by Brent Weeks
The reports lit up, beacons against a night of ignorance, cairns on a climb with precipices on every side. He squinted until the lights blurred, new lights appearing and old fading away as the reports aged and the map advanced time. It was like clouds passing over a night sky, blotting out the stars and revealing others. But some places stayed ever-black, little bits of the evernight, of eternal ignorance and blindness.
If you screened out a few reports, which could well be there to distract, then . . . the darkness had a shape.
There was an area of coastline almost entirely dark.
“What were those four reports? Here?” he asked Tisis.
She went back to the very beginning of one of her folders and told him some names. They had no meaning to him.
He pursed his lips.
She said, “But that was when I was just getting my networks set up. I didn’t have many sources yet.”
“Whose lands are those?” he asked.
She hadn’t written that down, but she knew this satrapy well. She searched her memory for a few moments. “These ones are Red Leaf lands, a forest and farmland. This is Conal Briar Wood’s estate, and this is old Aoife Bracken’s grazing land, if she’s still alive and it hasn’t shifted to her stepson’s family, uh, they’re . . . Petrakoi? Alexandros Petrakis. Yeah.”
“Shit,” he said. He’d been hoping there was some connection with something, anything.
“Kip, they’re both retainers to the Red Leafs.”
“Shiiit,” Kip said.
He darkened those four lights on the map, and now there was a blank area, east of Ox Ford. “What’s this town near the coast?”
“Azuria, or maybe Apple Grove. Azuria Bay used to be a port until the harbor silted in. The moorage was a bit of a way up the river, can’t remember the name. But it didn’t generate enough revenue for the locals to be able to afford dredging it, and there are a lot of rocks farther out that made captains leery of it in the first place, so it slowly shriveled up and died. Apple Grove is the next village over, maybe a league away?”
Kip chortled.
“Oh ho. Master Danavis would be so disappointed in me. Cruxer, what do you do when your enemy is making a mistake?”
“Don’t interrupt them,” Cruxer said. “You taught us that a long time ago.”
“Tisis, show me the language you’ve worked out with Ambassador Red Leaf.”
He looked it over and clapped his hands. Good play, enemy mine! It almost worked.
“Well, you were wrong, Commander,” Kip said.
“How so?”
“The White King did send his emissary. Ambassador Red Leaf is a traitor.”
“What?!” Tisis asked. “But he gave us everything!”
“Everything to snare us,” Kip said. “Commander, what message do you think those assassins were sending when they failed on purpose?”
Cruxer’s brow furrowed. He still didn’t buy that they had.
“Look,” Kip said. “Let’s say, for argument’s sake, that they intended to fail . . . but didn’t intend to die. What would you take from that?”
“Uh . . . ‘Don’t mess with the Order, or we’ll get you next time’?”
“Right. So where’s the last place you’d go if you didn’t want to run afoul of the Order?”
“Braxos?” Cruxer asked.
“Well, yes, yes . . . But you know, maybe a living city that someone might actually go to.”
Cruxer shrugged. “I dunno. It’s not like the Order publicly lets anyone know where their headquarters are.”
“You’re not really helping me here,” Kip said. “How about if I said I wanted to go to the Chromeria? Would you be more or less afraid of the Order than if we stay here?”
“More, definitely.”
“Thank you!” Kip looked at the treaty. “And this treaty commits me to take all our troops to lift the siege of Green Haven—and go with them personally.”
“But that’s where we want to go,” Cruxer said.
“Right. Or we could stay here. There’s a million reasons to stay here. A million problems to solve. A bandit army, for one. And what were they trying to do—before Daragh the Coward so kindly betrayed Koios and handed them over to us?”
Cruxer said, “Trying to trap us in the city so we couldn’t go help lift the siege?”
“No,” Kip said. “They don’t care if we tried to lift the siege or if we fought here. They’re armor, see?”
“ ‘Armor’?”
“But not just any armor! We thought they were blocking the Great River to keep out new threats from without—reinforcements and supplies and everything else. Now, it does do that, but that’s not the main purpose. The White King hasn’t thrown his whole might at Green Haven. Why not? He split his forces rather than overwhelm the city. Why? Because if he took the city, we would know that we had no chance of taking it back. So we wouldn’t even try. See?
“He didn’t block the river to keep things from coming in. His blockade is to keep something dangerous from going out. Do you see it now? We’re trapped in a closet. Three walls, one door—and he knows what I’m going to do: either stay in here afraid, or rush out the door he shows us. He doesn’t care which!”
“What do you mean?” Cruxer said. “Of course he cares!”
“I’m not saying he doesn’t have preferences. He’d love for us to sit in this city and do nothing so his people can take Green Haven. But even if we save Green Haven—even if we push his forces out of Blood Forest entirely, how can we hold it if he holds the Great River and the rest of the Seven Satrapies?”
“Orholam’s hoary head,” Ben-hadad said. “That harbor. Cruxer, what do we know about the bane? I don’t mean religiously. I mean practically, for war.”
Cruxer scowled. “They lock down drafters of their color.”
“And one other thing,” Kip said.
Ben-hadad looked at him, horror dawning. “Oh no . . . They don’t need a navy, just some supply ships and barges. That’s why a little harbor could work.”
“What? What do you mean?” Tisis asked. “What’s the one other thing, Kip?”
“The bane float,” Kip said. “At least, the one at Ru did. So what if the other can as well?”
“Plenty of lumber around Azuria to help support the heavier ones, if need be,” Ben-hadad said.
“You’re telling me . . .” Cruxer said.
“They’re going to invade the Chromeria,” Ben-hadad said. “Barges for ten or twenty thousand men and drafters and wights and food, and they just . . . cross. The Chromeria is surely using skimmers to scout now, but any skimmers that get close enough to spot the bane would simply die in the water because the drafters powering them couldn’t draft. The Chromeria might only get a couple days’ warning.”
“And it wouldn’t matter anyway,” Kip said. “The Chromeria’s defensive plans rely on drafters to do most of the fighting. If none of the drafters can do anything because the bane neutralize them . . . they’ll panic. Everyone will. With drafters and wights and even five thousand warriors, the White King could take the Jaspers in a day.”
“Well, that’s fuckin’ terrifying,” Big Leo rumbled, coming in the door. “Doesn’t do us much good, though, does it?”
“Sure it does,” Kip said. “If we know what he’s doing, we have a chance to stop him.”
“How?” asked Big Leo.
“Gimme a break, man,” Kip said, “I just figured out his plan. Give me a second or two to come up with ours, maybe?”
“Maybe we go scuttle the bane before they can leave?” Big Leo asked.
“Yes! A surprise attack. Move fast through the forest, descend on him like the raiders we are.” Kip started to warm to the idea. He could stop the White King and not abandon Blood Forest. “We could send along the bulk of the army to relieve the siege at Green Haven, shoot down there by small rivers and streams, maybe reunite with the Night Mares and—”
“Breaker,” Cruxer said. He looked over at Big Leo. “If the
y have the bane . . . then they have the bane. We’re drafters. All of our elite warriors, all the Night Mares—we’re all drafters. The bane can immobilize drafters of their color. If they have all the bane, we’re the last people who could stop them.”
It hit them all like a punch in the gut.
“We haven’t lost. Not yet,” Kip said. “I won’t believe it.”
Tisis came beside him and took his hand.
His heart plunged.
“We haven’t,” Big Leo said. “But maybe the Chromeria has.”
“I guess that makes our decision for us,” Cruxer said. He looked ill. “We can send messengers. Maybe see if they get around this navy to go warn the Chromeria.”
“It won’t make any difference,” Big Leo said, “but we owe it to them to let them know what’s coming. Maybe they can flee.”
“You know damn well they won’t,” Tisis said. “Andross Guile won’t believe someone’s thought of something he hasn’t.”
At the Battle of Ru, everyone in the Seven Satrapies had seen what one bane could do—or could almost do. But they’d killed that one. Maybe that had lulled them all into a false complacency. No one could imagine that anyone could assemble seven bane together without anyone finding out about it. No one could imagine organizing large-scale warfare without drafters at the center of the strategy.
Kip said, “Fine, so let’s say we give up the Chromeria for lost, which means we’re giving up on the Seven Satrapies entirely. Then let’s say we go free Green Haven, and have total success. Then we have . . . what? until next spring at best for the White King to regroup and attack us? We have until next spring to figure out how to win a war against drafters and wights and the bane—without using drafters, not even ourselves?”
He looked from face to face, but they all looked as gray and hopeless as he felt.
“And if the Chromeria falls,” Cruxer said. “All the fleeing drafters are no help to us. We can’t even help us.”
“We’d have to retreat before every battle, leaving the munds to do all the fighting—against wights and drafters. They’ll be slaughtered. We could fight a guerrilla war, but we’d have to be willing to give up every city, every decent-size town, and every person not able to travel fast and live off the land. There’s no endgame there except hoping Koios simply decides it’s not worth it to kill us. Anyone here think Koios will give up before we’re all dead?”
Every face was grim.
Tisis said, “You’ve been awfully quiet, Ben. Any ideas?”
He fidgeted with his flip-up spectacles. He chewed on his lower lip. “Not for an attack, but maybe . . . maybe for a defense?”
Chapter 32
Karris White Oak had never felt so alone. She didn’t know how long she could stand this.
She lifted her head from the prison of her folded arms at some sound from outside her rooms. She’d fallen asleep at her desk after another too-long night of studying and making plans and drinking too much kopi. Karris’s room slave, Aspasia, wasn’t confident enough in her position to make her go to bed. She had merely draped a blanket over her mistress’s shoulders. It had fallen off.
Constantly surrounded by the Blackguards, who had been her family for nearly two decades, now Karris couldn’t let herself trust any of them. She stood slowly, body aching, and wondered if it was only the night-sleeping at her desk, or if she was getting old. She moved toward her bed, not bothering to undress as she glanced at a water clock. It was still two hours until dawn. She could get an hour of real sleep, anyway. Then the day’s duties would accost her once more.
But she had barely slipped under the cold blankets when she heard a voice. The same voice that had wakened her, but now impossibly loud.
“Want to know your problem, Highness?” Samite said.
Let this just be a bad dream, Karris thought.
Highness wasn’t one of her titles. “Not enough sleep,” Karris said, not opening her eyes. “Please go away.”
“You’ve got tits again. Never thought I’d see it.”
“Excuse me?!” She opened her eyes. Samite was not alone. She closed them again. She was in no place to deal with people right now.
Gill Greyling’s usually welcome voice intruded. “She’s trying to be polite. She means you’re getting fat.”
“Ahem,” said Commander Fisk. What the hell. When had he come in? “Excuse Gill. He meant soft.”
“Chubby?” asked Essel.
“Chubby?!” Karris said. “My clothes still fit!” A little less comfortably, maybe, but still.
“Flabby?” asked Buskin.
“Tubby,” suggested Vanzer.
What was this? Had all of them come? It was mortifying. Karris peeked from beneath her pillow. Orholam’s granite belly, there were a dozen of them.
Karris stared daggers at some new kid she didn’t even know. He swallowed. “I, uh, I hadn’t noticed any change, High Lady.”
“Hasn’t been around long enough to know how tough you used to be,” Vanzer said. “Sad.”
“Long time ago,” Essel said.
“Weren’t they calling her the Iron White? More like the Hungry White,” Gill said.
“You can’ t—you can’t talk to me that way,” Karris said plaintively.
“Bet she can’t even do five pull-ups these days,” Samite said.
“Excuse me!?” Karris sat bolt upright. She’d once matched the women’s record for most pull-ups.
Half an hour later, she’d done those five pull-ups. Barely. And knew she was going to pay for it for days. And pay for everything else, too, training with the Blackguards. It was all coming back fast, though, and she realized how much she needed it. The clarity it brought.
In her time as White, she’d come to think of the hours spent training as hours lost—but now, again, she realized she accomplished more in the hours she still had than if she’d only worked.
Now, in the dawn’s light, she sweated at the rear of a line of Blackguards, doing an advanced form. Standing on her left foot, she snapped out a side kick, sharp and crisp, holding her balance as she then spun and slapped her right elbow into her left hand, exactly at the moment fifty other Blackguards did. Kick, land on the opposite foot, kick again.
She wasn’t a mind, housed in a body; she was body and mind united.
Dammit. How had she forgotten?
Her Blackguards loved her. They saw her. She didn’t know exactly what she needed to do, but she knew she needed to fight for them. She needed to be worthy of these magnificent men and women.
The thought carried her through the rest of the morning’s duties. She’d been elevated not to be honored but in order to serve. So this afternoon, she’d buried her reason for walking down this hallway amid a half dozen other tasks that took her to half of the towers of the Chromeria and even belowground, making numerous stops as if they were spur-of-the-moment decisions to check in on old friends, even to minister to an elderly luxiat who’d broken her wrist in a fall. All of it had been to bring her to this door, flanked by the new, short, and burly Blackguard who’d just been assigned to her detail, a kid named Amzîn.
Because she didn’t know him, she didn’t trust him. It had almost made her abandon her plan. To keep secrets, she had to trust no one, had to make today’s stops seem casual. And she couldn’t do that while checking the guard roster or requesting someone she knew.
Still, it put her alone, with a stranger. The young man who was supposed to be protecting her could well be a spy for the Order of the Broken Eye.
She could just go by this door. Pass it off as nothing. A whim.
In one of the stranger perquisites of her office, this little room was technically hers, albeit low in the bowels of the green tower, and thus much too far away from her apartments for her to use frequently as a second office or library. In her time as a Blackguard, she’d learned that previous Whites had sometimes used this second room as a discreet place for assignations. Karris was using it to tuck her own little secret away from
sight.
“Do you want me to open the door, High Mistress?” Amzîn asked.
O sweet Orholam. He was just a kid! Built like a stump and as plain as the day was long, Amzîn had an incongruously high tenor voice. Seemed embarrassed about it, now that Karris had let her surprise at it show.
She owned everything in the room before her, including the person, so she had every right to go straight in.
“Knock, please,” she said instead. It was a weird situation already; she didn’t need to make it weirder.
Amzîn knocked too hard and rattled the door on its hinges. He actually flinched. Apparently didn’t know his own strength.
Karris pretended not to notice.
“Please don’t knock my door down!” a young man shouted from within. “It’s unlocked!”
“Apologies, High Mistress,” Amzîn mumbled.
Karris waved it away.
They stood for a moment longer, then Amzîn suddenly realized that by his training, he was supposed to open the door and go in first to assess the room for threats, and instead he was standing around. He blurted out, “Oh, shit!” and shoved the door open.
It slammed into the slight young man who’d come to open the door, and knocked him head over heels sprawling into the room.
Amzîn froze momentarily, but then checked the room like a professional.
Then he apologized profusely to the young luxiat in golden robes and many chains, who had only risen, wobbly, as far as his knees.
Quentin waved away Amzîn’s proffered hand. “No, no, actually thank you. You’ve saved me all the effort of getting down gracefully in all this regalia.” Facing Karris, Quentin lay himself prostrate, stretching out his hands toward her feet. “High Lady. Gracious One. Beloved Mistress. How may I serve you?”
“Please stand,” Karris said. “I mean, if you can, under the weight of all that.”
The wide Blackguard offered his hand again, but Quentin flinched. “Err, no . . . no, thank you.”
“Amzîn?” Karris asked.
“High Lady?”
“First day solo?”