Sword Born ss-5

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Sword Born ss-5 Page 28

by Jennifer Roberson


  Herakleio was neither a battle nor a kill, but he undoubtedly felt as though he’d lost and died by the time she finished with him.

  As with me, he finally pulled up, shook his head so that sweat-soaked strands of hair flew, then flopped over at the waist.

  Del took one step into him, slid a rigid hand between his arms, and jabbed him in the short ribs. "Stand up," she commanded. "If you want to win back your wind, give your lungs room."

  Thus accosted, no one doesn’t stand up. He jerked upright, scowled at her, then walked away to circle with his hands on his hips, head tilted back, sucking air.

  Del turned to me, took three strides, picked up the water jar, walked back to Herakleio. "Next time, drink when water is offered. Only a fool passes by an oasis even when his botas are full."

  I smiled to hear my own words quoted. Herakleio was less amused. He snatched the jar from her, took it to his mouth, tipped his head back to drink. Then he raised the jar higher, held it in both hands, and proceeded to pour what was left over his face and head. It splashed in a silvery steam upon the clean white tiles that had hosted and honed scraping bare feet.

  Del watched, apparently unmoved. She was sweat-sheened and undoubtedly thirsty as well, but she pushed for nothing. She waited.

  When Herakleio handed the empty jar back, there was challenge in his eyes. "Only a fool allows the enemy to drink when she herself has not."

  "I am not your enemy, nor are you mine," Del responded, clearly unwinded. "This was not a dance, nor was it war or skirmish."

  "What was it, then?"

  "Lesson," she said simply. "What did you learn from it?"

  He flicked a glance at me, then looked back at her. "Never underestimate a woman with a sword in her hand."

  "Then you have learned nothing." Del turned abruptly and strode away from him. In one step she was over the wall, and disappeared around the corner of the house.

  Herakleio was baffled. Eventually he looked at me. "Isn’t that what she meant me to learn?"

  "That’s a bonus," I said. "But the point was for you to learn something from the engagement. One maneuver, perhaps; even one that didn’t work so you know it won’t work." I shrugged. "Did you?"

  His expression was peculiar. "No."

  "Then she’s right. You learned nothing." I stood up, stretched briefly, gifted him with a lopsided smile. "What woman did you think I meant when you asked about my scar?"

  He looked at that scar immediately, and had the grace to color. "Oh."

  " ’Oh,’ " I echoed. "Ah, well, now you know. And it’s not like you’re the first to dismiss her out of hand."

  He ran an arm over wet hair plastered to his scalp. "Has she ever killed a man?"

  "Men," I clarified. "And I never kept count."

  He nodded absently, gone away somewhere inside his head. I watched him a moment, then smiled again and turned to step over the wall.

  "Wait," he said. When I turned back, his expression was calm. "Tomorrow morning?"

  "Tomorrow morning is likely today." It was a not so subtle reminder that he’d dragged me out of bed in the middle of the night. "Get a few hours’ sleep, then we’ll begin again. And this time, I suspect, you’ll pay attention."

  He nodded, looked down at his wooden blade, nodded again.

  I left him there debating his abilities, and took myself off to bed.

  Life continued in that manner for the next tenday, as they reckon time on Skandi. I worked Herakleio to a standstill, pointed out his failures, guided him into small gains. Without years of study he could never match me, but he was a quick learner and not unwilling, once he decided to learn. His temper flared now and again and he was not beyond hurling curses at me when impatience led him into folly that I quite naturally took advantage of, but for the most part he kept his mouth shut and did what he was told.

  Del, too, took part, though he shied like a wary dog the first couple of times she went at him with the sword. Me he accepted as a true challenge because I, in addition to being male, was on other levels a threat, but Del, despite his acceptance of her expertise with the blade, was yet a woman, and though Skandic men were not raised to believe women were lesser beings, neither were they raised to learn the sword from one.

  Herakleio’s natural tendency with Del was to take his punishment instead of fending it off, which occasionally led to some measure of hilarity on my part, playing spectator; a certain focused and relentless determination on Del’s; and utter frustration on his. I recalled how Nihkolara had made no sound nor attempted to escape the blows rained upon him by the metri that first day. It seemed on Skandi that women in authority were permitted complete autonomy in a given situation. And while ordinarily that might be the kind of thing Del appreciated, it didn’t much aid her when her express desire was for Herakleio to fight back.

  The rhythm of hours, of days, of sessions settled into a comforting discipline. Herakleio and I warmed up together, performed ritual exercises designed to train the body’s reflexes and control, sparred briefly; then I set about showing him techniques and maneuvers; then Del came in to test his comprehension of what I’d explained and demonstrated while I stood apart to make suggestions and comments. We trained during the day, but also at night with the torches lighted, so the eye would not be prepared only for daylight.

  Occasionally I’d step back in and correct Herakleio’s grip on the leather-wrapped hilt, or show him a maneuver that might offset whatever it was Del had just done to disarm him, but most of the time I simply watched and critiqued as the young Northern woman and the young Skandic man moved closer to the dance.

  Then, of course, I made the mistake of shouting out for Del to correct one of her maneuvers.

  It was growing late in the evening and the torches fluttered in the breeze. She shot me such an outraged and venomous glance that I was moved to immediate defense. "Well, hey," I said, "there’s no sense in letting you make mistakes either."

  Herakleio, having learned one thing, held his stance and made no assumptions as to whether this incident was unplanned, or specifically designed to catch him off guard.

  "Was it a mistake?" Del asked coolly. "Or merely a maneuver different from the one you might favor?"

  As she lowered her sword to look at me, Herakleio realized it was a true disengagement. He stepped away warily, out of her reach, but did not relax completely.

  "I favor whatever might help you win," I shot back. "You’d have lost with that maneuver. You left yourself wide open."

  "To whom? You?"

  "To anyone with wit enough to see the opening."

  "Then come test me, Tiger."

  "No."

  "Come on, Tiger. Show me. Test me."

  "No."

  Herakleio asked, "Are you afraid?"

  "Stay out of this," I said grimly, "or you’ll end up with more bruises than you already have."

  "But if she’s right — if her maneuver is correct for her and merely different from one you might use…"

  I glared at him. "Ten days have made you an expert, I see."

  He didn’t flinch; but then, he wouldn’t. "Ten days have taught me that each opponent may have his — or her — own individual style, and one had better learn to adjust one’s own style to it at any given moment."

  Well, I couldn’t argue with that. But I sure wanted to.

  "Tiger," Del said with admirable self-restraint. "I’m not saying you were wrong. Only that I did it intentionally. With specific purpose."

  "That’s all very well and good," I returned, "but you’d have ended up dead. Unintentionally dead, perhaps, but dead. And without specific purpose."

  "Then come show me."

  I glared at Del, then included Herakleio in it. "I don’t want to spar with you. Even with wooden swords."

  "Tiger, we have sparred many times! Even after the dance on Staal-Ysta, where we nearly killed one another."

  Herakleio, leaping head-first into stupidity again, said, "I’d like to hear about that."
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br />   I set my teeth and ignored him, speaking only to Del. "The last time we danced was in the big rockpile in the Punja, when you wanted to lure Chosa Dei out of my sword."

  "Which I did."

  "Del…" I shook my head. "We have danced two times with intent beyond conditioning one another. Once in the North on Staal-Ysta, because the voca tricked us into it — and both of us nearly died, as you pointed out. Then again a matter of two months ago, out in the desert, when Chosa Dei nearly ate me alive from the inside out."

  "Yes," Del said.

  "In both circumstances, it was far too dangerous for either of us. We’re lucky we didn’t die on Staal-Ysta —"

  "Yes."

  "— and lucky you weren’t swallowed by Chosa Dei when he left my sword for yours —"

  "Yes."

  "— and each time the threat came to life only when we faced one another with blades."

  "Yes," she said again.

  I stared at her. "Well?"

  Del smiled. "It means in each case that our skills have proved equal to luck."

  "I would like to see it," Herakleio said seriously.

  I rounded on him then, blistering him with every foul curse I could think of on the instant. I only stopped when I became aware of applause, and noticed both Del and Herakleio had turned away from me.

  I shut up. There on the other side of the wall was the metri, being seated in a chair with Simonides’ aid, and beside her two people: Prima Rhannet and her blue-headed first mate. The captain was applauding.

  "Foul tongue," she said, grinning. "One might suggest it be cut out of your head."

  "Care to try?" I asked sweetly.

  "Oh, no," she returned, unperturbed. "I think not. But you will be tried, and by the woman Herakleio is so intent upon seeing dance against you. Which means he must believe she is better." Smiling, she gestured briefly at Nihko, who bent and lifted something from the ground at his feet.

  Swords.

  He set them lengthwise precisely atop the wall, then took a single step away as if to repudiate any link to them. The message was clear: these were the swords the metri had hired them to find, so Del and I could enter the circle to settle my term of employment.

  I looked at the metri. There was little resemblance to the ill woman I had seen in bed. Her hair was pulled off her face and gathered into a variety of plaits and loops, secured with enamel-and-gold pins. She wore a tunic and heavy beaded necklace; also a loose robe that billowed in the breeze. She sat quietly in the chair, arms folded neatly across her lap, but her expression was severe.

  "Now," the metri said, "let it be settled, this argument of service."

  "Here and now," I said skeptically.

  "Indeed."

  I looked from her to her servant. "How is she?"

  He seemed to understand I asked him because she would not give me the truth, even if she answered. "Well enough," he said.

  "Much improved," the metri snapped, clearly annoyed. "Now, be about it. If you win, you may be excused from service beyond our original agreement. If she wins, you will stay on an additional length of time to be decided by me."

  I shook my head.

  The metri looked at Nihko. "Make him."

  Nihko looked at me. "I can."

  Del threw down her wooden blade. "I want no part of this. I agreed to dance with Tiger, but I will not do so if he is forced. It abrogates the honor codes and oaths."

  "What ’honor codes and oaths’?" Prima asked scathingly. "He’s his own kind of ikepra. He has no such thing."

  "We make our own," Del declared, stung. "He and I, between us."

  Herakleio hooked a foot beneath her wooden sword and scooped it into the air, where he caught it easily. "Then do so," he suggested. "The metri has hired you. You accepted. Is that not honor? And dishonor if you refuse?"

  Prima’s tone was sly. "You renounced your honor, Sandtiger; she has not. Do you expect her to break all of her oaths simply to be with you? Or has she none left because she is with you?"

  The terrace was round, but we were cornered anyway. Del and I did not even bother to look at one another. They had found the holes in our individual defenses and exploited them perfectly.

  I took up the blades from the wall and handed one to Del. Her eyes searched mine, asking the question.

  In answer, I walked to the center point of the terrace. It wasn’t a proper circle, but our minds would make it one. I leaned, set down the weapon with a faint metallic scrape, turned my back on it and paced to the wall farthest from the spectators. Torchlight filled my eyes; I half-lidded them against it.

  Prima’s tone was startled. "Don’t you want to practice first? To test the blades?"

  Del walked deliberately to the center, bent, set her sword alongside mine. Rising, she asked, "Why? If they are meant to break, they will. But I doubt that’s what you want."

  "Indeed not," the metri said testily. "This is to be an honorable engagement."

  Herakleio grinned widely. "Then perhaps you would do better to excuse the Sandtiger. He has none."

  "Enough," Del said sharply, taking position across from me.

  I didn’t look at Herakleio, but he knew whom I meant. "Say it."

  But it wasn’t Herakleio. Nihko said, "Dance."

  Feet pounded, gripped, slid against tile; bodies bent; hands snatched, closed; blades came up from the ground. They met, rang, clashed, scraped apart, clashed again as we engaged. The blows were measured, but not so restrained that no damage would be done if one of us broke through. There is no sense in pulling back when one intends to win, or if one intends to learn. To do so alters the dance into travesty, with nothing learned and thus nothing gained even in victory.

  We tested one another carefully. Last time we’d met it hadn’t been sparring, hadn’t been a contest to settle a complaint, but a dance against the magic that had infested my sword, that had wanted me as well. I had lost that dance, but in the losing I won. Del lured Chosa Dei out of my blade into hers, then purposefully broke her jivatma. We had not since then set foot in any kind of circle, being more concerned with surviving a journey by ship.

  Now here we were, off that ship at last and on the soil of what I’d begun to believe actually was my homeland, dancing for real at the behest of a woman who had no idea what it meant to be what we were.

  Or else she knew very well and used this dance to prove it.

  The night was loud with sound, the clangor and screech of steel. As always, with Del and me, there was another element to the object, an aspect of the dance that elevated it above the common. We were that good together. In the circle. In bed.

  — step — thrust — spin —

  — catch blades — catch again —

  — slide — step — thrust —

  — parry — again — slash —

  It was a long dance, one that leached from us all thoughts of the metri, her intentions, of Prima and her first mate, of Herakleio and his attitude. As always, everything else in the world became as water against oilcloth: shed off to pool elsewhere, while inside the circle, our dwelling, we stayed dry, and warm, and so focused as to be deaf and blind. But we were neither of us deaf or blind; we marked movement, responses, the slight flexing of muscle beneath taut flesh; heard the symphony of the steel, the rhythm of our breathing, the subtle sibilance of bare soles moving against stone.

  — slash — catch — scrape —

  — the shriek of steel on steel —

  Walls of air, the metri had called it. My home was built of walls I fashioned in the circle, because only here could I define myself, could I find my worth in the world. Only here had I become a man. Not in the use of my genitals, a use once copious and indiscriminatory; nor in the language of my mouth, sometimes vulgar, always ready, but inside the heart, the soul. Inside the circle I was whatever I wished to be, and no one at all could alter that.

  Except me.

  And I had.

  One day at Aladar’s palace, when I had broken all the oaths.


  "No —" Del said.

  I grinned.

  "Tiger —"

  I laughed.

  With an expression of determination, Del tried the move I’d chastised her for.

  "Oh, Del —" Disgust. I couldn’t help it. Because now I had no choice. I broke her guard, went in, tore the hilt from her hand. "What did I tell you?" I roared. "Did you think I was joking? That kind of move could get you killed!"

  Furious, she bent and retrieved the sword. "Again."

  "Del —"

  "Again, curse you!"

  Again. As she insisted.

  I stepped back, renewed the assault. Saw Del begin the maneuver again. I moved to block it, break it, destroy it — and this time something entirely different happened. This time it was my sword that went crashing to the tile. And I was left nursing a wrenched thumb.

  "What in hoolies was that?" I asked.

  "The reason I created that maneuver."

  "But I defeated it the first time."

  "Not the second."

  "You’d have been dead the first time. There wouldn’t have been a second."

  "Maybe," Del said, "maybe not. Not everyone fights like you."

  "No one fights like me," I corrected with laborious dignity, then shook out my thumb.

  "Shall I kiss it?" The irony was heavy.

  I bared my teeth at her. "Not in front of witnesses."

  "Stop," the metri said.

  I turned toward her, startled by the hostility in her tone.

  "You must begin again," she declared.

  "Why?" I asked.

  "One of you must win. Decisively."

  "I did win," I explained. "I disarmed her."

  "Then she disarmed you."

  I shook my head. "That doesn’t count."

  "Why not?" Del asked.

  I shot her a disbelieving glance. "Because I’d have killed you. I broke your pattern. You’d be dead."

  "But I broke your pattern the second time."

  "Finish it," the metri commanded. "One of you must win decisively."

  I displayed my thumb. "I have a slight disadvantage."

 

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