The Darkness that Comes Before (25 page)

BOOK: The Darkness that Comes Before
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“Do you see it, Cememketri?” Xerius hissed under his breath. “Do you see the mark of sorcery?”
“None,” the sorcerer said, his voice tight with the fear of being overheard.
The snake’s eyes lingered for a moment on the dark porticoes that flanked the courtyard, as though assessing the threat posed by the shadows within. Then, like a tiller swinging on a greased hinge, it turned to Xerius.
“I am Mallahet,” the Cishaurim said in flawless Sheyic, “adopted son of Kisma, of the tribe Indara-Kishauri.”
“You’re Mallahet?” Cememketri exclaimed. Another indiscretion: Xerius had not given him leave to speak.
“And you are Cememketri.” The eyeless face bowed, but the snake’s head remained rigid. “Honour, to an old foe.”
Xerius sensed the Grandmaster stiffen next to him. “Emperor,” the sorcerer murmured, “you must leave at once. If this is truly Mallahet, then you’re in grave danger. We all are!”
Mallahet . . . He had heard that name before, in one of Skeaös’s briefings. The one whose arms were scarred like a Scylvendi.
“So three are not enough,” Xerius replied, inexplicably heartened by his Grandmaster’s fear.
“Mallahet is second only to Seokti in the Cishaurim. And only then because their Prophetic Law bars non-Kianene from the position of Heresiarch. Even the Cishaurim are fearful of his power!”
“What the Grandmaster says is true, God-of-Men,” Skeaös added in low tones. “You must leave at once. Let me negotiate in your stead . . .”
But Xerius ignored them. How could they be so hare-hearted when the Gods themselves had secured these proceedings? “Well met, Mallahet,” he said, surprised by the steadiness of his voice.
After a brief pause, Gaenkelti barked: “You stand in the presence of Ikurei Xerius III, the Emperor of Nansur. You will kneel, Mallahet.”
The Cishaurim wagged a finger, and the asp swayed with it as though in mockery. “Fanim kneel only before the One, before the God-that-is-Solitary.”
Out of reflex or simple ignorance, Gaenkelti raised a fist to strike the man. Xerius stilled him with an outstretched palm.
“We shall rescind Protocol for this occasion, Captain,” he said. “The heathens shall kneel before me soon enough.” He cupped the fist holding the Chorae in his other hand, driven by an obscure impulse to conceal it from the serpent’s eyes. “You’ve come to parlay?” he asked the Cishaurim.
“No.”
Cememketri muttered a soldier’s curse.
“Then why have you come?” Xerius asked.
“I have come, Emperor, so you might parlay with another.”
Xerius blinked. “Who?”
For a moment, it seemed the Nail of Heaven flashed from the Cishaurim’s brow. There was a shout from the blackness of the porticoes, and Xerius raised his hands before him.
Cememketri intoned something incomprehensible, dizzyingly so. A globe, composed only of ghostly trails of blue fire, leapt about them.
But nothing had happened. The Cishaurim stood, as motionless as before. The asp’s eyes glowed like amber coals in the firelight.
Then Skeaös gasped, “His face!”
Superimposed like a transparent mask over Mallahet’s skull-like visage was the face of another, a grizzled Kianene warrior who still bore the desert’s mark on his hawkish features. Appraising eyes peered from the Cishaurim’s empty sockets, and a phantom goatee hung from his chin, braided in the manner of a Kianene Grandee.
“Skauras,” Xerius said. He had never seen the man before, but somehow he knew he looked upon the Sapatishah-Governor of Shigek, the heathen scoundrel whom the Southern Columns had fenced with for more than four decades.
The ghostly lips moved, but all Xerius heard was a far-off voice speaking in the lolling rhythms of Kiani. Then the real lips moved beneath, saying, “Excellent guess, Ikurei. You, I know by your coins.”
“So what is this? The Padirajah sends one of his Sapatishah dogs to confer with me?”
Again the alarming lag of lips and voices. “You’re not worthy of the Padirajah, Ikurei. I alone could break your Empire over my knee. Be thankful the Padirajah is a pious man, and abides by his treaties.”
“All our treaties are moot, Skauras, now that Maithanet is Shriah.”
“Even more reason for the Padirajah to spurn you. You too have become moot.”
Skeaös leaned and whispered in his ear. “Ask him why the theatrics if you’ve become irrelevant. The heathen are afraid, God-of-Men. That’s the only reason they come to you thus.”
Xerius smiled, convinced his old Counsel had merely confirmed what he already knew. “If I’ve become moot, then why these extraordinary measures, hmm? Why make your better your messenger?”
“Because of the Holy War that you and your idolatrous brethren would wage against us. Why else?”
“And because you know the Holy War is my instrument.”
The wraithlike expression smiled, and Xerius heard distant laughter. “You would wrest the Holy War from Maithanet, would you? Make it the great lever you’d use to undo centuries of defeat? We know of your petty schemes to bind the idolaters to your Indenture. And we know of the army you’ve sent against the Scylvendi. The ploys of a fool—all of them.”
“Conphas has promised to pike a road of Scylvendi heads from the Steppe to my feet.”
“Conphas is doomed. No one possesses cunning or might enough to overcome the Scylvendi. Not even your nephew. Your army and your heir are dead, Emperor. Carrion. If so many Inrithi did not muster on your shores, I would ride to you even now and bid you drink of my sword.”
Xerius clutched his Chorae tighter to silence the tremors. An image of Conphas bleeding at the feet of some wild Scylvendi reaver flashed before his soul’s eye, and he relished it, despite the horror of its implications.
Then Mother would have only me . . .
Again Skeaös’s voice in his ear. “He lies to frighten you. We heard from Conphas just this morn, and nothing was amiss. Remember, God-of-Men, the Scylvendi crushed the Kianene not eight years past. Skauras lost three sons in that expedition, including Hasjinnet, his eldest.
Goad
him, Xerius. Goad him! Angry men make mistakes.”
But of course, he’d already considered this.
“You flatter yourself, Skauras, if you think Conphas is as foolish as Hasjinnet.”
Ethereal eyes blinked over empty sockets. “The Battle of Zirkirta was a great woe for us, yes. But a woe you will share very shortly. You attempt to injure me, Ikurei, but you merely prophesy your own destruction.”
“The Nansurium,” Xerius said, “has endured far greater losses and survived.”
But Conphas can’t lose! The omens!
“Well enough, Ikurei. I’ll grant you that trifle. The Solitary God knows you Nansur are a stubborn people. I’ll even grant that Conphas may prosper where my own son faltered. I’ll not underestimate that snake charmer. He was my hostage for four years, remember? But none of this makes Maithanet’s Holy War your instrument. You hold no hammer above us.”
“But I do, Skauras. The Men of the Tusk know nothing of your people—even less than Maithanet. Once they understand they war not only against you but against your Cishaurim, the leaders of the Holy War will sign my Indenture. The Holy War requires a School, and that School happens to be mine.”
The disembodied lips grinned over the dour line of Mallahet’s mouth.
Again, the uncanny, far-away voice. “
Hesha? Ejoru Saika? Matanati jeskuti kah—”
“What? The Imperial Saik? You think your Shriah would cede you the Holy War for the Imperial Saik? Maithanet
has
plucked your eyes from the Thousand Temples, hasn’t he? Do you see, Ikurei? Do you finally see how quick the sands run beneath your feet?”
“What do you mean?”
“Even we know more of your accursed Shriah’s plans than you.”
Xerius glanced at Skeaös’s face, saw concern rather than calculation furrow his crinkled features. What was happening?
Skeaös . . . Tell me what to say! What does he mean?
“Speechless, Ikurei?” Mallahet’s surrogate voice sneered. “Well, choke on this: Maithanet has sealed a pact with the
Scarlet Spires
. Even now, the Scarlet Magi prepare to join the Holy War. Maithanet already possesses his School, one that dwarfs your Imperial Saik in both numbers and power. As I said, you are moot.”
“Impossible!” Skeaös spat.
Xerius whirled to face the old Counsel, stunned by his audacity.
“What’s this now, Ikurei? You let your dogs howl at your table?”
Xerius knew he should be outraged, but such an outburst from
Skeaös
was . . . unprecedented.
“But he lies, God-of-Men!” Skeaös cried. “This is a heathen trick, meant to extort concessions—”
“Why would they lie?” Cememketri snapped, obviously eager to humiliate an old court foe. “Don’t you think the heathen
want
us to possess the Holy War? Or do you think they’d rather treat with
Maithanet?

Had they forgotten the presence of their Emperor? They spoke as though he were a fiction whose usefulness had come to an end.
They think me irrelevant?
“No,” Skeaös retorted. “They know the Holy War’s ours, but would have us think it’s not!”
A cold fury uncoiled within Xerius. There would be much screaming tonight.
Either the two men remembered themselves or they sensed something of Xerius’s humour, because they abruptly fell silent. Two years past, a Zeumi had entertained Xerius’s court with trained tigers. Afterward, Xerius had asked him how he could command such fierce beasts with looks alone. “Because,” the towering black-skinned man had said, “they see their future in my eyes.”
“You must forgive my zealous servants,” Xerius said to the wraith inhabiting the Cishaurim’s face. “You can be assured that I will not.”
Skauras’s visage flickered then reappeared, as though nodding in and out of some unseen shaft of light. How the old wolf must be laughing. Xerius could almost see him regaling the Padirajah with descriptions of the disarray in the Imperial Court.
“I shall mourn them, then,” the Sapatishah said.
“Save your dirges for your own folk, heathen. Regardless of who possesses the Holy War, you are doomed.” The Fanim
were
doomed. Outrageous insolence aside, what Cememketri had said moments earlier was true. The Padirajah wanted him to possess the Holy War. One could not bargain with fanatics.
“Ah, strong words! At last I speak to an emperor of the Nansur. Tell me, then, Ikurei Xerius III, now that you understand we
both
bargain from a position of weakness, what do you propose?”
Xerius paused, possessed by a calculating cold. He had always been at his canny best when wroth. Alternatives tumbled through his soul, most of them foundering on the sharp fact of Maithanet and his demonic cunning. He thought of Calmemunis and his hatred of his cousin, Nersei Proyas, heir to the throne of Conriya . . .
And then he understood.
“To the Men of the Tusk you and your people are little more than sacrificial victims, Sapatishah. They speak and act as though their triumph is already inked in scripture. Perhaps the time will come when they respect you as we do.”
“Shrai laksara kah.”
“You mean fear.”
Everything now hinged on his nephew, far to the north. More than ever.
The omens . . .
“As I said—respect.”
CHAPTER SIX
 
THE JIÜNATI STEPPE
 
It is said: a man is born of his mother and is fed of his mother.
Then he is fed of the land, and the land passes through him,
taking and giving a pinch of dust each time, until man is no longer
of his mother, but of the land.
—SCYLVENDI PROVERB
 
 
. . . and in Old Sheyic, the language of the ruling and religious castes of the Nansurium,
skilvenas
means “catastrophe” or “apocalypse,” as though the Scylvendi have somehow transcended the role of peoples in history and become a principle.
—DRUSAS ACHAMIAN,
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR
 
Early Summer, 4110 Year-of-the-Tusk, the Jiünati Steppe
 
Cnaiür urs Skiötha found the King-of-Tribes and the others crowded across a ridge that afforded them a panoramic view of the Hethanta Mountains and the Nansur army encamped below. Pulling his grey to a stop, he studied them from a distance, his heart hammering as though his blood had grown overthick. For a moment he felt like a boy excluded by his elder siblings and their snide friends. He half-expected to hear taunts sailing on the wind.

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