions or the soldiers who had come to greet them.
“Where is she?”
Master Jaks looked back, toward the river.
“Alone? Markko will kill her!” He turned
his horse and Jaks grabbed hold of his bridle.
“I can’t leave her to face Master Markko
alone.”
“If Habiba isn’t worried, doubtless she can
take care of herself,” Jaks reasoned quietly.
“Maybe.” Llesho figured the magician would
sacrifice the old woman to protect the surprise of his ambush: Habiba didn’t
owe the healer a life-debt, after all. Breaking his teacher’s hold on his
reins, he headed back the way he had come, hunching over the neck of his horse
to absorb the jolt of the landing on the other side of the wall.
In mid leap, a warning stabbed through his
head. The pain disappeared almost as soon as it had come, but he had already
lost his concentration on the jump. The horse skittered under him, unsettled by
his uncertainty. It bucked and rolled, and Llesho was falling, hitting the
ground like a sack of rice. Master Markko’s soldiers didn’t notice their prey
lying helpless on the far shore, however. They had their own problem. And Mara
clearly didn’t need his help.
With their leader driving them forward from
atop his massive warhorse, Markko’s troops had begun to cross the bridge. As
they reached the very top of the arch, Mara had stepped out from the shadows by
the carved eye and climbed up on the wide snout. She called something Llesho
couldn’t hear, and the great eyelid opened to reveal an emerald as tall as Mara
herself. The bridge blinked, and then it writhed and contracted.
Straight-backed and terrible as he had never seen her, the healer Mara stood at
the center of the great golden head, her gaze locked with the magician’s as the
neck of the dragon raised her high above the river, higher than the arch of its
great worm body. The loop of its back twisted and sank, tumbling screaming,
terrified soldiers together with their panicked horses into the rushing river.
Gradually the cries of the dying faded out of reach. Mara lifted her right arm
straight ahead of her and pointed at Master Markko.
“You owe me a debt, Magician, but I will
not collect it now. Consider yourself fortunate that I have business with this
worm, or we would decide right here who of us is the stronger.”
“My lady.” Master Markko gave her a mocking
bow and turned his horse. Before he rode away, however, he turned in his saddle
and addressed her one last time, as if with an afterthought. “Caring is a
weakness, my lady. Each delay finds you more encumbered than the last. And I
grow stronger.”
Mara did not answer him, and he settled
himself in the saddle with a final laugh before setting heels to the flanks of
his horse. When the magician was no more than a speck on the horizon, Mara
signaled the dragon to carry her to the other side of the river and set her
down on the riverbank.
Llesho remained where he had fallen, lying
in the grass by the river. He was close enough to observe all that transpired,
but both Mara and the dragon seemed too preoccupied with their own business to
notice one insignificant Thebin in the dirt. In this he was mistaken, not
counting on the sensitivity of a dragon’s sense of smell.
The golden river dragon opened his mouth
just enough for his long serpentine tongue to flick out and lick his massive
chops.
“It’s been a long time since I received
payment in virgin blood.” An occasional wisp of smoke escaped the worm’s
nostrils when it spoke, while his tongue explored the air for the taste of a
scent. Llesho blushed to the roots of his hair when the dragon added, “I prefer
girls, you know, though they’ve become more scarce than dragons. One wonders
where the virgin boys come from.”
“They grow a little more slowly,” Mara
answered with the same humor that the dragon offered in the question. “But they
do grow, or there would be no young ones for you to ask about. As for this one—
Llesho, stand up and bow to your benefactor. Dragons insist on good manners
always—I still need him.”
Llesho stood and bowed low as the dragon
turned an emerald eye to study him. “Does he know?” the dragon asked. The great
worm ignored Llesho to direct his question at the healer. This suited Llesho
just fine, as he was shaking in his boots and didn’t think he could utter an
answer even if he had understood the question.
“That is not your concern,” Mara answered
him tartly. “Shall we get on with this?”
“Oh, very well. But wouldn’t you rather owe
me something less personal to be collected at a later date?”
“Life-debts must be paid in life,” she
said, and opened her arms to the dragon’s tooth.
“NO!” Llesho cried, as the dragon opened
his mouth and nipped at the healer. Revulsion released him from the paralysis
of his fear and he dashed forward, sword drawn, but too late. The golden worm
pierced the heart of the healer with his poisoned fang. She fell between them,
dead, and Llesho followed her to his knees, reaching for her bloody corpse.
With great delicacy the worm nudged him with his snout and Llesho tumbled in
the grass. Even such a gentle push, for a dragon, felt like a tree had fallen
on him. Then the dragon opened his mouth wide and swallowed the healer whole.
Llesho tried to scream, but the sound
caught in his throat would not come out. He could not breathe, could not see
for the darkness that seemed to cover the sun; he could only kneel where he had
fallen and rock himself painfully, his sword forgotten at his side, his arms
wrapped tight around his gut.
“Noooo!” The scream finally escaped its
prison in his chest. “No, no, no, no.” He moved his arms so that he could cover
his eyes with his clenched fists, rocking and screaming, “No, no, no!”
“What are you going on about, boy?” Still
licking his chops, the dragon loomed over him, and Llesho wanted to kill the
creature, but he couldn’t move. He noted that the thin tongue had missed a
spot, and his gut turned over when he realized he was looking at the healer’s
blood.
“I loved her,” he moaned, still rocking
himself like an out of control cradle. That wasn’t what he intended to say, and
he wasn’t even sure how he meant it. As a mother, perhaps, or even as a
grandmother. She had reminded him of Kwan-ti and even Adar, his brother, a
little, and he’d lost every one of them.
Llesho’s declaration didn’t seem to
surprise the golden dragon nearly as much as it had surprised Llesho himself,
but the creature had little patience with his continued distress. The dragon
snorted, and Llesho felt the touch of heat, the smell of ash, on the breath of
the great worm.
“No need for hysterics,” the creature
pointed out. “She’ll be back.”
Lleck had come back as well, but Llesho
could take little comfort and less counsel from a bear cub with a tendency to
forget his charge and wander off into the woods to hunt. “I don’t need another
bear or a monkey or a parrot or crocodile; I need Mara, herself.”
“You don’t have much faith in her, do you,
boy?” The creature eyed him thoughtfully, as though he was deciding which
morsel to take next from the platter at dinnertime. Llesho bowed his head,
waiting for the devouring mouth to descend, but the dragon merely gave a pained
sigh and belched smoke and greasy fire. Something the worm had eaten clearly
did not agree with him. With a last sniff of disdain, the creature abandoned
him; Llesho looked up in time to see its gleaming coils ripple the surface of
the river and then it disappeared beneath the swiftly running current.
Long after the dragon had gone, Llesho
stared at the place where he had disappeared, but the youth’s thoughts were not
on the worm that had only acted according to his nature. Disaster seemed to
follow Llesho wherever he went, and he stood up, walked to the river’s edge
with a calculating question: if he threw himself in, let the river take him,
would the rest of his friends have a better chance at survival? Perhaps no
other governments would fall if he were gone. The world would turn as if he had
never existed, which would probably be a good thing for the world. If he could
be sure it wasn’t already too late.
The brush of cloth sweeping across grass
alerted him to a presence nearby and he turned. Habiba approached. The
governor’s witch, except that the governor was dead for buying Llesho away from
Master Markko’s control. Llesho wondered if the witch still had a job, but
figured he’d always been her ladyship’s anyway. Kaydu’s father, and Llesho had
almost gotten her killed today, with her father close enough to watch on the
wrong damned side of the river. Llesho would have thrown himself at Habiba’s
feet, except that Habiba had come as close as he seemed to want, and then had
dropped to one knee, his head bowed.
“You have given me two great gifts today,
my prince,” he said. “How does a man pay a debt greater than the value of his
life?”
“I am not your prince. And you owe me
nothing.” Llesho did not look away from the river; he hoped the witch mistook
his hopeless anger for strength of purpose. How could Habiba honor him? “Your
daughter, Kaydu, could have died here today.”
“But she didn’t. You saved her. For that
alone I would give you my life.”
“I put your daughter in danger. Mara saved
her, saved all of us, at the price of her own life.”
“Kaydu is a soldier. She did her job. As
her commander, you saw her safely home, at great cost to your own peace of
mind.”
Habiba paused, and Llesho thought he would
get up and leave now that he had said his piece. But the witch spoke again,
more wistfully. “All my life I have wished to see one of the great worms.
Almost, it had become easier to believe they no longer existed than to accept
that I was unworthy. Today you have shown me wonders I thought lost to the
world forever.”
“Mara did that. And Mara is dead.” Llesho
faced the witch with all the truth of his guilt. His eyes burned, and Habiba
flinched, was himself the first to turn away. He watched the river as if he
expected the golden dragon to surface again and invite him to tea.
“We live in an age of wonders, Llesho. Something
died here today, but I think, whatever she was, that it was not your healer.
You will see her again, if you don’t do something really stupid like drown
yourself out of self-pity.”
“What can you know about it?” Llesho
demanded, though he couldn’t work up much fight. He didn’t really want to die.
It wasn’t very heroic, but mostly he wanted to lie down where he was and sleep
for a very long time. Maybe, if he slept long enough, the storm would have
passed him by.
Habiba seemed to know what he was thinking,
though. “You are, yourself, the eye of the storm,” he said softly, and Llesho
saw compassion in his eyes. “If you sleep, the storm sleeps with you, when you
awake, the storm is with you still.” He shrugged, a gesture of submission to
the fates. “Some of those who ride in the wake of the storm always suffer, but
without it we have no rain, no rivers, no life.”
“I’m not strong enough,” Llesho whispered.
He wondered if he could have given his life in the healer’s place, and had no
answer.
Habiba put a hand on his shoulder. “Then
today, the storm will sleep.” In the sanctuary of the arm curved around his
shoulder, Llesho permitted the witch to guide him back to the wall. He looked
for a break to enter by, but Habiba used one hand as a balance, and vaulted
over with the agility of a youth. Llesho clambered after him with a great deal
more effort and considerably less grace.
Chapter Twenty-four
LESHO slid over the low stone wall. He
would have fallen, but Bixei was there, waiting for him, and propped a shoulder
under his arm to hold him up.
“Is he all right?”
That was Stipes, and Llesho wondered what
the gladiator was doing here in the camp with the governor’s witch. But Lling
was tearing at his shirt, her fingers gentle but her tongue a good deal
sharper. “Fool! If you’ve opened your wound again, Mara will have your guts on
a platter.”
Habiba put a hand on Lling’s wrist,
stilling her fingers on Llesho’s bandages. “That can wait until we are more
comfortable.”
“No, it can’t—”
“Mara’s dead,” Llesho gritted between
clenched teeth. He pulled away from Bixei’s support before he added, “The
dragon ate her.”
Lling’s hand fell, her face going white
with shock.
Bixei gave the newcomers a cautious frown.
“What dragon?” he asked, as Hmishi objected, “I saw her at the bridge—”
Llesho sighed. “There is no bridge over the Golden Draeon
River.”
“No bridge. Then what—”
“Our enemies have spies everywhere.” Habiba
stopped the argument with a glare that cut like a knife. “Let’s take this
conversation under shelter.”
They walked in silence after that. Llesho
glanced sidelong at Stipes who strode with familiar ease at Bixei’s side, but
no one else seemed surprised at his presence. Stipes dipped his head in
acknowledgment of Llesho’s unspoken questions, but answers would have to wait,
as Habiba had commanded. Any of the myriad birds calling overhead or the small
creatures skittering in the grass might be under Markko’s spell. Even the wind
might carry their words away to the magician.
Master Jaks had set up camp in the orchard.
Habiba led their party past lines of red felt tents tucked between the gnarled
trunks of fruit trees. At the center of the camp a larger tent was stretched
over stout poles. Its sides were furled, and under its shade Llesho counted
half a dozen silent guards whose presence warned away accidental trespassers.
Their drawn swords offered more persuasive arguments in the event of unfriendly
approach. Master Jaks waited for them at a folding table strewn with maps. Two
secretaries in the robes of their office hovered in the background.
Master Jaks spared the newcomers a brief
smile, which Llesho did not return, and gestured to chairs set up in a rough
circle around the table. By some unspoken agreement the others left the most
comfortable chair for Llesho, who only realized what they had done after he had
seated himself and planted his elbows on the chair’s smooth wooden arms.
When they had all settled in, Habiba spoke
in his most formal tones. “The governor of Thousand Lakes Province sends his
regards to Prince Llesho of Thebin, Lord of the Eastern Passages and
Wizard-King of the High Mountains. His lordship regrets that he could not
deliver his respects in person, but begs the prince’s understanding, as he must
prepare the defense of his own people. The soldiers you see about you, however,
he offers at your disposal, with most fervent prayers for success in your
endeavor.”
“Thank him for me, please, though I wonder
if the emperor would recognize the right of the governor of Thousand Lakes
Province to offer his protection here.”
“I do not understand you.” Habiba smoothed
a hand down his coat, a weak effort at distraction.
“I think you do, Habiba.” Llesho moved
forward in his chair, leaning over the table to better read the message in the
witch’s eyes. “Where are we?” It wasn’t the most important question on his
mind, but the answer would shade all the others.
“The Golden Dragon River,” Master Jaks
replied. The faces of Llesho’s companions hardened with the reminder of their
loss, but Llesho refused to give in to the remorse he felt.
“It’s a long river,” Llesho pointed out. “I
just lost another healer on it, so I am not in the mood to play geography
games. Are we in Farshore Province, or Thousand Lakes?” He thought they’d
strayed too far north to have crossed into Sky Bridge Province, but he couldn’t
be certain.
“I told you, she’ll be back,” Habiba
objected softly. “It isn’t always about you.”
Llesho stared down the governor’s witch. He
felt a door open in his soul, to one of those caverns darker than he cared to
look at, and he didn’t bother trying to hide it. Habiba pulled back, frowning
as if he’d been given something tough to chew. “Lately, it may seem so, I’ll
grant you that. But under cover of the storm, many agenda are at work.
Including Mara’s own, and her business with Golden Dragon.”
“But still we play geography games. What
province do we out to the storm todav. Master Witch?”
Master Jaks gusted a heavy breath. “Until a
month ago, this land was part of Farshore Province.”
Whatever was bothering him, Habiba had put
it aside, and he took up the explanation in terms of an imperial memorial:
“His lordship, the governor of Thousand
Lakes Province, has extended his protection to the lands that border his own,
and to the household of his daughter, who has come to him for refuge. Think of
this orchard as a provincial mission of the governor of Thousand Lakes
Province, sanctuary to all who ask it in the name of her ladyship, wife of the
murdered governor of Farshore. Until the Celestial Emperor himself assigns a
new governor to Farshore, it is within the lady’s right to request the aid of
her father, and within the duties and obligations of her father to fulfill her
request wherever her ladyship’s interests may find themselves.”
Habiba extended his hand in a gesture that
took in the orchard and the surrounding camp, demonstrating the unstated. The
army that held it possessed the land they stood upon and that army owed its
loyalty to Thousand Lakes Province.
“And Lord Yueh?” Llesho asked. “Master
Markko did not pursue us to offer safe passage to the borders of her ladyship’s
lands. What claim has Lord Yueh made?”
“Yueh is dead.” Stipes answered that one,
which surprised Llesho. He’d wondered why Stipes had joined their counsel; now
he knew. “Poison, I think, in his wine.
“I had already decided that I would run, if
I could find Bixei, but I didn’t kill Lord Yueh,” he added when all eyes turned
on him. The penalty for a slave who killed his master was skinning alive, a
painstaking process in which the skin was removed slowly beginning at the feet
and moving up his legs to his torso before the verv eves of the horrified
victim. There were stories of executioners who could peel the skin off a man in
one piece, toes to crown, and leave his victim still alive and bleeding in the
sawdust when he was done. The sun got any survivors soon enough, or the cold.
Or the vultures and the bugs.
Knowing her ladyship’s feelings on the
matter of slavery and adding that to what she must feel at the murder of her
husband, Llesho didn’t believe she would condemn Stipes to a horrible death for
killing Yueh. Still, he could not suppress the shudder that passed through him
at the thought of the terrible execution that awaited one who would commit such
a crime.
Fortunately, Llesho was pretty sure the man
was telling the truth and hadn’t killed his master. “Did Markko have access to
Lord Yueh’s wine?” he asked. Master Jaks must know the story, and Habiba, if
they had permitted the gladiator to join them, but Llesho looked to Stipes, who
had been there, to tell it.
“Not that night. Markko learned from his
spies that you had split from the main party. He took a couple of foot units
and a few horse to find you, and Lord Yueh followed her ladyship’s train. Her
ladyship traveled slowly, with the aged and the young in her care, and we were
soldiers on a forced march. We caught up to her easily enough, but Yueh hadn’t
counted on Master Jaks.
“He stood us off after the first attack
failed, waiting for Master Markko to return with you. I think he planned to put
her champions to the sword and take her husband’s place as governor and as
mate, but he fell ill soon after he dined, and never left his bed. In the
morning, Yueh was delirious, his army in disarray. Few among Lord Yueh’s forces
fought for him willingly, and many surrendered without raising a weapon that
day. I was lucky to find Bixei; he took me to Master Jaks, and I offered my
weapons and* my service.”
There was something left unsaid in that
last, and Llesho wanted it, down to the last promise: “To whom?”
Stipes dipped his head, acknowledging the
hit. “To Master Jaks, actually. Don’t know much about lords and such, but that
Chin-shi was a foolish one and Yueh a bad one. And yours was a dead one,” he
added sullenly when Habiba turned a threatening eye on him. “By then, Yueh was
a dead one, too; the healers could do nothing.
“But I trusted Master Jaks, had done so for
more years than I care to consider. And Master Jaks says you are a king, so
here we are.” He shrugged, admitting he didn’t understand what had gone on
while they had belonged to different camps, but that he was willing to take
some things—even outlandish things like a skinny pearl diver being a long-lost
king—on faith from the right person.
Llesho turned thoughtfully to Master Jaks,
who returned his level gaze from across the table. Master Jaks was his teacher,
and he had trusted the man just as Stipes had. But Llesho had grown wary since
the poison arrow had felled him. Master Jaks had served Lord Chin-shi, who was
dead, under the direction of Overseer Markko, who now sought to capture or kill
Llesho. Master Jaks had followed Llesho to Farshore, but now took into his
escort Stipes, who was Lord Yueh’s man, or had been until his lordship’s timely
death. Most damning, Jaks was an assassin; Llesho’s eyes returned again to the
six rings tattooed on Jaks’ upper arm. Why was an assassin so interested in an
exiled prince of Thebin?
Master Jaks followed the gaze. “They
trouble you?” he asked, nodding his chin at the rings on his arm.
Llesho waited, while the assassin returned
his study, looking for a crack in the stone of Llesho’s eyes and finding none.
With a little shrug, a tiny smile that
Llesho did not understand, Master Jaks
rested his arm on the table, palm up, the gesture of surrender. “If my arm
offends you,” he said, “cut it off.”
Not what Llesho had expected. He turned to
Habiba for an explanation, or advice, but the witch said nothing, merely
gestured to a guard who raised his unsheathed sword and set it lightly across
the muscle, just above the first, and oldest, ring.
“Why?” Llesho asked.
“I wasn’t always an assassin,” Master Jaks
answered, and gave the rings on his own arm a look of such loathing and hunger
that Llesho would have drawn his own Thebin knife had a guard not already held
the man in check with a sword resting on flesh. “A long time ago, I served
Thebin as a hired defender.”
“A mercenary,” Llesho corrected. He had
seen the device on Master Jaks’ wrist guards long ago, that time with blood
splashed on them from the Harn. Mercenaries, yes, but his guard had died like a
Thebin to protect a young prince.
“A
mercenary.” Master Jaks accepted the correction. “My clan is poor; her sons
serve others for pay. The less skilled take contracts as foot troops in the
border wars of strangers. Those of breeding and skill hold positions in the
great houses of the wealthy. My own squad served the Royal House of Kungol. My
brother swore his life to the protection of the young prince, but could not
save him.”
He met Llesho’s stony gaze with fire in his
eyes— grim, grim fire. “I was, myself, sworn to the young prince’s mother. I
lay as the dead on the floor of her temple while the men of Harn tormented her
and dragged her away. To my shame, I did not die of my wounds that day.”
“You loved my mother.”
It wasn’t in the words but in the longing
when
Master Jaks said them, and in the despair
that crossed the landscape behind his eyes when he spoke of her torment.
“Everyone loved her. How could they not?”
Llesho saw in the rueful smile that Master
Jaks had never overstepped his place at the foot of his mistress: no dishonor
to the queen or her husband had ever been contemplated. The self-loathing at
his failure would have been the greater for his feelings, however. Llesho
understood about failure and regret. He didn’t understand how one could honor
the holy queen of Thebin with the rings of an assassin on his arm, and he said
so.
“You prove your love of that holy woman of
peace with the taking of lives for pay, as an assassin?”
Master Jaks flinched, as even the sword
resting on his arm had not made him do. “There are few professions open to a
member of the elite guard who has failed so disastrously in his charge. But I
have kept myself alive, when I could wish only to join my brother in death, for
the day when I might restore honor to my family and my clan, If I have
dishonored my quest, I offer my death. Let my blood wash away the stain upon
her pure honor that I served. You would be doing me a favor, one I have wished
for many years. If you want to win in the coming battle, however, I can offer
my service. With two arms or with one, I pledge my life, and the lives of those
men who follow me, to restore her house to its rightful place, and for my
brother’s honor to protect her son in all things.”
“You will do with one arm what you could
not manage nine cycles ago with two?”
A glint behind the fire, a deepening of the
lines around Master Jaks’ eyes, told more than the words: “I know more now.” He
hadn’t been a paid assassin then. With rueful, dangerous humor, Master Jaks
followed the length of the sword with his eyes. He’d abased himself enough with
his confession. Llesho wasn’t ready to fight this war on his own, and he
thought maybe the boy even knew it. “Better with two, of course.”
Llesho gave the slightest flick of
dismissal with his fingers, and the sword lifted. No emotion broke the
impassive obedience of the guard, but the man’s whole body eased. So it hadn’t
been just for show. Some, though. And it wasn’t over yet.
“By the laws of Shan, I cannot take your
pledge, ” Llesho pointed out with ice in his tone. “I am a slave.”
He had his manumission papers in his tunic,
of course, but, until his seventeenth birthday, her ladyship could free him
only by adopting him. When offered the opportunity, she had declined. Now,
having recognized his lineage, any such act on the part of Thousand Lakes
Province must appear as a first move in a political game neither her ladyship
nor her father could afford. Shan itself would move against the province. And
Llesho would be no closer to freeing his brothers than when he was diving for
pearls off Pearl Island.
Too much had happened. Llesho knew, in his
head, that he had come a long way in more than physical distance from the bay
where the spirit of Lleck, his teacher, had appeared to him and sent him to
free his home. But he was no wizard-king, and in his heart, he felt only the
weight of his losses. Given his track record on this quest, he doubted he’d
live long enough to see Kungol and his beloved mountains again.
“His lordship the governor has interpreted
the manumission status of a young royal under the law that governs the
succession to the governorship.” Habiba reached out a hand and a secretary set
a sheaf of papers into it. “If a governor should die before his orphaned heir
reaches the legal age of majority, the law allows for the appointment of a
regent.
“His lordshio did not wish to be seen as
motivated by political ambitions in the appointment of the young prince’s
regent. Accordingly, he has charged me to invite your own recommendations for
the role of your adviser.”
No one stirred at the table. The silence
was so complete that Llesho could imagine no one stirred in the whole camp. He
studied the faces of his companions, but each kept his eyes downcast and his
counsel to himself. He could have wished for Kwan-ti then, or Mara, or Master
Den, or Lleck—any one of the people he had grown to depend on for their wisdom
who had died or disappeared from his life, leaving him storm-tossed without an
anchor. He sorely needed their advice now; if any one of them had beep at the
conference table, he would have landed the regency in their laps and been done
with it. But they weren’t— even Lleck the bear had not followed him to this
camp—and Habiba, while clever and deep, was too much her ladyship’s creature.
And Master Jaks. Master Jaks, with the six rings tattooed on his upper arm, one
for each paid murder he’d committed, would be no fit regent for the spiritual
leader of the Thebin people, even if Llesho never had another spiritual thought
in his life. Stipes was a fighter, not a thinker, and he was Yueh’s anyway, or
Bixei’s, if he had his choice. The rest of them were no older than he was, or
not by much, and no smarter.
The more he thought about it, though, the
more he rejected the notion of anyone making his decisions for him, law or no
law. It was his quest, his country he had promised to free. The decision was
easy after all.
“Adar,” he said. “My brother.”
Habiba smiled and handed him the papers.
“Her ladyship thought you would decide as much. She persuaded her father to
complete the appropriate forms appointing Adar as your regent in absentia.”
Adar. Llesho brushed the sheaf of papers
with his Hp needed tn find his hrother. to nrove to himself that he was on the
true path to the liberation of his people and not on a fool’s journey. The
papers appointing his brother regent until succession should be decided at
Kungol reminded Llesho of Farshore’s own problems.
“His lordship the governor left no heir,
did he?”
“He did not,” Habiba answered. “His family
line having failed, the emperor will appoint a new governor in his place. Lord
Yueh would have petitioned for the post if he had lived, I am sure.”
Llesho nodded, thinking. The emperor, far
away in Shan and with only the word of easily bribed advisers to guide him, had
awarded Lord Yueh the governorship of Pearl Island. Yueh had received clear
title to all the holdings that belonged to the island, including the dying
oyster beds of Pearl Bay, in payment of debts left owing after the death of
Lord Chin-shi. With Lord Chin-shi’s overseer Markko as his adviser, Lord Yueh
had attacked Farshore. Now Lord Yueh was dead, and Markko had turned back after
his defeat at the jaws of the dragon on Golden Dragon River. Llesho didn’t
think the deaths of three governors were coincidence.
“Lord Yueh had a young son, did he not?”
“Still does,” Stipes confirmed. “At least,
the son still lives, though just a babe.”
“Will the Emperor name his mother regent?”
Llesho directed his question to Habiba. As the adviser to a murdered governor
himself, the witch would know better than any of them what would happen next in
the matter of continued government.
“I doubt it.” Habiba considered his answer.
“Her ladyship of Farshore produced no heir for the governor. If Markko acts
true to form, he will lay a claim against Farshore in the name of Lord Yuen’s
young son, and petition to be named regent under the guidance of the boy’s
mother. Everyone knows that Lady Yueh was much younger than her husband, and
that she was a quiet, shy creature. Markko’s deference to her wishes will be
seen for what it is: an opportunity offered the mother to visit her child upon
state occasions. She will have no say in his upbringing, and certainly none in
the rule of Farshore, which Markko will want to consolidate with Pearl Island
in his own name.”
“And how long will the boy live?”
“At least a year,” Master Jaks suggested.
“It will take Markko that long to marry the widow and get her with child. Then
Yueh’s child will die, and Markko will petition to claim the post in his own
name, for the son his wife carries.”
Between them Habiba and Master Jaks had
outlined Llesho’s own conclusions. It left one question unanswered, however.
“What does he want with me?”
“The trade routes through the passes above
Kun-gol?” Master Jaks guessed.
Llesho shrugged a shoulder. “Then he’d do
better attacking the Harn. I couldn’t give him Kungol if I wanted to.”
“He may wish to control your power of
persuasion with the goddess,” Habiba suggested.
Llesho snorted an unpretty laugh. “He’d
have done better to wait a day to attack Farshore if that’s what he wanted. The
goddess didn’t come. I didn’t see her. I’d rather believe that the attack came
before I had a chance to finish the ritual than that the goddess did not choose
me. If she was able to find me at all so far from home, however, it’s more
likely the goddess found me wanting and rejected me. No special influence
there.”
Habiba looked at him strangely, but didn’t
say anything. There seemed little left to
say. Llesho had his own quest, but Thebin seemed very far away and his enemies
formidable. He wasn’t smart enough to defeat Markko, wasn’t strong enough, and
his so-called “mystical powers” weren’t going to impress the magician. Aside
from having a ghost tell him what to do and a dragon eat his healer, he didn’t
have any magic. And like his luck, it seemed that if it weren’t for bad magic,
he’d have none at all.
He did know that he was too tired to think
about it now. He rose from his chair, but when he turned to bow politely to
Habiba, he found the witch on one knee before him again, along with Master Jaks
and the secretaries and Stipes. Bixei had moved to stand next to Kaydu, and
together with Hmishi and Lling the four companions stood to attention, his
personal guard awaiting his next order.
“I need to rest.” He was also hungry, he
realized, and in no condition to make more difficult decisions. Given his
current temper, he was lucky Master Jaks still had two arms.
Habiba took that as permission to rise, as
did his companions. “Kaydu can show you to your tent,” he said. It was accepted
that his companions, who once again included Bixei, would not leave his side,
and equally clearly understood that no other company was welcome at this time.
Except for one person, who wasn’t available.
“I wish Master Den were here,” Llesho said.
“Who is Master Den?” Lling wanted to know.
Before Llesho could answer, Bixei volunteered the information, “He is here.
Don’t know why he didn’t attend the meeting just now, but you can probably find
him in the laundry after you’ve had something to eat.”
“The laundry? Here?”
Bixei laughed. “He brought two huge
cauldrons with him on a supply wagon, and he’s had Gryphon Squad hauling water
from the river all morning. By now he’s probably knee-deep in soap suds!”
A darkness at the edge of vision that
Llesho hadn’t even noticed until now suddenly lifted. He smiled: a real, full
smile, for the first time in so long he couldn’t even remember when it had last
happened. Den was here. Maybe he had a chance after all.
Chapter Twenty-five
HEY’VE assigned us one of the large command
tents.“ Kaydu led them through the bivouac lines. When the smells of food warned
them that they were passing close by the cook tent, Bixei left the group with a
murmured promise to bring something to eat for them.
“Something hot,” Llesho requested absently.
He felt cold from the inside out, the chill escaping in fine tremors that shook
him in waves, like a fever. He followed Kaydu along a row of round felt tents.
Men and women in the leather and brass of
fighters stopped in their mending and polishing to stare as they passed. Kaydu
glared, sending them back to their tasks with unanswered questions still
lurking in their eyes, but no great desire for answers. Llesho was just as
glad; what few answers he had satisfied no one, least of all himself. He wasn’t
up to sharing them, but turned his thoughts inward, fighting the cold that
crept over his heart. Mara was dead in his place, though Habiba seemed to think
she had survived the dragon’s poison tooth and fiery gullet somehow. The other
deaths, and Kwan-ti’s disappearance, he could blame on events that flowed
around him but were not themselves a part of his own story. Local politics, far
from the eye of Thebin and no fight of Llesho’s, took their toll, and he could
do little more than survive them. But Mara had called up a dragon to rescue
him, and then had offered her life to the creature in exchange for his own. He
should have—
“Stop it.” Lling punched him in the arm,
and he realized that she’d been talking to him, and he hadn’t heard a word.
“It wasn’t your fault.” She called him on
his guilt-ridden brooding, angry at him for it. “According to Habiba, she isn’t
dead anyway.”
“He said she’d be back, not that she wasn’t
dead.” Llesho emphasized the distinction. “Lleck is back, too. Does that mean
he didn’t die of the fever on Pearl Island?”
“Where is Lleck?” Hmishi thought to ask
just then. “I didn’t see him cross the bridge ... Or ... Dragon . . .
Something.”
“He clearly had better sense than to cross
a rushing river on the back of a legend,” Llesho suggested.
“I didn’t think kings had temper tantrums,” Lling snapped.
Llesho looked at her, too tired for any of
this. He wanted to escape, to dig a deep, deep hole, and crawl in and hide. But
they weren’t going to leave him alone; Master Jaks had made sure of that. “They
probably don’t,” he agreed, thinking about his father, who had often laughed,
and sometimes cried, and in court would stroke his beard in thought before
handing down a wise and balanced ruling. “But since I will never be a king, I
don’t see your point.”
“But Jaks said—”
“A thousand li of Harn grassland, filled
with Harn raiders, stand between me and a crown,” he pointed out. “And
somewhere between here and there, I have six brothers, each of them older than
I am and more suited to the throne. So I am still just a minor prince in exile,
as I told you before.”
“You are the seventh son of the king of
Thebin, though,” Hmishi pressed him.
“Favored of the gods,” Llesho quoted. “Is
that how it seems to you?”
“Well.” Lling put an arm through his, and
Hmishi took the other. Together they leaned into him. “You’ve got us. I’d say
that counts as blessed.” She grinned at him, daring him to contradict her.
He tried to laugh but could only manage a
tight smile, until the smell of soap bubbles hit his nose.
“This is it,” Kaydu said, tugging him
toward a command tent, red like the others, but bigger, and tall enough to
stand up in.
“Later.” Llesho followed the sound and the
smell he had grown to love because they reminded him of Master Den.
He found the washerman, loins bound up and
knee-deep in a steaming vat of soapy water. The traveling washtub was made of
knee-high oaken staves bound in a circle as wide across as a spear, with an
oaken floor in sections set clinker-style, one board overlapping another to
make the whole watertight, on the grass. Long strips of bandages hung from
lines that festooned the fruit trees, and bright red tent cloths lay spread
upon the grass to dry. Llesho stood beneath a cherry tree, letting the smell
and the sound ease into his soul and loosen the rock-hard tension in his
muscles. He realized suddenly that it didn’t hurt to smile and let his lips
have their way, skinning back in a toothy grin he’d forgotten was ever a part
of him.
“Kick your sandals off and get in here,
boy, or have you forgotten all I’ve taught you?” Den set his fists atop his
broad hips and huffed a steamy breath for emphasis.
“I’m a prince now,” Llesho reminded him
with a haughty sniff. He was toeing off his sandals when he said it.
“You were always a prince,” Master Den
corrected him with an answering grin. “You had to learn to be a washerman.”
Llesho dragged his leggings off and dropped
them in a heap over his sandals, and followed with his tunic. The washerman’s
grin faltered, and Llesho was suddenly self-conscious about the wound still raw
on his breast. But Master Den taunted him with another mock challenge, “Unless
you’ve forgotten everything I taught you.”
In nothing but his own smallclothes, Llesho
climbed into the vat. “I haven’t forgotten a thing,” he promised, and meant
much more than how to stir up the wash.
“And well you shouldn’t, young prince.”
Master Den gave a meaningful look to the Thebin knife hanging in its sheath
from a cord around Llesho’s neck. He gave a broad smile then, and opened his arms.
“It’s good to see you again, boy.”
Llesho gave his teacher a hug. “I thought
you must be dead, too,” he whispered, and Den set him at arm’s length so that
he could look deep into his eyes. “I am not dead. Hold onto your faith, Llesho.
The world is a more wondrous place than you can yet imagine.”
“I could do with a few less wonders. The
last one ate my healer.”
“Perhaps she is a wonder, too.” Master Den
gave him a nod to signal the end of meaningful conversation, or perhaps the
beginning of a lesson, Llesho could never quite tell when the washerman was
teaching and when he was making small talk. “But now we have bandages to clean,
and then boil, and tent cloths to prepare for the hospital.”
He stepped out of the vat, and Llesho
followed; each took a coarse rake and began to dredge the soaking cloths.
Working in comfortable unison they draped the waterlogged bandages over the
spokes of a wheel, the axle of which ended in a crank. When each spoke was
lined with long bandage cloths, Llesho grabbed their loose ends, and Den turned
the crank, twisting the bandages and wringing out the dirty water. Then each
bit went into a bubbling cauldron for a brief but important boiling to kill any
putridity that might still inhabit the weave, and onto the lines it went.
Llesho bent and stretched, thinking of
nothing but the regular motions of duties he remembered from a time when his
road seemed clear and the risks belonged to him alone. While he worked, the hot
water of the vat and the steam from the cauldrons loosened the muscles that had
grown rigid with a soul-deep cold. He wiped sweat from his brow with the back
of his hand, and felt his shoulders uncurl from their customary hunch around
his wound and his heart.
“Father says you need rest,” Kaydu insisted,
her frown expressing the disapproval of his humble toil that she hesitated to
speak out loud.
“Are you scolding the prince, or the
washerman for detaining him?” Master Den asked with laughter barely restrained
in his voice. Kaydu didn’t know Master Den, of course, and she didn’t like that
tone of voice from a stranger.
“He’s been wounded,” she snapped back. “He
shouldn’t be pulling at that shoulder.”
Master Den acknowledged her with a wise
nod, a twinkle hidden in his eye. “His wounds run deep, but even the deepest
wounds heal, give the opportunity to do so.”
While Den and Kaydu challenged each other
for the right to determine his well-being, Llesho scratched idly at his damp
belly. His damp, empty belly. “Is there anything to eat?”
“Bixei brought your dinner. It’s getting
cold in your tent right now.”
“Cold is good,” Llesho decided, “unless it
is fish heads in porridge.” He shuddered a little, and Den laughed.
“No fish heads,” the washerman said. “The
fish are known to curse the fishermen in their own tongue hereabouts.”
Llesho figured he meant the Golden Dragon
River, which had already shown itself to harbor stranger creatures than he had
ever wanted to meet. No, he wouldn’t want to fish in that river.
“Do you have any cheese?” he asked. “And a
bit of bread?”
“Llesho!” Kaydu snapped.
She wanted to protect him. Llesho figured
he was making that difficult for her, and that at the least he owed it to his
friends to make it as easy as possible for them to keep him alive.
He raised his head, instinctively setting
his shoulders and tilting his chin with the quiet poise of a prince. In his
eyes lingered the fear of a terrible pain waiting to claim him if he gave
himself time to think. Kaydu dropped her gaze, suddenly embarrassed to be
ordering him about, and guilty for reminding him of that pain that lay in wait
for him.
“You do that very well.” Den might have
been mocking him, or ... something.
“I’m sorry,” he apologized to Kaydu, “but I
need this.” He had missed his old master more than he was willing to say in
front of his companions.
She nodded, not looking at him, and turned
to go.
“I’ll watch him, Kaydu.” Den made his own
peace offering. “He won’t come to any harm tonight.”
“I know,” she said, and turned to Llesho.
“But one of us will be on guard anyway. Just in case. Bixei wants to talk to
you. He’s been really worried since we parted with her ladyship’s train. He has
asked for first watch. I’ll send your dinner up with him.”
“Thank you.” The debate had drained much of
the warmth out of his bones, and Llesho felt his muscles tightening up again.
“Cover up; we’ve done enough for one day.”
Den threw him a patched linen shirt and a pair of coarse breeches, reminders of
another time. “Perhaps you would like to do prayer forms with me?”
Llesho nodded, then realized Master Den
couldn’t see him with his head under his shirt. He found the open neck, popped
his head through, and answered, “Yes, Master, very much,” while punching his arms
into sleeves, and pulled on the breeches just as Bixei showed up with his
dinner.
“Dinner can wait.” Den bowed, his hands
clasped. Bixei grinned in answer and set himself next to Llesho, their old
positions in the training yard on Pearl Island. Following Den’s lead, they
performed the Flowing River form, to thank the Seven Gods for their timely
rescue across the Golden Dragon River, and the Twining Branches form to honor
the orchard that sheltered them. Somehow, Jaks had joined them, and Stipes. For
a brief span of minutes, they fell into old routines that were, Llesho reminded
himself, no less dangerous for their familiarity. A gladiator was called to die
as often as a soldier in battle, for the price of a wager or the whim of an
audience.
But in the forms, Llesho could forget all
the dangerous roads that had brought him here. The pieces of his heart tumbled,
found their proper places, and clicked together in the moment. Body and mind,
motion and a soaring heart joined in the fading sunlight. Llesho reached
through the forms, became the twisted shadows of laden branches, honored the
grass that bruised beneath feet in Wind through Millet. The grass offered
itself in answer to the prayer forms, releasing its sharp green scent around
his legs, its touch a reminder of life infinitely renewing all around them.
Fingertip breezes soft with the oerfume of rioe oeaches kissed his cheek and
whispered through the strands of his hair. The earth rocked them gently, the
universe cradled them, and the evening flowed with his muscles, one with all
the living men and gods.
Llesho offered plums to the lady goddess in
his mind. She was his bride, and he felt her kiss in the kiss of the breeze,
her touch in the warmth that flowed through his body. He knew that he could
wait for her, as she waited for him. When he finally came to rest, with a bow
to his master, he noticed that his companions were staring at him with guarded
wonder.
“Did I do something wrong?” he asked,
ducking his head in embarrassment. He meant by that, Did I do something strange to call attention to
myself. It was one thing to have a private moment with the
universe, and quite another to share that moment with all one’s closest
companions.
Den shook his head, his own little smile
accompanied by a shrug of the shoulder. “Nothing to be ashamed of,” he
promised. “But it is becoming more and more difficult to forget you are a
prince.”
“Does that mean I can’t join you in the
washing anymore?” he asked, the first thing that came to mind. Master Den said
nothing, just watched him with the same gentle smile, but Master Jaks sat down
hard on the ground, laughing till the tears ran down his face. “You scared the
hell out of me, boy.” Jaks shuddered at a memory Llesho didn’t share. “I
thought you would die on that river.” He shrugged, helpless to explain away the
feelings that had escaped him. “Didn’t realize you had influence with the local
river dragon.”
“Not my influence.” Llesho winced at the
thought of Mara facing the dragon. But Habiba didn’t seem disturbed. And there
were all those missing afternoons. ... “I don’t think I’m meant to die yet.” He
reached for the bread Bixei had left under the nearest peach tree and tore off
a chewv bite, erabbed the slab of cheese resting beside it, and munched
thoughtfully, leaning back against the tree trunk. Llesho had always understood
the responsibility a king owed his subjects. Not since Khri had died to protect
him from the Harn raiders, however, had Llesho felt the weight of
responsibility a prince owed his protectors. He had to stay alive or the
sacrifices of Khri, and of the Long March, and of Mara were for nothing. If he
had died on the river, Khri’s brother would have gone to his grave with a
blood-debt unpaid. Llesho understood about brothers. Looking at Master Jaks
that way was a revelation.
“You will have your chance to complete your
contract.” This time he meant it, in the full knowledge that he owed his debtor
as much as the mercenary-assassin owed him. With a single dip of his head, Jaks
acknowledged the solemn promise in Llesho’s demeanor.
Done. Llesho returned the bow with a jerk
of his chin, and blinked. Thinking took as much energy as running from Master
Markko, and he’d had more than enough of both to last him a while.
“You need a bed, and rest,” Bixei took his
arm.
Llesho struggled to his feet and let Bixei
lead him to his tent. The clothes he wore were soft enough that he didn’t worry
about taking them off, just let himself drop on the pallet prepared for him and
fell into the welcoming darkness.
I’lorning came with the sunlight spilling
red through the tent cloth and the smell of fresh bread and hot porridge rich
with peaches. Llesho opened his eyes and found Bixei kneeling by his bed with a
steaming bowl of breakfast in his hands. “I told you this would wake him up,”
Bixei said to someone behind him.
Llesho sat up and craned his neck. Kaydu
sat cross-legged on her blanket with a bowl of her own in front of her. “Llesho
liking his breakfast is not exactly news,” she answered with a sniff.
“Who likes breakfast?” Lling popped into
the tent, followed by Hmishi, both with steaming bowls in their hands.
“I do,” Llesho took the bowl from Bixei
while the two newcomers settled themselves on the floor of the tent.
They ate in silence for a while, then Bixei
cleared his throat. “We’re going on to Shan?” he asked.
Llesho shrugged. “I promised Lleck that I’d
find my brothers. Adar may be in Shan, so that is where I will start the
search. But no one is obliged to follow me.”
“Who’s Lleck?”
Hmishi finished his porridge and set down
his bowl. “Lleck was Llesho’s teacher. Now he’s a bear.”
“A what?”
“Never mind that.” Llesho waved aside the
discussion. Whatever Lleck was now, he’d exacted a promise from Llesho, one he
intended to keep. “I think we’d all be better off if I did this on my own.”
“Like that would work!” Kaydu gave him a
crinkled frown over her porridge. “We barely made it this far with the four of
us. If it hadn’t been for Mara, we’d be Master Markko’s prisoners right now.”
Llesho didn’t need reminding. Mara was dead
and wouldn’t be coming to their rescue any time soon.
“If you act like you’re unbeatable, you
usually don’t have to fight,” Bixei added. “I learned that when we defeated
Lord Yueh on the road.”
Lling finished her porridge and flicked out
a dainty tongue to lick her fingers clean. “Habiba said we are to go in state,”
she reminded them with a waggle of her eyebrows. “That sounds a lot more
comfortable than straggling into the capital with my clothes in rags and my
hair in snarls.”
“And we’ll have more time with Master Den.”
Bixei had assumed his place among them again, but he darted an uncomfortable
glance at Llesho. He was hiding something, and Llesho wondered if he could
trust Bixei now. “Out with it,” he demanded, unwilling to wait until whatever
it was bit him in the backside.
“It’s Stipes.” Bixei dropped his head. “He
knows it won’t be like the old times. This is war, not the arena, but he asked
me to remind you that he was first to befriend you in the practice yard, and he
would be at your side to see the end of the story, if you would permit it. He
had no choice but to serve Lord Yueh. He was a slave. But he never spied for
Markko, and he has never compromised his honor for personal gain. He says.”
Bixei looked up at Llesho, pleading: “All that I have known of Stipes tells me
that he speaks the truth. And I have missed him.”
Perhaps he should have doubted more, but
Llesho did trust Stipes. He wondered, though, about Bixei. “If you had to
choose,” he asked, “to let Stipes fall, or to give your comrades into Markko’s
hands, what would you do?”
Bixei hesitated, as Llesho expected he
would. In a matter of Stipes’ life or Llesho’s, Bixei would choose to honor his
sworn oath to protect the prince of Thebin. Given what appeared, on the
surface, an equal choice, the outcome was not so certain. But Bixei had already
chosen Stipes over his comrades once. Llesho couldn’t leave decisions of
loyalty to the field.
“Stipes will remain in Habiba’s guard, under Jaks’ command,” Llesho
decided. “You, Bixei, will act as liaison between Habiba’s camp and ours here.
Where will you bivouac?”
Bixei stared at him, stricken, then slowly
processed the question. Not Where will you
sleep while we are in camp, as it appeared on the surface, but, show here, now, where your allegiance lies.
“I’ll bivouac with my comrades, and take my
turn at sentry duty with the others.” He acknowledged
Llesho’s purpose in asking the question
with a rueful smile. “Stipes will understand.”
Llesho set his empty bowl on the pallet
beside him and rubbed at his head. He knew he was just postponing the day of
reckoning with Bixei, but with any luck none of them would ever have to choose.
In the meantime, he was pretty sure he’d awakened late and missed prayer forms,
but it wouldn’t hurt to wander down to the temporary laundry and say hello to
Master Den. Stipes, on the way to Llesho’s tent, met Llesho himself on the way
out.
“Pardon, Your Highness, but Habiba has
ordered that we strike camp and be ready to move by mid-morning. And Master
Jaks asks if he can be of service.”
“It’s a little late to be throwing titles
around, Stipes. I’m the same person I always was.”
“Begging your pardon, Your Highness, but
you’re not,” Stipes objected.
Llesho had turned back to his tent, but
Kaydu shooed him away with a scornful whoosh. “Time you learned how to act like
a prince,” she said in support of Stipes. “And princes don’t strike their own
tents. Go, find Master Den, or Jaks, or whoever, and do what princes do in the
morning.”
Weapons practice. “Ask Master Jaks if we
will have time on the journey to renew our study of the martial arts, if you
please. At his leisure, of course.”
When Stipes had made his deferential bow
and departed, Llesho left his companions to pack their new wealth and went in
search of Master Den. He found the washerman under the same trees, his tubs and
cauldron empty around him and the last of the tent cloths and bandages spread
out to dry.
“Llesho! Come here, boy. You’re the very
thing. Would you take that end—there you go.”
Llesho picked up the trailing ends of the
tent cover that Master Den was folding and mirrored the washerman’s moves,
coming toward him when Den moved forward, and away when Den pulled back, until
the tent cloth was no more than a dense square the size of a dinner plate. They
went on to the next, comfortably working together, while Llesho wondered if
this, too, would soon change. Would Master Den, like Habiba and Master Jaks,
soon press him to behave more like a prince, and less like a washerman. Not
knowing just made him more and more tense, so he took a deep breath and plunged
in.
“You aren’t treating me any differently . .
.” And let Master Den make of that what he would.
“Would you like me to?” Den returned the
question with one of his own, but then offered an answer that unwound a bit of
the tension pulling Llesho’s mouth into a frown.
“I thought you would have had enough of
that from the rest of the camp. Would you prefer that I treat you like a hero,
or like a prince?”
“Like an apprentice washerman, if it is all
right with Habiba,” he answered, and began rolling the strips of clean bandages
with a will.
“It is not for Habiba to say,” Den reminded
him. “And when you are finished with that roll of bandages, I need your help to
break down this washtub.”
“Yes, Master,” Llesho answered the
washerman, who himself hid secrets of his identity. He joined Master Den in
pulling up the floor of the tub in three pieces, and discovered that the rim of
barrel staves folded into a bundle and stowed snugly in the wagon alongside the
cauldron. They had just finished loading the various tent cloths and Master
Den’s own bedroll when a boy just a bit younger than Llesho brought round the
cart horses to lead into harness.
“Your own mount will be waiting for you,”
Master Den reminded Llesho, who bowed to take his leave.
“Would it be all right if I joined you
tomorrow morning for prayer forms?” he asked before he left.
“Who can say what tomorrow will bring?”
Master Den mused. “But if I rise in the morning, and a certain young man should
happen to be near, he might, if he had a mind, perform his prayer forms in
company rather than alone.”
In his weakened state after his wounding
and later, in the confusion of running from Markko and his men, Llesho had
forgotten the comforting ritual of prayer forms. He bowed, in part to hide the
deep wine color pulsing in his cheeks. Torn between guilt and embarrassment, he
resolved to make up for his negligence, starting the very next morning. And for
once, he was glad to abandon his teacher.
Chapter Twenty-six
AFTER the council held on their arrival,
Llesho expected that his squad would join Habiba and Jaks at the head of the
massed guard. But Habiba had wisely explained that marching on the capital of
the Shan Empire with a deposed prince in their company might stir up more
concern than they were prepared to face on the journey. Instead, he set them
somewhat forward of the center in the order of march, an anonymous cluster of
very young soldiers lost among the horse guards.
As they left the orchard behind them,
Llesho turned for a last glance back at the Golden Dragon River to his left,
imprinting the memory of the sun sparking off the tiny frothed peaks of the
swiftly running current. He’d seen wonders on the river, but would have traded
the dragon in all its glory for one more glimpse of the old healer, Mara, sound
and scolding him to be still so that his wound would heal. His flesh scarcely
twinged at all now, but the newer wound of Mara’s loss was a deeper, sharper
hurt.
They advanced at an easy pace that maddened
Llesho. He didn’t think Master Markko had given up the pursuit; the magician
would find a way to cross the river, perhaps already had, and then he’d be
after Llesho and his band of friends again. Llesho had an army with him now,
and they had a witch of their own, of course. He wasn’t sure who practiced the
stronger magic between the two, but thought perhaps Markko would hesitate
before attacking if he knew Habiba had ridden against him. He had enough
grudging respect for Master Markko’s skills, however, that he wanted as many li
between them as possible.
Ahead lay Shan, the imperial city. Caravans
from the north had brought stories of Shan to Thebin. The gods might set Kungol
down in its entirety in the emperor’s gardens and have room left over for his
tiger preserves. Llesho didn’t know how he was going to find Adar or their five
remaining siblings when he got there, but Habiba had them going in the right
direction at last. He wanted to move faster. If he had magic of his own, he
would make the li disappear, and they’d be walking through the mighty gates of
the capital city by nightfall. But he didn’t have magic of his own, and Habiba
didn’t seem inclined to use the skills he had, or to press the company to
haste.
Kaydu rode ahead of him, and Lling and
Hmishi guarded his flanks. Bixei rode behind. When Llesho had reminded him that
his liaison should travel with the leaders of their force, Bixei had responded
that Stipes would serve as their link to Habiba and Jaks; for himself, Bixei
would stand ready to ferry messages from Llesho to the commanders at the head
of the column. And until there were messages to carry, he would keep his place
and guard his companions’ backs.
The column had taken up a journey song.
Llesho didn’t know the words, but his companions picked up at the chorus and
the mournful plaint wove its lines of home and sorrow into his dark thoughts.
As I
march from the home I am leaving by the cottage door, holding our babe.
my
sweetheart is quietly weeping
for
the sweet boy she sends to the grave.
As I
march from the home I am leaving, by the fence post, clutching her shawl, my
mother stands quietly grieving her sons, she has given them all.
As I
march from the home I am leaving, in the cornfield, swinging his scythe, my
father stands anxiously yearning like his son, he would follow the fife.
But
the drums and the pipes now are silent and the tunic of red turns to rust and
the fields are now sown with the fallen in the twilight, in blood, and in dust.
And I
long for the home of my fathers, for the smiles of my sweetheart and babe, to
bring home the sons of my mother, let our leaders, and gods, point the way.
The mood of the song reflected his own dark
thoughts, but the rhythm kept the measured pace of the march. Slowly, however,
the meaning of the song found its way into his heart. He’d lost mother and
father, brothers and home, and much of his own innocence when he was little
more than a babe. Since he’d taken on the burden of Lleck’s oath, he’d lost
comrades-in-arms. But he wasn’t alone anymore. He traveled with an army, and
with the promise that his brothers were alive.
While the marching song reminded him of the
grief of parting, it also reminded him of his goal: he was going home. He would
rescue his brothers, and together they would free Thebin from the Harn. They
would do it. He found his head tilting upward, out of his moody slump and
seeking the sunshine. His shoulders drew back, as if a weight were not lifted,
but had settled properly where it belonged. As the words of the song said, he
would return the sons of his mother to their home. Markko was an obstacle, but
he wasn’t the goal, and Llesho couldn’t let his fear of the magician take over
his thinking so that he forgot what he’d set out to do. That didn’t mean he
could forget the forces pursuing them, but he had to let go of the dread he’d
built up of the magician over the months he’d spent as his captive. To do that
he had to know more about the overseer.
He pulled his horse up slightly and fell in
step next to Bixei. “Back when I first entered the gladiators’ compound on
Pearl Island, you were Markko’s assistant.”
“I was not in league with him, nor did he
tell me any of his secrets.” Bixei looked sideways at him, uneasiness crossing
his features. “I carried messages, nothing more.”
“You were afraid that I would take your
place.”
“As a messenger, I could leave the compound
pretty much whenever I wanted. I’d just tell the guard at the gate that I was
carrying a secret message, and they’d let me go.” Bixei looked down, and Llesho
wondered if he was hiding some guilt about his actions, but Bix-ei’s eyes were
as clear and true as they had ever been when he met Llesho’s gaze again across
the necks of their horses. “I would never betray you. You annoyed the piss out
of me when you first showed up. You were too short and too skinny, ridiculous
for the arena, and I couldn’t imagine why Markko had accepted you for training.
I thought perhaps he found you pretty, though he never seemed interested in
boys before. I was afraid that, if you were his favorite, Markko would give you
my place, and I’d be stuck behind the palisades again. But even then, I would
not have betrayed you.”
Llesho had never thought much about how
others saw him. He’d been born a prince, and had taken the devotion of his
people and his large and loving family for granted. Then he’d lost it all and
hadn’t cared what anyone thought of Llesho the slave—that wasn’t him, and the
people whose opinions mattered weren’t there anymore. Whether he wished it or
not, however, it seemed that he was about to learn as much about himself as he
was about Markko. He found himself cringing at Bixei’s word-picture of him.
“But you learned fast,” Bixei continued,
“like you’d been born to the forms, and sometimes, in weapons practice,
especially with the sword and the knife, it was hard to tell where the weapon
in your hand left off and your body began. Master Den had that skill, and
sometimes Jaks. Madon, too, if sorely pressed. I thought it was odd that you
didn’t practice in the yard with your born weapons more often, but I figured
Jaks wanted to raise your skills in a broader range of weapons.”
Bixei shrugged. “I suppose I should have
been more jealous when you proved you could hold your own in the practice yard,
but Stipes said you were all right, and I didn’t envy you having Master Den
breathing down your neck. And, sometimes, when you were using the knife and the
sword, you would have a look on your face that. . . well, just say that I never
wanted to find out what put it there. And I never wanted to be your practice
partner when I saw it.”
“Master Den never let anyone but himself
practice knife with me,” Llesho admitted. “Not even Master Jaks. When Habiba
took me to the governor’s compound at Farshore, I nearly killed someone in
practice. That’s when Master Jaks explained that I only knew how to kill with
the knife, not to wound or to hold back for a practice match, and that to try
and change that would ruin me. Since then, I sometimes dream that I killed
Master Den in practice. It gives me the cold sweats just thinking about it.”
“How did you get that way?”
Llesho shrugged. “Goddess knows. Master Den
says I was trained to it as a child, but I have no memory of it. Lately I’ve
begun remembering more. I was only seven, but I remember killing a man with my
knife, so I guess Master Den is right.”
“Is that why you were sold into slavery?”
Bixei asked. “I mean, you were a prince and all, but . . .”
“The man had just killed my personal
bodyguard, and would have killed me if he’d seen me first. He was a Harn
raider. They attacked the palace, killed my mother and father and my sister,
and sold the rest of us into slavery. I don’t feel guilty about killing him,
exactly, but I want to throw up when I remember how it felt to drive a Thebin
war-knife between a man’s ribs.”
Bixei nodded. “You were different when you
began weapons practice—”
“I’d forgotten a lot about the attack on
Kungol, our capital city, until I held a war-knife again. Then it all came
back.” Llesho didn’t mention that her ladyship had watched-him in the weapons
room that day, that she had known even then who he was.
Bixei nodded. That made sense. “By then, I
realized that you weren’t interested in taking my place in the team; you had a
plan of your own, and whatever it was, it worried Master Jaks.
“I don’t know why Markko treated you the
way he did—he never was cruel with me, never interfered with my life or with
Stipes. I knew about his workroom, of course, but other than carrying a potion
to a patient now and then, I had nothing to do with that part of his business.”
They both fell silent for a few moments,
listening to the song of the soldiers as they marched. Then
Bixei went on. “I’m not saying that Markko
was ever a decent overseer. But a lot of things changed when you showed up,
Llesho. You spent years diving for pearls on the same island, but I don’t think
anyone in the training compound knew you existed. And then suddenly Master
Markko wants you, and you are making Master Jaks nervous, and Master Den is
alternating between treating you like the village idiot and like his most
prized chick.
“I never saw Master Den take weapons
practice with anyone until you showed up, and suddenly he is a master at the
knife and sword. I never, I mean never, saw anyone handle them like Master Den
did, not even you, and until you came, I would have guessed he didn’t even know
how to hold a sword.”
“I think his stories are all true,” Llesho
offered. “I just don’t know how he managed to do all those things, or how he
came to be the washerman in a stable of gladiators.”
“Me neither,” Bixei admitted. “But I just
wanted you to know that things were different before you showed up. So part of
what Master Markko has become was always in him, but part, somehow, has to do
with you. And I think, I think
that he sees a power in you—whatever it is that has Master Jaks and Master Den
and her ladyship and Habiba in a stew.”
“It’s the prince thing.” Llesho tried to
convince himself as well as Bixei that was all there was to it. “If today the
Harn can take Thebin and hold the passage to the West hostage, tomorrow they
may decide to take Shan and the eastern end of the trade route.”
Bixei, unfortunately, didn’t take the bait.
“That might explain Master Jaks, and even her ladyship,” he agreed, “but not
Habiba or Markko. Markko wanted to study you and use whatever power he saw in
you, but he couldn’t figure out how to reach it. And I think it finally got to
be too much for him. Chin-shi wasn’t the greatest lord in the empire, but he
wasn’t the sort to let his overseer dissect the slaves for his own education. I
think that’s why Master Markko made the deal with Lord Yueh.”
“There’s just one problem with that
theory.” Llesho shuddered. He could too easily imagine himself spread out on
the long, sturdy table in Markko’s workroom, his guts revealed to the curiosity
of the poisoner. “I don’t have any power. If I did, Mara would be alive. Madon
would be alive. I wouldn’t have taken an arrow in my chest, and I wouldn’t have
spent weeks recovering from the fever.”
He didn’t add, We wouldn’t be in this mess if the lady goddess had found me pleasing
in her sight, but said, “Master Markko has what he was looking for.
With the governor murdered by Lord Yueh’s soldiers, and Lord Yueh himself now
dead, Markko will hold Pearl Island and Farshore. He has all the power he can
possibly want.”
“Not all,” Bixei pointed out. “And it’s not
me you have to convince. Markko isn’t likely to believe you don’t have some
mysterious powers, because he’s already committed everything to capture them.”
“I don’t understand.” Llesho muttered the
comment to himself, but Bixei picked it up and answered: “Ask Master Den. If
you can make any sense of what he says. Whatever Master Markko sees in you,
Master Den saw it first.”
With that, Bixei dropped back to take the
rear again, leaving Llesho with his thoughts.
Chapter Twenty-seven
IF someone had asked which of his
companions Llesho expected to unsettle his thinking the least, he would have
answered, “Bixei,” without a moment’s hesitation. Which just proved once again
that he’d taken on this quest thing with his eyes half shut, and hadn’t opened
them yet. Half the company he traveled with apparently considered him a magical
talisman of some sort, while the other half—probably thought the same thing by
now, except that they hadn’t yet told him so. It made him wonder if they
weren’t right, and he was just too stupid to realize it. He was smart enough to
know that he didn’t want Master Markko to be the one to unlock his mysteries,
though.
The magician was following them, he was
sure of it. Habiba had to know it, but he held their pace to a slow and steady
advance, as if no danger followed them nor anything of importance awaited them
ahead. Habiba wasn’t riding beside him, but Kaydu made a handy substitute, so
he complained to her.
“Can’t we move any faster?” Llesho pressed
when Kaydu dropped back to ride beside him.
“Not if we want the wagons to keep up,” she
answered. “Father will not risk the waeon teams to an attack on an undefended
rear. He doesn’t want you to greet the emperor’s ministers with anything less
than the full honors of your position, and the tents and supplies are carried
in the wagons.”
“I’d rather arrive without the tents, but
within this lifetime,” Llesho grumped. An image flashed in his mind, of
himself, in a cage lashed to the back of a wagon, with Master Markko riding
beside him, gloating. He didn’t think it was his own imagination, but how had
Markko got into his head?
Without thinking about it, he’d been urging
his sturdy mount forward with insistent pressure from his knees. When the horse
obediently picked up the pace, he tugged impatiently on the reins, holding
their place in the line. The horse, which had coped patiently with Llesho’s
nervous energy to this point, gave a frustrated snort and a little sidestep,
bucking as if he’d been bitten by a fat green fly. Llesho sailed into the air
and crashed down hard on his tailbone.
“Ouch!” he shouted, and grunted a
humiliated complaint, “I can’t feel my butt!” The images of himself in chains
were gone, though, pushed out by the sudden awareness of the pain in his
backside, for which he was grateful at least. Now all he had to do was figure
out how to manage it without falling off his horse.
Hmishi snorted, but he slid off his horse
and offered a hand. “Your butt’s still there,” he assured Llesho, “though you
may regret it by the time we stop for the night!”
Llesho glared at him and remounted,
gritting his teeth as his nether regions renewed their acquaintance with his
horse.
“More stubborn than a packhorse,” the voice
of a soldier snickered behind them. His wounded expression earned Llesho no
support from his companions, however. Lling sniffed scornfully instead, and
muttered, “It’s only the truth.” Embarrassment reddened his dusky skin to the
color of an aged wine. “I have to find Master Jaks,” he said, and urged his
horse out of the line.
His companions surely knew he had no more
business with the officers at the front now than he’d had just minutes ago,
when he’d argued the pace with Kaydu. But it gave him an excuse to escape their
knowing glances, and his horse needed to work off some of the nerves it shared
with its rider.
Master Jaks was not to be found, and
Habiba, riding at the head of the line of soldiers with Stipes at his flank,
greeted him with a polite nod, and a sympathetic smile that for some reason
made Llesho even angrier than he was already. Muttering some courtesy he did
not mean and forgot as soon as he’d finished saying it, Llesho turned his horse
and headed back down the line. Without quite realizing it, he found himself
moving toward the rear where Master Den followed with the wagons, willing to
trade the watchful attention of his guard for the curious glances of the men of
the line. He had not gone far, however, when Stipes caught up with him, a
wrathful glare on his face, and a sharp word on his tongue.
“Your guard is responsible for your
safety,” he began. “They can’t protect you if you insist on running off like an
irresponsible child.”
“There are a thousand troopers on this
march, Stipes. If the whole of Habiba’s forces cannot keep one man from
snatching me away, I don’t think the five of you will make much difference.”
“And you don’t want to see us dead like
your bodyguard in Kungol Palace,” Stipes snapped back at him. “But Lling and
Hmishi would die to save you from nicking your finger on your dinner knife, and
Kaydu and Bixei aren’t far behind, for their honor if not for love of you.”
It hurt to hear the words said aloud. He
hadn’t understood it as a child—his people falling dead by the wayside so that
he would live. Now he carried the guilt as a warning as well as a memory.
/ don’t
want anyone dead for me. No point in saying it, since Stipes
already had, so he glared back at the man. “And you? What are you doing here?”
“What do you think?” Stipes shrugged.
“Habiba and that girl, Kaydu, have fixed it so that the only way I can keep Bixei
safe is to keep you alive. So I’m doing it, even if I have to drag you over my
horse’s rump like a saddle pack and haul your ass back to your place in the
line.”
Think
cold thoughts, Llesho told himself. But the hurt still sneaked onto
his downcast face. He didn’t want that responsibility. He heard a sigh from
above him—Stipes, taller to begin with and riding a bigger horse.
“You’ve got friends, Llesho, whether you
want them or not. Give them a break.”
That was the problem. Llesho grabbed the
reins of Stipes’ horse close by the bit. When the two horses settled, closer
than either of the animals would have liked, Llesho met Stipes’ gaze and held
it. “Friends die,” he said.
“Remember that the next time you decide to
do something reckless.” Nodding an end to the conversation, Stipes tugged his
reins out of Llesho’s hand and turned his horse.
Neither said anything when they slipped
back into place with their companions, although Llesho, even deep in his own
thoughts, could not ignore the silent communication going on around him. “I
won’t go off on my own again,” he growled when it had gone on long enough. “Far
be it from me to permit my death to get in the way of true love.”
He’d used as much sarcasm as he could
summon, and Bixei responded with his usual sneer. Llesho hadn’t expected the
furious blushes that heated the faces of his two Thebin companions. He
remembered them lying close together in the healer’s cottage, and it made him
unaccountably angry, in an unfocused way—left out more than wanting Lling for
himself. He’d kept himself as a gift to the goddess, who didn’t want him, and
now he found himself on the outside in his own company. He wondered if he was
supposed to start plying Kaydu with poetry and sighs now.
She answered his curious look with a
disdainful tilt of her head. “Don’t even think it.”
She seemed to have read his mind. Since the
others were snickering, however, he figured his speculation must have been
pretty obvious. He hoped his relief wasn’t as easy for everyone to read, but
Kaydu’s indignation, and the renewed laughter around him told him it probably
was. Tucking his head into his collar like a defensive turtle, Llesho turned
his attention forward, wishing he hadn’t just promised not to run off on his
own. Stipes gave him an encouraging slap on the shoulder before cutting out of
the line to return to Habiba’s side. Llesho’d done something right, apparently.
He didn’t know what it was, but he was glad to know the humiliation wasn’t for
nothing. Even embarrassment passed the time, however, and soon the troops ahead
were breaking formation, spreading across a field of beaten grass to make camp.
That night his companions held Llesho close to their own campfire.
They could not stop him when he rose at
dawn to take his place at prayer forms before breakfast, however. Master Den
led the exercises as he had in the training compound on Pearl Island, and each
day that passed found more of Habiba’s army joining them. Most were strangers,
but Bixei and Stipes were there, standing next to each other as they had in the
practice yard of old, and Master Jaks took his place in the line close to
Hmishi and Lling. Gradually, Llesho’s newly healed body relearned how to sketch
the forms on the wind, muscles acting in harmony with each other and the earth,
wind, fire, and water.
He should, perhaps, have helped with the
eager recruits from among the Farshore troops, but he felt a selfish need to
experience the separation from thought the exercises could bring. The forms
flowed through him, shaped him as they had not done since Markko had made a
prisoner of him.
Master Den called out the forms: “Red sun.”
Llesho closed his eyes and lifted his face
to greet the newborn day. Muscle moved against muscle, action against action;
his arms stretched to meet the first light bathing the meadow, filling his mind
with physical sensations.
“Wind through Millet.” Master Den moved
with the words, and Llesho followed. Feet touched grass, became grass, the
sharp scent of green life rising in the wind that touched him, parted for the
blade of his arm.
“Flowing River.” Llesho’s body moved with
the breeze that flowed around him, with him, like a river. In the Way of the
Goddess, all life flowed the great river, Llesho, and the earth he stood upon,
and the gods he worshiped, were all a part of each other. Markko’s chains, her
ladyship’s plots, could not break him if he flowed with the river of all life.
“Butterfly,” and Llesho moved free of the flight in darkness and the arrow
searing his flesh and all the other horrors he relived in his dreams at night
and in his waking reveries.
His escape from his own dark thoughts ended
when Master Den completed the last of the forms and performed his bow of
respect to the assembled company. Instead of leaving, as he usually did, before
Llesho could free himself of his comrades and ask for a private word. Master
Den remained behind as the com-pany broke up. Master Jaks stood by him, and
Llesho waited impatiently for the two teachers to finish their low
conversation. Neither of his masters looked at him, but—sensitized by the
prayer forms—Llesho felt the hairs on his neck prickling the way they did when
others made him the focus of their secret attention. The conversation ended,
but before Llesho could speak up, both men had departed, leaving him feeling
foolish. Bixei and Stipes said nothing, but followed him to breakfast with
their own silent conversation of eyebrows and frowns.
When he returned with his companions to
their tent, Llesho found that Kaydu had already started to break camp. Together
they made quick work of it and distributed their light gear among the five
horses. Kaydu held his bridle as Llesho mounted up. “Stay close today,” she
warned him. “There are rumors in the camp that make me nervous.”
“What does your father want you to tell
me?” Llesho’s temper was already short and he didn’t like being kept in the
dark, or fed information in tidbits, like a child. Kaydu’s father was leading
this march, after all. Her intelligence could hardly be called rumor.
“My father has told me to keep you alive,”
Kaydu snapped back at him. “It would help if you didn’t make it so hard to
follow orders!”
Before Llesho could decide how to answer,
he was distracted by the forceful “Uhum!” of a throat being cleared behind him.
“Do you mind if I join you?” Master Den
asked with a bland smile. He wore a travel robe and carried a light pack on his
back and an ironshod stave in his hand.
“Yes,” Llesho could have bitten his tongue
when he heard his ill-considered answer. He’d been wanting to talk to Master
Den for days, and now that the opportunity presented itself, he was rejecting
it out of temper.
However, Den didn’t go away. He ignored the
hasty answer with a wink, though his smile remained as meaninglessly polite as
ever. “I felt the need of a bit of exercise; thought I’d walk a bit today.”
Llesho glared at him. “It will be a dusty
walk so far back among the troops,” he pointed out. “You might want to travel
with Master Jaks at the head of the line.”
The soldiers ahead of them began to move,
and Llesho nudged his horse into motion. “I think I’ll be comfortable here.”
Master Den clasped the bridle and walked beside him.
“Your sudden desire for exercise has
nothing to do with the mysterious rumors Kaydu was about to explain, I
suppose?”
“Rumors? Must a man find nothing but
questions and suspicion just because he takes a walk with old friends of a
morning?” Master Den grinned at him as if he hadn’t expected Llesho to believe
him, but wished to invite his pupil into the conspiracy.
Llesho declined the invitation. He figured
at the rate he was going, he’d be lucky if his companions didn’t tie him up and
toss him to the wolves before the day was out. But he wasn’t seven years old
anymore; if Master Den was going to be there, Llesho had a whole list of
questions, and he wasn’t waiting any longer for answers. “I assume you will
have no trouble talking as you walk?”
“What do you want to know?” Master Den
spoke as if he had not been avoiding Llesho for days, as if the answers were
always his for the asking. Llesho shook his head, but determined not to waste
this opportunity on pointless arguing, especially now that Kaydu had posed him
a new question.
“What is the truth behind the rumors Kaydu
talks of?” Llesho shook his head when Master Den took a deep breath, a sign
that Den was going to tell one of his long tales in which his answer might or
might not appear in some form Llesho would spend the whole day trying to untangle.
“You are here, beside me today, when I haven’t been able to get a word with you
since we left the Golden Dragon River. Why now?” ‘
“Habiba’s spies have seen Markko following,
and he is traveling fast.”
“And we still move as if we were on
parade?”
“You have heard the proverb, ‘to the swift
go the spoils’?”
Llesho nodded. That was the point, wasn’t
it?
“It isn’t always true.” Master Den smiled,
the kind that twinkled in his eyes as well as tilting his mouth. “Did I ever
tell you the story about the falcon and the turtle?”
Habiba called a halt at noon to rest the
horses and feed the troops on cold rations at their stations. During the pause,
Master Jaks appeared on a large battle steed with armor plates attached to its
chest and withers. Jaks tried to make light of his appearance at the middle of
the line, but his eyes remained watchful and grim. When the line moved again,
he fell into place next to Llesho, offering the defense of his person on the
exposed flank. Master Den took the more defended side, walking at the head of
Llesho’s smaller horse with a pace that never faltered. Stipes had joined Bixei
guarding their rear. Kaydu, with Little Brother peering nervously out of the
pack where he’d tucked himself to hide, rode at the head of Llesho’s guard,
Hmishi and Lling to either side of her.
“How long?” Llesho asked Master Den. He
didn’t need to explain himself. The question was obvious, and Den did not
pretend to misunderstand.
“Soon.” His glance flicked to Master Jaks,
who nodded agreement.
The shadow of a low-flying bird passed over
them, and Master Jaks amended his answer: “Now.”
Calls passed through the line as sergeants
brought their squads to a halt and gave the command for battle formation. Kaydu
glanced at Master Jaks, who directed the formation of a circle of pikemen
around Llesho’s squad. He called for archers to take their positions inside the
circle, prepared to shoot over the shoulders of the pikemen, ranged a double
line here, and here, where he expected the greatest pressure from Markko’s
attack. Llesho’s own guard set themselves at the fore of the line of archers,
their horses protected inside the circle. When all was in readiness, Master
Jaks returned to Llesho’s side and drew his sword. Llesho considered his choice
of weapons, and decided on his bow and arrow.
They had scarcely taken their places when a
dark line appeared over a low rise in the landscape. An army, no bigger than
their own but driven by fear of their leader, plunged forward, battle cries
shouted as they ran. Llesho tensed and focused his gaze on the rise, where a
figure sat astride a restless warhorse. Master Markko, proclaiming himself in
the horned helmet of a warlord.
Llesho shivered. He sensed the sharp gaze
of the magician pass over him and halt, then turn back again. If an arrow could
have reached so far, Llesho would have turned away that searching gaze with a
well-fired bolt, but at this range he could only call attention to himself.
“Hold on, boy,” Master Jaks muttered at his
side, and Master Den held the head of Llesho’s horse, quieting the animal’s
nervous dance.
Markko was flying down the hill then, his
charger striking sparks off the ground beneath its feet, and a bird, huge and
lethal, flew over their heads to meet the enemy. It circled overhead, calling
encouragement in the deep-voiced cry of a roc. Kaydu shouted a salute to the
bird, a magical creature, and would have followed him, Llesho thought, but
Master Jaks called out a reminder, “Hold your post.”
Then Markko’s forces were upon them. The
defensive circle Jaks had ordered bristled with pikes, their staffs planted
firmly in the ground and their blades tilted out at the horsemen thundering
toward them. They had only seconds to wait. The cavalry reached the circle, but
the horsemen could not force their mounts to close with the sharp-toothed fence
of pikes. Turned aside, the horsemen met the harrying arrows as Habiba’s
cavalry darted in for the kill and moved away again. Markko’s foot troops
followed the scattering horsemen; driven mad by their master, they flung
themselves upon the pikes to clear the path for their fellows. Llesho set an
arrow and fired. Fired. Fired again, until his quiver was empty. The bird was
gone from the sky, but Lling was at his side, one arm tied with a makeshift
bandage, the other flinging a fistful of replacement bolts into his hand. She
had gathered the arrows falling into their circle from the enemies’ bows;
Llesho recognized the strange devices marked upon them as he shot again, again.
And then the circle was breached, and the
fight turned inward. Llesho dropped his bow and slid from his horse, drawing
his sword from its saddle scabbard and his Thebin knife from where it rested at
his breast. On foot he moved like a demon, protecting his own belly with the
knife in his left hand while he carved at the enemy with the sword in his
right. Master Jaks, still on horseback, whirled his sword over his head,
striking terror into all who saw him, while his battle horse fought under its master
with tooth and hoof. Careful as a mother the mare picked her way around Llesho,
snapping at Markko’s soldiers, kicking out at them and beating at them with her
frantic feet when they fell.
Master Den held his position to Llesho’s
right flank, warded off an attack with his stave, cracked a head like an egg,
and swung around to brush the legs out from under the nearest attacker while
knocking the breath from a third with the rising end of the stave.
Bixei was down, Stipes standing over him
with a two-handed sword held out in front of him, Hmishi at his back slashing
with a long knife and jabbing with a short-handled trident.
“Close up! Close up!” Master Jaks ordered,
shoring up their broken circle and drawing it more tightly around Llesho and
his guard. Master Den accepted the surrender of Markko’s troops left inside the
newly re-formed circle. When they had been disarmed and placed on good conduct,
Jaks called for retreat: “Back!” He whirled his sword once overhead, and
pointed to the fallback position with his blade. Stipes got a shoulder under
Bixei’s arm and they moved, the pikemen holding their defensive formation. When
they met the circle behind them, their numbers swelled, the two circles
interlaced, filling in the weak places around Llesho without leaving a break
for the enemy to exploit.
Markko was driving his army in a wedge
directly at Llesho’s circle. If he succeeded, he would divide Habiba’s army in
two parts. As the circle fell back, Markko pressed forward, until he faced his
prey down an alley of his own troops. “I will have you, boy,” he said, a
snarling grimace of a smile contorting his face.
Llesho froze, aware suddenly how thin his
defense was, just a single band of pikemen between them, and Markko dug his
heels into the flanks of his horse, lowered his head over the animal’s armored
neck, and charged.
The pikemen set their pikes and braced for
the onslaught, but at the last moment, Markko urged his horse faster, up,
higher than a horse could jump, and the warlord flew over the blades bristling
beneath the belly of his steed and landed lightly inside the circle.
Master Markko raised a strange weapon of
his own devising, a tube shooting sparks of fire and smoke and tiny slivers of
crystal sharp as knives from the end. In confusion the defensive circle broke.
A picked squad of Markko’s followed and joined him in the fray.
“Get down!” Hmishi called.
Under cover of the billowing smoke, Lling
knocked Llesho to his knees.
“Pretend you are dead!” she demanded, and
pushed him to land with his face in the dirt. Then she fell on top of him, her
bandage convincingly stained rust and crimson from her reopened wound. Llesho
wondered what had happened to Kaydu, if she’d managed to escape, but a vulture
landed on his shoulder and gave the back of his head an imperious peck.
“Cawuuuiet!” the bird squawked, and Llesho
wondered if he had gone mad, or if the bird had really told him to be quiet.
“Wha—” he began, but the bird snapped up a
strand of his hair and gave it a warning tug.
The smoke was beginning to clear. Through
closely lidded eyes, Llesho saw that Master Den had suffered a myriad of tiny
cuts which he seemed to be ignoring as he scrambled among the fallen. Stipes
had dropped Bixei to the ground only to fall after him, clutching at his eye
while blood gushed from between his clenched fingers. Master Jaks was down, on
his back beneath his horse, his eyes wide and unseeing. The horse stood
quivering but steadfast over her master.
Hmishi crouched at the side of his Thebin
companions. His knife lashed out, not at the warlord, but at the legs of his
battle horse. The animal screamed and fell to its front knees. Mad with its
pain, the horse struggled to rise again, its eyes reddened and rolling wildly in
its head. Master Markko sprang free of the animal as it crashed to its side,
thrashing with its legs as it tried to rise. Hmishi struck quickly and the
animal was dead, its throat cut, the blood splashing the fallen Thebins.
It could as easily have been human blood.
Llesho had to remind himself that he was unhurt, and ought to do something more
than lie about playing dead. Like stand up and be dead, he figured, and stayed where he was. Somehow,
Master Markko seemed to have turned the day in his favor, and Llesho could only
hope that he would be overlooked in the carnage. A faint hope, with Markko
seeking him, but it was enough to keep him facedown in the dirt.
Above him, Llesho heard a terrible cry, and
he cringed where he lay, afraid to open his eyes. A deep growl from closer by
answered the first cry, and Llesho felt a weight suddenly lift from his heart.
Freed of his terrible fear, he turned his head and peered over his shoulder,
into the sky, where two beasts—he knew for a fact such beasts did not exist in
nature—fought tooth and claw in the air overhead. One was a huge bird, a roc,
if such a thing could actually exist. It uttered a challenge, the most desolate
sound Llesho had ever heard, as if it contained within itself all the grief of
the battle and its losses, and called them forth in a mourner’s wailing cry.
The other, a creature out of night terrors, was a rodent-faced monster with the
haunches of a horse and stiff gray hair instead of feathers covering its broad
leathery wings. A long naked rat’s tail whipped out behind it. The creature had
clawed feet and claws at the joints of its wings, long, fanged teeth and angry
red eyes. When it opened its mouth to answer the roc’s cry, Llesho had to cover
his ears to stop the piercing pain it released instead of sound.
The creatures tangled overhead, the fanged
monster grappling the bird with its tail while its claws ripped at the roc’s
breast. The roc darted its razor-sharp beak at the monster, and when it pulled
back, the ends of a bit of flesh dangled from its mouth. The monster emitted
another of its soundless screams and began to tumble from the sky, its shape
blurring as it fell: now it was a creature out of nightmares with the hands,
the face of a man, now it became a man with leathery wings covered in gray
hair, now a creature with the hindquarters of a beast and the arms and breast
of a human, its human mouth open in a scream that did not stop through all its
transformations, until it had fallen to earth.
The roc followed it down, transforming as
it did into the witch Habiba, dressed in robes the colors of the bird’s
plumage. But Markko was gone; no sign of him remained except for a splash of
steaming blood where he had fallen, and the remnants of his scattered army.
“You can get up now. And you did well, my
daughter.” Habiba tapped the vulture on its long, curved beak, and the bird
unfolded, grew arms and legs, and a familiar face.
“Thank you, Father.” Kaydu did not have the
success of her father in transforming her clothes with her body. She gathered
her discarded uniform that had fallen on the battleground while Habiba bent
over the heap of Thebins.
Llesho didn’t notice until Habiba started
to sort them out that Hmishi had joined them on the pile. “I’m all right,”
Hmishi insisted, but his eyes darted wildly in his head, unable to fix on
anything.
“Concussion,” Habiba informed him. “Lie
still until I can spare someone to escort you to the hospital tent.”
The magician raised Lling with his own
hands, and examined her arm before he declared her serviceable if damaged, and
able to make her own way to the hospital tent.
With the weight of his companions removed
from his back, Llesho was able to rise on his own power and survey the damage.
Markko had disappeared and left behind his army—the fallen where they lay, and
the defeated wandering the battlefield in confusion and terror.
The field was silent now except for the
cries of the wounded, but the ground was muddied with the blood of the dead and
churned by the hooves of the horses into a thick black muck. Squads of her
ladyship’s army passed back and forth over the sucking mire, searching for
their own wounded, and marking out the dead for burial.
Closer to hand, Stipes sat cross-legged in
the dirt, Bixei’s head in his lap. He still held a hand to his damaged eye, but
his blood had caked and rusted his fingers in place so that he could not have
comfortably moved them if he chose to, or if he’d even remembered that he held
them there. Bixei’s eyes were closed, but his chest rose and fell in rhythmic
breathing.
His own wounds forgotten, Master Den sat
quietly at Jaks’ side. Jaks’ eyes were open, fixed on a distance living eyes
could not reach. Whatever the soldier-assassin was seeing in the afterlife, it
did not seem to frighten or dismay him. Tenderly Master Den wrapped a cold hand
in his broad, warm grasp.
Llesho wanted to pound at Habiba with his
fists, to scream at the man and curse him for the devastation that surrounded
him, but he found he could not break through the hard, numb shell that
separated his bleeding emotions from the outside world.
“What happened?” Llesho demanded an answer
from Habiba with the cold authority of a prince. He didn’t feel the tears
leaving trails in the dust on his face, so he didn’t try to hide them.
Habiba looked at him for a long minute.
Then he picked up the splintered remains of an arrow and drew two parallel
lines in the bloody dirt, added a few lateral lines between them.
“Our column,” he said, and put a circle
midway between the front and rear. “Kavdu’s squad.”
Next he drew a triangle, its apex driving
at the circle. “Markko sent his army at your position—we knew he used birds for
spies and would have your location pinpointed. When he attacked, we knew he would
try to divide our army and pluck you out of the middle. So we let him try.”
He drew two more lines, showing how the
column had not truly broken at Llesho’s position, but had bent toward the
flanks of Markko’s army like the blades of a scissor closing. “The emperor
could not authorize imperial troops to take part in the battle without
consulting his advisers and considering the messages sent to him by either side
of the conflict. Fortunately, in his capacity as governor of Shan Province, the
Celestial Emperor has no such limitations. Shan provincial troops moved in to
close off Markko’s escape—”
Habiba added a final line to his drawing in
the blood-soaked mud, joining the two halves of the column at their widest
separation to mark out the base of a triangle enclosing Markko’s wedge. Then he
threw the bit of shattered arrow away from him and stared at Master Jaks, lying
motionless on the ground. “He knew your position was the key. Markko must be
lured in, but he could not be permitted to break through. Master Jaks chose to
hold the position himself.”
“Did the others know?”
Habiba brought his gaze back from the dead
assassin, but settled his focus inward, as if he could not face Llesho with the
answer. “Kaydu, yes.”
She had put her clothes back on, but when
Llesho glanced up at her, she turned away as if she still were naked.
“Anyone else?”
“Stipes may have guessed. As for Master
Den—” Habiba shrugged one shoulder, an admission of helplessness Llesho did not
credit. “The question should be, perhaps, ‘did he choose to know?’ I don’t have
an answer, though.”
Stretcher bearers had reached them at last,
grim-faced men who looked at Habiba nervously and then waited while he gave
directions for the care of his charges: Bixei and Stipes, and Hmishi, to the
hospital on stretchers. Lling might follow on foot, but should have her arm
seen to. Master Jaks should not go to the mass grave of the line soldiers; the
bearers must return him to his tent, where he would be prepared for the burial due
his courage and his station. Llesho wondered what rank a former slave and
assassin might command. Master Den would not leave the body, although Habiba
asked him to go to the hospital to have his own wounds tended.
When the stretchers had moved away,
trailing their walking wounded, Habiba put a hand on Llesho’s left shoulder.
“And now, there is someone you should meet.”
Kaydu joined them, walking a little behind,
still unwilling to intrude herself on Llesho’s grief or ask his forgiveness.
“You should have told me,” Llesho stated.
“Perhaps.” Habiba accepted the reproach,
but his tone held no real agreement in it. Llesho was a pawn. He’d always known
that—why else would her ladyship take such an interest in a deposed and rather
pathetic princeling with some hint of magic about him, but no clue how to use
it? Why else would Markko chain him like a dog for his amusement? He had not,
until now, however, understood how dangerous a pawn he was.
Habiba interrupted his brooding. “General
Shou,” the witch said as he pulled back the cloth that covered the entrance to
his own tent. The general stood in the glorious armor of his rank, but the
splendor of his appearance was marred by a streak of dirt smeared across one
cheekbone and ending on the bridge of his nose. More smudges of dusty sweat
marked the arm he offered. Llesho clasped it, felt the firm grip of the
general’s hand above his own wrist.
“The emperor offers his grief for your
losses this day, but extends his joy that you have survived the battle.” The
general released Llesho’s arm after he delivered his message.
“We can only hope that the gain will be
worthy of the loss,” Llesho answered.
The general raised an eyebrow. “We can,
perhaps, do more than hope.” He turned on his heel and left the tent.
Kaydu had not entered with them, so Llesho
found himself alone with Habiba, who was the first to break the tense silence
between them.
“Kaydu will have a tent prepared for you.
Clean up and rest as much as you can. We petition for an audience with the
emperor tomorrow morning.”
“I have to go to the hospital,” Llesho
answered. “And I must see Master Jaks.” His voice broke on the last.
Habiba, thankfully, did not comment upon
his loss of control, but only said, “He would not be sorry to die protecting
you. If he regretted anything, it was that he could not see you safely home.”
Llesho nodded, but could not speak. He
brushed by Kaydu, afraid that she would want to offer her own apologies and
demand his forgiveness when he only wanted to weep for the blood of his teacher
on his hands.
“We did what we had to do,” Kaydu shouted
after him. She did not sound apologetic at all, and Llesho did not stop to
challenge her on it. If he opened his mouth, he would scream, and he wasn’t
sure he would ever stop.
Chapter Twenty-eight
HIS first impulse was to find the
tent where Master Jaks lay and give the dead man a piece of his mind. A prince
owed his life to the living, however. Llesho knew he shouldn’t have yelled at
Kaydu, who had done her duty and deserved better for it. Much as the drama of
the gesture might appeal to him, he also knew that he would not rather be dead
in Master Jaks’ place. Nor would the man have thanked him if he were, any more
than his brother, Khri, would have seen Llesho dead at seven summers to save
his own skin. He had a mission to complete, a people to free, and Master Jaks
was just one of many who had already died and would die in the future to make
that happen.
He had to stop thinking of them as friends.
They were tools, weapons in his battle. A prince took care of his sword because
his life depended on its readiness. Only a fool sacrificed the battle to save
the sword. His heart didn’t buy his argument, but he pulled the reins in on his
anger and changed direction for the pale blue of the hospital tent. First the
living.
Stipes had lost the eye. He lay on a woven
rush mat rolled out on the blue canvas floor, a cloth soaked in a potion to
ease the pain held in place by a bandage tied around his head. Bixei lay on the
next mat over, still unconscious, but breathing steadily.
“He took a nasty bump on the head.” Hmishi
sat cross-legged on a nearby pallet, a cup of some sweet medicine in his hand,
and continued the healer’s report, “But his eyes are clear behind his lids. If
he wakes, his brain should not be addled.”
If. The healers offered hope and took it
away in the same breath. Lling stood nearby, leaning on a well-tethered tent
pole. Her arm rested in a proper sling now, with a clean bandage on the wound.
She glared at him, measuring her anger against his own. “Are we going home?”
she asked him.
Llesho knew what she meant, and so did
Hmishi, who watched them both over his potion. Not Pearl Island or Farshore or
Thousand Lakes Province, but Thebin. Had the pain and the death been worth
giving to his cause? He nodded once. “We are going home.”
“All right, then.” She walked away, and
Llesho watched her go.
“She’s worried about Bixei,” Hmishi tried
to explain away her anger. “He should be awake by now. The healers believe that
the mist from Markko’s weapon may contain a slow-acting poison, and that Bixei
somehow took a greater dose than the rest of us. They call for Master Den, but
he doesn’t come,” Hmishi continued with a shrug. “I don’t know what they think
the laundryman can do. . . .”
Llesho sometimes forgot that his Thebin
companions had not met Master Den until Habiba’s forces came to their aid at
Golden Dragon River. They could not be expected to see him as Llesho did. But
even those who had worked with him in the gladiator days couldn’t be said to
know Master. Den. Perhaps Jaks had, but he wouldn’t be telling anyone now.
Habiba guessed something, as the healers did. But Llesho figured even they
underestimated the teacher.
“He won’t leave Master Jaks.” Laundrymen,
in that, had more freedom than princes. Which explained much about Master Den’s
choice of rank in the world.
“Not even if the living need him?”
Llesho stole a glance at the unconscious
form on the nearby sleeping mat. He tried to see Bixei as a tool, but his
memory played tricks on him, fed him images of the training yard and the
cookhouse. If Mar-kko had poisoned them, Lling might be unconscious by
nightfall. Hmishi, too, and Stipes, who had already lost an eye in Llesho’s
battle, for a country he’d never heard of. Llesho might never see Thebin again,
except in misty dreams the dead clung to.
“He wouldn’t leave us here to die while he
wept over his dead,” Llesho assured him, though he wasn’t certain it was true.
“He might tell that to the healers,” Hmishi
complained.
“He will.” Now that he had satisfied
himself about the condition of his living, Llesho’s mind had turned, Like
Master Den’s, to his dead. “I’ll be back later.”
Jvlaster Den looked up when Llesho entered
the un-floored tent—white for mourning, with the grass still green
underfoot—and gestured for him to come forward.
“Jaks is waiting for you,” Den said. For a
moment Llesho’s heart beat faster in anticipation. It was all a mistake, and
Master Jaks had merely been stunned and found the premature grief at his death
a sorry joke, but nothing more.
No. Not alive. The body lay still and cold
beneath a winding sheet of cloth white and fragile as chestnut blossoms in the
spring. Den had removed the soldier’s bloodied leathers and washed away the
dirt and sweat of battle with water in which sweet herbs and flowers had been
steeoed. Master Jaks mieht have been sleeoine.
Llesho thought, but no hint of breath
animated the peaceful shell of flesh.
Teacher and slave, gladiator and assassin,
soldier: what other words identified this man who lay so silent on the pallet
before him? Did any of the names matter now that the man was dead? Only the
wounds hidden beneath the white cloth and the six bands of the assassin on his
arm remained to tell the harsh tale.
“He loved you as his liege and lord,”
Master Den said.
Llesho nodded. How could he explain how
angry that made him? Jaks was gone before Llesho rightly understood him, and
for what?
“I’d rather be a slave with a live friend
than a free man with a dead servant,” he said.
“It wasn’t up to you. That’s a price
kings—and princes—have to pay.”
“What would a washerman know about being a
prince?” Llesho snapped. He didn’t need that kind of pointless drivel from one
who was grieving more than any of them.
“Nothing,” Master Den answered with a sour
smile. “Nothing at all.”
“The healers think Markko used a poisoned
vapor during the battle.” Llesho did not look away from the dead soldier, but
still he was aware of Master Den nearby.
“You look well enough to me,” Den answered.
Llesho waited, and finally, the master bowed his agreement. “If you stay with
him, I will go to your comrades.”
“It would ease their minds.” Llesho added,
not quite as a plea, “Bixei is still unconscious.”
“He’ll wake up.” Den reassured him. Not
like Master Jaks, who would never wake in this life. Llesho heard the sound of
the tent flap pushed aside, and then he was alone with Master Jaks.
“I did
nnt oive. von leave to on” I.lesho said to the absent spirit of
his master, and found his anger rising again, becoming a white hot rage. “If I
have to stay and see this through, what right have you to abandon me just when
the fight begins? What am I suppose to do now? Who can I trust—”
Llesho’s gaze fell upon the six bands
around the arm of his teacher. Assassin. He reached a hesitant finger to stroke
the first dull blue band, remembering his early doubts. Six times this man had
murdered for pay. Llesho wondered who those souls were. What had they done to
deserve such a fate, and how had Master Jaks justified his actions with his
honor? Did all men walk such a tangled path from birth to death as Master Jaks
had done?
“Fate has taken everything from me.”
Foolish, Llesho knew, to blame Master Jaks for that, but he did. “Home and
family, Lleck and Kwan-ti, Mara, and now you, are all gone. And I am left with
lesser folk who look to me for answers I do not have. What am I supposed to learn
from this?
“Tell me, damn it!” he screamed at the
corpse. Horrified at his own actions but unable to stop himself, he curled his
fist and slammed it down upon the breast of the dead man. Again. “Tell me!”
A sudden gasp spasmed under Llesho’s fist,
and the eyes of his dead teacher flew open, animated with fear and confusion
and pain. The dead mouth dragged air down a dead throat, and the dead chest, so
mortally wounded, rose and fell unevenly.
“Master Jaks?” Llesho froze, paralyzed by
his own conflicting feelings. It had all been a mistake. Jaks was alive.
The blue lips struggled to shape a word,
and Llesho bent low to hear what Master Jaks wanted to say to him.
“What . . . have . . . you . . . done?” the
voice, so near death, whispered.
Looking into those clouded eyes, Llesho saw
agony, not only for the wound that once again bled freely, staining the pure
white sheet, but for something only those eyes could see, that now was lost.
“I don’t know.” Llesho fell to his knees,
lay his head upon the heaving breast, and wept. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry,” he
cried.
“I ... can’t . . . stay . . . here ...,!”
Master Jaks’ tortured whisper cut Llesho to the heart. He had not meant to
cause his teacher pain, only to demand recognition of his own anguish. But it
was too late, to late for any of it. And he realized how selfish his desire to
hold his teacher in this world past the time appointed for him was.
“I know,” he said. He opened his fist, lay
his outstretched fingers on the wound in Master Jaks’ chest, but already the
bleeding had slowed, cooled. When he looked up, the eyes were fixed again, and
he realized Master Jaks had stopped breathing.
“Tell the goddess for me that I love her
still,” Llesho asked of his departed teacher. “But I do not understand what any
of this was meant to teach me.” Gently he closed the staring eyes.
“Llesho?” Master Den had returned, and now
he dropped a heavy hand on Llesho’s shoulder.
“He’s dead,” Llesho said.
It seemed a pointless statement, but Master
Den looked from the body, soiled with fresh blood, to the princeling with tear
tracks marking the battle stains on his face, and gave a deep and mournful
sigh.
“Yes, he is. Bixei is awake, however, and
demanding food and an accounting of what followed his own fall. The rest of you
will survive this time as well: Markko’s poison was not strong enough to kill
in the open air of battle.”
“He will fix that the next time,” Llesho
said, allowing Den to push his thoughts to surviving. “Mar-kko never makes the
same mistake twice.”
“If it was
a mistake. He wants you alive.”
Llesho remembered the image of himself, a
captive in a cage, that had come to him on the battlefield, and he shuddered.
“Is any of that blood yours?” Den asked.
Llesho shook his head. “I wasn’t injured at
all.”
“That is a matter for debate,” Master Den
observed. “But it appears you will live. At least, you will if I let you get
some sleep. Kaydu is waiting for you outside. Clean yourself up and let her
take you to your tent. Eat. Rest. Visit with your friends if you must, but
leave tomorrow to Habiba and the new day. It will get better.”
Llesho wasn’t sure if the last was true,
but he found Kaydu waiting for him as Master Den had said. He ate what she
handed him, though he didn’t notice what it was. When she took him down the row
of red tents and opened the flap into the one assigned to him, he followed her
in and fell on his camp bed without complaint. Then he pretended to sleep so
that he wouldn’t have to talk while she kept guard.
Gradually the campfires faltered, until he
could no longer see the peak of his own tent above him. He was surprised to
find that his mind did not replay the day’s battle in the darkness. In fact,
while they would not let him sleep, neither did his thoughts circle endlessly
on the memory of his losses. His mind was quite, quite blank, and he felt
grateful for the emptiness until the sun grayed the corners of his tent.
In the morning, Jaks was gone, buried
secretly somewhere on the field of battle. Llesho could not make out one
freshly turned grave among so many in the churned ground. Kaydu, still at his
side, said nothing; Llesho did not guess at what she saw on the bloody field.
Or under it.
“If his friends can’t find him, neither
will his enemies,” Master Den explained. “And they won’t be able to desecrate
his body if they can’t find it.”
Llesho shrugged. Once the spirit abandoned
it, the body meant nothing. A soldier deserved freedom at death: not dirt in
his face, but the high mountains overlooking Kungol, where his bones might be
picked by the birds and his spirit might begin its journey that much closer to
heaven. He would have taken Jaks to the passes in the West, but Thebin and her
mountains were a thousand li away. Lowlanders had different customs anyway. So
he accepted Master Den’s assurance that all had been done as Master Jaks would
have wanted, and followed him to the command tent. Habiba waited for him
inside. .
“Good morning.” Habiba gestured to a folding
seat open for Llesho at his right hand. He addressed the teacher with an ironic
smile. “The yarrow sticks are in the air, Master Den. Have you come to see how
they fall?”
Master Den eased himself into a solidly
built chair that seemed designed for his personal use, a luxury Llesho had
never seen his teacher indulge in. “The Changes can only reflect what rests
within us already,” he reminded their host, offering the words with his own
subdued challenge.
Kaydu frowned at Master Den and wrapped her
arms around her father’s neck as if she would protect him from the washerman’s
barbed tongue.
Habiba patted her arm. “We’ll keep it
civilized, I promise,” he said. She hesitated, but took her father’s frown as
dismissal and joined the watchful guards who stood at the entrance to the tent.
When they had all settled in their places,
Habiba returned his attention to Llesho.
“Have something to eat.” He gestured at the
low camp table in front of him, where a map lay, held in place at one end by a
bowl of plums and figs, and at the other by a plate of biscuits. Llesho did as
he was directed, accepting a biscuit.
“We are here—” Habiba waited for Llesho to
settle himself, and went on, “—at the border where Thousand Lakes Province
meets the frontier of Shan Province.” He drew an imaginary line with his finger
on the Thousand Lakes side of the border. “Scouts report a large force of
imperial guards await us on the Shan side of this line.”
“You sound worried about that.” Llesho took
a bite of his biscuit to cover his surprise and gain himself a moment to think.
“Would the Emperor direct General Shou and his provincial guard to help us, and
then send his imperial forces against us the next morning?”
“If he wanted Markko and her ladyship both
off the board,” Habiba conceded with a curious smile. “In his capacity as
provincial governor of Shan Province, the emperor might assist us to defeat the
greater threat. Calling upon his power as Emperor, he might choose to send his
imperial troops against the survivor while he was weakened from battle.”
“But we aren’t preparing for battle,”
Llesho noted. The whole of Habiba’s forces seemed to be catching their breath,
tending to their wounded and their dead, collecting undamaged arrows from the
field of battle, and otherwise healing the injuries to men and equipment
inflicted in Markko’s recent attack.
“Of course not,” Habiba acknowledged. “Her
ladyship and the governor of Thousand Lakes Province remain the loyal servants
of his supreme excellency, the Celestial Emperor of Shan and Its Provinces.”
Llesho detected irony in Habiba’s
representation of his master’s position, but couldn’t figure out what was
behind it. Not treason. Habiba did not act like a man engaged in a desperate
conspiracy; rather, he looked like he had a secret that brought him some
reassurance.
“I have sent an emissary to the commander
of the Emperor’s force,” Habiba went on, “begging his protection for our small
band, which comes to petition for the safety of Thousand Lakes Province.”
Master Den nodded solemnly, a gesture that
belied his ironic answer: “A message that has the advantage of being true on
the face of it. Markko has already murdered three lords in his bid for control
of all the eastern provinces, and has attacked our party on the very border of
Shan Province itself.”
“The emperor already knows this, of
course,” Hab-iba agreed. “His spies have been busy on all sides of the border.
But he also knows that Markko has left the consolidation of his conquests to
pursue a boy who has declared himself a missing prince of the mysterious
kingdom of the West.”
“I have done no such thing,” Llesho
objected.
“Others have done it for you,” Den said.
“And now, his imperial highness will have his look at you, and determine for
himself whether he will risk his empire to acknowledge the claim.”
Habiba agreed. “With the Harn harrying his
borders . on the west, and Markko gobbling up the provinces to the east, and
both declared enemies of this newly discovered prince, I don’t think he can
afford to help directly. He may, however, conclude that a boy who still lives
in spite of such powerful enemies is not to be tampered with. So you will ride
at the front today, and in attire suited for a traveling prince.”
“I have the clothes I stand up in, and not
much else,” Llesho pointed out to him.
“We had hoped to rescue you with less
trouble,” Habiba admitted, “but we left Thousand Lakes Province with this part
of the plan in place. Master Den has, in his supply wagon, the necessary
garments for an audience with a provincial representative to the emperor.”
“We can fix you up, no problem there,” Den
agreed.
Llesho was beginning to feel like a puppet,
and he wondered if it was safe to let Habiba pull his strings. Without Habiba,
of course, he’d be dead now, or in
Markko’s hands, but Llesho still didn’t
trust the man or his motives. Oh, he was sure that Habiba served her ladyship
honorably and well. From the first, however, Llesho had wondered why her
ladyship took such an interest in him.
As Habiba himself had just pointed out,
allies could quickly become enemies when one didn’t understand the politics
that bound one to the other. Llesho was on the point of asking Habiba directly
what her ladyship wanted of him when Kaydu joined them, followed by a stranger
in the uniform of an imperial messenger.
The messenger shook out her hair and gave a
short bow to Habiba, then a deeper bow to Master Den. Of Llesho she gave no
formal recognition at all, although he noticed that she examined him minutely
out of the corner of her eye.
“Lord Habiba,” she said, “in the name of
the Celestial Emperor, Ambassador Huang HoLun invites you to a parley to
discuss matters of great import to you both. Will you attend upon him for tea?”
“I am, as ever, the humble servant of his
divinity, the emperor. Please tell Ambassador Huang that I shall attend upon
him within the hour. And I bring gifts from the West.” Habiba tilted his chin
in Llesho’s direction.
Betrayal. Habiba’s words struck like a bolt
of lightning and Llesho clung to his calm. Habiba couldn’t mean what he seemed
to say. As a slave Llesho figured he was fairly useless; he had some training
as a gladiator, a bit more as a soldier, and some experience * as a decent pearl
diver, for which there was little call in the inland capital. The Harn had sold
him once, but they might be inclined to cut off his head if the emperor
returned him to them. He figured that her ladyship hadn’t put her witch to all
the trouble of getting him this far alive if she intended to hand Llesho over
to assassins, though. Much easier to whack off his head at Farshore and send it
off in a box. Less likely to attract the attention of Master Mar-kko that way
as well. He was pretty sure, however, that Master Den wouldn’t let anything
happen to him so early in whatever game of nations the powers about him played.
As if thinking his name could conjure his
attention, Master Den chose that moment to speak. “Please convey my respect to
your master. Tell him for me that he chooses his envoy well.” He smiled at the
girl. And she smiled back.
Oh. Den knew this girl. Liked her. And she
knew him. Llesho had never fooled himself into thinking he was the only student
Master Den had ever mentored, but he’d thought the others had been men like
Stipes, fighting on the side where he found himself. The girl bowed and
departed, leaving Llesho to wonder whether Master Den would defend old
loyalties or new ones.
“It is time,” Habiba said, “to put the
pieces in play. Llesho will ride in the place of honor, at my side. That will
give Ambassador Huang pause. And Master Den—”
“I need no guard, of honor or otherwise,”
Den cut him off. “Huang HoLun knows that I am a simple man, and he will expect
nothing more.”
“Then we will overset his expectations. I
want Kaydu where I can see her as well, and any of the young prince’s guard who
are well enough to ride. We depart at noon.”
“As you say.” Master Den made much of
pulling himself out of his chair, grunting and huffing in a way that alarmed
Llesho. So when he called, “Give me your arm,” Llesho came willingly to offer
his support.
When they were out of the command tent,
however, Den straightened up, and he set a finger to his lips, warning Llesho
to silence. Llesho watched the shifting tensions in Den’s face, trying to read
some explanation for his strange behavior, but Den signaled, “Wait.”
Suddenly, two crows flew from the command
tent: the witch and his daughter. As birds, the two wheeled in a great arc across
the sky, then turned in the direction the messenger had gone and quickly
disappeared.
When the two were well and truly out of
sight, Master Den urged Llesho forward. As they walked between the rows of low
red tents, Den let him ask his questions. To Llesho’s own surprise, they did
not start with Habiba.
“What am I?”
“You are Llesho, seventh prince of Thebin.
Beloved of the goddess,” Master Den answered as if he were reading from a
scroll. It wasn’t what Llesho wanted to hear.
“That’s nothing but titles, of no interest
to anyone outside of Thebin, and of little concern to most Theb-ins either. I
want to know why Markko wants me so badly. He’s not interested in Thebin or the
route to the West; he wants me,
the way he would want a particularly poisonous root. Why?”
“You will have to ask him.”
Llesho gasped with the shock of that
answer, pierced through with a terrible chill. “Is that what Habiba plans? To
hand me over to his enemies after expending so much effort to keep me out of Markko’s
hands?”
“No, boy.” Master Den softened his tone.
“No one here will hand you over to anyone willingly. But the emperor may have
some purpose in seeing you publicly declared, or he may wish to see you
quietly, in secret. That choice Habiba can give him. If it comes to more than
that, rest easy. I would put my own life between you and a danger such as
Master Markko, no less than Master Jaks has done.”
Llesho didn’t feel reassured by that
speech. He didn’t want the responsibility of Master Den’s life any more than he
wanted to risk his own life on Habiba’s good intentions.
Master Den hadn’t finished with Llesho’s
question, though. “As for the rest, how does an evil man turn something
precious and good to his own twisted use? I don’t know. Only Master Markko
himself, or someone as evil as he, can answer your questions. So you must
decide, either to forgo this understanding, or to confront Master Markko when
the time comes, and ask him.
“I do know that you are good, that you are
the beloved of the goddess, and that you have felt her touch on all your long
journey.” He put up a hand to stop Llesho when he would have interrupted.
“The goddess can be a terrible mistress to
one she loves. The hearts of those who rule above see into the past and the
future as no man can. They see more deeply into the hearts and souls of their
creatures. And their reasons—we who are only human cannot fathom their reasons.
We can only trust that, harsh as their judgment may seem, their love is true,
and their purpose just.”
“You mean, it will all turn out in the end?
That’s not enough. Too many people have died for a vague hope that our struggle
has meaning, somewhere. If the goddess truly loves me, why doesn’t she tell me
what I am supposed to do?”
“Perhaps she has.” Den sighed again. “It
will have to be enough. The Way of the Goddess is seldom simple, least so in
times such as these.” He turned without another word and walked away, but his
step was heavier than it had been.
Llesho followed. He thought perhaps he had
hurt his old mentor, but he couldn’t figure out how, or what he had done. They
went first to the hospital tent, where Bixei was up and about, offering
attentive care to Stipes one minute, and fretting the healers to distraction
the next. When Master Den appeared, the healers were of one mind: “Take him!”
“I can’t leave!” Bixei objected. “What if
Stipes needs me while we are gone?”
“Go!” Stipes raised a foot and gave Bixei a
not-so-gentle push on the behind. “The worst that can happen is that I bump
into a post, and you have a duty.”
Bixei lingered anxiously for a minute, then
joined Llesho and Master Den with an embarrassed flush creeping over his
cheeks. “I didn’t mean to fuss,” he confessed.
“I know.” Den smiled at him. “Where are
your companions?”
“Lling and Hmishi went off to find out
where Kaydu had set up our camp. We were going to bring Stipes back there to
recover.”
“Stipes will have to recover among the
healers for a little while longer,” Master Den informed him. “But for the
moment you have a reprieve. Wait until your companions return, and fetch them
to the laundry wagon. Tell them we are going calling.”
Bixei looked to Llesho for an explanation.
Llesho said nothing, just made a sour face at the teacher and pointed west.
“The wagons are that way.”
So Master Den wasn’t the only one being
difficult. Bixei sank to the canvas floor beside Stipes’ pallet and added
Master Den to his list of things to worry about. Llesho was already on it.
“And now to dress you.” Master Den drew
Llesho away to the laundry wagon, piled on one side with trunks of cloths for
repairing tents and for bandages, and on the other with chests Llesho had
noticed only in passing. Master Den fussed with the chests until the four companions
joined them. Bixei had found Kaydu in her human form, and had brought her along
as well.
From one of the chests, Master Den drew
Thebin breeches and embroidered shirts and caps.
“Where did you get this?” Lling squealed
with delight as she put on the proper uniform of a past age, when the people of
the high plateau had been ruthless warriors, before the goddess had come down
from heaven to favor the Thebin kings. Hmishi was just as pleased with his
uniform, but showed it only with a quick duck of his head to hide his smile.
None of them expected an answer. Kaydu wore the uniform of her father’s army.
Bixei considered his companions thoughtfully, and then asked, “Do you have a
uniform like Master Jaks‘? I know I can never be as good as he was, but he
should be represented, don’t you think?” Master Den smiled. “Yes, he should.
And it would not surprise me if someday the student surpasses the teacher.”
With that he brought out leathers and the beaten brass wrist guards, the match
of those Master Jaks used to wear. When he added a cloak, Llesho experienced a
little shiver of recognition. In his features Bixei looked more like Master
Markko than he did the dead weaponsmaster. In the dress of the mercenary
assassin, however, he took on the watchful carriage of the guards who had died
for him when he was a child and he would have snatched the cloak away as a bad
omen. But Master Den looked at Bixei with pride, and Llesho knew he had to do
the same. This was the truth of Bixei, as the embroidered shirts had become the
truth of Lling and Hmishi. These three existed to protect him. He could only
serve them by making their sacrifices worthwhile.
While Llesho was admiring his companions,
Master Den had unearthed a chest covered in leather and bound with brass. From
the silk-lined interior he drew a shirt and breeches like his Thebin guards
wore, but of a finer fabric. Llesho stripped off the trainee’s uniform he had
been given in the governor’s compound at Farshore; he felt as though he were
shedding a false skin with it, reclaiming Thebin with the fine woolen shirt and
breeches. Next Master Den pulled out a pair of soft boots encrusted at heel and
toe with gold filigree that gleamed with a polished sheen in the sunlight, and
a sleeveless Thebin coat embroidered in gold-and-crimson thread crossed with
blue silk. Llesho pulled on the boots and slipped his arms through the slashed
openings at each side of the coat, settling the shoulders with a familiar
shrug.
“Now you look like a fine young prince of
the High Mountains,” Den assured him with a pleased look. The last item, a
heavy leather belt, he wrapped around Llesho’s waist with a satisfied nod. They
were far from Thebin, however, and Llesho could think of no way that Master Den
would have acquired the court dress of a prince of just Llesho’s size on Pearl
Island.
“Where did you get these?”
Master Den shook his head. “All in good
time.” He led them back through the line of tents, Lling at the left side of
the prince and Hmishi at his right, with Kaydu and Bixei following behind.
Soldiers who had paid them no notice when
they had passed on their way back to the launderer’s wagon now stopped their
mending or their gossip as they passed. Llesho tilted his chin up, refusing to
show the nerves that were twisting his gut. A suit of clothes might convince
the soldiers of the line, but alone it was not likely to impress the emperor’s
representative. He’d have to act like a prince as well.
Llesho didn’t remember much from the part
of his life he’d lived in his father’s court. He did know, however, that before
state appearances, the Master of Protocol had always taken him aside and
explained what was expected of him. And his brothers, whichever of them was
home at the time, would watch him to make certain he did not shame himself or
the court. Yet here he was heading into the most important appearance of his
young life—based on this meeting, he might gain the help of the emperor for his
cause, or find himself clapped in chains and sold again in the marketplace—and
there was no protocol officer in sight.
“What is it, boy?”
Llesho took a deep breath and let it go in
a long, expressive sigh. Was his terror so obvious that his teacher could read
it in his face without a word spoken? He didn’t know what Master Den could do,
but Llesho took the question as an invitation to unburden himself of some of
his fears. “I don’t know what to do.” He did not add, “I don’t know why you are
doing this, or what Habiba—or her ladyship—hopes to gain by espousing the cause
of a long deposed prince.”
Master Den clapped him on the shoulder with
a snort of laughter. “You forget, Llesho, I’ve seen you when you feel
threatened. You are more haughty at those times than the emperor himself. Even
dressed in rags you carry yourself like a prince. So be the prince you are.
Beyond that, speak as little as you can; let them wonder. You can manage that,
can’t you?”
“I. Yes.” Head up. Meet the challenge with
a level gaze that judged everything and apologized for nothing. And trust no
one.
It was Den’s turn to sigh now. He dropped a
heavy hand on Llesho’s shoulder. “Your father would be proud of you.”
“Thank you, Master.” Llesho bowed his head,
hiding the shine of tears in his eyes. His father was gone, and he didn’t know how
Master Den could have known him, or how the teacher could choose the one
compliment that could bow him low with his grief while at the same time
instilling a greater determination to do justice to his father and the line of
Thebin kings. For Thebin, Llesho knew, he could do much.
They had reached the command tent; Habiba’s
guards came to attention when they announced Llesho and his party. Habiba
waited for them inside the tent. The maps had been stowed, the dishes of food
taken away. A simple wooden box now sat alone on the table.
“Prince Llesho. I have something that
belongs to you. Her ladyship bid me return it to you, should the opportunity
present itself.” Habiba stroked the wood of the box on the camp table. The
witch had never called Llesho by his title before, and he did so now with no
hint of a smile.
Once
you bought me fresh from the arena, a shopworn prince for small change in that
marketplace, Llesho thought, but did not say aloud. He did,
however, returned the solemn bow.
Habiba opened the box. From it he drew a
silver coronet, which he offered to the prince between outstretched palms.
“Where did you get that?” Llesho asked,
surprised at how much it hurt to look at the slender circle of precious metal.
Not quite a crown, nevertheless it signaled to any who saw it that the wearer
was of royal blood. He’d worn one like it on his small head during the most
solemn court occasions before the Harn had come. It was too big to have been
his own as that child; it must have belonged to one of his brothers.
“Her ladyship obtained it from a Harn
trader,” Habiba answered. “I did not ask her why, or question her decision to
return it to one who had the right to wear it.”
She had always known, from that first day
in the weapons room at Pearl Island. She had suspected even earlier, though
Llesho didn’t know how long he had lain in bondage while the governor of
Farshore and his lady knew him for a wronged prince. He could not decide
whether he was grateful that they hadn’t murdered him as a gift to the
conquerors, or angry because they had left him to suffer under Markko’s hand
for so long.
“If I may?” Habiba lifted the coronet over
his head, and Llesho bowed his acceptance. Habiba lowered his hands and set the
coronet on Llesho’s head. The weight of it settled over Llesho like a
benediction, and he felt his fate shift beneath his feet. The sensation struck
with such force that it made him dizzy, and he might have fallen had Lling not
reached out a hand to steady him.
“Are you all right, my prince?” she asked.
He nodded, and realized that Master Den had
the right of it. He was a
prince, and Llesho had only to be himself to prove it. He found himself
whispering a prayer to the goddess, that she might find him worthy in her eyes.
“To horse, Your Highness?” Habiba urged
them all. “Ambassador Huang awaits.”
“It’s time,” Llesho agreed. He had much to
fear from the coming meeting, but none of it would be what he expected.
Whatever happened, however, he would greet it with the dignity of a prince.
PART FOUR
Chapter Twenty-nine
Ft ABIBA’S sergeant at arms would have put
Llesho on a war steed taller at the shoulder than Llesho’s head, but he
refused, choosing instead the short and sturdy horse, so like the beasts native
to Thebin, that had carried him from Farshore. His guard had likewise rejected
the more impressive mounts for their old companions of the trail. Like warriors
stepping through a crack in time, they stood at the right hand of the magician,
Habiba.
Master Den complained about mounting any
horse at all, but was finally persuaded onto the back of a fat and complacent
mare who took his weight with a single snort of indignation before sidling up
to Habiba’s left. The honor guard, twenty of Habiba’s soldiers in the livery of
her ladyship and Farshore Province, fell in behind the leaders.
“An auspicious number to honor a visiting
prince,” Habiba explained to Llesho, “but not so many that Ambassador Huang
HoLun might consider our purpose a threat.”
That was certainly true. Habiba’s scouts
had reported that the emperor’s guard, a force in excess of five thousand,
guarded the great city itself.
A SINGLE PARAGRAPH IS MISSING HERE. SORRY.
I WILL TRY AND FIX THIS IN THE FUTURE - JASC
A li distant, camped in a wheat field left
fallow for the season. The witch had accepted the information with a little
shrug. “We are seeking the Celestial Emperor’s help, not contesting his rule in
his own province. If he decides against her ladyship’s petition, we have lost
before we have begun.”
The thought did little to comfort Llesho.
The party of petitioners crossed the field
on which their own army camped. Too soon, the forest that marked the boundary
between Thousand Lakes and Shan Province was before them. Two by two, the party
entered the wood, following a narrow but well-marked path that wound between
tall trees whose thick branches blotted out the sun. Llesho shivered as his
horse stepped into the shadows. The forest was too still, and he wondered what had
startled the birds and crickets into silence. Perhaps the emperor’s ambassador
had decided to resolve the puzzle of a deposed prince with an anonymous arrow
from behind a tree or from hiding in the brush that crowded close against the
path.
Kaydu rode ahead with Bixei to scout the
way, and Habiba followed, riding at Llesho’s side, offering themselves
unprotected at the head of the party as a sign of trust and good will. Llesho
recognized the message his own place in the order of march sent the ambassador
waiting up ahead. Habiba recognized Llesho’s rank as superior to his own and
equal to the lady’s in whose name he traveled. Her ladyship’s witch did not
speak, but watched the forest to right and to left with dark and vigilant eyes.
Llesho found himself darting quick glances to either side as well, wondering
whether Markko had survived the recent battle unscathed, and where he had gone
to regroup his forces. Master Den rode after them, alone, with Lling and Hmishi
behind. The twenty men of Habiba’s guard followed last.
Llesho held himself a little straighter.
The short spear her ladyship had returned to him remained hidden in his pack,
but he displayed his Thebin sword in its saddle scabbard near his knee. Habiba
had said nothing about the knife he carried beneath his shirt. To Llesho, the
Thebin knife even more than the coronet signaled his rank. So he reached under
his collar for the cord around his neck and removed it, clasping the scabbard
to the belt that wrapped his Thebin coat. Now
he felt like a prince of the House of Thebin, beloved of the goddess and
successor to his father’s throne. Without giving it any thought, his head came
up, and the hesitation cleared from his eyes.
“Your Highness,” Habiba addressed him with
a smile. “I am happy to see that you have joined us at last.”
Llesho responded with a level, almost
threatening stare. “I know what they think of us in Shan. To them, we are
barbarians, seduced by the riches of the West and brought to our downfall
because we grew weaker than our savage neighbors.”
Habiba looked surprised at Llesho’s
description of how imperial eyes must see Thebin. He was about to be more
surprised.
“They’re wrong,” Llesho finished. “We are
barbarians, perhaps, but captivity has made us stronger.”
“Thebin was once known for its cunning.”
Habiba seemed to approve.
“I know nothing of that,” Llesho answered
with a sardonic twist to the words.
“I’m sure you don’t.”
They had reached the edge of the forest,
and Habiba gave his attention to the open field before them. Llesho did the
same. Waves of low grasses filled in the faint reminders of plowed rows. Now,
however, the fallow ground sprouted silk pavilions like bright yellow mushrooms
in the sunshine. Three men on horseback waited for them at the side of the
forest trail. The central figure, dressed in the heavy coat of an imperial
marshal at arms, moved forward to greet them. His two attendants, in the
uniforms of the imperial horse battalion, waited with their hands on the hilts
of their swords.
“Huang HoLun, Ambassador of the Celestial
Emperor the Great God of Shan, sends his greetings to Habiba, servant of her
ladyship of Farshore Province,” the marshal pronounced, “and bids him come
forward to offer tribute and receive the blessings of the emperor’s house upon
him.” He said nothing of Llesho, but his eyes did not leave the Thebin prince
until Habiba drew his sword in the ritual of allegiance.
First Habiba kissed the blade. Then,
reversing his hold on the weapon, he extended the hilt to the emperor’s marshal.
“Her ladyship extends her worshipful prayer that the emperor’s ambassador will
accept her humble servant as his own, and lend an ear to her piteous plea. The
emperor’s governor of Farshore Province lies murdered, his state and all his
holdings seized by enemies who press even now to lay waste to her father’s
realm.”
“Ambassador Huang will speak to you on
these and other matters,” the marshal agreed. He did not add any kind wishes of
the ambassador’s that might have assured them of a favorable hearing, but
turned his horse and, with a last backward glance at Llesho, headed for the
largest of the bright yellow tents waiting for them on a small rise in the
field.
“He knows who I am, but he didn’t say
anything about me being here,” Llesho frowned after the departing marshal,
wondering what he was to make of the greeting that ignored him officially while
giving him all the attention of the man’s stare.
“He knows who you say you are, surely,” Habiba corrected
him. He kicked his horse into motion, setting his small party to follow the
marshal before adding, “Your dress and your bearing have made that clear. And
he showed great interest in you, but no surprise.”
“You’re not the only one with spies,”
Llesho suggested.
“No, I’m not.” Habiba narrowed his eyes, as
if he could see through the yellow silk and into the heart of the delegate. He
hadn’t expected so guarded a reception, and Llesho didn’t like the idea that
something had taken the witch by surprise. After a moment of tense thought,
Habiba shifted into a waiting mode with a little shrug. “We will know soon
enough what the ambassador makes of us.”
There was something brewing beneath
Habiba’s impassive exterior. Llesho couldn’t figure out exactly what it was,
but he figured that, if the witch was suspicious, he was well advised to stay
on the defensive. He let his hand drift to the hilt of his knife.
“Five thousand to our twenty.” Habiba did
not turn to look at him, but offered the reminder as if to the wind. Llesho
took the hint—a dead prince was no use to his people—and let his hand drop once
again to the reins. It was as well that he did so, for they had arrived in
front of the yellow silk tent, and soldiers poured out on every side to
surround them. Llesho slid from his saddle, leaving his sword where it lay.
When one of the imperial guard would have taken his knife, however, he reached
it faster, not unsheathing it, but holding it tight to his side with the flat
of his open hand.
“It is a symbol of rank,” Habiba explained,
and the soldiers backed off, letting one of authority among them come forward.
“No one may approach the emperor’s
ambassador while armed,” the sergeant of the guard instructed.
Habiba waved a careless hand. “He is but a
boy, the knife a mere trinket, but important as a symbol. You understand?” he
lied.
The sergeant turned to examine the Thebin
prince, who looked younger than he was because of his short stature. Llesho
smiled back at the sergeant with his most vacuous grin. I’m harmless, he thought at the man.
Quick as a striking snake, the sergeant
made a grab for Llesho’s throat. Just as quickly, Llesho had the knife out. If
the sergeant had not anticipated the move, he would have been dead, but he
clasped Llesho’s wrist in both of his hands and managed to stop the knife with
just the tip bloodied. The wounded soldier exerted pressure on the nerves that
ran close to the surface of Llesho’s knobby wristbone, but the knife did not
fall. “Give.” the soldier said. “Give!”
They stayed like that, frozen for an
endless second, until Llesho’s eyes cleared, and he realized that he was
standing in the center of a shocked and silent circle, his hand still wrapped
around his knife, while a bleeding soldier clung to his wrist as if his life
depended on it. Slowly, Llesho realized that it probably did.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered, horrified at
what he had done. But he did not drop the knife, even now that he was aware of
the painful pressure the sergeant was exerting on the nerves in his wrist.
“Please let me go!” he cried. “I’m not
going to hurt you.”
The sergeant snorted indignantly. “Let go
of the knife first, then we’ll see.”
Llesho stared with growing horror from the
knife in his frozen hand to the sergeant. “I can’t,” he said.
The soldier frowned, and glanced away to
call for aid from the men who surrounded them. Habiba stepped forward, however,
with both hands out to show that he carried no weapon.
Moving slowly so that he startled neither
Llesho nor the tense guards who awaited only the command of their sergeant to
cut down the Thebin prince, he slipped one hand over that of the soldier
holding Llesho’s wrist. “Let go, very slowly.” He pinned the man with a
hypnotic stare, and the soldier’s hand relaxed. Llesho pulled away, but he
could not escape Habiba’s hold, which had replaced that of the damaged soldier.
“Now, give me the knife, Llesho. You can
trust me . . .” Gradually, Llesho felt the soft, low words lulling him into a
warm sense of security. Relieved, he turned his bloodied palm up, offering the
knife. With no outward show of urgency Habiba took it.
“I hope that whatever you learned was worth
the cost,” he said to the sergeant, holding the knife out to him. The sergeant
looked from the witch to Llesho and back again, his face set in hard lines. He
didn’t have to say anything. It was obvious to everyone who had seen it that
the man had learned exactly what he wanted to know from the exercise, and that
he treated that knowledge with deadly seriousness.
“I truly am sorry.” Llesho sighed, certain
that they had just lost something more important than his Thebin knife, but not
sure what it could be. They wanted
the ambassador to believe that Llesho was a true prince of Thebin. If the
sergeant knew enough about the raising of young princes on the high plateau to
test him with the knife, he had only learned what they wanted the emperor to
know anyway.
Whatever it was, Habiba had his “making the
best of a plan gone awry” face on when he held out a cloth to the bleeding
sergeant. “Bind that up; you are dripping on your uniform,” he said when the
sergeant had thrust Llesho’s knife into his own belt. “And watch that
blade—it’s sharp.”
The sergeant gave him a dark look, but
accepted the cloth. When he had wrapped it around the wound in his arm, he
directed his soldiers to surround Habiba’s party.
“Hold their guards here.” he ordered the
greater number of his men, and marked out half a dozen to accompany Llesho and
Habiba. “These two, come with me.”
“These three.” Master Den gave the sergeant
a respectful bow marred only by the quirk of an eyebrow.
The sergeant laughed. “Master Den! Ill met
as always! I should have realized you would be a part of this!”
“Not by choice, my lad, not by choice.”
Master Den shook his head mournfully, but he was smiling as he did so. “I’ll
keep an eye on things for you.”
“Go,” the sergeant concluded. “Before I
change my mind and have you clapped in chains for the last time we met.”
“A man shouldn’t wager what he can’t afford
to lose,” Den suggested with another deep rumble of a laugh. He fell in next to
Llesho before the sergeant could respond.
When the imperial guard had the party
sorted out, the sergeant held aside the tent flap and announced their arrival
to the house guards standing at attention just inside. The first gave a deep
bow and scurried away. He quickly returned, and gave the newcomers low and
humble bows before gesturing for them to come forward.
The ambassador was a tall man, so old that
his thin gray mustache hung down almost to his belt, and so slender that one
could almost count the bones in his upraised hand. He had a mean and narrow
face that gave him the look of a miser in spite of the sumptuous robes of
rustling silk he wore. Llesho felt his heart sink as he took in the measure of
Huang HoLun. He will not help us,
he thought. This Ambassador Huang will
send us away with our story unheard, and the emperor will learn nothing of our
plight.
If his first examination of the ambassador
sank his hopes in his chest, he soon had greater cause for fear.
“That is the boy. He belongs to Farshore
Province
And Farshore belongs to me.“ Master Markko
stepped out from behind the ambassador’s chair and rested a triumphant smile
first on Habiba and then on Llesho. He did not seem to look at Master Den at
all, but his next words proved that he had recognized the third man: ”As for
this one, I did not know that it was customary for the emperor’s ambassador to
meet with washermen, but I can save you the trouble with this one. He belongs
to Pearl Island which, as we all know, belongs to me by right of Lord Yueh’s
last wishes.“
“I see no washerman,” Ambassador Huang
answered in a high, testy voice. “These two are unknown to me, although you do
not contest that they are who they say they are—”
“I contest not who, but what they are,
Master,” Markko pointed out the fine shading of difference between his own
position and that of the ambassador.
“Yes, yes, but you have accused neither of
washing laundry, I presume?”
Llesho would have volunteered that he had,
in fact, washed laundry, but held his tongue. Master Markko seemed unhappy with
the direction of the ambassador’s discussion, which suited Llesho just fine.
“Then you can only mean Master Den,” the
delegate continued. “And Master Den is well known to me as the general who led
the house guards of our present emperor’s father. Master Den’s strategy for the
defense of Shan’s borders against the Harn have protected the emperor and his
people lo these many years, even as the Harn prey upon our trade routes to the
south.”
“You have been duped,” Master Markko
insisted, “by this man, who, until Lord Chin-shi’s recent demise, washed the
linen for Pearl Island‘s stable of gladiators, of which the boy here was a
member in training. Both belong, by right, to me!” his black eyes glittered
when he said it, “but I believe I am correct about Master Den. I am not likely
to have forgotten my old teacher, even after so many years.”
“But . . . But . . .” Markko spluttered.
“He cannot be the same man, he is too young!”
Ambassador Huang turned a bland stare on
the traitor. “I am convinced that, having made a mistake in respect to the
identity of one of my guests, you may have made equally serious errors about
the others. By no deliberate fault of your own, of course, Master Markko. As it
is, I find myself at a loss to make a judgment that will so profoundly affect
so many who consider themselves under the protection of the Celestial Emperor.”
Llesho flinched at the loathing in Markko’s
eyes. The old ambassador seemed not at all aware of the seething hatred
directed at him. “Disagreements are so tiring!” Ambassador Huang complained
petulantly. “I believe I must take a nap.”
Master Den beamed complacently at the
yawning delegate, looking as doltish as Huang HoLun himself. “I think we could
all use a nap,” he agreed cheerfully.
Shocked at his teacher’s apparent loss of
sanity, Llesho nevertheless succumbed to his mentor’s suggestion. Try as he
might, he could not stifle the gaping yawn that almost unhinged his jaw.
Ambassador Huang’s black eyes twinkled at
him. The old man might not be the doddering fool that he wished to appear, but
Llesho did not let himself forget the cold-eyed calculation that had greeted
them. Huang played his stones with apparent carelessness, but strategy informed
every move.
“We should all rest now.” The ambassador
rose from his chair while pronouncing his plan. “This evening, we shall all of
us return to Shan together. By sedan-post, we may arrive before midnight on the
sec-ond day of travel, and then we may leave the matter in the hands of the
emperor and his advisers.”
Markko accepted Master Huang’s decision
with a bowed head, but Llesho saw that the magician’s eyes burned with
frustration before he lidded them to hide his anger.
“And now, Master Den, come. See me to my
bed. We have much to talk about, many lifetimes to catch up on!”
The ambassador spoke as if in jest, and
Master Den laughed as he offered his arm to the old man. But Llesho could not
help thinking that the joke was on the rest of them. He wondered, not for the
first time, exactly who Master Den was.
Chapter Thirty
LESHO trusted his horse not to drop him,
but put no equal faith in the arms and running feet of men like himself. He had
never journeyed by litter, and the thought of doing so made him uneasy. The
litters were designed for the comfort and reassurance of the travelers who made
use of them, but on Llesho they had the opposite effect. Polished wood suitable
for the finest furniture made up the pallet base, with low rails on all sides
to protect the passengers from falling out onto the road. Brightly colored silk
curtains hung from a sturdy frame suspended above graceful carved posts at each
corner, preserving the privacy of the travelers within. On both sides, long
carrying poles extended several paces beyond the front and back of the wooden
floor. Llesho figured that, with the furnishings, it had to weigh more than his
horse.
A dozen bearers stood in position next to
the carrying poles of each litter while the ambassador’s protocol officer
sorted out their company. The ambassador entered the largest and most sumptuous
litter. He insisted that Master Den accompany him so that they could catch up
on court gossip, which sent his protocol officer into scandalized fits of
temper. As the emissary of her ladyship and her father, both of whom had rights
of provincial governorship by appointment and marriage, Habiba had precedence
over Master Markko, who petitioned the emperor in his own right as regent for
the dead usurper, Lord Yueh. If he wished to offer his protection on the road
to Llesho, howevei, Habiba must cede his right by protocol, and accept the
lesser station afforded the pretender to the Thebin throne. Llesho would be
situated last in the order of travel to signify that the emperor had not yet
acknowledged Llesho’s status.
Finally, all parties agreed upon the order
of march: Master Markko would follow the ambassador’s litter in solitary
dignity, and Llesho would bring up the rear, with Habiba as his traveling
companion. Imperial foot soldiers would accompany them. Like the litter
bearers, they would pass off their duty to fresh soldiers waiting at the relay
points. The party’s own guards would come after them on horseback.
“It’s not safe,” Bixei had insisted when he
heard that they would be left to follow at a slower pace. They had gathered in
the tent set aside for them by the ambassador.
“I can’t believe you would go anywhere with
Markko, let alone that you would leave your own guard behind when you did it.
How do you know you can trust this Huang fellow?”
“He’s the emperor’s ambassador,” Kaydu
reminded them, but Lling shared Bixei’s fear.
“The emperor did nothing when the Harn
came,” she reminded them. “For all we know, he may be in league with the
raiders and wants only to see you dead!”
“My father would never let that happen!”
Kaydu looked ready to strike.
Llesho stopped them with an upraised hand.
“For good or ill, we are now in Shan Province, the very heart of the empire. If
the emperor wishes us dead.
he doesn’t have to drag us all the way to
the imperial city to kill us—he could have me murdered by any one of five
thousand of his soldiers in this camp while I stand here talking to you. You
might be able to avenge yourself on a soldier loyal to his duty before his
comrades killed you all, but we’d still be dead. And the emperor would still be
on his throne in his palace.“
“So we leave you in the hands of strangers
and hope for the best?” Bixei asked, not believing what he heard.
“I think,” Llesho said, and paused, because
he was puzzling it through as he spoke. “I think that her ladyship and Master
Den—Master Jaks, too—wanted this all along, and Markko wanted us not to reach
the emperor at all. I have to figure that those who want me here will keep me
alive, at least until I find out why they thought it was so important.”
“I think you’re right,” Kaydu agreed. “For
whatever reasons, my father is determined to see you safely into the hands of
the emperor. And he’ll be sharing your litter. No one would dare to attack you
while you are under his protection.”
“Master Markko already has.”
“We were not in the emperor’s own province
then,” Llesho reminded the young gladiator, “and the emperor had not turned his
head in our direction. We are now on imperial time.”
Bixei muttered a grudging agreement, but
added, “If you do run into trouble, we will be right behind you.”
“I know it.” Llesho gave each a handclasp
to seal their friendship. They said nothing more, but accompanied him to his
litter in silence, and stood by while he pushed his head past the silk curtains
that swathed his litter.
There he stopped, frozen in amazement. “It
will never get off the ground,” he swore. The inside of the litter was even
richer than the outside! Thick down cushions covered in patterned silk lay
scattered in heaps over the wooden flooring. In one corner a fat stand held a
tall pipe bound about with brass and silver. Perfumed water already bubbled in
its base, and the sweet grasses in its bowl sparked red before releasing
fragrant smoke into the air. A basket of dainty tidbits for the road rested in
the center of the litter, between two mounds of cushions for the riders.
“Of course it will.” Habiba’s voice behind
him reminded Llesho that they had no time for gawking. Feeling inadequate to
the luxury around him, he clambered inside. Habiba followed.
“Very nice,” the witch approved, and began
arranging his pillows into an impromptu nest.
Llesho did the same, and had barely settled
himself before the litter began to pitch and rise. Llesho grabbed for the
closest rail and held on tightly until the poles supporting the litter settled
on the shoulders of the bearers. Habiba seemed untroubled by the jostling. He
began to pick at the basket between them.
“Have something to eat,” he said. “Even by
post relay it will be a long trip.”
Llesho considered the basket in front of
him and shook his head, far too nervous to eat anything. “I’m not hungry.”
When he’d started on his journey from the
pearl beds, the empire was just another obstacle between himself and his goal:
a map upon which he would find his brothers widely scattered but alive. In
secret he would gather them around him, and in secret they would return to
Thebin and somehow take their home back from the Harn. He hadn’t considered how
he would do that without an army or claim to his own name, and he certainly
hadn’t counted on setting the great empire of Shan on its ear as he passed
through it. But sitting in imperial luxury, approaching the imperial city, with
allies and enemies at either hand, it was all becoming too real.
As it often did when his quest began to
overwhelm him, Lleck’s pearl throbbed in his mouth like a bad tooth. On his
road to Thebin Llesho had acquired gifts as well as allies—gifts that were
supposed to mean something to him. The pearl, the spear, the cup all gave him
feelings he should have been able to identify but which remained stubbornly out
of reach. His knife, though, he could understand. And he didn’t like what he
knew. He was a trained killer, had killed even as a child. No wonder the
goddess had not come to him! He thought, perhaps, he could not succeed without
Her help, and would have wept for his captive country, with only an abandoned
boy to care about the misery of his people.
Habiba frowned thoughtfully at Llesho as he
chewed on a bit of fruit. Perhaps he knew what desperate thoughts passed
through his head, but chose instead to remark upon the more obvious cause of
Llesho’s distress with a conclusion that seemed to amuse him.
“Thebin has a reputation for the riches its
trade routes with the West brought. Surely you were accustomed to greater
luxuries than this in the palace at Kungol.” He waved a hand with a half-eaten
peach in it to signify their surroundings.
“Not really.” Llesho considered the silk
appointments of the litter with the eyes of his younger self. By Thebin
standards, it was overdone: too much surface glamour, but the richness of the
cushions did little to muffle the jolt of the runners’ feet. The motion passed
up through the poles and bounced the litter like a skiff in a stormy sea.
Llesho realized that in spite of the luxury that cradled him, the motion was
making him sick.
Talking distracted him from his growing
nausea, however, so he let his mind wander back to his early home.
“Kungol lies just below the snow line,” he
explained. “Just below the point on the mountains where the snow never melts.
It is cool all the time, and it can sometimes snow during the night even at
high summer. Thick woolen rugs hang on the walls of the palace, and in winter
rugs even cover the windows, to hold in the warmth. I had a goose down
comforter covered in Shan silk when I was small, but everything else in my room
was wool or leather.” He shrugged. “The things that seemed most precious and
rare in Thebin—wood is so scarce that we only use it for decoration and a few
bits of furniture—are common to Shan. The things of their own country that
Thebins value, like jade and amber, copper and bronze, we trade very little,
and so they have the value of rarity in your world but lack the meaning they
hold in mine. And I have heard what lowlanders think of Thebin dress—” He
looked down at his own gaudy coat with a weary smile, knowing and sad. “Our
cloth is too rough, our embroidery too garish, the cut of our garments
barbaric.”
“I take it that means no, you are not
acquainted with such luxurious surroundings.” Habiba grinned at him, a slash of
sharp white teeth cutting through his whiskers like a secret spoken in the
dark.
Llesho grinned back, aware of the lesson he
had just taught himself. “It means that to a Thebin, this is not luxury at
all,” he answered. It wasn’t true, exactly. All of the silk traded in the West
passed through Kungol, and the Thebin people were certainly familiar with its
worth. But they didn’t covet such overnice luxuries as others did.
“Remember that when you meet with the
emperor,” Habiba said, and this time Llesho couldn’t tell where his amusement
was directed. He was about to ask when the bearers slowed their naw T l^chr.
ho^rA
MISSING PARAGRAPH.
tramping feet coming toward them—attack!
His conversation with Habiba suddenly forgotten, he cursed himself for, having
left his bow and arrows in the camp. Ambassador Huang’s guards had returned his
knife for the journey, however; Llesho reached for it under his coat.
Habiba did not appear distressed. The witch
finished his peach and threw the pit onto the road, and then took hold of the
low railing that ran around the sides of the litter.
“We are about to change bearers; make sure
you are secure.”
Llesho gave him a wary look, but followed
his example and reached for the railing instead of his knife. He did so just in
time.
The newcomers had lined themselves up
parallel with the Utter and were beginning to match the slowed pace of the
bearers. Suddenly, the litter pitched and tilted, bounced and jolted. “What are
they doing!” Llesho wanted to know.
“We have reached the first relay station,”
Habiba explained. “The bearers we came with are trading places with the bearers
who have been waiting at this outpost.” The witch rolled with the uneven
motion. He didn’t look sick; he didn’t even look uncomfortable. Llesho wished
he could say the same.
“As we approach the city of Shan, the relay
posts come closer together, so we should make very good time in our journey,”
Habiba finished his explanation and reached for a pear.
“How much farther do we have to go?” Llesho
asked. At the moment, the length of their journey was the most urgent thing he
could think about—that and the rolling pitch of the litter that carried them.
He felt the color drain from his face.
“I’m going to be sick,” he whispered.
Habiba threw down the pear. He reached for
the water pipe and tossed it out onto the road as he had the peach pit, and
then tucked the bucket-shaped base under Llesho’s chin.
“Master Huang has shown you a great honor
by putting the post relay system at our disposal,” he chided while holding the
bucket. “Only the most important officials on the most urgent business of the
empire may command such-travel. Is this any way to repay his kindness?”
“I would gladly decline the honor and ride
to Shan on horseback,” Llesho offered. His gut swung queasily in its own
direction, completely at odds with the beat of the running feet that jolted the
litter.
“But Master Huang could not ride so far,
nor could Master Den,” Habiba reminded him. “And we would have to leave our
horses on the road in trade for fresh ones that we did not know as well, just
as we have done with the bearers.”
All true, Llesho supposed. But they had
only a few li behind them. If Habiba were correct, most of the journey remained
ahead, and already Llesho wished himself dead. He leaned over the bucket and
was thoroughly sick.
When he had finished, Habiba handed him a
silk handkerchief with a smile. “It is the simplest I have about me,” he
offered in a mild joke about the riches of empire. “Are you feeling any
better?”
“Nooooo,” Llesho moaned, and was violently
ill once again. When he was through, he fell back on his cushions with a woeful
sigh. “What is the point of all this haste if I wish I were dead already?”
Habiba shook his head. “The point? Why,
putting you in front of the emperor as a live supplicant rather than as a dead
pretender, I suppose. Or did you look forward to Markko plotting your demise at
his leisure?”
“Do you think he’d kill me now if I asked
nicely?” Llesho perked up. The possibility almost gave him hope.
Habiba gave him an exasperated sigh. With a
finger tucked under Llesho’s chin, the witch lifted the prince’s head out of
his bucket.
“How long have you felt sick?” Habiba asked
him.
“Since we started out.” Llesho wanted to
ask how the witch managed to cope with the motion, but to think the words was to
remind himself of how he felt, and that only made it worse.
Habiba frowned at him. “I could probably
make you up a potion if we had an hour or two, and a fire.” He considered
Llesho for a long moment. “But we cannot spare the time.
“Look at me, Llesho.”
Llesho looked, and flinched at the change
that came over the witch. Habiba’s eyes were wide and fixed; the irises almost
vanished while the pupils grew to fill all the space with darkness. He closed
his own eyes, but that only made the sickness worse.
Habiba gave him a sharp tap on the chin
with one finger.
“You are not a prince yet, my fine young
gladiator,” Habiba snapped with more humor in his voice than the words merited.
“Now do as you are told.”
“What are you going to do?” Llesho asked in
a whisper.
“Nothing to hurt you. Not after all the
trouble I’ve had getting you this far! Now look at me!”
Llesho looked.
“It is night, very dark, and you are in
your own bed in the palace at Kungol. There are no raiders; your guard stands
watch at your door to keep you safe. Your bed is warm, the breeze through the
open window brings the scent of snow off the mountains, and below, in the city,
the bleat of camels and the bark of dogs fill the night with their music.”
Llesho knew that none of it was real, but
in spite of himself he felt his shoulders relaxing, his head growing heavier,
his eyes closing . . .
“You are safe, you are comfortable, and you
are so sleepy. You cannot stay awake any longer . . .”
When Llesho awoke, the litter had come to a
halt, and beyond the tent curtains he heard the harsh calls of servants sorting
themselves and locating their charges, From the hollow echo and the clack of
wooden-soled sandals against paving tiles, he guessed they stood in a walled
courtyard somewhere, but he didn’t know how far they had come or why they had
stopped.
“Where are we?” he asked groggily, but
Habiba was not there.
“Come, come!” One of the servants pushed
his head between the curtains and gestured for Llesho to follow.
Llesho shook his head. “Where are we?” he
asked again.
The servant disappeared, muttering
something about crazy Thebins, but he was soon replaced by Master Den.
“What are you still doing in there, boy?
You can’t see the emperor looking like that!”
Llesho paled in dismay, but climbed out of
his litter as Den demanded. “Has the emperor come to meet us on the road?”
“We’re not on the road, Llesho. This is the
inner courtyard of the Celestial Palace at Shan.”
“It can’t be!”
It certainly didn’t look regal. They had
come to rest in a large walled courtyard with a cobbled square and plastered
walls that rose well above Den’s head. It was dark, with not even a moon to
brighten the square. The few torches carried by servants did little to light
the space beyond the circle of the three official litters, but from what Llesho
could see, the courtyard was empty except for themselves. There were no plants
on the edges of the wall and Llesho could see no trees bending their branches
over it as might be the fashion in Farshore Province. Of course, with no trees
or vines to climb, a spy or saboteur would have a difficult time getting over
the wall. Kungol Palace, he remembered, hadn’t had a wall at all. Who, after
all, would invade the privacy of the goddess’ own beloved family? Llesho found
himself looking at the courtyard wall in a friendlier light.
A stranger—no, not a stranger, but General
Shou; Habiba had introduced him after the recent battle with Master
Markko—interrupted his thoughts with a slap on the back. “Indeed, you’ve been
on the road for two days,” General Shou confirmed. “Did Habiba put you to
sleep? He’s a sly one. You have to watch him every minute!”
He figured the general meant it as a joke,
because the man laughed and slapped him on the back again, but Llesho decided
to take it as a real warning. After all, he had lost two days to the witch’s
spell. What if they’d been attacked? He could have died without a chance to
defend himself.
“As for meeting the emperor in your present
state, I wouldn’t worry,” General Shou added, “even emperors have to sleep.
“If you have time during your visit, I’d
like a chance to talk with you about Thebin.”
That was more seriously said, and Llesho’s
curiosity perked up. “Do you know Thebin?” he asked.
“I visited it once, long ago, with a
caravan to the West,” the general confirmed. “That was before my duties kept me
closer to home.”
Spying, no doubt, Llesho figured, and
whatever he’d seen hadn’t persuaded the Shan Empire to step in when the Harn
raiders attacked. He found it a little more difficult to be polite after that,
but fortunately, General Shou turned his attention to the others in the party.
“I am very glad to see you again, Master
Den.” He slapped the master on the arm—something Llesho had never expected to
see. “Very glad indeed.” He left them with instructions to have a comfortable
night, and entered the palace by a small door from which a steady stream of
guards and visitors in various degrees of official dress seemed to enter and
depart.
“Come on, boy,” Master Den called to
Llesho, and together they followed the servants through a more imposing public
entrance. Habiba, Llesho noted, had disappeared, as had Ambassador Huang.
Markko strode before them like a conquering hero; Llesho wished he had his bow
and arrow handy, or barring that, a snowball. But it was not yet winter, and a
servant led Markko away before Llesho could devise a more pertinent attack.
Chapter Thirty-one
Den nudging him with a strong hand between
his shoulder blades, Llesho followed a servant into a vaulted entry hall bigger
than the audience chamber at Kungol. In front of them a broad stairway of
inlaid marquetry rose halfway to the carved and painted ceiling, where it
opened into a gallery that ran the length of the entry hall. The staircase
resumed at either end of the gallery, disappearing into passageways at opposite
ends of the hall.
The servant stopped on the first landing
and wordlessly directed them past a sliding panel into a long corridor, dark
except for a few scattered lamps set into the smooth plastered walls. When it
looked like they could go no farther without bumping into a blank wall at the
end of the passage, the servant turned right and disappeared.
Llesho followed and found himself in a
narrower, darker passage that curved in a long arc, so that he could not see
more than a few feet ahead of him. He stopped, unwilling to follow any farther
until he knew where they were going, and Master Den bumped into him.
“What if it’s a trap?” Llesho whispered
urgently.
“It’s the back way to the private
bedrooms,” Master Den assured him, and added tartly, “Some of us didn’t sleep
the entire journey away and are anxious to get to our beds.”
Llesho began moving again, but he wasn’t
much comforted. “Where are Habiba and Master Markko?” He figured that the
ambassador had his own home to go to, but he didn’t want to bump into Markko in
a dark corridor.
“They’ve been taken to official guest
quarters in another wing of the palace,” Master Den informed him. “They don’t
know where the guards have taken us, and they don’t have access to the private
quarters from their own rooms.”
Master Den clearly had some connection to
the royal household that would merit a personal invitation, but Llesho wondered
why he hadn’t been sent off with the others. The washerman who, if one were to
believe the ambassador, had once been an imperial general, seemed to read his
mind. “Official quarters are for those who have an official claim upon the
empire. Until the emperor decides what claim he is willing to acknowledge
toward you, it is better that you remain a guest in an unofficial capacity.”
“You will be watched, of course.” Master
Den laughed under his breath. “And keeping you close like this is bound to make
Markko nervous.”
Llesho wasn’t certain he wanted the
overseer nervous— Master Markko was bad enough when he thought he had the upper
hand—but he said nothing. The narrow passageway ended in a door which the
servant opened with a big iron key that groaned in the lock. He threw the door
wide and ushered them into a lavishly decorated hall lit at every point by
lanterns with soft gold shutters. Creamy light gleaming off of gilt carvings
dazzled Llesho’s eyes, and he blinked away tears until his vision had adjusted
to the glow.
Master Den followed him out of the passage
and the servant closed the heavy red-lacquered door after them with another
impatient gesture to hurry. He led them just a little way down the elegant hall
to a recessed alcove flanked by stiff-backed Imperial Guards. Elaborate panels
carved with fantastic animals lined the alcove. The servant pressed on the head
of a carved dragon, and a gilt panel slid aside, revealing a bedroom larger
than Lord Chin-shi’s room on Pearl Island, and decorated with more riches as
well.
Again, the servant gestured without words
that Llesho should enter. Leaving him to his own devices with a brief bow, the
servant slid the panel shut after him. Llesho heard two sets of footsteps move
down the hall, then another door slid on its runner. Master Den was nearby at
least.
Alone, Llesho had a choice of only two
occupations: he could think, or he could explore. His bladder made that
decision for him: explore. Quickly. He passed over the lacquered cabinets and
the tall standing chest, and ignored the bed big enough to hold his entire
squad without crowding them. The room was lavishly draped with silken wall
hangings covering greased-paper windows, paneled walls almost as sumptuous as
the hangings that covered them. Some of those panels had to be doors: he’d come
through one which had blended back into the decorative gilt and carving so that
he could no more find his way out again than he could find the other doors that
must be present in the room. When he had begun to despair of ever finding what
he needed, however, he discovered the secret of the moving panels, and behind
them, the door leading to the correct chamber.
More comfortable after a brief visit to the
personal room, he explored more systematically. Besides the panel by which he’d
entered and the door he had just used, Llesho found only one other functioning
exit, and that was locked and bolted from the other side. He noted that the
mysterious door had no locking mechanism on his side, and the absence of his
personal guards suddenly took on a more ominous meaning. Assassins could come
through that door any time they wanted to kill him in his sleep. Good thing he
wasn’t tired.
On a second round of exploring his
bedchamber, Llesho opened the chest and the cabinets, noted items of Thebin
apparel and others in the style of the Shan Empire, all in his size. Laid out
among the elegant decoration of the palace chamber, the contents of his pack
rested on the shelves of the standing chest. Displayed lovingly, like the
votive objects of a shrine, he found the ancient spear that her ladyship had
given him and the jade cup. Touching them sent a chill down his spine. Someone
had gone to a lot of trouble to make him comfortable, had even recognized the
value of the objects in his pack as relics rather than the tools of a soldier.
The care they had taken hardly seemed necessary if they planned to have him
killed immediately. He decided to take that as a good sign.
Even in daylight he wouldn’t be able to see
through the greased paper windows, but he stopped for a moment in his
explorations of his bedchamber, struck by the silence. He could hear nothing of
the life of the empire’s largest and most powerful city, and the contrast with
his father’s palace struck him like a dagger in the heart.
Even in the darkest hours of night Kungol
had hummed with life—groaning camels and bleating lambs, drunken caravan drovers
brawling in the street—like the pulse of a living creature whose health a king
might measure by the beat of it as he slept. How could an emperor know his
empire when he could not even hear the cries of his city? Why did Habiba and
Master Den think that such an Emperor would stoop to help the deposed prince of
a conquered land a thousand li to the west, when he gave so little notice to
the life just paces from his celestial throne? He would receive no help here;
Llesho threw himself on the bed, determined to make his own way at dawn.
But the bed was comfortable, and he had
been on the march for a long time. Despite his determination, he fell asleep
and awoke only when the smell of breakfast pulled him out of his dreams. A
bustling servant poured out his tea and opened the lacquered chest with a
thoughtful frown. When Llesho returned from relieving himself, he found that
the servant had laid out a set of ornate robes suitable to an imperial
official. Llesho glared at the clothing, which looked too complicated for him
to manage on his own and too uncomfortable for him to want to manage. The
servant had already gone, so he ignored the clothing and focused on his
breakfast.
While he was still nibbling a cake full of
cinnamon, nuts, and honey, a man he identified from his medallion of office as
a protocol officer knocked on his door and entered without an invitation. After
a minimal bow, to show Llesho how little respect he was owed, the protocol
officer stiffly recited his message: “The emperor is otherwise engaged. You may
petition for an audience, but he is very busy. If he finds the time to see you,
you will have two or three minutes to state your case in a public audience, and
none at all alone. Be prepared with an inscribed memorial laying out your case
and the outcome for which you petition: the Celestial Emperor does not suffer
fools to live.”
Llesho was tempted to comment that the
continued existence of the protocol officer proved otherwise, but he kept his
mouth shut. Don’t attract attention,
he warned himself. When the official had gone, Llesho wiped his hands on the
silk napkin and prepared to dress. He ignored the Shannish robes laid out for
him, and dug in the chest for something less noticeable to wear. The Thebin day
wear tempted him, but it would draw far too much attention here on the eastern
edge of the trade routes. Instead, he pulled on a pair of plain breeches and a
silk shirt with a minimum of decoration, and found a pair of shoes more suited
to walking than either his Thebin boots or the fragile slippers the servant had
chosen.
When he was dressed, he left his room. The
guards at his door did not surprise him, but neither did they follow when he
turned down the hall, nor did they stop him when he tried to slide open the
panel to the next room down the corridor. He was disappointed but not surprised
when it didn’t open. About thirty paces farther on he came to a staircase more
modest than the one he’d taken the night before. Descending cautiously, he
found himself in a small, octagonal chamber with a doorway in each wall. Two
imperial soldiers stood guard at rigid attention, but they made no move to stop
Llesho when he opened the first door. “Just exploring,” he explained. The
soldiers said nothing, so he peeked inside and found a small room with a few
scattered chairs bearing no decoration, and a table with a large urn of hot
water, a teapot, and a scattering of cups on it. Two of the chairs were
occupied by soldiers, apparently waiting for their turn at guard duty or coming
off the shift before and warming themselves with some tea before moving on.
They stared at him, and Llesho smiled uncomfortably.
“As you were,” he said, and closed the door
again.
The next door opened into another small
room, this one more carefully furnished, but still with none of the richness
one expected of an imperial palace. Llesho guessed that the officers of the
guard might take their rest or give their orders here.
The third door led into a long dark
passageway that plunged deep into the palace. At the far end, Llesho could just
make out by the light of a single lamp an iron staircase spiraling up to the
level from which he
MISSING PARAGRAPH
an underground passage or chamber. The
passage left him with the vague impression of dried and crusted blood, though
he had seen nothing to support the terror that he felt just thinking about it.
He stored the location for later, but closed the door on the passage with as
much speed as he could muster with any kind of dignity.
When he opened the fourth door, he actually
smiled. Here was another passageway, but one with natural light filtering in
from slots cut high overhead. The passage followed the line of the palace wall,
and Llesho guessed that there might be a hidden exit at the end of it. The
soldiers did not stop him, so he entered the passage and closed the door behind
him, leaving it ajar just enough so it would not latch and lock him in if he
did not find another way out.
He needn’t have worried. The passage led
him through what must have been the palace’s east wall, because the morning sun
fell like bars of gold across his path. After he had gone more than two hundred
paces, the passage opened out into a rough chamber that ended in a tunnel
cutting into the ground beneath the palace wall. From this tunnel Llesho felt
no air of death or decay, and he followed it. He was surprised to discover
lighted torches all along the way—for all its apparent secrecy, it must be a
well used route, a shortcut of some kind. The tunnel branched. Llesho
considered for a moment, before taking the path with fewer torches burning down
its length.
He didn’t know what he was looking for, but
it didn’t take him long to find it: a door with a large iron lock with the key
still left in it. Clearly an invitation, but to what? Llesho turned the key and
pushed open the door. Nothing he had ever seen before had prepared him for the
scale and the magnificence of his surroundings. He was outside the palace, the
pink sandstone wall at his back rising to more than twice his height. On his
left, the wall joined to a temple of many levels with seven curved roofs
ascending like a ladder to heaven. The marks of the seven gods the temple
served appeared in red paint above the heavy lintel.
Of course, the Emperor was himself a god,
so his palace must be the greatest temple in the imperial city. The practical
nature of the Shan people was well known, however, and Llesho had heard jokes
even on Pearl Island that in the imperial city money itself was worshiped as a
god. He didn’t quite believe it, but looking up at the symbols of the deities
worshiped here in the shadow of the palace, he was shocked to discover how many
of the beloved gods of Shan were bureaucrats and money counters. The goddess, he thought, would not bend her gaze upon such a city.
But one might buy the freedom of a brother here, where even the gods were
worshiped for pay.
On his right stretched a massive building
also made of pink sandstone. The building bore no marking to indicate its
purpose, but the wide stone steps in front of it were filled with the bustle of
official looking men and women in robes of state with elaborate buttons of
office on their hats. The buildings, together with the palace wall, formed
three sides of a square in which the paving stones had been arranged according
to the zodiac, with many signs of good luck and blessings worked into their
surfaces. Llesho thought that ten thousand soldiers might fit into that square
with room to hold a corps of drummers as well.
He stood in the shadows under the wall,
trying to decide what to do. The city was alien to him, oppressive and cold and
large beyond the scale men could comprehend. The few people in the square
seemed busy and important—more likely to call out the guard than assist him if
he asked for directions. Llesho hesitated to step out into the sunlight at all
for fear that someone would notice he didn’t belong there and sound a warning.
Although there were far fewer people around
the temple than gathered on the steps of the offices of state, they seemed more
varied both in dress and in their looks; a Thebin might not seem so out of
place on those steps. Staying in the shadows, he worked his way around the
palace wall and across the front of the temple, not stepping into the light
until he had ascended the temple steps. From there he allowed himself to survey
the city, which faded into a jumble of roofs around a square of green. A
garden. Llesho turned toward that spot of comfort with purpose in his stride.
The Imperial Water Garden was very
beautiful, restful and green with just the occasional hint of weathered cedar
where little bridges arched over ponds and man-made streams. A few scattered
willows drew the eye upward, but most of the water-loving plants huddled closer
to the ground. Cattails and swamp grasses, water lilies and lotus, gave texture
to the garden but drew the eye earthward to contemplate the stillness of a pond
here, the gentle ripple of a stream moving over artfully placed stones in
then-path. At the center of the garden, a natural spring fed a waterwheel that
spilled over a tumble of rocks to create a splashing waterfall which, in turn,
sped the streamlets through the park. Under the waterfall sat a small stone
altar with the symbol of ChiChu, the god of laughter and tears marked on its
side.
Llesho considered offering a petition to
the god, but thought better of it. Of the seven mortal gods, only ChiChu had
used trickery to gain a place in heaven. When the six had demanded their
unworthy brother be cast out, the goddess had chastised them for pride, and set
the trickster among them as a reminder of their humanity. ChiChu often granted
the requests that came to him, but he was likely to do so in ways both unlooked
for and unwelcome to the supplicant. Llesho found a bench nearby and sat. The
park was peaceful, and it was easy to forget his worries when the gentle breeze
shifted the grasses in hypnotic patterns. He found it difficult to reconcile
this refuge with the trading of cash-filled envelopes for heavenly favors on
the temple steps. What was this city, where human lives and the favors of tax
collector gods might be bought and sold, where tiny altars to the Seven might
be hidden among the reeds of a public garden? Who were these people, who
worshiped an emperor, yet turned their backs when the favored of the goddess
fell to the invading Ham?
A shadow falling over him shattered his
reverie. Almost as if it had a will of its own, Llesho’s hand reached for the
knife hidden under his shirt.
“I thought I might find you here.” General
Shou moved around the bench so that Llesho could see him. He wore robes of
brilliant blue beneath a red silk coat. A crane embroidered in gold thread on
each sleeve and a cap with a button of office completed his dress. The sleeves
of his coat gave fleeting glimpses of copper wrist guards on each arm, the only
clue that Shou was more than the merchant he appeared to be. The general’s face
settled into the petulant lines of a harried trader. If he had not spoken
before he showed himself, Llesho wasn’t sure he would have recognized him at
all.
“I didn’t know you were looking for me.”
“You promised to tell me about Thebin.”
“Oh. Yes.” Llesho didn’t add that he’d dismissed the request as diplomatic
small talk. Or that the general’s real interest made Llesho more wary than the
pretend kind. What did Shou want?
“This is my favorite place in the city.”
Shou put a small offering on the tiny altar and sat down, letting the
conversation fade as he contemplated the waterfall. It could have been
strategy, let his prey grow comfortable with his presence before pouncing again,
but Llesho thouehr not Th* —•
artifice, and quiet joy seemed to radiate
from some hidden center that Shou did not often reveal. That made him all the
more dangerous, Llesho figured. Apt that a general who traveled about the city
in the garb of a merchant should honor the trickster god; Llesho took that as a
warning.
“It reminds me of the governor’s compound
at Far-shore Province,” Llesho commented with a gesture to indicate the garden.
Idle chat. He would stay clear of his own concerns.
General Shou nodded agreement. “Her
ladyship did not want to leave her home, and so her husband, the governor,
promised that she could take a part of Thousand Lakes Province with her. He
built the compound to remind her of her home among the lakes. This park, too,
is a piece of Thousand Lakes Province.”
“I thought you were from Shan Province,”
Llesho prodded.
The general shrugged. “I was born here in
the capital city. But I was fostered for many years at Thousand Lakes.”
“Then it’s a lucky coincidence that the
city has a park you can visit to remember in.”
“Not luck, really,” General Shou corrected
him. “As the center of the empire, Shan must love all her children equally, and
so there are many parks, each in the style of one of her provinces.”
“And what province do you represent with
the slave pens?” Llesho watched the emotion freeze on the general’s face, and
wondered what he showed in his own eyes. He was terrified again, shaking with
it, so small and thin that he thought he must surely be culled before the
market opened, spoiled goods that no one would buy. The trader had wanted to
slit his throat to save himself the few coppers it cost to feed him. He
remembered listening while the overseer of the pens and the trader argued his
fate—he was too sickly to sell to the perverts, and too old to sell to the
beggars’ guild, though his size might give him a few years of good begging
before he was turned out there. If he survived the exposure and the abuse.
Almost crippled by the lingering echo of
past terror, Llesho crumpled in on himself, clutching his gut. Hopeless
children with empty bellies still passed through the slave pens of Shan. Llesho
had been luckier than most. If Lord Chin-shi hadn’t wanted Thebin children to
train as divers, the trader would have killed him and fed him to the pigs. If
he’d been prettier, or younger, he wouldn’t have lived out the year.
He didn’t cry—not with the sensations
hitting him like hammer blows—but he couldn’t breathe either. And he didn’t
know how he was going to find his brothers if the thought of the slave pens
alone dropped him to his knees.
“Are you sick?” General Shou asked him,
setting a comforting hand on his shoulder. “Do you need a healer?”
Llesho shook his head, wishing the general
would leave him in peace to regain his composure, or at least move his hand,
which was making it hard not to scream between his clenched teeth.
Shou did not move.
“None of us are brave all the time.” He
seemed to be offering comfort, but when Llesho looked at him, he realized that
the general didn’t remember he was there at all. Shou stared into the
waterfall, lines of suffering etching themselves into his cheeks.
“We do well enough at the moment,” he said
to the trickling water. “It’s easier, really, to do what we must than to decide
even on a cowardly course of our own. But later, when it is all over, even
hardened soldiers cry at night.”
Llesho stared up at him in amazement. He
was a general, vigorous and energetic and a respected leader in battle. Surely
he did not . . .
General Shou gave him a wry smile. “Even
the emperor sometimes must take the room with the thickest walls at night, so
that he doesn’t disturb the sleep of those with quieter dreams.”
Llesho doubted that, but he thought it was
kind of the general to say it. And he thought perhaps the general might
understand his problem.
“I don’t know how all this happened, you
know? I was a pearl diver for nine years and never received so much as an extra
banana at dinner. Then ”Lleck died, and he made me promise that I would find my
brothers and take back our home.“ He didn’t mention that Lleck had been a
spirit at the time—didn’t think it would do much for his credibility, and it
didn’t matter to the story anyway.
“I thought, if I became a gladiator, I
could travel, maybe win enough money to buy my freedom. I could look for news
of my brothers in the cities we would visit for the games and return for them
when I was free. We would travel secretly across the Harn lands and take back
Thebin.
“I didn’t know what plots and counterplots
I was walking into. Since
then, I’ve become a stone in a game that makes no sense and has nothing to do
with taking Thebin back from the Harn. I can only assume Master Markko has gone
mad. He seems to think I have some great magical power, and if he can’t enslave
it for himself, he wants me dead so that I cannot use it against him. The
problem is, I don’t have any magic, so I’m of no use to either of us in the way
Markko thinks. Does that make sense to you?”
“Not on the face of it, no,” General Shou
admitted. “But you were young when you left Thebin. Perhaps Master Markko knows
something about your heritage as a prince that you would have learned if your
life had not so abruptly changed for the worse.”
“ ‘Would have’ isn’t the same as ‘did,’ ”
Llesho pointed out. “My life did change, and whatever I
would have learned or received as a prince,
I did not learn as a pearl diver.
“As for her ladyship and Master Den, I
don’t know what they think they have to gain by sending me to the emperor.
Thebin is a thousand li from here, and all that space is filled with Harn. If
the emperor wanted to help Thebin, he would first have to conquer Harn, war
band by war band, and he could never trust that those he left behind him in a
conquered state would not rise up at his back or attack Shan in his absence.”
“You’ll make a good general someday,
Llesho. I couldn’t have explained the situation between Harn and Shan any
better after years on the border.”
“It’s not that hard to figure out when
you’ve made the Long March.”
Shou didn’t deserve sarcasm from him, but
it was the only defense Llesho had. The emperor would certainly listen to his
general, and Llesho had hoped that Shou would come up with a flaw in his
argument and prove to him that her ladyship had been right all along. Instead,
the general had just agreed that it was pointless to support Llesho’s fight for
Thebin. Praise was a poor substitute for hope.
“If you will direct me to the slave market,
I’ll be on my way.”
“I love Shan, but I wouldn’t trust her
slavers to resist a Thebin boy on the streets alone.” General Shou stood up and
stretched out kinked muscles. “I’ll take you there, and see that you get back
safely.”
“Thank you.”
Llesho stood as well, and followed Shou out
of the park. It seemed strange that someone with the responsibilities of a
general would have the freedom and the inclination to humor the stubborn goals
of a slave. If Shou felt inconvenienced, however, he didn’t show it.
“You should realize I am only humoring you
in this, Llesho.” General Shou led them down a narrow twisted street with
ramshackle buildings stacked helter-skelter one on top of the other and leaning
into the cartway on both sides. The general walked with a casual air, as if he
had no particular place to go and no set time to be there. In spite of his
apparent nonchalance, he kept a cautious eye out, and directed them around a
pile of garbage heaped on the paving stones. Llesho copied the general’s next
action when he stepped out into the cartway to avoid walking under the narrow
balcony overhead. He was glad he had done so when a pail of refuse cascaded
over the landing they would have been passing just as it fell.
“It’s been nine summers since Thebin fell,
and almost as long since anyone from the highlands but ignorant farmers have
come to market,” General Shou pointed out, ignoring both the obstacles he
avoided and the begging children to whom he absently threw coins without
breaking stride. Harn traders walked among the passersby with hard, sharp eyes
and a hand to their money belts. Llesho shuddered when those eyes glanced over
him with silver in their evaluation and leering smirks for the general. He knew
what they thought the man used him for, but their scorn was better than his
fate if they found him alone.
I don’t expect to find my brothers in the
pens,“ Llesho said, ”but there must be records.“
“Maybe. But you can be sure they have been
falsified to hide the identities of any slaves who might have the power to
attract a following.”
“One would almost think you disapprove that
we were not killed out of hand.”
The general shrugged. “I wouldn’t have
attacked Thebin in the first place, obviously, since I didn’t attack her. But you’re right: if
I had, I would have killed her rulers and all their kin before I ever sat on
her throne. It is bad policy to turn your back on someone with a grudge.”
“Then I guess Thebin was lucky that it was
Harn
^h31!? DOt ShaD“
Not a ”Stable conto be having in the heart of Shan’s
capital
“No doubt.” General Shou did not seem to
take t°u^f ^ if hC ** hC h3d his
reven8e *•» hey turned the next corner. “Here we are,” he
said.
Uesho hadn’t needed the words to tell him.
He recognized the place even before he saw it, by its stench.
Chapter Thirty-two
FORMALLY titled the “Labor Exchange,” the
slave pens took the more common name from the maze of stockades and livestock
runs that ended at the slave block in the market square. The place reeked of
misery: rotting food and feces and the sweat of too many human beings, tainted
with unendurable horror and despair and crammed together like cattle. Senses on
overload, Llesho’s memories assailed him like blows to the gut. He grabbed for
the top railing of the nearest stockade, and rested his head on his hands;
absorbing the blood-drenched horror opened old wounds in his soul.
“Prince Llesho of Thebin died here,” he
said. The slave market had obliterated the prince, if not the flesh he wore,
had stripped him to the bone and rebuilt him as another person entirely. So
many terrified children had passed down these chutes, and yet no one had raised
a hand in protest when the innocent were sold like animals to be used and bred
and slaughtered at the whim of whoever had the money to buy them.
A keening wail of mourning fought him for
control of his throat. “My people,” he moaned softly. “Oh, Goddess, what have
you done to my people?”
In stark images of crumbling horror, the
slave pens reminded him that he was alone in this world. He’d known it since
Lleck had died, of course, but sometimes the knowledge crashed in on him with
the force of his need for allies, or friends. He felt a hand on his shoulder.
He knew it was General Shou’s, but memory of rough hands in the market made him
flinch. What comfort could Shou offer him now, anyway?
“An empire with the rot of the slave pens
festering at its heart cannot help itself,” Llesho told him bleakly. “It
certainly has nothing to offer Thebin.”
“The old emperor is dead.” General Shou
withdrew his hand and rested his forearms on the top rail, next to Llesho. “His
son now rules. Things will be different for Shan, but change takes time.”
Change. Llesho stared at the holding
facility leaning over its rotted foundation. The slave traders had called it
the dormitory even though it had no beds—just an unswept dirt floor to lie
upon. It had never been meant to shelter the wretched slaves, Llesho realized,
but served to hide their exhaustion and hopelessness from potential buyers.
They’d put men and women together. He’d thought at the time, with the mind of a
small boy, they’d done it out of kindness, so that families might have one last
night together. Later, when he’d come to understand what those anguished cries
in the night had been about, he realized it was because the traders didn’t
care. If the females turned up pregnant in the morning, well, the buyer had
made a bargain: two for the price of one. No. He couldn’t expect help from
Shan.
“It takes more than a day to change a
world, Llesho. It needs a cause to raise the will of the people to change. Can
you do this?”
General Shou’s voice soothed the ache in
his heart and the prickling unease that clenched his flesh. So many meanings in
the question: “Can you offer Shan a cause to throw off the unclean trade in
human lives? Can you walk back into that hell to save your brother?”
Llesho nodded. The last, at least, he could
do. He just needed a minute to remember how to breathe. “The pens are empty.”
“The next slave caravan is due tomorrow;
the traders should be around somewhere getting things ready for the new
arrivals and the sale to follow.”
Llesho shot him a piercing glance and
pushed away from the corral. “You seem to know a lot about the slave trade.”
Far more than Llesho found comforting.
Shou twitched a shoulder, not quite
shrugging. “I keep my eyes open for the odd Thebin prince on the resale market.
It’s easier than fighting for them, or stealing them.”
“Is that what you did?” Llesho asked him,
thinking back to the battle with Master Markko, and Jaks lying dead. “You
fought for me?”
“Not to own you,” Shou clarified his
statement. “But to see you succeed.
“Strategy, Llesho. When Markko attacked the
governor’s compound at Farshore, why didn’t you stay and fight him there?”
General Shou used a tone of voice that
Llesho knew well from his sessions with Lleck, and even the rare discussion
with Habiba. No point in bristling at the suggestion of cowardice. The general
was trying to teach him something, so he needed to answer the question as
stated, not as pride interpreted.
“The governor ordered us to flee,” he said,
but Llesho knew that wasn’t the answer Shou was looking for. “Farshore isn’t my
war. Thebin is.”
That won him a slight nod. “And to save
Thebin, you have to stay alive, and you have to stay free.”
It was Llesho’s turn to nod.
General Shou followed his first question
with a second. “What do you think would happen if the emperor tried to shut
down the slave market?”
“The slave trade would end,” Llesho
answered immediately.
‘JAnd the slavers?“
“Would be unhappy, but would have to find
something else to trade.”
“The Harn have a habit of turning their
displeasure on the one who displeases them.”
The Harn. Who stole or traded for human
flesh to sell for money in Shan’s marketplace. Who had laid waste to Thebin.
“The Harn control the high passes and,
through them, all the trade that moves between Shan and the West. They hardly
need to trade in human lives anymore.”
“For the Harn, the trade value of the
slaves they sell has always been secondary.”
Llesho frowned. That didn’t make sense. Oh.
Yes, it did. The enemies of the Harn feared not only death in battle, but the
public humiliation of the slave block and lives spent in misery. Better to be
dead.
The Harn would not give up the trade
peacefully, but that did not leave Shan free of responsibility. “If there were
no market, there would be no slaves,” Llesho insisted. “If Shan is willing to sell
its soul for peace, the Harn have no need for battle. They have already won.”
General Shou met his gaze briefly, then
dropped his eyes again. “You shame me,” he said.
“Shan shames you,” Llesho corrected him. “I
only point out what is already true.”
“I know. But we cannot resolve the issue
today. Did you have a plan for rescuing the prince, your brother?”
“I will need the price of a bid,” Llesho
pointed out.
“That is not a problem. I have more money
than I have a use for.”
Llesho shook his head. “I didn’t come all
this way to trade one master for another, for myself or for Adar.”
“What do you suggest?” General Shou made it
clear in his tone that Llesho could offer no other solution. “You have won no
purses in the arena, and wouldn’t have the price of your own freedom if her
ladyship demanded it.”
“I have this.” Llesho reached into his
mouth and plucked out the pearl that Lleck had pressed into the space of his
lost tooth. As he drew it out between his fingers, the black pearl returned to
its original size, and he had to open his mouth wider to extract it. When he
held it out to General Shou, the pearl almost filled the palm of his hand.
“Will the slave traders accept the pearl itself as payment, or must I exchange
it for money before I approach them?”
“Where did you get that?” General Shou’s
voice shook, and his face paled so quickly that Llesho thought the man would
faint dead away in the gutter. Shou reached out to touch the gleaming black
surface, but pulled back as if it had burned his fingers.
“Lleck gave it to me,” Llesho said. “He was
dead at the time. I was in the bay, and he put the pearl in my mouth to hide
it, then told me to find my brothers. If it will pay for Adar’s freedom, I
consider it well spent.”
“I think not,” the general whispered. He closed
Llesho’s own fingers around his treasure, and slowly, as if he acted against
his own will, he dropped to one knee and bowed his head over the fist Llesho
clasped around the pearl.
“Adar shall be my gift to the goddess,” he
said. Rising from his obeisance, he asked, “Does anyone know that you have
this?”
Llesho shook his head.
“I am sure Master Markko suspects,” the
general muttered. “It would explain his interest in you.” Shou could not pull
his gaze from the hand that held the pearl, and Llesho saw the troubled longing
in that gaze, and the moment when that soul-deep inner conflict came to rest.
“Tell Master Den,” the general advised him.
“Explain how you came by it, and stand by his counsel. As for Habiba, Master
Den will know what is best. Say nothing to anyone until you have conferred with
Master Den.”
Llesho hesitated. He hadn’t wanted to share
this secret with anyone, but Shou had caught him off-balance. He didn’t know
how he would buy his brother’s freedom without the pearl.
“First, we must see to Adar,” Llesho
insisted. “And if we are not going to trade the pearl for his freedom, I am
left without a plan.”
“Fortunately, you have a general in your
retinue, my prince. As I said, I have the price, and your brother shall be my
gift to the goddess. More important, I have a plan for acquiring the prince
without arousing suspicion. You will not like it, however.”
“Strategy, General? I thought you honored a
trickster god.”
“If winning doesn’t matter to you, we can
return to the palace now,” the general shot back. “I know very little about
honor, perhaps, but a great deal about winning.”
“So, what is this master plan?” Shou looked
away, and Llesho followed his gaze to the counting house, more solidly built
than the dormitory. Llesho would have bet that the roof didn’t leak either.
“The traders and the money counters will be
preparing for tomorrow’s shipment. They know me as a merchant and a slave
owner. If I demonstrate an interest in Thebins, and ask about a Thebin healer,
they may be inclined to open their records for the privilege of brokering the
sale.”
“I assume you have a role for me in this
charade?” He wasn’t stupid; he’d figured out his part in the game as soon as
the general had spoken. It didn’t even surprise him. But he wanted Shou to say
it out loud.
The general threw down the challenge with a
little smile. He didn’t seem to regret a thing. “You will play my slave, of
course. My dear slave. They won’t find you on their books, but haven’t I made
much of the urchin once purchased in the market at Wuchow?”
General Shou’s whole posture shifted; his
expression grew soft and lost the keen edge that intelligence gave it. He
stroked Llesho’s face with a feather-touch of the backs of his fingers, and
Llesho flinched like he’d been struck. But he resisted the urge to move away
from the touch and even managed to drop his lashes provocatively.
Shou laughed. “I think that should do. Just
try not to kill me before we’ve found your brother.”
Kill him, no. But he had questions for this
master of disguise—like why a general would need such skills. Answers would
have to wait. Llesho didn’t like it, but he couldn’t afford to anger his only
chance to secure Adar’s freedom.
When he had last been to the slave market,
Llesho had known only the dormitory and the holding pens, and the block in the
market square. Unlike the parts of it he had seen, the countinghouse had a
sturdy air. Inside, dark and solid wood gave weight to the entry hall. There
were no chairs, but a gong on a small table invited the visitor to announce his
presence. General Shou, playing the part of a merchant and slave connoisseur,
struck the gong with its muffled hammer. A small woman with greased-back hair
and a voluminous coat quickly answered the call, sliding open a panel to the
inner chambers with a low bow.
“Your wish, good sir?” she asked, peering
up at General Shou with a simper. She had the sharp, carved features of the
Harn; Llesho’s flesh crawled at
Shou took a moment to pet Llesho with a
fatuous grin on his face before addressing the trader.
“I have developed a partiality for
Thebins,” he smirked. “And I am in the market to buy.”
The woman gave Llesho a knowing leer, but
schooled her features to a thoughtful frown before answering Shou’s question.
“It may be difficult to serve the master if
he wishes a match for the boy. The age is in demand across types, and one must
make a profit where one can, you understand. Our entire stock, except for
special orders, must go to the block. I could get you a good price for this
one, though, and we can place an order for a set, if you’d like: two boys, or a
girl and a boy if you prefer. Special orders, for which we must charge a
premium, you understand, take at least six months to fill, but I am sure we
could make an arrangement for resale of this one after the replacements arrive.
Subject to the usual, of course. Contract is void if property is destroyed or
damaged in a manner that negatively effects market value.”
By the time the old flesh peddler had run
down, Llesho was trembling under General Shou’s hand. The general gave his
shoulder a warning squeeze, but he needn’t have worried. Llesho’s rage and
terror seemed to please the woman.
“He still has spunk. That’s unusual. Some
would pay extra for that, if he isn’t broken before they take possession.”
“I did not come to sell,” Shou reminded
her. “And I am not looking for another young one. The upkeep, you know. Eating
all the time at this age, and far too much energy for an old man like me.”
He smiled sweetly, and the trader replied
with a flattering comment on the gentleman’s youth, but quickly deferred to his
taste. “Of course. What would you prefer, then, good sir?”
“I have several Thebins in my retinue, and
would like to purchase a healer of their kind to tend to their needs, and
perhaps offer my house the novelty of his advice,” Shou answered. “Medicine is
an especial passion of mine.”
“And Thebin healers are reputed to have a
special knowledge of herbs that ease the mind,” she added conspiratorially. “Of
course, healers are likewise rare—even rarer than boys! Frankly, I don’t expect
to see one in tomorrow’s selection. I could be wrong, though. Would you like me
to send a note to your dwelling with the particulars about likely merchandise
in the morning?”
“No need,” General Shou answered. “I will
send a servant for your list myself. In the meantime, perhaps if you have
record of Thebin healers in the area, a current owner might be interested in a
brokered sale?”
The trader considered him for a moment. “I
have been a part of this market for more than ten summers,” she said, “and can
remember only two Thebin healers to cross our block. Three if you count a woman
herbalist with a reputation for poisons.”
“I would be interested in either of the two
reputable healers,” Shou agreed, and added, “I have an expert in poisons on my
staff already, and would not trust such a sensitive task to a Thebin anyway.”
“Wise, sir.” She considered him
thoughtfully, watching the glitter of jewels on the fingers of the hand
absently toying with Llesho’s hair. “If sir is not concerned about the price,
perhaps we can be of service.”
“I am very rich,” General Shou flirted with
his wealth. “And I can indulge my whims.”
The trader led them down a hall so
luxuriously appointed that even the clink of coins from the strong room
whispered in subdued tones. Finally, she slid aside a screen and led them into
an elegant room lined with shelves on which scrolls were piled.
“Have a seat,” she invited him. General
Shou took the proffered chair and glared at Llesho when he would have taken
another. Llesho bit off the comment that had almost leaped from his lips, and
stood behind the general. Steeling himself to the intimate gesture, he rested
his hand on the general’s shoulder, which won him a sweet smile. The general
placed a hand over Llesho’s, holding it steady, and gave the Harn trader his
attention once again.
“Here we have it.” She ran a finger quickly
down a list, explaining, “We keep a record of the special ones by skill and by
origin. Crossing the two lists, I can locate your preferred merchandise. And
here, two, like I said.”
She lifted a scroll from a high dusty shelf
and another from a shelf lower down, on which no dust had settled. “No,” she
corrected herself. “Not two Thebin healers, but one, a slave with the name
Adar, traded some nine summers ago. The same came to block again about three
summers ago, when the original buyer lost his property to debauchery. Had a
reputation for being headstrong, as I recall, but that had been beaten out of
him by the time he came to market again. Yeesss. That’s the one. About
thirty-five summers, so he is too old to pair with your boy for a pretty set,
but we can work on that in a separate order for you.”
Llesho shuddered for his brother. For much
of the period of his bondage Llesho’s treatment had been harsh and debasing,
but until Markko he had never been singled out for personal humiliation by his
owner. He had hoped that Adar had fared better. Now he hoped only to see his
brother alive through whatever damage slavery had done him. The general’s
pressure on his hand warned him against voicing some protest.
“I am sure you will strike a fair bargain
for me, Mistress Trader.” Shou rose from his chair and bowed.
“Fair for rare.” She reminded him that the
price would be high.
Shou returned her a casual shrug. “I will
not barter the boy, but your owner may state his price in gold or silver. You
will, of course, add your percentage to the price.”
“As you will, Master.” She wrote out a note
to confirm the commission and handed it to the general, then wrote another and
called for a servant, who attended her at once.
“I will see you tomorrow, then, good sir?”
She led the way to the front of the countinghouse, and opened the sliding panel
into the entry room again.
“Tomorrow,” General Shou promised, and with
a last bow, he waited until Llesho had opened the door for him, and they
departed.
“You did that very smoothly,” Llesho
commented when they were well away from the countinghouse.
“Is that a compliment on my skills as an
actor, or an accusation that I own slaves.
“You tell me.”
The general huffed an exhalation—whether of
guilt or frustration, Llesho could not tell. Shou kept his face clear of all
expression.
“If you are asking, do I own slaves, the
answer is ‘yes,’ though I believe I have always behaved honorably toward them.”
They had entered the market square. Llesho
noted the noise and bustle at the edges of his awareness, but his senses had
tunneled down to one focus: the slave block at the market’s center leaked blood
around the edges of his vision. “I don’t see how you can use the words ‘slave’
and ‘honor’ in the same statement,” he objected.
“Old customs are hard to break.” It seemed
that Shou was trying to justify his actions, but his next words were a
surprise: “Lately, though, I have come to believe you may be right. For the
most part, however, it was acting.”
“I think that worries me more.” Llesho
didn’t look at the general. He would see only the face Shou wanted him to, so
looking for clues in the man’s eyes or the depth of the lines above his brow
seemed pointless. “I don’t know what to trust of your motives. Have you lied to
me as easily as you lied to the slave trader?”
“Not as easily or as well as I would have
liked, obviously, or you would trust me more.” The general laughed. “Are you
hungry?”
For a moment Llesho wondered if General
Shou had simply lost his mind. But he was
hungry. Very. The smells coming from the food stalls on his left reminded him
that he’d had breakfast a long time ago, and he’d eaten nothing since. The
general gave him a shove in the direction of those wonderful smells, and
suddenly Llesho’s awareness of his surroundings opened up.
The market square was huge. He had thought
so looking out on it from the slave block as a child, and his impression of its
size hadn’t changed much. Now, however, he was conscious of the excitement
buzzing in the colors and the noise and the smells. This, much more than the
square in front of the palace, seemed to be the center of Shan. They passed a
booth where bits of meat were roasting on skewers over an open flame, but the
general didn’t stop.
“He has no butcher’s bill, and his shop is
remarkably free of rats,” General Shou explained.
He went farther, toward a stall surrounded
by customers pressing their demands for service. He waved a hand with two
fingers raised at the fat old woman behind the counter, on which a variety of
fillings sat beside a stack of flatbreads. The woman smiled her recognition,
and had their order ready by the time they had cut through the crowd to reach
her.
“Little Shou!” she hailed him. “I do not
see you for a full summer, and you appear at my stall hungry as ever and with
an outlander at your heels! What have you been up to this time?”
“I’ve traveled the wide world ‘round
looking for the equal to your flatbread, Dark, and found only a friend to share
your treasure with.”
“I can believe it,” she answered him with a
laugh, handing Llesho a flatbread covered with a combination of hot and cold
fillings that made his mouth water. “He’s nothing but a stick—buy him two,
before he fades away to a shadow.”
“That wouldn’t do at all,” Shou agreed,
pressing a few copper coins into her hand. He bit into his own flatbread and
motioned for Llesho to take the extra that she had wrapped in paper for him.
She wished them enjoyment of the market and
added, “Take him to see the performers over by the Temple to The Seven. The
puppets have a play that reenacts the ascension of the new emperor, and a woman
with a performing bear has drawn favorable audiences enough to annoy the cloth
merchants.”
“Why don’t the cloth merchants like the
bear dancer?” Llesho asked her around a mouthful of flat-bread and meat.
“Her audiences block their entrances, so
their business suffers when her bear dances. He is a very droll bear, however.”
Llesho wasn’t in the mood for watching
bears dancing. He’d lost Mara to the dragon and Lleck first to death and later
to the rapid current of Golden Dragon River, and the memory of his lost friends
still hurt. That was all before he’d met General Shou, of course. The general
couldn’t know about Llesho’s harrowing escape at the river, or his anguish at
watching the healer give her life for his safety. So Shou headed straight for
the knot of laughing people at the steps of a low, shabby temple.
Pushing his way through the crowd which had
al-ready begun to disperse, Llesho followed. When they reached the steps of the
temple where the performers worked, the bear dancer had already gone. Shou
stopped to chat companionably with a temple priest in threadbare garments who
gathered up the offerings of the day from the worn wooden steps. No thick
packets of cash changed hands here, but a flower, a bowl of rice, and one of
vegetables fresh from a supplicant’s garden. The priest interrupted his
conversation to give thanks for each as he gathered it into his basket.
Llesho gave the area a quick scan—the bear
dancer could not have disappeared so quickly—and caught a glimpse of her
turning a corner between two vast warehouses almost before he recognized her.
“Mara!” He followed and discovered a short
alley leading away from the market square. The alley had collected a few people
on their way home, but Llesho saw nothing of the woman or the bear, who must be
Lleck if he had seen the bear dancer aright.
“Llesho!” General Shou caught up with him
and grabbed his arm, and he couldn’t be a good enough spy to fake the near
panic in his eyes. “By ChiChu, boy, don’t disappear like that.”
“I am not the trickster here,” Llesho
answered tartly, but he knew he owed the man a sensible answer. Unfortunately,
he didn’t have one to give. “I know her. The bear dancer. I saw her die.”
He didn’t add, And if it is she, her bear used to be my teacher. He had
already given the man more wonder tales to believe than one afternoon could
support, and didn’t want to add any more fuel to that fire.
Shou peered down the alley as if he could
see those few short minutes into the past and discover where the woman and her
bear had gone, but his answer addressed the present. “Either you know her and
she didn’t die after all, or your friend is truly dead, and memory plays tricks
on you.”
“I saw her die at Golden Dragon River,”
Llesho repeated, “and I saw her slip into this alley just now.”
“If your dead are walking the streets of
Shan,” the general said with a colder, harder tone than Llesho had heard him
use before, “we had better find out why.”
“How?” Llesho asked him.
The general’s expression had closed around
his thought. “Your companions from the road should have reached the palace by
now,” he said. “Perhaps they can shed some light on the question.”
Llesho didn’t know how his friends could
help him. They hadn’t seen the Dragon swallow Mara whole, and hadn’t seen her
in the marketplace either, but they had known Mara, and Lleck, too. They could
at least confirm he was not mad when he told Shou about the reincarnation of
his teacher into the form of a bear. Habiba had seen the dragon eat Mara in
payment for their passage across the river, however, and he had seemed sure
that Llesho would see the healer again.
“We need Habiba.” General Shou winced.
“I thought he was your friend.” Habiba had
introduced him to the general, and Llesho left the question hanging: What lie is about to catch up with you now?
“We are allies.” Shou scrunched up his face in a very unmilitary show of mixed
feelings. “Habiba often does not agree with my methods.”
Llesho set aside that objection with a tart
reply. “That makes two of us.”
The general laughed. “Don’t tell Habiba
that when you see him.” He led Llesho through the alley rather than back the
way they had come, winding around the marketplace rather than through it. They
met fewer passersby away from the square, though once a sharp-eyed Harn shoved
by them with a sneer for Shou in his disguise as a merchant. The general gave
no indica-tion he had noticed the slight, but he uttered a single, sharp word
when Llesho’s hand wandered to his throat. Killing a single Harn trader
wouldn’t gain the prince anything but a moment’s satisfaction, but it could
cost him everything.
A wide boulevard emptied into the market
square above the slave block. Crossing, Llesho did not let his gaze linger on
the source of his nightmares, except as a reminder of his purpose here. He had
a general at his side and tomorrow he would find his most beloved brother,
Prince Adar. All he had to do was stand by and let it happen when General Shou
bought Adar as a slave. He hoped he wasn’t making the biggest mistake of his
life. Habiba, and even Mara, could wait.
Chapter Thirty-three
OHOU’S winding path returned them to a
secluded spot where a cluster of low bushes obscured the bottom half of the
palace wall. Pulling away some branches, the general revealed a wayside shrine,
carved in relief into the pink stone wall.
“Turn around,” the general instructed
Llesho absently, while he studied the carvings intently. “I haven’t used this
passageway for years; it may take a few minutes to remember the sequence.”
Llesho did as he was told, but after a
moment Shou gave a thoughtful grunt. With the grinding of stone shifting upon
stone, the shrine swung inward to reveal a dark tunnel. The palace walls seemed
so riddled with the things that Llesho wondered why they hadn’t fallen in on
themselves already, but he followed General Shou inside, took up a torch when
it was handed to him, and helped to push the massive door back into place. When
they were in pitch darkness, Llesho heard the snap of a match firing, saw the
tiny flame, and watched it take hold on the fuel-soaked end of Shou’s torch.
The general waited until his torch burned steadily, then fired the one Llesho
carried.
They walked some hundred paces down the
straight passage, until they came to a dead end at a blank wall. Shou found a
latch in what seemed to Llesho to be a flaw in the pointing of the rough stone,
and another hidden door swung open.
“I used to sneak out of the palace by this
route when I was about your age.” Shou laughed softly as he led the way up a
narrow stairway of age-worn stone. “Good to see it hasn’t been discovered since
then.”
“You lived in the palace?” Llesho asked
sharply. Of course, only a high-ranking nobleman could aspire to become a
general of the Imperial Guard, but the idea suddenly made him nervous. Shou was
also a spy, and when the general had come upon him in the park, Llesho had been
too free with his opinions about the emperor. And he’d shown the man Lleck’s
pearl. Being a spy didn’t make him a thief, but he’d clearly known more about
the nacreous gem than he was telling.
However, General Shou was nodding. “I was
raised here. Had anyone asked what title I wanted attached to my life, I would
have told them explorer. Of course, that was not an option even then.”
Llesho thought that the general had too
much excitement in his life as it was. “All I ever wanted was Thebin,” he
answered. Not quite a reprimand, or a complaint about the unfairness of the
world, it nevertheless made him uncomfortable to have said it out loud.
Fortunately, General Shou did not take the
comment as a slight. “Then we will have to win Thebin back for you, won’t we?”
he promised, and led the prince down another turning.
They came out of the tunnel into a chamber
shrouded in richly decorated banners hanging from ceiling to floor. Low couches
had been pushed to the edges of the room, and a meeting table and chairs sat in
the center. Lling lay in a restless sleep on one of the couches, her color
flushed and sweat beading her temples. Hmishi sat next to her, occasionally
stroking the hair from her forehead. They both still wore their Thebin
uniforms, now stained with the dust and grime of the road—only the bandage on
Lling’s arm was clean and fresh. In the chairs, an equally travel-worn Bixei
and Kaydu had draped themselves in poses of exhaustion and disappointment.
Little Brother, Kay-du’s monkey companion, sat in the middle of the table,
peeling a banana, while Habiba paced nervously back and forth by the door.
Little Brother was the first to notice that
Llesho and General Shou had entered through the secret passage. He dropped his
banana and began to hop up and down and screech the alarm. Suddenly, the
companions were on their feet, reaching for weapons they did not have. Even
Lling roused from her sleep and half rose from her couch.
“Lord General!” Habiba bowed low when Shou
stepped from behind a long, floating banner. “Or should I say, Lord Merchant?”
When Llesho followed, his guards shouted
his name—“Llesho!”—together. All but Lling ran to greet him, and she grinned
smugly from her couch.
“So you found him,” Habiba remarked. “Did
retrieving him cost you much?”
“Not yet, but I expect it will cost me a
tael or two before we are done,” the general confirmed with a sigh. He took a
chair and waited while the companions reassured themselves that Llesho was
indeed safe and sound.
“Where were you?” Kaydu demanded, and Bixei
exclaimed angrily, “We have been looking for you since noonday! We thought
you’d been kidnapped.”
Hmishi just shook his head. “He wandered
off. I told you he wandered off.”
“And I told you he would turn up in his own
time,” Lling reminded them.
Hmishi pressed her to lie down again, but
she resisted. “Habiba says you need rest,” he scolded.
“What’s the matter with Lling?” Llesho
interrupted the welcome with his own question, directed at Habiba. He sat down
in the chair between Bixei and Kaydu and tugged on Kaydu’s tunic, urging her to
sit back down as well.
Lling answered the question tartly for
herself. “Lling’s wound became infected. It is now well on its way to healing
and no cause for alarm.”
The look that passed between Hmishi and the
witch told a different tale. Habiba shrugged. “She needs to keep the wound clean
and the arm still, or she risks losing it.”
“Have you alerted the emperor’s physician?”
Shou asked.
“I don’t want a fuss made over a stupid cut
on my arm!” Lling snapped. The skin above and below the bandage was pink.
Llesho guessed it was hot to the touch, but it was not unduly swollen. He
looked for the telltale red streaks that would indicate the infection had
invaded her blood, and was relieved to find none.
Habiba graced her with a sour grimace.
“That won’t be necessary, Lord General. But if you could recommend a good
locksmith? I am beginning to fear that nothing short of restraints will ensure
the cure is taken.”
Llesho smothered his laughter. Lling glared
at him, but she did permit Hmishi to help her lie down again on the couch.
“Tell me about your trip,” Llesho asked his
companions when the greetings were over. “Did you run into any trouble on the
road?”
“Since Markko traveled with you,” Kaydu
pointed out, “we didn’t expect much trouble for ourselves.”
“We tried to catch up with you.” Lling
spoke up from her couch. “But you were traveling too fast for the horses to
follow, and we didn’t want to leave them behind.”
Llesho winced. It was his fault she was in
danger from her wound, because she had neglected her own care to protect him.
Kaydu nodded, glaring at him. Well he
should wince, she seemed to say
“Our troubles began when we arrived at the
palace,” Bixei said, “and found that the emperor was away, our charge had
disappeared, Master Markko had likewise vanished, and no one could find General
Shou. Oh, and Master Den had gone out to see if he could find any one of the
missing people.”
“We thought that Markko must have taken
you,” Kaydu added. “We were trying to figure out where he might have gone when
the general materialized through a solid wall with you in tow. He has our
thanks, but I’d still like to know where you were.”
“I’d like to know that myself.” Master Den,
with his usual good timing, chose that moment to open their door. He glowered
at them all with a sweeping flash of his eyes. Once he made sure the door was
securely closed behind him, he settled the disfavor of his frown on Llesho.
“Markko takes his ease in an unpleasant
eating establishment in the city,” he said. “The place has a bad reputation for
serving the Harnish slavers who frequent the market, and Markko does not dine
alone. The traders who attend him have a Harnish look about them, and they seem
to be on familiar terms.
“I expect he will be returning soon, and
some of us should be in our rooms on the other side of the palace when he does.
Before we go our separate ways, however, we’d all like to know what Llesho has
been up to.”
Llesho stared down at the table, as if the
grain of the wood had mesmerized him. Now that it came to telling them, he
hesitated, as if speaking about it aloud could somehow put him back in the
slave pens. But it had to be done. “We went to the slave market.” Three of his
companions went very still. Kaydu, who had been born free in Thousand Lakes
Province, had never seen the slave block or the pens, but she had seen the
products of them and she respected the silence of her friends. Little Brother,
with the sensitivity of his monkey kind, edged closer to Llesho. The monkey
chittered softly, and reached to touch Llesho’s hair in a gesture of comfort.
Llesho took the monkey’s hand and smiled at the distraction. “I think we have
found Adar, my brother,” he said. “You ‘think’?” Habiba pressed him. “You do
not know him?”
Llesho stared at the witch, trembling
suddenly; the afternoon became confused in his mind with his experience as a
child on the slave block, and he could not speak.
General Shou watched him with concern while
offering an explanation in his place. “Llesho posed as a slave, and I as a
merchant with a taste for Thebins and a wish for a Thebin healer to tend my
small collection.” His smile was thin and dangerous. “They have such a one on
their books, and have agreed to broker a sale with the current owner for me.”
Kaydu looked from Llesho to her father,
balancing the need for secrecy with Llesho’s need for reassurance, but her
father gave her no signal on which to base a judgment. Finally, she decided
that Llesho ought to know. “We brought five hundred soldiers with us in case we
had to fight to get you out of here, but we left them outside the city wall until
we had scouted out the situation.”
“And how long have you told them to wait
until they are to attack the palace and rescue you?” General
Shou asked. His voice was harder than
Llesho had ever heard it, and the man’s piercing gaze made him quail.
“Until midnight, tonight,” Kaydu answered.
She sounded sure of herself, but her eyes grew dark and calculating. She didn’t
breathe while she waited to hear the general’s response.
“Then perhaps you should send them a
message.” General Shou spoke very softly, but the steel of a blade rang in his
voice.
Kaydu nodded. “Of course. The question is,
what message to send. Will we need them tomorrow to secure Llesho’s brother?”
“I think a few bits of gold will work
better than a foreign army,” General Shou answered her. “As an officer in the
Imperial Guard, I can tell you that if your soldiers enter the city, the
emperor will have no choice but to consider it an invasion by a hostile force.
Why set friend against friend when I have gold enough to spare and a willing
broker for the bargaining?”
“You have a plan, I see.” Master Den took a
couch by the wall nearest where General Shou and Llesho had entered. Llesho
figured that was no coincidence; he wondered how much Den knew about the
palace. Did his teacher know the emperor himself?
“Part of one,” Shou admitted. “I should be
able to buy Adar with little trouble, and there are officials enough in the
palace to prepare the manumission papers. But there is the problem of Master
Markko.”
“He may be working with the emperor against
us,” Bixei suggested.
General Shou shook his head. “The emperor
is not so easily fooled or frightened as Master Markko may believe.”
“But Llesho must still petition the emperor
for help to cross the Ham lands and free Thebin,” Kaydu insisted.
She hadn’t included herself in that goal,
and Llesho wondered if, beyond Shan, he would be traveling alone. Well, not
alone if they succeeded tomorrow. Adar would be with him.
“I believe the emperor may sympathize with
Llesho’s petition,” the general confirmed, only to dash their hopes again: “It
may not be in the best interest of the Shan Empire—or Thebin—to announce an
alliance, however.”
“Then what was the point of our mad dash to
the capital?” Llesho demanded, frustrated.
General Shou looked at him as if he’d gone
quite mad, and even Habiba had the grace to look embarrassed for him.
“A hypothetical problem in strategy,
Llesho,” the general explained as if to a particularly dim child. “In the name
of the governor of Thousand Lakes Province, for the honor of his daughter, the
widow of the murdered governor of Farshore Province, a witch marches at the
head of his master’s troops. In his train he bears a boy whom all know to be
the exiled son of the murdered King Khorgan of Thebin.
“In pursuit come the armies of Farshore
Province, led by the magician who has murdered that province’s governor in the
name of Lord Yueh, the usurper. This murderer proclaims himself regent of a
child who may or may not be born to the usurper’s widow. If the child exists at
all, it may be the usurper’s own child, born out of the union of husband and
wife and blessed by the goddess, or it may be the murderer’s child, forced upon
the grieving widow. Or it may be the product of a secret union plotted by the
widow and her magician lover, to replace her husband with his murderer.
“Regardless, the magician who has murdered
three lords of the empire finds himself within the city of Shan, as does the
witch who serves the widow of a fourth lord, also dead.”
“Her ladyship fled Farshore in defense of
her honor, to escape Master Markko,” Llesho pointed out. “When you lay out all
these murders in a row, keep in mind that she is sinned upon and injured no
one.”
General Shou nodded in agreement. “Which
may be a ruse, but is likely not to be, or she would not have entrusted her
father’s troops to her dead husband’s chief steward and witch. Unless—” he gave
Habiba a thin smile,“—that witch is himself the widow’s lover.”
Habiba bowed in acknowledgment of the
point, but his eyes held a dangerous glint. “I would not have the lady’s honor
doubted, even in the name of a lesson,” he answered mildly.
“To do so, one must assume that all the
ladies in the East have fallen under the sway of the overseers to their
respective husbands’ properties, since Lady Yueh and Lady Chin-shi likewise
find themselves widowed.” Master Den harrumphed, as if he found the game they
played too tedious for words. “And, like her ladyship, they now find their
husbands’ lands and possessions in the hands of Master Markko.”
“Why, then, does Master Habiba march on
Shan?” General Shou asked. “And why carrying the heir to a vanquished kingship
in his train? And why fight a bloody battle in the shadow of the emperor’s
throne and bring his troops to the very walls of the empire’s chief city? An
emperor must suspect that such a one wishes, perhaps, to seize the throne for
himself, or for the foreign princeling he dangles on a string.”
“Perhaps,” Llesho said, taking his time to
formulate his answer.
His companions waited, watching him
intently. They were all familiar with lessons, and realized that more hung in
the balance with this examination than a cuff on the ear for inattention.
“Perhaps,” Llesho began again, “her
ladyship’s father, the appointed governor of Thousand Lakes Province, wished
his emperor to know of the terrible destruction that has overtaken his
neighbors and threatens his own province, and the very empire itself. With such
danger all around him, he could not risk a simple messenger, but must send a
delegation of sufficient stature to persuade Shan of the threat all the
provinces of the empire now face.”
Habiba gave Llesho a bow, and an ironic
smile. “Perhaps,” the witch began, matching the diffidence of Llesho’s own
answer, “her ladyship concluded that she could not protect a young prince, beset
as she was by the enemies of her husband, enemies who wished to acquire the boy
for their own mysterious ends. She might then choose to deliver the boy to the
emperor, who might, in his wisdom, have a better idea of what to do with a
young and propertyless king.”
“None of it makes any sense.” Llesho threw
himself back into his chair. “Even if Markko could somehow put me on the throne
of Thebin, he must know I would never act as his figurehead. He can kill me,
but he cannot make me obey.”
“He wants your power,” Habiba insisted,
“the divine power that is your gift from the goddess—”
“I have no such power!” Llesho insisted,
and blushed that he had raised his voice. “Excuse me, I did not mean
disrespect. But if that’s what Markko wanted, he should have waited until after
I had completed the vigil of my sixteenth summer.”
“Your power as a symbol of kingship will do
if that is all he can reach,” Habiba conceded, “though her ladyship has
conveyed to me her certainty that your vigil did, in fact, succeed in wooing
the goddess.”
“Then she is more in the confidence of the
goddess than the professed bridegroom. But what does any of this have to do with the
emperor’s decision not to grant us an audience or accept our petition?”
“If the emperor had any doubts about you at
all, Llesho, you would be quartered here with your friends and enemies alike,
and not in the private quarters where you pose a threat to the emperor
himself,” General Shou pointed out practically. “But if he acknowledges the
validity of your claim, he must at the same time reject Master Markko’s
opposing petition that you belong to him by right of property in Farshore.”
“And?” Llesho bristled. He’d thought that,
at least, he could gain from his mad dash across Shan Province.
“Markko doesn’t work alone, boy,” Master
Den said. “That was clear at his dinner table, if we did not know it before.
His connections to Harn likely run much deeper than a chance encounter at an
inn.”
Llesho closed his eyes and let his head
drop against the straight back of his chair. Hundreds had fallen in battle.
Stipes had lost an eye and would never march at Bixei’s side again. Master Jaks
lay buried in a soldiers’ field with no mark upon his grave to proclaim his
bravery or his honor.
“I have thrown away the lives of those who trusted
me to placate a hallucination,” he said. “I should have drowned in the bay
before I ever set out on this fool’s mission.”
“Don’t let self-pity spoil your judgment,”
General Shou chided him. “You have performed a great service for the empire:
Shan is forwarned of the danger within its own borders, from whichever
direction it may come.” He glared at Habiba to show that he hadn’t let the
witch off his hook yet. “And you have already achieved the first part of your
quest. Tomorrow, you will have Prince Adar at your side. And you are in the
imperial city, which is more than the capital of the empire.”
“The head of the trade route to the West,”
Kaydu muttered, and the general smiled.
“The trade caravans must pass through
Kungol, regardless of which power rules there,” Hmishi supplied, with an
answering grin.
General Shou gave a little shrug, his smile
only half-hidden. “If a future general could travel the length of the trade
route by caravan, and explore the city of Kungol unnoticed, so, too, can a
future king.”
“It will be dangerous,” Habiba warned.
Llesho looked at him as if he’d lost his
mind. “Ask Lord Chin-shi how safe it is to do nothing.”
Habiba bowed in acknowledgment. “It had to
be said, though I had no doubt about your answer.”
“Speaking of danger,” Bixei reminded them,
“what is to be done with Markko? We can’t very well hire ourselves onto a
caravan crossing Harn lands with him following, especially if he is working
with the Harn.”
Markko’s power was subtle and strong, and
evil to its very center. Llesho had lost so much to the deadly master already
that he could not be certain he had the strength to overcome the magician, even
if he were willing to die in the attempt. But he had not lost all, yet.
“I saw Mara in the square today,” he
whispered.
“I thought you saw her die,” Hmishi said,
while the rest of the companions held their breath.
“The Golden Dragon swallowed her,” Llesho
confirmed. “Nevertheless, I saw her today, in the square. A vendor said she has
a bear with her, and that the creature dances for coins.”
“Do you think the bear is Lleck?” Lling
asked.
“What else can it be?” Llesho asked.
“It may be a trap, set to snare a prince,”
Habiba warned him.
Kaydu picked up Little Brother from the
table, cradling him in her arms with a sly smile. “But tame bears are not the
only performing animals in Shan. While Llesho and the general are buying the
freedom of Prince Adar, Little Brother and I will find a likely spot on the
square and see what we can find out.”
Master Den nodded his agreement. “If Habiba
and
I take up the charge of keeping Master
Markko away from the various subterfuges of our young soldiers, our plan is
set.“
Habiba signaled the end of their meeting
with a bow to the general. “I will see to standing down the alert among our
guard.”
When he had gone, Llesho followed General
Shou toward the banner behind which they had entered. Kaydu caught him,
however, and laid a hand upon his sleeve before he could make good his escape.
“You are not going anywhere without your guards, Llesho. It’s not that I don’t
trust your security, General Shou,” she bowed politely to the waiting general,
“but Prince Llesho is our responsibility.”
Hmishi tried to pull himself away, but he
could not seem to let go of Lling’s hand. “I can carry her.”
General Shou shook his head. “No one is
coming with us. I’m taking risk enough bringing Llesho through the tunnels. I
won’t hazard the palace or its secrets any further.”
“Then Llesho can stay here,” Lling
insisted.
“And Master Markko?” Shou asked. Markko had
rooms in the guest quarters just as they did.
Master Den had lied, or not known about the
tunnels, when he said there was no access to the private sleeping rooms of the
palace. But what Master Den had figured out, Master Markko might also.
“Rest easy,” Master Den assured the
companions. “Between us, the general and I can keep even Llesho alive.”
With a last reassuring smile, Master Den
nudged Llesho toward the secret door behind the wall hanging. General Shou led
the way, and the three were back in the tunnels, following a twisting course
that Llesho could not recall from one turn to the next. Master Den, he noticed,
did not hesitate or require confirming directions.
Finally, they stopped at another blank wall
which opened to the general’s cautious probing, and Llesho tumbled out into the
locked room that adjoined his own, a study lined with books and strange
artifacts from many distant lands.
Master Den followed him with more dignity.
“Sleep well, my prince.” He gave Llesho a deep bow, and left the general alone
with Llesho in the study.
“You played a difficult part, and did it
well today.” The general pulled back the bolts and opened the door for Llesho
to pass into his own room. “Ring for the servants to fetch you a meal, so that
you can be officially accounted for. No need for explanations; the servants are
discreet, and none will ever know save Master Den and your confederates that
you were absent for much of the day. As for the trinket you would trade for
your brother’s freedom, the fewer who know that you have it, the safer will be
both the bauble and its bearer.
“Now get some rest. I’ll leave word for you
in the morning.”
With that he closed the door. The walls
were thick, so Llesho could not hear the general’s departing footsteps, but
when he tried the door, he found it unlocked, and when he opened it, the room
beyond was empty.
Chapter Thirty-four
IN the morning, Llesho found a folded note
sitting on a suit of clothes laid out for him to wear. The note said only, “The
garden. One hour.”
He had a good idea who had put it there,
and the garden must mean the altar of ChiChu at the Imperial Water Garden. But
he didn’t know how long the note had been waiting for him to wake up. With a
groan, he decided he didn’t have time for breakfast. Instead, he hurriedly
pulled on the white quilted breeches and embroidered red silk jacket that
General Shou meant him to wear. The black pearl he had received from Lleck was
still where he had hidden it; he put it in the inside pocket of the jacket.
Then, slipping his feet into a pair of woven sandals, he headed for the secret
tunnels that would lead him to the palace square and the garden beyond.
As they had the day before, the guards he
passed showed no interest in where he was going. The sun was well up when he
slipped into the square, but few people were yet about their business or
worship, and he made his way with few eyes to notice his departure. He soon
found himself standing alone in front of the waterfall at the center of the
Imperial Water Garden that represented Thousand Lakes Province in the city of
Shan. General Shou was not there as Llesho had expected, nor was anyone else
about who might have left him the note. For a moment he felt the prickle of
danger raise the hair on his neck. Then he heard Bixei, talking to someone as
he drew closer to Llesho’s position.
“Are you sure this is a good idea?” Bixei
said, and Llesho heard a soft murmur in reply. Then the two came into sight.
General Shou was dressed in robes of even more outrageous richness than the day
before, and Bixei wore a suit of clothes almost identical to Llesho’s, except
that his embroidered jacket was of blue silk rather than red.
“Is what a good idea?” Llesho asked. He
didn’t have to stand up because he hadn’t bothered to sit while he waited;
didn’t want to cover the seat of his white pants with dust before they’d even
got started. “Kaydu went to the market square this morning to find out about
the dancing bear,” Bixei answered. “Hmishi is tending Lling, who is well enough
this morning to insist upon rising, but not sufficiently improved to actually
get out of bed. Habiba and Master Den have both gone out of the city to check
on the troops waiting there, which has left no one watching Master Markko.”
“That is not entirely correct.” General
Shou did not explain what he meant by that. He studied Llesho carefully, and
instructed, “Tuck in your chin. You must at least try to look like you are
afraid of me, Llesho, or I will never be able to hold my head up in the slave
markets again.”
“How can you carry yourself with pride while
buying and selling human beings?” Llesho snapped at the general, but raised his
right hand in a gesture of surrender. “Uncalled for, I know. I owe you this
chance to find Adar. It is not my place to speak as your
“No, it isn’t,” Shou replied, and his tone
was so distant, and so regal that Llesho had to look at him twice to find the
general he knew inside the noble stranger who had briefly taken his place.
Truly a disciple of the trickster god, with so many layers to him, Llesho
wondered if he’d met the real man at their center even yet.
Without another word, Shou began walking.
Llesho fell in step behind him, with Bixei at his side. They headed in the
direction opposite from the one they had taken the day before, and Llesho
realized they were going to enter the market square across from the slave
block, nearer to the temple of The Seven. As they moved into the open, he saw
Kaydu, clad in an extravagantly shiny set of clashing clothes, capering about
while Little Brother, in the garb of the Imperial Guard, begged for coins with
his tasseled cap in his paw. The crowd laughed as Kaydu performed some skit in
which the “Imperial Guardsman” chittered at her in monkey language and danced
on her head.
General Shou, Llesho noticed, was trying to
suppress a smile, but his good humor vanished as they approached the Labor
Exchange. The pens were full this morning; Llesho tried not to look at them,
but still he felt the blood leave his face. The auction had already begun.
People from more races than he had known existed, and dressed more strangely
than he could have imagined, crowded the Shan market.
“Here’s a fine specimen, trained in the
crafts of cabinetmaker and coffiner,” the auctioneer wheedled while with one
hand he gestured at the auction block. A naked man with his hands chained
behind his back shivered there in all his desolation. “Presentable enough for
household use, strong enough for heavy labor.”
The crowd of potential buyers surged
forward to inspect the bitter captive displayed for their examina-
Bixei looked about the market square, his
eyes wide as teacups. He had been born into slavery and had come to Pearl
Island by private purchase, so he had no memories of the market or the slave
block to haunt him. Still, he turned his head so that he did not have to look
at the man on the block. “They sound like cattle, moaning in their pens,” he
observed softly.
“Oh, Goddess.” Llesho shivered, his teeth
chattering, as he repeated, again, “Oh, Goddess, I can’t do this, Oh, Goddess.
I can’t.”
Bixei stopped. He reached out to grab
Llesho’s arm, but Llesho pulled away, screaming, “Don’t touch me!” as he
retreated further into the agony of his past. Bixei stared at the ongoing
auction and then at his companion, but he refused to imagine what it had been
like to stand on the slave block.
“I think he is sick!” he informed General
Shou between clenched teeth.
“Llesho!” General Shou wrapped a hand
around his arm and shook him, hard, when he tried to pull away, until his eyes
focused on the general’s face.
A woman came next to the block, trying with
no success to hold her torn dress together over her breasts. Her weeping drew
his gaze, but General Shou took Llesho’s chin in his fingers and held him so
that he could not look to the block.
“That’s right,” Shou insisted. “No one is
going to hurt you today. Just keep your eyes on me. A little pale is
attractive, but we don’t want the trader to think you are diseased.”
Llesho nodded that he understood, and
managed to walk between the slave pens at the general’s side, though he flinched.
Each groan of misery struck him like a blow. Almost, he envied his sister, who
had died in Kungol and had been spared the terror and the misery of the slave
auction.
The countinghouse looked very different on
trading day. The sliding panels that had separated the trading offices from the
entry hall had been pushed aside to make one large room. Now the offices acted
as privacy alcoves for conducting business. The room was crowded with Harnish
traders and brokers shouting sums at one another and waving slips of paper and
purses of coins. Llesho could not figure how they sorted out who had bought and
who had sold and what the money changing hands had purchased.
Gradually, however, he realized that the
desk on the right served a line of buyers awaited the completion of their
transactions. At the desk on the left, sellers received their payment,
calculated their commissions and taxes, and departed. The shouters seemed to be
trying to strike private bargains with buyers and sellers both. The line of
sellers seemed to be mostly Harnish, and Llesho backed away, ducking behind
General Shou as if the traders would recognize him and kill him as the raiders
had murdered his parents and his sister.
No one noticed them at all, however, until
the general raised his voice. “Where is my lady trader?” he insisted with a
nasal twang so high and petulant that Llesho did not recognize him. “She
promises me a set of fine, plump boys, and a healer to doctor them!”
A few of the traders looked up from their
record books and their accounts to give the general’s party a scornful
examination before returning to their work, but no one seemed to care about the
dandy prancing about with his mismatched boys.
Their trader of the day before, however,
heard the demand for her attention, and scuttled over. “My lord!” she tucked
her hands into her sleeves and bowed deeply before General Shou, a grin pasted
on her painted lips. She narrowed her eyes when she caught sight of Bixei, and
grabbed his jaw in her hand to count his teeth. “Hmmm,” she said, taking his
measure with one cold glance.
“Pretty. He’s a bit too tall, and shows
some wear—”
The latter she said with a well-chosen
combination of sly admiration and motherly rebuke. “Some like sweeter flesh,
but I can get you a good price. This one, too,” she pointed to Llesho and
explained, “Thebin stock. He will look like an untried youth well past twenty
summers.”
“I told you yesterday, old woman. I want to
buy, not sell. If you don’t have what I want, I will find it elsewhere.”
Llesho gave the general a sharp glance, but
the woman assured him with much hand-waving that he would have what he wanted.
“This way,” she said, stopping in her tracks to look at Bixei again. “I can
sell you a close match,” she bargained. “Female, if you like that sort. The height
and skin tones are close enough. Brown hair; a bit of bleach would make a
perfect match, but perhaps you’d rather color the girl.”
Bixei sniffed indignantly at her, but Shou
petted him and gave the trader a simpering smile. “Perhaps next time; I’m looking
for Thebins today.”
The trader’s shoulders sagged a bit as the
prospect of a second sale to the rich but foolish customer faded. Llesho
wondered if she would try again, but the trader opened a door at the very back
of the countinghouse, and led them into a room empty but for two men standing
at a small table. The taller, slimmer man with the tanned, chiseled features in
the simply cut jacket and breeches of a gentleman farmer came forward to greet
them. His shorter, darker companion in the robe of a healer remained out of the
light, a little behind his master.
Llesho had schooled his expression to
remain neutral when he saw his brother. He said nothing when the tall man
approached General Shou and bowed formally, but Llesho noted the flare around
the nostrils, the sudden whitening around his lips. Adar recognized him, and
was keeping his own counsel as well.
“I understand you wish to purchase a Thebin
healer,” Adar said, and Llesho stared at him in confusion.
“I am in need of such a one in my
household, yes,” Shou answered, a proprietary hand on Llesho’s shoulder.
The tall man’s eyes narrowed, but he
shrugged in a show of indifference. “I am not selling,” he said.
“You said you were interested in the
offer,” the trader huffed, and Adar, masquerading as a farmer, quieted her with
a gesture. “I am interested,” he said. “I have a mind to purchase the boy.”
“Then perhaps it is time to show our bids.”
Shou pulled a coin purse from his belt and took out three gold coins, which he
set on the table between the bidders.
Adar held out a hand to his attendant. When
the second man moved out of his shadow to put a stack of coins on Adar’s
outstretched palm, Llesho gasped.
“Shokar,” he said, and the tears he had
been holding back spilled down his face. “Shokar.”
Llesho pushed his way passed the general.
Bixei reached to stop him, but he slipped by him, and lunged for the short,
stocky stranger, burying his face in the man’s shoulder.
“Llesho?” the man whispered, and the other,
Adar, stepped in front of the two so that he could hide their embrace at almost
the same moment that Llesho realized the danger they were in.
“Sell!” he whispered to his older brother,
and released Shokar with a blush and an apology.
“It has been so long since I have seen
someone new from my own lands,” he explained, bowing as deeply as he could to
the general. “I did not mean to distress your lordship.”
“The exuberance of youth!” The general
waved a hand. “Show such enthusiasm when we return home, and it will not go ill
for you.” Shou placed the gold coins in the hand of the trader with a smile.
“For your trouble,” he told her. “We will continue this negotiation over wine,
I think.”
Adar said nothing for a moment, and Llesho
urged him silently to agree. Finally, the healer nodded.
“I have rooms nearby.” The general bowed as
he offered his hospitality. “And the wine is excellent. If we can come to no
permanent agreement, perhaps you will do me the favor of having your man look
at my boy.”
Adar who wore the clothing of the master
rather than the slave, seemed little inclined to trust the offer. Taking
advantage of the cover Adar gave him, Llesho reached out and pressed his
fingers against his brother’s hand, signaling reassurance, he hoped. Adar
finally bowed his agreement.
The trader narrowed her eyes, but General
Shou, in his disguise as a merchant, returned her suspicion with a guileless
smile. He took another coin out of the purse and handed it over. “For your
efforts on my behalf, and so that you will remember me if you see something to
my taste cross your block,” he said.
Llesho was amazed at how stupid the general
looked at that moment, but it seemed to disarm the trader, who bit into the
coin with her cracked teeth and pronounced herself happy to be of service to
his lordship. With much bowing, they made their way back through the press of
commerce at the front of the countinghouse, and found themselves once again in
the market square.
“The boys must be hungry,” Shou announced,
still in the guise of the foolish merchant. He made his way across the square
toward Darit’s booth, and waved four fingers in the air to order four of her
wonderful breads. When they drew close enough to reach their food, she gave
General Shou a crinkling smile. “You’ve collected another one, I see.” She
handed Bixei and Llesho two each of the delicacies, and then held out a fifth,
wrapped in paper, to Shou himself. “I have a new filling I thought you might
like to try.”
She gave a loud laugh which did not startle
her customers at all, who were used to her manner, but her eyes were serious.
Llesho thought he read a warning in their depths. General Shou’s smile likewise
did not move beyond the mechanical flexing of his mouth, which caused Llesho to
wonder what Darit was to the general, besides a source of delicious food.
Shou did not say anything, however, but
tucked the packet into his coat. “Do you still want to see the dancing bear?”
he asked. Shokar tensed, and Adar placed a comforting hand on Llesho’s
shoulder. Both men were surprised when Llesho answered around a mouthful of food:
“Yes! I hope we are able to see the monkey as well!”
“Your master seems very kind,” Adar
ventured in low tones as their party skirted the shops of the cloth merchants,
which were again blocked by the laughing crowds.
“He’s an unusual man,” Llesho agreed. He
had picked up on the general’s guarded study of the crowds in the marketplace,
and it had heightened his own alertness. He wondered what the general saw that
he did not know enough to recognize.
Shou led them around the crowd, and up the
steps of the impoverished Temple of The Seven Gods on the far side of the
crowd.
Adar gave him a strange look, but held his
tongue when Llesho frowned, darting quick glances over the heads of the crowds.
“Soldiers,” Llesho muttered, and Shokar
communicated his surprise and his question with a raised eyebrow. Llesho
shrugged, trying to put “later” in the gesture. The troops were not wearing the
uniforms of guard or militia, but soldiers going into battle carried themselves
as no one else in Llesho’s experience. And if that were true, there were too
many of them in the market square. And far too many wore the garb of Harnish
traders.
At the center of the laughing crowd, a
monkey in the uniform of an Imperial Guard did backflips on the shoulders of a
brown bear. Kaydu carried a basket which she stuck under the noses of the
audience, many of whom had a coarse word or joke about the uniform the monkey
wore. A slim young woman in a long, flowing gown sat on the steps, smiling at
the antics of the bear, but watching the crowd with careful, attentive eyes.
She looked like Mara, except that she was too young, too straight and slim to
be the old healer woman. But she had Mara’s face and Mara’s eyes. She caught
Llesho’s glance and rose from her perch, skipping down the steps with light
dance moves.
“Come back later!” she called to the crowd
as she took the bear’s paw in her hand and danced him once around the little
open circle. Kaydu finished her collection with a flourishing bow, and gathered
Little Brother to her as the bear and its leader danced their way around the
corner of the temple.
General Shou waited only until the market
performers were out of sight before ducking into the temple. Bixei followed,
and Llesho came after with Adar and Shokar.
“That didn’t go quite as I’d planned it,”
Shou remarked. “What exactly were you doing, Llesho?”
The two newcomers stepped between Llesho
and the man they took to be a merchant, but Llesho responded to the familiar
commanding tone with a quick snap to attention.
“May I present my brothers,” he said,
stepping between them and bowing to the general. “Adar, the healer of whom I
have often spoken—” he smiled and gestured at the taller man, “—and Shokar,
whom I had thought lost to us.”
Shou made a bow to the brothers, and would
have spoken, except that a priest of the temple approached.
a frown creasing his forehead. “As always,
you come to us with trouble close behind,” the priest said.
“Master Markko’s people?” Shou skinned out
of his merchant’s robe. Under it he wore his uniform and had a sword strapped
to his side.
“He does seem to be in the thick of it.”
The priest took the merchant’s robe and handed Shou his helmet. “And he seems
to command not just the remnant of the force he brought from Farshore Province,
but Har-nish raiders as well, scattered among the honest tradesmen in the
marketplace.”
“A man would have to be mad to trust the
Harn as allies,” Adar swore heatedly.
“Mad he may be,” Llesho agreed, “but no
less dangerous for it.”
His brothers stared at him, surprised at
the force and confidence of his words. Their surprise turned to astonishment
when Kaydu skidded into the temple. She had shed her fool’s costume, and wore
the uniform of Thousand Lakes Province. Little Brother sat on her shoulder, his
paws clinging around her neck, and the bear from the marketplace scampered at
her heels. The bear’s companion from the marketplace followed at a more sedate
pace.
“Mara?” Llesho asked Kaydu.
The stranger answered, with a smile. “I’m
Carina, Mara’s daughter. But my companion is an old friend of yours.”
“Lleck?” Llesho whispered. The cub nuzzled
his hand and moaned, “Lleeee-shooooo!”
“Lleck?” Shokar choked on the name. “You
have named a dancing bear after our father’s chief adviser?”
Llesho shrugged with a rueful smile. “Not
exactly.”
“Shoooooo-karrrrrr?” the bear sniffed at
his hand. “Shoookarrrrr!”
Shokar gasped. “That bear said my name!”
“It is
Lleck,” Llesho explained, “our father’s ad-viser. He has taken the form of a
bear as protector until Thebin is regained.”
Adar looked shaken and seemed about to
speak, but General Shou was addressing Kaydu, and Llesho turned to listen.
“Are the emperor’s troops holding?” Shou
asked her.
“They are outnumbered,” she gasped. “My
father is bringing his reinforcements from outside the city.”
“We need time,” the general muttered. “We
have to hold Markko to the square.”
A second priest joined them, and Llesho
grinned when he saw the bundles he carried. “Is that my sword?” he asked. The
bundle was wrapped in his Thebin coat and he unbound the pack and put on his
coat first. His sword belt and sheath followed; Llesho drew the sword and
loosened his wrist by twirling the weapon in small circles pointed at the
floor.
Shokar was still confused, but one thing
seemed clear. “I take it you are not the pampered pleasure slave of a stupid
Shannish merchant, then?” he asked dryly.
“No, brother.” Llesho flashed a predatory
grin that was new to him since the battle with Master Markko on the border of
Shan Province. He drew his Thebin knife and tossed it in the air, catching it
again by the hilt and casting about with it to measure the balance of it in his
hand. Bixei was testing the heft of his spear, and Kaydu had drawn her sword
and taken up a trident with it.
“Are you certain of what you are doing?”
Shokar asked his brother. “You’re just a boy. This temple would surely protect
you if there is to be fighting.”
“I’m a soldier,” Llesho answered with a
shrug. “And it is my battle as
much as Shan Province’s. Master Markko followed me here. If he now conspires with the Harn, all of Shan may
soon fall under the same yoke as Thebin.”
Shokar pulled off his healer’s robe and
handed it to Adar. Beneath the robe, he wore his own sword belted to his waist,
and he loosened it in its scabbard. “Would you mind if I joined you, then?” he
asked, with a bow to General Shou.
“Be my guest,” the general invited him with
a tight smile.
They had begun to move, following the
priest to the back of the temple, when the first priest returned bearing a slim
burden in his hands.
“This was delivered for you, young master.”
The priest bowed and unwrapped the oiled cloths that protected the short spear
contained within.
Llesho shuddered.
“Is that what I think it is?” Adar asked,
his voice grown husky with awe.
“I don’t know what it is, except that her
ladyship has bid me carry it, and that I feel my own death clinging to it like
a cobra waiting to strike.” He thrust the weapon into his brother’s hands.
Pain crossed Adar’s face, but he did not
let the spear fall, even when it blistered his palm.
“Why is it doing that?” Horrified, Llesho
snatched it back, too late to save his brother from the hurt that bubbled on
his hand.
“Because it belongs to you.” Adar smiled,
though his hand must still hurt.
Llesho didn’t want to understand, but they
had run out of time, and Carina was leading his brother away with words
soothing as the burble of a dove: “My mother has taught me much of her herb
lore, and the tending of wounds.”
Torn between protecting his brother and his
own duty to the battle’s wounded soon to come, Adar hesitated.
“Go,” Llesho said. “If we win, there will
be time to talk later. If we lose, we already know what we needed to say.”
“Go with the goddess,” Adar whispered his
farewell like a prayer.
Still as stone, General Shou waited until
Carina had taken the wounded healer away.
“It’s time,” he said, and led their small
force out of the temple.
Chapter Thirty-five
IN the market square Harnish raiders had
drawn their short, thick swords. The soldiers who had marched from Farshore
with Master Markko brandished the more familiar weapons they had kept hidden
under their disguises until the signal ordered them into action. Llesho figured
they had expected only the weak opposition of shopkeepers and their customers
in the square.
But General Shou had laid his plans carefully,
and the invaders found themselves confronting grim-faced Imperial Guardsmen who
threw off their own disguises and fought to defend their homes and their
families. The very auction block at the center of the marketplace served as a
reminder of Harn’s treatment of its conquests, and civilians fought alongside
the emperor’s guards with any implement they could find.
Stalls overturned in the fray spilled food
and trinkets and pots and pans onto the square. Wares scattered underfoot as
raiders hacked at the proprietors with their swords. Llesho saw the food vendor
Darit hit a Harnish raider over the head with a heavy copper platter and then
swing her makeshift weapon in the face of another soldier.
Finally she whirled it like a discus at a
Harnishman who directed the action of his raiders from the auction block. He
went down, spilling blood from a deep gash in his brow and Darit was over her
counter, with a chopping knife in one hand and a bone cleaver in the other. He
lost sight of her when Markko’s troops rushed his own position on the steps of
the temple.
“Can you fight?” he asked Shokar, who stood
at his shoulder.
“For you, I can fight,” Shokar answered,
and drew his own Thebin knife. He took the two-handed defensive stance of the
Thebin fighter, sword raised, knife extended, and soon proved his worth. A band
of soldiers in the uniform of Lord Yueh’s guards rushed their position, laying
about them with bloodied swords. From the determined savagery of their attack,
Llesho knew they had but one objective: to bring down Master Markko’s chosen
prey at all costs.
Llesho slashed with his knife, jumped out
of range of a swinging sword, and jabbed with his own long blade. He heard his
brother grunt with the exertion of wielding his weapons. Shokar did not move with
Llesho’s practiced ease, but he had not forgotten all he had learned as a young
man in Thebin.
Bixei fought at his right side, his battle
cry a low growl in his throat. Kaydu screeched like the spirits of the thirsty
dead as she cleared the steps on his right. Llesho whipped around to take on
the next assault, and discovered that for the moment they had driven back their
attackers.
Trying to catch his breath and his senses
at the same time, Llesho looked about him in dismay. General Shou had placed
cadres of Imperial Guardsmen in disguise throughout the square, but they were
seriously outnumbered. Though the emperor’s men strove valiantly to contain the
attack, the Harnish raiders pressed outward, unstoppable in their attempt to
escape the square and join up with reinforcements flooding into the square from
the streets of the city.
Already two of the Harnish bands had drawn
off from the fighting, making for the eastern corner of the square, from which
a tangle of paths and roads led to the palace. In the chaos of the fighting, he
had no intelligence about how many Harnish reinforcements lurked in the city,
or if they waged their battle against the palace as well as in the market
square. It must have been like this on the streets of Kungol, he thought, except
that the Thebin palace had no high walls to protect it, nor a standing army to
defend it.
Even in Shan, however, too much lay
vulnerable to attack. The thought of the Imperial Water Garden trampled in
battle burned in his chest. His own imagination would have paralyzed him then,
but General Shou shook him out of his thoughts. “Hold fast, if you can,” Shou
directed Llesho’s little band. “Don’t let the Harn join their forces in the
city.” Then he disappeared into the fray.
Llesho took a quick survey of their
position. The temple stood at one corner of the market square. They had
themselves come out a side door and down a small alley, which the priests had
cluttered after them with baskets and old cooking pots to delay the enemy. A
wide avenue on the far side of the building would be much harder to secure,
however. With the point of his sword, he directed Bixei and Kaydu to the more
open position. He would have sent Shokar with them, but his brother read his
mind and gave him a baleful glare.
“Harry them and fall back,” he told his two
guards. “We cannot hope to hold for long, but we can make them pay in blood for
every step they win.”
General Shou had gathered to himself a
small troop of Imperial Guards, still dressed as peasant farmers come to sell
their wares. These farmers, however, wielded swords instead of plowshares, and
they followed the general, defending the roads that led to the palace. If the
city fell, Llesho knew, all of the Shan
Empire fell with it, and all hope that they
might free Thebin as well. Though his arm had grown heavy, he raised his sword
in fighting position again, his Thebin knife held poised for the next attack.
He would stop Master Markko and his allies or die in the attempt.
Although the Thebin princes were badly
outnumbered, no enemy could touch them. Pressed on all sides, Llesho moved
without thought, one with his blades and the rhythm of his deadly dance. Blood
slicked the paving stones and he slipped, righted himself before he fell, and
plunged his knife to the hilt into the throat of a soldier. The man opened his
mouth to scream, but only blood spewed forth, and a death rattle as he strove
to draw breath while drowning in his own blood.
The knife had caught on bone, and Llesho
could not pull it free. For an almost fatal second he held on, while the
falling man dragged Llesho’s arm down with it, leaving the heart in his breast
an open target. A spear came toward him out of the melee, was knocked away by
his brother’s sword but not before the tip had drawn blood. Shocked at how close
he had come to losing his life, Llesho abandoned the knife along with the body
of the Harnish raider and turned to the next attacker, then the next, until he
and Shokar were surrounded by a ring of wary soldiers held at bay by the swords
of their prey.
For a moment the battle seemed to pause, as
if the world held its breath, and Llesho became aware of the bodies, and the
gore, and his own hands, slick with blood up to the elbow, gripping the hilt of
his sword between them. On one knee, his brother gasped for breath, and Llesho
felt his own blood trickle down his cheek, though he did not remember the
strike that had cut him. Stealing a glance toward his companions who struggled
to hold the wide boulevard, he raised his head, a triumphant grimace turning his
blood-smeared face into a death mask Hnhiha’c tiwrwie k»<i
arrived, orderly columns of them passing
into the square from the main road at each of the four corners. “Surrender!”
Llesho demanded. His attackers followed Llesho’s gloating stare, and struck again
with a fervor fueled by their desperation. It was now or never, he realized. Of
the two choices that confronted them, most of the enemy soldiers would rather
face death at Llesho’s hand than the slow, lingering torment they would suffer
from Master Markko if they failed.
Shokar struggled to his feet, but his sword
dragged heavily at an arm leaden with fatigue. Llesho shifted closer to his
brother. He didn’t have to win, he told himself, he needed only to hold off the
attack until Habiba’s men had secured the road. He would have reinforcements,
if he could just keep his brother alive for a few minutes more. A sword slipped
past his guard and cut him under the arm, but he rallied and knocked it away
before it could do more than scratch the skin. He heard Kaydu’s voice urging
him to hold, but her words were cut off by the sudden cry of a great bird.
The creature swooped from the sky with
talons stretched; Master Markko’s own men dropped to their faces in terror as
the beast flew at his prey. Llesho raised his sword over his head to stop the
beast, which opened its beak to cry its scorn and defiance. With one powerful
foot it swept aside Llesho’s sword, and with the other it tore past his
shoulder, talons gouging deep gashes from Llesho’s throat to his hip.
Llesho grunted and fell, at the mercy of
the bird, his sight blurring as the curved beak drew closer.
/ will
tear out your heart, and eat it in the market square.
Though the bird could not speak, Llesho
heard the words in his mind. So this is
dying, he answered, and heard again Master Markko’s answer in his
mind: Among cowards and weaklings, yes;
this is dying.
He felt the piercing pain as the beak cut
into the flesh over his heart, and then he heard a growl behind him.
“Lleeee-shhhoooo!”
Lleck! The bear raised up on his hind legs
and howled over his fallen charge, the spittle flying from his long, sharp
fangs. With his claws extended like curved knives, he swatted at the bird,
raking long streaks of blood across its feathered breast. It seemed then that
he was cradling the bird, for both huge arms wrapped about its wings, pressing
it down, until the full weight of bird and bear crashed to the paving stones at
Llesho’s feet.
The bird redirected its attack, raking
Lleck’s thick pelt with claw and beak. Lleck cried out and lowered his head
over the neck of the magician, who changed himself into smoke as the bear’s
teeth clamped together. Taking solid form again, the invincible bird of prey
that Master Markko had become transformed again, growing the head of a lion and
the long, spiked tail of a serpent held aloft by the feathered wings of the
bird. The creature fell upon the bear and locked its teeth into the back of his
head.
The lion jaws tightened. Bone crunched.
Lleck bellowed one last anguished cry and the light went out of his eyes.
“No!” Llesho cried, while Markko’s insane
laughter filled his head.
He had lost his sword and a good deal of
blood. Llesho stood and faced the creature of his nightmares with no hope of
victory, only a determination to take the evil creature before him into hell.
As his bloody end drew near, however, Llesho saw a woman standing just above
him on the temple steps. Carina, the young healer, defied the monster with
calm, sure eyes. Unarmed, she raised both hands above her head, chanting some
prayer of supplication. Although he knew she must follow him quickly into
death, he was unaccountably comforted by the sight of her.
In that moment of peace, the short spear
from her ladyship pressed a reminder against his side. He drew it. “Die!” He
screamed, “Die! You twisted demon out of hell. Die!”
He plunged the spear into the side of the
monster, and it screamed, dripping gouts of blood that steamed and blackened
the paving stones where it fell. Enraged, the creature writhed away from the
weapon and rose into the sky, still shrieking in pain and fury.
Suddenly an answering roar filled the sky
and made the very temple shake. A horde of dragons filled the sky, the Golden
River Dragon in the lead, a smaller silver queen following with three younger
dragons behind her. The dragons separated at the market square, the younger
ones fanning out into city, while the silver queen descended upon the battle
being waged before the palace.
The Golden River Dragon, vastly larger and
more terrible than the magical apparition that Master Mar-kko had created, fell
in a steep dive aimed right at the magician. The dragon’s roar spat fire into
the marketplace, and Shannish citizens as well as Harnish raiders fell to the
ground, cowering with their hands over their heads. Markko’s beast roared an
answering challenge.
The two unearthly creatures met, the long
and sinuous body of the dragon tangling with the lashing tail of the beast in
the air above the market square. As they tore at each other, the
patched-together beast of Master Markko’s creation struggled frantically for
the advantage. The larger and more powerful Golden Dragon thrashed its tail in
anger. Up, up, they flew, until they were just glittering specks in a sharp
blue sky. Then a path of flame reached out, and the fiercely struggling
monsters were falling, growing larger and larger. A scream rose to shatter the
sky, and the beast that was Master Markko vanished.
With a last trumpeting bellow of victory,
the Golden
Dragon circled lightly on a thermal created
by his own fiery breath. Lazily he floated to a soft landing in the square, and
lowered his head at the feet of Carina, the young healer, on the temple steps.
“Father.” She kissed him between his
smoking nostrils, and tapped him sharply where she had placed the kiss. “Time
to let Mother go.”
The dragon’s eyes sparkled in the sun, a
deeper glint than his golden scales. He opened his huge mouth as wide as the
temple doors, and belched. From his throat a querulous voice drifted.
“Wretched beast. I don’t know what I ever
saw in you. Put me down.” Mara, but as they had never seen her before, walked
out of the dragon’s gorge and stood on his tongue, arms folded over her singed
and smoking garments, while he gently put her down. She looked taller than she
had in the forest, her back straight and her hair black instead of gray. She
did not look young, but neither did she look old. In fact, traveling in the
belly of a dragon seemed to agree with her.
“Thank you, Father.” Carina hugged her
mother and patted the giant head of the Golden River Dragon.
“Where is your sister dragon, old husband?”
Mara asked the dragon.
Llesho did not find out if the dragon could
in fact answer the question, because at that moment the silver queen descended
lightly at the foot of the temple steps. His vision blurred, and Llesho wiped
his eyes, leaving a bloody streak across his forehead. “Am I hallucinating?” he
wondered. No silver dragon stood beside the golden monster, but Kwan-ti, the
healer he had thought lost at Pearl Island.
“Llesho. You look awful.” She brushed his
hair out of his eyes and pursed her lips in displeasure. “Three healers
standing about whiJe the young prince bleeds unattended.”
“You were dead—” He resisted her urging
toward the door. “This is some kind of trick!”
“Never dead,” she answered with an
enigmatic smile. “A trick, yes, but the same trick it was when you knew me as
Kwan-ti.”
“You saved my life.” Llesho remembered the
sea dragon that had come to him when he had tried to die in the bay. It was not
a moment he wished to relive, and Kwan-ti acknowledged it with a bow of her
head, but did not intrude the memory upon him further.
“The children have returned to Golden
River, brother,” she addressed the Golden Dragon with a sad droop to her
shoulders. “The sea around Pearl Island still reeks of death. You will take
care of them until it is safe for them to come home?”
The dragon nodded his head in an
affirmative. With an affectionate snort of curling smoke, he hauled his body
into the open square, picking his way carefully among the fallen, too many dead
for Llesho to count in his dazed condition. Survivors helped their more
severely wounded brethren out of the dragon’s path, more frightened of their
terrible ally than they had been of the battle.
When the Golden River Dragon lifted on his
powerful wings, the wind he created in his passing nearly knocked Llesho to his
knees. Falling down seemed like a good idea, but while he could stand, he
needed to find his companions. Shokar sat at the head of the bear who had saved
Llesho’s life, stroking the fur between Lleck’s ears. The prince did not seem
to have any physical wounds on him. Shokar was no soldier, however; the horrors
of battle had almost broken him.
Slowly, the living converged on the temple.
Stupid with the shock, Llesho watched them ascend the wide steps and enter the
sanctuary. Though weary and bleak, Kaydu and Bixei seemed unhurt as well.
“You must come inside,” Mara reminded him.
“Those wounds need tending.” “Soon.”
Carina and Kwan-ti had already entered the
temple, following the wounded who would need their care, but Mara waited at
Llesho’s side as Kaydu drew up before them to report.
“Did the general make it?”
“I don’t know.” Kaydu shrugged, not
indifferent, but helpless to offer greater assurances. “Maybe he’s already
inside.”
Bixei took Shokar by the arm and drew him
away from their dead companion. Together the four entered the temple, where the
wounded were laid out in rows on the floor. Llesho scanned the rows, seeking
Adar as he had with scrapes and minor hurts when he was a child.
“Llesho, you’ve been hurt.” Adar came to
them, and touched his arm.
“The brother. Good.” Mara nodded with
satisfaction and left them to offer aid among the injured groaning on their
mats.
The tension in the pit of Llesho’s stomach
relaxed. “When you have time.” He waved a careless hand and dropped it to his
side again, suddenly realizing that he was brandishing the short spear in his
bloody fist. “I just need to sleep.”
Adar used his hold on Llesho’s arm to guide
him deeper into the temple. “Now,” Adar said. “Before you bleed out on the
priest’s nice floor.”
Llesho hadn’t realized he was still
bleeding, but he accepted Adar’s word, and followed him to the bandaging
station. “I’m glad you’re alive,” Adar told him, and Llesho let his head drop
on the curve of his brother’s shoulder.
“I’m so glad I found you,” Llesho agreed.
And then he fainted.
Chapter Thirty-six
SHADOWS moved through the darkness, broken
only by the dim glow of scattered lamps and the weak moans of the wounded. At
Llesho’s head, a heavier darkness sat, solid and reassuring. Shokar snored
lightly. Tomorrow, the healers said, Llesho could leave the makeshift infirmary
set up in the Temple of The Seven Mortal Gods. He would be taking with him his
brother, who refused to leave his side, and his guards, who refused to accept
any defense of his sleep but their own. Bixei had assumed guard duty at the
front entrance to the temple and Kaydu had watched over the secret entrance
into the side alley. Torn between his duty and Lling who had joined them after
the battle at the palace, Hmishi had spent days pacing the length of the long
hall from her bedside to the entrance onto the square and back again. When the
companions paused in their vigilance to meet the new princes and tell their stories,
Shokar had listened with avid horror. Alternately, he’d berated Llesho for the
chances he had taken and scolded Adar to check Llesho’s wounds for proper
healing and signs of lingering damage. Llesho forgave the healers their
unseemly relief at his recovery; his protectors were starting to get on his
nerves as well. And, much as he loved his brother, Sho-kar’s worry was driving
him mad. These few moments of contemplative silence while his brother slept
nearby were precious. Not as dear as the opportunity to speak with Adar,
however. The healer sank to the floor beside him with a wry smile mellowed by
the lamplight.
“He just wants you to be safe.” Adar gave
the sleeping prince an indulgent smile.
“I love him, too.” Llesho sighed. “But
there is no safety anywhere for us. And I am not a child he can protect from
the truth.”
Adar laughed softly. “Convincing Shokar
that you are no longer a seedling of seven summers will take stronger magic
than either of us possess.
“As for the danger,” the healer shook his
head, sorrow creasing his features, “Shokar has always blamed himself that he
was not in Kungol when the Harn attacked.”
“The raiders would have killed him.” Shokar
could have rallied the Thebin people to his cause; the Harn would never have
let him live.
“He’s not a coward,” Adar said, as if that
needed explaining, “but he is a man of peace. A farmer. And when he saw you in
the countinghouse, he truly believed the goddess had given him a second chance
at redemption. If you died, it would surely destroy him.”
“I do understand.” Llesho closed his eyes,
weary and achy, and unwilling to think about it anymore. “But I can’t stay.”
Adar patted his shoulder. “Sleep,” he said.
Llesho decided it was just too much work to
open his eyes. In the distance he heard the soft voices of the priests, and a
name—ChiChu, god of laughter and tears—called. And it seemed that the god
answered in Master Den’s voice. But that must be a dream, and then it was a
dream.
And then it was morning, and Master Den was
standing at the foot of Llesho’s pallet, roaring for him to get up, no time to
waste on sleeping. He dropped a stack of linen beside him, and Llesho noted
that the clothes were day wear of her ladyship’s household, neither the uniform
he had fought in nor the house pet disguise he had worn on the day of the
battle. And he did not know where Lleck’s pearl had gone. Llesho moved stiffly,
and the sharp pain when he lifted his arms to slip into his shirt was
explanation enough of his pallor. General Shou had advised him to confide in
Master Den, but he could hardly do so while surrounded by his well-meaning
companions. But if he could discover the whereabouts of his other possessions,
perhaps he would find the pearl there as well.
“My weapons?” he asked. “And the gifts her
ladyship returned to me?”
Den had not been there when her ladyship
had given Llesho the short spear and the jadeite cup, but he knew of them
nevertheless. “In your room at the palace,” he said, “with whatever other
valuables you may have acquired on your journey.”
That sounded like Master Den knew more than
he was telling, but he couldn’t ask about it here.
“General Shou?” he said, one thought
turning on another, “Was he hurt? Has anyone seen him since the battle?”
Kaydu shifted Little Brother in her arms
and shook her head. “The last time I saw him, he was exhorting us to hold the
square.”
“I saw him in the palace before I joined
you here,” Lling added. “He seemed unhurt, and was directing the Imperial Guard
in a street-by-street search to rout out the last of the Harnish spies.”
Llesho had known the fighting wasn’t over
with the first battle, and he felt foolish for feeling let down that the man
hadn’t come to see him.
“And Mara is well?” He still had trouble
believing that the healer had lived through what had seemed like certain death
on the Golden Dragon River.
“Mara will say nothing about her travels in
the belly of the Golden Dragon,” Lling offered, “but she smiles rather more
than seems appropriate for someone who has met a horrible fate at the hands of
a monster.”
Llesho laughed, whether at Lling’s
indignation or Mara’s satisfaction with her travel arrangements he wasn’t sure.
He’d thought laughing would hurt his chest more than it did, but apparently he
really was getting better. If he could erase the memory of the terrible beak
digging at his chest to tear his heart out, he would consider himself well
served.
As it was, he wished with all the heart
that remained to him that he could talk to Master Den. The washerman sensed
something that Llesho was thinking. “Let’s get you back home,” he said, and
dropped a hand on Llesho’s shoulder. Llesho wondered what home he meant, but
decided he would settle for his room at the palace.
The market square was bright with morning
sunshine and the sound of clashing cymbals and ringing bells. A crowd had
gathered, and Llesho craned his neck from his place on the temple steps to see
what was passing. Carina stood on the step just below his, a shawl held tightly
at her throat. She looked a lot like her mother, cloaked in the same strength
and dignity, but it was softer in the younger woman. Everything about Carina
was softer, even her hair, which she wore in a long braid wrapped around her
head. Llesho realized he wanted to touch the shining braid, but he restrained
himself with some horror at how improper such longing must be in a young
prince.
“The emperor is passing,” she told him with
a bright smile that did funny things to his insides that Lling’s voice had
never done, even when he considered being to her what Hmishi had become.
It took an effort of will, but he turned
his eyes away from her face, and looked out into the square, where troops of
Imperial Guards were passing in review. At their head, in a gold-encrusted
chariot, rode the emperor, his robes so richly decorated that Llesho wondered
if the man inside of them could move at all, or whether he just stood like the
center support of some elaborate statue. The royal headdress of the Shan Empire
was no simple crown, but an ancient helmet that covered the sides of the face and
the chin, and flared at the shoulders and over the forehead to protect the
wearer’s face. The helmet was black, with gold and jewels worked into it. So
dazzling was the display of wealth and power that Llesho almost didn’t
recognize the man under it.
“General Shou?” Llesho muttered.
Kaydu had followed him out of the temple,
and she’d come to her own conclusions: “He looks like General Shou. They could
be brothers.” She gave Llesho a measuring frown. “They look more like brothers
than you and Adar, at any rate.”
“He said once that he was a member of the
nobility,” Llesho offered her the weak explanation, but inside, he knew.
General Shou was the Emperor
of Shan and for some reason, he had kept that knowledge from Llesho and his
party while he roamed the city with them. He’d even fought in Habiba’s war
under a false identity. Llesho wanted an explanation. First, however, he wanted
his pearl back, and the few other possessions that were supposed to be waiting
for him in the palace.
He did not immediately get his wish. After
the emperor’s procession had passed, his own party made their way to the palace
and, for a change, presented themselves at the Ministry of Government for
entrance. The clerk who guarded the gate assured them that they were expected
within. Unfortunately, he determined that, as they represented no recognized
government, neither Llesho nor his brothers carried any standing sufficient to
gain entrance to the palace. Master Den, as a former general and adviser to the
emperor’s army had had the necessary rank at one time, but unless he carried a
present rank in that army, he could not be admitted either.
As the daughter of the representative of
Thousand Lakes Province and Farshore Province, Kaydu, however, had the
necessary position for admittance. With a sweep of her hand, Kaydu declared the
rest of their party, princes and general and soldiers alike, her personal
servants. They had no sooner entered the palace as a group than they were
separated again, Llesho’s guard to a wide hallway with gilt panels, and Llesho
down a darker, more forbidding passage, into a room that the prince knew from
his first explorations of the palace. He had thought the room a private one for
the questioning of Shou’s spies. It had a few chairs and a small table, but nothing
more to see or hold the attention. Shokar trembled with fine tremors of terror
but refused to be separated from his brother.
Llesho knew the way to his room in the
palace from here. He tried the panel to the outer hall, but the two guards that
waited there with swords drawn would not let him pass this time. The recent
battle had left them all, on both sides of the door, too ready to fight. Llesho
shook his head and withdrew.
He didn’t have to wait long, however. A
panel opened in the opposite wall, and Shou walked through, wearing comfortable
robes that suited neither the general nor the emperor, but ably fit the man.
Shokar bowed deeply to the emperor, but Llesho didn’t move. “Why didn’t you
tell me?”
“I thought Lleck taught you better than
that,” the emperor chided him. He sat in one of the stiff wooden armchairs,
threw one booted leg over the arm, and tossed a peach into the air, absently
catching it with no thought to regal dignity, but exuding a lethal menace
without even trying.
In spite of his apparent informality, this
face of the man scared Llesho more than any of the others he had seen, because
he had a sick feeling that this was the real thing. He blushed, feeling foolish
for having asked the question. He knew the answer, really. “I suppose you wanted
to see for yourself if I was who Habiba said I was, or if it was some sort of
plot. But you could not trust to official appearances.”
“Part of it, yes.” The emperor waited. “You
wanted to know if I was worth taking a stand for.”
“Not that.” The emperor was laughing
softly, but with no humor. “Shan could not afford to acknowledge your claim
under any circumstances, however true and worthy that claim might be.”
“It didn’t matter, then? That my claims for
Thebin are true.” The reminder of that truth was carved over Llesho’s heart,
and he laid a protective hand over the bandages that covered his chest.
“Oh, yes, it did matter.” Shou wasn’t
laughing now. His face was hard and his eyes looked past Llesho, into some time
or place that was closed to his questioner. “We have won a small skirmish, but
the war remains to be fought. And while the Harn press at our borders, we
cannot give the Prince of Thebin what he wants.”
“And what is that?”
“Thebin, of course.” Shou—it was hard not
to think of him that way—let go
of an exasperated sigh and swung his leg off the chair. “But privately, as a
man who speaks to a man, and not as an emperor who speaks to a deposed prince,
we can acknowledge mutual interest in the downfall of our shared enemy.” “How
does that help either of us?”
“It has already helped Shan.” General
Shou—the emperor—stood with a predatory grin that showed all his teeth and led
them to the panel that had been denied them earlier. “Master Markko has failed
in his attempt to throw down the empire. The Harn have failed to garner the
spoils of their puppet’s campaign, and must return to their plotting. Thebin
isn’t the problem of Shan’s emperor.”
“Then how am I to go home?”
“The way you had planned to do it
originally, but with a bit more help than I should be giving you,” Shou
admitted. He frowned at Llesho and sighed. When he slid the panel open, the
guard entered with sword drawn. Llesho swallowed around the dry lump in his
throat, but the emperor dismissed the man with a careless wave.
“I had planned to offer my services to the
guard detail of a trade caravan leaving for the West,” Llesho explained as he
followed the emperor down a hall that looked far too shabby and unused to be a
part of the formal palace. It looked more like they were wandering through more
of those hidden passageways that riddled the place like an abandoned beehive.
“And so you will.” Shou stopped in front of
a sturdy looking door and pressed the release. “Actually, the Harn raiders fell
right into our hands with their little raid. The traders who organize the
caravans have already approached the palace for protection along the route.”
Inside the room behind the door, three
women waited at a table on which were spread all of Llesho’s missing
belongings: his knife and sword and his bow and arrows, the jadeite cup and the
short spear from her ladyship, and inside the cup, Lleck’s black pearl. Llesho
first took inventory of his possessions, not because he cared about their
material value, but because he knew they were somehow vital to his quest. But
he did not touch them, looking instead to the women who waited for his
acknowledgment.
“Your ladyship.” He bowed to the woman who had tested him on Pearl
Island, and who had taught him archery. She wore clothes of white and green and
blue, diaphanous layers that blended into the murky water colors of the
Imperial Water Garden.
“SienMa.” She received his bow with a tilt
of her head, and set another pearl, the match to the one he had received from
Lleck’s ghost in Pearl Bay, into the cup.
SienMa. One of the Seven Mortal Gods, the
goddess of war. Llesho shivered.
“Kwan-ti.” Trembling, he bowed again, this
time to the middle woman, dressed in silver, and with sparks of liquid silver
in her hair. Kwan-ti had already shown herself as a dragon queen; but was she a
goddess as well?
“Pearl Bay Dragon,” she revealed her true
name with a nod, and a rueful smile. “You already have my gift, I
am afraid. Your wily ghost stole it while my attention was elsewhere.”
Lleck’s pearl. Llesho blushed. The third
woman, dressed in gold, he had lately seen walking from the mouth of the Golden
River Dragon. Was no one who they seemed? “Mara.”
“And Mara I am,” she said, “a seeker.
Aspiring to be the eighth.” She, too, set a black pearl, the match of the others,
into the jadeite cup. “Since the coming of the Harn to Thebin, the gates
of heaven are sealed to us. We cannot return to serve the goddess as is our
duty, and the goddess can reach us only in dreams.”
SeinMa, her ladyship, stretched out a hand
to the pearls. “This is all that we could rescue of the goddess’ most treasured
adornment, the necklace called ”string of midnights.“ The goddess weeps for her
necklace day and day, for night has fled from heaven.”
“The seas weep,” Pearl Bay Dragon said.
“The goddess does not come. Open the gates. Return the balance to heaven and
earth.”
The gates of heaven, high above Kungol in
the mountains of Thebin. “You have my oath,” Llesho vowed, and Mara smiled at
him like a mother.
“And you have my daughter. Carina will
travel with you.”
Llesho wondered if they could see the heat
rising in his face, but he didn’t say anything. The emperor rescued him with
more mundane details.
“You and your companions will be fitted
with uniforms as soon as you are ready to travel. Now get some sleep. The guards
will take you back to your old room, and orders have been given to billet your
companions nearby.”
Llesho still had one question, however, and
the presence of Master Den in their party told him more than anything how vital
it was that he have an answer before they traveled any farther. He did not have
to ask it, however. Den found in his hand a slip of paper that Llesho
recognized from his first meeting with General Shou in the Imperial Water
Garden.
“An unusual request to make of a trickster
god.” He handed the offering back to the emperor.
“The gates of heaven are closed to all of
us, Master ChiChu,” he said, “and not just to us mortals.”
“You were always a clever boy,” the god of
the laundry, he of tears and laughter, smiled benignly on the emperor. “I will
do what I can to keep this one safe. But even a god cannot know the future.”
The emperor bowed to the trickster god and
then to the ladies, who preceded him from the room.
“Well, Llesho, what do you think?” the
trickster god asked him.
Llesho answered as he always had, as
student to teacher, with a bow and a smile. “The journey is begun. We are going
home.”
Shokar, at his back, said nothing.