Oshiram had wanted to believe it, and in his eagerness he’d made others believe. He had summoned them, his peers from twenty lands. He had committed the unforgivable sin of making fools of them as well. Some of them had travelled months. Who could resist? Who didn’t dream of an end to war? And all Oshiram had shown them was another fiasco, a new upwelling of hatred between the Empires, and a young girl strangled before their royal eyes.
No, they would never forgive him. Indeed the other six rulers of the Crownless Lands had just met on Talturi: Oshiram still had enough gossips in his pay to keep him aware of such momentous gatherings. Even if his fellow princes no longer wanted him joining the conversation.
Then again, perhaps he was the subject of conversation. Perhaps they’d agreed to censure him, to dump Simjan goods into the Nelu Rekere, to punish his people along with their naïve king. Those parting looks at the gates of Simjalla City, those heads shaking in disbelief, the long silence when the last ships had left the harbour … .
Oshiram had come through all that. He had found a new purpose in the rescue and healing of Eberzam Isiq. And shortly thereafter had come a miracle: he was in love, for the first time in his stilted, ceremony-clogged life. A former slave, a dancer, a beauty to stop the heart. She watched him like a frightened child, at first; no doubt she’d heard that all kings gobbled their women like sweets from a platter. She’d expected to be raped. Oshiram had treated her with gentleness and dignity, assigned her light chores and spacious rooms, sent her flowers and invitations – not summonses – to dine with him quietly if she would. He had wooed her: that was what it was called. And when at last she came to him, and loved him, he knew a joy beyond all telling. He forgot about intrigues and rat infestations and the duplicity of Arqual. He lived for this woman, lay awake longing for the morrow beside her, or slept and dreamed of her voice. He gave her rings, dresses, dogs, excursions to the hills, mad promises. His heart.
Isiq had broken that heart with a word.
The woman’s real name was Syrarys – formerly Syrarys Isiq – and she had been sent to him by none other than the Arquali spymaster, Sandor Ott. Years earlier, Ott had dispatched her to Isiq’s own household, and Isiq’s bed. Syrarys had poisoned the admiral for years, plotted both his death and his daughter’s, who she had helped to raise. And if Isiq could be believed, she had even betrayed that serpent of a spymaster. Her true allegiance, he insisted, was to the Blood Mage, Arunis.
If he killed himself, he would do it cleverly. He was not so selfish as to add a monarch’s self-inflicted death to the woes of his people. He must go sailing and fall overboard, or go riding and be thrown into a ravine. Yes, that was better. There were always moments alone on a hunt. A blameless death, and the crown to his younger brother, a man unburdened by shame. It could happen. These nights of misery could end.
On 20 Halar, as quiet hands lit a fuse in the kitchen of the Lord Admiral of Arqual, King Oshiram send a page to inform his huntsman that they would be riding at dawn. He lay alone that night, sleepless. At ten that evening he sent his chamberlain by coach to a certain notorious address, with orders to bring back a courtesan; it had been decades since such women had lived in the palace. She arrived by eleven, and he took her to his bedroom and undressed her beside a roaring fireplace. She was very beautiful. When he touched her, he cried.
His weeping terrified the girl. Rising, he told her to dress. At the doorway he handed her a note for the chamberlain: she would be handsomely paid. Alone again, the king went to the window overlooking the little pond where in summer (legend had it) the frogs spoke in the voices of his ancestors. He stood there until he was chilled. Then he pulled off his remaining rings, the ones not given to Syrarys, and threw them into the pond.
At daybreak he ate standing up in the stables with the hunting party, as was his custom before such outings. It was perfect, this smelly, sweaty, anonymous end. Bitter tea, foul tobacco. Surrounded by horses and dogs and brutes who cared only that he rode well, and followed their lead in the woods.
Almost perfect, that is: the chamberlain had infiltrated the stables. There were papers to sign before a day of leisure. And a message that had come the night before, when His Majesty had insisted on no interruptions of any kind.
The king nodded, wolfing sausages: ‘Give it here, then.’ He took the parchment, wiped his hands on his leggings, broke the oxblood seal.
It was from the Archduke of Talturi. Oshiram smiled: a last sting before the drop of the curtain. He scanned the letter indifferently. Then he froze, and started over, reading this time with care.
Beloved Oshiram: I have just left a conference from which Your Majesty was, by necessity, excluded. If by chance you have learned of this meeting, I beseech your forgiveness. The circumstances, and the matter under debate, were quite extraordinary … .
He read on. Gods of death, they were ratifying the Simja Pact! He’d almost forgotten it existed: that framework for an alliance of the Crownless Lands against external aggressors. They’d dropped the initiative when peace between the two great Empires appeared to be achievable. Now the other kings had revived the pact – and wished him to lead it. They were asking him, begging him, to assume the role of Defender of the Crownless Lands.
They are not many, our forces – perhaps one hundred vessels, and twelve thousand men – if Your Majesty should see fit to contribute to its number. They cannot repel the invaders where they are already entrenched. But with skill and Rin’s favour they may prevent the next entrenchment, or at least slow the bastards’ progress across our lands.
All are in agreement: we must have you. Balan of Rukmast is losing his hearing, and brave Lord Iftan’s people cannot spare him: a volcano is bubbling and oozing across Urnsfich. There were other contenders. We argued long. But when the shouting ended there was relief in every face. Because we know you, Oshiram. Because in this time of infinite deception there is one sovereign who never chose aught but truth and courage, and who saw before any of us that the world was changing, and that we must change as well. If you had not called Arqual’s bluff , not let them bring their sham Treaty to your island, how else would the truth have emerged? And when word came that you, in secret, had harboured Admiral Isiq …
Someone belched. Oshiram lowered the parchment and gazed at the hunters blankly. en a small, quizzical smile appeared on his face.
‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘it pains me to inform you that I cannot ride today. No, nor tomorrow either. Go and kill a buck without me. It seems the world has little intention of letting me go.’
Finally, to the rebels themselves. Maisa’s land forces were paltry compared to the great legions of Arquali loyalists brought in from the east, but once back in the Chereste Highlands they were relatively safe.
Officially, the Highlands had been annexed six years earlier, along with the city below; in practice, they were an afterthought. The Imperial Governor himself had never set foot in what he called ‘those dull, drowsy hills’. And they were drowsy – until they exploded.
One effect of this drowsiness was that, over the years, the governor had shifted more and more of his troops out of the Highlands and back to Ormael City, where they grumbled less and could be more cheaply maintained. By the time of Maisa’s declaration, the mountain checkpoints had become a form of punishment detail, and the total Imperial presence had dwindled to some five hundred men.
When the rebels stormed Ormael, those five hundred had no chance. A quarter were killed outright. Eighty or ninety defected to the rebels’ side. The rest were stripped of their arms and driven down into the plum orchards, and left there to hobble barefoot to the city gate.
But at sea, matters were very different. Power in Alifros has always meant naval power, and in sheer numbers of men and ships the loyalists had an overwhelming advantage. The murder of the Lord Admiral and his son had cracked the navy’s unity, but that crack would take long months to spread. Meanwhile, loyalist ships filled ports from Etrej to Opalt. The nearest squadrons were less tha
n a day from Ormael.
Just three hours after Maisa’s speech in Tanner’s Row, a light sprang up across the Straits of Simja. It was a warning fire, lit by order of King Oshiram. Ships were making for Ormael from the east.
The scramble was chaotic. Men who had hoped for a day or two ashore were drummed back to the ships; food and water casks were all but tossed aboard. New recruits scoured the city for weapons, hammocks, sea coats, shoes. Romances just hours old fell to pieces, or were consecrated by marriages performed in Ormael’s ruined temples, the monks too stunned by circumstance even to object when couples appeared before them still reeking of love. Isiq and Commodore Darabik aborted their inspection of the boats of the Ormali volunteers, most of which were not swift or seaworthy enough to join the fight. No one seemed to know where the Empress was. Her ministers responded to the question with glares.
Soon lookouts on the Chereste cliffs were able to spot the enemy: thirty warships in the vanguard alone. Some miles further, a second wave was advancing, larger than the first.
Isiq and Darabik received the news on the Slave Terrace, as they prepared to board their separate vessels. The two men exchanged a look. They had made but one move in this campaign; their second would be a desperate retreat.
‘I should have married your sister, Purcy.’
‘The hell you say, my prince. You were destined to take the hand of the Empress. One day soon I’ll be kneeling before you both at Castle Maag.’
Isiq smiled and pressed his shoulders. One day soon.
Then he tightened his grip and looked Darabik in the eye. ‘You must do something for me. Protect Suthinia, if and when you see her. Do your best to keep her alive.’
Darabik’s black eyebrows climbed. ‘My word on it, Prince.’
That was as much as either of them could say. Darabik knew that the Empress meant to keep Suthinia at her side. But not even he and Isiq could discuss Maisa’s whereabouts. The Empress had a new task: to appear everywhere, to stir rebellion in port after port – and then disappear before the loyalists could seize her. To roar like a tigress and vanish like a ghost. The ship she chose to board at any moment was therefore the greatest secret of the whole campaign. Each man who knew where to find her was a man who might be taken and tortured into revealing the fact.
Maisa had shared just one point with Isiq: that she would not be leaving Ormael on his vessel. Isiq had all but revealed that fact to Darabik, with this talk of Suthinia. He did not, therefore, confess anything further: not his dark prognosis for the campaign, nor his terror of catching a whiff of deathsmoke, without Suthinia there to help him fight the urge. Nor his shameful inability to say goodbye to her, the witch he lusted for, and loved perhaps, the dreamer who saw Thasha in her dreams.
‘You don’t mind me taking over the Nighthawk?’ Isiq asked.
‘I suggested it,’ said Darabik. ‘She’s our finest warship, and belongs with the Fleet Admiral. And you should have pleasant sailing, too. The old men say it will be fine for a week.’
‘We are the old men, Purcy.’
‘Almost, my prince. And we made a great mess of things, didn’t we? All those years under Magad. Years of loyalty to a symbol, a moth-eaten banner. A rotted man.’
Isiq released him. ‘A great mess,’ he agreed. ‘Nothing for it now but to start the clean-up.’
So it was that hours before dawn the tiny fleet that stood for Maisa of Arqual left the port of Ormael. At the harbour mouth they divided into three, saluted one another with roars and cannon-fire, and began their lives as hunted men.
Isiq took his squadron east, and was under fire by noon. A second squadron tacked west into the Nelu Gila: waters that no Empire but the Mzithrin had ever held. And Commodore Darabik took his forces south towards Locostri, and was caught by a task force of Arquali destroyers. The latter vessels had the wind, and closed quickly, and Darabik’s entire squadron went down under a bright blue sky.
27
Souls Set Free
‘By all that’s holy, doubt your instincts!’ my mother told me when I came of age, ‘and trust even less in those weak organs, the eyes. Wait for the heart’s eye to open. Then you’ll know how long you’ve lived in the dark.’
– Embers of Ixphir House by Hercól Ensyriken ap Ixhxchr
9 Fuinar 942
297th day from Etherhorde
‘Ah, Master Stargraven! I knew you would be back.’
Felthrup led the way down the ancient passage with its rotting wares. Ahead in the enchanted brig, the antique lamp burned on its chain as before, and the light gleamed on the unlocked cells. He was terrified, and elated. His scholarship was paying off – and more importantly, he had friends beside him. Marila and Fiffengurt would need his guidance. They had never faced a demon before.
This time the maukslar had not bothered with a disguise. It stood at the centre of its cell looking just as Felthrup remembered: talons, wings, bloated body, gleaming gold eyes. Its hands rested lightly on the bars of the cell; lamplight glittered on its rings.
‘Shall we bargain, rat?’ it said.
‘Oh yes,’ said Felthrup. ‘That is indeed why we came.’
The three humans remained silent, as he had hoped they would. Marila and Fiffengurt each held a little pouch. The demon studied them, allowing its eyes to linger pointedly on Marila’s belly. Unblinking, the Tholjassan girl met its gaze.
‘Oho, little wife,’ said the maukslar. ‘Ferocity suits you. It will not protect you, however.’
The maukslar turned to the last figure in the brig. It smiled, fat cheeks folding in on themselves. ‘Nilus Rose. Are you come to join your good friend Captain Kurlstaff? He was an amusing companion, while he lived.’
Rose’s eyes betrayed nothing. His voice was low and deadly. ‘Kurlstaff has spoken of you, monster.’
‘Has he spoken of your death? It is very near. You will know shame, then agony; then the plague will simply melt your mind away. You will try to hold on, to remember yourself, to keep your human soul intact. But you will fail. It will pour from you in a rush, like bilge down a drain.’
Captain Rose stepped forward. A show of courage, but he did not truly feel it: Felthrup could smell the terror in the big man’s sweat.
‘Not too near, Captain!’ he squeaked.
Even as he spoke the maukslar hurled itself against the bars with a snarl. Its reach was longer than anyone could have foreseen: one jewelled hand clawed the air just inches from the captain’s face. Fiffengurt hauled Rose back by the arm.
The maukslar straightened, its calm suddenly restored. It held something red between two fingers: a bit of Rose’s beard.
‘I think I shall keep this,’ it said.
‘Abomination!’ shrieked a voice from behind them. ‘Fat toad of Slagarond! Drop that hair!’
It was Lady Oggosk, hobbling down the passage, brandishing her stick. Felthrup winced. He’d been wrong to tell the captain about this place. Neither he nor his witch could help them now.
‘Drop it!’ Oggosk shrieked again. But the maukslar did not obey. Instead it put the wisp of Rose’s beard into its mouth, and swallowed. Oggosk’s face twisted in horror. She struck the iron bars and snapped her stick in two. The maukslar held its vast belly and laughed.
‘Enough, enough!’ cried Felthrup. ‘Duchess, you are not to interfere! Captain Rose, I thought we had an understanding, you and I.’
Rose took Oggosk’s elbow, firmly. ‘Go back to the door,’ he told her, ‘and see that no one approaches. That is my command.’
For once, Oggosk heeded him, though she wept and swore and as she departed, clutching half her stick.
‘The ghosts are thick around you, Captain,’ said the maukslar. ‘They know when one is soon to join their number.’
Marila nudged Felthrup with her foot. She was right; it was for him to take charge.
‘Tulor!’ he said, inching nearer. ‘I am ready for you today, but I warn you that I shall not tolerate behaviour unbecoming in a – that is, poor behaviour
of any kind. You have knowledge to barter with? Very good, that is what I require. To begin with—’
‘Free me.’
Mr Fiffengurt snorted. ‘Now there’s a laugh,’ he said.
Felthrup suppressed an urge to bite his ankle. ‘To begin with, I will ask you a simple thing. Is Arunis gone for ever, now that Mr Uskins is dead? Or is there still a man aboard who he has … infected, as it were?’
The maukslar spat.
‘Hmmph!’ said Felthrup. ‘That is because you don’t know.’
The creature bristled. ‘I was perfectly clear with you, rodent. I will tell you nothing more until I am set free.’
‘But I think you will. I think you will trade knowledge for food.’
‘Food!’The creature looked at him with contempt. ‘Little squirmer! You may keep your shipboard slops. I do not hunger here.’
‘How ungracious!’ said Felthrup. ‘But you must offer him a taste all the same, Marila.’
Marila reached into her pouch and withdrew a gold coin. Taking care not to lean too close, she tossed it through the iron bars. The coin rolled in a half-circle and landed near the maukslar’s taloned feet.
The maukslar did not look at the coin, but it grew very still. Wait, thought Felthrup. The humans were looking at him, perplexed. In his thoughts he begged them to keep silent.
The maukslar crossed its arms. It glared, defiant, its vast chest rising and falling.
Wait.
The fat hands twitched. The golden eyes looked away. Then suddenly the creature threw itself down like a dog before the coin, and ate it. The demon moaned, as a spasm of wild pleasure crossed its face. Droplets of gold sparkled in its mouth, as if the coin had melted there. But the creature’s joy lasted only seconds. It turned Felthrup a look of redoubled hate.
The Night of the Swarm (Chathrand Voyage 4) Page 61