by Ginn Hale
“Oh, shut up!” Genimo snarled at Fedeles.
“No!” Fedeles began a panicked chant. “No, no, no, no...”
Seeming to catch Fedeles’ agitation, the horses stamped the ground, releasing short nervous snorts.
“No, no, no, no…” Fedeles seemed hardly aware of Kiram. He clenched his eyes shut as if focusing all his attention on just repeating his refusal.
“Shut the fuck up!” Genimo snapped. “Shut up!”
“Calm down,” Kiram told Genimo. “You’re only making him worse—”
“You never speak to me in that tone, heathen!” Genimo lashed his black riding crop across Kiram’s cheek.
The shock of being struck stunned Kiram more than the explosion of pain. He barely registered the wet heat of his own blood spilling down his jaw.
Never in his life had anyone treated Kiram with such disrespect. Pain and outrage flooded him. He jerked his hand free from Fedeles’ grip and slapped Genimo’s face.
“Khivash,” Kiram spat.
The blow resounded with less brutality than Kiram would have liked, but it took Genimo off guard. He staggered back half a step. Then he launched himself at Kiram. His first punch forced the air out of Kiram’s lungs and threw him back against the wall.
Fedeles wailed, “Lunaluz! Lunaluz!”
Kiram tried to regain his balance but Genimo was already up against him, pinning him against the wall. In desperation Kiram sank his teeth into Genimo’s forearm.
“Whore!” Genimo drove his knee into Kiram’s groin. Blinding, nauseating pain shot through him. His knees buckled and he collapsed to the ground.
“You piece of shit,” Genimo snarled. “How dare you lay your filthy, heathen hands on me?”
Genimo hauled Kiram up by his hair and punched him again, this time in the face. White flashes exploded through Kiram’s vision. The sickening hot, wet sensation of blood gushed from his nose and poured over his lips. He choked as blood ran down the back of his throat. He could hardly think for the pain.
“God, you’re pathetic.” Genimo smirked at Kiram. “You’re a worm. A piece of shit—”
Suddenly a greenish mass of horse dung smacked into the side of Genimo’s head. His face flushed scarlet with rage and he released his hold on Kiram to turn back to Fedeles. Kiram slid down the wall to the ground. Beside Fedeles stood Javier, hefting a muck shovel in one hand.
“No, Genimo, what is clinging to your hair is a piece of shit.” Javier’s tone was light, and his expression almost friendly as he strode closer. “What you had the poor sense to toss around just now is something entirely different.”
Genimo’s fury seemed to dissolve into a stunned fear. He backed away.
“If you run,” Javier said, “I’ll bring the white hell out to hunt you. So I wouldn’t if I were you.”
Genimo froze. Javier glanced to Kiram and for a moment his playful smile disappeared. Then he turned his attention back to Genimo.
“You ought to ask before playing with my things.” Javier wiped the back of the filthy shovel across Genimo’s chest. “And if you break something of mine, you know I’m going to be annoyed, don’t you?”
“Scholar Donamillo sent me to fetch Fedeles for his treatment and—” A terrified tremor ran through Genimo’s voice.
“Not what I want to hear.” Javier jabbed the shovel into Genimo’s chest.
“I…I…” Genimo’s face was bloodlessly pale. His eyes were so wide that Kiram thought that he could see white all the way around Genimo’s black, gaping pupils.
Kiram suddenly remembered his uncle describing the men he had treated during the bread riots. Many had died in states of terrified shock. His uncle always said that they had rabbit eyes. Kiram thought he knew what his uncle had meant now.
“I’m sorry, Javier.” Genimo swayed on his feet and then sank to his knees.
“You’re sorry?” The sadistic amusement in Javier’s voice disturbed Kiram, and yet there was a part of him that was deeply pleased to see Genimo on his knees and covered in excrement. “I can’t imagine what you could be sorry for. Except that I caught you.”
“Please…Javier, I swear I won’t do it again.”
“You certainly won’t.” Javier gave a hard laugh. “In fact you may not do anything ever again.”
Javier held his left hand out over Genimo’s head. White sparks flickered between his fingers.
Kiram caught the unmistakable scent of human urine and realized that Genimo had pissed himself.
“Don’t kill me,” Genimo sobbed.
Javier flicked his fingers across Genimo’s forehead. The moment Javier touched Genimo’s skin a tiny white bolt burst up from his hand and drove into Genimo’s skull. Genimo jerked backwards and then collapsed to the ground.
Kiram stared at Genimo’s prone body in horror. He felt suddenly sick and he wasn’t sure if it was from the throbbing pain deep in his groin or from the sight of such an offhanded murder.
Javier knelt down beside Genimo and lifted his head off the floor slightly. Genimo’s neck sagged against Javier’s hands like a dead snake.
“You killed him,” Kiram whispered.
“Killed him?” Javier glanced up to Kiram and shook his head. “How dramatic you are.”
Javier bowed his head close to Genimo’s. Small white sparks skipped across Javier’s hands and jumped through Genimo’s hair. “Sleep. Dream of rats devouring your intestines.” Then he lowered Genimo’s head almost gently back to the stable floor.
Javier stood and turned back to the door of Firaj’s stall.
“Fedeles, come out.” Javier’s tone was neither as amused nor as cruel as it had been with Genimo. He sounded a little exasperated.
“No,” Fedeles replied from behind the door.
“I’m not going to take you to your treatment. Kiram is hurt and you promised to look after him, didn’t you?”
“Yes.” Fedeles sounded sulky.
“Come on, then,” Javier said. “Help us get back to our room.
Chapter Five
Fedeles rushed ahead of them, opening doors and singing the names of horses triumphantly.
When they reached their room, Fedeles lingered outside the open door and then at last scampered away.
“Is he going to be all right?” Kiram asked as Javier lowered him to his own bed.
“Fedeles? He’ll be fine. He’s got his room all to himself tonight and he’s gotten out of his treatments for another day.”
“But I think something’s wrong.” It hurt his entire face to speak. The gash in his cheek throbbed and his head ached. “This afternoon he asked me to help him.”
“He gets that way when he misses his treatments. He hates them, but if he goes more than a month between treatments he becomes agitated and then delusional. He starts seeing things and hearing things that aren’t there.”
“He said something about someone hurting Firaj, I think.” The earlier conversation seemed muddled and confused as he tried to recall it. Kiram sagged back into his mattress. A dizzy, whirling sensation engulfed him each time he closed his eyes.
“Here.” Javier lifted his head and propped a pillow under him. His hands felt warm. “Don’t fall asleep just yet, all right?”
“Why not?”
“Well, I’ve got you talking to me for the first time in two weeks. I’d rather it not end too quickly.” Javier left briefly, then returned to Kiram’s bedside with the basin of water and a washcloth. “You really don’t know the first thing about fighting, do you?”
“I know that a quick fist is the first sign of a slow wit.”
This elicited a laugh from Javier. Very gently, he washed the blood from Kiram’s nose and mouth. Kiram hissed in pain as Javier began to clean the cut across his left cheek.
Javier leaned closer, examining the wound. “This is really deep. Did he catch you with his signet ring?”
Kiram clenched his teeth as Javier continued to clean the cut. “He used his riding crop.”
“H
e cropped you? God, he’s a shit.” Javier rinsed the blood out of the washcloth. “Maybe I should have killed him after all.”
“I’m glad you didn’t.”
“Really?” Javier pressed the damp washcloth lightly against Kiram’s cheek.
“Murder is a profane act.” Kiram found it distracting to have Javier so near him. His attention kept straying to the faint shadow of stubble along Javier’s jaw and the woody scent of his skin. “It would have injured your soul to kill him when he begged you for mercy.”
“I have no soul to injure,” Javier replied easily.
“Yes you do.” Kiram couldn’t help his annoyance. He was so tired of way Cadeleonian beliefs stripped the soul from anyone or anything they pleased. “Every living thing has a soul. Trees, birds, dogs, cats. Even demons—and I don’t believe that you are one—but even if you were, you would still have a soul. You aren’t a piece of furniture or a rock, you’re just an egotist and maybe a bit of a flirt—I haven’t decided yet. But you definitely have a soul.”
“I’m not sure if I should be offended or comforted by that pronouncement of yours.”
“You should just believe me,” Kiram said and he realized that the pain was making him short tempered. Still, he added, “I’m sorry, but in this matter your religion is simply wrong.”
“And you say I’m an egotist.” Javier’s smile widened. It wasn’t the same smile that Kiram had seen him give Genimo in the stable. There was nothing sharp or cruel about his countenance now. His touch was gentle, almost caressing.
“You’ll have a scar from this, I think.” Javier poured salve from a glass jar and worked it between his fingers.
“It won’t be my first.” Kiram tried to sound casual about it. His mother was going to be horrified when she saw it. “I have another scar.”
“One other?” Carefully Javier spread the warmed salve over Kiram’s wounded cheek. It smelled astringent but dulled the pain almost immediately. For an instant Kiram wondered at the lucky coincidence that Javier would have such a salve ready at hand. Then he remembered the countless nicks and grazes that had scored Javier’s pale body, the raw red scar that ran up his wrist, and the huge curling crest burned into his right shoulder. Obviously the life he led required such a salve, if not something much stronger.
“I’m a scholar from a good home,” Kiram responded. “How many scars could I possibly have gotten?”
“Well, one obviously.” Javier glanced over Kiram’s body curiously. “Somewhere.”
“Here.” Kiram offered his right hand for Javier’s inspection. Javier gently spread Kiram’s fingers apart then explored the tender expanses of his palm and wrist. The sensation made Kiram’s entire body feel suddenly too warm.
“Are you talking about this little white line along the inside of your thumb?”
“Yes. I got it making candy with my mother. I cut my thumb while snipping taffy.” Kiram felt a little embarrassed, but he had only been six years old.
“And that’s really the only other scar you have?” Javier pushed the sleeve of Kiram’s shirt up, inspecting the dark skin of his arm.
“I wouldn’t have dared to get another,” Kiram replied, but he was only half thinking about the conversation. “My mother made such a huge scene of just this one.”
Javier seemed to come to some decision. “You should get out of this shirt. There’s blood all down the front.”
Kiram didn’t move to stop Javier as he began unbuttoning his shirt.
“Your mother would hate to see this, I imagine.” Javier paused, his hand resting over the last three buttons of Kiram’s shirt, radiating warmth across Kiram’s stomach. “All those letters you’ve been writing, they’re to her, aren’t they?”
Kiram nodded. Not only had the pain in his cheek faded but also he felt strangely languid. He wondered what had been in the salve that Javier had treated him with.
“And the rest of your family?” Javier looked almost troubled. “You’re close with them?”
“Very. The letters are for the whole family,” Kiram said, “but Mother loves to read them aloud. Whenever my brother Majdi writes she reads his letters at the evening meal and asks what people would like her to write back. Now I guess she’s reading my letters, though I still haven’t received a response.”
As he spoke Kiram could see a kind of uneasiness come over Javier. He withdrew his hand from Kiram’s stomach and straightened as if to rise from the bedside.
“What about your family?” Kiram grasped desperately for anything to say, just to keep Javier there beside him.
“Fedeles is all of the family I have left. There’s Fedeles’ father, but he isn’t from the Tornesal bloodline.”
“Just Fedeles?” Kiram couldn’t imagine having only one cousin. He had over a dozen.
“We’re a cursed lineage. Of course we’ve had our fair share of drunken idiots who rode off cliffs in the night as well. It certainly saves me the trouble of purchasing too many New Year gifts.”
“I’m sorry.” Kiram couldn’t think of anything else to say. The thought of being so alone seemed heartbreaking to him.
Javier gave a flinty laugh.
“Be sorry for Fedeles if you must, but don’t waste your pity on my account.” Javier strode back to his bed and began pulling off his boots. “I control the white hell and rule Rauma. It’s all worked out beautifully for me.”
“Do you miss them?” Kiram asked.
“No,” Javier replied but Kiram didn’t believe him. The answer was too fast and too flat.
Javier set his boots aside and glanced back to Kiram. “Do you think you might be able to walk yet?”
“I don’t know.” The change of subject took Kiram a little off guard but he respected it.
“You should probably give it a try. See if you can make it down the hall to the toilet before the night warden gets up to our floor. It’s going to hurt like hell when you first try to piss but do it anyway.” Javier busied himself with the silver buttons of his jacket. “If there’s blood, call me right away. I’ll take you down to Scholar Donamillo and he’ll treat you.”
Kiram made the trip to the toilet and was relieved to discover his body still functioned properly. When he returned to the room, he found Javier had already washed and gone to bed. Only one oil lamp remained lighted. Kiram washed himself quickly and returned to his own bed.
“Good night,” Kiram whispered to Javier.
“Good night,” Javier replied softly. After a moment of silence he added, “Thank you for looking after Fedeles.”
“It wasn’t—” Kiram couldn’t say that it wasn’t any trouble. It had been. It had gotten him in the first fight of his life, but oddly he didn’t regret it.
“It’s just what friends do for each other,” Kiram said at last.
“I suppose it is.”
Kiram waited for him to add something more but there was only silence and the darkness of the night.
Chapter Six
The next morning Kiram felt better and most of the swelling in his nose and groin had diminished. Still, Genimo’s crop had more than left a mark. Even in the crowded din of the dining hall other students gawked as Kiram passed by. Several snickered behind his back but none of the other students met Kiram’s gaze directly. And only one of them kicked his leg out to trip him as he walked past.
He took his usual seat between Fedeles and Nestor.
Nestor only glanced up over the rims of his delicate glasses and then returned his attention to the inky figures on the page in front of him. “You look awful.”
“I know.” Kiram’s entire face ached as he moved his mouth. The gash across his cheek had closed to a thick scab, while his upper lip was bruised to a dark purple and swollen.
Once bowls of morning porridge and pots of bitterly over-brewed tea were distributed, Kiram attempted to engage breakfast. It hurt to open his mouth wide and he wasn’t sure that this sticky, beige mass was worth the effort but he soon discovered that hunger mitigated di
scomfort. He swallowed a spoonful of the bland porridge. Both Nestor and Fedeles had already finished their servings.
Fedeles flipped through the yellowed pages of a tattered book. The black-printed letters were overwritten with hundreds of scrawling notes and weird little symbols. Fedeles turned the book upside down and then right side up again. His hair was a wild tangle and his clothes looked unkempt as always, but Kiram thought he seemed more clear-eyed and aware of his surroundings than usual. He met Kiram’s gaze, and for the first time he didn’t seem to be looking through a dreamy haze.
“Eat up,” Fedeles whispered.
Nestor sketched absentmindedly. The figures filling his sheet of parchment trailed off into loops of ink and then were engulfed in newer drawings. All around them students only half dressed in their blue linen uniforms chatted and laughed. Some of them exchanged class notes while others tossed banned dice. Their voices formed waves of noise, which crashed through the silence of Kiram’s two companions.
“Is something wrong, Nestor?” Kiram asked at last.
“You shouldn’t have put up such a fight,” Nestor whispered. “Especially not against Upperclassman Javier. He could have really hurt you. Ladislo says that if you just close your eyes and take it, it’s not so bad. Fighting won’t do you any good.”
“What are you talking about?” Kiram asked.
Nestor’s pale face flushed deep red.
“Ladislo gets bent because he’s little,” Fedeles murmured. “A little pony. Pretty little pony.”
“You know, they say that if your upperclassman gets bloody-minded and horny, there isn’t much you can do. It’s best not to put up a fight. Unless you have an older brother or something.” Nestor scowled at his empty porridge bowl. “Upperclassman Atreau leaves me alone but I’m not…pretty like you.”
“I’m not pretty.”
“Yes, you are,” Nestor cut him off. “There’s no point arguing about it. Obviously you’re too pretty for Javier to resist.”