I pointed. "That horse right there."
"Neesha," Del said, still waiting behind me. The tone was a complex combination of relief, concern, and command. And something I couldn’t identify.
Umir glared at me. "The book."
"When the boy is mounted and heading out of here."
Nayyib finally bestirred himself to walk haphazardly to his horse and stick a foot in the stirrup. With great effort he pulled himself up. I heard the sound of a burnous seam ripping as he fell into the saddle. I wondered if I’d have any teeth left by the time we exited the courtyard. Already my jaw ached from clenching it.
"Go," Del told him, as Nayyib lifted reins.
The stud, taking a closer look at the bay, suddenly filled the courtyard with a ringing neigh. I winced.
Del’s voice again: "Neesha. Go."
Neesha went.
"You too, bascha." I heard retreating hoofs clopping agains the pavers. Then I smiled down at Umir. "Your book."
I thought he might send a servant to take it from me. But Umir came himself, lower lip caught in white teeth as he reached up for it.
"I’ve locked it closed," I told him, "for safety." I handed over the book. "It may take you a few weeks or years, but eventually you’ll figure out how to open it."
Eyes wide with alarm, Umir attempted to undo the latch holding the book closed. "No — no —"
"A little insurance," I remarked, "in case you felt like trying a spell on me when I wasn’t looking."
He hugged the book to his chest, staring up at me. "But — how did you do this? It requires a spell to lock it!"
"Let’s just say I picked up a few things while visiting an island paradise." I tossed him a jaunty wave as I backed the stud toward the opening in the wall. "Happy reading, Umir."
Outside the walls, I found Del and Nayyib waiting. I motioned them to ride on as I headed past them.
Del’s face was white. "I can’t believe you did that."
"What — give him the book? Why not? It worked, didn’t it? Nayyib-Neesha is now our guest instead of Umir’s." I glanced at the boy. "Are you drugged? Did Umir drug you?"
Owl-eyed, he shook his head.
Suspicion stirred. "Drunk?"
His tone was excessively grave. "I believe so, yes."
I swore deeply and decisively.
Del was still stuck on the book. "I thought you said it contains magic spells."
"It contains a number of things, including magic spells. It’s a pretty amazing book, actually."
"And you gave it to Umir?"
"Well, I’d read it already." I grinned at her. "What did you think I was doing all day when you were asleep in bed?"
Del was stunned. "You read that whole book in an afternoon?"
"Just a little trick I picked up in Skandi." I took a hard look at Nayyib. "Are you sober enough to stay on your horse?"
"I believe so, yes."
"Do you know where the oasis is from here?"
"I believe so, yes."
"That’s where we’re going."
Nayyib nodded amiably. "All right." Then a hiccup emerged, attended by a modest belch.
I planted the flat of my palm against my brow. "Gods save me from a sandsick woman and a drunk boy!"
Del scowled at me. "I am not sandsick, and he’s not a boy."
"But he’s drunk."
Nayyib offered, "I believe so, yes."
"Oh, hoolies," I groaned. "Maybe I should take my sword to him. Or go on ahead and let him find his own way to the oasis. I only might have been killed in there getting him free, and it turns out he’s drunk. Drunk!"
"Neesha," Del said gently, "I would be quiet now."
"All right." He gifted her with a luminous smile and a worshipful stare from those melting, honey-brown eyes. "You’re so beautiful."
"Oh, hoolies," Del muttered.
TWENTY-SEVEN
We managed to get the boy to the oasis.
Or rather, Del managed to get the boy to the oasis; I was so disgusted by his condition I refused to have anything to do with him. He managed to stay aboard his horse, which was all that mattered to me, and upon finding a quiet little place at the oasis that we might call our own for an hour or two, I dismounted and led the stud off to the spring. I left Del to deal with the kid. Which maybe wasn’t the wisest thing in the world to do, in view of his obvious infatuation, but I wasn’t in any mood to put up with either of them. And since I knew Del had no tolerance for drunkenness, I doubted she was any more entranced with Nayyib than I was. The main thing was, he was free of Umir and my debt was repayed. Del and I could now get on about our business.
I was heading back to the trio of palm trees when I met Del leading her gelding and Nayyib’s bay. "Did you get him settled all safe in his own little bed?"
Del, pausing, shot me a hard glance."You might have a little sympathy for him."
"I jut risked my life for a drunken kid! Why should I have any sympathy for him?"
"Umir could have killed him."
"Umir wanted his book back too much for that." "Which you gave him."
"In exchange for the boy. The one you were so all-fired determined to rescue. Well, he’s rescued. He can stay here and sleep it off, and you and I can get on with our lives."
She seemed startled. "I don’t want to leave him here."
"Why not?"
"He’s drunk."
"He can sleep it off."
"What if he gets sick?"
"I never died from it." I paused. "Neither did you, when you got drunk on Vashni liquor."
Color flooded her face. "We are not discussing me."
"Maybe we should."
"Why? This has nothing to do with me!"
"He’s not a stray kitten, bascha, or a puppy with a broken leg, or even an orphan sandtiger cub — though you might not be so thrilled with the idea of saving baby sandtigers, now, after our last meeting with one. He’s a grown man; he can take responsibility for his own binges."
Del’s eyes narrowed. "You are jealous."
I sighed with long-suffering patience. "I think not."
"If you weren’t, you’d have nothing against helping him."
"Rescuing him isn’t helping?"
"He spent days nursing us both after the sandtiger attack, and weeks with me at the Vashni encampment."
"Yes, I’m aware of that."
"Yet you want to just ride off and leave him here to fend for himself when the gods know who might try to rob him."
"Sometimes that’s what happens when you get drunk. It’s called a learning experience."
"And I’m learning a little more about you just now, aren’t I?" She clucked to the horses and started to move them out. "Do whatever you like, Tiger. I’m staying here with Neesha at least until morning."
I watched her disappear between two wide horse butts as she led them down the path. I found the image extremely appropriate, in view of her behavior.
Aloud, I said, "I think this was the most ridiculous argument we’ve ever had." I patted the stud’s face. "And we’ve had a few." Being a very wise horse, he did not comment.
Nayyib was sound asleep when I got back to the little encampment. Del had unloaded gear and set out his bedroll; he lay sprawled upon it on his back with one bent arm flung across his eyes. I contemplated the rest of him, which was partially hidden beneath his burnous. But the legs were free of encumbrance, and one shoulder, and a forearm. Not a big man, not like me, but not small, either. His coloring was Southron, including the big brown eyes that he used to such advantage, curse him. A good-looking kid, no doubt, if still a tad soft around the edges; and certainly closer to Del in age than I was. Maybe that’s why she wanted to mother him. She couldn’t do it to me.
Not that she’d ever indicated she wanted to.
Scowling, I turned my attention to the stud, pulling off pouches, saddle, and blankets. I had thought to ride on after a rest, believing the oasis too obvious if Umir sent anyone after us or if there happened
to be sword-dancers in the vicinity, but there was not much time before sundown. This place offered water, a little shade, safety in numbers.
Or maybe just more witnesses than usual.
I hobbled the stud, grained him, draped the halter-rope over one of the spiky bark segments sheathing the bole of the nearest palm tree. Someone else had built a modest fire ring not far from Nayyib’s unconscious body, but we lacked kindling for it, and I didn’t feel like going on a lengthy hunt for wood. Over the years pickings had become very slim near the oasis, so that most people on wagons carried wood with them if they wanted a fire, and a pot of embers they kept alive by feeding it twigs regularly. Del and I didn’t pack that heavy; if there was no wood for a fire, or circumstances warranted it was safer to go without, we didn’t bother.
I didn’t bother now. I just set up my own little area with upside down saddle, drying blankets spread next to it, and bedding unrolled. I shed the harness and sword and set the blade within reach. Then I lay down in a posture very similar to the kid’s, if without the accompaniment of liquor fumes, and let myself drift. Del came back a little later. Eyes closed, I listened as she finished untacking her gelding and Nayyib’s, hobbled them, told them to behave themselves, then crunched over to where the kid lay.
"He’s alive," I remarked.
She didn’t answer. She just arranged her own bedding — closer to him than to me — and settled down.
"We’ll spend the night, all right? Make sure he’s alive in the morning. Then we’ll go."
There was no reply. Swearing under my breath, I rolled over onto one hip and pulled the corner of a blanket over my face. With one hand draped across the hilt of my sword, I went to sleep. If she was so concerned about the kid, Del could keep watch for any stray sword-dancers looking to get some of Umir’s reward money.
I woke up to morning when I heard the sound of a body moving nearby. My hand locked around the sword hilt, lifted the blade even as I sat upright — and discovered Nayyib staggering off from our little camp with the frenzied focus of a man in dire need of relief. Since it was very likely his head, bladder, and belly were ready to burst, I hoped he found it in time.
Dropping the sword back onto my bedroll, I arched backward to stretch my spine and shoulders. Del, coming out of the cocoon of blankets between me and the kid’s bedding, squinted at the early sunlight. Not far from our camp a danjac brayed and was answered by another, which began a whole chain of earshattering morning greetings from one end of the oasis to the other. No one could have slept through that.
Del finger-combed hair off her face as I crawled out of bed and stood. Across the oasis other bodies were doing the same, murmuring to one another as the day began.
I bent and picked up the sword. "I think the kid’s got the right idea —" I yawned. "— though I don’t believe I’m in quite the same distress. Be back in a bit."
Nodding, Del gathered up horse buckets and headed for the spring. Everyone carried water to their animals first thing in the morning, since to take livestock to the spring would form a milling mass of thirsty, impatient animals all insisting they deserved to drink first. Much safer to do it this way.
When I got back to the camp, I found Nayyib standing near his bedroll, staring at mine and Del’s as if he had no idea who they belonged to. He heard me coming and turned sharply. Momentary alarm faded.
"Oh," he said.
"Yes, oh. It’s us. Or did you forget what happened yesterday afternoon?"
"I think I have forgotten all of yesterday, not just the afternoon." He scooped up a bota, unstoppered it and took a long pull. The last mouthful he turned and spat out. "Yeilkth," he remarked — or something like it. He backhanded excess moisture from his jaw and looked at me. "What happened?"
"We rescued you."
"Oh." He nodded vaguely. "Good."
Near-black hair stood up in clumps all over his head. Stubble darkened the hollows beneath his cheeks, enhancing the steep, oblique angles of the bones above them. He had the look of a slightly disreputable but appealing young man coupled with boyish innocence down to perfection. But the honey-brown eyes, I saw with a stab of satisfaction, were bloodshot, and his color was slightly off.
"Bright day," I commented cheerfully.
Nayyib squinted.
"Feels like it’ll be a warm one." I set down the sword, then gathered up my bedding and began to shake it out.
Nayyib very carefully sat down on his own and squirted more water into his mouth, then soaked his hair and let droplets run down his face.
I spread my blankets, began rolling them up. "You probably won’t feel much like riding today, huh?" He scrunched up his face thoughtfully as he slicked hair back into the merest shadow of obedience.
"Probably better if you stayed here, waited another day." I tied thongs around my bedroll. "No reason to get in a rush. Del and I’ll make our goodbyes and head on out."
That got his attention. "Head out?"
"We’ve got business to attend to." I set the bedroll by my saddle, checked the condition of the saddle blankets. Dry. "Del and I." Just to make it clear who the "we" meant. "I imagine you’ve got things to do, too."
"Not really."
Figures. "Well, I imagine something will come up."
Del was back with the buckets. Nayyib immediately stood up, took a somewhat wobbly sideways step to regain his balance, then gallantly offered to assist her.
She took one look at his face and smiled. "No, but thank you. Tiger can help me. Why don’t you sit back down — or lie down — and rest?"
Recognizing an order disguised as casual comment, I took one of the buckets from her. "He’s a little worse for the wear this morning," I remarked cheerfully as she and I hiked over to the horses. "But he’ll get over it by tomorrow, and then he can be on his way."
Del set the bucket down in front of her gelding. "Why don’t we have him come with us?"
Startled, I nearly tripped over my bucket as I put it down in front of the stud. "What for?"
"He said he wanted to take lessons from you."
"Yes, but I never said I wanted to give them."
"But that’s what you’re going to do. Give lessons. Remember?" She patted the gelding’s neck. "The plan is for you to resurrect Alimat and take on students. At least, that’s what you told me. Has that changed?"
"No." Though I wasn’t certain when it might come to be, since we were a bit busy trying to keep me alive.
"Then you’ve got your first student in Neesha." She grabbed the bucket, shoving the gelding’s nose away, and lugged it over to Nayyib’s horse.
"That sounds like a very tidy arrangement — from your point of view — but maybe I’m not ready to start lessons yet."
"Why not? Aren’t we heading to what’s left of Alimat? Couldn’t he help us rebuild it?"
I glanced over my shoulder at Nayyib and saw him lying on his bedroll with an arm draped over his eyes once again. I lowered my voice. "What is it with you, Del? Why do you care so much about someone who’s practically a stranger?"
Her face was set, though her tone was pitched as quiet as mine. "I told you, he helped me when I was ill. I would have died without his help."
"Does this mean we have to adopt him?"
She cut her eyes in Nayyib’s direction, then stepped close to me. Since Del is six feet tall, you tend to notice when she gets that close. "Why don’t you just say what’s on your mind, Tiger? That you’d rather he didn’t ride with us because you don’t want a good-looking man my own age spending time with me."
I ground it out between my teeth. "That’s not it."
"Then what is it?"
"I like it the way things are. You and me. Just you and me. It has nothing to do with the fact he’s a good-looking kid with eyes that can likely get any woman to spread her legs for him with the first puppy-dog glance and who just happens to be your own age."
A wry male tone intruded. "Really?"
Del and I both turned as one. Nayyib stood three
strides away, legs spread, arms folded against his chest. "I wasn’t asleep — or unconscious — and I’m not deaf. I don’t particularly care to eavesdrop, either, but when one hears his name mentioned, one tends to pay attention." His brows arched up as he met my gaze. "Do you think I really can get any woman to spread her legs for me?" He touched a finger to skin below one eye. "With these?"
I said, "Not the way they look today."
His rueful grin was swift, exposing white teeth; at least he could laugh at himself.
"Maybe by tonight," Del said thoughtfully.
Outraged, I glared at her.
"Really?" Nayyib repeated, sounding more than a little hopeful.
"Really," Del confirmed.
"This is ridiculous," I announced. "We’re standing here talking about how this kid can get women to sleep with him when there are any number of people who want to kill me?"
Del seized the opening. "Which is another good reason for him to come along."
"Why, bascha? He’s not a sword-dancer. I don’t think he’d be much of a challenge." I glanced at Nayyib. "Hey, I’m telling it the way I see it."
He nodded. "Fair enough. But if you taught me, maybe I could be good enough to provide something of a challenge. I do have some skill, you see… though actually you never have, have you? Seen my sword skill." He shrugged. "So I believe you’re making assumptions with no evidence to shore them up."
"Stay out of this," I suggested.
"Why? It’s about me."
"Because you’ve already proven you’re unreliable," I retorted.
"How has he proven that?" Del demanded.
"Hoolies, bascha, he got drunk while he was a prisoner!"
Del’s disdain was manifest. "That’s your evidence?"
"I got drunk," Nayyib said, "because Umir felt I might know some things about you that he wanted to know. Something to do with a book. But I didn’t know anything about any book, nor do I know anything about you — except what everyone in the South knows, and Umir already knows all that, too."
"What does that have to do with you getting drunk?" I asked, failing to see any point.
"Because after it became evident that beating me wouldn’t gain him his information, he tried another tactic. He had a supposedly sympathetic servant slip me a jug of — something. I don’t know what it was, but it was certainly more powerful than anything I’ve tasted before. And while I lack your vast experience with liquor — you are old enough to be my father, after all, and thus you have the advantage of significant additional years — I have made the aquaintance of it in various forms." He shrugged. "It made me very, very drunk."
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