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"Then how can I prove it to you?"
"You can't," she told him. "But it's something you should have told me long before now: in my role as A'Hirzg and the matarh of the Hirzg if nothing else. And I don't know where that leaves us. I don't know that at all."
The steed was frothed with sweat as it galloped hard up the slope to where they waited, its muscular legs shivering as the rider dismounted holding a courier's pouch. He immediately dropped to a knee in front of Jan, Allesandra, Sergei, and Semini. "Urgent news from Nessantico, my Hirzg," he said. The man's leathers were caked with road grime, his face and hair streaked with dirt. His voice shook with exhaustion, and he looked as if-like his mount-he were ready to collapse. He held out the pouch, his hand trembling. Jan took the pouch from the man as Allesandra waved to the attendants, hanging back a judicial few paces from the four. "Get this man some food and rest, and take care of his horse."
Attendants scurried to obey. Jan unfolded the thick parchment inside the pouch, dropping the pouch on the ground. Allesandra watched his eyes scan the words there. Her son's eyes widened, and he handed the paper to Allesandra silently. She understood his shock quickly; the phrases there seemed impossible.
... Kraljiki Audric has been a.s.sa.s.sinated in much the same way as Archigos Ana . . . Sigourney ca'Ludovici has been named Kraljica, but she has been injured in the attack . . . Karnor has been razed and plundered by Westlanders . . . Westlander army approaching Villembouchure . . . Garde Civile and chevarittai mustered to stop them . . .
She pa.s.sed the message to Sergei, who read it with Semini looking intently over his shoulder. "A'Hirzg," she heard Semini say, "this comes as a shock to me. I swear to Cenzi that I knew nothing of any of this. Audric dead . . ." He spread his hands in supplication. "That was not my doing, nor my intention."
She paid no attention to his protests. She put her arm around Jan, who was staring out over the army encampment, glittering with banners and armor, dotted with gray-white tents, seething with the activity of thousands of soldiers. "What does this mean, Matarh?" Jan asked her, though she saw him looking at Sergei as well. "Tell me what you're thinking."
"It means that Cenzi has truly blessed us," she told him. "We are moving at the right time, when our enemy is weakest." She nearly laughed. Audric dead, ca'Ludovici injured, the attention of the Holdings given over to the Westlanders rather than looking toward Firenzcia. "This is your moment, my son. Your moment. All you have to do is seize it."
It was her moment as well, perhaps more than her son's, but she didn't say that.
Jan continued to stare at the encampment. Then he shook himself, and in that moment, she saw a glimpse of his great-vatarh in him: the firm clamping of his jaw, the certainty in his eyes. It was the way the old Hirzg Jan had always looked when he'd set his mind; she remembered it well. Jan gestured to the attendants.
"Bring Starkkapitan ca'Damont to me," he said. "I have new orders to give him."
The White Stone.
SHE WAS ACROSS THE LANE from them when Talis went up to the building and knocked on the door, holding Nico. She heard the cry from Serafina-"Nico! Oh, Nico!"-and she watched the woman gather up Nico in her arms . . . and she also saw Talis stiffen as if in alarm, raising the walking stick he always carried as if he were about to strike someone with it, gesturing with his free hand as if he wanted Serafina and Nico to leave.
She hurried across the lane, her hand on one of the throwing knifes hidden in her tashta. She caught some broken, loud conversation as she did so.
". . . just go! Now! . . . the Numetodo Amba.s.sador . . . tried to kill me . . ."
". . . knew where Nico was, and you didn't go to him? . . ."
There was more, but the voices were yammering in her head, and she couldn't distinguish the real ones from the ones inside her head. The door closed behind Talis, and she took the opportunity to slip into the narrow s.p.a.ce between the buildings. There, she pressed against the wall next to one of the shuttered windows. She could hear the m.u.f.fled conversation-clearly enough to realize that she didn't need to intervene. Not yet. There was talk of the a.s.sa.s.sination of Archigos Ana, ("That cold witch deserved to die for what she did to my family," Fynn screeched), of something called black sand that could kill (and all the voices of her victims clamored in her head at that-"Death! Death! Yes, bring more of them here to us!"-so loudly she had to scream silently at them to stop), of a man named Uly ("That name . . ." Fynn said "I know that name . . .").
When it was apparent that Talis and Nico would be staying here, she slipped away again, returning to her apartment and gathering up the things she had there. That evening, after three or four stops, she had rented a new apartment, one street south of Nico's matarh's rooms: there, from the window, she could see the door of Nico's rooms through the s.p.a.ce between the buildings.
For days, she watched. She would slip at night between the houses and listen to them. She followed them whenever they left, especially if Nico was with them. For days, she watched: the trips to Oldtown Market, the attempts to find Uly. She'd already found the man herself, living in squalid rooms on Bell Lane near the Oldtown Market. She found the foreigner strange and loathsome-not a man who cared about the cleanliness of his rooms or the filth ground into his clothes. He was brusque and rude with the customers to whom he sold potions, usually in the tavern below his rooms: the Red Swan. He was often drunk, and he was a poor drunk. He could be violent as well; certainly he was rough with the prost.i.tutes he hired, enough that most of the women working the streets around the Market avoided him.
For days, she watched.
She was surprised, one day, to see Nico accompanying Varina and Karl to the market-generally, that was something that Serafina wouldn't allow. But she also knew that the market visits were by now routine, that with each pa.s.sing day the group had less expectation that they would ever find Uly, and she knew that Varina and Serafina had become close friends, that Nico seemed to think of the Numetodo woman almost as a beloved tantzia. She followed the trio closely, winding her way through the throngs about the stalls, close enough to almost listen to them but never so near that one of them might notice her. She saw them talk to a farmer in his stall, saw him point and the three of them hurry away, with Varina looking suddenly worried. Karl went up to a woman with a yellow tashta-a woman that she recognized as one of Uly's customers.
A hard knot of worry twisted in her stomach-or perhaps it was the child growing there. The voices muttered. "She will tell him . . . You'll have to intervene . . ." She put her hand to the white stone in its pouch around her neck, pressing hard as if she could stop the voices with her touch.
Had Karl started to go after Uly with Nico, she would have stopped them. She wouldn't let them endanger Nico. She wouldn't.
But Karl sent Varina and Nico away. She followed the two long enough to know that they were actually returning to their rooms, then she turned quickly back, hurrying through the streets toward the Red Swan. On the way, she plucked a small, flat, and pale stone from the street.
She saw Karl enter the tavern and followed after him. Uly was there, sitting at his usual table and-also as usual-half-drunk. Karl saw him as well, but he was at the bar, ordering a pint. As she watched, Karl pushed away from the bar and went to Uly's table. She couldn't hear their conversation, but not long afterward, Uly finished his ale and stood up, Karl following him toward the door.
"You know what will happen." Fynn cackled in her head. "What are you going to do about it?"
She moved. She interposed herself between Karl and the door, b.u.mping into him deliberately. "Beg pardon, Vajiki," she said to him. She took his hand and placed the stone she picked up into his palm. "For luck," she said. "You must keep it, and it will bring you good fortune, Vajiki. You make sure now. Keep it."
She hoped he would do that, because she couldn't help him if he didn't. Had he given it back to her, or dropped it, or tossed it away, she would have been helpless. "The White Stone can't kill without the ritual now," the voices chorused mockingly. "Weak. Stupid."
But Karl didn't do any of those things. She had hidden herself as she left the tavern, and a few breaths later, Karl and Uly emerged. Uly led Karl away from the tavern, and she followed carefully. In any case, Uly appeared to be either too intoxicated or too uninterested in seeing if anyone was watching. She saw him push Karl into an alley, and she ran quietly forward.
When she reached the intersection, Karl was already down, and it was apparent that Uly intended to beat the Numetodo to death. "You're a fool, Amba.s.sador ca'Vliomani," she heard Uly snarl. "Did you think I wouldn't recognize you?"
She moved then, the White Stone again, grim and serious. Uly glanced up at the sound of her approach, but her kick was already on its way, smashing into his kneecap so that the man crumpled with a groan, and then her doubled fists. .h.i.t the side of his head, taking him down to the pavement unconscious.
Quickly, she tore away Uly's bashta, then went to the moaning, half-conscious Karl. She wrapped the torn cloth around his head, then slid her favorite knife from its sheath and pressed it against his neck. "Stay still and you won't be hurt," she told him, pitching her voice low. "Take off the hood and you'll die. Nod if you understand."
His head bobbed once, and she left him for Uly. She slapped the man's face to wake him, watching his eyes widen as he saw her, and she showed him the knife blade before jabbing it sharply into the tattooed flesh of his neck. She placed her boot on the man's broken kneecap. "He's seen you. You can't let him live now," the voices clamored, and she bid them to be quiet.
"Answer me if you want to live," she told him. She felt his hands start to lift and she shook her head at him, driving the tip of the blade into his neck, close to the throbbing, thick vein there. His eyes widened further. "You killed Archigos Ana, didn't you? You made the black sand."
"No," the man began, but she shoved the blade in further with the lie. "All right, all right." He leaned away from her as much as he could. "Yes, I helped kill her. With the black sand. But it wasn't my idea. I just gave the man the stuff and told him how to use it. I didn't know what he intended to do with it." Again she pressed harder with the knife. "Ouch! d.a.m.n it, it's the truth!"
"Who?" she asked him. She knew Karl would be listening; she would give him the information he wanted, as long as it meant Nico would still be safe.
"You have to kill this one. You must."
"I don't know-" Uly was saying, and she ignored the voice to draw the knife's blade slightly toward herself, opening a cut. Warm blood dripped down his neck. "Ow! By Axat! Stop! He told me his name was Gairdi ci'Tomisi, but I don't know if that's his real name or not. Paid me well-that's all I knew or cared about."
The man tried to push her away, and she put more weight on his shattered knee. He panted with the pain. "Please. Please stop."
"Then tell me more about this man," she said. "Quickly."
"Sounded like ca'-and-cu', the way he talked. Firenzcian, maybe, by the accent. Said he had 'orders' from Brezno, in any case. That's all I know. I made the stuff, gave it to him, and he left. I was as surprised as anyone when the Archigos was killed."
"You can't stay here. You have to leave or someone will come and see you."
The voices were right. She pressed her lips together. With a single, savage motion, she plunged the knife deeply into the man's throat and slashed it from right to left. Hot blood spurted, and the man died in a gurgle of wet breath. Quickly now, she pulled the pouch from under her now gory tashta and opened it, placing the precious white stone on the man's open right eye. Then she went to Karl, rummaged quickly in his pocket and found the stone she'd given him. That she placed on Uly's left eye. She sheathed her blade, waited a breath, then took her stone from his right eye.
She could hear Uly's voice already, wailing in a language she didn't understand.
She placed the stone in the pouch again. She glanced down once at Karl, who was straining under the cloth, listening desperately.
She ran. She ran-staying to shadows and lonely back ways because of her blood-spattered tashta-ran to find Nico, to know that he was still safe.
BLOODSHED.
Kenne ca'Fionta.
Aubri cu'Ulcai.
Allesandra ca'Vorl.
Niente.
Varina ci'Pallo.
Kenne ca'Fionta.
Sergei ca'Rudka
Nico Morel.
Karl Vliomani.
The Battle Begun.
Kenne ca'Fionta.
KENNE STOOD ON THE BALCONY outside his private office, gazing down on the temple plaza. Below him, teni in their green robes mingled with the normal throngs as they hurried to escape the drizzle seeping from low, gray clouds. The weather seemed to weigh down the wings of the pigeons in their cooing huddles; as people hurried past, the birds would scurry away, heads bobbing, but not take flight.
The foul, miserable day matched Kenne's mood.
He was a dead man if he made the wrong move, and he wasn't sure how to avoid that fate.
Even if he avoided physical death, he was dead within the Faith. He could already feel the vultures beginning to gather: in the whispers of everyone from the lowliest e'teni to the subtext of the messages he received from the a'teni in their cities. When will we have another Conclave? they asked. There are urgent matters that we must all discuss. How should we respond to the news from Nessantico? What is the Archigos' thought on these matters?
The subtext was always below the innocent questions. It had begun even when he'd been elevated to Archigos after poor Ana's a.s.sa.s.sination. The chorus had grown louder and more constant since Kraljiki Audric's death and the news of the Westlander invasion. The messages came every day by courier: from Fossano, from Prajnoli, from Chiva.s.so and Belcanto and An Uaimth, from Kasama and Quibela and Wolhusen. We don't trust your leadership. Someone else needs to be Archigos. That's what they said underneath the polite, indirect words they wrote. You should be removed from Cenzi's Throne.
Worst of all, he found that he agreed with them. I never wanted this, he wanted to write back to them. I never asked to sit in Ana's place. I would have much preferred that someone else take this task from me. He had told Ana herself this long years ago, after he'd returned to Nessantico to become A'Teni of Nessantico under her, after the Firenzcian army had been dispersed. "You were here before I was," she'd said to him, looking almost embarra.s.sed to be sitting behind the desk that they both remembered Archigos Dhosti using. "By rights, you should be here and not me, my friend."
He had laughed at that, shaking his head. "Archigos Dhosti told me, long ago, that I was an excellent follower. He was right, too. I follow very well. But I don't lead. I don't have whatever it is you have, Ana. Dhosti saw those qualities in you, too-you can lead. You're strong, you're talented, and you have a strength of will that's amazing. That's why he made you his o'teni. Had he lived, he would have groomed you for this anyway. Me . . ." Another headshake. "I was destined to be what I am. No more. And I'm quite content to have it that way."
She had protested, politely, but they both knew that-inside-she agreed with him. With Dhosti.
Yet Cenzi had thrust this on him late in life, and Kenne could only wonder whether that had been some kind of cosmic joke.
The a'teni of the Faith were one danger to Kenne, and the new Kraljica was another. She was in pain-she would be in pain for the rest of her life, almost certainly. She had been thrust into a terrible crisis with the loss of the h.e.l.lins, the a.s.sa.s.sination of Audric, and now the invasion of the Holdings itself by the Westlanders. There was Firenzcia on her other side, no longer an ally but another enemy at her back. She would be trying to consolidate her position. She would be trying desperately to simply survive as Kraljica, and to do that, she would be looking for people with strength who could support her and she would be casting aside those she thought too weak to be of help-because weakness in her allies was as much a danger as the Westlanders or Firenzcians.
Kenne knew that Sigourney's opinion of him was perhaps even less high than that of the a'teni. She would be maneuvering to have him replaced, and quickly. Knowing the history of the Kralji in Nessantico, Kenne could not rule out that her solution would be his own a.s.sa.s.sination and replacement by someone more suitable for her. It had happened to Archigi before Kenne when they had come into conflict with the political rulers of the Holdings: such an Archigos might die under mysterious circ.u.mstances. One had only to look back to Archigos Dhosti himself, after all.
Kenne stared down at the plaza below, where Dhosti's broken body had once sprawled, the blood flowing between the cobbles. He wondered if one day soon it might be his body being tossed over the railing to fall, flailing desperately, to the ground below.
"Archigos?"
Kenne shivered at the call. He turned slowly, expecting to see Petros standing there. But it wasn't. It was, instead, a ghost.
"I know," the ghost said, and the voice's accent confirmed his suspicions. "You didn't expect to see me again. Frankly, neither did I. Sorry to startle you, Archigos. Petros was kind enough to let me in."
"Karl . . ." Kenne stepped back into the room, going around the desk to embrace the Numetodo. "Look at you-your beard shaved, your hair dyed and cut like some unranked person, and those horrible clothes. I wouldn't have recognized you . . . but I suppose that's the idea, isn't it? I thought, after you helped Sergei escape, that you'd have fled the city." He shook his head. "These are dark times," he said wearily, the depression washing over him again. "Terrible times. But-I forget myself. You look tired and hungry. Can I have Petros bring something?"
But Karl was already shaking his head. "No, Archigos. There isn't time, and I shouldn't stay here longer than necessary. I . . . I need a favor."
"If it's within my power," Kenne told him, and had to quash the thought that followed: as weak as my power is, I'm afraid . . .
"It is, I hope," Karl said. "Please, Archigos, sit. This may take some time. I know, at least I think I know, who killed Ana."
Kenne listened to Karl's tale with growing dread, suspicion, and horror. By the end he was sitting in his chair behind his desk, shaking his head.
"A man named Gairdi ci'Tomisi, you say?" Kenne said finally. The name had shocked him; he wondered what else he had not known. "A Firenzcian? He did this with help from Westlander magic?"
"Firenzcian, yes," Karl stated. "But you must understand that there was no magic involved. No-this black sand isn't of your Cenzi's making, nor that of the Westlander G.o.ds, either. It's not magical, not of the Second World-just the product of a person's imagination and logic." Karl tapped his head. "And that makes it even more dangerous. Look . . ."
Karl took a small pouch from the pocket of his grimy and tattered bashta, spilling a dark, granular powder on the blotter of Kenne's desk. Kenne prodded it with a curious finger. "Uly had a stash of this in his rooms; I bribed the innkeeper to let me in. Uly had the ingredients there in his rooms so we know what they are. Varina thinks she can reproduce this mixture even if Talis won't help us. Sitting there like that, the black sand's innocent enough, but put a flame to it, and . . ." Karl's voice trailed off, and he looked away. Kenne knew what the man was remembering; he remembered it, too, all too well.
"What can I do?" Kenne asked him. He stared down at his soiled desk.