Sword Sworn-Sword Dancer 6 (38 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Roberson

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"Bright day," I commented cheerfully.

Nayyib squinted.

"Feels like it'll be a warm one." I set down the sword, then gathered up my bedding and began to

shake it out.

Nayyib very carefully sat down on his own and squirted more water into his mouth, then soaked his

hair and let droplets run down his face.

I spread my blankets, began rolling them up. "You probably won't feel much like riding today, huh?"

He scrunched up his face thoughtfully as he slicked hair back into the merest shadow of obedience.

"Probably better if you stayed here, waited another day." I tied thongs around my bedroll. "No

reason
to
get in a rush. Del and I'll make our goodbyes and head on out."

That got his attention. "Head out?"

"We've got business to attend to." I set the bedroll by my saddle, checked the condition of the

saddle blankets. Dry. "Del and I." Just to make it clear who the "we" meant. "I imagine you've got things

to do, too."

"Not really."

Figures. "Well, I imagine something will come up."

Del was back with the buckets. Nayyib immediately stood up, took a somewhat wobbly sideways

step to regain his balance, then gallantly offered to assist her.

She took one look at his face and smiled. "No, but thank you. Tiger can help me. Why don't you sit

back down—or
lie
down—and rest?"

Recognizing an order disguised as casual comment, I took one of the buckets from her. "He's a little

worse for the wear this morning," I remarked cheerfully as she and I hiked over to the horses. "But he'll

get over it by tomorrow, and then he can be on his way."

Del set the bucket down in front of her gelding. "Why don't we have him come with us?"

Startled, I nearly tripped over my bucket as I put it down in front of the stud. "What for?"

"He said he wanted to take lessons from you."

"Yes, but I never said I wanted to give them."

"But that's what you're going to do. Give lessons. Remember?" She patted the gelding's neck. "The

plan is for you to resurrect Alimat and take on students. At least, that's what you told me. Has that

changed?"

"No." Though I wasn't certain when it might come to be, since we were a bit busy trying to keep me

alive.

"Then you've got your first student in Neesha." She grabbed the bucket, shoving the gelding's nose

away, and lugged it over to Nayyib's horse.

"That sounds like a very tidy arrangement—from your point of view—but maybe I'm not ready to

start lessons yet."

"Why not? Aren't we heading to what's left of Alimat? Couldn't he help us rebuild it?"

I glanced over my shoulder at Nayyib and saw him lying on his bedroll with an arm draped over his

eyes once again. I lowered my voice. "What is it with you, Del? Why do you care so much about

someone who's practically a stranger?"

Her face was set, though her tone was pitched as quiet as mine. "I told you, he helped me when I

was ill. I would have died without his help."

"Does this mean we have to adopt him?"

She cut her eyes in Nayyib's direction, then stepped close to me. Since Del is six feet tall, you tend

to notice when she gets that close. "Why don't you just say what's on your mind, Tiger? That you'd

rather he didn't ride with us because you don't want a good-looking man my own age spending time with

me."

I ground it out between my teeth. "That's not it."

"Then what is it?"

"I like it the way things are. You and me. Just you and me. It has nothing to do with the fact he's a

good-looking kid with eyes that can likely get any woman to spread her legs for him with the first

puppy-dog glance and who just happens to be your own age."

A wry male tone intruded. "Really?"

Del and I both turned as one. Nayyib stood three strides away, legs spread, arms folded against his

chest. "I wasn't asleep—or unconscious—and I'm not deaf. I don't particularly care to eavesdrop, either,

but when one hears his name mentioned, one tends to pay attention." His brows arched up as he met my

gaze. "Do you think I really can get
any
woman to spread her legs for me?" He touched a finger to skin

below one eye. "With these?"

I said, "Not the way they look today."

His rueful grin was swift, exposing white teeth; at least he could laugh at himself.

"Maybe by tonight," Del said thoughtfully.

Outraged, I glared at her.

"Really?" Nayyib repeated, sounding more than a little hopeful.

"Really," Del confirmed.

"This is ridiculous," I announced. "We're standing here talking about how this kid can get women to

sleep with him when there are any number of people who want to kill me?"

Del seized the opening. "Which is
another
good reason for him to come along."

"Why, bascha? He's not a sword-dancer. I don't think he'd be much of a challenge." I glanced at

Nayyib. "Hey, I'm telling it the way I see it."

He nodded. "Fair enough. But if you taught me, maybe I
could
be good enough to provide

something of a challenge. I do have some skill, you see . . . though actually you never have, have you?

Seen my sword skill." He shrugged. "So I believe you're making assumptions with no evidence to shore

them up."

"Stay out of this," I suggested.

"Why? It's about me."

"Because you've already proven you're unreliable," I retorted.

"How has he proven that?" Del demanded.

"Hoolies, bascha, he got drunk while he was a prisoner!"

Del's disdain was manifest.
"That's
your evidence?"

"I got drunk," Nayyib said, "because Umir felt I might know some things about you that
he
wanted to

know. Something to do with a book. But I didn't know anything about any book, nor do I know

anything about you—except what everyone in the South knows, and Umir already knows all that, too."

"What does that have to do with you getting drunk?" I asked, failing to see any point.

"Because after it became evident that beating me wouldn't gain him his information, he tried another

tactic. He had a supposedly sympathetic servant slip me a jug of—something. I don't know what it was,

but it was certainly more powerful than anything
I've
tasted before. And while I lack your vast

experience with liquor—you are old enough to be my father, after all, and thus you have the advantage of

significant additional years—I have made the aquaintance of it in various forms." He shrugged. "It made

me very, very drunk."

Del was furious. "Umir had you beaten?"

I was beginning to be intrigued in spite of myself. "Did you tell him anything?"

"No, because you arrived before he could ask me anything. But it would have gained him nothing

anyway. I
don t
know anything more about you, or whatever this book is."

"The
Book of Udre-Natha,"
I said, "is a grimoire. It contains all manner of Things Magical: spells,

incantations, conjurations, recipes for summoning demons, notes made by men who studied it for years,

and so on and so forth. Pretty much anything you want to know about magic is in that book."

The kid had the grace to look stunned. "And you
gave
it to him?"

"Gave it
back
to him," I clarified, "and yes, because it was the only way to get you free."

Nayyib looked somewhat diminished, losing the cocky stance as he stared at me in surprise. "You

gave it to him for me?"

"I did."

But confidence reasserted itself. "Why didn't you just ride in there and take me ? Without the book. I

mean, you are
you.
Umir couldn't have stopped you."

"He might have."

"Stopped the Sandtiger?"

"I'm eminently stoppable," I told him. "Permanently, even. What, did you think I was immortal?"

His chin rose and assumed a stubborn tilt. "You've never yet been killed."

"Well, no, since I wouldn't be standing here involved in this ludicrous conversation if I had been. But

'not yet' doesn't mean 'never.' "

Del said, "Which is another reason Neesha should come with us. So 'not yet' doesn't become 'now.'

"

I stared at her. "You really want him to come along."

"I've said that several times, I believe. Yes."

"Fine." I stalked past the kid. "Get your sword."

He turned. "What?"

"Get your sword." I bent and picked up my own. "Let's see just what kind of skill you have that I

haven't seen. And then maybe my assumptions will be proven by evidence."

Nayyib was aghast.
"Now?"

I smiled. "Why not?"

His mouth opened, then closed. Opened again. "Because . . . now is not a good time."

"You don't always get to choose your times, Nayyib-Neesha. Let that be your first lesson." I

indicated his bedroll and pouches. "Your sword."

"I can't," he said faintly.

"I thought you wanted me to teach you."

His color was fading. "I do."

"Well then?"

"Because now . . . because now—" He swallowed heavily, looking pained. "—I'm going to be sick."

He turned, staggered two steps, bent over—and promptly suited action to words.

"Gee," I marveled, "I've never had quite
that
effect on anyone before."

Del scowled. "Are you happy now?"

I grinned. "Yep." Particularly since it's hard for anyone, even a pretty kid like Nayyib, to look

particularly attractive to a woman while he's bringing up the inside of his belly.

She picked up an empty bucket and slung it at me. "Go fill this up. The horses need more water."

I caught it, laughing, and took it and my sword with me to the spring, whistling all the way.

TWENTY-EIGHT

SOME WHILE LATER, Nayyib presented himself to me. He had washed, dusted himself off,

neatened his hair. His eyes looked better, and his color was also improved. I had readied the stud and

now occupied myself with splitting alia leaves and applying a new coating of oil, waiting for Del to finish

tacking out and loading the gelding. It was taking a suspiciously long time, and when Nayyib stopped in

front of me and drew himself up, I knew why.

I sighed and assumed a patient expression.

He didn't beat around the bush. "I would like to come with you."

I smoothed oil across the back of my neck. "We've had this conversation before."

"And you have never given me a definitive answer."

"No isn't definitive?"

"You haven't said 'no.' You have made objections. There's a difference."

Well, yes, there was. "You're absolutely certain you want me to teach you to be a sword-dancer."

"Yes."

"Why?"

Something in his eyes flickered briefly. It was neither doubt that he could answer nor fear that he'd

answer wrong. Maybe it was merely a question he'd never expected of
me.

The stud nosed my shoulder. I patted his muzzle, then eased his head away. "Well?"

"It's what I've wanted to be since I was very young."

I wiped alia oil across my abdomen between harness straps and began working it in. "Why?"

"My sister and I ..." A quick smile curved his lips as he thought of her. "We made swords out of

sticks. Drew circles in the sand. Eventually my mother made her spend more time in the house, so I had

to dance alone. But my sister knew, and I knew, that someday it would come to this."

"What made you choose me?"

A muscle jumped in his jaw. "I didn't, at first. There was a sword-dancer in the village, on his way to

Iskandar. For the dances there two years ago." His eyes flickered again. "Do you recall?"

Did I recall? Oh, yes. With infinite clarity. Del did too; it was where she'd killed Ajani.

I tossed used leaves aside, worked at splitting a new one. "So this sword-dancer rode through your

village, and you asked him for lessons?"

"Yes.

"Did he give them to you?"

"Yes. He needed money, and I offered to pay him."

I nodded, bending to work oil into thighs. "And you decided by the time he left that you wanted to

challenge me."

Once again color warmed the dusky tan of his face. "I didn't mean it as a challenge. I just wanted to

step into the circle with you. I knew I would lose."

I grinned lopsidedly. "Not necessarily."

"Against you? Of course."

"Nayyib, the first time I stepped into a circle against a legendary sword-dancer, I won."

"But you're you."

I straightened up. "I wasn't me
then,"
I
said in exasperation "I was just a gangly seventeen-year-old

kid with hands and feet too big for his body, who was underestimated by a man who should have known

better. Complacence in the circle is dangerous—it nearly got him killed, and I had only a wooden

sparring blade, not live steel." I shook my head, remembering Abbu's shock. I waved a depleted leaf at

him. "And there, Neesha, is another lesson."

His mouth twitched in a half-smile. "Will you give me more? It would be my honor—and I have the

money to pay
you,
too."

I laughed, tossing aside the leaf. I was aware of Del moving even more slowly as she prepared the

gelding. Nayyib's horse was already tacked out and loaded, ground-tied some distance away. "Look ..."

I paused, thought about it briefly, gave it up. "I have every intention of reopening the school at Alimat,

but not quite yet. There are a few things to settle first. If you truly want to learn—if you haven't lost

interest or gotten distracted by something else by then, like a woman—come find me then."

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