âAnd you want me to kill this local noble?' Keshik suggested.
âOh, no,' Ambra said. She looked genuinely shocked at his idea. âI just want you to get a child on me so that our line might continue.'
âIs that all?'
âHa!' Nikolo barked. âIs that all, he asks. As if getting a child on a Midacean witch were that easy.'
âHow hard can it be?'
âBrother!' Ambra snapped. âYou heard him. He knows what we want, now let him decide.'
âHe knows nothing.'
âI know about getting children,' Keshik countered.
âNo, you don't.'
Keshik was about to laugh and protest both his knowledge and ability when something passed between brother and sister. More than a look, more than words, it was like a flash of understanding, a shimmer in the air that made everything blur for a flicker of time. Instinctively, he reached for his swords, but they were not strapped across his back, they were hanging on the wall opposite him, beyond the table. Ambra saw the direction of his look and turned to him. As she did, a change came over her: she went from being a homely hearth witch to a
creature of chaos. Her eyes shone with a blue light, her hair changed from brown to yellow and seemed to take on a life of its own, wreathing her head in a writhing mass. She grew taller and claws extended from her fingers while her humble clothes shifted into shimmering robes of gold and red.
âYou think you can escape me now, with just blades of steel?' she hissed past teeth more like fangs.
âLet me have them, and we shall see,' Keshik said.
âI think not,' Nikolo said. Like his sister, he too had changed into something no longer human. He advanced towards Keshik with his claws outstretched. Keshik looked from brother to sister, trying to work out some way to get past them to his swords when the door burst open. Slave crashed through, slashing at Nikolo with his Claw.
The scream Nikolo gave was as much surprise as pain. He spun around to face Slave. Keshik took advantage of the distraction to hurl himself across the room past Ambra. He dived under her slashing claws, and slid across the table to crash into the wall opposite. As he fell, he ripped his swords off the hook. Ambra's words about simple steel gave him an idea and he drew only the sorcerous blade.
He stood just in time to see the table hurled away by Ambra. She advanced on him with her claws hooked. He swung his blade at her but she dodged with all the speed and skill of a Swordmaster, raking at his chest. The speed of the Tulugma was all that saved him as he swayed back and out of reach. Her slash overextended her reach slightly and Keshik slammed his fist into the side of her head before she could regain balance.
She staggered and Keshik moved in closer, slashing across her ribs. The blade bit and cut, sending a fine spray of blood across him. It hissed and smoked where it landed on him, making him take half a step away in surprise. Ambra snarled and backhanded him across the face. He swayed just enough to avoid most of the blow, so her claws left only fine lines of red across his cheek and nose.
A sudden cry of pain and shock rang out. Ambra paused in her attack and looked away as her brother fell. She screamed in outrage, but Keshik was alert for the opportunity and drove his glowing sword through her chest. Her outrage shifted into shock and anger, then died away with a gurgle as she slid off his sword onto the floor. When she landed on the ground, her body shrivelled into an emaciated, doll-like figure. In disgust, Keshik stamped heavily on the body, shattering it into dust.
âWhere have you been?' he asked Slave.
âLooking for you,' he replied.
âYou found me just in time. That's good.' He looked down at the shrivelled corpse at Slave's feet. âWhat were they?' he asked.
âI don't know. But they're dead now.' He tucked his Claw back inside his clothes and started to look around the small house. âWe need food and water.'
âAnd anything else we can carry,' Keshik added.
They ransacked the house for anything useful and left it in flames.
âWhy haven't you told them who you are?' Maida asked.
Myrrhini sat in the bow of the
Queen's Quest
, watching as the green smudge of land approached.
âI dare not,' she said softly.
âWhy not? What harm could it do?'
âI don't know, but the last time I did that, about fifty people died.'
âHow?'
âSlave killed them.'
âOne man?'
âNo ordinary man, I think, but yes. Just one man.'
âHow could one man do that?'
âHe was out of control. Completely mad. He killed everyone, even a woman he seemed to care for.'
A horrible thought flashed into Maida's mind. âWhat does this Slave look like?'
âVery dark skin, strange pale hair and the most disturbing eyes I have ever seen.'
âWas one silver, with no pupil?'
âYes. How did you know?'
âI have met him before.'
âI hope you didn't fight him.'
âI did. He killed me.'
âWhat?'
Maida regretted her choice of words and gave a half-chuckle, to try and make a joke out of it. âI mean, he beat me so badly he almost killed me. No, Keshik rescued me and we got away. But he was completely mad, almost inhuman. That eye actually seemed to glow as he fought, and that weapon, the Warrior's Claw â I've never seen anything like it.'
Myrrhini shuddered. âI will never forget what he did with that weapon.'
âMe neither,' Maida muttered, unconsciously fingering the spot in the middle of her forehead where the Claw had smashed in.
The dreams will be back tonight
, she realised. It had been a while, but thinking about it always brought them back.
Myrrhini seemed about to say something when she stopped and sniffed. âWhat is that smell?' she asked.
Maida sniffed. There was definitely something dead nearby. A waft of breeze drifted in from the coast ahead, bringing with it more of the smell.
Something very, very dead.
Shouts came from the Agents. Maida looked around to see men pointing overboard at something in the water. She peered over the railings and went pale.
Bodies. Hundreds of bodies were drifting past. There were all kinds of domestic and farm animals, people of all ages as well as a sprinkling of wild
animals. She could not tear her eyes from the macabre scene. Beside her, Myrrhini gagged at the sight and smell of so much death.
âWhat happened?' Maida gasped.
âGot to be the Wall,' Itxtli said from behind her.
âThe Wall?'
âLook at the water,' Itxtli went on. âSee how we are floating lower than normal? That means fresh water has mixed with the sea water. Somehow, the Wall has released the Great River of Kings into the delta.'
The magnitude of what Itxtli was suggesting stunned Maida. It meant whole cities, whole farming communities could have been washed out into the Silvered Sea. The loss of fertile land, livestock and human life was incalculable. With Vogel up in flames, and the Lac'un farmlands burning, this could be a disaster of unheard-of proportions.
âHow could this have happened?'
Itxtli shook his head and leant forward on the railing to stare down at the horrible procession of bodies as it bumped and rolled past the ship.
âI can only think of three possibilities, each one unlikely. Either the Wall has fallen, or the ancient magic that kept it operating has collapsed, or this is an act of malice by the Masters of the Wall.'
Myrrhini finally lost control of her stomach and was noisily sick into the water. Maida was not far from doing the same, so she moved away from the railings. Itxtli followed suit, leaving Myrrhini to her misery.
âSurely none of those things could have happened,' Maida said, more in hope than in belief.
âI cannot think of anything else. This sort of thing is exactly why the Wall exists. Have you ever seen the floods coming down off the mountains?'
Maida shook her head. She had only heard of the monstrous wall of water that was said to surge down from the mountains when the thaws hit and how it would slam into the Great Wall and be held back from the rich delta that flowed into the Silvered Sea.
âHave you?' she asked.
âJust once. I was a young Agent on assignment to the Wall when the flood hit. It filled the canyon to the east of the Wall as far as the eye could see, and that thing is more than a thousand paces deep. When they opened the Wall, the water shot out from under it like an arrow out of a bow, heading west. The thought that anyone could have simply left the Wall open to allow that sort of flood to flow unchecked â¦' He did not finish the sentence.
The
Queen's Quest
started to come about, swinging south.
âWhere are we going?' Maida asked.
âIt seems there's not much point in heading there.' Itxtli jerked a thumb over his shoulder at the land to the east. âI guess we'll make port somewhere further south.'
Myrrhini pushed herself back from the railings and took a few unsteady steps towards Itxtli.
âHow are you feeling, Onaven?' he asked.
âYou need to ask?' she snapped.
âNo, I suppose I don't.'
She staggered as the
Queen's Quest
heeled over further, heading south. The wind caught her sails,
filling them and driving the ship away from the carnage floating all around them.
Maida looked up, away from the bodies, away from the land now to her right, and stared out at the open sea and sky that lay before them. The contrast of smoothly rolling water beneath clear blue sky with the horror of the delta could not have been more stark.
How could something so horrible be so close to such beauty?
She shuddered and went to walk away, to head below deck, but Itxtli grabbed her arm before she reached the stairs. He wrenched her around to face him. With the deck sloping beneath her feet and her barely controlled nausea, she staggered and fell against him. He stared at her, his own face suddenly angry.
âWhat do you know about this?' he hissed at her.
âHow could I know anything?' she snapped, mystified as much by his abrupt change of mood as the question itself.
âI am no mayehqueh to know nothing of the Queen's mind. I know what she is seeking, and why.'
Maida tried to pull away from him but his grip was too strong. He shook her.
âTell me what you know,' he repeated.
âHow can I know anything about that?'
âIf you were what my queen was seeking, you would.'
âAnd if I did, why would I tell you?'
âYou already have, if you are who Iskopra thinks you are.'
Maida suddenly realised what Itxtli was referring to â the strange words Myrrhini had called out at the end of the ceremony. He must have heard them and thought she said them.
âIf you understood what I said, you know more than you should anyway,' she said, hoping his own mind would add the meaning she had left out. Anyone who understood a language some mystical seer spoke had to be a mystic themselves, so they would be prone to think that way. She felt vindicated when Itxtli dropped her arm and stepped back.
âIf you are her, then who is Onaven?' he whispered.
Maida shrugged. âSome slag you picked up by mistake, I imagine.'
He shook his head as he stepped further back. âNo. I don't believe you.'
âWhat you believe or don't believe is of no concern to me.'
âNo,' Itxtli repeated. âThat mayehqueh achulti with his snivelling servants could never have found a pureblood.'
âI have no idea what you are talking about, Itxtli, but whatever it is sounds like some internal squabble you Agents have that is none of my business.'
âI do not believe you are pureblood. Your colouring is all wrong, and you do not stink of daven.'
âI wash,' Maida snapped.
âThat is not what Mixcoatl told me.'
âDid he tell you about Patecoatl?'
âI was there, remember. I saw what your spurre did to him, I heard the story about you being a Midacean witch, and none of any of it makes any sense.'
âNot my problem.'
âOn the contrary, Maida. If you are not who you have now claimed to be, you will face judgement for the murder of an Agent.'
âAn Agent who was trying to rape me!'
âWe have only your word for that, witch.'
âYou have mine as well, Itxtli,' Myrrhini said.
Itxtli looked quickly around to see Myrrhini staring at him quizzically.
âWhat? Do you think Maida was seducing him in order to escape?' she asked.
âYes, I do.'
âIf she was doing that, why would she kill him?'
âI don't know yet, but I will find out.' He bowed stiffly to both women and stalked away.
âThanks,' Maida said.
â
Xahnatl yatl
,' Myrrhini said.
âWhat?'
Myrrhini shrugged. âIt's some old expression the Agents use. It means “it's nothing”.'
âIt was more than nothing.'
Myrrhini seemed to dismiss the whole thing as she continued to head towards the stairs. âLet's get below deck,' she said. âAway from all that.' She gestured at the sea with all the horror it contained.
Â
It took several more days before they came to port. And again, Maida and Myrrhini were sitting together in the bow of the
Queen's Quest
watching
as the land drew near. Unlike near the delta, there was a city clearly visible here.
âSullito,' Maida told Myrrhini in response to her question. âThe city is called Sullito, and that's about all I know about it.'
âSullito,' Myrrhini repeated softly. âI have never seen Sullito before.'
âI didn't think you had ever seen any city before.'
âI have seen three now: Venste, where I was stripped naked and leered at by criminals before fleeing in stolen clothes; Usterust, where I bought something for the first time in my life before being locked in a room with you; and now Sullito.'
Maida was struck suddenly by how different their lives had been. How little she knew about this frail-seeming woman, how strange Maida's own life must appear to her.
âI was taken as a baby. The Acolytes, when they talked to me at all, told me they rescued me from freezing to death in the snow, but I think they just bought me from slavers like they bought so many others. I don't think they knew what I was when they bought me. Something they often did to young girls they bought was to feed them daven and see what happened. I saw quite a few die that way.'
Maida sighed, possibly louder than she needed to, and looked away. Let the woman wallow in her past; the future was more important than some pointless maundering recollections.
Either Myrrhini was oblivious to her rudeness or she did not care, because she continued.
âI was mostly left alone with my books and my thoughts. My Banes only bothered me when the
Guardian of the Key demanded a Seeing, but even so, I was brought up by my Banes. I owed them so much and when I left, they were all killed because of me.' She gave a derisive snort. âAll except Hinrik, of course, but I can only hope the Wastes killed him for me.'
Maida was only half listening and did not understand most of what Myrrhini was talking about. She looked away, towards the slowly approaching city. Already the smell of massed humanity was wafting across the water towards them.
âI read about Sullito. It was a story about a woman who was running away from a cruel arranged marriage. She fled across Midacea only to be tracked down in Sullito. When she hid one night from her future husband's soldiers, she met a young thief who helped her and kept her safe. They hid among the river boatmen until she realised she was in love with the young thief. In the end he was captured by the local militia and she gave herself up to save him. Ever since then, I have wanted to see Sullito.'
Maida could see no reason to comment on such silliness. She leant forward over the railings to try and fill her lungs with clean sea air to prepare herself for the onslaught that would soon be coming from Sullito. The pure air rose from the clear water that frothed as the
Queen's Quest
scythed her way through the gentle swell. She was torn. The sooner she got off this ship, the sooner she could escape, but getting off the ship meant spending time in another hot, stinking city.
â⦠most of my Seeings were about prosaic things like kingdoms going about their business and armies in small wars here and there,' Myrrhini was saying, âbut every now and then, I caught a glimpse of strange things happening. I saw you once, I think, Maida.'
Maida looked around sharply at the sound of her own name. âWhat?' she said.
âI saw you once, I think, in a Seeing. You were with a short man with very long, black hair. As soon as I saw you, back in that room in Usterust, I recognised you, but I didn't know how. It's taken me until now to remember.'
âYou had a Seeing about us?' Maida repeated. âWhat does that mean?'
âProbably nothing. I have had many Seeings and I wouldn't think they're all about world-changing events.'
âHow can you know that?'
Myrrhini had not taken her eyes off the city ahead. âI have always wanted to go to Sullito,' she murmured. âIt seems like such a romantic place.'
âWhat?' Now that she was actually listening to Myrrhini, Maida found she was beginning to regret it.
âI once had a Seeing about Sullito.' Myrrhini gave a ghost of a smile. âAlthough I have a feeling it was more of a dream. I Saw, or dreamed, that I would be rescued there by a beautiful man who would lay down his life for love of me.'
âDream,' Maida muttered. âPlease let that one be a dream.'
âLike I said, I don't think Seeings are always about world-changing events.'
A voice cried out from the lookout station high in the rigging.