The Black Mausoleum (Memory of Flames 4) (29 page)

BOOK: The Black Mausoleum (Memory of Flames 4)
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Riders were still coming up from the tunnels below, dragging poles and great long sails of dragon skin with them. Jasaan switched his eyes to watch. They looked like wings.

‘Jasaan? Guardsman Jasaan?’

Jasaan met the rider’s eyes. Neither of them bowed because neither of them knew whether either of them should. Adamantine Men served the speaker. As far as Jasaan was concerned that meant
Queen Lystra, and if he’d been feeling suicidal, then Hyrkallan was a traitor and so was every rider who followed him. Jasaan had settled on quietly pretending not to notice. The other
Adamantine Men who’d survived the journey from the Spur had followed his lead, and the same went for the story about the alchemists. Just pretend it’s true. Don’t ask questions.
Made him sick, though, that one.

They settled for staring at each other. The riders of the Pinnacles didn’t know what to do with him. The Adamantine Men made them uncomfortable. They were scared, and so they should
be.

‘I’m Jasaan,’ he said.

‘Come.’

The rider led him across the rubble towards Hyrkallan’s throne, close enough that Jasaan could know he was being watched. Other riders, clustered together, stopped their conversation and
stared as Jasaan approached. One broke away to face him.

‘Guardsman Jasaan.’ Jasaan didn’t know this one, but he could see the other riders deferred to him.

‘That’s me.’

They stared at each other, yet another battle of wills. Jasaan had had enough of those since he’d come here. Truth be told and despite the obvious danger, he’d happily have taken his
chances leading his men back to the Purple Spur.

‘One of your alchemists is alive,’ said the rider without looking away. ‘You will help us find her.’

Her.
So it was Kataros, the half-alchemist who’d been thrown out of the order in disgrace before the Adamantine Palace had burned. He didn’t know what her indiscretion had
been – pillow talk, secrets spilled to a rider lover she should never have had, something like that – and it simply wasn’t his business. She was the alchemist who’d found
the Adamantine Spear, the Dragonslayer. The Adamantine Men called her the spear-carrier, and of the three he’d brought here, she’d been the one who seemed to understand what a dragon
really was. It didn’t surprise him that she, of all of them, would survive, although last he’d heard she’d been eaten by a dragon along with the rest of them right where he stood.
Apparently that had been a lie. He said nothing.

‘Your alchemist may have killed the others,’ said the rider. ‘We think she led them up here, knowing a dragon was waiting. We think she did it so she could
disappear.’

Jasaan said nothing. They all knew perfectly well that his alchemists had been killed by men, not by dragons.

‘We know why and we know where she’s going. You will help us find her.’

Jasaan allowed himself to blink. Eventually they’d tell him what they really wanted him to know.

‘She’s gone to the Raksheh,’ said the rider eventually. ‘To somewhere near the Aardish Caves.’

‘Why would she do that?’ Jasaan asked when the rider didn’t say anything more.

The rider spat. ‘Alchemists make their own laws. They think they are beholden to none, not even to the speaker.’ He glanced at Hyrkallan on his throne and then turned to watch Jasaan
carefully. ‘You will help me,’ he said again.

‘How?’

‘You’ve been out there.’ The rider glanced over towards the edge of the mountain. He was scared. It had taken Jasaan this long to realise it, but the rider was scared. He was
scared to leave his stone shelter.

‘Yes.’ No expression in his voice. No judgement. Scared? So he should be.

‘The speaker commands that this alchemist is to be found. She is to be returned. As are those with her and anything she may have found if we do not catch her in time.’

‘Found?’ Jasaan cocked his head.

‘We had an outsider. He claimed to have entered the Aardish Caves and found the Black Mausoleum. The alchemist has taken him.’

Jasaan nodded. There was no such place. Every Adamantine Man knew
that
story, and that’s all it was – a story, a myth, another waste of time. ‘Vishmir himself spent his
life searching for it in those caves,’ he said.

‘Indeed. Yet this alchemist you brought among us has taken him. We will start our search there.’

He had to wonder why they were even bothering about such a mad tale, but that was another question and not one for an Adamantine Man. All in all he’d be glad to be out of the Pinnacles,
filled with its veiled hostility, and he’d be glad enough to find the alchemist too. Her life had been placed in his hands and all he’d managed to do was deliver her to men who wanted
to kill her. He owed her for that. When he found her, he wouldn’t be bringing her back here, that was for sure. ‘I’ll get my men ready,’ he said. Eaten by a dragon on the
top of a mountain? No alchemist was
that
stupid.

‘No,’ said the rider. They stared one another down.

‘The most likely thing,’ said Jasaan after neither of them had flinched, ‘is that they’re both dead. They’ll fall prey to dragons or feral men before they even
leave the Silver City.’ He shrugged. ‘But if you want her found, then you’ll want to take with you the men who have the most knowledge of what lies out there.’ He nodded
towards the darkness. ‘We braved dragons, yes, but there’s more.’ Perhaps he could play on this rider’s fears. ‘There are snappers, wolves, feral men. Disease is rife
and every day is a battle merely to find food. Once we reach the Raksheh . . .’

The rider shook his head. ‘No.’

‘Then send us out together because we are the men you can best afford to lose!’ hissed Jasaan.
Keep us together!

‘No.’ The decision, Jasaan realised, had already been made. He glanced up at the throne, at Hyrkallan the pretend speaker, staring back down at him.

The rider pointed to the wing-like things that had been brought up from below. ‘There can be eight of us, no more, because that’s how many of Prince Lai’s wings we have left.
They’ll take us far enough away from the Silver City. Two of my riders will return them. You and I and four others will enter the Raksheh. I have no doubt at all that you’re right, that
the alchemist is already dead and the outsider too. Nonetheless, we will look for them. We will go to the Aardish Caves and we will search for them, and if we do not find them then we will search
for the Black Mausoleum ourselves. We will not return empty-handed.’

So we won’t be returning at all.
That explained the rider’s fear. Jasaan looked for his own and found nothing. He’d either survive or he wouldn’t, whether there
were dragons to face or not.

‘Vishmir searched for twenty years,’ he said again. ‘With a hundred dragons and a thousand men. There is no Black Mausoleum.’

The rider wasn’t listening, but the plan made Jasaan feel better about leaving his soldiers behind. They weren’t welcome here, that much had been obvious from the day they’d
arrived, but they deserved better than to be thrown at the Raksheh chasing after a dream. He, on the other hand,
he
deserved every bit of it.

He looked at the things the rider had called Prince Lai’s wings. Yes, they looked like wings. Other than that he had no idea what they were for.

‘You will come.’

It wasn’t a question. Jasaan nodded.

‘Good.’ The rider paused and frowned. ‘The alchemist took one other with her. We do not know whether he went willingly or not. He was another Guardsman. An Adamantine Man who
found his way here some months ago.’

The rider paused, waiting for a reaction, but Jasaan didn’t have one for him.
Good for her
, he thought to himself. Maybe she was still alive after all.

‘His name was Skjorl. Did you know him?’

Skjorl? Here?
Jasaan frowned for a moment. ‘No,’ he said mildly. ‘No, I don’t know a Skjorl.’

 

 

 

 

45
Kataros

 

 

 

 

Thirteen days before the Black Mausoleum

The Adamantine Man did what she needed of him: he got her to the Raksheh. He led them, slowly and methodically, following the Yamuna River but never too close to the waters
themselves even though they never saw any sign of the dreaded river worms. Down here, away from the forest, perhaps the dragons really had eaten them after all.

There had been people on the Yamuna plains once. It wasn’t a place for cities, but there had been an abundance of thriving small towns and villages clinging to the riverbank. She could see
what had once been huts and halls, all built on stilts for when the river flooded. Most of them had been smashed and burned now; sometimes the only sign left was a field of stumps, blackened and
splintered but still stuck stubbornly in the earth.

Boats littered the fields. They were everywhere, scattered among the flotsam and jetsam of the dragons’ passing. Most were little fishing skiffs, no more than a few poles lashed together,
picked up by the last floodwaters and dropped wherever they were dropped. There was nowhere to hide, no shelter. No hills, no trees, not any more, no caves, no cellars, no rocks, just flat fields
full of wild grass going on and on, a slight rise here, a slight dip there. As each night began to brighten, the Adamantine Man found them a cluster of rocks, a pit in the ground or maybe simply a
mound of rubble. They spent one day dozing under a pile of old boats that he’d carefully arranged around the stump of a tree. Anything to hide them from the sky while the sun was up, while
Kataros and her dragon-blood potions masked their thoughts and hid the fact of their presence.

She saw dragons every day, often more than once. They usually flew on their own, but sometimes they came in twos and threes; and towards the end, as they drew closer to the forest, there were
more. She counted a dozen in one day, every one of them flying away from the Raksheh. She wondered why, but had no answer. They were flying away from where she was going and that would have to be
enough.

The Adamantine Man set a hard pace. Most of the time he still carried the outsider. Even then she was pressed to keep up with him. Siff would have had no chance at all. He was getting some of
his strength back now, but he still mostly dozed except at dawn and dusk.

‘The less time we spend here, the more likely we are to live,’ Skjorl told her, not that she ever asked him to slow down. Maybe he saw the strain in her face, but she wouldn’t
complain, not to him. He’d stop if she told him too, she knew that; he’d walk slower if she asked, stand on his head or go and drown himself in the river if she demanded it, but for now
he was doing what needed to be done, driving them on.

She saw the forest as they settled down to hide on the fourth day, distant hills above the plains, lit up by the rising sun. The river was already starting to change, from a wide sluggish brown
to clear and flowing with purpose. The fields were away from the river now, more uneven, the earth harder. By the end of that night the villages they passed were still shattered and burned but the
houses weren’t built on stilts any more. They were past the flood plains. Towards the next sunrise they came to the ruins of another village, a few stones houses on the edge of the hills.
They were scorched, their roofs gone; they were black and empty shells half tumbled down, but carved over one doorway Kataros saw the outline of a dragon, worn and faded. She saw it and knew
exactly where they were.

‘Looks as good a place to stop as any,’ muttered Skjorl. ‘One more day in the open. Another night of walking and then we should be in the trees. You can rest a bit then.’
He put Siff down and wandered around the buildings, looking to see what was there. Kataros stayed where she was. There weren’t any bodies, not that she could see, and by now all they ever saw
were bones, but still . . . The dragon was the sign of the Order of the Scales. Of the alchemists. She doubted she would have known any of her kin who had died here, but that’s what they
were. Kin. The order had a house here because it was close to the Raksheh. She knew it, had even come here once. You could ride a boat, if you were willing to brave the worms, all the way down the
Yamuna from here; or you could ride a different boat up to the forest, but somewhere nearby were rapids that no boat could pass, and so the order had built this place, a way station for their own,
with rooms to dry herbs and roots, to salt them or roast them or mix them with oil or water or vinegar or with blood.

Skjorl came out of one house and went into another.

‘There’s a trail from here to the forest,’ she told him, but he didn’t seem to hear. In the light of the half-moon the ruins cast shadows that merged together, one after
the other. If she let herself drift, they all merged into one. She supposed she ought to feel something in a place like this. Sadness. Loss. Something, at least; she’d felt a sadness when
they passed through the burned-out towns and villages by the river after all, so she ought to feel it here as well, oughn’t she? But she didn’t. All she felt was indifference, nothing
more, nothing less. If the Adamantine Palace hadn’t burned, her brothers and sisters would have made her a Scales. They would have dulled the spark within her and fed her their potions and
made her fall in love with a monster, and never mind that she was as good an alchemist as any of them. She’d liked her men, liked her wine, liked other things. She’d said things that
she shouldn’t and they’d flogged her for it, and she’d gone straight out and done it again.

She looked up at the moon and the fitful clouds and picked absently at the hard skin on her knuckles, the first stages of Hatchling Disease. Siff and Skjorl had both drunk her blood.
They’d have it too now, although it would take a good while to show. The alchemist’s curse:
I can give you a potion to help with that. Just one little thing: if you drink it,
it’ll slowly turn your skin to stone.
She hadn’t exactly been pretty to start with, but then an alchemist wasn’t supposed to care about such things. An alchemist’s
thoughts were always lofty.

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