V1- ripped from adobe ebook , needs a bit
of cleaning and beautifying at page end but it's all good otherwise. -kud
THE
JAGUAR KNIGHTS
A Chronicle of the King’s Blades
DAVE DUNCAN
A UTHOR’SN O T E
Historically, the eagle knights
and jaguar knights were the elite troops in the armies of Montezuma, but that
is the last history you will find here.
SOME SIGNIFIC ANT D A TES
351,Thirdmoon |
Sir Durendal bound (The Gilded Chain) |
|
357,Thirdmoon |
Sir Wasp bound (Lord of the Fire Lands) |
|
367,Twelfthmoon |
Sir Eagle bound (Sky of Swords) |
|
390,Thirdmoon |
Queen Malinda abdicates, King Athelgar succeeds |
|
390, Fourthmoon |
Sir Wolf bound (The Jaguar Knights) |
|
392, Fifthmoon |
Lord Wassail exposes the Thencaster Conspiracy |
|
394, Fourthmoon |
Death of Sir Parsewood, Durendal elected |
|
Grand Master |
|
|
395, Secondmoon |
Massacre at Quondam |
|
400, Fourthmoon |
Sir Beaumont bound (Paragon Lost) |
|
405,Thirdmoon |
Sir Ringwood bound (Impossible Odds) |
|
The master first lets
slip his best hounds
1
Something was up. The Royal
Guard liked to think it knew all the news and heard it before anyone else did, but
that day it had been shut out. The morning watch had been on duty for two hours
already, but Commander Vicious had not arrived to hold the daily inspection and
the graveyard shift had not yet been stood down.They were supposedly attending
the King, who was meeting with senior advisors in the council chamber. Absurd!
Even during the worst panics of the Thencaster Conspiracy, three years ago,
Athelgar had never summoned his cabinet in the middle of the night.
Deputy
Commander Lyon must have some idea what was going on, but he refused to admit
it. Infuriatingly, he just sat behind his desk in the guardroom, reading a book
of poetry—Lyon not only read poetry, he wrote it too, yet he was a fine
swordsman, subtle and unpredictable.The half-dozen Blades sustaining the
permanent dice game under the window were doing so halfheartedly, grumbling
more than gambling. Sir
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Wolf was polishing his boots
in a corner—Wolf never read poetry, was never invited into the games, and cared
not a fig what folly the King was pursuing this time.
The
park beyond the frost-spangled panes was all pen-and-ink, stark
white-and-black, sun-bright snow and cadaver trees under a sky of anemic blue,
for this was Secondmoon of 395, the coldest winter in memory. Nocare, with its
high ceilings and huge windows, was a summer palace, impossible to heat in cold
weather. The King had moved the court there on some inexplicable whim and could
not return it to poky old Greymere as long as the roads were blocked by
snowdrifts. Courtiers slunk around unhappily, huddled in furs and muttering
under their smoky breath.
Innumerable
feet shuffled past the guardroom door: gentry, heralds, pages, porters,
stewards,White Sisters, Household Yeomen. No one paid
any heed until a rapid tattoo of heel taps raised every head. Blades knew the
sound of Guard boots, and these were in a hurry.
Wolf
went on polishing his left one.
In marched Sir Damon, still wearing his sash as officer in charge
of the night watch. The
kibitzers by the window exchanged shocked glances.The matter was much more than
routine if Sir Vicious had sent a senior Blade as messenger, instead of a
junior or just a page.
Damon
glanced around the room, then bent to whisper
something to
“Leader
wants you.”
Wolf
put foot in boot and stamped. “Where?”
Damon
said, “Council Chamber. He’s still with the Pirate’s Son.”
At
the dice table, eyebrows rose even higher. The Pirate’s Son was King Athelgar.
It was common knowledge that Vicious preferred to keep Sir Wolf out of the
King’s sight, so if Wolf was wanted now, it was because the King had called for
him by name.
Wolf
was the King’s Killer.
Ignoring
the rabble’s surprise, Wolf strode across to the mirror and looked himself over
with care. Like all Blades he was of middle height, slim and athletic, but he
was invariably the best-turned-out man in the Guard—boots and sword belt
gleaming like glass, not a wrinkle in his
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hose nor speck of dust marring his
jerkin. He adjusted the feather in his bonnet an imperceptible amount and
turned away. He did not examine his face. No one looked at that horror unless
they must.
Exchanging
nods with a lip-chewing
So what was
up? The last time Wolf had been summoned to the royal presence, Athelgar had
named him—over Leader’s objections—to lead the Elboro mission, which had
required him to kill two brother Blades. It had not been the first such filthy
job the Pirate’s Son had given him, either, and Wolf’s written report
afterwards had let Athelgar Radgaring know exactly what he thought of his liege
lord. Moreover, since Leader had not ordered him to rewrite it, it had warned
His Majesty that others shared those opinions. The Guard had been shorthanded
back then, else Wolf might have been thrown in a dungeon for some of the
comments in that report. In the two years since,Vicious had kept him well away
from the King.
What had
changed? Well, the Guard was up to strength now, so one possibility was that
Athelgar was going to award him the Order of the Royal Boot. That was highly
unlikely. Knowing how Wolf felt about him, Athelgar was more likely to keep the
King’s Killer bound to absolute loyalty forever—safer that way.
Another
possibility was that the Pirate’s Son wanted someone murdered. Blades were
bound by oath and conjuration to defend their ward from his enemies, not to
commit crimes on royal whims, but defense could cover a multitude of nasty
situations.
Wolf saw
anger in Damon’s tightly clenched jaw. Damon was a decent man, not one of
those who carried grudges against the King’s Killer.
“Any hints,
brother?”
“Dunno
anything. Huntley and
“Ah! And
Leader wakened the Pirate’s Son?”
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“They’ve
been in council ever since. No one’s allowed in or out except inquisitors. A plague
of inquisitors!”
That news merely
deepened the mystery. Sir Flint and Sir Huntley were typical examples of Blades
who failed to find a real life after being knighted and discharged from the
Guard. Both men were in their fifties, idling away years at Ironhall,
instructing boys in fencing and horsemanship, yet still hankering after the
sins of the city.Whenever Grand Master needed a dispatch taken to Court, men
like Flint or Huntley would accept couriers’ wages, knowing that the skilled
young pimps of the Guard would always find them some of what Ironhall lacked.
So whatever
had provoked this emergency had originated at, or near to, Ironhall.Although it
was officially headquarters of the Loyal and Ancient Order of the King’s
Blades, in practical terms it was only a school and orphanage, a factory for
turning unwanted rebellious boys into the world’s finest swordsmen. Wolf could
imagine nothing whatsoever that could happen there to provoke a
middle-of-the-night meeting of the King in Council.
He could guess
why he had been summoned, though. When the weather was this bad near Grandon,
it must be mean as belly worms up on Starkmoor. Grand Master would not have
sent anyone on such a journey unless the matter was supremely urgent, and he
had thought the trek perilous enough to send two of them. Most likely his
despatch required an answer, and Athelgar had decided to give his least
favorite Blade the putrid job of riding posthaste to Ironhall over snowbound
roads in this appalling cold.That would be a typical piece of royal spite.
There were
Blades on duty even outside the anteroom, which was not usual. The rest of the
graveyard shift was sprawled around on the chairs inside it, sulky and
unshaven. They looked shocked when they saw the man Damon had fetched. Damon
halted, Wolf kept going. Sir Sewald had the inner door; he tapped and opened it
so the newcomer could march straight in without having to break stride.
The Cabinet
Chamber was large but gloomy, newly repaneled in wood like molasses and
furnished with spindly chairs from some lady’s boudoir. Athelgar had terrible
taste and his expensive renovations were methodically ruining every palace he
owned.
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Since his
summons had officially come from Commander Vicious, Wolf could go straight to
him and ignore the King, always a pleasure. He stamped boots and tapped sword
hilt in salute. Dark and menacing as one of the bronze memorials along Rose
Parade in Grandon, the Commander was standing well inside the chamber, so he
had been taking part in the talk, not just being an ornamental doorstop.
Vicious was notoriously taciturn, but had not always been so. The facial scar
that made speech physically painful for him was a memento of the Garbeald
Affair, another of the King’s follies. His vitriolic hatred of inquisitors
dated from that same disaster.
Maps,
papers, and dirty dishes littered the central table. Lord Chancellor Sparrow
stood on one side of the crackling fire, the Earl Marshal sat bundled in his
wheeled chair on the other, and Grand Inquisitor were by the window, being
extra-inscrutable. Grand Inquisitor were twins, indistinguishable. All
inquisitors seemed foreboding, with their black robes, sinister reputation, and
unblinking stare, but to have two of them doing it at you was twice as bad.The
Guard called them the Gruesome Twosome.
Sparrow was
a perky, beak-nosed little man, more of a pompous robin than a cheeky sparrow,
but rated a better-than-average chancellor. He feared Athelgar not at all and
often quashed his mad notions before they did too much harm. The Earl Marshal,
old as the ocean and crippled with gout, was asleep.A spidery clerk crouched
over a writing desk, busily wielding a quill.
And the
Pirate’s Son . . . as always, Athelgar was wandering, restless as a dog with
fleas. He was not his usual splendid self. His hose were rumpled, he wore no
jewelry, and his hair—dyed a respectable Chivian brown—was badly in need of
brushing. Even his goatee, which he left its original Baelish red, looked
somehow bedraggled. He had just turned twenty-five and was about to celebrate
the fifth anniversary of his accession.
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“Sir Wolf, sire,”Vicious said.
Wolf turned
and performed the gymnastics of a full court bow.
“Ah, Wolf.”
Athelgar headed to the fire. “We have bad news. Your brother has been seriously
injured.We are distressed to impart such dire tidings.”
That could
not explain the emergency. The King had no interest whatsoever in the
well-being of an obscure private Blade, whom he had not seen for years, who was
not even a member of his Guard.
I know how
you weep for him, Wolf did not say, since
you’ve kept him locked him up on Whinmoor all these years. “Your
Majesty is kind. Injured by whom?” Blades did not meet with accidents.
The
uninvited query made the King spin around and glare. “That remains to be
discovered. Three nights ago, Quondam was attacked by persons unknown. Sir Fell
and Sir Mandeville are slain.”
Wolf gaped,
shocked into silence. Lynx wounded, two other Blades dead—there should be a
dozen corpses lying around as evidence, so why was the criminals’ identity in
doubt? And Quondam?
Quondam, on Whinmoor, was absolutely impregnable, a fortress that had never
been taken by storm or siege. If this was not a bizarre joke, it must be the
start of an invasion. Or armed rebellion.The emergency snapped into focus.
Moreover,
the King was scared. Wolf’s
studied opinion, most people could lie to ears, but not to eyes. If you knew
how to look, you could learn a man’s feelings more truly from the way he held
his chin and moved his eyes than you ever could from his words. All really good
swordsmen had some of this skill, even if they were unaware that they were
reacting to the twitch of an eyelid flagging a lunge before their op-ponent’s
foot began to move; it was why Ironhall discouraged dueling masks during
training. Grand Inquisitor were unreadable, of course, but the Lord Chancellor
was usually fairly legible and Athelgar displayed his feelings like heraldic
banners. With shoulders hunched, wrists crossed low, and teeth set, he was
proclaiming worry in fanfares. Sparrow was chewing his lip. Even Vicious was
not standing with his hands confidently behind his back as usual, but looking
rather as if he were poised to leap to his ward’s defense. If this tale was a
hoax, the King and his most senior advisors were not in on it.
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“A sizable
force,” Athelgar said. “Gone already. Their tracks led to the beach.”
“Raiders,
sire? Baels?”
“Not Baels!”
snapped the royal Bael. “These were definitely not Baels!”
Wolf bowed
and waited to hear why the King was so sure and who else could have pulled off
such a feat.
The King
did not explain. “Baron Dupend was seriously wounded. At least a score of his
men were killed, and Grand Master thinks about as many of the attackers.The
Baroness was abducted.” He paused to stare out the window. “That appears to
have been the sole motive for the as-sault—to kidnap the lady.”
Wolf
resisted an urge to tell his sovereign lord he was out of his mind.Why should
anyone storm one of the most formidable strongholds in all Eurania to carry off
a woman guarded by three Blades and a garrison of men-at-arms, knowing the
loss of life this must entail? Even if Celeste’s stunning beauty had survived
four years of imprisonment, that would be carrying rape to improbable extremes,
and why else should anyone want that trollop? She had no land, no rich
relatives, no importance. Nevertheless, the report had come from Grand Master,
and for almost a year now Grand Master had been Durendal, Lord Roland. Any
Blade would accept Durendal’s testimony if he said the sea was wine.
“My brother’s ward was kidnapped, yet he
is still alive?” That was truly incredible. “I said so!” Athelgar was staring
at him very hard. “Does this news surprise you?”
Wolf
hastily adjusted to the idea that he had been summoned to answer a charge of
treason. He looked to Vicious for support and saw suspicion there, too. His path
and Celeste’s had crossed in the past; his brother shared her captivity at
Quondam. He struggled to view the grotesque news through Athelgar’s snaky eyes.
Fortunately
he need only speak the truth. “It amazes me. Your Majesty, I swear that I had
no prior knowledge of any plan or plot to rescue Lady”—he saw warning signs—“I
mean abduct Lady
Celeste.The news dumbfounds me. I do not know who could, or would want to,
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remove her from Quondam, nor who could
achieve it. Surely Your Grace cannot question my loyalty? Even if my binding
would allow me to engage in armed rebellion against your royal peace—which I do
not believe it would—I should never involve my own brother in so dastardly a
plot.”
“The
evidence is not yet clear,” the King said narrowly.“We are not certain who
injured your brother, nor which side he was supporting.”
“I swear I
know nothing about this, sire!”
“Grand
Inquisitor?”
The one on
the right said, “The witness speaks the truth.” They never hesitated and never
spoke at the same time, but nobody knew how they did it.They did not just take
turns.
The weather
in the chamber changed for the better.
“We are
relieved to hear it,” the King said, without looking much pleased. “Then you
will wish to hurry to your brother’s side, Sir Wolf, and we will have you
investigate this crime for us.”
The shocks
were coming too fast. Promoted in a blink from chief suspect to chief
inspector,Wolf mumbled something about being honored.
“Your first
destination must be Ironhall,” Athelgar said. “The casualties were taken
there, for it has the nearest octogram where they might be healed. Grand Master
thinks Sir Lynx will live.”
Not will
make a complete recovery? Wolf nodded,
distrusting himself to speak. Outlawed at twelve, imprisoned five years in
Ironhall and four more at Quondam—his brother had never known freedom. Now
this.
“And that
is about all we know,”Athelgar said, pacing again.“Every-thing else is hearsay.
Go and find out the facts! The news must be kept secret, until we know who and
what and why. Is that understood, Sir Wolf ? Extreme secrecy! Premature
disclosure will cause panic and talk of a foreign invasion. It may be
a foreign invasion for all we presently
know. The Commander recommends you as the best man to investigate. We know,” he
added sourly, “that you can be discreet.”
And
ruthless, but no doubt he was hinting that any other investigator might
uncover secrets Wolf had known and kept for years. Those would make stale news now,
no longer capable of raising the epic scandal they would have stirred up once,
yet Athelgar would certainly pre
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fer that his youthful follies remain
unmentioned. Spirits knew he had enough others to satisfy anyone. Wolf bowed
and murmured gratitude for the royal compliment.
“You will
be granted all the powers you require. Go and see to your brother and then
proceed to Quondam.”
“Your
Majesty does me honor.”Wolf wondered if he was being appointed royal scapegoat
for something. The King thought of him as a killer, but Vicious knew he did any
job as thoroughly as possible, whether it involved killing or not.
“To
expedite matters, Commander,” Lord Sparrow said primly, “pray advance Sir Wolf
adequate funds from the Guard’s coffers and apply to Chancery for
reimbursement. A representative of the Office of General Inquiry will accompany
you, Sir Wolf.”
“But I will
be in charge?” Wolf’s query created an angry pause. It should go without saying
that a Blade would not and could not take orders from a Dark Chamber snoop. It
also went without saying that the snoop would feel free to ignore, subvert, or
misunderstand any orders from a brainless sword twirler like Wolf. Especially
Wolf.
“You will
report to the Lord Chancellor,” the King decreed, “and the inquisitor to Grand
Inquisitor.”
“Your Grace
is setting up two inquiries?”
More
glares.
“I do
believe, sire,” Sparrow twittered, “that Sir Wolf should be given overall
authority.”
Athelgar
nodded grumpily.
Wolf
said,“I will also need the help of a sniffer, my lord.”This business reeked of
conjuration.
“The
nearest White Sisters’ priory,” the Chancellor said, “is in Lo-mouth.Your
commission will give you all the authority you need. The Council expects
frequent reports, Sir Wolf, but should you conclude that additional assaults
are likely, you will issue a general alarm directly to the authorities
concerned.”
“Who
keeps the King’s Peace on Whinmoor, my lord?” Sparrow pursed lips.“The sheriff
is Baron Dupend himself, but you will speak with the King’s voice.”
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“How soon can you leave?” the King
barked.
“The moment
I receive my writ and the funds, sire.”Wolf looked to the Gruesome Twosome.
“And my assistant?”
“Inquisitor
Hogwood will meet you at the stable, Sir Wolf,” said the one on the left.
“We will
send your commission there also,” said the Chancellor, peering over the clerk’s
shoulder at what he was writing.“Momentarily.”
“By
your leave, sire?”Wolf bowed to the King and was dismissed.
2
Vicious
stepped out to the anteroom with him.Wolf turned, expecting some sort of
explanation, but the Commander just snapped, “Move!” and went back in again.
So Wolf
moved. Heads turned as he streaked along the endless marble floors of Nocare,
skidding around corners. He paused at the guardroom door long enough to shout,
“Modred, pick me out a horse!” and resumed running. He reached his quarters,
dressed in two of everything topped off with a heavy fur robe, and was down at
the Guard’s stable with a pack on his shoulder before the groom had finished
saddling up under Sir Modred’s needle eye.The yard outside was heaped with
dirty snow, and the horses’ breath was icing up their stalls.
The haste was
unseemly but necessary if he were to leave before Inquisitor Hogwood appeared,
which is what Vicious had meant. Nobody liked the way inquisitors spied, lied,
and pried, but the mutual dislike between the snoops and the Blades ran
especially deep, and Vicious morbidly detested them. Wolf, moreover, was the
Dark Chamber’s least favorite Blade.
Modred had
chosen well, a powerful bay Wolf knew of old, which seemed to know him also,
snorting puffs of steam at him and stamping a roughshod hoof on the flags.
Young Florian arrived, panting, with a weighty purse from Vicious.A few moments
later a mousy clerk minced
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carefully across the yard to hand Wolf
his warrant, signed and sealed. He read it through carefully, disentangling
complex prose to establish that he was granted authority to go anywhere,
requisition anything, question, detain, or conscript anyone, even suspend
civil liberties. It was an astonishing delegation of power, but then he was the
government’s first response to an act of war, either foreign or civil.
Answering Modred’s frustrated glare with a smile of thanks, he swung into the
saddle and adjusted his sword.
As he rode
across the yard, another horse emerged from an adjacent stable and moved
alongside, its hooves making muffled thuds instead of the usual clatter. The
rider was well wrapped in black fur, with little more than his eyes visible
inside the hood of his cloak, but their glassy stare told Wolf his assistant
had arrived.
The snoop
said, “Trying to sneak away without me, Sir Wolf ?”
The little
of him that was visible suggested he was too young to be much help, even in a
fight, but Wolf would prefer an incompetent rookie to an older man deliberately
blocking him.
“I was
tired of waiting for you, Inquisitor Hogwood.”
The boy
held out a black glove. “Your commission, please.”
Unable to
think of a reason to refuse,Wolf fished out the scroll and handed it over.
Junior unrolled it, rolled it up again, and returned it.
“I thought
you wanted to read it.”
Fishy stare
again. “I did read it. Very curious, isn’t it?”
That was
typical snoop talk, but he sounded even younger than he looked and Wolf clung
tight to the remaining shreds of his temper.“Cu-rious in what way, boy?” He put
his horse into a saddle-high canyon cut through the drifts to the postern gate.
“In whom it
names and whom it does not.The Privy Council is apprised of massacre, either
armed insurrection or foreign invasion, and it reacts by sending a
twenty-four-year-old swordsman of meager education and repellent reputation.”
“It was a
birthweek present for me.”
“Prudence
would suggest dispatching several senior Privy Councillors with an entourage
of clerks and attorneys.”
Wolf could
sneer too. “In this weather, sonny? The poor dears
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wouldn’t last a league.” Babyface had
made a valid point, though. Wolf would be replaced the moment the roads were
passable again.
“Looking to
the Royal Guard for brains is still a questionable innovation.”
“But I am spiritually
bound to absolute loyalty.You are not.Who is not mentioned in the writ who
should be?”
By then
they were heading for the northern gatehouse, plodding along an avenue flanked
by giant beeches, half a century old and barely adolescent.
“Lord Roland,
of course. He sent the news. He has gone to Quondam to take charge. As Grand
Master of the Blades, he holds one of the senior offices in the realm. He must
have been sworn in as a member of the Privy Council before you were born, so
why not just send a courier with a warrant to confirm his authority? Of
course,” young Smartypants added, “Lord Roland is no longer bound and therefore
the King may doubt his loyalty. He may see him as being no more trustworthy
than an inquisitor.”
Fretting at
being under Blade authority, no doubt, the kid was trying to make Wolf look
like a dumb, pig-sticking swordsman. Doing quite well, too. Obviously he had
been better briefed than Wolf had.
“I expect
His Majesty wants a second opinion.”
“A trained
observer, more likely.”
“No eyes
are sharper than Blades’. Can you use that thing?” Blades had only contempt for
the sort of short sword Hogwood was wearing, a gentleman’s weapon.
“Not well
by your standards, Sir Wolf, but better than most men. I may fare as well as
you do against a pack of animals.”
The Yeomen
at the gatehouse noticed Wolf’s cat’s-eye hilt and saluted them through.The
“Animals?”
Hogwood
quirked very pretty eyebrows.“The intruders used teeth, claws, and clubs. No
swords, no axes.You were not told this?”
Athelgar
had been certain the attackers had not been Baels. What sort of injuries had
Lynx received? “Animals do not use clubs.” Wolf
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pulled
his hood forward. “I hope you can keep up, boy. I won’t wait
for
you.”
“You won’t have to, Sir Wolf.”
“No?”
He kicked in his heels and gave the bay its head.
3
In
summer Wolf could ride to Ironhall in a single day, but he knew he would be
lucky to do it in less than two in that snowy winter. Old
Where there
was a visible track, it was rarely wide enough for two horses abreast, so he
was spared the need to make conversation. He had time to worry as he rode—worry
about Lynx and his injuries, both physical and mental, and worry about the
King’s motives. Blades notoriously went mad when their ward died by violence,
but Wolf could recall no precedent for a ward being kidnapped while his Blade
still lived. And why had Athelgar assigned this extraordinary commission to
him, of all people? Lynx and he knew things about Celeste that might still
embarrass the King if they came out. Now Celeste had vanished, Lynx was at
death’s door, and the King had sent him to
investigate the bizarre affair? It made no sense.
The brief
winter day was ending in a blood-red smear when the travelers crossed the Gran
at Abshurst. With no one else crazy enough to be on the roads, the post house
offered a wide choice of well-rested mounts. By law, a Blade could take his
pick of the King’s horses and Hogwood knew enough to select the second-best.The
only reason Wolf had not taken that one was the mean look in its eye.
He would
not dare go farther until the moon rose, so he led the way to the dining room,
whose stench of bad beer and tallow candles would make a goat gasp. A few
locals were drinking in front of the fire, but quickly relinquished that
favored space to sword-bearing gentry.Waiters tossed down the usual dirty platters
and piled them with winter fare:
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salted fish, beans, and pickled pigs’
feet. They added fresh loaves, hard cheese, and mugs of small ale.
Hogwood was
now revealed as a skinny youth of about Wolf’s height, looking no more than
fourteen. The mystery thickened—why had the Dark Chamber sent a boy to
investigate an act of war or rebellion? Did the assignment seem so hopeless or
dangerous that no senior snoop would touch it? The King had been very sparing
with information. Was this a suicide mission?
“Well,
Inquisitor,”Wolf said.“Tell me about yourself.You look very young to be ...you
... you’re a girl!”
“So my
friends tell me.” She smirked.
So much for
bragging about the sharp eyes of a Blade! She was tall, but that did not excuse
Wolf’s folly. He would not knowingly have spoken to a woman so aggressively,
and could not mend his manners now without seeming ridiculous.
Male or
female, she was absurdly young to be assigned a case of such importance.
Nubile, though. Wolf fancied his women well bolstered, with a soft double chin
to make them seem more feminine, but Hog-wood as a girl was even more of a
beanpole than Hogwood the boy. Her hair was as black as her robes, worn in a
pageboy cut popular then among youths around court, somehow making her face
seem small and boyishly bony, despite full lips and lashes like cortege plumes.
In firelight, with winter roses blooming on her cheeks, she was childlike. She
would be in grave peril if she ever came within groping range of Athelgar the
Randy, who notoriously favored nymphets.
Wolf pulled
his wits together. “Tell me about yourself.”
“We are
forbidden to talk about ourselves.”
“Remember
you are my subordinate, Inquisitor. How old are you?”
She shook
her head, chewing and smirking down at her platter.
“I said, ‘How
old are you?’”
She looked
up with a sultry glance that would have stopped a knight in a tilting yard.
“Old enough for anything you require, Sir Wolf.”
He was
outmatched. Already he could feel old yearnings wakening. Buxom was not
essential. “What grade are you, then?”
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She sucked
on a bone and waved it in a vague gesture.“Not allowed to tell.”
“At least I’m
entitled to know your abilities. I have worked with snoops often enough to know
they come supplied with various tricks and skills. Some are conjuration, some
come from long training, others are gadgets in your pockets.”
“My skills
will be at your disposal when needed.”
Had she
been a boy, at that point Wolf would have leaned across the table and belted
his ear hard enough to spin his head like a weathercock. “When we set out today
you questioned the Privy Council’s wisdom in sending a man of my age and
background to investigate an act of war or armed rebellion.Tell me why Grand
Inquisitor did not assign a senior agent to support me, instead of a flippant
sixteen-year-old female ap-prentice?”That guess could be out three years either
way.
“Because I
was the best-qualified inquisitor available.”The gibe had amused her, which was
a warning that the truth might surprise him.
“Qualified
how, other than having shapely eyebrows?”
“I am not
permitted to answer.”
Wolf hurled
a bone into the fire. “This is ridiculous!” He studied her for a moment.“I know
this fodder would sicken a sewer rat, but it’s cold out there, so eat.
That’s an order.You’re as frightened as
the King was.What do you fear, Hogwood?”
“I am not
afraid!” Anger darkened the flush the fire had brought to her cheeks.
“Yes, you
are. I know I have the ugliest face in Chivial and they call me the King’s
Killer, but I rarely kill inquisitors, and never women or children, so you need
fear nothing from me, girl. What else scares you? The journey?”
“Nothing!”
She glared.
“You’re
lying,” he said and cut a hefty slice of cheese.
Suddenly
his assistant was wearing the blank, glassy mask of an inquisitor. Even the
flush faded from her cheeks. “This collaboration is not prospering. Start
again.You tell me your background and I’ll tell you mine.”
It was a
peace offering, he supposed. They had time to kill, a meal to eat. A job to
do.They couldn’t fight all the time.
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“My
history is no secret. I was born Ed Attewell in Westerth.” “In Sheese, to be
exact.” “A totally unimportant mining hamlet.” “Is it really?” He ignored that
dangerous invitation to tattle. “My father died in a
rock
fall, and my mother found another breadwinner.When she died in childbirth, he
found another bed mate. When he fell down a shaft . . . and so on. I lost
count.They got worse.Worse, they got drunk, and often on money I’d earned in
the pits.”The last stepfather had given him the start of his face—the smashed
nose, crumpled ears, gap teeth.“I had one full brother,Alf.When the current
house brute started in on him as well, I decided it was time for us to leave.”
Wolf had gone for him with a shovel, leaving himself no safe course except
flight.
Hogwood
had switched expressions, to Dark Chamber Sympathetic Face Number One, perhaps.
“So what led you to choose Ironhall?”
He
laughed and gulped down some ale. “Crime, of course. Every kid in Ironhall
brags of a criminal past. I remember one thirteen-year-old who boasted of being
a serial rapist until Prime asked him to explain exactly what a rapist did.”
Hogwood
did not smile. “But he is one now, of course?” “He’s a Blade in the Royal
Guard!” “The difference escapes me.” Was this insubordination intended to be
some sort of flirtation?
Hogwood
had a very kinky taste in men if she fancied Sir Wolf.
“The
difference is that Blades seduce,” he said.“If I decided to give you a treat,
darling, you would cooperate completely and thank me afterwards.” Incredibly, that
was true.The legend would overcome even his gargoyle face and macabre
reputation if he set his mind to it. It had happened more than once, although
he was not proud of the fact.
Hogwood
glanced around the dining room.“This is rather public. I hope you will rent a
bedroom for your demonstration, Sir Wolf.And explain to me how this legendary
side effect of the Blades’ binding conjuration differs from a love potion,
which is highly illegal.”
“It’s
more fun!” he snapped. Blades were notorious womanizers, but he had never heard
of one being accused of rape.
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“Then I’m
curious to know why you so seldom employ it. But do continue. How did your
crimes lead you to Ironhall?” Candlelight danced on the black agates of her eyes.
“Because we
had to steal food to survive.They set dogs on us. Eventually we came galloping
across Starkmoor, bareback on a stolen horse with a posse hot behind us.”
Looking back,Wolf could see that the pursuers had let their quarry escape to
sanctuary rather than see them hanged.
Two
trembling kids were led up the narrow stairs to the stark and forbidding flea
room. Sir Parsewood was Grand Master then—stooped and losing his teeth, but
well respected. He got the true story out of two waifs easily enough, although
he probably did not believe that Alf was thirteen, which is what Ed had told
him to say. He talked with them separately, tested their agility by throwing
coins for them to catch.
I have room
for one,” he told Wolf. “If I choose you, will you stay?”
“Not
without Alf.”
“And if I
choose him, will he stay without you?”
“If you’ll
let me get away before he finds out.”
But
Parsewood accepted both of them and ordered a skinny boy named
“A simple
tale, Inquisitor. Tell me yours. What sort of family lets a daughter become a
Dark Chamber snoop?”
Hogwood
paused in raising a crust to her mouth to give him a very long stare, not the
glassy-eyed snoop stare, just a stare. He was annoyed to find himself
discomfited by it.
Then
she said, “Have you ever heard of Waltham House?” “There’s a Waltham House near
the Bastion. It’s an orphanage endowed by Queen—” “Run and financed by HM
Office of General Inquiry.That’s where inquisitors come from.That’s the only
home I’ve ever known, Sir Wolf.”
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“All of them?” He had never heard this.
“All of us.”
“Spirits!
No fathers, no mothers?”
Pleasure at
shocking him flickered momentarily in her face.“Waifs left on the doorstep, or promising
toddlers from other institutions obtained in exchange.The Dark Chamber is
my family. I have been trained from
birth for this work.”
He had
never wondered where snoops came from.The idea of their black-coated forms
emerging from some teeming ants’ nest made him squirm. “Time to go.The moon
will be up.”
She resumed
her picky eating. “The groom promised to tell me when it is.”
“You can’t
rely on kids like him.”
“I can. He
knew I was not a boy and he was not lying. Enough about background, let’s discuss
qualifications.Why did the King choose you to lead this investigation, Sir
Wolf?”
Hoping to
shock her in turn, he said, “Probably because he hates me.”
She nodded.
“Yes. That is curious. It is no secret that you and His Majesty detest each
other, which is an absurd situation when you are spiritually bound to defend
him to the death. How did this quarrel originate?”
“The Dark
Chamber must know. If it matters, why weren’t you briefed on it?”
She studied
him again, licking her fingers.“I thought we had agreed to cooperate?”
He thought
subordinates were expected to be respectful to their superiors, but no doubt
inquisitors kept prying from habit, just as Blades had to stay physically
active. And the King’s motives might turn out to be very significant.
“It’s a
stupid story.” But it had begun in Ironhall, with no witnesses except Blades,
so the Dark Chamber might have failed to dig out the facts. “You won’t remember
King Ambrose. He came to harvest Blades for the Guard only twice in my time at
Ironhall—a sick, fat old man, barely able to walk. After that he let ripe
seniors pile up like hay before assigning batches of them to courtiers and
ministers.”
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That royal
error was later to turn the Thencaster Conspiracy into a Blade tragedy and give
the King’s Killer his title.
“We all
hoped he would die soon, which he did, and one blustery spring day his daughter
came riding over the moor with the Royal Guard at her back. It had been many
years since a woman had performed the binding ritual, and we juniors noisily
laid bets on how many seniors she would kill before she learned how to handle a
sword. Fortunately Prime was Hereward, a lad of much more beef than imagination.
Amid the chanting and flickering firelight he sat bare-chested on the anvil in
the center of the octogram and barely flinched when she rammed his saber
through his heart. After that the other bindings were routine.
“Malinda
was a staunch woman. I think her husband had taught her fencing. He had certainly
tutored their son.We were all puzzled to know why she took only six seniors
when there were so many waiting in line. The answer appeared a week later in
the form of Crown Prince Athelgar, aged eighteen and as red-haired a Bael in
those days as ever earned a dying curse. He insisted on fencing with some of
the candidates. I was chosen and made him look foolish.That’s all.”
Hogwood
frowned. “How foolish?”
“Very
foolish.”
Wolf was only
a fuzzy, but a better fencer than most of the seniors. He would have been
promoted months ago, had there not been some sad clodhoppers ahead of him. An
hour after the Crown Prince arrived, Grand Master sent the current Brat to find
him. Parsewood played favorites, and Wolf was one of them.
“His Royal
Highness,” he mumbled through his awful teeth,“has expressed interest in
fencing with some of the candidates.”
“That would
indeed be an honor, Grand Master.”
“I’m glad
you think so.You will go first. If you fail to make him look like a paralyzed
palsied duck with dropsy, you will find yourself on quadruple stable duties
every day until you leave here.”
“The
prospect forebodes, Grand Master.”
“Also
flogged raw every morning after breakfast.”
“I do comprehend
your position, Grand Master.”
“Knew I
could count on you, sonny.”
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They
grinned together, thinking it was funny, but it did not turn out funny. Give
Athelgar his due—one rarely got the chance—he might just have wanted to reassure
Prime and the other seniors that he could use a sword, but he was displaying a
typical lack of tact by reminding everyone that his father, the current King of
Baelmark, had trained at Ironhall.The Blades of the Royal Guard who had been
sent along to look after him were especially furious, checking and rechecking
foils and padding.The entire school flocked out to the quad to watch.
When they
had Athelgar wrapped up like a pudding, anonymous behind a chain mask, Grand
Master called forward Candidate Wolf. Assuming he had been chosen for his
ogreish looks as much as his ability, Wolf had deliberately mussed up his hair
and discarded his shirt, although the day was chilly and everyone else was
dressed to the gables for the royal visitor. He was still narrow-shouldered,
all wrists and ankles, looking younger than his age, and adolescence had
blighted his smashed face with pustules and brown moss he could not shave
without bleeding to death.
This
eyesore proceeded to make a public spectacle of the Heir Apparent.Wolf planted
bare feet on the grass, hooked his left thumb in his belt, and parried every
stroke. He scratched. He yawned. When the Prince paused to catch his breath,
Wolf switched his foil to his other hand, and still Athelgar could not touch
him. To be fair, he would have been judged exceptional by any standards but the
Blades’, but Wolf made him look like a fretful rabbit attacking an oak tree. Juniors
laughed outright. Guardsmen turned purple trying not to.
Hogwood
tossed a bone in the fire and licked her fingers.“You were only doing what
Grand Master told you.”
Wolf
shrugged. “Nobody knew then how well our future King could carry a grudge.”
“It’s a
nice story,” Hogwood said, licking her fingers.“I can’t believe it’s the whole
truth.”
“I also
lipped him a few times, but that started it. Now your turn. What makes you
qualified for a mission this important?”
Hogwood
shrugged. “A doctorate in conjury. I am the highest-ranking spiritualist in the
Dark Chamber.”
Wolf opened
his mouth and no words came out. At her age?
A stableboy
came to smile worshipfully at Hogwood and tell her the moon was up and he had
saddled the horses.
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4
Knowing
the bare chalk hills that lay ahead,Wolf decided to take a pair of spare mounts,
a precaution that would not slow them much. There was no real road there, even
in summer, but the wind had cleared away most of the snow and he could steer by
the stars. However romantic the combination of moonlight and pretty girls was
supposed to be, he could see nothing endearing about that frigid night—breath
smoking, horseshoes ringing on frozen ground, relentless cold eating in
through his furs. Hogwood had no trouble with her evil-eye horse, so one of
them was better than he had expected.
When they
slowed the pace to rest the horses, she rode alongside, asking impertinent
questions.
“There must
be more to the King’s dislike of you than you have told me.”
“I told you
I sauced him, and he’s a very petty person.” Not
an actual lie, just an incomplete truth. “Why
are you so afraid?”
“What makes
you think I am afraid?”
Visual
clues—the way she had kept her arms in front of her breasts, for instance, but
he did not explain. Blades had professional secrets too. “You know a lot more
than you have told me. I still think you were assigned to accompany me because
no senior snoop would accept such a hopeless mission.You are worried because
you know we are both dispensable and are heading into danger.”
“A wild
hypothesis! You will be in far greater danger than I, Sir Wolf.”
“Why so?”
“Visiting
Ironhall.” If she curled her pretty lip, it was hidden by her wrappings. “The
Blades have a reputation for avenging their own, and no one has ever slain more
Blades than you have. I am astonished that you have survived so long.”
Hogwood
ought to know that he had visited Ironhall a dozen times in the last year,
because he was first choice whenever Vicious needed
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something
done out of town—anything to keep him out of the King’s
sight.
Her briefing had been deliberately falsified.
“How many Blades am I alleged to have
murdered?”
“At least three, possibly five.”
The correct
answer was eight, which she should know because the Guard certainly did. “And
how many other men?”
“Inquisitor
Schlutter for one.”
Ah!
Schlutter’s unpleasant end was the inquisitors’ main grudge against Wolf. He
wondered whether they had told the girl anything close to the truth; also
whether she had been assigned to him as an agent of vengeance. His Majesty’s
Office of General Inquiry had a very long memory.
“Inquisitor
Schlutter committed suicide.”
“He was
murdered!” she shouted, shaken out of her flippancy at last. “By an outlaw Blade,
while you stood by and did absolutely nothing to help him!”
“It is bad
manners to interfere in a private quarrel.”
“You murder
and then joke about it?”
“You expect
a serial killer to weep? We were sent to arrest Lord Gosse. He and his Blades
had flown, leaving Sir Rodden behind to delay pursuit. Inquisitor Schlutter
drew on him—drew on a Blade defending his ward! Coroners usually call that
suicide, Hogwood.”
“But
Schlutter was in charge. You were supposed to defend him. That was what you
were there for! Instead, you waited until Rodden killed him and only then did
you kill Rodden.You snuffed him like a candle, they said. If he was so easy for
you, why did you wait until it was too late to save Schlutter?”
“It was my
going-away present for the boy.”
She stared
at him aghast, knowing that he spoke the truth.
Rodden had
been Lynx’s best friend at Ironhall, and his death was entirely Schlutter’s
fault.When Gosse’s other two Blades spirited their ward away, they left Rodden
to cover their getaway, although he was by far the youngest.That was a breach
of the code and Rodden quite rightly resented it.The trail was at least a day
old by the time the King’s men arrived, so there was time to argue and heroics
would do little good. He had understood that.Wolf could have talked him
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into
letting the King’s men go past, and that would have saved his life, if not his
sanity. But Idiot Schlutter tried to arrest him at swordpoint. Rodden resisted,
of course, and after that there was no hope for him.
Wolf’s
turn.“Give me your professional opinion, Inquisitor. I know
you have a golden key to open locked
doors.Will it raise a portcullis?” “No.” “Knowing my brother, I am certain that
Quondam was locked up
tight
three nights ago. Can you suggest any way the murderers could
have entered such a fortress?”
“Treachery or conjuration.” “Has the Dark Chamber any theories on who the
raiders were?” “I was told it does not.” “A curious evasion.” Her chin jerked upward.“Agents
are told only as much as they need
to know.To burden me with theories might
bias my investigation.” Her investigation?
The child had grand ideas. “Does the Chamber know why they went to such lengths
just to
kidnap
Celeste?”
“Their
purpose is something we have to discover.The Baroness may be irrelevant. My
turn: Why did you accept binding to a man you hated?”
Her
excessive interest in Wolf’s past probably meant that she was after the Celeste
story, which he had no intention of sharing with her, relevant or not.
“Stupidity.”
“His or yours?” “Both. By the time Malinda abdicated, I was ripe for binding.
One
fine
spring evening Grand Master summoned us seniors for a little pep talk.The new
King was on his way, he said. For five years, he reminded us, Ironhall had
given us bed and board, refuge and education.We were rightly proud of what we
now were, but Ironhall had made us so.When His Majesty chose to present the
bill, it behooved each of us to honor that debt. Of course we all knew that the
paradigm ingrate, the one who had refused binding many years before, had been
the new King’s father, Radgar Æleding.There would be an odor of justice
in the air if any of
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us chose to turn that table on Athelgar
himself, but we all promised solemnly not to weasel out.
“Who would
be chosen? There were fourteen seniors and Grand Master was sure to hold back
four or five to seed the next crop. Lynx and I were eighth and ninth, although
we did not know which was officially which. I was privately resigned to being
left behind as Prime. It was two years since I had shamed Athelgar at fencing.
Judging by the way I had caught him looking at me on subsequent visits, his
pride had never healed, so he would not want me lurching around the palace for
the next ten years to remind him of that humiliation. I was certain he would
assign me to some petty bureaucrat as a private Blade.”
Next day
Athelgar entered Ironhall for the first time as king.At his side rode a pudgy, red-haired
young man.The candidates could not guess who he might be, but they knew where
to ask, and the Guard graciously informed them that the popinjay was Garbeald
Aylwining, childhood friend of His Majesty, recently come from Baelmark.
Neither Ambrose nor Malinda had ever brought spectators along to a binding.
Nervous and suspicious, the seniors retired to their dorm to await the ordeal.
Parsewood
always sent for the required number plus one, and an hour or so later the Brat
arrived with a summons for the top nine, which was about what Wolf had
expected. Putting on a brave front, the Blades-elect strode out to meet the
monarch, loftily ignoring the excited juniors boiling along beside them.
In the
chilly, barren flea room they lined up before Grand Master and the King, while
the mysterious Garbeald leaned against the wall with arms folded, watching the
proceedings in contemptuous silence.The boys were shocked by their first close
look at the two Court dandies. From the plumes on their bonnets to the pointed
toes of their buskins, they sparkled and shone. Their polychrome sleeves were
puffed and slashed beyond all reason, while their capes and jerkins came down
only to their waists, exposing silken hose like paint from ankle to buttocks
and gaudy, padded codpieces spangled with jewels. These were the new palace
fashions that had appeared since the old Queen departed, featuring the new
King’s taste.They made Parsewood look like a shabby old crow in his Iron-hall
patches, and the candidates even shabbier.
“Prime
Candidate Viper,” Grand Master mumbled,“His Majesty has need of a Blade. Are
you ready to serve?”
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Viper
agreed that he was, paid homage to the King, and was granted a gracious few
words of welcome.Then came Second . . . and so on.Wolf had put himself at the
end of the line, but when Number Seven, Hengist, had kissed the royal fingers,
Parsewood passed over Lynx.
“Candidate
Wolf, His Majesty has need of a Blade.Are you ready to serve?”
Wolf
snapped back to the beating of hooves, moonlight like crystal, the iron world
of winter . . .
“I never
expected him to want me,” he told Hogwood. “I stared right at him—which is not
proper protocol with a king, of course—and he sneered back at me, daring me to
let him put a sword through my heart in the binding ritual. If it missed by a
hair’s-breadth, I would die, and Baels are not known for compassion. But all my
friends were watching, so I had no choice. I walked forward and knelt to kiss
his fingers.”
“The logic
escapes me,” she said.
“It escapes
me now, but I was nineteen then. His Majesty said,‘I do recall Candidate Wolf’s
skill with steel.’ Who was laughing now? Well enough! It was an honor to be
remembered by my sovereign and if he had left it there, as his mother would
have done, then we could have all smiled and admired His Grace’s grace. But
Athelgar Radgaring has the tact of a crotch louse.
“ ‘Ready
for a rematch, are you,Wolf ?’ he said.
“That was gloating.Yes, he was my King
and I should have bridled my tongue. I didn’t. I said, ‘Don’t worry, this time
I won’t be armed.’ ” Hogwood gasped. “That was insolence!” “That was stupidity!
I told you it was stupid.” Wolf increased the
pace, ending the conversation—but not
ending the memories.
Parsewood said hastily,“Finally, sire, I
have the honor of presenting Candidate Lynx, who will henceforth serve Your
Majesty as Prime, here in Ironhall.” Lynx bowed. That should have been that.
The candidates waited for dismissal.
“Well, my
friend,” the King said, “who do you fancy?”
“Viper, I think,”
Garbeald said in a bored drawl.“I like his taste in names. And that last one.
He is so incredibly ugly!” Athelgar laughed.“He doesn’t need a sword—he
frightens people to death.” He smiled again. “But I want to bind Candidate Wolf
personally.”
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The Bael shrugged and pointed at
Hengist. “That one, then.”
Athelgar
nodded to Parsewood.
“Candidates
Viper and Hengist stay a moment,” Grand Master said.“The rest of you may go.”
He in the
Guard, his friend Hengist a private Blade, and Lynx as Prime— all Wolf’s
predictions had been wrong and he was in shock as he followed the others
out.They trooped downstairs to gird on their swords again, then to head out to
the quad and the cheers of the assembled juniors. One of the knights was waiting
below, congratulating each man in turn, but when it came to Wolf’s turn, he
added, “A word with you, Candidate.”
The others
departed, leaving the two of them alone.
Durendal,
Lord Roland, former Lord Chancellor, and greatest of all Blades since his
legendary namesake who founded the Order—even the cynical seniors held Durendal
in awe.Widowed and bored in retirement, he had come to live at Ironhall the
previous year, and although he refused any formal title or duties, the entire
place soon revolved around him. He could explain anything better than anyone,
see farther, say more in fewer words. In fencing, strategy, or statecraft he
was the supreme expert. He had a kind or humorous word for everyone and he spoke
to the grooms in the stable the same way he spoke to Grand Master.
“You did
not spit in the King’s eye, I hope?”
“Not quite,
my lord.”
Roland
frowned.“Good. I was a little worried. I just wanted to tell you that it was my
idea.”
“What was?”
“Separating
you and Lynx. Blame me. I suggested it to Grand Master. For Lynx’s sake,Wolf.”
“I don’t
understand.”
“Yes, you
do.” Roland’s smile took the sting out of the contradiction. “He needs a few
months without you.You’ve been mother and father to him too long.”
“He’s only
seventeen! He can’t handle being Prime! Some of those oafs have two years on
him!”
The young
ones might be worse, though. Lynx was bigger than Wolf, better-looking, much
better liked, and potentially a better fencer, although even there he tended to
be too easygoing. Wolf told him he lacked the killer instinct, never dreaming
how that humor would return to haunt him. Lynx’s binding should
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take care of that weakness in due
course, but he would not have binding to help him to handle the junior rat
pack.They could make his life one big torment.
Roland
laughed.“They’ll all stand on their heads for him. Go out there and tell him
you’re proud of him and expect him to do a great job—which he will.”
“Yes, my
lord.”
“Wolf,Wolf!
He needs a chance to prove himself.You proved yourself years ago collecting
those scars.” He clapped Wolf’s shoulder. “Let him wipe his own nose for a
while. Understand?”
“I do trust
your judgment, my lord.”
Durendal just
smiled at the sarcasm.“I am flattered! Vicious has been pruning out older men,
so the Guard is below strength. Believe me, Lynx will be along to join you by
summer.”
“And what
about this Garbeald?”
Roland
glanced at the stair and frowned. “Who’s missing?”
“Viper and
Hengist.”
“Ah. And if
His Majesty chooses to assign two Blades to his friend, will you complain to
him?”
“Of course
not.”
“Good.
Kings are not always right, Wolf, but they’re always kings. And don’t you worry
about tomorrow night. Athelgar won’t miss.”
Wolf said,
“You’re certain of that?” It was his heart they were discussing.
Durendal smiled. “Oh, yes. A monarch
must consider his reputation.”
The wind was rising, swirling snowflakes
over the icy ground in fairy dances. Moonlight shone on corpse-pale clouds
piling up in the west, suggested a storm, which at these temperatures would be
a killer. They still had two-thirds of the way to go.
The next
time they dropped back to a walk, Hogwood said, “Obviously the King did not
kill you.”
“You snoops
are wonderfully observant.”
“I cannot
imagine how any of you find the courage to sit and let someone drive a sword
through your heart.”
“There’s no
real danger,” Wolf said. “We’ve all seen it done a hundred times before we
have to do it ourselves.”
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Expect him.
Conjury always gave him a thundering headache, and after four hundred years the
Forge was so tainted by spirituality that he had never stayed there long enough
to watch a binding completed.That night he had no choice and within the
octogram itself the effect was murderously intense. He was barely conscious as
he stumbled through the words of the oath.When he sat on the anvil with Lynx
and Modred holding his arms, he knew vaguely that the King was taking much
longer than usual to line up the stroke, letting the point of the sword wander
all around the target chalked on his bare chest, but all he was thinking was
that he wanted Athelgar to kill him quickly and put him out of his misery.
“So you won
the dare,” Hogwood said. “You won!
Why do you still hate the King?”
She was
still fishing for the Celeste story, and Athelgar had ordered him to keep it
secret.
“It’s my
turn to ask questions.Why are you so interested in me, inquisitor? Are you
investigating this Quondam mystery, or me?”
“Professional
curiosity, Sir Wolf. You are a curious case. You are a perfectionist, the
smartest man in the Guard. You named your sword Diligence
and you polish it about six times a day.You
rarely apply the seduction skills that are the main compensation for being a
Blade, and when you do form a sexual pairing, it never lasts long.You show no
interest in other men. The Guard’s confidential file on you describes you as a
ready killer who enjoys killing. Understandably, you have no close friends. Is
that really all that drives you—a love of killing?”
Had any man
asked such a question, Wolf would have blistered his ears, but no man would
have dared. Besides, they had long leagues to go yet, and conversation would
keep him from brooding on Lynx and his wounds.
“You are
good at answering questions with questions, Inquisitor, but you are asking the
same thing twice. Do you know what set off the Thencaster affair?”This was a
hair-trigger topic, because the treason had come very close to the Dark Chamber
itself.
“Lord
Wassail walked in on the King’s toilet and told him he would be deposed if he
didn’t act quickly.”
“I mean
what set off the treason?”
“The King
made some bad decisions.The ultimatum from Thergy—”
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“You’re
quoting history books. Athelgar behaved like a maniac, but the last straw was
not Thergy. It was Garbeald.”
After a
moment Hogwood admitted, “I don’t know what you mean.”
“You know
of him as the Duke of Brinton, a Baelish thug who had made even Baelmark too
hot to hold him. Athelgar gave that scum-bucket a royal dukedom. He also gave
him two superb young men, like a pair of
hunting dogs—Viper and Hengist.They were bound the same night I was. It was
when that pissant fustilugs raped Lord Lowbridge’s daughter that the Chivian
nobility decided they had endured enough. That was when the Thencaster
Conspiracy was born.”
“Tell me
about Viper and Hengist, then.”
“No.”Wolf
nudged his horse to a trot, which made further conversation impossible.
5
He
knew the
Teeth,
claws, clubs—what was he up against? What opponents fought with such a mix? Lynx,
Lynx! What have they done to you?
The leg
west from Flaskbury was the longest; the eastern sky was brightening by the
time they reached Holmgarth. He was determined not to slacken the pace before
Hogwood asked him to or fell back, and so far she had done neither. He thundered
on the door of the post house until a sleepy hand admitted them.
They waited
in the stable itself while the lad led grumpy horses out from their stalls to
show.The lamps cast grotesque shadows, the urinous air made eyes sting, but at
least there was warmth. Slumped on a bale of
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straw, Hogwood looked half dead with
fatigue, obviously still believing she could keep up with a bound Blade.
“There is
no inn between here and Ironhall,” Wolf said. “This is your last chance to take
a break.”
She looked
up sourly. “You lead, I’ll follow.”
“As you
please. We won’t stay long at Ironhall. As soon as we’ve heard from the
witnesses there, we’ll push on to Quondam itself.”
“You are in
charge, Sir Wolf.”She folded her arms and looked down at the floor again, but
now she was wearing her dead-fish mask. He suspected she was using it to hide
fear, in which case the danger she foresaw must lie at Quondam.
“Did you
have any choice when you were detailed to accompany me?”
“We are not
allowed to discuss the—”
“I
heard.You think I’m going to bungle the most important inquiry in years? The
whole Dark Chamber must think so.You were assigned to me as patsy, Hogwood, and
you know it.What do they do to inquisitors who fail to get their man? Rack
them? Burn them at the stake?”
Glassy
stare.“If this mission fails it will be through no fault of mine, Sir Wolf.”
She could not possibly be old enough to have much experience of major
investigations, certainly not as senior inquisitor.
“Nor mine. I
always get my man. Perhaps I’ll be able to cut a few more notches in my sword
belt soon, mm? Think so?”
She turned
her face away in silence, as if disgusted by his black humor.
The groom
brought another horse and again Wolf told him he did not want one with white
hooves. He led it back into the shadows.
After a
moment she said, “Tell me.”
“Tell you
what?”
“What you
just remembered.”
She was
becoming a serious nuisance.
He said,“I
know you can detect a falsehood if it is spoken, but I refuse to believe you
can read my thoughts.”
“Didn’t you
just remember something significant about this place?”
“No.”
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“You were
pulling faces.”
“You’re
trawling. I’ve been through here dozens of times. Of course I remember things,
but it’s nothing that need concern you.”
Perhaps it
did, because ultimately it concerned Celeste. In that stable, on the very day
he was bound, he had heard the first rumble of what was to become the Thencaster
thunderstorm. Athelgar had left Ironhall for Grandon at dawn.The rest of the
Guard watched in amusement as the eager rookies all tried to ride as close as
possible to their new ward.The King ignored them, chatting with Garbeald, who
likewise had Hengist and Viper fretting to draw alongside him.
It was
there at Holmgarth, when Wolf was choosing a remount in the sta-ble—a place
royal feet deigned not to tread—that a heavy hand settled on his shoulder.
“You need some help, brother,” Terror
said. Sir Terror was an old Ambrose man, likely to receive the Order of the
Boot soon. “That’s kind of you, but . . .”Wolf recalled that Terror was one of
the finest horsemen in the Guard. “Thanks.This one looks—”
Terror
eased him backward into the stall until they were squeezed between rough planks
and a piqued stallion.“This one has four white hooves.Always try for black if
you can. That wasn’t what I had in mind.” He spoke more softly. “We all saw
what the Pirate’s Son did to you last night, toying with you. Nasty, that.”
“I
survived.”Wolf was pleased the incident had been noted.
Terror
jabbed him hard in the ribs.“But leave it there, boy! Some might say you earned
it by lipping him the day before. Now you’ve sworn to die for him and he’s the
King.You can’t win that battle. Leader said to pass the word to all the
greenhorns, especially you: ‘The Pirate’s Son has a mean streak, ignore it.’
Follow me?”
Wolf
shrugged. “I find it contemptible. I’m amused he is so petty.”
Poke again.
“He can out-petty your amusement any day, kid.” The awesome black beard
bristled.“Listen! It’s not just you. It’s not even him personally, just that he
was reared in Baelmark and got washed up here in Chivial. He don’t know any
better. Ever since mommy went home to her pirate, he’s been running wild. He
insulted the Speaker. He mocked the Lord Mayor and other nobs who came to
present loyal addresses. Now he’s given that creepy Bael buddy of his a
dukedom—a royal dukedom—and that will hit the real nobs like a bucket of
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vomit. He hasn’t been on the throne a
month yet.You’re nothing, but some people do matter.”
This was a
jolt of adult reality. Even Wolf was not green enough to miss the point.
“You’re implying I may have to make good on my oath?”
Terror
dropped his voice even lower. “If he keeps on like this, anything may happen.”
The novelty
of being treated as one of the gang was a heady sensation. “I don’t like the
look of that Garbeald. Isn’t it odd that the Pirate’s Son’s best friend didn’t
show up in Chivial until after his mommy had left?”
Poke become
punch with
an impact that made Wolf gasp.
“Stop it!Vicious
said to tell you to keep your jackass mouth shut from now on.Take that chestnut
over there, if you’re not too proud to ride a mare. She’s a little wonder.”With
that Terror went away.
Of
course Wolf had been right about Garbeald, but things might have turned out
better if Leader had never sent him that warning.The rest of his conversations
with the older guardsmen on that ride had concerned the latest Court scandals,
especially the King’s new mistress, the exotic Marquesa Celeste, and the way
ladies’ necklines were plunging to hitherto unseen depths.
At Blackwater, the sky had turned to
lead and a bitter wind was lifting the fallen snow and swirling it around the
horses’ fetlocks. The blur of brightness marking the sun said the hour was not
far past noon. There should be time to reach Ironhall before dark.
The small
post house there was run by the only fat Blade in the Order, Sir Orvil. Right
after his knighting he had married the previous owner’s daughter and raised the
rates until Ambrose threatened to pass a law to stop him.
Orvil was
slack-jawed at seeing an inquisitor riding to Ironhall, and a female one at
that. If he had heard of any other raids along the coast he would certainly be
babbling of them, but his ignorance of even the Quondam assault showed that
news was not traveling as it usually did. He knew about
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prising. Of course Orvil wanted to know
what the fire-and-death was going on to raise so much excitement, and of course
nobody was telling him.
“Weather
looks bad,” he muttered, peering out the stable door at the sky and the snowy
folds of the moor.“Starkmoor is death after dark, my lad.We could put you up
until it blows over.”Again he ogled the inquisitor with disbelief.
“We have to
push on,” Wolf insisted. “My assistant may have more sense.”
She just
shook her head, too weary to speak, her face haggard, with dark smears of pain
under the eyes, but Wolf knew he might see worse in a mirror. She was certainly
using some sort of Dark Chamber conjuration to keep going. Fair’s fair—he was
drawing stamina from his binding.
“Let me
send the boy with you, then,” Orvil said, all chubby and sincere. “Tam knows
the moor like the back of his head, don’t you, Tam?”
The
gangling stableboy smiled shyly and continued saddling their mounts. Wolf knew
that his dear brother Blade would charge him a month’s wages for the loan of
his underpaid hand and add as much again for keeping secrets from him, but he
also knew how treacherous the moor could be. In his beansprout year, four
candidates out riding had been caught in a snap blizzard and died. The locals
had an instinct for the moors. He was a Westerther himself, but not from these
parts.
“What do
you think,Tam? Can you guide us to Ironhall, or is it too dangerous?”
The boy
grunted the local equivalent of “Yes” while shaking his head, which meant that
he was not frightened and was willing to take them. He also knew that Wolf was
a generous tipper. Orvil beamed and prepared to haggle.
Tam turned
out to be a wise decision.Wind raged up on the moor, hurling gritty snow in
their faces and driving a fog that hid all the landmarks. He took a couple of
shortcuts Wolf would not have risked, across bogs frozen by the long cold, but
his main service was just to relieve Wolf of the need to do anything except
stay on his horse.
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Cold and soaked,
every bone throbbing with fatigue, he rode in a stupor, thinking—when he
thought at all—about meeting Lynx again, after so long. Although Ironhall to
Quondam was not far as the crow flew, Whinmoor and Starkmoor were separated by
the Great Bog. Horses, unlike crows, must make a day-long trek around by
Newtor. On many of his visits to Ironhall,Wolf could have stolen enough time to
go and visit Lynx, but his persnickety conscience would not let him be absent
from his ward on a personal whim. In four years they had exchanged a dozen or
so letters. Lynx would have changed.
Wolf was
taken by surprise when the fairytale fake battlements of Ironhall emerged from
the whirling murk. There was respite from the wind in the lee of the walls, and
he urged his sad horse forward alongside Hogwood’s.
“We’re
here.You’ve done well, for a woman.”
She peered
blearily out of her snow-caked hood. “And you, for an old man.”
“Are you
ready to begin your investigation?”
“Your
investigation, Sir Wolf.”
“No.
Finding out what happened is your job. Report to me everything you
discover—who is lying, who is holding back, all your theories and suspicions.
If I notice or suspect anything, I will be equally open with you, I promise. I
will decide what we do about it all in the end. Meanwhile I want everyone to
believe you are in charge and I am just muscle sent along to protect you.” He
did not feel capable of fighting a dead frog.
“Why?” she
demanded suspiciously.
“Do you
always question orders? Are you too tired to start work at once?”
“No.”
“Then do as
I say. I promise you all the credit or blame you deserve. My reputation is
already made. Make yours.”
“Thank
you.” She was puzzled, but she was supposed to be.
“Just do a
good job.” He eased his horse back to the rear again as they turned into the
gateway.
Both the
King and the Dark Chamber bore grudges against him.
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Somewhere on the road he had decided
that this affair must eventually result in an inquiry into his inquiry, so he would
find himself testifying before inquisitors.The snoops looked after their own
and any restriction he placed on Hogwood would damn him, if he wasn’t damned
already.
When they
reined in at the Main House steps, she threw back her hood and stared at him
with red-rimmed eyes. “Whom do you suspect at the moment, Sir Wolf ?”
“Athelgar,
but I don’t know what he’s up to.” For the first time ever, he saw an
inquisitor’s smile. It was thin and transient. “Because he sends one of his own
Blades to investigate?”
“Partly.
Also because I can’t think of anyone else with resources to storm Quondam or
reason to abduct Celeste. I can’t even see that the King has that. If he wanted
her back he could just send for her.”
“But
if we discover that your ward did cause so many needless deaths, you will
suppress the truth?” “You know I will have no choice. How about you, if it
turns out that the Dark Chamber is guilty?” “That is an outrageous suggestion!”
Apparently the girl had not even thought of that possibility. “Why? Don’t try
to tell me the Chamber never arranges assassinations!” Wolf slid painfully
from the saddle.
6
Predictable
as roosters at dawn, a dozen boys had come running out to see who these snowmen
visitors were.When they recognized the infamous Sir Wolf they stood back and
stared, solemn and silent as a forestful of owls. None of them would have seen
an inquisitor before or would guess what Hogwood’s black robes meant, but they
knew the King’s Killer, the worst villain in the Guard.
The young
swordsman who came loping down after them was Rivers, a smarmy, unpleasant
youth, but currently Second and hence a
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voice of authority with power to punish.
He yapped out commands, sending guides off with Tam and the horses to see that they
were all cared for, delegating other boys to bring the saddlebags, telling off
one to inform Master of Rituals, and dismissing everyone else with dire
threats.
He led the
visitors indoors. “Sir Wolf, your brother is much improved. No, he’s this way,
in the guardroom.The infirmary is full of Lord Dupend’s men.”
“This is
Second Candidate Rivers—Inquisitor Hogwood.”
Rivers
nodded as they walked. “Master Inquisitor, you are . . .”
Wolf was
amused to watch “welcome” change to “a woman” and then disappear entirely as
Rivers’s jaw dropped. How long since a woman of her age had visited Ironhall?
“Is Grand
Master still at Quondam, Candidate?” she asked.
“Yes, um,
my lady.”Walking sideways, Rivers continued to stare at her. “He left Master of
Rituals in charge here, and he’s done wonders with the healings! The Baron, Sir
Lynx, and another dozen. Of course, not all ...I mean, some of them had very
terrible wounds.” He pulled a face. “This is a very strange and frightening
event.”
“When did
you hear the news?”
“Just
before dawn on the fifteenth, er, mistress.When the raiders left, Sir Alden
sent a rider, then loaded the worst of the wounded in a wagon and drove it over
here himself.There was a full moon, of course, and the Great Bog is frozen this
year.”
So Lynx
owed his life to the weather? “Who is Sir Alden?”
“Not a
Blade, sir. Lord Dupend’s knight banneret. Very quick-witted for his years.”
Rivers
narrowly avoided walking into a red-haired swordsman waiting in the corridor
to First House, already beaming at Hogwood.
“Dolores!”
Hogwood
said formally, “Good chance to you, Sir Intrepid.” She was wearing her working
face, all stone and glass.
“And to
you. What a wonderful surprise! Welcome to Ironhall, Inquisitor. And brother
Wolf, of course.”
Intrepid
was unpopular in the Order. He had an abrasive manner
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and was reputed to have deliberately
galled Ambrose until the old man booted him out of the Guard several years short
of a normal term. Thereupon he had enrolled in the Royal College of Conjury and
done so well there that one of Lord Roland’s first acts as Grand Master had
been to call him back to Ironhall to be Master of Rituals. That had shocked the
Blades, but Durendal’s opinion carried such weight that Intrepid was now on a
sort of unspoken probation. Wolf was willing to overlook a mountain of gall if
he had done so well ministering to Lynx and the other Quondam wounded.
“And where
did you two meet?”Wolf demanded.
“Dolores
was the most rewarding student I ever had,” Intrepid pro-claimed.“I take it
Grand Master’s letter reached the court?” He glanced inquiringly from Blade to
inquisitor, wondering which was in charge.
“Yes,” she
said. “The Privy Council sent us to look into things.” Subtly, her reply misled
him.
“A
commendable choice and a very impressive testimonial, Inquisitor.
Congratulations! This business may require all your genius. There was
undoubtedly some novel conjury involved.” He glanced at Wolf to see how he
enjoyed being nursemaid.
Wolf just
shrugged, confirming the deception.
“Sir Wolf
is anxious to see his brother.We will begin with him.”
“Of
course.” Intrepid had brought them to the guardroom. “Thank you, boys. Get them
out of here, Second. Leave the bags.”
“How is
he?”Wolf asked as the helpers reluctantly departed.
Intrepid
flashed an annoying smirk.“He looks as if he tried to break up a bear-baiting.
If he offers to show you his scars, decline politely.To say that his guts were
delivered in a separate container would be an exaggeration, but not much of
one, and of course he was almost exsanguinated. It is only because Quondam
keeps a generous stock of conjured bandages on hand that he lived long enough
to leave the castle, let alone reach Ironhall. Even the healing rituals my
predecessors used would have been useless against injury on that scale.We
pieced him together as best we could and I tried some new Isilondian chants I
brought with me last fall.”
“The
Guilliane Hortations?” Hogwood asked.
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“No, I went
straight to Barbuse’s Variation of the Sidonia Catabolism. After all, we had
almost nothing to lose! It worked better than I had dared hope. We cannot relax
for a few days yet, of course. The internal healing may not have been complete
and I have a few more things to try, but I do have hope that he will be back to
his old self, or should I say young self, in a week or two. Sir Wolf need not
give up hope of some nephews and nieces yet.”
Much tempted
to give Intrepid some injuries of his own to experiment on,Wolf said, “And his
state of mind? He has lost his ward.”
For the
first time Master of Rituals lost his air of infallibility. “He may not have
quite realized that yet. He seems sane enough. It may be that the trauma of his
injuries somehow compensated . . . there have been cases . . . still somewhat
dazed, of course . . . takes time to recover from spirituality on that
scale.And loss of blood and shock.” He reached for the handle.
“Wait,”
Hogwood said. “Baron Dupend?”
“Ah. I’ve
kept him alive so far, but at his age . . .” Shaking his head sadly, Intrepid
opened the door.
Next to the
Seniors’Tower, the guardroom was Ironhall’s closest approach to an indoor
midden. Every Blade in four centuries seemed to have left something behind as a
souvenir: clothes, tack, books, even unpaired boots.The average guardsman
visited it about once a year and did not care. Wolf cared, and whenever he came
by on one of his courier trips and had time to kill, waiting for day to dawn or
someone to finish a letter, he tried to tidy up.The mess always returned before
he did.
This time
it was better. Someone had shoveled the litter into a corner and installed
decent furniture. On one side of an amiably crackling fire a dark-haired boy
sat at a table with quills, paper, and a silver inkwell. On the other, Lynx
leaned back against heaped pillows on a bed. He stared at the visitors and for
a gut-wrenching moment nothing happened.
Then he
said,“Wolfie! What by the eight are you doing here? Wolf, you old scoundrel!”
He tried to laugh, sit up, and hold out his hands, all at once. The result was
a wild spasm and a grimace of pain. He sank back, cursing, and by that time
Wolf was there to embrace him.
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He had
changed in four years, of course. He was all-over huskier and hairier than
before, and had grown a beard, brown and curly. He also bore the pallor of a
very narrow escape and the bewildered look that followed massive healing conjuration.
Purple-and-yellow swellings marred the right side of his face, with traces of
dried blood showing in his hair.
“Still a
bit tender,” he muttered. Sweat gleamed on his forehead. His attempt to sit up
had dropped the blankets and exposed a nightmare of rose-red scars on his arms,
chest, and shoulders.
Wolf said,
“Take it easy, then, you great idiot! Flames, man! What
were you fighting?”
Lynx smiled
ruefully. “Dunno. It wasn’t human and I never want to meet it again!”
“It? Just
one?”
“One was
enough.”
Wolf
mumbled manly, no-nonsense condolences, grateful that Hog-wood’s presence saved
them from becoming maudlin. Lynx, always the sentimental one, began blurting
out mawkish gush about how long it had been and how much he had missed him, and
so on. Wolf stepped back and introduced the inquisitor as a warning that he
must guard his tongue.
Intrepid
indicated the boy now standing uneasily beside the table. “Inquisitor, this is
Prime Candidate Tancred, a swordsman of great future renown.”
“Good
chance to you, Prime.”
“Mistress!”
Tancred tapped his sword hilt. He had infinitely more poise than Rivers. He was
probably a couple of years older than Hog-wood.
“Prime has
been taking dictation, Inquisitor,” Intrepid said. “I asked Sir Lynx to relate as
much of what happened as he could remember, considering it important to catch
his testimony as soon as possible.” He preened at his own brilliance.
“Very
wise,” Hogwood said.“How many other witnesses are here?” “Eighteen, of whom
eleven are capable of testifying. I set seniors to take statements from all of
them.”
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“Excellent.
Prime, the Council has declared this matter a state se-cret.We require your
oath of secrecy regarding everything Sir Lynx has said. Repeat after me . . .”
Hogwood’s eyes were caves of fatigue in a chalk cliff and yet she radiated
confidence and authority.That was how she was trained to act, of course, but
Wolf was impressed by her sheer physical toughness, steel sword in silk
scabbard.
Tancred was
a solemn youth who looked vaguely worried at the best of times, but he spoke up
bravely as he swore the oath.“I think Sir Lynx had finished, Inquisitor,” he
added. “I had just finished reading his testimony back to him when you
arrived.”
“Very well.
I can see that your handwriting is as stylish as your swordsmanship, and for
that I am already grateful.”
Tancred
saluted again. Skilled fencer that he was, he read the signs and headed for the
door without needing to be told.
Lynx
called, “Thanks, lad. Big help. Always knew you’d turn out to be one of the
good ones.”
Beaming at
this tribute from a hero,Tancred departed.
Hogwood
turned to Intrepid and swore him to silence also, which tweaked his beard. She
said, “About security, Master . . . has anyone left Ironhall since the news
arrived?”
His pout
deepened.“Grand Master, of course. Sir Alden and his man went back to Quondam.
Grady,
“Food and
rest, a hot bath if one is available. I should be finished here in an hour or
so. Sir Wolf ?”
“I’ll wait
here, if I may, Inquisitor. Naturally I am interested to hear my brother’s
story.”
Intrepid
saw a chance to flaunt authority. “No more than twenty minutes! I do not want
my patient overtired and we have another healing scheduled to treat the adhesions.”
He paused at the door.“I hope you will be our guest at the evening meal,
Inquisitor?” His eyes gleamed at the thought of displaying her at high
table.“And your escort, of course.”
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After the long
hours of cold, warmth was making Wolf’s head spin and he was sure Hogwood would
collapse if she did not sleep soon.
She
surprised him yet again.“Sir Wolf and I will be honored. If you will send me
those other statements right away, Master, I will get to work.”
As soon as
Intrepid had gone, Hogwood went to the table and flipped through the pages
Tancred had written. Wolf pulled a stool up to the bed and regarded his wounded
brother, who smiled vaguely back. Anger began to beat like a pulse in Wolf’s temple.Would
Lynx ever recover his wits properly? Whoever or whatever had done this to him
must be hunted down and dealt with.
“You been
doing some fighting yourself, Wolfie,” Lynx said. “Who cut the bits out of your
face?”
“It’s a
long story.You feel well enough to answer questions?”
“I’ll
try.The world’s still fuzzy at the edges.”
“You
understand I’m here as the King’s servant? You will be testifying as if in a
court of law and that Inquisitor Hogwood’s account of your answers may be
entered in evidence at some other time and place?”
Lynx
glanced at her and pitched a magnificent Cute Little Boy smile. “I’ll try to
impress her with my innocence.”
He probably
did not realize he was doing it, but Wolf had seen the Blades’ legendary
seduction powers in action often enough, although rarely as blatantly—or as
potently, so far as another man could judge. He wondered how resilient dear
Dolores’s defenses would be if Lynx really tested them.The hero’s honest, open
face was unmarked; even when visible, his battle scars lacked the grotesque
horror of Wolf’s mutilation.
If Hogwood
noticed, she gave no sign. “I will summarize for you what your brother has
already said, Sir Wolf.” She marched over to the fire, turned her back on it,
and proceeded to rattle off a concise account of Lynx’s deposition.
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7
Testimony
of Sir Lynx, companion in the Loyal and Ancient Order of the King’s Blades, as
dictated to Prime Candidate Tancred at Ironhall, this 18th day of Secondmoon,
395:
I
was accepted as a candidate in Ninthmoon of 385 and bound on the 13th of
Fifthmoon, 390, by Marquesa Celeste. At that time she also bound Sir Fell and
Sir Mandeville, and she appointed me commander of her guard.We escorted her to
Grandon and thereafter resided at Court until four years ago . . . almost
exactly. Firstmoon of 391. Anyway, then she married Baron Dupend and moved to
Is
this going to be on oath?
Then
I’d better tell the truth. Celeste was never a real marquesa. She was the
King’s mistress. He tired of her and ordered her to marry old Dupend, but she
didn’t. The notary kept asking her those “Do you?” questions and she kept
saying,“No, I don’t!” and in the end he just shut his book and declared them
man and wife. I carried her out of the palace over my shoulder, screaming.Yes,
really. No, she was screaming, I was just angry, but I was bound to defend her
and I’d been told very clearly that much worse would happen to her if she
didn’t do as she was told.
So
Quondam was a jail for her. An awful place—bleak and cold and drafty, perched
on the edge of the sea cliffs. Nothing ever happens there, but it is the
strongest keep in Chivial and Dupend would rant for hours how it had withstood
assaults by Baelish raiders, turned back rebels during the Fatherland War, and
so on. Quondam holds the land road to Westerth and the sea approach to the
Straits, and has never fallen to storm or siege or treachery. So he says. Or
used to say. He can’t say it now, because it certainly fell to something four
nights ago. Funny he should brag, because it belongs to the King, not him. He’s
no rich landowner, just a paid employee who never set eyes on the place until
four years ago.
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He’s
listened to too many minstrels. On the night of the raid, he was feasting in
his mead hall like an olden-times hero—rushlights flickering through wood
smoke, walls hung with ancient weapons, flushed faces at the tables as knights
gorged and quaffed, a harpist twanging and warbling up in the minstrel gallery.
All that. Don’t forget greasy odors of roast pig still wafting from charred
remains on the spit above the hearth.Yes, absolutely crazy!
I
know I took a clang on the noddle and am foggy on some details, but I will
swear to this feast nonsense. It happened two or three times a week, all year
long.This was how the Baron celebrated the anniversary of every battle his
ancestors had fought in (or run from), the fall of every town they’d sacked,
and every siege Quondam had withstood. His dates were skittish, so that the
Dupend
was far too deaf to hear the music, which was no great loss, and had no teeth
for the roast boar, which was a hog from his sties.The wenches were serving
watery cider because he couldn’t afford mead, and the brawny heroes were just
his men-at-arms plus a few local farmers acting out the farce in return for a
free meal.Their ancestors might have owed knight’s service to the lord of
Quondam, but those days are long gone, even on Whinmoor.
The old
fool is ...was? Well, I hope he makes it. Where was I? ...
Lynx was as
near the hearth as anyone and he was still cold. He stood behind his ward, but
slightly to her left, so he could toast his buns without keeping the heat off
her. She and the Baron were seated at the center of the long table, their backs
to the blaze. Beauty and the beast were not speaking to each other, but that
was normal. They never did. Fell was on the right side of the fireplace. Only
the turnspit was closer to the flames than they.
Dupend
hated his wife’s Blades almost as much as he hated her, because they would not
take his orders. It did no good to explain that Blades never took orders from
anybody. He screamed if he caught them questioning visitors or searching the
baronial bedchamber. Sometimes
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he would decree that they were not to be
fed, so they had to pretend to take food from the cooks at swordpoint. He never
let them dine in the great hall with his pretend knights, so they stood guard
at mealtimes and ate later in the kitchen.
Long ago
they had agreed to rotate the leadership, just to ease the appalling tedium,
and this was Fell’s month to wear the sash. Mandeville was off patrolling the
rest of the fortress. No one could remember a winter so bleak, even on
Whinmoor. Sheep had been freezing to death on the hills and cottagers in their
beds. Even Celeste, who normally flaunted a king’s ransom of jewels on large
areas of bare skin, was muffled to the eyebrows.
She was
chatting with Sir Alden, Dupend’s knight banneret, the one genuine warrior in
the castle, a boiled-leather veteran of the Wylderland campaigns. He took his
duties seriously. Even in that weather he posted sentries on the battlements,
but they would certainly have headed indoors to find a brazier as soon as his
back was turned, so Fell had warned Mandeville to be especially vigilant and
make doubly sure the gates were locked and barred. Nowadays it seemed insane to
raise a drawbridge and drop a portcullis, but they did so every night without
fail; that was the one thing on which Baron Dupend and his wife’s Blades
agreed.
As the
remains of the mock boar were being carried out to feed the kitchen staff, Lynx
drew Ratter and
deftly detached a slice of pork. He chewed happily, unnoticed by the Baron,
provoking sly grins from the servants.The harpist was coughing his lungs out, up
there in his smoke cloud.
Sir
Mandeville came running in by the pantry door, yelling, “To arms! The castle is
under attack!”
The drunks
howled jeers and catcalls. Lynx hurled the meat in the fire and wiped grease
from his hands, while exchanging shocked glances with Fell. Blades did not
make jokes about danger to their wards!
The deaf old Baron was yelling hysterically, wanting to know what all the
commotion was about.
Mandeville
arrived at the fireplace, panting. “Men coming in the gates,” he said. “They’ve
killed Dogget and Treb.”
Then the
hounds sprang up, growling. Thunder, the leader, started
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her terrible baying and charged out the
door Mandeville had left open, vanishing with the rest of the pack on her tail.
Men who would not believe a Blade would trust a dog, and in the sudden silence
everyone heard what they had heard, a drum beating. Sir Alden had a voice like
a harbor seal—not beautiful, but audible for miles—and he began roaring at
everyone to start stripping weapons from the wall displays. In moments crashes
of crockery announced that the tables were being tipped up and dragged over to
the corner he had designated for the redoubt.
Lynx and Mandeville
waited for Fell to issue orders. Normally a Blade guard prepared plans to deal
with any conceivable emergency, but an armed invasion of Quondam was
unthinkable. Even a lifelong worrywart like Wolf would not take that idea
seriously. The keep was the
“The
corner!” Fell shouted. Lynx and Mandeville grabbed their ward’s arm and rushed
her, almost carried her, across to Alden’s makeshift fortress.
Other women
might have screamed, but Celeste was a tough gosling. Her only protest was a
calm “Put me down, you bullocks! I’m perfectly capable of walking.”
Now
servants were pouring in from the buttery, yelling about raiders. The main door
flew wide and intruders appeared en masse, bringing an icy gale with them. Half
the rushlights blew out and the smoke billowed worse than ever. At first Lynx
did not believe what he was seeing. Apparently Quondam was being assaulted by
the grand parade from one of those masquerade balls King Athelgar fancied. The
newcomers wore bizarre headdresses and swirling cloaks, some had elaborate
masks, and some bore strange basket structures on their shoulders. Others were
close to naked.Their eyes glinted in the rushlight, but their faces did not
show up well enough for them to be fair-skinned Baels.
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And he saw
no glint of metal, neither weapons nor armor. He relaxed, convinced that this
was some absurd joke. Then he remembered the dogs. What had happened to the
hounds? With even some of the women armed, they were about fifty defenders
facing at least six times that number.
Drums
boomed out a signal and the enemy charged. Lynx drew Ratter
and barely had time to raise her in
mocking salute before the nightmare army was pouring over the barricade. About
six of the illusions came straight for him.
Next thing
he knew, he was down on the floor in a jumble of bodies and shattered
furniture. His head rang carillons of pain and when he touched it, his hand
came away bloody. He was lying on the corpse of a hefty, dark-skinned youngster
wearing a loincloth and sandals.This was madness. It
was colder than death out there!
Even in
that hubbub, he could hear his ward’s screams. She needed him. Fell was
shouting his name, too. He struggled to his feet and headed in their direction,
stumbling over the confusion of dead and wounded. The invaders were leaving by
the same door they had come in, carrying their wounded, abandoning their dead.
Fell was hobbling after them, carrying Widowmaker in
his right hand. His left arm hung limp and he was a southpaw, almost useless
that way. Beside him went one of the farmers, a solid yokel armed with sword
and shield. Lynx managed a wobbly sprint and the three of them were almost
together when they reached the hearth and caught up with the rearmost invader.
He had to
be important because he was screeching incomprehensible orders in a
discordant, inhuman voice. He loomed so grotesquely tall, at least seven feet,
that he must be on stilts, and his streaming cloak swirled in iridescence—an
impressive masquerade costume, but not warrior garb by any stretch of the mind.
His head was hidden inside a bizarre furry helmet and Lynx saw no indication of
a weapon under the cloak.
Somehow the
giant sensed the threat behind him, for he spun around only just too late to
avoid a wild haymaker overarm stroke by Fell. Widowmaker
slammed down on his right shoulder. Had
Fell been fighting southpaw he would have slashed the freak’s head off, helmet
and
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all, slick as cutting berries. As it
was, he almost severed the man’s arm. The giant yowled in rage, struck the
farmer’s matching stroke aside with his left hand, and kicked the man like a mule,
sending him sprawling. Then Lynx was there, thrusting Ratter
into his heart.
That’s what
he meant to do. He underestimated his opponent. Despite his size, that
tree-high monstrosity was so incredibly nimble that he dodged Lynx’s thrust at
zero range. Ratter sliced
along his chest and tangled briefly in his cloak. His left hand smashed down
on Lynx’s arm.
Lynx
registered the clang of his sword hitting the flags and stooped to snatch her
up. His fingers refused to obey him. He stared in bewilderment at his forearm,
which had been macerated into raspberry puree and slivers of bone. The lower
half hung at right angles, as if he had grown a new wrist. One blow had done
that?
So Fell and
the raider and he were all one-handed. Fell was now behind the giant, though,
and this time he slashed at kidney level, cutting through the cloak. Blood
burst out. The giant should have dropped to the floor and died, but he didn’t.
He rounded on Fell with a massive, deadly blow to the face. He was wearing
gloves armed with knives, and one blow did to Fell’s face what he had done to
Lynx’s arm.
The farmer
closed again, with even less success. He was game, but he was nothing compared
to the Blade-killing monster. The thing parried
the man’s sword aside like a straw and kicked again, but this time up, under
the older man’s shield. Its boots were toothed, too.The farmer screamed.The
thing finished him off with another punch.
By then
Lynx had retrieved Ratter. He
was not quite as inept with his offside hand as Fell was, and this time he made
certain of the freak with a cut on its good shoulder, severing the tendons it
needed to raise that arm. One-arm was now no-arms.
“That fixed
you, swine!” he roared.
No. It was
spilling blood in rivers, but it leaped on Lynx, crunching his shoulder in its
jaws. He heard bones crack as they hit the floor together, with the invader on
top. Lynx tried to grab the thing’s throat to choke it, but he had only one
useful hand. The monster had no usable hands anymore, but it had knives on its feet,
and it proceeded to rip Lynx apart with those.
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8
Hogwood said,“Do you,
Lynx, warrant that what you dictated to Candidate Tancred is the truth as you
know it?”
“Wait!”
Wolf barked. “He’s not himself.” Naked savages in midwinter, superhuman
warriors, unknown conjurations, insurrection for unknown purposes?
Lynx
tried to laugh and grimaced in agony.“I know it sounds mad,
Wolfie, but the others will back me up.”
“It agrees with Grand Master’s report,” the inquisitor snapped. Small wonder
the Council was confused and the King so worried!
When
the Thencaster Rebellion exploded, Athelgar had followed age-old tradition and
fled to the safety of Grandon Bastion. The Bastion would be no haven if conjury
could now take even a major fortress like Quondam so easily.
Wolf
parried and riposted.“Pray note, Inquisitor, that the bite marks on my
brother’s shoulder were made by jaws larger than those of any hound I ever
saw.The King speculated that he might have been injured while fighting for the
wrong team, so for the record, Lynx, did you fight to prevent the abduction of
the Baroness?”
“I
did.” Had there been a fleabite of hesitation there? “You were wounded by the
invaders?” “I was.” “While fighting alongside the Baron’s men, the defenders?”
“Yes.” If dear King Athelgar had been hoping Wolf would have to arrest
his
own brother and charge him with murder, he would be disappointed. Relieved, he
turned to Hogwood. “Is the witness telling the truth?”
She
regarded Lynx glassily.“He has not lied yet. Pray do not interrupt while I am
questioning the witness, Sir Wolf. Sir Lynx, you describe the intruders as
dark-skinned. Black or dark brown skin is found in
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southern lands, where the sun is closer
to the earth. Were these such men, or had they dyed themselves to be less
visible at night?”
Lynx tried
to shrug and winced again. “I don’t know.They seemed about the color of ripe
chestnuts, but the light was very poor.”
“Describe
the helmet your assailant was wearing.”
This time his pause was longer.“I’m not
sure now that it was a helmet. A sort of spotted mask covering his whole head ...but
it bit me . . .” He peered down at his ravaged shoulder. “You described the
Baroness as wearing ‘rags and jewels.’ What did you mean by that?” “What I
said,” Lynx retorted grumpily.“She had no decent clothes and if she hadn’t worn
her jewelry all the time, it would have been stolen.”
“By whom?”
“The
Baron.”
“Who is her
current lover?”
“Mind your
own business.” Lynx set his teeth. For all his amiability, he could be stubborn
as moorland granite.
But so
could an inquisitor, and this one was very eager to prove her competence in an
investigation of historic importance. “You are required by law to answer my
question. Did she have a lover?”
“Baroness
Celeste is my ward and I will not—”
“Wait!”
Wolf was willing to keep Hogwood on a slack rein, but browbeating his invalid
brother went too far.“Lynx, we’re trying to find her.You want her found, don’t
you? We need your help. The only reason to kidnap Celeste is to free her from
captivity and only a lover would care enough to risk this.Were you or Fell or
Mandeville swiving Celeste?” Seeing another refusal coming, he tried to
forestall it.“Specif-ically—within the last year, did you or Fell or Mandeville
have carnal relations with Baroness Celeste?”
Lynx
glowered. “No. None of us.”
“She had no
lovers?”
“If by lovers you mean admirers, then
everyone who pees standing up. If you mean who slept with her, then nobody.”
Knowing Celeste,Wolf found this statement as incredible as the assault itself.
He sighed and returned the witness to Hogwood.
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“The Baron is a very old man,” she
prompted.
“And
smelly.” Lynx bared his teeth.“Celeste would not have him in her chamber. She
slept alone and we stood guard outside the door. Dupend loathes her. He has grandsons
older than she is and she will inherit everything he has left, through dower
rights. He wanted nothing more in the world than to catch her with a man so he
could divorce her and spit in the King’s eye. That would be dangerous for her,
and we made certain no other man got near her!” Anger had raised pink roses on
his ashen pallor. His voice was as taut as a bowstring.“To the best of my
knowledge, Celeste has balled no man or boy since the day she left Greymere. I
don’t pretend she enjoyed chastity, but we weren’t bound to keep her happy,
only safe, so we saw to it.”
“Not easy?”
Lynx
conceded, “Like herding wasps!” with a shamefaced grin.
Hogwood
took off after another scent. She was literally steaming, standing there before
the fire. “So you have no idea who might have plotted to rescue Celeste from
her captivity?”
“Not like
that,” Lynx muttered.
Flames!
Wolf bit back another interruption. He was growing very uneasy.
She
pounced. “Like what?”
“Not
killing and violence.”
“Who was
plotting to free her, and how?”
“Me.” Lynx
spoke unhappily to his own toes.“Us. Least, we’d talked some about it.We
worried about her sanity. Lately she’d taken to weeping and moaning for days
on end. She’d stand on the high battlements, staring down at the surf, brooding.We
stayed very close to her when she did that. We searched her room every day for
knives or rope. That sort of thing.”
“She was
always a wonderful actress,” Wolf said, earning another brotherly glare.
“A few
months after Baroness Dupend was sent to Quondam,” Hogwood said, “she bore a
child.”
“Athelgar’s,
not Dupend’s!” Lynx shouted. “Everyone knew that.”
“It died
within a few days?”
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“Everyone celebrated!
The Baron celebrated. Celeste was the only one who mourned.”
“Did you
not mourn it?”
That was an
unfair question, but Lynx answered before Wolf could object.
“No. No, we
celebrated, too, thinking she might be released then, that the King might let
her go and live somewhere better.” He stared down at his thick, scarred arms on
the cover. “Even her Blades!”
“If the
death of her child did not make her suicidal, then why this sudden concern for
her sanity now?”
“How much
cruelty can a woman take? Four years in jail? Four years of that awful climate?
Four years of that awful husband? No ladies-in-waiting for company, no lady’s
maids to dress her hair? All her gowns—remember,Wolf, she had three wagons with
her when she left Grandon? All that stuff disappeared. She wore her jewels all
day long and probably in bed, too, for all I knew. Everything else got
pilfered— clothes, silverware, even furniture. All gone.”
“What did
the Baron do about that?”
“He was
behind it. He stole whatever he could and sold it. It was part of the deal, I
think.”
“What
deal?”
Lynx
sighed. “We thought Athelgar threw in her jewels when he gave her to Dupend.
Dupend seemed to think he had a right to them.”
That was
reasonable, because if Athelgar felt an unwanted mistress was his to dispose of
as he pleased, he would not scruple to deal off the finery he had given her.
The snoop
said, “So what were you Blades planning?”
“We
talked,” Lynx said grumpily, “just talked,
about one of us riding into Lomouth to pawn a bracelet or something and hire a
ship.Then the other two would bring her.We hadn’t gotten very far.”
And never
would have, if the Baron had sent his men after them. But he might just have
shouted, “Good riddance!”Wolf made a mental note to ask Hogwood about dower rights.
“So,” she
said, “her Blades were plotting rescue but had not taken action?”
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“That’s right.”
“And you know of no other plots?”
“None.”
“Could the Baron have faked this attack
himself ?”
Lynx
snorted. “Never.”
This had
gone far enough. “Can’t my brother be allowed to rest now? It would seem that
he has cleared himself of any complicity in this affair.”
“Not
necessarily.” Hogwood continued to stare snakily at her vic-tim.“Sir Lynx, have
you deceived me or tried to deceive me in any way, by omission or equivocation,
misdirection or evasion?”
That
catchall invitation to self-incrimination was a hoary inquisitorial trick,
repeatedly denounced by the courts and repeatedly resurrected. Fortunately
Lynx was aware of it. “I refuse to answer that.”
Intrepid
walked in, ending the interrogation. If Wolf was not satisfied with Lynx’s
story, he could not expect Hogwood to be.
9
The
statements you wanted, Dolores,” Master of Rituals proclaimed breezily, handing
her a sheaf of paper. “Also some evidence for your, um, weapons expert. Sir
Alden brought this along when he ferried over the wounded.”
Intrepid
enjoyed annoying people, especially people with any trace of authority. He
handed Wolf a club as long as a man’s arm, carved from some dark wood. It was
not too heavy to swing with one hand, although the leather-bound grip had space
for two.The shaft was an intricate tangle of fanciful birds, beasts, and
vegetation, flaring out like a paddle at the working end, which was inset with
teeth of black stone. Three of the original four had broken off, no doubt when
that part acquired its ominous bloodstains.
“It
impresses me more as a work of art than a weapon,”Wolf said,
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“but it could obviously damage people.”
He tried it for size against the wounds on Lynx’s scalp. “I’ve never seen its
like. Have you any idea where it came from?”
“No,”
Intrepid said, “but Grand Master thought he did.We did not have time to discuss
it before he left for Quondam.”
“No metal?
Black stone, sharp as razors.”
“Allow me.”
Hogwood took the weapon, giving Wolf in return the thick wad of eyewitness
accounts, which she had already read. “This stone is volcanic glass, called
obsidian. It fractures to extremely sharp edges.You will note that the design
represents an animal’s paw, probably a cat’s—four operational claws and a
smaller one set back so it is not engaged.”
“Dogs have
feet like that.”Wolf hated being lectured.
“But dogs
do not fight with their feet. And there are no dogs shown.” She was peering at
the carvings.“Cats and birds—raptors, probably accipiters, and possibly
buteos.” Know-it-all smartyskirts!
Intrepid
was amused.“Send it to the Privy Council and let the royal falconers worry about
it. I have put you in the Queen’s Tower, Dolores, since Baron Dupend has the
Royal Suite.You will find a hot tub ready for you there. You, brother, will
have the honor of sleeping in Grand Master’s bed.”
“No!”Wolf
said. “I am not worthy.”
“We have nowhere
else to put you.”
“I’ll bed
down in his study.”
“I wish you
a comfortable night there.”
Wolf
understood the sneer a little later, when he reached the study and found it in
chaos: floorboards missing, half a fireplace, stacks of building materials
everywhere. Ironhall had been already crowded.With Vicious anxious to replace
all the old Ambrose and Malinda men, enrollment had been raised to record
numbers and more knights had been brought in to instruct.The Quondam wounded
had filled the infirmary.
Wolf picked
his way across to the tower door and went up to Grand Master’s chamber. Unlike
other knights who moldered away in Ironhall, Durendal was a wealthy man, and he
had already refurbished the turret with opulent rugs and elegant furniture,
very unlike the school’s usual
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relics.A hearty fire was driving off the
chill and illuminating down-filled quilts and silken sheets, shelves of
leather-bound books, golden candlesticks, a carved alabaster inkstand on the escritoire.Three
oil paintings— a strikingly beautiful young woman, a boy, and a girl—were
clearly from some master’s brush.Wolf felt like a trespasser.
When he had
made himself presentable, he headed down to the inevitable pre-dinner
assembly, aware that he would be made to feel like a trespasser there, too.
Except for Grand Master and a few others, the knights spurned Wolf the
Blade-killer.
Eight or
ten knights were already present, as were Inquisitor Hog-wood and Master of
Rituals Intrepid, who was obviously enjoying the sensation she caused.A few
fogeys sulked in the background, shocked to see a Dark Chamber snoop allowed
inside Ironhall, but the rest had crowded in to enjoy rare female company. Some
would not have seen a woman in years. She wore inquisitorial robes of plain
black, without adornments, her sable hair was gathered in a caul, yet adulation
converted her into a reigning monarch and her perfectly ordinary chair into a
throne. No one could have told from her looks that she had ridden almost
thirty hours over winter roads.
Wolf
entered unnoticed and accepted his usual goblet of well-watered wine from old
Hurley. Sir Bowman, the new Master of Sabers, made him welcome with his usual
wry humor and they stood back to watch as each newcomer reacted to the
situation by drifting into one party or the other. The pro-Hogwood faction was
ahead by about twelve to seven when a voice like a very rusty trumpet screeched
out at their backs.
“Even
inquisitors are better than murderers.”
“Even
female inquisitors are!” croaked another.
The room
stilled. Wolf glanced across at Intrepid, who just shrugged. He turned to face
the withered remains of Sir Etienne and Sir Kane, Ironhall’s oldest
inhabitants. Kane had been bound by Ambrose III and bore the unwelcome title of
Father of the Order, being over ninety. Etienne could not be far behind, and
neither seemed capable of supporting the weight of the cat’s-eye swords they
still had the audacity to wear. They had gummed Wolf before, but always Grand
Master—
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whether Parsewood or Durendal—had
snapped them back to heel. Tonight Grand Master was in Quondam and his stand-in
did not want to spoil the fun.
“Arundel he
slaughtered!” Etienne quavered.“And young Rodden.”
“And
Hotspur!” Kane yelled. He was as deaf as a rock and almost toothless. “And
Cedric! And
There was
no way to deal with this horrible pair except to remain silent. Normally Wolf
never cared what they said, but tonight Hogwood was listening.
“I don’t
think Cedric was one of mine,” he said. “He died of old age years ago.” He
wished certain others would, and soon.
“What’s he
say?” Kane demanded.
“Jared,
then! Your brother in the Order and you murdered him!”
Bowman
intervened. “They wanted to die, you old fools. Their wards were plotting
treason! They were torn between their binding and their loyalty to the King. If
not Wolf it would have been the entire Order coming after them or the Household
Yeomen or gangs of thugs with nets and clubs.That meant arrest and trial and
madness.Wolf gave them an honorable way out, one last glorious duel to the
death with a brother Blade.Wouldn’t you have chosen that, a fair fight?”
Kane
sprayed anger.“Shameless slayer! Apostate!” He hadn’t heard a word.
“Quintus!” Etienne
quavered. “What about Sir Quintus, eh? Quintus won the Cup two years in a row
and you’ll not convince me you were ever good enough to kill Quintus! Not in a
fair fight.”
Wolf
shuddered at the memory.Why did they have to drag up that one? Quintus had been
a senior when he was admitted to Ironhall. Quintus had been his hero. Seeming
to lose his temper was easy.
“You
besmirch my honor, you foulmouthed old stinkard?” he roared. “Draw and defend
yourself.” He slapped the dotard’s face, less gently than he intended.
Etienne
staggered back, bewildered. Some of the onlookers howled in horror at a mass
murderer challenging so old a man.A few others guffawed, but Wolf had driven
the game beyond reason, as he intended.
Intrepid
jumped forward to steady the tottering ruin. “Very droll,
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brother, but not seemly when we have a
lady guest. Brothers, shall we go in to dinner?”
Playing his
role as Acting Grand Master, he led the procession into the hall with Hogwood on
his arm.Wolf attached himself to the end of the line, although a member of the
Guard should have been given precedence; indeed, as bearer of the king’s writ,
he could have claimed the throne itself, but that was traditionally reserved
for Grand Master or the sovereign. Intrepid ignored tradition by planting his
hindquarters on it and then smirking around at the angry glares of the other
knights. Why had Roland, with his astoundingly keen eye for people, left this
popinjay in charge during his absence? Life was beset with mysteries.
The meal
dragged interminably. A fair storm blew outside, making the myriad blades
dangling overhead thrum a restless jingle. Newcomers were supposed to stare up
at the sky of swords in terror when that happened, but Hogwood ignored it and
chattered instead to her neighbors, Intrepid and Master of Sabers.That night
the seniors ate their meal without ever taking their eyes off her.Wolf was
mostly concerned with trying not to yawn.
The meal
was followed, as always, by a reading from the Litany
of Heroes. Intrepid did not invite the visiting
guardsman to do the honors, as was customary.Typically, he chose one of the
most recent entries, but it was at least brief and gave no details.
“Number
301, Sir Reynard, who on 14th Fifthmoon, 392, died defending his ward. Let us
pay tribute to our fallen brother.”
Wolf stared
out over the hall but no one met his eye.
Then
Intrepid presented Inquisitor Hogwood, sent by His Majesty to investigate the
atrocity at Quondam, and asked if she would care to say a few words. Wolf was
sure she had not been forewarned, but she never hesitated.
“It would
be more appropriate for a Blade to address Blades and future Blades. Sir Wolf
?”
Wolf rose
to face angry silence. He gave them four sentences. He mentioned the King’s
decree of secrecy and paid tribute to the gallant defenders who had died at
Quondam, especially the two Blades, who had been true to the ancient traditions
of their Order. “I swear to you
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all,” he concluded, “that Inquisitor
Hogwood and I will fulfill His Majesty’s solemn command.We will
discover the culprits and we will
see them brought to justice!”
The
moment he sat down old Bowman was on his feet, applauding. Tancred picked up
the cue.The boys followed Prime’s lead.Then everyone had to join in the
standing ovation, even Etienne and Kane, who could not have a clue who was
being cheered. The King’s Killer sat in angry silence as the hall rang and the
sky of swords overhead thrummed in approval. He had never been given a standing
ovation before. He was sure he would never get another, and this one was for a
foolish boast he had no hope of ever carrying out.
10
A single
candle flame danced nervously to the shutters’ castanets and the wailing flutes
of wind in the eaves. Wolf had reports to read, but even that slight activity
must wait upon some rest. His body dropped gratefully onto Grand Master’s bed
and went to sleep at once, eager to do whatever it is bodies do to repair
extreme exhaustion. His mind remained alert. At such times he tended to worry
about his ward and whether the sex-crazed halfwits of the Guard were keeping
proper care of him in his absence. He forced it to consider the Quondam
problems instead. Why had the King chosen him, why had the Dark Chamber chosen
Hogwood, why had the intruders squandered so many lives to so little purpose?
Strangest question of all—why Celeste?
It was
several days after his binding that he first set eyes on the King’s exotic
mistress. Rookie guardsmen must be outfitted with livery before they could be
seen around Court.They needed specific Guard training, not the least of which
was just learning their way around whatever palace was currently the royal
resi-dence.They must endure lectures on the latest politics and court
scandals—Baron This can be violent when drunk, Lord That spies for the
Isilondians, and so on. They were offered certain initiation rites.
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Celeste’s
title of King’s Courtesan was unofficial but no secret. Her quarters were
located directly below the Royal Suite, and Greymere Palace was riddled with
secret passages and concealed stairways.Vicious was too tactful to post men
outside her door, but any intruder breaking in during the night would have
greatly brightened the lives of half a dozen Blades dying of boredom in her
antechamber.
Her path
and Wolf’s first converged one evening when he was on guard at the entrance to
the West Hall and she was dancing with the King. Even at that distance, a naive
country lad was impressed by her red-gold hair, her incredible body—invariably
clad in a scandalously revealing gown—and the ripples of excitement that
always marked her location in a crowd, but he was still gawking at every
chandelier and cleavage in sight, and not as impressed as he should have been.
A day or two later he stole a closer look at her and was very impressed indeed.
She did not notice him.
The
Marquesa de Sierra Crudeza was rumored to be an illegitimate daughter of King Diego
of Distlain. Her husband, the Marqués, was by then in Clag Street
debtors’ prison and destined to remain so until he died of jail fever, which he
did with tactful dispatch.An uncanny air of danger and mystery hung about
Celeste, adding to her attraction. She had been the belle of the court of
Isilond until the queen poisoned the king in a fit of jealous fury, so Chivial
was almost a letdown for her. Court gossips twittered that the White Sisters
could smell conjuration on her and she had bespelled Athelgar.The Blades knew
that this was not true; her hold over him was not spiritual at all.The Guard
called her the Hag.
About two
weeks after Wolf’s binding, a rumor swept through the Court that the Marquesa
was with child.The news rolled on to echo in all the courts of Eurania, but in
fact it was mere speculation, which passage of time disproved. She had
experienced a mild dizzy spell, no more.
Bloodhand
and Wolf were on ornamental duty outside the ballroom door, required to stand
there like candelabra until the palace burned down or rabid Baels came foaming
along the corridor, smiting bystanders with axes.The clotted cream of Chivian
society swept through between them in jewels and finery without a glance.
Except, for some fateful reason, Celeste, who arrived like an empress regnant,
leading her train of ladies-in-waiting. Her overskirt was a wonder of
scarlet-and-gold brocade, rich and weighty, as were her puffed and slashed
sleeves.Those
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were tasteful and respectable, but her
lace bodice was fine as gossamer and virtually transparent.Athelgar encouraged
her to flaunt what he could enjoy and other men could not.
As she
swept past Wolf, he winked. She carried on into the hall as if nothing had
happened, trailing attendants and a faint scent of lilac.The babble hushed for
a moment, which was normal and predictable. Suddenly women screamed.The two
Blades ran to investigate.The lady had fainted, that was all.
It had
taken her a moment to make the connection. Boys change much more than girls do,
and she had not seen him before in that context.Wolf was sorry he had startled
her so badly, but that, he thought, was that.
Wrong.
How could
the King’s mistress possibly snatch a private word with the most junior member
of the Royal Guard? For Celeste this was no problem at all. She was at the
height of her powers then, able to manipulate Athelgar like a silken glove on
her subtle little hand. She began by persuading him to declare that the annual
Apple Blossom Night festivities would include a masked ball, thus throwing the
Court into panic and canceling sleeping time for every tailor and seamstress
in the city.The Guard detested nothing in the world more than a masked ball.
Leader canceled all leave for that evening.
Celeste was
more than a perfect body driven by a lust for power. She also had an
incomparable sense of humor, and that evening she chose to dress in Guard
livery. Needless to say, no Blade had ever revealed so much of his chest in
public, nor had such a chest. Never had silken hose looked as good on their
legs as it did on hers.At an appropriate moment, she excused herself and in the
powder room concealed her costume under a white domino, which one of her maids
had brought for her.With the hood raised to hide her resplendent hair and a
white mask in place of her former blue one, she returned to the ball anonymous.
Wolf was on
duty beside a table of comfits, although spirits know what good he was supposed
to be doing. He caught a whiff of lilac and looked around to see familiar
sea-green eyes peering out at him. He knew every gold fleck in them.
“Hello,
Amy,” he said. “Congratulations.”
“I think
you have made a mistake, Sir Blade.”
“Really?
How are Tim and Sarah and Eli and all the other Sprats? How are things in Sheese
anyway?”
She sighed.
“Much duller after you left, Ed.” Amy Sprat was a realist. A
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ghost of a smile played over the rose
petal lips.“And what is the price of your silence?”
“That smile
is ample reward, my lady.” He could smile too. “I didn’t talk then and I won’t
talk now.”
“You
swear?”
“I swear on
my soul and on the happiest of memories.Your secret is safe with me.Take him
for all you can get.”
She moved
closer to the table to sample the sweetmeats. She reached for some treat; her
breast touched his arm. The Guard’s orgying lessons had not yet expunged all
his innocence, but he knew enough to see that she was searching for a solution,
testing his susceptibility. Memories made his head swim and his flesh throb.
Everything he knew about sex he had discovered with her.
“Don’t,” he
murmured, edging away.
“I’d like
to, you know? I never met a lover better than you, Ed.”
“Thanks,
but I’ll wait until you retire, if you don’t mind.”
“What’s
your name, Sir Blade?”
“Wolf, my
lady.”
“Very
fitting”—she raked him with a smile—“wild beast of the moors. What happened to
Alf?”
“He’s still
at Ironhall. Don’t worry about him, either. I’ll warn him to keep his mouth
shut.”
Moorland
green shone in her eyes again.“You’re a good friend, Ed Attewell. I have
influence, you know. Anything I can do for you?”
Wolf
chuckled, wondering if she could see how he was sweating.“You owe me nothing,
Amy. I am always in your debt.”
She floated
away, and a few moments later he saw her back in among the bluebloods, laughing
at some jest of the King’s.
Amy Sprat
had learned what she wanted, and she needed less than a week to get it out of
Athelgar. She began by going riding with her ladies in Sycamore Market to be booed.The
good people of Grandon were grudging in their support of a foreigner King and
had no love at all for a foreigner mistress. There were scores of buxom Chivian
girls willing to do anything a Marquesa could do. Booed she was.
Wolf learned
of her success late one night when he was fencing in the gym, being coached in
sabers by Martin. Having spent all day on an orientation tour
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of the city, he had not heard the news.
Bram put his head around the door and yelled over all the clattering, “Anyone
seen
Willow,
practicing in another corner, shouted back, “He led the Ironhall party—King’s
orders.”
Blades went
back and forth to Ironhall all the time. It was a welcome perk, a break from
routine. But not the Deputy Leader. Wolf howled, “What?”and
had the breath knocked out of him for his lack of attention. “Why?”
“The
binding,”
“Who’s
binding?”The King wasn’t, because Wolf had watched him retire.
“The Hag.”
Wolf was
out the door before his foil hit the boards.
Being
recently married,Vicious was spending much more time in his quarters than
Blades normally did. He did not appreciate fists thundering on his door in the
middle of the night. He was even less impressed when he opened it a crack and
saw the most junior of his men stripped down to his hose and an unlaced,
sweat-soaked shirt, unarmed, out of breath, hair all awry.
He stepped aside
to let Wolf into his reception room. The bedchamber door was closed. He was
heated and sweaty himself, wearing only a shirt wrapped around his loins.Wolf
had probably arrived at the most inopportune time possible.
“Keep your
voice down and be very convincing.” Vicious’s voice was soft and his stare
hard.
“The
Pirate’s Son’s assigning Blades to the Hag?”
“What
business is that—” Vicious recalled who was Prime, and his eyes flashed like
razors. “What if he is?”
“I knew her
before the King did!”
Vicious
stared at him for a long time. He was a dark-skinned man, showing surprising
muscle when he had his shirt off, as he did then, and extreme menace when he
had a naked sword in his hand, as he did then.
“When?”
“Before
Ironhall. Her name is Amy Sprat.We were kids together in a hamlet called
Sheese, in Westerth.”
“Guardsman,
you are being misled by a chance likeness.”
Wolf shook
his head. “We’ve spoken. She’s Amy. She has a birthmark on her thigh.About
here. She claims it’s shaped like a heart, but that depends which way you’re
looking at it.”
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Leader’s
eyes shone brighter in the candlelight.“Spirits, man! She’s only fifteen now!
When was this?”
“Fifteen
bullfeathers! She’s eighteen, ten months younger than me. I was fourteen then
...I wasn’t the only one! Every boy on the moor was a close friend of Amy
Sprat.”
“Death!”Vicious
advanced a pace. “Why didn’t you tell me this sooner?”
Wolf
retreated. “You told me . . . told Sir Terror to tell me . . . to keep my mouth
shut.”
“Not to me,
you idiot!”Vicious muttered a curse.“It’s too late to catch them. Have you told
anyone else of this?”
“No,
Leader.”
“Then
don’t, as you value your neck. If His Majesty assigns Blades to a friend, that
is absolutely none of your business, Sir Wolf, brother or not. Is that clear?”
Wolf could
do nothing but mutter, “Yes, Leader.” Lynx was to be bound to a harlot.
“You are
telling me that His Majesty’s concubine is an imposter, vulnerable to
blackmail?”
“Er ...I
suppose so.”
“Which
means you withheld information relevant to His Majesty’s safety?”
Gulp! “Yes,
Leader.”
Vicious
looked him up and down. “And you ran all the way here from the gym looking like
that?”
“Yes,
Leader.”
“Present yourself
after the morning muster with a written list of the regulations you have
broken and a recommendation for punishment. Now get out.”
Wolf got
out.
He had been
thinking only of Lynx.Vicious could see not one but three men betrayed and must
have been even angrier than Wolf was. Furthermore,Wolf had presented him with
the ghastly problem of telling the King his paramour was a fraud and a
potential traitor. If he didn’t, sooner or later the Dark Chamber certainly
would, and even in those days Vicious hated inquisitors.
He dropped
a hint of his feelings the next morning. It was Guard tradition to have a
malefactor recommend his own punishment, which Leader would then either accept,
halve, or double. Like any man in this predicament,Wolf consulted
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experts and then set his penance
unfairly high, as he thought, in the hope of having it halved.
Vicious
tripled it and added two five-league runs.
11
Inquisitor
Hogwood slept the sleep of the innocent, no doubt, but Wolf must spend half the
night in snail-pace reading, snug in Grand Master’s bed, working through
reports by flickering candlelight. The other witnesses confirmed Lynx’s
incredible story. One veteran man-at-arms had even witnessed his fight with the
giant in the spotted helmet, if that is what the monster had been, and swore
he’d never seen a man move so fast. Wolf read everything three times, wishing
the other seniors had matched Tancred’s superb handwriting.
But none of
it made any sense.Why attack Quondam? Why the attackers’ bizarre costumes and
weapons? Why Celeste? If her Blade said she had no lover, then she had no
lover. She was no missing heiress; her father and grandfather had been
shepherds, her mother a sister of one of Wolf’s stepmothers.Any secrets she
knew would be years old. Celeste had been a stunning woman, but she was not
worth scores of lives.
She was not
worth what she had done to Lynx, Fell, and Mandeville, either.Wolf had been sincere
when he promised not to betray her, but how could a strumpet trust a man, any
man? She had taken Lynx hostage for Wolf’s good behavior, turning up at the
palace a few days later with three bewildered young Blades at heel.
A week or
so after that, when Wolf was alone in the junior Blade dormitory, changing to
go on duty, Lynx entered silently, having always had a creepy ability to move
quietly.Wolf looked up from straightening his hose and was startled to see his
brother’s familiar grin overhead. He was arrayed in a bizarre livery of purple
and gold, with Celeste’s arms outlined in seed pearls all over his chest.
Wolf jumped
up and hugged him. “Congratulations!” This was their first chance for a private
talk.
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Lynx
squeezed him till his ribs creaked, then chuckled and settled on the edge of
Ivor’s bed. “Not commiserations?”
“There are
advantages to being a private Blade.”
“Tell me
about them some time.” Lynx normally took life as it came, so from him that
remark was a scream of frustration.“Like not being thrown out to starve after a
mere ten years?”
“Like not
having time to die of boredom. And I hear she appointed you Leader.
Congratulations again!”Wolf had a low opinion of both Fell and Mandeville, and
assumed Grand Master had guided Celeste’s choice.
Lynx
hesitated, glanced at the door as if you to confirm that they were not being
overheard, then muttered,“She said I was the best.Almost as good as you, she
said.”
Wolf stared
at him aghast, eventually whispered, “You didn’t!”
Lynx bit
his lip and nodded, still studying Wolf’s boots.
“When? I
mean where ...I mean ...Lynx, you mustn’t!”
“Ironhall.The
same night.”
“Don’t you
remember what happened to
“
Wolf wanted
to scream and could only whisper.“You think that would matter to the Pirate’s
Son?”
Blades
bragged that their binding made them irresistible to women and rarely mentioned
that the reverse was also true.They were the randiest of men and a Blade bound
to a woman was notoriously prone to do his guarding at unseemly close
quarters. Celeste was lusty, a skilled seductress, and Athelgar had let her
bind three teenage virgins. It was easy to guess what had happened right after
the binding, while they were still dizzy from the ritual, the excitement, the
aftermath of danger. Likely Celeste was as inflamed herself, having just
stabbed them all through their hearts, but even if she had been her usual
calculating self, it would have been out of character for her to resist such a
temptation. Of course she would have pled exhaustion and a need to rest after
such an ordeal. Of course her Blades would have escorted her to her quarters,
and of course she would then have sampled them.They would have been child’s
play for her, mere nibbles.
“He’ll kill
you all,”Wolf said. “Who else have you told about this?”
“Just you .
. .” Lynx laughed sheepishly and forced himself to look up.“I’m
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only
kidding, Wolfie! You really think we’d be such idiots as to bed the King’s
private
harlot? Just joking,Wolf.”
“That sort of joke will laugh your head
off.”
They never
discussed that subject again. From then on Wolf never saw Celeste without at least
two of her Blades in attendance. He could always count on a smile whenever she
caught his eye and a fiery glare when the King did.Vicious had passed on Wolf’s
revelations, of course.The quarrel that had started with juvenile mockery
would never heal now—Athelgar had made Wolf’s brother slave to a harlot,Wolf
had enjoyed the favors of the King’s mistress.
Yet Celeste
was so skilled at her work that she kept her royal lover enraptured for months
longer. Only as summer faded did Athelgar’s attention start to stray. In her
desperation, Amy abandoned whatever conjuration she had used to block
conception. By Long Night she was with child, royal child. No monarch wanted
bastards complicating the succession, and by then Athelgar’s fancy was set on
the shamelessly underage daughter of the Duke of Finemont. Celeste had become
a bore.
As the King
cast around to find a father for his spawn, into view tottered ancient Baron
Dupend, a man with more ancestors than teeth, a widower whose purse was as lean
as his shanks. He had come to Court seeking permission to sell off the last of
his entailed estates, a desperate solution that would leave his sons paupers
without totally banishing the threat of debtors’ prison for him. His Gracious
Majesty was amused to offer the noble lord the wardenship of Quondam, which
was located conveniently far away, plus the slightly used, visibly pregnant,
but witty and lusty Marquesa Celeste, supported by a bribe handsome enough to
save the old fool from bankruptcy. In Firstmoon of 391, the marriage was
announced—not the betrothal, but the accomplished deed.After that day the
Attewell brothers did not meet for four long years.
Typical of
Athelgar! He simultaneously infuriated the nobility by insulting one of the
oldest houses in the land and the burghers by squandering a fortune in tax
revenue to dispose of a doxy he could have given to a gardener.There never was
a man with such a gift for making enemies.
But none of
this ancient history explained Quondam.
Someone
rattled the latch, trying to open the bedroom door. Wolf was off the bed in a
flash of steel, Diligence in
hand. He flipped the bolt and kicked the door wide. It hit someone.
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Lynx swore
in the darkness. He came limping into the light, swaddled in a fleece bedcover
that made him look like some huge half-melted bear, wearing the bemused smile
of an amiable drunk.
“Stubbed my
toe,” he muttered. “Need talk . . . like old times.”
“Sit and be
welcome.” Wolf closed and bolted the door again, saw him settled on the hob,
poked up the fire. Lynx had no shoes, no lantern. “How did you get through the
study?”
“Mm?
Painfully.This like old times, middle of the night?”
“It
is.”Wolf pulled up a chair and beamed at him happily.“Spirits, it’s good to see
you again! Had another healing?” Lynx had not been drinking. Intrepid had
scrambled his brains with a blizzard of elementals.
He nodded
vaguely. “Shoulder’s better.” He demonstrated moving his left arm, flexed his
right hand, and then tugged the rug around him again. He was wearing nothing
under it. “Swordsman needs his arms, Wolf.”
“Hard to
hold a sword with your teeth.”
“Got no
sword. Lost Ratter!”
His face crumpled like a child’s.
“You
dropped her in the fight. We’ll get her back for you. Listen, I need your help.
Can you think of any reason at all why anyone at all would want to kidnap
Celeste?”
Lynx was
incapable of serious thought just then, but if he’d worked out an answer
earlier he ought to remember doing so. He sniffed. “Lost my ward, too.What sort
of Blade loses his ward? Oh,Wolfie! What am I going to do,Wolfie? Wander the
world forever looking for her?”
“Start by
working out who took her. Tell me about her missing years.”
“Huh?”
Wolf sighed.
“How did Amy Sprat become the Marquesa Celeste? When did she leave Sheese?”
“Week after
we did,” Lynx said, as if that was obvious.
His wits
would return by morning, but Wolf could never be patient when a job needed
doing. In four years of captivity, the languishing Baroness must have rehearsed
her troubles to her Blades, drunk or sober, and Wolf set to work to drag her
story out of Lynx, phrase by phrase. It took an hour.
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A lecherous
old chapman peddling pots in Sheese had discovered Amy Sprat, flower of the
moors. Recognizing her burgeoning beauty and natural skills, he had taken her
away with him and set her up in Lo-mouth as a source of revenue for him and a
benefaction to the young men of the city. Seeing how she was being exploited,
she had run off with a ship captain, who took her across the Straits to
Isilond. From there, somehow, she found her way farther south, to Distlain. For
the next five years or so, while Lynx and Wolf studied swordsmanship at Ironhall,
Amy had learned a different trade. Her story, as told to and by Lynx, involved
a huge cast of villains, johns, pimps, sugar daddies, blackmail victims,
crooked officials, and outright suckers, with herself always the persecuted
heroine.Wolf inferred that she had been more puppeteer than puppet,
deliberately scaling the social ladder until she could pass for nobly born.
A few
months before Malinda’s abdication, Amy had returned to Chivial with the
express intent, so she claimed, of snaring Crown Prince Athelgar. She had
acquired a husband for respectability and appropriated the name of Celeste from
the notorious seductress in the Isilondian murder scandal.Whoever the supposed
Marqués was, it had been child’s play for Amy to dump him in Clag Street,
out of her way, as soon as the Prince nibbled her bait. She claimed that the
first thing Athelgar had done to celebrate his mother’s departure had been to
head straight from the docks to the palace and try out the royal bed, even
before sitting on the royal throne.The royal bed with Celeste in it, of course.
Clearly the
spurious Marquesa had been absent from Chivial for years, which explained why
she had been so shocked when Wolf recognized her. Secondly, her associates had
been sailors, small-town doctors, younger sons of minor aristocracy—none of
whom could have found the resources to storm Quondam. There had been no
mastermind behind Celeste except Celeste herself, and Wolf had still not found
a credible suspect.
“Gone!”
Lynx sniffed. “Lost my ward. No Blade’s ever lost his ward before, Archives
says. I’ll go crazy!”
“I think
you’d have . . .” Wolf caught a spark of an idea before it could emerge in
words. Playing for time to think, he said,“I don’t think
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Hogwood
was completely satisfied with your testimony. Did you hold back anything? Is
there anything you can tell me that you didn’t want to put on the record?”
“Just
that I loved her.” “You said she’d kept her legs together at Quondam.” Lynx
sighed and a tear trickled down into his beard.“I don’t mean that
sort of love. Oh, we had to be so cruel!
I love her,Wolf ! We all loved her.” “She’s a harlot!” “I know. But I love
her.” “That’s your binding talking, chump!” “It’s my binding feeling it.” A
tear trickled from the other eye.“The
most beautiful woman in the world.” “No
doubt,”Wolf agreed with a shudder.“You still say you didn’t
swinge her when she was at Quondam?”
“No,” Lynx said grumpily. “But not from want of longing.” “She’d have agreed?”
Lynx just scowled. Stupid question. Wolf said, “I still can’t understand anyone
sacrificing so many lives
to
carry her off. Have you thought of any sane reason why anyone should? Or any
other reason for the attack on Quondam?”
“Jewels?”
Lynx muttered. “I told you she used to wear all her jew-els.That’s what I’m
afraid of,Wolf. It was easier to carry her away decorated than to strip her
there. They took her to their boats, kept the jewels, and dropped her
overboard.” He put his face in his hands and started weeping in earnest.
“You’ve
been conjured out of your wits.You want to lie down and
get some sleep?” He grunted. “Can’t
sleep.” Wolf said, “Good.” The spark of an idea was glowing nicely now.
“You
remember Quintus?”
Lynx
looked up with a sad smile. “Remember his fencing. He won the Cup twice, didn’t
he? Remember his laugh. Always laughing. You could hear Quintus laugh right
across Starkmoor.”
Wolf
would certainly never forget that laugh. “Ambrose gave him to Baron Elboro, him
and Warren.”
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“And you
killed them,” Lynx said, starting to show more interest. “Intrepid was telling
me.Why d’you kill so many brothers,Wolfie? Why you, always? Why not let some of
the others do some of the King’s dirty work? Or why not catch them in nets or
something and revert them?”
“Because
reversion spells almost never work and you can’t catch a Blade with nets or
anything else if he knows you’re coming for him, and they all knew. As soon as the
Thencaster Plot crawled out of the midden they all knew we’d be coming for
their wards.”
Lynx said,
“Oh. Right.”
“They were
all half crazy from divided loyalty anyway. Elboro was the last. The King put
me in charge . . .” There were details Wolf had never told anyone, not even
including them in the infamous report he had filed after he’d done Athelgar’s
filthy work for him.
“Three
Blades and two snoops,” he said, “but by that time I was wearing the sash on
these excursions. We discovered a possible escape route over the rooftops and
if we knew of it, we could be certain that Elboro’s Blades did. I set a trap. I
thought it would be better to herd Elboro into the chokey than try a frontal
assault.”
Leaving his
helpers to wait in ambush, he beat on the door in the middle of the night, the
traditional hour for Death to come calling. He waited a minute, then opened it
with an inquisitor’s golden key and went in. Elboro House was very opulent, all
marble and thick rugs and gilt-framed mirrors. Warren and Quintus stood
foursquare in the great entrance hall, barely visible in the moonlight. He had
not expected both of them.
“Look who’s
come!”Warren said.“Your reputation has preceded you, brother.”
Wolf gave
them the speech he had ready. “We shall not be disturbed.You know you cannot
escape and I know you cannot give up, any more than I can. I offer you a clean,
quick end, or you can kill me and endure what follows.The choice is yours.”
Warren
laughed shrilly. “You plan to take us on together? My Leader is a dueler of
renown and I certainly intend to defend myself.”
“That is
your right,”Wolf said, hoping they did not mean it. He drew Dili-gence.Two
more swords flashed from their scabbards. He was gambling, of course, that
their ward was already fleeing between the chimney pots and they would play for
time, rather than fight seriously.
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He was
wrong. Quintus stayed out, but Warren was recently married, unwilling to die,
and a deadly fencer. The rugs made for tricky footwork and absorbed the sound,
so only clattering metal broke the silence, just panting breath and starry
gleams from the steel. They worked their way around the hall, with Wolf doing
most of the recovering, but in the end he got his back to the light and used
that advantage to find an opening.
As he stood
in bitter triumph over the body, sobbing for breath and bleeding like a pig
from what Warren had done to him, he heard Quintus chuckle in a soft, macabre
mockery of his boisterous mirth back in the days of their innocence.
“That was
the easy part,” he said. “Try your teeth on me, Sir Wolf.”
He came
forward in a whirl of rapier and the King’s Killer had no chance at all.
Quintus drove him into a corner, pricking and jabbing without mercy, adding
scars to his face with a surgeon’s precision, and all the time cackling.
“You don’t
need all that much ear....A little more leer . . .” Conjury could heal cuts,
but not replace missing flesh. Soon Wolf was fighting with an arm over his
forehead to keep the blood out of his eyes. Repeatedly Quintus cornered him,
cut him some more, then let him break free, just to drive him back the other
way. No swordsman in creation could have held him off and Wolf was convinced
that Diligence was
on her way to the sky of swords when his opponent suddenly hurled his rapier
down and ripped his doublet open. And laughed.
“Oh, Lynx!
You think he had a laugh when he was at Ironhall, you should have heard him
then.The Yeomen two streets away heard him.”
Lynx’s eyes
were still not back to normal, but he was interested enough to forget his own
plight for a moment. “What happened?”
“I killed
him.The point is that his ward was dead, Lynx. Elboro fell off the roof and
saved Athelgar the headsman’s hire. Quintus’s binding snapped and he knew it
right away.”
“So?”
“You still
can’t sleep.”
Lynx
shrugged stupidly, still bemused.“I fainted from lack of blood.”
“I said sleep.Your
binding’s intact.Your ward’s still alive.”
Lynx’s eyes
seemed to shine like a cat’s then. “Celeste? Alive?”
“She has to
be.You’re still bound!”
She had not
been taken for the sake of her jewels and dropped over-board.That was not the
explanation.
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12
By
the time the morning bell began its clamor, Wolf had finished writing a full
report of his progress so far, little as that was. He had wrapped the bizarre
wooden mace for shipment to the Privy Council and copied out parts of Lynx’s
testimony for Master of Archives, so that Fell and Mandeville would receive due
honor in the Litany. He
had also raided the kitchens for a quick breakfast. Snow was falling but the
wind was veering to the south, which on Starkmoor usually meant a break in the
weather.
He found
Hogwood in a hallway, cornered by Tancred and Rivers, both of them smiling
inanely as they practiced making conversation to a female person. Other boys
slunk by at a safe distance, young ones smirking, others pouting enviously but
knowing better than to intrude. She looked more exhausted than she had the
previous evening, but if she had been using some sort of conjured stamina on
the journey, she would almost certainly suffer aftereffects.
Wolf
himself was still one huge ache, but he beamed cheerily and saluted. “Good
chance, Inquisitor! Any instructions for me this fine morning?”
“Ride out
in the blizzard and freeze to death,” she said sourly.
Rivers
guffawed.Tancred frowned warily, trying to work out the play.
“I would, but
I have to defend you from these lecherous characters.”
Tancred
took Rivers by the elbow and led him away.
“Why do you pretend I’m
in charge?” Hogwood said. “Wouldn’t Ironhall be pleased to know that the King
had chosen a Blade in such an emergency?” Wolf shrugged.“Just habit. A dagger
up my sleeve. And I care nothing at all what Ironhall thinks.We must ride to
Quondam today.” She glanced at the white nothing beyond the windows. “When the
weather improves.”The fear was back, suddenly.
“Come
plague, earthquake, or tidal wave, I ride to Quondam today.”
“Let me
know when you leave so I can testify at the inquest.”
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“Soon. I’m
on my way to interview the Baron.”
“I just
tried.” Her eyes glinted at scoring a point. “He’s still unconscious. One
casualty died in the night—”
“Which
one?”
“The cook.
One of the grooms is capable of answering simple questions now, but can add
nothing new.”
“Good
work,”Wolf conceded. “I’ll go and try my hand. If I’m not in the infirmary,
you’ll probably find me in the gym.”
An hour
later he was little wiser.The witnesses’ estimates of the invaders’ numbers
ranged from eighty to a thousand, so he was inclined to trust Lynx’s guess of
three hundred.There had been at least two of the cat-masked warriors on stilts,
and the farmer who had witnessed Lynx’s fight with one of them confirmed that
the freak had singlehandedly felled two Blades and another swordsman. He also
insisted that the monster had managed to get back on its feet afterwards. That
sounded impossible, but others had seen its corpse in the bailey later.
Wolf’s need
to reach Quondam was urgent, for this was the fifth day since the attack.The
wind was definitely dropping, though, and he could wait a little longer.
He went across
to the gym and learned that Tancred could now beat him black and blue at
sabers, as he had been able to do with a rapier for the last half year.The lad
was a wonder. Bowman swore he was the best since Durendal, and certain to start
winning the King’s Cup as soon as he joined the Guard. Some of the lesser
lights ventured to try out against the killer, too, and a couple gave him a
worthy workout. Aware that he lacked patience to be a good instructor,Wolf
tendered what advice he could, and those who could recognize the gulf between
fencing as a sport and real-blood sword fighting were eager to learn from a man
with so many scars.
But noon
was approaching and he must leave soon to reach Quondam before dark. He found
Hogwood in the library, going over incantation scrolls with Intrepid, who was
sitting very close to her. They looked up at the newcomer as if he ought to
kneel.
“A clear
need for Veriano’s Excoriation,” Intrepid said.
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“Don’t
bother, I’m leaving anyway,”Wolf retorted. “It’s a fine afternoon for a ride.”
“You can’t
see your nose in front of your face out there, man. I know that you wouldn’t
want to, but even you can’t be crazy enough to risk the moor in this weather.”
“Watch me.
Have I left out anything, Inquisitor?” Wolf handed his report to Hogwood, who
performed her usual instantaneous reading and returned it.
“The
pattern of injuries,” she said. “I have seen no wounds except your brother’s
that could not have been caused by clubs like the one Sir Intrepid gave us.
Broken bones and cracked skulls are commonest. Cuts and puncture wounds are
largely confined to the men-at-arms, and a couple of male servants, both large
men.”
Annoyed
that he had not seen that,Wolf sat down at the next table and reached for a
quill and inkwell. “So the teeth were reserved for serious opponents? Why?”
“It would
seem that the invaders hoped to disable rather than kill, but I cannot suggest
a reason. Sir Intrepid, I need a few words with Sir Wolf.”
Intrepid’s
face flushed to match the red in his hair. He sprang up and strode out the
door, slamming it loudly behind him.
Wolf signed
the report and sealed it. “The snow’s stopped, almost.”
Hogwood
said, “You do not seriously intend to set out across the moors in this fog?”
“I have a
compass.”
Her mouth
and neck were tense with fear, but he could not tell whether she dreaded the
journey or something waiting at Quondam.
“Sir
Wolf,”she said with unusual respect,“will you answer a question?”
“Ask it and
see.”
“This is
not just nosiness. It is relevant to your mission today. According to Sir
Intrepid, you have slain more Blades than I was informed. Eight, he says.”
“You are
surprised that your bosses tell lies?”
“And I have
also learned that the very first of your victims, Sir Hengist, was your closest
friend here at Ironhall.”
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The sort of
friend a man finds only once or twice in his lifetime; the sort of friend a man
would die for. Wolf just nodded.Words to an inquisitor
must be carefully dispensed.
Hogwood
said, “There were witnesses when he died, including inquisitors. Deliberate
cold-blooded murder, I was told.”
“An
indiscretion. But Hengist was the first, and once a man develops a taste for blood
it soon becomes a habit. It really is time to leave now. I’ll have Intrepid
send a courier—”
Her eyes
were very large and very dark. “Candidates Hengist and Viper were bound as
Blades to the Duke of—”
“Don’t call
him that! Garbeald was trash!
And when even the King had to admit it and sign the warrant, someone had to
arrest him.”
Only Blades
could hope to arrest Blades, so Vicious went in person, taking twenty of the
Guard. His scar and his hatred of inquisitors dated from that night. That was
the start of the slaughter, although they hadn’t known then that the Thencaster
Plot was coming and there would have to be many more arrests.
“Garbeald
fled, with his Blades,” Hogwood persisted.
“Of course.
But I fail to see what this has to do with—”
“They were
cornered at Hobril. Garbeald was taken into custody, but only after Sir Viper
had been killed and Sir Hengist gravely wounded.”
“Don’t
forget the other casualties, Inquisitor. Be exact. Four guardsmen, two
inquisitors, and six men-at-arms. Commander Vicious almost lost half his face
that night.” Oh, how those two fought! The entry in
the Litany did
not do them justice.
She
grimaced. “The fighting was over, the Duke in custody. An inquisitor was
applying conjured bandages to Sir Hengist, trying to save his life.You pushed
him aside and ran your sword through the prisoner’s heart. It was cold-blooded
murder.”
“Was that
what happened? The witnesses disagreed.”
“The Blades
all lied, yes.You escaped without even a reprimand.”
Not
true.Vicious upbraided Wolf for being so public, but he was harder on Florian
and Sewald for not doing their work properly earlier.
“Your best
friend, and you murdered him!”
“When you
are older, you will learn not to listen to gossip.”
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“Don’t
you dare patronize me like that!” “Grow up. It’s time to go.”Wolf headed for
the door. He must not, would
not, remember Hengist drenched in his
own blood—
gasping in agony, yet tortured even more
by the intolerable shame of having betrayed his king and failed his faithless
ward. He and Viper had fought like legends against impossible odds and now he
faced certain madness when Garbeald was hanged, as he was. Cruelest of all
memories was the dawn of hope in his eye when he saw his old friend arrive and
the relief when Wolf reached for Diligence....The
nod.
“Wait!”
Hogwood shouted, jumping up and slamming her hands on the table. “Then Sir
Jared, Sir Warren. And Quintus!
The champion! You actually went in alone against two—”
Wolf turned
in the doorway. “I am going to Quondam now, Inquisitor. If you prefer to
remain here and jabber with all the old women, I will quite understand.”
“Listen to
me! Those Blades wanted to die, yes?”
“Definitely
irrelevant.”
“So do
you!” she yelled.“Don’t you understand? Right now, you’re setting off across
the most treacherous ground in Chivial in dense fog. That’s suicide! Ever since
you killed Hengist you’ve been trying to kill yourself.”
“If you believe such nonsense, girl,
you’re in the wrong profession. See that report gets sent to the Council.” Wolf
slammed the door on her.
75
II
Skilled huntsmen knowing all
forms of spoor . . .
1
Tam and two Ironhall
hands were perched on kegs around a crate, playing a game of straws.They had three
layers on top of the bottle and matters were getting interesting, with six
copper groats at stake. Wolf waited until the next straw was in place. Nothing
collapsed.
“Tam,
good chance to you.” Tam looked up warily. “And to you, Sir Wolf.” “Can you guide
me to Quondam in this?” The boy glanced out the window, pushed hair out of his
eyes, and
said, “Naw, sir. Not today.” Wolf
flipped a golden crown, flashing like sunlight in the gloom. The men exchanged
wondering glances. Stable hands never saw gold. “Naw, sir.Too dangerous.”It was
Tam’s turn to play. He added a coin
to the stakes and chose a straw. Wolf
said, “Two crowns.” “Stop it!” Hogwood said at his back. “Only an idiot would
go out
on
the moor in this weather.”
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“All men
are fools for gold.” Wolf was conscious of other hands closing in to listen.
“Not for two?”
Tam licked
his lips, shook his head.
“How about
four?”Wolf counted them from one hand to the other. “Four gold crowns to guide
me to Quondam.That’ll buy you a fair wife and a share in two oxen.”
“Stop it!”
Hogwood yelled.“You are tempting the boy to kill himself.”
“Six, then?
Six crowns will rent a farm, buy a fishing boat.” Clinking coins, Wolf looked
at the others and was surprised that none of them spoke up.“No takers on six?
Then I’ll go by myself. Greg, saddle me a horse.”
“I won’t!”
the hostler said harshly.
“Then I’ll
do that myself, too. Come,Tam, you’ll feel guilty all your life if I die and
stupid if I don’t. Name a price.”
Tam was
sickly pale. He licked his lips. “Make it ten, Sir Wolf ?”
Was that
the biggest fortune he could imagine? “Ten it is.To be paid
at Quondam gate.” Tam touched a finger
to the heap of straws, dropping them all. He stood up.Wolf surprised him by
offering a hand to shake. “Courage becomes a man. Brains are for cowards.
Follow when you dare, Inquisitor.”
“Burn you!”
Hogwood said.“Burn your guts for tinder! Saddle one for me, too, hostler.” She
wheeled on Wolf. “And we’ll take a spare saddle horse in case one goes lame,
and a packhorse with food and bedding, you hear?”
Wolf said,
“If you insist.” He had been planning to do so. “See to it please, Greg.” He
went into the stable office to wait by the fire. Hog-wood followed.
“Finding
the grownups’ league a little scary, Inquisitor?” “Stop
babying me! I find your condescension as repellent
as your morbid pursuit of danger.”
“You must
have done well in vocabulary class.” He liked her glares. Other inquisitors he
had worked with had kept their corpse faces in place all the time, and she
rarely used hers. He must not start thinking of her as a desirable woman,
though.That road would be scarier than the moor.
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“Tomorrow
morning would be safer,” she said. “We’d only lose a few hours.”
“Any job worth
doing must be done right, which means losing no hours in this case.” He risked
a smile, a real smile, not the permanent fanged leer that Quintus had given
him. “It really isn’t that dangerous! The fog is not thick enough for us to
fall off a cliff and the bogs are frozen.Tell me about dower rights.”
“The
baron’s debts swallowed everything the King gave him to marry Celeste. If he
died, his widow could claim all of whatever pittance was left. If he’d caught
her in adultery, he could have divorced her and she’d have lost her dower
rights.That’s what kept your brother out of her bed.”
Aha! “So
his sons had motive to make sure she died first.”There had to be a sane reason
somewhere behind the madness.
Sweet
Dolores gave him a look worthy of Vicious in one of his well-named moods. “Two
middle-aged farmers struggling to keep their households fed hire a few hundred
cutthroats to paint themselves brown, run half-naked through a Secondmoon
freeze, break into a fortress, kill dozens of innocent bystanders, and abduct a
baroness? And they keep it all secret? His Majesty’s Office of General Inquiry
had no forewarning of this atrocity at all, Sir Wolf !”
“The
raiders departed in ships, so the cutthroats were hired abroad.”
More
eye-rolling. “And where did the money come from to do that?”
“Her
jewels!” he said. “They took her jewelry as well!”
“Surely it
have been cheaper just to poison her? And you are overlooking the club, or
mace. It makes your theory absolutely untenable, Sir Wolf.”
“What about
the mace?”
At that
point old Greg came to say the horses were ready.
Starkmoor
weather could change in minutes. Compared to what had gone before, the fog was
merely damp, not frigid. It seeped inside clothes like cold sweat and beaded
the horses’ manes.They rode in single file, with Wolf in the rear sneaking
glances at his compass and growing steadily more impressed by young Tam’s
performance. He found the
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Newtor turnoff easily enough, lost the
road once, found it again, and brought them safely to the Great Bog. From then
on there were no trails and no landmarks. He began veering to the west.
“Hold!”
Wolf said, riding forward. “You’re going in circles. I’ll lead now.”
Tam’s face
was white as milk, his eyes wide with terror. “I’m gone lost, sir!” He knew
every rock and bush on Starkmoor and had never seen a map in his life.
“No, we’re
not lost. We’ll head southwest until we reach the coast road, then cut back
east again and come to either Quondam or Newtor.”
It would not
be quite that simple, of course, but the only really serious risk was that of
the weather changing. The bog was actually easier going than the uplands,
because the reeds and moss and general flatness had held the snow better, so
there were no thick drifts hiding sudden hollows or rocks.
In a little
while Hogwood rode up alongside him.
“If I’m
trying to kill us,” he said, “why are you here?”
She glanced
sideways at him, studied the fog ahead for a moment, and finally said,“It’s
true, you know.You fit a pattern—your perfectionism, like polishing your boots
all the time, your lack of close friends, your deliberate courting of danger.
Quintus and Warren cut you in ribbons, I heard.You could have served your ward
without having to endure that. People are not always aware of their own
motives.”
“My only
motive is to guard the King. I was asking about yours.”
Again a
hesitation, but shorter than before. “Ambition.”
“Grand
Inquisitor Hogwood?”
“It’s
possible!” she said indignantly.
“I
know.Women have been Grand Inquisitor in the past.”
She seemed
mollified, perhaps surprised that he knew that. “If I make a success of this
assignment, I can expect to be promoted at least two grades. Maybe even three,
Grand Inquisitor said.”
They had
started a conversation, which was promising. “So your family will be proud of
you?”
“That
remark is insulting! You are no gentleman.”
“I never
claim to be. Spare me girlish tears.You’re doing a man’s job,
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so I treat you like a man.You want
compliments? Very well. Few men could have kept up with me on that ride from
Grandon.You’re tougher than most Blades I’ve known.”
“How sweet
of you to say so, Sir Wolf! Your honeyed words will completely turn my foolish
head.”
Wolf laughed.
“If you can discover who abducted the baroness and why, you very likely will be
in line to become Grand Inquisitor.You will certainly have a wonderful future
in the Dark Chamber.”
“Now you
know my dark secret,” she said, studying him under the winnowing-fan lashes.“I
know your past.What of your future, your ambition? What will you do when you
are knighted?”
If Athelgar
ever dared release him.“Find a job. Men do not become rich in the Guard.”
“That’s not
much of an ambition.What sort of job?”
What had
she expected him to say? That he would marry and breed children? What woman
would have him? “Assassin. I’m good at killing people and it probably pays
well. My turn now. Why did Grand Inquisitor choose you for this mission?”
“I told
you! I’m an expert conjurer. A major stronghold fell without even a warning. How
it was done matters even more than who
did it or why,
Sir Wolf. Tell me why you stabbed Sir Reynard in
the back.”
“Tell
me why it matters.”That ended the conversation.
2
As
daylight was fading, the travelers heard sounds of surf and crying seabirds,
and soon arrived at a cliff top. By then the fog was so thick that the sea
below was totally obscured, but they headed east, following tracks in the snow,
until the towering ashlar walls of Quondam solidified out of the murk. The
battlements overhead were invisible, and the great, gloomy pile seemed big as a
mountain.
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“Half an
hour later and we’d have been spending the night in a snowbank,” Hogwood
complained.
Wolf
thought he’d done quite well, all things considered. “Do so if you want to.”
The
drawbridge over the dry moat was down and the outer gates stood open, but he
was not surprised to see the far end of the barbican blocked. Any garrison
would be vigilant so soon after a massacre, even more so if the great Durendal
was in charge. A voice called down a challenge.
It amused Wolf to
answer with “Open in the King’s name!” While he waited, he pulled out his purse.
“Tam, your wages.” The boy shook his head wildly, making hair flap. “Didn’t
earn him, Sir Wolf. ’Twere you guided me.”
“Take it.”
“No, sir. Didn’t earn ’im. You’d been
finding th’ place swifter enough witharn me.” “I wouldn’t even have found the Great
Bog before dark,”Wolf said.
“Take it!”
Tam
flinched and held out a large and grubby hand, into which Wolf counted ten gold
crowns. “This is for courage. The King has lots more where it came from.”
Hogwood sniffed. “You are
liberal with your sovereign’s gold, Sir Wolf.” Wolf did not reply. Did she
think they were not being watched? The story would loosen tongues and speed
feet in his service.
The great
gate creaked open far enough to admit a horse and rider. Wolf led the way
through, into a bailey so depressingly huge that no end to it was visible, just
towers and ramparts fading away into murky Secondmoon dusk. Men-at-arms in
leather and steel closed in around. Resenting their suspicious glares, he
dropped flatfooted into the slush to splatter them, then turned to see if
Dolores needed help.
“Oh, an
excellent choice!” Grand Master pushed through the throng and thumped his
shoulder.“Welcome, brother Wolf ! You bear the king’s writ?”
Lord Roland
was still tall for a Blade and bore his years as if he had
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thrown away a score of them. Age had not
withered him. He wore an opulent sable cloak and a wide hat with osprey plumes,
both of which would have attracted admiration in Greymere itself, and yet he
made such garb seem totally appropriate even in that remote medieval stronghold.
He had moved fast to be there and greet the newcomers, for he was noticeably
dry in a company well wetted by the fog.
Wolf
saluted. “Grand Master, may I present Inquisitor Hogwood? She was sent to
investigate these odd events you report. Regard me as senior henchman.”
Lord Roland
bade her welcome, doffing his fine hat to bow, but his eyes were as bright as a
pigeon’s. “Before I turn over my highly questionable, self-proclaimed command
here, Inquisitor, I should probably inspect your commission.”
Hogwood
gave Wolf a what-do-you-expect look. He produced the warrant, which Grand
Master unrolled just far enough to read the name on it. He returned it with a
knowing smile.
“As I said,
an excellent choice. And young Tam Trevelyan! In this fog? Laddie, I never
believed your dad when he bragged you could find your way over the moors
blindfold and backward.Well done,Tam! Walt, see he is made welcome.” He glanced
up at the gloom, then at Wolf and Hogwood.“You have earned a fireside carouse,
both of you, but there is one thing you should see as soon as possible.”
Hogwood
said, “Then lead on, my lord.”
Lord Roland
guided them through muddy slush, between decrepit sheds and paddock fences.
They passed the looming mass of the Great Tower that Lynx had mentioned and the
glazed windows of the baronial living quarters, slate-roofed, quaint, and
shabby. Quondam had stood guard on its cliff for centuries, but the world was
passing it by. However massive the great curtain wall, Athelgar’s Destroyer
General could batter a breach in it now in a few days.That was not what the
intruders had done, though. They had known a better way.
“What news
of Lynx,Wolf ?”
“He is
well, Grand Master, thanks to Master of Rituals’s skill at commanding
elementals. He seems likely to recover completely.”
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“I am
joyfully moved to hear that. I did not dare to hope. The Baron?”
“Intrepid
has not conceded the battle yet.”
“He is a
wonder.” Roland chuckled and led the way up a long stair to the top of the
wall, where only a low and rickety railing separated them from a forty-foot
drop to the courtyard. On the outer side, two steps led up to the battlements.
Wolf went up and leaned out between merlons, but saw nothing but fog. Surf
rumbled very far below him. He followed the other two, walking along the
rampart, noting that the slush had been well trodden.
In places
the walls were capped by outlook turrets, crenellated and corbeled outward like
swallows’ nests to give the defenders an unobstructed field of fire. Grand
Master halted when he reached the nearest.
“I don’t
suppose you can see, but the invaders came up the cliffs just below here.Their
tracks were obvious when I arrived, straight up from a small beach called Short
Cove. It would be a hard climb even on a dry summer afternoon, a path to tax
goats.”
Hogwood
said, “Then straight up the walls, too? Human flies?”
“No. From
here they went around to the gates and in through the barbican.There is a
narrow path around the base of the walls, not one I should care to try at
night.”
“So
treachery opened the gates?”
“Perhaps.”
“Someone must
have lowered the drawbridge and raised the portcullis,” she insisted.
Grand
Master nodded. “But one picket was killed up here on the battlements. He was
thrown off, or fell over the rail—or jumped, perhaps—and died when he hit the
courtyard. So the matter is not that simple.When the invaders withdrew, taking
the Baroness, they very sensibly followed the main shore road down, which is
much easier.And that was that.They took all their boats away, despite the men
they had lost.”
“How many
men?”Wolf demanded. “How many boats?”
“I do not
know. Normally you can see Short Cove from this turret, but no one has ventured
down to the beach to look for traces, so far as I know.There were no boats in
sight when the sun rose.”
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“What was the
state of the tide during the attack?” Hogwood asked.
“I did not
think to ask, I am ashamed to say.” Roland was clearly annoyed at displaying
human failings.
“Doesn’t
matter,” Wolf said. “The question is, who opened the gate?”
The older
man shivered and pulled his cloak tighter. “Let us discuss that when we go
inside.What I really want you to see,Wolf—and you, Inquisitor—is up on that
lookout.”
He gestured
again at the turret. It was unroofed and higher than the rampart, reached by a
short flight of steps.Wolf went up them carefully, for there was no handrail
and they still bore enough snow to make them treacherous. A hurdle had been
stood across the top, as if to bar entry to the turret itself. It was a
semicircular space surrounded by a crenelated wall, and at first glance it was
totally empty. Most of the snow in it had melted to slush, and even before that
the tracks would have been overlain and unreadable by anyone but a skilled
woodsman. But in a few places he made out single, distinct impressions, and
then he could only stare in disbelief.
A gasp at
his shoulder confirmed that Hogwood was seeing what he saw. How could they
possibly report this evidence
to the Council?
Grand
Master chuckled below them. “From your reactions, I infer that the prints have
not all melted?”
With anyone
else at all, Wolf would have suspected a joke in very bad taste. Hogwood did
not know Lord Roland as he did.
“Who found
these marks and when?” she shouted.
“They were
pointed out to me as soon as I arrived.” Grand Master sounded more amused than
angered by her suspicion. “I have taken statements from the men who discovered
them. I do not believe they are faked, Inquisitor.”
Three toes
forward, one behind. Here and there, in the most sheltered examples, imprints
of great talons also.The brutes must be as big as ponies.Their feet were larger
than human.
Hogwood’s
voice was shriller than an inquisitor’s should ever be. “You are testifying
that the gates were opened by invaders who flew up to this turret mounted on
giant birds?”
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“No.”
Roland’s tone sharpened, bringing echoes of the authority he had borne for a
generation as Lord Chancellor of Chivial. “I merely show you evidence I believe
to be genuine. Draw your own conclusions. You can interview everyone in the
castle at your convenience. Shall we go indoors now?”
3
Worrying
about those monstrous bird tracks, Wolf followed Hog-wood and Grand Master back
down to the bailey. Chivian conjury was supposed to be the best in the world.
So he had always been told. But flying horses were something very new. As they
reached the bailey, he caught Hogwood grinning to herself. If the fortress had
fallen to treachery, she would have faced a straightforward inquisitorial
investigation, probably solvable with her skill at truth-sounding. Instead she
faced a major problem in conjury, so she was gleeful. She was showing no signs
of her former fears, although now she was in Quondam—discard one more theory.
In the hall
where so many had died, the only signs of the battle were fresh rushes on the
floor and two carpenters noisily repairing furniture. Lord Roland beckoned a
passing servant to order fires lit in the guests’ rooms, water heated, hot
bricks piled in their beds, then led the way up a creaking staircase to what
was obviously the baronial bedchamber, for a massive four-poster occupied most
of it. If that been Celeste’s bed for the last four years, there was nothing of
her in the room, nor of the Baron either—no fine mirrors, no sumptuous robes
discarded over chairs, no lingering scent, no silver toiletries arrayed on
gilded furniture. Old and cramped and shabby like the rest of the castle living
quarters, the room was as impersonal as an icehouse, although it was warmed by
a huge fire of driftwood roaring welcome on the hearth.The only noteworthy
object it contained was a rickety table bearing papers, ink, wax, and pens.
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“I have
been working in here,” Grand Master said,“because the solar is colder than the
ocean and the hall is too public. Pray make yourselves at home. So,
Inquisitor—this maniac did not kill you on the way here?”
“But not
for want of trying, my lord.” She was giving him her professional haddock
stare, which was a reminder that she almost never used it on Wolf.
Roland was
untroubled. “He drives himself hard, which is why the King sends him out when
lions prowl. May I suggest, brother, that you proclaim your commission tonight
in the hall? Then, if the weather permits, I can return to my duties in
Ironhall tomorrow.Another day of this thaw and the Great Bog will be its deadly
old self again.”
“It cannot
melt so soon, my lord.”
“It will
flood and be more dangerous than ever.”
“Well, I will
read myself in if you think it necessary, Grand Master, but I have no intention
of letting you escape so easily. I hereby appoint you acting warden of Quondam
until His Majesty’s pleasure be known.”
An aging
servant brought in a steaming copper jug and three tankards. Lord Roland
poured, and they began sipping the fragrant brew. It burned Wolf’s mouth and
raised every hair on his chilled body.
Grand
Master said, “I will serve as needed, but is that altogether wise, brother?”
“It is the
smartest thing I can think of. My charge is to find out who did this terrible
thing, not to wait around here in case they try to do it again. I cannot
understand why the Council did not send the writ directly to you.”
“I am sure
the inquisitor can tell you that.”
“I am
somewhat puzzled by His Majesty’s decision,” Hogwood said.
He feigned
surprise. “It is simple, surely? Ever since Thencaster, the royal buttocks rest
uneasy on the throne. I am not Athelgar’s man, I am an Ambrose leftover. He did
not appoint me Grand Master, he approved my election. Now I send in a lurid
dispatch, raving of improbable superhuman invaders at a time of year when no
sane warrior leaves his fireside. I describe a massacre and announce that I am
taking charge. I am the last man he would trust to investigate, Mistress
Hogwood.”
Or believe,
if he began babbling about pony-sized birds.
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“To
question your loyalty after such a lifetime of service is blatant insanity,
Grand Master,”Wolf said. “But I have no wish to jaundice the royal eye against
you. If you wish to suggest a substitute warden, I will accept your
recommendation.”
“I am sure
you will find an excellent candidate close at hand.” Roland’s refusal was
accompanied by just enough smile to take the sting out of it.
“You have
been here four days, my lord.You have had time to query, investigate, and
ponder.Tell us what happened.”
Grand
Master sighed. “Oh, I wish I could!” He scooped a sheaf of papers from the
table. “Let’s see . . . Sir Alden loaded twenty-five seriously wounded,
including himself, into a wagon, and brought them to Ironhall. Seven of them
died on the journey.”
“And one
since,” Hogwood said. “A cook.”
Roland made
a note.“The dead he left here totaled twenty—that is two Blades, seven men-at-arms,
two visitors, eight male servants, and a page.The invaders killed off any of
their own wounded who could not walk, leaving fifty-four corpses behind. I have
details here . . . and some drawings of those tracks you saw. I discovered that
one of the grooms is an excellent artist.. . . An inventory of the enemy dead
and their weapons.... Statements from everyone who was present, including a
former forester. He read the invaders’ tracks for me.”
Hogwood had
the grace to look impressed. “You have been diligent, my lord! You said,
‘everyone’?”
“Everyone I
could get. Some witnesses had fled by the time I arrived, but I had them
brought back. Except . . .” He thumbed through the sheets.“This one . .
.‘Nathaniel Dogget, his mark.’ A page serving in the hall. His father was slain
in the assault, so I let him return to his family. And two young pikemen—Rolf
Twidale and Cam Obmouth. They were on watch, so they may have been slain and
thrown over the battlements. Or they may still be running, somewhere very far
away.”
“Or they
were abducted along with the Baroness?”
Roland
shrugged, as if to say that anything was possible in a nightmare. “Everyone
else awaits your pleasure, Inquisitor. I certify that my own account is the
truth as I know it.” He passed her the papers.
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While
Dolores flipped through them in her infuriating show-off fashion,Wolf said,
“What I want to know is:Who were they?”
“Ah.” Grand
Master smiled. “There I can show you some evidence. I made a collection of the
best examples.” He rose and went around the four-poster to unlock an ironbound
chest, returning bearing a familiar-looking wooden billet. “You have seen
these? Sir Alden brought one to Ironhall, and we gathered up dozens here.We
call them ‘cats’ paws’ because they always have the same five claws, four on
the top edge and one so far back as to be useless.The carving on the shaft
varies, within narrow limits—cats, birds, flowers, serpents, other symbols I
cannot decipher.”
“If a rebel
chief wanted to arm his men without attracting notice,” Wolf said,“then he
might dream up something like these and have them carved for him in any forest
hut.The Dark Chamber keeps track of standard weapon manufacture and
importation, does it not, Hogwood?”
She
groaned.“Will you explain art to him, Lord Roland, or must I?”
“No need,”
Grand Master said, with more tact than truth. “Wolf knows that no Chivian
artist could have carved these.They are too unlike any craft he would have ever
seen.They are alien, strange. All artists work within their own tradition. This
style is enormously different, exotic to our eyes.The invaders came from no
nation in Eurania, I am certain.”
“Their
weapons did not, you mean?”Wolf asked.
“They did
not.Their skin color is wrong.Their features are wrong.”
“So they
were not painted? Have you kept some of their dead for us to see?”
“I have
kept all of them, because they do not decay in the sort of cold we have been
having, and also the balefires for our own dead consumed all the firewood
Quondam can spare.The ground is too hard to bury them. If this thaw persists,
we may have to give them back to the sea. It brought them here, after all, and
from very far away.”
“You cannot
say from where?” Hogwood asked.
Roland
smiled inscrutably. “I cannot, but wiser men than I will be able to identify
the clothes and chattels. Their dead wore strange garments and decorations.
None of their weapons were metal, but they would be baneful enough. For example
. . .”
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He rose and
went back to the chest in the corner, returning with what was obviously a
wooden sword, its edges inlaid with obsidian teeth. “Be careful! These are as
sharp as razors!”
Wolf took
the hilt. “Impractical for battle, surely?”
“You could not
parry with it, but two of our dead were decapitated by such weapons, each with
a single stroke. No, that is a dangerous thing.”
“But
consider the numbers, my lord! Estimates vary but most witnesses thought there
were between two and four hundred invaders. And they had the advantage of
surprise. Against how many defenders?”
“About
fifty men, plus a score of women and children.”
“Yet the
invaders’ losses were more than ours, even if you include our wounded.
Militarily the result was an upset and that can only mean that our weapons were
superior!”
“Or their
fighting technique was inferior,” Hogwood said, taking the sword.
“Possibly.”
Grand Master handed Wolf a matching stone-toothed dagger from his chest of
wonders. He was enjoying displaying the bizarre hoard. “Darts, glass-tipped,
and this hooked stick is a thrower for them, called an atlatl, if memory
serves. This one is decorated with gold leaf and shell, but most were plainer.
They are about as deadly as bows in practiced hands, I’m told.About as many
shields as corpses . . . look at this shield. Made of woven reeds, covered in
fur and trimmed with feathers. And this one, of cane with a flower design made
entirely of feathers. I wonder what Griffin King of Arms would say to this
heraldry, mm?”
“They are
superb work,” Wolf admitted, “very light. They might block obsidian teeth, but
a rapier would go straight through them.What beast sports this spotted fur?”
“Ah!
Perhaps an ounce?” Grand Master smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. “When I
was about the age you are now, brother, King Ambrose sent me on a very long
journey to a land called Altain, far to the east of Eurania. In the mountains
of Altain lives a very large, much feared, spotted cat called the ounce. It is
twice the length of the lynx we find in northern Eurania, and is either related
to the pard or a highland variety of it. I saw the skin of one and it looked
just like that shield.”
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“You think
the invaders came from Altain?” Hogwood demanded sharply.
“No, I don’t.
I still have much to show you. Headdresses, now. Fit for the palace ball. Like
this.You would look sweet in this,Wolf.”
He handed
over a crown of feathers, brilliant blue and green, trimmed around the headband
with gold. He followed it with dozens of extraordinary garments and artifacts,
chuckling at his audience’s amazement—a full-length cloak of iridescent
feathers, sewn on what seemed to be very delicate cotton, sandals of some
mysterious flexible stuff, fabrics of various dimensions and dazzling colors,
displaying bizarre images of beings with multiple heads, human or otherwise.
“This is
not just stranger than I expected,” Wolf admitted. “It is stranger than I could
have imagined.” Athelgar was going to have a thousand fits.
“Now for
treasures.” Grinning, Grand Master brought a leather bag and returned to his
seat to open it. “A disc of gold, inscribed in unknown glyphs.This bracelet
seems to be pure gold, as are these two earrings. These other trinkets are
copper. But what of this ornate pin? It held a man’s cloak. Or these?” He
passed over three carvings about the size of thumb joints, one of crystal and
two of lustrous green stone. “Bizarre, are they not, but have you ever seen
such delicate workmanship? A bird of prey and two cats?”
Hogwood and
Wolf duly admired the little carvings but were puzzled by their backs, where
each bore a stud like a small mushroom.
“What are
they for?” he asked, just as she said, “What are they?”
“Why, those
are labrets, of course!” Grand Master laughed.“Lip or-naments.The green stone
is jade, I believe. I must report, Inquisitor, that I noted many corpses with
pierced earlobes or lower lips and some with pierced noses, so I assume that
much evidence was stolen before I arrived. Excepting one more item, these are
the only true valuables I found.”
“I will
give you a receipt for them,”Wolf promised, for they both knew how suspicious
the officials in Chancery could be. “And I’ll offer reasonable payment for any
more turned in.”
“Lips?”
Hogwood tossed one of the labrets and caught it. “Surely,
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such
a weight would drag down the lower lip and expose the teeth?
Wouldn’t
that look ugly?”
“I’m told it does,” Grand Master said
solemnly.
“Told by whom?” she snapped.
“Where in the world has this stuff come
from?”Wolf asked.
Hogwood frowned at his clumsy
interruption.
“That is
for you to determine.” Lord Roland reached to the bottom of the bag.“This,
finally.This is my favorite.” He produced a flat package.
Holding it
so Hogwood could watch,Wolf opened the cloth wrapping to reveal a roughly
pentagonal plate about the size of a man’s outspread hand. Its front surface
was a mosaic of innumerable tiny fragments of greenish-blue stone, depicting
the face of a cat with lips open to reveal the double row of fangs.The image
would have seemed fiercer and more impressive had its eyes not been closed and
its color not so improbably non-cat.The backing was a thin sheet of dark wood,
which protruded slightly beside each ear and was pierced to take a thin leather
thong.
“Curious
thing,” he said. “It would not be popular as a pendant, though. Most ladies
would object to the weight. It would anchor a small boat.”
“No woman
would be allowed to wear that.” Hogwood disentangled the thongs and extended
them.“The right is shorter than the other. Both seem to be bloodstained.Was
this cut by Sir Fell?”
Inscrutable,
Roland sipped his drink. “Why do you ask?”
“Sir Lynx
described a battle with a giant masked warrior. Sir Fell struck him on the
shoulder, the right shoulder. The pendant fell to the floor?”
Grand
Master smiled and nodded.“Correct. I admire your reasoning. We found it not
far from Sir Fell’s body, near the hearth. The giant’s corpse lay just outside
the door, and there was a fragment of thong embedded in the wound. It has a
sinister beauty, this feline, wouldn’t you say?”
“It is the
emblem of a chief,” Hogwood said, “like the cat’s-eye swords you both wear.”
Wolf
resented that comparison. “Why are its eyes closed?”
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“I’m sure
that is significant,” Roland said, “but again you must seek wisdom elsewhere.
The stone is turquoise and the fangs seem to be seashell. Exquisite
workmanship, you agree? It obviously belongs to the same artistic tradition as
the cats on the clubs.”
“It has
that same strangeness,” Hogwood agreed. “But surprisingly naturalistic, too.”
“Like the
labrets.”That was Wolf’s contribution to the learned confabulation.
“You will
observe,” said Grand Master, who had had several days to observe, “that the
stones suggest the spotted rosettes of ounce fur.”
“My lord,”
Hogwood said in her iciest inquisitor voice, “you are keeping information from
us.Who told you those sticks were called atlatls? Who described labrets to
you? Where have you seen these things before?”
Former Lord
Chancellors were not easily browbeaten. “I am withholding no facts,
inquisitor.” His voice was tempered steel. “To burden you with guesswork would
not advance your search.”
“By law,
you are required—”
“By law my
Privy Councillor’s oath takes precedence. I will answer to His Majesty.”
“You told
me yourself, Hogwood,”Wolf said, “that your superiors withheld information from
you to avoid biasing your thinking.”
“I did not!
What I said was—”
“Come,
now!” Grand Master said easily. “I suggest you both leave your cares for
another day and attend to your personal needs.”
“First I
will see these corpses you have collected,” Hogwood snapped.
“Then I
hope you have a strong stomach. Pray come this way.”
Wolf
followed the two of them down the creaking stairs, even more deeply troubled
than he had been on the way up. He had never met the word labret
before, but he had seen one the previous
day. At Ironhall, among Grand Master’s personal treasures in his bedchamber, he
had noticed a thumb-sized golden stud bearing a serpent’s head; he had admired
its workmanship and assumed it was some sort of foreign decoration—the Order of
the Golden Snake, perhaps. Now he knew
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what it was
and why Lord Roland had known that excessively obscure word meaning “lip plug.”
He must know where his own labret had come from, and therefore what people had
attacked Quondam. So why not say? He was withholding vital information from the
King’s inquiry. But to doubt Lord Roland’s loyalty was blatant insanity.Wolf
had said so himself only a few minutes earlier.
4
The
Great Tower is no longer in use,” Roland explained as they trudged through the
bailey’s slush, “except to stable bats and rats. The floors are unsafe.”
He unlocked
the door with a key as big as a boot. Having no windows, the lowermost room
had taken on a foul smell of death, like a badly maintained outhouse. It echoed
creepily. As Wolf’s eyes adjusted, the wan beams of the lanterns reached out
into the darkness to reveal row after row of corpses on the floor.
“First look
at these two.” Grand Master led the visitors to a pair of shrouded bundles on
makeshift tables.“I had these wrapped in the hope of keeping rats away from
them. I shall have to move ...you may wish to have them moved to the icehouse,
Sir Wolf.”
“Good
idea,”Wolf said.“Others will want to see them after us.” He opened the flaps of
heavy oiled canvas and uncovered one of the mysterious raiders.
He was
young, stocky, and certainly darker than any Chivian, perhaps chestnut color
as Lynx had suggested, although it was hard to judge corpse pallor in that
light. His only garment was a loincloth consisting of back-and-front flaps hung
on a cord, but what he had lacked in clothes he made up in decoration, being
painted in gaudy stripes of red, black, and yellow.
“His feet
are muddy,” Grand Master said,“so he came barefoot.The breechclout is
universal, but most of the others wore more—tunics,
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capes, cloaks, feathered headdresses.
Some had greaves on their legs and a few wore a sort of padding, like cotton
armor. I wonder if this lad was of low rank or just demonstrating his courage?”
Hogwood
peered at an obscene clot like a blackberry over his heart.
“Unlucky
enough to encounter Sir Mandeville, I fancy,” Roland said,“since he was the
only one sporting a rapier. But physically this man is typical. No sign of
beard stubble and only traces of a mustache, although he seems quite adult.
Note that his lower lip has been pierced. He wore the crystal labret I showed
you. You would think he would have preferred to invest in better armor
instead.”
“Noble
birth and low rank?” Hogwood suggested. “Or lowborn and high rank?”
Wolf said,
“The poor devil was even uglier than I am.”
Grand
Master shook his head.“Beauty is largely habit,Wolf. By our standards, his nose
may be too long and his lips too thick. His eyes are not quite the shape ours
are, but his companions all look much like him, so I expect his sweetheart
considered him handsome enough. He was a husky chap, you must admit.”
“Well, we
can discard any notion that these men are Chivian, or even Euranian.”
“Indeed you
can. Look at the other one. He was certainly a leader.”
Roland led
the way to the other table, and Wolf guessed what they would find there from
the length of the bundle—and he no longer expected stilts, although Lynx’s
estimate of seven feet tall seemed reason-able.This corpse’s skin was the same
color as the other man’s, and at first glance he seemed lean, almost slender,
but that was an illusion caused by his height, for his limbs were meaty. He had
not been slain with rapier finesse.The corpse was black with dried blood;
fragments of white bone shone in the gaping shoulder wounds. Lynx’s cut along his
ribs was trivial, but Fell’s slash at his loins must have cleaved his liver in
two.Yet still he had fought, this giant warrior, overcoming even Blades.
Ripped
remains of a feathered cloak were glued to his body by caked blood, as was his
breechcloth, but Wolf began his inspection by bringing his lantern close to the
boots with claws on them that Lynx had mentioned and so nearly died from. They
seemed strangely
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misshapen—too long and lacking a proper
heel—and each bore four black, curved talons, which were not at all fragile.
Those and the spotted fur itself were coated in clotted blood and fragments of
flesh. Realizing whose that was,Wolf turned away in revulsion.
Or else
just in refusal to accept an impossible conclusion.
“The claws
seem to be retractable,” Hogwood announced, studying the right hand. Hand, not
glove.
Wolf forced
himself back to the great feet, and this time saw them as they were—enormous
furred paws. As a man, the monster had been a giant; judged as a cat walking on
its toes, its proportions were more understandable. Legs, arms, and torso were
human; hands and feet were not.
He and
Hogwood converged on its head, which still bore a golden circlet supporting a
plume of feathers. The helmet was no helmet, any more than the gloves were
gloves or the boots, boots. Its eyes were closed, but the great jaws hung open,
its huge fangs still bloody. No human mouth could have crushed Lynx’s shoulder.
“Fire and
death! Is it man or brute?”
“Man,”
Hogwood said. “It gave orders, remember?”
Lord Roland
chuckled. “Would you argue with them?”
“Or both?”
said Hogwood. “Man and pard combined? Or did he die while changing from one to
the other?”
Wolf raised
his lantern, its flame dancing as his hand trembled. His questions spilled out
too loud, echoing in that sepulcher.“What do you know that you are not telling
us, Grand Master? Did you not meet with such creatures back in the Monster
War?”
“Not like
this, I think.The chimeras we faced then were animals— unstable, short-lived,
and no smarter than dogs.This big fellow was described as giving orders. He
was in charge.”
“Is he a
shape-shifter, then? Did he fly up to the lookout as a bird, and change into a
pard for the assault? Was he changing back when he died?”
“I know no
more about it that you do,Wolf.”
Hogwood’s
voice was calmer than Wolf’s.“But you know where he came from, this half-man,
half-cat. You know whose foul conjurations produced such a monster.”
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“I do not
know, Inquisitor.” After a moment Roland added, “The witnesses claim that he
slaughtered three men singlehanded and two of those men were Blades. Does not a
warrior so mighty deserve a better name than monster?”
“It
will do until we find a better,”Wolf said.
During dinner, Wolf talked with Sir
Alden—peppery, bristle-bearded, and much weathered—who regarded him and his
fancy writ with the contempt due to an upstart court jester.Yet this was the
man who had ignored a badly broken arm to drive a wagon all the way to Ironhall
through the rigors of a Secondmoon night. Many men were living now only because
of that feat, notably Lynx.The old campaigner was a very impressive man, and
Grand Master’s smile in the background confirmed that Alden was the candidate
he had in mind for acting warden.
Later the
inhabitants of Quondam were assembled to hear the King’s writ read out and give
three cheers for Athelgar. This time Wolf dared not brag about bringing the
culprits to justice. No one would believe him. He explained that everyone
would be required to make a statement to Inquisitor Hogwood. He also warned
that all booty belonged to the King.
“However,”
he added,“I will accept any souvenirs you turn in, with no questions asked.
Gold I will buy for its weight in crowns, and I will pay fairly for anything
else.”
The hall
being the only warm place outside of the kitchens, Wolf settled there to read
through the statements Grand Master had provided. Others seeking warmth or
company spread themselves around adjacent tables or just sat on the rushes to
gossip and ignore the minstrel wailing up in the gallery.
Soon a
nervous youth shuffled up to Wolf, watched by many eyes.
He laughed.
“Drew short straw, did you? What have you got?”
Shyly the
boy produced a massive thumb ring, intricately carved and too heavy to be
anything but solid gold.
“Now here’s
a jewel fit for a king,”Wolf said. “The castellan would have had money scales
around somewhere?”
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The lad
returned in a few moments with scales and an eager, relieved grin. It took
seven crowns from Wolf’s expense pouch to outweigh his ring, but the boy
strutted off with a negotiable fortune in place of stolen property that he
would never have disposed of otherwise for anywhere near its true value.
Half the
hall promptly stampeded in Wolf ’s direction. He bought a chain and a pair of
silver anklets, but the fourth man produced a gold duck as big as a plum, in
itself heavier than all his remaining coins. Obviously Wolf had bitten off far
more than his purse could chew. He offered the man an IOU, written in a fair
hand on parchment, payable on demand by any of the royal coiners and slathered
with an imposing wax seal. The hard-bitten Westerther farmer just scowled and
clung tight to his loot. The treasure-buying project had apparently sunk at the
dock.
“May I
assist?” Grand Master inquired, joining the meeting. “I have every confidence
in Sir Wolf and will be happy to countersign his notes, if you wish.Then, even
if His Majesty refuses payment, you can collect from me.” He sat down and added
his signet and signature.
That was
good enough for the farmers and men-at-arms. They all knew of the great Lord
Roland, both by reputation and now personally. With his help Wolf went on to
buy earrings, bracelets, jeweled pins, necklaces, gem-studded sandals, labrets,
ornate belts, deer, bees, monsters, birds, chains, bells, daggers,
headdresses, cloak pins, and odd symmetrical plugs he was told had been
extracted from noses. Steadily the pile grew. Gold and silver were easy to
value by weight. For jade, crystal, turquoise, feather-work, and so on, he
just set a price in consultation with Grand Master, refusing to haggle but
trying to be generous without drawing the noose any tighter around his neck
than it was already. He was convinced that he was doing his duty, yet he could
almost feel the rough hemp against his skin. His authority did not extend to
ransoming stolen property, for that was itself a felony, so there was a chance
that Athelgar would simply seize the loot as his by right and charge Wolf with
embezzlement of crown funds. He would enjoy doing that. It might even amuse him
to leave Grand Master to pay the tally, but that was unlikely, because every
Blade in the country except the Guard itself
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would rise against him. Still, Roland
was taking a risk in helping Wolf, and they both knew it.
Eventually
the flow of loot slackened. Some latecomers admitted that they had already
smuggled their booty out of the castle, so Wolf promised them time to recover
it and turn it in. Only after they had gone was he left alone with Grand Master
and able to thank him.
Roland
stood up, chuckling.“I don’t think you’re taking much of a risk, brother.”
“I am
guessing at the purity, remember.”
“You have
usually proved to be a very sound guesser,Wolf! Let’s talk later.” His smile
implied after your assistant has gone to bed.
He
strolled back to the hearth to resume his previous conversation with
Hogwood.Wolf demanded a stout satchel and manhandled his loot upstairs,
wondering what those two were discussing so earnestly.
5
Refusing
Grand Master’s offer of the baronial bedchamber, Wolf had selected a room in
the attic. It was a poky cubicle, so small that the door opened outward like a
cupboard’s, and it held only a cot, a chair, and a clothes hamper, but the
chair was much more comfortable than the lumpy bed, a strong hint that this was
a Blade’s lair. In the basket he found some items he recognized as Lynx’s.
He poked up
the fire and settled down to make an inventory of the booty he had just
incurred for the royal treasury. The total cost came to a staggering thirty
thousand crowns. The greatest part of that had been spent on actual bullion and
he was gambling on his childhood experience in the mines, which made him fairly
certain that the foreigners’ gold was very close to pure metal, twenty-four
carats. King Athelgar’s coinage was not, for he had been debasing it, as the
Guard knew, even if Parliament had not yet caught on. That meant that the
beloved monarch could clear a profit of at least a
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hundred percent just by melting down the
entire heap and coining it. Wolf considered that prospect the downside of an
otherwise enjoyable evening’s work.
The mystery
of Celeste’s abduction now seemed even deeper, for her jewelry had certainly
not been the motive.What sort of raiding party came to battle dressed like a
king’s court? Even Baelish pirates, who loved to flaunt their ill-gotten
finery, never risked it in actual combat.
Before
morning he must complete yet another report, but what in the world could it
say? And what could he do next? He was certain that the answers were not going
to be found there at Quondam. Having seen the awful place, he could even find
it in him to pity Celeste, imprisoned there for the crime of conceiving a child
no one wanted— likely not even she at first, although Lynx had insisted she had
mourned it as any mother would. Rescuing her from this captivity had cost the
lives of almost ninety men, women, and boys.
Why?
The
question waited for an answer.
Other people
came upstairs and closed their doors and the attic grew quiet again. His
accounts completed, he stoked up the fire and struggled down the ladder with
his precious satchel. He found Grand Master still fully dressed, leaning back
against piled cushions on the big bed, but he came alert at once.
“Make
yourself at home, brother. Leave your cloak and dagger on the table and poke up
the fire.”
“I want to
add my loot to yours,”Wolf said. He did so and double-locked the chest with a golden
key, a conjury only inquisitors were supposed to possess. He declined Grand
Master’s offer of refreshment, and the two of them settled before the hearth
with the air of men getting down to business.
“I did not
wish to gossip in front of the inquisitor,” Roland said, showing anxiety he had
concealed formerly, “but tell me truly how Ironhall fares. Rituals is coping,
you said, but how about the rest?”
“I think he
may have rubbed some fur the wrong way.”
Grand
Master smiled. “Very likely. Most of them are terrified by novelty. He is not,
and I wanted him to have a free hand to work on the
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wounded. But I should dearly like to
return to my post and smooth that fur,Wolf, as soon as the fog lifts.”
Wolf was
horrified to hear the head of his Order pleading with him. “Of course! I will
send an escort with you.”
“I’m sure
Tam will suffice.Thank you. Now, brother, a question.This is only old man’s
nosiness, I fear, but your companion puzzles me. Did you choose her?”
Wolf
laughed at the thought of a Blade having carnal designs on an inquisitor. “I
thought she was a boy.”
Lord Roland
shook his head, frowning.“Then what are Grand Inquisitor thinking of, sending
a child on a man’s job? They must have dozens of experienced agents who could
have kept up with you on the journey. If she bungles the investigation, His
Majesty will be much displeased.”
“It puzzles
me, too. She claims to have a doctorate in conjury, but I expect the snoops are
up to something underhand, as usual.”
“Now, now!”
Grand Master waggled a finger. “They will have their reasons. Inquisitors spy
excessively on the innocent, but they serve the same king we do, if in
different ways. Once in a while they may satisfy what they see as His Majesty’s
needs rather than his expressed wishes, so the royal hands are not soiled.”
“As in the
case of Lord Musthorpe?” Musthorpe had been another Thencaster suspect, but had
succumbed to a very convenient fever before the warrant for his arrest could
be delivered. The Guard was convinced the Dark Chamber had poisoned him.
Grand
Master shot Wolf a dark glance.“There are such things as coincidences.” He
could have pointed out that the Musthorpe’s death had been so ambiguous that
his Blades had eventually recovered from their bereavement, which was more than
could be said of those the King’s Killer had taken off the roll.“I want to tell
you two things,Wolf. Firstly, I sent an appeal for help to Mother Fire Rose,
prioress of the White Sisters at Lomouth.You know the lady?”
“No, Grand
Master.”
“Do not be
deceived by her homely manner. She has a mind like a rapier. But she is old now
and will probably send someone else.”
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“The
cat-man was obviously conjured. What else do you suspect? His medallion?”
Grand
Master took up the tongs and jabbed idly at the fire. “I’d be interested to
hear the worthy Sisters’ opinion of that, but not at all surprised if they
fail to find any conjuration on it.Which brings me to the second thing. I kept
secrets from you and the inquisitor, which was a foolish old man’s whim. I will
confess to you and trust your discretion.”
Here came
the golden labret. “That won’t be—”
“No,
please! I should have told you right away. My motives were very trivial.There
is no evil secret behind this. It was just that all my life I have refused to
involve my family in affairs of state, and I balked at doing so today,
stupidly.The person I was shielding was my son.”
“Oh?”Wolf
had never heard him mention his family before.
“Andy was
for many years a sailor, eventually master of his own ship, a trader and
explorer of some renown. He always brought back mementos from his travels, and
after one voyage he presented his mother with a jade figurine of a somewhat
sinister-looking cat. He gave me a labret of gold, depicting a fanged
serpent—with an explanation of what it was, of course, and the joking
suggestion that I start a new fashion around court by having my lip pierced.
Being a loving and dutiful son, you see. Can you imagine what old Ambrose would
have said? Both trinkets came from wherever your invaders came from, for they
show the same artistic style.”
“So the
next question is—”
“Where did
he acquire it? Somewhere in that newfound world they call the Hence Lands.
Exactly where I cannot recall, for he had many tales and it was long ago.
Andy’s only a farmer now. He lives in my old house, Ivywalls, just west of
Grandon. If you wish to consult him, then I am certain he will eagerly provide
what help he can.” Grand Master glanced at his guest, and some trick of the
light on his gaunt features cruelly emphasized the age he so rarely showed.“I
did not mention him earlier because the Dark Chamber will—”
“Hassle him
mercilessly, of course.”
“Exactly.
And, knowing Andy, I am sure he will react badly if he is not forewarned. At
times he displays a streak of orneriness he claims to have inherited from one
of his parents.”
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Suddenly
Wolf had a lead, a light to follow, and his way ahead was clear. “I must return
to Grandon very soon—to see tonight’s haul of loot delivered safely, if nothing
else. Also, I am sure there are no more answers here in Quondam. I do not think
your son can be kept out of the matter entirely, but I promise I will not
mention him to Hogwood until I have had a chance to speak to him myself.”
“Then I am
much in your debt,Wolf.Truly I am! I will give you a note of introduction. Once
the situation has been explained to him, Andy will gladly help you track down
these vicious killers.”
“I do not
see he need appear in the affair at all,”Wolf said.
“Ah, but
there is more.” Grand Master sighed. “My wife was much attracted to the
figurine, but she took a virulent dislike to the labret. She was a White Sister
and not given to strange fancies. Although she could detect no trace of
spirituality on my little snake head, she would not have it in the house. I
took it to my chambers in Greymere, locked it away, and forgot all about it
until after I left office. It is presently in Iron-hall. I will be happy to let
you have it, if you see the need. I am sorry I kept this tale from you.”
Wolf
squared mental shoulders and said, “I am sorry for not being quite open with
you either. Ironhall is so crowded that Sir Intrepid insisted on billeting me
in your chamber last night. I saw your serpent.”
Grand
Master laughed with no trace of resentment. “As I tell the juniors, honesty is
always the best policy! I thank you for not unmasking me before the
inquisitor.”
“It never
occurred to me to.”
Knowing that
the abduction of Amy Sprat had been effected by men from the far side of the
western ocean made the matter more mysterious, not less. Wolf said, “Make one
more confession, Grand Master. Have you any notion, any wild wisp of a theory,
to explain why these men should sail halfway around the world to this castle
merely to abduct Baroness Celeste? At this time
of year?”
Roland
shook his head and went back to staring into the fire. “Not an inkling. It is
incomprehensible. They must have traveled for months. Andy spoke once of seeing
naturales in
large canoes on rivers, but they have no seagoing craft, so far as I know. His
Majesty has cho
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sen
you to solve one of the greatest mysteries of the age. He chose
wisely,
I believe.”
“You never used to flatter.”
Grand
Master sighed. “You never needed it before. Now you need all the support you
can get.”
They sat
and talked of lesser things until a sudden collapse of the fire warned Wolf
that he had lingered too long, because his host needed sleep, even if he did
not. He thanked Grand Master again for all his help and set off up the ladder
to his garret. He had not bothered to bring a lantern down with him, but he had
left the door ajar to let firelight guide him home.
Someone had
closed it, and not the wind, because he had propped it with the chair.
Royal
guardsmen went armed with a sword only. Standard livery did not include a
parrying dagger, any more than it included plate mail, and the average Blade
never bothered to wear one unless he was expecting trouble. Nobody
picked fights with Blades! Wolf was an
exception. He always carried a poniard at his belt and Sir Vicious had never
told him to get rid of it, although he had blasted a couple of juniors who had
tried to copy his example.Wolf also kept a stiletto in his sleeve, but no one
knew about that.
Now he drew
both dagger and Diligence. He
took a very long time to raise the latch, and even longer to ease the door back
far enough to peer in with even one eye. At that point he sheathed his blades
and opened the door the rest of the way, faster but still silently.
The chair
stood by the dying fire, and the person sprawled in it was Dolores Hogwood,
apparently fast asleep. She was slender, but no one would mistake her for a boy
now, and a man would have to be very greedy to complain about her figure. Her
flowered robe had fallen open to reveal a shapely leg in its entirety, which
hardly mattered because the silk was sheer enough to give him an excellent view
of the rest of her as well. Very rich ladies might possess such gauzy,
provocative garments, but normally they were only seen in brothels.Why would an
inquisitor bring such a thing along on a mission to a wilderness like Whinmoor?
Oh,
spirits, he was tempted! It had been a very long time since he
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had been alone with a pretty
girl.Whenever he did find a woman who could tolerate his nightmare face,
inevitably someone would soon mention his tally of dead friends—to her or her mother—and
that always ended any hint of romance. Hogwood was not merely pretty, she was
young, nubile, and gorgeous. She was clearly very much available. He was
extremely tempted to provide what she had obviously come looking for.
He was even
more tempted to pick her up bodily and hurl her out into the corridor.
He
took several deep breaths to bring his mangled emotions under control.Then he
quietly collected his baggage and tiptoed across the corridor to Hogwood’s
room. He gathered up her things—she was a lot less tidy than he was—and took
them back to where she slept.When he left, he used his golden key to bolt the
door behind him. It felt like a very stupid decision, but he was already a mass
murderer. He had no wish to be a convicted rapist also. If the Dark Chamber
wanted revenge for the death of Inquisitor Schlutter, it would have to be more
subtle than that.
6
Wolf
ran into his seductive assistant in the hall at dawn. She favored him with a
full inquisitorial dead-fish stare, which was not just a way to intimidate
witnesses; it could also be used to mask emotion. She should have been blushing
a screaming scarlet. He suspected that he was, and tried to look angry.
“Grand
Master is almost ready to leave. Have you anything to send with him?”
“No, Sir
Wolf.”
That was a
relief. If she planned to accuse Lord Roland of withholding information, she
was not yet ready to commit her beliefs to paper. Or she did not trust him to
deliver the report, perhaps.
Out in the
bailey a full spring day was getting itself organized, com
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plete with sunshine and birdsong—just
strident gulls and terns, admittedly, but better than nothing. Water was
dripping everywhere and the mud was ankle deep already. Grand Master and Tam duly
departed, taking with them three cat’s-eye swords.
Wolf located Sir Alden in the stable,
grooming his horse. “We must dispose of the bodies.” We
meaning you.
The old warrior rested an arm on the horse’s croup and regarded
him without enthusiasm. “Throw ’em in
the sea?”
“The King
won’t want corpses washing up all along his coasts.”
“We’re
short of firewood. If weather turns bad again, we’re like to freeze.”
“I
understand the floors in the Great Tower are unsafe?”
Alden
waited a beat before nodding. “Baron won’t like it.”
“The Baron
is past caring and we cannot tolerate fifty rotting carcasses. Use whatever
fuel you have on hand to burn them and treat the floors as your emergency
store. So ordered in the King’s name, if that’s how you want it.”
For the
first time Alden ventured a smile. “Aye,Your Majesty.”
Wolf
ordered the two sample bodies moved to the icehouse as Grand Master had
suggested, and then began making a gruesome inventory of the others as each in
turn was carried out—guessing at ages, noting war paint, clothes, body
piercings, and so on. They might have dressed like fops, they might be uglies
by Chivian standards, but they were an impressive collection of brawn. All were
men in their prime with the right callouses for warriors, but curiously few
scars. His study had no real purpose. Mostly he just did not know what to do
next. He was a swordsman, not an inquisitor.
He had
assumed that Hogwood was working her way through the castle, questioning every
witness in turn to make sure they were hiding nothing—a procedure likely to be
as futile as what he was doing. Not so! When about half the bodies had been
loaded on to the wagon that served as hearse, he was startled to see his
black-robed assistant disappearing out the postern gate. He caught up with her
as she neared the top of the cliff. She was walking blind, her attention
entirely on something she held cupped in both hands.
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“Fine
morning for a stroll,” he remarked. “Mind telling me what you’re doing?”
She did not
look up.“An extreme longshot, Sir Wolf. I have a tracker and I am following the
Baroness’s trail. It is faint, but I seem to be obtaining consistent results.”
She was
walking in the muddy track the raiders had left on what Grand Master had called
the main shore road. Wolf had watched conjured tracking before, once even
trailing a fugitive who had fled by boat, but this particular scent was more
than five days old.
“What did
you use for a drag?”
“I left it
wrapped up in one of her ladyship’s dresses overnight.”
The trail
descended rapidly, more like a slightly less steep strip of cliff than a road,
and the footing was greasy as hot butter. Hogwood ignored the terrain,
detouring safely around the boulders and chasms as if she trod in the exact prints
of the warrior who had carried Celeste down this precipice by moonlight. Poor
Celeste! Wolf wondered if she had been still screaming as she came this way.
In places
on that death-defying scramble he made out individual prints preserved in mud
or slush—marks of shoes, mostly, also bare feet, but no tracks of giant birds,
or cats.
“Did you
find out about the tide?”
“Yes,”
Hogwood said vaguely, still staring down at the tracker. “It was at the full.
Extraordinary.”
Wolf ground
teeth in silence for a few moments before giving in and saying, “Why
extraordinary?”
“The night
of the full moon? The highest tide of the month? Baelish raiders would never
beach boats then and risk being stranded for two weeks.”
“Two or
three hundred strong men could move a few boats a long way down a beach.”
At that
moment Hogwood slipped and almost fell. He caught her elbow to steady her.
“Don’t
touch me!” She shook him off, keeping her eyes on the tracker.
He released
both her and his temper.“You were ready enough to be manhandled last night.”
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Here the
way crossed a very steep gully. She began edging sideways down the slope.“And
evermore I will be remembered as the girl who couldn’t even lay a Blade.”
He followed.
“I’d have been happy to start your education, but I didn’t want you waking the
entire castle shouting rape.”
She stopped
abruptly at the bottom, standing in the stream itself so he almost walked into
her. She was still bent over the conjurement. He thought she was losing the
track, until he realized that her shoulders were shaking.
“What’s
wrong?”
She gasped.
“Please!” She was laughing!
“Don’t say things like that. I have to concentrate.”
“Like
what?”
“Like the
idea of you raping
me. Be
quiet. This is important.” She started climbing out of the gully.
Wolf
followed in furious silence. He was certain now that Grand Inquisitor had sent
Hogwood along with the express purpose of compromising him somehow. The
doctorate of conjury was a lie or a red herring. There was no other explanation
for the negligee or last night’s blatant performance.Today’s derision was
simply another tactic.
When the
trail arrived at the beach, he said. “If you weren’t trying to stage a rape,
what was the reason for that disgusting performance?”
For the
first time she looked at him, dark eyes mocking. “Disgusting? Spirits, can’t
you guess? I fancied a man and a Blade was the obvious choice.Women can enjoy
bed sports, too, you know. Or haven’t you ever noticed?”
That was
absurd. He had not been using Blade charm on her and nothing less would make a
pretty girl lust after the ugliest man in Chivial.
“Decent
women do not even think that way, let alone talk like that.”
“By the
seven saving spirits! A Blade lecturing on morality? And how can he know what a
woman thinks? Now be quiet, Wolf, or you will make me break the thread.”
He was just
plain “Wolf” now, was he?
Short Cove
was well named, just a scoop out of the cliffs, a hum
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mocky, boulder-strewn meadow with a
small stream draining away into a pebble beach. The tide was out, the air
pungent with odors of seaweed, raucous with the screech of seabirds.
“Very
tricky harbor,” he observed profoundly, staring out at some jagged rocks not
far beyond the breaking waves. “And shingle, see? Won’t find any marks of boats
on that.” He looked up at the cliff and a solitary turret of Quondam visible
above it.“They did go straight up, as Grand Master said! They didn’t find the
road in the moonlight, just made a beeline for the fortress, right up the face
of the . . .”
He was
talking to himself.
Hogwood had
not turned toward the sea, but was still following her tracker’s guidance,
stumbling across the coarse bent grass of the meadow. He went after her. He
should have used his eyes to better effect, for the passage of so many men had
left an obvious trail there, too. It terminated in a wider trampled area, as if
the invaders had milled around for a while.The newcomers’ arrival had
interrupted birds, which clamored up in a noisy blizzard, screaming protests as
they circled overhead.
“No!” He
drew his sword, yelling in fury as he ran forward to where they had been
feeding. Beyond the trampled area, the invaders’ trail ended between two rocks.
On the landward side the grass was crushed and flattened; on the other it stood
proud, rippling in the cold salt wind. On either boulder . . . things not to be
looked at.
“Not the
Baroness?” Hogwood said. Her face was almost green, and he doubted his was any
better.
“No. The
pikemen.” They had found the missing Cam Obmouth and Rolf Twidale.The birds had
found them first, though. One or two tried to return and he chased them away
with more oaths.
“You keep
these vermin off and I’ll go and fetch some horses,” he said. “Or would you
rather go?”
“Please.”Hogwood
was shrunken and huddled, every inch of her conveying horror and nausea.“I
should ...I ought to look around here first.”
She seemed
more childlike than ever. If he opened his arms she would fall right into them.
And hate herself ever after. She had too much pride. So had he, after the
previous night’s display. He was tempted, though.
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“What is
there to see?” he said, deliberately harsh. “The raiders didn’t leave by boat.
They almost certainly didn’t come by boat. They traveled by conjuration.”The
mystery was becoming ever more bizarre. “You’re the expert, Hogwood. Did they
come all the way from ...from, er,wherever they came from ...by enchantment or
just from a ship offshore? And why take two prisoners and then butcher them in
cold blood?”
“Some sort
of ritual,” she muttered, looking everywhere except at the bodies.“No octogram
that I can see, but travelers have reported con-jury performed in other ways in
other lands. There was a fire, see?— here, between the rocks.”
Wolf shooed
birds again. “Go and tell Sir Alden. I’ll stand watch.”
She nodded
gratefully and hurried away.
The
victims’ clothes lay in the grass.They had been stripped naked and then
stretched out faceup on the rocks.Whatever had been done to them after that had
left the boulders drenched with blood, but he could make out no details because
the birds had picked the corpses almost to bare bones.Then the invaders had
disappeared.This was quite clear, for their trail entered the area and no trail
departed. The bodies had been left for the gulls and the insects, and somehow
that made him angrier than anything else.
He
strode up and down for the next hour, warding off the shrieking gulls and
waiting for the horses, and swore dark vows of vengeance on whatever monsters
had perpetrated this horror, whoever they were, and wherever they came from.
7
There
was something morbidly fascinating about any very large fire, and especially a
funeral pyre on a cliff edge, with yellow flames streaming in the sea wind,
the harsh lamentation of gulls.Wolf had spoken the eulogy, just a few words in
the King’s name, thanking the men who had
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fallen in his service. He had let Sir Alden
hurl the brand onto the pile to start them on their way. It seemed wrong to
make Twidale and Ob-mouth share their funeral with their murderers, but there
was no other practical solution, so he had made sure that the Chivians’
carefully wrapped remains were placed at the top, in the spirit of the old
sagas, where slaves and captives were sacrificed on the balefires of warriors.
“Now it is
safe to break the news to the families,” he said.“Who can guide me?”
“I’ll do
that,”Alden growled. “I knew them, you didn’t.”
Wolf did
not argue very hard. Later, when the pyre began to collapse, the old man rode
away into the gathering dusk and the other spectators began wandering back to
the castle, for the wind was chill.
Wolf
remained, brooding. His mission was complete, as far as he could take it. Now
he must return and deliver a very unwelcome report to the Council. He must
advise the King that there was still no explanation for the abduction of
Celeste and he was powerless to punish the guilty or even to defend his realm
against any future attacks. No keep was secure now, no one safe against attack.
Hogwood
spoke at his elbow. “You mourn.”
He turned
with a sigh. “You think a mass murderer can’t be a hypocrite too? I just love
funerals. I was standing here planning some more.”
She shook
her head. “You are right to be bitter.”
“And you
were right to be frightened of me. What exactly did Grand Master tell you last
night?”
“We talked
a long time. I don’t remember exactly.”
“Inquisitors
forget nothing. He told you something that completely changed your mind. Until
then you were scared of me. Right after that little chat you tried to throw
yourself into my bed.That’s been your mission all along, hasn’t it? The
massacre was just a sideshow for you.Your real job was to seduce me, and the
thought of sleeping with a murderous ogre had you seriously affrighted.
Then—behold!—suddenly you were eager. My looks didn’t change. What did? What
lies did Grand Master tell you?”
Hogwood’s
unforgettable eyes were brimming over with innocence. Or tears brought on by
the wind. “I know he wasn’t lying. He
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said you killed your best friend because
he asked you to. Sir Hengist was horribly wounded and fated to go mad if he
didn’t die first. His death was a mercy. After that you were bearing as much
grief as any man could, so when other Blades had to die, you appointed yourself
executioner. Whenever possible, you spared your brothers from having to share
your guilt.”
Wolf clung tight
to his temper, but he was furious that Durendal had dared to gossip about him
to an outsider. “That’s nonsense. I just enjoy killing.”
“Not
according to Grand Master.The real culprit, he says, was King Ambrose, who gave
away so many Blades to the nobility in his old age.”
“No! The
real culprit was that worthless incompetent Athelgar, who provoked the nobility
into rebellion!”
“It was not
his fault that they had Blades to defend them! He could not even arrest them
for questioning.”
Wolf was
very close to shouting at the stupid wench now. “He didn’t need to arrest them!
He could have dealt with them the way he dealt with Celeste—put them under
house arrest and use their own Blades as jailers.Then nobody would have had to
die!” And nobody would have had to kill.
“But in the
event,” Hogwood said,“those Blades did have to die and you took the guilt on
yourself. You never stoop to making excuses, Grand Master said, so fools don’t
see that. Most Blades just ignore you because they don’t even want to think
about it, he said. But some knights at Ironhall know better. Sir Bowman, for
example, a highly respected former deputy commander. He wasn’t shunning you.”
“He’s a
friend.”
“You have no friends. Friendship hurts
you so much you don’t dare to make any more friends.” “We grownups don’t
believe in fairy tales.” “I am not a child! Didn’t your amazing Blade vision
notice even
that much?” “You seriously expect me to
believe that Roland’s homily gave you a sudden impulse for a tumble in bed with
a killer?” She nodded. Perhaps it was a trick of the wind and the sunset, but
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he could have sworn he was seeing an
inquisitor blush. She must have a doctorate in blushing.
“I don’t
think so,” he said.“Then why pack a negligee? I think the Dark Chamber wanted a
handy assassin on staff and you were assigned to trap me. What sneaky
conjuration can you pull on a man in bed, Inquisitor?”
She said
coldly, “No conjuration will work on a bound Blade, Sir Wolf, as you well
know.”
Certainly no
enchantment could warp his loyalty without killing him, so Wolf was not seeing
the whole plot yet. “Your technique is not exactly subtle, is it? Did you fail
seduction classes?”
“No, my
instructors praised me highly.” Sarcasm slid off her like rain off a duck.“We
were taught how to snare normal men by leading them on and then refusing them
satisfaction, but that trick is useless with Blades. Subtlety will not work on
them.”
He couldn’t
resist asking, “What does?”
She sighed.
“Anything. Just being female. You’re the first Blade in history to refuse a
chance like that.The negligee was a mistake.”
Such brazen
vulgarity disgusted him and emphasized how young she really was. “And all this
to avenge the late, unlamented Inquisitor Schlutter?”
“No. The
purpose was what you said, to enlist you into the Dark Chamber.”
He stared
at her.
She stared
right back. “Truly.”
He had
suggested that without believing it.The trouble with snoops was that you never
knew how many layers there were. Catch other people in a lie and then you’d
probably dig out the truth, but with inquisitors you never knew what you were
expected to disbelieve and what other lies lay behind the ones you could see,
and what lies lay behind them in turn.
“You need
an experienced assassin? You expect me to kill for love, not money? Or is there
money involved as well? How much a head?”
“There is
no point in negotiating.”
“But you
admit you were assigned to snare me?”
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She
shrugged. “My mission was to hire you, but I have learned that Grand Inquisitor
were mistaken in their assessment of you.You do not kill for pleasure, so you
will not accept the offer I was authorized to make.”
“I love the
smell of fresh blood.”
“No,” she
said sadly.“You are not a violent man at all.The only time I have seen you lose
your temper was with the seagulls.You were right when you said I feared your
reputation, but now I have come to know you, I am truly sorry for you, a gentle
man trapped in a vile job.”
“I don’t
want your pity!”
“Was that
what you were demonstrating last night?”
Wolf
reminded himself that no man could ever win an argument with an inquisitor. Or
a woman.“I am still curious to hear your offer. It will have to wait until after
I’m released, though. Commander Vicious will not look kindly on me if I keep
asking for weekend passes to go and stiffen someone.” Not that Athelgar would
ever release him.
“That was
to be part of the offer,” Hogwood said. “Release.”
He stood
very still while his mind flailed like a flag in the sea wind. Yes, he had
heard her correctly.The wind was stronger and colder, making him shiver
desperately. Release? Freedom?
“Even the
Dark Chamber cannot offer that.”
“Yes, it
can.”Was that triumph glinting now or just mischief?
“Athelgar
would never agree.”
“He can be
persuaded.”
“To use conjuration on the King is
treason. Even to tamper with my binding is.” “There is another way.” “Wolf!” a
voice cried. “Wolfie!” Two people were riding in from the moor. He forgot
Hogwood. He yelled, “Lynx, you crazy man!” and went
bounding over the gorse to meet him.“Did
Master of Rituals say you could get out of bed?”
His brother
peered down at him, trying to force his usual amiable grin from a face so pale
that it shone like ivory in the gloom, a rictus of pain and exhaustion. “Of
course not. Haven’t made up the rest of my blood yet, is all.”
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Lynx began
to dismount, lost his balance, and cried out in alarm. The mare was already
spooked by the fire.Wolf tried to catch him, but Lynx fell like a mountain and
flattened him into the heather, while his mount went bucking and kicking off
across the moor. It was a humiliating accident to happen to a pair of Blades.
Lynx found Wolf’s
top end and demanded, “You all right, Wolfie?” Then he collapsed on top of him
again, howls of laughter alternating with gasps of pain as his scars
pulled.Wolf was so happy to see him better that he began laughing too, still
pinned under him.
The other
arrival was an angular figure in a practical tweed riding costume, staring
bleakly down at them. “Sir Wolf, I presume?” she inquired icily.
Lynx
caught his breath with an effort.“Sister Daybreak,” he gasped. “Got no sense of
humor.” He went back to laughing.
8
No,
Sister Daybreak could never have laughed at anything in her life. Receiving
Grand Master’s appeal in the absence of Mother Fire Rose, who had been in
Grandon all winter, she had traveled from Lomouth to Ironhall the previous day
and been very unamused to discover everyone sworn to secrecy and unable to tell
her anything.
The
following morning Wolf’s crazy brother had insisted on riding over to Quondam
to retrieve Ratter and
had offered to escort her to Lord Roland. Master of Rituals had sworn he would
never arrive at Quondam alive, and had been proven unpleasantly close to right.
Lynx didn’t care. He had his sword back, having met Tam and Grand Master on the
way, and he never stopped grinning and joking while they loaded him on a litter
and carried him into Quondam.
Sister
Daybreak resembled an angular tree trunk washed up on the shore, bleached,
scoured, and stripped of its bark. Her voice was a raven’s croak, her face
bleaker than Starkmoor, slashed into deep lines of disap
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proval. She especially disapproved of
grotesques holding high office and read Wolf’s warrant through twice before
accepting that His Majesty could have made such an error.
Later,
after she had dusted herself off and changed into her White Sister robes—white
steeple hat and all—she was able to disapprove of a cramped baronial bedroom as
the site of an important meeting. Hog-wood was there, of course, applying her
fishy stare, and Lynx sprawled back against pillows on the bed, working his way
through half a roast goose and three flagons of beer.
Daybreak
sipped water and declined further refreshment. “I am starved for information,
though. Even Grand Master told me almost nothing.There was a raid, I
understand. Men were killed?”
“Between
eighty and ninety,” Wolf said. “They took greater losses than we did, because
they used ineffective weapons. Such as this.” He had the chest open by then and
began, as Grand Master had, with one of the cat’s-paw maces.
Sister
Daybreak did not approve of it. She felt it, sniffed at it, and passed it back,
shaking her head. “A curious thing, but it bears no trace of spirituality.”
He offered
a gold labret. She hesitated over that, frowning distastefully. “No.
Nothing.What is its purpose?”
She disapproved
of that, too. And so it went.Wolf produced only a small fraction of the
artifacts in the chest, because if there had been any really serious
conjurations there, she would have sensed them from downstairs. Some she seemed
to find more distasteful than others; some she examined with extra
suspicion—peering, sniffing, touching, even seeming to listen to them—but her
conclusion was always the same: None had been conjured in any way.
Wolf did
not believe this.The raiders would not have believed it either. Any conjurer
would insist that good-luck charms were useless, as likely to summon bad
fortune as good, but no soldier would go into battle without one. Even some
Blades wore them. Love charms were effective, which was why they were
illegal.The status that cat’s-eye swords gave their bearers was mostly granted
by law, but a White Sister could smell spirituality on them, left over from the
binding ritual, and only
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they could undo that binding, so the
swords did have power. The men who attacked Quondam had decked themselves up in
gold, body paint, and jewels for some good reason.
Like Grand
Master, Wolf left the pard mosaic plaque to the end. Hogwood had compared it to
a cat’s-eye sword, and on viewing it a second time he could see how its
closed-eye arrogance reeked of power. Its owner had certainly not needed any
emblem to enhance his stature or fearful aspect, but if the pendant had been
the secret of his shape-shifting, its loss had caused him to remain half man
and half cat.
Sister
Daybreak recoiled from the sight of it and seemed loath to touch. She peered at
it quickly, then thrust it back.
“Nothing!
Repulsive, but no spirituality.”
“Let me see
that!” Lynx demanded, licking his fingers and showing interest for the first
time. He grabbed it when Wolf held it out.“Whose was this?”
“Your furry
friend.”
Lynx stared
at it sadly for a moment. “Then I claim it by right of conquest!” He knotted
the ends of the thong together and hung it around his neck.
“I’m not
sure the King will permit that.”
“You know
where it is when you want it.” He unlaced the neck of his doublet so he could
tuck the pendant inside. “It’s safe on me.”
But was he
safe from it? Sister Daybreak was staring at him as if he had filled his shirt
with pig manure.
Wolf said,
“Thank you for your reassurance that we have no evil conjurations to worry
about, Sister.There are a couple of bodies down in the icehouse that I would
appreciate your looking at also. If you feel up to it, we can attend to that
and then go into dinner. Or it can wait until tomorrow.”
Was that a
wisp of a grin crossing Hogwood’s face?
Sister
Daybreak’s conical hat rose straight up, with her head still in it. “By all
means let us get it over with. I have come a long way unnecessarily, but I
wish to make an early start homeward tomorrow. Daybreak begins at dawn, I
always say!”
“An
excellent principle. Inquisitor, if you would be so kind as to
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lead the lady down to the icehouse, I will
follow as soon as I have locked these trinkets safely away.”
As the two
women trooped out, Lynx yawned and stretched his arms. “For the last four years
I’ve dreamed of sharing this bed. You weren’t the one I dreamed of sharing it
with, of course, but I’m sure you won’t mind . . .” He flashed an arch
look.“Unless you have plans to share it with someone else?”
The thought
had crossed Wolf’s mind less than a hundred times in the last hour, but he
said, “No.You’re welcome to rest there as long as you don’t mind candles
burning all night.”
“How’s that
slinky little inquisitor of yours, anyway?”
“She is
definitely off-limits as far as you are concerned.”
“Ah? Like
that?”
“No. Like
nothing, but you stay away from her.”
Lynx
chuckled—knowingly, as he thought. He made no move to put his boots on, so Wolf
left him where he was and hurried down the stair after black robes and white
robes. He very much wanted to hear Sister Daybreak’s assessment of the cat-man.
As it
turned out, he knocked her hat off.
She had
been warned! The woman was abrasive and arrogant, much too sure of her own
opinions, but Wolf repeated that she was about to view a man’s corpse; he had
been severely wounded and was not a pretty sight.
She knew
better. “I have seen cadavers before, Sir Wolf. Pray be speedy lest we freeze.”
The
icehouse was small and underground, set in the shady southwest corner of the
bailey. At that time of the year it was almost completely full, and the two
corpses had been dumped in on top of the stock, the big one at the front.There
was very little headroom and Sister Daybreak’s towering hat was ridiculous.
She was bent double, her nose almost touching the tarpaulin that Hogwood and
Wolf were attempting to open one-handed. All three held lanterns, which cast an
eerie golden light and make the work tricky.
“There!”
Hogwood said, as they dragged back the last flap. The corpse lay on its back
with its front paws crossed on its belly.Wolf was
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at the head, Hogwood at the feet. Daybreak
stood between them and for a moment she peered back and forth in
incomprehension, trying to make sense of the gruesome display.
Then she
gave a sort of yowl and leaped back, straightening up and slamming her head
against the vaulted roof, dropping her lantern.Wolf and Hogwood let go of
theirs in grabbing her, so suddenly they were a Blade and an inquisitor
supporting a stunned White Sister between them in total darkness.
Wolf said,
“I’ve got her. Can you make a light?”
The
Quondam icehouse was not well kept.The floor was not only wet, as was to be
expected, but also muddy, and in the process of hoisting Daybreak over his
shoulder he trampled her hat into oblivion. She started coming around as he
carried her up the steps to the bailey. She was a tough old slab of driftwood,
though. After a rest beside the fire in the hall and a glass of mulled wine,
she wanted to go back to work right away. Hogwood bandaged her scalp wound and
Wolf ordered her to bed in the King’s name.
9
Wolf
had hoped to leave the next day, but he knew Lynx would insist on going with
him—anything to see the last of Quondam—and was not well enough to travel.
Although Wolf’s conscience might have rejected that as a reason for delay, he
did have legitimate business to finish and morning brought a drumming downpour
that was certain to turn snowy roads into quagmires. He found Sir Alden leaning
against a doorjamb scowling at the weather.
“Good
chance to you,Warden.”
The soldier
transferred the scowl to him.“You saying I’m to be Acting Warden?”
“I suspect
it will be a permanent appointment. Name your stipend and I’ll swear you in.”
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“King’ll
want a lord.”
“He’ll have
trouble finding a real lord willing to live here.What he needs is a damned good
soldier.”
“Horseapples!
Ought to rip the place down.”
Surprised
to hear his own opinions coming from such a source,Wolf said, “Why?”
Alden spat
into the mud.“If you can’t hold a fortress, you raze it so your enemy don’t use
it against you. I’d need a thousand men to hold this place against what came by
a week ago.”
Even
without the raid, Quondam was an outdated symbol of royal power, serving no
purpose to justify its running expenses.Wolf certainly intended to tell the
Privy Council so, but kings had strange ideas about symbols and honor.
He wondered
how many more insights Alden might have. “That’s very valuable advice. Can you
tell me why the raiders took the Baroness?”
Alden’s
leathery scowl softened. “She’s just a trophy, poor lass. Always was, I’d
say.”
“And I’d
agree.Why this time, though?”
“Ah!” The
old warrior sighed. “If you can storm a stronghold and carry off the lord’s
woman in all her finery, then you’ve proved something. Doesn’t matter who they
were or where they came from. They took her home to show their king what they’d
done.”
Brilliant!
Flaming brilliant! “I should wrap you up and send you to the Council!”Wolf
said.
“Try it.”
“No
thanks.”
Alden spat
again.“It cost them, of course.They lost more men than we did.They need better
weapons.Wonder why they didn’t take any of ours with them when they left?”
“They
didn’t?”The man was a mine of insights!
“Maybe a
few. Haven’t counted. Could match what’s left against the smoke stains on the
walls.”
“Do that!”Wolf
said. “Yes, please do that!”
Later the
White Sister appeared, a little whiter than usual, wearing a
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goodwife’s
bonnet over her bandage. She insisted on taking a second look at the freak corpse
in the icehouse. After staring hard and long at it, she capitulated with better
grace than Wolf had expected.
“I
cannot detect conjuration on this body.” “You mean he was born like that?” “Of
course not. I mean that my skills are unable to detect this form
of
enchantment. I sense a dark, ingrained evil that I do not understand. It is
alien to everything I know. Everything I told you yesterday may have been
wrong.” She shut her mouth with a click of disapproval.
“Lord
Roland warned me that such might be the case.”Wolf caught Hogwood’s eyes
shining at him in the lantern light. He had promised to share all his
information with her, but he had not shared that.
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III
The chase is reserved to the lord . . . lesser orders
[hunt with] snares and nets
1
The
royal standard no longer flew over Nocare. His Majesty, it seemed, had returned
to Greymere, in the heart of Grandon. Athelgar rarely stayed in one place for
long, but he had been excessively inconsiderate, even for him, in moving Court
in such weather. He could travel in his fine waterproof coach, but hundreds of
people must have toiled for days in a solid downpour to satisfy his whim, and
uncounted wagons had churned the highway to soup.
Having no
need to return to Ironhall,Wolf and his companions had followed the coast road
through Newtor and Narby, then cut up to Flaskbury from Brimiarde, but they had
not had a dry moment the whole way. Three people and five beasts in mortal
misery had plodded tracks that were rivers of mud and waded fords that were
raging torrents. He had sent no reports ahead, because they could not arrive
before he did.The Council would not expect mail in such weather.
Every day
Lynx grew visibly stronger. Often he was his amiable old
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self, blissfully happy to be released
from jail at last; at other times he would retreat into sullen despair,
remembering that he had lost his ward, the only Blade ever to do so. Wolf had
no comfort to give him. Even if Celeste were still alive, the world was too big
for one man to search it all.
Wolf
avoided Hogwood as much as he decently could, partly because he did not want
her asking what else Grand Master had told him, but mainly because he
distrusted his own weakness. If she convinced him that she could really arrange
his release from the Guard, he might agree to anything—anything short of
murder, surely? Yet, would killing strangers for the Dark Chamber be any worse
than killing friends for the Blades? He also distrusted the looks he saw her
giving him at times. Her childish efforts to appear a woman only made her seem
even younger. Grand Master’s absurd excuses had transformed the infamous Sir
Wolf into some sort of grotesque martyr in her eyes. Dread had become fascination,
and an odious duty had been sugar-coated with adolescent infatuation. What
could he say or do to make her hate him again, to remove the temptation before
it wore him down?
He had
intended to drop off Hogwood and the treasure at Nocare and go on to visit
Grand Master’s sailor son by himself, but Athelgar had foiled him.Wolf happened
to be in front, leading the packhorses, when he recognized the turnoff to
Ivywalls from Grand Master’s directions. He took it.
“Where are
you going?” Lynx shouted.
“To see a
man who may be able to tell us where your ward went.”
“Who?”
“Baron
Roland,” the inquisitor said.
Wolf turned
to glare. She dead-fished back at him.
Lynx
repeated, “Who?”
Sir
Durendal had been created Baron Roland of Waterby on the day he saved King
Ambrose’s life in a fabled feat of arms. He had been promoted to earl when he
became chancellor. Since he could not use both titles, his son was allowed to
use the lesser one by courtesy, a favorite trick of the nobility. But how had
the inquisitor known?
The way led
over a gentle ridge into a snug valley, a haven of fruit
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trees and well-drained, tidy fields.
Countryside rarely looked fair in winter, but that did, combining clean lines of
good maintenance with the ramshackle comfort of a place that has had a few
centuries to settle into its role. Roland’s son might be “only” a farmer, but
he was a good one.The house, when it came into view, was ancient, well-kempt,
and impressive.
A chorus of
barking announced the visitors’ approach. When they reined in at the steps, a
bulky, white-haired worthy was already awaiting them between the pillars. He
seemed too old to be the Baron and too dignified to be a servant.
Dismounting,Wolf let his cloak fall away from his sword hilt. The watcher
snapped his fingers and men came running from nowhere to take the horses. Had
he given some other signal, no doubt the hands would have arrived with hounds
and weapons. It was slickly done, suggesting that everything at Ivywalls would
be slickly done.
Wolf
offered Grand Master’s letter. “Wolf of the Guard to see the Baron if he is
available.”
The old man
acknowledged the seal with a smile that would have looked good on anybody’s
grandfather. “His lordship is always happy to welcome Blades, Sir Wolf. I am
Caplin, the butler. If you and your companions would be so kind as to come
this way....”
Wolf
offered Hogwood his arm and followed. He had no qualms at leaving the raiders’
treasure unattended, because she had warded the bags. Anyone trying to open
them would receive a memorable surprise.
Their
sodden outer garments were taken; they were shown into a snug library where a
fire warmed the winter evening and glinted on shiny leather chairs.The
paintings on the wall were tasteful yet intriguing. Rugs and tapestries looked
exotic and non-Chivian, while the bronze statuette was classic Isilondian; yet
everything was of such quality that nothing jarred. This was how the truly
rich lived, those who could afford to be comfortable and did not need to flaunt
their riches by adhering to the current fashion. Although none of the visitors
was in uniform, the admirable Caplin was no doubt already explaining to his
employer that a guardsman and a private Blade had come calling with an
inquisitor.
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Wolf said,
“Hogwood, how did you know who we were coming to see?”
She turned
from her study of the book titles, wearing her professional corpse mask. “A
lucky guess, Sir Wolf.”
“Based on?”
“Lord
Roland was evasive. He is beyond suspicion himself so he was protecting
somebody else, and you cooperated with him, so the problem was probably
trivial. A former Blade is unlikely to have family he cares about, other than
children.You said we were coming to see a man, so I guessed an eldest son.”
“Standard
inquisitorial sneakiness!”
“Thank
you!” Her glee lit the room.
Lynx
guffawed. “She has your measure,Wolfie.”
“She needs
a good spanking.”
“Likes the
kinky stuff, does she?”
“Wolf!” Hogwood
took two strides to the fireplace and lifted down a small greenish carving.
“Look at this!”
The men
joined her. Grand Master had called it a “somewhat sinister-looking cat,” but
it was only a kitten.Yet ...was that a subtly malign look in its eye? Yes, this
might be a very tricky feline when it grew up.The style was by now
unmistakable.
“Which of
you is Sir Wolf and how may I assist you?”The man in the doorway was no better
dressed than his butler and not much less bulky, although he was carrying muscle,
not fat. He seemed around forty, weathered and dark, not especially tall, but
with a self-assurance that did not appreciate uninvited guests meddling with
his possessions. He held Grand Master’s letter. Although he did not look like
his father, Wolf recognized the glare.
He bowed.“I
am Wolf, my lord.Your honored father sent me to ask you where you got this
cat.”
The scowl
darkened.
“May I
present Inquisitor Hogwood . . . Sir Lynx of the Blades.We have ridden for four
days to ask you this. My commission—”
Roland took
the writ, raised his eyebrows at the royal seal, glanced over the text, then
returned it with a half-bow. “My father is clearly
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not
the only one who holds you in high regard, Sir Wolf. How may I
help
you?”
Wolf held up the kitten.
The
farmer’s laugh had a solid, trustworthy sound. “You were serious? Sigisa.
Don’t tell my father, but I won it in a dice game in a tavern.”
Sigisa?
That meant nothing.Wolf said, “Where—”
“But it came
originally from Tlixilia.”
Hogwood said, “Oh, of course!”
as if that explained everything.
2
The
Hence Lands were discovered about forty years ago by some Distlish sailors
blown far to the west by a storm.. . .”
The Baron
had suffered no argument—business could wait, the visitors would spend the
night at Ivywalls, and his home would be honored by their presence. He offered
every comfort, even dry clothes kept on hand for travelers, there being only so
much that one could pile on a horse.
Wolf found
himself bedecked in a burgundy brocade jerkin finer than anything he had ever
worn. Later, enjoying a superb meal, and sipping seductive wine from a crystal
goblet, he decided this was how all swordsmen should go adventuring. Hogwood
shimmered in a jade silk gown belonging to Baroness Maud herself, who was an
ivory figurine, gracious and aristocratic. Small children romped somewhere in
the background in the care of servants.
Magnificently
fed and dry for the first time in days, three grateful travelers settled down
in the library with their host. A couple of their bags had been brought in and
set down in a corner to reek of horse. The Baron swore the oath of secrecy
without demur, knowing that he would learn nothing at all if he didn’t.
“Distlain,”
he said, “managed to keep the discovery quiet for a few years, long enough for
its men to establish that there were scores of is
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lands involved, some of them very large.
Finding that the people there were defenseless against properly armed and
trained soldiers, the Distliards claimed the territory for their king. Other
nations learned what was happening and failed to see why King Diego should own
all that territory. Distlain established bases in the area and tried to keep
the rest of Eurania away by force. Times got exciting. They still are, from
what I hear.”
Obviously
he was enjoying a ray of excitement in the drab boredom of winter.“Once or
twice, I even found myself fighting my King’s friends in the company of his
foes. Baels, no less! Father never knew that, fortunately.”
He stopped
to smile inquiringly at Hogwood. Men always smiled at her, but in this case she
had indicated by a minute readjustment of an eyebrow that she wanted to ask a
question.
“I’ve often
wondered, my lord,” she said,“why Baels didn’t discover the Hence Lands first.”
“I’m sure
they did. Many of the spices and dyestuffs they traded that were supposed to be
from the distant east had really come from the west, but they kept the secret.
The Hence Lands offer little for Baelish tastes, though. Most of the islands
are small and have little or no water. When there are naturales
on those, they’re starving primitives,
living on fish and roots and any visitors they can get their hands on.” He
chuckled heavily.“When they say you will stay for dinner, they really mean it.
The Distliards take them for slaves, but the Baels never bothered. Slaves don’t
travel well and Baelmark could always pick up better slaves closer to market.
“Then
there’s the big islands, and some of them are enormous, bigger than Chivial.
They’re jungly and mostly mountainous: Fradieno, Mazal, Condridad, and
others.Their culture is primitive, better than the small islands had, but producing
nothing worth stealing from a Baelish or Distlish point of view.The Distliards
have colonized them, setting up plantations for cotton and spices and so on,
none of which would have any appeal to a Bael. Baels don’t farm.The naturales
still hold out in the interiors in many
places, raiding the Distlish towns.
“Finally
there’s the mainland.We had several names for it in my day,
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but now it seems to be one big
continent. Leastways, no one’s found a way around it yet. It has huge mountains
near the coast in places. And it has real cities.The greatest of those is
Tlixilia.”
Roland
paused, studying the wine in his glass. “That’s properly the name of the
imperial city, but it got applied to its empire, which includes many lesser
cities, and sometimes people extend the name for the whole mainland. Now the
Distliards have taken to calling the city itself El Dorado, the place of gold.
It is reputedly bursting with gold and art and precious things, magnificent
buildings. Those who have seen it rave about it, but they’re all naturales
of one tribe or another. I don’t think
any Euranian has seen Tlixilia City itself and returned to tell of it. The
Distliards claimed sovereignty over El Dorado, too, and sent armed expeditions
inland to explain to the Emperor that he was now King Diego’s vassal.The
Tlixilians disagreed then and haven’t been convinced yet.”
“Good
fighters?” Lynx asked, picking his teeth with a fingernail.
“Yes and
no. I’ve never met them. From what I heard, they have no iron, no bronze, just
gold, silver, and a little copper, so their weapons are edged with stone.They
make armor from cotton padding, and it’s more effective in that climate than
steel plate, but most of them scorn to wear it.They fight for odd reasons, in
odd ways.They try not to kill their op-ponents.They prefer to take
prisoners—for slaves, and also for food, because they have no cattle or other
large livestock, and a man tires of beans.That hampers them, because it’s
harder to overpower a man than it is to kill him. One-on-one in an equal
contest, they’re fighters as fierce as any in the world, but put fifty
Euranians against fifty Tlixilians with their own styles of fighting and the
Euranians will win every time. Luckily the odds weren’t even.The naturales
outnumbered the Distliards by a thousand
to one, and blotted them. The Distliards regrouped and began organizing the
Tlixilians’ local foes against them.Things started to get bloody.
“But the
Tlixilians are still independent and the Distliards daren’t set foot on that
part of the mainland.They maintain a few trading posts on offshore islands,
notably Sigisa. That’s where I picked up the cat. It had come from the
mainland, but I don’t know how—looting being more
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likely
than honest trade. Battle honors, perhaps. I got a gold lip stud the
same
way. Did Father mention that?”
“I saw it at Ironhall,”Wolf said. “A
serpent.”
Roland
nodded.“Mother had been a White Sister and detested that thing. She couldn’t
say why, just that it was evil.”
“You
haven’t mentioned Tlixilian conjury, my lord,” Hogwood said.
“Sir Wolf
hasn’t asked me to.” He tempered the remark with another not-fatherly smile at
her before looking to Wolf. “Relevant?”
“Very.”
“I’m no
expert.” He pulled a face. “I do know it’s different from ours. It’s reputed to
be extremely powerful, but that may be just the Distlish excuse for their
battlefield disasters. Tlixilian conjuration is largely or entirely devoted to
warfare, and it involves human sacrifice. All their conjurers belong to one or
other of two great military orders.You ever heard of the jaguara?”
Hogwood
frowned; the Blades shook their heads.
“It’s a
pard, a huge spotted cat, very deadly.That carving represents a jaguara
cub.The Tlixilians are reputed to name
their conjurer-knights after the jaguara and
the eagle, the night hunter and the day hunter. There are wild stories about
feats of conjury in battle. If you believe them, their spiritual power comes
from ripping the beating hearts out of sacrificial victims.”
Hogwood and
Wolf exchanged glances.
Lynx
snorted. “Pig wallow! What sort of conjury would that be?”
“Very
potent!” Hogwood said. “But limited in scope. I can’t see doing a healing that
way, because you would be invoking death, not revoking it, but you could
summon some of the elementals in immense strength. The heart itself combines
five of the eight: earth because it is a solid, water and fire from the blood
it pumps, plus time and love. Add deliberate death and you have gathered power to
fashion massive conjurations. And chance!” she added quickly.“You said they
used captives taken in battle? That supplies the element of chance. Seven out
of the eight! Only air is missing.”
The Baron
chuckled.“They commit their atrocities on top of tow-ers.That would bring in
air elementals, wouldn’t it?”
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“Of
course!” Dolores looked pleased.
Wolf
shuddered. “But what do they do with this foul ritual?”
“Well,” said
the Baron, “for example, I’ve heard tell of an enchantment called ‘the
Serpent’s Eye’ that turns whole companies of troops into slobbering
idiots—conscious, but unable to use their arms even to defend themselves.
There’s tales of sentries found impaled with their own pikes and tents full of
sleeping men where every second man had his throat cut without the others
hearing a sound. And ambushes galore—armies rising out of the dust. I’m just
repeating hearsay, you understand. Distlish propaganda.”
“Believe
it.”
Roland
raised eyebrows expectantly. It was time to pay the piper.
“Ten days
ago,”Wolf said,“several hundred Tlixilians came ashore at Quondam Castle. They
probably arrived by conjuration, but we can’t prove that.They stormed the
fortress, carried off the castellan’s wife, and then disappeared.We lost thirty
dead and about half that wounded; their death toll was over fifty. It took less
than an hour.They departed by conjuration, ritually slaying two young men in
the process.”
Roland’s
face had gone slack with shock. “Here? In
Chivial?”
“Not far
from Ironhall.”
“That is
incredible.What for?”
“We don’t
know. A warning? A threat? Retaliation? Is it possible that Tlixilians don’t
know the difference between Distlain and Chivial?”
“Very
possible. The distance is enormous. It takes months to . . . They came in Secondmoon?”
“In bare
feet in Secondmoon, some of them. We collected feather cloaks, labrets, gold,
jade. Lynx, here, was almost massacred by one of your jaguar knights. We have
his corpse—half man, half jaguar. Probably some of the eagle knights you
mentioned were present also.”
The Baron
shook his head in amazement.“The Council must be seriously concerned.”
“The
Council is going out of its mind,”Wolf said with relish.“For-tunately your father
was available to take over. He did a wonderful job. It was he who identified
the unknowns’ gear as having come from the same place as your cat and the
serpent head. Inquisitor, if you would be
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so kind as to open the bags? I want to
show you some artifacts, my lord, and ask you to confirm his opinion. I am sure
His Majesty will reward you well.”That was a lie. “Lynx, show his lordship your
pendant.”
The doublet
provided for Lynx was strained across his chest, so the neck laces were already
loose. He reached into his shirt and brought out the mosaic plaque of the
jaguar. He pulled it up for the Baron to see. The Baron held out a hand for it.
Reluctantly Lynx took it off and passed it over.
Roland
examined it with interest. “I’ve seen some of this mosaic work before.
Definitely Tlixilian style. I won’t swear it’s from El Dorado itself, but
somewhere very close by. Horrible thing, isn’t it?”
Eventually
he returned the image to Lynx, who put it on quickly, without looking at it.
Hogwood was still working on the bags, so she hadn’t seen it either, and
apparently Wolf managed to control his face enough that the other men failed to
notice his shock.The jaguar’s eyes were now open.
3
Later
they sang songs while Lady Maud played on the virginals; they drank a nightcap
with a toast to His Majesty, and they trooped upstairs to bed. Ivywalls was
old, built to the antique plan of rooms laid out in sequence. Thus Hogwood’s clothes,
cleaned and dry, were tidily set on the dresser in the first,Wolf’s in the
second, Lynx’s in the third, and the host and hostess continued on beyond that,
since they would naturally use the most private chamber at the end.The others
must just remember to draw their bed curtains.
There were
no fires in the fireplaces, but in Wolf’s room a pretty chambermaid was running
a long-handled pan of hot coals back and forth under the covers. He gave her a
farthing, thanked her, and bade her good night. She curtseyed as best she could
without dropping the pan or meeting his eye.
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She caught
Lynx’s though. “Could touch up your sheets again, sir? Was just about to.”
He beamed.
“Please do. I like my bed snug.”
She hurried
into his room. He followed.Wolf waited for her to leave.
She didn’t.
The door
closed. Evidently she had agreed to warm the bed personally—either on the
promise of a larger tip, or just because Blades were so cuddly.
Wolf marched
in before things went too far. There was no sign of the girl, but the bed
curtains were closed and the warming pan had been safely placed on the hearth.
Lynx had his shirt off and was just about to blow out the candles. The thong
was still around his neck, which must mean he wore the plaque both day and
night.
He turned
to scowl.Wolf scowled back, but less at him than at that hateful thing snarling
amid his brown chest fuzz. His scars were as gruesome as ever.
“I want
that pendant now, please.”
“Tonight?
Why tonight?” His refusal was worrisome but not surprising.
“I don’t
need it but you certainly don’t. Have you noticed how it’s changed?”
“What of
it?”
Aware that
the girl would be listening,Wolf said,“Lynx, that’s a potent conjuration, the symbol
of a jaguar knight. It’s active. It’s alive. Remember
the thing that wore it? You want to change into one of those? Take it off now!”
Wolf reached for it.
Lynx
slapped his hand away.“No.” “Lynx! I’m your brother. And if you won’t trust
your brother, then I order you in the King’s name.” “Right of conquest,
remember?” He folded his arms. Ratter still
hung on his belt and the move put his hand closer to her hilt.
“No. He
conquered you.
Please give it to me.”
“No.” Lynx
grinned, little-boyish. “I’m a bound Blade, Wolfie, which means I’m as proof
against conjuration as any man can be. Can’t a lynx carry Mommy’s picture next
his heart?”
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“It belongs to the King. Hand it over!”
“No! I have
taken a fancy to my pussycat. I won’t go to jail for it, but it means more to
me than it does to Athelgar. So no. I will not hand it over.Want to fight me
for it?”
“You are
crazy!” Wolf left before they terrified the girl out of her wits. Back in the
good old days, Lynx had done anything he said without a blink.
More
trouble—the door to Hogwood’s room stood open. She heard Wolf return and
appeared in the opening, still in the jade silk dress.
She said
quickly, “Don’t panic. I didn’t come to— What’s wrong?”
Wolf removed
his cloak and hurled it at a chair. It slid to the floor. “That plaque Lynx’s
wearing. Its eyes are open.”
“No!”
“Yes. Set
with amber and obsidian, I’d guess. But it’s an active conjurement and he
won’t give it up.”
She smiled
sadly. “Poor Wolf! I do think Lynx’s old enough to look after himself. Have the
King take it off him tomorrow.” She took a deep breath and went back to the
prepared speech: “Don’t panic. I didn’t come to steal your virginity, just to
deliver my report. Here.” She held out some sheets of paper.They quivered
slightly.
He stayed
where he was. “What’s it about—the raid or me?”
“Both.” She
spoke in a rush. “I said you carried out your mission flawlessly and I totally
failed in mine. I agree with everything you’ve been saying about the raid. I
gave you all the credit. They were from Tlixilia, they may have thought they
were attacking Distlain, they may return, and Lady Celeste was taken as spoils
of war, not for any personal reason. Baron Roland’s talk of eagle and jaguar
knights is ample confirmation of your theories.You want to hear what I wrote
about you?”
“No.”
“May I sit
down?”
“No.”
She stuck
her tongue out at him. “I forgot to mention that your manners are terrible. I
did say that you are a reluctant killer, that you would never kill for money,
or even to win release from the Guard, no
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matter how much you despise the King.
Grand Inquisitor will have to find another assassin. Read it!”
“I don’t
want to read it.” He threw his sword on the bed, scabbard and all.“You couldn’t
make the King release me.” He began unlacing his jerkin to see what Hogwood’s
reaction would be.
“Yes, we
could.”
“How?”
She smiled.
“Suppose the King must choose between you and Sir Vicious? Which one would he keep?”
“Vicious.
But how ...?”
“There is
no rule that a Blade cannot marry. He does not need permission.”
Wolf caught
his breath. “That wouldn’t . . .”Yes, it would. Of
course it would! Vicious detested inquisitors with a
passion. Rather than have one skulking around Blade married quarters, he would
throw Wolf out of the Guard. In a flash. Release! His heart raced. “That raises
prostitution to new heights. Or do I mean depths?” He flung his jerkin after
the cloak. It slid off the chair, too. “You would sell your body just to please
your superiors in the Dark Chamber?”
She had
expected him to say something like that. “I told you the Chamber is the only
family I have ever known. How many girls accept a husband their parents have
chosen because the match is good for the family? I admit the thought frightened
me when they told me you were a multiple killer and the ugliest man in the
Guard, but they were just warning me.The choice was mine, they said, and now I
know you, I like the idea.Truly I do.”
He was tempted
to tell her to prove that by undressing and getting into his bed. He didn’t
because he was certain she would do exactly that. This was her last chance to
earn her promotion. Fortunately she had taught him how vulnerable he was. He
knew that he would crumble like a puff ball at one touch of tenderness. He
removed his doublet and this time scored a bull’s-eye on the chair.
“You can’t
keep your eyes shut for the rest of your life.”
“Wolf !”
She straightened up and stamped her foot. “Forget your face! It’s a fighter’s
face and it was probably a very handsome face once.
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Scars don’t worry me.You’re not a
slobbering lopsided village idiot who will breed deformed children.You’ve got a
strong, attractive body and you’re a strong, kind man.Women don’t care what men
look like on the outside, just what’s inside.”
He began
unlacing his shirt, and there was nothing inside that but him. “Just how often
will I be expected to kill?”
For a
moment she thought he was serious and beamed. “Probably never. I don’t
know.You’d have to negotiate that with Grand Inquisitor. The Chamber doesn’t
slaughter men out of hand,Wolf, only for reasons of state. Just like the
Blades.”
About to
deny the similarity, he saw that the argument would be fruitless and he might
even lose it to her slippery inquisitor-talk. However tempting her offer, he
kept remembering Inquisitor Schlutter. If the Dark Chamber wanted revenge, this
would be a good way to trap him.
“I am not
interested and you should not want to be friends with me. That would be much
too dangerous! Keep your report and get some sleep.We’ve a hard day ahead
tomorrow.”
She sighed.
“Yes, Sir Wolf. I was hoping for a hard night!”
The
cruelest thing he could have said then was “How old are you really?” He
didn’t.“Good night, Inquisitor. Sorry about the promotion.”
“
’Night,Wolf. I’ll be here if you change your mind.” She shut the door.
He finished
undressing and climbed into a lonely bed. He had to plan his return to Court
tomorrow, add the Baron’s testimony to his report, prepare his expense account
for audit.Yet his thoughts kept drifting to the salivating prospect Hogwood
had dangled—the chance to wipe Athelgar off his boots forever.There was nothing
he wanted more, but if he accepted her offer, which of them would be the whore?
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4
Lynx
was known to the Guard and tongues would flutter if he appeared in the palace
without his ward, so Wolf left him at the Pine Tree Inn on Thistle Street with orders
to await a summons. He still refused to surrender the jaguar plaque, promising
only that he would give it to the King in person—which would be no problem if
the King would send for him, thank him for his loyal service, and hand him a
purse of gold. That would be regal, but did not sound like the Athelgar Wolf
knew and loathed. The stupid cat face had so little real value that he might
have convinced even his corrosive conscience to let Lynx keep it as consolation
for all he had suffered, had he not given Grand Master a receipt for it. Even
if it took them five years,Treasury’s roach-chasers would notice its absence
eventually, and Hogwood would surely babble.
Greymere
Palace was huge. Willow and Sewald were on duty outside the doors of Chancery,
and Wolf wondered what they’d done to deserve that—having to stay brass-button
smart like brainless Household Yeomen, no dice, no lounging. From the
appraising looks they gave him, he could tell that rumors about his mission
were flying, but he nodded and walked on into the anteroom.There, it was said,
the sorrows of the kingdom roosted. All the ills that government was prone to,
all its errors and misjudgments, its cruelties and neglects, all eventually
gathered there. As always, the room was packed with suppliants—wealthy
burghers, widows and orphans, cripples, scabrous paupers—all come in
desperation to the final court of appeal, the King’s chief minister. Some might
wait for weeks before being spared a few moments of some flunky’s time, and
only the most fortunate would ever catch so much as a glimpse of the Lord
Chancellor himself.
In his
case, Orders Had Been Given.The duty clerk almost knocked over his inkwell at
the sight of him—the lowliest drudge in the palace knew the King’s Killer.
“If you
would wait in there, Sir ...er ...um ...Wolf,I will inform His Excellency.”
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The door he
indicated opened into a library Wolf had never seen before. It contained no
chairs, only bookshelves, a high reading desk, and two doors. A moment later
the other one flew wide to admit Lord Chancellor Sparrow, all a-twitter.
Wolf bowed
and rattled off the gist of his report in almost the exact words Hogwood had
used the previous evening, stopping before he reached the marriage proposal. He
proffered the written version, sealed and official, and his warrant with it.
His
Excellency hissed out a very long sigh of relief. He beamed, rosy-cheeked.
“Then there is no immediate danger of further attacks?”
“Not that I
can see, but I do not know the reason for the first one.The conjuration
potential is serious.They can undoubtedly seize any stronghold in Chivial as
easily as they took Quondam. Since they know Quondam and how vulnerable it is,
I recommend that either its garrison be substantially increased, or that it be
abandoned altogether.”
“I must
notify His Majesty. He may want to hear your report in person.”
“I have
brought some evidence that he may wish to view.”
The little
man frowned, carefully opening the seal on the report. “Oh, I doubt that.”
“For which
I debited the royal treasury thirty thousand crowns.”
It was not often one got to see a Lord Chancellor turn that
color.
5
Having
made himself respectable,Wolf arrived at the Council Chamber to find the
baggage waiting under the limpid gaze of Inquisitor Hogwood, immaculate in
crisp black robes. The two towering Household Yeomen who had been set to guard
it seemed so desperately glad to see him that he guessed she had been flirting
with them. She was a superlative tease, and he was still cursing his folly at
not grabbing what
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she
had so blatantly offered the previous evening. Lynx’s companion
must
have enjoyed herself, for she had not left until dawn.
“You may wait outside now,” he told the
Yeomen.
The taller sneered.“Our orders are to
stand guard in here, Sir Wolf.”
“Now they
are to wait outside.” He no longer wielded the Crown’s irresistible authority
and the Yeomen usually found Blades extremely resistible, so he quickly added,
“I must lay out certain secret materials for His Majesty to see.Will you keep
him waiting?”
That scared
them away and Hogwood went to de-ward the bags. By the time the privy
councillors started drifting in, the long table was heaped with feathers and
gold, jade labrets and glass-edged swords, a rainbow hodgepodge like wares in
some bizarre bazaar. As he was tucking the bags themselves out of sight behind
a chair, she whispered in Wolf’s ear,“There’s one missing.A gold thumb ring
with an eagle’s head in jade.”
Only an
inquisitor could have performed such a feat of memory, but now she had told
him, he could recall the item and confirm that it was not in sight. It would
have been easily palmed—by Baron Roland the previous evening, even by the Lord
Chamberlain, who was presently sniffing at the gold collection. Or Hogwood
herself.Was this yet another ploy to trap him?
The first
councillors to arrive had been the Lord Chamberlain and a couple of dukes.The
Earl Marshal was wheeled in and set out of the way. Then came Lord Chancellor
Sparrow, closely followed by Grand Inquisitor, who took their favorite place by
the window. In swept Mother Superior of the White Sisters, a huge woman like a
galleon on a calm day, all canvas set, with her steeple hat as main topgallant.
She proceeded majestically over to the exhibit, displaying disapproval worthy
of the minatory Sister Daybreak.
Commander
Vicious entered and glanced around before stepping aside to admit the King. All
knelt and were told to rise.
“Speak up,
Sir Wolf,”Athelgar said. “Tell us what you discovered.”
Wolf did,
while everyone listened intently and the King himself poked and scowled at the
long table, concentrating on gold and ignoring art. He interrupted only once.
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“How much?”
“Not quite, sire.Twenty-nine thousand,
nine hundred eighty—”
The royal
cheeks flushed. “But those men had no right to any of this! When enemies attack
one of my castles,
the booty belongs to me!”
“With
respect, sire, if I had held to that principle, none of the gold you see would
be here now. The men accepted Your Majesty’s coinage at face value, so the
hoard is worth more to your mint than you will pay for it.”
A sensitive
point! Athelgar grunted angrily. “And what is in this bundle?” He sniffed disapprovingly.
“A human
forearm, sire, with a catlike paw in place of a hand.”Wolf went to unwrap it.
He had packed the grisly relic in salt, but it was definitely starting to rot.
“Never
mind!” the King snapped, stepping back quickly. “Grand Wizard can examine it at
leisure. Carry on with your report.”
After he
finished they all had to ask him questions.Then they started querying one
another.
“He doesn’t
know if they were conjured to a ship waiting offshore,” said the Lord High Admiral,
who was not as stupid as he looked, “or all the way back to the Hence Lands.
Grand Wizard, is such a transportation possible?”
“Not by any
means known to me,” the old conjurer said unhappily. “Our efforts to move
people usually end in pâté.”
“What do
you know about Tlixilian enchantments?” asked a duke.
“No more
than what Sir Wolf told us.” Grand Wizard wrung bony hands. “I’ve heard the
human sacrifice stories. Rubbish!”
“Well,
Mother?” the Chancellor said. “Do you agree with Sister Daybreak’s opinion? How
many of these articles do you sense are conjured?”
Mother
Superior turned at bay, like an ox mobbed by squirrels. “None of them, but I
agree with Sister Daybreak that one cannot have a man-cat chimera without using
conjuration. So, like her, I must assume that this trash may be tainted in a
way I cannot detect.” The galleon had run aground and didn’t like it one bit.
Wolf
said,“One article is . . .” No, two were
missing.“In addition to
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these articles, sire, we brought back a
mosaic pendant depicting the face of a Tlixilian pard, which Baron Roland
called a jaguara.
My brother, Sir Lynx, was carrying it and I failed to get it back from him this
morning. That one I am certain is conjured, because it has changed its
appearance since I first saw it.”
The
councillors demanded details and lost interest when they heard them.
“So your
conclusion is that the attack was not intended specifically to abduct Baroness
Dupend?” Athelgar was pleased.
“That is my
personal belief, sire.”
“This pin?”
Mother Superior declaimed, holding up one of the palm-sized cloak
fasteners.“Inlaid with turquoise, malachite, mother-of-pearl, and . . . is this
pink shell?”
No one
spoke.
“Wasn’t
Baroness Dupend once the Marquesa Celeste?” she demanded.
The King
nodded with a brow of thunder.
Matron
Majestic sailed on undeterred.“Hers had a cat’s face....Do
you
recall, sire, how some years ago you presented the Marquesa with a pin like
this, displaying the visage of a pard?” Athelgar shrugged. “Vaguely.” He had
given her everything imaginable. “It came from the Hence Lands! Didn’t it?”
Her voice rumbled like surf. “We do not recall!” When the King snapped like
that, the subject was to be considered closed.
“I do,” Grand
Wizard mumbled in his fondly fuddy way. He might not recall what day this was,
but he could remember when many notable mountains had been only molehills.“It
was a gift from the King of Distlain to His Majesty’s honored mother upon her
accession. She made some remark about village craft trash ...er, she did not
care for it.”
“Her
judgment is usually sound,” Athelgar said threateningly. This subject was definitely
closed.
“She
donated it to the crown jewels,” Lord Chamberlain remarked.
Grand
Wizard mused on, oblivious, “I was asked about it.The Mar
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quesa wore it a few times at court
functions. It was ...er, outré as jewelry. Unique, really, but she had
taken a fancy to it. She was deeply enamored of His Majesty—”
Flaunting a
unique emblem of royal favor would have appealed to Celeste, no matter how ugly
she thought it. Hogwood and Wolf exchanged looks. Now they knew the real
reason for Lynx’s fixation on the jaguar pendant—Celeste had worn one like it.
“I remember
well!” Mother Superior boomed. “She wore it three times and every White Sister
in the palace had nightmares of being stalked by giant cats. We begged Your
Majesty to ask her not to wear it again! Not that we could find any conjuration
on it,” she concluded vaguely.
“It was
delightful!” said the old conjurer.“Chips of stone glued on a silver plate. It
was just after Your Grace appointed me . . .”That put the incident before Wolf
arrived at Court, which explained why he had never heard of it.
“This is
irrelevant!” the King roared.
“It’s not!”
Wolf said. “And I withdraw my conclusion that the raid on Quondam was not
specifically directed at rescuing Celeste.”
Even if
one’s sovereign was an idiot who gave crown jewels away to floozies, one never
contradicted him.Alerted by the appalled silence that followed, the culprit
babbled suicidally—
“Celeste
wore that pin at Quondam, sire! My brother told me she wore all her jewelry all
the time and that means she wore the Tlixilian jaguar, and if the new one has
managed to conjure him in a few days, then what could the other have done to
her in four years?”
More
silence.
“Conjured
your brother?” Athelgar said. “Sir Lynx?” His cheeks were as red as his goatee.
Wolf was underwater
and sinking fast.“My brother is strangely fascinated by the pendant the jaguar
monster wore. He joked that he’d earned it as a battle honor. He wore it on the
journey back to Grandon. And I ...I forgot to get it back—”
“The
witness is lying,” proclaimed the right-hand Grand Inquisitor.
“My brother
insists he will deliver it only to Your Majesty.”
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“It
conjured him?” the King asked again. “Well, he is obsessed by it. And it did
open its eyes!” “Where is Sir Lynx now?” Wolf explained. “No, we do not want
him seen at Court!” the King decreed. “But
we
do want that pendant. Now! Go and get it! And tell him he is to remain out of
sight during our pleasure.” Wolf bowed and headed for the door. Vicious opened
it for him, giving him a very nasty look.
6
Scorning to run, Wolf
strolled out through the antechamber, scrutinized by a score of eyes, half of
them Blades’ and all of them curious, although no one was brash enough to ask
him who had died this time. Then a voice shouted,“Wolf !” behind him, and
Hogwood came swishing along in her robe. He waited for her out in the hallway.
“We’ll
take a coach,” she said. “I’ll meet you at—” “We?” She clutched his arm. “Wolf,
it’s not just the pendant! We must find
him before he sells that ring! The
King’ll hang him for grand larceny.” “And you won’t?” “Of course not! Idiot!”
She pushed him impatiently. “Go! I’ll get
my
bag.Wait for me at the west door!”
He
had been planning to take a horse, but coaches always stood ready at the west
door, so that might be quicker. By the time the doorman had summoned a
brougham for him, Hogwood arrived, clutching her black bag and puffing hard.
The driver cracked his whip and they rumbled out under the arch.
The
rain had stopped again while the clouds regrouped. “Wolf ?” “Yes?”
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“Can’t you
trust me just a little bit? I really do want to help Lynx.”
Those eyes,
those eyes! But if he trusted her even a little he was going to find himself
trusting her absolutely, which smelled of rank insanity.
“You’re not
a typical inquisitor.” He risked a smile, which he rarely did, since to
describe his teeth as lupine would be flattery.
“You’re not
a typical Blade.” She grinned impishly.
“In what
way exactly?”
“You never
bedded me.”
“I was a
fool.”
She sighed.
“Yes, unfortunately.”
“I think
that pendant has stolen Lynx’s wits.”
“His binding
stole his wits.The pendant reminds him
of his ward because she wore a pin like it, and his binding will give him no
rest until he finds her.”
“Yes. I
mean no, it won’t.”The world was big, but a binding was implacable. “Why is
the Dark Chamber involved? He has committed no crime.”The plaque was no crime,
so far, but the missing ring was likely to hang someone.
Hogwood made
an exasperated noise. “It isn’t! The Council went into secret session and
dismissed me. So I’m free to help. I want to,Wolf! Honest! I should have seen
Lynx pocket that ring. I swear I’m trying to help.”
Wolf did
not bother denying that Lynx must have taken the ring.
The Pine
Tree was a clean, respectable tavern patronized by minor gentry visiting the
capital. The Guard used it for business, as Wolf had by parking Lynx there,
because the proprietor, Emil Montpurse, was notoriously discreet. He also favored
Blades with favorable rates for private matters—so favorable that there were
persistent rumors that the Pine Tree was owned by the Order itself, or perhaps
Grand Master.
Rain was
starting again, but Wolf sent the coach back to the palace rather than have it
stand there and attract attention. Master Montpurse had seen him with Lynx
earlier and raised no objection when he and Hogwood headed upstairs to visit
him. Their knock went unanswered. The lock clicked open at Hogwood’s touch.
Lynx’s baggage was there; he was not.
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“He may
have gone for a walk,”Wolf suggested weakly.
“He’s taken
his brown pack. Open that big one! I need something you are certain is his.”
Wolf’s
dagger severed the ropes. He pawed through contents until he found a shabby old
jerkin he recognized. Hogwood wrapped her tracker in it and put it back.
“It needs
an hour.”
“Let’s ask
around downstairs.”
She warded
her bag and left it there, locking the door the same way she had opened it.
The taproom
was almost deserted at that hour in the morning, smelling pleasantly of beer
and new bread. A spotty boy was spreading fresh sawdust on the floor, Montpurse
himself was wiping the tables. He was a trim man of middle years, whose flaxen
hair was fading away altogether rather than turning white. His sky-blue eyes,
which normally twinkled with professional bonhomie, were wary now as he
insisted he had not seen Sir Lynx leave and had not spoken with him since he arrived.
An inquisitor
and a royal guardsman together could demand and get very nearly anything they
wanted, but Wolf had always preferred handshakes to arm wrestling. “I am his
true brother, master.”
“I am aware of that, Sir Wolf.” It was
the inquisitor that bothered him. “We are on his side, I swear.The matter is
extremely urgent. There has been a change of plan and we need to warn him.”
Hogwood interrupted. “Summon the rest of your staff. He may have asked
directions of someone.”
“I’m sure
he did not,” Wolf said. “We’ll call back in an hour or so, master. Ask him to
wait if you see him, please.” He chivvied Hogwood out to the spring drizzle.
“Lynx is a Blade! His ward lived in Greymere so he knows the terrain here like
he knows his ward’s face.What did you think he might have asked for?”
“A pawn
shop.”
“A fence,
you mean. He’d go straight to Greasy Tom’s. Come on.”
Tom’s was
three alleys east and a mile down the social scale.Women
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shorter than Hogwood would have to stoop
to enter that dingy, gloomy basement, and neither she nor Wolf could straighten
under its ancient beams.The agglomeration of junk down there had changed little
in the five years since he had first seen it, and perhaps in the fifty or so
since Tom acquired the store. A lack of buyers was hardly surprising, because
the stock reeked of dirt and vermin and was barely visible. Greasy Tom had no
desire to sell any of it, for then he would have had to go to the trouble of
replacing it, and his real income came from fencing stolen goods. He was
reputed to pay Blades top value for any trinkets their ladies gave them.There
were bad apples in every barrel if you dug deep enough, and Tom probably made a
handsome living off the Guard alone.
Their entry
provoked spidery noises in back, until the nasty gnome came shuffling in from
whatever horrors lay beyond the far door. He was a tiny, wizened scab of a man,
smelly, corrupt, and old as the hills. He knew Wolf for a Blade at first
glance, and bared a few dark stumps of teeth in a smile of welcome before he
registered the inquisitor in the gloom.Then he shrank back like something slimy
withdrawing into its shell.
“We have
information,” Hogwood said in tones grim enough to make any spine tingle, “that
today you purchased a gold ring bearing a stone in the shape of an eagle’s
head.”
Tom hunched
even smaller, shaking his head but being careful not to speak. Wolf thought he
looked as guilty as a dog with blood on its muzzle, but his opinions were not
evidence.
Hogwood’s
were. “Did you? The article we are seeking belongs to His Majesty. Answer my
questions. If you lie to me I shall call the Watch.”
Tom moaned.
“How was I to know it was stolen? I did not know! The man was a Blade. Aren’t
Blades always honest?”
“No!” Wolf said,
for now he had a thief for a brother.“But always dangerous.” He clicked Diligence
up and down in her scabbard.“Hand it
over.”
“I’ll fetch
it, Sir Blade.”
Hogwood
nodded, so Wolf did not follow the spider as it withdrew
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into
its web. It soon came crawling back to give her the ring, staying
well
away from the swordsman.
“How much did you give him?”
“Ten crowns, mistress.”
Wolf had paid twice that for it.
“Do you
want a receipt?” she asked. “Or shall we forget this happened?”
He gaped a
toothless maw at her.“Forget what happened, mistress?”
“Let’s
go,”Wolf said.
It was a
relief to be back out in the street just to breathe, and in Grandon that was a
damning comment indeed.They took shelter under an overhang and watched rain
dance in the mud.
“Where
now?” he asked bitterly.“The docks?” He was trying to recall exactly what the
Baron had told him the previous evening— information Lynx had certainly taken to
heart. Chivian trade with the Hence Lands was small, Roland had said, maybe six
ships a year, and most of those left from western ports, not Grandon. None
would set sail in Secondmoon, certainly, so Lynx’s best strategy would be to
cross the narrow seas to Thergy or Isilond, and either ship out from there
directly or work his way south to Distlain, although officially Distlain still
banned all foreigners from the new lands it claimed.
“Or livery
stables,” Hogwood said. “We’d do better to wait for the tracker than run around
blind.”
“Then
let’s eat,” Wolf said. “That’s an old campaigner’s advice—fill your belly
whenever you get the chance.We may have a long day ahead of us.” The moment he
reported back to the palace, his brother would be a thief on the run.
7
They
went back to the Pine Tree to eat pork pie and cheese, both of which were good
there. Wolf ordered small beer because his binding
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made anything stronger taste like bile
after the first few mouthfuls. Hog-wood shocked him yet again by ordering
porter.
Between
taking manful swigs, she scorched him with her great innocent eyes. “You
realize that this is goodbye,Wolf ?”
“I’m
sorry.” It was true—no other lovely girl called him Wolf. “Why?”
“I failed
in my mission. I’ll be transferred elsewhere.”
“No
promotion?”
She frowned
as she cut a tiny slice of pie.“I was still hoping for one grade. Now I doubt
it. We missed Celeste’s pin, so we got everything wrong.”
“I’m sorry.
And very sorry it’s goodbye.”
She smiled sadly.
“I’ll have to find another monster to fall in love with.”
After a
moment’s chewing, he said,“That may be kindly meant, but it still hurts. Not
the monster part. I know I’m a monster. But don’t joke about love.You relayed
an employment offer, I turned it down. Don’t be hypocritical, blathering about
love.”
She reached
across the table to him. “Wolf ...truly,I am in love with you!”
He ignored
her hand.“If you’re feeling lusty it’s my binding getting to you, that’s all. I
can’t shut it off completely. Sorry.”
“It isn’t!
I know what a Blade attack feels like. It’s like being drowned in honey! Lynx’s
been trying to climb in my bed ever since Quondam. I am protected to some
extent, but it was only being in love with you that let me hold out. One more
night and—”
“Lynx
wouldn’t do that!”
“Wolf,Wolf!
You’re a child!”
No, she was
the child, but he discovered he believed her and his anger veered. “I wish
you’d told me. I’d have stunned him.”
She shook
her head, amused.“No, you wouldn’t.You’d have snarled at him, but you love him
too much to hurt him. And he loves you. He told me you’d always been father and
mother to him.”
“And why
would he have told you that?”Wolf asked suspiciously.
She flashed
the wicked little grin he had come to both fear and
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enjoy.“He
asked me if we were bed partners. I said we weren’t, because I knew what he had
in mind. I hoped you’d see what he was up to and get jealous. And you didn’t
even notice!” She took a draft of porter. “Served me right—I surely had my
hands full from then on!”
“Well
you missed your chance. He’s gone, I’m sure.” “If he caught the tide, he is.”
“How do you know the state of the tide?” “You can see the river from the
palace.” She grinned in childish
triumph—one more point to her. “He has
ten crowns and some silver I gave him. Can he get to Tlixilia on that?” “I
think Lynx could get to Tlixilia on one copper groat as long as he had his
sword and his binding was driving him.”
“Likely.”
The problem was not Lynx, it was Athelgar. If that man truly appreciated his
Blades and what they gave up in his service, he would recompense Lynx for four
years’ lost wages and give him every possible help to go in search of his ward.
But a better man would never have bound Lynx to a strumpet in the first place.
“Dolly!”
said a new voice. “Mother’s looking for you.”
The
youth standing over them was slight of build, with whiskers too scanty to hide
boyish rosy cheeks, but he was wiry enough to be dangerous.The dagger on his
belt would almost qualify as a short sword. Young men who went armed with
things like that were liable to be questioned by the Watch unless they were
dressed like gentlemen, and this boy’s fustian jerkin and cheap hose suggested
a clerk or secretary.
Hogwood
frowned at him. “Tomorrow.” “She needs help with the apples.” “Get Frank to
help!” The youth shrugged and then curled his lip at Wolf. That sort of
open
contempt usually heralded an insult inviting a fight. Royal guardsmen were
forbidden to brawl with either fists or swords, but they had been known to
treat chronic bad manners with minor surgery.
“Put
it in writing, Flicker!” Hogwood snapped. He shrugged and walked away. “An
inquisitor,”Wolf said. “You were talking code.”
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She emptied
her tankard and wiped her mouth on her sleeve. “Mother
meant they want me for an important
assignment right away. Apples means
Flicker himself is probably going to lead it. I told him to eat rocks. Let’s
see how the tracker is doing.”
They headed
for the stair, and Hogwood walked as straight as Wolf did.
“You were
showing off there, weren’t you?” he said. “You’re not tipsy in the slightest.”
Quaffing a pitcher of porter that fast would blur a blacksmith, let alone a
sylph like her.
She laughed
and squeezed his hand. “It’s a Dark Chamber party trick.”
“I’m not
Lynx,” he said, hurt.
“That
wasn’t what I intended!”
No? When
she knew they must go back to the bedroom?
She allowed
him a proper look at the tracker that time. It seemed to be an octagonal tile
with the painting of a swallow on it, except that the image swiveled on the
ceramic like a compass needle.
“A good
strong trail,” she announced when they reached the street. “You go in front.”
The coming
of noon and some sunshine was bringing out the crowds, but people made way for
a man wearing a sword, so he led, turning corners as directed from behind. He
was annoyed to discover that Lynx had known a shorter route to Greasy Tom’s
than he had.They did not go in; Hogwood picked up the trail returning, then
veering off toward the river.
Big ports
like Grandon were busy, smelly, noisy, and endlessly fascinating. The people,
the ships, the goods, the birds ...even otherwise nondescript buildings and
wagons gained reflected luster on a waterfront. Wolf was not in a mood to
admire scenery that day, though. He kept hoping they would find Lynx on a ship
waiting for the next tide, or prowling the dockside taverns looking for a
berth, but the spirits of chance withheld their support.
Wolf stopped
with his toes on the edge of a pier and only rain-dimpled, garbage-speckled
river below them. Hogwood ran into his back.Yellow-eyed gulls on the pilings
stared curiously at them. He asked
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three men before finding one who could
tell him that the last vessel to use that berth had been the Lady
Polly, departed for Gevily on the morning tide.
They turned
and retraced their steps.
“Gevily,”Wolf
said hopefully.“Wrong direction. I might be able to catch him in Gevily.”Except
that Wolf was still a bound Blade and could not desert his ward.
Hogwood
took his arm.“He just needed to get out of Chivial. He’ll jump ship when she
puts in for water, in Isilond or Thergy. He’s a grown man,Wolf. He’s driven by
his binding and there’s no way you or anyone can stop him.What could you have
done if we’d caught him?”
“I could
have taken that accursed plate off him so he isn’t leaving Chivial as a
fugitive. I have some money I could have given him—not much, but some. I could
maybe have persuaded him to wait until we organized some help for him, some
proper finance perhaps.. . .”
He could
have said goodbye! But Lynx was gone, and all for the sake of a shoddy trinket
and a king who didn’t know the meaning of gratitude. He could never dare
return.
Wolf walked
in silence most of the way back to Thistle Street, his hatred of Athelgar
boiling like vomit. At the tavern door, Hogwood caught his arm again, and this
time pulled him into a corner, away from the passersby. “Wolf, the assignment Flicker
was telling me about is Tlixilia.”
“You’re
joking! They’d send you into that fever-pit jungle? Pirates and cannibals and
death?”
She
nodded.“Think about it.We . . . the Dark Chamber ...we had no warning of
Quondam. It took us completely by surprise. It means Chivial has enemies we’ve
never suspected. Thanks to you and Lord Roland, we now know Who
killed all those people, but we still
don’t know Why and
we do not have a clue about How!
Of course we must send people to investigate! Of course one of them must be a
conjurer, and I’m the best they’ve got who isn’t senile.The Chamber will do anything
it can to get its hands on that enchantment!”
Most of
that made sense. Sending a child like Dolores did not.
“I just
want you to know,” she went on, her fingers still tight on his
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arm,
“that if I run across any trace of Sir Lynx there, then I’ll do what
ever
I can to help him.”
“Is this a final desperate effort to
enlist me?”
“No.” She
smiled sadly. “It’s a final miserable goodbye.Will you kiss me,Wolf ? Just
once?”
Trust her?
Dare he trust her? He had worked with snoops before, more often than any Blade
ever had, probably. He’d picked up a little of their code. “Put it in writing,”
she had told Flicker, and then she’d said it meant he was to go and eat rocks.
But that was not what “Put it in writing” meant. It meant something like “The
mission is proceeding as planned. Target will be met or exceeded.”
So what if
it was?
“Would they
still send you if you were married?” he asked.
Oh,
spirits! Could even an inquisitor fake that look of joy?
“No! They
don’t split up married couples.They’d send both of us!”
The
combination was irresistible—marry Dolores, track down Lynx, and be rid of
Athelgar, all in one roll of the dice.
Wolf
cleared his throat, wondering if he were cutting it. “Then if the offer is
still open ...we could get married, I suppose.”
She did not
flinch. “Can you rephrase that with a couple of romantic epithets and maybe an
endearment?”
“No. I’m a
killer, not a hypocrite. I’m not asking for a proper marriage. Spirits, I know
what I look like! Finding that on the pillow every morning would be lifelong
torture. You realize we have known each other barely more than a week? But you
get me out of the Guard and I’ll get you out of the Tlixilia mission, if that’s
what you want. If you really want to go, then I’ll come with you and see if I
can locate Lynx. But after that we can go our separate ways.”
She
regarded him quizzically. “It won’t be legal until it’s consummated.”
“If you can
stand it, that would be no problem for me.” Her scent was tantalizing—mostly
damp hair, but he found even that exciting.
“That was
not the impression you gave me last night.” She grinned.
He had been
regretting that folly ever since.“Just once and you can keep your eyes closed.
You’ll get your promotion. Spirits know you’ll
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have earned it.” The
absurdity of her smiles was breaking his heart.This was only business for her,
why could it not be business for him? “You can’t
be thinking a real marriage! I can’t really marry
anyone. I can’t support myself, let alone a wife. I have no money, no skills
except killing, and my face makes children scream. No one would hire me.”
“We snoops
will.”
He laughed.
“Killing people? That’s all I am, girl, a killer! You want my private Litany?
Hengist, Hotspur, Reynard, Rodden, Jared, Arundel, Warren, and Quintus! Plus,
of course, beloved Inspector Schlutter. The Dark Chamber may need a monster,
but you don’t. I’m dangerous!”
“No
killing,” she said firmly. “When I reported this morning that you didn’t kill
for pleasure, Grand Inquisitor said they knew that. They wanted you for
something else. And I want you for this . . .” She kissed him.
She was a
tall woman; he had no need to bend his head. She was surprisingly strong and
she did know how to kiss. It was the sort of kiss that could lead to charges of
public indecency. It was not the sort of kiss a man could ignore. It demanded
cooperation and it lasted long enough to leave his scruples in ruins.
“Oh,Wolf !”
she whispered into his collar.“Forget the Dark Chamber! Blades don’t need
permission to marry and neither do we. I want a real marriage! Bed and loving.
And children, of course. I do want children because I want to be the sort of
mother I never had, but I’d like to wait a few years yet, and spirits know
we’re young enough. A few years’ adventure first, yes? Why not Tlixilia? We can
be rich! Oh, Wolf ! We’re a good team!” She looked up, eyes full of
stars.“That’s what I want.You, and someday children by you, and a lot of love.
I won’t settle for less. Tenderness? Caring? That’s not too much to ask.
Adventure and wealth maybe. But no killing.”
He could
say only, “You’re crazy!”
“Will that be
a burden, a wife insane enough to be hopelessly in love with you? Decide! You
must decide now,Wolf. Right now!”
“You really
mean this?”
“Absolutely.”
Life was a
reflection in a soap bubble.
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“Darling, I
love you, will you marry me?”Was that the King’s Killer talking?
“Oh, yes!”
“Now?”
“Instantly.”
This time
he began the kiss and by the time they could breathe again he had stopped
caring what the Dark Chamber wanted of him. He would be an assassin if he must.
Two men in
overalls came stumbling out the Pine Tree door. The taproom beyond was jammed
full and raucous. Wolf led Hogwood in and almost fell over Emil, cleaning up
broken pottery and spilled ale. He jumped up to move his pail out of their way.
“Master
Montpurse, I am sorry to trouble you when you are so busy.Would you do me a
quick favor?”
He wiped
his hands on his apron. “If I can, Sir Wolf.”
“I wish to
marry this person. Will you and your wife consent to witness?”
The
innkeeper waited a beat before saying, “I have done almost everything
imaginable to oblige Blades, Sir Wolf, but I have never married one. Blades
don’t go in for marriage much.”
“Sometimes
it is a necessary, er, blessing. Isn’t it, Dolores?” Belatedly, he put an arm
around her and she snuggled against him. Tall, but slender. Now she felt
dainty, vulnerable, precious.
“Yes,
indeed,” she said solemnly.“Necessary and urgent. I may give birth at any
moment.”
Montpurse
allowed himself a small smile.“You wish me to call for silence and announce a wedding?”
“No!” Wolf
said, having recognized a couple of Blades among the taproom throng.“We mustn’t
keep the King waiting any longer than we have to.”
The minimum
the law recognized was a man and a woman declaring before two witnesses that
they were over the age of thirteen and were now married. Notaries and
everything else were optional.The traditional six-question ceremony felt right
and everyone knew it, but even that was not required.
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They went
into the kitchen. Montpurse asked Wolf the three questions. An outraged
Mistress Montpurse asked them of Hogwood. After six I
do’s it was done.The bridegroom slid a
heavy gold ring with a jade stone over two of the bride’s fingers and told her
to keep her hand closed.
“Thank you,
master and mistress,” he said. “If anyone asks, of course, you will confirm
that this ceremony took place, but for the next hour or so, should anyone come
looking for us, would you revert to more normal Blade treatment and tell lies
for me?”
He lifted
his wife into his arms and ostentatiously trotted up the stairs with her. It
was time for some masculine assertiveness.
153
IV
On the eve of the hunt, the lord summons his huntsmen,
his trainers, his grooms . . .
1
Viewed
dispassionately, of course,” Dolores said, “the act of love is gross animal
behavior on a par with defecation or parturition.”
Wolf
said,“I had not realized you were viewing it dispassionately. In fact, I
gathered a contrary impression.”
They were walking
hand in hand back to the Palace in a drumming, pitch-black downpour. Rain cast
a golden glory over the link-boy splashing along ahead of them; it made his
reeky torch hiss and smoke, its flames dance in every dimpled puddle. No one
else was mad enough to be in the streets, which meant that even a starry-eyed
sex-satiated Blade must keep an eye out for trouble.
“Sir, I
have never been less dispassionate in my life.You are an expert.”
Why did a
man glow with stupid pride when a woman praised his skill in an act any billy
goat could perform a dozen times better? She had known what to expect and her
body had reacted in ways he was certain
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even
an inquisitor could not fake, but she was not as experienced as she was claiming.
He was secretly pleased at that—he was a prude, he knew, certainly by Blade
standards.
“I
already told you,” he said. “You inspired me. You were stupendous. I love you
beyond all reason. I am insanely happy. Am I telling the truth?”
She
squeezed his hand. “What does that mean?” “It means ‘Close enough.’ It will do
for now.” “I will do better the next time,” he promised. “Braggart!” “I suppose
. . .”Wolf wondered if the link-boy was listening to this
salacious conversation. “You have been
to see Cumberwell, I hope?” She chuckled.“Isn’t it a little late to think of
that? No, I haven’t.We provide our own conjurations.”
Cumberwell
was a fashionable conjurer, popular with the wealthy because he could guarantee
a woman would not conceive. His fees were high and the cost of the antidote
conjuration was considerably higher. But love spun its own enchantments.Wolf
felt as if he and Dolores were now in some mysterious way a couple, a pairing
set off from the rest of the world. He had been in love before, or had thought
he was, which was much the same thing, but he had never known that sense of oneness
envelope him so suddenly and so tightly. He had told her that, too.
“I’ll
turn in the ring,” she said. “Get a receipt for it.” “Of course.You think you
married an idiot?” “Yes. I’ll report to Leader. I want to tell him in private,
my love. I
owe
him that much. He may not be available tonight. Even if he is, the King may be
partying. Are you quite certain this will work?”
Squeeze
again. “If it doesn’t then your
inquisitor wife will have to hang around Blade quarters spying on everyone
until it does. I must report in, too.”
“To
get a list of hits for me?” “Will a dozen be enough to start with?” “Make it
fifty.Where can I find you? The Dark Chamber office?”
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“No,
that’s just for show. Come to Thirteen.” “Amber Street?” “Of course.That’s the
real rats’ nest.” Under the palace lights, Wolf paid off the link-boy,
over-tipping
him.The
lovers parted with a very damp kiss.
The
number of flunkies lighting candles in the hallways and corridors told him
that there was some royal function planned, but he dripped and dribbled his way
to the guardroom unseen by anyone of consequence. He wondered if the Council
was still in session, if it had wrestled all day with the Tlixilia problem
while he had been wrestling his wife in bed. The current front office
decorations were Bloodhand and Modred, comparing their date books.
Vicious
was at his desk in the room beyond, working late and in full dress uniform.
Next to inquisitors, he hated paperwork the worst. He looked up sourly as the
newcomer loomed in his doorway.
“Lynx’s
gone, Leader.We traced him to the docks.” “Pity. Need full report. Quondam
excellent job.” “Thank you, Leader.” “Five-crown bonus, cancelled because you
blew your mouth off in
Council this morning.”That was a long
speech for him. “Did they decide anything?” Vicious shrugged. “If I knew I
couldn’t tell you. They argued long
enough.”
It was unusual for the Commander to be excluded from Privy
Council meetings, but this affair broke
all rules. “Yes, Leader. One other—” “Go get dry before you freeze.” He bent to
his toil again. “Pardon, Leader. An application for married quarters . . .”
“See Lyon.” Then Vicious looked up, surprised, even smiling.
“Who?”
Wolf
closed his door before telling him. His reaction was exactly what Dolores had
predicted—incredulity, disgust, and finally anger. His swarthy face darkened
until the great scar stood out like a jagged white rope.
“You’ve
already done this?”
“Yes, Leader.”
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He slammed
the desk with his fist and leaped up.
“Go and
pack your kit. Wait in your quarters.” With that he strode out.
Wolf’s quarters
were a poky cubicle with a squeaky floor and an absurdly narrow bed. Deputy
always assigned that room to Wolf when Court was at Greymere, probably because
he so rarely entertained visitors. He dried himself off, dressed in the only
civilian clothes he owned, and threw everything else he wanted to keep in a
bag, mainly books. His possessions were few, because the Guard led a
peripatetic life, following the King around.Then he sat down to contemplate the
incredible events of the day just ended and an even more incredible future.
Freedom! A
wife. A journey to the ends of the world. Danger and action.A wife.Yes, he was
besotted. He felt like a sex-drunk, harebrained adolescent again, like the
spotty boy who had tumbled Amy Sprat in the heather so long ago. His new wife was
an adolescent. She was brilliant and
beautiful. He was years older and grotesquely disfigured. How long before she
saw the ghastly mistake her ambition had led her into? He must learn to trust people.Yes,
even love was not without its shadows. It brought both a driving desire to be
worthy of the loved one and a terrifying certainty that one never could.
Perhaps no one could ever be worthy of true love, but in the case of a
gargoyle-faced multiple murderer, that conclusion seemed more than commonly
evident.
Time
passed.
Too much
time. He began to worry.
Dreams
curdled into nightmare.
If the King
had been unavailable or had refused to perform the release ceremony right
away, Leader should have sent word. No matter how angry he was, he would not
leave a man sitting on the edge of his bed like this, not Vicious. Was it
possible that Athelgar had balked, Vicious had resigned his commission in
protest, and the Guard now had a new Leader? Who might that be? Not Lyon,
surely! He lacked the necessary inner meanness.
If Wolf was
not going
to be puked out of the Guard, then he should get back into uniform. He fretted.
He dithered. Just as he was about to start changing again, the door opened and
Ivor stuck his head in.
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“Leader
wants—” His eyes widened as he saw the bag.“You leaving?”
“I hope
so,”Wolf said. Oh, how I hope so! As
the two of them hurried off along the corridor, he asked, “What’s been
happening?”
“Don’t know.”
No further comment. A portcullis had just dropped between them.
His Majesty
was in his dressing room, being shaved by one valet while two others set out
the royal finery. Florian and Neil were on duty, but Vicious was there also,
glowering worse than ever, and so was Sir Damon. Certainly something had been
happening, because Damon was wearing the Deputy Leader’s baldric. The King
stared frostily from behind a mask of shaving soap. Wolf sensed universal
anger like boiling acid.
Vicious
held out a hand for Diligence and
in silence took it to the King. The valet backed away, razor in hand. Athelgar
rose. Wolf knelt, busily unlacing jerkin, doublet, and shirt.
Typically,
Athelgar went and spoiled his triumph. “Congratulations on your marriage, Sir
Wolf.”
“Thank you,
sire.”Wolf was surprised, but there was worse to come.
“The maiden
we saw this morning?”
“Yes,
sire.”
“Breathtaking,
even in widow’s weeds. Clearly a perceptive woman, too. I wish you good chance
together. I am going to miss you,Wolf! You have given sterling service these
last five years and we must find other opportunities for you to serve your
sovereign in days to come. Now we dub you knight . . .”
The sword
that had bound him touched Wolf’s bare shoulders.
How dare
the Pirate’s Son go and spoil it all by
being gracious! Telling himself grumpily that Athelgar had just been taking a
dig at the scowling Vicious in the background,Wolf withdrew to begin a new
life, free as he had not been since arriving at Ironhall, ten years before.
When he had
left the royal presence, Neil returned Diligence to
him. He said only, “I’ll see you out.”
“What
happened to Lyon?”
“Don’t
know.”
That was
certainly a lie, but a Blade who married an inquisitor was
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no longer one of the boys. Also, of
course, the Guard would be happier without the King’s Killer around, reminding
everyone of unhappy times now gone.
But
he was free at last.
2
With
rain falling harder than ever, Wolf persuaded his overly tender conscience that
Athelgar owed him one last coach ride, but he had the driver let him off in
Ranulf Square, lugged his bag through a shortcut he knew to Amber Street, and
trotted two doors along to the house he wanted. He was starting to think like
an inquisitor already. Although he knew that some of these old mansions were
more than they seemed, he had never been inside Thirteen.The door opened for
him as he ran up the steps, and he stepped through into a scabby,
cracked-plaster vestibule that had seen better centuries.
The alert
lookout was the boy named Flicker, and his attitude had become no more
respectful since lunchtime. He jerked his head and said, “That way.”
Wolf
stepped through to a fine, high hall sparkling with candles, polished paneling,
shiny marble staircase. He dropped his bag, but Flicker did not take the hint.
Anyone sporting a pig-sticker like that thing on his belt would not see himself
as a porter.
“I am Sir
Wolf.”
“I know.”
“And your
name?” Meaning real name.
The youth
smiled. “You are renowned, while I have yet to amaze the world. My
congratulations on your marriage.”
“Thank you.
Is my wife here?”
“Possibly.”
He stepped close, too close.“Make her happy, Sir Killer.”
He was
trying to look Wolf straight in the eye but was not quite tall enough. Still,
the threat was so blatant that Wolf’s sword hand twitched.
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“Or what?”
“Or you
will regret it.” He was still smiling, this weedy boy-child. He thought he could
deliver on his bluster.Wolf sensed Dark Chamber trickery and was annoyed.
“You are
her brother, perhaps?” He was about her age.
“We grew up
together. We are all very fond of Dolores. Grand Inquisitor are waiting for
you upstairs, Sir Wolf.”
“I like to
know the name of men who threaten me.”
“I speak
for many in this instance,” the soft voice said.“Do not keep your masters
waiting.”
Furious,Wolf
turned his back and advanced to the great staircase.
Once this
mansion had been the home of rich and powerful persons. It seemed deserted and
he knew it wasn’t. He felt he was being watched by many eyes: Welcome
to the Dark Chamber.
Upstairs
the only light spilled from a doorway leading into a great ballroom. In
contrast to the hall downstairs, this had been allowed to fall into decay, so
that rich murals had peeled from the walls and the ceiling frescoes were
crumbling. Only the central chandelier of a dozen or so was lit, spilling a
puddle of light below it and leaving the rest shadowed, haunted by vague shapes
of unwanted furniture shrouded in dust sheets and cobwebs. Like his old master,
his new one was working late tonight. In the brightness a space had been
cleared for a fine floral rug, and there sat a black-clad man at an ornate escritoire,
flipping through papers amid baskets of books and documents awaiting his
attention. It was half of Grand Inquisitor. Hearing feet crunching toward him
over the gravel of crumbled plaster, he looked up and smiled.
“Sir Wolf !
Good chance!” He came around the desk, hand out-stretched.“Congratulations on
winning a wonderful wife.And welcome to the sink of iniquity!” He laughed. He
actually laughed! In candlelight and without his normal biretta, he seemed
older and unexpectedly bald, gray-streaked hair fringing a shiny scalp,
everyone’s kindly grandfather. “Come and have some refreshment.”
“Is my wife
here?”
“She is.”
He ushered Wolf back into the shadows, to chairs clustered
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around
a low table.“But you and I must have a quick chat, because time
is
short.”
“Time for what?”Wolf perched on a
spindly-legged chair.
“Time to
find a replacement if you turn down our proposition. Let us drink to your
future happiness. And congratulations on striking off your chains.” He clinked crystal
decanter against crystal goblet, poured ruby wine.
“Perhaps my
wife should hear this also.”
The smile
did not waver, but there was annoyance in the way the old man’s shoulders
shifted.“She knows. Sir Wolf, I am not holding your wife hostage! She is making
herself beautiful for your wedding night. Do you want to hear it from me or
from her?”
“From you,
Grand Inquisitor, please.” Aware that he no longer had his binding to limit his
indulgence, Wolf sampled the wine, which was strong and rich, with interesting
aftertastes. Expensive, in other words. Had this whole palace been set up just
to dazzle him? All those candles? Nice old Gramps?
Grand
Inquisitor raised his glass in a toast. “To your happiness! We were greatly
impressed by your performance on the Quondam mission, Sir Wolf. Very quick,
very efficient work. Your identification of the raiders as Tlixilian was
brilliant.”
Grand
Master had done that and he knew it.
“You knew
all the time, of course.”
The snoop
chuckled. “We did not know. We
suspected, because Grand Master’s letter seemed to describe what the Distliards
ran into— feathers, earrings and lip-plugs, attempts to stun or disable victims
instead of kill them, et cetera. It was up to you to obtain the evidence.
Which you did. Now we know Who,we
still have no notion of Why and
certainly none of How. The
King agreed right away to let you investigate the incident. He can be quite
competent at times.”
Wolf passed
on the invitation to badmouth Athelgar. “And when did you learn about Celeste’s
brooch?”
“Two days
ago. Like you, we had concluded that her abduction was a random act of banditry
and she was only a trophy.Then our ongoing inquiries into Hence Lands
conjuration nudged an elderly White Sister
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into recalling the pin that caused
nightmares five years ago. Like you— but perhaps not so quickly—we realized
that this might be relevant. When you mentioned that the cat-man’s similar
badge displayed enchantment when worn and the Baroness had kept her finery on
her person day and night at Quondam, then we arrived at the same place you did
. . . although we did not blurt it out in front of a seriously upstaged
monarch!” His mouth smiled; his eyes did not.
“What do
you know now that I don’t?” Wolf was starting to remember why he disliked
snoops so much.
Grand
Inquisitor shrugged. “Not much, all negative. No strange vessels have been
sighted off the coast. To the best of our knowledge, nothing like Quondam has
happened in Distlain, which ought to be the Tlixilians’ main target for
retaliation, but—as you again pointed out—they may not distinguish between the
nations of Eurania. Or King Diego may be keeping his troubles secret. Lady
Celeste still seems special.”
“Why did
you send Dolores along to snare me?”
“Why do you
think?”
“Because
you wanted an in-house assassin?”
“Sir Wolf
!” He shook his head in mockery.“You don’t believe that! Any inquisitor can
kill people, and in much subtler ways than you can. We had to give Dolores some
reason to pursue a notorious murderer. She soon saw through it.” He sipped his
wine, keeping his eyes on his guest.“Dolores is a genius and you have impressed
us for years, Sir Wolf. Swordsmen are taught to improvise and react, but you
can devise strategies and carry them out, a most unusual talent in a Blade.”
“Are you
hinting that the Quondam mission was an audition?”
“Call it a
trial run, to see if you can work together.Which you can. You regret your
marriage so soon?”
“No.”Wolf
would not thank him for playing matchmaker.“You got your dream team.The main
event will be?”
“Go and
find out Why the
Tlixilians staged that raid and, most important, How.
You may be able to learn Baroness
Celeste’s fate also, or even rescue her and your brother.”This time his smile was
more genuine. “Sir Lynx was a bonus we never expected!”
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Wolf tossed
back half his wine in a gulp. “Take my wife to the Hence Lands to be eaten?”
“With
respect, I would give better odds on her survival than I would on yours.”
No man
liked to hear that he had been yanked around like a puppet on strings or
tricked into marriage for cold-blooded business reasons. Nor that he was
expected to lead his bride into a cannibal-infested jungle. Dolores would leap
at this dazzling prospect of adventure. Spirits! How could he stop her?
“Pray be
more specific, Grand Inquisitor. How do we do this?”
“That is up
to you.”
“Until
yesterday about this time, I had never even heard of Tlixilia. Baron Roland was
helpful, but I know nothing of the current political situation.”
Chief Snoop
shrugged impatiently. “The bats will brief you. In summary, the Distliards are
actively arming the peripheral states for a combined assault on the Tlixilian
Empire, but the Tlixilians know this and have learned the advantages of horses
and steel weapons. Consequently, there is a huge trade in armaments. The
Distliards are arming their allies: Yazotlans, Tephuamotzins, and others,
mostly coastal states. Chivians, Isilondians, and various other Euranians are
trading with the Tlixilians. Baels, as usual, are seizing any cargo they can
get and selling it to anyone who wants it.The seas run with blood. Sigisa
seethes with intrigue.”
Also,
according to Baron Roland, cannibals, snakes, and tropical fevers. “You believe
we can achieve something worthwhile in such a snake pit?”
“Dolores
will, if anyone can. Her grasp of conjuration theory is unmatched. Cherish her
and keep her from swimming too near the sharks.” Grand Inquisitor drained his
goblet and set it down as a signal that the interview was over.
“It sounds
like total insanity with very little hope of success,”Wolf said brutally. “And
for what? What wages do you offer?”
The snoop laughed.“That
seems such a strange question! We reward success, Sir Wolf. You are aware of
the Cumberwell conjurations, of
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course? Queen Malinda heard of those
rituals, devised by a school of brilliant Fitanish conjurers, and decided
Chivian women would benefit from them. We dispatched Inquisitor Cumberwell. He
went to Fitain, obtained the formulae by devious means, and is now a baron with
extensive landholdings. If he has prospered just by reducing the supply of
unwanted babies, imagine what terms you could obtain from the kingdoms of
Eurania if you had the ability to move armies halfway around the world.”
Wolf became
aware that he was gaping like a dead fish. The one thing no Blade ever expected
was wealth, unless he could snare an heiress around Court. Perhaps Dolores was
not quite so foolish, after all.
“If we
discover the rituals you’ll let us keep them?”
Grand
Inquisitor smiled cynically.“Dolores would hardly be true to her training if
she did not retain at least one copy.”
“Fortune if
we succeed and nothing if we fail?”
“Fortune if
you succeed and most likely death if you fail. No one offers riches for
nothing.”
His words
were harmless but his smile threatened.The prospect was El Dorado, but
Inquisitor Schlutter’s death still lurked in the shadows and always would. The
Blade witnesses had lied brazenly to defend brother Wolf. Remembering Neil’s
cold dismissal as he returned Diligence that
evening, Wolf realized that those days were over. Grand Inquisitor knew that,
too. Wolf was vulnerable now. He did not ask if he had the option of refusing
the mission.
And he was
starting to feel excited. Adventure? Earn a great fortune?
Find Lynx!
“So my wife
will be the brains of the investigation and I will be the brawn?”
Grand
Inquisitor shrugged. “I hope you are man enough to endure that situation.We
need a team whose members’ skills complement each other. Men are physically
stronger than women, but they are rarely more ruthless or as effective at
gathering information.”
“You say
the Tlixilians are desperate for steel weapons, yet they took none from
Quondam.”
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“That’s
another Why for
you to answer.” He moved as if to stand up.
“I wonder if
their conjurations won’t move iron?”Wolf mused.“We saw no weapons discarded
down on the beach, but Sir Alden said a couple of pikes were found in the
barbican, as if dropped during the withdrawal.”
Instantly
the inquisitor had his glassy-eyed mask on. “You did not mention that in your
report.”
“Like so
much else, it seemed trivial at the time. I will discuss your offer with my
wife and we shall have more questions in the morning. But explain to me, Grand
Inquisitor, since I am only a stupid swordsman— why all the underhand dealing?
Why not just ask the King to release me from the Guard and appoint me his agent
in the Hence Lands?”
The old man
stared at him without a blink. “The King is too erratic. He might refuse to
spend the money or insist on appointing the wrong person. If he asks we answer.
Otherwise we do what is required without adding to the royal burdens. Remember
the stories of the Tlixilians’ eagle knights and jaguar knights? The day
hunter and the night hunter? Does that not remind you in some way of the Dark
Chamber and the Blades? We supply the crown with information.The Blades defend
it.”
“Blades do
what the King wants, not what they think he should want.”
Grand
Inquisitor sighed. “Let me tell you what happened tonight, after you broke the
news of your marriage. Commander Vicious went straight to the King and demanded
that you be dismissed from the Guard. The King refused. Vicious divested
himself of his silver baldric and proffered it to His Majesty. The King refused
to accept it. Vicious laid it at his feet and asked leave to withdraw. He was
told to send in Sir Lyon, his deputy. Lyon, when he arrived, both declined
promotion and resigned his commission also. Athelgar, faced with two baldrics
on the rug, sent for Sir Martin.”
Now Wolf
understood. “Who also refused, of course? None of them would be seen taking my
part against Vicious.”
“Exactly.
So the King was forced to reinstate Vicious and release you. He refused to take
Lyon back, though, and appointed Damon in his
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stead.The distinction between Sir
Vicious’s mutiny and Sir Lyon’s is subtle, but defensible.You see my point,
Sir Wolf? The senior Blades of the Guard were not doing what His Majesty wanted
at all.They were doing what they thought was best for him.Are our two orders so
very unalike?”
“But ...how
do you know all this?” Did the snoops have spies behind the paneling in the
King’s quarters?
Grand
Inquisitor smiled mockingly. “We know because it is our business to know, Sir
Wolf. It is also our business to keep watch on the King’s enemies, both here
and abroad.The sack of Quondam revealed a foe who has struck at us from halfway
around the world! Will he strike again? How big an army can he field at such a
distance? What does he want of us and how can we defend ourselves? These are
not trivial questions, Sir Wolf!”
“No, Grand
Inquisitor.”
“So,
whatever your opinions of the current sovereign, I hope that you are truly
loyal to your country, because the Dark Chamber is. Lead our new friend to the party,
please, Flicker.”
Crystal
shattered, but even before the goblet hit the floor Wolf was on his feet and
turned around. He could have been long dead. Dolores’s surly young friend was
standing behind his chair, calmly paring fingernails with his elephant-sized
dagger. Wolf had not heard him come across that gritty floor and had no idea
how long he had been there.
3
The
party was informal, just a dozen people standing around while grinning youngsters
circulated with trays of goblets and sweetmeats.The bride looked ravishing and
half the age she thought she did in a gown of gold and cobalt brocade, which
was obviously borrowed, because it was both too short and too large for her.
Her cobalt velvet cap was trimmed with a coronet of what seemed to be genuine
rosebuds, impossible though that was in Secondmoon.
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The guests,
about a score of them eventually, were friends of the bride. Most were her
contemporaries, but they ranged up to a motherly woman of extreme
antiquity—meaning about ten years older than Wolf.They were all snoops, and he
was disturbed to recognize the Lord Chamberlain’s latest mistress and one of
the King’s junior valets. That told him how Grand Inquisitor had learned of
Vicious’s attempted resignation.
Several
senior black robes dropped in to pay their respects. All of them he had at
least seen around the palace and a few he had worked with professionally, but
they soon left so they would not spoil the fun. The arrival of the Gruesome
Twosome stilled the hubbub as if they were the King himself.They were relaxed
and pleasant, and their feat in kissing the bride in mirror-image simultaneity
was obviously intended as humor. So, perhaps, was their joint speech:
Left began,
“It is our great pleasure to—”
“—announce,”
Right continued without a break, “that Inquisitor Hogwood—”
“—has begun
her professional career with a highly successful—”
“—independent
investigation, whose details must unfortunately remain—”
“—confidential
for the time being. But her success extended so far—”
“—beyond
merely catching a notable husband that we are—”
“—happy to
promote her two grades, to the rank of—”
Dolores uttered
a squeal of joy.The others all cheered. Most seemed genuinely pleased, but
Flicker and others of his age must be straining a little. A two-grade jump on
top of a doctorate in conjury would be a coup in the battle for eventual
Grand-Inquisitor-ship. The incumbents departed soon after, bidding everyone
enjoy the evening.
The food
and wine were superb, the merriment convincing, the cold dark firmly shut
outside. Many of the guests had brought lutes or shawms and took turns
providing music for minuets, gavottes, and pavanes. The bride seemed genuinely
happy showing off her new husband, and her friends were too polite to ask if
he was the best unemployed baboon she could find. Even so, Wolf felt very much
a
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stranger and was glad when bride and
groom could make their excuses and withdraw upstairs to resume what they had
begun at the Pine Tree. Not all of Thirteen Amber Street was palatial. Even the
so-called bridal suite was modest by palace standards, although it was better than
the rainy streets for a homeless, unemployed swordsman.
The moment
they had the door closed, the bride demanded,“What did Grand Inquisitor tell
you?”
“I never
discuss business on my wedding nights. Later.”
Somewhat
later, she asked drowsily, “So what did Grand Inquisitor say?”
“I’m
asleep.”
“You will
waken in extreme agony if you don’t tell me.”
“He wants
you to lead an expedition to the Hence Lands.”
Her
reaction was everything Wolf had feared. “Shush!” he said, pulling her back
into his embrace. “You’ll waken the whole city.”
It was a
tremendous compliment, she said when he let her speak again, a chance at a huge
promotion, the opportunity of a
lifetime. Wasn’t it?
“It’s
exciting,” he admitted. “The journey worries me. Months of danger and hardship
and—”
“Stop it!”
She pummeled his chest. “Don’t baby me!
I’m not a child.”
“I do know
that. But—”
“Tlixilia?
To discover Why and How
they sent an army to Quondam?”
“Right.
We’re a natural team, you see. You handle the conjuration and I do the human
sacrifices.”
She
sniggered, which was quite an experience in such intimacy. “And you were
worried about money? This could make us rich beyond dreams,Wolf ! Like
Cumberwell! If we can learn how to transport people by enchantment, we’ll put
every post house in the country out of business!”
Maybe, but
she had married a lifelong cynic.Wolf knew that Athel-gar’s Parliaments had
been quietly nibbling away at the “petticoat” laws Queen Malinda had forced
through during her brief reign. He had
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heard much talk that Cumberwell and
similar elementaries would soon be made illegal and shut down as contributing
to public immorality.The Blades disapproved of many of the petticoat laws but were
generally in favor of public immorality. Cumberwell had provided an enchantment
that the Queen wanted made available. How would Athelgar feel about Isilond or
Gevily teleporting armies onto his shores at will? What about thieves or
assassins materializing inside the palace? Dolores would have serious marketing
problems.
“And that’s
only a start,” she said. “There may be hundreds of
new things we could learn. Let the horrible Distliards have the gold from El
Dorado, I’ll take their spell books.”
Marketing
and production problems both. “Listen, my beloved. According to the Baron, the
Tlixilians use beating human hearts in their conjury. Parliament may disapprove
if you try to introduce this practice into Chivial.”
“Oh, we
wouldn’t!” she said. “Sacrifices shouldn’t be necessary. Grand Inquisitor saw
that.The eight elements are universal.The Tlixilians are summoning the spirits
in a different way, that’s all.What we want to learn is how they control and
direct the elementals after they’re assembled. Tlixilians have glass swords,
we have steel, but they’re both swords.”
“I’m
relieved to hear it.”
“And what
did you mean,” his bride said indignantly, “about me
leading? You
will lead!”
“You’re a
trained inquisitor, I’m not.”Wolf knew he would lose this argument. She was
much too proud of her brand-new husband to risk slighting him in her friends’
eyes by taking away any of his manly authority. It would be easier for him to
keep the title and then just do whatever she suggested.
Later
still, when there seemed to be no chance of any sleep at all, he said, “Tell me
about Flicker.”
She
shrugged in his arms.“One of the boys I grew up with.Why?”
“Why is he
called Flicker?”
“He’s so
fast on his feet.”
And quiet
on them. “He has a doctorate in sprinting?”
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“No! He’s
an incredible all-rounder. He was first in line for the Tlixilia mission. Even
if I’m a grade or two ahead of him now, he’s much more likely to become Grand
Inquisitor one day than I am.”
“Does he
have chips on his shoulders?”
“One or
two, maybe.Why?”
“I didn’t
like the way he was looking at you.”
Dolores
snickered all over. “Flicker? Don’t worry about Flicker, beloved! We grew up
together.There were six in our pod at Waltham— Bert, Spat, Kate, Quin, Flicker,
and me. We shared a room until we were twelve. He’s like a brother to me. Girls
are not interested in their brothers!”
Wolf
kissed her to change the subject. She might look on Flicker as a brother but
Flicker did not look at her the way boys looked at sisters. At least one of his
chips had a new name on it now. No matter! The newlyweds would soon be far
away, seeking their fortune.
4
First
let’s discuss my wife’s rank,” Wolf said. “She was promised a promotion of
three grades if she completed the Quondam mission successfully, so why did you
only give her two?”
The
Gruesome Twosome were four glassy eyes on the other side of a paper-littered
table, and last night’s camaraderie had gone with the morning dew.They occupied
the only two seats in the room. Left-hand had just asked if Sir Wolf and Lady
Attewell accepted the Sigisa posting.
“That offer
was not explicit,” said Right,“and she did not complete the mission
successfully, because she did not question Sir Lynx’s obsession with the
jaguar plaque. Also, had she enlisted you as instructed, you would be more
respectful now.”
“Blades
give respect where it is due,” Wolf retorted. They also resented attempts at
intimidation.“I will accept the mission provided Dolores is put in command.
She is trained to the work. I am an
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outsider—helpers you call us, I
understand. She must be in charge.” They had argued this problem half the
night, and Dolores had only grudgingly agreed that he could put the matter to
Grand Inquisitor.
“When the
two of you went to Ironhall,” Left said,“you told her to pretend that she was
in charge and you were her tame thug.When she asked why, you evaded the
question. But His Majesty’s Office of General Inquiry often appoints a nominal
leader to distract the opposition and attend to time-wasting ceremonials so the
real head can observe undisturbed from the sidelines.You learned this technique
from us in the field, did you not?”
“I ...well,
yes.”
“We did not
expect,” Right continued, “that we would have to stoop to spelling out that
arrangement in this case, when the need for it is so obvious.”
Lady
Attewell emitted a small snigger.
“On that
basis,”Wolf said, “we are both happy to accept the posting to Tlixilia.”
“Good.
Dolores, you are promoted to third grade effective when you sail.”
“Now go to
Edgewyrd and the bats.”
“And in
future stop your helper from wasting our time.”
Two heads bent in unison as they returned to their paperwork.
“Edgewyrd! Edgewyrd!”
Dolores
bubbled with excitement as she led the way through the embrangled Dark Chamber
warren. Like any Blade, Wolf hated not knowing where he was, and Number
Thirteen had spread outward from the original building of that name,
malignantly invading its neighbors. He was constantly being introduced to new
people, all of whom hailed his wife with joy and felicitations on her marriage,
making him feel like a new gown being shown off, but she was obviously well
loved in this bizarre outsized family, and for that he was happy. He felt that
only his grip on her hand kept her feet on the floor.
“Where is
Edgewyrd?” he asked when they had a moment alone.
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“Not where,
love. Who!
Edgewyrd is our chief strategist! A
logistical genius! Only the very biggest missions
merit Edgewyrd’s attention.” She peered at him and laughed. “You’re not upset
just because the old grumpies snapped at you, are you?”
“Of course
not.”
“They do
that to everyone! It means you’re accepted!”
“It’s all
right! I’ve been gnawed on by experts.”
“Well,
what’s wrong, then? Aren’t you excited about this marvelous honeymoon they’re
giving us?”
Cannibals?
Jungle? Ships? “I’m suffering from lack of sleep. I haven’t slept in five years
and you didn’t give me a moment’s peace all night, you sex-crazed wanton.”
“Me?” his
bride squealed. “You call
me wanton,
you insatiable satyr, you lecherous glutton? You debauched ...er ...”
“Innocent?”
So they
played. He was humoring her, not wanting to burst her bubble of happiness. She
did not seem to realize that Baron Roland had painted the joys of ocean travel
in all the wrong colors and a voyage to the Hence Lands would be a long and
perilous torment. Wolf looked on the dark side of everything and she saw only
the bright. Perhaps that made them a better team.
They
arrived at a small room packed with papers and documents in baskets and boxes,
overflowing shelves and tables, stacked on the floor. A staunch woman of around
forty was hunting for something in this abundance. She straightened up with a
guard dog’s forbidding frown, changing it into yet another cry of joy and a
motherly, all-enveloping hug for the bride. When that was over, Wolf was
presented. Her name was Belinda Beresford.
“You are
indeed a fortunate man, Sir Wolf.”
He made his
usual response about being aware of that.
Eventually
she gestured to a door in the corner.“You are expected.”
They had
arrived at the celebrated Edgewyrd. Dolores’s tribute had suggested something
between a poison-fang monster spinning webs in a cellar and a mousy clerk with
thick glasses.Yet now she led the way into a shabby little parlor, stuffy and
poorly lit, where a tiny woman
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sat humped before a crackling
fire—hairless, wrinkled, skeletal, swathed in a rug and a shawl. She looked likely
to crumble into dust at any moment. Dolores dropped to her knees on the hearth
rug and very gently clasped one of the spotted and knotted hands.
“Grandmother!
They tell me you have not been well.”
The other
hand found hers. “I have not been well since before you were born, child.” Her
voice was softer than sea mist. “The man I smell must be your husband.Tell him
to shut the door. I told them you were wasted on a killer.”
The old
crone nodded to the fireplace when Wolf was introduced, but did not offer
fingers to be shaken or kissed. She was blind, although evidently not deaf
enough to have missed his voice talking to Belinda.
“Be
seated,” she whispered. “We have much to do and little time.” She carried on
talking almost inaudibly even as he fetched two waiting chairs, putting them as
close to the fire as he thought he could bear. “You will be writing to Grand
Master to report your dismissal from the Guard, Sir Wolf.”
“Well, no.
Leader, that is, Commander Vicious, normally mentions—”
“You will
write.You need twenty swords within three weeks.”
Wolf opened
and then closed his mouth, noting his wife grinning as if she understood, which
he certainly did not.
“Without
the jeweled pommel, of course,” the ancient said. “Have them delivered to
Cranton in Brimiarde.The gift of tongues—”
“Who? Wait!
Why do I need twenty swords? And who is . . .”
Dolores
pinched him hard, shaking her head. One must not interrupt the oracle.
“As
samples,” the crone whispered. “Enough to fill a chest and im-press.You are a
gentleman adventurer taking orders for arms. He is capable of that simple
personation?”
“He’ll make
a very good gentleman adventurer,” Dolores said loyally, grinning sideways at
him.
“Ironhall
swords are the world’s best, are they not?”
“Yes they
are, but . . .”Wolf began to explain that cat’s-eye swords were limited to
Blades, and even for them were merely a heriot, returnable at death. If the
King himself could not give one away to a for
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eign monarch, how could Wolf persuade
Grand Master to break the law in his case? Tell him he was on His Majesty’s
service but His Majesty mustn’t know of it?
Ignoring
him, Edgewyrd continued mumbling. “. . . many of the originals have not been
translated from the Distlish. Is he a quick study?”
“Not by
your standards, mistress.” Wolf wished he had brought a slate to take notes.
His wife would have to remember all this for him.
“He’s
smarter than the average Blade,” Dolores said loyally, turning pink with the
effort of not laughing aloud. She put a finger to her lips.
“I should
hope so.” The ghostly whisper continued relentlessly: “I need to hear drafts of
your contract and commission by this time tomorrow. Oh, this isn’t going to
work, child! Time is so short and you have so much to do. Grand Inquisitor
truly put him in charge? Not just as figurehead?”
“They did.”
Dolores winked at Wolf.
Edgewyrd
grunted angrily.“Then direct him as much as you can.At least make him curb his
lusts until the voyage. He’s far too old to learn swift reading,
truth-sounding, or eidetic recall, so choose a team with those skills.You are
wonderfully talented, but you can’t do it all yourself. See he’s given the
basics of brawl and applied conjuration, and of course talks to the bats, so he
has some idea what you’re supposed to be doing. Unless he’s exceptionally
stupid he may be able to pick up some of the minor adjuncts, like ciphering,
narcotizing, sign talk, pocket picking, forging, even personation if he’s
deceitful enough. Remember you must all take a course in medicine, because
there may be no octograms in Tlixilia. Pack an adequate supply of simples and
potions. Make sure he understands the climate and travel hardships before he
starts requisitioning gear.The sooner you open negotiations on finance with
the bursar the better, but not until you’ve decided how long you will be gone,
of course. The Glorious hopes
to sail in the middle of Thirdmoon.” She paused to catch her breath.
“Just a
moment!”Wolf said.“How many people are we taking with us? How long are we going
for? How are we going to travel? How—”
Dolores
poked him hard in the ribs.
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The
dry-leaf voice rustled again.“Blade, I told you! I expect you to tell me all
that tomorrow morning.” She sighed. “You do not seriously expect this to work,
my dear? I will try again to talk Grand Inquisitor into sending Louis
instead.You’d really be much safer without this outsider blundering around,
shouting orders about things he doesn’t understand, upsetting people.”
“I
have watched Sir Wolf in action and am confident he will do a wonderful job.”
Dolores’s tone was firm but her glances at Wolf were begging him not to take
offense at the old woman’s spite. He grinned back reassuringly.
When the ordeal ended and they emerged
into cooler air and a now-deserted corridor, he pulled her into a corner for a
reassuring hug. “So we write our own orders and submit them for approval?”
“Sometimes
we bid for missions: several agents submit plans and Grand Inquisitor chooses
one.”
“Love, I
probably know more about inquisitors than any other Blade does, but I never
heard of that! What else have I got to learn?” It was still disconcerting to
embrace a woman whose eyes were level with his.
She kissed the
remains of his nose.“Lots! I used to discuss this with Sir Intrepid when he
coached us in conjuration. Ironhall teaches cooperation, yes? Since you cannot
be bound until everyone ahead of you is bound, you try to help the slower ones
along, not do them down.”
“That helps
the team spirit. Besides, teaching is a good way of learning!”
“In
fencing, perhaps. But we’re encouraged from babyhood to compete, so we all
become fiercely ambitious. When we’re too young to have achieved anything, we
brag about our skills instead. We’re always trying to learn something new, even
if it is part of the standard curriculum. Do boys at Ironhall ever boast that
they’ve won medals for dancing? Or that they will be Leader one day?”
“Whatever
for? Being Leader is just paperwork all night and too much King all day.”
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“Different
rules, love. Come along, we have to meet with the bats.”
He had
already established that the bats were the Dark Chamber’s political analysts, a
coven of Masters of Protocol. It was their job to know where all the world’s
bones were buried.
As they
walked hand-in-hand he said, “Where do I find these new rules?”
“They
aren’t written anywhere. We learn them in childhood, like walking. As a helper,
you’ll always have some leeway.”
“How often
are helpers put in charge of major missions?” Obviously that had been the root
of Edgewyrd’s complaint.
“Oh,
helpers do all sorts of things.”
“Including
being put in charge of trained inquisitors?”
“I think ‘in
charge’ is not quite the right expression.” His wife’s eyes twinkled in a way
he was learning to distrust. “Inquisitors are rarely given outright orders.
Let’s see ...I suppose Rule One is Never get
caught. If you’re exposed, we never heard of
you. And Rule Two would be Tell all. You
must report everything you learn up the chain of command as soon as possible.
No keeping secrets!” She thought for a moment. “The one that will bother you
most is Be right. You
can ignore instructions if you think they’re wrong and are willing to gamble on
it, even flat-out disobey a direct order.A Blade who did that would be disciplined
even if he was right, wouldn’t he? An inquisitor would be promoted.”
“What if
he’s wrong?”
“We use him
as a model in assassination classes, of course.”
“Reassure
me that you’re joking.You’re warning me that I can never trust a subordinate?”
“Think of
them as colleagues assisting you in your mission.”
Wolf
decided that his would be a very small expedition.“Eidetic recall?”
“Perfect visual
memory. Flicker can quote you any book he’s ever read since he was about nine,
word perfect, starting at any page and line you ask, chapter after chapter. He
can describe people he saw in a street a week ago.”
“And I
suppose personation is acting?”
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“Oh, much
more than that! It means taking on a new identity for months or even years.
Living, sleeping, breathing another life, never stepping out of the role.”
Perhaps the
old woman he just met had been Flicker in drag? “And what’s narcotizing?”
“Putting
yourself to sleep. That’s essential if you have to live on a knife-edge for
weeks. Flicker can put himself into a two-day coma.”
A
ten-year coma underwater sounded like a better idea for that one.
5
By
late afternoon—after another six meetings, each more bewildering than the
last—Wolf had a vague idea of what was in store for the future unofficial
Chivian ambassador to El Dorado. While climbing a long flight of stairs
burdened with three weighty volumes written in Distlish, feeling like a hound
who has tried to play catch with a wasps’ nest, he turned to his irrepressibly
cheerful wife and said, “Can we go back to bed now?”
She laughed
and snuggled closer. “No, but that’s enough work for one day.You’ve done very well,
love! You impressed them all, yes, even Edgewyrd! Now it’s playtime. I want you
to give me fencing lessons.”
“That
I do know something about!”
“Yes, and I
warn you, you’ll be mobbed.They’ll all want them.”
“You’ll
defend me.”
In a moment
he heard the unmistakable echoing sounds of a gym in use. A few steps farther
up he could smell it. It had once been the ballroom of one of those Amber
Street mansions, but now it was stripped to bare plaster and a floor of scuffed
boards, lit by late sunshine peering through high but very grubby windows,
furnished with vaulting horses, bars, racks of foils, and full-length mirrors.
It was large enough to look almost empty, although it currently held about
thirty busy people, six of them adults. Five male adolescents were hopefully
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swinging dumbbells and others were being
coached in fencing, but most of the noise and dust came from a dozen or so
children enjoying a semi-controlled riot in a far corner. It was not unlike an
Ironhall scene, except that the small fry were too young and almost half the
people present were female.
By the time
Wolf and Dolores had donned masks and plastrons— for he would take no chances
with his bride and knew she would not pad up if he did not—everyone else had
gathered around, eager to watch a Blade in action. She turned out to be a much
better fencer than he had expected, and she used Ironhall style. He coached
her, rapping out encouragement without having to lie at all. By the time the
light grew too tricky and he called a halt, the audience had more than doubled.
“I
am not the first Blade to teach here,” he said.
“And
won’t be the last,” Dolores agreed, puffing.
“I didn’t
believe you when you said you could handle anyone else but Blades, love, but I
was wrong. I think you could take almost any other man.”
“Not me,”
said a familiar voice.
Wolf turned
to face the inevitable sneer.“You’re the best, are you?”
Flicker
said, “Yes.Want to try me?”
The kiddies
buzzed approval like a fanfare of piccolos. Clearly he was the hero of the
local immature.
Dolores
made an angry noise and tossed him her foil, then her mask. He caught the first
and batted the other away.Wolf threw his after it and stripped off his plastron.Then
he said,“Guard!” and went for him.
It was soon
obvious why the pest was known as Flicker, but he was not a Blade, and Wolf
gave him a few bruises as reminders to watch his manners.
“Very good,
though,” he said at the end. “Certainly anyone but a Blade would have to be
very lucky to take you, Inquisitor.” He turned away to look for his wife.
“How are
you at brawl?” Flicker asked.
The hall
fell silent.
“I’m not
familiar with the term,”Wolf said cautiously. Anyone who
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would trust an inquisitor in that
situation at that moment would have to be stark crazy.
Looking
ominously content, Flicker tossed his foil to a girl nearby. “First, Sir Wolf,
can you do this?”
He shot off
across the gym like an arrow, slapped his hands down on a vaulting horse, spun
up in a handstand, twisted in midair and then, instead of completing the loop
to land on his feet, hit the floor spread-eagle, with a crash that made Wolf
wince. He started to laugh and was silenced by wild cheers from the audience.
Flicker sprang to his feet and came trotting back, grinning and acknowledging
the applause. Clearly that had been an exceptional performance, even for him
“I rarely
find a need for that skill,”Wolf said, puzzled.
The smile
grew wider, hungrier.“Then we’ll go over to the polliwog corner and the mats.
Bring your foil, Blade.”
Having no
choice now,Wolf followed him, with the spectators trailing behind or running
ahead. He was not seriously worried. Fast or not, there was no way bare hands could
beat a rapier. He wondered why Dolores seemed so concerned.
They
stepped onto the mats and Flicker turned, dropping into a half crouch. “You
have a blade, Blade,” he said. “Kill me.”
Wolf used
Cockroach—a suckering feint at sixte and lunge at quarte. Flicker slapped the
foil aside and kicked, tapping the top of Wolf’s thigh with his foot to
demonstrate what he could have done. In a real fight he would not have gotten
inside Diligence’s
guard like that and would have been disemboweled by Wolf’s dagger if he had,
but there was no denying he had won the make-believe bout and the smaller kids
all screamed in joy.
“Try not to vomit all
over the rug, Sir Wolf.” Flicker himself was fizzing with excitement. Wolf had seen
bloodlust before and taken advantage of it.“I apologize for underestimating
you.You knew that one, didn’t you? Try another?”
“Kill me.”
For a few
moments Flicker circled around while Wolf held his ground, waiting for him to
make a move. That was cheating a little, in that the man with the sword was
supposed to attack; it would look like
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cowardice
very shortly. Wolf was forced to keep shifting his feet, and Flicker chose his
moment to leap within range. Wolf countered with a straight no-nonsense lunge
that should have cracked his breastbone. It failed to connect, the foil was
jerked forward, and Wolf went over Flicker’s knee, impacting the mat hard
enough to knock the air from his lungs. Flicker fell hard on top of him, sliding
an arm under his to grasp the back of his neck.Wolf discovered he was helpless.
“You
lost again, Sir Wolf,” Flicker whispered. “So I did.” Flicker chuckled and
released him. Wolf climbed to his feet and shook his head when offered his foil
back. “What are the rules in brawl?” The
fuzz-faced pipsqueak was already back in his menacing stoop, hands waving
slightly, as dangerous as a spanned crossbow. “Rules?”
“Don’t injure your friends in practice
matches is one!” Dolores’s
shout carried a strong implication that
Flicker had a weakness that way. “Don’t injure friends,”Flicker
agreed, eyeing Wolf like his next meal. Wolf was now mad—not about to froth at
the mouth or charge in
all
directions like a mad bull, but too mad to pick up whatever shreds of dignity
he had left and go while the going was good. He had been made a fool of in
front of an audience that included his one-day bride and this was intolerable.
“And
what decides the bout?” He spat on his hands. “Results.” “Show me, then.”Wolf raised
his fists. Both Flicker’s feet hit him in the chest and down he went again,
this
time
harder. Those meager mats might save a ten-year-old from bruising, but he
weighed much more and lacked Flicker’s superlative skill in falling. Flicker
caught his foot and twisted it hard enough to hurt.
“Broken
ankle, Blade.You’re not doing very well, are you?”
In
the next bout Wolf nearly landed a punch, except that Flicker threw him clean
over his shoulder, to the worst landing yet. He tweaked Wolf’s nose. “Gouged
eye, Blade.”
And
the fourth time he pinned Wolf with both hands
on the back of his neck.
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“If I push
just a little harder,” said an odious whisper in his ear,“your spine will snap,
Sir Wolf. They won’t get you to the octogram in time, Sir Wolf.”
Barely able
to breathe for the pain,Wolf just grunted.
Flicker did
not accept that as surrender.The junior members of the audience were making so
much noise screaming with mirth that he could ignore their elders’ disapproving
shouts.“Then they’ll send me to Tlixilia with Dolores after all.”
“Try it and
see,”Wolf mumbled.
Flicker
released him and he collapsed with a gasp of relief. In a moment he managed to
sit up. Flicker was squatting just out of range, eyes burning.
“More, Sir
Wolf ?”
Only a fool
failed to admit when he was beaten. “Not today. You really are the best, aren’t
you?”
Flicker
nodded vigorously, still almost spitting venom.
Wolf was
half again as old as he was and half again as heavy and yet Flicker could knot
him like macramé whenever he wanted. He had lured Wolf onto his turf and
rubbed his nose in it. Battered and bruised, Wolf could see only one way in the
world to rescue anything at all from this humiliation.
“I’m a gentleman
adventurer sailing to the Hence Lands with my lady wife.We have decided to take
just two servants with us, no one else. You want to come along as my man?”
Flicker
bared his teeth in anger. “Is that a serious offer?”
“Are you
man enough to accept?”
He sprang
to his feet.“Oh, master, let me help you up, sir! That was a nasty tumble you
took there, master.”
“Thank you,
Flicker,” Wolf said as he was raised, apparently effortlessly—Flicker was all
whipcord muscle and knew how to apply his strength.“If you’ll fetch the wheeled
chair, my man, I believe I could just manage to sit upright in it.” He was
limping on both legs.
“Oh, please lean on me, master.You can
depend on me always, Sir Wolf.” Dolores had probably not overheard their
exchange, but she could
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guess what had been agreed just from
seeing the transformation in Flicker, for now he was the perfect obsequious
servant. She wore an expression of doubt and horror in roughly equal
proportions.
“Congratulations,
Flicker,” she said.“I’m happy you’re going to join us.”
He touched
his forelock to her. “It’s very kind of you to say so, my lady. I will try to
give satisfaction and justify Sir Wolf’s faith in me. Oh, master, do let me
carry those!”
She
regarded her husband’s condition angrily. “You should go downstairs and have
your bruises healed.”
“No
need!”Wolf would not give Flicker that satisfaction.
He said
nothing else of importance until they reached their room, because he had his
faithful manservant in attendance, carrying his books. The moment he sank down
on a chair, Flicker was kneeling at his feet, helping him off with his boots.
“With
respect, master, these seem a little scuffed. May I take them and clean them
now?”
Homage was certainly
better than homicide. “Do that. Be quick, though.”
“Of course,
master. And have you some laundry I could attend to?”
Clothes
were a problem. Now Wolf thought he might send his man out to buy some for him,
but not yet. “Lady Attewell may have.”
With a
perfectly straight face, Dolores gave Flicker a bag of laundry and off he went.
“How long
will he keep that up?”Wolf asked, chuckling.
“Until he
returns from Sigisa. Night and day. He really will do that washing himself.”
Her voice rose.“Wolf, if you’re doing this just because you want to lord it
over him, you’re making a bad mistake.You won’t score points off him. He just
sees it as more of a challenge to stay in character.”
“That was
not my intention,”Wolf said gently. “I’m hurt that you would think it was.”
“You’re a
fool to take him! Why didn’t you ask me first?”
They must
not have their first spat already, and over a pimple like Flicker. He stood up,
wincing. “Partly out of wounded pride, I admit. Mostly because you told me he
was the best and now I believe it. I have
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never
seen a man move like that!” Not Wyvern, the current Blade cham
pion,
or even Quintus, the one Wolf had slain.
She stalked over to the window. “But he
hates you!”
He followed.
“If he hates me because he wanted to go on the Tlixilian mission, then I have
given him his wish and will trust him to perform as best he can. If he hates me
because he lusts after my wife, that’s differ-ent.You told me he was like a
brother to you and there was nothing between you. If that is not so, then of
course I will withdraw the invitation.”
“It’s too
late to do that. They’d all think I’d overruled you. No, Flicker won’t pester
me.” She turned away when he reached for her.“A good servant wouldn’t dare
presume so and he will always be the perfect servant. But he will try to
upstage you.”
“A knife in
my back?”
“No.When we
make a final report, we are not allowed to mask our answers.”
“Then let
the best man win,”Wolf said. “He can have all the credit as long as I get to
keep the top prize.” He turned her around to kiss her and they nuzzled as
lovers do.
He broke
free before he began running a fever. “Love, I must write the letter to
Durendal and if it’s to reach Ironhall before high summer, then it will have to
go by Blade. I’ll send Flicker round to the palace with it tonight.”
“Won’t they
read it?”
“Not if
it’s addressed to Grand Master.”
She
shrugged, as if amazed at such naivete.“Then we must decide who else we take
with us.”
“That’s up
to you. Ladies choose their own lady’s maids.”
“Remember
Megan, who was at the party last night?”
“Of
course.” Wolf recalled the older woman—motherly, loud-voiced, short and
inclined to dumpy, and hair graying although she was probably only in her mid-thirties.
She’d drunk two glasses of wine, told a risque story or two, and laughed a
lot.“She seemed very pleasant, good company.”Already he knew enough about
Sigisa to know that Dolores would find no compatible female companionship
there.
“Oh, she’s a
wonderful person. I love her. She was in charge of our
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pod, my foster mother, really. Until we
were twelve, when she was reassigned and we began looking after ourselves, but
we’ve never lost touch.” His wife was pacing, avoiding his eye, and displaying
symptoms of indecision. “Very competent, has an excellent record as an
investigator. I’m sure she’d love to go on a wild romantic mission like this
to wind up her active career.”
“Are you
suggesting, my beloved, that we take Flicker’s mother
along on his first mission to keep an
eye on him?”
Dolores was
wearing her inscrutable inquisitor face.“That was not my intention. I’m hurt
that you would think it was.”
Wolf hooted
with laughter and embraced her.“But?” He knew that there was more to come. They
were reading each other as if they had been married for years.
“But Megan
was married to Ed Schlutter.”
That ghost
was going to haunt him as long as he associated with inquisitors. “You don’t
mean Schlutter was your foster father?”
“Oh, no.
She met him later, on a mission to Gevily.”
“Two knives
in my back?”
“No. She
was not sorry to be rid of him. But it will cause gossip.”
“If you
want her and trust her, my love, then you ask her. If she refuses, then
nothing’s lost. I trust you and trust your judgment.”
So
Wolf sat down to write an impossible letter while his wife went off to invite
her foster mother to join the mission. His quest was turning out as unorthodox
as his marriage.
6
Wolf
led the way into Edgewyrd’s stale, oppressive den. She looked as if she had not
moved since the previous day, but Dolores had warned him that nothing happened
in Thirteen without her hearing of it.
“Good
chance, Inquisitor,” he said. “I have brought my team and a first draft—”
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“You met
your match yesterday, I hear. Louis?”
Flicker was
arranging the visitors’ chairs. “My lady?”
The old beldam
uttered a squeal that was apparently an attempt to shout, for she went into a
paroxysm of tiny coughs. When she could speak, she whispered angrily. “Wolf!
Stop this nonsense!”
Dolores bit
her lip.“You have to declare this a conference, darling, so he can drop his
personation.” She was unhappy, because she knew the plan Wolf was about to
present was not going to be popular.
“I see.
Megan, Flicker, this is a conference.”
“About
time!” Flicker said. “Yes, I’m here, grandmother.”
Sir Wolf
and Lady Attewell sat down, Flicker and Megan stood behind them.
Edgewyrd
was showing her gums in a smile.“I’m glad you’re going, Louis, because you can
stop this murdering swordsman from messing everything up.”
“I’ll do my
best.”
“Don’t take
any nonsense from him! You’ll have to do all the work, because he doesn’t know
anything.And you, Megan Schlutter! What are you dreaming of ? Supporting the
monster who murdered your husband?”
Megan hid
her fangs behind a motherly smile. “I have heard Sir Wolf’s version of events
and I am satisfied that he had considerable justification for his dilatory
response. I am honored to have been invited to assist him.”
The crone
ignored that. “Well, Blade? What are you waiting for? Report!”
“First
problem,”Wolf said, “is obvious—there is a war on.We want to collect
information about Tlixilia, but the Empire does not extend to the coast. It has
been driven back, and that area is now held by the Distliards and their
allies—Tephuamotzins,Yazotlans, and others. El Dorado itself lies many days’
travel inland. Distlain more or less rules the seas, and tries to keep all
foreigners out of the Hence Lands completely.
“Secondly,
while Dolores and I cannot suggest a better cover story, the arms-peddling
masquerade you proposed is a very wobbly boat. It makes enemies at the same
time as it makes friends. It is even illegal
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under the laws of Chivial. According to
the bats, His Majesty is strongly opposed to the prospect of King Diego getting
his greasy hands on the fabled gold of El Dorado, which would make him the
richest monarch in Eurania and upset the balance of power. Until we provide
evidence that El Dorado deliberately attacked Quondam, Chivial favors the Tlixilian
side in the war.”
“Why is that
a problem?” the old woman croaked.
“Because
two years ago the Privy Council forbade any shipment of weapons, armor, or
horses to the Hence Lands, in the belief that they would certainly end up in
Distlish hands, no matter whose name was on the boxes.”
“So?”
The Dark
Chamber did what it thought the King needed, not what he ordered.
Wolf said,
“If the Council hears of illegal shipments of—”
“It will
order Grand Inquisitor to investigate.” Flicker waited a beat before muttering,
“Stupid!” so
it became an aside and not a direct insult.
“I was just
making a point,”Wolf said calmly.
“Get to the
plan!” Edgewyrd croaked. “You think I have nothing better to do than listen to
you drone all day?”
“Very
well.We will ship out in Glorious and
proceed to Sigisa, which is the main port for the whole of Tlixilia.” Lynx
would almost certainly have to pass through Sigisa, too.“There we will set up
house and gather whatever intelligence we can.We will send word to El Dorado
that we have arms for sale. If we fail to make significant contact in half a
year or so, then we shall give up and come home.”
Edgewyrd
opened her mouth but Flicker was quicker. “That’s ridiculous! Go all that way
and stay only six months? Sit around an offshore trading post handing out
glass beads and trinkets in return for saloon gossip? That’s not what you’re
supposed to do!”
“We’d also
pay gold.”The meeting was going much as Wolf had expected. “Beads for naturales,
gold for Distliards.”
“Oh, stink!”
Flicker said. “Dolly, you don’t approve of this rat shit, do you?”
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Since her
own first reaction had been similar, Dolores was ready with the arguments Wolf
had used to convince her.“It makes a lot more sense to me than plunging off
into a land the size of Eurania, all full of mountains and jungle, when we have
no maps and no local support.The rebel kingdoms would never let us through and
if we did get past them, the Empire would take us for Distlish spies. We can
always change our plans once we know the current situation.”
“Send word
to El Dorado?” Flicker growled.“How? Smoke signals? Mail them a letter? And
suppose you do make contact with the Emperor? Even if he is willing to trade
his spell books for swords, how do you get the weapons to him? It would take a
year to send an order back here to Chivial, fill that order, and deliver the
goods. Maybe even two years. Nobody cares what happens so far ahead when there
is a war on now!”
“Details,”Wolf
said airily. It was fun to needle Flicker and he wanted to see if Edgewyrd
could live up to her reputation.
She was
nodding. “That’s all?”
“That’s
all,”Wolf said.
“Very good
plan! Simple and flexible! Dolores, you did this, didn’t you?”
Wolf nodded
vigorously.
Dolores grinned
and said,“Yes, it was really my plan, grandmother.”
Edgewyrd
could still truth-sound, apparently, because she scowled horribly. So could
Flicker, for his face went blank.
“The roads
are frightful,” Wolf said. “To be sure of catching Glorious,
we must leave here no more than four
days from now.”
“I see no
problem,” Flicker sneered.
“You will.
How long can you get by with no sleep at all?”
“Five days.
How about you?”
“Five years
at last count. Conference is ended. Put the chairs back where you got them,
Flicker.”
“At once,
master.”
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7
In
the mad scramble to equip the expedition, the conjurations were the
worst.Wolf’s sensitivity to spirituality, a minor nuisance until then, suddenly
became torture. He had to undergo many more enchantments than the others,
because real snoops were routinely provided with defenses against bad food,
seasickness, travelers’ vermin, and even mosquitoes. Every member of the team
was given the ability to pick up foreign tongues so fast that within an hour
Wolf was starting to make sense of those weighty Distlish log books he had to
study, but every visit to the octogram meant hours of pounding headache for
him.
In the odd
moments when he was not bleary from pain, Dolores gave him lessons in applied
conjuration, which meant practicing with
the cute little gadgets inquisitors carried: golden keys, coding sticks, warding
cord, and others he had never even heard of before.
Why the
rush, when it would take months to travel to the Hence Lands? Obviously because
the snoops had failed to foresee the attack on Quondam, and even an idiot like
Athelgar might start asking questions about the safety of the realm. If that
happened, they could now report that they had snatched up His Majesty’s
favorite killer, Sir Wolf, the moment His Majesty had released him from the
Guard and Sir Wolf was already on his way to the Hence Lands to investigate.
When he returned—if he ever did—odds were that the King would have forgotten
the whole affair. Wolf was a cynic, especially where Athelgar was concerned.
As a
stickler for detail, Edgewyrd put even him to shame. She had been organizing
spy missions for a hundred years or so, interviewing the survivors and
forgetting nothing. She suggested scores of items that were always to hand in
Chivial but might not be available in the Hence Lands—needles, scissors, salt
to clean teeth, oil and whetstones, spare buttons and buckles because they got
stolen, tinder, and so on.
Megan was
practical, soothing, and capable of teasing anything out of anyone. She
supervised and catalogued the steadily mushrooming
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heaps of gear in the stock room, oiling
the squeaks between Flicker and Wolf without annoying either of them. One day
Wolf found her weighing bags of gold coins bearing a face he did not
recognize.
“King
Diego’s ugly jar,” she explained. “They’re Distlish pesos.”
Wolf bit
one and decided it was even worse currency than Athel-gar’s, containing little
gold. According to the bats, the Hence Lands war was bleeding Diego into
bankruptcy. “Is it real?”
“It’s
better than real,” Megan assured him solemnly.“But don’t offer it to any White
Sisters.”
Flicker was
so determined to prove himself the better man that he seemed hellbent to work
himself to death. Fortunately, Wolf could exploit his vanity. On the third
morning, when he reeled into the stock room like a walking corpse, Wolf ordered
him to lie down and sleep until the palace clock struck noon. Flicker could not
refuse a direct order without breaking out of his servant role, but he had not
actually been told to go to bed, so he accepted this as a challenge and crawled
under the table to stretch out on the flagstones. Soon afterwards a porter
tipped out a barrow-load of cuirasses and vambraces not a yard from his head
and he did not even twitch. He opened his eyes about a minute before the chimes
began. He thought he had won, but Wolf had a useful helper again.
There was
no mail service from the Hence Lands to Chivial. At Dolores’s suggestion, they
added a fifth member to the team. Quin Barnhart was another of her
foster-brothers, but as unlike Flicker as could be imagined. He was solid, even
pudgy for his age, but quiet and perpetually cheerful, a good-natured plodder
who would do his duty as best he could and leave the thinking to others. He
accepted the invitation with a grin and a fast “Yesr!” His duties would be to
turn around and sail all the way back again to report to the Chamber that the
expedition had reached Sigisa. Wolf appointed him his personal secretary, which
meant manservant Flicker had another pair of boots to clean.
They
decided to take supplies for a one-year stay and two years’ travel. But what
gifts should they take to bribe both haughty Distlish officials and cannibal
chieftains dressed in feathers? How best could they
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conceal all the gold they might require?
How long did boots last in a tropical jungle?
Swords? In
the end Wolf’s letter to Grand Master had merely told him of his marriage and release,
Lynx’s departure in search of his ward, and Wolf’s intention to go abroad for a
while. Better than anyone in the kingdom, Roland could put two and two together
and get the whole dozen.Wolf did not ask him for any spare cat’s-eye swords he
had lying around, mostly because he would not ask Grand Master to break the
law, but also because he could not believe Tlixilians would appreciate such
quality if they saw it.After chips of glass, any edged steel must look good. He
bought what he needed in Grandon.
Amazingly,
it was all ready on time. By dawn on the fourth day, the wagon was loaded, the
team harnessed, and they were ready to go. Nobody came to see them off, but
they all went to say farewell to Edgewyrd. She wept and told them to come back
safely.
They
reached Brimiarde two days before the ship was due to sail, and the spirits of
air and water smiled on them.Westerlies that had been howling up the Straits
for weeks suddenly backed to mild northerly breezes. On the appointed morning
Wolf stood on the aft castle with his arm around Dolores and watched the green
hills of Chivial sink below the skyline.
“You
realize, love,” she murmured, “that today is exactly a month since the attack
on Quondam?”
Chivial was
making a fast response to that aggression, but not a very convincing one. “For
every tail there is a head. In that month I have gained my freedom, a wife, and
a chance to win untold wealth!”
She
chuckled.“I won’t ask you to put those in order.You also lost a brother.”
“Gained him
and lost him again.”
“Don’t
worry,” Dolores said, pecking his cheek. “We’re going nonstop. Lynx has to hop
from port to port and ship to ship. We’ll get to Sigisa long before he does.”
If he ever
did. Poor Lynx! Wolf worried about him all the time.
190
V
Hearing the horns’ call and the
baying of hounds, the stag taketh flight
1
Life
was mud. Rolling like a drunk, Lady Polly was
standing in to Mauxville, which was a port in Isilond and obviously not much of
one. Running before a rising gale, she had made a fast crossing, but the next
few minutes would be critical. Frozen and drenched by the rain, Lynx leaned
against the ship’s side and waited to see if she would cross the bar safely. If
she did, life would continue to be mud; otherwise it would be over. He didn’t
much care either way.
As far as
the crew was concerned, he was a thief on the run, which he was, of course, but
not for stealing a cat’s-eye sword, as the sailors suspected. He was entitled
to wear Ratter and
he looked the part well enough that no one had tried to cut his throat for her,
so far. Since he had not slept, they had had no chance to go through his
pockets and had thereby been saved a severe disappointment. Lynx was no trader,
and in his desperation to get out of Chivial he had paid out almost all his
ill-gotten cash just for the fare.
Dave
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Night
falling, wind rising. The only wisp of light in his personal dark swamp was
that he was currently facing southwest and could feel the jaguar plaque burning
hot over his heart. That was his compass, pointing the way to his ward. But
even that was stolen.
Thief!
He kept
thinking of Wolf, and Grand Master, and the four centuries of Blades he was
shaming. Not just by theft, either. He was the only Blade in the history of the
Order to let his ward be kidnapped! Of course a Blade would do anything at all
to ensure his ward’s safety, so an absentee Blade could justify any crime that
helped him return to his proper place beside his ward. Lynx just wished he
hadn’t had to steal from his brother, which is what he had done, in effect,
since Wolfie had been custodian of the ring and the plaque. Wolfie would howl
with shame. And Lynx’s life of crime had barely started. He spoke no Isilondian,
knew no honest trade, had virtually no money. He would know no rest until he
found his way back to Celeste, yet his most immediate problem ashore would be
finding food to stay alive.Assuming he did not drown in the next few minutes,
he would die of starvation crawling on hands and knees along the road to
Distlain.
Every time Lady
Polly crested a wave, the bar was visible as a
line of surf glowing in the gloom.The gap ahead looked impossibly narrow and
the tub was drifting sideways, too.
“Tide’s
out,” Cook muttered. Cook was the cook, and seemed to have no other name. He
was young, blubber-fat, had a wooden leg. He hung on the rail beside Lynx, the
two useless men aboard, while everyone else stood poised to leap into action
if needed. If Cook thought it safer to be on deck in this weather, so did the
passenger.
“She won’t
make it?” Lynx asked.
Cook chewed
his lip. “It’ll be close.”
Lady Polly was
turning, so Lynx turned to compensate, keeping the plaque facing the southwest,
burning hot. It was not hot to his hands, just on his chest over his heart, and
only when it was facing toward the other jaguar image, Celeste’s brooch.
He had
first seen that brooch on the night he was bound. Celeste had brought it with
her when she came to Ironhall, probably choosing
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it because she was forbidden to wear it
at Court and would not care much if it were lost or stolen. The gown she donned
that night made her Guard escort gibber. It might pass at Court, Lyon insisted,
but never at Ironhall. Elderly knights would die of apoplexy and candidates
drown in their own drool. He refused to allow her out of the royal suite until
she draped a shawl over the abyss and fastened it securely. For that she used
her jaguar brooch.
So there
was the young Alf Attewell sitting on the anvil with his own chest bare,
certain he was about to die at the hands of a royal trollop who had never held
a sword before. He locked his eyes on that brooch, concentrating furiously on
what he imagined lay below it, and those lustful thoughts distracted him enough
that he managed not to disgrace himself. But when the Marquesa pleaded
exhaustion and retired right after the ritual—spurning the traditional
banquet—she left Fell and Mandeville on guard in the antechamber and invited
the new Sir Lynx into her bedroom “to help her unfasten this pin.” Hands trembling,
Lynx reverently lifted away the shawl to reveal the glory beneath. His
imagination had fallen short of reality, but he was later assured by an expert
witness that he acquitted himself well thereafter.
At Quondam,
of course, he saw the accursed brooch every day and night, and never without
remembering the first time and knowing he could relive the rest of that
experience whenever he wanted. Celeste would not merely welcome his presence in
her bed, she repeatedly demanded it, yet none of her Blades dared gratify her.
Old Dupend would have them all in divorce court in no time, testifying before
inquisitors.
The ship
shuddered, staggered, and then seemed to settle. Sailors cheered. She was over
the bar! Lynx peered through the rain at the huddle of low, slate-gray houses
ahead, then he looked at Cook, whose globular face now wore a stupid grin of
relief.
Lynx had
bought passage to the first port they reached in Isilond or Thergy, so he was
stuck now with Mauxville, and it seemed fishing boats were about Mauxville’s
limit. “Tell me about this place.”
Cook spat
over the side. “What’cha want to know?”
“Not much
of a place?”
“Any port
in this weather.”
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“Yes, but what about other ships? I need
to go south.”
“Nothing
sails in Secondmoon.”
Cook did
not explain why Lady Polly did,
although Lynx suspected she was smuggling something. Did excise officers fly
south with the storks for the winter? With the present storm showing signs of
getting worse, nothing would leave the harbor for days.
“How many
people in Mauxville understand Chivian?”
The fat boy
looked at him contemptuously. “None.”
So Lynx had
better find some answers before he went ashore, and this youth was the only man
aboard not busy.
“I need
work until I can find a ship heading south.Who might hire a good swordsman?”
Cook wiped
rain off his stubbled face, but not quickly enough to hide a sudden craftiness.
“You really a Blade?”
“Got the
scars to prove it.”
“Know a
madam who might hire a bouncer. She’s Chivian.”
A woman, of
course! Lynx should have seen that. Men didn’t trust Blades, especially Blades
with no ward in sight; Blades were dangerous. Women were intrigued by their
reputation. He should have seen that the alternative to theft would be sponging
off women, living by what the Guard called “that other swordplay.”
“Sounds
promising,” he said. It was almost certainly the best offer he would get in the
squalid little settlement coming up ahead. Of course he might have to take his
wages in trade, but even that he wouldn’t mind if food was included. Flames, he
didn’t need a bed, just a roof and his bread! “What’s her name? How do I find
her?”
“What’s it
worth?”
Worth not running
a sword through you, sonny. “You never
been down on your luck?”
Cook pulled
a face. “Her name’s Hermione. She runs the only house in town. I’ll take you
there.”
“Good man.”
Life was
still mud, though. Lynx turned until he was facing the sea, so he restored the
glow in his plaque, the other jaguar face, the cat-man’s toy. Maybe he’d have
to swim to this Tlixilia place.
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For a few
days after the fight at Quondam he had been too close to death to appreciate
his torment, but Intrepid and his gang kept working on him and the pain kept
getting worse. The first Blade in history to lose his ward! When Rituals told
him he would die if he tried to ride back to Quondam, that made it certain Lynx
would try. His binding would not let him kill himself directly, but he
desperately wanted release from the agony.
At
Quondam,Wolf flashed that larger version of the jaguar at him.When Lynx touched
it, a tingle ran up his fingers.At first he thought of it as just a memento of
Celeste, but from the moment he put it on, he was conscious of it all the time.
If a man noticed his shoes or clothes like that, they would drive him crazy,
but the plaque never let him forget its presence over his heart. It seduced
him. It tantalized him. It whispered constantly in a language unknown. He soon
discovered it felt warmest when he faced roughly southwest.That was a clue, and
the very next day he saw its eyes had opened. After that, Wolfie couldn’t have
pried it off him with an ax.
The plaque
was not alone. Cat’s-eye swords had spirituality too.The plaque and his sword
were working together to lead him back to his ward.They were in cahoots. He was
convinced of that. He dared not tell even Wolf, though. Lynx lost his last
doubts when Baron Roland said that Tlixilia, which Lynx had never heard of
before, lay far to the southwest. Right!
Tlixilia it must be!Knowing he would need money, he palmed
one of the baubles being passed around.That would break poor Wolfie’s heart.
The ship
drifted toward a jetty. Sailors were preparing to throw ropes.
“How far is
it to this house?” Lynx asked. His feet hurt.
“Nowhere’s
far in Mauxville,” Cook said.
Lynx could
certainly keep up with the fat boy’s wooden leg, no matter how sore his feet
were. Food and shelter and a nice fire ...he blew on his hands. They hurt with
the cold.Well, his fingertips did . . . why were his fingernails so dark?
And why did
his feet hurt, anyway? They were not cold. He’d owned these boots for years,
ever since Celeste had lived in Grandon, and they had never pinched his feet
like this. Both feet. Curious. Bothersome.
One more
thing to worry about.
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2
The
Widow Hermione had no need to hire a bouncer. “Who do you think my girls are, anyway?”
she asked Lynx.“In a town this size? They’re daughters, sisters, and wives,
making a little extra when a ship comes in. Anyone starts trouble, I just
whistle for the local men.”
Lynx turned
on his most winsome smile. “You’re from Grandon, aren’t you? Somewhere near the
Elmbrook? I know your accent.”
The Widow
Hermione thawed slightly. “After all these years?”
He said,
“Oh, it can’t have
been very many
years . . .”
It had been
very many, but not too many, and she did get lonely sometimes, among all the
foreigners. She let Lynx dry himself at her fire. He sort-of-accidentally let
her glimpse his scars. She was appalled, so he had to explain how he had lost
his ward and must go in search of her, even if it took him the rest of his
life. He had always been good at getting along with people, and when Hermione
turned out the last of Lady Polly’s
crew at dawn and sent the girls home, she offered him a place to sleep.
She was
intrigued to discover that bound Blades did not sleep.
When the
wind dropped, a few days later, and Lady Polly sailed
away northward, Lynx remained, making himself useful, by day and by night. His
toes, fingers, and teeth ached. His nails seemed darker and thicker. His hair
and beard began falling out, making way for fur.Wolf had been right, telling
him he must not wear the plaque, but he could not take it off now. Even when he
romped with Hermione, he just turned the thong around and wore the pendant on
his back. He could not bring himself to remove it, no matter what it was doing
to him. It would be like cutting his heart out. Besides, he needed it to lead
him to Celeste.
By the end
of the first week he was having trouble forcing his feet into his boots. Death
and fire!
He
genuinely enjoyed Hermione. What she lacked in agility she made up for in
experience, and she was still more voluptuous than blowsy. She enjoyed him too,
for company and sex—neither of them
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called it making love. She was discreet
as only a village madam could be, but she was also smart enough to notice the
changes in him. They frightened her, naturally. He promised he would go away
the moment she asked him to. Fortunately, Hermione was very fond of cats. Unfortunately,
every cat she owned disappeared rather than share the house with an apprentice
jaguar.
How
long until people noticed
that his hands were turning into paws?
Chance smiled on him. Another
southwester brought another ship into Mauxville. Papillon
was bound for the Sauelas, which were halfway
to the Hence Lands.The master was worried about Baelish pirates and Distlish
coastguards, the bosun spoke some Chivian, and a healthy deckhand with a
Blade’s famed skills was a good buy for them. Hermione spoke up for him, so
Lynx was hired and Papillon sailed
two days later. By then people were staring at his ears.
The weather
turned sour again. He discovered he was proof against seasickness, even when
lifelong salts were draped on the rail like laundry, but the changes in him
were becoming obvious. His thumbs were shrinking and the fur replacing his
beard was spreading ever closer to his eyes. He especially had to remember to
keep his mouth closed. The pains were growing worse, too.As soon as the storm
ended and the crew viewed their swordsman in sunlight again, they would
certainly throw him overboard to see if he could grow gills as well. Sailors
were a superstitious lot.
He was
likely to drown anyway. The storm grew terrible. It ripped the tiny rag of a
sail they were carrying, so they had to throw out a sea anchor. Papillon
was somewhere off a lee shore, but
nobody knew how far. She rolled and pitched, starting to leak as her seams were
sprung. When they were not fighting for their lives on deck, the men crouched
belowdecks in darkness in a stinking, rolling, pitching coffin, working the
pumps or just listening to her ribs creak and wondering how long she could stay
afloat, wondering if every roll would be her last.The oldest man aboard had
never known such weather in those parts.
On what Lynx
was convinced must be his last night on earth, some
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thing hit the deck right above his head.
It could have been the start of Papillon breaking
up. It could never be boarders in those seas, but the plaque seemed extra hot
over his heart, so he buckled on his sword and went up to investigate.
The night
was as dark as a cellar. He knew he was on deck only because the wind was
howling past him, more salt water than air. He had not known waves could stand
so high, looming black walls of water, while the spume blown from their tops
enclosed the ship in a fog. Every rope and board groaned.The master and bosun
were bent over Marcel, who had been one of the best hands and was now a heap on
the deck, very dead, a pile of oilskins leaking dark fluid into the scuppers.
“What
happened?” Lynx yelled.
“Screamed,”
the bosun said. “Yelling? Then fell.”
Lynx looked
up. It was a night as wild as they come, but Marcel must have been aloft a
million or two times in his life.Why had he been screaming? What could he have
seen in this murk?
“You,” said
the bosun, “go up to see!”
Lynx
hesitated. Even Blade eyes would be useless in that murk, and if he saw
breakers directly downwind, Papillon could
do nothing about it.Then something screamed overhead, up there in the darkness,
a harsh, inhuman sound whipped away by the gale.There was no one up there. The
plaque throbbed like flames.
“Belay!”The
bosun changed his mind, grabbing Lynx’s arm. “No!”
Yes. That
inexplicable cry was just one more of the bizarre things that had started when
the raiders came to Quondam. It was his business, no one else’s. Lynx pulled
free, fought his way through the storm to the shrouds, and began to climb. He
had forgotten he was wearing Ratter until
she tried to tangle herself in the ratlines.
The storm
grew ever more savage, doing its damnedest to tear him off. His cape billowed
and beat at him. He imagined his feet slipping and him helpless, streaming out
like a flag until it tore away his hands as well. Papillon’s
roll was incredible, sweeping him across the sky so he overhung the ocean,
first to port, then to starboard. For heart-stopping moments she would just
hang there, almost on her beam ends, before she began to right herself. He
wondered how Marcel had ever found the deck
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when he fell. Or was pushed. Frozen and
battered, Lynx dragged himself up to the top. The trap was open, so he heaved
myself inside, and paused to catch his breath.
The top—landlubbers
would call it the crow’s nest—was basically a barrel with a hatch in the bottom
of it for access. It provided shelter, but he was bulky in his leathers and had
to share the space with Ratter and
the topmast, so it seemed cramped. Marcel could have fallen out of the barrel
only when the ship was listed well over, and then he would have dropped in the
sea. The trap had been open; he must have abandoned his post and slipped on his
way down. Why had he? Why had he screamed? Had he screamed?
The
strident noise Lynx had heard on deck was repeated, much louder, very close.
He shut the
hatch for safety, then struggled to his feet. The wind tried to tear his head
off.The sea anchor hung over the bow, so Papillon was
drifting stern first, but he could see absolutely nothing astern, just more
mountains of water. Nor could he see anything forward.The top rested on the
crosstrees, which were short spars extending out to either side, and on the far
end of the starboard crosstree was something that should not be.
It was
larger than he, a bulky shape ruffling in the wind like a stack of feathers,
writhing so much that he could make out no details in the dark.To eyes full of
tears and spray, it was just a huge and evil thing,
no more. If it was a bird, it was
clinging to that impossible perch with its feet, but the only bird Lynx had
ever heard of that could be that big was whatever had left the tracks Wolfie
had seen at Quondam. A human being could be holding on to the shroud, but only
a madman would stand there at all.What was it and why was it there ...?
When Lynx
first saw it, they were about level. Gradually it rose as Papillon
heeled over to port, until it was well
above him. It had seen him arrive, likely had watched him climbing. It
screeched at him repeatedly, as if it were trying to talk.
“Who are
you?” Lynx yelled. “What do you want?”
More hoarse
cries. He recognized the language he had heard that night in Quondam, when he
and Fell slew the jaguar knight.
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This monster
might have come to revenge that other monster. Or it might be asking for the
plaque back, please. But Celeste had been whipped away from Quondam by
conjuration, so perhaps this thing had come to take him to her. That idea
seemed like rank madness even at the time, but Lynx’s world was a nightmare in
many ways right then, not the least of which was that the ship might be going
to sink under him. Even if it didn’t, he would soon look so inhuman that he
would be fed to the fish anyway. Or he would go mad with pain. No, this insane
long-shot was his best, his only, chance of ever finding his ward.
As Papillon
continued heeling over to starboard, he
struggled to climb out of the top. By the time he was straddling the rim of the
barrel, he was looking almost straight down at the giant bird and the ocean
below it.
His
foot slipped, his hands were yanked loose, and he fell.
3
The
world exploded in brilliance. It spun like a churn. Lynx cried out and covered his
eyes. He became aware of heat, of unfamiliar scents, and of a strange lethargy.
He was facedown on a woven rug in glaring sunlight and a summery warmth.The
tumult of the storm had changed to a jabber of excited voices all around him,
so obviously he was no longer on Papillon, and
yet he had no sense of motion or time passing, no mysterious nothingness. He
just was. It was very pleasant, very restful.
The
spinning was almost fun, but something very odd had happened and he probably
ought to be terrified out of his wits. He sniffed, identifying odors of dust,
vegetation, and cooking, hot in his nostrils. The voices were all male, a
discordant yowl that reminded him of the terrible thing on the ship, plus a
harsh screeching like the noise the cat-man had made at Quondam. Rubbing his
eyes to dry them, he peered around, squinting at the glare.
There were
two bird’s feet—enormous bird’s
feet—right by his nose.
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Dismissing them as illusion, he looked
the other way, raised his head. The world wobbled, steadied.Above a low wall
towered a mountain and a clear sky with a sunset. It had to be a sunset; dawns
were yellower. He rolled over. Above him, staring down, stood an eagle knight,
his green plumage still bedraggled by rain and sea spray—fierce golden raptor
eyes and a beak fit to behead horses.
Lynx had
never moved faster in his life. He was on his feet and running ...running
downhill, then up . . . crashing into a waist-high wall, spinning around and
drawing Ratter .
. . again the world reeled, took a moment to steady.
There was
no uphill-downhill. He was on a roof, wide and flat and white-stuccoed,
splotched with fine bright rugs and long shadows cast by wicker gazebos. Ornate
pots held flowered and fragrant shrubs. The eagle knight stood near the
center—something between a gigantic green owl and a big man bundled in a
feather bed so that only his head and feet were visible, although those were
not human.
Nearest to
him was a jaguar knight like the Quondam monster, with pard head and paws on a
male human body wearing a two-flap loincloth, golden bracelets and necklaces,
a jeweled belt whose buckle bore the mosaic jaguar emblem. Lynx vaguely
recalled it . . . him . . . showing feline teeth and snarling as Lynx hurtled
past him, but that reaction had probably been laughter, because if it was
anything like the Quondam one, it could have slashed him down with a single
stroke of its paw. So the Quondam monster had not died halfway through a shape
change, it had always looked that way, and somehow the eagle was easier to believe,
because that had no human flesh visible.
About two
dozen other men stood around in attendance on their lords. Most of the young
ones wore only loincloths, others had various mantles, ornate cloaks, superb
feathered headdresses, and a couple in the background were robed in black. Body
paint, labrets, nose plugs, rings of all types, plus swords, spears,
shields—these and the brown, beardless faces were all horribly familiar from
last month’s attack on Quondam.
How could
it be only last month when this was summer? Where was he? He began to take
stock, trying to be methodical. He was in a far corner of a flat roof, pressed
back against the walls with his sword
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out, muffled to the eyes in leather and
oiled cloth, with layers of wet wool underneath, dribbling seawater and due to
boil in a few minutes. No doubt he had reacted very foolishly in front of these
savages, but he knew he was not capable of thinking clearly yet and the world
lurched every time he moved his head.
Beyond the
roof? He had enough wit to realize he must be in the legendary city Baron
Roland had described, El Dorado. The world could not contain two such marvels.
It was vast, far larger than Grandon, a stunning vista of white, flat-topped
buildings, mostly one-story, although some had two. Its streets were wide, its
canals innumerable. He gaped at wooded parks and gardens and great market
plazas galore. Within this jewel box, like trees in a meadow, stood many of the
towers of sacrifice the Baron had described, tapering in four or five great
steps from a broad base to a small flat summit. They cast long evening shadows,
and the greatest among them must stand twice as high as Grandon Bastion.They,
too, were of white stone, although each seemed to have a steep staircase on one
side, and the staircases were black.
No Euranian
had seen the floating city and returned alive, the Baron had said. All around
it lay shiny blue waters, the lake that made it impregnable, and around that
stretched a very wide, but fair and fertile valley, enclosed by distant
mountains like battlements. As the chatter of the spectators stilled, Lynx
heard a distant clamor of drums and some sort of horns or trumpets. Nothing else—no
horses, no carriages.
Meanwhile
he had been kidnapped and was about to be thrown in a cookpot. The spectators
had found him stupendously funny. Picking up the jaguar knight’s cue, they
roared with laughter at his antics and obvious terror. The cat-giant silenced
them by turning to the eagle-giant and saluting him—he crouched down, touched
the floor with one paw, which he then raised to his lips.That was an obvious
reverence and everyone else did the same. Even a terminally confused swordsman
could guess that they were honoring the big bird for a magnificent feat of
conjuration in finding and bringing back the man who dared to wear a certain
plaque.
The Eagle
croaked his thanks for the compliment, shook himself, and was instantly dry,
glorious green plumage all shiny-bright.
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The cat-man
spoke a word and waved a paw. One of the youngsters sprinted across to a
hatchway and disappeared. A slightly older man laid down his spear and shield,
untied his glittering embroidered cloak, and brought it across to Lynx, who
brandished Ratter at
him. He stopped and held out the cloak, but Lynx just threatened him again,
being unable to think past cookpots. The roof was too high for him to jump off,
and where would he run to?
The jaguar
knight stepped closer and spoke again, impatiently.
Desperately
Lynx said, “Celeste?”
The monster
flashed his fangs and nodded his great cat head. “Celeste!” The word was
distorted, but comprehensible. He pointed north. Lynx wondered if he was being
ordered to the kitchen.
Out of
patience, the jaguar knight snarled. Ratter’s
belt and scabbard dropped around Lynx’s feet. His weighty leather cloak fell
apart at the seams and followed. The same thing happened to the blanket coat he
wore under it. He howled in alarm, setting the audience to laughing again. The
knight wanted him to shed all his sodden and unnecessary garments, but Lynx did
not want to reveal the jaguar plaque. Despite his wails and protest noises, his
clothing disintegrated, layer by layer, until he was completely exposed,
wearing only the pendant. He realized that to the onlookers he must seem
obscenely hairy and sickly pale, like something growing in a damp cellar.
The
laughter changed to shouts and cries of wonder.The audience milled forward to
see, making Lynx realize how stupid he must look defying such a company. He
lowered his sword. Evidently it was his scars causing the sensation, because
the jaguar knight himself strode over and reached out to match his talons to
the red traceries on Lynx’s belly.
Then,
balancing perfectly on one foot, he raised the other to try that for size.
Mostly there were too many overlapping slashes to tell apart, but in a couple
of places the start of a stroke was visible, the four talon marks of a single
paw. The audience gasped at the obvious fit, clamoring at the wonder of a man
surviving such injuries.The fang marks on his shoulder were another sensation.
Someone noticed his old binding scar, which was more visible than most, thanks
to Celeste’s ineptness, and they gestured for him to turn around and display
its mate on his back.
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Continuing
the dumbshow, the jaguar knight pointed a claw at Ratter,
the plaque, and then to his own heart. Lynx
took this to be a query whether he had slain the original wearer, so he nodded.
The cat-man made a speech that brought cheers from the spectators.
Now the
eagle knight came stalking over also, moving with an awkward chicken gait,
folding up toes as he lifted each foot, spreading them again as he lowered it.
Golden eyes glaring, he made a speech, too, a longer one. The Jaguar responded,
and then all the spectators crouched to offer Lynx their kiss-hand obeisance.
He had slain a cat-monster and survived; he was an honored hero. Even in his
muddled state, he began to hope that he might enjoy his next meal at
a table and not on
one.
The boy who
had run downstairs returned with a bundle and gingerly approached Lynx.
Feeling more confident now, Lynx raised his arms as a sign that he was willing
to be dressed.The boy tied a two-flap loincloth around him, covered it with a
triangular cloth knotted at one side, then retrieved and restored the scabbard
and sword belt from the heap of rags at Lynx’s feet. Lynx shamefacedly sheathed
Ratter.The
man still holding the fine embroidered cloak stepped forward, draped it over
Lynx’s left shoulder, and fastened it with a silver pin on the right.
Finally the
Jaguar held out a paw to an attendant, who unfolded a gold bracelet from his
lord’s wrist and bent it around the visitor’s, probably a great honor. Lynx
was now fully dressed, feeling much better. No one offered him shoes and he was
content to go barefoot, walking on his toes.
Meanwhile
the Jaguar himself had been robed in a splendid cloak of feathers and gold
embroidery, topped off with a high plumed headdress. He took his leave of the
eagle knight with an embrace and many mutual flowery compliments. Beckoning for
Lynx to accompany him, he glided over to the stair with feline grace, and his
entourage closed in behind them.
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4
The
jaguar knight did not deign to walk the streets like mere people. He sank onto
plump cushions in a magnificent palanquin, ornamented with gold sequins, jade
plaques, and a canopy of tall green feathers. Sprawled at his ease, he gestured
for Lynx to join him. Then eight brawny men raised the litter shoulder high and
set off at a fast walk.The bearers were not slaves, but some of the most
adorned and bejeweled of his attendants, so this chore must be an honor. Lesser
warriors stalked along before and aft as guards, while servants alongside
whisked away flies. Harbingers blew on conches, warning spectators to touch
their faces to the ground until the procession had passed.
Confident
that he was being paid a great honor, Lynx reclined facing the rear. His host
faced forward, leaving little room to spare, for he was at least as large as
the Jaguar who had died at Quondam. His feet smelled faintly of cat, but Lynx
must stink obscenely after a week aboard Papillon. He
had great trouble believing any of the scenery was real, except that the city
was too incredible to be a dream. In the dusk people were heading homeward.
Canoes streamed like ants along the canals and the wide avenues were crowded,
but to him they seemed to be paved with stationary human backs, mostly bare
male backs, with some robed women among them. He saw no wheeled vehicles and no
horses.
The warmth
of the air amazed him. Was this summer, so his journey had lasted months, or
just normal Thirdmoon weather in the Hence Lands? And how had he gotten from
night to sunset—had he been unconscious for many hours, or had he moved fast
enough to overtake the sun?
Guards
saluted as the bearers passed in through the gates to a place of flowers and
trees, an enclosure containing several buildings. Servants made obeisance to
their returning lord—a man who wore gold could not be expected to live in a
tenement. Dismounting, he led his guest to a pleasant hall with one side open
to a flowered garden, and a strange absence of furniture, other than some works
of art and a small mat, but
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the Jaguar ordered another mat brought for
his guest and remained standing until it arrived. Knowing the difficulty of
injuring a Jaguar, Lynx decided that the stripling warriors guarding the doors
were merely ornamental.The hazel-colored maidens who brought water to wash his
feet and hands were much more so.They offered sweet drinks cooled in bowls of
snow, and golden platters laden with honeyed treats and fruits. Somewhat
hysterically, he decided he preferred this life to being thrown about in Papillon’s
stinking hold. A jaguar knight lived better than King Athelgar.
A jaguar
knight did not even feed himself. A winsome girl did that, popping morsels in
his mouth, and holding a reed for him when he drank. She was obviously special,
although even she did not look him in the eye. He purred at her sometimes, and
stroked her cheek with the back of his paw, making her blush. Evidently his
tastes did not run to she-jaguars.
Then a
youth hurried in, flushed and sweating as if he had been summoned from a
distance, and prostrated himself before his lord. He had the coloring of a naturale,
but dark stubble on his chin and upper
lip, as if he were of mixed race. The Distliards had been in the Hence Lands
for forty years, after all.
The knight
spoke. The newcomer passed on his words to Lynx’s knees in a language he had
heard aboard Papillon and
sometimes from Celeste when she was feeling bitchy.
“Distlish?”
he said. “Don’t understand. No entiendo.”
The
interpreter looked worried. “Isilondo?”
“Chivian.”
“Ah!”
Beaming with relief, the boy explained to the knight that Lynx was Chiviano
and what that involved. Celeste’s name
was mentioned.
“Celeste?”
Lynx repeated.
Nods and
sign language informed him that she had been summoned. At that news some of
his mental fog seemed to lift and he half-melted with relief. He had done the
impossible. In a mere month he had traveled halfway around the world and found
his ward. Never underestimate the power of an Ironhall binding!
Celeste
swept in, cool and poised in a simple wrap of white cotton.
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She wore no jewels, but her magnificent
braids shone like copper and somehow she had managed to keep her milky skin
from turning brown or exploding in freckles. Four young girls followed her in
and knelt at the door to wait. She looked vastly better than she had a month
before, much more her old confident self.
She kept
her eyes lowered as she approached, but Lynx could not restrain himself. He
sprang up to salute his ward. Celeste spared him the briefest of glances and continued
on her way without missing a step. She had her faults, Amy Sprat, but she was
as tough as a veteran warhorse.
She
prostrated herself before the jaguar knight. He spoke.The half-breed
interpreted.
Celeste
rose to her knees and spoke to her Blade’s knees. “Lord Lizard-drumming
welcomes you, Sir Lynx. I have been expecting you. Be very careful. He is
dangerous.”
Lynx had
already decided that. But so was Celeste. She could recognize power at a
glance and was firmly of the opinion that the more of it a man possessed, the
more he needed her in his bed.The cat-man would have had to be a lot less human
than he looked for Celeste not to have taken him by then. If Lynx let himself
be seen as a rival for her favors, he might glimpse a last, brief view of the
city from the top of a pyramid.
The four of
them held an awkward and protracted conversation, with questions going from
Lord Lizard-drumming to the interpreter— whom Celeste addressed as Manuel—in
Tlixilian, from Manuel to Celeste in Distlish, Celeste to Lynx in Chivian.
Answers had to retrace that path and the opportunities for misunderstandings
were legion. But Celeste was not merely tougher than boiled leather, she was
sharp as a fresh obsidian flake. Lynx had no doubt she was amending his answers
as required and she salted the questions with cues, keeping them brief so the
jaguar would not suspect she was prompting him.
“Oh, mighty
conjurer, the lord hopes you were not distressed
by your ride on the Spirit Wind.”
“Only
briefly. All better now. Er, tell him he has a nice place here.”
Translations
. . .
“He hopes
the floating tree you were riding will not suffer by your
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absence. I don’t think he can
truth-sound but he can probably stop you lying to him.”
“The
floating tree is of no importance,” Lynx declared. “Um . . . Looking upon his
glory is reward enough. Do you swive him?”
Celeste
ignored that question.“The noble lord apologizes for killing your warriors and
stealing your concubine, great conjurer. He was really after the brooch I was
wearing, which was his father’s.”
“Um. He
could have just asked nicely.” But if recovering Celeste’s pin had been worth
scores of lives, how much was the one on Lynx’s chest worth? “I expect
compensation. And we want to be sent home.”
Translation.“He
gladly returns me to you, together with all the rest of your jewels and with
many rich presents besides, begging you to forgive his error. He assures you
that he has avoided quickening my womb so he could continue to enjoy me.”
This was
the strangest day of Lynx’s life to date and growing stranger by the minute.
“Bet you’re glad to hear that bit,” he said. “You might end up with quite a
litter.Answer however you think best, but I’d suggest accepting his offer. Tell
him it is urgent that I lie with you as soon as possible.”
“Keep
hoping, Muscles.” She turned to the humble Manuel and reported whatever she
thought the reply should be.
No
expression showed on Lizard-drumming’s muzzle, of course, and Celeste frowned at
the response. “He asks if you support the Hairy Ones who perform such terrible
acts against his Emperor. I think Emperor is what they mean.”
Whatever
the truth, there could be only one reply. “Say that the King of Chivial is very
much against the Distliards and strongly supports the noble Emperor and people
of wherever this is. When he sends us home we will tell our King the true
story.”
“Don’t look
so scrutable, Lynx! Be mighty. Kitty-cat is honored to have you as his guest.
He’s hedging on sending us home.”
Lynx sensed
that Celeste was hedging too, suddenly. Was her Blade a better bet than her
present owner or wasn’t he?
“Tell him
the first time you throw one of your tantrums he’ll get you straight back and
welcome.”
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She told
Manuel something suitable. Lizard-drumming replied. Celeste queried the
answer.
Eventually
she said, “The great lord offers you rest and security for tonight. Tomorrow he
will send word to the great family of Plumed-pillar, telling them that you have
brought back his regalia. He thinks Plumed-pillar’s heir will load you with
rich gifts in return. He’s fishing for something, but I don’t understand what!”
“He may be
threatening—I admitted to killing one of his buddies. Just tell him his generosity
outshines the sun and the stars and can we go to bed now, please?” Lechery was
not Lynx’s only aim, or even his main one, for fatigue sat on him like a
cartload of rocks.
Celeste
spoke to Manuel.Whatever she said worked.Their host gave them leave to retire.
He saluted his guest by touching the floor before him and then kissing his paw.
Lynx responded in kind, and then demonstrated a courtly bow. Lizard-drumming
purred in amusement and gave him one, graceful as a cat for all his size.
Everything was very genteel and elegant, and a dozen torchbearers lighted the
guests’ way through the grounds. Lynx walked on his toes.
They
arrived at a small guest house, containing a single sumptuous bedchamber,
decorated with multicolored murals, but furnished sparsely, with mats and some
baskets. Attendants were already laying out food. Celeste chased them all away,
demonstrating that she had already learned a little Tlixilian. They closed the
door behind them and Lynx flopped down on a mat, deathly tired. That Spirit
Wind traveling really took it out of a man! He did not even want to eat.
She
said,“Where is this?” just as he said,“What in flames is going on?”
He reached
a hand for her. She stepped away.
“Talk
first!”
And love
later, he hoped. Once in Ironhall, long ago. Never at Court. Since then, five
years of close-quarter longing. Celeste dulled the appetite for all other
women, as Athelgar had been heard to admit more than once. He got over her
eventually, but Lynx was forever bound and never would.
“This is El
Dorado.” He explained what little he knew of the geography.
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Unimpressed, she tossed her head. “Why
was I brought here?”
He
explained about her brooch. She pouted when she heard how her other Blades had died
in her defense, but did not give way to emotion. Celeste never did. Even her
tantrums were staged.
“That’s
ridiculous! Now tell me how you’re going to get me out of here.”
“No, you
tell me what that overgrown mouser thinks is going on.”
The result
was a roaring row, but no ward had ever quarreled with her Blades as often or
as fiercely as Celeste did, and she had always picked on Lynx more than on the
other two.They had fought every day at Quondam. He was too weary to go stamping
around the room as she did, but he could yell louder. If Lizard-drumming had
posted guards outside, they would surely be amazed to hear a handmaiden
shouting at her mighty conjurer lord.
Celeste
could be utterly unreasonable.“Of course you will get me out of here! You’re my
Blade. That’s what you’re for. I have been waiting a whole month for you to
turn up and rescue me!”
“Then show
me a map. Bring me some horses.Tell me which way the sea is and how we get over
those mountains— Food? Port? Ships?” They could not even speak the language.
She howled
that he was useless, Blades were useless. He repeated that two had died for
her. She would not listen. She would not look at his scars or hear how he had
crossed half the world to reach her.
“What’s
wrong with your ears?” she demanded.
He told her
what his plaque had been up to.
“Take it
off ! Now! This instant! I will not have you turning into another monster. Can
you imagine what I’ve been through? He has a tongue like a wood rasp and those
claws . . . ! I’ve seen him rip a bed apart with his feet when he’s worked up.
And the teeth ...!”
“I can’t
take it off. It’s like Ratter now,
part of me. And you’re just mad because you made a mistake.You backed the wrong
horse tonight.”
A hit!
Celeste screamed even louder, because she would never admit a mistake. She
should have spurned the penniless castaway and stayed with the power-wielder,
Lizard-drumming. Believing Lynx had come to rescue her, she had chosen the
wrong man for the first time in her life.
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Lynx was
too tired for more argument, and he had a bad toothache. He shed his cloak and
loincloth, rolled himself in a blanket, and pretended to go to sleep. He knew
Celeste, though. He was not surprised when she jabbed him in the ribs a few moments
later.
“You’re
not fooling me, Muscles,” she said. “Say please.”
5
Forget
the Emperor. He was ruled by the Great Council and the Great Council could do
nothing without the knights.The Eagles and Jaguars were the real power in the
Empire, the cream of the nobility, owners of great estates, and their personal
troops were the Empire’s army. Every knight was a superlative warrior himself,
trained from childhood, proven in battle. Only knights possessed spiritual
power.They gained that virtue by sacrificing prisoners and used it to bless
their warrior followers with special abilities, keeping them loyal and making
them better fighters. Better fighters took more prisoners, which they turned
over to their lords for sacrifice. It was a delicious circle, and no one
understood it better than the third most senior Jaguar, old Basket-fox.
All his
life he had excelled at the scheming and infighting that kept the knights
amused when they were not engaged in a real war. Now the Empire was fighting
for its life, the Eagles and Jaguars were at loggerheads and divided among
themselves.The winners of the current struggle would determine the strategy
that would decide who won the war—El Dorado or the Hairy Ones. Now, suddenly,
just tonight, Basket-fox had seen an opening. It would be expensive for him,
but if his idea worked he could confound the opposition within his own order,
so his views would prevail. United, the Jaguars could persuade the Eagles, so
the Empire would crush the rebel states and drive the Hairy Ones into the
sea.These were worthy stakes.
A Jaguar
could expect to be spied on, and there was nothing much to be done about it if
the spies were Eagles, who could see anything
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anywhere anytime. But Eagles were
outnumbered by Jaguars in the service of the Emperor and they had many duties
more important than just snooping on their rivals, even wily old Basket-fox.
Besides, eagles usually slept at night, when jaguars were at their best.
Against his
rivals within the Jaguar order he should take precautions, though, which
explained why Basket-fox was not visible as he paced the grounds of his own
palace in the floating city, known to the Hairy Ones as El Dorado. Another
knight could have seen him, if he tried hard enough, but his own guards could
not. Monkey-blue, the boy he had been talking with earlier, had not yet been
blessed with true sight and could not even see the guards standing over him. He
knelt there in the moonlight, completely unaware of the four spears poised
ready to strike him the moment their lord gave the order—which Basket-fox never
would, because that would be a wasteful way to dispose of a man, even if he
turned out to be a traitor. Another fifty or so warriors patrolled the grounds
and palace, equally unseen.
Basket-fox
was almost as rich as the Emperor. His palace was one of the greatest and his
pyramid the second highest in the city, shining in the moonlight. Even home
alone, as now, he wore the finest feather-crafted cloak, and was bedecked in
gold and jade and seashell. Bats flitting overhead made more noise than his
paws on the gravel paths.
Monkey-blue
was a spy—a very fortunate spy, because he had been present that evening when
that spotted idiot, Lizard-drumming, had spoken with a very unusual Hairy One.Also
a very clever young spy, because he had seen that the talk he overheard
justified his climbing the wall and running to report to his true lord,
Basket-fox. Since he could never dare go back to spying on Lizard-drumming, he
had risked the wrath of his lord for wasting two years’ work, but his lord was
not wrathful at all.
Pacing,
pondering, Basket-fox came to the marble edge of a fish pool and paused to peer
down, past his furry toes. He saw only the moon like a great silver bubble, a
few stars struggling against its glare. Idly he thinned his virtual cloak until
his reflection began to appear— old and scraggy, ugly and grizzled, with one
ear gone altogether and the
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other tattered. Soon he must go to the altar
stone. But not yet! Chuckling, he faded out of sight again.
El Dorado
had been at war for generations. It was always finding excuses for
war—extending the limits of the Empire or bringing subject cities back into
line when they fell behind in their tribute, which they did all the time
because they were run by the same system.Their Jaguars and Eagles needed
prisoners also. The dry season was wartime, every year.The cities ran real wars
or pretend wars, and the losers were the peasant boys conscripted to fight
them. It was they who fed the altars. Senior warriors were usually safe enough
and the knights almost invincible. In a pinch, an Eagle could simply transport
himself and his favored followers right off the battlefield. Jaguars and their
warriors just vanished.
Knights did
die eventually. They lived a long time, preserved from decay by their spiritual
power, but when an old campaigner began to slip, he issued a challenge to an
aging counterpart in an opposing force, and the loser went to the altar. That
was the honorable way to die. Basket-fox had been challenged three times so far
and had not lost yet.
The
Distliards, the accursed Hairy Ones, had changed everything. They had little
use for prisoners and observed none of the proper rites of battle.They cared
only for victory, had no respect for rank. No atrocity was too shameful for
them, even using trained dogs to track invisible Jaguars.
Thus poor
Quetzal-star—longtime friend of Basket-fox and one of the most respected jaguar
knights of El Dorado—had gotten himself slain in one of the first battles, one
that Basket-fox remembered well. Tlixilians had not even known what a crossbow
was in those days and Quetzal-star had not expected any rank-and-file archer to
be so uncouth as to shoot at a great lord like him. So he finished up dead on
the battlefield and his regalia went to the Hairy Ones.That had been a national
tragedy.
Ah!
Basket-fox sniffed the air. A moment later a ragged black-clad figure came
hurrying through the grounds, hugging himself against the chill.When he reached
a small lawn, he stopped and knelt down to wait, confident that his lord would
know he had arrived. Even a commoner
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could have smelled him before seeing
him, for acolytes never washed. They were black all over from dried blood and
wore their clothes until they rotted away under newer layers.
Basket-fox
padded around to approach from upwind.When he was about two spear-lengths away,
he revealed himself.The acolyte doubled over in obeisance.
“Speak,”
the knight said. If acolytes had names, those were known only to other
acolytes. “Speak of the death of Plumed-pillar.”
“A most
noble knight of your great order, lord,” the acolyte told the grass.“Slain by
demons in the battle of the Feast of Conches.” He paused and took silence as an
order to continue. “His cousin, the noble Lizard-drumming, having heard the
soul of his dead father, the great Quetzal-star, lamenting from afar, asked the
valorous Plumed-pillar to aid him, and together they besought mighty Eagles,
Bone-peak-runner and Amaranth-talon, to bear them to this place of torment.
Alas, the demon defenders slew many fine warriors and the deadly Plumed-pillar
also.”
Lizard-drumming
was a fool. He had done so well in several recent battles that he had ended up
with more captives than his slave pens could hold. Instead of using the excess
to buy friends and alliances, he had squandered them on a mission of utter
folly. Why would he want his dead father around anyway—to claim back his
inheritance after all these years? Honor should not be carried to such
extremes.Worse, anyone knew that riding the Spirit Wind a great distance
jangled wits. From what Basket-fox had heard, the young idiots had led their
troops straight into battle, without giving them time to recover.
“Did they
really find the soul of Quetzal-star?”
“Lord!” the
acolyte quavered.“We do not know! They brought back a woman.
She had been wearing . . . Lord, a
knight’s regalia is burned with him, always! We do not know what happens if it
is not.”
The thought
that some part of a knight’s soul might be left trapped in his regalia after
his death was extremely disconcerting.
“You’re
saying that there was enough virtue still in the emblem to bless a commoner who
wore it, even a woman?”
“It may be
as my lord says.”
Or not.
“And then the soul of Plumed-pillar was
heard weeping?”
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“As my lord
says. But much, much louder, stronger.”
The regalia
had been fresher, the death more recent. But Lizard-drumming had been in
terrible straits, a laughingstock, having suffered humiliating losses with
nothing to show in return except a female captive and some exotic, unfamiliar
jewels. He was out of favor with every-body—the knightly orders,
Plumed-pillar’s family, the survivors of Plumed-pillar’s retinue, even the
Grand Council. Nobody needed more enemies than that. Basket-fox neither knew
nor cared which of them had forced Lizard-drumming to try to make amends.
“I hear now
that he tried . . .”When a knight made a statement a mere acolyte would not
contradict him.“Tell me what you have heard about him lately.”
“Lord, it
is said that he persuaded the great lord, Whirlwind, to aid him but the noble
Eagle agreed only to go and see.”
“Just to
look? You don’t happen to know what he paid Whirlwind, do you?”Whirlwind was a
very new Eagle with a great need to acquire captives; borrowing them from some
greater lord might require him to mortgage the rest of his career.
“Alas, I
fail my lord. I am ignorant and worthless.”
“No matter.
Continue.”
“I did hear
a rumor tonight that the Eagle Whirlwind brought back a warrior of the Hairy
Ones wearing the emblem of Plumed-pillar, but this is mere gossip, lord.”
Yet it was
the confirmation Basket-fox needed. If an emblem could respond to a woman, it
would certainly react to a warrior.
“I heard
the same. And I heard that the warrior has started the Flowering. Could the
regalia alone do that? Without ritual, without sacrifice?”
“It may be
as my lord says.” Pause. “But it cannot last long, lord.”
“He will
die?”
“He will
die of pain.”
As every
knight knew, the Flowering was ordeal enough even when correctly performed.
“Could he
be blessed just to let the change continue, or does it require the full
ritual?”
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What
Basket-fox was planning was very close to sacrilege. Even to suggest giving a
foreigner slave a full initiation would land the pair of them on the altar
stone in a twinkling, and his acolytes would never obey such orders. But
something less might be possible.
“I am
worthless to my lord.”
“You mean
you don’t know?”
“The words
of the ancestors do not speak of it.”
“Then it
may be interesting to try. You may go. Do not speak of this.” Mind made up,
Basket-fox stalked off to where Monkey-blue knelt, shivering in the chill night
air.
Spying on
brother knights was so close to dishonorable that it was governed by very
strict rules. To turn a colleague’s own followers from their loyalty was
unthinkable. It was permissible only to choose a promising lad of one’s own
clan and bless him with a disguise so he could enlist in the other’s retinue
undetected. He faced vivisection on an altar if he was discovered, but he was
serving his own true lord; his first oath took precedence. Monkey-blue had
survived in Lizard-drumming’s retinue for over two years.That took real
courage. And tonight he had displayed good sense.
His lord
appeared in front of him. He buried his face in the grass.
“Tell me
again,” Basket-fox said, “what Lizard-drumming told the Hairy One he was going
to do with him?”
“Lord, the
knight said he would return his woman to him and his jewels and give him rich
presents.” Pause. “Er . . .”
“Continue.”
“But later
he told his steward that he would sell the man to the mighty Jaguar Flintknife,
lord.”
Of course.
Flintknife was Plumed-pillar’s brother and heir.
“Did great
Lizard-drumming address the Hairy Warrior as Plumed-pillar?”
There was a
pause, while Monkey-blue stared at the ground in front of his nose. Good man,
taking time to think. “Not that I heard, lord.” He sounded puzzled, so he had
not seen the real game either. But that would be asking a lot of one so young.
“On your
feet!”
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Monkey-blue
scrambled to his feet, keeping his eyes lowered, rigid with worry at standing
in his lord’s presence. A sturdy, promising lad. Not by any means a close
relative, but of a branch that had thrown up some excellent warriors in the
last generation.
“You have done
me great service,” Basket-fox declared solemnly, “and displayed great courage.
Long ago I served as a spy and I know how hard it is. If I send you back now
you will be uncovered, and that would be a waste of a fine young warrior.What
was your original company?”
“The Flesh
Eaters, lord!” Monkey-blue’s voice was suddenly hoarse with excitement.
“You will
return to training with the Eaters, then.You are promoted to taker of two
captives. Take time to visit your family if you wish. When you return you will
be assigned quarters and may choose two concubines from the pens. I will find
you a wife of good rank.”Widows he had aplenty, alas.
“Praise to
my lord!” The boy crouched to salute.“I weep before my lord’s benevolence.”
“And I
rejoice at gaining a proved servant.” Power had its enjoyable moments. “One
last thing. Do you know how many captives Lizard-drumming has left in his
pens?”
“I heard
none, lord,” Monkey-blue said hoarsely, “but I do not—”
“Oh, I
believe you.You may go,Taker of Two Captives.”
One of the
invisible guards stepped aside as the running youth almost cannoned into him.
So the
third Eagle had cleaned Lizard-drumming out completely, had he? How much did
the idiot think Plumed-pillar’s heir would pay just to recover his brother’s
regalia? The man would be worth much more
to Basket-fox.
The old
Jaguar squatted down in a patch of shadow to think. Should he start low,
offering perhaps ten captives under the pretense, say, of wanting to torture
information out of the prisoner? Or should he try to overwhelm Lizard-drumming
with a fortune, say ten twenties, and hope to win agreement before the dolt had
time to think? Unfortunately, Lizard-drumming was probably not stupid enough
to overlook
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the
possibility of asking Flintknife for a counterbid. Plumed-pillar’s heir had far
less virtue and influence than Basket-fox did and had far fewer prisoners in
his pens. He would need most of those for his own Flowering, which he had just
begun. Nevertheless, an auction could really hurt.Ten twenties might not be
nearly enough. No, Basket-fox had better start even higher, to show he meant
business—offer twenty twenties
and hope young Flintknife would be frightened to bid higher in case Basket-fox
was setting a trap for him and did not really want this mysterious Hairy One
after all.
6
By
dawn, Lynx knew he was in mortal trouble. His long-longed-for reunion with
Celeste had been a disaster, to her disgust and his horror. No Blade had ever suffered
from lack of virility before—at least none had ever reported such a problem. He
had no strength for anything else, either. Even sitting up was an effort, and
he was repeatedly racked by jabs of pain: in his teeth, feet, hands, even his
skull.When he wasn’t suffering he was waiting for the next torment to start,
which was almost worse. The plaque was obviously to blame, and yet he could no
more remove it than he could have bathed in boiling water.When he allowed
Celeste to take it off him, he went into convulsions and she had to put it
back.
Her four
attendants arrived with fresh food and clothing. Then Manuel appeared to start
language lessons. Lynx sat outdoors on a mat and tried to concentrate on how to
greet knights and warriors of a dozen different grades. Celeste already knew
many such flowery phrases, but those were for women and men’s were not only
different, they also varied depending on the speaker’s rank. Manuel had no more
idea of Lynx’s status than Lynx himself did and played safe by trying to teach
him all of them. Celeste had to interpret, of course.The instruction proceeded
very slowly.
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Then a
troop of spear-carrying warriors arrived at the double, a score of them.Without
explanation, they ordered Manuel and the girls away and took up position around
the prisoners. Their eyes were chips of obsidian.
“Gorgeous,
aren’t they?” Lynx muttered through a mouthful of hot coals. Feathers and
paint, bangles and lip-plugs.
“Half of
them are wearing heraldry I haven’t seen before. I think those are not
Lizard-drumming’s men.” Why was she bothering to whisper?
Lynx was
past caring. He sat with his back against a tree and stared vaguely at a
ceremony in progress on the summit of a nearby pyramid. He could make out no
details, but the eerie music from drums and conches was unsettling. Celeste
went indoors and left him alone. He sat and suffered and sweated and wondered
how soon he could die.
Later
another dozen warriors appeared, accompanied by a slave carrying a basket that
contained Celeste’s missing jewelry. She came running out to welcome it with
cries of joy, which turned to screams of rage when she was not allowed to touch
it. Instead Lynx was ordered to stand up. Unwilling to argue with an
obsidian-tipped spear, he struggled to his feet.Then he stood on his toes and
tried not to twitch at the jolts of pain running through his jaw, while two of
the youngest, least decorated warriors proceeded to adorn him.They were
puzzled that he had no openings to take earrings or a lip-plug.The rings that
would not fit on his pinkies they strung on a cord to hang around his neck
beside the real necklaces, but in the end they seemed satisfied with their
handiwork. He was confident that the infamous emerald tiara which had caused
such a scandal in Athelgar’s Court five years ago must look very good on him.
By that
time half the original guards had departed and there was no one else in sight,
which seemed ominous.The escort formed up around the two prisoners, the leader
beckoned, and off they all went.
“I think,”
Lynx remarked, “that we have just changed owners. Don’t—Eyaaa!”
Flames of agony in his right wrist made him bite his lip until it bled. By the
time the spasm ended, they had been herded through a gate in the perimeter wall
and out to a quay where three
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dugout canoes were waiting, complete
with brown-skinned paddlers and more armed warriors.
From there
they proceeded along successive canals. Neither the warriors nor the slaves spoke
at all, and the many other canoes they passed were equally quiet. So were
pedestrians on the bridges. Did no one in this city ever laugh, or even smile?
Apart from sounds of pyramid rituals farther away, it was eerily silent.
Reflections swam on silver ripples in a dreamlike repetition of blue water,
white buildings, blue sky, white peaks. He wondered if the first Blade ever to
visit the Hence Lands would merit mention in the chronicles at Ironhall, and
who would take the word there.
Lizard-drumming’s
mansion had been impressive. The one they were taken to overwhelmed. Its
pyramid was three times as high, its grounds enormous, even its polychrome
sculptures were breathtaking, despite their bizarre, convoluted style. Lynx
noted Celeste smiling again, confident she was moving up the social scale. If
this was not the home of the Emperor himself, it must surely belong to a lord
chancellor or someone equivalent.
The
prisoners were escorted to a small, secluded terrace, flanked by a colonnade on
two sides and unfamiliar trees on the others, furnished with a pond and
flowering bushes. There another Jaguar waited in the blossom-scented shade,
lying half curled up on a richly colored mat, with his head in the lap of a
scantily clad, eye-catching brown maiden. She was fanning him gently, keeping
flies away.This knight’s muzzle was grizzled and his human skin lacked the tone
of youth, so by human standards he would be at least sixty.
Behind him
stood a scrawny, balding man leaning on a crutch, wearing the invariable
two-flap loincloth and nothing more. He was a stubble-faced, hairy-chested
Euranian of perhaps forty, although deeply tanned by the tropical sun, and
likely a war captive, for he had lost his left leg just above the knee.The
wasting of his thigh showed that the injury was not recent. He raised a finger
to his lips to urge silence.
Having no
sane alternative, Lynx stood where he was, waiting for his host to finish his
catnap. There were swordsmen in the bushes and more in the shadowed interior
beyond the arches. Sensing Celeste
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standing very close to him, he gently
took her hand, and she squeezed his fingers. Unexpectedly, the move sent a
spasm of pain shooting through his wrist. He did not cry out, but he did take a
very deep breath.
The cat’s
eyes opened.The Jaguar sat up.
About to
salute, Lynx thought better of putting his hand near his sword and bowed
instead. Celeste knelt most humbly.
The old
jaguar knight stretched and yawned, displaying a fine set of fangs and a long,
pink tongue.Then he flowed effortlessly to his feet. He wore a loincloth and a
jeweled belt with a jaguar-emblem buckle, but as he paced over to Lynx with his
front paws behind his back, he resembled nothing so much as an aging alley
cat, all scars and one ragged ear, full of sin and ancient evil. His feline
eyes were inscrutable and bloodcurdling.
He looked
Lynx over, from his tiara down to his toes.
Then he did
much the same with Celeste.
With a
needle-sharp black claw, he lifted the front of Lynx’s cloak so he could
inspect his scars. Then he sauntered back to his mat. He bared his fangs in
what might have been a jaguar leer, and spoke some gibberish.
Lynx
shrugged.
The old
knight said, “Jorge!”
The man on the
crutch spoke. Celeste replied.
Jorge spoke
again, and it was clear that he was a much better interpreter than
Lizard-drumming’s Manuel. Celeste translated his Distlish into Chivian, phrase
by phrase.
“Basket-fox,
lord of the dark ...welcomes his unfortunate and dearly loved kinsman . . .
jungle terror Plumed-pillar . . . to his humble house . . . and extends
sympathy to him . . . in his misfortune.”
Celeste’s
expression told Lynx that she understood no more of this than he did.
“Er . . .”
Jorge had
not finished. He frowned a warning and continued what could only be a prepared
speech. “He feels a mountain of sorrow . . . that the noble lord’s heir and
brother . . . the midden cur Flintknife . . .
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has wrongly claimed his inheritance . .
. has seized the dread killer’s estates, followers, captives, concubines, and
slaves. The jungle slug Flintknife . . . refuses to admit . . . that his
brother has returned from ...the place of demons . . . in a borrowed body and
will ...require some brief time . . . to recover his memories . . . and be
restored to his former self.”
Celeste
finished the translations with her eyes as big as water jars.
Could he
settle for a half dozen concubines back, Lynx wondered, teetering on the brink
of hysteria. “There may be some mistake—”
Jorge read
his face and did not wait for Celeste to begin translating. “I mention that the
dread hunter Basket-fox paid thirty twenties of captives to rescue his kinsman
from the avaricious Lizard-drumming this morning. If he was in error, then the
consequences will be dire indeed.”
Translating,
Celeste added, “Bargain, you idiot, bargain!”
Before Lynx
could speak, he felt a spasm of agony coming on, as if his skull was being
crushed in a vice. He sweated and gasped, unable to hide his agony. It was
terrible—and then it stopped. Instead of dying away as usual, the pain was shut
off instantly.The world unfolded like a flower. He opened his eyes and found
Lord Basket-fox standing in front of him with one black talon touching Lynx’s
jaguar plaque. He snarled something to Jorge. Jorge spoke to Celeste.
Celeste
said, “Kitty-cat says he apologizes for not noting your distress. Like spit he
didn’t, darling! But he says he has blessed you now and you should be all right
for a day or two.”
Basket-fox
walked over to the pond, stepped in with both feet and sat down on the marble
edge, resting his top paws on his human knees. He showed his fangs in what Lynx
hoped was a smile.
Lynx was
certainly cured for the moment—pain gone, horrible lethargy gone.Tonight he
would triumph on the sleeping mat. “I thank him from the bottom of ...my
heart.” Whose heart? By
the time those words emerged from Jorge, they had multiplied into a speech.“And
tell him,” Lynx added, for his thinking was clearer now, “that I shall be
guided by him in all things until my memories return. I am his devoted,
lifelong servant.”
Jorge was
still translating this when half the pond seemed to explode in Lynx’s direction,
a storm breaker of bright droplets. Blade re
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flexes flashed; his hand streaked out to
snatch a silvery fish out of the air. Only then did Celeste utter a squeak of
alarm.
Lynx
solemnly stepped forward and replaced the bewildered fish in the water, where
it darted away to safety under a rock. He nodded to Basket-fox and returned to
his previous place.The Jaguar regarded him with a piercing feline stare, idly
shaking water off his paw.
Basket-fox
to Jorge to Celeste: “He says you are very fast.”
Lynx to
Celeste to Jorge: “Tell him he is faster.”
Right
answer. The Jaguar uttered a rumble of amusement and stepped out of the water.
He went back to his mat. Another mat was brought for the honored guest. So they
were all friends together now? Spear carriers still lurked in the shrubbery.
Refreshments
appeared. The knight’s lithesome handmaiden fed him tidbits and held a reed
when he wished to drink—pulque, Celeste
said, fermented cactus sap. Perhaps she was expected to serve Lynx in the same
way, but he could still use his fingers. For how
long?
Basket-fox
had become charming, making small talk and purring. It made him seem very
cuddlesome. Play safe and pet a pit viper? Describe
the floating tree. Do all women in your city have hair that color? Were the
eyes you are now using that brown color from birth or has the Flowering
changed them already? But then—
“You may
not remember yet the battles in which we fought together.”
“The truth
is as my lord says.”
“And language
takes time.”
“My lord is
all-wise.”
“The noble
Flintknife is a warrior of irreproachable honor.”
“As my lord
says.”
“But not
all his supporters may be of equal scruple. The stakes are high.The time of the
Flowering is one of great vulnerability.”
“Who knows
these things better than my lord?”
“The
knights have not yet reached a judgment in your case, kins-man.The matter is so
unusual that I am sure they will decide to suspend judgment for a while. Long enough
for you to complete your second Flowering and calm their unworthy doubts.”
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“This is
most reassuring.”The mud was beginning to settle, and the water had snakes in
it.
“Until
then, my house is at your disposal, son of Trumpet-pillar.”
That was
Lynx’s father’s name, was it? “My lord’s kindness passes all measure.”
Basket-fox’s
warriors were as the sands of the plain and would defend the gallant
Plumed-pillar, skillful acolytes could aid him through the Flowering, allies
and friends would rally to his cause....Lynx was not inclined to argue. A dead
Blade could not serve his ward.
Later he
was installed with his supposed handmaiden in sumptuous quarters, plied with
servants and hospitality. His whims were commands.
Soon
after dawn the next day he began serious language lessons.
7
The
Hall of the Jaguars was vast and grand, an adjunct of the Imperial Palace
itself. In Tlixilian style its walls and columns were carved into intricate
pictures, brilliantly colored. One side was pillared, open to a courtyard to
admit air, sunlight, and even birds, but temperature was rarely a problem in El
Dorado. Lynx estimated it could have held half a thousand people, but that day
about sixty men were standing around arguing. One woman stood discreetly
outside, behind a pillar—Celeste, who was needed as an interpreter. She had
been marched across the city on foot, which had done nothing to improve her
disposition.
Lynx had
been carried there in Basket-fox’s personal palanquin, with an escort of eighty
warriors. Having thrown the noble Jaguar order into chaos with his outrageous
claim that a disgusting Hairy One was in fact Plumed-pillar Redux, the sly old
rascal had stopped just short of giving him a knight’s drums, trumpets, and
harbingers.The meeting had been called to examine the evidence, namely Lynx.
Neither
Basket-fox himself nor Flintknife, Plumed-pillar’s brother and authentic heir,
was in evidence. No knight was, because none of
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them would ever bother to attend
anything as tedious as a committee— not so anyone would notice.There might be
some lurking unseen in the shadows, Jorge had warned.They were a curious lot,
Jaguars. Officially, each knight had sent one of his senior warriors to
represent him.
The agenda
was Lynx and whether or not to kill him out of hand. There were no precedents
and no formal procedures. Two or three of the more respected older men tried to
keep some sort of order, but it took a long time to examine the evidence and
agree that he did show signs of beginning the Flowering. Lynx had always had a
rare ability to wiggle his ears and he was a lot better at it now. His eyes
were close to yellow already and his teeth were taking on new shapes.
The plaque
was accepted as undoubtedly Plumed-pillar’s regalia. Lynx’s scars confirmed
that he had survived a mighty battle. The warriors peered at his fingers and
eyes and teeth, scowled at the hair on his chest, and nodded approvingly at the
fur sprouting on his hands, face, and feet.They enthused over his jewelry like
a pack of greedy dowagers. And they asked innumerable questions, which Jorge
passed out to Celeste, who passed them back in to Lynx, and so on.
Jorge had
assured him that Tlixilian conjuration did not include truth-sounding. Eagle
knights could compel people to speak the truth, but that was a form of
aggression, and the Jaguars would never call on the Eagles for help in an
internal matter such as this—although Eagles would certainly be monitoring the
proceedings. Free to bend the truth, therefore, Lynx and his mentor had devised
a pleasing shape for it. Lynx was, after all, a knight back in his own land. He
explained that Ratter, with
her mysterious cat’s-eye pommel, was a Chivian knight’s regalia, empowered with
his own heart’s blood. He showed his binding scars as proof of this. They
understood that and assumed that he must be a mighty conjurer, as Tlixilian
knights were. He must be
mighty just to have survived the first stroke in the duel with Plumed-pillar—described
by Lynx in a dramatic narrative sorely lacking in modesty.
At the end,
he explained, it was Plumed-pillar’s soul that had survived in Lynx’s body, so
he had made the best of it and set off to return to the floating city. Since he
was not dead, his usurping brother could not have inherited his rank and
wealth, and should not be allowed to
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continue the Flowering.Then he would
die, of course. Pity. Lynx salved his conscience by reasoning that he was not
really telling lies, because no one was going to believe a word of that
balderdash.
As Jorge
had explained, all Basket-fox’s clients and allies would pretend to believe.
Some of Flintknife’s weaker supporters might waver in their loyalty. Many,
perhaps a majority, of the knights would wait to see who was going to offer
what for their votes. No doubt Basket-fox was merely establishing Lynx as a
valuable property that he could trade off at some future date in return for
whatever it was that he really wanted, which would be something completely
different. Think of cats, and mice.
Eventually
the warriors ran out of questions and sent Lynx away. He had no real hope that
he would ever be accepted as Plumed-pillar Redux, but he would live at least
until the knights reached a verdict, which would probably be appealed to the
Emperor and Great Council. From a pawn’s point of view, this was better than
the alternative, which was a one-way trip up a pyramid, and until that day
came, as it must, he could live in a palace and guard his ward as closely as
physically possible.
A few days after the meeting in the Hall
of Jaguars, Lynx had his fourth interview with his mentor. He had asked for it,
indeed begged for it, because his feet and hands burned as if every bone in
them had been hammered to slivers.They would continue to do so until
Basket-fox instilled more virtue into the plaque in the process the Tlixilians
called “blessing.” Even that might not completely cure the problem.
Jaguar
Flowering took a lot longer than an Ironhall binding—a year was standard. It
involved rituals whose details Lynx preferred not to know, and long study to
master the powers the knights wielded after their apotheoses. What
Plumed-pillar’s plaque was doing to him— helped along by Basket-fox’s infusions
of power, although no one admitted that, and perhaps by his Ironhall binding
also—could produce nothing more than a change in his physical appearance. No
one had ever heard of such a thing happening before, or could guarantee that
this partial transformation would not kill him or drive him crazy.
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The sun had
just set, painting the eastern volcanoes orange under a cobalt sky speckled
with a few early-bird stars. The air was still, heavy with flowery, leafy scents.
Lynx sat with Celeste outside their cabin, chatting endlessly with the
interpreter, Jorge, and hoping fervently that he would soon be summoned to the
Jaguar’s presence.
“The
...weather? What’s the word for weather?” Celeste asked Jorge.This was what
they did all day—talk.They were making progress. “The weather is very
fine,”Lynx said miserably.A life of pain would
not be worth living.
“The
weather is pleasing,” Celeste agreed.
“The
weather is rarely mentioned,” Jorge said, “because it is always pleasant. Even
in the rainy season, this is not a stewpot like the coast.”
Celeste
asked him to explain a couple of words he had used, and he did.
“You are
happy here?” Lynx said.
“Happy? I
have accepted my fate.There are worse lives. I am a cripple, so I will never
be sacrificed on the altar stone.There is no finer city in the world than El
Dorado.” Jorge was an educated man and had traveled widely in Eurania before
coming to the Hence Lands. He had been a captive and slave for five years. “The
worst part of my duties is helping to question my countrymen when they are
made prisoner.That part I do not like.”
“Torture?”
Lynx wondered what torture could be worse than what he was enduring.
“No
torture. Eagles use the Serpent’s Eye on them, so they cannot lie, but I
translate. And when they ask me, I must tell them that they will die.”
Celeste
started to ask a question in Tlixilian.
Lynx was distracted. His pain faded
away, icy water quenching the fires. All his knotted muscles relaxed. “He is
here.” He peered around the shadowy patio. There was no one in sight . . .
except Basket-fox, where he had not
been an instant before. As his prisoners
genuflected to him, he made a sound somewhere between a chuckle and a purr. “That
feels better, noble Plumed-pillar, slayer of hundreds?”
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“Wonderfully
better, mighty hunter of the night.” Lynx managed that speech all by himself.
“Except . . .” He frowned and flexed his right hand. “Still a little . . .” He
pointed, and Jorge supplied the word for wrist. “In my wrist.”
The knight
sank to the ground, graceful as a cat. He rested his front paws on his very
human knees. He was unusually grandly dressed, glittering with jewels and
bright feather work.
“You will
have to endure some discomfort. Even the normal Flowering is not for the faint
of heart.”
That
sounded ominous. “I endured it once, I can do so again.”
“Of course.
I hear the carrier-of-nightsoil Flintknife is racing through the Flowering as
fast as he can stand it, recklessly squandering captives.”
“His crimes
will catch up with him.”
“Of course.
And your fair concubine?”
Celeste
sighed. “The renowned silent slayer honors my life by asking. His kindness
rules the night as the sun brightens the day.”
She must
have rehearsed that! She missed no chance to flirt with the old scoundrel.
“Nothing personal, darling,” she had said the last time Lynx complained of her
behavior. “You are a wonderfully strong lover, while that old tabby will be a
wearisome chore, but my safety is your duty, is it not? Will I not be more
secure as handmaid to such a great lord than I am shut up with a penniless
imposter?”
Her logic
was impeccable, and she was being especially nice to him these days to console
him.
Basket-fox
licked his fangs with a tongue like an insole. “We must think to your estate,
kinsman.” He kept his great cat head toward Celeste, but his words were
directed to Lynx, or rather to the fictitious Plumed-pillar.
“I am
already overwhelmed by my lord’s generosity.”
Waiting for
the interpretation, the Jaguar stretched, making his finery clink and
sparkle.“But a knight of your eminence needs warrior attendants.”
Lynx was
suddenly permitted to notice a stripling warrior standing in the background clutching
spear and shield, his face carefully impassive. He had not been visible a few
seconds ago.
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The knight
waved a paw. “This staunch young man is my great-grandnephew, so he is related
to you also.”Any two knights in all Tlixilia were related to each other in
some convoluted way. “Night-fisher is his name. He would be honored to wait on
you.”
Lynx
glanced at Celeste and saw triumph. Strangely, Lynx sensed that his binding
would not resist the change. Basket-fox would be a much more effective
protector for Celeste than he would be, and to resist him would be dangerous
for both ward and Blade.There was nothing to be done, and he appreciated that
the Jaguar had eased his pain before stating the price, which was the
gentlemanly way to do it.
Sigh!
“Nothing can ever match your generosity, shadow of the dark, not even close.
All the world knows that your wealth is as boundless as the stars, but if there
is any trifle left to me in my present downcast condition that might amuse
you, I would be overjoyed to cast it at your feet.”
The cat-man
departed soon after that, with an arm around his exotic new playmate. Lynx
remained, and so did his new aide-de-camp. Doubtless this Night-fisher would be
deft at cleaning teeth and brushing fur, but he would never replace Celeste.
229
VI
Send not valued dogs against the
wild boar in his wallow . . .
1
The
incredibly misnamed Glorious was
a two-masted carrick, high front and back and low in the waist, a scruffy tub the
size of two hay wains, carrying a crew of fifty. Dolores and Megan shared a
closet-sized cabin in the aft castle. Quin, Flicker, and Wolf slept with the
hands, which meant on deck whenever possible. In bad weather, they were battened
down in the hold like apples in a cider press, a solid carpet of seasick men
in windowless quarters barely chest-high, dimly lit by a few wildly gyrating
oil lamps, reeking of bodies, bilge, vomit, feces, and rotted food. Only fools
stood downwind of sailors.
Like his ship,
Captain Clonard was nigh as broad as he was long. He wore a fringe of curly
brown beard, a kerchief around his head, and a large silver earring that was
almost certainly a talisman. He claimed to be a trader, but probably dabbled in
piracy, smuggling, and slaving whenever the wind was fair. His officers were
as scabrous a gang of villains as could be found anywhere, while the hands were
a mixture of similar
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rogues and baby-faced innocents fresh off
the farm. He would not discuss his relationship with the Dark Chamber—wiser
not to know that, Dolores said—but he dealt honestly enough with his
passengers, to Wolf’s continuing surprise.
The menu
varied as the voyage proceeded, but beans, bacon or pickled pork, salt fish,
and hard, salted biscuit were the staples. Fresh pork, onions, garlic, cheese,
bacon, and chickpeas appeared briefly after each landfall, even fruit for the
first few days. They drank foul water or beer, and later wine, but never enough,
because the diet was so salty. Washing was a fond memory, yet no one was ever
dry. Sea water corroded the skin.
Any
unattached single woman among so many men would have been pestered, and Megan
was winsome enough. With an experienced eye, she quickly selected Duff, the
ship’s carpenter, to be her favored friend. He was a solid, soft-spoken man of
around forty, seemingly easygoing, but when his good fortune was challenged,
as it inevitably was, the battle was both bloody and decisive.Thereafter he was
left to enjoy his victory.
Not only
were the passengers expected to help defend Glorious
against Baelish pirates—which would
certainly have been the wise thing to do had any appeared—the contract also
required them to train the crew in the finer points of sticking sharp metal in
people. Fencing helped pass the time, but until Wolf tried teaching
swordsmanship to a squinty-eyed buccaneer on a wildly rocking deck with barely
room to move between the mast and the rigging, with spray in his face and clothes
drenched, while at any minute a foam-topped green wave might roll over the side
and wash him into the scuppers, he had never realized how much Ironhall had
spoiled him.
Ships were
the worst torture chambers ever invented, places of constant torment with
death one plank away. At first the travelers were bounced and frozen, later
bounced and boiled, and near the end they almost died of thirst, becalmed for
three weeks with the sun balanced atop the masthead. Glorious
first cut south from Chivial to Isilond,
then bypassed Distlain itself to make landfalls in Granaira and the Llaville
Isles, which Distlain owned, plus the Sauelas, which it did not. In
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Granaira the inquisitors picked up
Distlish with a despicable accent. From the Sauelas they made the long sweep
west and south to the Hence Lands, but the wind failed them a few days from
their expected landfall. Just in time a stray breeze came by and wafted Glorious
to one of the smaller islands, but one
where there was water.
“Nine
months since Quondam was attacked,”Wolf said. “Maybe at last we may be able to
do something about it.”
“And
make our fortunes, too,” Dolores insisted.
Although it was the capital of
Condridad, largest of the islands, the town of Mondon was only a splatter of
timber or mud shacks, with no stone or brick buildings. It was also at its
worst just then, near the end of the rainy season, with air like steam and a
downpour every afternoon turning the streets to red quagmires.Thousands of
gaudy birds swooped and screeched, the roaches were bigger than mice, and
vegetation erupted in every corner, as if the entire settlement would revert to
jungle the moment the people turned their backs. Mondon Bay was a magnificent
natural harbor, though, and a busy one. Officially only Distlish vessels were
allowed to drop anchor, but all eyes winked at that law. Glorious
needed a refit, which would take a week
or two.
The
inquisitors’ program there had been decided early and confirmed by months of wistful
longing: first comfort, then society, then language. Their long ordeal afloat
had left the team filthy and haggard, with every bone showing. By rights they
needed several weeks’ rest to recuperate, but time did not permit this. So Don
Lope Attewell moved his household into the town’s best hostelry in search of
landlubber luxuries like soap and hot water. As soon as everyone felt human
again, Flicker went off in carefully preserved livery to deliver a carefully
forged letter of introduction to the Distlish governor.
Wolf
himself went hunting through the saloons until he found a penniless, highborn,
insufferably arrogant Distlish don drinking himself to death, then lured him
back to the hostel to sample some excellent Granairan red. By midnight, when
the boys laid the lush out to dry on the boardwalk, Dolores and Wolf had
acquired accents matching those
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of the bluest of azure-blooded Distliard
aristocrats, albeit slightly slurred.
Predictably,
His Excellency was diplomatically indisposed and unable to receive the
foreigner, but his wife and the other permanently bored upper-crust ladies of
Mondon were snobs. They swallowed the bait and invitations began arriving the
next day. Having no training in personation, Sir Wolf remained Sir Wolf. Lady
Attewell, wife of a mere knight, became Lady Dolores, a noblewoman who had
retained her title after marrying a commoner. Society ladies in the colonies
would understand such matters. Indeed they would soon discover—from her servants,
say—that Lady Dolores was a daughter of the Duke of Twobridge, no less.The
tragic love story, the unwanted baby, the expulsion from Court and even from
Chivial itself, could all be deduced from that, while especially sensitive
noses would detect the fragrance of money available to make sure the reprobates
stayed away. Why else would they be here, at the wrong end of the earth?
The
governor and his wife attended several of the dinners that followed. In fact
the same faces appeared every night, and only the houses changed. Dona Dolores
played her role so magnificently that she awoke some mornings weeping over the
poor dead baby.
For that
first evening in society, Megan miraculously transformed milady from
storm-battered waif back to ravishing beauty. Quin having hired a carriage and
driver, Don Lope and Dona Dolores whirled off in state, with two footmen
clinging on the back. Since they could find no excuse to take a lady’s maid to
a dinner party, Megan went to bed, swearing she would sleep the clock around
yet again.
The tropic
sun set early and a languorous night descended, the sky all stars, like silvery
lace draped just above the treetops, and the steamy air scented with flowers
and vegetation.With Distlish men greatly outnumbering Distlish women on the
island and native wives banned from society, an admiring crowd soon gathered
around Dolores. The men mobbed Wolf, most of them trying to sell him their
plantations so that they could retire home to Distlain or head west to join in
the war. Quin and Flicker scoured the kitchens for crusts of information. In
short, all four inquisitors spied their heads off.
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Although
they were staggering with weariness when they returned to the hostel at
midnight, Dolores insisted on holding a conference, for that was standard Dark
Chamber procedure, and Megan was wakened to listen. Shunning the stifling
bedrooms, the team assembled on a balcony overlooking the harbor, dropped the
role-playing, and conversed softly in Chivian.A gibbous moon shone peacefully
over the bay, but the night was alive with frog songs, saloon quarrels, lute
playing, and the constant whine of insects.
The rules
said they must start with the most junior, so he could show his stuff, if any.
“Didn’t
learn much,” Quin said complacently, leaning back against the rail. “Politics
hasn’t changed from what the bats told us. The rainy season’s almost over, so
the war’s about to start up again. This new Caudillo
that King Diego sent out, Severo de la
Cuenca—everyone has great hopes for him, but the Tlixilians are still holding
their own. Last spring they sacked two towns and stamped out a major invasion,
losses heavy on both sides. Dead, wounded, and missing in action are all
equally dead in this war, of course.There’s talk of the El Dorado forces using
metal weapons, so some of the smuggling is getting through.”
He glanced
sideways at Flicker, who had not said a word yet, but was quivering like a
hound on a leash. Quin grinned and let him loose. “That’s about all that I—”
The
greyhound shot off. “You can’t be sure about the smuggling— they must have
captured lots of weapons by now ...but it’s likely.Even the locals hereabouts
want to stretch the war out as long as—”
Wolf
started to ask why and Flicker leered triumphantly.
“Because
for thirty years the Distliards have been setting themselves up with wide
estates . . . here and on Mazal . . . plantations growing cotton, sugar cane,
beans, ranching on higher ground for horses, salt beef, and leather....They’re
all in over their scalps in debt and the only cash market they’ve got is the
army on the mainland. It’s a great pyramid built on war and
slavery....Slavery’s absurdly inefficient, because the initial investment and
the capital tied up in security and housing is much more than the wages you’d
have to pay free folk to work far harder, so the moment the war is settled the haciendas
are all bankrupt.”
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He
drew a breath about then.“I also heard that there’s not much wrong
with
glass swords.”
Wolf made disbelieving noises.
“So they
say!” Flicker snapped. “ ’Long as you don’t parry with them. Use a shield for
parrying and they’re more deadly.
A glass sword can cut off a horse’s head with one stroke! The great advantages
the Distliards had at first weren’t swords, they were horses and war dogs,
which the Tlixilians had never seen before, so those are what we ought to be
offering, not swords. Steel armor might sell, but cotton’s cooler. Horses . .
.Tlixilians have captured a few and learned to ride them.”
Dolores was
nodding that she’d heard that too.
“The ones
who are really making money here,” Flicker said, “and will make a lot more, are
the harbor merchants and shipwrights. If the Distliards can take El Dorado,
then the trade through Mondon will be enormous!” Another breath. “If they
can’t, then Eurania will start treating Tlixilia as a sovereign state and
trade will bloom anyway!”
He was an
ingenious little slug and might even be likeable if he did not keep making eyes
at Dolores. He had learned more in the kitchen than Wolf had in the dining
hall.
“Interesting but not immediately
relevant.Thank you, Flicker. Good work.You, love?” “I collected the names of
some grandees in Sigisa,” Dolores said.“It seems there’s only one counts for
much at all.”
“Severo de
la Cuenca?”
“Ruiz de
Rojas.”
“But Cuenca
is the Caudillo, the
Governor, El Supremo.”
Dolores
fought back a yawn. “But Cuenca is away inland, fighting the war. Don Rojas runs
Sigisa, which is the gateway to all Tlixilia.We’re going to have to deal with
Rojas. How about you, love? Did you hear anything we haven’t mentioned?”
Fortunately
Wolf did have one scrap to add to the heap.“Just a man they call El
Chiviano. Seems he has a ranch hereabouts, in the
hills north of town, a big one.”
“I thought
only Distliards could own land?” Flicker said suspiciously.
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“He’s
a friend of the governor.They say he’s the largest supplier of horses to the
Distlish army, so he’s doing well. He may have good sources of information.
I’ll see if I can arrange a meeting.Well done, all. Good start! Now let’s get
some sleep.We have work to do tomorrow.”
2
Mondon
was the center of the slave trade in the Hence Lands. Ships bringing prisoners
from the mainland unloaded at dawn; ranchers and planters bargained; and by
noon, when the sun became murderous, it was all over. Horrible as Wolf found
the business, he and Dolores were there every morning to watch the chain gangs
shuffling into the plaza—a few dozen men, women, and children, naked or close
to it, fastened by the neck, and wrapped in ultimate despair. Young women sold
first.
That was
the best place to study the languages of the naturales.
The slavers shouted commands to their
wares, sometimes even translating questions and answers back and forth between
the merchandise and prospective buyers. It soon became clear that there were
many dialects, but only two languages, one from the islands and the other from
the mainland.That was the one that interested the Chivians, of course.They
stood in the shade with the buyers, declining offers to bid, but watching,
listening, and applying their conjured gift of tongues.Within a week they knew
enough Tlixilian to try whispering it to each other in bed, although slave
market talk included more curses and insults than endearments.
Wolf was
amused to discover how quickly he adjusted to the brown faces and coal-black
hair of the naturales, men’s
lack of beards. He soon stopped seeing them as irredeemably ugly, as he had
when viewing corpses at Quondam; the younger women were gorgeous. Most of the
slaves seemed lost in bewildered despair, but he saw some who still held their
heads high. In contrast, the worst gutter dregs from the slums of
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Distlain
had found their way out to the Hence Lands, where they could
strut
around like kings and buy slaves to gratify their whims.
On the tenth morning, Dolores said, “Buy
that one.”
“Which one?”
“The big
one. I love the way his muscles ripple. He gives me goose bumps.”
Wolf said,
“He gives me goose bumps too.”The object of her interest was a fearsome giant,
his powerful brown body still bearing traces of war paint.The iron collar had
abraded his neck and his chest showed marks of the lash. Alone in that tragic
parade he wore manacles and leg irons, yet he held his head high and glared
back at the world that maltreated him so. That mattered, but more important
were the crusted wounds on his ears and lower lip, where ornaments had been
ripped out. He was a Tlixilian of high rank.
“He won’t
fetch much,” Dolores said. “We could try later when prices are lower.”
“Not too
much later.There are ways of taming stallions.”
“Wolf ! No!
They’d really do that to a man?”
“He’s not a
man, he’s a chattel.”Appalled at the thought,Wolf said, “Spirits take the
money! Let’s buy him now.”
As soon as
they moved out in the sunlight, a greasy trader attached himself to them,
fawning and querying their needs: “A fine kitchen maid for the lady? A child or
two to teach.The little ones eat so much less.. . .”
Dearly
wanting to cut out the brute’s tongue,Wolf did not answer, but escorted Dolores
directly over to her choice, knowing that this would drive up his price even
more. As they drew near, the giant glared at them, and especially at Dolores, a
woman viewing him in his shame. His chains rattled.
“Ah, this
is Dominique! Very strong. Feel those arms! The señor
will buy the strength of three ordinary
men.”
Dominique
turned his back on the customers, ignoring what the rough iron collar did to
the sores on his neck. He undoubtedly meant to demonstrate contempt, but he
also revealed the amount of flogging he had endured. Wolf shivered at the sight
of so much raw flesh, welts
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weeks old repeatedly overlain by newer,
all suppurating and crawling with flies. The man might be terminally stupid,
but he certainly had courage.
The slaver snarled
and raised his whip.
“Leave him!
You’ll never tame him that way.”
The greasy
man smirked and gestured with his fingers.“As the señor
says—snip! In a week he is docile, yes?”
“No, I
fancy him for breeding stock.Ten pesos.”
“The señor
is joking! Seventy pesos and cheap at
the price.”
Wolf let
Dolores take over the bargaining—inquisitors were very good at it.The dealer
settled for nineteen pesos and two hundred maravedís.
Wolf paid
up. Not wanting the slavers to know he spoke the language, he said,“Tell him
to turn around and look me in the eye as a man should.” Dominique, who must
have been steeling himself for the whip throughout the proceedings, obeyed the
order, except he was looking over Wolf’s head and Wolf’s eyes were level with
his collarbones. “Tell him he is a warrior, and I also am a warrior.”Wolf
tapped his sword and the dark eyes glanced down at it. “Tell him he is my
prisoner and I will treat him with honor.”
The slaver
obeyed, then chuckled. “The señor should
play safe and buy those leg irons from us.”
“I will buy
a cloth from you,” Wolf said, and had to pay an outrageous eighty
maravedís for a dirty rag.As soon as his slave’s shackles were unlocked,
Wolf handed it to him to hide his nudity, then beckoned for him to follow, and
the three of them walked together from that hellish, verminous place. The
moment they were around the corner, Wolf stopped and looked up at the face of
hatred, wondering if this warrior might prefer death to dishonor and choose to
take one last bearded enemy with him.
“You are a
warrior from Tlixilia?” he asked in Tlixilian.
The man’s
eyes jerked wide but he did not speak.
“Tell me
your real name, warrior, not what those nightsoil carriers called you.”
Suspiciously
the giant said,“I am Heron-jade, taker of four captives among the sons of
Sky-cactus.”
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“And I am—”
It came out as Wild-dog-by-the-spring. “You
fight in the armies of the floating city?”
Looking
very puzzled, the big man said, “I did. Now I am meat.”
“If you could
return to Sky-cactus, you would be a warrior again?”
The dark,
tortured eyes flickered to Dolores and back to Wolf.The world was making no
sense for him—despair numbed, hope hurt. “In time it might be granted.”
“If you do
more noble deeds?”
He nodded.
“In a few
days we sail west. I will return you to the great land, warrior Heron-jade. I
will send you with a message to the Emperor.This I promise by my honor, as
warrior to warrior.That will be a noble deed, for you must cross the land of
the traitor rebels. Take my words to the floating city and live to fight
again.”
The
chattel sneered in disbelief, refusing to be seduced by hope.
“Now we
take you to the place of spirits to heal your wounds.”
His chin
jerked higher. “I will give my precious jewel.”
“Wolf !”
Dolores squealed.“He thinks you’re going to tear his heart out.”
Wolf
explained as best he could, but Heron-jade was still perplexed and apprehensive
when he arrived at the elementary. He grimaced at the robed conjurers lurking
in the shadows, but went and stood in the center of the octogram as Wolf
ordered. The chanting had scarcely begun when he gasped and raised a hand to
his torn lip.
Healing was
the only conjuration that did not give Wolf a headache—or if it did, it cured
it immediately.
When the
ritual was over, he said, “Now you feel better? Now you see we mean you well?”
Heron-jade
strode across to him, dropped to his knees, and laid his head on Wolf’s boots.
“I am my lord’s meat.”
That might
mean no more than a polite “Good chance!” or it might mean what it said.Wolf
told him to rise, and took him out to the ship, leaving Dolores to inspect the
traders’ stalls.
As he was
being rowed over the silvery bay, the slave kept his eyes fixed on his master’s
face, but Wolf could not tell whether he was being
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respectful or plotting murder. Their
worlds were too far apart. Captain Clonard had grumbled hugely when told of
Wolf’s intention to buy slaves, but he had lost five men on the voyage to sickness
and mishap, so he could not deny that he had room. Now, when he saw the ogre
who climbed on board, he insisted that Heron-jade be put in irons, and Wolf
reluctantly agreed.
Two days
later he bought Serpent-night, who was a more manageable size and younger, a
taker of one captive, but just as stubborn, for his back had been flogged to
strips.With two prisoners, the Chivians could eavesdrop and polish their grasp
of the Tlixilian language. The slavers began saving their intractable livestock
for the madman, and on his last day in Mondon he acquired Pulse-obsidian and
Blood-mirror-walks. He had to be content with four, although he wished he could
buy and release them all.
He was much
relieved when Glorious completed
her refitting and prepared to sail. Having never been much of a partygoer, even
before becoming the King’s Killer, he had quickly wearied of Mondon’s social
life—humorless, cheerless guests sitting around soggy courtyards by the light
of torches, drinking rum, being served hand and foot by sullen brown people
whose world they had stolen. They ate meat, meat, and meat. They had nothing to
discuss except the bad counsel King Diego was receiving and the incompetence of
his army. They feared that El Dorado might yet reconquer its rebellious colonies
and hurl the Distlish into the sea. Wolf’s associates were more skilled at
extracting useful information than he was, and the parasite lords of Condridad
had little more knowledge to be extracted.To learn more, the team must move on
to the notorious Sigisa, island of vice.
But
Sigisa was run by the self-appointed alcalde, Ruiz
de Rojas.The more they heard about him, the clearer it became that he was going
to be a problem.
Wolf had expressed a passionate desire
to meet El Chiviano
Alas,
señor, the rainy season! You cannot possibly.
But
anything was possible if the spirits of chance willed it. On his
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last night, the hostess, beaming with
pride, announced that El Chiviano was
here! In town! In this very house! To meet Don Lope! And she swept Wolf across
the courtyard to make the introduction.
He was
standing with three ranchers Wolf already knew, listening rather than talking.
He was slim, average height, a weathered forty or well-preserved fifty. He wore
the same knee-length pleated tunic as his companions did, with the same greatly
puffed sleeves, the same silk hose below and pancake hat above, plus the
inevitable sword, which was more necessary in Mondon than in Grandon. He
greeted the newcomers’ arrival with an expectant smile. As the hostess uttered
Wolf’s name, he offered a hand—and then dropped it. His eyes slitted. The
threat was as blatant as a slap.The señora
gasped and fell silent.The onlookers
instinctively pulled back a pace.
“Wolf?” he said.
“You Blades do choose silly names, don’t you?”
Wolf raised
his eyebrows.“You have the advantage of me ...brother?”
Although
the man’s sword bore no cat’s-eye, he might as well have had Made
on Starkmoor written on his forehead. Blades aged
well, but this one was too old to be a threat to Wolf.
“No brother
of yours. My name would mean nothing to you. I hear the stupid bitch is
actually queen now.” Fortunately he was speaking Chivian.
Wolf
ignored the sneer.“If you mean Queen Malinda, she kept the throne warm until
her son came of age. Then she abdicated and sailed home to rejoin her husband.”
“I
wonder what even a Bael could do to deserve that one.” “She ruled well, Chiviano.
Another twenty years would have been even
better.” The expatriate shrugged. “If King Whatsis is worse, then Chivial must
truly be in a mess.” “Chivial is in excellent shape for a country ruled by a
homicidal halfwit.”Wolf was enjoying himself.Wonderful party!
And El
Chiviano was puzzled. “He sent you here to spy,
of course.”
“I swear by
my soul, my sword, and my wife’s virtue, señor,
that King Athelgar did not send me here,
and I would rather starve to death in a chain gang than ever lift a hand to
help that man. Do I convince?”
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“Nevertheless,
perhaps I should inform His Excellency exactly what Blades are and what sort of
dirty work they do.”
The
governor’s friend was threatening to have Wolf hanged as a spy. Fortunately he
was still speaking Chivian.
“Of course,
señor. Tell
him how they keep slaves now.”
El Chiviano
did not like that. “Sonny, if I put
slaves to herding horses, I would own no slaves and no horses. Understand?”
“I do. Do
your friends?”
The exile
almost smiled. “Some of them are still lost in the trees.” He started to turn
away.Then he said, “Who is Grand Master now?”
“Durendal.”
He nodded,
as if that was to be expected. “He aided me once, at great risk to himself, I
think. If you ever see him again, tell him Eagle is grateful.”
“Any friend
of Lord Roland’s is a friend of mine.”
“But none
of mine.” He strode away.
“Señora,”
Wolf told his hostess,“El
Chiviano has insulted my King. I have no choice
but to withdraw.” Oh, horrors! He was defending Athel-gar’s honor! He collected
his wife and servants and departed, huffing ferociously in case he burst out
laughing.They sailed unhindered the next morning, so Eagle had not betrayed
him.
No
doubt the story was buried somewhere in the archives at Iron-hall. Certainly
the Litany of Heroes mentioned
a Sir Eagle dying with glory two centuries ago, but the name was no longer on
the permitted list.Wolf knew that because he had wanted it and been refused.
3
The
final leg of the journey was the most dangerous, for they had left the last
traces of the rule of law behind in Mondon. Baelish pirates or Distlish
warships might challenge them, or Captain Clonard might spot a likely prize and
throw off his cloak of respectability to give chase.
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Even assuming the passengers reached
Sigisa safely, they would need help to survive in that cauldron, so they had
already begun subverting the best men among the crew with offers of good wages
ashore. Clonard knew of this and liked it no better than he liked the four
killer slaves in the hold.
At noon the
first day, as Glorious wallowed
with all canvas spread, Wolf unshackled Heron-jade and took him up on deck to
exercise. He pointed at the sun. “See, we sail west, to the great land.”
“The lord
spoke as a true warrior.”
“You
exercise now. Grow strong again.”
The big man
threw his head back and began to clap. Once he had the beat, he went to
stamping, then a dance, and eventually wild gymnastics, as best he could in
that cramped space. Crew and passengers watched openmouthed. Sailors danced for
exercise too, but they did not go on to balance on one hand on a rolling deck
or perform twelve consecutive back flips.When he finished, gasping and running
sweat, the audience applauded. He frowned until Wolf explained, then shrugged.
Dolores gave him water and led him forward to the forecastle.
Being the
smellier end of a ship, the bow was the least frequented. Flicker and Quin
arrived. Heron-jade had met them earlier, but servants were beneath his notice.
He tried to ignore Dolores, also, but that was much harder. Megan was not
present, probably reuniting with Duff.
Very warily
Wolf began asking questions. He knew from early conversations and eavesdropping
that the giant was an eagle warrior, vassal of an eagle knight, Sky-cactus. The
other three warriors were followers of jaguar knights, and there seemed to be a
coolness between the two orders, even there in the enemy’s clutches.There were
more complexities. Heron-jade and Blood-mirror-walks were warriors of El
Dorado itself, the floating city, while the other two were from lesser towns
within its empire, and therefore had lower status. This pattern matched
Euranian society, but Wolf dearly wanted to know how the two orders of
knighthood differed. The corpse at Quondam had sported jaguar claws. Did an
eagle knight have wings as well as the taloned feet whose tracks they had seen?
He left that point for later.
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“There are
towns that make war on the floating city,” he said.
“Zolica,Yazotlan,Tephuamotzin.”
Heron-jade’s
eyes flashed. “Offal! Turncoats! Slaves of the Hairy Ones.” He thudded a huge
fist on the rail. “They will be meat!”
“Our town
is not the town of the Hairy Ones you fight. Our king is not their king.”
Heron-jade
considered that information. “So?” He was neither stupid nor especially
quick-witted, but his mind walked unfamiliar paths and speech was beset with
traps.
“Our king
does not want the Hairy Ones and their slaves to burn the floating city.”
“Your king
will send his knights to fight with us?”
“First he
sends me to ask a thing. Nine moons ago, knights of the floating city came
across the ocean to the lands of my king, invaded his stronghold, slaughtered
his men, abducted—”
As much as
this terrible giant could display fear, he did so then. He shrank away, his
brown face pale below its tattoos, white showing all around his coal-black
irises.
Wolf said,
“You are troubled and I know not why, Heron-jade.”
He looked
wildly around, at the birds floating by, the great swoops of sail overhead.Wolf
began to fear he might leap into the sea.
“What makes
a warrior so afraid?”
Even for
his size, Heron-jade had enormous hands. One of them shot out and grasped Wolf
by the throat.Wolf grabbed his dagger, realized he could be dead already, and
quietly sheathed it again, while glimpsing Dolores tucking a knife back in her
sleeve. He was released.
“You have a
precious jewel,” the eagle warrior said. “It beats.”
“Why did
you think I might not?”
“It is a
sad song.”
“Songs may
speak true. Sing me the song.”
Heron-jade
nodded, thought for a moment, lips moving. Then he began to chant, hoarsely at
first, gathering confidence as he went.
Words
rarely translated exactly, so that even in ordinary speech Wolf had trouble
seeing the world his slaves described. Heron-jade would refer to Sky-cactus as
his father and himself as Sky-cactus’s fledgling, yet
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he would
also tell of his father having been a taker of three captives who had given his
precious jewel to a jaguar knight of another town many years past—which meant
he had been sacrificed in the ghastly conjuring ritual, of course. When it
came to song, meaning was as intangible as mist.
Great the
gifts—myriad the precious jewels
Lizard-drumming
of perfect valor—spotted slayer
brings to the halls of
Amaranth-talon—unconquerable soaring one
Hear words
of my father—Quetzal-star blood spiller
after many years whispering on night
winds
Terrible
the battle—more terrible the Hairy Ones I slew
most terrible—the house of demons that
holds me
Thus speaks
Quetzal-star—prowler of darkness
crying out for aid
Far-seeing
one take these cloaks, these rings, these riches
the myriad precious jewels—bear me
thence
Send with
me—Plumed-pillar
my brother—silent slayer
Amaranth-talon—hears
the clawed one
the cloud
chaser rises—wings spreading
calls his brother—Bone-peak-runner
Swift and
terrible—the sky darkener
comes storm-riding
They spill
the precious jewels—knives drink
A wind they
raise—blowing into the cold, the dark
the hell—where
demons torment Quetzal-star
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Wind-borne
they go—dread slayers of demons Lizard-drumming—Plumed-pillar
Great
the slaughter—demons bleeding the soul of Quetzal-star—is brought forth
Alas
Demons
rally—falls Plumed-pillar ax strikes—mighty cedar falling falling
Out
from the cold, the dark, the hell Bone-peak-runner—Amaranth-talon
Lizard-drumming—heroes triumph
But
weep weep for the new lost—Plumed-pillar Wasted—mighty jewel wasted
The Chivians exchanged smiles of
triumph. Even Flicker looked pleased. “Lizard-drumming was the true-born son of
Quetzal-star?” Wolf asked. “And mightier,” Heron-jade said solemnly. “Uncounted
precious
jewels wept for him.” “Questions?”Wolf
asked in Chivian. “Pass them through me.” Flicker jumped in before Dolores
could speak. “What can the wit
ness tell us about the warriors who
accompanied the four knights?” “Just their regular war bands, I expect.”Wolf
translated the question. Heron-jade’s eyes seemed to turn even darker than
usual. “Many
great warriors. Men of great courage.
Mighty lords.” “Well done, Flicker! Of course an expedition into demon hell
would call forth the show-offs.
Volunteers, likely.” Flicker looked smug. “It explains all the finery you
collected.” Boy Genius had seen what Wolf had not, that regular troops would
not
have worn so much gold, every amulet and talisman available.
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“Any more
questions?”
“How did
they work the conjuration?” Dolores asked.
“I suggest we
leave that for another session, love. I don’t want to push too hard. We have
several days before we reach Sigisa. Quin, my lad, you will repeat this
testimony to Grand Inquisitor, but how will you interpret it for them?”
Quin’s face
went blank for a moment as he pondered. That plain, honest, workaday face was a
good inquisitor face, dangerously easy to underestimate.
“Interpretation,”
he said. “The attack on Quondam Castle was a unique event, not the opening of a
general offensive. The Baroness’s jaguar pin had been regalia of a jaguar
knight named Quetzal-star, who fell early in the Distlish invasion. Its new
owner sent it home to Distlain and King Diego, who passed it on to Queen
Malinda, who left it behind when she departed, and His Majesty gave it away to
Marquesa Ce-leste.The implication is that nobody wanted to own it, and the
effect it had on the White Sisters when it was worn is further evidence of its
residual spirituality. At Quondam the Baroness wore it constantly and thus
stimulated this remnant power to action. Lizard-drumming, Quetzal-star’s son
and successor, sensed it in use and interpreted the call as his father’s spirit
requiring rescue, so he and another jaguar knight purchased the aid of two
eagle knights to go in search of it. Implication is that the eagle knights
provided the transportation and the jaguars did the fighting.The jaguar knight
killed by Sir Lynx was Plumed-pillar.”
“Very
concise analysis, Quin.Any comments, anyone?”Wolf turned to Heron-jade.“Your
words move us, Taker of Four Captives, but it is only a song. That was our land
the great warriors saw. It is not always cold, not always dark. It bears
flowers in abundance, in season. Nor was Plumed-pillar the only corpse they
left behind. Many of our warriors and your warriors died. The person they took
back to your land with them—what of her?”
“Her?”
“It was a
woman they brought back.”
The giant
howled, startling the entire ship. “The demons did this? Weep, weep for
Quetzal-star!” He beat on his head with his fists.
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Dolores’s
face turned bleak, as if Heron-jade had just made his muscles seem less sexy.
Quin and Wolf exchanged manly grins.
When the
warrior stopped wailing,Wolf asked,“What happened to Quetzal-star after the
rescue?”
He did not
know. Lizard-drumming was not his lord. But if Celeste had since been
murdered—to release Quetzal-star’s soul?—then Lynx would have sensed it,
wherever he was. Had that most unfortunate of Blades gone mad in some foreign
port?
Wolf told
Flicker to escort Heron-jade back to the hold and bring up Pulse-obsidian and
Serpent-night so they could have their turns on deck.They did not dance or
sing; they just went straight into calisthenics. Despite the cramped
conditions and although they could never have practiced together before, they
put on an incredible acrobatic double act of warrior gymnastics.
Later they
were questioned about their youth and training, none of which turned out to be
of interest.They did confirm that Tlixilian politics were as complex as Euranian.
El Dorado was ruled by an aristocratic warrior-caste, with the Emperor only
chairman of the council. He would be succeeded by a close male relative, not
necessarily a son. The greatest lords were the warrior-conjurer knights, but
birth alone would not admit a man to the great orders; he must also be a great
fighter. Pulse-obsidian let slip that Blood-mirror-walks stood highest among
the four ex-slaves, being of very high birth, related to the imperial
family.That and his growing battlefield prowess had destined him for eventual
knighthood until he was wounded and captured by the Distlish.
Those two
were sent back to their chains and up came Blood-mirror-walks himself. He was
probably the youngest and certainly the shortest of the four, although almost
as wide across the shoulders as Heron-jade. He might also be the smartest. He
had limped when Wolf first bought him, but the healing had cured that. Seeing
him looking curiously at Diligence, Wolf
drew her and passed her over to him to study. Dolores glared at him for this
foolhardiness.
“We Hairy
Ones have better weapons than you do,”Wolf said.
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The young
warrior fingered the edge and tried the balance. “Sky metal.And you ride on deer.This
is the regalia of a knight?” He pointed to the cat’s-eye.
“It is
...How did you know that?”
“I was told
so by someone.” Blood-mirror-walks returned the sword, hilt first. “But not all
flowers bring fruit.”
“Why do you
not acquire weapons like ours? We will trade them.”
The dark
eyes were expressionless. “That is for the lords to say.”
“But when
the knights went to the cold hell to rescue the soul of Quetzal-star, there
were many weapons of sky metal there and they took none.Why?”
“I do not know.”
He did
know. He just wasn’t going to tell. He had already learned from Heron-jade that
the soul of Quetzal-star had been imprisoned in the body of a woman, and was
equally appalled.This, in his opinion, was what came of fighting Hairy Ones. “A
warrior must give his precious jewel to an honorable conqueror,” he explained.
“It is best
to win, surely?”
He sneered.
“And die of old age?”
“Had it
been the rebels who captured you, instead of the Hairy Ones, would they have
taken your precious jewel?”
“Of
course.”
“And you
would have submitted?”
“Proudly.”
His smile
was chilling.To a Tlixilian, ritual vivisection was the finest death.
“Why did
the jaguar knights ask the eagle knights to raise the wind? Do jaguar knights
have lesser power?”
“Our knights
have other powers.”
That was
the last information Wolf got out of Blood-mirror-walks that evening, and next
day the others were much less communicative than before. Quin overheard some of
the harangue. They had been tricked, Blood-mirror-walks argued. It was better
to die a slave than be indebted to a Hairy One of any sort in any way, and if
the new kind
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imprisoned
knights’ souls in female bodies, then they were even worse than the Distliards.
He ordered his companions not to cooperate with their captors and they swore to
obey.
4
This is romantic!”
Dolores said.
Which
merely demonstrated, in Wolf’s cynical view, that one could get accustomed to
anything, even shipboard life. They were up on the forecastle, sitting close,
hugging tight while Glorious ploughed
onward through a moonless night. Her sails were plumped by the warm trade wind,
the sky was a glory of unfamiliar stars, and even the waves had a spooky glow.
The rhythmic swish of waves against the bow and the creak of cables added a
sort of lullaby. But this was the downwind end of the ship and somewhere ahead
was a continent full of cannibals.
“Anywhere
is romantic when you’re there, my love.”
“You’re
learning.” She kissed his ear, the larger one.“Anyone but an inquisitor would
be utterly deceived and swept off her feet.”
“I don’t
have to sweep you off your feet.You are putty in my hands.”
She
chuckled happily. “True.”
He was
about to try a serious kiss when he heard voices and the rest of the team came
trotting up the ladder to join them.A fiddle struck up amidships, a sailor
began singing a lament, and others joined in.
Wolf began
with a lament, also, stressing the problems that lay ahead. “Conference.We were
sent to discover the How and Why
of the attack on Quondam. Heron-jade has
answered the Why question
for us, so you get to go home and report, Quin, you lucky fellow. Why
was easy, How
will be hard. We were told in Mondon
that in all their years here, the Distliards have learned nothing about
Tlixilian conjuration. If even their allies guard the secrets so closely, would
we do better if we were free to walk the streets of El Dorado? Who feels that
we should declare our mission impossible and all go home with Quin?”
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He was
appealing to Dolores, although he knew she would be the last to quit. Tlixilian
conjuration was to be her life’s work or the death of her.
Flicker
said, “No one.”
“Let’s talk
about it,” Megan said. “We did confirm that the How
is human sacrifice. Chivial would never
tolerate that. Do we even want to
know any more about how they do it?”
“Yes!”
Dolores never wavered in her enthusiasm. “I’ve told you! Conjuration requires
both summoning and commanding. We summon the spirits inside an octogram and
it’s almost impossible to apply their power outside it.Things or people can be
enchanted and then taken out of the octogram, the way we were enchanted against
fevers. The eagle and jaguar knights don’t cut out hearts on the battlefield,
but they certainly do apply power there. It sounds as if they can enslave the
actual spirits and take them away to use at another time and place. That’s the How
we need to know! They just use
sacrifices to summon the spirits, but we can do that in other ways.”
She was the
expert.The sailors’ chant ended and for a moment only the ship and the waves
spoke.
Wolf
sighed.“Forsooth, then we press on, my hearties.We have our four messengers.We
send them off to El Dorado, and stay put in Sigisa, drinking rum and dancing
till dawn. Tell me what we do about de Rojas.”
Their
sources in Mondon had known little of affairs in the interior, where Caudillo
Cuenca battled the Tlixilian Emperor,
but they had been well-informed about the scandalous, depraved island of Sigisa.
King Diego’s writ did not run there. The government comprised an Alcalde,
Ruiz de Rojas, and a city council.The
council elected him and he appointed the council—a very tidy arrangement that
kept all the crime under one management. Every saloon, dice game, and brothel
paid its toll to Rojas. Not a bean was sold or a water cask filled without his
sanction.
Rojas was
said to be discreet in what he skimmed off the army’s supplies, though, and the
Caudillo was
currently too engrossed in the war to pay much attention to the racketeer at
his back. That situation
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could not last very long. Even if Rojas
was tolerated as a welcome control over inevitable corruption that might grow
even worse without him, sooner or later King Diego and his general would move
to establish the rule of law. Or the Tlixilians would win and no Distliard
would be left breathing in Sigisa. Rojas must be amassing loot as fast as he
could by any means he could. To the Chivians he was a monstrous looming threat.Why
should he cut them in on the smuggling?
“Quin?”
Again Quin
smiled and shrugged. “I won’t be staying, Sir Wolf. Doesn’t feel right for me
to speak.”
“We can use
anybody’s good ideas. Flicker?”
Flicker’s
teeth shone in the starlight. “Why waste our prisoners just as messengers? Use
them as guides. Ignore Rojas. Slip by him before he notices and head inland. Go
straight to El Dorado.”
Wolf had
expected this. “You are proposing a major change of plan.”
“The
situation has changed.The bats didn’t know about the Alcalde.
He’s more dangerous than the mainland
would be. Can’t you see that?”
“It’s
possible, but you can’t prove it yet and the only place to find out is Sigisa
itself. Secondly, you’re assuming we can slip
by Rojas. Efficient robber barons keep a very close watch on the road—or
harbor, in this case. I’m sure his goons will go through the ship like a
business of ferrets, and they’ll want to look in our baggage. Thirdly,
eventually we hope to come back out. I don’t want to burn our bridges. Or boats.
Let’s hear the others. Megan?”
Megan was
just as predictable. “Stay away from him as much as we can.We have ways of
being unobtrusive.”
Dolores
said, “I agree we must try and avoid trouble, but I’d rather tell him what we’re
planning than have him torture it out of us. His price will go up, but we have
lots of gold.”
Flicker
made a snorting noise. “Offer him a thousand pesos and he demands ten thousand?
Give him ten and he demands a hundred? Give—”
“Point
made,”Wolf said. “You want to bypass him, Megan wants to hide from him, and
Dolores wants to cut him in. I have another idea.”
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For several nights he had been dreaming
of his stepfathers, especially the last one. Normally he paid little heed to
dreams, but sometimes they offered warnings, and one should at least try to
understand their advice. “You’re snoops. I’m a bully boy. I don’t think the way
you do. I agree with Dolores that we’ll have to cut Rojas a slice of our
imaginary goose. I’d like to have him as an ally, but I prefer to negotiate on
my feet, not on my knees.”
“Meaning
what?” Flicker sneered.
“Meaning
I’d start by kicking his shins.”
They talked
amicably. Megan stuck to her original position. In the end Dolores supported
Wolf out of loyalty. Surprisingly, so did Flicker, either because he just
enjoyed brawling or because he hoped to watch Wolf botch up the mission.
Quin
had the last word. “Keep me out of it, Sir Wolf, so I can report on your
funerals.” Another six months at sea might not be such a terrible prospect
after all.
Captain Clonard had refused to hire a
pilot in Mondon. Finding Sigisa, he had explained, was a feat of navigation
within the abilities of the average spaniel. All you did was sail due west
until you made landfall and then go north, keeping an eye out for
Smoking-woman, one of the great volcanic peaks of Tlixilia.When you had passed
that and were almost halfway to an even bigger one, Sky-is-frowning, you made
a left turn and entered the river mouth.
Fortunately
he was right, and one sunny morning Glorious was
towed into the harbor. Wolf leaned on the rail beside a wildly excited Dolores,
admiring the gateway to the mainland, of which they had heard so much. Baron
Roland had described Sigisa as two miles of brothels and dens, but since his
day it had grown longer and wickeder, until now it was a dull night when no
bodies departed on the morning tide. Into this pestilential pit had poured
Distlish soldiers, sailors, and adventurers by the thousand, plus all the
human parasites that fed on them. Having seen how big the world was,Wolf had
almost given up hope that Lynx would ever reach the Hence Lands, but if he did,
his quest to find
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his ward must lead him through Sigisa.The
brothers would meet again here or nowhere.
Languid and
greasy, the river drifted northward along the coast, held captive on the east
by Sigisa, which was a sand spit, not a true island. In the dry season the
river shrank and the wells turned brackish, but at that time of year, with the
rainy season just ended, the river was a safe harbor, and a dozen ships were
anchored there, most of them surrounded by dugout canoes, loading or unloading
cargo. The western bank was jungle and swamp, reputed to be full of poisonous
snakes, spiders, insects, and even frogs, little scarlet blobs no bigger than
a thumbnail whose touch burned a man’s skin.
“I don’t
like the look of that side.” Dolores was pouting at the impenetrable green
tangle. “Let’s not stay there.”
They turned
to study the equally dense tangle of shacks and tents on the sandbar. Wolf
said, “Do you think the town looks any better? I think I’ll sleep in plate
mail.”
“Not in my
bed you won’t.”
Their first
requirement must be to find somewhere secure to live and store their valuable
baggage. Real estate was reportedly volatile in Sigisa, with houses changing
hands all the time on the roll of a die or twist of a knife. Anyone wishing to
breathe the air there was expected to pay off the goons, from the mayor down to
the junior assistant deputy harbormaster who would be the first aboard when Glorious
dropped anchor. There were limits,
though. If Rojas shaved his victims too close to the bone, ships would find another
port. Estimating what could be plucked off Glorious
would take hours of negotiation in that
murderous heat, but that was Clonard’s business. Wolf planned to go right to
the top.
Although
Sigisa was the main port for the slave trade, he had been told in Mondon that
there were no slaves in Sigisa itself, because they would escape too easily. As
evidence that one should not believe all one heard, the dozen sweating brown
rowers in the lighter that was towing Glorious to
her anchorage were very obviously chained, and the man standing over them held
a whip. Just as Glorious was
moving slowly past a ship loading a fresh cargo of prisoners, Flicker and Quin
emerged on
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deck with the four Tlixilians, who
recognized the place at once and glared around as if they would much enjoy
burning it to the ground with all its inhabitants.
Wolf addressed the one who mattered, the
youngest, a great-great-grandson of a former emperor. “I have kept my promise.”
Blood-mirror-walks studied him distrustfully, eyes black as coal. “And what
must we do now,Wild-dog-by-the-spring?”
“Must?
I do not use that word to warriors. That
way lies home.” Wolf pointed to the jungle and the snowy cone of
Sky-is-frowning peering over it. “Swim now if you wish. Or wait for dark, and I
will have you rowed across. I will give whatever you need for your
jour-ney—food, canoe, gourds, blankets.” Blankets seemed absurd in that
tropical sweat house, but El Dorado lay beyond high ranges. “I ask only that
you take word to the floating city that we will help its struggle if we can. I
showed you the weapons we offer in trade.You are free to go at any time.”
The chunky
jaguar warrior was still suspicious, sniffing the air for a hint of treachery.
“And you remain here?”
“I hope
to.You could help me in that, if you wished.”
Blood-mirror-walks curled his lip in an I-knew-it
sneer. Here came the bargaining he had
been expecting. “Help how?” “It is possible that there will be some Distliards
in need of dying.” Heron-jade made a blood-curdling noise in his throat. “Is
that a
promise?”
Wolf
laughed.“No, but I will arrange it if I can.Today I must challenge the lord of
this town and he may send his warriors against me. I will fight, but I need friends.
I freed you, I healed your wounds, and you have eaten my salt. Are not the best
friendships sealed in battle? Within three days I will win a home here, or I
will be dead. But the choice is entirely yours. Go now, or tarry three days and
help me against the Distliards.”
The others
just watched Blood-mirror-walks, and he did not consult them. He was young and
assertive.To refuse a fight against the Hairy Ones was unthinkable. “We have
eaten your salt,” he agreed. “We will stay and fight at your side,Wild-dog-by-the-spring.”
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5
The
anchor had barely splashed down before a gang of harbor officials came swarming
over the side, looking at least as villainous as Wolf had expected. They closed
in on Captain Clonard, who had an unlimited supply of impressive fake documents
to flaunt on such occasions.
They were
intercepted by a gentleman resplendent in fine linen tunic and silk hose, the
garb of a wealthy planter or rancher in Mon-don, topped off with a couple of
glittering decorations. Dolores, on his arm, was even more impressive in bright
brocade, twirling a silk parasol. Wolf announced in his haughtiest aristocratic
Distlish that he had urgent business with the Alcalde.
The chief
ruffian said, “No one goes ashore until I am satisfied.”
Staring at
him in disbelief, Wolf pointed to the ship’s standard, which was undoubtedly
large and multicolored, but hung so limp that its heraldry was unreadable. Then
he unwrapped a package to reveal a scroll bearing much scarlet wax and ribbon.“You
would argue with the King’s seal?”
No, even a
senior de Rojas minion would not do that.A lighter was brought alongside;
Dolores was lowered into it in a sling. There was— much
apologies, señor! no such thing as a
lady’s carriage in town, but the distinguished visitors were assured that the
walk to the municipalidad was
not far. Leaving the rest of the team to guard the precious baggage, Don Lope
and Dona Dolores set off to call upon the ill-famed de Rojas.
It was a
very educational stroll. Baron Roland had explained that the business district
lined the riverbank, the center of the spit was occupied by a residential
squalor of tents and wattle shacks, while an avenue of large villas stood
shoulder-to-shoulder along the seafront to divide the riffraff from the fresh
air. He had not mentioned that there was almost no room left to move.
Every gap
was packed with people. Most of the men were Distliards, almost all the women naturales,
but there were exceptions—haughty Euranian
ladies with trains of servants, even haughtier warriors in feath
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ered cloaks and body paint; child pimps,
child hookers, child pickpockets. Unlike drab old Chivial, Sigisa shimmered with
color: rainbow loincloths and fine gowns; gaudy half-naked prostitutes
soliciting; hucksters thrusting fabrics, beads, or pottery at passersby;
blinding sunlight and inky shade; foliage against the cloudless sky; flowered
creepers; parrots, macaws, and toucans.The air was a potpourri of exotic scents
of spices, flowers, and people. No one was hurrying, everyone going somewhere.
Blank-faced servants, swaggering pirates, armor-plated men-at-arms blazing in
the sunlight and close to heat stroke, enormous war dogs and their handlers . .
. carts and wagons and horse-drawn drays.
The slim
hand on Wolf’s arm was steady, but he knew Dolores well enough now to know that
she was nervous. She would be crazy if she were not. The shore was lined with
shipyards, marine chandlers, livestock pens, distilleries, lumber yards, and a
dozen other enterprises. Behind them lurked lath-and-wattle shacks, houses
mixed with grog-shops, stalls displaying fruits and fly-infested meat, leather
workers’ shops, potteries, and certainly brothels. Every breath brought a new
scent, every moment new peddlers shouting their wares. Dull it was not.
The
visitors had leisure to admire the bustle, for their guide naturally took them
by a roundabout route, so one of his boys could sprint more directly to their
destination and warn of their coming.At last they came to the Rojas palace, a
complex of fine wooden buildings on the seaward side of the town, enclosed by
an impressive palisade and guarded by troops in shiny cuirasses and helmets. If
there were many of those beauties around, Wolf decided, this hacienda would be
a very tough nut to bite on. He was even more impressed by the interior, which
had the same air of wealth and taste as Baron Roland’s Ivywalls, meaning it did
not look as if it had been designed by King Athelgar. Some of the furniture
might have been imported all the way from Distlain; the pottery and wall
hangings were Tlixilian.
One side of
the reception room looked out on a garden, and another was open to the
spangling blue sea and its cooling breeze.The visitors were granted a few
moments to admire it before the Alcalde strolled
in, displaying remarkable grace for a man who must be puzzled to the marrow. An
emissary sent by King Diego ought to arrive with a squad
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of men-at-arms and a warrant for his
arrest, not just a skinny girl dressed as a grand lady. Gang boss, vice lord,
murderer, local tyrant, Ruiz de Rojas had been born on Mazal, his father one of
the first settlers, his mother a naturale. Wolf
had expected someone of villainous appearance like Captain Clonard, but Rojas
was thirtyish, handsome, superbly dressed, and instantly charming. His mixed
blood showed in his features. He wore his heritage proudly, letting it add to
his hauteur: You may claim conquest or inheritance, I
have both. I rule here by right.
He was
respectful to an envoy bearing a royal edict, but he did not fawn or grovel.
Informed that the señor’s companion was in fact his wife, he bowed
gracefully and kissed her bejeweled fingers in proper Distlish style.Then he
turned to a waiting servant and nodded.
The man
vanished and a moment later ushered in a striking young woman—almost as tall as
Dolores, svelte, and the color of ripe chestnuts, as Lynx would have said. She
wore a shimmering white silk gown, and her jet-black hair was wound in coils
held by silver combs. She moved like gossamer on a summer dawn.
“Don Lope,
Dona Dolores, may I have the honor of presenting my dear wife, Fortunata?”
Rojas had arranged for her to be on hand, of course—a very quick reaction to
the news of the important arrivals. Wolf found it doubly remarkable because the
grandees in Mondon kept their native or part-native wives and concubines out of
sight of Euranian visitors.
According
to the gossips of Mondon, Fortunata had been born into the highest level of
Eldoradoan nobility.While still a child she had been dispatched to one of the
minor cities to become a royal wife, and her caravan had been captured by a
Distlish raiding party. After passing through various hands, she had become the
gangster’s wife in settlement of a gambling debt. She spoke Distlish
hesitantly, so Wolf and Dolores responded in Tlixilian.
Her eyes
widened. “I thought no Distliard spoke the pure tongue, señor!” She
meant they spoke the El Dorado dialect—courtesy of Heron-jade and
Blood-mirror-walks, of course.
Now the Alcalde
was even more puzzled, but he bade his
guests be seated. They babbled flowery trivia about the voyage out from
Distlain
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and the news from Mondon. Considering
that most of the social life in Sigisa was at the saloon-and-brothel level,
Fortunata was amazingly poised. After his servants had brought refreshments and
withdrawn, Rojas’s curiosity won out.
“Your visit
to Sigisa is more than social, Don Lope?”
Wolf
smiled. “Personal business.”
The major
glanced inquiringly at the package bearing the royal seal.
“This?”
Wolf said.“It’s a forgery, but quite a good one. Care to see?” He handed over
the package, which was not in fact sealed by the seal dangling on the
ribbon.The inside was blank.Wolf kept his smile firmly in place, for this was
the point at which the mayor might send for thugs and thumbscrews, and then the
visitors would leave with the flotsam on the morning tide.
Rojas
studied the wax and the vellum carefully. “And its purpose?” “Merely to get
your attention, Excellency. I never said it
was the King’s seal.” Rojas laughed with every indication of real amusement.
“Just to own this would get you hanged back in Ciudad Del Rey, señor!”
“But this
is not Ciudad Del Rey.”
“True. So
what can I do for you?” Smiling, he offered Wolf back the forgery.
“No, please
keep that as a souvenir of a brash intruder, Excellency.” A little penmanship
and a hot knife could make that document extremely valuable for anyone with a
low scruple count. “I am considering tarrying awhile in your fair city to
pursue . . . certain interests . . .”
The
inquisitors had rehearsed him half the night. Distlish grandees did not sully
their hands with trade, so ostensibly he was talking about land, but no one
could acquire clear title to land here, for all of it was claimed by at least
two monarchs. So there was meat under the pastry, and Rojas set to work to find
out what it was. Wolf declined to be pinned down. In practice they talked about
how the war was going, how a stranger might go about buying or renting a villa,
and how one might meet interesting people in Sigisa. Money would be no problem.
Rojas was
witty, subtle, and as cynical as only a vice lord could be. The war was nothing
to him. Neither King nor Emperor claimed his
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loyalty. “The Distliards are fools to
pursue such a bloody struggle,” he said, “when they could gain so much by peaceful
trade. And the Emperor is paying the price of arrogance. Had he been less
greedy when he was overlord of the coastal cities, they would not have rebelled
when the strangers came.”
“What of
them?”Wolf asked. “Zolica,Yazotlan,Tephuamotzin?”
“Fools! We
see their emissaries around town sometimes. You can know them by their high
manner and low intelligence.They are so keen to settle scores with an ancient
foe that they cannot see how much more dangerous Distlain is.They buy a jaguar
to silence a noisy dog.”
“What will
happen to them when El Dorado falls, señor?”
Dolores asked. Wolf had been careful to keep the women involved in the conversation,
so she could rescue him if he blundered into trouble.
Don Ruiz
shrugged with both hands. “Then they will follow right after.That is if
El Dorado falls.”
“Can it be
that it will not?”
He
smiled. “They are learning.You know the ways of the bullring, señor.
If you do not kill the bull inside of twenty minutes, he will kill you.”
6
That,”Wolf
said as they left the Rojas mansion, “was without doubt the hardest
conversation of my life. I never met any man so incredibly winsome. I hated
lying to him! I am never any good at lying, anyway.”
The
nightlife of Sigisa was beginning to waken—bands, drunks, drummers, lutenists,
and singers, backed by massed choirs of frogs and monkeys in the jungle.
“That’s
what I love about you, your naivete.”
“A simple
‘no’ would have sufficed. He saw through us, didn’t he?”
Rojas’s
questions had been inoffensive, but he had kept pick-pick-picking at Don Lope’s
fraudulent life story until he had unraveled it and
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could see that Wolf had never set foot
in Distlain any more than he had. So the visitors were spies. He had been too polite
to say that, but knew. He was supposed to know, of course.
Terms had
been settled over an excellent supper. His Worship the Alcalde
knew of just the respectable villa the
august Don Lope needed, and the owners—who had gone Home on some important business—
would accept a very reasonable rent. If the spirits were kind, Fortunata could
find the charming Dona Dolores some excellent servants by tomorrow. Don Lope
and his lady were more than welcome to spend tonight here, at his hacienda.The
spies had declined with thanks.
Wolf said,
“I think he swallowed the bait, don’t you?”
“I don’t
know.” Dolores was unusually subdued, holding tight to his arm and keeping her
head down. “His wife loves him.”
“Does that
matter?”
“It’s
puzzling.”
“Did he
ever tell us the truth?”
“I don’t
know! In a way he never told us any lies at all.”
“What?”
Wolf felt
her shiver.“Our teachers warned us that some people have no sense of wrong.They
do not understand evil, so truth-sounding will not work on them. Ruiz must be
one of those.” She laughed nervously. “He’s very good company, isn’t he?”
“Very. We
can still take Flicker’s advice and strike inland.”
But she was
not willing to consider that yet, and when they reached the ship and held a
whispered consultation with the others, neither were they. Even Flicker wanted
to press on with the dangerous challenge Wolf proposed.
Quin
had already shipped out as a deckhand on a Distlish vessel, homeward bound.
Next morning the mysterious Don Lope and
his charming lady arrived at their new home—just the two of them plus one
female servant and four great sea chests. Glorious
had already raised anchor and caught the
tide.The villa was luxurious, at least by local standards, but one month’s
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rent would have sufficed to build it in
Chivial.Wages for the three servants waiting there came to almost as much, and
the cost of the food they had already bought could have provisioned Greymere
Palace for a week.This was Sigisa, the crumbling cliff-edge of civilization.
Rojas had
been a little obvious with the servants, because they were all Distliards and
any Distliard in the Hence Lands would rather starve than touch menial work.
Perhaps Wolf was not supposed to know that. Or perhaps he was. None of the
three impressed him, although Estavan, the gardener, could have uprooted palm
trees with his bare hands, having being cast in the same giant mold as
Heron-jade. Gustavo of the black fingernails was chef, and the smiling Che said
he was to be majordomo, although he had no evident qualifications except a
sensational profile.
Still, the
hacienda was a mansion, a thatched, single-story wooden structure with several
outbuildings, all reasonably furnished, all set in spacious grounds surrounded
by a high stockade. The front entrance boasted a reasonable garden of trees and
flowered shrubs. There was a gate on the ocean side, too, just above high-water
mark, but currents off Sigisa were too treacherous for swimming—so Don Ruiz had
said.Wolf ordered chairs set out on the lawn, where he and Dolores could relax
in the shade of palm trees to enjoy a snack and the noble lifestyle they so
richly deserved.The lawn itself was a scabby mess, only to be expected in the
tropics and so near the sea, but the ground sloped down toward the ocean,
giving them a fair view over the palisade. They debated whether the sail just
dipping below the horizon might be Glorious departing.
Young Che
brought out the food. “With your permission, señor,
I will go out this afternoon to hire
more workers, yes?” He flashed teeth like the breakers, white and dangerous.
“No,” Wolf
said. “Until we discover on what scale we shall be entertaining I cannot
determine what staff we need.”
“But, señor!
A porter? Women to clean, surely?”
“Not yet! Meanwhile
. . . tell Estavan I want those cactuses dug out. You can read and write?”
Che said,
“Of course, señor.”
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No need for
truth-sounding to know he was lying. “Then prepare for me a detailed list of
everything on the property from the beds down to the smallest spoon.”
That ought
to keep him busy.Wolf cut his food with a special Dark Chamber belt knife and
so did Dolores. Neither blade changed color.
“The quarry
is running true so far,” he said. It was too soon for poison.
She nodded,
not as cheerful as usual.
“And Megan
is willing to sing her solo?”
“She says
she can handle all three of them at once if necessary.”
They did
not expect the violence to begin yet, or they would not leave Megan alone, although
even Flicker admitted Megan was no mean brawler. She bragged that she had
taught him all he knew.
When they
had eaten as much as they could of Gustavo’s vile cooking, Don Lope and Dona
Dolores announced that they were going out to explore the town.They began by
strolling along to the Alcalde’s
residence, where Dona Dolores called on Dona Fortunata to present her with a
spectacular pearl necklace in gratitude for all her kindness. Curiously,
Fortunata was as beautifully clad and groomed as she had been the previous
day—apparently he kept her like that all the time. She wept over the pearls,
and they certainly looked genuine. Rojas himself was not at home, to Wolf’s
relief.
They did
explore the town a little, but not enough to lose their supposedly unseen
followers. When they returned to the hacienda, they were admitted by Che, who
seemed not quite his former joyous self.
“Something
wrong?” Dolores asked innocently.
Alas,
Estavan had been bitten by a tarantula and had gone in search of a herbalist.
“It is not
to be tolerated!”Wolf said.“A gardener so careless? Do not admit him if he
returns.”
“I was
hoping it would be Gustavo,” Dolores said as they went in search of Megan. “The
shock might have shaken the dirt out of his nails.”
“How long
until the conjuration wears off ?”
“Three
days. Maybe four for a man that size.”
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They found
Megan where they had left her, sorting Dolores’s clothes. She seemed a little
flustered, but no worse off than that.
Dolores gave
her a hug. “You all right?”
“I am very
well, thank you, mistress.”
“And Che?”
Megan
rolled her eyes. “A hard-fought battle. He was using some sort of charm, not
just eyelashes, and I swear he has more hands than the King’s stables. I had
just decided I was fighting on the wrong side when we were interrupted by
Estavan’s screams.” She sighed regretfully.
Dolores
grinned. “And where was Estavan?”
“In the
master’s dressing room.”
A strange place
to dig cactus! Che had been distracting Megan while Estavan tried to open a
warded chest. Estavan’s arms were now useless.
“It is hard
to find good help,”Wolf said.
They had raised the stakes and it was Rojas’s turn to roll
again.
7
Just
after sunset that evening, Che served dinner on the patio. Nights were darker
and stars closer in the Hence Lands than they were in Chivial and Wolf found
the tropical air as soporific as sweet wine.There was something sublimely
relaxing about the ageless rumble of the sea.
“This does
beat ship life,” he remarked, unobtrusively stirring his wine with his belt
knife. He peered at it. No danger.
“Except
possibly for the food.” Dolores was inspecting her plate of hors d’oeuvres.
“The mushrooms.”
“Odd-looking
mushrooms!” Wolf cut one and held his blade near the candles. “Remind me what
blue means?”
“Probably
not fatal, but certainly not wholesome.”
“Right.” He
scooped up all the mushrooms and put them in his pocket. “We go with Plan
One.You get Megan.”
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Feeling the
joyous tingle that came before a fight, he strode around the house to the
kitchen, which was an open-fronted shed, set apart from the main building as a fire
precaution. Gustavo was stirring a pot on the stove, virtually outdoors, but
Wolf’s approach from seaward cut off his best line of escape. Megan had been
backed into a corner beside the larder by the glamorous Che, although she did
not seem very troubled by this situation. Wolf drew sword and dagger. Che
noticed him and was distracted. Before he could start thinking hostage,
Megan butted him in the face and made
her escape, grabbing up a knife from the table as she passed.
“Stay where
you are, Che!”Wolf waved his dagger.“Join him there, Gustavo. Don’t try
anything. I am an expert swordsman.”
Señor!
What is the matter?” Che’s lip was
bleeding.
Seeing
Gustavo furtively comparing his distance from the back door to his chances of
dodging around the hearth without coming within reach of Diligence,
Wolf said, “Don’t even think it! I will
slice you thinner than tortillas.”The only advantage to having a face like his
was that people did believe his threats.
Dolores
walked in carrying her sword and a coil of thin rope. He felt safer with all
three of them there, but he did not relax completely until they had made the
two scoundrels secure. They sat them back to back on the butcher block, binding
them to both it and each other, wrapping the rope around them repeatedly.
“Now!” he
said, sheathing Diligence. “Now
you will answer some questions.” He emptied his pocket of mushrooms and laid
them in clear view on the table.Turning to Dolores, he saw she was strung as
tight as a longbow. There was a world of difference between taking lessons in
how to do something—run a rapier through a man’s skull, say, or torture a
confession out of him—and actually doing it or even watching it done. “Er
...Megan, would you take the first hour?”
“Happy to
do so, Don Lope.We may need some gags.”
“There’s a
towel here.” He ripped it in half.
“They won’t
be necessary for a little while. When they start to break ...Gustavo, why did
you try to poison Don Lope and Dona Dolores?”
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“I do not know what you mean, bitch!”
Megan
sighed like a nurse about to administer a major enema. “Notch one!” Both men
gasped in surprise as their bonds tightened.“If you tell lies or do not answer,
I will continue until the rope cuts you in slices.Why did you try to poison
them?”
“I did not
intend to harm the señor and
señora,”
Gustavo growled.
Apparently
that was a true statement, because the women exchanged puzzled glances.“What
would have happened if they had eaten the mushrooms?”
He tried to
shrug.“Make them happy, see pretty things. Not worry. Put one in my mouth and I
will chew it.”
“And we
wouldn’t get anything more out of you tonight, would we? How long does the
effect last?”
“A day?
Two? It is harmless.”
“Why did
Estavan try to open the baggage this afternoon?”
“This is
crazy!” Che protested. “Estavan never tried to— Eeeeee!”
Megan had
just called for notch two.
They
resisted until she reached notch six, by which time the rope was biting deep.
They were in pain, yes, but fear of what was to come troubled them much more.
No doubt they were surprised, as Wolf was, to discover the fiend inside his
sweet-natured foster-mother-in-law.
“Don Lope,”
she said,“in the name of mercy we should adjourn for a while to let them
consider.” She flickered a wink they could not see.
“I don’t
see why. Keep going.”
“Their ribs
will start popping soon and no blood is reaching their hands.The risk of
gangrene—”
“It is
their own fault for being stubborn. We haven’t got all night! Pop all the ribs
you want.”
“No!” howled
Pretty-Boy Che.“I will talk! I will . . . tell, but please give ...me air, señora!
I am dying!”
“Notch
four,” she said, and they sighed in unison. “You weren’t dying.You can suffer
much worse than that before you die. If you start lying again, I am going
straight to level eight, for half an hour. Now talk. You were sent here to
pretend to be servants?”
“Si,
señora.”
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“Truth, at
last!” She sounded as relieved as Wolf felt. “Who sent you?”
“I do not
know!” Che cried.“It is the truth, señora!
We were not told!”
“Someone
must have sent you.”
“Pablo told
us a man wanted this.”
“Who is
Pablo?”
“A man,
another man. He pays well!” Che was almost gibbering. He was not going to incriminate
Ruiz de Rojas. He could not. His trail would stop at the mysterious Pablo, and
Pablo’s trail in turn would lead only one more link up a very long chain.The Alcade
himself stayed out of reach. “Please,
please, señora!
The cramps . . .”
“The cramps will get worse.What were you
going to do when you got the trunks open?” “Just steal, is all. Anything we
could see that we—”
“Notch
eight!”
Both men
screamed as the air was crushed out of their lungs. Wolf was suffering too, for
Dolores had her fingernails buried in his arm.
Che managed
to croak, “Tell Pablo!”
“Notch
five,” said the motherly fiend, smiling sweetly. “Keep talking.”
Pablo was
waiting at the third villa north. He was to be notified when all three
strangers had been drugged, bound, gagged, and blindfolded—and the trunks
opened. Che and Gustavo had been sternly warned not to help themselves to
anything, because the contents might be dangerous, but Señor Pablo,
cautious soul, would stay away until all the booby-traps had been removed.
“And if we
had refused to open the chests?”
Che’s teeth
started chattering. “We were to persuade you.”
Wolf felt less guilty
then—torture his wife, would they? Megan asked more questions, but obtained
nothing except a vague description of Pablo.They had reached the end of the
road. “I think that’s all they can tell us,” she said in Chivian. “They’re
trash, expendable.”
Dolores
nodded agreement.
“Then why
don’t you reward them both with a nice feast of mush
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rooms? I’ll be right back.”Wolf strode
around to the front door, which opened onto a courtyard decorated with
flowering bushes and some palm trees. Theoretically it was well illuminated by
the flames of seven or eight torches on poles flanking the path. Che had
insisted that these were a necessary precaution in this wicked town, but Wolf
had noted several places where trees blocked the view of the stockade from the
house, so a limber and well-prepared intruder could shimmy over the top and
approach unseen through the dense shadows of the shrubbery. He did not doubt
that Don Ruiz de Rojas was aware of this.
Here the
growl of the sea was fainter and the racket of Sigisa enjoying itself much
louder. Wolf walked down to the gate, slid back the bolts, and opened the flap
a handsbreadth. Revelers were singing their way along the road, and the grog
shop directly across from him was doing an uproarious business, complete with
drums and trumpets. Near his feet, a man sat on the dirt with his back against
the wall, mumbling happily to himself.
A faint
shadow solidified into deeper blackness, only the whites of his eyes showing.
“All well?”
Flicker asked.
“Very well.
And you?”
“All
present.”
“No other
watchers?”
“There was
one.”
Wolf did
not ask. “Bring them, then.”
A few
moments later, he stepped aside to admit Serpent-night, Heron-jade,
Blood-mirror-walks, Pulse-obsidian, Duff, Hick, Peterkin, and Will. The last
four were sailors he had bought away from Glorious.
Flicker followed and shot the bolts behind
him. All nine had enjoyed a night and a day ashore at Dark Chamber expense and
brought a strong smell of rum with them, but Flicker would have kept them
operational. Duff had been the man in the gutter. Heron-jade carried a limp
form draped over his shoulder.
“Do we need
to tie him up?” Wolf whispered as the eagle warrior slid his load to the grass.
“Maybe next
week,” Flicker replied, just as quietly. “Seems it’s a
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point of honor to hit once and only
once. Killing is regarded as shoddy work.”
“Come
then.” Wolf led his troops into the house, avoiding the kitchen. Che and
Gustavo might hear voices, if they were still capable of hearing anything, but
they must not be allowed to see faces.
First in Chivian,
then Tlixilian, he explained what had happened so far.
“And now
what?” asked Blood-mirror-walks, ever the leader.
Dolores
came in and smiled at everybody, but she still looked wan.
“How are
they?”Wolf asked.
“Che is
giggling happily,” she said, coming close to him. “Gustavo is worried by the
alligators.We gagged them both, just to be on the safe side.”
He nodded
and turned his attention back to the Tlixilians. “What next, you ask? The enemy
will meet violence with violence. If we do nothing, then they’ll wait until
tomorrow night ...probably. Unless someone panics and acts without waiting for
the leader’s say-so.” He repeated that in Chivian for the sailors. “But since
we now know where Pablo is, it would be easier just to go and deal with them
there.What do you all think?” Again he translated.
The men’s
smiles were enough answer. Peterkin and Will were natural fighters, almost on
a par with the Tlixilians for ferocity. Hick and Duff were less aggressive but
enjoying the skulduggery so far.
“Wolf !”
Dolores said. “No! Defending yourself against intruders is one thing. Storming
somebody else’s house is a crime.There may be innocent people there, too,Wolf!
It will be murder.”
He conceded
the point reluctantly, for he had his dander up.“I cannot seriously believe
that our friend Pablo is merely spending a quiet evening visiting friends,
waiting for Che’s message. But I suppose it’s possible. There may be innocent
people in Sigisa. Let us see if we can provoke the others into doing something stupid.”
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8
A band
of revelers reeling along a street was a common enough sight in Sigisa. In this
case one was so drunk that he was being carried by another, a very large
man.When they had progressed three gates from their starting point, Wolf ran a
golden key over the timbers and heard bolts click. He peered inside.The
courtyard was dark, but candles glimmered in windows, and he thought he heard a
rumble of male voices, although he could not be sure.
He stepped
back and Heron-jade went in just far enough to unload his burden, who was
starting to move and make noises. Che and Gustavo were allowed to proceed on
their own, weaving and groping into the dark yard.Wolf closed and locked the
gate.
“Let’s hope
they enjoy the party.” He led his army home.
They were
gambling that the unknown Pablo would panic.This was the second time he had
failed and the hour was late to go crawling to his superiors for fresh
instructions. He must be under pressure to learn what the insolent visitors
kept in their well-guarded chests before they had time to hide it or spend it.
Now they had annulled four of his men and made him look stupid. Working for an
unscrupulous gang boss, he ought to
be panicking.
Back at the
hacienda, Wolf opened the weapons chest and handed out swords. The jaguar
warriors accepted eagerly, but Heron-jade refused, scowling and holding up a
cudgel he had acquired from some-where.Why argue with results?
“Kill or
take prisoners?” Blood-mirror-walks asked, trying a few swings.
“Take
prisoners if you can.”
“We can.You
will claim their precious jewels?”
Wolf
suppressed thoughts of the butcher block in the kitchen.“Not unless you can
explain how it is done.”
“Only
acolytes know such things.” The warrior’s eyes were dark pools of distrust, and
Wolf wondered if he had just failed a test.
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“I’d
better explain these,” he said, pulling out a roll of tangle mats. “They have
been blessed?” Blood-mirror-walks demanded, but he
put the question to Heron-jade. The big
man nodded, squinting at them suspiciously.“Spider webs.” “That’s a fair
description,”Wolf admitted. “Put them away!” Blood-mirror-walks said
contemptuously. “You
have
warriors here.You do not need such trash.”
“Very
well.Then let’s inspect our perimeter. Flicker, Duff, will you keep an eye on
the front while the rest of us take a look at the ocean side?”Wolf led the way
out to the veranda.There was no light there except the stars, but a faint
golden haze on the horizon showed where the moon would soon rise. He waited a
moment for his eyes to adjust. “I took a look at the stockade earlier, and I
didn’t see any weak places where—”
“I
can see five already,” Blood-mirror-walks said at his shoulder. “No, I meant places
where a man or a boy could—” “I know what you mean,Wild-dog-by-the-spring.You
see the foot
prints
beside that bush?” He pointed at an inky patch halfway between
the house and the beach. “No.”Wolf could
barely see the bush. “I do. Yours and a bigger man in sandals. Leave this fight
to your
jaguars.
Serpent-night, inspect the fence. Pulse-obsidian, the bushes.” His tone
softened as he looked up at the eagle warrior.“Taker of Four Captives, to have
you as lookout would honor us all.”
“The
honor will be mine, terror of the dark.” “What signal will you give us?” “If
they come by the street—” Heron-jade cheeped like a small
bird. “Along the beach—”Two cheeps. Wolf
doubted such a signal could be audible far enough away to be
useful, but Blood-mirror-walks said, “Is
good.” The big man shrugged and went back indoors. Wolf made a last feeble
effort to exert authority.“Where is he off to?” The youth shrugged his
oversized shoulders. “You will tell an eagle
how to watch?” “No, nor a jaguar how to
hunt.” However nimble, a Blade was out
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classed in this situation by true
warriors spiritually reinforced. “Where do you want the rest of us?”
“You and
your women will be bait. Laugh. Drink. Be seen. Keep your men inside the house,
out of sight.They will not be needed.”
“None of
them?”
“None of
them.They blunder around making too much noise.Also they smell like Hairy
Ones.”
“That
leaves only three of you to patrol the grounds, front and back,”Wolf protested.
“One of us would
be plenty. Now go.”
As it
please Your Majesty! Wolf did as he was told, gathering
Dolores, Megan, and some wine on the veranda for a make-believe victory celebration,
trusting that the enemy would see them but did not know about their allies.
Flicker and the sailors stood guard indoors, furious at being kept out of the
coming fight. The moon was rising in splendor, unrolling a golden swatch across
the ocean.
Wolf had
trouble laughing convincingly when enemies with crossbows might be prowling
the darkness. Even the wine helped little, because he was warded by the
inquisitors’“party-trick” conjuration, which was a sash worn next the skin. It
would hold off drunkenness but not alcoholic poisoning, so users who
overindulged would learn so when they dropped dead. Its spirituality gave him a
dull headache.
As the
night wore on, bats whirled and squeaked overhead, the raucous revelry of
Sigisa subsided, the sea drummed untiringly, and the bait saw nothing at all of
their four Tlixilian defenders. Wolf struggled against growing worries that
they had simply departed, abandoning the Chivians in some bizarre Tlixilian
practical joke, or in revenge for some slight against their warriors’ honor.
“Dawn can’t
be far off,” Dolores said at last.
“I am ready
for bed,” Megan agreed.
“Or should
we simply slide to the floor in drunken stupors? This partying won’t be
convincing if we fall asleep.” Dolores yawned and her husband’s jaw began to
ache horribly.
“You’re
right,” he said. “Perhaps the enemy is just waiting for us to retire so they
can—”
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A bird
tweeted right behind him. He jumped and peered around. His companions were
doing the same.There were no birds present.
“I think
that was our sentry’s signal,” he said. “One quack means they are coming by
land.”
“Spiritual
ventriloquism?” Dolores was alert again.“How does he do
that?”
“Ask him
when Blood-mirror-walks isn’t around and he may tell you. A toast to victory!”
Wolf poured wine. The bird tweeted twice more at his back, causing his hand to
twitch and spill some, but this time he did not turn. “And they are also coming
by sea.”
Then it
cheeped three times.
He raised his glass and they drank to
victory. “Tell us another of those funny stories of yours, Megan.” She laughed
tinnily. “I think my sense of humor just dried up.” “Then tell about the first
time you set eyes on Dolores. How old was she?”
“Not fair!”
Dolores complained.
They were
all trying not to watch the lawn. It was bathed in moonlight, and the isolated
puddles of shadow did not seem large enough to hide a rabbit. The stockade was
a saw-edge of darkness against the silver ocean. Surely nothing could creep up
on them unseen from that direction? What was happening at the front? And what
had three chirps meant?
“A few
minutes old,” Megan said,“still bloody and crying.The midwife handed her to me
in a blanket. I know nothing of her past.”
“As long as
I still have a future,” Dona Dolores muttered.
“Well, as
Grand Master always says—”
“If you
mention that man just once more I will make myself a widow.”
So they
babbled.Wolf managed not to stare, but he thought he was keeping a fair watch
out of the corner of his eye, yet he saw nothing untoward before he heard a
half-stifled cry, only one, seemingly from behind a tree in the middle of the
lawn.
“What was
that?” Now they were free to look openly, but there was still nothing to see.
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“Probably a
bat,” Megan said and stretched. “I did enjoy the party, Sir Wolf.We must do it
again some time, but now I—”
Dolores
said, “Eeek!”
Blood-mirror-walks
walked up the step to the veranda dragging two bodies, his fingers locked in
their hair. He dropped them at Wolf’s feet like a cat offering mice.
“All done,
Wild-dog-by-the-spring.” He did not even seem out of breath.
“Excellent
work,Taker of Three Captives. Just two of them?”
“Eight this
side. Four at the front.This one”—he kicked the larger, older man—“they called
Pablo. I only throttled him, so he will wake soon. In case you want to torture
him.What shall we do with the rest?”
Pablo, it
turned out, had divided his force into three squads of four. One band had
climbed over the stockade on the street side and the other two had cut across
neighboring properties to come in on the flanks. The tops of the logs were all
sharpened, of course, making for a tricky climb, and by the time the first man
in each squad had finished helping his companions descend safely, a warrior had
been waiting in the shadows beside them.When the intruders started moving
toward the house, the defenders followed, stunning them all before they even
knew they were under attack.
Wolf was
impressed. He had been judging the Tlixilians by the mass assault on Quondam.
With the advantage of numbers and surprise, the invaders should not have
suffered the losses they did, but whatever their problem had been, he must
revise his opinion of Tlixilian warriors in general. Blood-mirror-walks and his
band were not even the legendary knights, yet they had stomped four times their
number like a line of beetles.The Distliards’ problems in conquering El Dorado
became more comprehensible.
Pablo was
tied to a chair and left in a dark room to recover. The other eleven they spread
on the lawn, trussing them securely also, although they had barely enough
rope. It was then Wolf discovered that the Tlixilians’ success had not been
quite perfect, for one man was dead. Head wounds were notoriously unpredictable
and what barely dazed one man could kill another outright, but Tlixilians
prided themselves on
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their skill at taking prisoners.
Pulse-obsidian hung his head in shame under his colleagues’ angry glares. It
was not the death that troubled them, it was his clumsiness.
“A minor
matter,”Wolf said, although he regretted it.“We may perhaps turn it to
advantage.”
Having made
certain his wife was not watching, he cut off the corpse’s left ear.Then he
collected Dolores and went in to see the chief brigand.
Pablo was
fortyish, flabby, and greasy, with streaks of gray in his beard and an ugly
scar half-hidden in his whiskers. He screwed up his eyes and moaned when his
captors arrived with lanterns.
Wolf held
up his bloodstained dagger. “Dog! Why should I not kill you also?”
Pablo made
a croaking noise.
“Speak,
scum of the cesspool.Who sent you to attack our house?”
His only
reply was a silent glare.Admittedly Pablo had few good excuses available under
the circumstances. Wolf grabbed the man’s beard and shaved one side of his jaw,
removing some skin. He screamed.
“Who sent
you?”
“No one!”
Wolf made
the shave symmetrical, so he screamed again. The remaining goatee did not suit
him. Dolores was not speaking and Wolf was not looking at her, but he could
sense her disapproval burning hot. He hoped she knew he did not enjoy
maltreating a helpless man, however despicable. He wiped his bloody hand on
Pablo’s shirt.
“Then I
must complain directly to the Alcalde. Take
him this.”Wolf produced the ear.“You will bring Don Ruiz de Rojas here before
sunrise, do you understand? So he can see the vermin who assaulted me— what is
left of them.”
“It is not
possible!” Pablo screamed, ashen under his tropic tan.The thought of reporting
to Rojas upset him more than the previous rough treatment.
“Then I
will send one of the others, with both your ears. And perhaps an eye?”Wolf
took hold of the prisoner’s right ear and he howled in terror.
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“I will go! I will go!”
“Before
sunrise the Alcalde must
be here, or I will start tossing pieces of your men over the wall. And I will
not stop with ears.”
They untied
the wretch and threw him out the gate with an ear in his pocket and his hands still
tied behind his back. He took off at a staggering run, unaware that Flicker
was lurking out there to make sure he arrived at the correct destination.
Sick and
trembling with reaction, the ogreish Don Lope made his way to the kitchen,
where half his forces were tucking into a meal prepared by Duff and Peterkin.
The others had gone to catch some sleep. He perched on the butcher’s block,
which was the only vacant seat in sight, and accepted a steaming cup of a local
beverage he had taken to, called chocolatl.
“Which way
did he go?” Dolores asked.
“Looking
for a fast horse-sleigh to Skyrria.”Wolf burned his mouth and swore. “He was
last seen going north, anyway.”
His
challenge to the tyrant was proceeding amazingly well, but it was still a
terrible gamble. Many violent men understood nothing but violence, so Rojas
might fly into a fury and send his militia to storm the fortress, whatever the
cost in lost prestige. He would certainly guess that the impudent newcomers had
troops he had not known of, but he must suspect spiritualism by now. There were
no octograms in Sigisa and probably no conjurers, so he had no source of
conjuration to offset it. Unless he had access to some of the local variety, in
which case the battles might grow even bloodier.
“This is
good,” Heron-jade announced. He was eating an entire ham, clutching it in his
huge fists and tearing chunks out of it with his teeth. “What animal?”
“Distlish
man-at-arms,”Wolf said.
“Wolf !”
Dolores shouted. “No, it is pig,Taker of Four Captives. An animal about this
big.” She gestured with a tortilla and a beaker.
The big man
grunted and offered the ham to Serpent-night, who had been cramming beans into
his mouth nearby but showed interest in the subject. He bit out a nugget,
chewed thoughtfully, then nodded. He ripped off a larger chunk and passed the
rest back.
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“What did
you think it was?”Wolf asked uneasily.
“What you
said.” Heron-jade grinned with his mouth full. “Definitely not local.”
Dolores shuddered.
“Really? You do eat people?”
He nodded
as if surprised by the question. “It is my right. I am a taker of four
captives.”
Wolf said,
“I thought captives were sacrificed so that their hearts could be used to
summon the spirits.”
“But we do
not waste the rest of them,” the giant said cheerfully. He flexed a bulging
arm. “One day I will make a great feast for someone.”
“You chatter like a girl!”
Blood-mirror-walks stood in the doorway, scowling. Heron-jade dropped his eyes
like a guilty child. “May my lord forgive!”
At the
moment they were not eagle and jaguar but a great lord and a lesser. All four
of the Tlixilians were nobly born to some extent.They had explained that
commoners served in the army but rarely rose out of the ranks.
“Use your mouth
for feeding in future!”
“I am
justly accused,” the big man said.
Abruptly
the youngster switched back to military forms. “Will you honor us blind ones by
keeping watch until noon, sky traveler?”
“Until
sunset,” Heron-jade said. “I will keep the day. The night is yours, dread
shadow.” He raised his head and peered around.“The emissary went to a large
house north of here and was admitted.The servant Flicker is returning.”
Blood-mirror-walks
bowed. “We are indebted to you for this lore.”
Dolores’s eyes
shone. If she could smuggle that spell
home to Chivial, the snoops would be able to snoop on anyone anytime. Even Wolf
could hear the sound of gold clinking then.
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9
Wolf
did not seriously expect Rojas to come running before sunrise as instructed. He
was prepared for more violence, or a conciliatory letter, or almost anything
except what did happen, which was nothing.The sun rose and kept on rising.
Rojas had called his bluff.
Having no intention
of chopping more pieces off the corpse or vivisecting the ten prisoners, Wolf
did nothing also. The jaguars had gone to sleep—curled up in corners, to his
amusement. Will and Peterkin slept also. Big Heron-jade was working his way
through the larder, eating indiscriminately, as if to redress weeks of slaves’
diet and ship rations. He insisted that he was also keeping watch, but just
leered when Dolores tried to charm him into discussing the conjuration he was
using. His childlike amiability hid warrior flint. Eventually she gave up and
went off to rest. Hick and Duff tended the captives, giving them water, untying
each in turn for brief exercise, and making sure the three still unconscious
were as comfortable as possible. Flicker reverted to his manservant personation
and unpacked his master’s clothes. Wolf just paced around, waiting for
something to happen.
He was in
the kitchen preparing a beaker of chocolatl when
Heron-jade looked up from his stool and remarked through a mouthful of onion,
“You have visitors.”
The gate
bell jangled.
“Who?”
He
shrugged. “A Hairy man and a Real People woman.”
“Is she
wearing jewels?” Wolf asked, wondering how well an eagle warrior could see
through several walls and trees.
He nodded,
grinning to show he saw through the subterfuge.
“No snakes
hanging on branches?”
“None.”
With such
spying ability available, it was no wonder that El Dorado was holding off the
Distliards. On his way to the front door, Wolf met Flicker.
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“Rojas
and his wife.Tell Dolores.” Wolf opened the gate himself, expressing delight
and honor at the visit.
Rojas
returned his bow.“The pleasure is ours, Don Lope.” He wore a sword and a
gentleman’s finery. Fortunata curtseyed demurely. She sparkled with gems and
her gown would have passed at Court.
“The
villa is to your satisfaction?” Rojas inquired blandly as they
strolled along the path. “The villa,
yes.The servants, no.The neighbors, definitely not.” “You wish to lay charges?”
“What else can I do?” The mayor shrugged. “Do anything you like with them, señor.”
In
competent
henchmen were of no more use to a gang boss than, say, a conscience. “Our
mutual friend Pablo?” Wolf inquired as he opened the front door.
“Pablo?”
Rojas murmured, entering with his wife on his arm. “Pablo? I know many men by
that name. I cannot be expected to remember them all.”
Dolores
appeared—miraculously relaxed, coiffed, and groomed, with only faint shadows
under her eyes to hint at a sleepless, stressful night.The guests were made
comfortable on the veranda. Flicker served fruit juices and cakes, then
departed.With sailors and warriors safely out of sight, the villa might have
been deserted. Conversation flitted like a forest butterfly, never touching on
murder, torture, home invasion, or any such sordid topics. For a while.
Then
Wolf found himself being studied by the coldest pair of eyes he had ever
seen.The Blades’ greatest killer had never faced such eyes in a mirror. Rojas
had dropped his charm.
“Let
us talk business, Don Lope.” “By all means, Don Ruiz.” “What do you want?”
“Knowledge, the secrets of Tlixilian conjuration.” “You would rip beating
hearts out of men?” “Never. My wife is the expert on spiritualism. She believes
that the
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jaguar and eagle knights have skills we
could apply without resorting to their murderous ways.” Without looking at her,
Wolf could sense Dolores disapproving of his candor, but Rojas was not the
sort of man she could have studied in lecture halls, and he trusted his
instincts. Rojas would never accept Wolf as an equal, but now he must take him
seriously.
The snake
eyes continued to stare unblinking.“Others have tried to learn those secrets
and failed. Do you not think El Caudillo
would rather have that knowledge than
another five thousand men? Or that King Diego would not reward whoever supplied
it?”
“Were I the
Emperor of El Dorado,”Wolf said, “I should not want Don Severo to have it, either.
But Chivial is far away and harmless. King Athelgar is no friend to King
Diego.Those in need must deal in whatever coin they have.”
“And you?
What coin do you deal in, señor?”
Wolf had
fought mortal duels less stressful than this conversation. Rojas had the power
to storm the hacienda, murder every inhabitant, and loot whatever he fancied.
He need answer to no one for his actions.
“For the
combatants—weapons, armor, war dogs, horses. Chivian horses are renowned. For
others who aid our quest ...King Athelgar can be generous, also.”
That meant gold
for Rojas.
For what
felt like hours, Rojas just stared as if he had been turned to bronze.Wolf
sweated it out, determined not to be the next to speak.
“If I could
introduce you to persons having the sort of knowledge you seek?” Rojas asked
softly.
“This would
be a most valuable favor.”
“Ninety
thousand pesos.”
The
Chivians had more than that lying around the house, but only an utter madman
would confess to owning such riches here.There were times when madness was the
only sane policy.
“Seventy.
And another forty if we obtain usable knowledge.”
“The
seventy without conditions?”
“Only that
I am satisfied the other persons do possess the knowl
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edge we seek and will negotiate
seriously, whether or not we reach an agreement.”
The charm
flicked back—the Alcalde put
his head back and laughed joyously. “It is a pleasure doing business with you,
Don Lope! Enjoy your stay in Sigisa. This is the finest time of year. Allow me
a month, even two . . . nothing happens quickly in these lands. Now, if you
will excuse us, my wife and I have many urgent . . .”
As they all
rose,Wolf said, “And the neighbors?”
“I find it easiest
just to lay the garbage on the beach at low water— the tidal race is very
strong along here. I trust you will experience no further disturbances, señor.”
Or cause them, of course.
The moment
Wolf closed the gate on the guests, his wife threw her arms around him and
kissed him with great enthusiasm, while trying to jump up and down at the same
time. Rojas was probably halfway back to his residence before she broke loose
long enough to say,“Darling, that was wonderful.You were brilliant!”
“Wasn’t I?”
Wolf resumed the kiss so he would not have to point out that they might still
wake up tomorrow to find their throats cut and all the gold gone.They would not
beat City Hall so easily another time.
He
sent the prisoners out the gate in threes and they departed without a fuss. If
they had any sense at all they would be gone from Sigisa by nightfall.
10
The
tyrant made no move in the next two days, while the Tlixilian warriors were
still available to defend the villa. That was fortunate, because the four
sailors all succumbed to the Sigisian variety of dysentery, which was notorious
even within the Hence Lands. Duff recovered fastest; Peterkin was hit hardest;
the inquisitors were protected by their conjuration.Wolf and Flicker were kept
busy outfitting the ex-slaves for their trek home. Warm clothes and bedrolls
were not the easiest mer
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chandise to find in that tropical oven,
and they tried to rent a canoe without provoking questions, although Wolf was
certain the Alcalde would
have spies watching.
On the last
night, an argument broke out.The three jaguar warriors were ready to go,
stripped down to loincloths and the local footwear, which was made from
congealed tree sap.Their kit was packed, they had three days’ rations—more than
that would be a burden to carry—and they bore a Chivian sword apiece. Wolf
would be lynched if the Sigisians learned he had given arms to cannibal
warriors inside their town.
Heron-jade
sat on the floor with his knees up, the naturales’ favorite
posture, for they never used chairs. His gear lay in a heap, ignored. The other
three were shouting furiously at him.
Blood-mirror-walks
was red-faced with fury.“It is your duty to the Emperor!”
Heron-jade
just went on picking his teeth with a thorn. His amiable, almost dopey,
expression meant he had made up his mind over something and would not be
dissuaded. He had probably grinned like that while the slavers flogged his back
to paste.“My duty is to my liege, soaring Sky-cactus.”
“And how
will you serve the great lord by staying here? By being a slave?”
“By being
true to his will.”
Blood-mirror-walks
growled dangerously.
Wolf said,
“Will you tell me why you do not wish to go?”
The big man’s
dark eyes studied him for a moment. “I have eaten your meat.You saved me from
the slavers. I have not repaid that debt.”
“But I
asked you to repay that debt by defending me from the brigands, which you did,
and by going home.”
“I will not
go.”
“You want
to repay the debt and I say you can repay it by going home and yet you say you
will not go?”
“I will not
go.”The conversation was over.
The
situation did have merit, because Wolf would undoubtedly weasel more
information out of the eagle warrior when Blood-mirror-
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walks was not around to nanny him. That
no doubt explained the jaguar’s anger.
“You do not
have to take the sword!” he said. “Lord Wild-dog-by-the-spring will not mind if
you do not take the sword.”
Heron-jade
just shrugged. He had refused to handle one of the metal swords before.The
raiders at Quondam had stolen no weapons. A pattern was emerging.
“You do not
have to take the message!” Serpent-night said. “Lord Wild-dog-by-the-spring
will not mind if you do not repeat his message.”
“Yes, I
would mind that,” Wolf said. “Since I do not know why Heron-jade refuses to do
as I ask.” That earned him angry glares all round. Sometimes he despaired of
ever understanding how their minds worked.
Eventually
even Blood-mirror-walks gave up hope of making Heron-jade change his.The three
jaguar warriors took their leave with polite speeches. Wolf was convinced that
three minutes in the jungle, even in daylight, would see him dying of snakebite
or sunk without trace in a swamp, but to them it was sanctuary.Their danger
would come in a few days, they said, when they left the forest and began
traversing the foothills. If they were caught in Allied territory they would
find themselves dead or back in a chain gang, but Wolf was confident that they
would reach El Dorado long before de Rojas’s messengers did.
When they had gone, Wolf and Dolores
took their voluntary slave out to the patio. They dined at the table. The big man
sat on the floor and ate more than both of them, just to keep them
company.While an unorthodox companion, Heron-jade was certainly an interesting
one.Wolf plied him with rum to loosen his tongue and was amazed at the quantity
he poured down his throat.
“If you
feel you still owe me a debt, Taker of Four Captives, then there is a small
task that you may perform for me. It is a very trivial thing to ask of so great
a warrior, but it is dear to my heart.”
“Name it,”
the eagle said with his mouth full.
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“You see this jewel on my sword?”
“Blood-mirror-walks said it was the
regalia of a knight.”
“Yes it is. How did he know that, do you
know?”
“Yes. I
promised not to tell you.”
Wolf said,
“My mother bore another son who wears such a sword, and I believe he is on his
way here. He may not come for a very long time, or never at all, but if you
would consent to look at the men disembarking from each ship as it arrives,
then this would put my heart at ease.”
Heron-jade
stared at him as if he were thinking, but that was just his way. “For how long
must I search,Wild-dog-by-the-spring?”
“Until my
brother arrives, or until you feel you have repaid the debt.”
“It is a
life for a life. I will do this. I can do it from here.”
Dolores uttered
a small gasp. “Your great powers impress us.”
He leered
drunkenly at her.“Noble Sky-cactus is generous with his blessings.”
She said,
“He gave you
his ability?” Delegation of powers was another marvel.
“I would
accept it from no one else!”
“Of course
not.”
He sighed.
“My lord said I was the truest of his watchers.”
“But this
stone is so small,”Wolf said, tapping Diligence’s
pommel.“I would doubt that even the eagles flying among the peaks could see so
tiny an object at such a distance.”
The big man
found that remark hilarious.“It is a weapon, borne by a warrior.You think I
cannot see that? When I am looking for
it?”
Well, yes.
“I will
look in every ship,” he promised.
“You will
also warn us if brigands approach our house?”
“Of course!
Fear not, Wild-dog-by-the-spring. I do not want to wear sky-metal regalia
again!”
Heron-jade
downed another half bottle before he explained his refusal to leave, which
turned out to be nothing more than ordinary human stupidity.
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“Only a
coward fights on the back of a deer!” he proclaimed.“Dogs are for eating, not
to turn into monsters to attack noble warriors. A true warrior uses his
strength, his courage, the powers that come from the captives he has taken.
With these he fights. He does not sully himself with the ways of his enemies.”
That was
that. El Dorado was split. Eagle knights were traditionalists and scorned
anything that stank of the invaders. More pragmatic, the Jaguars would use
steel blades and armor if they could get them. The Great Council was divided
and the Emperor had made no decision yet. Until he did, Heron-jade would not
tarnish his honor by carrying Wolf’s offer to sell weapons, because the offer
was insulting. Similarly, the eagle knights Amaranth-talon and Bone-peak-runner
had agreed to transport Lizard-drumming’s men to Quondam but had refused to
bring back any of the demons’ weapons. A matter of honor.
The party
ended when Heron-jade laid his head on his knees and went to sleep. Wolf led
his wife off to bed, feeling very pleased with himself. He had launched two
birds and had nothing left to do except enjoy the lordly life in Sigisa while
waiting for them to return to his wrist with the prize in their talons. That,
and wonder where Lynx was and what he was having to endure.
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VII
Birds of prey must be handled
with respect
1
The Fierce Ones met in
formal session yesterday.”
Basket-fox
spoke offhandedly, as if commenting on something trivial, like the current shortage
of captives, but Lynx knew him well enough by now, and was sufficiently fluent
in Tlixilian language and customs, to guess that something important was
coming. His throat tightened.
“My lord
honors me with this confidence.”
“I sorrow
to report that my friends and I were overruled.The misguided majority hailed
the imposter Flintknife as a lawful member of the order, successor to the
mourned Plumed-pillar.”
“And did
the mighty ones make any decision about me?” Pass a death sentence, for
example? Was that why they were climbing the pyramid?
Lynx’s long
and painful metamorphosis was complete, so a spectator would see two jaguar
knights padding up the steps side-by-side.The
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older, Basket-fox, was magnificently
arrayed in full regalia of feathers and treasure, heading for a ritual,
obviously a big one, for many captives were already waiting below and guards
were still bringing in more.
The younger
Jaguar wore only a loincloth, a sword strapped on his back, and Plumed-pillar’s
regalia on his chest. At times Lynx rather fancied himself in his new form.
His skin was tanned almost as dark as the naturales’
and only his greater hairiness
distinguished him from a true Jaguar in appearance. Although he could no longer
wield Ratter, he
was at least as fast as he had ever been and came armed with sixteen deadly
claws, which Night-fisher kept as sharp as razors for him.
Basket-fox
said, “They concluded that you were an imposter and must die, of course.”
It was
typical of the sly old cat that he would make this announcement in such a
place. He strode confidently upward, not even breathing hard, although the
steps were so caked with dried blood that even a surefooted jaguar knight must
tread with care.They were also fiendishly steep, because they were crafted for
Jaguar legs and paws, not human limbs. A squad of warriors preceded him in case
anyone at the top thought of rolling anything down on him; there was no one
behind him to catch him if he slipped, for even a slight stumble would be proof
that it was time for him to retire.
Lynx
said,“It would be an honor to give you my precious jewel, terror of the
night.” Relatively speaking, of course, for the scoundrel had been kind after
his fashion. Better him than anyone else. Better still to keep Lynx’s heart
where it was.
The old
rogue shot him a cryptic glance.“So it would, but I am ordered to send
Plumed-pillar’s regalia to Flintknife with you attached. Your jewel would then
be his. I do not see why this must happen today, though. Unless you insist?”
The wind
blew cold on his Lynx’s sweat. “I will serve as my lord commands.”
Celeste had
warned him that something was brewing.They met every day at language lessons,
and could talk freely in Chivian. She was now Basket-fox’s senior concubine,
tended by many servants, and she bragged that she had him feeling like a
kitten again. Only this morning she had warned Lynx that their owner
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was
planning something new for him: “He has been asking me about your life
before
you became a knight.”
“What did you tell him?”
“That you
are of noble blood, of course. I didn’t dare make up too much because I didn’t
know what you’d told him. I’m trying to talk him out of getting me with child.
He can control that, you know.” Celeste could never think of much except
Celeste for very long.
“You would
probably be safer as mother of his kits than just a plaything,” her Blade had
suggested helpfully. She had screamed at him.
As they
neared the top of the stair, Basket-fox said, “There is still hope,
Bobcat-by-the-spring.” That was Lynx’s name when he was not Plumed-pillar
Redux.
“The noble
lords may reverse their decision?”
“No. Even
if you were high-born in your own city, here you are nothing. And there is the
problem of battle skill. However noble his blood, a candidate for knighthood
must have won a glorious reputation in battle.Your scars prove that you can fight,
but where are all the captives you have taken? You can no longer swing that
sword you carry. How would you fare in battle now, think you?”
“You know
how it goes on your practice grounds, lord.” Lynx could win the mock battles
nine times out of ten—he was a demon with paws. “Can I challenge Flintknife to
single combat?”
“He would
use the Breath of Night on you.You would stand there yawning while he ripped
you to tatters.”
“The
prospect does not appeal,” Lynx admitted. Understatement, that.
They reached
the flat summit of the tower.The escort opened out on either side to let their
lord advance, and a drum throbbed a salute. Some of the disgusting black-clad
acolytes were fussing with the great brazier, making it burn hotter, and others
were readying drums and conches, laying out knives. Ignoring these gruesome
preparations, Basket-fox headed to the far edge and stood there, apparently
lost in thought, while the wind whipped his feathered cloak and the plumes of
his headdress. Lynx went with him, his stomach churning at the thought of what
was going to happen to the wretches waiting down below.
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He
concentrated instead on the breathtaking view of the city, the bustle and
activity, crowds milling along the streets, canoes plying the canals.With the
rainy season over, the peaks encircling the green valley had shed their mantles
of cloud and stood starkly white against a sky of flawless blue.The marshes
where the peasants grew the city’s food were even greener, almost painfully so,
and the lake shone bright as silver. Many small towns dotted its shores, most
of them too far off to see.
Suddenly
Basket-fox said,“You remember the Battle of Blackrock?”
Now what?
“Of course, great slayer. That was when the Zolicans’ Eagles tried an ambush,
moving two four-hundreds in behind the knoll on our right.You and I and—”
“Good.
Point to your pyramid. Good. And Bone-peak-runner’s?”
Lynx brandished a claw over the floating
city. “There, on Four-Cactus Canal.” “And who is Moon-feeder?” “One of
Flintknife’s senior warriors, a taker of ten captives, my
brother
by another of our father’s concubines. He wears a jade labret in the shape of a
swan and he has a jagged scar on his right thigh.” The Jaguar uttered his
strange chuckle.“Your memory is returning, Plumed-pillar!”
Having
spent hours every day for months being coached by Basket-fox’s reciters, the
illiterate keepers of Tlixilian history, Lynx could rattle off his pretended
ancestry back for generations and list more than two hundred living relations.
Recognizing their faces would be more of a challenge, and all that work was
useless now, since the Jaguars refused to accept his claim.
“We will
appeal to the Great Council to overrule yesterday’s wrongful decision.”
“My lord is
gracious,” Lynx said. “Will that work?”
“No, but it gains us a little more
time.You are a warrior of the Hairy Ones.” “Not the same sort of—” He was
stopped by a feline glare. “Whose side are you on, Bobcat-by-the-spring?” “Yours,
lord.” Lynx had known for a long time what his answer
must be when this question came. “The
other side would kill me on
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sight. Many on your side would too, if
you sheathed your claws. But while you guard me, my heart beats for El Dorado
and I will do all I can against the Hairy Ones.” His real motive, of course,
was that only thus could he be of any use at all to his ward. A dead Blade was
no protection. He could never return to Chivial in his new shape, so he would
not allow Celeste to do so either. Fortunately she had not realized this yet.
“Pretend
for a moment you are the enemy. How would you attack this city?”
Blades were
not military strategists, but one-legged Jorge had been a mercenary back in
Eurania. Did Basket-fox not know that, or did his dignity not allow him to seek
advice from a slave? Lynx was a slave in fact, but not by agreed pretense, and
perhaps that made a difference in the old man’s contorted thinking.
What had
Jorge told him? That street fighting was the most vicious sort of battle
possible and El Dorado was far larger than any city in Eurania. To take it
house-by-house against determined resistance would cost thousands of lives;
Jorge even doubted that it would be possible. Eastward the lake was wide and
unobstructed. South, north, and west, three great causeways, straight as
arrows, connected it to the mainland. Each causeway was broken at intervals by
removable bridges, specifically to block an assault.
But
Basket-fox was not after the obvious answers. What did he want?
“Have the
Hairy Ones reached the lake yet, terror of the woods?”
“There!”
Basket-fox aimed a paw at the far distance.“Seven Reeds, a town of cowards, a
nest of traitor Tephuamotziner lackeys.”
“Are the
Hairy Ones building boats there, by any chance?”
The cat
eyes shone brighter than Ratter’s
pommel. “So my Eagle friends tell me. Many of my brothers feel that we have
enough canoes to counter anything they can make.”
Now Lynx
saw where the conversation was headed. “No, lord.” He made some wild guesses as
to what would be possible for the Distliards’ shipwrights.“You could fight them
with fire arrows and grappling irons, but otherwise it will be horses all over
again. Their boats will be faster
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and far more agile than your canoes, and
much less likely to tip over. Their boats will ride the wind, but not only in
the direction the wind goes.They can move across or even toward the wind,
also.”
Basket-fox
bared his fangs in what usually implied a smile. “Their knights bless them
thus?”
“No
blessing needed. Even I could do it, after a fashion. I am not skilled, but
give me some workers of wood and I will show you roughly how it works.” Lynx’s
life at sea had been brief, but he had seen how Papillon
sailed into the wind, and Jorge could
assist him.
“It shall
be so.”The big cat head nodded. A furry paw patted Lynx’s shoulder.“It is
strange! I trust you more than my own sons, for you have no friend but me. Even
Night-fisher believes in you only because I told him to.”
“I
owe you my life, lord. I will serve as I can.” “Go and do so,” Basket-fox
growled.“Quickly, before the ritual begins. Order whatever you require.You
speak with my voice.”
Relieved
that he would not have to watch the slaughter, Lynx ran to the top of the long
staircase and started down. Night-fisher would be surprised to see him coming
on his own two paws instead of rolling down as dead meat. Maybe next time.
Meanwhile,
he must find Jorge. Put a sail on a dugout canoe and it would tip over in a
twinkling. So tie two of them together for stability? Add a mast ...a rudder
and perhaps a keel board?
2
The
workers in wood were probably slaves—Lynx did not ask, and it was an
unimportant distinction in El Dorado. They tended to collapse and bury their
faces in the dirt at the sight of a jaguar knight, but he cured them of that by
threatening to kill them if they didn’t behave. What else could he do? If he
smiled, half of them fainted.
After some
hours and several unexpected swims, he managed a suc
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cessful maiden voyage on his ungainly
craft, which he privately named Celeste. He
strengthened the rudder, had his workers attach splash boards along the gunwales,
and tried again.The moon was full, so he sent Jorge and the carpenters home at
sunset and worked on through the night with a fresh team. Getting the sails
right was the hardest part, and finding a satisfactory way of attaching the
boom was almost as bad, but just before dawn he sent word to Basket-fox that he
was ready to demonstrate sailing.
They
had hardly left the dock before the old knight yowled with delight and insisted
on taking the tiller. He learned the knack of steering in an astonishingly
short time, as if he had an instinctive feel for the way the catamaran would
respond. Soon he was running before the wind, tacking back, chasing down
terrified paddlers in canoes, even deliberately ramming them just to watch
them tip over. In high spirits he returned to his palace and summoned friends.
Jaguars began arriving at the dock in canoes or palanquins or just appearing,
sometimes accompanied by Eagles and sometimes with dusty feet, as if they had
actually walked the streets. Seeing that Celeste was
becoming dangerously overloaded, Lynx made his excuses and left them to it.
That night he was summoned. As he
trotted through the grounds with Night-fisher at his heels, Basket-fox appeared
ahead of him in what had been an empty patch of moonlight. That was not
surprising. What was surprising was that he hailed Lynx with a formal greeting
due a brother knight.
He added,
“Your dancing canoe was a magnificent feat, Plumed-pillar!”
“It was a
trivial trick, silent killer. I am happy to have amused you.”
“A valuable
amusement.” The old monster chuckled deep in his throat. “I have given some
thought to your entourage. A single stripling is not enough.” He nodded at a
nearby tree; a fully fledged warrior became visible in the shadows, complete
with spear and shield, labret, and plumed headdress.“You remember Corn-fang,
now a taker of one captive? A most promising warrior who has seen the shame of
following
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the imposter Flintknife and will be
overjoyed to serve the real Plumed-pillar again.”
Who had
been bribed, in other words.Astonished, Lynx thanked his mentor for this
further generosity and spoke a suitable greeting for a knight acknowledging a
taker-of-one-captive follower. Corn-fang came forward to touch the ground
before his new-or-restored lord. By Tlixilian standards he was an impressive
sight in his finery, although he would have driven whole armies hysterical back
in Eurania.
Unless
Basket-fox was being exceptionally devious, even for him, he would not donate
followers to a man he intended to kill very soon.
Another
knight materialized—an Eagle, his great hunched shape towering over them all,
feathers shining in the moonlight. This time there were no flowery greetings.
Ignoring warriors and Jaguar-imposter, the newcomer spoke directly to
Basket-fox.
“We see few
guards posted. None is blessed.”
“No
knights?”
“Not one.”
The Jaguar
bared his fangs in what looked like an enormous yawn, but probably was not. “Then
we shall have sport!” He turned to Lynx. “Plumed-pillar, we go to Seven Reeds
to find the Hairy Ones’ boats and knock holes in them! The mighty
Frowning-whisper, here, will carry us on the Spirit Wind—four Jaguars and three
twenties of warriors. You wish to accompany us?”
Lynx
dutifully said, “I shall die of shame if you forbid me.”
The cat-man
grunted. Moonlight shone on his eyes. “But you will come only to observe, not
to fight. You will instruct Corn-fang and Night-fisher that they are to guard you
closely, and are not to seek out captives, nor attack anyone who is not
threatening you.”
That seemed
entirely reasonable to Lynx, who was already wondering what he was letting
himself in for, but honor required a protest, so he protested.
Basket-fox
cut him off with a snarl.“Jaguars’ weapons are sleep and madness and mindless
terror. When a knight chooses to close in battle and gather captives with his
own hands, he must go unseen or the enemy will roll over him like an
avalanche.You would be a stain on the
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grass before they even noticed you were
a fake. You will come along only to observe, so that you can copy the Hairy
Ones’ work for us.”
Oops! Lynx
should have seen how the wind blew.And the Tlixilians were still thinking of
dugout canoes, not planks. “Lord, knocking holes in the boats will do little
harm.You should go prepared to burn them or steal them.”
Growl! “Is
it so?”
“Also, may
I suggest that capturing the men who do the work would be advantageous? We
could use their skills.”
Any great
lord might glare when contradicted, but few as effectively as Basket-fox. “Star
skimmer, do you see where the workers sleep?”
The eagle
knight clicked his beak a few times, whatever that meant. “There are shelters
nearby. We can bring back captives on the usual terms.”
“And
tools!” Lynx said. “Anything made of metal, all or part.” He knew no words for
nails or spikes.
“No!” The
Eagle’s beak shut with a noise like an ax. The knights were divided between
Traditionalists and Progressives, and most Eagles were Traditionalists.
Lost in a
jungle of tangled values, Lynx saw he might as well push on as try to turn
back. If he must risk his neck on some madcap sabotage raid, then he would
prefer that it made sense. “To take the Hairy Ones’ tools would be the hardest
blow you could strike.”
“Tools are
not a matter of honor!” the Eagle declared.
“But let us
hear how warriors of the Hairy Ones think,” Basket-fox said. “Continue,
Plumed-pillar.”
Blades were
not soldiers, but one thing Ironhall taught was the value of reconnaissance,
and it sounded as if the Eldoradoans had not done theirs yet. “I don’t know
what we are assaulting, lord. If it were me, I would have the noble Eagle send
a scout across tonight and leave the actual attack for another evening.”
Basket-fox’s
talons flashed in the moonlight. “You dare?”
Frowning-whisper
uttered a shriek that might denote either fury or amusement.
Lynx gaped
in sudden terror and hurled himself to the ground,
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groveling.“I mean no disrespect to my
lord! I know not how I have offended the most terrible one!”
Basket-fox
snarled dangerously. “Stupid, ignorant foreigner! I will forgive your ignorance
just this once. Rise.” He retracted his claws with what seemed like an effort.
“Your suggestion has merit, though, and I will allow you to accompany me.You
will oblige us, terror of the dark?”
Frowning-whisper
said, “I am humbled by your trust.”
“Tarry a
moment!” The old knight spoke to empty air. “Ragingstone, stand down the
Furious and the Flesh Eaters.”
Lynx was
still shaking, hard put to keep his fangs from chattering. That had been a
very, very narrow escape! He would never volunteer to go alone into an enemy
camp, but his imperfect Tlixilian had been understood as an insult to
Basket-fox’s courage or judgment or something. Of course the mission would not
be certain suicide if the enemy truly had no eagle knights at Seven Reeds, as
Frowning-whisper claimed, but it still felt like going into battle armed only
with fingernails.
The Jaguar
turned to stare fixedly at him, and he felt a strange sensation that the moon
was growing brighter, like a strange colorless sunlight. The bats and crickets
and the frogs in the lake sounded louder. How long had the air born this rich
medley of scents? Even its touch on his skin felt suddenly meaningful. He was
being blessed.
“We are
ready now, friend of stars,” Basket-fox said. If the old cat felt scared out of
his whiskers, as Lynx did, he was not showing it.
The moon
lurched a third of the way around the sky. The air chilled, changing scents and
sounds; the frogs’ chorus barked louder and nearer.Yet Lynx experienced none of
the giddiness he had felt the first time he rode the Spirit Wind. Sheer terror
yes, dizziness no. He glanced around quickly, registering a sawpit and stacks
of tree trunks and cut planks.The Eagle had set them down in a secluded spot .
. . them?
There was no sign of Basket-fox. Panic surged until Lynx realized that he had
no shadow, so the moon was shining through him. Old Kitty-cat would be
somewhere close.
With his
heart still thumping like a drum, Lynx padded toward the nearest gap, moving as
quietly as he could, although his steps on the dry
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clay
sounded abominably loud. When an invisible paw touched his
chest,
he barely suppressed a shriek of terror.
Whiskers tickled his ear. “Mud!” said an
anonymous whisper.
Lynx nodded. He was still shivering as he
edged around the puddle.
In the next
few minutes—which felt like weeks—he established that the Distliards were
constructing a fleet ashore, but close to a canal leading into the lake.The
boats were larger than he expected, capable of carrying forty or fifty men.
Several were near completion and would burn nicely. Best of all, he found a
well-built shed with a massive iron lock on the door, a device that must have
come from Eurania. He paced out the building’s dimensions, remembering that his
stride was longer than human.
Then he set
off to explore the rest of the site, occasionally being warned off some
particular course by a touch of his unseen compan-ion’s paw. He found pickets,
crouching around small fires that seemed painfully bright, like fragments of
the sun itself, but the men were relaxed, and might just be keeping watch for
thieves. He inspected the rough shelters where the workers slept, peering
inside a few to estimate how many there were.
What next?
He had a sudden hysterical mental image of his enormous, near-naked feline
self dining at high table in Ironhall, expounding on his military exploits in
the Hence Lands to the horrified candidates. Join the Blades and see the
world.. . .
A paw
detained him. He waited. It did not move. He began to feel alarmed. Another
touched his other shoulder, turning him to look leftward. Still, for a moment,
he remained puzzled. Then he saw a movement . . . another . . . and yet
another. He almost cried out in terror as shadows transformed into misty outlines
of warriors, a gang of them drifting silently through the shrubbery, crossing
his path not ten paces ahead. The paws urged him farther around and he saw
another squad. The whole camp was filling up with armed men.
The moon
jumped again and he was back in El Dorado, right where he had started, with the
old scoundrel Basket-fox himself and an Eagle. About a hundred armed warriors
were kneeling around the area—naturales did
not line up in rows like Euranian soldiers.To Lynx’s
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shame, his front paws began to shake
violently as realization of his narrow escape sank in.
“We are in
your debt, star gatherer,” Basket-fox said cheerily, looking up at the monster
beak. “You will see that Frowning-whisper is properly reprimanded?”
“He will
not live long enough to repent his shame.”The eagle apparition vanished just
as Lynx realized that it had not been Frowning-whisper.
“Return the
men to the barracks, Taker of Seven Captives,” the Jaguar said. “Tonight is not
auspicious.Tomorrow, perhaps, they will get a chance to show their mettle.” He
thumped Lynx’s shoulders with both paws, in a sort of half hug. “That was very
well done, Plumed-pillar! I applaud your warrior courage!”
“I don’t
understand!”
“No?”
Basket-fox rumbled a deep purr of amusement.“Your dancing boat upset the
Traditionalists today. I knew the Tephuamotziners had at least four knights at
Seven Reeds yesterday, so I was sure that Frowning-whisper was lying and would
betray me, but without your daring offer I might have lost many men proving
that. Fortunately I had the mighty Star-feather watching over us. What was that
house you found so interesting?”
Lynx gulped
and pulled his wits together. “My lord’s words warm the world.That house must
be where they keep their tools, lord. Stealing those, or at the least
destroying them, will do more to slow them than even burning the boats
themselves. They probably have sails and ropes in there, too, and those must
also be stolen or burned.”
“We
shall discuss it later. Come, tonight we shall feast.”
The attack was launched the following
night. No less than six Jaguars and two Eagles had listened attentively as the
imposter knight told them what should be done to inflict maximum hurt on the
enemy. A flotilla of canoes set off just after sunset; another army rode the
Spirit Wind after them when the moon was high.
Lynx was
left behind. He protested both loudly and sincerely, be
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cause he had developed a proprietary
interest in what was now his plan, but he had made himself too important to
risk. Knowing how disappointed his two warrior retainers would be, he begged
that they, at least, be allowed to participate, and again was denied. Around
midnight he walked over to the pyramid and started up its evil, blackened
stairs, still reeking of blood from the recent slaughter. Probably this was
forbidden behavior, for Corn-fang and Night-fisher seemed much perturbed, but
they followed in silence as good bodyguards should.
Lynx
ignored them. In the small hours of the night, he sat in lonely misery on the
top of the pyramid and stared out across the moonlit lake to a distant yellow
star glowing near Seven Reeds. Thanks to him, the Distliards’ shipyard was
ablaze, their boats and materiel turned to fire and ash. He had postponed the
Allies’ assault on the floating city for months. He had, in a very small way,
altered the course of history. If he did a good job as shipwright and grand
admiral, he might change it even more.
He had no
idea which side Athelgar favored in this war. It might be that Lynx was
supporting his King’s enemies, but his duty to his ward gave him no choice. It
hardly mattered, because he would never see Chivial again.
Sheese,
Ironhall, Quondam—Chivial had never been very kind to the former Alf Attewell,
so why was he so bitterly homesick?
3
We
are wasting time!” Flicker repeated furiously. “Rojas is singing lullabies until
we drop our guard, so he can storm the house and take all the gold. The dealers
he promised will never appear. Even if Blood-mirror-walks and the others do
reach El Dorado safely, do you think the Emperor will send a jaguar knight here
to bargain with you? You can stay here and rot if you like, but let me go
inland!”
“You must
learn to be patient,”Wolf said in fatherly fashion. Flicker
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was an explosive mixture of ability,
ambition, and impotence, needing to vent his frustration regularly. The
Chivians held a conference every week and always had the same argument. They
had been a month in Sigisa, but that was not long enough for their messengers
to have reached El Dorado, let alone bring back a reply. Even news of the war
was scanty, although rumors suggested that the new Caudillo
was faring better than his predecessors.
“Besides,
it’s Long Night! Enjoy the festivities.”
Nothing
could be less like Chivian midwinter than a sultry tropical evening on a patio
in Sigisa. Surf rumbled on the beach, palm trees waved their tresses in the
trade winds. With the sun asleep behind the ranges, moths were swooping
lovingly around the lanterns, and frogs were tuning up. Here Don Lope and Dona
Dolores lived a lazy, rich-folks life, gathering gossip and seeking to learn
more about this strange new world.The Chivians had shed their sea-voyage
scrawniness, except for Flicker, who was as gaunt as ever, restless and
impatient for action. They had a team of servants to pamper them; Hick and Will
had even acquired live-in companions. All such outsiders were liable to be recruited
by the Alcalde’s
minions, but the inquisitors regularly identified the spies and sent them
packing.
Amid the
vice and squalor of Sigisa in general, the ever-charming Don Ruiz de Rojas ran
a bizarre parody of high society. Wolf and Dolores were frequent guests at his
soirées, mingling with many other interesting guests—smugglers,
pirates, spies from Isilond and other Euranian powers, also gentleman
adventurers who tended to die young in brawls or vanish upcountry, where they
would doubtless leave their bones.
“Why don’t
you let Flicker go, if he’s so anxious?” Megan asked quietly.
Mutiny?
Flicker had never won any support before.Wolf glanced at Dolores, to see what
she thought, and was surprised to see her wearing her dead-fish inquisitor
face. Did that mean she was trying to hide surprise or was anxious not to take
sides? Personally,Wolf would love to let Wonder Boy go blundering off into the
jungle and get himself killed, but the interests of the mission must come ahead
of personal feelings.
“Firstly,
because the mainland is enormous and infested by warring
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armies that kill strangers with no questions
asked. Or answered. Secondly, because we are already too few.We need Flicker
here. It would be crazy to divide the team.”
“Then let’s
all go!” Flicker said sullenly.
This sort
of back-talk might be correct Dark Chamber procedure, but it rankled a
Blade.Wolf said,“Why don’t you let Peterkin show you the sights, sonny? Then
maybe we’d get some peace.”
Peterkin
was the expedition’s brothel expert. Flicker scorned to visit the houses and
brought home no women of his own. He just mooned around the hacienda making
calf-eyes at Dolores, lovesick brat.
He
glared.“At least let me visit the coastal states.Yazotlan or Zolica.”
“No. We’ve
been over this a dozen times. If the rebel states need arms, they get them from
the Distlish. If they were willing to trade their conjury secrets, they’d have
sold them to the Distlish long ago.We deal with El Dorado or with no one.We
need you here and I expect you to be loyal to the team. Now, if no one has
anything else to—”
“If you
were loyal to the team we would be halfway to El Dorado by this time.”
Now both
Megan and Dolores were looking blank.
“Meaning?”
“Meaning,”
Flicker sneered, “you’re keeping us all here in Sigisa only because you hope to
catch your thief brother on his way through.”
That hurt,
as Flicker undoubtedly intended.Yes,Wolf kept an eye on ships arriving and
Heron-jade said he did, too.What else the eagle warrior did with his time,
apart from eating and wandering the streets, only the spirits knew. He kept his
slave scars hidden under a shirt, and he was too big to attract trouble he did
not choose himself.
Meanwhile,
to become angry would be to give Flicker a victory.
“That is
not true,”Wolf said calmly. “I do watch for Lynx, but I do not let my own
priorities interfere with the mission, and you can tell I’m not lying.You
reminded me of something, though. There’s a Chivian caravel named Sea
Queen in the river, unloading barrel staves
and pig iron. I’ve spoken with the captain and he’s willing to take mail Home
for us. Mention that to the sailors, will you, Megan? Now, if no one . . .Yes,
Duff ?”
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The
carpenter had emerged from the house, looking unhappy at interrupting. “Note
handed in, sir. Man says it’s urgent.”
Dolores
beat Flicker to the message, grabbed it, and broke the seal.
“They’ve
answered, they’ve answered! Oh, Wolf, they want to trade!” She tried to kiss
him and show him the note at the same time.
The cause
of her excitement was brief, neatly inscribed. Alcalde
Don Rojas requested the presence of Don
Lope and Dona Dolores at their earliest convenience this evening, so
that certain promises could be made and other promises kept.
Wolf
glanced inquiringly at Flicker, but now he was being inscrutable, of course.
“Isn’t it
wonderful!” Dolores said. “I have nothing to wear!”
“Chain mail
might be safest.” Bait in a trap should smell as sweet as this. “It’s a very
quick response, but possible, I suppose.” Just plausible enough to be believed?
“Will you be able to tell if the emissaries he produces are fakes?”
“Of course!
If they say they’re what they’re not.” Suddenly she turned coolly professional.
“He’s hinting he wants us to bring the gold along!”
“Over my
dead ...I mean, not yet.”
The summons
gave Wolf gooseflesh, and even Dolores was starting to look edgy, now the first
excitement had worn off.“Why not let me go and you have a headache?” he said.
“That won’t
work.”
“I’ll take
Flicker. He can do truth-sounding as well as you can.”
“Flicker
doesn’t know an execration from an exaltation. Don’t baby
me!” She was right.“Very well.Tell the
man he’ll have our reply in a moment, Duff.” Wolf went in search of pen and
paper.
He would trust a fer-de-lance ahead of
Don Rojas. Whenever he and Dolores visited the hyena’s den, he put everyone on
alert in case they needed rescuing or the villa was attacked in their absence.
Normally a couple of the sailors accompanied them to the Alcalde’s
door, while
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Heron-jade kept watch from their own kitchen
table. There was no question that the eagle warrior could see some things at a
distance and, although he was never specific about which things or how he
looked for them, he had never failed to dispatch sailors to escort them home
again when they were ready to leave. Rojas’s invitation had taken them unawares
and Heron-jade was nowhere to be found. He might be carousing somewhere or he
might already be floating in the harbor. It was worrisome.
An hour or
so later the Attewells strolled arm-in-arm along the bustling street, with
nightlife roistering around them and Will and Hick stalking behind.The gate to
the mayor’s compound was opened by the usual men-at-arms, but the guard in the
torch-lit courtyard included a dozen naturale warriors
in feathered headdresses. Most wore the usual embroidered cloak or mantle
pinned at the right shoulder, but some were in padded cotton armor, while a
couple of youngsters had not graduated beyond simple loincloths. Many carried
feathered shields, and all were armed with spears and obsidian-edged swords.
They outnumbered the Distliards.
“This is
real!” Dolores whispered in Chivian. “He wouldn’t fake all this.”
Seventy
thousand pesos would finance a fair scam, but Wolf was certainly not about to call
these bravos imposters to their faces. How had Rojas smuggled such visions into
the city? How had he dared? By
entertaining his king’s enemies, he was openly playing traitor.
The usual
servants had vanished. The visitors were greeted at the front door by pox-faced
Don Pedrarias, who was chief justice of Sigisa and as ruthless as the Alcalde
himself. He looked them over coldly.
“You
brought it?”
“No. If it
is due I can easily fetch it.”
The villain
scowled, but he could not seriously have expected Wolf to drop a fortune at his
feet. He led the way out to the main terrace and left them there.
The garden
was dimmer than usual, with no moon so close to Long Night, and only a few
small lanterns substituting for the usual flaming torches. Stars swarmed overhead,
flowers loaded the air with soporific
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scents, and the surf beat its slow
measure like a great heart, but there were no guests in sight, no servants, not
even stools or benches. Dolores grinned and fidgeted with excitement, while
Wolf grew steadily more tense. Truly, they were the world’s greatest
pessimist-optimist partnership.
Soon,
though, a dozen men paraded out from the house. Other than Don Ruiz, they were
all naturales in
their glory—gems, gold, and feathers. Earrings, labrets, nose plugs, bracelets.
They were almost all armed, but older men than the guards on the gate. The
leader of the delegation, the sun amid this constellation of nobles, was the
man on the Alcalde’s
arm.When those two stopped, the others spread around in a circle.Trapped, all
Wolf could do was wait politely to be presented to the bull elk.
He was a
smallish man made tall by pride, well-preserved but old enough to have stringy
whiskers. The shimmering feather cloak hung loosely on his shoulders, like his
headdress and jewelry, seeming at once less gaudy than most of the others’ and
more impressive. His eyes were rapier-sharp, deep-set in wrinkles.
“This is
the foreigner, glorious one,” Rojas said in halting Tlixilian. “And his senior
wife. His name is Lord Wild-dog-by-the-spring. Don Lope, we are honored by the
presence of Prince Hummingbird, Conch-flute of Yazotlan.”
Yazotlan? All
the arguments Wolf had thrown at Flicker earlier col-lapsed.Why Yazotlan?
Yazotlan was a coastal state, a Distlish ally. His head throbbed as he tried to
work out why it would want to buy steel swords from him. Did the Distlish
charge too much? Or were the Yazotlans trying to buy more arms than Distlain
would supply?—for both sides must know that all bets would be off as soon as El
Dorado fell. Or perhaps precious spiritualist secrets were the Distliards’
asking price also. In that case, the Yazotlans must prefer they go to a
distant, unaligned power like Chivial than to one with an army already on the
mainland.
And the Conch-flute!
El Dorado was ruled by a Great Council composed of men of the imperial family.
The man called Emperor by the Distlish and Fountain-of-swords by the Tlixilians
was leader of the army and thus the most powerful, ranking first in the council
without being
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paramount. Second in authority was his
minister for foreign affairs, termed the Conch-flute for reasons lost in the
mists of time. Apparently the arrangements in the city of Yazotlan were
similar.
Wolf offered
a full court bow and some sickly compliments.
Hummingbird’s
curt nod suggested he should lie prostrate and kiss sandals. Rojas frowned,
perhaps wishing he had coached the foreigners in the correct etiquette. Of
course all those obsidian swords might be making the tyrant’s neck
itch.Technically Yazotlan was a Distlish ally, but only the Caudillo
would have royal authority to deal with
its government, so Rojas was still playing a dangerous game.
The
Conch-flute gestured. An attendant spread a mat behind him. The great man sat
down. Everyone else at once dropped to their knees on the stones. Since Dolores
had given no signal that Lord Hummingbird was a fake, Rojas had amply
fulfilled his side of the bargain and now it was up to Wolf to negotiate. In
that sticky tropical night, the prospect made him sweat rivers.
“Your women
are most beautiful, Wild-dog-by-the-spring,” the prince remarked politely,
hugging his shins.
“So are
yours, Highness. So are all women.”
He smiled.
“There speaks youth.”
The courtiers’
obedient little chuckles sounded like beetles dancing.
“The Alcalde
tells me that your wives are callers of
the spirits?”
“I am
limited to one wife, Highness, but she is wise in the ways of the
elementals.This is not unusual for women in our country.” It would be in his.
He must find Dolores’s presence bizarre.
Again a
thin smile. “Then she has great talent as well as beauty, and also fortitude,
for I understand that journeying upon the waves is an ordeal to try strong
men.”
“It is
indeed, but what man ever dared give birth to a baby?”
A thinner
smile. “She has very pale skin.”
In Wolf’s
opinion Dolores’s visible parts bore a magnificent tropical tan. “Our land lies
farther from the sun, Great One.That is why.”
“How many
days did you journey upon the waves?” His accent was not that of El Dorado as
Heron-jade spoke it.
“More than
half a . . .” The query had sounded like more chitchat
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politeness.
Too late Wolf saw that it struck at the heart of the night’s
business.
“. . . year.”
The bargaining had begun and he had
already stumbled.
“You speak with your King’s
voice,Wild-dog-by-the-spring?”
“Well, sort of. But he doesn’t know it.
I mean my King doesn’t.”
“Of course
he does!” Dolores corrected. Everyone glared at her.
Wolf tried
to recall his blunder.“I mean he’s really on the side of El Dorado in your war,
but don’t worry about that.” No, that was worse. His thumping headache was
mashing his wits.
“And what
war goods have you ready to trade?”
“Swords and spears and horses. Lots of
horses and swords. Good swords. Not the best, like mine, but good enough to
fool you.” “Fighting dogs?” “You want dogs, I’ll promise dogs.” “You have ships
standing by? On their way?” “Oh, no.You can fetch the stuff the way the El
Dorado knights sent
their warriors to my land last winter, can’t you? Isn’t your
conjuration as good as theirs?” “The world is a big place. How will you show
our Eagles where to go?”
“I can’t.”
“So when
could you deliver the weapons?”
That was the
crux. If the Distliards overthrew El Dorado without significant Yazotlan
help,Yazotlan would not share in the booty. Worse, if the Distliards gave up
and sailed away, the allies it abandoned would face terrible vengeance from the
triumphant Empire. The negotiations were urgent, but Wolf had already admitted
that his homeland was farther away than Distlain was.
“At least a
year, maybe two.”
Old
Hummingbird sat there unblinking and spat questions. He ignored mosquitoes
landing on his face. He had a mind like a dancing scorpion and Wolf was making
an utter fool of himself. It was worse than being shredded by Quintus.
The
Conch-flute asked, “And what do you seek in return for these wonderful things
you promise?”
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Seeing a
chance to let Dolores take over,Wolf grabbed it.“Wisdom, Highness.To explain
that, I must ask you to hear the words of my wife.” It was a great relief to
stop talking and rest his aching skull.
But it was
too late for Dolores to save the situation, and she fared even worse. Oh, she
knew exactly what it was she wanted to learn about the knights’ techniques, but
the technical terms she had learned from Intrepid and her other instructors
would not translate into Tlixilian. Even Wolf had trouble understanding what she
was saying and any Blade knew a fair bit about conjuration—certainly more than
the aristocrat-politician, Hummingbird, did. It began to seem that Tlixilian
and Chivian views of what conjury actually did were worlds apart.
When she
finished, the Conch-flute just sat and stared at her for a while without
expression.Then he said, “Extraordinary!”
Rojas was
seething. “I was misled, Highness. I am deeply sorry that you came so far to no
purpose.”
“Never
fear, it has been instructive. But I do not think we can trust these strangers.
What does the exalted Shining-cloud think?” The old man had not raised his
voice, but the answer came in a screech out of the sky.
“The man
was trying to cheat you, benevolent one. The woman is merely crazy.”
Dolores
cried out in shock. An eagle knight stood on the ridgepole of the house like a
giant weathervane.
4
He
was only a black shape against the stars—bulbous, as if he had muffled himself
in a quilt from his ears down to his knees, with only the top of his head
showing. The way he held his balance up there brought back memories of the
giant talons that had marked the snow at Quondam.
“That the
man was lying was obvious,” Hummingbird said dryly,
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not looking up.“What was the woman trying
to say, could you tell, lord of the skies?”
“It was
babbling, baby talk.” Shining-cloud’s discordant croak was a knife on a plate.
“She wants to pry into the sacred mysteries of the knights, but her reasons for
this madness are more madness. Kill the man for insolence, but the girl is
worth something. I will take her myself if you do not want her.” His laugh was
even more dissonant than his voice.
Wolf
gripped his sword, aware that he was hopelessly outnumbered, even without
counting the mighty Eagle. Much too late, he remembered what gave him
headaches.
“Wait! Your
Highness, this freak up on the roof sullies your honor! I am an emissary of a
great monarch, entitled to respect. He used the Serpent’s Eye on me! Is not an
envoy sacrosanct?”
A surge of pain cued him to cry out and
clutch his head. Sometimes it helped to dramatize. “What is this?”The
Conch-flute was frowning. “Shining-cloud, are you blessing the foreigner?”
“Certainly
not, scion of heroes.”
The pain
eased, though.
“He was! I
am sensitive to the spirits.”
Hummingbird
peered around his entourage.“Prickly-pear, what do you say?”
“I may have
sensed some blessing, valiant prospect,” one of the older men muttered
unhappily.“But I am sure no more than would be prudently applied to disable
treachery.” A good courtier could straddle any fence.
“Shining-cloud
does not want the great ones of Yazotlan furnished with sky-metal weapons!”Wolf
said.“He hoards the secrets of his order, so he seeks to block an agreement
between us.”
“By your leave, mover of mountains,” the
Eagle said, “I claim his precious jewel.” “Wait.”The Conch-flute was frowning
harder now, but at Wolf.“You slander a mighty warrior, stranger, and the
penalty for that is death.”
Wolf saw he
was on to something. “Is it slander? Are the eagle knights of Yazotlan
different from those of the floating city—Sky-cactus, say, or Bone-peak-runner,
or the great Amaranth-talon?”
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There he
scored his first real hit of the evening.That he could quote such names caused
hisses of surprise and disapproval all round.
“You deal
with our enemies also?” the Conch-flute said. Sudden death was now on the
table.
Even Rojas,
who had been having trouble following the Tlixilian chatter, had caught the
gist. He was displeased, but perhaps mostly at the thought that a dead Chivian
could not pay his commission.
“To deal
with those I named is impossible,”Wolf said.“They live in dreams of the past.
Jaguar knights—like Lizard-drumming, say, the mighty son of Quetzal-star—are
wiser, and wish their warriors to be well armed.” He was gambling that
Lizard-drumming was not known for conservative views. No one contradicted him.
“August
ruler,” said the thing on the roof, “I confess that I did cast a very slight
blessing on the strangers.They came bearing many strange, outlandish blessings
of their own, so they were first to breach the rules of negotiation. I feared
those were evils that might imperil you. It is possible that I disturbed the
aim of the man’s thoughts a little, but I put no filth in his midden mouth. I
made him less able to deceive you, that is all.The foulness he revealed was his
own.”
“Your
powers are undoubted, wind rider.”
“As for the
sky-metal weapons and other abominations, I argued against them only until the
Great Council in its wisdom made its deci-sion.We are always loyal to the
Council.”
“Your
loyalty has been proven times beyond reckoning,” the Conch-flute admitted. “But
the stranger’s charge was true and I am shamed.”
“I claim
his precious jewel!” the knight repeated stubbornly.“Emis-sary or not, a
commoner who insults a knight must make recompense.”
“What does
Don Ruiz say?”
The Alcalde
was an unhappy man, anxious to collect
his fee. “Our traditions are similar, Highness. We did invite this worm to a
parley. However foul his words, in our ways he would be allowed to depart
freely.”
“In your
house we shall be bound by your ways.” Hummingbird raised his elbows and two
men sprang forward to lift him to his feet. Everyone rose.“We have been honored
by your hospitality, Don Ruiz.”
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The Alcalde
doubled over in a bow. “Nay, my house is
exalted by Your Highness’s shadow on the floor. I deeply regret that your journey
was in vain. I am unworthy of the noble gifts Your Highness brought me and
humbly beg that I may be allowed to decline them without giving offense.”
“No, no.
Keep them for friendship.” Prince Hummingbird pulled his cloak about him. “If
the glorious Shining-cloud will favor us once again, we are ready.”
In response
the eagle knight overhead uttered an ear-piercing screech and . . . he did not
exactly spread his wings, but
he seemed to stretch out sideways and upward and continue to expand so that his
darkness blotted out the sky and the stars.Wolf felt a blaze of pain as if
red-hot irons had been thrust in his eyes. He staggered and cried out.
Then the
stars returned, fading in from pitch darkness. All the Yazotlans had gone.
“Darling,
you were wonderful!” Dolores embraced him. “I was so worried, and you saved the
day.That monster churning our wits! I loved the way you—”
“Later!”
Wolf detached her gently and turned to face their irate host. Pedrarias and
henchmen had emerged from the shadows. Negotiations were not over yet.“We are
grateful for your efforts on our behalf, Your Worship. It is regrettable that
the other side did not play fair.”
“It is more
regrettable that you turned out to have nothing to sell, Sir Wolf.” Bluster
would have been easier to deal with than Rojas’s icy charm, his calculated
killer’s smile.
“I do have
the merchandise.We had a misunderstanding. I told you I wanted to trade with El
Dorado, which has conjurers who could transport it.You never told me you were
going to bring in the Yazotlans. Evidently they are not so skilled in the
spiritual arts.”
“Nobody
is,” Rojas said. “What you ask is impossible.You betrayed my trust and shamed
me in front of the most powerful men I know.”
“With
respect, Excellency, they admitted that the fault was theirs. Else why would
they have left you the gifts they brought?”
The Alcalde’s
eyes shone like steel in the starlight.“What they left or did not leave is not
your concern. My fee is.You will produce it now.”
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“It is a
fair request,”Wolf admitted, having no choice. Knowing that the Yazotlan Great
Council was eager to obtain weaponry that the Distliards either would not or
could not provide, Don Ruiz had performed his role of middleman admirably and
expected to be paid by both parties. “Seventy thousand pesos.Tomorrow morning?”
“Tonight.
One hundred and ten thousand. I will offer your lady wife some refreshment
while we wait. Hurry back.”
Wolf made a
halfhearted effort to argue that the additional forty had been conditional on
reaching an agreement; not surprisingly, he got nowhere. He had right on his
side, but he had admitted having the additional money and Rojas wanted it. He
offered a bodyguard for the journey.Wolf assured him that Diligence
was sufficient protection.
As if the
night had not yet provided enough failure, he now had to suffer the shame of
leaving his wife behind as hostage. He was shown the gate and hurried
homeward.The street was thronged with revelers, but he traveled warily, for the
presence of witnesses was no guarantee of safety in Sigisa.A man could be cut
down in the midst of a crowd without anyone seeing a thing.Women and drunks
moved to accost him and he snarled at them menacingly.
“You pee in
the water jar, Wild-dog-by-the-spring.” A hand like a paving stone dropped on
his shoulder.
He glanced
up at the scowling face of Heron-jade. “What means that?”
“It means
you don’t know your friends from your enemies.” He was panting, out of breath.
“But you told
me it was cowardly and dishonorable for eagle warriors to use sky-metal
swords.You told me the Yazotlans were dishonorable and cowardly.Why do you
object if I try to cheat them?”
The big man
screwed up his face as he tried to work out the correct response.
“Shining-cloud is not the least of Eagles,” he said grudgingly. “I recognized
his shadow in Calero’s.”
Calero’s
was a long way south, reputedly the wildest, nastiest dive on the island. “What
were you doing there?”
Heron-jade
chuckled low in his throat. “Urging tranquility on the excited.”
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“Calero
pays you for that?”
“He lets me
eat all I want for nothing.” Heron-jade had never asked Wolf for money. His
feeding bills were so high that Wolf had never felt obliged to offer him any,
and doubted he even knew what it was. It was amazing that the big man could be
eating elsewhere as well, but his peculiar ideas on warrior’s honor might see
bouncer as a permissible occupation.
They walked
in silence for a few minutes.
“Great and
most trusted watcher,”Wolf said at last,“speak of something near to my heart.
If Shining-cloud or some other mighty eagle knight wanted to send me back to my
homeland and then bring me back with a heap of valuable things, could he do
it?”
The eagle
warrior had been asked such questions before, but had always sulked and
refused to answer.This time he chuckled as if he found such ignorance amusing.
“Of course
not! If you told one of those rats in that corner to run to El Dorado, would it
know where to go?”
Wolf could
see no rats where he pointed. “But Amaranth—”
“Soaring
Amaranth-talon and star-walking Bone-peak-runner went to rescue Plumed-pillar.”
So
Celeste’s jaguar pin had acted like a beacon, and without that guidance, the
Dark Chamber’s plans lay in ruins. There was no practical way to import
Chivian weapons into El Dorado.
At the
villa, Wolf ran his golden key over the gate. Nothing happened. He cursed and
rang the bell. Many strange, outlandish blessings, Shining-cloud
had said.
Flicker
opened the gate and stood foursquare in the entrance. “Where is she? What have
you done with Dolly?”
“I sold her
to the cannibals. You are between me and the ransom money.”
He stepped
back to let Wolf past.“I told you to take the money with you!”
“Bless the
spirits I didn’t!”
“What do
you mean?” Flicker yelled, following. For once he had dropped his personation.
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In the
light of the first torch, Wolf paused to examine the three pesos he had been carrying
in his pocket. Then he continued, now trailed by Flicker, Peterkin, and
Heron-jade.When he reached his bedroom, they were joined by Megan and Duff,
both anxious.
Wolf handed
Flicker the key.“Open the box for me.” He pulled off his sweaty shirt and
reached for another from the closet.
“If you’d
taken the money with you as I said, you wouldn’t have had to abandon her to
those criminals!” Flicker insisted, kneeling beside the great sea chest in
which they stored the bulk of the money. In a moment he cried out in fury as
the key slid from his nerveless fingers.
“Oh, sorry,
Flicker,”Wolf said. “I thought it was just me. I suppose you can all see my
sash now, can you?” Fearing trouble, he had gone to the mayor’s house wearing
what the inquisitors, with unusual humor, referred to as his “war band,” a
normally invisible belt that not only provided some defense against poisons,
including alcohol, but also contained many useful gadgets. In Chivial only a
White Sister could detect a war band, but obviously Shining-cloud had. Now its
contents must be worth-less—enchanted bandage, infallible tinder, light-maker,
stamina bracelet, and the rest.The twine stronger than a steel chain would be
only string. For most of these Wolf had no replacements. He held out the fake
pesos for the others to see, reverted to nasty, greasy lead.“It is good I
didn’t take all the money, or we would be in much deeper trouble.They had an
eagle knight there. He disabled all our conjuries.”
“No!” Megan
said, wide-eyed. “No, that isn’t possible, Sir Wolf! No Chivian conjurer could
do that, certainly not without putting the conjurements inside an octogram.And
not several different conjurements at once!”
“He
did. He also used the Serpent’s Eye on us, so we became twittering chickens when
we needed all our wits about us. Did you expect them to play fair? Nobody does,
here. Someone find the antidote for Flicker. I want his sword arm working when
we go to deliver the money.”
He took Flicker and three of the sailors
with him when he carried the ransom to the Rojas mansion, but they met with no
trouble. Dolores
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was alive and well, chattering with Dona
Fortunata. It was a very civilized extortion.The odious Pedrarias accepted the
bags and weighed the coins under the Alcalde’s
watchful eye.
“So where
do you head now, Don Lope?” Rojas inquired as he ushered his guests to the
gate, where their guards were being guarded by his guards. “Home to Chivial, or
on to El Dorado?”
“I have not
thought beyond falling into bed tonight, Your Excellency. Conjuration gives me
a headache and your feathered friend packed a mean punch, spiritually
speaking.”
Rojas
squeezed Wolf’s arm in a sort of friendly menace. “The Distlish allow their
allies to keep very few captives, so they are short of virtue. You made them
waste a lot of it tonight. Do remember Sea Queen, in
port just now.You could do worse.”
“I have not
been doing well recently,”Wolf admitted.
“But if you
prefer to tarry in fair Sigisa to spend the rest of your money, I am sure there
will be those who can help you do so.”The Alcalde
smiled sadly—such a shame to cut a
friend’s throat. “Good chance to you, and to you, Dona Dolores.”
They headed
for home with his threats still ringing in their ears. Dolores bubbled with
joy, as if she’d just been to a glorious ball instead of being ransomed from a
monster’s den. She had witnessed impossible things.
When Wolf
broke the news about the conjurements, she laughed.
“That’s
impossible, of course.”
“So Megan
told me. It’s still a blow.”
“But
that wasn’t the only impossible thing Shining-cloud did!” she said. “Oh, Wolf,
it’s so wonderful! Let’s have a conference the moment we get back.”
They went straight to their bedroom;
Flicker and Megan joined them. Wolf sat on the bed and nursed a seething anger;
Flicker stood by the door and glowered, arms folded. Megan made herself
comfortable with her knitting.
Dolores
paced about, like Athelgar. “What the eagle knight did was
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absolutely incredible! Moving two dozen
men from here to Yazotlan with a snap of his fingers!” She laughed excitedly.
“If he has fingers. Then he deactivated all our conjurements—poof ! Like that.
No chanting. No octogram. All by himself! And there’s more. He is not only the
most incredible conjurer I ever heard of, but he’s a sniffer as well!”
Megan
frowned. “You sure of that, dear?”
“Yes, yes!
He had to sniff out all our little gadgets in order to break them.We know,”she
said with a glance at Wolf that meant he might not, “that a conjurer can never
be a White Sister or vice versa. You either push the elementals around or you
stand still and watch them. Blacksmiths don’t play lutes, is how Intrepid puts
it. But Shining-cloud can do both!”
“I don’t
believe it,” Flicker said. “He must just have a general conjuration to release
elementals.”
“That has got
to be impossible!”
“I believe
it,” Wolf said grumpily, aware that he never missed a chance to disagree with
Flicker. “The sniffing, I mean. Heron-jade told me he detected the eagle knight
all the way from Calero’s.‘Recognized his shadow’ was how he put it.”
“Now you’re
saying Heron-jade is a White Sister?” Flicker was rarely so witty.They all
smiled.
“He’d look
great in the hat,”Wolf said. “But remember he saw the enchantment on our tangle
mats? The jaguars didn’t, but he did. They had an unnatural ability to see in
the dark and probably other skills. An eagle knight, like his Sky-cactus, can delegate
the ability to sniff out con-jury to his
followers. He must conjure them
to do it! Try telling that to the White Sisters!”
Glum
silence. Everything they had been taught about spiritualism had fallen apart in
the Hence Lands.
“What does
matter,” Dolores declared, “is that the Eagles’ conjuration skills are
absolutely incredible and it’s worth anything to
get hold of them! What do we try next, love?”
“We go
home. De Rojas told me to get out of town or he’d skin us completely. He even
pointed out that there’s a Chivian ship in port. He was giving us a five-yard
start.”
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Megan’s
needles clicked softly. She was nodding to her knitting. Dolores stared in
dismay at the crumbling of her dreams.
Flicker
sneered. “You flee from threats,Wolf ?”
“I learn
from my mistakes, and tonight I learned that what we want to do is impossible.
The mission has hit the rocks; all hands to the lifeboats. Firstly, we were
relying on the eagle knights to fetch the trade goods. Rojas and Heron-jade
both say that’s impossible.” He waited a moment in case his wife wanted to say
Rojas had been lying, but she did not. “The Eagles need something to aim for,
and without it they can’t find Chivial.To ship arms by sea would take us years.
Secondly, the Eagles and Jaguars will never reveal their secrets.”
“They will
if they are desperate enough!” Flicker said.
Wolf
sighed. “No. I should have listened to my own advice. I told you, all of you,
back on Glorious. I
told you, ‘The Jaguars and Eagles guard their secrets so closely that we could
learn nothing if we were free to walk the streets of El Dorado.’ ”
“They were
willing to trade tonight if we’d had trade goods ready!” Dolores protested.
“Hummingbird
was, love. Shining-cloud wasn’t. He and his flock had orders from their king to
cooperate, but he found a way to wiggle out. That will always happen.You can
bribe the rulers, or threaten the cities with massacre, but you cannot pressure
the knights. Are you suggesting we tie the likes of Shining-cloud to a stump
and start pulling out his feathers? You’re thinking of them as conjurers, like
old Grand Wizard and his fumbling fog of fogies. I’m telling you they’re
fighters, military orders like the Blades or the Yeomen.You could offer a Blade
anything in the world for his sword and he would turn you down even if he were
starving. Or try bribing a Yeoman to go out in public with mud on his cuirass. We
will never get their secrets out of the knights! ”
He was
looking at three disbelieving faces. Even Megan probably just thought it was
too dangerous to try, not that it was impossible.
“I should
have seen this sooner,” he said.“We all should.We are trying to exchange goods
for knowledge and that is never easy. It’s almost impossible in this case,
because the naturales have
no proper system of
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writing.They have no spell books we can
buy.” More blank looks.Wolf pressed on.“Listen! Suppose we offer a whole
wagonload of swords just for one conjuration—say the one the Eagles use to
teleport people.That can’t be written down anywhere, because Tlixilians don’t
have real writing. But we have the swords, they have the know-how, and we
agree to trade. We send them, say, Flicker, and the knights teach him the
tech-nique.They may grumble, but they obey orders from their king or emperor
and they reveal their mystery.We hand over the swords, and they send Flicker
back. Now they have the swords and we have Flicker and both
parties have the information.You see the
difference?”
“Then they
kill me.” Flicker’s mind was as fast as his feet. The women were still puzzled
but he was smiling, thin-lipped.
Wolf
nodded. “With their powers, they could probably do that no matter what
precautions we took or where you fled.You might cheat them by writing it all
down quick, but I wouldn’t count on even that. You’d be a dead man running.
Then they still have the swords and we have nothing.”
Even
Dolores was frowning now, still reluctant to believe.
“Suppose we
had not been unmasked tonight,” he said. “Suppose I had managed to gull the
Conch-flute into believing I did have a shipload of hardware on its way.We make
a deal, so what happens? He certainly does not call Shining-cloud down off his
perch to give Dolores a few tips in Tlixilian spirituality. No, he whisks her
off to Yazotlan with him to learn the skills she wants at leisure.When I am
ready to deliver the goods, I get my wife back in exchange. But for how long?
I’m telling you that tonight was the luckiest failure of my life. I say we give
up and go home.”
Dolores
jumped to her feet.“Darling, we can’t! We mustn’t! Chivial needs this. What if
Isilond or Distlain gets these powers before we do? They could drop an army in
the middle of Grandon. So what if it’s dangerous? We knew this mission would
be dangerous.You’re trying to baby me again,Wolf ! You are treating us like
children.”
“I am not
trying—”
“Yes, you
are! I did not come all this way just to turn around and run home with my tail
between my legs.”
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Megan folded
her knitting back in its bag.“Let’s talk about it in the morning, Sir Wolf.
It’s a big decision and we should sleep on it.”
5
The most important rule
in a marriage was Never take an argument to bed. But
there were times . . .
“You
didn’t listen to Rojas,”Wolf said as he snuffed the candle.“He knows we’re
trying to deal with El Dorado. He can guess we have more gold. One night he’s
going to send an army here again. He more or less promised! And this time we
don’t have jaguar warriors to bash heads.” He rolled over.
“Don’t
touch me!”
He
rolled back again. “That won’t help.” “Nor will what you want.” “It would, you
know.” “No, it wouldn’t.” “As you wish. Megan was right. We should sleep on it,
not talk
about
it anymore tonight. Go to sleep.”
“You
don’t love me.” She saw triumph and fame being snatched away from her. He saw
no chance of either. She saw her great adventure cut short for no reason. He
saw both them and the people who relied on them dying nastily and soon.
“You
think I came to this fever swamp to please Athelgar?” he
asked. Silence. He was bitter. “Yes, you
let it slip tonight, didn’t you? I wasn’t the
only one babbling secrets under the
Serpent’s Eye.” “What do you mean?” she whispered, still with her back to him.
“Put it in writing! Remember?
What you said to Flicker the first time
I
met him, in the Pine Tree Inn. Then you told me it meant he was to go away. But
that’s not what that means! That happens to be one scrap
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of Dark Chamber code I know. It means The
plan is going well, targets will be met or exceeded. I
hoped you were telling him we would catch Lynx. But you meant me. Had you
slipped something in my food when I wasn’t looking? Or were you just using
feminine intuition to know you were going to land your fish?”
Silence.
Wolf sighed
at his own folly. “Flicker took the news back to Grand Inquisitor and the Privy
Council. Because no matter what Grand Inquisitor may say, the Dark Chamber
would never dare launch a major international venture like this without
approval from the Council.You confessed that tonight.You manipulated me into
taking on the mission by telling me I was deceiving the King. I expect Grand
Inquisitor persuaded the King to agree by letting him deceive me. Athelgar
would have enjoyed that—not to mention enjoying sending me to somewhere far
away and dangerous.They spun me a cock-and-bull story about Vicious
threatening to resign.”
Flicker
must have been in on the joke too.That rankled.
Dolores’s
answer was half-muffled in the pillow.“I don’t know what Grand Inquisitor
does.”
“No? Well
I’m not interested in risking my life to give Athelgar or the Dark Chamber any
more conjury than they already know. We’re going home.”
She rolled
over. “No, we’re not! I came here to make my name and fortune and I’m not ready
to quit.”
“Fortune?
Fool child! You expect Athelgar to make you rich? The man’s tighter than the
axle nut on a millstone. If you go home with any Tlixilian conjury, you’ll be
locked up in the Bastion as a military secret weapon before you know what
happens to you.Trust Athelgar? You’re crazy!”
“And you’re
a quitter!” She rolled away from him again.
He lay and
sweated in the airless heat. Mosquitoes shrilled in his ears, moths bounced off
the windows. Little tropical things moved silently over the floor and walls. He
went over the problem a million more times and found no new answer. He had
nothing but lies to offer for secrets beyond price. If the inquisitors stayed
in Sigisa, Rojas would skin them. Conclusion: Go away.
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Eventually
he realized that he was scratching. He slid out of bed and went in search of a
candle.As he had feared, he was covered in mosquito bites. Shining-cloud had
de-conjured more than the tricks in Wolf’s pockets; he had also stripped off
his personal enchantments, and that was very bad news indeed. Every advantage
the Dark Chamber had given him had been wiped away.The knights’ powers were
terrifying.
He
had next watch. Giving up hopes of sleep, he dressed and went to relieve
Peterkin on guard. Then he could pace the house in silence, still seeking some
safe way to keep Dolores’s mad ambitions alive.A couple of times he almost
stepped on a tangle mat, which would have wakened the household and exposed
him to ridicule.
As
the crescent moon rose from the sea to herald dawn, Flicker emerged from his
room, fully dressed. He had drawn last watch and prided himself on never
needing a wake-up call, but he looked more guilty than sleepy.
He
regarded Wolf sourly. “Still planning on running away?” “If you have a better
idea, I’ll listen.” “You never have before.” “Your personation is slipping.”
“Not surprising. Go to bed.” Flicker headed for the kitchen. “I’m going for a
walk.” Flicker spun around to stare at him, suspicion visible even in near-
darkness. “Why?” “Thought I’d hit a few
brothels and grog shops. I may be gone some
time.” “Brave of you.” “Takes one to
know one.” Wolf moved the tangle mat away from
the front door. “Good chance.You’ll need
it.” Angry at having been transparent, Flicker growled, “Thanks.” “Don’t forget
to spread out this mat again.” Wolf stepped outside
and closed the door.
He
climbed over the stockade because he could no longer bolt the gate from the
outside. Dawn was his favorite time of day in Sigisa.The town
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was as quiet by then as it ever was, the
insect population less troublesome, the temperature bearable. He headed south
along the beach, enjoying the sea’s company and worrying at his problem. By
the time he reached the southern end of the spit, where the river emerged from
the jungle, the sky was blue and he had still found no way to reconcile love
and common sense. (Was that a contradiction in terms?)
He began
making his way back through the town, pausing once in a while to chat with
drunks still able to speak. He often met interesting characters on his
early-morning outings. He met dead ones, too, on occasion, but not that day.
His real
objective was Sea Queen. He
had spoken briefly with the master, Walter Wagge, agreeing on a price for
taking mail home to Chivial. Shipping out seven or eight people was a different
matter, and Wolf wanted to know more about Wagge, his ship, and his planned
itin-erary.That problem solved itself, because Sea
Queen had moved. It took Wolf awhile to find
her at anchorage and when he did she was loading slaves. She would not be going
home to Chivial with that cargo, and she would not be carrying him or anyone
associated with him.
So
the urgency had vanished. He might need days or even weeks to find a suitable
vessel, and by then he could talk Dolores around.That assumed that Rojas would
behave himself in the meantime.
He had to haul on the bell rope to gain
admittance and the gate was opened by Dolores herself—Dolores in great
distress. She threw herself into his arms so he staggered backwards. He had
never known her drop a tear before, and now she was weeping helplessly.
Muttering sympathy, he eased her inside the gate and closed it.
“So
Flicker’s gone?” he said. “I guessed he was planning it.” In Flicker’s eyes, he
had wasted a month of precious time and most of the money. Flicker had always
wanted to head straight inland.
Dolores
continued to sob into his shoulder, mumbling incomprehensibly.
“You can’t
be surprised!” he said. “I think he’s crazy, but he’s young and ambitious and .
. . and what did
you say?”
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It took two
more tries before she gasped out,“He tried to rape me!”
Wolf
screamed, “No!” and
pushed her back so he could see her. “You mean that?”There was a swelling red
bruise on her cheek.
The very
vehemence of his reaction seemed to sober her. She nod-ded.“Came into . . .
bedroom ...say goodbye. I tried to talk him out of it.” She pulled back into
Wolf’s embrace again, burying her face against his neck. “He went mad. Said you
were . . . called you terrible things. Wanted me to go with him. Oh,Wolf!
Pulled sheet ...away ... had to fight him off! Really fight!”
Had a
tearful farewell gotten out of hand? How far had she gone in trying to persuade
Flicker not to leave? Wolf cursed himself for a jealous, suspicious fool. He
must not try to imagine that scene. Any of it. The details did not matter.
Nothing excused rape or attempted rape.
“Did he
hurt you?”
Sniffle. “A
few bruises. Oh,Wolf! Be all right . . . just shock.”
Seeing that
she was barefoot,Wolf picked her up in his arms.“Come along.” He headed for the
house. When a man had killed so many brother Blades, what would one more
inquisitor matter? He wasn’t even an inquisitor, he was a rat. “He can’t have
got far yet. Where’s Heron-jade?” It would be an execution.
“Went with
him.”
Wolf let
rip with a few obscenities. The big man would be a far greater loss to the team
than Flicker would.What had made him change his mind? Wolf’s treachery in
dealing with the Yazotlans, or just homesickness? Without the eagle’s
far-seeing skills, Wolf had no hope of tracking Flicker down and administering
justice.
“Well I hope
our eagle gets home safely.”He hoped much more that the Tlixilians caught
Flicker and roasted him alive. “I hope we do, too. Sea
Queen’s a slaver.”
“You won’t
wait for Flicker to come back?”
He laughed.
“The next time I see Flicker, my love, I kill him.”
“Wolf! No!”
“Yes. Did
you invite him into bed?”
“No, no,
no! I swear!”
“And he did
try to rape you?”
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She nodded.
“Then
it doesn’t matter if he comes back here before we leave or I run into him in Grandon
ten years from now,” Wolf said. “I will kill him.”
6
Life
was always going to happen and never did. Young Alf Attewell had expected his
life to begin the moment he escaped from Sheese into the real world. At
Ironhall, Candidate Lynx had looked forward to life beginning as soon as he was
bound. But the Guard had been cheated of his services and, as chief Blade to
the King’s doxy, Sir Lynx had enjoyed much less freedom than guardsmen did, and
much less security, because in any kingdom the office of royal mistress usually
had short tenure. It had seemed then that life would begin as soon as Celeste
was dismissed; he had never foreseen anything as terrible as Quondam. At
Quondam life had receded into the remote future, beyond the Baron’s death. Now
he was Bobcat-by-the-spring and life looked likely to end before it ever got
started.
Under the
million stars of El Dorado, the Grand Admiral’s barge swept along the
canal.Yes, it was only a dugout, but no horse-drawn carriage could compare with
it for comfort. It moved as smoothly as a raindrop running down a windowpane,
with no sound except the forced breath of the four naked paddlers as they
stroked the silver water, speeding their lord through the night. Could this be
life? He had expected it to feel more real.
Ruling the
world had never appealed to Lynx. He would have always settled for a happy
wife, well-fed children, and a few convivial friends—plus some useful and
interesting way of getting from dawn to dusk, some task he could perform well
enough to earn a little respect. Life could offer little more than that.
Respect he had achieved, at least for now. He was a revered citizen of the
floating city, with servants and
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handmaidens (pawmaidens?) and rich
landholdings. But the happiest time of his life had been the month he had spent
as Prime, at Ironhall. Then his job had been to keep a hundred boys happy and
motivated, which for him had been no problem at all, and his reward had been
praise from Grand Master. Overseeing three thousand men shaping planks with
stone adzes just did not compare.
In El
Dorado he had proved his loyalty and developed many useful skills. As well as
being commander of the new imperial shipyard, he was Jaguar advisor on anti-cavalry
tactics. He had taught the Tlixilians that horses had a terror of fire, and how
to fight them with caltrops of obsidian flakes set in earthenware balls. He
had assisted at the interrogation of prisoners, even managing to save a few
from the altar stone, although he was not sure for how long. The Tlixilians
feared and hated the Distliards’ war dogs so much that he had suggested the
Eagles drop poisoned meat in the pens; this had killed off two whole packs
before the Distliards woke up to what was happening.
For that
exploit Bobcat-by-the-spring had been formally honored in the Hall of Eagles.
(Whatever would Grand Master have thought of that ceremony’s barbaric
splendor?) Such recognition of a non-Eagle was almost unprecedented, so the
intent had been more to insult the Jaguars than to honor Lynx, but the Jaguars
had countered by hailing Lord Bobcat-by-the-spring as a full jaguar knight and
presenting him to the Emperor, the Fountain-of-swords, who had promptly granted
him great estates. His former delusion that he was the revenant Plumed-pillar
had been quietly forgotten, at least for now.
It was all
make-believe. His vast landholdings lay in country currently held by the Hairy
Ones, so he would not be able to visit them until after the war. Besides,
however useful he might be as a wartime advisor, socially he was still an
embarrassment that the Jaguars would likely dispose of as soon as the war was
won. If it was lost, he would die in the carnage.
So if this
was life, it was going to be short.
The
Admiral’s barge back-paddled to a stop alongside a quay where several other
canoes were unloading important people. Lynx sprang nimbly ashore, without
tipping his rowers into the water. Human atten
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dants dropped to touch the ground in
salute. He was respectfully ushered through a gate, into the grounds of the
palace of Salt-ax-otter, a very senior knight, the Jaguar representative on the
Grand Council.
The Admiral
had been summoned to attend a meeting of a select group known as the
Progressives. Old scoundrel Basket-fox called them the Peyote Eaters, although
he had been one of their founders.They had first come together a year or so
ago, not long before Lynx arrived in the floating city—some Jaguars, a few
highborn officials, and two or three Eagles, about a score in all.Their
doctrine had been that the Hairy Ones were a new peril and must be fought in
new ways.Their opponents, the Traditionalists, had considered anything new to
be dishonorable. Now the Traditionalists were discredited, thanks largely to
Lynx’s efforts.The Progressives had won the argument and the Emperor’s
approval, so he wondered why they needed to meet at all.
Not that
the war was going any better, of course. Two bad defeats had cut off the supply
of captives. The dwindling flow of virtue from the altar stones was hoarded so
jealously now that eagle knights were traveling by canoe or palanquin.
As always,
the members had assembled out-of-doors, standing under trees in an irregularly
shaped area, so that there could be no arguments about rank or precedence. Many
conversations were under way, but no one offered to chat with the foreigner.
Untroubled, Lynx spread his lower paws, rested his knuckles—well, they felt
like knuckles—on his hips, and waited
for the meeting to begin. He thought everyone must be present ...no, the host
was still missing.
After a few
minutes heads turned in Lynx’s direction and Salt-ax-otter emerged from the
outer darkness to stand near him. With him came a man who was certainly not a member
of the group. He seemed short alongside a Jaguar, but was actually tall. Also
young, highly respected, and a member of the Great Council.All conversation
ceased instantly. Any other group would have dropped to its knees—and even
these would if the guest were formally named, for he was the Emperor’s brother,
designated heir, and deputy, Two-swans-dancing, the Conch-flute of El Dorado.
Salt-ax-otter
did not name him. He merely said, “Friends, you are
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welcome all. Honored Star-feather, we
are curious to know how the Hairy Ones’ boats are progressing.” That opening
was sufficiently unusual to convey that we meant
the Great Council in
this instance.
“They have
four in the water,” the Eagle said. “But only one has ventured out from shore
yet. I estimate they will have ten complete within twenty days, and they have
another eleven started.”
Two-swans-dancing
peered past his host. “And what can the skilled Bobcat-by-the-spring report on
his progress?”
“We have
four boats operational,” Lynx said. He calculated quickly. “In ten days we
should have another six or seven.We cannot go as fast as the enemy.”
“Why not?”
“They have
better tools.” What else to say? Basket-fox’s raid on Seven Reeds had destroyed
the cache of equipment there, instead of capturing it as Lynx had urged, and
the Distliards seemed to have replaced it all. They had steel saws and
chisels, spikes and nails; they had hemp ropes and lathes to make pulley
wheels.They had pitch for caulking, wedges to split logs. “And besides, er . .
.” This group shunned all honorifics, but it felt wrong not to offer them to a
prince.“And besides, we are about to run out of timber.”
Trees had
to come from the hills, borne on the shoulders of men until they reached the lake.
Enemy forces were rapidly encircling the floating city—not so much by marching
troops across the landscape as by perverting towns from their loyalty. Soon the
whole valley would be hostile territory.
“We should
attack Seven Reeds again?”
That was a
major decision involving far too many factors for an upstart Chivian Blade to
evaluate.The city rulers knew the boats’ capability as well as he did, and
they should decide whether to gamble their fleet now or save it to defend the
causeway drawbridges in the assault to come. “Such choices belong to the Great
Council,” Lynx said stubbornly.
After a
moment’s ominous pause, Two-swans-dancing said, “True.” He passed the meeting
back to Salt-ax-otter with a nod.
“Friends,”
said the host, “today I had joyous news. My son and first
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warrior, whom we mourned for lost, has
returned to us. He brings news you should hear. Have I your leave, friends?”
Who would
argue when he had the Emperor’s brother at his side? Out of the darkness strolled
a solid young man wearing the grandiose trappings of a very senior jaguar
warrior, a youngster Lynx vaguely remembered having seen somewhere—mostly
because he had shoulders that would have impressed an ox. Quiet welcomes and
congratulations murmured through the trees.
“Tell my
friends your tale,Taker of Nine Captives.”
“My lords
do me honor . . .” Blood-mirror-walks related how he had been captured on the
field of battle. He considered that he had been doubly unfortunate in having
been taken by Distliards, who had sold him into slavery, instead of by the
local Tephuamotziners, who would have had the decency to rip his heart out.
Instead he had been transported across the stinking water in a floating house
and offered for sale like cloth or pottery, but a strange Hairy One had
ransomed him, blessed him to cure his injuries, and brought him back to the
true country. So he had returned from the halls of the dead, trotting in along
a causeway to report to his lord and father. The message he had brought
explained the presence of Two-swans-dancing—this dissident foreigner on the
coast was willing to aid El Dorado in its righteous struggle against the
invaders, and would sell it all the war materiel it needed.
“His city
is not that of the Hairy Ones we know,” Blood-mirror-walks explained.“He is a
knight among his people. His regalia is a sword bearing a jewel like a jaguar’s
eye, like unto one I saw once in the Hall of Jaguars.”
All eyes
had turned to Lynx.
A Blade!
Here? Death and fire! But a Chivian should not want to aid El Dorado.Would he
not rather seek to bring the Quondam killers to justice?
“And his
name?” inquired the Conch-flute.
“It is
Wild-dog-by-the-spring, mover of mountains.”
Wolfie! Lynx
bellowed out a laugh that must be a grievous breach of protocol. “A very ugly
man, who looks as if his face had been stamped to mush in childhood and then
chopped up by many obsidian blades?”
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“It
is he.” “This is my brother, lord, my own parents’ son! And if he says he
has brought the things we need to fight
this war, then it is so.” “You vouch for him?” asked Two-swans-dancing,
beaming. “With my life!” Lynx cried.
327
VIII
The mort is sounded by one long
call and several short
1
All
his life, Wolf had detested failure. Dolores made fun of his compulsive boot
polishing, but that was a small part of a much greater struggle, his
determination to succeed at anything he tried. Some Blades did only what their
bindings demanded, nothing more. Not he. He had served a master he despised to
the limits of his ability, even killing men when that had been the right thing
to do in the circumstances. Nothing he had done in all his years in the Guard
troubled his conscience.
But the
Sigisa mission had turned out to be far beyond his abilities. The fact that no
one could have achieved what he had set out to do was no comfort, because he
should not have taken on an impossible task. The knowledge that the inquisitors
had tricked him into it only made him feel worse. He had not even managed to
end it cleanly and run away. Sigisa had piled disaster on disaster.
Within
hours after Shining-cloud nullified their spiritual protec
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tion, both
Wolf and Dolores succumbed to dysentery. She recovered in a few days. He took
much longer and was barely back on his feet, still as shaky as an autumn leaf,
when he contracted tertian fever, another Sigisian specialty. He had never
known a serious illness before, and was appalled at what it did to him. He
burned. He thrashed and raved in delirium, ranting mostly about his brother.
Every second day the fever would return, each bout leaving him weaker than
before, but nothing in the medicine chest helped. He needed an octogram and
eight competent conjurers, and those did not exist in all Tlixilia. He almost
died.
The start of Secondmoon found him
reclining on a portable bed on the patio, sipping fruit juice and watching
unfamiliar stars play peekaboo between the romping palm fronds. Phosphoric
breakers spilled up the beach. His fever had stayed away for several days, so
he might be going to live after all.
Dolores
settled at his side. He moved the beaker to his other hand and wound an arm
around her.
“Peterkin’s
found a ship,” she said.
That was good news, although Wolf
doubted he could walk as far as the harbor. “Not a slaver?” “No. Isilondian
trader, outbound for Mondon the day after tomorrow.” The new Caudillo
had been enforcing the laws against
foreigners
more strictly, and almost no non-Distlish
vessels had dropped anchor in Sigisa in the last month.A Distlish captain would
be within his rights in accepting the Chivians’ money and then impressing the
men into his crew. What might happen to the two women then did not bear thinking
about.
Wolf
studied his wife’s face by starlight. “You will be coming with us, won’t you?”
She nodded
wistfully.“Of course. I was wrong and you were right.” She lay down to snuggle
against him. “Darling, I was so frightened we were going to lose you!”
He offered
lips to be kissed. “Then it must be time I declared myself recovered.Tomorrow
I shall strap on my sword and resume my old
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domineering
ways. I think I can walk with it on if I lean sideways. Don’t
ask
me to use it.”
“Good. I feel in need of being
domineered.”
“Has Peterkin fixed a fare yet?”
“They’re still bargaining.”
Something
about her tone alerted him. “How much have we got left?”
“Less than
ten thousand pesos.”
“What!?” That
might not be enough to see all of them home to Chivial. “What has Rojas been up
to, curse his smelly socks?”
“Well,
first he tripled the rent on the villa. Now he wants to triple it again. When
the sailors go out they get arrested on trumped-up charges and we have to
ransom them from jail.You ought to see that jail! We must get out of here,
love. Soon! Take over, please! We need you.”
“I love you
when you’re humble like this!”
“Enjoy it
while it lasts.”
Their humor
was a shroud to bury black thoughts. Even if the Isilondian captain was willing
to take passengers, would Rojas let the Chivians escape with the clothes on
their backs? Not until he had taken every last maravedí out of the
pockets. They would arrive in Mondon penniless.Wolf wasn’t ready to take up the
battle again. He needed time to recover his strength.
“No word
from Blood-mirror-walks and the boys?”
Dolores
shook her head. “I don’t think we’re ever going to hear from them.”
“Or from
Flicker?” Wolf would certainly have heard if there had been word from Flicker.
He had been gone a month. He might be dead or almost at El Dorado by now.
“No.And no
sign of Lynx.We have been watching every ship, love.”
Yes, it was
time to go. “But we’ll need to find some way of sneaking on board without
Rojas knowing,” he said glumly.“Let me sleep on it.” Expecting his milk cows to
make a break for it, Rojas would keep close watch on the foreign ship. He might
even preempt their flight and send in his bully boys this very night.
She cuddled
closer and said softly, “Wolf ?”
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“Mm?”
“ ‘Put it
in writing?’ ” She was smiling, but he heard shadows behind the words. “I did
lie to you that day, love, but not very much. And we weren’t even betrothed
then!”
“It doesn’t
matter now.”What was done was done.
“It matters
to me. So listen. It was the jaguar plaque I was after.You’d told me at
Ivywalls that it was an active conjuration, remember? When Lynx refused to part
with it, I guessed it was important. In the morning you and I delivered Lynx to
the Pine Tree and went on to the palace. The plaque was the first thing I
mentioned. Flicker and a couple of others were sent to the inn to keep an eye
on Lynx. He’d skipped by the time they got there. Flicker dropped by when you and
I were eating to tell me that they’d lost him.”
Wolf said,
“He said, ‘Mother’s looking for you.’ ”
She
chuckled. “Well done! I’ll make a snoop out of you yet. The code words are only
hints, though.They can’t be more than that or they couldn’t be hidden in
ordinary conversation. ‘Mother’ means bad news and ‘Father’ is good. If the
team had been tailing Lynx he would have said something like ‘Father’s still on
the road.’ I told him we didn’t know where Lynx was either.”
“And ‘Put
it in writing?’ ”
“Meant I
was working on it and didn’t need any more help. I hoped we’d find Lynx with
the tracker. If we couldn’t, then there was nothing more to be done.” She
kissed him again. “And I honestly don’t know if the King knew that Grand
Inquisitor were trying to recruit you. I’m just very happy that they did and
you married me.”
“No
regrets here,” he said. He wished he believed more of what she had said.
Dolores punched him awake. “Wolf ! Wolf
! Burglars!”
He sat up,
bewildered. One of the tangle mats was shrieking.Then another sounded off, even
shriller, and now he heard thumps and human screams as well. He fell out of bed
and dropped to his knees, not entirely by choice. It was his custom to lay Diligence
under the bed at night,
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unsheathed, but during his sickness she
had been pushed so far in, beyond easy reach, that he had to scrabble on his
belly to find her.
Appalled at
how heavy she was now, he reeled across the room to the door. Dolores was
wrapping herself in a gown, but he did not worry about such niceties. He
tumbled out in the corridor, bounced off the opposite wall, and headed for the
din.The house was dark.
A tangle
mat reacted to being stepped on by uttering an unbearable screech and closing around
the trespasser’s feet so he could not walk. If he fell over, as he usually did,
the mat slithered up his body and enveloped his head. The man in the entrance
hall had reached that stage. He was a naked, dark-skinned naturale,
heavily built. Surrounded by the ruins
of a bench, his loincloth, and a once-sturdy table, he was thrashing wildly in
his efforts to tear off the suffocating bandage. Knowing the rug would choke
him unconscious and then relax enough to keep him alive, Wolf ignored him. He
headed for sounds of battle coming from the dining room.
Before he
reached the door, a man staggered out backwards, contesting possession of a
sword with another invader.The first was recognizable as Hick by his clothes
and lurid sailor language. His opponent was another naturale,
albeit a somewhat skinny one, who should
not be giving Hick so much trouble. When Wolf scooped up a table leg and
cracked it over his skull, he dropped, taking Hick with him. The other intruder
had now lost his contest with the tangle mat, making two of them out of action
and available for later questioning. So far so good.
Peterkin
lay groaning and half stunned on the dining room floor. Another intruder was
doing a mad one-legged sword dance against the starlit windows, trying to kill
a tangle mat before it broke his ankle, but without cutting off his own foot in
the process. The mutilated mat howled as if it were alive and in agony.The
window it had been guarding stood open.
Whatever
Ironhall tradition might say, there were times when the table leg was mightier
than the sword.Wolf slammed his cudgel against the back of the dancer’s knee,
sending him toppling to the floor, screaming as the tattered mat scrambled for
his face like a giant spider.
Something
hurtled in through the window without touching the
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sill. It hit the floor with its front
paws, spun over in an airborne somersault to strike the far wall with its back
paws, twisting in midair so it was the right way up, and without ever pausing,
launched itself at Wolf’s throat. He glimpsed fangs and claws, but he already
knew that if this was not an actual jaguar, it must be a jaguar knight.
Off-balance
for an attack from that direction, he had no time to turn and bring Diligence
into play, but his left hand still held
the table leg and he instinctively parried at the open jaws.Turning its head
aside to save its teeth, the monster slammed into him. They hit the floor in a
tangled heap. Had he been his usual nimble self,Wolf might have made a better
showing, but in his fever-weakened state the double impact almost stunned him.
His throat was exposed; he expected to feel it ripped open.
The cat
thing rolled clear and went to the aid of the man being smothered by the
vengeful tangle mat. Back in Grandon the inquisitors had insisted a mat could
not be forcibly removed without pulling the victim’s head off, but they had
never met a jaguar knight armed with eight finger knives.The remains of the mat
fell silent. The gasping victim stopped thrashing.
All this
had taken only a few seconds, and Wolf had barely managed to stagger to his
knees. He was ages too slow to fight such a monster. Eyes glowing in the
starlight, the Jaguar sprang, batting his weapons aside.They hit the floor
together again, and this time he cracked his head so hard that flames danced
before his eyes. Paws pinned his wrists, great fangs opened over his face. He
heard a snarling cat sound. After a moment he realized it was human speech
distorted into a yowl.
Not
only that, the Jaguar spoke Chivian. What it said was “And whose turn is it to
rub whose nose in the dirt now, brother?”
2
Before
Wolf could collect his wits, light flooded the room. Help had arrived at
last—Dolores, Megan, Hick, and Will, all armed with swords
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and carrying lanterns. Dolores was out
in front and reasonably so, because she was the best fencer. She came within
half a second of running her sword into a jaguar knight.
That was at
least four-tenths of second too late, though. Lynx launched himself upward
again, almost crushing Wolf’s wrists in the process. He slapped Dolores’s sword
aside with his claws, spun her around, and pinned her against him.Then he waved
four black talons in front of her face and the rescuer party froze.
“Stop!”Wolf
croaked. “It’s all right. He’s on our side.”
My brother
the monster! Spirits save us!
“Oh, I
wouldn’t hurt my dear sister-in-law,” Lynx yowled, releasing her. “You are
legally married, I trust? Give me a kiss, dearie?” He bared his fangs and waggled
a grotesquely long tongue at her.
Dolores
screamed and reeled backwards.
Yes, it was
Lynx.Wolf knew the scars, although they had faded from red on pink to white on
brown. He stood tall on his stilt feet; his head, hands, and feet had been
transformed, and he wore a Tlixilian-style loincloth, but his chest was
hairier than any naturale’s.
He carried something strapped on his back. Seeing Wolf struggle to rise, he
offered a paw.Wolf gripped his wrist where spotted fur gave way to human skin
and was effortlessly flipped upright.
“What’s the
matter with you? You fight like a grandmother.”
“Fever.
More important, what happened to you?”
Lynx
chuckled—a sound not far off a purr. “Obvious, isn’t it? Where’s my guide?
Where’s Blood-mirror-walks?”
Wolf recalled
the husky invader out in the hall. He should have recognized those shoulders.
“He’ll be all right, as long as he doesn’t struggle.” He wrapped an arm around
Dolores, who had been working her way closer to him without going too near
Lynx. “Megan, release him, will you? And see to the other one?” Megan swept
from the room.
“The other
one’s Night-fisher.” Lynx seemed to be enjoying himself, but he was mistaken
if he thought that exposing those frightful teeth counted as a grin. He turned
to the intruder he had rescued from the mat. “And this is taker of one captive
Corn-fang. Dread warrior, greet my father’s son, Lord Wild-dog-by-the-spring.”
Lynx spoke Tlix
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ilian haltingly, and with what must be a
Chivian accent. He had learned the language the hard way.
“I kiss the
feet of my lord’s brother,” Corn-fang said, making no move to do so and looking
as if he would prefer to cut them off.“His glory dims the sun.” The tangle mat
had totally ruined his elaborate feather headdress and there was blood around
his jade labret.
“I weep
with shame that a valorous taker of captives should have been so maltreated in
my house,”Wolf said. “May we evermore fight in each other’s shadow.” He
presented his wife and the sailors, whom he promoted to warrior rank.
“I want to
know how Lynx got here!” Dolores whispered. She was trembling, almost in shock.
“Yes.
Explain, Lynx.”
“We can
sing old songs later!” the cat-man said in Tlixilian.
Wolf was
about to go and find some clothes, when in strode Blood-mirror-walks, clearly
furious and wearing no more than he was. If a relative of the Emperor did not
care, why should anyone? Behind him came the adolescent Night-fisher, limping
and rubbing his neck. Then Peterkin and Don, and the room was crowded.
“Where is
Heron-jade?” Blood-mirror-walks demanded. “Why did he not warn you of our
approach?”
“The noble
warrior went inland with Flicker about a moon ago.”
The
Tlixilians exchanged glances that Wolf found worrisome.
“Good chance
to them,” Lynx said. “We must hurry, Brother, but you should offer your guests
hospitality.”
The
servants might be hiding under their beds or they might have fled to raise the
population.Wolf asked Megan to inspect the outbuildings, and she went off accompanied
by Blood-mirror-walks.
“You are
welcome to all we have. What do you eat now? Raw meat?”
“Meat when
I can get it.”Again Lynx had answered in Tlixilian. His obvious reluctance to
speak Chivian suggested that either he had learned a new respect for good
manners or that his companions did not trust him.
“Should I
butcher a gardener?”
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He purred
that peculiar laugh again. “No, I haven’t gotten to that yet. It’s good to see
you again,Wolf!”
“And you, Lynx.
But you are changed.”
“No
regrets!”
Could this
night get any worse? “Then I’m glad for you. How is dear
Celeste?”
“Very well.
Much happier. I came to fetch you,Wolf.Your presence is commanded in El
Dorado.”
Yes, it
could! Much worse.
“And me!” Dolores
shouted. “And me!”
Wolf was
appalled. He had been sure the mission was dead and could be written out of his
life. Now it was alive again, he knew that he did not want it alive, did not
want it to succeed. He wanted his brother to be a man, not a monster. He wanted
to take his wife home, not squire her halfway across a continent of cannibals.
He certainly did not want to acquire any vile conjurations for Athelgar and
Grand Inquisitor.
He flopped
down on a chair, feeling a hundred years old. “Listen, Lynx. I was relying on
the Eagles to transport the arms we want to trade. I’m told that they can’t do
that—that they only found Quondam last year by homing in on that pendant. If
that’s so, then we’ll need years to ship weapons here.”
His brother
scratched an ear with a claw like a fleshing knife.“Don’t see a problem. Both
Amaranth-talon and Bone-peak-runner have been to Quondam. Either of them can
find it again for you.”
Dolores
squeaked with glee.The original plan was viable again! Life and incredible wealth
were back on the table.
Wolf
switched back to Chivian. “I have no weapons to trade. I was lying.”
“Then you
may have serious problems when you get to El Dorado. But you are coming to El
Dorado if I have to carry you.”
“So am I,”
Dolores said sharply.
Lynx curled
his lip in the snarl that he considered a smile. “Then you carry him.Where’s
the kitchen?”
Wolf heaved
himself to his feet and ripped a tapestry off the wall
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to make himself at least semi-respectable.
He led the way to the kitchen shed, where the sailors were already preparing
food for the visitors.
Megan
emerged from the dark with a different escort. There were more intruders out
there in the grounds, she said, but the servants were still abed and must have
slept through the commotion. Fights were every-night occurrences in Sigisa.
Lynx
ignored promises of beans and tortillas, demanded meat now, raw if necessary.
He shrank to his old height when he sat on a stool with his cat feet under the
table, and when he also tucked his forepaws out of sight he could almost have
been a human being with his head inside a huge pard mask. The illusion
disappeared as soon as he began to eat. Young Night-fisher held the meat for
him and he tore off chunks with his side teeth, swallowing without chewing.
The object
strapped on his back was Ratter, securely
tied in her scabbard so she would not fly out when he performed the sort of gymnastics
he had demonstrated earlier. He must be carrying her only as a talisman, for he
had no need of a sword and could not have wielded one with both hands.
Forepaws. Oh, Lynx! Did
he not even care what
they had done to him? Wolf wanted to scream.
The Jaguar
consumed most of a standing rib roast, raw. Night-fisher was his squire, or
possibly nursemaid, for he wiped Lynx’s muzzle and chest to clean him up after
the meal.Then the boy was free to finish his master’s leftovers, which he did
eagerly. It was common knowledge that the native diet offered little
meat—venison, turkey, rabbit, and dog—and almost all of that went to the
nobility. Human flesh was a privilege of the very highest, meaning the most
honored warriors. Other intruders had been ransacking the larder and almost
came to blows over some pork ribs they found there.
Leaving the
feast in progress, Wolf went in search of Dolores and found her being helped
into her traveling clothes by Megan. Obviously she was bound on going to El
Dorado no matter what he said or did. A trek of eighty leagues or so over
mountain ranges seemed utterly impossible in his condition. He doubted he
could walk as far as the river bank. If the Emperor wanted him so badly, why
didn’t he send an Eagle?
He found a
shirt and sank down shakily on the edge of the bed.
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“You, my beloved, must stay here and see
the others safely home to Chivial.”
Before
Dolores could protest, Megan bristled. She changed her posture, her voice, and
her age, transforming into a lady.“Since the death of my husband the count,”
she announced haughtily,“I have decided to return to Chivial with my
entourage. Do you imply that I am incapable, Sir Wolf?”
Dolores
laughed. Wolf apologized and pulled on the shirt. In the next few minutes each
one of the sailors appeared in turn, offering to go to El Dorado with him, but
they spoke little Tlixilian and he refused to lead them into a stewpot.
“Flicker
left us three stamina bracelets,” Dolores announced. “You want one now?”
“I’ll save
them for later.”What else did he need? “Medicine chest?”
“It’s
too big,” she said. “And we can’t know what we might need from it. Leave it
all.”
Probably only an hour intervened between
the first tangle mat scream and the click of the gate being bolted behind them as
they left the villa. Wolf took nothing with him except Diligence.
He was too weak to lift a bedroll off
the floor and knew better than to ask a warrior to be a porter. By then it had
become obvious that the real leader of the expedition was Blood-mirror-walks,
for it was he who assigned them posi-tions—Lynx, Dolores, and Wolf in the
center, six Tlixilians around them. However much Lynx looked the part, he
lacked a knight’s authority.
The eastern
sky was just starting to brighten, but Sigisa never slept. As the expedition
emerged from the hacienda, a sailor reeled past with his arm around a woman.
Neither seemed to notice anything amiss. Nor did any of the other people they
passed on their way to the river. A were-jaguar might be disregarded as illusion—mushroom
eaters saw much stranger things than that—but feather-decked killers carrying
obsidian-toothed spears and swords around in the middle of the night should be
attracting suspicion.
“You are
conjuring us?”Wolf asked.
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“We have
been blessed,” his brother said softly.
There were
always many dugout canoes moored along the river-bank.Their owners slept or
even lived in them, for no one in Sigisa left anything of value unattended. The
intruders had brought one of their own and left three men to guard it.
Exhausted already, Wolf collapsed into the stern. Lynx shoved in behind him as
if that were his place; Dolores went in front of him. The warriors pushed off
and scrambled aboard without tipping the Chivians out, which was undoubtedly
trickier than they made it look. Soon the craft was racing upstream, driven by
powerful paddle strokes.
The sky
over the treetops began turning blue, birds and monkeys were wakening in the
forest.The Tlixilians began chuckling and cracking quiet jokes, as if they
thought they had made a clean getaway. Blood-mirror-walks chirped once and
silence fell. Sound traveled well over water, of course, and his caution was
justified almost before they rounded the first bend. Another chirped order sent
the canoe veering sharply to the right. It drifted in under trailing
vegetation; strong hands took hold of roots or creepers and brought it to rest
against the bank. Wolf tried not to think of snakes and poisonous spiders. Then
he detected sounds the warriors had noticed much sooner.
A large
canoe came into view, heading downstream. Paddles were much quieter than oars
and no one aboard was speaking, but a man at the stern beat stroke with a
maddening monotonous tap.There was also a muted clinking sound. The canoe swept
past, clearly visible in midstream, carrying a cargo of prisoners, at least
some of whom were being compelled to paddle their way to exile and slavery; the
clinking came from their chains.Wolf expected Blood-mirror-walks to order an
attack, for the slavers were few and could have been speared before they even
knew they were being watched, but no one moved or made a sound, and the evil
sight glided on its way unmolested.A few minutes later two more canoes followed
it.
Some time
after that, the warriors resumed their journey, but the luxury of effortless
travel did not last long.Alerted by no landmark Wolf could see, they swung the
canoe into the bank, passing under a leafy drapery into a tiny creek; also into
renewed darkness, a fog of insects,
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and
air ripe with vegetable odors. A paw tapped his shoulder and
whiskers
tickled his ear—
Lynx whispered, “Salt-ax-otter is
royalty. Do not look at him.”
Interesting,
no doubt, if one knew what it meant. Wolf passed the word on to Dolores, who
gave him an odd look, checking for delirium.
They passed
within arm’s length of logs that plunged into the water and swam away. A
creeper extending downward changed its mind and slithered back up onto its
branch again. The creek soon dwindled, grounding the canoe at the edge of a
tiny clearing, not far from a tumbledown thatch cottage, well hidden from
river traffic. There were no people in sight. Had the original owners of the boat
been paid for its rental or just slaughtered out of hand? There had been law in
that country before the Distlish came and might be some in the future, but
there was none at the moment.
The
travelers scrambled out and set off in single file along a barely detectable
track, slick and ankle-deep in rotting leaves—huge leaves, like heaps of old
clothes. The ground on either hand was mossy and fungoid, half hidden under
fallen trunks and roots that coiled and looped as constant reminders of snakes.
Life rioted amid the odors of decay, with every tree a colony of lesser plants,
suckers and parasites, all draped with vines and constantly dripping in the
steamy air. Far overhead the forest soared in shadowed vaults, inhabited by
flocks of raucous, improbably colorful birds.
Wolf
managed to keep up only because he was wearing a stamina bracelet, but it would
not support him for long at that pace. He staggered and sweated rivulets.They
came at last to a place that was a little more open, although not truly a clearing,
and Blood-mirror-walks stopped without warning. He dropped. So did everyone
else, and Lynx’s great paw pressed hard on Wolf’s shoulder. He crouched in the
weeds like the others.
Blood-mirror-walks
touched a hand to the ground and his lips. “I kiss the feet of my lord.”
Only then
was Wolf allowed to see the jaguar knight posed in their path. He had not been
invisible, exactly, just hidden by a few trailing fronds and dappled shadows
that should not have concealed anything at
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all. Back in Chivial the Dark Chamber’s
spiritual toolbox included an invisibility cloak, but it was unreliable and
required long training in a type of mental gymnastics most people found
extremely difficult.What Salt-ax-otter had just done did not seem any harder
than blinking.There was another warrior behind him, holding spear and shield.
And another off to the left . . . there must be at least a dozen of them.
The knight
was magnificent, towering seven feet or more from his furry toes to the tips of
his spotted ears. He wore an embroidered loincloth and a sumptuous full-length
feathered cloak, which hung equally from both shoulders, exposing a jaguar
pendant of jade and silver on his chest. Plumed-pillar would have looked like
this before his battle with Fell and Lynx.
“Speak,” he
said.
“As my lord
commanded, so it is.”
“You are
valorous and worthy, having been dutiful when there was no honor to be
gained.”The knight’s voice was distorted like Lynx’s, yet it carried resonance
and power.
“Glorious
are the words of my lord.” Blood-mirror-walks rose. One by one his men
performed the touch-ground-and-kiss-hand gesture, then stood up, keeping eyes
respectfully lowered. And so, when it was their turn, did Dolores and Wolf.The
only exception was Lynx, who had remained standing all along.
“This is my
father’s son, terror of the night,” he said, “and his wife, the acolyte.”
The man-cat
did not answer. It must be Wolf’s turn.
“We are
honored to meet the dread Salt-ax-otter, and bring greetings from our king.”
The Jaguar
looked to Blood-mirror-walks. “We could hear them coming all the way from the
river. Carry them both.”
“As my lord
commands.”
Wolf
flopped down on the soggy ground to rest. Dolores joined him and Lynx squatted
on his heels, which left him as high as he would be on a chair.
“What is
the problem?”Wolf asked.
Lynx
growled. “Enemies everywhere.”
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“Those prisoners we saw—there has been a
battle?”
“Many
battles. Fighting’s going on everywhere from the coast to El Dorado.”
So much for
Flicker and Heron-jade. This was no time for noncombatants to be wandering
around Tlixilia.
“You can’t
just whistle up an Eagle?”
Lynx said,
“Don’t want to attract attention. The enemy has Eagles too.”
“That’s a good
second reason.What’s the first reason?”
Silence.
Cat eyes stared at Wolf as if their owner was planning how to skin him. How
much of the old Lynx was left inside the new Jaguar?
Unnerved,Wolf
said, “Not enough prisoners, maybe?”
Lynx licked
the back of a paw and wiped his whiskers. “Don’t ask too many questions, my
lord Ambassador.The Pirate’s Son can’t protect you here.” He rose and stalked
away.
Wolf looked
at Dolores. She bit her lip and said nothing.
Four
men were already weaving creepers and others had begun chopping down saplings
with flint axes. In minutes they completed two hammocks, slung under poles for
carrying. However humiliating the prospect of being treated as baggage,Wolf did
not protest when he was ordered aboard. Lynx traveled under his own power on
his grotesquely elongated legs, but this was not a noble moment in the history
of the King’s Blades.
3
For
several days thereafter, Wolf saw nothing but walls of jungle enclosing the
tracks the Eldoradoans followed. He knew they never strayed far from
cultivation, because they could always provide an evening meal. Lynx insisted
the food was obtained by honest barter, because otherwise the locals would
report marauders to the authorities, and even if “honest barter” meant a gift
to the headman and nothing for anyone else, that
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would ensure that mouths stayed shut.
Their road zigzagged between Zolica and Yazotlan, in territory now loyal to the
Distlish, in a steamy heat unbelievable by Chivian standards.
In the
second week, the country changed from lowland jungle to foothills, with the
great white peak of Sky-is-frowning looming ever closer.The weather grew more
bearable and each day Wolf walked part of the way, managing better as his
strength returned. At some point they began encountering patches of territory
still loyal to the Empire and could spend nights in villages instead of huddled
together in camps. Loyal and rebel villages formed an irregular patchwork, and
even Lynx could not say how Salt-ax-otter knew in advance which was which. None
of the settlements were large, usually just a dozen or so thatched adobe cottages,
but the friendly natives were eager to serve. They provided shelter and
bedding, plentiful beans, maize flour, and sometimes small amounts of dog meat.
Day by day
Lynx told more of his story, but some questions he always parried. Obviously
he was not the equal of Salt-ax-otter. Among the warriors, only Corn-fang and
Night-fisher were his vassals and only Salt-ax-otter was wielding spiritual
power. The Chivians rarely saw the knight, but the others spoke of him as if he
were nearby, not present and invisible—jaguars were solitary hunters.That a
lord of his stature should have come to fetch them in person was a huge honor,
Lynx said.
In the
villages the knight was never visible and even Lynx became strangely
inconspicuous, so Wolf would jump when he spoke and realize he had been
present all along. The locals either did not register his inhuman appearance or
failed to notice him at all.
One night
Dolores pointed out that a full moon was shining in through the doorway, so it
must be exactly twelve months since the attack on Quondam. Lynx declared that
this anniversary should be commemorated and demanded pulque
from the villagers.The Chivians drank to
the memory of the fallen and toasted Celeste’s release from impris-onment.Wolf
was not at all sure that he would have wanted to celebrate, were he in his
brother’s place, but Lynx had always looked at life on the bright side.
They had
been assigned a hut of their own, surprisingly clean and
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spacious because the owners owned no
furniture. Outside, in the moon-bright street, the locals were singing and
dancing to honor their visitors. After Night-fisher had wiped Lynx’s muzzle for
him, Lynx dismissed him, telling him to go off and have some fun.
The youth
said, “My lord is bountiful as the clouds,” and vanished out the door, leaving
the Chivians alone.
“You don’t
fancy striking up some friendships of your own?”Wolf asked. He felt much
stronger now, and was anxious to demonstrate this for Dolores. It seemed a long
time since he had been uxorious.
Lynx made a
sound somewhere between a chortle and a cough. “I think one kiss would blow my
cover.” He lifted a gourd between two paws and slurped pulque,
spilling as much as he drank. He had
drunk enough to become jovial and talkative, which was rare for a bound Blade,
but his ward was too far away at the moment for temporary fuzziness to matter.
Or perhaps his shape-change had weakened his binding.
Dolores had
noticed an opportunity to ask questions.“Tell me, how eager is El Dorado to buy
our aid?”
He set down
the gourd with care. “Very.The Distlish are gaining. If they can pen the
Eldoradoans up in the floating city, they can starve them. Starve them of food,
but also deny them captives. No prisoners, no hearts; no hearts, no power; no
power, no defense except brute muscle. Oh, I think you can make a deal!”
“What are
your plans?”Wolf asked.
The big cat
eyes fixed their menacing stare on him. “Can you see me back in Chivial? A cozy
cage in the Bastion zoo?”
There was
no answer to that.
He uttered
a chilling growl. “I stay with my ward. As long as Celeste lives, I’m bound to
El Dorado. Why do you think I’m racing around the countryside instead of
following her? Because this is the best thing I can do to defend her.And I do
help! I’m Lord High Admiral.We must have boats to keep the invaders from
bypassing the drawbridges on the causeways. But, burn it, Wolfie, I need tools!
Lathes, pulleys, ropes. You get me some of that. And some shipwrights.” He
crouched to lap pulque directly
from the bowl.
“You’re not
visible to the locals, are you?” Dolores said. “Warriors
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can see in the dark and move without
making any sound, even see conjuration on things. How are these ‘blessings’
done? With ritual on the pyramids?”
Lynx sat up
and wrapped his arms around his knees, his huge furry feet protruding in front
of him. He favored her with his disconcerting silent stare for a while, as if
he had to translate his thoughts into Chivian. “Depends. Some blessings are
done that way.”
“All the
major rituals are performed on the pyramids?”
“You’ll
have to ask the acolytes.They’re the real conjurers.”
“Stow
it!”Wolf had had enough. He knew what Dolores was after. She had already
established from Lynx that the murders on the pyramids were committed by the
acolytes under the eyes of the knights, but she suspected that the eating of
human flesh was another part of the process. Granted that Lynx had been trapped
into the change he called the Flowering without meaning to be, and had been
driven to persist by self-preservation and loyalty to his ward, had he accepted
more than the bare minimum needed to survive?
Wolf was
not about to let his wife ask his brother if he was a cannibal. “I’m ready for
bed!” he announced. “How about you, darling?”
Lynx
took the hint instantly—his way of thinking might have changed, but he had not
lost his wits. He purred his odd laugh. “Think I’ll go and hunt some mice.” He
flowed out the door and was gone.
Wrapped in llama-wool ponchos, they made
their way over a bleak pass where icy winds cut like a thousand machetes, under
a shoulder of the great volcano, down into a wide and verdant valley that they
traversed by moonlight over several nights. Beyond the next range lay the
valley of El Dorado, but to cross that one they needed camping gear and villagers
to carry it. By then Wolf’s strength had returned enough that he could keep up
with the plodding porters and no longer needed his lit-ter.They spent two
nights in a frozen desert, so high that it was impossible to sleep properly
and everyone huddled together for warmth.
The next
day the scenery changed dramatically. At dawn they plodded through snow and
thick fog, trusting to Salt-ax-otter to find the
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trail. By noon they were shedding furs
and descending grassy slopes, rocky and steep.A vast valley extended below
them, speckled with white salt lakes and green farmland, and very far
ahead—still days away, but visible as a brightness—lay the great lake of
Tlixilia itself. Although weary from lack of sleep, everyone was jubilant. Even
Blood-mirror-walks was cheerful. If they were not completely out of danger, he
admitted, they were a lot safer now than they had been.
Soon heat
was forcing them to strip down to bare necessities.They came to level
meadowland dotted with clumps of strangely familiar trees—oaks, alders, and
something Dolores said was cypress. One of the porters laughed and joked with
Lynx, whom he must be seeing as fully human. Close behind those two,Wolf was
walking with Blood-mirror-walks and having no more success at extracting
information from him than he had back on Glorious. The
warrior would neither admit that El Dorado had warships on the lake or deny
that the Distliards did. He would talk about almost nothing except his
forthcoming marriage and his bride’s exalted ancestry.
Wolf’s
attention wandered, thinking of escorting his wife into the fabulous El Dorado
a few days from now. Would they find a smug Flicker already there, negotiating
the final details of a treaty? Or had Flicker and Heron-jade run into Distlish
allies somewhere and ended up on an altar stone? The expedition was truly
scattered now—Quin back in Chivial or at the bottom of the sea, Megan and the
sailors perhaps hanging around Mondon trying to find passage back to Eurania.
As they were
crossing a clearing he said, “My head hurts.That usually means—”
Blood-mirror-walks
screamed a warning. An army sprang up out of nowhere. At least a hundred
painted, feathered warriors came charging in on all sides, howling war cries
and already hurling spears.They could not have been hidden by trees, for there
were few trees close. Most of the porters dropped flat and played dead, but the
one beside Lynx stopped a spear and there was nothing make-believe about his
fall. Lynx himself seemed to blur, dodging two or three more spears and smacking
a couple more right out of the air.
Drawing Diligence
and his dagger, Wolf looked around
wildly for
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Dolores. Then the horde was on him and
he had no time for anything but staying alive. Blood-mirror-walks yelled,
“Guard my back, Wild-dog!”
“Guard
mine!”
The warrior
had only his shield and a spear, because the glass-edged swords were impossible
to sheath and had to be carried to battle by squires. Salt-ax-otter’s
expedition was not equipped for full warfare and had been caught in sad
disarray, as if some Eagle had been using the Ser-pent’s Eye on them.
Wolf faced
his first painted, shrieking, be-feathered monster, blocked a downward sword
slash with his dagger and ran Diligence through
the man’s gaudy feathered shield into his chest. Before he even flattened grass
Wolf parried a cut from another warrior with his dagger, surprising him, for
that was not the naturales’ way
of fighting. Obsidian shattered.Wolf swung his sword and the shield went with
it, so Wolf hit him with that.Then Wolf jerked Diligence
free and, as he tried again, cut his
opponent’s knee almost through.Two more men came at him.There was no quarter in
Tlixilian warfare; you died on the field or the altar stone.
He had been
taught melee fighting at Ironhall, but had never expected to use it. He needed
all his expertise just to stay alive, and did so only because he had
Blood-mirror-walks at his back.With a glass sword taken from a corpse, the
Eldoradoan made blood fly like rain. Footwork became tricky on ground littered
with men—dead, dying, or pretend-ing.Wolf just hoped that Dolores had had the
sense to lie down, out of the way, but he knew in his heart that she would have
drawn her sword and become fair game. He could hear wild animals snarling
nearby and vaguely registered that Lynx was in an even wilder battle than he
was, because the enemy would see him as a knight who must be neutralized before
he could bring his powers to bear.
Two men
rushed him with spears, holding them like lances to impale him at long range.
He prepared to parry the first with Diligence and
swing his dagger at the second, fearing it lacked the weight to deflect a pole
properly. A renewed stab of pain in his head threw off his aim, but
Blood-mirror-walks howled and crashed backward, knocking him fly
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ing, so both spears missed. One of them
hit Blood-mirror-walks, but he was already as good as dead, pinning Wolf under
him and fountaining blood over his legs. Helpless,Wolf looked up at a
multicolored monster wearing a smile of triumph as he changed his grip to club
his victim with the haft of his spear.Wolf had faced death often enough before
and known terror, but now he felt only regret, a sense of waste that there was
so much living to be done and he would not share it. He really did not want to
be eaten.
Diligence slid
from his fingers.The warriors dropped their spears.The world faded behind a
sugary pink mist.
Somewhere a
bird chirped in the mountain stillness.
After a
little while Wolf struggled free, sat up, and peered around at the trampled,
bloodstained turf. His temples throbbed. He could see more men on the ground
than upright, but nobody was fighting any-more.They just stood there, most of them
disarmed.This had to be spiritualism, he decided vaguely; men did not take
time out in the middle of carnage.
A new force
had appeared. Two or three score of men were striding over the battlefield in
line abreast, methodically wielding the toothed clubs he had seen at Quondam,
stunning the ambushers with brutal efficiency, knocking them flat without even
breaking stride. The victims did not raise a hand to defend themselves.
Survivors of Salt-ax-otter’s party were just ignored, but as soon as the line
had passed, they began to recover their wits. It took a few minutes for the
sugar to dissolve and the sun to break through.
“Dolores!”Wolf
cried, scrambling to his feet. He lurched two paces, then came back to retrieve
his sword. “Lynx?”
Lynx was
sprawled within a circle of ripped and bleeding corpses and turning the air
scarlet with a profane medley of Chivian, Tlixilian, and infuriated jaguar
noises. He was well spattered with blood, but if much of it were his own he
would not be capable of such a tirade.
“You all
right?”Wolf demanded.
“Twisted my
pastern. Where’s Night-fisher? Where’s Corn-fang? Why did they take so long?
What kept them? You!” he
roared. “Why didn’t you prevent this?”
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Wolf swung
around and found himself looking up at the bizarre and cryptic shape of an
eagle knight, dark against the sky. Golden eyes glared down at him.The great
beak opened, revealing a black tongue.
“If
Salt-ax-otter and his whelp had kept proper military order,” the monster croaked,
“this would not have happened.”
“You swore
you’d keep watch over us, you oversized bag of feathers—”
“Eat dirt!”
the Eagle shrieked.“But you did well, imposter.You were stunning them!”
“Of course
I was stunning them!” Lynx raged. He flashed eight claws. “These are only good
for skinning. I just thumped them.” He paused and looked around. “How many did
I get, anyway?”
The Eagle
assessed the bodies.“Seven. Perhaps five will live to reach the altar
stone.That is no mean feat, warrior.”
“Right!”
Lynx said, and calmed down.“Five is good,
isn’t it? In one skirmish? This is my father’s son, Wild-dog-by-the-spring.
Wolfie, meet terror of the skies Star-feather.”
Not
convinced that his wits were back to normal,Wolf bowed and said something
polite.
The towering
Eagle nodded, setting his feathered headdress to waving. “Your father bred
notable warriors, Hairy One.”
“Lord!
Lord! You’re safe!” Young Night-fisher came racing across the field with arms
outstretched. He skidded to a halt on his knees beside Lynx, looking
ecstatically pleased with himself.“I took a captive for you, lord!”
Wolf said, “My
wife! Where is my wife?”
“Here.”
Star-feather stalked over the bloody sward, lifting and placing his feet like
a giant rooster. Ashen pale, Dolores lay curled up very small within a
terrifying puddle of blood. Her sword lay beside her, and there was blood on
that, too.
“Flesh
wound in the belly,” the Eagle said.“Is the woman important?”
Wolf fell to
his knees beside her. She was conscious, but overwhelmed by pain. Something
inside him was shouting, No! No! No! in
endless, mindless denial. Why had he ever let her come on this crazy, hopeless
mission?
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“Wolf ?”
she muttered through clenched teeth, her hand grasping for his. Her fingers
were icy.
He forced
his voice to remain calm. “Just a minute, love.” He cut away the cloth and was
both relieved to see how small the wound was— she had not been run through or
disemboweled. It was a clean, obsidian-sharp stab, but blood was still flowing
from it and she might well be bleeding internally as well; the blade might have
broken off inside her. Abdominal wounds were excruciatingly painful and
invariably fatal unless promptly conjured.Tlixilia had no healing conjury.
“We’ll get
you some help, love,”Wolf whispered, then looked up at the monster. “She is
very important. She is vital, if you wish to make a treaty.”
She was
vital to him, too.This must not have happened. It was impossible. He could not
accept it.
“She is the
emissary spoken of,” growled a new voice. Another Jaguar had arrived,
recognizable from Lynx’s description—scars, slack body tone, ragged ears. He
wore a flowing feathered cloak and a king’s ransom in gems and gold.
“The dread
lord Basket-fox, I presume?”Wolf did not rise.
The
old knight snarled, showing his fangs. “This was unfortunate. We were not
prepared for the foe to use such force against you. You should be proud that
the Yazotlans sent four knights. Discretion requires that we quit the field.
Cloud harrier, take us to the floating city.”
4
Sunlight
jumped, shadows shifted. The inevitable jab of pain made Wolf cry out and very
nearly draw Diligence, in
the fighting instincts of a swordsman. The air was hotter, damper,
flower-scented, with macaws screeching nearby and drums rumbling in the far
distance. He was kneeling on a rooftop, obviously in the center of El Dorado as
Lynx had described it—white, flat buildings and a multitude of tapering towers.
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Dolores lay bleeding on a mat, instead
of grass, but she did not seem aware of the change. Only Star-feather and
Basket-fox had traveled with them.
“I will find
healers for your woman,” the Eagle croaked, and vanished in another momentary
headache. Having eagle knights dance attendance on a commoner, and a woman at
that, was probably equivalent to a marquis delivering groceries.
Lynx
flashed into view and yowled with fury, claws out. Evidently he had not
expected the move. He was balanced on one paw and leaning on Night-fisher’s
shoulder. Another Eagle towered over them both.
“Where do
you want me to deliver your captives, terror of the dark?” the monster
inquired.
“Yawrg!” Lynx
said. “Um . . .”
“I shall be happy to install them in my
own pens until you are ready to take them.” “That is gracious of you, storm
tamer.” The Eagle vanished. Lynx bared his fangs, somehow implying that if he
had a tail he
would
lash it. “ ‘Terror of the dark!’ Did
you hear that, Wolfie? That’s like—” “Congratulations. And just what are you
planning to do with your captives?”
He said, “Yawrg!”
again and glanced up at the nearest
pyramid, which overlooked them, its long shadow stretched by the westerly sun.
“I’ll think of something.”
Let it go! This
was no time to start a family quarrel with a big-brotherly lecture on ethics.
“Whose house is this?” “Basket-fox’s.” Still supported on Night-fisher’s
shoulder, Lynx came hobbling over. “Sorry about this, Dolly.”
Eyes
closed, she did not reply, and her hand did not respond to Wolf’s touch. She
was unconscious, or narcotizing. Or dying. Hurry,
hurry, hurry!
“Someone
should . . .” Lynx said, “Ah, I hear them coming.” Wolf heard nothing. Four
middle-aged women came scurrying up the steps, carrying bags, and still he did
not hear them, because they were
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barefoot.They wore the same white skirts
of maguey fiber he had seen on almost every naturale
woman, plus loose white tunics. He had
expected men, but women to treat women was reasonable.
“Are male
healers better at treating wounds?” he asked in Chivian.
Lynx
shrugged. “About the same.” He meant neither
much good.
The women
clustered around the patient.Wolf moved out of the way.
“There is
no octogram on the mainland, is there?” Condridad would be the closest.
Lynx said,
“No. Don’t know why.”
Rojas had
claimed that skilled conjurers refused to live in Sigisa, but there was
probably some political reason. Dolores was going to die for want of a few
minutes’ conjuration. In the haste of their departure, they had left all their
conjured bandages back in Sigisa.
One of the
women rose and turned to Wolf, keeping her eyes lowered. She held a blood-stained
probe.
“Speak!”
“Lord, the
wound has penetrated the bowel. We could cauterize with red-hot silver, but she
might die of shock. She would almost certainly lose the child.”
“The child
is of no importance.” He had not known of it and doubted that Dolores had.“The
woman must be saved.” His mouth was so dry he could hardly speak. “Can you stop
the bleeding? How long can she live?”
“The
visible bleeding has almost stopped. We can sew the wound, but it may still
bleed inside.We cannot answer the lord’s other question.”
She might
die of loss of blood in minutes or hours, or of wound fever in days. No one
survived an untreated stab in the intestines; pregnancy must make her even
more vulnerable.
“Do not
cauterize. Just keep her alive as long as you can.”
Of course
it was Flicker’s child she carried. She could not have conceived before
Shining-cloud stripped away her Cumberwell conjuration, and Wolf had succumbed
to dysentery and fever right after that. For the next month he had been in no
state to sire children. So Dolores had not told him the whole truth about
Flicker’s farewell visit to the bedroom. Now that the truth was out, Wolf saw
how very improbable
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her story had been. Flicker was a martial
arts genius; he would not fail in something as physical as rape. Or had she
cooperated? Wolf shuddered away from the thought. No, she had been bruised.
People could not deliberately bruise their own faces.That was impossible.And
she had been genuinely distraught.
He turned
to Lynx. “We must get her home!”
Basket-fox
came padding across the roof on his big cat feet. “Your acolytes in Chivial
could make her live?”
Hope
surged. “They could. Can your Eagles take her there?”
“They can.
We are told you come as spokesman for your King, noble lord, and he sent you to
make a treaty with our Emperor.”
“This is
correct,”Wolf said.
The Jaguar
touched the floor in salute.“Emissaries should be lodged in comfort and treated
with honor and ceremony, brother of my friend, but clearly the matter is
urgent. If you would waive all such ceremony without feeling that you have been
slighted, then we can discuss a treaty right away.”
“This
courtesy honors me beyond words.”
“Spirit
stalker, you will keep watch over your brother’s woman for him?”
Lynx
flashed fangs in delight at another compliment. “I will, terror of the forest.
I’ll stay with Dolly,Wolfie.”
Wolf said,
“I will be back very soon, love,” but she did not answer. He bowed to
Basket-fox. “At your service, mighty lord.”
Lynx
snarled, “Er . . .Wolfie, ambassadors do not go around armed. His sword is his
regalia, dread slayer.”
“He may
retain the sword,” the Jaguar said. “If you will be so kind, honored
ambassador?” He beckoned with a paw.
Wolf had to
run to keep up with the old cat as he hastened down the stair, and obviously
everything had been foreseen.The first stop was a room where half a dozen boys
waited with water and sponges and fresh garments.Wolf stood and endured while
they stripped off the Distlish clothes he had worn since Sigisa—filthy, ragged,
and now blood-soaked—then washed and dried and oiled him. He barely noticed. He
could as well have been in a whirlwind or the bottom of the ocean, for
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he could not stop worrying about
Dolores, and whether she would be alive when he returned.They garbed him in a
loincloth and a larger, triangular cloth tied at his hip, then a feather
cloak, a diadem of feathers, jeweled sandals, rings, bracelets, and flowers.
All the time Basket-fox stood in the doorway urging them to go faster.
When they
had done Wolf managed to curb his impatience for the moment it took him to
thank the slaves, and the jaguar knight also. “Such finery overwhelms me!”
Basket-fox
waved a paw dismissively.“Mere trinkets. Keep them to remind you of the day
your footprint honored my house. If my lord is ready . . .”
Off they
went across his private park, between trees, ponds, flowers. The sun had set
but the sky was still blue and the air silky smooth. Dolores was dying. Lynx
had said that the Tlixilians were anxious to make a deal, but the first rule of
trading was never to seem too eager. Dolores was dying.Wolf must agree to any
terms, like the commander of a starving city pleading with its besiegers.
Dolores was dying. Dolores was dying. Cats play with mice. Dolores was dying.
“His name,”
his host announced, “is Two-swans-dancing. He is a member of the Great
Council.”
“I have
heard the great lord’s name and am honored beyond speech.” Two-swans was the
Conch-flute, so the Tlixilians must be greatly expediting negotiations, cutting
through the protocol. An eagle knight on guard at the door of a gazebo of white
stone stepped to one side as the newcomers approached. Basket-fox went to the other,
and Wolf walked through between them.
The man he
had come to meet was standing within, arms folded, smiling welcome. He was
young and virile, sumptuously dressed in a full-length feather cloak over a
beaded and embroidered kilt and golden sandals; the plumes of his headdress
reached higher than an Eagle’s. He wore gold and jade earplugs, gold plugs in
his nose and lower lip, and he was wreathed in flowers.Wolf gave him the
ground-touching salute. As he rose, the Conch-flute took his hand and led him
to a pair of mats, the only furnishings in the pergola.
“Your
troubles pierce us to the heart, Lord Ambassador,” he said, as
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soon as they were seated. He had a
magnificently resonant voice, too. “We sorrow that we failed to guard you well
on your journey and that your senior wife has been injured. Let our agreement
now make recompense for these sufferings.” He turned to a tray beside him and
poured pulque into
beakers.
The Chivian
ambassador mumbled some suitable retort, keeping careful watch for hints of
headache.
“Let us
negotiate like warriors,” his host said, “cutting fast to the quick, not
maundering for hours like gossipy old women. Already the sky-soaring
Amaranth-talon prepares to transport you to the place he went a year ago, you
and your wife.That is what you wish?”Two-swans-dancing had a personality to
melt limestone. If Athelgar were in the least like him, there would have been
no Thencaster Conspiracy.
“Indeed it
is, lord. Or can he find a similar place a day’s walk to the northeast if I
described it?”
“No. He can
go only to a place he knows or can see.”
“It will
suffice.”Wolf hoped that the Great Bog had frozen again this year, bringing the
Ironhall elementary within reach, but at least Quondam would have conjured
bandages on hand.
Two-swans-dancing
smiled an invitation: Your turn.
Wolf said,
“The floating city is truly the wonder of all the world. What can it possibly
lack that humble Chivial could offer to increase the happiness of your mighty
Emperor?”
The
Conch-flute had his answer ready. “Stags for riding and war dogs, also slaves
who can teach ours to care for both. Swords and pikes and crossbows. Armor. The
tools your brother seeks. Will you trade all these things?”
“We keep no
slaves, lord.” That was stretching a legal nicety, for many Chivian peasants
were little better than serfs. “We could loan you skilled teachers, but would
it not be better if you sent your men to our land to see how the animals are
cared for? Then they can return with the first livestock. We can provide the
things you ask if you can transport them across the great water.”
“We can do
that. We have many Eagles and Amaranth-talon can show them the way.What do you
seek in return?”
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So here it
came.
“We would
know your ways of conjury.” Still no headache.
Two-swans
sipped his pulque, cellar-dark
eyes fixed on the stranger. “It would be easy for me to send some acolytes with
you tonight, who can instruct your acolytes at leisure. But the other Hairy
Ones abhor the use of sacrifice and seek to prevent their allies, the traitor
cities, from putting prisoners to death.They think it kinder to sell them like
fish in a market.”
“But their
allies still do use conjury! How else were we attacked today?”
The
Conch-flute shrugged.“The Distlish allow it now only because we use it, so they
say.Your people do not share their strange ideas?”
“We, too,
disapprove of sacrifice, but my wife is an acolyte and hopes to combine our
ways of summoning the elementals with your ways of controlling them.”
Two-swans
shook his plumes. “She will fail. Our rituals absolutely require the precious
jewels of prisoners taken in battle. Unless those are offered, the god of
battle will not bless our knights.”
Dolores might
be dying at that very moment, but so was El Dorado. These shaky negotiations
with Wild-dog-by-the-spring offered the best, if not the only, hope for
Two-swans and his people, and yet he was spurning a chance to hide behind a
half-truth. He slaughtered prisoners like oysters, yet Wolf would trust him a
lot sooner than he would Athelgar.
“You are a
man of great honor, lord.”
“I am
anxious that both sides benefit from our trading. Can we not offer you gold
instead? The other Hairy Ones have a great hunger for gold.”
Wolf tried
to imagine himself appearing in the bailey of Quondam Castle with a wagonload
of gold—his mind rejected the image. Athelgar would be delirious with joy. No,
gold was a distraction.Time was a-wasting, Dolores bleeding to death. It was
time to make a specific offer, and it must seem reasonable.
“My wife
and those who trained her are confident that your con-jury can be made
acceptable to our customs, great ruler.Tonight, let the great Eagle transport
my wife and myself to the place he went last year. Let us take two wise
acolytes with us.This is the rainy season in Chivial,
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and we will need time to collect great
quantities of goods. Let the Eagle return on the first night of the new moon, and
we shall have assembled there as much as we can of what you need. We shall
return your acolytes, of course. If your conjurations seem of no value to us,
then we shall happily accept gold.We can agree at that time on all details.”
New moon was nine or ten days away, so the timing would be tight but not
impossible.
The
Conch-flute nodded at once. “It shall be as you have spoken.” He did not ask
for hostages for the two acolytes’ safety. He had Lynx and Celeste.
Negotiations
are easy when both parties are desperate.
They sprang
up together and embraced.Two-swans-dancing unfastened a lengthy gold chain
from his shoulders and laid it on Wolf’s. “Take this as a keepsake of our
friendship, Lord Wild-dog-by-the-spring.”
The weight
was amazing. Every link was in the shape of a scorpion, each with claws joined
through the looped tail of the next. It was an artistic marvel, but the gold
alone, melted down, would make him rich. They had come to the Hence Lands to
seek their fortune and here it was. Could he keep Dolores alive to enjoy it?
“This is
generous beyond measure, lord. I have never seen such a wonder. If you would
honor me by accepting this trifle, which is all I have of my own to offer.”Wolf
unfastened the scabbard at his right hip and presented the Conch-flute with his
dagger of shiny steel.The Tlixilian exclaimed in joy. It was probably at least
a fair exchange in Tlixilia.
When they
had embraced again, and Two-swans-dancing had wished his new friend a good
journey, he clapped his hands. Eagle and Jaguar appeared in the doorway to hear
his orders.
“This was
well done, ruler of the night. Choose four twenties from our pens.To my house,
star fisher.” Conch-flute and Eagle disappeared.
Tattered
old Basket-fox touched the ground in salute.“Your father bred most noble sons,
Wild-dog-by-the-spring. Between you, you will save our city from the Hairy
Ones.”
Wolf said
only,“Chance may produce strange wonders, terror of the dark.”This day was far
from over yet.
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5
Dolores
lay propped up on cushions near where he had left her, a gaudy sheet drawn up
to her chin. A slave girl kneeling alongside was fanning away insects, and two
of the healers squatted within call, keeping watch. In a far corner, Lynx sat
on the parapet with Corn-fang and Night-fisher. A bearded Euranian sat at their
feet.
The indigo
sky was growing starry, but the air was still warm, flower-scented. The moon
would not rise for hours yet. Men carrying torches were climbing the stairs of
Basket-fox’s pyramid.
“Dolores?”Wolf
took her hand. It was cold.
Her eyes
seemed enormous in a marble-pale face. She tried to smile. “This was stupid of
me.”
“Don’t ever
do it again. But everything’s going to be all right.”
“Good.”
“Are you in
pain?”
“Not much.
Gave me stuff to drink. How did the meeting go?” She was mumbling, either
drugged or faint from loss of blood.
“Put
it in writing! We’re going home, love.They’ll be here
to fetch us in a few minutes.We’ll ride the Spirit Wind back to Quondam and put
some conjured bandages on that cut. They kept Lynx alive, remember, and his
wounds were a hundred times worse than yours.Then we’ll cart you over to
Ironhall and the octogram. See this chain the Conch-flute gave me? We’re rich
already.”
“No spell
books?”
“Better
than spell books. We’re going to take a couple of acolytes with us, so as soon
as you’re healed you can start jabbering conjury with them night and day. And
they’ll have orders to tell you everything.”
She closed
her eyes and her wan smile faded off into sleep. Her grip on his fingers went
slack, but her breathing was steady. He looked inquiringly at the healer
women, who nodded reassuringly. Somewhere in the distance drums and conches
made strange music.
Lynx was
beckoning. Wolf rose and went across to the group. An
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armed man approaching their lord was
enough to bring Corn-fang and Night-Fisher to their feet. The bearded man had
only one leg and remained seated.
“What does
‘Put it in writing’ mean?” Lynx asked in Chivian.
Wolf had
forgotten how acute his hearing was. “Inquisitor talk. Means the plan is going
well, targets will be met or exceeded.” He stared out at the fabled city he
would never properly see.
“So this is
goodbye?”
“At least
for now. I promised Two-swans-dancing that we would start delivering materiel
to Quondam at the new moon. I don’t know how bad the roads will be, but we’ll
get something together by then.” He forced himself to meet the deadly stare of
the great cat eyes.
After a few
moments, Lynx spoke softly, still in Chivian. “I’ve been trying to decide what
to do with the prisoners I took today. With Night-fisher’s I have six. That
isn’t enough to make anything spectacular, but I can probably trade them for
several days’ invisibility.Would be useful when the war gets here.”
Wolf
studied the last rays of the sunset. More men were climbing the pyramid stair.
“You don’t
approve, Brother Wolf?”
“No. But I
understand better than I did this morning.”
Lynx said, “Miaow,
miaow! Transporting you home will take more than six hearts, Brother Wolf.” “I
said I understand!” Wolf snapped louder than he had intended. He knew there
must be sacrifices. He did not want to hear numbers.
Lynx’s
voice stayed soft, burning like hot cinders in his ears.“I don’t know how many
it took to turn Sir Lynx into Bobcat-by-the-spring. I did not ask. I did not
protest. I took what was offered. I ate what I was given.”
“I didn’t
pass judgment on you, did I?”
“But you
thought it.Who’s pot and who’s kettle now?” It was impossible to read
expression on the cat muzzle.The Lynx of five years ago would have been wearing
a lackadaisical, almost foolish, grin, but that was before the exile to
Quondam, and the massacre, and everything that had happened since.
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“Needs
must.”Wolf’s conscience reminded him that this was the excuse the Distliards
used for allowing their allies to continue sacrificing prisoners—if the enemy
uses conjury, then so must we, just for now.
“Must
needs?” Lynx said. “The high moral ground isn’t quite as high as it was, is
it?”
“It isn’t
just me. There are more ways of being bound than Iron-hall’s, Brother. I’m
doing it for my wife.”
“And for
Chivial, I hope?”
“Not
especially.”
The cat-man
chuckled. His bodyguards stared fixedly at the stranger.Wolf’s scalp prickled.
“What did
you tender as the price of your ticket?” Lynx asked.
“Survival
of the city.Weapons, horses, dogs, tools.Whatever you need to give the
Distliards a boot in the cuirass. Drive them into the sea.”
“Ah!” Lynx
licked his fangs with a thick pink tongue.“And can you deliver, Ambassador?
Will good King Athelgar really trade thousands of crowns’ worth of war gear for
a couple of stinking, blood-caked acolytes?”
“He’ll
deal.The Conch-flute will pay gold instead of conjury if he wants.”
“That’s
better! The Pirate’s Son likes gold.” Lynx switched to Tlixilian. “Jorge, give
him the list.”
The
Distliard held up what appeared to be a piece of paper. Wolf took it and peered
at it, but he could not read it in the dusk. “Paper?”
“It’s some
sort of bark,” Lynx said. “They make picture books from it.That’s a list of
what the navy needs.You’ll be able to get most of it in Lomouth or Brimiarde. I
need all that and the sooner the better. Hide it! Celeste’s coming.”
Before Wolf
dared ask how he knew that, a woman came floating up the stair, closely
attended by half a dozen maids carrying useful equipment, such as fans,
sunshades, even a stool. They were dusky, she was the color of starlight. She
gestured for them to wait there, then sauntered across the rooftop to inspect
Dolores, ignoring the audience but aware of it.Watching her in motion,Wolf
thought of she-jaguars.
“Why is she
dangerous?” he murmured.
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“Celeste is
always dangerous.”
She had started
all this.Wolf strode over to join her at the sickbed. Dolores was asleep, or
pretending to be so. Celeste wore only a knee-length skirt of white cotton and
a scarf of the same cloth hung around her neck, with its ends dangling to cover
her breasts, at least in theory. Even in two rags and barefoot she looked as if
she were dressed for a coronation—her own.
He bowed.
“Good chance, my lady.”
“Hello,
Ed.”
“The years
have passed you by.”
Celeste decided
Lady Attewell was no threat and turned to regard Wolf. She curled her pretty
lip.“They have not been kind to you, have they? I understand that this will be
a flying visit?” She had extracted the news from Basket-fox, no doubt.
“Regrettably.
I must get my wife to an elementary.”
Celeste
smiled; the danger level rose. “Must you? Well, I want to know what you’re
really up to, Ed. If I don’t like it, I’ll put a stop to it. What game are you
playing?”
Seemingly
no one trusted him tonight except the Conch-flute.“No game. I am in a hurry to
save my wife’s life, certainly, but I am fulfilling my duties as emissary from
King Athelgar.”
“You? Athy
wouldn’t appoint you ambassador in a thousand years!”
True.“Men
change,Amy.You have been away from Grandon a long time.” But nothing had
changed. He had to force himself not to stare at the twin roses glowing through
the gauzy scarf.
“But for a
year before that I had to put up with dear Athelgar’s
opinions of you.All night, every night!” She sighed.“Ranting about the beetle
guardsman Sir Wolf, and what he’d like to do to you. Pathetic, it was.”
What game
was Celeste playing? All Wolf could do was keep parrying, wondering when the
acolytes would arrive to take him to the rit-ual.Already a drum had begun a
slow beat from the top of the pyramid.
“The Pirate’s Son’s never liked me,
but—What did you tell
him about me, Amy?” She shrugged.“Well, he always wanted to hear how you
deflowered me, of course.”
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“That’s a
lie to start with.”
“And how
virile you were, even as a boy. How no man could compare. He would quite wear
himself out trying to better your feats. I may have exaggerated a teeny-weeny
bit when describing your equipment. The King does not stand above all other men
in that respect, you know.”
So Celeste
had fanned Athelgar’s animosity toward him, just out of devilry.That might well
be true. But what was she after now? Return to Chivial? Would Basket-fox let
her go? Lynx would fight it, because he could not go with her.
“I don’t believe
much of this, Amy. I do have to leave shortly. Is there something you want of
me, for old times’ sake?”
Celeste
floated closer to him—dangerously, intimately close. Her scent was sweetly
tropical, her allure incredible, even yet, and her eyes reflected the stars.
“Yes. I want to borrow the King’s Killer. There is a matter of justice that
needs be attended to.”
“What are
you talking about, Amy?”
“Justice,”
she said. “Justice for my murdered child.”
Startled,
Wolf glanced back to the cat-man sitting on the parapet. He had not moved since
Celeste appeared.
“I thought
your baby died. I had it on excellent authority, sworn in the presence of an
inquisitor . . .”Ah, but that day back in Ironhall something in Lynx’s
testimony had rung false.Wolf’s heart sank. He could not recall his brother’s
exact words but deceit did not always require actual lying. “What really
happened, then?”
Celeste
laughed coarsely. “The midwives pulled it out of me, cut it loose, dropped it
in a blanket, and handed it out the door to my senior Blade, Sir Lynx. And
he killed it!”
Wolf batted
away the wheeling insects while he tried to think this through. If it was true,
then the moral high ground had sunk to new depths. It was as hard to think of
genial, easygoing Lynx murdering a baby as of Celeste being maternal, but a
Blade must do anything necessary to protect his ward. She had been given years
to brood over an in-justice.Without raising his voice,Wolf said,“Brother, you
are accused of murder.”
Lynx yowled
like an alley cat in heat, but he stayed where he was,
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sitting on the wall with his guards
around him.“So?” he called.“So what can you do about it now, Wolfie? I’m much
faster than you are. I carry eight
blades to your one. Corn-fang is nimble, too, even at this range. Draw that
sword and you’ll have a spear through both ears.”
Light
glowed in the stairwell. The waiting maidens twittered and cleared a path for a
mighty feathered warrior, who came marching across the roof with seven or eight
men at his back. He thumped the butt of his spear down in front of Wolf.
“Lord
Ambassador, I am taker of seven captives Raging-stone, son of Lord Basket-fox,
who bids me tell you that the ritual is about to begin.”
“We have a
few things to settle here first,” Wolf said. Infanticide, perjury, fratricide.
“We have
brought you garments in the style of your city and blankets for your wife.”
“That is
very kind.”Wolf turned to Celeste. “I don’t believe you.”
She
shrugged again.The light of the newcomers’ torches made her long hair shine
like copper; her eyes were an intense green flecked with gold.
“Then I
shall warn my dear old tabby cat protector that you are a notorious liar, Edwin
Attewell. That you will betray his trust. That you do not speak for the King of
Chivial, that the King of Chivial wants vengeance on El Dorado for the massacre
at Quondam, and that you plan to torture the conjury secrets out of the
acolytes and have no intention of delivering any weapons. Old Foxy will get
one of his Eagle friends to lay the Serpent’s Eye on you and out will come the
truth. So if you’re lying, Ed, you’d better kill that brother of yours for me,
by hook or by crook.”
Yes, she
was dangerous. She was deadly. She had guessed that Wolf was lying and dared
not face the Serpent’s Eye.
“How long
has she been like this?”
Lynx said,
“She has some lucid moments.”
“Maybe we
should call for the Serpent’s Eye for you,Amy Sprat, and get the truth about
the baby.”
“Yes,
let’s!” she said, but her neck muscles were tense. She was lying, too, somehow,
at least slightly.
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Maybe
they all were. “Brother?” he said. “I didn’t kill it,” Lynx said. “The King had
made it quite clear that
he
wanted no royal bastards running around.They endanger the realm. They get used
by unscrupulous people. He promised me Celeste would be released if the child
was born dead.”
“You trusted Athelgar?”
Wolf said. “How could you be so stupid? Oh, that was really
stupid!” “But we had no choice, did we?
I found a good home for it ...him. I had a wet nurse waiting. She knew that.”
“I
know what you said!” Celeste snapped.“But then you told me he had died.When
Athelgar went back on his word, you wouldn’t give me back my child!”
“Of
course not!” Lynx said. “That would have been admitting to conspiracy. In ten
minutes the old Baron would have been high-tailing back to Grandon babbling
about treason.”
Watched
by the healers and grandiose Raging-stone, four slaves were lifting Dolores on
her mat, to lay her on a litter they had brought. Wolf should be providing
comfort and support, not engaged in this absurd quarrel.
“Oh,
so now you tell me he’s alive?” Celeste said, baring her teeth.
“He’s been dead for years and now he’s
alive. I want my son! Where is he?” “You don’t need to know.” “Eater of stars
Amaranth-talon is waiting, speaker for kings,”
Raging-stone announced. “We’ll be ready
very soon,”Wolf said, “Is the child still alive?” “A year and a half ago he
was,” Lynx said. “What’s his name?” “Edwin.” “I’m flattered.” “Her idea.” “And
there’s no doubt it’s the same boy and he’s Athelgar’s get?” “I’ve watched him
grow. Every year I delivered money for his
board. His hair’s as red as any I’ve
seen.” “Where can I find him?”
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“Brackyan.
Remember it?”
“Brackyan!”
Celeste practically spat.“A king’s son there?”
Brackyan was another mining hamlet, not far from Sheese and its equal in
squalor.
The slaves
had raised the stretcher and were carrying Dolores toward the stair. One
torch-bearer remained, fidgeting. It was time to go.
“I know
Brackyan,” Wolf said. “It is no fit abode for a king’s son. How can I know him?
Who fosters him?”
Lynx
chuckled. “Cob Sprat, her brother. He doesn’t know Edwin’s his nephew,
though.The boy limps, has a twisted foot.The right one.”
Drums throbbed
in the sultry night.Torchlight danced.
“Should be
able to find him,”Wolf said. He braced himself to take hold of Celeste’s arms,
which was like embracing lightning. “Do you want him sent here to you, Amy?”
She
hesitated, then shook her head. She was a slave in an embattled city.What
future for her son here? All these years she must have been at least half
convinced that the baby was dead. She didn’t know what she wanted.
Wolf said,
“Will you take my word for it that I’ll find him a good home and see he is
raised as a gentleman? I can, now. Two-swans-dancing made me a wealthy man
tonight.”
She studied
him with those huge green eyes that he knew so well from so long ago. Every
gold fleck in them he knew.“Will you tell him who his parents are?”
“Of course
not. But I’ll see he is educated and taught gentle manners.”
“You will
adopt him as your own son!”
Now, there
would be irony! “If you insist.” He had no time to bargain.
“You
swear?”
Wolf
nodded. “I swear. I swear I will do the best for him I possibly can. I will
never hold his father against him.”
Still she
hesitated, but no man could tell when Amy Celeste Sprat was being real and when
she was acting. “Kiss me, Ed.”
“For
Edwin,” he said, and kissed her. Even after all the years, he knew the taste of
her and the warmth of her breast in his hand. It was
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an
incredible kiss; he let it persist as long as she wanted.They were both
burning
when it ended; she buried her face in his shoulder.
“Spirits!” she muttered.“We should have
stayed in Sheese, you and me.”
“Maybe we
should have.” He broke free. “I’ll look after Edwin, I promise. Goodbye, Amy.
Good chance.” He set off toward the stair, the torchbearer at his side.
“Lucky man,”
Lynx said at his back. “I do miss kissing.”
“So does
she.” Wolf sighed. “Were you telling the truth about the brat?”
Lynx chuckled. “Surprisingly, I was.Were you?”
6
Glimmering
like mist in the starlight, the great masonry pyramid tapered upward into the
night. Flames streamed from two great fires on the summit, where the drums now
beat the double rhythm of a giant heart: Boom-BOOM!
Boom—BOOM! Many people had gathered at the base of
the pyramid steps, the low rumble of male voices like surf on distant reefs,
wafted by flower-scented trade winds.There was a dreamlike quality to any big
crowd in darkness, but Wolf had never felt that unreality as strongly as then.
He saw a few Jaguar and Eagle heads towering above the others; he saw
feather-decked warriors and slaves holding flaming torches, and a group of
blackened acolytes went by him, trailing an unbearable stench.
Boom—BOOM!
He squeezed
between guards and bearers standing around the litter and knelt to speak to
Dolores. She opened her eyes and smiled briefly, but soon drifted off to sleep
again. He hoped that was a good sign, meaning she was not in pain. Three of the
healer women were in attendance, and nobody seemed to know what everybody was
waiting for.
Lynx said,
“If you’re doing favors for Celeste and people, will you do one for me?”
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Wolf stood
up. “Of course.What?”
Night-fisher
offered him a sheathed sword. Boom-BOOM!
“I can’t wield
her anymore,” Lynx said. “I can never come home. When the city falls, I will
die with it.” Boom-BOOM!
“I’ve told
you! The city is not going to fall. I’m going to send weapons and horses to
save it for you.”
“Awoull!
Really?”
“Of
course.” In that sticky-hot tropical night,Wolf’s body betrayed him and
shivered as if he were cold.
Lynx purred
a sort of chuckle. “I know you will do your duty as you see it,Wolfie.You
always have. Even if you do save Tlixilia, the other pussycats won’t tolerate
me for long.Take Ratter, please.”
Wolf said,
“If you insist. I’ll see she goes to the sky of swords—but not until I’m sure
it’s time.”
“I’ll write
you as soon as I’m dead.”
Wolf tucked
the sword in under the blankets and warm garments that had been piled on the
litter at Dolores’s feet. She did not waken. As he straightened up he became
aware of a new sound, a low moaning, a lament like wind in a forest. A long
line of torches was emerging from the darkness.The leaders were armed men, men
with torches, men with flutes, but behind them followed a line of prisoners,
all naked, all tethered by the neck to a very long rope. Some staggered, some
shuffled, and a few tried to march with their heads up. Some were moaning,
while others sang softly or sobbed or just mumbled to themselves—the noise he
had heard was the sound of the entire coffle, a weeping snake of doomed
humanity. Guards walked alongside, carrying canes and torches. Any misbehavior
earned a blow.
They went
by from left to right and joined a score or so other prisoners sitting on the
ground. As they sat down, slaves moved among them, untying and coiling the
tether. But the vague wind sound continued, and to leftward the lights were
still coming, flickering between the trees. How many?
Horror,
most horrible!
“Lynx?
These aren’t all for . . . they’re not just for us, are they?”
Lynx
stroked his whiskers with a giant paw. “Who else?”
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“How many
sacrifices does an Eagle need to send four people to Chivial?”
“Hundreds.”
Boom-BOOM! Boom-BOOM!
No! Wolf
had not dreamed of massacre on that scale. A man might rationalize a few deaths
because this was war and he was playing for great stakes and trying to save his
wife’s life. But hundreds?
“You never
told me!”
Dolores was
dying . . .
Lynx
shrugged human shoulders. “Maybe thousands.”
“All the
times we talked about transporting weapons, you never once told us they
sacrificed men on that scale!”
“It isn’t
exactly a pleasant topic of conversation,” the cat-man said wryly. “I’m sorry
if you bit off more than your conscience can chew, but it’s too late to back
out now, Wolfie-my-lad. Much too late. You shook hands with the Conch-flute.”
Were two
murders worse than one? Were nine hundred worse than nine? Why should the
King’s Killer—after offing an inquisitor, eight brother Blades, and possibly a
stepfather, not to mention many traitors he had helped send to the scaffold—why
should he trouble his soul over anonymous prisoners of war in what would
shortly be a very distant country? Why did he feel a need to vomit?
Jorge had
arrived, hobbling on his crutch, and now his harsh voice broke into the
conversation. “You think we Distliards are driven by nothing but greed,
Chivian? You think only love of gold makes King Diego squander his army’s blood?
We fight to end this atrocity!”
“Do
you?”Wolf snapped.“But you use it.Your allies have eagle and jaguar
knights.Your hands are bloody too.”
“We use it
so we can stop it!”
“Oh, isn’t
that a sweet rationalization!” But Wolf was doing exactly the same thing
himself. And how could he not? Dolores was about to die. The torches in the
night, the drums, wailing horns, the stench of men and fear . . . none of those
mattered when Dolores was dying. He just did not know how to put that into
words, though. Her life against how many?
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All
right! He was not doing it for Dolores. He was doing it for duty. Was that
better?
Boom-BOOM!
Boom-BOOM!
“It’s
not quite as bad as it seems,” Lynx said. “They don’t know what’s going on. They’re
drugged stupid with peyote and other stuff. And they’re all doomed anyway. If
they don’t die tonight for you, then they will soon, for some other purpose.
And it’s funny—if you threw open the gates a lot of them would refuse to
leave.The Distlish would, of course, but not the naturales.
It’s an honor.”
“Oh,
thanks!”Wolf found little comfort in that.To learn that there might be
Euranians among the prisoners should not make things worse, and yet it did. It
was one more horror to deny. He jumped at the inhuman screech behind him.
“We
are ready!” He looked around and then up, up to the great cruel beak and ruth
less eyes of an Eagle. “So are we,
lord.” “This is the sun-grazing Amaranth-talon,” Lynx said. The Eagle ignored
him.“You would go to the beach, or the tower?” “The tower, please.” “You will
not interrupt the ritual.” Wolf said, “No, lord.” “It would be dangerous and
give offense.” “We shall do as my lord bids.”To interrupt an incantation could
be dis
astrous even in Chivial, where the
spirits were confined in an octogram. The Eagle vanished like a bubble. Boom-BOOM!
Boom-BOOM! Boom-BOOM! The great heart beat
faster.
Raging-stone,
taker of seven captives, started barking commands. The bearers raised the
litter. It was time to go. Wolf turned to say farewell to Lynx, who dropped his
heels to make himself human height, and gave him a rib-bending embrace. He
smelled of tomcat.
“Try not to watch,” he said quietly,
furry cheek against Wolf’s ear. “It is horrible, but remember the victims don’t
know what’s happening.” That was an admission of guilt.
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“Thank you
for that,”Wolf said.“Good chance, little brother. If you ever get the
opportunity, do give Celeste my love as well as your own.”
Lynx purred
a laugh. “That will be the day.”
Wolf had
never imagined so terrible a parting, in so terrible a place. He turned away
with a pain in his throat, to find that he could not leave yet, his way was
blocked. Raging-stone’s men were trying to clear a passage through the endless
line of victims shuffling past between them and the staircase.The soldiers cut
the tether.The dazed and drugged prisoners ahead continued on their way
without noticing, but those behind had to be halted forcibly, so the line
bunched up in sheeplike confusion. There was much shouting and cursing, and the
guards spread their spears like rails to make a barricade.
Then
Dolores’s litter could go through. Wolf and the warriors followed, and began
to mount the great staircase.
7
The
stair was very long, perilously steep, caked with old blood. Up ahead, the
bearers carrying Dolores mounted sideways, two at each end of the stretcher,
with the rear two having to hold their side head-high. Wolf hurried as much as
he dared, trying not to imagine what would happen if they dropped the litter,
or even if he stumbled. The drums grew louder.The steps reeked like an
abattoir. Pale smoke from the braziers drifted overhead, sparkling with its
own red stars. His head began to ache as he approached the center of
spirituality.
When he
drew his breath of relief on reaching the summit safely, he was facing the
blackened altar stone, the heart of evil, flanked by two great braziers. His
forehead ached, but not as badly as it had in the Forge at Ironhall—so far.
Many black acolytes, busy as ants, were loading wood into the fires, and two
were playing drums. He saw other drums and conches not yet in use, and dozens
of flint knives set out on a stone table. How many other pyramids would he see
from here if he came in
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daylight? How many tens of thousands
died here every year? The city was dark and mysterious, seeming very far below,
hardly a light showing. The slaves carried the litter around one of the
braziers and set it down some way back from the altar; then they were herded
away by a couple of acolytes.
Wolf knelt
beside the litter. “We’re on our way home, love.”
Dolores was
just conscious enough to ask,“How many . . . sacrifices?”
“I don’t
know. Lynx says they’d all die anyway, very soon.” He must rationalize this
atrocity somehow or he would go mad.
She pulled
a face. The eagle knight appeared, plumage shining metallic green in the
firelight. He took up position between them and the altar, fortunately blocking
all Dolores’s view of it and most of Wolf’s also. More drums and a conch were
joining in the music, if that was what it was. The four slaves who had carried
the litter were drinking something, with acolytes fussing around them.
She smiled
with bloodless lips. “So that was the famous Celeste?”
“You see
why Athelgar was smitten?”
“What
happens about her child?” Her voice was so soft he could barely hear it.
“I promised
we’ll adopt him.You don’t mind, do you?”
“It won’t matter
what I . . .” She screwed up her face for a moment. When the spasm passed, she
said, “I don’t mind.” Later she said, “I’ll make this one a girl, then, all
right?”
He laughed
and kissed her.“Anything except kittens! Did you know before the healer told
you?”
She shook
her head, then murmured, “I wondered.” She was drifting into sleep or coma,
and the next few things she tried to say were inaudible under the thundering
drums, the scream of conches, acolytes wailing incantations. Wolf remained
kneeling by the stretcher and kept his face turned away from the altar stone,
watching Dolores, or the lake, or anywhere. He must not think about the
clean-picked bones of Cam Obmouth and Rolf Twidale on the rocks at Quondam. Where
is your outrage now, sinner?
One of the
ragged, revolting acolytes came to kneel at the end of the litter. His face was
shadowed from the fires, a blank darkness with
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two eyes visible. Then he smiled,
showing white teeth also. He reeked worse than a midden.Wolf looked away and
found another at the other end.These two were to be his traveling companions,
and no doubt they had their orders.Their hair hung in matted strings, never
cut, their fingernails were long and jagged.
Drums
boomed. Conches wailed.
The four
bearers, now naked and thoroughly drugged, were escorted back from the far
side of the platform.Three were stopped close to the litter, but the fourth was
led on, around to the altar stone. Wolf guessed what was about to happen and
quickly looked away. Perhaps the ache in his forehead grew a little worse, but
he heard nothing sinister over the racket of drumming and wailing.The second
slave was taken.
He would
not watch. He could imagine.
Except that
he couldn’t. They really did
not resist? Against his will, his eyes followed the fourth slave all the way
around to the altar. The man went willingly until the last few steps.Then he
tried to draw back, but four acolytes seized him and stretched him across the
great stone, face up. Wolf’s view was obstructed by Amaranth-talon’s outspread
wings, but he closed his eyes anyway. He thought he heard the hiss of the
beating heart landing in the brazier.
The corpses
were rolled down one side of the great staircase. The procession of captives
came up the other side, the side Wolf could see. All were naked, all doomed,
all drugged almost senseless. And they just stood
there, a line of four men waiting like
sheep between the uppermost step and the murder site. Then another body would
be dragged away, another young man grabbed and thrown down. The rest would take
two steps forward and a replacement victim appear at their backs.
How much
was this done by drugs and how much by indoctrination? Once Wolf had sat on
the anvil at Ironhall waiting for a sword through his heart, but he had known
it wouldn’t kill him.
None of the
victims cried out, but they probably couldn’t, once their chests were cut open.
How long must this go on? He had lost count already. He wanted to scream at
them to stop. But why? He was the King’s Killer, wasn’t he?
His head
was throbbing now.The conjuration must be concentrated
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around the altar stone, but the ride on
the Spirit Wind would hurt, as he knew from today’s experience. Long journeys brought
mental confusion, Lynx said—that was why he and Fell had managed to overcome
Plumed-pillar at Quondam. Wolf must plan. He must be ready to act when he
reached Quondam. Only if he knew exactly what he was going to do could he hope
to be fast enough to overcome the Eagle.
Yet he
could not tear his eyes away from the horrifying parade of drugged victims,
could not help staring at them, wondering why they did not rise in revolt and
at least try to die fighting. Most of them were appallingly young.Young or old,
their faces were totally blank, their eyes dull as pebbles in the
torchlight.Then came one who was paler than the others and had a straggly
beard. He was Euranian . . . Chivian, in fact . . . his name was Louis, known
as Flicker.
Without
thinking, Wolf surged to his feet. The pain in his head clanged like a great
bell, so he staggered—and then just stood there, staring, paralyzed.
There was
no sign of Heron-jade, who ought to stand out because of his size, but he might
be farther back, lower down on the long climb. No, he had to be dead, or he
would have identified himself and called for his lord, Sky-cactus. A
blood-caked swelling disfigured the left side of Flicker’s face, perhaps a
relic of the blow that had disabled him and led to his capture. Had it rendered
him unable to talk, to explain who he was, or had his protestations just been
ignored? Who would believe a Hairy One, trying to lie his way out of the
abattoir pen? Had the Eldoradoans killed Heron-jade by mistake, or had he
fallen to the Distlish forces and Flicker gone on by himself ? There were a
thousand possible explanations.
Another man
died without a cry, another corpse rolled away down the staircase to the
waiting butchers. Flicker was urged forward by an acolyte, and another man
stepped up behind him. Now Flicker was only two men back from the stone.
What could
Wolf do? However the Tlixilian prisoners might feel about donating their
hearts, Flicker would not feel honored.
Nothing.Wolf
could do nothing. He had promised not to interrupt the ritual, and the pain in
his head was ample warning that elementals
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had been gathered in great strength. To
release so much power at random would surely cause disaster. He could not save
Flicker and why should he even want to? He had sworn to kill the rat. He was a
rapist. Let him die now!
Another
heart dropped in the brazier. Another corpse rolled over the brink and was
gone. Flicker was only one man away from the altar stone. His unsteady gaze
wobbled past Wolf, then returned. Something changed. He seemed to make an
effort to focus. He frowned uncertainly.
Dolores
began to fret and her eyes opened, as if the pain had returned. She could not
see Flicker from down there.
But Flicker
could see Wolf. Life began to shine in his eyes. He was struggling against the
mind-numbing drug—perhaps even using some inquisitors’ trick to resist it. The
acolytes noticed his alertness and two of them jumped forward to grip him even
before the previous victim had been completely processed. He shouted feebly and
tried to struggle. He was turned around and dragged down on the altar.
Wolf knelt
down to attend to Dolores. His head hurt less down there. “What’s wrong?” He
had to crouch close to hear her whisper through the thunder of the drums.
“How many?
Wolf, stop this! Murders?”
Wolf kissed
her. “Soon be over,” he promised.
“Wrong!”
she muttered. “Wrong, wrong!”
Not all
wrong. Flicker had gone.All the waiting victims were Tlixilians.
The rising moon
was smearing the eastern sky with gold.
Wolf had
fulfilled his oath—he had executed the rapist Louis Duteau, known as Flicker.
Why should that bother him? The spirits knew he had slaughtered enough of his
brother Blades in the line of duty, and this latest killing ought to bring him
great personal satisfac-tion—and no small relief, because in mortal combat
Flicker would have been as dangerous an opponent as any he had ever
encountered. Was that why? Or because he had let others do his dirty work for him,
like an Athelgar? Or because it might have been possible to save him with a
whispered word to the Eagle? Or because he was not quite certain of Flicker’s
guilt? No, no, no . . .
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How would
Dolores feel when she learned that saving her life had cost hundreds of deaths
and it had all been in vain, because what she wanted to do with the conjury was
impossible, that Tlixilian spells would always require mass slaughter? Wolf was
cheating her as much as he had cheated Two-swans-dancing. He was the King’s
Killer, but he would not rescue a culture so unspeakably barbaric that even
Lynx could not discuss what underlay its power. Dolores was wrong. Jorge had
been right.The Distlish were right. El Dorado must die.
He must
have his plans clear in his mind, so he could act instantly when he arrived on
the turret at Quondam. It would be dark, possibly snowing. If the sentries
noticed his arrival at all, they would take a few minutes to react. He knew
what the cold of a Chivian Secondmoon night felt like, and the Tlixilians did
not. He must take the Amaranth-talon first, certainly, before the Eagle could
use the Serpent’s Eye on him. If he could kill the Eagle and the two acolytes
and throw their bodies over the edge, to fall far down the cliffs below, then
he might just get away with it. If he didn’t, Athelgar could have the pleasure
of deciding whether to hang him for murder or behead him for treason. Flicker
would certainly have tried to stop him, but Flicker had met his just deserts.
The
moon peered over the mountains. There were no more men waiting at the stone and
the ritual had ended. Amaranth-talon raised his head to the stars and screeched
in triumph. He swung around to face the stretcher, spread his wings.Wolf
screamed at the explosion of agony in his head.
8
The
world rocked. After the din of trumpets and drums, the bonfires in the night,
he was plunged into blazing sunlight and a salty gale as cold as any icy
torrent. And intolerable pain. Screaming, he drew his sword. The howling wind
helped, making the Eagle stagger, and he was too big
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a target to miss, even in that sudden
blinding glare.Wolf leaped over the stretcher. A slash might have been deflected
by the tough feathers, so he lunged, withdrew his blade, and rammed Diligence
into the monster again before it had
collapsed on the shingle. He stabbed it a third time to be sure.
The sun was
not far above the horizon, a brilliance in a hazy maritime sky. Surf boomed on
the rocks, hurling up pillars of spray. One of the acolytes scrambled to his
feet and Wolf felled him with a slash to the neck. The other screamed and tried
to run, reeling and flailing on the loose shingle, but heading the wrong way,
toward the sea.Wolf ran unsteadily after him. A breaker exploded on rocks
directly ahead, hurling foam skyward and probably terrifying the Tlixilian out
of his few remaining wits.Wolf caught up with him and killed him too.
By then the
pain was almost gone from his head. He felt no guilt or regret as he hurried
back to Dolores.Those three had been pitiless murderers on a vast scale.
Compared to such butchers, the King’s Killer was merely a naughty child. He
removed Amaranth-talon’s regalia and smashed it to fragments with a rock so
that no other Eagles could come to see what had gone wrong.The only one who
knew the way now was Bone-peak-runner, who had accompanied Amaranth-talon on
the raid a year ago, but Wolf doubted strongly that the Eldoradoans would risk
him. At the new moon they might. Not now.
It was a
wild morning, but the damp in the air was flying spray, not rain. Impelled
onward by the wind, he almost fell over the stretcher. Dolores made incoherent
noises. He wrapped blankets around her.
“It’s all
right, love,” he said. “We’re home in Chivial.We’ll have you to an octogram
very soon.” Not as soon as he had hoped. He had asked the Eagle to deliver them
to the turret, but they were down in Short Cove. He wondered if he could have
bullied one of the acolytes into helping him carry the stretcher. Probably not,
and murdering him later would have been more difficult in the presence of
witnesses.
“Why, why?”
Her whisper was almost lost in the wind. Her pallor was terrifying. “Why kill
them?”
“Because
what you wanted isn’t possible, dearest.Their conjury only works with beating
hearts.The Distliards have tried to make it work oth
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erwise and can’t—Rojas told us, the
Conch-flute says so, too. This horror must be stopped. I’ve stopped it. Now
let’s get you out of the wind.”
She stared
at him unbelievingly, tears in her eyes. “All those deaths? Why did you let
them die?”
To get her
home, of course. He raised one end of the litter and dragged it off the beach,
into the grass, and there found her a sheltered spot in the lee of a boulder.
He was still exposed to the gale, though, and it was a struggle to change into
the Euranian-style garments that Raging-stone had provided. They were not
Chivian style, but would seem less bizarre than his Tlixilian garb. The hose
were two large for him, the shirt and tunic too snug. No doubt they had
belonged to Distliards who had left their hearts in El Dorado.
He crouched
beside her again.“I’ll be as quick as I can, love. I’ll run up to the castle
and get some conjured bandages and some men and horses.”
She was
weeping, but perhaps that was just the wind.“You could at least have let me try
to make the rituals work. Just for a few days,Wolf !”
No. To
bring knowledge of the Tlixilian conjury into Chivial was to trust Athelgar,
and to trust Athelgar was incredibly stupid, as he had told Lynx and Celeste.
Oh, the beloved monarch would not start tearing men’s hearts out right away,
but sooner or later the public good would demand extreme measures. Needs
must—so Wolf himself had argued. And Lynx
had, too. In a jam, if the evil was available, eventually it would be used,
just as the Distliards were using it now.As he himself had just used it to save
Dolores. He would not let Athelgar
have it!
And even if
the floating city promised a mountain of buttery gold instead, he would not
send them weapons.The city must fall.The secrets must be wiped off the face of
the world.
“I’ll explain
tomorrow, love, when you’re better,” he said.“I have to run up to the
castle.They’ll have conjured bandages up there, and we’ll come back with
horses.”
She tried
to cling to him. “Don’t leave me!”
“I must. I
will go as fast as I can, I promise!”
Remembering
Twidale and Obmouth, he covered her face to keep the gulls away, although they
should find enough carcasses to keep them
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occupied. He set off as fast as he could
go on rough ground, plunging through spiky grass. By now the Eldoradoans must
know that Amaranth-talon was not going to return. Were they even now interrogating
Lynx and Celeste?
He was
appalled at how weak he still was from his long bout with fever. In no distance
at all he had to slow to a walk. He looked up to orient himself on the single
turret that could be seen from Short Cove. It was not there.
Spurred by
panic, he ran down the shingle to the water’s edge and looked again. From there
he could just see a jagged edge of masonry, blackened by fire. For a moment his
mind staggered from one absurdity to another, but finally had to accept the
only possible explanation—the King had followed his suggestion and slighted
Quondam. That explained why the Eagle had not done as Wolf asked—the turret
was gone.The walls would be cast down, the buildings burned, and no doubt the
bailey was a wasteland of rubble. There would be no one up there to help him,
no conjured bandages, no horses.
He trudged
back to Dolores. “It’s me, dear,” he warned her before he lifted back the
blanket. “I think I’ll have to carry you.”
She looked
even paler than before. She shook her head feebly. He had to make her repeat
her words three times before he understood: “I’m losing the baby.”
She was
hemorrhaging. Nothing he could do would make any difference. He stretched out
on the grass beside her and held her as she writhed in pain. He talked, barely
knowing what he said—lies about help being on the way, probably—but soon she
was past speech and probably did not understand anything he said anyway. He
could not possibly carry her up the cliff path unaided.To make the attempt
would kill her. Even if it did not, they would still be miles from the nearest
help, perhaps days away from an octogram. Flicker’s child was killing her.
Flicker was
dead. So was Lynx, dead man walking. He had known what Wolf planned, had
guessed, could have stopped him. So he had approved.
Later Wolf
said, “When you’re healed, we’ll go and rescue young Edwin from Brackyan.”
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Later still,
“We have to get out of the country fast, before Athelgar finds out what I’ve
done.”
And even
later, “We did find our fortune, darling.We’re rich now!”
He
babbled on for hours, until he was too hoarse to speak, long after he knew that
he was alone.
Half frozen, Wolf staggered across to
the stream and drank. Then he began the long labor of gathering driftwood,
dragging it across the shingle, and eventually the work warmed him and eased
his cramped muscles. Knowing he lacked the strength to lift the body onto a
pyre, he covered it with brush he cut with Lynx’s sword and piled the heavier
wood on top.When that was done he searched the beach in the fading daylight
until he found a piece of flint to strike sparks. After much effort he made a
flame, using an abandoned bird’s nest as tinder. Once the fire was burning, he
hauled the acolytes’ corpses to the water so the tide could carry them away.The
Eagle he left for the Tlixilians to find if they came looking.
He was
tempted to hurl the priceless scorpion chain into the blaze as a final gift,
but Dolores would have disapproved of such waste, so he didn’t.As night fell,
he started wearily up the path, burdened with riches and sorrows and his
brother’s sword.
379
Epilogue
The horseman rode up by the arroyo track
and paused at the top to let the mare catch her breath while he admired the
view. Workmen were burning brush somewhere, so a faint haze lay over the green
hills that rolled away to a far glimpse of ocean. It was as fine a vista as he
knew— grass and high rainfall and limestone, great country for horses.The mare
snorted, as if in agreement.
He laughed
and patted her sweaty neck.“Not far now, Malinda.” He nudged her forward again.
Many years ago, founding his stud, he had bestowed that name on his first
brood mare, and he had kept the personal joke going ever since.
His own
name had varied over his life. Originally he had been Hugh Byrd. For three
glorious months, he had been Sir Eagle of the Royal Guard. Much later he had
become Don Águila, but the locals had more often called him El
Chiviano and still did, although there were two
Chivian ranchers in the hills now. It was the other one he was on his way to
visit. This new one, Don Lope, was generally known as El
Diablo, but that was a comment on his looks, not
his behavior. His workers adored him, for he paid them the highest wages on the
island and addressed them in their own tongue. The only people who spoke ill
of him were other ranchers who had seen their best hands disappear in his direction.
The man had
ability and fanatical attention to detail. Felipe’s hacienda had been a ruin
when he bought it, and was now such a success that half the landowners in
Condridad were trying to copy his methods. Riding in, Eagle noted improvements
even since his last visit—the new roof was almost complete, the dam on the
stream had been raised
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to turn a pond into a tiny lake, and the
training ring had been much enlarged. Edwin was in there now, putting his pony
over the jumps under his father’s watchful eye.
Eagle
enjoyed visiting his new neighbor and wished they lived closer. It was good to
talk his mother tongue sometimes, to reminisce about Ironhall and hear tales of
men he had known in boyhood: Panther, Hector, Stalwart, Shadow.
He had been
seen.Wolf was waving a greeting. Eagle rode up to the rail and shook hands
across it.
“You are
indeed welcome, brother,” his host said. “How long can you stay? Greet Don
Águila, Edwin.”
The boy
began in Distlish and switched to Chivian. Then he grinned and repeated the
welcome in Tlixilian.
Eagle
thanked him in the same three languages. “You speak as well as you ride,
master. Let me see those jumps again.”
“Sí,
señor!” Flushed with pleasure, the boy turned
his mount, digging in his heels.
“I swear he
grows a handsbreadth every time I see him!” Eagle said.
That was
Wolf’s cue to look pleased. “That’s because you don’t come by often enough.You
should have seen what a starved little waif he was when I ...by the way, I have
a gift for you.”
When Sir
Wolf had passed through Mondon five years ago, he had been accompanied by a
wife. The following year he had turned up again, with a son and no wife. The
boy was almost certainly not his. Edwin was going to be very tall and his shock
of screaming-red hair would not have shamed a pure-blood Bael.Whatever their
relationship, man and boy were obviously very close.
“Indeed?”
Eagle said. “And I have news for you.”
“Good or
bad?”
“Both.”
They waited
until Edwin had completed the circuit, then applauded as he rode past,
triumphant. Hands arrived to take charge of the riding lesson and Eagle’s
horse.The two ranchers walked over to the house.
“Begin with
the bad news.”
“A great
tragedy. Sigisa has gone.”
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“Gone?
How?”
“Hurricane.
Six days ago. El Caudillo barely
escaped—he had sailed just two days before. They say the entire town has
vanished. The sandbar was washed away.The river empties directly into the sea now.”
Wolf walked
for a while staring at the ground, then said, “The world is better off without
Sigisa, but there were some innocent people living there. At least, I think
there must have been. No survivors?”
“Oh, yes.
Homeless, of course.And we shall have shipping problems from now on.There is no
decent harbor on that coast.”
Don Lope
shrugged. “We’re better off than the farmers.”
“How so?”
“You can’t
drop cotton or beans overboard and expect them to swim ashore.” He smiled,
which required only a slight change in the permanent tooth-displaying sneer of
his disfigurement.
Eagle
laughed and said, “True.”
Lady
Attewell greeted the visitor when they reached the veranda. Wolf excused
himself and disappeared into the house. Eagle presented the trifling gift he
had brought for the lady—a seashell necklace—in-quired after her daughter,
chose a comfortable chair, and accepted a glass of cool fluid. He yielded to
her entreaties and promised he would stay for at least two days this time.Wolf
had chosen wisely when he bought this place.The view of the mountains was
stupendous on one side, and the sea was visible on the other. Eagle could
almost feel jealous.
El Diablo had
done well in his choice of wife, too. Dona Novia was the daughter of a
prosperous planter, Pascual Fombella. She had the striking dark beauty that
often appeared in a first cross, and wit to go with it. Eagle told her about
Sigisa and she duly expressed horror. He suspected she was pregnant again. That
was not unreasonable, because Amy must be about two now.Wolf reappeared with a
package which almost certainly contained a sword, but which he laid beside his
chair unexplained.
Polite
conversation floated in the evening air like dreams of butterflies. Novia
asked what was to be done about Sigisa. Eagle mentioned a relief ship being
organized in Mondon. Wolf promised a contribution. The problem was money, of
course. Rich though ranchers were in land,
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hard cash was always short.Young Edwin
came limping in to boast of his riding.
In a moment
Dona Novia rose from her chair.“Come along, young man. Don Águila has
business to discuss with your father.”
Edwin aimed
a worried glance at Wolf, who laughed.
“I haven’t
forgotten! Don Águila will come with us and teach both of us. He’s a
much better diver than I am.”
Reassured,
Edwin allowed himself to be led away.
“I am
hopeless in water,” Eagle protested. “I know nothing about diving.You should be
teaching me.”
Wolf grinned
wolfishly. “Edwin will be pleased when he realizes that! Now, brother . . .” He
produced a scroll. “When El Dorado fell, I had occasion to send a package Home
to Ironhall, Returning a sword. Amazingly, it arrived safely. Equally
amazingly, Grand Master’s reply reached me, too. It came a couple of days ago.”
Eagle laid
down his glass and stared very hard at him. “Are you telling me that there was
a Blade in
“It is a
long story, brother, not all of which I can reveal, even yet.” Wolf smiled
wanly.“I’ll tell you what I can, but yes, a brother did die in the fall of El
Dorado, if not before. When I wrote, I passed on your thanks to Grand Master,
as you once asked me to. And he sent this for you.”
Eagle
accepted the scroll reluctantly but made no effort to unroll it. The seal was
obviously the royal signet of Chivial. He had seen it often enough. “The
bitch?” he said.
Wolf
chuckled. “Lord Roland wrote that, when he became Grand Master, he inherited
some items of unfinished business. That deed, he told me, is a royal pardon for
the former Sir Eagle, and accolade of knighthood in the Loyal and Ancient
Order.”
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“The
bitch!” Eagle repeated. The injustice still rankled, after thirty years.
“Durendal
also pointed out that the document is dated very early in the reign of Queen
Malinda. It must have been done on her first visit to Ironhall. I remember that
day! Thirdmoon, 388, it was, twelve years ago. Hereward was Prime.” When his
guest did not comment, Wolf reached for the package beside his chair. “This, I
am informed, is an exact replica of a sword named Stoop.
The original was destroyed when you were
expelled, of course.”
“The nerve
of the hussy!” Eagle muttered.“She was sixteen. Spoiled rotten. Arrogant.
Oversexed.” He had never told anyone the story, yet it had been common
knowledge at the time and ancient history now. He sighed.“I suppose I wasn’t
completely innocent.We had to guard her, of course, and we played games with
her. We’d take turns flirting. Just a glance or two would do it. She was
lonely, insecure, daren’t trust anyone around that snake pit Court of her
father’s, and he barely knew she existed. Blades could be trusted, though. All
her life she’d been told that the Royal Guard could be trusted.We toyed with
her.We weren’t serious! Spirits, a bound Blade could collect more girls around
Court in those days than he had hours in the day for!”
“They still
can,”Wolf said. “They still do.”
“Not
princesses, though. When Malinda went starry-eyed, we’d complain to Leader, and
he’d reassign us. But then Durendal was promoted to Chancellor and Bandit took
over. He didn’t react fast enough. One evening she cornered me in the stable
and kissed me. She kissed
me!
And in walked the snoops.They must have been watching her day and night.”
“Sounds
right,”Wolf said.“That’s exactly the sort of game they like to play.” He sipped
his drink. “Some of them.”
“Ambrose
wanted to cut my head off!” Eagle said bitterly. “You’d think I had raped her
and sired triplets on her. I was cashiered, exiled, transported. Durendal
arranged for me to escape and saw I had money.”
“That’s
typical, too,” Wolf said. “But remember that Ambrose married her off to a
pirate, poor child. And if she took the first chance she got to try and make
what amends she could, doesn’t that suggest that
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she had been feeling guilty all those
years?” He raised his glass. “To the Pirate’s Wife!”
Eagle
grunted wordlessly, but he did drink the toast.Wolf waved for the servant in
the corner to come and refill the glasses.
Eagle
unwrapped the sword. He had forgotten just how fine an Ironhall blade felt to
handle, the damask, the perfect balance. “I suppose I can regard this as my
due.” He admired the engraving: Stoop. “Thank
you. I will write and thank Grand Master.”
“What was the
good news you were going to tell me?”
“Oh,
nothing to get in a froth over,” Eagle said, squinting along the sword.“El
Caudillo is in Mondon, Don Severo de la Cuenca
himself ! I told you they barely missed the hurricane. Even so, their ship got
badly battered. He’s on his way Home to fame and riches.The King has made him a
marquis.”
Although
they were speaking Chivian,Wolf waited until the glasses were filled and the
boy had gone before he responded. “I suppose he earned it. The world is
certainly a better place without El Dorado. No more mass sacrifices, no more
half-human monsters.”
“Nary a
one,” Eagle said.“Not a building left standing in El Dorado itself, apparently,
and he leveled every pyramid in the Hence Lands, so no more altars.”
“And no
survivors?”
“None in
“Who?”
Surprised
by his vehemence, Eagle said, “The Marquesa. She’s pure blue-blood Distlish,
apparently. She’d been a prisoner in
Wolf stared
very hard at him. “A prisoner in El Dorado?”
“So they
say.” Eagle thought it over. “I don’t know if I believe it, though.” He
chuckled.“Come with me next week and hear it from her own lips. Cuenca will be
in Mondon for a few weeks; he and his wife. If you want to meet them, I can
arrange it.”
Don Lope
seemed to be studying the sunset. A group of boys went
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racing past, kicking a ball and
screaming at the top of their lungs in a mixture of Distlish and Tlixilian. In
among them, fair-skinned and red-haired but as loud as any, went Edwin. Despite
the awkward, lopsided gallop dictated by his twisted foot, he was keeping up.
Only after the ball went bouncing away with the raucous gang still in hot
pursuit did El Diablo turn
to answer his guest’s invitation.
“No! Thank
you, but no! I have absolutely no desire to meet El
Caudillo or his Marquesa. I’d be much obliged if
you see I am not even mentioned—brother.”
“Why ever
not—brother?”
Eagle smiled an I-told-you my-story smile.
Wolf
scowled. “In confidence?”
“Upon my
sword!”That was a good Blade oath he had not heard in years.
“Because if
that Marquesa is who I think she is, she will take Edwin away from me.”
“You’re
joking!”
“I am not
joking!”Wolf’s snarl was fearsome. “And nothing on this earth will make me give
him up to the likes of her!” He drained his glass and banged it down on the
table beside him. “That boy saved my life. I mean that, literally. I needed a
reason to keep going and I found someone who needed me as much as I needed
him. I came from the same sort of background myself, and I had forgotten just
how terrible it was—houses like holes in the ground, food that would sicken
cattle. I rescued him. And he rescued me, because he’s why I’m still here.”
After a
moment he shrugged as if ashamed of his vehemence, for he was not a demonstrative
man. “I’d made a promise, see?”
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