Authors: Matthew Stover
But he could still see with his physical eyes, and what they showed his sizzling brain must have been some kind of imagination or hallucination or dream too, because what they showed was her broken neck straighten and the dent in her skull uncrumple.
She shook herself from head to hind like a wet dog.
Propped hands-and-knees on the dying ogrillo’s torso, she looked at him with vivid indigo eyes and her bloody char-smeared mouth moved but only eerie silence rang in his ears. She looked at him, looked through him, and that imaginary blue fire sparked in her eyes and somehow he knew that for her he wasn’t even there. Then she pushed herself brokenly to her feet and shambled off into the smoke.
He decided she was someone he’d like to know.
Nice ass too.
The sun brightened from crimson to scarlet, heading for orange as the duck-scented smoke swirled and thinned in some silent breeze. Empty eyes of shattered windows stared from blackened buildings into the haze. Clearing, it revealed a broad stone-flagged plaza, littered with human bodies. Most of them wore armor. A blast-crater big enough to swallow a couple cart-and-fours steamed: clear water drained into it through a jumbled gap in a broken fountain wall.
The words
Smoke Hunt
surfaced from muddy depths inside his head. He couldn’t remember what they meant. All he had was silence and smoke and the taste of blood.
And the smoke was full of ogrilloi.
Six or seven at least, red-flaming specters pacing among the armored bodies with careful, methodical, deliberate intent, stopping here and there to smash a skull with huge mockeries of the Khryllian weapon.
And the dead girl reached the nearest of them and turned him with one hand on his huge grey arm and her other hand blurred and his huge grey chest folded inward around her fist and blood burst from his mouth in a spray that trailed behind him as he flew backward from her as though yanked by some invisible god.
Now the other ogrilloi stopped and turned and saw her.
They converged on her and she staggered to meet them and the first one to reach her died and so did the second but they closed around her and now they had her, because after all she was broken and dead.
Well, mostly.
Pretty soon to be all the way, because they had her now.
A grill held one of her arms and another held the other and a third swung back a huge steel morningstar like a golf pro in a morphine nightmare.
And one particular hard lump on which he lay—like a hunk of steel jamming into his right kidney—his hand slid toward without any prompting from his consciousness; his fingers closed around it and his arm pulled it out from under him and he discovered, to his mild astonishment, that his hand was full of big fucking gun.
He pointed it and the barrel fountained silent flame.
The ogrillo who’d lifted the morningstar spun and sprayed everyone around him with blood and shreds of flesh and bone that burst from sudden craters opening in his chest and the stump of his severed arm.
The others now turned. And looked
his
way.
A new burst unzipped another from balls to breakfast, and the girl yanked free and from there it was a settled question. She swung and stepped and swung again, and he reached out with streaks of silent metal that hit almost as hard as her fists: pelvis, knee, shoulder, spine. Shatter the bones to bring them down. Between his metal and her bone, every one of them died. More than died. Dismantled. Shredded.
None even tried to run away.
Each squeeze of the trigger pumped memory back into him. When it was over, he knew where he was, and how he had gotten here, and why.
He knew who she was.
And so when it was over, when she came back to him there among the broken rock and stood above him, her face blackened and solemn, her form a drench of clotting crimson, he held the muzzle centered between those vivid indigo eyes.
He needed both hands.
She didn’t even look at it. She was looking at him.
Their eyes met over the sights of his gun, and her reserve dissolved. In her eyes, on her lips, in the angle of her head was some bleak shivering despair. How could he shoot that?
After a moment, her face swept itself blank, and she held out her hand for the pistol.
Ahh, Christ. He really was getting old.
He let her take it.
She cradled the weapon as though it were some exotic songbird that had died in her hand. When she spoke, he could hear only a thin singing whine that slowly strengthened as his stunned ears began to awaken. But he could read her lips.
Dominic Shade
, she said,
you are under arrest
.
“When the gods would punish us, they answer our prayers.”
—
ARTSN. TAN’ELKOTH (FORMERLY MA’ELKOTH, 1ST ANKHANAN EMPEROR AND PATRIARCH OF THE ELKOTHAN CHURCH), QUOTING DUNCAN MICHAELSON
Blade of Tyshalle
W
hen he had washed her blood from his face and hair and hands, an armsman came to his cell to take the bowl and its rusty water away. “And the towel.”
Beside him on the camp bed: thick bleached shag smeared clay-red, specked with clots—
He passed the towel through the bars, and the armsman folded it carefully, reverentially, then laid it into the water, soaking. He turned to go.
“Hey—”
The armsman stopped.
“My clothes, huh? It’s freezing in here.”
“Take it up with the Champion.”
The armsman bore the bowl away in both hands as though it held something sacred. Maybe it did. His blood once had saved this world. Whatever they were hoping hers might save, he was pretty sure they were shit out of luck.
He watched the armsman leave, his tongue thoughtfully exploring the small flat pick and tension bar tucked back in his cheek along his gums; he’d coughed them up from his magician’s half swallow after the Knights had finished their brutally thorough body-cavity search. He could go
through the cell door without breaking stride, but he wouldn’t get far running naked through streets full of angry Khryllians.
Besides, he was pretty sure the Champion would be along anytime now, and it might be worth his trouble to have another word with her.
No bones seemed to be broken, and he retained enough Control Discipline to induce reabsorption of serous fluid from his bruises. Most of the pain went with it. The rest he could handle with natural endorphins and dopamine. He’d pay for this later—glandular exhaustion is not to be lightly fucked with—but for now he had to be able to move.
He passed the time idly picking the locks on his leg irons, relocking them and picking them again: a fair-to-middling thumb-twiddle. Naked on the cot, he was mostly paying attention to the pictures in his head. Like the splintered knobs that had stuck out from her back.
Shrapnel. Wet bone shrapnel.
No petro-volatile stink. Not even the burnt-toast-and-bean-fart of gunpowder. Just overcooked duck. Not a bomb. Not chemical, anyway.
Magickal.
That’s why with the eye of his mind he had seen energy gather around the dead Smoke Hunters. Each corpse thrown on the pile had brought the explosion a step closer. Magickal critical mass. An improvised timing device, to make sure the maximum number of Knights and armsmen would be nearby.
Worked, too.
Still, something was off. He couldn’t quite spike it. No surprise—he didn’t have much in the way of sharps after being blown up and all. Not to mention the whole fucking timeline thing. Funny: the guy whose wrist he’d sprained had been right. He should have left the square. For his own safety.
If Angvasse had been standing a foot to either side, he would have seen those splintered knobs sticking out from his own chest.
Luck. That’s all. Lucky old man.
The man who’d become the god behind his eyes had sometimes said “
Luck
is a word the ignorant use to define their ignorance. They are blind to the patterns of force that drive the universe, and they name their blindness
science
, or
clearheadedness
, or
pragmatism
; when they stumble into walls or off cliffs, they name their clumsiness luck.”
But with the eye of his mind, what he saw was exactly those patterns of force. And
luck
was still the only word he had.
Lucky old man.
• • •
Stripes of noonish sun slanted through the bars of the skylight. His cell was above the stable of a small subgarrison. The quiet here had an empty, echoic feel as though the place had been deserted for years. Most of the armsmen assigned to this particular subgarrison had been in Weaver’s Square.
He was the only prisoner.
The street outside rustled with hushed activity. Resting his forehead on the bars of the cell’s little window, black iron rough and cool against his skin, he watched armsmen drape open carriages in shimmering white silk chased with thread of gold, and harness carriage traces to immense thick-muscled warhorses. He watched a single white-clad drummer summon citizens from the houses and shops around with a slow bleak cadence.
Witnesses for the Last March.
One dead Knight lay alone in each carriage, hung on a mortuary board by large blunt hooks at armpit and groin. Their visors had been removed to display the blood-pudding remains of their faces. As the drummer rolled a solemn flourish, the mortuary boards were raised to vertical and fastened in place. Fallen Knights are borne standing from the field.
Slain armsmen rode in plain, practical wagons, six to a bed. They too wore their armor. They too displayed their death wounds.
He’d seen Last Marches before: here, twenty-five years ago, and in Ankhana, after Ceraeno. The Last March would wind through the streets of the city. The drummer’s slow rhythm would stop traffic and trade, and line the streets with solemn silent witnesses. Citizens under the protection of Khryl are never allowed to forget the price of their safety.
Blood from the floor of the carriages and carts would be allowed to trail onto the streets over which they passed: a baptism, reaffirming the sanctity of this land. The living would march behind, in the blood of the fallen, leaving footprints of red dust and sand.
Blood prints in the Boedecken Waste. In what Khryllians called the Battleground, and ogrilloi called Our Place.
He watched her too.
Draped in white. A loose cowl over her hair and a veil erasing her face. He knew her by the square of her shoulders. By the angle of her head. By the deference of the armsmen as she moved among them with a word here and a touch there. By the way her presence alone seemed to give them whatever strength they needed.
While he watched her, inside his head he watched the bloody swamp
that had been the back of her head uncrumple. He wondered in passing how long it had been since she’d last bothered to put on her helm. Khryllians stand to pray. She hadn’t stood. She hadn’t prayed.
Just as well he hadn’t shot her. Probably would have only pissed her off.
Simon Faller had told him—would tell him, on Earth, in the Buke, a few days from now—that no one had seen Angvasse since the Smoke Hunt. That she never showed up to face Orbek for Khryl’s Justice. And it might have gone that way too, if he hadn’t started shooting Smoke Hunters.
Maybe it had nothing to do with him. Maybe it would unhappen. Sure. It was possible.
When one eliminates the impossible …
Hey, wait.
There was the other line his father had liked to quote, the one about the mystery of the dog who didn’t bark in the night. Shanna used to say the toughest thing to spot is what
should
be there …
And that was it. That’s what had been bothering him. What should have been there.
“Holy shit,” he muttered. “Literally.”
Assumption Day on God’s Way in Ankhana. Ma’elKoth Incarnate, sliced shoulder to hip …
The man-god wasn’t full of shit after all.