by Kate Elliott
He didn’t touch him. “What happened?”
Seren was vomiting, his face gray with pain. The hand he had clutched to his stomach was slick with blood.
Beyond a gold awning where fry-ups were sizzling ran an exceeding narrow walk between three-story buildings, accounting houses topped by apartments. A young militia man appeared in the gap. Seeing Kesh, he beckoned him over.
“Weren’t you one of the Master Feden’s slaves? Aren’t you hired now by the outlanders? Best you come see.”
Back here the buildings were a maze, walkways barely wide enough to let a barrow pass. They turned a right corner, then a left, and in the center of a stone drainage ditch awash in spilling sewage and flowing blood lay the other Qin soldier, Tam.
He was dead.
32
From a ridge, Marit looked over a substantial valley, green with the season. Far below, a lake and river sparkled in the afternoon sunlight. The Orator and her Three Daughters formed a bulwark to the southeast, snow dusting their heights and clouds threatening behind. To the east rose a sheer line of cliffs running almost due north and south, ends lost in haze. The uneven patch of lifeless brown scarring the lake’s shore near the confluence with the river marked the town of Walshow.
Here on the northern frontier of the Hundred, where many weather systems met and mingled, the wind blew in changeable eddies. Vultures drifted along currents of air right where the foot of the long ridge met the valley floor. Far above, a speck circled, almost certainly an eagle, although it glided too high up for her to be sure.
She led Warning along the ridge trail to the road, a graded avenue that, having cut through the hills that separated the valley from upper Haldia, now switch-backed down the grueling slope into the depression. This late in the day, she had the road to herself, no traders, no casual traffic moving up or down. She might have flown it, but now that she had traveled all this way through the wild lands of Heaven’s Ridge, keeping out of sight, she found herself reluctant to hasten into the belly of the beast.
And no wonder.
Where the road bottomed out on the valley floor, poles had been erected at intervals as trees are planted to shade a thoroughfare. Corpses in every stage of decay dangled from the posts, hoisted up by their arms and left to rot. Where the soft tissue had pulled free, remains had fallen into heaps on the dirt. Some of these bones had been weathering here for years, when they ought to have been offered release at a Sorrowing Tower. The impiety—the sheer scale of executions—was meant to intimidate anyone approaching Walshow. Where had all these dead people come from? She remembered Sediya’s chant: “The weak die, the strong kill.”
She rode on through the drowsy afternoon.
Most of the trees in the valley had been cut down. Sheep and goats grazed among stumps. After about two mey, the scrub and pastureland spilled into fields being worked by men and women who kept their heads down, glancing at her swiftly and getting straight back to work. Threads of smoke rose from the town. It was too quiet. Chains rattled when the wind caught them just right. Skulls leered at her from the ground, tilted back to make their unhinged jaws open in a wide grin.
The poles with their corpses were, evidently, the first line of defense. The second was a stockade ringing the outermost neighborhoods of the city; beyond that rose an actual city wall with gates and battlements. Strangely, the stockade gate lay open and unguarded.
Beyond the gate, the outer town had the look of a place ransacked and left to recover. Ramshackle hovels sprouted beside sturdier row houses with shops in front and living quarters in back. Children ran away into shacks. A man trundling a barrow took a sudden detour, and a trio of women carrying washing in bundles atop their heads turned right around and hurried back the way they had come. She dismounted by the first relatively clean inn, chickens scattering from Warning’s hooves as she walked the mare into the unswept yard.
A woman appeared on the porch, tying her black hair up into a bright linen kerchief in the northern style. Her eyes were darkly lined with cosmetics, and she smelled of sour milk. Within the inn, soup boiled, a thin broth flavored with smoky sesame oil. Her gaze flashed away from Marit, a tangle of startled wonder at seeing the sacred winged horse so close that she could distinguish each silver feather, and anticipatory fear because after all how could anything good come of one of them walking into her humble yard and maybe after all now she would get the news of his death because she knew it was coming eventually however much she dreaded it. A child cried in one of the back rooms. She bowed her head and hid her face behind her hands.
“Shardit, are you coming?” called a man impatiently from the interior.
“Shardit,” said Marit, recalling the name. “Is your man with the army? Is that him in there?”
“Just a customer,” she said into the space between her face and her hands. “I haven’t seen my man for months, have I? What else am I to do?”
“Do what you must,” said Marit hastily, thinking of Joss. “You have to go on with life. I’m not here to judge you.”
The awkward silence dragged out. Inside, the child’s crying faded to a grating whimper. A weight was shoved over a floor, like furniture being moved. Beyond the yard, a dog yelped; the steady stroke of someone chopping wood rang.
“Where can I find the commander’s hall?” Marit asked.
“In town, in the old Assizes Court.”
“In the Assizes Court? Where is the actual Assizes Court held, then?”
Marit heard Shardit’s tone alter, because really even a child ought to know this. “Lord Radas runs the Assizes Court, him and his underlings.”
“So that’s where I’ll find him?”
“Him?” The woman was surprised enough that she dropped her hands and looked: a shuddering memory of a man cloaked in sun riding a dazzling winged horse in the vanguard of a mass of armed men. “Neh. You’re come too late. They’ve already left.”
“Left?”
The hands came up to shield the face, like an act of obeisance. “They marched weeks ago. They’re gone.”
Gone.
“Where did they go?”
Shardit shrugged. “High Haldia first, then Toskala, and after that Nessumara. Not that we were told anything, not folk like me, but the soldiers have a song about it. ‘The cloaks rule all, even death.’ The Star of Life will rule the Hundred. That’s what they say.”
“And then what? Will the soldiers who lived here come back?
She hunched a shoulder, seemed about to turn away in shame but did not. “I have to hope they do. If there’s no one to sup from my kettle, then how will I feed my children?”
“Did you live in Walshow before, or were you brought here?”
“Oh,” she said, and then, “oh.” She began to cry, not sobs but simply tears trickling down her face, the taste of their salt like sorrow.
“Can you go home?” Marit asked more gently.
The man called from inside. “Shardit! How long do I have to wait?”
“Why do you torment us?” Shardit whispered. “Teach them to kill, who were peaceful before? Isn’t it enough to rule us?”
The hells!
“Don’t give up hope,” said Marit, and knew it for a stupid thing to say the instant the words left her mouth. She tugged on Warning’s reins and rode out of the inn yard without looking back. There’s only so much a reeve can do. But she swore under her breath the entire walk back to the outer gate, as if her words were knives to cut away the bonds that confined people like Shardit.
Guards had meanwhile shown up at the gate, two elderly men who raised hands nervously to shield their faces as she approached. Their rustic spears, little more than sharpened tips, leaned against their frail bodies to leave their hands free for the obeisance: the hiding of their eyes.
“Where’s the army gone?” she asked them.
In stumbling words, clearly frightened, they told her the same story Shardit had. By the look of these broken-down men, Lord Radas had sucked the town clean of
all able-bodied men and left the leavings to fend for themselves.
“Is Walshow abandoned?”
“The commanders pulled everyone out, Lady. By your leave, Lady. Is there aught we can do to serve you, Lady?” They cringed away from an expected blow.
“Nothing,” she said furiously, which only made them cringe more.
Outside the gate she mounted, and gave Warning her head. Near here, surely, she would find a Guardian’s altar. The horse must walk, then trot, then gallop and lift. She liked the horse, but the slow rise into the sky had none of the thrill of an eagle’s thrust or soaring glide. It was more as if the horse paced out a road of air invisible to all others and rode it above the ground.
She surveyed the earth as well as she could, with the wings beating wide and, together with the body of the horse, blocking her view. An archer could loft an arrow into the horse’s belly and she never see it loosed. From an eagle, you missed nothing.
She saw no rice fields, but a few agricultural strips recently plowed and planted. Orchards and pastureland made up the second ring, and beyond that—as she had seen before—the valley had once been forest, but it was all hacked down, leaving gouges in the earth and serious erosion where the rains had cut unprotected dirt into a hundred destructive channels. Charcoal heaps smoldered under caps of dirt.
They headed for the bulwark of the Orator. The stony peak lay directly ahead, her three daughters clustered close. The sun’s last rays glinted on the spires, and as the disc slipped below the western horizon, the shadow of twilight grew. A wind out of the northeast thrummed in the spires like a voice too deep for its words to be understood.
Although the sun had set, a dazzle glimmered atop the rounded head of the shortest daughter. There they trotted to earth on a dusty top ringed by boulders any one of which might topple from the peak and crash down the steep face to the tree line below.
They had arrived at a Guardian altar.
She released the mare before setting her own feet on the labyrinth’s entrance. She paced its measures, seeing how the different landscapes passed through late afternoon all the way into night and back again, depending on how far west or east they lay in the Hundred. She paused, recognizing the overlook onto Sohayil.
Twilight lingered in the west, surprise evident in his tone. “You’re above Walshow!” he said through the crossroads that linked them.
“Hari! I hoped to find you.”
“Why are you in Walshow? Just where you shouldn’t be.”
“The army has moved out. There’s no one here but the folk they’ve left behind.”
“Lucky for them.”
“Maybe for the locals. There are others who are little better off than fish left to gasp on the shore. You’re on the western edge of the basin of Sohayil.”
“So I am. Lost and lonely and, fortunately, not with the others. Although I must soon join them. I have made of my assigned task an utter fiasco for which I will suffer, I guarantee it. Lord Radas sent that pervert Bevard to gather up the dregs of the broken army, and has called me back to him. Thus I linger in the west, and travel as slowly as I may.” He laughed as he spoke, but the edge in his voice was sharp. “Where will you go now?”
“I’ll ride the Istri Walk south, on the army’s track.”
“Why go after them?”
“Because I must. Just like you.”
“Eiya!” But the lament sounded sweet spoken in that slurred foreign accent.
Saying no good-bye, she left him behind. She walked the labyrinth to its center, where she found Warning had already drunk her fill from a basin chipped out of rock, clear liquid seeping out of the stone to form a pool so still that she saw her own face as in a mirror.
She looked the same, brown face, brown eyes, black hair clipped short so it wouldn’t get in her way. But she was no longer the reeve who had partnered Flirt. She was someone else now, a stranger with a face and heart she recognized but whose purpose remained in shadow.
She knelt, filled her bowl, and drank until she thought she would burn up from the inside. But she knew it now as the nectar that demons crave, the clear milk of the gods. She could exist without it, hiding from the others, but to drink it made her strong. It gave her the clarity she needed for the path ahead.
33
In the Qin compound in Olossi, in the center of the living quarters and surrounded by a porch backed with rice-papered sliding doors, lay a square courtyard. Lamps set on tripods burned with a particularly bracing flavor, purple-thorn seeds crushed in with the lamp oil, that mostly cleared the twilight air of insects. On a brick platform surrounded by troughs of flowers, Mai sat cross-legged on a pillow, happier than she had been in many days, because her dear friend had at last been allowed to visit.
“Anji has forbidden me to go to the market—to go out at all!—until they’ve tracked down everyone involved with the attack.”
“If such people can be tracked down,” said Miravia, “which I doubt. Really, anyone might have killed Tam. A Sirniakan spy posing as a beggar, as your husband believes. A discontented laborer. A sweet-smoke addict. A thief.”
Mai shook her head. “Only a trained assassin like one of the Red Hounds could have lured two Qin soldiers into such circumstances, and then taken them by surprise like that.”
“Perhaps Olossi’s sweet-smoke addicts have surprising talents.”
Mai laughed, and then was ashamed she had done so, thinking of Tam, a polite young man who had never said more than ten words to her in all the time she had been with the Qin.
“It isn’t funny, is it?” said Miravia as she picked up her ceramic cup and examined, with half her attention, the egrets in flight painted around the white finish, brushstrokes of gray and black suggesting the movement of the wind. “Nor do I suppose a common thief or disgruntled laborer could have managed such a skillful murder, or known to put such a deadly poison on his blade. Your husband is correct in being cautious.”
“Surely any attack is directed against him, not against me.”
“Because of his connection to the Sirniakan throne?” She set down the cup. “But it has always been true that one way to strike at a man is to strike at what he values most.”
“Must I live forever trapped inside the compound?” Mai rubbed her belly. A flutter like butterfly’s wings startled her. “Oh! Here, feel it. It moved.”
They sat in silence as Miravia pressed her hands over the curve of Mai’s belly. Then she, too, gasped, and laughed. “I felt it!”
Priya looked up from her seat on the porch, smiled, and resumed her discussion with Miravia’s brother, who naturally had to act as escort to make sure his sister was at all times isolated from the men of the house, although Mai suspected that he had also been tasked to make sure that Miravia behaved according to other, more subtle strictures. Miravia’s attendants remained beyond the doors, the veiled women in a private sitting room and the male guards relegated to duty beyond the private rooms in tandem with the regular Qin guard.
“It will be a healthy boy,” said Miravia.
“That’s what everyone says. Naturally I am required to desire a son first and second, and a daughter third.”
“No, I meant that Grandmother says it will be a boy, so it will be.” Miravia sipped thoughtfully at her tea. “Grandmother has been against my coming all along, of course, but Mother said you must be lonely in circumstances to which you are unaccustomed.”
“So poor Tam, by getting murdered, made it possible for you to visit me?”
“Perhaps. But Grandmother herself tended that other soldier.”
“She saved Seren’s life.”
“Yes. I never saw him, of course. That would never be allowed, as I remain unmarried.” Miravia’s tone slid toward a darker edge. “He was very polite to her even when the poison was at its worst. Since he was in unspeakable pain, she determined that even the lowliest Qin soldiers had sufficient good manners and proper notions of propriety as well as discipline to be trusted not to barge in and
discover me unveiled. And trusted to guard me, in this house, since of course no household in the Hundred can be trusted to safeguard the dignity of women.”
Mai picked at the tray of cakes and fruit. She was hungry all the time, nibbling constantly. “Even at home I was never confined like this, and certainly my father was strict about the dignity of the women of his household. It’s just that I’m accustomed to being in the market. It’s so dull, being stuck inside the walls all the time.”
“You have plenty of company.”
“That counts for something, certainly, but many of the women will marry and go off to establish their own households. So we must hope. Priya is always with me. And there’s a sweet girl my age among the ones we’re hoping will marry the soldiers. I like her, she reminds me of my sister Ti, but she is not a deep thinker, Miravia, if I may say so. As Ti would say, I think I would die die die if I couldn’t see you.”
Miravia pressed her hand softly.
In pregnancy, Mai’s thoughts had begun to wander down strange paths unknown to her before, or perhaps it was the long journey she had undergone, from being Father Mei’s favored pet in Kartu Town across months of travel through desert and hills and mountains to the fragile peace she had grasped for herself in this new land. Her thoughts, once confined by the limits of Kartu Town, had roamed into a wilderness she did not at all comprehend.
“Is it strange to say,” she said hesitantly, “that even so quickly, I felt when you and I met that we knew each other already?”
“Not strange at all. Souls are reborn, and in their new lives they move toward the souls they have loved in previous lives.”
“Is that what the Ri Amarah believe?”
“What we believe? It is the truth. Perhaps you and I were sisters in another time.”