by Glenda Larke
Taquar lowered his voice. “I want to speak to you alone.”
“No chance,” Jasper said. “If you have anything to say, you can say it in front of Iani.”
“I have something of value you want.” He spoke so softly it was unlikely Iani would hear, anyway.
“I doubt it.”
“A bargain is best discussed in private.”
“There cannot be anything you could offer me that would change a single grain of sand beneath my feet.”
“Not even Mica?”
Jasper felt himself go utterly still. There was nothing he wanted to do more than seize Taquar by his neck and throttle him until there was no more life in him. Instead, he asked, “What about him?”
“He’s alive. I know where he is.”
“And now you tell me?” He smiled faintly. “You know, I can’t think of a single reason why I should believe you. Not one. You’ll have to do better than that.”
“Give me my freedom. Freedom to leave the Quartern. Undertake to put me on a ship for the other side of the Giving Sea. And in exchange I’ll tell you everything I know about him and where he is to be found.”
“Convince me you know where he is.”
“You don’t think I would have allowed Davim to kill him, do you? Rainlord talent runs in families. Even if he had no talent himself, he might have sired a stormlord. Anyway, he was to be our lever, should you refuse to cooperate.”
“Then why did you allow Davim to kill Citrine?”
When Taquar looked blank, Jasper’s rage boiled to the surface. His hands curled into fists, but he kept his arms by his sides. “My sister,” he said. “Why did you let Davim slaughter her—in a game?”
“Oh! I had forgotten her name. He wasn’t supposed to kill her. He was supposed to take them both. But you lied to him and he didn’t like it. He thought he had to make you fear him.”
Once again, that ache. The agony of the knowing. Of never being able to undo the past. His action—a childish attempt to hide who he was—had resulted in Citrine’s death. He’d been too young, too ignorant, too innocent. He said, “At the time you denied knowing what had happened to Mica. You didn’t in fact use him as a lever for my good behavior.”
“It wasn’t necessary. Had you proved recalcitrant, we would have produced him quickly enough.”
“You still didn’t use him later. You threatened Terelle instead.”
“If that failed, I was going to tell you about Mica.”
“I think you didn’t use him because you didn’t have him. In fact, you told me after the fall of Breccia you knew Mica had died. That Davim had told you so. Did he?”
“No. I know Mica is not dead. I know where he is.”
“Then why did you tell me he died in a pede accident?”
“Because I didn’t want you going to look for him.”
“Gabbling pebbles and nonsense, Taquar! If you’d had him, you could have had him brought to me. You can’t think I will believe this. I don’t think you have him at all. I think, if he is still alive, he’s in Davim’s hands and that’s why you used Terelle.”
There was a long silence, then Taquar capitulated. “All right, it’s true. He was in the Red Quarter. Still is. I was worried you’d want to rescue him and end up caught by Davim. I can tell you where to find him. I can tell you which tribe guards him, and on which dune.”
Jasper shook his head. “You are pathetic. We are on our way to war against Davim and his men. Soon I will indeed be able to look for Mica myself. I don’t need your information. And I don’t believe you’ve actually seen him, even if he is alive. All you have is what Davim tells you, and you have no way of knowing if that is the truth.”
Mica, oh, Mica. I don’t know what’s the right thing to do…
Iani brought in the last sack and nodded to indicate he had finished. Together they left the cavern and closed the grille door. Taquar sat where he was, watching Jasper lock it from the outside using a conventional system of iron padlocks, six of them fixing the door on all sides. Six metal plates meant none were accessible through the bars from the inside.
“With a little luck, I shan’t see you again,” Jasper said. “Ever.”
As he and Iani walked away, leading the pedes back to where Terelle waited with Dibble at the ruins, Jasper said, “When you come to bring his supplies, be very careful, my lord. He’s a clever man, and his water skills surpass yours. Never open the grille. Pass the food in through the bars. Never have the keys on you.”
Iani looked back at the grille. “I wish I could be certain he can’t break out of there.”
“I’m sure he’ll try. I want him to try. I want him to try, again and again. The padlocks will hold him unless someone comes with a sledgehammer or something similar to deal with them. You need to maintain a general watch in the area, men who will keep their mouths shut about what they are doing. Well-paid, loyal men who have a grudge against him, like the men you got to mend the grille and bring in the furniture and supplies. Men who have suffered at his hands and will never tell anyone he is here, but don’t let them anywhere near him. He could threaten to seize their water to force you to release him.”
Iani scratched his cheek. “Secrets are hard to keep. Tough to know who whispers pillow talk to a wife or lover.”
“I know. I do have a—a back-up plan to keep him where he is, just in case. Better you don’t know about that, I think. But then, who would want to help him? The Reduners won’t, not now he has nothing to offer them. That alliance is long gone. And anyone else will know he is a traitor who brought us to thirst by his murders. Who would want to free such a man?”
Still, he would have preferred to order Taquar Sardonyx’s death. Instead, he needed him alive, just in case he ever needed the man’s help to stormshift. In case he and Terelle couldn’t find a way to bring rain to the Quartern while she rejoined Russet.
He mounted his pede and they rode the rest of the way, pulling up a few moments later in front of Terelle and Dibble. “Let’s go join the army,” he said, smiling at her.
He reached down to pull her up behind him, while Dibble mounted behind Iani. “Did you have a look?” he asked her quietly as they rode away.
“Yes. I could paint it with my eyes closed.”
“Eight paintings,” he said. “One for each year. With him slightly older in each. Every year, Iani will paint a number on the rocks outside the entrance, starting with number one, then two, and so on. Your paintings should reflect that change. That way I hope he will be tied to that place, his future determined for the next eight years. He won’t be able to escape.”
She didn’t reply.
“Will it work?” he asked over his shoulder.
“I don’t think it’s wise to do paintings so far in advance. Once they are done, the artist can’t change them to unmake the future. What if you need to release him so he can help you make storms again?”
This time, he was the one who was silent.
She leaned forward to speak quietly into his ear. “I’ll do it, but not like that. I’ll paint it as it looks now, but with the grille open and Taquar standing free outside, back view, alongside several guards wearing Scarcleft uniforms and a man wearing the robes of the Sunpriest. I’ll do all those people from the back, identifiable only by what they are wearing. And I will paint something on the large rock to the left of the entrance. The word ‘Shale,’ that’ll do.”
He frowned, trying to follow her line of reasoning.
She explained, “The word is irrelevant. The important thing is it’s not painted there in reality until just before you are ready to release Taquar. That will mean you control the means of his release, not Taquar. He will only be free if there are Scarpen guards and a Lord Gold present, surely something he could not arrange.”
He twisted in the saddle to speak urgently in a low voice. “But Lord Gold could! And such a painting might ensure he decides to do it for some obscure purpose of his own. I loathe the man, you know. Why not paint m
e there?”
“I chose guards and the Quartern Sunpriest because they have recognizable clothing. It means I don’t have to bother with their faces, or how much they age, and I don’t change the fate of a specific person. But I have guarded against this happening without your permission. Only you and I will know about the name on the rock.”
“Ah, I see. But if we do it that way, you have just ensured Taquar will one day be free.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Shale, you know what it was like locked in there. And yet you want to do it to someone else?”
“He had my sister killed, and my village.”
“You can let him out and shove him back in again.”
Just then Iani rode up alongside, so they fell silent. Iani fingered the gold bracelet he had just pulled from the water token pocket of his tunic. “Who was it once said ‘Revenge is balm to the injured soul’?” he asked Jasper.
“That was Edicus the Evil, Cloudmaster about five hundred years ago,” Jasper said dryly. “It has also been said—probably by a much nicer person—that ‘Revenge blackens the suffering heart.’ ”
“Hmm. I think I prefer the first.”
“I prefer to think of it not as revenge, but as justice.”
And the two men exchanged grim-edged smiles as they rode on to rejoin their army in the Warthago Range.
Terelle, troubled, was silent.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Red Quarter
Dune Watergatherer
The blood-spotting soon stopped altogether, much to Ryka’s relief. She forced herself to rest and eat well, wryly amused at how difficult she found the first, and how easy the second. She had developed a fondness for deer baked in heated sand beneath an open fire, for the delicious desert beans always in plentiful supply, for sandgrouse eggs boiled and stuffed with wild garlic served with a sauce of spicy beka seed pods, for sliced melon flavored with a tangy sweet paste from powdered vine seeds.
It’s odd, she reflected, I hate being here, but there is something seductive about the life. Now, if only they had books, or I had my own pede to ride out on a hunt…
And Kaneth at her side, loving her. Damn the louse of a man.
No, don’t think about that. Not now. Kaneth is gone, changed into Uthardim. And he doesn’t know you. Or care, not really. Think instead about how you love the desert nights. Think about all the things you appreciate.
That feeling of openness she’d never had within the walls of a city. The kindness of the women, their wisdom and the way they passed it on from one generation to the next. The way the tribespeople gathered around the fires at night to sing or dance or listen to the storytellers among them. (How she longed to have parchment and pen to record that wisdom, those tales!) Beyond the encampment the night-parrots boomed and the crickets sang; above, the Star River passed in a blaze of light.
Early evening, before the light was gone from the sky, the women would mend and embroider while the men sharpened or oiled their weapons, or made needles and brooches from bone to give to their womenfolk, or sewed leather into sandals or water skins and other items. Children played hide and seek in and around the tents.
And then there were the days. The gloriousness of the dawns and the way the dune shadows shot miles across the plains as the sun came up, as if attempting to drape the landscape—in vain—with the last vestiges of the dark. The way the hawks hung in the sky as if they had been pinned there. The way the dune sang deep inside as the sand shifted, or the way tiny spindevils whispered as they played their games along the crests.
She’d even made a friend, of sorts—the lad, Khedrim. For some reason he’d taken a liking to her, and whenever he had any spare time he became her shadow. With his strange mix of bright intelligence and a clumsy lack of social skills, she couldn’t help but like him as he chatted away, impervious to her supposed lack of understanding.
Blighted eyes, she thought, why did these Reduners have to spoil it all with their schemes of war and dreams of a Time of Random Rain?
Fortunately Ravard was no longer so inclined to take her to his bed. His anger and suspicion simmered. He watched her, his glower a mix of rage and pain. Mostly, though, he was too concerned with the tribe and the morale of his men even to speak to her. Once his back allowed it, he pushed his men hard and himself even harder, often disappearing for days while they chased the meddles of wild pedes and brought in some of the immature beasts for taming.
When in the encampment, the men spent their days encouraging the animals to accept saddle and bridle and rider, equipping them with handles and mounting slots, persuading them not to panic at the sound of ziggers in cages. It was hot, back-breaking work, and usually at the end of the day, after eating a meal and drinking amber around the fire, Ravard would tumble onto his pallet and sleep the night through, exhausted.
Or maybe, she thought, it’s just that a woman as pregnant as I am lacks allure to a man as young as he is. Whatever the reason, she appreciated the result.
In the meantime, she planned her escape, even though she was not sure when to risk it. The return to the heart of the Scarpen would take her possibly twelve days or more, riding hard and direct and resting little. Along the way, she would have to bypass Qanatend without being seen, because Ravard had told her Davim still had a remnant force there, under the Warrior Son, holding both the city and the mother cistern up in the Warthago Range. At least Breccia was free again.
But first she had to steal a pede, more difficult now there were fewer of them around. She needed to pilfer enough food to last for the journey. Even feeding her mount would be a problem. A pede could graze on plants, but the grazing time needed for a beast to obtain enough nourishment was substantial and, for a fugitive, time would be in short supply.
Night after night, she slipped out under the walls of the tent—easier now she slept alone—to filch food, one small theft at a time. Families made it easy because they kept their stores outside their tents, usually in half-buried earthenware jars shaded by a woven grass canopy. Stealing was unknown within the tribe, unnecessary even, because food and water were freely shared. She found petty thievery was simple: a handful of pede kibble here, a few strands of dried pede meat there, some salted eggs from a jar, dried bab fruit originally stolen from Qanatend. No one expected it; no one took any precautions against it; no one noticed.
She wrapped all of it carefully in cloth she cut from her bedding, then stored it under the carpets in her sleeping room, in holes she dug then salted to keep the grubs and ants out. It was a slow process, but at last she decided she had sufficient food for herself for the journey. The pede kibble, though, was not enough. She would have to achieve a more audacious theft on the night she left. Water she could take from the waterhole on her way off the dune, using her rainlord skills. The panniers and jars to carry it would be more difficult.
The pede presented a problem, too. The one she had befriended on her journey into the Red Quarter had been taken by Kaneth. The new ones were semi-wild and only just beginning to bond with their trainers. The old, tamer ones were now tethered close to the tents. Stealing one of those would be fraught with danger, as pedes being saddled tended to be restless, noisily snuffling and blowing, or clicking their mouthparts.
Finally she settled on one of the three youngest of the newly caught beasts. They were corralled together in an enclosure at the foot of a dune not far from the waterhole. They were all five or six moults away from maturity, and of no interest to warriors looking for a mount now. Pedes entering moult were useless for half a cycle until the old chitin had been shed and the new hardened. Khedrim, not yet old enough to be granted his own myriapede, had been told to look after them, and he’d gratefully accepted an offer of help from Ryka.
“This one,” he told her the first time she came to the yard, pointing out the largest of the three, “is going to be mine. I’ve called her Redwing. My brothers laugh and say she is too young to train, but already she comes when I call
. That one there I call Blackwing. And the third one is Skite, because he likes to show off.”
Talkative and trusting, both character traits making him the butt of jokes and teasing from his peers, Khedrim was happy enough to escape the camp as often as possible in order to tend to the three young pedes. Ryka, mixing sign language and horribly broken Reduner mangled by a terrible accent, made him laugh, and she soon had him following her lead without even knowing he did so.
She started by coming with him when he led the pedes to water every evening at the waterhole and helping him collect feed. Fortunately, Reduners thought nothing of women working physically hard until their confinement, so no one remarked on her activities. She trained the one he called Blackwing to come when she called, to associate her presence with delicious treats and delightful rubs between the segments. She asked Khedrim to carve mounting slots and screw a saddle handle onto the animal.
“The chalamen say that’s stupid,” he said. “After they moult you have to do it all over again when the new chitin grows in.”
“What matter?” Ryka asked with a shrug. “Khedrim, Garnet, ride now can, eh? Young,” she added, pointing to both pedes, “learn quick. Easy teached.”
He looked shocked. “Women don’t ride pedes!”
“Blackwing, Redwing, not proper pede,” she said hurriedly. “Baby only!”
He still looked dubious, but she persuaded him to do it, then impressed on him that it was probably better he didn’t tell anyone she intended to ride. By the time he had second thoughts, he was already complicit and it was in his interest to keep quiet. Inwardly she felt guilty. He was so gullible, and she was using him. One day he would get into a heap of trouble because of it.
Apart from a couple of times with Khedrim when no one was around, she mounted Blackwing only at night. She’d wait until the sentries were on patrol in the opposite direction—easy enough for her to determine with her water-sense—and would ride the pede round and round the corral. When the sentries returned, she would duck down behind the young pedes and wait for them to pass. It did not take her long to teach Blackwing to put up with her on its back, to obey the bridle and to respond to the prod.