Tila had confirmed his guess that duels could only be demanded of to those in the habit of wearing a sword, and Carel, having passed his sabre, Arugin, on to Major Jachen, was now officially a pensioned retainer of Lord Isak’s. The net result was that he could pretty well be as rude as he liked to any nobleman, and any demand for apology in the form of a duel would have to be offered to Lord Isak instead. Of course, if Isak judged his friend correctly, any illegal attack on Carel’s person would see the former élite guardsman thumb a catch on his cane and suddenly regain the balance of forty years’ superb swordsmanship.
‘Reminding you of anything, old man?’
‘No, not at all,’ Carel replied breezily. ‘You were much worse.’
‘Were?’ Isak said sourly. ‘You heard her; I’m now a Saviour who can’t even save himself. At the moment I’m inclined to think that might be worse than a petulant child.’
‘So a petulant child might claim, but I know which one I’d prefer to share a pipe with out in the moonlight.’ Carel gestured towards the Great Hall and they walked in side by side. The servant now tending the fire still had a shocked look on her face, the result of Xeliath’s passing. It took a moment of panic before she remembered to curtsey to Isak as the three rangers sitting at a table rose and bowed.
Once out on the moonlit training ground, Isak took Carel’s proffered tobacco pouch and thumbed a wad of tobacco into his pipe. He lit it and took a deep breath of the warm smoke before passing it over.
‘I cringe every time I hear the word “Saviour”.’
Carel nodded, his face partly obscured by the shadow of hair made silvery in Alterr’s light. ‘Don’t surprise me, that’s a bastard term to live up to no matter who you are.’
‘I never realised how powerful the word was, the hold it takes on some folk.’
‘Ah, folk are dumb as mules, you know that,’ Carel declared carelessly, gesturing to the other side of the training ground where they could just make out a flurry of activity at the stables. ‘Sometimes as stubborn too.’
The sky was dark. It was well past midnight, and all they could see ahead was the moonlight catching the frost on the many peaked roofs of the palace.
‘Whether a saviour is needed or not, that don’t matter to some. We’re mortal, whatever tribe or colour.’ The veteran shrugged, the stump that was all that remained of his left arm nudging Isak’s sleeve. ‘“Frail mortals, weak and fearful” - isn’t that what it says in the Devotionals, the one to Lord Death? That’s what we are, my boy, frail and weak. We don’t lead perfect lives and deep down every one of us knows we could be better, as people, and as servants of the Gods. Who then wouldn’t want a saviour to be the light showing us the way?’
‘And they look to me?’ Isak shook his head in disbelief. ‘Because at some point years ago the Gods feared Aryn Bwr’s revenge, only to have their tool twisted awry? I’m no example.’
‘Ah, but you are, like it or not,’ Carel said firmly. The man handed back the pipe then knocked the head of his cane against Isak’s massive thigh. ‘Whatever playing was done with your destiny, it made others see a leader in those oversized boots of yours.’
‘And what about me?’ Isak countered, rounding on the veteran and ducking his head so he could look the smaller man in the eye. ‘Who do I look to when I run out of answers? I’ll tell you now I’ve got sod-all clue how to deal with the fact that I can feel my own death creeping up behind me, let alone whatever games Azaer is playing. So do I look to Kastan Styrax, perhaps the only man in this Land more trouble than I am? The man I feel in my bones is going to kill me?’
‘No need to take that tone with me,’ Carel said sternly, ‘I ain’t saying I’ve got all the answers.’ He jabbed his cane against Isak’s chest and after an angry moment the white-eye stepped back. ‘I’m just out here for a smoke,’ Carel continued with an approving grin as he watched Isak swallow his temper, ‘and who’m I to say what manner your salvation might come in?’
Isak hesitated as Carel’s words seemed to rush through his body. ‘Salvation? Gods, is that what I’m looking for?’ Suddenly aware of the swirling winds up above him, the energy and power coursing through the darkness, he felt the cold of night fall away. Some instinct kicked into action, sending a tremble through his veins and clearing the last remaining vestiges of alcohol from his body. In its place was a sensation he couldn’t place, almost like a trickle of energy waiting to be shaped into magic.
‘Don’t know what you’re looking for,’ Carel said, oblivious to what was happening to Isak as he watched Xeliath struggle into a saddle and set out at a walk for the open space of the training ground, a terrified groom at her side. ‘Think Mihn’s the better man to ask about salvation, even if he’s getting a little strange of late too. You seen those tattoos of his? I’d never call the man a savage, no matter where he’s from, but he’s starting to look it with those arcane symbols tattooed onto his skin.’
‘There must be a purpose to it,’ Isak said distantly, prompting a snort from Carel.
‘Purpose to everything, so the priests say, but sometimes you got to wonder.’
Oh, too true, my friend
, Isak thought, staring blankly into the black sky,
and wonder I do. Death and salvation, they’re strange companions in any discussion. But if the strands of life and destiny are woven together, what happens if I grab one and give it a tug? If nothing works as intended around me, what would happen if I faced death head-on?
‘I think Mihn knows more than he’s letting on,’ Isak said finally.
‘If he does, he’s got good reason, I’d say. That man is as loyal as they come; don’t you worry about him.’
‘I’m worried
for
him.’
‘Ah, now that’s foolish talk. You’re Lord of the Farlan; it’s your duty to ask difficult things of others. It’s Mihn’s responsibility what he gives to your cause, though; his choice, and one that’s gladly made.’
Isak was silent for a moment. ‘So what’s your advice for me then? Like it or not, you’re the one I look to for answers.’
‘Don’t make fun,’ Carel growled irritably.
‘I’m not, I swear.’ Isak clapped him on the shoulder. ‘All my life you’ve been the only one I could turn to. I’m not expecting answers to all my problems, but your advice has guided me this far. If nothing else, it’s a comfort to hear, and these days I’ll take any comfort I can get.’
Carel looked suspicious for a moment, then shrugged, hearing no mocking from the boy he’d instilled with a soldier’s sense of humour. ‘Not sure there’s much more I can teach you, but you’re slow, so I’ll repeat some of it and see if it sticks this time.’ He grinned briefly before turning back towards the Great Hall, but not fast enough to hide his face as it became grave once more.
‘A soldier can’t let fear rule his life,’ Carel said. ‘Fear tells you you’re still alive. Without it you’ll be dead damn quick, that I promise, but if it’s fear guiding your horse you’re riding straight to the ivory gates.’
My host of fears, all waiting in my shadow
, Isak thought.
I think you’re right, I’ve been letting fear play my hand for me, so perhaps it is time that changed.
Isak turned back towards the warmth of the Great Hall and draped an arm over Carel’s shoulder. ‘It’s good to have you back.’
The old soldier chuckled as they headed back. ‘I’m sure it is; you never did bother to buy your own tobacco. At least give me the damn pipe back, you oversized fool.’
Vesna didn’t hear the discreet knock on his apartment door. Slumped in a chair before the fire, he had even forgotten the bandaged wound on his head that nagged constantly. His focus was entirely occupied with the blood-red gem he turned over and over in his hands, feeling the slick surface of the cut faces and watching the light glitter through the stone. He’d never seen a stone like it, but for all its beauty it made him more fearful than anything else. For days now he’d spent hours after everyone else had retired, sitting and staring at the stone. Questions ran through his head, but any answers just slipped off those glassily smooth facets and vanished.
The knock came again, this time louder. Vesna gave a start and sat up, his heart racing as he looked around the room in confusion before realising it was someone at the door. He hauled himself up, tucking the gem into a pocket before he called for the person to come in.
Tila came in, her hair falling loosely about her shoulders and a worried look on her face. She had wrapped a thick blanket around her.
‘Damn. Sorry,’ he started, ‘it’s late isn’t it?’
Tila nodded. No doubt he didn’t look quite at his best, bandaged up and with bags under his eyes from lack of sleep.
‘I’d hoped you had just fallen asleep,’ she started, ‘but I saw the light under the door.’
Vesna crossed over to her and took Tila in his arms. He hugged her close and dropped a kiss on the top of her head. ‘I’m sorry,’ he started. ‘I meant to come to say goodnight, but I hadn’t realised how late it was. My mind’s all fogged at the moment - this damn cut.’ Even in Scree, Vesna had made a point of going to say goodnight to Tila at her bedroom door, and that had continued even after she had moved into Isak’s rooms to keep Xeliath company as much as to help her.
‘Is it still hurting?’ she asked, immediately concerned. ‘Do we need to get the healer back up here?’
‘No, no,’ Vesna said, dismissing the matter with a wave of the hand, ‘the stitches need time, nothing more.’
‘Then what else is it?’ she persisted. ‘You’ve had injuries before - did they always make you act so strangely?’
‘I—’ Vesna faltered, disarmed by the look on his betrothed’s face, and admitting, ‘No, this isn’t normal.’
‘Then tell me what the matter is.’ Tila urged him back to his chair and knelt beside it, keeping hold of one of his hands in hers. ‘We’re to be married in a few weeks; is that the problem? Just a case of nerves?’
Vesna saw in her eyes she didn’t believe that for a moment and he didn’t even try agreeing. He sighed, realising the time had come. ‘No, that’s not it, believe me. That is something I could not have happen soon enough.’ He squeezed her hand.
‘Well ?’
‘The night I was ambushed,’ he started, then paused. ‘Tila, there’s something I didn’t tell you about that night.’
‘You were going to that brothel for more than just drink?’ she said, trying to smile.
‘Gods, no!’ he exclaimed with a grimace. ‘I wish that were all. No, I meant during the attack. Something happened afterwards, and I’ve been thinking about it for days, trying to work out what to do.’
‘So tell me. There’s nothing that could change things between us.’ Seeing Vesna wince as she said that, Tila continued sharply, ‘Evanelial Vesna, do you think I’m stupid? You’ve been a professional soldier for twenty years, and I am well aware what that entails, the demands it makes of you. As for the rest, I know you’ve performed services at Lesarl’s com—’
‘What?’ Vesna spluttered, ‘he told you?’
‘In a fashion. Oh, don’t look so shocked, I’m working alongside the man on a daily basis and I have put a fair amount of thought into marrying you. Did you think that meant I’ve spent weeks wondering how to do my hair?’ Her voice softened. ‘My father asked me about a dowry and I didn’t have to look very hard to gain an idea of the debts your father left you; there’s no way you would have been able to service those debts and pay the College of Magic for your armour.’
‘Did you read my file? Do you want me to tell you?’
Tila ran a hand down his cheek. ‘No, dearest, I know you; I know the extent of what you would do for the tribe already. I don’t need to ask. However unsavoury your reputation might be, no one has ever bothered to claim you gloried or delighted in death. What you did in the past for the good of the tribe is not my place to ask.’
Vesna looked stunned at how easily she’d dismissed the matter. ‘Are you sure?’ He remembered all too well the look on Tila’s face when Isak had announced rather casually that he’d murdered a man the previous evening. ‘That’s quite a turnaround since Count Vilan’s death.’
‘Vilan? I’m not saying I like murder, or that I approve of it, but I don’t believe you would ever talk about it the way Lord Isak did then.’ She shivered. ‘His callous streak still catches me off-guard from time to time, but I forgave him that, just as I forgave you your reputation. Do you think I was impressed when Lesarl intentionally left a note from the Keymaster of the Heraldic Library where he knew I’d find it? The note was to confirm that Lord Bahl would approve our marriage if such a thing might occur.’
‘The Keymaster of the Heraldic Library?’ Vesna wondered aloud. His confusion increased when Tila’s expression darkened.
‘Keeper of the family trees,’ she said in a cold voice. ‘Apparently it was not only Sir Arole Pir who Lesarl considered it necessary to confirm his true parentage.’
Vesna opened his mouth to speak but Tila held up a finger to stop him, her face thunderous. ‘Trust me; you do not want to continue that conversation any further. It will not end well for you. Just be glad the marriage is still going to happen.’
He nodded dumbly. Suddenly the cut to his head didn’t hurt now. It was overshadowed by the cold sensation of dread in his belly.
‘Now, tell me about the night you were attacked,’ Tila said, perching on the arm of his chair and staring intently at him.
Vesna couldn’t meet the force of her stare for long, but he knew not to drag the silence out and began to relate the last few moments of that fight and his conversation with the God of War.
After he had finished, Tila was silent. He chanced a look at her, but could read nothing from her expression as she stared into the fire, digesting the implications of what he’d said.
‘This is what you had to tell me before we married. An offer of immortality from the God of War. I can see the dilemma.’ Her voice was cool, clinical.
Vesna’s dread continued to mount as she left the words hanging in the air. His mouth went suddenly dry.