More importantly, was this a routine check, or were the guards looking for her? Had someone found her cell empty?
Like her sitting room twenty paces farther down the hall, Kor-iRok"s bedroom was crowded with furniture. Little tables, stools, cabinets as tall as Dhulyn herself, some with open shelves and some with closed doors. Dhulyn edged over farther and squatted, adding herself to the shadow of a round table with thick carved legs. From here, she had a clear view of the large bed at the far end of the room. A small bedside table held a bowl of fruit and a light horn cup with a hinged silver lid to keep insects out of the drink. The Tenebroso Kor-iRok did not stir. The woman was warmly dressed and covered. At her age she would feel the cold more than would her ladies asleep in the outer room. Without cosmetics to give it color, the skin of her face was papery and pale. On a stand near the bed rested the elaborate golden-haired wig the old woman had been wearing when Dhulyn had first seen her, a gold, Dhulyn realized with a jolt, the exact shade of Parno"s hair.
More light entered the room as the curtain was noiselessly pushed aside. The rings must have been bound with cord to prevent them rattling against the curtain rod. Wish I"d known that before, Wish I"d known that before, Dhulyn thought. One of the lady pages from the anteroom took a step into the bedroom. Dhulyn thought. One of the lady pages from the anteroom took a step into the bedroom.
"What is it, Jhes-iJhes?" came a whisper from the bed. Only years of discipline, and her teeth in her lower lip, prevented Dhulyn from making any sound.
"One of the guards in the west wing thought he saw something, my House," the woman said.
Not me, then, Dhulyn thought. Dhulyn thought.
"Well, there is nothing in here," the papery whisper sounded once more from the bed. "Pray shut the door until the alert is over."
"Yes, my House, sleep well." The woman stepped out of the room, drawing the curtain closed as she went. Dhulyn heard the "snick" of the latch as the door she hadn"t noticed in the anteroom was closed. She squeezed her eyes shut. This was all going to take much longer than she"d thought. She"d hoped to find Parno and go tonight, not take the chance of another day in One-eye"s interrogation room.
"Come sit by me, Mercenary," came the whisper again. "They will take a few minutes to sleep again, and you will be more comfortable here."
Dhulyn squeezed her eyes shut. Why didn"t her Sight ever show her something like this? Suppressing a sigh, she straightened out of the shadow of the round table.
"When did you know?" she asked, as she sat down on the edge of the bed.
"When you moved the curtain," the old woman said. "The air changed."
Dhulyn eyed the distance to the door, and turned to watch the old woman"s thin chest rise and fall. If she took a breath deep enough to call out, Dhulyn could stop her before any sound got farther than the edge of the bed. Though it was bad luck to kill someone so old.
"I did not want to be Tenebroso, you know," Kor-iRok said as though she was continuing a conversation. "But my brother died, and then my sister. I had a daughter who died also, an elder daughter. Two months before her presentation day, dead of a fever. Young. I believed it to be natural; eventually, I learned differently. Now my time comes, though I am the only one who knows it." She looked directly at Dhulyn, the force of her stare belying her words. "You may help me. Your coming is most advantageous. I fear I have less time than I had hoped."
Dhulyn pressed her lips together. There was no doubt, not even any real sense of request in the Tenebroso"s voice. She was used to being obeyed, and she expected to be obeyed now. What help would the old woman need? And what would she do if Dhulyn did not provide it?
"I do not see how I may be of aid," she said. "We do not kill people in their beds."
"The only killing needed here will be done by me." The old woman indicated the bedside table with a glance from her still bright amber eyes. Following that glance Dhulyn saw what she"d missed before in all the shadows of the place, a gla.s.s vial no longer than her smallest finger, and stopped with a waxed plug. Dhulyn pursed her lips in a soundless whistle.
"Grandmother," Dhulyn said, finding herself instinctively reverting to the courtesy of her Clan. "I do not understand."
"I will ask three-no-four things of you. First, unstopper the vial and hand it to me." She waited. "I am am ready my child," the papery voice whispered when Dhulyn hesitated. "More than ready." ready my child," the papery voice whispered when Dhulyn hesitated. "More than ready."
Dhulyn looked at the vial, at the old woman, saw the determination and certainty in the Tenebroso"s face. She picked up the vial. She wondered what kind of poison the old woman had decided on. She ran her thumbnail around the edge of wax and worked out the cork before placing it into the Tenebroso"s waiting hand. The old woman smiled, and tipped the contents of the little gla.s.s tube into her mouth. A small grimace of distaste, as when one takes a mouthful of sour wine, and then she held out the vial once more.
"I wish you to take this with you when you go." The Tenebroso suddenly gasped and shut her eyes tight before blinking them open again. "I will not give him the satisfaction . . . I would not have him think I have killed myself because of him."
No need for Dhulyn to ask who the man in question might be.
"That is only two things, Grandmother."
"I would have you listen to my curse," the old woman said. "Another"s ears will give it weight and power. And I wish it to fall upon him as heavily as might be."
"You would curse your own Kir?" Towns folk. Who could understand them? Towns folk. Who could understand them?
The old woman"s eyes must have been very accustomed to the darkness in her room for her to catch Dhulyn shaking her head.
"It is not what you think, Mercenary. I would curse him for killing my daughter, all those years ago. For killing his sister."
"But your House . . ." She"d condemn her House to the chaos and turmoil that would follow the cursing of its Kir? Not that Dhulyn would stand in the old woman"s way. As far as she was concerned, a curse was just what the One-eye needed.
"The House will continue. I was afraid," the old woman said in the voice of one confiding in a friend. "I thought I might have waited too long. Dal is not what I had hoped. He watches, but he does not lead. He hates Lok, but he cannot make up his mind to kill him."
Dhulyn smiled at this insight.
"But now Par-iPar has come, as I arranged, and you will bear my message to him. He is strong. A true Heir. Now I may die content, cursing my son who robbed me of my daughter, and my House of its true Kir."
Par-iPar? Dhulyn stared again at the golden wig, this time really seeing how exactly it matched Parno"s hair. Lok-iKol thought he was bringing her here for her Mark, and all along his mother was bringing the One-eye"s replacement. Parno. Dhulyn stared again at the golden wig, this time really seeing how exactly it matched Parno"s hair. Lok-iKol thought he was bringing her here for her Mark, and all along his mother was bringing the One-eye"s replacement. Parno. Parno Parno was the heir. Not just a younger son of some Household of the extended House Tenebro, n.o.ble but unimportant. was the heir. Not just a younger son of some Household of the extended House Tenebro, n.o.ble but unimportant. When this woman dies, my Partner will be When this woman dies, my Partner will be heir. heir.
"I am glad he has you, my dear. What a consort you shall be. What a House you will make between you. Carry my words to him, and my blessing for him and our House."
Dhulyn let her mouth close, her words of refusal fading on her lips. It was too late for the old woman, let her die in peace at least. She managed a nod as she took the Tenebroso"s hands in hers and squarely met her bright amber eyes.
The woman"s pupils suddenly shrank.
"Your death is here, Grandmother. Begin your curse."
Eleven.
THE ROOM WHERE the Kir of House Tenebro questioned his prisoners was, as Hernyn Greystone had expected, unlocked and empty. Though, perhaps, prisoners was too strong a word. After all, some of the people questioned had gone in smiling, had been given wine and dainty edibles before they came out, still smiling, restored to their normal routine. Others, Hernyn knew, had gone in and never came out again-at least not under their own power. What exactly distinguished guests from prisoners-and what made some remain guests while others became dead-had been beyond the concern of Mercenaries employed in the guard.
Lucky thing he was so good at the Stalking Shora Shora. He"d had to dodge three people on his way out of the cellars alone, and there seemed to be an unusual number of the Kir"s guards patrolling the hallways.
Hernyn had been pleased and excited to find two Brothers already in the guard at Tenebro House when he signed up. Fanryn and Thionan were both older, but they"d treated him right, and he"d been careful to follow their examples, especially when it came to being discreet. "Nothing you see or hear ever leaves your eyes or ears." That was Common Rule no matter who you worked for. The only people you ever told about anything you saw or heard while on an a.s.signment was the Mercenary House itself.
"Do nothing to lose trust and respect, or you"ll lose it for all your Brothers." That was Common Rule, too.
And, Hernyn thought, a blush rising over him even now, he"d seen some very interesting personal behavior in the months that he had been in Tenebro House. Had even been invited to join in-and by some most unexpected people. The Mercenary"s code prevented him from gossiping about what his old grandmother had called "that kind of thing," even as it stopped him from discussing the routine security measures of the House. And the kind of people who went into the room he was going to now. Their names. Which ones walked out on their own limbs, and which ones did not.
He hadn"t needed the presence of his Brothers to remind him of the Common Rule. He just hadn"t expected it all to be so complicated. Because he"d gone and made a mistake after all. That he couldn"t have known it would be a mistake, didn"t make him feel any better. He should have known better. Because he"d been bragging. And he"d thought he"d been cured of that, long ago. The hard way. He rubbed the scar on his right forearm.
He crossed quickly to a window, let himself out into the cool night air. Frost before morning, Frost before morning, he thought, using the finger- and toeholds provided by old and crumbling mortar to move up to a similar window on the floor above. No one bothered to latch these windows; they were too high up, and gave only on an inner courtyard. he thought, using the finger- and toeholds provided by old and crumbling mortar to move up to a similar window on the floor above. No one bothered to latch these windows; they were too high up, and gave only on an inner courtyard.
When Rofrin and Neslyn the Fair had asked him about a Brother who was obviously Dhulyn Wolfshead, he"d told them far far too much about her-everything he knew, in fact, and he"d known quite a lot. And he hadn"t told them to be helpful, or even to enhance the reputation of the Brotherhood; he"d told them to show off. And just as he"d been warned, showing off had brought trouble-had put another Mercenary Brother in danger. too much about her-everything he knew, in fact, and he"d known quite a lot. And he hadn"t told them to be helpful, or even to enhance the reputation of the Brotherhood; he"d told them to show off. And just as he"d been warned, showing off had brought trouble-had put another Mercenary Brother in danger.
The long corridor of the south wing took him past the first of Dhulyn Wolfshead"s possible prison rooms. The door stood open, a good sign the room was empty. Hernyn hoped that Dhulyn wouldn"t kill him when she learned what a fool he"d been, even though Parno had said that she wouldn"t.
A noise?
Hernyn held his breath and concentrated, exerting all the skill born in him from generations of desert hunters and honed to perfection by the Stalking Shora Shora of the Mercenary School. Yes. Noises. Still a ways away, but possibly coming closer. of the Mercenary School. Yes. Noises. Still a ways away, but possibly coming closer.
Hernyn eyed the next slot of shadow, marginally darker than the hall around it, created by a bit of uneven wall and a hanging that was just a handbreadth too wide. He took two silent steps and eased himself into its protective embrace.
An arm clamped around his chest, trapping his left arm at the same instant that a hand covered his mouth. He whipped up his right hand, aiming for where his captor"s eyes should be, and cracked his fingers against the stones of the wall.
"Quietly, my Brother," the soft murmur in his left ear froze him. "Did no one ever teach you to make sure the dark is empty before you hide yourself in it?" The arms around him loosened but did not drop.
"Dhulyn," he breathed. He had not realized he was holding his breath. He felt her nod, and relaxed against her. Suddenly he was acutely aware of her b.r.e.a.s.t.s and stomach pressed against his back and b.u.t.tocks. He released his mind from the Stalking Shora Shora. This was not the moment for heightened senses. If he moved away from her, he knew, he would be out of the shadow that hid them both. He was embarra.s.sed to react to her physically, but more embarra.s.sed at being so easily caught. It was like being back at School. He should have known better, he thought. Good enough to avoid ordinary people just was not good enough to fool another Mercenary. Nor was he particularly surprised that Dhulyn Wolfshead had stood in the shadow unseen by him. Outlanders were notoriously good at keeping hidden, and an Outlander with Mercenary Schooling, well, you"d need a Finder even to notice them.
Hernyn"s lungs refilled with air. "My name is Hernyn Greystone," he said. "I was schooled by Dorian the Black. Parno Lionsmane, Fanryn Bloodhand, and Thionan Hawkmoon await in the cell of our confinement. I will lead you there."
"I thank you for finding me, Hernyn. Is the Lionsmane well?" Dhulyn rested her forehead against the back of Hernyn"s shoulder. He could smell a faint odor of sweat, dust, and a sharp but not unpleasant herbal scent rising from her skin. He found himself thinking of a time that he"d had a bad fever while he was being Schooled. He"d been given a drink that had smelled the way Dhulyn smelled now.
"He is," he replied. "His right arm bone was cracked, but Fanryn Bloodhand has seen to it. Come, I will take you to them."
He felt the slow release of her breath. Some of the tension left her body.
"Weapons first," she said. "Brothers second. Do you know where the north armory is?"
There. He could admit his Mark to himself, if to no one else. None of his usual methods, untrained and almost unconscious as they were, had helped him at all. He was here to try the only other thing he could think of. He gritted his teeth, squared his shoulders, and knocked.
"Just a minute," came her voice from within, much more quickly than Gun had expected. It looked as though he was not the only one who"d spent a sleepless night.
The door cracked open, and a deep blue eye looked out.
"Lady Mar, I"m sorry to disturb you so early, but I have need of your bowl."
"My bowl? bowl?" The door swung open, and Mar-eMar stepped back in invitation, one hand still on the edge of the door, the other holding the throat of her dressing gown closed. There were oil lamps burning in this outer room, and neat piles of folded clothing on the low chairs and the single brazier table, but he barely took them in as he scanned the surfaces for the patterned bowl. Could she be keeping it in the bedroom? He glanced from the girl, still standing with her hand on the open door, to the inner door leading to the bedroom.
"I"d only need it for a few minutes, I won"t harm it."
"But why my my bowl? There must be bowls in the kitchens you can use." bowl? There must be bowls in the kitchens you can use."
"It"s-" Now that he was faced with it, Gun realized he had no idea what to say next. He hadn"t seen beyond the point at which he had the scrying bowl in his hands. It simply hadn"t occurred to him that he would have to explain what he wanted it for. He glanced over his shoulder at the open doorway, but there was no help there. When he turned back, Mar-eMar was watching him with her liquid eyes.
She had relaxed her hold on her dressing gown. The neck had fallen open and he saw that, under it, she was wearing not a night dress but a shirt and tunic. There was no fear in her face, just a calm query as she waited for him to answer her-and the certainty that he would. She"s very brave, She"s very brave, he thought, taking a deep breath. She had to have been, to come all this way not knowing what waited for her. he thought, taking a deep breath. She had to have been, to come all this way not knowing what waited for her. Braver than I am. Braver than I am.
"It"s a scryer"s bowl, Lady Mar," he said. "A Finder would use it to focus the Mark."
Mar-eMar glanced into the pa.s.sageway and shut the door.
"Are you sure?" She came toward him. "Dhulyn Wolfshead only said it was very old."
"I"m sure. Please, my lady. I"ve lost something, and I-" Gun swallowed the sob that threatened to break out. She was from Navra, the Marked were still safe in Navra. She must not think him a coward, she must must not. "I have to Find it." not. "I have to Find it."
"You . . .?" Mar gestured without completing the sentence. "Please." Mar gestured without completing the sentence. "Please."
She stared at him a moment longer and then turned to the pack that lay open on the round brazier table to the left of the inner door. She removed two rolled gowns, a pair of light brown sueded half boots, and finally the old thick cloth he"d seen when she"d shown the bowl on her arrival. As Mar-eMar turned back the faded folds of material, she looked once more at the door. Gun followed her glance and went himself to secure the latch. When he turned back, she had tossed the old cloth over a chair and set the bowl on the round table.
"Do you have water?" he asked. Without another word, Mar went into the bedroom and returned with a pitcher of water. Gun took it from her and, after moving the bowl nearer the edge of the round tabletop, filled it two-thirds full. He looked around and found Mar taking three folded tunics from a chair. He positioned the now empty chair in front of the bowl and sat down.
His Finding had always been most successful when he was researching. He placed his fingertips lightly on the edge of the table and leaned forward, keeping his back straight, his shoulders down. He was researching again, that"s all; all he had to do was relax.
Gun licked his lips. Research so often started with the printed page. A scroll, or book. The flame of the lamp cast little highlights on the surface of the water, standing out against the pure white of the bowl. A little like letters meticulously copied onto a page of parchment or paper. This was how he"d Found Found things. Hypnotizing himself with the ink and page. The water- things. Hypnotizing himself with the ink and page. The water-
He walks faster, following the thin jade line as it rounds a corner into a narrower aisle. The aisle ends, opening into Lok-iKol"s workroom. Of course, this is where his memory must be. There. The Kir is bent over Dhulyn Wolfshead in her chair, her face frozen in that snarling smile. And there he is himself-Caids, how fat he"s become!-sitting in the other chair. Something has frightened him because he has his hands up to his mouth and his eyes are very wide open.
They are motionless as a painting, as if the jade-green mist that fills the room, the exact shade of the line he"s been following, is a kind of ice freezing them into stillness. But his memory is in there, it must be. He focuses, straining to move forward again, and the mist is sucked away, so suddenly that he takes an unintended step forward into the room just as sound and movement returns to the people in it.
Dhulyn Wolfshead stiffens and looks at where Gun sits in his chair, but she also looks at him now, right now, where he"s standing watching them all, and with a shock he realizes that she can See. See. That she Saw him when they were all in this room together. That she Saw him when they were all in this room together. She She is is a Seer a Seer. Part of him feels triumphant. Her eyes shift and he follows the angle of her glance and sees himself at the door of Lok-iKol"s workroom, trying to work the latch. But he"s transparent, and his hands pa.s.s through the mechanism without affecting it. I don"t remember that. I don"t remember that. Gun looks back to where he was sitting and sees his body is still there, filled with a jade-green light, that makes his eyes glow green in his slack face. Gun looks back to where he was sitting and sees his body is still there, filled with a jade-green light, that makes his eyes glow green in his slack face.
Gun takes a step back toward the Library he has come from. He remembers seeing that green glow, that slack face, in Lok-iKol. With that thought images, memories, cascade through his mind and he remembers-for the first time-seeing the glow, but with no slackness whatsoever, in the eyes of Beslyn-Tor as the Jaldean has pa.s.sed him in the doorway of this very room. And he remembers that the Jaldean has pa.s.sed him many times, over and over. All those memories lost-taken, he realizes-until this very moment. And now that he has those memories again, standing there in his mind"s Library, Gun realizes there is a difference between the green glow when it is in Beslyn-Tor and in Lok-iKol, and that same difference-please, blessed Caids-is in himself as well.
There is something living inside Beslyn-Tor, he thinks, his Scholar"s mind weighing and a.s.sessing. He and Lok-iKol were tools only, something to look through, as a jeweler looks through a lens. Somehow the Jaldean priest, or the thing living inside him, has pushed Gun out of his own head, out of his own body, and that"s why he has no memory of this. He couldn"t remember what he wasn"t in his body to experience. he thinks, his Scholar"s mind weighing and a.s.sessing. He and Lok-iKol were tools only, something to look through, as a jeweler looks through a lens. Somehow the Jaldean priest, or the thing living inside him, has pushed Gun out of his own head, out of his own body, and that"s why he has no memory of this. He couldn"t remember what he wasn"t in his body to experience.
And Gun realizes something else.
This is what happened every time I left the room. All those people I"ve Found for them. This interrogation, this torture, this this is what happened to them. is what happened to them.
At that moment the head on the body he"s not wearing begins to turn to him, and Dhulyn Wolfshead starts to scream, the sound a horrid tearing of the throat. Fear chokes him as he backs away, faster and faster, finally turning and beginning to run as shelves and tables of books and scrolls move to block the aisles between him and the image of the room, shutting it away.
Not that he will be able to forget it now.
At first he"d been relaxed, watching the water as though he were reading, eyes flicking back and forth. As the minutes pa.s.sed, however, he"d become gradually more rigid, and now his grip on the table"s edge showed white knuckles. Mar leaned forward. He seemed to have stopped blinking. She took a firmer hold on his shoulder and shook him. It was only slightly better than pushing at a wall. She reached out and gently touched his face. The skin soft, the muscles under it rigid.
Mar shot a quick glance around. She"d have to hide all her packing before she went to fetch help. Whoever came would be sure to notice it and guess exactly what it meant. Her eyes returned to the Scholar. There was one more thing she could try. She picked up the bowl and dashed the water into Gundaron"s face. He sputtered, blinked, and shook his head.
"I didn"t know," he said, clutching at her arm as he came fully awake. "I swear I didn"t know."
"Of course not," she said. The pressure of his fingers on her forearm made her wince. She gently pulled free and set the bowl back on the tabletop. "I take it you Found what you were looking for?"
He started to nod, turned a pale green, and retched, gagging. Nothing came from his mouth but a thin line of saliva.
Mar ran into the bedroom, s.n.a.t.c.hed up a towel from the washstand and brought it out to him. He disappeared into the towel, and for a moment Mar thought he wasn"t going to come out. When he did, he had rubbed some color into his face, and looked less as though he were about to faint again.
"Don"t tell anyone. Please."