by Brent Weeks
The Order had made her. They were about to learn how well.
One of those masked Blackguards who’d saluted the Old Man of the Desert had moved with a bit of a limp. That was her thread to pull.
Let the haunting begin.
Chapter 7
“On the one hand, I couldn’t be more horrified,” Tisis Guile said, looking out the window in a flowing red summer dress accented with a vibrant green that perfectly matched the emerald luxin in her eyes.
The moment she’d stepped through the living white-oak doorway of the Palace of the Divines two days ago, Tisis had assumed the wardrobe of young royalty and a mien of measured grace and slow eloquence like a favorite pair of old boots. Strangely, the guise had endured without wrinkle or rumple, her cadences and tones and even accent seamless over the long, full days of affectation since they’d arrived.
It had taken Kip several days to realize the persona wasn’t a pretense. Though Tisis absolutely was trying to impress both the nobility and the servants, this was no false face. She had grown up in the corridors of power in Rath and Green Haven and the Chromeria, and only at the last had she had her retinue forcibly limited by Andross Guile.
Far from being a façade, for the first time, Kip was seeing his wife in the full flower of her natural environment.
Thank Orholam he’d first seen her at her weakest. She’d intimidated the hell out of him then, when she’d been vulnerable, isolated, uncertain.
“On the other hand,” she said, letting the curtain fall, “I couldn’t be prouder.”
For this one thing, thank you, Grandpa Guile. You did me a good turn when—well, when you pretty much forced this stunning woman to marry me and made her think it was her own idea.
Kip was really going to have to tell her about that someday.
She noticed his smile slip, but before she could ask anything, Kip said, “Huh? What?”
He’d been staring at decrees and reports and budgets for so long he was drifting. She was horrified about something? Proud?
“What’s going on?” Big Leo asked Tisis, gesturing outside. “Something wrong out there with the queue?”
After word had gotten out about Kip’s magical restorations to Túsaíonn Domhan, everyone wanted to see the masterpiece ceiling functioning as it had been intended, so Kip had simply said whoever wanted to see it could.
That was how he and Tisis ended up sleeping in nondescript guest chambers: his permission had been taken as an order, and now there was a constant line out the door, out the Palace of the Divines, down the steps, and into the square below. People who had far better things to do in this wracked and wretched city were instead waiting hour upon hour to see Kip’s handiwork, even sleeping in line, watched by attentive guards. He and Tisis decided to move to another room rather than expel those who’d waited so long at the end of every day.
“Come see,” Tisis said, not to Kip, though.
The Mighty crowded around the windows, peeking carefully. Except for Winsen, who, with his typical subtlety, pulled the curtain fully back to stare down into the courtyard.
All of them were bored. Kip couldn’t blame them. While they all waited for their only paryl drafter to finish her quiet scans of the room, with her eyes midnight orbs against her true black skin, Kip had things to do. The rest of them didn’t.
Though Kip had never thought of him as the devious sort, Cruxer had been the one to initiate room searches. As it turned out, several other chambers in a row that had been provided for the Mighty’s meetings had been riddled with spy holes.
It wasn’t the only way Kip and his Nightbringers, outwardly hailed as liberators, had been passively resisted, and carefully made to feel unwelcome. The Divines were either not half as clever as they thought, or they believed themselves to be untouchable. Kip hoped they weren’t stupid, but they were treating him like he was, and it was a burr under his saddle.
Regardless, until the woman finished her paryl scans, the Mighty couldn’t talk strategy.
Kip hadn’t appreciated how good Teia was at drafting paryl until Súil had given him a basis for comparison. She was nice, but she needed breaks every few minutes, and even when she was working, she was slow.
He considered taking over the scanning himself, but that would shame her. It would also reveal more of the full extent of his abilities to any spies who might be watching.
The Mighty missed Teia for a dozen reasons, but her speed was one they’d mentioned repeatedly. Kip had agreed with them but offered no more, telling them only that Karris had needed Teia. Paryl’s ability to see through clothing for hidden weapons was so useful for a Blackguard that Kip hadn’t needed to lie to them about Teia’s real work hunting the Order—that had felt like a secret that wasn’t his to give away and one too dangerous to share.
But the Mighty had brought up Teia’s absence more as they realized how important it was to trust your paryl drafter absolutely. In fraught times, how do you trust a stranger who can kill you without leaving any evidence, whose powers can’t be detected or countered except by someone who shares them?
No wonder paryl drafters had so often been hunted down throughout history, their arts no longer taught, but instead buried and for the most part happily forgotten.
But the biggest problem with having Súil around was that it made him miss Teia. And all that didn’t bear thinking about.
Kip had been lucky last night. The Mighty stopping two Shadows? How did that happen, really? The Mighty were good, but . . . the Shadows must have been inexperienced or lazy, underprepared, undisciplined. Would the Old Man of the Desert really spend two Shadows to send a message? Kip had said that, but it had been bravado.
You can’t admit that all of your best people together barely stopped two of the enemy, and only because they’d been incredibly lucky. So was it luck, or was the Old Man telling Kip he could kill him that easily, or . . . what was the alternative? Divine intervention?
Kip only wished he could believe that.
If it were a message, though, what was the message?
This whole city was starting to infuriate him. Not just the attempted eavesdropping. The passive resistance. The bureaucracy. ‘That’s not the way we do . . .’ ‘Ancient tradition dictates . . .’ ‘The people will be mortally offended, but if my lord wills it . . .’ ‘The priests are being summoned for a grand council to vote to allow just that, my lord, but so many of them are old, it’s taken longer than expected. Doubtless they’ll meet today. But I’m afraid if you preempt their authority . . .’
But there were things only he could do, and that he could only do if he stayed. Things only Kip cared enough to do. Things only he could get away with. That wasn’t even counting the things he should do that he could do better than anyone else. Worse, he didn’t know who he could trust enough to leave in charge.
The longer he stayed, the more fighters flocked to his banners and the better the intelligence he received. More time also meant more resources he could gather for his army.
But the longer he stayed, the more time he gave the White King to learn what Kip had accomplished and move to counter what he would do next.
He was going to go full Andross Guile on those old bastards.
He looked at the papers stacked on his desk. A year’s worth of commitments and decisions.
Two more days. I can give it two days. What can I accomplish in two more days? Enough?
“Breaker,” Cruxer said beside Tisis at the window, “there’s a crowd.”
“So? There was a crowd yesterday.” Kip started sorting the stacks into what he could possibly hope to do in two days.
“I went out there this morning again,” Cruxer said. “I recognized some of them. Same people. They’re not leaving after they see the ceiling.”
“They want to wait in the queue to see it again, that’s their business,” Kip said.
“They aren’t in the queue,” Cruxer said, troubled. “Yesterday they came curious. They left exultant. Today they’re . . . expectant?”
>
“I think they’re hoping to make you king,” Tisis said quietly.
“Uh-huh,” Kip said, not looking up. “Too much to do today, sorry,” he said.
He would meet with the merchant in the next two days. Definitely. His question was, how much of a fight did he put up over these shortages? Of course the discrepancies were never ‘surpluses,’ but he couldn’t be certain whose fingers had lightened the shipments. Men on his side, or on the merchant’s, or the merchant himself, swindling Kip? Contracts with ‘neutral’ traders were the worst, especially this asshole Marco Vellera.
Kip was pretty sure Marco Vellera was actually Benetto-Bastien Bonbiolo, one of the four Ilytian pirate kings. Or three kings and a queen at the moment, technically—there was a rumor that a king had been on the Gargantua when Gavin and Kip sank it. They still called them kings, though; apparently ‘the Ilytian pirate monarchs’ didn’t have the same ring to it. Kip’s problem was that Vellera was undoubtedly not selling supplies only to him but also to Koios, and to Satrap Briun Willow Bough as well.
He hated that, but there was no recourse for it. If you started seizing merchants’ caravans, you bankrupted the merchants. Bankrupt more than one, and the reasonable ones stop coming, leaving you to deal with the greedy who’ll gouge you, or the desperate who might steal from you outright; you end up paying with one kind of coin or another.
So far, Kip thought his own performance as a leader was decidedly lacking. He couldn’t win every game like Andross Guile, and he couldn’t break every game like Gavin Guile, so he was forced to do his best to rebound a loss from one game (the financial war) into a win in another (the shooting war).
Blubber bounces back, boys.
Kip was first on Marco Vellera’s trade route, so he was surreptitiously buying up the supplies he guessed the White King needed most.
Finding the coin to do all these things was what half the stacks of papers on the tables were all about. It involved a lot of bending the truth to a lot of very concerned bankers.
“Breaker, she’s serious,” Cruxer said.
Kip didn’t even look up. “Uh-huh. Happens to everyone who dabbles in the art-restoration business. Hazard of the trade, getting offered a crown.”
“Art?” Ferkudi asked.
“Fixing the ceiling?” Ben-hadad prompted.
“Oh, right! Right.” Ferkudi looked up. “What’s wrong with the ceiling?”
“Crowd’s not that big. Oh, they’ve seen us,” Winsen said, now beside Cruxer. “Crux? How does a High Magister wave? Like so?” He waved a devil-may-care wave, and Kip could hear the crowd go mad with excitement.
“ ‘Not that big’?” Kip said, suddenly rooted to the desk, papers forgotten.
“Nor that small,” Tisis said.
“How not small is ‘not small’?” Kip asked.
“I dunno,” Winsen said. “Maybe twenty thousand?”
“What?!” Kip shot to his feet.
“He’s joking,” Tisis said. “Maybe a thousand?”
“Nine hundred fifty-seven,” Ferkudi said.
They all stopped. They looked at him.
“You didn’t just count them all . . .” Winsen said.
“Huh? Of course not,” Ferkudi said, as if Win was crazy. “I was guessing. Why does everyone else always guess round numbers? They’re not any more likely.” He suddenly looked troubled. “They aren’t more likely, are they?”
But Kip suddenly remembered. They were worried about spies listening in. Tisis was only bluffing, trying to give the Divines something to worry about—to soften them up for what Kip planned next. She wasn’t serious.
“Breaker,” Cruxer said as Kip stepped up to the window himself, curious. There must be a small crowd at least, for Tisis’s play to have any teeth.
But Cruxer put a hand on his chest, stopping him. “Kip! Don’t you step into view unless you plan to become a king. With all that that entails. For all of us.”
“You’re serious,” Kip said. Since when did Cruxer call him Kip?
“Never more.” The look in Cruxer’s eyes was inscrutable, and Kip suddenly wasn’t sure what his friend would do if he tried to take that last step.
Ever righteous, would Cruxer see Kip taking a crown as treason?
But as if he’d just wondered the same thing, Cruxer dropped his hand as if Kip were burning white-hot.
“Where can I stand where they won’t see me?” Kip asked.
“Let ’em see you,” Winsen said. “ ‘King’s Guard’ has a nice ring to it. Lot better than ‘Winsen, Kip Guile’s Mighty Right Hand, You Know, the Suave and Dashing One.’ ”
“ ‘Right hand’?” Cruxer asked, eyebrows climbing.
Winsen shrugged, helpless. “I can’t stop people from talking, Commander.”
“ ‘Suave’?” Ferkudi asked.
Ben-hadad said, “ ‘Dashing’? ‘Dashing Away from the Fight,’ maybe.”
“Least I can dash, Hop-Along,” Winsen sneered. “Funny, I don’t remember the cripple complaining about my speed when I saved his gimpy ass last night. And I am suave, Ferkudi. Certainly compared with the village idiot of the Mighty.”
“Oh, I’m sure you are,” Ferkudi said. “I mean, if you say so. It was a real question. I don’t know what ‘suave’ means.” He cut off suddenly. “Hold the door! Who’s the village idiot of the Mighty?”
“Was that a real question, too?” Ben-hadad muttered.
Kip peered past the edge of a curtain—and then he understood what Cruxer had meant. Hundreds of people were gathered, yelling and waving crude little green flags and banners he couldn’t read from here.
“They might not look like much . . .” Tisis said.
“The banners or the people?” Ben-hadad asked.
Tisis went on quietly without answering. “But you encourage these ones, and they get excited. They spread the word that becoming king is what you really want but maybe you just can’t say it. Tomorrow the crowd’s bigger. If no one stops them, that day or the next, some disaffected nobles join in, hoping their early allegiance will curry favor. The next day, others are joining fast, no one wanting to be the last.”
“They can’t be serious,” Kip said. King?
“They believe,” Ferkudi said, like it was simple.
Winsen said, “I know we’re not supposed to say the magic words . . .”
“But you’re going to say them anyway?” Cruxer said.
Winsen said, “How are you surprised by this? Being a king? There’ve been hundreds of kings—”
“Not since the Seven Satrapies were founded,” Kip said.
“Being a king’s like barely the second rung on the ladder to the heavens, and you’re heading pretty near the top of it.”
Ben-hadad said, “Don’t say it.”
“You’re the Lightbringer, the Luíseach here or whatever,” Winsen said.
“He said it,” Ben-hadad said.
“He just had to say it,” Big Leo said.
“Win, the rest of you, too?! Are you serious with this?!” Kip said. “Setting that up—even talking about it with the kitchen staff or, or anyone!—it’s totally destructive for everything we’re trying to do here. If you encourage that kind of talk, we might do a hundred amazing things, but if we don’t do one thing from some stupid prophecy, maybe even one we don’t know about—or even if some idiot wrote it down wrong or translated it wrong three hundred years ago or whatever—then all of a sudden, everyone on our side loses heart, because I look like a fraud. Rather than being a leader who’s helping save a satrapy, I look like some delusional megalomaniac who thinks he’s Lucidonius come again! Do you really not see how that’s a problem?!”
“Right, we’ve heard it before,” Winsen said. “It’s too late. You’re asking us to pretend because you don’t like the pressure? Tough shit. People already are joining us because they believe in you. Sure, deny it publicly, play it however you want, but the cards are on the table, you—”
“Enough!” Tisis said. “W
in, you’re a moron. Do you not remember why we’re here?”
“We invaded?” Winsen asked. “Liberated, I mean.”
“Here, here,” she said.
Kip saw it dawn on the slight archer: Oh, right, spies might be listening to every word. Shit.
“Kip,” Tisis said, “ignore him.”
Of course, all of them were trying to think whether Winsen—or Kip—had said anything that would be disastrous if it had been overheard.
Tisis went on: “The real reason the people here might dream of you as their king is simple. In their hour of need, Satrap Willow Bough did nothing for them. The Chromeria did practically nothing. You? You saved these people from the Blood Robes. And then you saved them from their own nobles, literally saved their lives when you fed them. And then you gave them reason to be proud of their city and their history when you fixed Túsaíonn Domhan. You gave them a new heart. You breathed new life into them; how can they forget that big empty throne in the audience chamber? Why would they not want you to be king?”
“Pfft. They’re desperate,” Kip said. “But they’re not desperate for me to be king. Me, so obviously a foreigner? I mean, who cares what my grandfather’s titles say? Look at me. Come on. They’re just desperate to be saved. I’m just a vessel to pour their hopes into.”
“Could do worse,” Ben-hadad said.
“That’s a rousing endorsement! I’ve got one cheek on the throne already!” Kip said.
“Room’s clear,” Cruxer announced suddenly. “One minute while our people put the luxin seals in place, then we can speak freely.”
“Finally,” Ben-hadad said. “I’m so glad Winsen will no longer have to hold back how he really feels.”
“We’re not so good at this being-devious thing, are we?” Big Leo asked.
He hadn’t meant it as a shot at Kip, but Kip couldn’t help but think it reflected most on him. He should have discovered if there were spies, and whose. He should’ve figured out exactly what lies to funnel to that person to make them do what he wanted.
Andross Guile would have.
Cruxer said, “Súil, thank you. Excellent work. You’re getting faster, aren’t you?”