by Gail Dayton
That was far from how it worked, but Kallista didn't owe them any explanations. They owed her.
“It does no harm to answer her questions.” The old woman looked then at Kallista. “Is it fair to force those who have faced each other once already and lost to fight again with nothing altered? Circumstances must change to even the odds."
“Why? Why must circumstances change? How does ‘evening the odds’ benefit anyone but the betting shops? How does it show ‘the will of the One'?"
“By removing the influence of money. One side may have been able to buy better champions. This eliminates that advantage, so that the One's will may more clearly be seen."
“My champions do not fight for money.” Kallista let Joh grab her hand, used his grip to keep her seething rage under control. From the corner of her eye, she could see Aisse holding onto Leyja the same way.
The old one's response was a shrug. Nothing more.
“Whybothertowinintheindividualcombatsthen?"Kallistademanded. “Why should anyone win if they're going to be penalized for it?"
“Today's wins are still credited to your case.” The old woman sipped at her cha, her quavering hand taking its own time about it. “Tomorrow's results will be weighed against today's victories. If your dedicats are as skilled as today's matches showed, they should have no trouble against these opponents."
“But—” Kallista cut off the temptation to shout that they were all mates and she loved them. The justiciars would likely just shrug again and go back to their meal. If they didn't call out the mob, or have them all tossed into the jail with Sky.
“You have had your questions answered. We are done.” The white-haired justiciar waved a hand, dismissing them rudely.
But then it had been rude for Kallista to barge in on them, and it had done no good whatsoever. Might even have done them harm. Nothing had changed. Torchay, Obed and Fox would stand alone in the arena tomorrow against all eight of Habadra's ruthless champions.
Kallista bowed in grudging apology and allowed Joh and Viyelle to escort her out of the room. Aisse had to almost drag Leyja out. The little justiciar-apprentice led them back through the warren of corridors to the space inside the plaintiff's gate where the champions waited with the horses.
“Where were you?” Torchay demanded when Kallista finally let go of him. “We've been waiting an age."
She grabbed Obed by the shoulder of his robe and shook him. “Why didn't you tell me about the handicap?"
“Handi—?” His eyes narrowed. “What handicap?"
“It seems that since you won today's matches so easily, tomorrow, the three of you will face all eight Habadra champions by yourselves."
"What?" Shock and outrage came from a hand of throats at once, Obed's foremost among them.
Kallista could sense his surprise through the link, now Leyja had calmed a bit. “You didn't know, did you?"
“No, of course not. What—How—?” Obed's mouth opened and closed another time or two without finding the words he wanted.
“Let's go.Backto theembassy. Wecan talk about itthere."Kallista swung onto her horse. “They must have changed the rule since you left Daryath."
“Yes, but why?"
“No reason that makes sense to me, but I'll tell you what they told me when we're out of all this.” Kallista clucked to her horse, heading for the gate, forcing Obed and a few of the others to scramble to keep up.
* * * *
That night, during all the explaining and all the complaining, Obed let everyone know exactly how senseless and unfair he thought the rule change was. His opinion: they'd changed it to increase the likelihood of someone actually dying in a tournament, for the thrill of the crowds. Kallista thought it likely inspired by the demons still hiding from them. Demons fed on death, destruction and misery. The three remaining fighters held strategy sessions late into the night to develop three-man tactics rather than eight.
The next morning, they retraced their path through Mestada's center, over the Bafret Canal, through the busy market squares to the court arena. All those who had made the trip on Firstday were back again. The champions not in the arena today wore their red robes over their Adaran uniforms. Kallista suspected they might be wearing those robes the rest of their lives as a boast that once they'd had the honor of fighting for their Reinine in a foreign arena.
Their young escorts were back, eyeing the black-clad, red-robed Tayo Dai with suspicion. “Why are they here?” one of the justice-apprentices dared ask. “They do not fight today."
“They are bodyguards,” Kallista said. “Adaran soldiers. Not freelance champions. They are part of my household."
The young woman didn't seem to know whether to be impressed or disdainful. Kallista turned to embrace her kilted iliasti.
“Stay safe.” She couldn't get her arms around all three of them at once, so hugged them one at a time. “We can find another way to get Sky away from that woman."
“Are you saying you don't think we can win?” Horror and hurt shuddered in Fox's voice.
“No, of course not.” Kallista rushed to reassure him before she saw the tiny quiver at the corner of his mouth, and clouted the back of his head for teasing her so. “Mean, cruel man."
“Me? You're the one that's hitting.” Fox rubbed the back of his head piteously.
“We will win,” Obed said. “We are that much better. Habadra's champions are stupid, clumsy and slow."
“They're also brutal and ruthless,” Kallista added.
“And we're not?” Torchay lifted an eyebrow at her and she had to admit his truth.
“We're soldiers,” Fox said. “Not champions."
“Which means?” Kallista looked from one to the other for an answer.
“We know how to fight together, as a team,” Torchay said. “Even Obed, who was champion and dedicat andspenthislife fightingalone.He's learned soldiering these past seven years. He's one of us. Part of us, like we're part of him. It's no’ eight against three today. It's three against one and one and one, to the end of them. Those other lads, Habadra's champions—they're each one of ‘em standing alone. They're no’ soldiers. They're no'—” He broke off, but she still heard the word he wouldn't say. Ilian. The others weren't ilian.
Silence ruled in the plaintiff's yard a long moment, seeming the more profound because of the hum of voices coming through from the public areas.
“Right.” Fox broke it. “Exactly. What he said."
“It is time,” the escort called from her place.
“Yes. So—” Kallista took a moment to hug them all again.
“Be especially careful,” she whispered to Fox. “I can't lose any more of my Tibrans.” She brushed her fingers over his eyes. “I wish I could help you somehow."
He smiled, captured her hand and pressed a kiss to her palm. “And I wish I could see you. Any of you. All of you. But we don't get everything we want, do we?"
“We get what we need.” Kallista called magic. She shaped it for vision, quickness, cleverness, wisdom, and she let it go. She didn't direct it. Any who had need of those things was welcome to them, even if they were Habadra's champions.
The world seemed to pause while the magic settled out over it. Then Kallista made herself walk away to go watch her beloved defend themselves against more than twice their number.
The opening ceremony was much the same today as yesterday, save only three in red kilts stood on the arena's sands. Habadra's box seemed more crowded today than yesterday, and it heightened Kallista's sense that something was not right.
She beckoned her duty-guard over. “Samri, does Habadra's box look different to you today?"
“There are twelve more people, my Reinine."
“Ah. Would you have Night take a look to see if he knows who they are, and why Chani might have brought them with her? Have him report to me, yes?"
The young guard bowed and stepped back a pace, beckoning the red-robed ex-Habadra over so Samri wouldn't have to leave his post guarding his Reinine
.
The petition had been read. The spectators were rustling back into their seats. The champions stepped out to return to their respective arming chambers and retrieve their weapons when the justiciar speaker held up her hand. "Hold."
The champions stopped. A buzz rippled through the arena. What was this? More rule-changing? Kallista held her temper. Time enough to let it go when she knew what was happening.
“It has come to our attention that one party in this trial is a nathain of very powerful magic,” the speaker stated. “One who could easily interfere with the working of this court."
The crowd's hum grew louder as a young man in black robes over black Daryathi shirt and trousers strode onto the justiciar's platform, a staff in his hand. “This man is Nur im-Nathain,” the speaker said. “One of our own, a truthsayer. He will determine whether unauthorized magic is being used."
He had to be one of the naitani who had fled the temple. Automatically, Kallista looked around for the shaved heads and voluminous white robes of the Samerics. One or two. No more. They seemed cowed by the justiciars’ peace-keeping champions scattered thickly through the crowds. The clerics had no legal power, only persuasion, and it looked as if the justiciars had no intention of allowing them to use it today.
Nur strode to the front of the platform, right up to the wrought-iron railing at the edge, to look out over the champions on the sands below. After a long moment, he looked back at the justiciars. “Magic has been worked this morning—"
“Forfeit!” Chani jumped to her feet. “I claim forfeit. Varyl has broken the rules and lost—” The rest of her rant was smothered by the noise of the crowd.
Nur Truthsayer slashed his staff through the air and the sound subsided abruptly. “The magic clings to more than the Varyl champions. Three of Habadra's have been touched by the same magic,” he added before Chani could cry foul again.
He turned his back on Chani, pointing his staff at Kallista. “Varyl Kallista, did you work this magic?"
Kallista stood and bowed deepest respect to the young truthsayer. “Nur im-Nathain, I did."
“Truth.” He was good, powerful, to be able to read truth at this distance. “What sort of magic did you work?"
How to describe it? She didn't quite know. “It is—I—"
“You see?” Chani shouted. “She seeks to lie already."
“Silence.” Nur slashed his staff at Chani and she fell back a step from the sheer force of his will. He thumped the heel of his staff on the floor beneath him. “You will not speak without permission of this court. You will not disrupt this proceeding. Another word from you when the staff is not yours and I will have Varyl Nathain weave it shut. Do you understand me?"
Kallista could not see the Habadra's expression clearly across the space between them, but she saw Chani bow. Then the Head of Habadra raised her hand asking permission.
“The Varyl does not seek to lie,” the truthsayer said.
Chani raised her hand higher and with a sigh, Nur pointed the staff at her.
“How do we know you tell the truth?” Chani's voice carried across the arena. “How do we know you are actually nathain?"
Nur's smile was crooked as he looked out at the spectators. “Ask them.” He waved his hand at the audience. “I have worked among them four weeks now. Am I nathain?"
The crowd burse into a roar of approval, of “Nathain! Nathain! Nathain!"
He had to wave his staff several times to stop the noise. “I am truthsayer. I cannot speak anything but truth.” His crooked smile returned. “And damned inconvenient it can be."
“Then tell me this truth,” Chani said. “Which side do you favor in this trial?"
“The child's,” Nur said without hesitation. “And there is no doubt that Sky im-Varyl—"
“Habadra-ti!” Chani howled, then shut up as Nur jerked the staff to point skyward.
“—Sky im-Varyl will have a better life as a son in the household of the Varyl Reinine, but—” He gestured with his staff, cutting Chani off before she got started. “But, I am truthsayer. I am nathain. I will speak the truth without bias or favor to anyone, whether the Head of the richest line in Daryath, the Ruler of half this continent, or a beggar on the street. I am nathain."
“Enough.” The speaker for the justiciars cut off any more argument. “We brought in this truthsayer at your request, Habadra. Let us get on with it."
Nur took a deep breath and turned to point his staff at Kallista. “Nathain, what was the magic you worked?"
“Perhaps the best description of it is a blessing.” She'd taken the time spent in argument to work out her answer. “Good will. Benefit bestowed on—wherever it falls. Which is likely why it clings to some of the Habadra champions."
“Truth.” Nur frowned. “Why not to all of them?"
“Blessings can be ignored. Rejected.” Kallista paused. “I can do it again, if you like. For everyone. You can watch me."
“I want none of her poison,” Chani burst out, ignoring the scowl sent her way by the justiciars.
“It is blessing. For good sense and wisdom and vision to see true. Magic, straight from the hand of the One."
“Truth.” Nur's voice held more than a touch of wonder. He turned to look a question at the three presiding justiciars.
“I'll take it!” One of the purple-kilted champions stepped forward. “I felt it last time—like the best wine ever made, without the morning after. An angel's kiss. I'll take more."
The white-haired justiciar looked up at Nur and nodded. He looked at Kallista, anticipation in his eyes.
She bowed to him, bowed to the justiciars, and turned to bow to the crowd. Then she called magic, called the great billowing waves of it pouring from her seven godmarked. Torchay's head fell back where he stood on the arena sands, his expression almost rapturous as she called. She struggled to shape it, hauling against the massive weight to shape what she wanted. Good sense, wisdom, true sight.
“I see it.” Nur's whisper barely reached her. “I see her calling the magic. It's beautiful."
Finally, Kallista had it balanced, perfectly formed for the purpose she intended. She bent her knees slightly, the physical action echoing the greater unseen action as she centered herself beneath the mass of magic, and thrust up hard, sending it up and out, moving majestically in all directions at once.
A thousand throats gasped, a thousand bodies stood as the pearlescent mist burst over the arena. A few screamed, but most lifted their faces to watch as it wafted outward, then drifted down over them. Even the champions, those who had rejected it before, turned their faces up to receive this Godstruck magic.
Profound silence fell, punctuated by the occasional soft rustle as someone's knees gave way and they plopped onto their seat. A quiet sigh echoed across the stadium.
Finally, Nur cleared his throat. He pointed his staff at the Habadra champion who'd spoken before. “Was that the same magic you experienced before?"
“More.” His voice scraped over gravel. “Better."
“Look at Chani,” Night whispered from where he stood just behind Kallista. “Does she look well to you?"
She didn't. The Habadra had gone pale, seemed struggling to breathe. Kallista frowned. “Gweric—"
But he hadn't come, had picked up a bad cough from somewhere. Fox was in the arena, and if she spun out any magic to look herself, Nur would see it and wonder what she was doing. Kallista could not look inside the Habadra for demons now.
“If we are satisfied?” At the justiciars’ nod, Nur Truthsayer retreated to the back of the platform where he took a seat on the bench beside Sky.
The justiciar's speaker stood. “Retrieve your weapons, champions. The trial begins."
Kallista stood to peer over the stone parapet of her box at the doors set in the wall below. Obed was already armed and out, the other two on his heels. They trotted together out to center arena, their hair spilling black, red and gold over their shoulders from their unbraided queues, a taunt to their opponent
s. They could tie their hair back loosely rather than binding it into the champion's difficult-to-grasp clubbed queue because their opponents wouldn't get close enough to grab it.
Obed had never thought to find himself here again, standing on arena sand, waiting for the justiciar's signal to begin. He had been very good at it, but he had regretted the killing. He did not think he would regret it today, if they forced him into it. And today, for the first time in his life, he did not stand here alone.
Justiciar Maathin—he remembered her well, despite the pure white her hair had gone—waved her hand. The lion flag on its pole came sliding down and Obed turned with his iliasti to face their opponents. The purple-clad were charging, obviously intending to overwhelm them with mass and numbers.
Obed stepped aside, away from Torchay, to let the big one rumble between them. Torchay slashed as the man passed while he parried another attack with his left-hand sword. Obed fought off his own opponents, folding back against his iliasti until they stood shoulder to shoulder, back to back to back.
“Status?” Torchay rasped.
“I'm bleeding,” Fox said. “A scratch. Nothing."
“Hm. So am I.” Obed discovered the graze along his upper arm, scarcely deep enough to bleed. “You?"
Seven of the Habadras attacked again. Torchay had caught the big runner across the back of his leg deep enough to take him out of the match. All seven attacking together got in each other's way. One of them tripped, fell but scrambled back quickly enough to escape injury. Obed saw him past the flashing steel he parried, the man's long halberd waiting to dart in from a distance and—Obed caught it on his blade, shunted it aside as Torchay dealt with the attack coming in under the halberd at Obed's stomach. Fox stopped an attack on Torchay, and Obed had to leap to knock aside a sword sliding toward Fox's side.
Finally, the Habadras fell back, bleeding from as many places as the three godmarked. But there were seven Habadra champions to spread the cuts across. The lion flag went up as arena judges consulted.
“Status?” Torchay leaned back and they all took a moment to relax, leaning into each other for support.