Read The Warrior King: Book Three of the Seer King Trilogy Online
Authors: Chris Bunch
She nodded.
“What will they be dining on?”
Lynton was surprised.
“We … they still have some bread left from last night. And Mam made soup two nights ago.”
“Take them this,” I indicated what lay before me. “And here.” I took a silver coin from my sack. “If your father drinks wine, have him buy a bottle for himself.”
“But … you — ”
“I suddenly remembered this is one of my family god’s days,” I said. “When I’m supposed to fast, and surely I’ve done enough already in this life to not want to anger her more.”
Lynton hesitated.
“Go on, girl,” I ordered, and she obeyed.
I lay on the bed, wondering what I would do next. She came back, looked at me, and smiled.
“We thank you,” she said. “You’re a good man.”
I shook my head.
“No,” I said, trying to keep anger from my voice. “I’m afraid there aren’t any left, these days.”
She sat on the bed, put a hand on my leg.
“Yes, there are,” she said gently. She stood and slowly began unbuttoning her dress. “You’ll like me,” she said. “I swear you will. I’ll do anything you want me to … and I’ll like it. Anything.”
The dress dropped about her ankles, and she stepped out of it. She wore only a thin slip under it, and hooked her fingers in its straps, let it fall away. Her naked body was unworn, fair, with small breasts and the merest curl of hair around her sex.
My cock stirred. It had been … how long, I couldn’t remember, since I’d been with a woman. Since … great gods, since I’d made love to Alegria, the night she died, long ago and far away in the frozen
suebi
of Maisir. Strangely, I would have thought the memory would’ve dashed my ardor, but it didn’t. Alegria, the greatest love of my life; Marán, my former wife; Amiel Kalvedon, who loved us both, all were now slipping into memory, and I realized enough time had passed, and their memories would have no more power to rule my life, for good or evil, than other remembrances.
I wanted to stand, take off my peasant’s attire, and woo this girl, this nude woman who stood waiting.
Instead, I took her hand and sat her down beside me. Then I went to my sack, took out the promised two silver coins, added a third.
“I’m one of those,” I said, “who likes things different.”
Lynton tried to hide a look of fear. She licked her lips.
“I said anything, and anything I meant,” she said.
“What I like,” I said, “is to watch women sleep.”
“What?”
“When I was a boy,” I lied, “I used to look through a crack in the wall at a neighbor girl. She was older than I was, so of course she never knew I existed. Every night she’d prepare herself for bed, combing her hair, which was dark, like yours, and then lie down, naked, and look at something I couldn’t see. Maybe it was a picture of someone she loved. I don’t know. Then her eyes would close and she’d go to sleep.”
“That’s what you like?”
I nodded.
“You don’t want to do anything … after I’m asleep?”
I shook my head.
“That’s …” she stopped herself.
“Strange?”
“Yes.”
“But that’s what I like.” I handed her the coins.
I got up, went to the nearby chair, sat down. She kept looking at me, waiting for me to take out a whip, no doubt, or something like that, then swung her legs up, and lay back.
“Do you want me to play with myself?”
“No.”
Lynton lay there for a few moments.
“Whatever happened to that girl?”
“She ran away with a soldier,” I said. “When I was only ten.”
“Are you married?”
“Yes,” I said. “With three children, and a fourth coming.”
“But you still like …”
“Yes. With your eyes closed.”
She was silent. I stayed motionless. Her eyes opened twice, looked at me, then closed once more. Her breathing grew regular, and still I waited. She began snoring. I covered her with a blanket, found what looked like a favorite doll, put it beside her.
I drank my water, curled on the floor, and, after a time of itemizing how many kinds of fools I was, slept.
I woke, as I’d always been able to, when I wished, about an hour before dawn. Lynton slept on, quite soundly, the doll now cuddled under the blanket.
I made myself one more sort of fool, and left all the gold from Salop’s purse on the bed next to her, silently left the room, and went out into the slow drizzle of morning.
• • •
“And what’s your business, might I ask?” the slender, almost emaciated man wearing a pair of seeing-glasses perched precariously on his nose asked.
“You buy gems?”
“So my sign indicates.”
“I’ve got some to sell,” I said. “From my uncle, who used to be a soldier, who died last week.”
I took out the stub of Herne’s sword and his bejeweled dagger. It was a rotten story, but the best I’d been able to devise.
The man looked at them carefully, then at me, then back at the weapons.
“An officer, I take it?” he said dryly.
“No, sir. But he fought against Kallio, and he told me this used to be some lord’s or other that he killed in a battle.”
The man nodded, considered the weapons.
“If,” he said carefully, “you are telling the truth, and of course I have no reason to doubt you, then these would be no doubt worth a great deal as collector’s items. More if you’d happen to remember the name of the nobleman your uncle took them from.”
I shook my head. “Been years since I heard the stories. My uncle died a month ago, and I thought I’d make the best price bringing them to the city to sell.”
“That’s correct, you’ll find more buyers in the city than in the country,” the man said. “The problem with selling them intact is that it will take longer to find the perfect customer, although there are three men I have in mind. There is a second option, which would be to remove the stones from their settings and melt down the gold and silver, which I would buy for its intrinsic value, no more.”
“That’s what I want.”
“It’s somewhat a pity to destroy works like these, even though they’re somewhat gaudy for my tastes,” the man went on, “but it also makes the gems exceedingly hard to identify.”
I pretended puzzlement. “I don’t follow you.”
“Of course you don’t. Now, if you’ll excuse me for a minute, I’d like to summon my partner.”
He smiled faintly, started for the back of the store.
“If your partner wears a gray uniform or looks like a warder,” I said, “you’ll not have the time to reap any reward.”
The man smiled once more.
“I have even less use for the agents of the law than you, if that’s imaginable,” and he disappeared behind the curtain.
He was gone almost ten minutes, and I nearly bolted. I opened the door and leaned in the entryway, pretending casualness, scanning the street in both directions for alarums.
The man came back with a woman who was simply huge, not just fat, but enormous in every dimension.
“Interesting items you offer us,” she said, and her voice matched her bulk. “Why’d you choose our shop?”
I told the truth: “It was the second one I came across. The first didn’t have anything expensive in the window, so I didn’t think it could afford my price.”
“Do you have any of the Talent?” the woman asked.
I felt a chill. “I know nothing about magic.”
The woman stroked her chins. “These gems are quite valuable,” she said. “We’ll be giving you a considerable amount of money, should we purchase them. How would you wish the transaction?”
“Gold, fairly small in denomination. Where I live, it’s hard to change big coins,” I said.
“Easy to carry, easy to dispose of,” she went on. “Are you planning on spending them here in Nicias?”
“That’s not a question I’ll answer.”
“You plan on traveling, then,” she said, as if I had satisfied her curiosity. “But you won’t tell me where.”
I shook my head, and my hand touched the grip of the sword in my sack.
“We mean no harm,” she said. “Unlike others in Nicias, who seek hard a man with long, blond hair, a man with a handsome face and a strong build.”
“Not me,” I said, trying to sound careless, “for I’ve wronged no one.”
“In these times,” the woman said, “wrong is an extremely variable judgment.”
“So I’ve seen.”
“If I said there’s a drawn bath upstairs, in our apartments, a bath intended for my own use, would you be interested?” the woman asked. “In a cabinet near it is a vial of dye, so a blond man might suddenly become black-haired. And a man with long hair might have a close-crop when he emerged from that chamber.”
I eyed her carefully. “And what is your interest in my affairs?”
She shrugged. “We like to see our customers happy.”
I found the situation suddenly amusing and laughed. “How much would this deduct from my price?”
“Nothing at all,” she said. “I would propose to give you two hundred and seventy-five …” she picked up the dagger, looked at it more closely, “… no, three hundred and seven pieces of gold.
“That’s somewhere between a quarter and a half what these jewels would fetch in the jeweler’s market. I might add that if I were dishonest, which I’m not, and a fence, which I’m not, the going rate is ten percent of value.”
“So I’d heard. I’ll take your price.”
“You haven’t heard all of it,” she went on. “Do you fear snakes?”
I looked at her in astonishment. “No more than the next sensible man, I suppose,” I answered. “I’ll slay a poisonous reptile, but the others I’ve found friend to man, those who feed on noxious insects and other reptiles.”
“That’s good,” she said. “Now, I do need to know at least in which direction you plan to travel.”
I was dizzied by this eerieness but obeyed her request, and then realized I’d not considered where I would flee to. North? I knew no one in the Delta, nor east toward the deserts. South, up the Latane, I might find some old comrades who’d shelter me. There really was but one choice for me.
“I travel to the west,” I said.
“I thought so,” she said. “The very far west, into the jungles.”
I kept my expression blank.
“Very good indeed,” she said. “Upstairs with you, and get rid of those disgusting garments. Wash yourself, and I’ll be up directly to deal with your hair.”
She saw my expression. “Don’t worry. I doubt if you can show me anything my husband here, or my six sons, haven’t already.
“I said go!” and her voice was as commanding as any drill warrant, and I obeyed.
Half an hour later, I was clean. Half an hour after that, I was shorn and black-haired. I stood, naked, and she handed me clothes. They were clean, often-mended, and the pants were those of an infantryman, the shirt homespun, the cowled cloak also that of a soldier.
“Put them on,” she ordered. I did as she told me, and she turned to her husband. “Well?”
“Released after the peace,” he said. “Wandered for a time, taking whatever job came along. Since he still has his sword and dangerous-looking knife, he’s obviously a man who’s willing to deal in death.”
“Good,” she approved. “That’s a good thing for him to appear as. Such men are left alone on the roads, for they never carry silver, and taking whatever coppers they have isn’t worth the bloodshed. He’ll not be bothered much, if he keeps to himself, on his journey to Cimabue.”
I jolted.
“How did you know that?” I blurted, not the most subtle admission I’d ever made.
She looked mysterious and changed the subject. “One more thing,” she said, opening a small pouch, and taking something out. “Hold still now,” and she pressed something against my left cheekbone, ran it down to my jawline, and she muttered as she did. It felt slimy, cold, then warmed against my skin.
“What — ”
“A good soldier,” her husband said, “generally has a scar or two. Interesting thing about people,” he went on. “They’ll note something about your features and forget the rest of your face. So you’ll be seen as Scarface, and no one’ll be able to tell the shape of your nose or color of your eyes.”
“The device is one used by mummers,” the woman went on. “It’s slightly ensorcelled, so you can wash, eat, swim with it on, and not worry. The words to take it off, and remember them well, for I doubt you’ll be able to come back here for a trot to the memory, are ‘
enem, enem, letek nisrap,
’ said twice.” I repeated them several times in my mind.
“You have them right?”
I nodded.
“There’s bread, cheese, water downstairs, since you drink no wine,” she said. “Eat quickly, for your new employer will be here shortly.”
The thin man held out a heavy bag of coins, with a drawstring about it, which I just stared at, still shaken by the woman’s knowledge.
“Here. Hang this around your neck. Your chest is big enough to conceal your wealth. Now hurry!”
• • •
The man smelled of sweat, even though his clothes and face were clean. He was scrabbily bearded and wore heavy boots, pants, and shirt, hardly ideal for Nicias’s tropic climate.
“I’m Yakub,” he said, grinning happily. “Come meet my children out back.”
There were a dozen cages stacked on a handcart, each holding a large snake. Some coiled watchfully, some appeared to sleep, others slid from corner to corner of their cage, endlessly seeking freedom.
“Yakub,” the woman explained, “offered you six, no, eight coppers, plus your passage, if you’d help him with his wares across the Latane. The ferry’s ramps and such are treacherous, and Yakub needs a good strong man who fears nothing. I doubt if any warders will be too interested in closely examining such a cargo … or its owners.
“And it’s best you be gone, for the next ferry that crosses the whole of the Delta will leave in two hours.”
Yakub laughed, jumped up and down.
“Yes, yes, out of the city, and going once more, where we’re free, away from everything stone and dirty.” He giggled again, and I wondered if he was entirely right in the head. But no matter.
I bowed to the woman, then to her husband.
“Thank you,” I said. “I don’t know why you’ve helped me.”
“It was not choice,” she said, “but a command, but from whom you need not know. Although I would’ve given you aid regardless, with what the future will … must bring. Remember this, Damastes á Cimabue, and also remember that everything changes, and nothing is ever the same.