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assassin’s target right now, so I appreciate having some power behind me at the right moments.” His expression turned deadly serious. “But if you remember, you have yet to give me a hint as to why I’ve been trained, and exactly what my task is, beyond winning this deuced tournament.”
Robert was silent for a few moments. Then he said,
“True. We haven’t told you much, and we shall continue to keep you unaware for as long as it suits our needs. If you were to fall into the wrong hands now . . . there are ways a skilled magician could peel your memories from inside your skull just as you’d core an apple, Tal. Those unconcerned with your well-being could do it in less than a day and leave you drooling outside an inn, and no one would think you other than a drunk with a damaged mind. But before they were done, they’d have extracted every secret from you.’’
Pasko nodded. “Very painful, too, I’ve been told.’’
Robert agreed. “They’d take him somewhere very remote, so the screaming wouldn’t disturb anyone.’’
Tal continued to stretch. “Then I shall count upon my mentors to use their magical arts to keep me safe from such as you describe. But do you know who the assassin was?’’
“Pasko was intent on getting you out of the bathhouse—” Robert nodded toward the other man in approval. “He managed quite a feat, stanching your wounds with towels and getting you to the carriage before anyone could see how much blood was your own and how much was the girl’s.’’
Pasko shrugged. “You’re generous in your praise, Robert. Most people were running the other way, or confused by the screams and shouts. The bathhouse is not well lit, and . . . well, I just knew it would not do well to have people see Tal lying like a piece of bloody meat on the floor.’’
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“You did well.” Robert looked at Tal. “You will know your mission when it is time, my young friend. Rest assured we are happy with your progress so far, and right now your only concern is to win that tournament.”
“Why?”
“When you win, I will tell you why.’’
“And if I don’t win?’’
“Then you’ll never need to know what would come after, will you?’’
Tal’s expression turned to one of dark amusement. “I suppose that is true, Master.’’
“Talon calls me ‘Master.’ Squire Talwin Hawkins can call me Robert.’’
“Yes, Robert,” said Tal. Falling back into his role, he said,
“Pasko, fetch clothing to Remarga’s and have the carriage there at the appropriate time.” Turning to the other man, he asked, “Robert, would you care to join me in the baths?
They are quite refreshing.”
Robert inclined his head. “I think it might be wise if I was with you. The assassin may not have been magically able, but someone got him into that room using a spell, either one of transport or one of invisibility. If something amiss occurs between now and the contest, especially involving the mystic arts, I need to be close at hand.’’
“Do you have any idea as to who the assassin was?” Tal asked a second time.
“A man,” said Pasko. “No one recognized him, and the City Watch carried the body off.’’
“Do we have anyone at the constabulary we know well enough who might inquire more about this malefactor?”
Tal asked.
Pasko said, “You’ve played cards with the Day Constable, Captain Drogan, and could ask without anyone taking too much notice.’’
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“Then I will, tomorrow,” said Tal. Turning to Robert, he said, “Let us take a stroll back to Remarga’s and try to put yesterday’s unpleasantness out of mind.’’
“Let’s make it appear we’ve done so,” said Robert, “but I want you always to remember how close these people came to killing you.’’
“Which people?’’
Robert smiled slightly. “We shall find that out soon enough, I think.’’
The two men left, and Pasko began to gather up clothing for the evening.
__
The morning was overcast, which fit Tal’s mood as he made his way down the narrow streets to the Constable’s office, which was located near the old market at the center of the city. The night before had been uneventful, but he had spent the entire time on edge, anticipating another attack, and found he had not much enjoyed the little things which usually pleased him. The dinner at Dawson’s, a former inn now exclusively serving meals to the nobility and the wealthy who did not wish to dine at home in upstairs rooms converted into private dining salons, had provided its usual excellence, but while the meat was cooked to perfection—the glazes and sauces were equal to any Tal had ever known—and the service was flawless, he and Robert had dined in relative silence. Even the usually fine Kingdom wines imported from Ravensburgh scarcely warranted his comment.
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had nothing to do with the unpleasantness at Remarga’s the day before, and no he was not seriously injured, only looking that way because he was covered in the poor girl’s blood and had struck his head hard upon the tile floor, and, yes, he was mainly lost in contemplation of the coming contest.
He excused himself from the game early, having suffered modest losses, and he and Robert returned to his apartment, where he went to bed early, while Robert and Pasko spoke quietly in the next room for hours.
Now he was seeking answers to a number of difficult questions. He reached the office of the Constable, Dennis Drogan, nephew to a minor palace functionary who had achieved his office through political connection, but who had nevertheless proven to be competent at it.
When he was ushered into Drogan’s office, which consisted of little more than a desk and chair in the corner of the muster room with a wooden screen erected to give the Chief of Constables some privacy, he was greeted with a polite but distant smile. “Tal, I was going to visit you later today.” Drogan was a heavyset man of middle years, with as round a head as Tal had ever seen, which was further emphasized by the way he kept his hair cropped close about his skull, and by shaving clean. He had a blob of a nose which had been broken repeatedly over the years, and half of one ear had been bitten off in a brawl; but his eyes were always focused, never missing much.
“I assume you’d want to talk to me about the murder.’’
The Constable’s eyebrows lifted. “Yes. Who’d want to kill you, Tal?’’
“Me?” Tal said, feigning surprise. “I assumed it was a jealous lover or someone who had it in for the girl, Salmina. She was the one he killed. I think he went after me to stop me from identifying him.’’
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Drogan reflected on this a moment, then said, “Did you ever see the man before?’’
“No. As a matter of fact, I was curious if he was someone known to you.’’
“No, none of my lads has ever seen him before. We searched the body before we dumped it in the lime pit and found nothing that might tell us anything about him, save he must have been recently in from the Isles, since he had some Kingdom silver coins on him.”
Tal sat back as if pondering. “Well, that’s a puzzler, then, isn’t it? Maybe it’s a lover come back from a trip who was unhappy to find Salmina working at the baths?’’
“She’s been w
orking there more than ten years, my friend. If it’s a lover who finds that surprising news, he’s a lad who’s not been around for a bit.’’
“Well, that was the first thought that sprang to my mind,” Tal replied.
“It’s an obvious choice, and that usually proves to be the right choice. But I don’t think so this time. If someone wanted to kill the girl, why not wait until she’s on her way to her crib? No, it’s more likely someone wanted to catch the best swordsman in Roldem on his stomach naked, a room away from his sword. That’s my guess.’’
“But who would want to send an assassin?”
“Who said the lad was an assassin?”
“I’ve never seen him before, Dennis. There may be one or two men who have a grievance against me, but certainly I’d know them by sight. If someone wants me dead, then it follows this man was hired to kill me. Although I don’t think it likely.’
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who might wish me dead, but there’s no one I know who would seriously send someone to do the job.’’
“You know what’s oddest about this?’’
“What?”
“No one saw the man enter the bathhouse. To get to where you were attacked, you have to enter past half a dozen attendants and porters. From the moment the baths open in the morning to the minute the doors are locked at night, there’s no way into that part of the building.”
“Yes, very odd, isn’t it?’’
“You have any idea how he could have appeared there, as if by magic?’’
Tal leaned back, with a rueful smile. “Magic? That would make things far more . . . odd, wouldn’t it?’’
“It would mean that if someone wanted you dead, they were willing to pay a great deal to have the deed done. Not only paying someone to wield the blade, but also paying someone else with the magical ability to get him into the building unseen.’’
“An invisibility spell?’’
“Something like that. My uncle has a friend who knows a magician. I asked that fellow some questions, and he says that’s the most likely spell to have been used. To send the man into the room from another place . . . that’s very difficult, and only a few magicians could manage it.”
Tal thought it best not to mention he knew at least three or four who could achieve that result. Leave it for the Constable to discover such facts for himself.
“So, no one knows anything about this man?’’
“No, sorry to say.’’
“So, you can’t even be certain which of us was the intended victim?’’
“No, we can’t. I just have a problem with all this bother over a woman who’s little more than a common whore.’’
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Tal stiffened. “Salmina was never common.’’
“So I’ve heard,” said Dennis.
Tal stood. “Well, I’ll not keep you from your duties. If you find out anything else, please let me know.’’
“Rest assured, I will.’’
They shook hands, and Tal left the office and headed back toward his quarters. He was frustrated that no information about the assassin was forthcoming, even though he had not really expected it to be.
Still, he had to turn his mind away from the imponder-ables of life and turn his attention full on the tournament.
It was less than two weeks away, and if he was to win, he could not be distracted further.
__
The contest drew nearer, and Tal found his anxiety increasing. No matter how much he employed the mind-calming exercises Magnus, Nakor, and Robert had taught him, no matter how much he attempted to divert himself from thinking about the tournament with dice, cards, or lovely company, he found himself constantly haunted by thoughts of the coming contest.
Not even an invitation to the palace, two nights before the tournament was to commence, eased his fixation. He killed hours at a tailor, having the latest in court fashions cut and sewn to fit. It was a gaudy bit of foppery, consisting of a pair of tight trousers, tucked into polished black boots that were absolutely useless for anything practical. They were too low at the calf for riding—the top of the boot would grind the calf to blisters in an hour—and too tall to wear on the march. But they had lovely silver buckles and a red stripe of dyed leather down the side.The trousers were tight to the point of being constricting, but the tailor 9261.01 3/13/03 12:53 PM Page 272
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assured him this was the current fashion at court. He forwent the codpiece that was also said to be the rage.
There were things he found too silly to bear, even for the sake of court fashion. The shirt was a work of frippery, being open at the neck and gathered below the breastbone by a series of pearl buttons, with a lace collar and more lace at the sleeves. The jacket was completely decorative—a gold-thread-on-red-brocade monstrosity, designed to be worn on the left arm only, hanging by a golden cord across the right, with pearls sewn at the collar and cuffs. The crowning glory was a hat, a broad-brimmed thing of snow-white felted fur, with a handcrafted silver-wire band, in which a dyed plume had been placed. Tal’s plume was black, so the contrast was dramatic. The tailor assured him the outfit was as fine as any that would be worn at court, but Tal could not help but feel someone had put the man up to this, so that his arrival for his first appearance at court would be greeted with laughter and derision.
But as his carriage arrived at the palace gate on the night of the gala, he could see other young men of the city dressed in equally absurd rigs. He remembered with nostalgia the simple skins and fur jackets his family had worn in the mountains in the winter and going almost naked during the summer heat. As he mounted the steps to the palace, Tal decided that fashion was a conspiracy created by tailors to bilk the nobility out of excess gold. He knew from what he had heard at various social gatherings he had attended in Salador and Roldem that by this time next year everything he wore would be counted out of style, and new fashions would be all the rage.
Tal handed his invitation to the squire responsible for ensuring no uninvited guests appeared in the King’s court.
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looked quite capable of repelling an invasion, let alone removing an unwanted guest. Then a page was assigned to escort him to the main hall. As they walked, the page said,
“Sir, tonight the King has decreed there to be no formal seating. Everyone will avail themselves of a buffet.’’
Talon didn’t know the word and had to search his memory for it. “Boo-fay,” he said softly. The boy motioned to the long tables at the side of the hall, heavily burdened with food, and servants moving rapidly through the hall with pitchers of ale and wine, filling cups at request.
Everywhere he looked he saw people in colors of riotous hue engaged in conversation, some holding a plate with one hand and eating with the other.
Then it came to him, buffet was a Kingdom word from the Bas-Tyran dialect. And it meant to eat from an open table without sitting. Sometimes you only think you can speak a language, Tal reminded himself silently.
He moved through the crowd, noticing half a dozen or so familiar faces, and those he smiled and bowed to as he made his way to the tables of food. Everything he could imagine dining on was laid out there, from smoked game birds and seasoned eggs to vegetables prepared in every conceivable fashion, from fresh out of the kettle to pickled and spiced, to cheeses and fruits—some expens
ively out of season—and sweets. He picked up a plate and found it to be lighter than he had expected, and a quick inspection showed him it was some sort of hard ceramic, rather than stone or metal. It had been hand-painted with the royal crest of Roldem, a dolphin leaping from a wave over a star.
It was quite impressive.
A voice at his right said, “Yes, it is impressive, isn’t it?’’
Tal turned and saw Quincy de Castle, a merchant from Bas-Tyra with whom he had gambled several times.
“Reading minds?” he asked with a smile.
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“No,” answered the merchant. “If I could, I wouldn’t have lost as much money to you at cards as I have, Tal. No, I saw you admiring the plate and guessed your reaction.”
“It is quite impressive,” Tal repeated.
“Well, as they say, ‘it’s good to be king.’ It allows one to indulge oneself in all manner of niceties.”
At that moment the Master of Ceremonies struck the floor with the iron-shod heel of his staff of office. “My lords, ladies and gentlemen, the King!’’
All eyes turned to the archway that led from the royal apartments, and there, sweeping into the hall, was King Carol the Sixth. A middle-aged man who still looked as fit as he had when twenty-five, the King escorted a plump but pleasant-looking woman wearing a small crown. “The Queen and the Royal Family!” announced the Master of Ceremonies.
Everyone bowed, and the King said, “It is our pleasure that you return to the festivities. We are informal tonight!’’
A light round of applause greeted this message, and everyone attempted to return to their previous activities.
Tal said to Quincy, “Have you attended one of these before?’’
“Yes, but not this sort of informal gathering. I hear that so many are in attendance for the tournament that there aren’t enough chairs in the palace to enable everyone to sit down, even if there was a table big enough to accommodate everyone. So, instead we have this buffet, and one in the next hall, and the hall beyond that.’’
Tal nodded. “I find myself feeling far less honored by my invitation than I did a minute ago, friend Quincy.’’
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