“Have you lost your mind? Do you think I don’t want to go cleave Alten’s head from his shoulders? I’m a strategist. And an archer, I’m worthless hand-to-hand. I don’t even have my sword, I have a dagger. I could get you twenty seconds before they killed us both.”
Kora lowered her head to the paper-strewn floor, tears filling her eyes. Then she realized, all of a sudden, that she had not seen Zacry, and she gagged herself again as she tried to yell. Had he run? Was he hiding?
Zalski slammed the cover of the last of three spellbooks he had skimmed. “It doesn’t seem to be here. You two—” he turned to the guards—“keep watch outside the building.”
The soldiers left, and Zalski used Mudar to rip the gag from Kansten’s mouth. “I don’t suppose you’d oblige us with the location of the Librette?”
She spat at his feet.
“I see,” said Malzin. “No spellbook. That’s fine, perfectly fine. I’ll settle for your trinket.” Kansten’s eyes bulged with loathing, the veins swelling in her cheeks and neck as Zalski’s wife removed her amulet, her fingertips grazing the captive’s skin. Then Malzin folded her arms, quoted what Kansten had not said.
“‘Get your hands off me, you malicious bitch?’”
Kansten’s mouth fell open in feigned surprise. “You can read minds!”
“Malicious, hmm? It seems Laskenay taught the country bum big words.”
“Malicious fool’s more to the point, if you need magic to guess what I think of you.”
Malzin scowled, then did a double take as a jet of purple light shot past toward her husband. Zalski’s reflexes were sharper than hers; he summoned a black shield, deflecting the binding spell to hit the washroom door while he then cried “Desfazair,” and a twelve-year-old boy popped into being against the wall. He too summoned a shield, which flickered in and out. His was an olive green.
“What in the world?” said Zalski. He walked up to the boy, clearly startled, but in command of himself. “What’s your name?”
The boy’s jaw moved down, and up again, silently. He strained visibly not to panic, to keep his shield up. “Trep,” he sputtered.
“Trep, is it? Short for Porteg?”
The shield faded completely. Malzin squealed in delight. “Not her brother? She was imbecile enough to hide her brother here?”
“That’s enough,” said Zalski. He patted Zacry’s rigid shoulder. “There’s no reason to be frightened, none at all. I see Kora taught you some magic. I’ve met your sister. She has talent, as do you.” Zacry stared wordlessly at the sorcerer. “She has talent, but I’ve been casting spells longer. I have a decade’s worth of experience over her. If you’re serious about learning magic, you should study at the Palace.”
“I don’t…. I can’t….”
“You’ve heard stories about me, is that the problem? Every story’s different from a different point of view. You can’t trust rumors, Zacry. You’ve heard what people say about your sister? They call her dangerous. Unbalanced. Power-hungry.”
“She isn’t!”
“I know she isn’t. I told you I’ve met her.”
Malzin was growing impatient. “Why don’t you gentlemen talk this over in the next room? All three of you?”
“Oh no,” said Alten. “I’m staying right here. That pesky thing called a witness.”
Malzin glared at the general. “Zalski, why don’t you take the boy, then?”
Zacry turned a pallid face to Kansten as Zalski steered him to the washroom.
“We’ll be all right, Zac. So will you, you’ll be all right!” the woman cried to him. Then Zalski shut the door. Malzin turned the amulet over in her palm.
“A powerful trinket you have here—Kansten, isn’t it? It made quite an impression on me in Podrar, I can tell you.” She turned to the redhead. “And you must be Bendelof. From the same farming village as your friend here. I’ll bet you were acquainted even before the League. How charming.”
Malzin slipped the amulet over her white hair. Kansten’s face turned gray; her jaw grew slack, and her eyes darted to her fellow captive.
“Now this is troubling. You think I’m going to punish her…” Malzin pointed a thin finger at Bendelof “…for what happened when I met you in the capital. Don’t worry dear, I’m not that malicious.”
Only the outer winds of Malzin’s vortex hit Bendelof; her chair went sliding across the wall. Kansten, however, took the brunt of the swirling air. It sent her soaring past the drapes and through the window with an ear-splitting shatter.
Alten pulled Bendelof and her chair upright. A fresh cut bled on her brow line, and her eyes had trouble focusing.
“Now you’ve nearly knocked the hostage unconscious, have you had your fun?”
“I would say so. What is so amusing, general?”
Alten was chuckling. “It’s just so ironic. All this bluster, and you still haven’t found the Librette.”
Malzin narrowed her eyes. “Rone never promised the book was here.”
“But you have no earthly idea where it is, no more today than four months ago. My God, you have foul luck.”
“I’m amazed you aren’t calling me incompetent.”
“You are incompetent, usually. In this you’re just unfortunate. If the League had set its mind to thwarting me, I’d still be searching out a mindstone vein.”
Choking sobs wracked Kora’s body. Menikas took pity on her and pulled the bandana from her mouth. He looked more distrait, more wretched, than Kora would have thought him capable. All trace of the leader, of his forcefulness, had disappeared.
“Who?” he asked.
“Kansten,” Kora whispered. “They killed Kansten. Rone betrayed us.”
Menikas stiffened. “Rone?”
“But Zalski’s gone.” She could not bring herself to mention Zacry. “And the guards, they’re gone. If I turn invisible, I just might get Bennie out of there.” And then get Zac, get Zac before Zalski realizes….
“It’s worth trying.”
Menikas pulled Kora to her knees. “Despareska,” she said, but before she could transport, she saw Zalski return from the washroom. “Damn it to hell!”
“He’s back, isn’t he?”
In the apartment the sorcerer stopped short, marking the broken window.
“I’m still going back,” said Kora. She restored her visibility.
“No.”
“All I need’s three seconds!”
“I said no!” Strength had returned to Menikas’s voice. “I’m not risking you.”
“To hell with risk, we’re talking about Bennie!”
Menikas squeezed Kora’s forearm so tightly she grit her teeth. “You took an oath, Porteg. You swore to obey your superiors.”
“I never swore to stand by while….”
“While casualties were made? We’re at war! You’re a soldier, and you need to keep your head! You say you need three seconds. Zalski would need half that to grab Bennie and latch on for the trip. Then we’d all be dead.”
Kora’s eyes smoldered, but she said nothing. Menikas was too close to her; he would stop her again if she tried to use magic. She forced herself to return her attention to the apartment.
Bennie was pleading with her eyes for someone to ungag her. Zalski obliged with a vanishing spell.
“Where?” she sputtered. “Where’s Zacry?”
“Ensconced in my parlor.”
“Don’t hurt him. Please don’t hurt him! He isn’t his sister. He’s innocent even by your standards.”
“Zacry Porteg is nothing but a child. I’m no monster, Miss Esper. In fact, I’m doing the boy a favor. I’ll rescue him from his sister’s corruptive influence. You I have different plans for.” Zalski grabbed her upper arm. “Malzin….”
“If I’d known my stay in Yangerton would be this short, I’d have packed less.”
“We’ll get your bags later.”
Idiots. “May I suggest,” said Alten, “for the umpteenth time, that we stay to eliminate
the rest of the League as they come back?”
“That’s not our objective, General. I know Laskenay and the princes. How they think. And I’d prefer to have them leading the resistance than whatever unknowns would take their place in reforming their organization. Rest assured that when we crush the Crimson League, it will be in such a way that nothing will sprout from its ashes.”
Zalski’s parlor. The room where Kora had spoken with the “king.”
She wrenched away from Menikas, cast the transport spell beneath her breath before he could react, and fell breathless to the ground as when she had tried to cross by magic from one mountainside to another, though she did not faint this time. Zalski had sealed the room, the entire interior of his home, against magical intrusion.
“No,” Kora moaned. “No….”
The papers beneath her slid as she tried to stand upright. Menikas caught her before she fell again. He thought something ghastly had happened at the apartment.
“Bennie? Not….”
“He has Zacry.”
Menikas’s grip became gentler before he relinquished it, when Kora found her center of gravity. “Which he?”
“He took Zac to the Palace. He’ll groom him to be his heir.”
“Zalski? Don’t be ridiculous.”
“Malzin can’t have children. And Zac’s a sorcerer. The man….” Kora shuddered. “The man who murdered Sedder will raise my brother. And I can’t stop him. I can’t even try!”
“Zacry will be all right.”
Kora flinched as Menikas reached out. “Don’t touch me! Don’t you touch me, this is all your fault!”
“My fault?”
“I could have saved him! If you’d let me go back, I could have saved him!”
“If I’d let you go back, he would have seen his sister murdered.”
“You don’t know that! You can’t know that! You pompous blueblood, what gives you the right to pass my brother to that man’s care? What?”
“Listen, Porteg, it fell to me to make a decision, and I stand by it.”
“So if Lanokas had been in that apartment, you’d have gagged me and bruised me and left him to Zalski’s mercy?”
Menikas slapped her across the face. She threw a chair at him, but he deflected it waving his hand. Back at the apartment, Zalski transported Bendelof and Malzin away.
Kora froze. “Alten’s alone,” she said.
“Are you serious?”
“Grab my sleeve. My sleeve, do you hear? If you touch me with so much as a finger, you’ll be wishing you were Galisan.”
445
CHAPTER SIX
Aftermath
As Alten opened the apartment door it resisted of its own volition, pulling away from his fingers as he took a step back, bewildered.
“You’re going nowhere, Grombach,” growled the prince.
“Hune Menikas.” Alten turned on his heel. “And the second Porteg. What are the chances I’d meet both in one day?”
Kora raised a hand to her forehead, startled she had lost her wrap, forgetting how Menikas had used it. Then her rage returned, overpowered anything else she might have felt. “You let Malzin kill my best friend. You let Zalski take my brother.”
“Let me guess, and now I pay for it.”
“Lassmagico!” she screamed.
Alten flicked his wrist, and the jet of purple light speeding at him reversed direction with no wide turn, and no warning. It struck Menikas, who was too slow in dodging, and lengthened to bind him tight. The prince teetered.
“Desfa—”
Kora stopped her spell short, clutching her throat. Alten used his power to move the chain around her neck so that it choked her. She tried to croak out words, but made no sound. Her face grew hot.
He rotates objects. Lanokas said he…. Lanokas….
Kora’s legs shook, and she dropped to her knees, losing strength. She clawed at the chain, tried to dig her nails beneath it. Fifteen more seconds and her vision went blurry.
My God, I’m dying. The thought struck her with a jolt while a buzz sounded at her ear. I’m dying, and there’s a damn fly.
She doubled over. Her head slammed the floor, and her throat felt like it was on fire. The fingers of her right hand twisted in the chain, while a cold gulp of air seared her lungs.
I can breathe….
Kora lifted her head as quickly as she could. She blinked to clear her vision and made out Alten leaning propped against the door, a crimson stain spreading across his tunic. A shaft protruded from his chest. He looked shocked, or maybe light-headed. His eyes met Kora’s, and gasping, she threw the chain of red gold over her head.
“You lucky bitch,” he groaned. Then his eyes rolled back and he slumped over.
Kora stared at his corpse for a full thirty seconds, coughing and heaving. She would have vomited, but there was nothing in her stomach to throw up. Menikas groaned from the floor, where he still laid bound. “Now do you understand why I stopped you?”
“More so, yes,” croaked Kora. She freed the prince and tried to moderate her anger, which was rising once again. They would have been fine, just fine, had she remembered Alten’s power. “That arrow, where did it…?”
“The window.”
Kora stumbled to the broken pane. Bidd stared back at her from the roof of the building opposite, bent on one knee, gaping, his bow still aimed into the apartment. Hayden and Hal were at his side, peering down to the street. Kora clenched her stomach and lowered her gaze.
Between the teenagers, they had struck down the guards Zalski ordered outside. The bodies lay across the front stairs. The street was deserted, and most curtains shut tight; no one wanted to see or be seen when slain soldiers formed part of the landscape. Kora’s eyes swept the cobblestone road until they reached a spot five feet out from the window.
Kansten lay face-up in a smattering of wood bits. Bubbles of blood stained her lips, and a crimson puddle framed her head, reddening her golden hair. Her face was frozen in an expression of shock. Her limbs were still bound, pulled in unnatural angles.
I never told her my theory, about Ranler and the cage. I guess it doesn’t matter. I was wrong, dead wrong. They got her anyway. They didn’t cart her off, but they got her.
Menikas walked up behind Kora. He stretched a hand out and pulled it gently toward his chest; as it moved, Kansten’s eyelids slid closed.
“She would have wanted it this way,” said Kora, more to herself than the prince. “She preferred this over letting them capture her. Oh, oh God, Bennie….”
“Bennie’s tough as nails. She doesn’t look it, but she is.”
“You don’t think they’ll rape….”
“She won’t be tortured. At least, not until Zalski gets his hands on the Librette. He wouldn’t risk accidentally killing her, she’s exactly what he wanted for that spell. One of us.”
That spell. The version of Estatua that maintained brain function and would asphyxiate Bennie in about a minute without the Lifestone to prolong her agony. The incantation that would let Zalski search her memories, her entire life, at will. Kora shuddered.
“Thank God we moved that book. Thank God. We can’t let him get his paws on it, let him do that to her.”
“We won’t. It’s about all we can do for her now. Let’s go, we have to clear out the other apartment and get to the woods.”
The first clearing in the forest between Yangerton and Podrar was the designated meeting point in the event League headquarters fell. Kora looked once more to the rooftop, but Bidd, Hayden, and Hal had already started off.
“We should clear this place out first,” said Kora. “Did they take anything? Can you tell?”
“It doesn’t look like it. Everything that would interest them’s across the street.”
“The papers for those rooms, they’re in Galisan’s name.”
“But we have them. That apartment’s safe, for the moment.”
“Menikas?”
Menikas bent over Alten, reaching fo
r the crystal that hung around his neck.
“Don’t touch that!” Kora shrieked. Menikas jumped back, staring at her. “Don’t touch it, it calls Zalski, it…. We don’t want…. Or do we? Menikas, do we?”
The dead king’s son gave Kora a skeptical once over, but did not touch the crystal. Kora stared at the stone that lay across Alten’s chest. If only she were in a state to duel!
She went to the bedroom, trying not to think too much as she rolled blankets, saving Kansten’s and Bendelof’s for last, her shaking hands making the folds uneven. When the room was packed, she slung three sacks on her shoulder and threw Laskenay’s to Menikas. He had gathered some odds and ends from the washroom, but put them down to pack Laskenay’s spellbooks.
“My sleeve,” Kora specified. Seconds later, they were in the clearing.
The sun was high, the sky overcast. A songbird twittered from the branches of a nearby oak, while the spring breeze soothed the bruises and the cuts on Kora’s neck.
“I’m going back for more,” she said, dropping her sacks in a heap. “You’re staying here.”
It took three more trips to transport the weapons, the bowls and flatware, the emergency food stores to the woods. Kora worked fast, ignoring Alten’s corpse and the mute curse on his faded lips. After dumping her last armful of goods, Kora dropped at the foot of an oak at the clearing’s edge, ignoring Menikas now. She stared in the direction of Yangerton, as did he.
Kora wanted to scream, to sob, but lacked the strength even to cry in silence. All she knew was that she should have tried to save them. Kansten would never have left a Leaguesman to Zalski’s mercy. Not even Bidd, and God knew she thought Bidd worthless. Worthless. If she knew what Kora owed to him…. And Bennie, Bennie would probably have offered herself as a hostage to save the others.
I should have fought Menikas harder. I should have just gone without him. I don’t care what he says, there’s a chance I could have saved at least Bennie. Three seconds to grab her and transport, maybe less. Three seconds. She never would have left me there, not in a million years. Not for anything!
The Crimson League (The Herezoth Trilogy) Page 37