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The Complete Empire Trilogy

Page 153

by Raymond E. Feist


  Half muddled by discomfort from his wound, Hokanu nodded. ‘Did you find out who sent the murdering dogs?’

  Lujan hesitated before he replied. His eyes remained on the master, naked with worry, as he hooked his thumbs in his baldric. ‘Jiro,’ he snapped at last. ‘The proof is incontrovertible. The Anasati Lord was behind this.’

  Hokanu blinked to clear his head. ‘Then he will have to die.’

  ‘No. Husband, you must not even voice such a notion. How can we go against the edict of the Assembly of Magicians?’ murmured a weak voice from the cushions.

  Both Lujan and Hokanu whirled around.

  Mara’s eyes were open and lucid in her drawn face. Her fingers tightened shakily inside her husband’s grip. ‘How can we kill Jiro when the Great Ones have forbidden our blood feud?’

  ‘Thank the Good God!’ Hokanu exclaimed. He bent over his wife and kissed her cheek, though the motion left him dizzy. ‘Beloved, how do you feel?’

  ‘Annoyed,’ Mara confessed. ‘I should have known better than to taste that chocolate. My greed to gain a trade monopoly nearly became my undoing.’

  Hokanu stroked her hand. ‘Rest now. We are lucky to have you with us.’

  Mara’s brow puckered into a frown. ‘The baby? What has become of our son?’ But the anguish on Hokanu’s face told her all she needed to know. She braced herself and closed her eyes. ‘Two sons,’ she whispered. ‘Two sons dead, and we can spill no blood in retribution.’ The phrase seemed to exhaust the last of her resources, for she drifted away into sleep, a flush of anger still staining the pallor of her cheeks.

  Servants descended in force upon the sick chamber the instant the Lady stilled into slumber. A healer with a satchel of remedies directed them to air Mara’s bedding, and to turn down the wicks in the lamps. Lujan did not wait for orders, but stepped forward, caught Hokanu in his strong arms, and lifted the master bodily from Mara’s side.

  ‘Force Commander!’ snapped the Shinzawai irritably. ‘I can walk on my own, and as of this moment you are dismissed.’

  For answer, he received Lujan’s most disarming grin. ‘I am my Lady’s man, Master Hokanu. Tonight I will take no orders from a Shinzawai. If you were one of my warriors, I would forbid you outright to move with such a wound. And truth to tell, I fear my Lady’s wrath the more. I will have you off to visit the surgeon to have that arrowhead removed. If you were to die of Jiro’s plots while Mara slept, that would be doing her no service.’ His tone was almost insolent, but his eyes spoke heartfelt thanks to the man who had saved the woman who was paramount in both their lives.

  The surgeon set aside bloodstained instruments, looked up from his work, and met Lujan’s eyes. Lamplight burnished the sweat-streaked planes of his face, to reveal a strained expression. ‘No, the light is quite sufficient,’ he said hoarsely. ‘I can see well enough to work.’

  ‘Then the prognosis is not good,’ Lujan whispered back. His hands stayed steady and firm on Hokanu’s leg, an assurance to the injured man as much as a restraint to keep an inopportune flinch from disrupting the healer’s touch. Dosed with sa wine laced with a narcotic herb to dull pain, Hokanu might not realise where he was or what was happening well enough to hold his honor and keep motionless. Still, no matter how muddled the consciousness of a man became, his spirit would remain aware. If the news was going to be bad, Hokanu’s wal, his inner self, did not need to hear before he was sufficiently recovered to maintain self-control.

  Yet either Lujan’s words were not quiet enough, or the wounded man was unwilling to relinquish consciousness enough to be spared. Hokanu weakly raised his head. ‘If there is something wrong, I’ll hear of it now.’

  The healer wiped his hands on a cloth. He mopped his brow also, though his infirmary was not hot. He turned worried eyes to Lujan, who nodded, then looked back at Mara’s consort. ‘The arrowhead is removed, master. But it was deep into the bone, and your attempts to move and run caused much damage. Tendons and ligaments are severed, some frayed beyond my skills to sew back.’ He did not add that the wound was deep, and the lacerations invited infection. He would pack the tears with poultice, but that was all he could do.

  ‘Are you telling me I won’t walk again?’ Hokanu’s voice did not quaver, but held only the sharpness of command.

  The healer sighed. ‘You will walk, master. But you will never lead a charge onto a battlefield again. You will limp, and your balance will be compromised. In combat, any competent enemy would see your lameness and kill you easily. My Lord, you must never don armor again.’ He shook his grey head in sympathy. ‘I am sorry. That is the best I can promise.’

  Hokanu turned his face toward the wall, utterly still. Not even his hands tensed into fists; his rage, or his pain, stayed hidden. But Lujan, who was a warrior also, knew his mind: that he was yet his father’s heir, and had stood as Shinzawai Force Commander. It was an ill thing for a man in line for the mantle of a great house to become a cripple. Lujan noticed the barest tremor in the sinews under his hands. He felt his heart wrench, but dared not offer sympathy, for fear that Hokanu’s desperately held dignity would break down.

  And yet the man that Mara had married showed once again the sternness of his fiber. ‘Get on with your work, healer,’ he said. ‘Sew up what you can, and for the love of the gods, give me no more medicinal wine. I would be aware when my Lady wakes, and not half out of my head with self-pity brought on by drink.’

  ‘Shift the lamp, then,’ muttered the surgeon. ‘I’ll have this over with as quickly as may be.’

  ‘Good servant, in that I may be of assistance,’ said a quiet voice from the doorway.

  The surgeon started in surprise, his hand half extended toward his tray of instruments; Lujan all but released hold of Hokanu’s leg in his initial annoyance. ‘I told the guard on this corridor that the master was not to be disturbed. For any reason.’ He half turned, drawing breath to dress down the lax soldier, and checked, appalled.

  The wizened man in coarse brown robes who stood at the edge of the lamplight was no servant but a priest of Hantukama, the God of Healing. Lujan had seen his like once before, on the day Keyoke’s life had been saved from multiple battle wounds and a leg amputation gone septic. He recognised the stranger’s order by the shaved semicircle at the back of his head, and by the intricate braid that trailed from his nape. Mindful of how difficult it was to gain the services of such a priest, Lujan bowed as deeply as the lowliest scullion to atone for his thoughtless address.

  ‘Forgive me, good priest, for my ill manners. In my mistress’s name, you are welcome here, my brutish behavior a pitiful reflection on the honor of this house.’

  The priest stepped forward, silent on bare feet. His sun-browned face showed no affront but only deepest sympathy as he touched the warrior’s shoulder. ‘With master and Lady both hurt, you would be a poor guardian if you did not seek to spare them from intrusions.’

  Lujan spoke with his face still pressed to the floor. ‘Good priest, if you have come to help, my feelings are of no consequence before the needs of my master and Lady.’

  Now the priest frowned, a fearful expression on a face that habitually was serene. His hand tightened, in surprising strength, and he raised Lujan from his posture of submission. ‘On the contrary,’ he snapped. ‘The spirit and the feelings of any man are equal in the sight of my god. You are forgiven your lapse of manners, worthy warrior. Go now. Leave me to my business with your master, and mind your post by the door with all vigilance.’

  Lujan snapped the priest a salute, hand over heart, and stepped out as ordered. The surgeon gave a hasty half bow, and made as if to follow. But the priest waved for him to stay as he stepped to Hokanu’s bedside. ‘My novice is but a boy, and too tired from travel to assist. He sleeps, and if I am to be of service to my god, I will need help.’

  The priest set down his satchel. He took the sick man’s sweating fingers into his own and looked into Hokanu’s eyes. ‘Son of my god, how are you?’

  Hokanu incli
ned his head, the best he could manage for courtesy. ‘I do well enough. Blessings of your god, and Chochocan’s favor for guiding you to this house.’ He drew a difficult breath and forced his voice steady over his pain. ‘If I may presume, I would ask that you look after my Lady. Her need is greater than mine.’

  The priest pursed his lips. ‘No. I say not’ – he held up a hand, forestalling Hokanu’s protest – ‘and it is my judgment to make. I have seen the Good Servant already. I traveled here in answer to her need, for her sacrifice and her love for her people are recognised by the followers of my god. But she is mending well enough without Hantukama’s blessing. You brought the antidote in good time.’

  Hokanu closed his eyes, his relief palpable. ‘I am grateful to hear she will be well again.’

  ‘She will be well.’ The priest paused, his face suddenly careworn. As if he chose his words carefully, he added, ‘But you should know, as her consort, that she will bear only one more child. The poison caused damage, and that was the best the healing powers of my god would allow.’

  Hokanu’s eyes flicked open, black in the flicker of lamplight. His warrior’s composure held, and nothing of his anguish leaked through, that his Lady could not have the many children she craved, to secure both her line and his also. ‘That is enough, then, good priest.’

  A silence fell over the chamber, with the surgeon standing motionless in respect for his master’s feelings. The hiss of the oil lamp blended with the whisper of the breeze beyond the screen and, farther off, the tramp of a warrior answering the change of the watch. With summer past, the amphibious creatures were silent on the lakeshore; only insects sang in the soft warmth of the night.

  Out of that stillness, and the peace that ruled the late hour, the priest of Hantukama spoke. ‘Master Hokanu, that is not enough.’

  The eyes of Mara’s consort focused with an effort, through the dulling effects of drugged wine. He looked at the slender, wizened little priest, and pulled himself half upright. ‘What more would you ask of me that I have not already given?’

  The priest of Hantukama sighed and returned a thin smile. ‘It is that you give too much, son of my god. Your love and devotion to your Lady consume all that you have and all that you are. For her, the heir to the Shinzawai has risked the wholeness of his leg, and for her, he would lay down his life to spare her own. I say, as the voice of my god, that this is too much.’

  Now Hokanu’s cheeks flushed red in anger. ‘What honor would I have if I saved myself before Mara?’

  The priest pressed him back against his cushions with a touch that was gentle but firm. ‘She does not need your rescue,’ he said, inarguably blunt. ‘She is Servant of the Empire and Lady of the Acoma. She has her own strength. She needs you as confidant and companion beside her, not as a shield before her.’

  Hokanu drew breath to argue. The priest gave him a sharp shake that made him gasp in discomfort. ‘You are no less than she in the eyes of this Empire and my god. The continuance of this nation, and the better life for all promised by the Light of Heaven, rely upon you, as heir to the House of Shinzawai, as much as on her. You are a major player in this changed Game of the Council. This you must understand.’

  Too weakened to argue, Hokanu sank back. ‘You sound as if you know the future,’ he said tiredly. ‘What is it you see that we do not?’

  But the priest would not say. Instead he stepped from Hokanu’s shoulder, and laid his hands on the flesh at either side of the wound on Hokanu’s hip. Softly, firmly, he addressed the surgeon. ‘Open my satchel, good healer. If this man is to rise without a limp, there is a long night’s work ahead, and a need to invoke the blessing of my god.’

  Word of the ambush against Hokanu and the certainty of Mara’s recovery caught up with Arakasi on a river barge bound downriver from Kentosani. The messenger who brought the news arrived just past dawn, during a stop to load fresh fruit. He boarded with the slaves carrying the baskets of jomach, and slipped unobtrusively forward to the huddled mass of deck passengers who bought their comfortless passage for a centi each. The barge was crowded with three families of migrant fruit pickers, two scabby beggars who had been run out of Kentosani for plying their craft without license from the Emperor, and a guild runner with a swollen ankle bound south to ask charity of an uncle while his injury healed.

  Arakasi was seated between two lashed casks, his dark hood drawn over his face. Since he was as dirty as the beggars, and looked as shifty as a street thief, the peasant mothers with their fretful infants and gaggle of skinny children had given him wide berth. The newcomer found enough space to squeeze down beside him, and whisper news from the Acoma estate.

  Eyes closed, head lolling against a barrel, the Spy Master appeared asleep; he had charcoal under his fingernails and an untended scab on his chin. He smelled as though he had not bathed in a sevenday. But his ears heard well. After a moment through which he thought furiously, he grumbled sleepily, rolled on his side, and returned the barest breath of a whisper.

  ‘I will not be getting off at the river fork. Tell the connection there to convey my regards to our master and mistress. If I am needed, have the net ask after me from the jewel setter adjacent to the trophy stuffer’s shop in Sulan-Qu. You’ll know the place by the harulth skull on the signpost.’

  The messenger touched the Spy Master’s wrist in confirmation. Then he made a noise of disgust, leaned over toward the nearest of the passengers, and began to proselytise for an obscure priesthood of Lulondi, God of Farmers.

  ‘Be off, pest,’ snapped the bothered victim. ‘I don’t love vegetables, and the flies are bad enough on this journey without your carping on top of them!’

  The messenger bowed, carelessly banging an elbow into the knee of a peasant wife. She cursed him, lashed out a foot, and caught him a blow in the shins.

  The disturbance brought the attention of the barge master. ‘Hey there! Mind you stay quiet, or I’ll heave the lot of you overboard.’

  The farm wife returned loud protest. ‘This scum is here soliciting, and did you get a coin for his passage, anyway?’

  The barge master scowled, tramped forward, and peered at the prostrate man the farm wife pointed her calloused finger at.

  ‘You! Vermin-carrying, sores-ridden wretch! Have you a centi to pay for your space?’ The barge master held out his hand, sweating in his annoyance.

  The man he singled out muttered pitiably. ‘For the goodness of Lulondi’s blessing, I ask that you let me stay.’

  The barge master scowled and snapped his fingers. ‘I’ll show you Lulondi’s blessing.’ At his signal, two polemen arose from their resting place by the rail. Muscled like wrestlers, they came forward on bandy legs and bowed before their master. ‘Heave him off,’ the barge master ordered in disgust. ‘And none too gently, either, since he thought to stow away.’

  Identical grins spread across the faces of the polemen. They grabbed their victim by the wrists, raised him, and tossed him over the side.

  He landed with a smack and a splash of dirty water that all but swamped the fruit seller’s dugout, tied alongside for the transfer of goods. The slaves whacked him away with their paddles, and the barge crew, the deck passengers, and bystanders gathered on the shore all laughed as the wretch kicked free of the strangling folds of his cloak and swam like a river rodent for dry land.

  ‘Lulondi’s blessing, indeed,’ harrumphed the barge master. He whirled, his mind back on business, and stepped over a snoring Arakasi without so much as a glance.

  Two days later, Mara’s Spy Master disembarked in Sulan-Qu. He made his way across the riverfront, unobtrusive in the noon shadows. The streets were nearly deserted, the shops closed in siesta. What few loiterers were about either slept in the shade of the window awnings and balconies or poked through the refuse in the gutters, in search of a crust to eat. Arakasi made his way to the House of Seven Stars, a brothel that catered to wealthy nobles with odd tastes. There, under a back-door arch adorned with kissing cherubs, he knocked in a
prescribed sequence. The panel opened, and an immensely fat woman hung with beads and corcara necklaces pulled him inside.

  ‘Gods,’ she murmured in a voice as deep as a man’s, ‘do you always have to come here smelling like a sewer? We have clients upstairs who might be offended.’

  Arakasi flashed a grin. ‘Now, Bubara, don’t tell me you’ve used up all the bath water with the kekali leaves and citrus so early in the day?’

  The madam grunted through her nose. ‘Hardly. The girls and boys have to smell sweet.’ She twitched a flabby arm through a curtain, and a naked deaf-mute child with skin the color of chocha-la beans scurried out and bowed before her.

  She motioned toward Arakasi and nodded.

  The little boy looked at the dirty visitor, cocked his head to one side, and grinned in delighted recognition. Unmindful of the smell, he took the charcoal-marked hand and led the Spy Master off.

  Arakasi tousled the boy’s hair and from some hidden pocket produced a cho-ja-made candy. The boy smiled, showing a pathetic expanse of gums where teeth should have been at his age. He made soft moans of pleasure and bowed his forehead to his fists repeatedly as a gesture of thanks.

  As an afterthought, Arakasi added two shell coins. ‘Somebody should buy you some clothing,’ he muttered and caught the boy by the elbow, tugging him upright as he made to prostrate himself on the floor. He patted the boy again on the head and waved him off, as he had been this way many times and knew which room he sought.

  He moved off down the corridor, touched a section of carving that unlatched a hidden door, and climbed the narrow, shadowy stair beyond to a cubbyhole under the eaves, while, behind him, the little boy clutched his treasured gifts and groveled upon the pretty carpets for long, unnoticed minutes.

  In the cramped chamber, under the heat of shingles ablaze under the noon sun, Arakasi picked from an assortment of carry boxes and chests which held garments of all types, from beaded, glittering robes to field workers’ smocks. He selected an orange-and-purple livery and a dusty pair of sandals with a hole in the toe of the left one’s sole. Then he bundled his unwashed robes in another chest that held what looked to be beggar’s rags, and, clad in nothing but his dirt and a soiled loincloth, made his way back downstairs to avail himself of the madam’s bath.

 

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