by Myke Cole
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
CHAPTER 1: THEY’LL HEAR YOU
CHAPTER 2: TINKER’S FORGE AND RANGER’S GIFT
CHAPTER 3: INSOLENCE
CHAPTER 4: THE KNITTING
CHAPTER 5: WE DIDN’T HAVE TO DO IT
CHAPTER 6: TURN HIM OUT
CHAPTER 7: LODGING
CHAPTER 8: HOME AWAY FROM HOME
CHAPTER 9: FOUND
CHAPTER 10: TOO FAR, TOO FAST
CHAPTER 11: FUMBLING IN THE DARK
CHAPTER 12: VENGEANCE
CHAPTER 13: DEVIL
CHAPTER 14: PALANTINE
Acknowledgments
Also by Myke Cole
Copyright Page
The strong have done what they could. Now the weak will suffer what they must.
—Thucydides
And it shall be as a plague unto your people
From father to son, from mother to daughter, until your seed is dust.
My redemption is the Emperor. My hope is His outstretched hand.
He has made my way plain, and asked only this of me,
Suffer no wizard to live.
—Writ. Ala. I. 14
CHAPTER 1: THEY’LL HEAR YOU
Heloise took her father’s hand, squeezing it hard. Samson’s eyebrows lifted as he squeezed hers back. “Been a long time since you took your old father’s hand. What happened to you being nearly a woman grown?”
The warm roughness of his palm made her feel safe, but she only smiled up at him, shrugged.
“The road to Hammersdown’s the safest in the valley,” her father said. “No bandit’d risk running into the Order.”
“It’s the Order that scares me.”
“Me, too,” Samson agreed, “but they’re a sight better than a wolf pack or a robber band, eh?”
She didn’t want to hear that something frightened him now. She wanted Samson the father and protector, not Samson the friend. Her father was a big man, and if his hair had gone gray and his stomach drooped over his belt, he more than made up for it with his broad shoulders and thick hands. For all his talk of being frightened, Samson’s eyes were hard, “Serjeant’s eyes,” the village Maior called them. He had fought alongside her father in the Old War. Don’t let his factor’s hands fool you, Heloise. Your father was a shield-hewer, the strongest pikeman I’ve ever known. The very name Samson struck terror into the hearts of the Emperor’s enemies.
“Well.” Samson pulled her into an embrace, holding her tightly to his side as they walked, his arm strong and comforting. “This old man will take what he can get.”
“I love you, Papa . . .”
“I love you, too, dove.”
Hoofbeats.
Samson stopped, glanced over his shoulder. Heloise turned.
Dust was rising on the road behind them, billowing out behind a column of riders. Too many to be bandits, even if they were brave enough to risk the Order’s main road. Heloise heard jangling chains and looked for a cart, but couldn’t see one.
“Papa, what’s . . .”
The dust whirled and cleared to reveal Pilgrims, their gray cloaks flapping away from leather armor, flails held out before them. At their head rode a Sojourner. His cloak was edged with gold, the bright red fabric so clean it shone, as if the dust dare not touch him.
The Sojourner held his flail across his chest, head over one shoulder, black iron spikes nestled against the scarlet fabric of his cloak. The red meant he had completed the great Sojourn, a year on the road to visit the sites where the Emperor had fought the devils until they were pushed back into hell. The Pilgrims’ gray marked them as lesser men who’d done only the fortnight-long Pilgrimage. They were pale imitations of their leader, their cloaks simple.
Only their flails were equal: the same stout, well-oiled wood. The same sturdy, black length of chain.
The Order had arrived, as if talk of them had made them appear.
She heard her father gasp in recognition, and then he was yanking her out of the road and into the chill mud. Heloise fell to her knees, gasped from the cold wet seeping into her dress. “Eyes down,” Samson said, “mouth closed.”
The terror was as intense as it was sudden.
She obeyed him, closing her mouth and casting her eyes to the ground. The cool air felt suddenly hot, the wide sky pressing down on them.
The hoofbeats came closer, and with them, the sound of the jangling chains.
“Bow your head, girl, now!” Samson hissed.
The hoofbeats seemed to continue endlessly. The sound of the chains rose as they drew closer. Heloise could see the links playing out behind the horses, dragging in the dirt. A dead woman slid past Heloise, green and bloated, caked with road filth. She was wrapped in the long, gray ropes of her innards, tangled in the metal links until Heloise couldn’t tell her guts from the chains. The horses dragged another body beside her, wrapped in metal like a silkworm in molt.
Heloise’s gorge rose at the stink and she gagged, clapping a hand to her mouth. Another moment and they would be past. Please don’t notice us. Please ride on.
The jangling ceased as the riders halted.
Heloise couldn’t resist glancing up. The Sojourner had a narrow face and a smile that was somehow worse than a scowl. He slowly turned his horse, a black animal taller and broader than any Heloise had ever seen. Heloise felt fear climb her spine, followed by anger at him for making her afraid.
“You, there,” the Sojourner called to Samson. “Attend me.”
Samson rose, eyes still on the ground. “Your eminence.”
“You live here?”
“Yes, your eminence. We hail from Lutet, just up the—”
“I know where Lutet is,” the Sojourner said. “What I need to know is where Frogfork is.”
“If you ride on past the Giant’s Shoulder,” Samson said, “you will see a carter’s track through the woods. Take it until the ground goes to marsh, then head into the mire. You’ll see it.”
“Can we make it by nightfall?”
“Yes, my lord. If you ride without stopping.”
“Very well. In that case, have you anything in that satchel to slake my thirst? Maybe some bread? I will pray a cycle for your soul and the Emperor will bless you for supporting His own Hand in the valley.”
“I’m sorry, your eminence. I am a factor on my way to take letters.”
“That is not an answer to my question.”
“All I have is my ledger, pen, and ink.”
“He’s a villager, Holy Father,” one of the Pilgrims said. “They are bred to lie.”
He turned to Samson, held out a hand. “Give it here.”
Without lifting his eyes, Samson handed the satchel over.
The Pilgrim fumbled with the iron buckle before cursing and ripping it open, sending a popped rivet flying. He thrust one gauntleted hand inside and seized a handful of her father’s pens, tossed them into the mud. One of the inkpots followed.
Heloise’s mind whirled, calculating the cost of the precious items, figuring how they could be repaired. It wasn’t so bad. The pens were wood and metal. Some had fine tips, but provided she was careful when she cleaned them, they wouldn’t be damaged. She winced as the inkpot struck the wet mud, but she didn’t think it had cracked. So long as he didn’t throw out any of the . . .
The Pilgrim’s hand disap
peared back into the satchel, emerged with a handful of crumpled paper. Heloise was only able to half-stifle a cry as he tossed the precious sheets in the air. They drifted in the wind, made their way down toward the wet mud.
Before Heloise knew what she was doing, she had taken a long, lunging step, her hand lashing out to grasp at the falling paper. The sudden move stirred the wind, and the precious sheets danced away from her, floating sideways and down, always down, until the ground snatched them up. Heloise chased them, knowing it was useless, unable to stop herself, eyes locked on the slowly spreading stain that was wet mud hungrily devouring the tools of her trade.
A hoof stomped in the mud so close that she had to leap back, her eyes darting up to catch the Pilgrim’s. They were a dazzling gray-blue, like the skim of ice over flowing water. “What in the Emperor’s name do you think you are doing?”
Heloise straightened, panic blossoming in her gut. “Just picking up the . . . I only meant to pick up the paper before it got wet.”
“Heloise!” Samson said.
“Your eminence,” she added.
“If the paper is on the ground,” the Pilgrim said, “it’s because I meant it to be there.”
Even now, Heloise had to fight not to bend down and pick the paper up. He only threw out some of it, she told herself. It’s not all ruined. The thought helped her to be still.
The Sojourner leaned on his saddle horn, gestured to the bodies in the chains behind them. “See that, girl?”
Heloise glanced back at the bodies. She knew she should answer, but she was robbed of speech, first by fear, then by rage. The Sojourner’s smile slowly faded as he waited.
Samson’s elbow in her ribs. “Answer him!”
“Yes.”
Her father’s elbow in her ribs once more, almost knocking her over. “Your eminence,” Heloise added again.
The Sojourner nodded, whether for the elbowing or at her answer, she couldn’t tell. “Such is the fate of wizards and those who give shelter to wizards. They betrayed the Emperor.”
The Sojourner gestured to the corpses with one red-gloved hand. “This is why the Writ counsels obedience above all, girl. For a chance at power, they would have rent the veil and let the devils walk among us. Is this not more than they deserve?”
Heloise looked sideways at her father, but his eyes were on the ground, his jaw clenched.
Heloise looked back to the corpse. The dead woman’s tongue had swollen out of her mouth, fat and gray. The moment dragged on. The Sojourner had asked her a question, she had to answer.
She pictured herself wrapped in those chains, dragged behind a horse. Her lips moved by themselves. “No, your eminence.”
The Sojourner straightened, satisfied. His small smile returned. “Very well. Brother Tone, I take it there is nothing of use in that rag?”
The Pilgrim looked up from Samson’s satchel. “No, Holy Father. The villager speaks truth, for once.”
“Let’s get moving then. He is likely speaking truth about the ride to Frogfork as well.”
“Yes, Holy Father.” Brother Tone turned his horse, throwing the satchel over his shoulder as he went.
Heloise watched it turn end over end, the lid flapping open, the remaining papers threatening to fall out. She could see the wind plucking at them, ready to cast them down to join their comrades in the ruinous mud. She felt herself start to cry then, because it was the rest of what they had, because she knew that most of their earnings for the next season would have to go to replenish their supply, because . . .
She heard a dull thud, felt something soft strike her hands.
Her father’s eyes widened and the remains of the Sojourner’s smile vanished.
Heloise looked down at the satchel nestled in her outstretched arms. She had moved. She had caught it. “I’m sorry . . .” Her lips felt numb. She didn’t know why she’d done it. It was as if her body had been unable to accept the outcome, not when it could do something about it. “I didn’t mean . . .”
“Perhaps you do not understand what the Holy Writ means by ‘obedience.’” The Sojourner’s voice was cold. His spurs jingled as he touched them to his horse and the animal took a step toward her.
“Please, your eminence.” Samson moved between them. “She’s only a girl.”
Brother Tone twitched the reins and pulled his horse between Samson and the Sojourner.
“She’s near a woman grown,” the Pilgrim said, his blue eyes blazing. “Old enough to know what she’s doing.”
“Please, your eminence,” Samson said, looking up now. “She’s my only child.”
Tone sat up straight, hands tightening on his flail. “Come here. Show me your eye.”
“Holy Brother, there’s no—” Samson began.
“Your. Eye.” The Pilgrim cut him off. “Open it.”
Heloise reached for her father, but he placed a broad hand on her belly, shoving her back. With the other, he reached up to his right eye, prying it wide open with thumb and forefinger.
Tone looked for a long time. At last he sat back, turned to his master, nodded.
“I see no portal,” the Sojourner agreed. “There is no wizardry here, only pride and the foolish love of a father for his child. Your first love should be the Emperor. Above all things.”
“Yes, Holy Brother.” The relief in Samson’s voice made Heloise angry and sad at the same time.
“You’re lucky we’ve pressing business,” the Pilgrim said, tugging his horse back into the column. “Otherwise, I’d teach you a lesson.”
“Yes, Holy Brother,” Samson said again, but it was lost in the pounding of hoofbeats, the jangling of chains, and the rising dust as the riders started moving again. Heloise and Samson stood, silent and frozen, as the whole column trundled into the distance, until at last they turned with the road and moved out of sight.
Samson didn’t take his hand from Heloise until the hoofbeats had faded into the distance. Heloise glared after them.
“Bastards,” Samson said, patted the dust from his trousers. Then he turned to Heloise, his face lit with fury. “Idiot girl! What in the Emperor’s name were you thinking?”
Heloise had thought she couldn’t be more frightened, but her father’s hot anger was somehow worse than the Sojourner’s cool threats. “I’m sorry, Papa!” She held out the satchel, showing the dry sheets safe inside. “I saved some . . .”
Samson’s eyes flicked from her to the satchel and back again. He took a long, shuddering breath and the anger in his eyes vanished as he exhaled. “So you did, girl. So you did.”
He looked at her face and sighed, put his hands on her shoulders. “Heloise, I know you were trying to help, but that was very, very foolish. That could have turned out badly for both of us.”
“I’m sorry, Papa,” she said again, “I don’t know why I did it, I just . . . but paper is so costly and I thought that . . . he was finished with it . . .” The fear and the humiliation swirled in her mind and her gut, so intense that she almost missed a third, stronger emotion, boiling beneath it all.
Rage. Fury at the Order for making her father grovel while they destroyed the tools of his trade.
“No buts,” he cut her off. “That was reckless. When a killer dumps your kit in the mud, you smile sweetly and tell him he’s done right.”
The anger wouldn’t let her. “But he hasn’t done right, Papa. And the Writ says—”
“That a word of truth is more pleasing to the Emperor than poetry, yes. I know the Writ as well as you. But it doesn’t change that however pleasing it may be to the Emperor’s ears, it isn’t to the Sojourner’s, and he’s the one with the flail.”
Heloise’s stomach churned. She had seen dead animals before, and been graveside for funerals more than once. But the image of the dead woman’s face still hung in her mind. Her father was right, she had put him in danger. “I’m sorry, Papa.”
Samson embraced her. “From now on, when the Order’s about, you’re a statue, mind me? Still as a stone. A
nswer their questions and that’s all. Now, help me clean up this mess.”
They cleaned the mud off the pens as best they could. The inkpot was whole, if a bit dirty. The paper was so thoroughly soaked that it was hard to distinguish from the mud, and they left it where it lay, walking on in silence.
Her father was right. She had risked both of their lives. As Heloise considered it, the anger turned from the Order to herself.
Samson looked at her, smiled grimly. “What’s done is done, Heloise. Don’t drive yourself mad about it.”
“Yes, Papa,” Heloise said, but she could hear the shame in her voice.
Samson put a gentle hand on her shoulder. “What does the Writ tell us about the light of the Sacred Throne?”
“That we bask in its radiance always,” Heloise answered from memory, “that the Emperor’s light warms and blinds in equal measure.”
“That’s so,” Samson nodded. He jerked his thumb up at the sun. “And there it is, shining over us all. No matter what happened, try and take joy in the day, girl. We have precious few of them.”
Heloise did her best, trying to feel the warmth of the sun on her face the rest of the way to Hammersdown, but the sour feeling stayed in her stomach, and her father’s kindness made her feel even worse. She almost wished he’d shout at her, tell her she was a fool who could have gotten them both killed.
She opened her mouth to apologize again when she heard shouts. Growing louder.
“It sounds like Churic,” Heloise said.
Her father nodded. “Something’s got him stirred.”
Churic’s voice grew louder as they walked past Hammersdown’s sentry tower. Heloise heard other voices now, Jaran Trapper, and Bertal Fletcher, too.
Alna Shepherd stood at the common’s far end. His dog, Callie, had rounded the sheep into a tight circle. She stood in front of them, a low growl in her throat, until Alna’s daughter Austre patted the dog into silence.
Jaran stood beside Bertal. The two were nearly identical, lined faces nearly hidden behind thick gray beards. Jaran was distinguished only by his gold chain of office, marking him as Maior. Both men were bent over Churic, red-faced and shouting.