The Ghosts Omnibus: The Kyracian War

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The Ghosts Omnibus: The Kyracian War Page 37

by Jonathan Moeller


  Though now the sun had gone down, and the nobles and wealthy merchants of Cyrioch had gathered to listen to the opera.

  Hundreds of the Magisterium's glowing glass globes filled with Amphitheatre with light. Arrays of mirrors, also designed by that long-dead engineer, focused the light upon the stage. She watched the chorus sing one of the songs from the epic opera of Tertius Maraeus, one of Corbould Maraeus’s distant ancestors. It was a solemn, majestic opera, describing how Tertius, at the urging of his Cyrican bride, invaded Cyrica and freed Cyrioch from the control of the Shahenshah of Anshan.

  Of course, Caina thought sourly, the first thing the Cyricans had done with their new freedom was buy slaves from the slavers of Istarinmul.

  But that part didn’t make it into the opera.

  “Marina!” Theodosia’s voice rang out. “Marina, I need you!”

  In the enormous Grand Imperial Opera in Malarae, the stagehands and the singers used the vast workshops and network of tunnels below the theater for their workspace. Here, in the Amphitheatre, there was no need for the elaborate scenery required in Malarae, so the tents served as makeshift replacements for the workshops. Caina passed tables laden with tools, one holding the jars of stage blood - mixed Caerish wine and tomato juice - that would be used in the climatic final act.

  She found Theodosia at a wooden table, gazing at her portable mirror. She wore the elaborate dress and makeup of Severa, Tertius Maraeus’s great Cyrican love.

  “Marina!” said Theodosia. “You simply must help me with my hair! I shall have to go on as soon as Marcellus finishes his aria, and my hair is a disaster!”

  Caina knelt beside her and began arranging the intricate hairstyle that the role of Severa required.

  “Anything?” murmured Theodosia.

  “Corbould, Armizid, and Khosrau are all sitting together,” said Caina. “There's a guard of militiamen and Imperial Guards around them.”

  “That’s good,” said Theodosia. “Hand me that brush, will you?”

  Caina handed over the brush. “Unless the Kindred have infiltrated the Guard or the militia. Or an assassin disguised himself as a slave. Gods, but there are so many of them.” The anger flickered inside of her. “And the nobles and the merchants don’t even see them. I thought the nobles in Malarae treated their servants badly, but this is worse. They cannot even be bothered the brush the flies from their sleeves, but allow the slaves to do it for them.”

  “Keep an eye on them,” said Theodosia. “All of them. If anyone asks, say that you are carrying messages for me. We’ve been assuming that Lord Khosrau wants Lord Corbould dead, but perhaps one of Cyrica’s lesser nobles would profit in a revolt.” She stood up, scrutinizing herself in the mirror. “Well, I suppose that shall have to do.”

  “Theodosia!” Marcellus, the tenor singing the role of Tertius Maraeus, wandered to her side, clad in a costume resembling antique Nighmarian armor. He had a handsome face, a voice like rolling thunder, and a mind like a lump of lead. “Am I going on?”

  “Yes, dear,” said Theodosia, taking the befuddled tenor’s arm. “Come along. We sing our duet after your first aria.”

  “Oh,” said Marcellus. “That’s good.”

  Theodosia guided him towards the stage, and Caina slipped out the back of the tent.

  She scanned the crowd. She would know a Kindred assassin when she saw one. Caina had trained under Riogan, a ruthless assassin who had left the Kindred to join the Ghosts, and he had taught her all their tricks. The Kindred preferred to buy child slaves from the Istarish markets, and used years of brutal training to shape them into remorseless assassins. Her eyes wandered over the endless gray-clad slaves waiting by their white-robed noble masters. Had the assassin she had killed in the Praetorian Basilica once been a slave child, terrified and weeping on the auction block?

  She pushed aside the thought.

  She could not afford distractions. Instead she watched the spectators on the ascending rows of seats, thinking of ways the Kindred might try to kill Lord Corbould. An archer in the higher seats? No, unlikely - the enspelled glass globes would dazzle an archer's vision. A dagger thrust or a sword blow? Even less likely - guards surrounded Corbould, and the Kindred preferred not to sacrifice themselves in their assassinations. A poisoned glass of wine? Khosrau would provide a food taster to Corbould out of courtesy. Though if Khosrau had hired the Kindred to kill Corbould, it would not be hard to slip Corbould poisoned food...

  "Mistress?"

  A male slave in his late thirties stood before her, eyes downcast, a silver collar around his neck. Like the others, he wore a gray tunic, but his was of finer material than most. A noble's slave, then - Caina had noticed the nobles like to dress their slaves in finer materials.

  Like a man putting a fine collar on a favored pet.

  The thought filled her with such rage that it was all she could do to keep her face smooth.

  "Aye?" said Caina.

  "Are you Marina, the servant of the singer Theodosia?" said the slave.

  "I am," said Caina.

  "Then my master Lord Khosrau bids you to come speak with him," said the slave. "Please, mistress, follow me."

  Why would Khosrau want to speak with her? Did he know that she was a Ghost? No, that seemed unlikely. But he would know that Marina, brother of Maric, was Theodosia's servant. Perhaps that was it.

  "Of course," said Caina.

  The slave bowed and led the way. Caina walked past the stage, and the man led her to the largest box, where the slaves attended the chief nobles of Cyrica. Lord Governor Armizid, stern and grim, occupied the center of the box. Lord Khosrau sat at his right, eating grapes fed to him by a waiting slave. Lord Corbould sat at his side, watching the opera with polite interest. Ranarius stood in the corner, stark and forbidding in his black robes, the blind slave girl sitting at his feet.

  The girl's blindfolded face turned towards Caina as she entered.

  "Master," said the slave, kneeling before Khosrau. "I brought the singer's servant, as you commanded."

  Khosrau waved a hand, jewels glittering on his thick fingers. "Yes, well done."

  "A servant?" said Armizid, looking at Caina with distaste. "Bad enough that we fawn over an opera singer, but now we must speak with their drudges?"

  "Now, now," said Khosrau. "There's no need for churlishness, my son." His dark eyes turned towards Caina, glittering over his white beard. "Come closer, my dear, so I can see you. Oh, you needn't fear that I will ravish you. I've drunk far too much wine for that."

  Corbould snorted. "In thirty years you haven't changed, Khosrau."

  "I certainly have," said Khosrau, and he threw a roguish wink at Caina. "Thirty years ago I could have fought all day, drunk all night, and then taken this lovely young lady and her twin sister to bed and left them more satisfied than they've ever been in their lives." He sighed. "But, all things must change." For a moment a note of melancholy entered his voice. "Even Cyrica."

  "My lord is much too kind to a poor servant," said Caina, keeping her eyes downcast.

  Khosrau roared with laughter, and even Corbould chuckled. Armizid's scowl deepened, while Ranarius watched the exchange in silence. The slave girl at his feet kept her face turned towards Caina.

  "You are a splendid liar, my dear," said Khosrau. "A fine quality in a servant. But, you must attend to your mistress, and I have no wish to cause her distress." He snapped his fingers, and the male slave handed Caina a scroll of thick white paper.

  "A message for my mistress?" said Caina.

  "A bright girl," said Khosrau, in the same tone he might use to compliment a dog or a horse.

  Still, Caina found it hard to dislike the jovial old lord. He was certainly more pleasant than his humorless son. And it seemed hard to believe that Khosrau could plot the murder of a man sitting next to him.

  Hard to believe...but not impossible.

  "Yes," said Ranarius. He had a quiet, precise voice, and Caina felt his cold gaze turn to her. "The commoners can do al
l sorts of tricks once they've been properly trained."

  "It is the invitation to a little gathering," said Khosrau. "Deliver it to your mistress, and tell her that Lord Khosrau Asurius would be most pleased if she could sing for it."

  Caina bowed. "My mistress would be most honored." And pleased, as well. It would provide an opportunity to spy within the Palace of Splendors.

  "She had better be," said Armizid. "It is unseemly for an opera singer to attend a gathering of nobles, but..."

  "Unseemly!" said Khosrau. "That is your favorite word, my boy. Unseemly. Well," he waved his hand, "off you go, girl. It would please me greatly if your mistress performed at the feast."

  Caina bowed and left the box. Khosrau's attention returned to the opera, as did Corbould's, but she felt Armizid and Ranarius staring at her as she left.

  She hurried back to the tents. Marcellus had taken the stage as Tertius Maraeus, his mighty voice booming his aria. In a few moments Theodosia would come on stage as Severa, and her song about the plight of the Cyricans would convince Tertius to make war upon Anshan. Caina slipped back into the shadows, listening to the song with half an ear as she scanned the crowd for any threats...

  "A blowgun."

  She whirled, reaching for the dagger at her belt.

  A shadow detached itself from the back of a tent and stepped towards her.

  It was a man in a hooded cloak, eyes glinting beneath the cowl. Beneath his cloak she glimpsed a sheathed sword and chain mail. His right hand rested on the sword's hilt, and Caina saw an odd, swirling black tattoo over his forearm.

  He was a Kindred assassin. She was sure of it.

  The assassin stared at her.

  "You're not going to kill me," Caina said at last.

  Behind them Theodosia's soaring song joined Marcellus's.

  "Oh?" said the man.

  "We're standing in front of ten thousand people," said Caina. "If I scream, quite a few armed men are going to notice. If you were going to kill me, you would have stabbed me in the back."

  "Astute," said the cloaked man. "I saw you watching the crowd, which seemed like an unusual thing for a servant girl to do."

  "Perhaps I was bored," said Caina. "I've heard the epic of Tertius Maraeus before."

  "Perhaps," said the cloaked man. He took a step closer, and Caina glimpsed his face, hard and lean. "I thought that at first. And then I remembered how the Emperor's Ghosts have many friends among actors and singers and slaves."

  "There's no such thing as the Ghosts," said Caina. "They're a story, a legend."

  A hard smile flashed over the cloaked man's face. "And that is an answer in itself, no?"

  "The Ghosts are myths," said Caina, "but the Kindred are not."

  The man's hard smile faded. "You think I am a Kindred assassin?"

  "I know you are a Kindred assassin," said Caina. "I know how the Kindred walk. I know how they hold their weapons. I know how they disguise themselves. You're Kindred. Who are you here to kill?"

  "You are almost correct," said the cloaked man. "I was Kindred."

  "That's impossible," said Caina. "No one leaves the Kindred. Alive, anyway."

  But that was wrong, and she knew it. Riogan had left the Kindred. They had tried to kill him for it, but he had survived. At least until Maglarion had found him.

  "So," said Caina. "Former Kindred. And you're here to talk, not to kill me. What do you want to tell me?"

  "A blowgun," said the cloaked man. "That's how they're going kill Corbould. A tiny dart, coated with a particularly exotic poison. The poison numbs the wound, and he will never feel it. Thirty-seven hours later, the poison will reach his heart and stop it. And then, I suppose, Lord Khosrau will have his war with the Emperor."

  "Why are you telling me this?" said Caina. She would not put it past the Kindred to spread lies to mask one of their assassinations. "Are you such a great friend of Lord Corbould?"

  "I do not give a damn for Lord Corbould," said the cloaked man, "nor for his precious Empire. Nor do I have a damn for the Ghosts. Suffice to say I have my own business here, and I do not want you stumbling over me in your zeal to save Corbould Maraeus."

  Caina opened her mouth to answer...and fell silent.

  She saw a slave moving through the aisles of the Amphitheatre. A dozen slaves hurried through the Amphitheatre, running errands for their masters. Yet this slave was heading straight for Lord Corbould and the other nobles.

  And Caina recognized him.

  When last she had seen him, he had been wearing a yellow robe and creeping up behind her in Barius's pawnshop.

  She turned back to the cloaked man, only to see that she had vanished.

  Caina cursed, looking around for him, but he had disappeared without a trace. She looked back at the seats, and saw that the Kindred assassin had moved closer to Lord Corbould. Had the cloaked man been right about the blowgun? Corbould was wearing armor, but his neck was exposed.

  She hurried across the aisles, moving as fast as she dared. The assassin drew closer, and Caina saw something clutched in his left hand, something that looked like a thick brown straw.

  His nose was broken, she saw with some satisfaction.

  Marcellus and Theodosia continued their intricate duet, the notes rising and falling, every eye in the Amphitheatre fixed on them. The assassin stopped three aisles from Lord Corbould’s box and dropped to one knee, as if to fix the laces on his sandal.

  But the blowgun came up, and Caina was out of time.

  She reached into her sleeve, snatched out a throwing knife, and flung it at the assassin. She could not put all her strength into the throw, not in front of so many people. But the blade sank an inch into the assassin’s shoulder. The knife knocked him off-balance, the poisoned dart falling to the ground.

  The assassin glared at her, his bruised lips tight with rage. He wouldn’t recognize her from Barius’s pawnshop, but he would realize that his cover was blown. She watched the calculation flash over his face. He couldn’t attack her, not in front of ten thousand spectators. Caina would only need to scream, and all ten thousand spectators would see a slave attacking a freeborn woman.

  That would not end well for the assassin.

  Nor could Caina kill him. If she slew him in front of the audience, it would ruin her disguise. Anyone with a brain would realize there were Ghosts among the Grand Imperial Opera, and Caina’s effectiveness would be curtailed.

  The Kindred assassin yanked her knife from his shoulder, turned, and began walking away.

  Caina followed, moving as fast as she dared. The assassin veered for one of the exits from the Amphitheatre, and Caina followed. Her mind settled on a plan. She would get close enough to overpower him. Then she could take him captive and question him. With luck, she could find out what the Kindred had planned for Lord Corbould…and, perhaps, what had happened to Barius.

  Then Theodosia and Marcellus finished their duet.

  Lord Khosrau rose to his feet, applauding. The other nobles took one look at him and hauled themselves to their feet, also applauding, and the merchants in the upper rows followed suit. Soon the entire Amphitheatre stood, applauding and cheering.

  And Caina lost sight of the assassin. She was too short to see over the rows of applauding nobles.

  She whispered a curse and broke into a run. A few of the nobles would see her, but they would only assume she was on an urgent errand for Theodosia. She caught a glimpse of the assassin sprinting for the Amphitheatre’s exit, and she ran in that direction. A half-dozen streets led from the Amphitheatre’s gates. If the assassin reached them, Caina would never find him again.

  She saw the assassin vanish through the gates.

  Caina ran into the small plaza outside the Amphitheatre, the Palace of Splendors and the Stone rising behind her. She heard Theodosia’s aria roll over the sides of the white hill, echoing through the city. The plaza was deserted, its opulent houses dark. Their owners filled the Amphitheatre, and no doubt their slaves had taken the opportunity
to get drunk.

  There was no trace of the assassin.

  Caina struck her fist against the side of her leg in frustration. Twice now that assassin had eluded her. Suddenly she felt like a fool. The show with the blowgun might have been a distraction to allow the cloaked man to kill Corbould without interference. She had to get back to the Amphitheatre.

  Caina turned and froze.

  A statue of white stone stood next to the Amphitheatre’s gates.

  She stared at it in horrified fascination.

  It hadn't been there this morning.

  She drew closer, heart pounding behind her ribs. The statue showed a man in a slave’s ragged tunic, arms thrown up as if to ward off a blow, face distorted with fear and horror.

  Caina recognized it.

  It was the Kindred assassin she had pursued through the Amphitheatre.

  Like the statue of Barius, it was incredibly detailed. Caina saw every wrinkle in the assassin’s face, every fold and crease of his tunic. The statue’s nose was even broken. Caina held out a hesitant hand and brushed the statue’s arm.

  She felt cool, smooth stone…and the tingle of sorcery.

  Caina jerked her hand back as if it had been burned.

  She had pursued the assassin out of the Amphitheatre…and someone had turned him to stone.

  Caina turned in a circle, her eyes sweeping the darkened plaza. She saw no one else, not a single living soul. No trace, no hint, of who might have done this.

  Or why.

  And if whatever power or creature had turned the assassin to stone was still lurking out here, standing alone in the plaza was not the brightest decision Caina could make.

  She hurried back into the Amphitheatre.

  Theodosia stood on the stage, singing her aria, her voice holding the nobles rapt. Even Armizid seemed impressed. Corbould Maraeus remained unharmed. Caina breathed a sigh of relief and hurried back into the tents.

  There was no trace of the cloaked man who had warned her about the assassin. Had he, perhaps, turned the assassin to stone?

  A sudden recollection tugged at her memory.

  She had seen the cloaked man’s scabbard and sword belt before.

 

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