The Scarab Path

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The Scarab Path Page 26

by Adrian Tchaikovsky


  Trallo? Perhaps the Fly had escaped. Perhaps there would be a rescue, after all. By who, though? She could not imagine Manny and Berjek charging in with sword and pike, but at least they could always go and seek aid from the Khanaphir. It would be a diplomatic embarrassment, of course, and if the truth of her deeds should become known they might be thrown out of the city – or worse. That might still be better than being bled to death by Fir-eaters over the course of a month.

  She recalled Trallo shouting something. Had he been shouting for help? And hadn’t help arrived? She had an image of a bright figure with its hands on fire. The Fir-eaters had been screaming …

  There was water and soap laid out for her at the foot of the bed, and the sight of it brought a surge of relief out of all proportion, since the Fir-eaters had not looked as though they cared much for washing. There was even a towel folded over the bed-end, Collegium style. Someone’s trying to make me feel welcome. After washing, she drank a great deal of water from a pitcher, trying to rid her mouth of the bitter taste of the vices she had dabbled in. Perhaps this is some kind of Khanaphir hospital?

  They had laid out a robe for her too, and she eyed it suspiciously. She was still wearing what she considered as her working clothes, hardwearing and practical even though they were filthy and malodorous.

  Realizing her sword was gone, she cursed quietly. Her new situation seemed subtly balanced between comfort and threat. Am I a prisoner here, or a guest?

  She decided not to change clothes. Instead, she tried the door, and found it opened out into a corridor. Immediately she was surrounded. There were three of them, men in dark leathers and helms, shortswords at their belts. One closed the door neatly behind her, another was off and away at a run. She swung round, reaching again for the absent sword. ‘What is this?’

  ‘If you’ll come with us,’ one of them said, the tone of his voice strictly neutral.

  ‘You’re – wait a moment, you’re Iron Glove. What’s going on?’ she demanded.

  ‘Just come with us, Bella,’ the man repeated. The two of them were standing on one side of her, blocking the narrow corridor. She backed off the way that the third man had gone running, and they followed smoothly.

  ‘I’m the Collegiate ambassador,’ she told them, trying for authority. ‘I insist you tell me where I am and what is going on.’

  They gave no reply to her bravado, which was perhaps all it deserved. She was retreating and retreating, seeing only closed doors on all sides, or doorways and stairwells where other Iron Glove men stood and watched, barring any escape.

  ‘Is Corcoran here?’ she asked desperately. ‘I know him. He’s a friend.’ An acquaintance, barely. ‘Please would you go find him. He’s in charge here, isn’t he?’

  ‘Not any more,’ one of the men said flatly, and her heart sank. What have I got myself into? Some schism amongst them? And how would that involve me?

  She realized that she had unthinkingly backed into a larger room, and turned, groping for her bearings. It was a dining hall, still low-ceilinged but wide, and windowed on one side beyond a row of pillars. This was a little more like the Khanaphes she knew.

  The long table that dominated the room was set with fruit and some sort of fish, simple local fare. The sight of it made Che realize how hungry she was, but there were only two chairs set there, and until the other one was claimed she was not going to sit down. The two Iron Glove men had now retreated to the doorway she had entered by.

  ‘Someone,’ she insisted, ‘had better tell me what is going on.’

  Even as she spoke, that someone entered the room from the far door. She saw a broad-shouldered man in intricate dark mail, pulling off his gauntlets even as he approached. He went to stand by one of the chairs, which was drawn out for him by one of his men. Cautiously, Che approached the other.

  He laid the gauntlets on the table, undid the chinstrap of his helm and took it off. Che stared into the solid, closed face of a stranger, a halfbreed, strong-jawed and heavy-browed, touched by that faint discontinuity that so many of mixed blood were tainted with …

  As she studied him, something shifted inside her, as though the ground beneath her feet had turned suddenly treacherous.

  ‘Hello, Che,’ he said, and she was rushing around the table to get to him, throwing her arms around the fluted breastplate, feeling his own arms hesitantly encircle her, almost too gently to feel, as though he was desperate not to break her.

  She stood back a pace, looking him up and down. That face, which a moment ago had been as full of mystery as a stranger’s, had that familiar half-bewildered expression that brought back long-ago days in the Great College.

  ‘I can’t believe it,’ she said. ‘I can’t believe it’s you. Look at you!’ The sight of him unleashed a whirl of memories. ‘I thought they must have killed you,’ she continued. ‘I was sure they must have found you out. I never heard anything more …’ A cold thought came to her. ‘You’re not …?’

  ‘With the Empire? I am not,’ he said firmly. He was trying to smile at her, but a lifetime of hiding his hurts and joys was making it hard for him. ‘And the man who found out what I had done was no normal Imperial officer.’ He made an awkward gesture at the table. ‘Eat, please. Will you eat with me?’

  ‘Of course.’ She sat herself down hurriedly, hands moving rapidly to the food under urgent directions from her stomach. She glanced back towards the two men who had shepherded her into the room. ‘How did you go from the Empire to these Iron Glove people anyway? Are you turned merchant now?’

  As he sat opposite her, a smile broke through at last. It made his face look unfamiliar: a hard thing born from the years since they had left Collegium, not something of the boy she had known at all. ‘Che, I am the Iron Glove,’ he replied.

  She frowned at him, bolted a mouthful of fish and said, ‘I don’t understand.’

  ‘A year ago I fled the Empire with my … business partner. We came to settle in Chasme, and started work. Now we’re the biggest artificing house around the Exalsee, and expanding every day. The trading is secondary. It’s the research, the manufacture, that’s the point.’

  ‘And you sell … weapons?’ Che recalled.

  ‘We sell war.’ From his expression, it was a reflexive answer, and perhaps one he would not have given her if he had thought it through. ‘Weapons, armour, machinery, with Exalsee innovation, Lowlander craft and Imperial methods. We’ve built it up, Che – I’ve built it up – and we’ve only been in Chasme for a year and a bit.’ His face was desperate for some validation from her.

  ‘You always did like your weapons,’ she said and, although that was not it, her fond smile seemed to satisfy him. ‘And that’s why you’re in Khanaphes now?’

  ‘There’s a market,’ he said, and she heard behind the statement things left unsaid. He could not have come all this way just to meet me. But her memory snagged on that letter, the one Achaeos had found, in which all of Totho’s soul had lain scraped bare.

  ‘I suppose I was lucky that you came along, in the Alcaia.’ She said the words lightly, but she watched, and saw the beat, the moment’s hesitation in his reaction. Or you were seeking me out, or you were watching me …? ‘Hold on a moment.’ She paused, the fork halfway to her lips. ‘Where’s Trallo?’

  ‘What’s Trallo?’

  ‘A Fly-kinden. He was with me in the Alcaia …’ A sudden chill struck her. Did they kill him? Had I abandoned him? She had been so concerned with her own surroundings, with this man from her past, she had not wondered what had happened to Trallo.

  ‘He …’ She saw Totho frown. ‘He was yours?’

  The chill increased. ‘What did you …? Tell me you haven’t hurt him, please.’

  ‘No, not hurt …’ His face remained without expression. ‘There was a Fly, but he fled, when we took you from the Empire. I was sure he was on their side.’

  She gave that one a long pause, trying it from all angles, and finding that it would not fit, no matter how she turned o
r forced it. ‘The Empire?’ she finally said, in a small voice. ‘It was natives, Totho.’ She could not bring herself to mention her foray into Profanity. ‘The people who attacked me were natives.’

  ‘Then they must have been in the Empire’s pay,’ he insisted. ‘I took you from the hands of the Empire. A Wasp – and not just any Wasp …’ She had held up a hand, but he barrelled on, determined to convince her. ‘It was that man who had you captive in Myna. Their Rekef man. I took you from him though. I rescued you.’

  He looked for approval, but she sank her face in her hands. She was suddenly feeling ill. ‘Totho,’ she said quietly, ‘what have you done? Have you killed him?’

  ‘The Iron Glove trades with the Empire,’ Totho replied slowly, ‘and this Thalric is their ambassador here. I merely took you from him … by force. I did not kill him.’

  She was surprised at the relief she felt. Thalric had been there, in the tent: the bright figure with hands of fire. She had been rescued from her rescuer. And how many people were following me, and keeping track of me, when I went to commit this crime against the Khanaphir? How could she have missed so many spies and agents following on her heels?

  ‘There’s no reason for you to have known, but he worked for Stenwold during the war,’ she said. ‘It’s … complicated.’

  ‘He’s the same man that enslaved you, tortured you,’ Totho argued stubbornly.

  ‘It’s complicated,’ said Che again. ‘That’s all. I had better go and see just what sort of a diplomatic mess has happened in my absence – whether they’re searching the city for me.’ She shook her head, seeing his suddenly aggrieved expression. ‘Or could you at least send someone to my embassy to let them know I’m safe, and then I can finish dinner.’

  He made a signal, and one of his men went running from the hall. In that same moment she felt uneasy with him. She could reconcile the face, the voice, but not the man. What has he become, after all this time? In all his designing and making, he had reinvented himself into this man of authority, dark-armoured, close-faced, hard-edged.

  ‘It’s good to see you again,’ she told him, but was not sure, looking at Totho, how much she was still seeing of her old friend, or what had been brought in to replace what she had once known.

  ‘So what happened to you?’ Marger asked, eyeing Thalric’s bruises.

  ‘Diplomatic incident,’ Thalric replied shortly. He had stormed back into the embassay only a few minutes ago, knowing that one of the Rekef would be with him as soon as they could decide who best to send.

  ‘With the Lowlanders?’

  ‘No, with the locals. Tell me about the Iron Glove.’

  Marger took the two statements in, and made the connection without comment. ‘What’s to say?’ Another in his long series of shrugs. ‘Trading cartel from the Exalsee, weapons and armour, operating out of Chasme. They’ve done well for themselves over the last year.’

  Thalric leant back in his chair with a disappointed sigh. ‘Come on, Marger, I knew that much myself.’ Talk to other Rekef men, and it feels as though I’m debriefing some enemy agent I’ve turned. It was ludicrous, considering his business, but he missed the trust and the certainty of honest spywork.

  Marger’s expression offered nothing but wide-eyed sincerity. ‘What do you mean?’

  Thalric sighed. ‘You’re thinking of me as a courtier, Captain Marger. You’re thinking of the Regent, some fop who’s never done a day’s work for the service. I didn’t get my Major’s rank through family or favour. I earned it. I know full well that if a group like the Iron Glove was muscling in on your area of operation, you’d get briefed.’

  For a long time Marger kept his usual easy smile, no more than the puzzled junior officer. Then it collapsed, and he gave a single hard-won nod. ‘Well then, Major, we didn’t know they were here, but it seemed likely enough for me to hear something. Nothing certain, mind, since they’re tight with their information. They travel all over the Exalsee and beyond, in those helms and that black armour, and they manufacture arms that are strong, cheap, top quality. For special customers they offer more than that, new designs that have the Imperial artificers in fits. The Exalsee is already ahead of us, in some branches of artifice, and the Iron Glove is keeping ahead of them, too.’

  Thalric digested this. ‘And we trade with them? We should do.’

  ‘As of recently, we do,’ Marger confirmed. ‘It’s difficult, though. We want their schematics, their plans, but they’re only prepared to sell us the finished articles. Reverse-engineering is always time-consuming, especially at the level of complexity that the Iron Glove are working at. And there are … other complications.’

  ‘Tell me.’

  Marger shrugged again, but it was a shrug from the heart. ‘Like I said, they’re secretive, and we don’t know for sure who’s running the cartel. Only … there are rumours.’

  Thalric made an impatient gesture.

  Marger grimaced. ‘You must have heard of the Colonel-Auxillian? That mad halfbreed artificer who captured Lans Stowa and Falme Dae and Tark? Official records have him dead, along with the rest of the garrison at Szar, but … the rumours keep coming back that it’s him …’

  Thalric was thinking hard now. The armoured man had got the blows in, but he had lowered his guard in order to do it: he had let Thalric know who he was, and his armour alone marked him as a man high in the Iron Glove hierarchy. Where did Stenwold’s renegade artificer fit in, though? Where had he gone after Helleron?

  He wasn’t at Helleron. The recollection came suddenly, like a splash of cold water. He was the one that Scyla replaced, because the boy had run off to... Tark. Tark, where the Colonel-Auxillian Dariandrephos had been practising his siegecraft.

  ‘Send to the General,’ he told Marger, who looked suspicious at the instruction. ‘Get some clerk to dig out names of the artificers who were assisting the Colonel-Auxillian.’ Am I right? He knew he was right, but he had no evidence. Drephos had survived or, if he hadn’t, someone who worked with him did.

  Oh, my armoured friend, I shall have you yet – if I have to use the Empire to beat you to death. The thought brought a rush of satisfaction, soothed both the bruises and his damaged pride.

  Marger was still looking at him. ‘Actually, Major …’

  ‘What?’

  ‘I’ll be sending to the General as soon as I can get a messenger, but my report is incomplete. I need your help to complete it.’

  ‘Of course, just ask.’ In that moment, Thalric felt confident enough to be unassailable.

  ‘You have been somewhat on your own recognizance,’ Marger said. ‘I understand that you were sent here because of your familiarity with the Lowlanders in general, and now it would seem that we extend that to certain individual Lowlanders that are here. I need to know what your plan of action is, so that the General can endorse it, and so that you and I won’t trip over each other.’

  And there’s a good question, for which I have no answer. ‘I am still gathering information,’ Thalric remarked.

  ‘You seem to have established a rapport with the Collegiate ambassador,’ Marger noted. ‘I can see the benefit of that. Do you intend to seduce her?’

  The question stopped Thalric dead, both in thought and action, leaving him looking at Marger with a half-framed expression on his face. At the same time something stirred inside him, that might have been anticipation, and the automatic answer: Why not?

  ‘You’re direct, Captain,’ he said, expecting and receiving a shrug in return.

  ‘She seems young for an ambassador,’ Marger said. ‘Inexperienced. It is easy enough to keep track of the others, but she seems to appear and disappear almost at random. If you were able to establish some kind of a hold on her, it would serve us well.’

  ‘I’ll … consider it,’ said Thalric, his throat unexpectedly dry. In his mind the face that loomed before him was not Che’s but that of the Empress. What word will wing its way back to Capitas now? When she draws me back there eventually, what
other treasons will I have committed?

  Amnon arrived shortly after Che had left, which spared Totho the burden of too much introspection. She had not quite warmed to him yet, but it had been two years, and the circumstances of their last meeting had hardly been conducive to fond memories. She had assumed he was dead, while he himself had done his best, in that time, to discover where she was and what she was doing. The resources of the Iron Glove stretched to a little spying, and Drephos had tolerated his eccentricities.

  The Captain of the Royal Guard sauntered in with a broad smile. His sheer robust energy made Totho feel tired.

  ‘So, we are ready for my fitting then,’ the big man began, with an enthusiasm that was almost childish. It doesn’t matter how strange these Khanaphir are, everyone loves a new toy, thought Totho. Corcoran had picked out the First Soldier as the man they should primarily impress, in order to further the Glove’s influence in Khanaphes. He was loved by the people, high up in the city hierarchy, and yet he was a hands-on commander always to be found in the front rank. It made him an ideal customer.

  ‘My people are unpacking the armour even now,’ Totho told him, once he had led Amnon to a room they set aside for testing. There were weapons on the walls, breastplates and helms displayed on armour trees. He imagined this man would want to try out his new mail as soon as he had put it on.

  ‘I see you’re wearing your own, still,’ Amnon observed. ‘Is it so light?’

  Totho could not suppress a slightly shamefaced smile. ‘It is new, so I’m wearing it as much as possible to get used to it. It’s not the weight, so much, just the way I need to move in it.’

  Amnon nodded approvingly. ‘Armour and mounts and women, you have to get used to them all,’ he said. He started to say something else, but paused to rethink. In a man normally so positive, the hesitation caught Totho’s attention.

  ‘You are one of these Lowlanders, are you not?’ the big man said eventually.

  ‘From Collegium, although I’ve travelled since then,’ Totho told him. He felt the time since he had left Collegium as a physical distance, a desert that he could never recross.

 

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