Trial of Stone
Page 17
Then she was through the second line and racing toward the third. She heard cries of pain from behind her, but the boots of her comrades pounded along to her right and left. Shouting her defiance, Issa raised her sword and brought it down hard onto the blade of the young Alqati man directly in front of her. The blow battered through his defenses and slammed into the side of his head. He sagged on wobbling legs, stunned.
Issa’s triumph turned to defeat in that moment. The staggering youth stumbled forward, right into her. She caught him and hurled him aside before he could lock arms blindly around her, but that moment cost her dearly. Her charge slowed, momentum gone, and now she faced a full line of twelve armored Indomitables wielding steel swords.
“Now!” She could only hope Enyera caught the command as her signal, but she had no time to look back. Three opponents surged toward her, steel blades singing in the bright morning air.
Issa batted aside the first two strikes with quick parries, but the third slipped through her guard and struck her chest hard enough to send pain flaring down her breastbone. The blow knocked her back a half-step and, before she could recover, two more attacks struck her right leg and left forearm. Her truncheon dropped from nerveless fingers.
Issa gritted her teeth against a cry of pain. She whipped her sword up and around to deflect a powerful strike aimed at her head, but that exposed her stomach to a low, horizontal chop. She doubled over as the blow knocked the breath from her lungs. Desperate, she lashed out in an attempt to drive back her enemy.
But there were too many—in front, behind, and now closing in from their flanks. Her company would be overrun in seconds. If Enyera didn’t reach the pennant now, she and her trainees would fall.
The clash of steel, the thump of wood striking flesh, and the grunts of fighting men echoed loud in Issa’s ears, but no trumpet to signal the halt of battle.
Then Kellas was there, kohl-rimmed eyes locked on her, an arrogant sneer on his lips as he raised his two-handed sword to strike. Issa blocked his attack, even though it opened her up to another blow from the side—she’d be damned if she let the Dhukari hit her even once.
A blow to her leg nearly shattered her knee and she sagged, crying out in pain. She tried to block the follow-up strike, only to take a slashing strike across her right forearm. The dull blade opened a deep gash and blood dripped down her elbow to her shoulder.
She fought through the pain, through the knowledge that her comrades were falling behind her. She couldn’t tear her eyes from the fight to track Enyera’s movement. All she could do was just hold the enemy off until the trumpet sounded.
Three blows struck at once, to her back, neck, and the top of her skull. Issa toppled forward and crashed to the sand face first. Darkness reached cool, welcoming fingers toward her.
Where is the trumpet?
It never came.
Chapter Nineteen
Evren went rigid, motionless.
“If you’re hiding from the Indomitables,” said the cold voice, “well that means you’ve done something wrong, doesn’t it? Now, how much coin do you think it’ll take to convince me not to turn you over?”
Evren tensed as he felt a hand reach into his right trouser pocket, doubtless in search of a pouch. He turned his hips slightly, pulling his pocket away from the searching hand without risking the dagger punching into his spine. When the hand followed his movements, the blade moved a finger’s breadth away from his back.
Just enough for Evren to attack.
He spun to the left and whipped his elbow around. The sharp-tipped bone slammed into the side of a face—a very dirty face that belonged to a very dirty young man that looked to be around Evren’s age. The blow collided with the youth’s jaw and sent him staggering. Evren moved with the spin, seized the boy’s flailing wrist, and twisted it behind his back. With his left hand, he seized the scruff of the boy’s neck and slammed him into the wall. The boy collapsed, blood leaking from his nose, and Evren leapt atop his back before he could recover. A flick of his wrist dropped his throwing dagger into his palm and he pressed the tip against the base of the youth’s skull.
“How much do you think it’ll take to convince me not to drive this into your brain here and now?” Evren snarled.
A muffled grunt met his question—it was all the boy could manage with Evren shoving his face hard into the dust.
“If it’s all the same to you,” came another voice, firmer, with a note of command, “I’d rather we didn’t have to kill the both of you here and now.”
Without removing the dagger from the boy’s head, Evren looked behind him. The speaker was an older man, with strong facial features and sharp eyes. Grey showed at his temples but he had an abundance of black in his short-cropped hair and thick beard. His barrel chest and broad shoulders matched the smith’s hammer in his hand.
Evren’s eyes dropped to the strange metal contraption on the man’s right leg: a brace, articulated at the knee, with thick leather straps that clutched his thigh and calf. The metal clicked quietly as the blacksmith took a step forward.
“Let Snarth up and we can talk like civilized people,” the blacksmith said.
Ten young boys stood around the man. They looked between the ages of seven and fifteen, though one couldn’t be more than four years old. Their clothing ranged from ragged to well-tailored, and they wore headbands of blue, black, red, brown, and white. At a glance, Evren saw a hard wariness in their eyes that could only come from a life on the streets.
Their weapons and posture spoke volumes as well. Two pointed compact handheld crossbows at him, while a third covered Hailen. The rest held daggers, hammers, and assorted metal bars collected from the smithy. Though simple and crude, the weapons would prove deadly effective at this range and with this number.
Yet Evren had stared into the face of death uncowed before. “Given that he threatened to jam a dagger into my spine, I’m not exactly feeling kindly toward your Snarth right now.”
The blacksmith’s teeth shone white against his beard as he smiled. “To be fair, you were the ones who climbed over my wall. Here in Shalandra, those looking to do legitimate business tend to come through the front door. Those taking the back way tend to get stabbed first, questioned later.”
“Fair point.” Evren inclined his head but didn’t remove the dagger from Snarth’s spine. “If I let him up, he’s not going to try and stab me again, is he?”
“You have my word he won’t.” The bearded man fixed Evren with a curious gaze. “Though I will be expecting some sort of explanation as to your presence. I don’t know what you did, but you’ve got the Indomitables spitting blood and fury.”
Evren grimaced. “So much fuss over a little punch.”
The blacksmith raised an eyebrow. “It all depends on who you punched, really.”
“Some fat bastard with too little clothing and a golden headband.”
Both of the smith’s bushy eyebrows shot up toward his hairline. “If you’re laying hands on one of the Dhukari, you’re as foreign to Shalandra as he is.” He inclined his head toward Hailen. “How’s this? Let Snarth up, and you have my word we won’t turn you over to the Indomitables to be sold in Auctioneer’s Square.”
Evren mulled over the offer. “Kind of hard to say no with those crossbows aimed at us.”
“That’s the point, isn’t it?” A smile tugged at the man’s lips as he studied Evren.
Evren stood and stepped back, giving the downed boy a wide berth. Snarth picked himself up off the ground and shot him a venomous glare. Evren tensed in expectation of an attack, hands at the ready.
“Get inside,” the blacksmith said. “There’s steel that needs working and it’s your turn at the bellows.”
Snarth looked like he wanted to protest but remained silent at the stern look on the man’s face. Instead, he snarled a muttered curse, dusted himself off, and stormed through the now-open back door that led into the forge.
“A few hours spent pounding hot steel should hel
p him forget his clumsy mistake,” the man said. Without taking his eyes from Evren and Hailen, he gestured to the youths that held the crossbows. Evren breathed an inward sigh of relief as the sharp-tipped bolts lowered to point at the dusty courtyard.
“Now, I think it’s time for that explanation.” The man took a few stumping steps toward Evren, his knee brace making that strange clicking sound. “Let’s start off with names. I’m Killian, master of this blacksmith. Your turn.”
Evren hesitated. He’d rehearsed the tale that got him into the city—sick father, dutiful son bringing the grain to market in Shalandra—but had neglected to come up with fake names for him and Hailen. He could always lie, but the wary look in the blacksmith’s dark eyes made it clear the man would prove challenging to fool.
He opted for the truth. “Evren.”
“I’m Hailen!” Hailen piped up from behind him.
Evren’s gut clenched, but he forced himself to relax. The names would mean nothing to this man—bloody hell, they probably meant nothing to anyone except for the Hunter, Kiara, Graeme, the Cambionari, and, in Evren’s case, a temple full of vindictive Lecterns two thousand leagues to the north.
“And what, Evren and Hailen, brings you two into my backyard?” Killian cocked his head. “I’d say it was the legendary quality of my wares, but if that were the case, you’d likely be coming in the front. And anyone foolish enough to punch a Dhukari is clearly not from Shalandra. So how, pray tell, did two youths from…” He eyed the two of them. “…far to the north end up here?”
Again, Evren pondered his choices. Lie and hope he was convincing enough that this Killian believed him? The blacksmith’s dark eyes belied his pleasant demeanor. Evren had known enough hard, cunning men in his time on the streets of Vothmot—and his years with the Hunter—to recognize them at a glance.
“That’s a bit of a tough question,” Evren said. “On the one hand, if I lie, you’ll likely put those little crossbows to the test.” He brought both hands up, palms facing the sky. “On the other, the truth’s just as liable to get us both killed.”
“A quandary, indeed.” Killian smiled. “Would it help if I told you that I’m a very open-minded individual? You might be surprised to find I’m less fond of the established order than the average Shalandran.” His eyes went to the dagger in Evren’s hand. “Judging by the blade in your hand and the ones tucked into the back of your belt and the tops of your boots, that’s a sentiment you seem to share.”
Evren tensed. How did he know? Even if Killian had spotted the two jambiya blades when he was knocking down Snarth, the daggers in his boots were invisible. The Hunter had special-ordered the boots and weapons from his own personal cobbler and bladesmith.
Killian’s smile widened. “I’ll take that as a yes.” He turned to his boys and gave a dismissive wave. “You all have jobs to be about. Training is done for the day.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Yes, Killian.”
The ten boys trooped out of the yard—a training yard, Evren realized, taking in the white chalk square in the center and wooden benches along the wall.
After a moment, Evren slipped the dagger into his wrist sheath. Killian had the sloped shoulders and strong arms of a blacksmith, but Evren reasoned he could defend himself and Hailen should the need arise. If nothing else, the two of them could definitely outrun the smith.
“Training, eh?” He looked around. “Something tells me this is a secret you’d rather I didn’t let out into the world.”
“Just as I’m sure you’d rather your assault on a Dhukari didn’t become public knowledge.” Killian inclined his head. “So let’s begin this negotiation with the understanding that we both have things we’re keeping from the other.”
“Negotiation?” Evren scrunched up his face. “What are we negotiating for?”
“Why, for you to come and work for me, of course!” Killian beamed. “In exchange for my assistance in procuring whatever you’ve come to Shalandra to steal.”
Evren’s jaw dropped. Bloody hell! The man was as brazen as he was insightful. He’d managed to connect dots that Evren hadn’t even imagined existed in the first place, and somehow he’d come to the right conclusion.
“Let me speak plainly,” Killian said. “Snarth’s one of my best Mumblers, but you took him down faster than anyone he’s sparred with. That sort of skill would be wasted on the chopping block in Murder Square or lounging in the Pharus’ dungeons. I am always on the lookout for resourceful young men to work for me, and you’re clearly more than capable of handling yourself.”
“What does ‘work for you’ mean, exactly?” Evren’s eyes narrowed as his mind raced through a thousand different scenarios. Young boys living on the streets of Vothmot often had to resort to desperate things to avoid starvation, but he wasn’t that boy anymore.
“Gather information to mumble into my ear,” Killian said with a wry grin. “Like all the rest of my Mumblers.”
Evren frowned. He’d encountered more than a few self-styled thiefmasters, men who offered young boys shelter and protection in exchange for a cut of their profits. Most had been selfish, greedy bastards that cared only for their own enrichment, even at the cost of those that served them.
Yet Killian didn’t have that conniving, self-interested look that had marked the others. Wary, certainly, and with a cunning that rivaled Kiara’s, but lacking malice. Something about the blacksmith was disarming, friendly even, though it could be simply an act.
“I’ve shown you my cards, now it’s your turn.” Killian gestured for Evren to speak. “What have you come to Shalandra to steal?”
Evren didn’t hesitate this time. The truth had served him well enough with Killian thus far.
“The Blade of Hallar.”
“The Blade—?!” Killian’s bushy eyebrows shot up but no trace of outrage showed on his face. He whistled through his teeth. “Damn, you’ve got a brass set of bollocks on you, indeed.”
The man’s reaction came as a surprise. He’d just learned that Evren had come to steal one of the city’s oldest, holiest relics yet hadn’t batted an eyelid. If anything, he seemed impressed.
“I’m sure you’ve heard just how impossible it is?” Killian asked. “Most secure room in the most secure building in all of Shalandra, that sort of thing?”
Evren nodded. “It’s been mentioned.”
“Then you know what you’re up against.” He folded hairy arms over his barrel chest. “Other, more superstitious men might balk at you stealing the Blade. Me, I’m just interested to see if you can pull it off.”
Killian’s expression grew contemplative and he remained silent for a long moment. Finally, he spoke in a slow voice. “Here’s my offer: I’ll find a place for you and your…brother—” He raised a questioning eyebrow. “—as a servant in the household of one of the most influential men in the city. The very man who carries the Blade of Hallar out of the Vault of Ancients for the Anointing of the Blades. It’s up to you to figure out the vault and how to get out of Shalandra safely.”
“And how, exactly, can you pull that off?” Evren shot a pointed glance around. “Unless you’re the Pharus’ personal blacksmith, I can’t imagine you’d—”
Killian cut him off with a chopping motion of his huge hand. “Let’s just say I have the right connections in the right places, yes?”
It seemed hard to believe; Evren had never met any blacksmiths with any sort of clout beyond their ability to pound metal into weapons. Then again, if Killian was more than a simple smith, he certainly wouldn’t flaunt it.
Evren narrowed his eyes. “And all you want in return is information.” He’d spent enough time around Graeme to know that the right information in the right hands could build empires as well as topple them.
“Correct.” Killian nodded. “This certainly isn’t me doing you a favor because of any kindness of my heart.”
Evren snorted. “Of course not.”
“I expect you to produce information that wil
l be of use to me,” Killian said. “The only reason I am offering you this bargain is because you have the motivation to keep up your end.” His eyes went to Hailen, his meaning plain. “You want to keep him safe. I want information. Simple as that.”
Evren hesitated. His primary task at the moment was to ensure Hailen was out of harm’s way—he needed to have that one worry out of his mind in order to focus on his mission of stealing the Blade of Hallar. Killian’s offer certainly came with strings attached, but as long as he knew what those strings were, he could live with that deal.
“What sort of information are you hoping I’ll gather?” he asked, more to stall for time to think than out of legitimate interest. Spying was spying, no matter what way he cut it.
“Anything and everything you overhear. Every two days, one of my Mumblers will slip into the Keeper’s Tier and meet you someplace to collect the tidbits you’ve gleaned. You never know what will prove useful to me, so I expect you to leave nothing out. In return, you’ll have work—hard work, but preferable to living on the streets. Better still, your brother here won’t have to worry about being scooped up by the Indomitables for being out of the Foreign Quarter after dark. No Alqati would interfere with a servant of the Dhukari, especially one as powerful as the man you’ll be serving.”
Evren frowned. The offer seems good, but is it too good?
Experience had taught him hard lessons, especially when it came to older men that surrounded themselves with young men. He’d fled the Lecterns to escape their abuse. Was Killian the same as the Master’s Priests?