“You shouldn't go wandering off alone, Ibrahim,” said the younger man in Istarish. “I heard the others talk. There's some hooded black shadow prowling about, snatching our lads into alleys and drinking all their blood.”
Caina permitted herself a grim smile behind her mask.
“Fool's talk,” said Ibrahim, continuing his halting walk down the alley. “Next you'll tell me that there are efreeti and djinni hiding among the slaves. Bugger off so I can piss in peace.”
The younger soldier shook his head and walked back to the Market. Ibrahim stopped before a brick wall and undid his trousers. Caina straightened up and glided forward, boots making no sound against the ground. Ibrahim finished and sighed in relief.
Caina seized the spike atop his helmet, wrenched his head back, and opened his throat. Ibrahim went rigid, and Caina kicked his legs out from beneath him, forcing him to his knees so the blood would not stain his armor.
She felt a pang of conscience as he died. Had he deserved to be murdered in an alley as he relieved himself?
But she remembered the shackled captives in the Market and her conscience fell silent.
She dragged Ibrahim's corpse to the doorway of a nearby tenement. After a moment's work she concealed the body and began stripping off the armor. She tugged on the shirt of scale armor over her cloak, letting the bottom of her cloak hang beneath it. Caina removed her mask, rubbing dirt and sweat over her cheeks to simulate stubble, but she didn't dare lower the cowl of her cloak. If she did, both Kylon and Sicarion would sense her presence.
So she put the spiked helmet on over her cowl.
The result was...passable, if hardly ideal. But some of the Istarish soldiers wore black cloaks, and she doubted Rezir had assigned his most observant men to guard the slaves. If she was careful, she could move unnoticed through the Market.
Caina took a deep breath, stepped over Ibrahim's corpse, and walked into the alley. She took care to walk with the bored, slow strides of the guards.
A moment later she entered the slave pens of the Great Market.
The younger soldier that had been speaking with Ibrahim looked her up and down as she approached. Caina kept her expression bored, watching the soldier for any sign of alarm.
“You see old Ibrahim?” said the soldier.
Caina hid her sigh of relief.
“Aye,” she answered, speaking Istarish. “I think he found a jar of wine, went to drink the entire thing.”
“Devils of the sand,” cursed the soldier. “You know what the emir ordered. Forty lashes for any man caught drinking. And impalement for any man who abandons his post.”
Yet the soldier did not move. Caina nodded and kept walking, relieved. A quick glance over her shoulder confirmed that the man remained at his post, expression still bored. Clearly Rezir Shahan had not set his best and brightest to watch over the captives.
And there were so many captives.
Caina walked past hundreds of slaves. Women and children, mostly. Caina supposed the Istarish must have killed anyone who resisted to prevent future trouble. The women sat with numb, blank looks on their faces. Some wept in silence. Some of the children shrieked, their cries ringing over the Market, while others huddled against each other. The stench of sweat and fear and waste hung over everything.
It was a far cry from the festive atmosphere that accompanied Lord Governor Corbould when he came to greet the Lord Ambassador.
Her disguise worked. Most of the women averted their gazes as she passed. A few stared at her, eyes filled with hatred and loathing. One small girl rocked back and forth, keening, as her mother desperately tried to hush her. No doubt she feared a beating from Caina.
“Hush, my angel,” said the mother. “Hush. The Balarigar will save us. As he saved the slaves from Black Angel Tower. You will see.”
Caina felt her cheeks flush with shame. She would find a way to help the captives, she vowed. Some way to rescue them from the Istarish. Even if she died in the process.
But first, Nicolai. Ark had saved her life so many times. She owed him his son's life.
Assuming she could even find Nicolai.
The captives had not been organized by any method Caina could determine. Most likely the Istarish had herded the slaves into the Market, intending to sort them out once they had control of Marsis. Had they divided some of the slaves by sex, or separated the women from their children? Slavers sometimes did that to break the spirit of their captives.
Caina decided to take a risk.
She put some briskness into her stride and walked to the northern end of the Great Market. Nearby stood the burned warehouse and the damaged watchtower where she had fought Sicarion and escaped from Andromache, the banners of the Padishah of Istarinmul and of New Kyre flying from the tower. Rezir Shahan and Andromache and the stormdancers were gone, no doubt butchering their way toward the Plaza of the Tower. But two Istarish guards stood at the foot of the watchtower, speaking in low voices.
Caina marched toward them and stopped, arms crossed over her chest.
“Where are they?” she said, keeping her voice low and gruff.
The soldiers blinked at her. “Who?” said the one on the left.
“Nine devils of the desert!” spat Caina. “The boys, fool. Are you as stupid as you look?”
The soldier sneered. “Don't give us orders, you...”
Caina backhanded the soldier. The blow sent a shock of pain all the way up her left arm, but the soldier staggered.
“You'd question a messenger from the emir himself?” said Caina. “I should report you to your khalmir. Perhaps having a sharpened stake rammed up your arse would teach you a respectful tongue.”
“Sir,” said the soldier on the right, obviously the smarter of the two. “We didn't receive any orders about any boys.”
“The boys,” said Caina. “One of the Immortals in the emir's guard has a taste for boys.”
“Sick devils,” muttered the first soldier, wiping blood from his mouth.
“Watch your tongue,” said the second soldier. “Our orders were to watch the captives, sir, and kill any that caused trouble. No one said anything about boys.”
“Then the children were not separated from their mothers?” said Caina.
“No,” said the second soldier, keeping his dark eyes downcast beneath his spiked helm. “No, sir. We thought about it. But keeping the women and their brats together calms them. We've only a few hundred men here.” He lowered his voice. “Enough of them get it into their heads to cause trouble at once...we might have a problem, sir.”
“The emir does not tolerate failure,” said Caina, racking her brain for an answer. How could she possibly find Nicolai among this throng? “None of the captives were sorted?”
“No, sir,” said the second soldier. “At least, not by the emir's men.”
“The Kyracian witch's pet spook,” said the first soldier. “He took some.”
“Pet spook?” said Caina. “You mean the fellow with the scarred face?”
“Aye,” said the second soldier. “He's worse than an Immortal, that one. He's calmer than an Immortal, but he looks at you like you're a piece of meat he wants to slice up.”
Remembering how Sicarion had stolen the hand from the dead man, Caina could not disagree.
“He took some of the captives?” said Caina.
The first soldier nodded. “He did. Went into the spoils and plucked out the ones he wanted. One of our lads asked if the emir had given him permission. The spook just laughed.” A hint of fear showed in the soldier's eyes. “I'm no fool. If the spook wants slaves, let him have them.”
“The idiot took the emir's slaves,” said Caina. Had Sicarion taken Nicolai? If Sicarion knew about Nicolai's connection to Caina, he might well have taken the child as bait. “He was supposed to have taken them to the Plaza of the Tower. Where did he go?”
“There,” said the first soldier, pointing at a tavern built of brick and timber a hundred yards away. "The spook took the sl
aves in there. Then a few minutes ago the Kyracian witch turned up and went inside.”
Caina blinked. Andromache was here?
This smelled more and more like a trap.
Yet if Sicarion and Andromache had Nicolai...
“They took the emir's slaves,” said Caina. “I will get them back.”
The second soldier shook his head. “Don't be a fool. You saw what that woman did to the siege engines. She'll blast you down to cinders if you look at her the wrong way.”
The first soldier scoffed. “He wants to go, let him go! No skin off my nose if the witch cooks him like a goose. Or if the spook carves him up like a roast.”
“I am an emissary of the emir Rezir Shahan,” Caina informed them. “The Kyracians will not dare lift a hand against me.
The two soldiers shared a dubious look.
Caina marched toward the tavern, mind racing. Why would Andromache and Sicarion gather up a band of slaves and secure them in a tavern? Andromache wanted whatever power lay in the Tomb of Scorikhon. If she merely wanted slaves, she could buy them in the markets of New Kyre.
Unless this was simply an elaborate trap to capture Caina.
She took a deep breath. If Andromache had Nicolai, Caina had no choice but to walk into that trap.
The tingle of sorcery washed over her as she approached the tavern. Andromache was near, and casting a spell.
Then Caina saw who stood guard at the tavern's entrance, and did her very best to keep her face calm.
###
Kylon waited before the door, hand on the hilt of his sword.
He looked over the sea of chained captives filling the Market. Their emotions washed over him, soaking into him like heat radiating from a furnace. He sensed a great deal of pain. Some of them had seen loved ones slain this day. Many would not live to see the auction blocks in Istarinmul.
Perhaps that was a mercy.
And most of all, he felt their fear. The immediate terror of what their captors would do to them. The deep, molten fear the mothers felt for their children. The gnawing fear of the future, of the horrors that awaited them in the slave ships and in the distant lands of their new masters.
For a moment it was too much. The fear screamed in Kylon's head like a thousand agonized forces begging for mercy, weeping for succor.
He closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose.
After a moment he regained control and opened his eyes, his arcane senses deliberately blunted for the moment. The captives had not moved. An Istarish soldier in a black cloak wandered past, looking at the slaves. No doubt he planned which spoils he would claim, which women he would take.
Vile fellow. Just like all the Istarish.
And Kylon had helped them do it.
This was wrong. He was a stormdancer, a warrior, a soldier of New Kyre. His purpose was to fight with valor and skill, to strike down the enemies of his city. To fight as his sister, the High Seat of House Kardamnos, directed him to do. Taking slaves was beneath him.
Yet Andromache had commanded him to fight alongside the Istarish. As they took slaves.
It had to be worth it. Andromache said it was. And she knew best. If she said the power in the Tomb of Scorikhon was worth all this death, it had to be.
Hadn't it?
He would find out soon enough. Once Andromache finished her meditations, she would go to the Citadel with Kylon and Sicarion's thugs. Then she would seize the Tomb's power and leave Marsis to the Istarish.
The Istarish soldier in the black cloak saw Kylon. No trace of fear went over the soldier's bored expression, but the man veered away.
Kylon suppressed a grim chuckle. Yes, the Istarish knew to fear him. They had seen him fight. Once Andromache claimed the Tomb, he would be glad to be rid of the Istarish and of Marsis.
Perhaps then these doubts would no longer trouble him.
The Istarish soldier in the black cloak wandered away, still looking over the slaves.
###
Caina made sure not to look at Kylon.
If he saw past Caina's disguise, he would kill her on the spot. He knew she was too dangerous to keep alive. It took every ounce of control that Caina possessed to keep from running, to keep from staring at Kylon.
Yet she managed it. Theodosia would have been proud.
She kept her pace idle, walking past Kylon, and risked a glance at him beneath the rim of her spiked helmet. His head was bowed, as if in thought, and his brown eyes narrow with emotion. The man looked confused, even troubled.
All the better. If he was distracted, that made it easier for Caina to avoid notice.
She passed the tavern, walked past a burned-out shop that had once sold barrels, and ducked into an alley. One quick glance around the corner confirmed that Kylon had not seen her.
She took a deep breath and hurried toward the tavern's back door.
###
Kylon looked up, frowning.
Something was...amiss. He did not know what. Yet his instincts said something important had just happened, something that he had failed to notice. He chided himself for his lack of vigilance. He could deal with his doubts later, after the battle was won. After Andromache was no longer in danger.
He drew on the power of water sorcery and reached out, extending his senses.
Again the misery of the slaves washed over him, and Kylon set it aside. He sensed the bored wariness of the Istarish guards. With a burst of alarm he realized that he felt nothing from inside the tavern, but then he realized Andromache had sealed the building in a shell of wards. They would keep any surviving magi from detecting her presence as she meditated and recovered her powers.
He felt nothing that indicated immediate danger. Certainly no one with the focused determination and suppressed fear that proceeded violence.
Yet he had missed something. He was sure of it.
But what?
###
Caina approached the tavern's back door.
She felt the crawling tingle of sorcery. Andromache had warded the tavern. Only a ward against detection spells, Caina thought. Nothing stronger. Her shadow-cloak would allow her to bypass the wards with ease.
She hoped.
She listened for a moment, took a deep breath, and then swung the door open.
Beyond lay a deserted kitchen, the fireplace cold, pots and pans crusted with old food. Loaves of hard bread and some sausages lay on a table nearby. After a moment's consideration, Caina tucked a few sausages into her belt. She had not eaten anything since yesterday, and she would need to keep her strength up.
Assuming she lived long enough to need her strength.
A flash of green light caught her eyes, and Caina felt a crawling, nauseating tingle.
Necromancy.
The light came from the door to the common room, which stood half-open. Caina ducked and crawled through the door. She found herself behind the common room's bar, jars of wine stacked around her. Two men leaned against the bar, clad in chain mail and leather. Caina recognized them at once.
Sicarion's mercenaries.
Another green flash, another shuddering tingle against Caina's skin.
She slid forward, peered around the bar, and went very still.
Sicarion stood near the tavern's entrance. Five collared slaves, all women in their early twenties, knelt before him, guarded by more of his pet thugs. Another woman lay on a trestle table, blood streaming from a gaping wound in her chest.
Andromache stood over the dead woman, a dagger in her hand.
A black dagger, with a green bloodcrystal mounted in the pommel. The crystal flickered with ghostly light, and Caina felt the necromantic power of the thing.
“She wasn't a virgin, Sicarion,” said Andromache, scowling. “The death of a virgin generates the most usable power.”
“I am sorry, mistress,” said Sicarion with a bow. “The virginity of a woman is rather difficult to determine. Still, you gained some power from her death, no?”
“Indeed,” said And
romache. “Continue.”
Sicarion beckoned, and two of his men shoved the corpse to the floor and wrestled another slave onto the table. The woman fought and struggled, screaming into her gag, but the mercenaries held her fast.
Andromache lifted the dagger, whispering a spell. Caina understood what Andromache intended, and her stomach tightened with rage. She wanted to spring from concealment, to bury her dagger in Andromache's chest. But if she did that, Sicarion and his men would cut her down, and she would never find Nicolai.
Ghost in the Storm (The Ghosts) Page 18