Northlight

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Northlight Page 16

by Wheeler, Deborah


  He forced himself to lie still. If he moved, if he seemed to be anything but sound asleep, if he even breathed too hard, he might alert the men and Kardith’s advantage would be gone.

  Seconds stretched by, marked only by the cadence of his heart.

  This can’t be happening. But it was happening. It was happening to him as he lay alone in the moonlight.

  Out of the corner of his eye, Terricel caught a shadowy figure as it breached the perimeter of the camp. He held his breath. Unlike at the funeral riot, when things had happened so fast he didn’t see them until they were over, every movement seemed exquisitely prolonged.

  The man crept toward Kardith’s bedroll, closer and closer to where she should have been sleeping. The faintest hairline of light glinted on the edge of his knife.

  As lithe as one of the great hunting cats of the eastern steppe, Kardith spiraled up from the earth behind him. Her long-knife curved through the air to slash noiselessly through the tendons behind his knees.

  The man screamed and arched backward through the chill night air. Moonlight flashed on the flat of Kardith’s blade. She stepped in and thrust upward, toward his heart, in a single swift motion. His scream ended abruptly, a muted gurgle and then silence. He toppled like an axed tree with the long-knife buried in his chest.

  Kardith made no move to recover her knife. Instead, she melted back into the shadows. No whisper of breath or rustle of clothing came from the empty space where she’d been. One of the horses whickered, a thin anxious sound, and swished its tail.

  Where the hell was the other man? Terricel dared to lift his head again. Suddenly he heard the whisper of a knife as it pierced the air, and then a thump directly above him. An inert body landed flat across his chest.

  For a single horrified moment, he couldn’t breathe, couldn’t move, couldn’t think. He opened his mouth and drew in the metallic reek of fresh blood. Images flooded through his mind — Pateros, Gaylinn, the gray mare...

  He clawed at the weight on his chest. He tried to scream, but nothing came out.

  Then the suffocating weight was gone and Kardith was hauling the dead man by the legs toward the fire pit.

  Terricel rolled on his side, bringing up his knees in a reflexive fetal curve. He gulped ice-edged air through chattering teeth. He wanted to crawl off into the darkness and empty his stomach, but he was too dizzy to sit up. His hands felt wet and sticky. He was glad he couldn’t see them.

  “It’s the boy we’re after...”

  The whispered words echoed through his bones. He could have been lying beside the banked embers while his life’s blood thickened and froze.

  He had to make himself move, no matter how he felt. Throat burning, he pushed himself into a sitting position. He clamped his teeth together and breathed hard through his nose. The whirling in his stomach surged and subsided. He dared to look up. Beside the fire, Kardith had pulled her long-knife from the first corpse and was wiping it clean on his shirt.

  “I owe you my life,” he said shakily.

  “Nothing but a pair of Mother-damned amateurs, if you ask me,” she remarked over her shoulder. “Good enough in the city, maybe, but not trained for the woods and too cock-sure stupid to know the difference.”

  “But there were two of them and you’re only one. What if they’d been better — or faster — or smarter? What if you’d needed help?”

  Kardith walked over to him and crouched down, her expression unreadable. That same quality of deadly stillness clung to her like an invisible mantle. “You’re pissed because I had to take them out,” she said. “Because you couldn’t have fought them alone.”

  “Not pissed. Scared. There wasn’t a damned thing I could have done. I don’t even own a fighting knife.”

  She stood up and slipped the long-knife back into its sheath. “Now you’ll be wanting me to give you one.”

  “It would do for a start.”

  “It would do to get you killed! You should never carry a weapon — any weapon — you don’t know how to use. When you pull a knife in a fight, you up the stakes. Get yourself slashed up good instead of a few bruises. Don’t go playing hero if you want to leave the Ridge alive.”

  “Kardith.” It was the first time he’d used her name, and he felt her flinch. “It was me they were after. I didn’t imagine it.”

  Silence, but no argument. Then she nodded and asked, “Why?”

  “I don’t know. I thought — when you spotted the man on the black horse — it could have been someone my mother sent, someone after you, anyone. I thought maybe you were wrong.” He jabbed a bloodstained finger toward the dead man. “If I’d said something then, this wouldn’t have happened.”

  “You’re too shook to think straight,” she snapped, then paused. “Look, Terris, it’s no good guessing. You get the fire back up and we’ll search these two jackals before they stiffen. Maybe we’ll find something useful, maybe not — we won’t know ’til we look.”

  Terricel turned his attention to the banked coals with a sense of perverse, almost absurd relief. He couldn’t imagine why he’d be a target, so far from Laureal City and with any passing importance he might have derived from being Esmelda’s adjutant gone. But Kardith was also right — it was obvious now that he was beginning to think clearly again — what they needed now was more information. He didn’t think assassins would be stupid enough to carry much in the way of evidence, but there might be something they’d thought of no importance, perhaps some personal souvenir. ..

  A spark lay deep within in the embers and he didn’t have to restart the fire from nothing, which was fortunate because his hands were shaking badly. By the time he’d coaxed it high enough to see by, Kardith had laid the two bodies out and was arranging their possessions in an orderly row.

  “No papers, but that’s to be expected,” she commented. “Two knives each, pretty decent. And this.” She held up a slender parcel the length of her forearm.

  It was wrapped — not sheathed like an ordinary dagger, but carefully wrapped in layers of supple leather. It was never intended for use in a fight. Yet it had a purpose...

  “It’s the boy we’re after.”

  Without a word, Terricel took it from her. As soon as he touched it, his stomach gave a lurch. His heart slowed, beat by chilling beat, and his hands turned as steady as marble. Hardly breathing, he untied the corded lacings and lifted the dagger to the flames. With his eyes, he traced the slender blade from the heavily ornamented bone hilt to the pointed tip.

  He knew what it was, what it was for, what it meant. He’d felt it in the pit of his belly the moment he touched the filthy thing.

  Why had he thought he was of no importance, a mere shadow of his mother, or that he could just disappear? Why had he thought he could go running after his Ranger sister and in the process find his own life? Everything was tied to everything — Esmelda, Montborne, Pateros, the Rangers, the north. He was part of it all and had been from the moment of his birth.

  A shiver went through him. Maybe the fight in The Elk Pass, the one in which he’d almost been knifed, had been no accident but a deliberate attack, a prelude to this one.

  “What’s the matter?” Kardith said.

  He shook himself back to the present. The carved bone gleamed in the firelight. “Do you know what this is?” he asked.

  “It looks like norther work. But I couldn’t swear...I’ve seen more of their weapons than I ever wanted to, but this one...” She took it from him, weighed it in her hand, ran her fingertips over the decorative motifs. “I don’t understand. No norther would ever use this.”

  “Why not?” he asked, startled.

  She frowned and rocked back on her heels. The flames burnished her hair and skin to the color of her eyes, turning her into a woman of gold, but her voice was human and troubled. “Northers may look the same when they’re raiding Laurea, but in their own country they’re as territorial as they come, and they don’t mix clan signs. This curlicue on the tang is Cassian, but then it t
urns into a stylized Huldite dragon. What norther would carry such a thing? It’d be like shouting ‘I’m a traitor’ to anyone he met.”

  As Terricel listened, each word reverberated through him like the tolling of the Laurean river bells. “There’s more,” he said, and told her.

  Kardith touched the tiny pin with her fingertips. A section of ornamented metal fell away, disclosing the reservoir of liquid. She whistled in astonishment.

  “Neuropoison,” he said. “Designed to flow down a channel in the blade. You wouldn’t have to stab deep or hit a vital organ. Just a scratch would do it.”

  “How the hell do you know?” Kardith’s voice shook. “You only held it a moment, and you don’t even know which end to hold a knife by!”

  “That...thing is an exact duplicate of the dagger used to kill Pateros.”

  She stared at him, mouth open, golden eyes wide.

  “I saw the first dagger up close,” he said. “In Orelia’s office. Esme was part of the investigation and I went along as her adjutant. I may not know the first thing about knife fighting, but I know what I saw. They’re the same.”

  “But northers don’t use poison.” She sounded puzzled. “They do plenty of other nasty things — barbed spearpoints, hooked knives — but never poison. They would think it shames their manhood.”

  “Which means the northers didn’t kill Pateros, any more than they came after me.” His next words were the same Esmelda had used. “Somebody wanted us to think they did.”

  “Talk sense!”

  “This dagger and the one that was used in the assassination are identical, and they’re not norther. Both the poison and the mixed decorations prove that. I couldn’t understand how the northers could do such fine smithing, but now it all makes sense.”

  As he spoke, Terricel gestured with his hands as if he were marking an unbroken chain of logic, building his argument point by point. The blood had dried, leaving a mottled pattern like a scholar’s age marks. Like Wittnower’s hands, which he’d thought one day would be his own.

  “No one except a Ranger who’d actually fought the northers would recognize the designs,” he continued grimly, “and the Rangers are pretty well tied down. But why? Who stands the most to gain by everyone thinking the northers are behind the assassination? Who stands the most to gain if we go to war...?”

  Kardith drew in her breath like a snake’s warning hiss. “Montborne? The general? He’s not been an easy commander, that’s sure, but — ”

  “Montborne makes no secret that he wants to march up there and beat the northers to rubble! He’s fought with everyone about it — Pateros, the gaea-priests, Esme. They all had their different reasons for saying no to him. So he had to get Pateros out the way and at the same time stir up feeling against the northers.”

  Esme said he was a destabilizing force for all of Harth, not just Laurea. That means there was something besides the risk of war. But he had no time now to consider this further.

  “It also explains those orders. They never made sense, not to any of us.” Kardith ran her hands over her face. She sounded shakier than Terricel had ever heard her. “He couldn’t risk...he wanted us to pull back so the northers’d think we’d gone soft and attack. Then he’d have another war, sure.”

  “Esme still stands in his way,” Terricel said unsteadily. He tried to set things up to replace her with me, but I wouldn’t go along with it. Then I conveniently left the scene and headed north with only one Ranger for company...

  “I don’t know what he was trying to do by killing me,” he continued, “threatening her she’d be the next or trying to undermine her, make her look like a crazy grieving mother, something like that, or maybe simply not tough enough to stand up to the northers.”

  “Esmelda, not tough enough?” Kardith snorted. “That old dragon? Are you concussed or just plain dumb?”

  The firelight covered Terricel’s flush. “Yeah, that was a pretty stupid idea, wasn’t it?” He barked out a short, bitter laugh. “You’re right, there just isn’t any way he could get at her through me. Not Esme. If she wouldn’t lift a finger to help Avi when she’s alive, she won’t do a damned thing about me once I’m dead. Nor can she be discredited, not easily, not any more than Montborne himself can. If he tries, it could just as well backfire and put her in the Guardian’s seat. They’re the two great saviors of Laurea — Esme from the epidemic and Montborne at Brassaford.”

  Brassaford... Maybe it wasn’t Esme that Montborne was trying to get at all. Maybe he picked me because as her son, my murder would be highly visible, even out here....

  “You fought at Brassaford, didn’t you?” he asked Kardith, and then rushed on before she could answer. “The Rangers fought at Brassaford. People talk all the time about it — how Montborne would never have stopped the northers without you. And you know the northers better than anyone...”

  Kardith laid the stiletto-dagger on its leather wrappings. “Your body was supposed to be found with this. Probably someplace closer in, where news’d spread real fast. People would think it was northers who did it.”

  “Not just my body,” he said grimly. “Yours, too. And they’d wonder how come the son of Esmelda wasn’t safe within our own borders, even with you to protect me. They’d think the Rangers had gone soft or weren’t so great to begin with. And if the northers did attack because you’d been pulled back, that would only prove it.”

  “First Pateros and then you — it would make the northers look damned good. Get people so scared, they’d say Yes to anything — give Montborne whatever he wants. Esmelda could get herself named the next Mother-damned Guardian and she still couldn’t stop him.”

  “He wasn’t counting on you.”

  “Well, I didn’t learn knives in the Rangers, that’s sure.” She shrugged and gestured toward the bodies. “These two’ll never tell him it didn’t work, especially if nobody finds them. Honest thieves I’d cairn, but these — we’ll leave their bodies for the wolves. Then what?”

  I should take the dagger and ride back to Laureal City, Terricel thought reluctantly. Give Esme the evidence to accuse Montborne publically, demand justice, open everything up to investigation.

  But he had no real proof Montborne was behind the attempt. All he had was the dagger, his testimony and a lot of supposition. Not nearly enough to convict, even though Esmelda would undoubtedly find some devious way to use them.

  Terricel’s thoughts raced on rebelliously. Esmelda didn’t need him. With her network of secret informers, she’d probably hear about the attempt before Montborne knew it had failed. But once Terricel opened his mouth, Montborne would be warned. On the other hand, as long as there was no body with a dagger in it for him to use, as long as the thugs stayed gone with no trace as to what happened, Montborne would wait and hesitate.

  Restless, Terricel got to his feet and strode to the edge of the camp, staring into the darkness as if he might find answers there. Going back means forgetting about Avi and handing myself over to be Esme’s pawn all over again. Just like the ‘no show’ on my proposal — everything I’ve done on my own will be for nothing.

  But what if she needed him and the information only he could give her? What if he were abandoning her just when he might make a difference?

  The truth...what was the truth? That he was behaving like a spoiled child deprived of his holiday outing? That he simply didn’t want to go back? Or that he could not abandon his search...that there was more at stake here than just a single Ranger, no matter what she meant to him?

  And how did he know with such certainty that there was more at stake?

  “You may be feeling pretty puny right now,” Etch had said to him. “But what you’ve got to do, it’s not a puny thing.”

  Something stirred deep within him, pushing upward through the layers of his mind like a leviathan surfacing on the western seas. No clear pictures rose before his eyes, only the wordless certainty that the search was about more than Montborne’s plots, more than Aviyya, more th
an breaking free of Esmelda’s webs of intrigue.

  The dagger would have to wait.

  Carefully Terricel made his way down the slope to wash the dead man’s blood from his shirt.

  Let Montborne and Esmelda fight it out between them. They deserve each other!

  He grinned up at the twin moons, his lips stretched thin and wide like a death rictus, and felt no pity at all for the general.

  o0o

  They had just broken camp but had not yet mounted up when they heard another horseman moving through the forest and making no attempt to disguise his presence. Noiselessly Kardith drew her long-knife. Terricel clamped his hand over the sorrel gelding’s nose to keep it from nickering in greeting to the other horse.

  “Who’s there?” Kardith shouted.

  “Halloo the camp!” came a man’s voice, relaxed and friendly. A few moments later, a man on big roan mare came into view, leading two saddled, riderless horses, a nondescript brown and the rusty black.

  It was Etch.

  Chapter 18: Kardith of the Rangers

  “Halloo the camp!”

  “Who’s there?” I slid the long-knife out, solid and ready in my hands. What kind of fool, I wondered, comes barging through the forest like that, making more noise than a bunch of cider-drunk brush-sheep? Not northers, that was sure. Not Rangers, not even Montborne’s assassins...

  The man from the Blue Star stables, that was who. He rode up on a rangy, flea-bit roan and for a moment I just stood and stared at him. I couldn’t think what he was doing here, since he had nothing to do with Avi or the Rangers or the kid or Montborne. When he saw me, his whole face lit up.

  “Etch!” Terris pushed past me and ran up to him. “Etch! You came after me!”

  What the hell is going on?

  I started sweating, about to jump out of my skin and a whole lot madder than I’d thought. I wanted help for Avi, a way around Montborne’s orders, not some Mother-damned plot with Esmelda’s finger on every turning, a war with the north and the Rangers caught in the middle of it all.

 

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