“They just stayed together day and night?”
“Yes,” Dasai said. “He became very close to the Patron, and the flat-headed slave did too. One day the Dhai slave seduced the flat-headed slave, and drugged him. Then he crept to the Patron’s rooms and tried to burn him in his bed. But the Patron was protected by powerful wards. He woke, unscathed, and had the Dhai slave’s legs broken.”
“Did the Dhai live?”
“He did,” Dasai said, “but he never danced again. And he could no longer fight. If he was going to improve his circumstances, he needed something other than brute force.” Dasai pointed to Roh’s head. “He needed to use his wits.”
“Did he escape?”
“He did,” Dasai said, “many years later, when the Patron’s family was killed by usurpers. He convinced the new Patron that he was a free Dhai. And, having no use for him, the new Patron released him. He walked one thousand miles to the harbor in Alorjan, and rejoined his family in Dhai.”
“That’s a sad story,” Roh said. “But why tell me?”
“Because you may find yourself in a very bad position, Rohinmey,” Dasai said. “If things go wrong, I do not want you to fight. I want you to live.”
“He lost years of his life, Ora Dasai,” Roh said. “I couldn’t live like that.”
“You’d be surprised what one can endure,” Dasai said. He watched the boy’s face. He looked young and fragile. Dasai imagined listening to some old man tell him not to fight. To just endure. To have his legs and will broken time and again. Foolish old man, Dasai would have thought, then.
“Ora Dasai, did you know I can see through wards? That’s what the sanisi said I did.”
“It was known to me, yes.”
“Why didn’t anyone tell me?”
“You’re a young novice. We preferred to wait until you had more… discipline.”
“What does it mean? I don’t actually see any breath around them. I just… see them.”
“Some parajistas can see through wards. It means you can see things that others wish to keep hidden.”
“I thought I was just smart.”
“Being smart takes effort,” Dasai said. “I suspect that seeing the things you do requires little effort.”
“Can I get better at it?”
“Perhaps. But not here. I have other tasks for you.”
“Like what?”
“You’re to stay away from the dancers,” Dasai said, “and the Patron, and the sanisi, during our final days here. I want you working only for the archive project now. We have much yet to accomplish.”
“Ora Dasai, I still –”
“This is not a negotiation, let alone an argument,” Dasai said. “Tomorrow you and Kihin and Luna will travel a few hours south with a text we’ve uncovered. You’ll meet a man named Shodav, an old colleague of mine. You will give him a book to translate. In return, he’ll turn over a book to you to bring back in its place. I want you to deliver it to me. Discretely. If anyone asks, you’re simply going there for the Bone Festival, to see the wolf dancing and meet with a friend of mine to discuss Saiduan grammar. Understood?”
Roh grinned. “Yes, Ora Dasai.” Dasai found it wearying that the boy was so excited at the prospect of deception. I was young once, he reminded himself, but that did not make him feel better. He should have left the boy in Dhai, Sina take the Kai.
Dasai eased to his feet, leaning heavily on his cane. It was like the world itself wanted to suck him back into it, yanking painfully at his bones. “Good night, Rohinmey.”
He shuffled to the door.
“Ora Dasai?”
“Hm?”
“Were you a very good dancer?”
“The very best,” he said.
37.
Ghrasia Madah preferred fighting blinding trees to questioning skittish Raonas. But she had three dead sparrows in her pocket and a description of the man who’d returned them to the clan’s primary dealer three days before. It was the best lead she had had in days, and with a lead that fresh, she knew she had to work quickly, even if it meant spreading her people beyond the clan fence to suss out the stranger.
She walked with a young parajista named Halimey, a big-eyed, plump cheeked young man who put her in mind of her own daughter. The militia was stretched thin, and the Oras she brought with her were even thinner. She had started out breaking them into teams of four – two militia, a parajista, and another Ora whose star was descendent. But the ground they had to cover around Clan Raona was substantial, and time was short. With no other leads beyond the vague description of the stranger, there was nothing to report to the Kai. The Kai, not Ahkio, she had to keep reminding herself. Because when she thought of him as Ahkio, it stirred up her memory of him at the fountain, and that stirred up a good many more feelings best left shuttered up. She’d gotten word of his marriage a few days before. A fine political match. She wished them much success. But she had far larger concerns.
“So you haven’t seen anyone with that description?” Ghrasia asked the matronly woman on the steps of her gill-topped home. Best Ghrasia could figure, the house was actually a tirajista trained mushroom, very old.
“I’d remember a stranger like that, with yellow eyes, missing three teeth,” the woman said. “I’ll remember your faces a good long time, too, and they aren’t half so colorful.”
“I’m sure,” Ghrasia said.
“You don’t look the way I imagined,” the woman said, and Ghrasia regretted introducing herself with her full name. Sometimes it opened more doors. But on occasion it did get her into trouble. “Thought you’d be taller. And have larger arms.”
“I hear that a lot,” Ghrasia said.
“I expect so.”
“Thank you for your time,” Ghrasia said.
“Feed this boy something,” the matron said. “He looks too thin.”
“I’ll do that,” Ghrasia said.
Once they were clear of the house, Halimey snickered. “Feed me, mother!”
“Call me that again and I’ll fix you up a proper mud pie,” she said. He could have been hers, though. He wasn’t more than eighteen or nineteen.
“Delicious!”
“Next one’s two miles further on,” Ghrasia said. “You want a rest?”
Halimey glanced up at the sky. The suns were winding down toward the western horizon. “If we’re going to finish one more before dark, we better press on.”
“Then hurry on, now.”
Halimey hopped after her. Ghrasia was tired, but knowing they only had one more house for the day gave her the extra bit of energy she needed to push forward.
“Why is it you don’t dance?” Halimey said. He fished around in his pocket for one of his scorch pods, and threw it off into the brush. It made a loud popping sound.
“What?”
“They have dancing at the council house every night,” Halimey said. “Everyone goes. Clan Raona is happy to host us.”
Ghrasia had her own impression of just how happy Clan Raona was to have them. The local militia had spent much of its time since their arrival running around curbing spurious storefronts, like the ones selling tax-free liquor and at least one illegal butcher shop, whose existence alone made Ghrasia’s stomach lurch. It took four days to assure them she was more interested in the sparrow buyers than collecting taxes. Tax collection was not the business of the Liona militia.
“You can dance for both of us,” Ghrasia said.
“Was it some terrible accident?” Halimey said. He tossed another pod. Another pop.
“What?”
“Was it because you were dancing and some bear attacked you? Or did you fall into a wine barrel while doing a Garika jig? My sister once –”
Ghrasia laughed.
“Ah,” Halimey said. “You see? You do laugh.”
“I laugh a lot when I’m not tracking assassins, Halimey. I’ll leave the talking to you, then.”
Halimey chattered on for the rest of the long walk while Ghrasia kept wat
ch for creeping vines and floxflass. The temperatures were cool, but still mild. It didn’t snow much in Dhai, which contributed to the problem with the plants. They never experienced a hard freeze.
As they neared the end of the road, the low whine of the mock cicadas went suddenly quiet. Ghrasia came up short, but Halimey walked on. She heard something crashing, far-off – the sound of a small herd of walking trees. She listened for a while, but they seemed to have stopped.
Halimey paused ahead of her, looked back. “What is it?”
“Just worried we’d run into some walking trees. They’ve stopped now, probably to bed down for the night. The suns are setting. Hurry, now.” She was jumpy, she knew. It had been a long, boring day knocking on doors.
The last homestead of the day lay at the end of a winding path overhung in mossy bonsa trees and weeping green bamboo. The house was thirty feet up the side of a bonsa tree, built on the ledge of a massive calcified fungus. It looked like a fairly large working homestead. Broad, tirajista-trained vines snaked up the surrounding trees. They supported open-mouthed grub boxes that collected the fat parasites that fed on the trees. Dorinahs considered them a delicacy, and they were among Dhai’s chief exports. Walking trees liked them, too. No wonder there was a herd of them so close. They likely sensed the wriggling worms in the cages.
“Hope you aren’t afraid of heights,” Ghrasia said.
“I’m a parajista,” Halimey said. “I could fly if I wanted to.”
They walked up the narrow stairwell to the porch of the house. Ghrasia saw two more buildings linked with the main house, hugging up the side of the tree. Outside the clan fences, the safest places to live were the trees, especially as a grub farmer that would draw herds of walking trees.
She reached for the door handle. The door was locked.
Ghrasia reflexively reached for the hilt of her sword.
“What’s wrong?” Halimey asked.
“Locked,” Ghrasia said.
Halimey reached up and knocked. “They’re grub farmers,” he said. “Anyone who lives outside a clan fence is a little odd. Lots of semi-sentient things crawl around out here.”
The door opened.
“I’m Halimey Farai Sorila and this is Ghrasia Madah. We’re from the Liona militia and –” he stopped.
The man at the door was about Halimey’s height, thin, with a shadow of a beard and tangled black hair. His eyes were not gray or brown, but yellow. His lips were parted, and Ghrasia saw the gap on the right side, where three teeth were missing. How the matron they last spoke to had not seen this man living just two miles from her home…
“We’re looking for a woman about your height,” Ghrasia interrupted. “She has long dark hair, about here,” Ghrasia said, putting a hand to her waist. “Maybe forty years old, high forehead, sloping nose, plump like my friend.” Ghrasia realized she had described Javia, the former Kai.
“No one like that here,” the man said, squinting. “What did they do to bring the Liona militia all the way out here?”
“I’m afraid we can’t discuss it,” Ghrasia said. If this man was an assassin, she needed three more Oras and half a dozen militia on hand. She could have Halimey call them up once they were out of sight of the house, post a watch overnight, and overtake him in the morning with a mounted force.
“Thank you for your time,” she said.
Halimey made a choked sound of distress. He groped at his throat and tumbled backward. Ghrasia grabbed his coat. A massive force thumped her from behind. The railing broke. They fell. Ghrasia had a long, sickening moment of freefall, just enough time to wonder how much it was going to hurt. She released Halimey. Relaxed her body. Bent her knees, and prepared for impact.
She landed hard on the balls of her feet. Pain jolted up her legs. The air rushed from her lungs. Halimey thumped beside her. Ghrasia’s right ankle throbbed, but she felt no shattering pain. As she struggled to breathe, the assassin leapt from the railing and fell slowly to the ground beside her. She yanked at her sword, still gasping.
The assassin stepped onto her scabbard. She followed his look to Halimey. Blood flecked the boy’s mouth. He had fallen hard on his right side. She could tell from the angle of the arm pinned beneath him that it was broken. A parajista could only fly if she was not wrapped in the powerful grip of another parajista.
“You wanted to talk,” the assassin said. “It would be impolite not to invite you inside.”
He yanked Ghrasia’s sword from its sheath and ran Halimey through with it.
Ghrasia cried out. The man plunged the blade a second, a third, a fourth time, into the boy’s prone body.
She turned over and clawed forward, ignoring the pain in her ankle. The assassin grabbed the knot of her hair and yanked her back.
“Not you,” he said. “You’re a gift to the dogs. The great Dhai hero. Even I have heard that name.”
He thumped Ghrasia over the head with the butt of her willowthorn sword. Blackness pooled across her vision. She lost her balance, collapsed. She was suddenly weightless, wrapped in a skein of air and propelled into the sky so quickly she blacked out.
When she came to she was lying on her side on a scuffed wooden floor in front of a wooden fence. Her hands were tied in front of her with stout fireweed cord. Her ankle and head ached. What was a fence doing inside a house? She looked through the fence and saw a line of small kennels, like one would use for an adolescent dog. The room was mostly dark. A thin line of light came in through ventilation slits high up on the ceiling. The stink of the place was overpowering. It smelled like urine and old feces and unwashed bodies. Ghrasia gagged.
She heard a thump and looked to the other end of the room. The assassin sat at a broad, bloody table. She saw the remains of Halimey’s body on the floor, tangled in his blue tunic and trousers and gray coat. The assassin was hacking up hunks of the boy’s leg on the table.
A massive wave of terror seized her. Ghrasia tried to sit up. She punched it back down and breathed through it. She heard a soft, whimpering sound from the kennels.
“They haven’t eaten in days,” the assassin said. “They’re very hungry.”
Ghrasia tried to think of something clever. The door lay between her and the assassin. She saw a large, intricate padlock on it, the sort that only came on crates from Dorinah. No one used those type of locks in Dhai. They required an exacting series of actions to remove them, pushing sliders and rotating pins in the correct order.
“How long have you been here?” Ghrasia said. Talking made her head hurt more, but she suspected not talking would ease the headache far sooner than she wished.
“Many years,” he said. “My brothers and I.”
“Where are your brothers now? They help you farm this place?”
“There are a dozen of us,” he said. “We have worked in Raona longer than you could imagine. You are not the first to find us. Only the most famous.”
He raised his cleaver. “I am a good boy. Loyal to the Kai. But she did not say we’d be killing our own people. No, she did not say.”
“Kai Kirana is months dead,” Ghrasia said.
“Your Kirana is dead, yes. Not mine.”
Something moaned from the kennels. It didn’t sound like a dog. Ghrasia fought her terror again.
“They all made me the messenger,” he said. “Passing their notes to one another. But I’m more than that. Stronger.”
The cleaver came down. Bone crunched.
Ghrasia flinched. “That boy was a friend of mine,” she said.
“He was weak.”
The assassin threw a hunk of Halimey’s thigh over the fence. It landed with a wet thud on the floor. She heard more whimpering from the kennels. An excited stir of movement.
Dirty, matted figures burst from the kennels. They loped out on all fours, sniffing and snarling behind long matted hair. Dirt and feces and dried blood covered their bodies and the tattered remains of what could have been some old tunic or sack mended for the purpose.
&nb
sp; The three creatures descended on the thigh, howling.
Ghrasia’s gorge rose. Their fingers dug into the meat.
The creatures were human. Or, had once been.
They fought and snarled over their prize. Great pools of twisted flesh made puckered scars around where their eyes should have been. They were young, in their teens perhaps. Living exclusively on human flesh in such conditions might have stunted them, though. For all she knew they had lived this way for a century.
“I’m freeing them,” the assassin said. He threw another hunk of Halimey over the fence. Another frenzy ensued. “They know, now, that they are just animals. Weak beasts, to be cared for and to serve a superior people. I am training them, you see. The way you will all be trained to serve us.”
Ghrasia left herself then. It was a strange, detached feeling, like watching some other little woman holed up in a tree house with a madman while children feasted like wild dogs on the desecrated remains of her companion. From the outside, it was easier to understand what she needed to do. She focused on Halimey’s coat, and the bulging pocket of scorch pods.
“It must have taken great strength to live here all alone,” she said, looking away from the coat.
The assassin reached for another of Halimey’s limbs, disturbing the coat. He slopped a long, tattered arm onto the table. She listened to the chewing, crunching sound of his captives gnawing on what he’d fed them.
“Strength beyond measure,” he said. He peered at her. “You’ll do, I think.”
“How’s that?”
“I’ve been wondering what to do with you,” he said. “Feed you to them… or make you one of them. What do you think? The great Dhai hero, one of my dogs.”
“I expect that will make you very happy,” Ghrasia said. “Are you going to blind me with your bare hands? I suspect there’s a better way to do that.”
“Oh, there is,” he said. “I’ll show you.”
He moved toward her. Ghrasia tensed. She had no defense against him. He was gifted, and she was not. If she moved quickly enough to cause him serious pain, she might be able to break his concentration, but she would have to be fast.
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