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Harshini Page 13


  Adrina stepped away from him with a fleeting look of regret, then turned to the captain. “It’s all right, Almodavar. I was just leaving. I’ll speak to you later, Damin. When you have more time.”

  “Adrina?”

  She hesitated at the door. “Yes?”

  “What did you want to tell me?”

  “It’s not important. Some other time perhaps.”

  “I’ll see you later, then?”

  She nodded. “If you wish.”

  When she was gone, Damin turned his attention back to the organisation of Krakandar’s defences, unable to shake the feeling that Adrina had left something very important unsaid.

  CHAPTER 17

  Teriahna was waiting for Brak in his room when he returned from his evening meal. He was quite partial to the spicy fare of Fardohnya, and had lingered over his dinner, enjoying the feeling of repletion that comes with a good meal accompanied by an excellent wine. For a fleeting moment he regretted his indulgence, but even had she searched his room, there was nothing for her to find here.

  He didn’t bother to ask how she had got past the locks. Those skills were taught to apprentice assassins. Besides, he was expecting her. She had promised to arrange to get him into the palace in the guise of a visiting lord from southern Fardohnya, come to court to find a royal bride. Brak had been surprised by her choice of disguise, but she had assured him that with so many daughters to dispose of, Hablet would see any man willing to take one of them off his hands, particularly if he was an insignificant, powerless lord who lived far, far from Talabar.

  “Any luck?” he asked as he closed the door behind him. She was sitting near the window, staring out over the gardens. The heady scent of frangipani filled the room, as it did every night once the sun went down. The room was shrouded in shadows and she didn’t turn when he spoke.

  “Lernen Wolfblade is dead.” She looked at him then, her eyes curious in the gloom. “Does this alter your plans?”

  “I’m not sure. What happened?” He lit the lantern on the table and dragged the only other chair in the room to the window beside her.

  “He died of the pox, by all accounts. But that is neither unexpected nor surprising. What is interesting is that it happened nearly a month ago.”

  “And you’ve only just heard of it? Who kept it quiet? The Sorcerers’ Collective should have been tolling the bells of every temple in Hythria from the moment they heard the news.”

  “The High Arrion isn’t in Greenharbour. She’s in Krakandar. There was a great deal of unrest because of Damin Wolfblade’s alliance with Medalon. She went north after Princess Marla to sort it out.”

  “So Marla was out of the capital when it happened, too? That’s not good.”

  “Not good for Damin Wolfblade, perhaps, but it proved a stroke of good fortune for Cyrus Eaglespike. He’s named himself High Prince.”

  “Without the sanction of the High Arrion? How long does he think that can last?”

  “He’s got the Warlords of Greenharbour and Pentamor on his side. It’s a foregone conclusion that Narvell Hawksword will support Damin’s claim, but there is still Rogan Bearbow and Tejay Lionsclaw to consider.”

  Brak nodded thoughtfully. He had been away from the politics of the southern nations too long. There was a time when he didn’t need the Assassins’ Guild to provide his intelligence.

  “Why has it taken the news so long to reach you? I would have thought you’d have heard about this within a day of it happening.”

  “Normally, I would expect to,” she agreed. “However, in this case, someone went to a great deal of trouble to stop the news getting out.”

  “Cyrus Eaglespike?”

  “Or his cronies. This isn’t the act of an opportunistic man. This has been very well thought out. I’d say they’ve been planning it for some time.”

  “Perhaps. Has King Jasnoff heard about Cratyn’s death yet?”

  “I don’t think so. It’s possible the news hasn’t even reached Yarnarrow yet. It’s winter in Karien, and travel will be difficult.”

  “They could have sent a bird.”

  “Even carrier pigeons fall prone to bad weather, Brak.”

  “And your spies in Krakandar? What do they tell you?”

  She smiled innocently. “What makes you think I have spies in Krakandar?”

  “If you don’t, it would be the only place in the south that you have none.”

  “You know far too much about us for an outsider, my Lord.”

  “And you seem to be avoiding the question.”

  Teriahna shrugged. “I don’t mean to. In truth, there’s not much to tell. Damin Wolfblade arrived in Krakandar, he stayed a week or more, learnt his uncle was dead and left for Greenharbour a few days later. Adrina is with him, certainly, and so is your demon child. The news of her presence set the city talking, I’m told, so much so that it somewhat overshadowed the news that Damin had taken a bride. Between the demon child and the death of the High Prince, she’s managed to keep a fairly low profile. The news is out, but it’s a poor third to the other rumours currently on offer. Oh, there was one thing I neglected to mention. Damin Wolfblade contacted the Guild in Hythria.”

  “Who does he want them to kill?”

  “Nobody. He sent a message saying that whatever price the Guild—either in Hythria or Fardohnya—was offered to kill either him or Adrina, he would double it if the we refused the job.”

  “I always thought he was a smart lad. Can you get me in to see Hablet? This is becoming urgent.”

  “If he’s finished mourning.”

  “Hablet is mourning Lernen Wolfblade?” Brak asked sceptically.

  The Raven laughed. “In public. He’s probably locked himself in his rooms and is throwing a party. But he is a king, and one has to be seen to do the right thing.”

  Brak fell silent, wondering how the death of the Hythrun High Prince would affect R’shiel’s plans. It was a singular waste of time, as he actually had no real idea of R’shiel’s ultimate plans. He was here on trust, and that was not an emotion that came easily when dealing with the demon child.

  “May I offer you some advice before your audience with our esteemed monarch, Brak?”

  “Of course.”

  “Hablet is a very devout man in his own way, but he despises the Harshini. He has no wish to learn they still exist and no desire to welcome them back into his court. He finds he gets along very nicely without them.”

  “Glenanaran and the others have been in Greenharbour for months. It’s no longer a secret that the Harshini survive.”

  “True, but neither is it common knowledge. Oh, people have heard the rumours, and some even believe them, but their belief is based on faith not fact. You won’t get a very warm reception when Hablet realises who you are. He’ll see your presence as the thin edge of the wedge. When you deliver your news about his daughter, he’ll take it as a sign that the Harshini are already interfering in Fardohnya. Be very careful.”

  “I can take care of myself.”

  “I’ve no doubt of that,” she said. “But it is better to be warned.”

  “I appreciate your concern, my Lady.”

  Teriahna leaned forward, studied him closely for a moment, then smiled. “Do you, Brak?”

  There was something in the way she spoke; something in the shift of her body that set warning bells ringing in Brak’s head. She placed her hand gently on his thigh. Then she abruptly shed any pretence of subtlety and the invitation in her eyes was so blatant she might as well have cried it aloud.

  “Do you really appreciate me, Brak?” she asked softly.

  Brak smiled ruefully and lifted her hand from his thigh, placing it quite deliberately on the arm of her chair.

  “Yes, I really do appreciate the help you’ve given me, Teriahna,” he said.

  “I see,” the Raven replied, nodding her head thoughtfully. “There’s someone else, isn’t there?”

  “What do you mean?”

  She laughed softl
y. “Do you know how I came to join the Assassins’ Guild, Brak? I was a court’esa, and a damned good one, too. I was recruited by the Guild for a very special job. The rest, as they say, is history. But just because I’ve changed careers, it doesn’t mean I’ve lost the skills I started out with.

  “There is someone else. I can see it in your face, plain as day. Who is it? Some impossibly perfect Harshini back in Sanctuary? Some lucky farm girl in Medalon?”

  Her assumption took Brak completely by surprise. He had taken no lovers since L’rin in the Grimfield, back when R’shiel was a prisoner there. Since then he had been so consumed by his task of protecting the demon child, he’d had no time to think of his own pleasure.

  “There’s no one else, Teriahna.”

  “Perhaps you’re not even aware of it yourself,” she shrugged.

  Brak laughed at the very idea. “You think that after several hundred years I wouldn’t notice if I’d fallen in love?”

  “I think after several hundred years, you’re so used to not being loved, you wouldn’t know what it felt like if it ran up to you and hit you on the head.”

  “You think so?”

  “Yes, I do,” she chuckled. “But don’t let it bother you. I’m sure it will work itself out. As for me? Well, I like to try new things. Sometimes I succeed, other

  times I don’t.”

  “New things?”

  “I’m sorry. I’ve offended you, haven’t I?”

  “No. I just don’t find myself referred to as a thing too often.”

  Teriahna’s smiled faded. “You should try a stint as a court’esa some time, Brak. Then you’d truly know the meaning of the word.” She looked away, suddenly uncomfortable that she had spoken so freely. Rising hastily to her feet, she pushed the chair back along the polished floor with a scrape of wood against wood. “I really should be going. I’ve spent far too much time away from my other duties. I’ll bring your audience clothes around in the morning.”

  Brak remained seated, guessing that she would prefer it that way. Teriahna walked to the door, stopping with her hand on the latch.

  “There was one other thing I meant to tell you,” she said, turning back to look at him. Her manner had reverted to its usual professional mien. “I had a message from Starros, the head of the Thieves’ Guild in Krakandar. He said there was an old man there who was stirring up the population against the demon child. I don’t know if it’s important, but I thought you’d like to know.”

  “Why would Starros send you a message about some old man in Krakandar?”

  “He thought it might have been one of our people on a contracted hit. It’s not inconceivable that someone might want the demon child eliminated and that they would be prepared to pay handsomely for the job. And it wasn’t a message so much as a reprimand. He was rather put out that I might have sent someone into his city without advising him first out of professional courtesy.”

  “Did he say anything else?”

  “No. Just that the old man had been preaching on street corners, subverting his people and making a general nuisance of himself. Starros thought our plan was to incite a riot of some sort and for the demon child to be killed in the ensuing chaos.”

  “That doesn’t sound like your style.”

  “It’s not. Crowds are much too hard to control. Particularly when you’ve worked them up into a brainless mob. Whoever the old man was, he certainly isn’t one of ours.”

  “It’s probably nothing to be concerned about.”

  “I agree, but I thought I should let you be the judge. I’ll see you later, then?” She turned her back to him and opened the door.

  “Teriahna? Just out of curiosity, if someone did contract you to kill the demon child, would you take the job?”

  She closed the door again and turned to him with a sly smile. “That would depend on how much they offered me.”

  “What price would you set on the demon child’s life, my Lady Raven?”

  “What would you pay for it?” she retorted.

  He laughed humourlessly. “The ultimate price.”

  “You’d pay with your life?”

  “I already have.”

  She nodded thoughtfully. “Then I have the answer to my question, Brak. There is someone else. It is the demon child.”

  CHAPTER 18

  Tarja knew exactly how he planned to strike his first blow against Medalon’s new masters, a plan as simple as it was fraught with danger. He also knew it would meet considerable opposition, so he kept silent until they were ready to leave Roan Vale, hugging his idea to himself as he pulled his cloak against the chill wind.

  They waited in the small village for the remainder of their troops and the rest of the rebels to catch up with them. His meeting in Testra had gone well, and although Antwon could not bring himself to desert, he gave any Defender under his command who wished to flee the advancing Kariens leave to follow Tarja. Consequently, the force Tarja now had gathered to cross the border into Hythria numbered over two thousand. It still wasn’t enough to take on the Kariens, but it was a start.

  “We should be ready to move at first light,” Denjon reported that evening, as Tarja stood poring over the map in the cellar. It was a singular waste of time. He had studied the map so often these past few days that every line and contour was burned into his brain.

  “Now if only this damnable rain would stop, so we could get through to Hythria.”

  “Aye. My scouts tell me there’s not a navigable road for miles. They’re either flooded or so boggy we’re going to have to walk most of the way.”

  “And every day the Kariens are getting closer to the Citadel.”

  “Well, look on the bright side,” Denjon shrugged. “The Glass River’s so full they’ll not be able to cross it for a while.”

  “I’d prefer it if they couldn’t cross it at all,” Tarja said.

  Denjon’s eyes narrowed. “That sounds suspiciously like a suggestion.”

  “Actually, it was. Where are the others?”

  “Linst is organising the supply wagons. Dorak is trying to beat some sense into your rebel friends. They’re not being very cooperative.”

  “That’s because they don’t like taking anything from the Defenders,” Mandah explained as she closed the cellar door behind her. “Least of all orders.”

  Tarja nodded, satisfied that they would not be disturbed for some time. He stabbed his finger at the map and looked at Denjon and Mandah.

  “We have to stop the Kariens crossing the Glass River.”

  “You said that already,” Denjon said, folding his arms across his chest.

  “There’s only three ways they can cross,” Tarja continued. “They can build rafts and float themselves across, which is far too time consuming and dangerous. They can commandeer what trading vessels and river boats they can find, or they can use the ferries at Testra and Cauthside.”

  “They won’t find many river boats,” Mandah said. “Most of them have sailed south for the Gulf. They know what’s coming.”

  “Then that just leaves the ferries,” Denjon agreed. “How do you plan to stop the Kariens using them? We don’t have enough men to fight them off.”

  “We’re going to have to sink them.”

  Mandah gasped. “Sink the ferries? But that would cut Medalon in half.”

  “I’m aware of that,” Tarja replied evenly.

  “It would stop the Kariens in their tracks, though,” Denjon mused.

  Tarja nodded. “With the ferries gone, the worst they can do is turn south-west and attack Testra. The heart of Medalon is the Citadel, and until they occupy that, theirs will be a hollow victory indeed.”

  “It won’t be easy, Tarja,” Denjon warned. “Even if the Kariens don’t try to stop you, our own people will. You’ll destroy their livelihood along with those ferries.”

  “I know, which is why I’m only taking a few men. We’ll backtrack to Vanahiem, cross over to Testra, and then make our way overland to Cauthside. Hopefully w
e can take out the Cauthside Ferry before the Kariens reach it.”

  “Then take the Testra Ferry out on your way back?” Mandah asked.

  Tarja nodded and glanced at Denjon.

  “That will take you weeks,” the captain said with a shake of his head. “The Kariens will be in Cauthside long before you.”

  “The logistics of moving an army the size of the Karien host are considerable,” Tarja reminded him. “They can only move a few leagues a day, or be forced to break their army up into smaller units. The latter is unlikely. They’ll stay together, thinking their impressive size will cow the Medalonians into submission.”

  “That’s a bit optimistic,” Mandah remarked with a thin smile. “The vast majority of Medalonians live south of the Glass River.”

  “You’ll be cutting it fine,” Denjon said with a frown.

  “I’ll hand-pick the men who accompany me. We’ve some good men out there and none of them come from the river towns or have family whose livelihood depends directly on trade across the river. It’ll ruin the merchants and families who depend on it for their wages and I don’t want any second thoughts when it comes to the crunch.”

  “And the Hythrun? What do you want me to tell them?”

  “I’ll leave that to you,” Tarja shrugged. “Once you get to Hythria, you and Damin can start planning the conquest of Medalon. There’s not much we can do until we find out how many men he can spare us, at any rate. I’ll join you as soon as I can. In the meantime, you can send out some other squads with orders to do whatever they must—cajole, threaten or destroy—to stop the river boats from docking on the western bank. I want every boat on the river—even those moored on this side too—safely out of reach of the Kariens.”

  “You know, given enough time, the Kariens will find a way across. They’ve engineers and boat builders aplenty and there’s more than enough timber on the other side of the river to build rafts to move their troops across.”

  “I’m counting on the change of seasons. By the time the Kariens have constructed their own transport, the Glass River will be even more swollen than it is now with the spring melt from the Jagged Mountains. It’ll be far too dangerous to attempt a crossing until the flood waters have subsided.”