Jonathan Moeller - The Ghosts 06 - Ghost in the Forge

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Jonathan Moeller - The Ghosts 06 - Ghost in the Forge Page 7

by Jonathan Moeller

Claudia’s lip crinkled in disgust.

  “Oh, very well,” said Halfdan, playing along. “Though I certainly do not have the time to chaperone the two of you.”

  “That shouldn’t be a problem,” said Caina, looking at Corvalis. “Cormark will chaperone us. Won’t you, Cormark?”

  Corvalis bowed, his expression grave. “It would be my solemn honor, mistress.”

  ###

  Three days later the column left the grasslands and entered the Red Forest, while the Anshani horsemen rode away to the east.

  “This is the boundary of the Shahenshah’s domain, you see,” said Irzaris, walking alongside his wagons. “The lands east of the Red Forest swear to the Shahenshah. The various petty princelings of the free cities rule the lands west of the Red Forest.”

  Caina nodded, keeping her eyes wide. Irzaris, she suspected, was more attracted to Claudia, but Claudia’s icy disdain for the man never wavered. Caina had found that men of wealth and power enjoyed a woman who hung on their every word…and so she hung on Irzaris’s every word.

  And learned a number of useful things.

  “So we are in danger,” said Caina, “of being attacked?”

  She looked around the forest and made a show of shivering. Huge redwood trees, larger than any Caina had ever seen, rose around the road. Some of them stood at least three hundred feet tall. Their roots transformed the ground into a wrinkled mossy sheet, and their vast branches cast patterns of light and shadow across the road.

  Irzaris laughed. “Not particularly, my dear. The free cities ignore caravans. If they attack too many they will earn the ire of the Emperor or the Shahenshah. Or, worse, of the Assembly of New Kyre. The Emperor and the Shahenshah can only make war upon the princes of the free cities. New Kyre can do far worse to them.”

  “What’s that?” said Caina.

  “Drive them bankrupt,” said Corvalis.

  Irzaris laughed. “Well spoken, Cormark. Master Basil is fortunate to have such a wise man in his service. Perhaps you should check on your master? The women will be safe enough with me.”

  Corvalis shrugged. “I am sorry, Master Khaltep, but Master Basil bade me to guard his daughters until we stopped for the night.”

  “Your vigilance does you credit,” said Irzaris, with only the faintest hint of irritation in his black eyes. He had never stopped trying to get Caina and Claudia alone. He turned to Claudia. “What do you think of the forest?”

  Claudia looked away. “I suppose the trees are large.”

  “Truly,” said Irzaris. “Men come from all nations to marvel at the great redwoods.”

  “Why haven’t they been cut down?” said Caina. “Surely such fine wood would fetch a high price.”

  Irzaris shrugged. “A dozen different cities claim this forest for their own, but I fear the real reason is mere superstition. Men say that spirits guard the forest, and will rise in wrath should any man assail the trees.”

  “I’ve heard Ulkaari men say that demons haunt their forests,” said Corvalis.

  “And I had have heard the most dreadful tales from Szaldic slaves,” said Caina, “of a terrible sorceress called the Moroaica.”

  Irzaris laughed. “Simple superstition, my dear. You mustn’t let the idle words of illiterate slaves trouble you. There’s no such thing as the Moroaica or demons.”

  Caina caught Corvalis’s eyes and saw the amusement there. Baiting Irzaris had become something of a game between them.

  “I am glad, sir,” said Caina, “that you travel with us. It indeed makes me feel better.”

  “Good,” said Irzaris, looking at Claudia. “Would you like to take a ride into the trees, my dear? Some of them are truly magnificent.”

  Claudia frowned. “I would fear robbers.”

  “Did not your sister say she feels safer at my side?” said Irzaris. “There would be no danger.” He kissed her hand and lowered his voice. “I would please me greatly to show you a…most magnificent tree.”

  Claudia’s face crinkled in disgust.

  “Sister,” said Caina. “We must have lunch with Father. Do you not remember? He is taking his midday meal with Lord Titus, and Father bade us to join him.” She paused. “And I hear Lord Titus has unwed sons.”

  Claudia shot her a grateful look.

  “Ah. Perhaps later, then,” said Irzaris.

  “It is a pity,” said Caina. “My sister said she was so looking forward to seeing the trees.”

  Claudia’s grateful look turned just short of murderous.

  “Mistress,” said Corvalis, “your father will be wroth if you are late.”

  “Yes. Good day, Master Khaltep,” said Claudia, striding away. Caina and Corvalis followed them, and Irzaris turned his attention to his wagons.

  Once they were out of earshot, both Caina and Corvalis started laughing.

  Claudia whirled to face them. “What the devil do you find so amusing?”

  “Irzaris,” said Caina.

  “The man is a fool,” said Corvalis.

  “Actually, I think he’s clever,” said Caina. “He’s been trying to worm his way into Claudia’s blankets for three days…and he’s never once mentioned the weapon of the Masked Ones.”

  “And,” said Corvalis, “he’s never said who is buying that red steel of his.”

  Claudia’s frown deepened. “Then he knows what the weapon is?”

  “Probably,” said Caina. “But he won’t tell us. It wouldn’t surprise me if those Catekhari soldiers report to the Masked Ones, not to him. He won’t boast of his secrets, not even to impress a merchant’s daughter he wishes to bed.”

  Claudia’s scowl returned. “The temerity of the man! I was a magus, a daughter of the First Magus himself, and of noble birth. And he thinks to seduce me like some common tavern wench!”

  “But he doesn’t know any of that, does he?” said Caina. “To him, you’re simply Irene Callenius, the daughter of a particularly successful merchant. Preferably a daughter with a large dowry…but if he can lure you into his tent for a night, well, that would also be to his liking.”

  “I know that,” snapped Claudia. “I am not a complete fool! Do you and Master Basil expect me to seduce him and discover his secrets?”

  Caina shrugged. “Only if you wish. And I doubt he’s that foolish.” She thought of Alastair Corus. “That can have…consequences.”

  “I suppose you would know, wouldn’t you?” said Claudia. “Given how you lured Corvalis into your blankets. And gods knows how many others over the years.”

  Caina felt her face go blank.

  “Sister,” said Corvalis at last.

  “I’m sorry,” said Claudia, blinking. “That was…that was rude, Marina. You saved me from the stone, and…and forgive me. I am overwrought. It’s…this place, the stink of all these unwashed men, and that toad Irzaris drooling over me…” She shook her head. “When I was part of the Magisterium, I wanted to use my powers to help people. I joined the Ghosts to do as you did, to save people like you saved us.” She scowled. “Instead we have been walking for days, and I have to endure the odious attentions of that money-grubbing lecher.”

  Caina shrugged. “We’re spies. This is what we do. You want to help people? Sometimes the right secret taken from the right man can save thousands of lives.”

  “Yes,” said Claudia. “Excuse me. I think I shall ride in the wagon for a while.”

  She walked off, rejoining the rest of the column, and for a moment Caina stood alone with Corvalis in the patches of light and shadow below the vast branches.

  “Do not mind her,” said Corvalis. “Before Ranarius, she had never left Artifel. She’s not like us. She hasn’t had training in disguise or stealth…”

  “I know,” said Caina, not looking at him. “Do you think she’s right?”

  “About what?”

  “That,” said Caina, “I seduced you for the Ghosts?”

  Corvalis barked his harsh laugh.

  “What?” said Caina.

  “I am a
penniless former Kindred assassin,” said Corvalis, “and the Kindred want me dead. My father is one of the most powerful men in the Empire, and he also wants me dead.” He smiled. “If you are trying to seduce me for personal gain, you’re doing it wrong.”

  Despite herself, Caina laughed.

  “Come,” said Corvalis. “Let us rejoin the others. If we disappear for too long, there will be talk.”

  Caina grinned. “That would only strengthen our disguise.”

  “Did I say it would be a bad thing?”

  They rejoined the column.

  ###

  Two days later they left the Red Forest and entered hilly country dotted by pine trees, and Caina developed a headache.

  Her skin crawled, and she felt the tingling of arcane force. For an instant she wondered if Claudia had cast a spell over her. But it was too faint for that. It reminded Caina of the mighty spell Kalastus had cast over Rasadda, of the awesome forces the magus had wielded.

  She was sensing distant sorcery.

  Powerful, distant sorcery.

  “We have almost reached Catekharon,” announced Irzaris. The Catekhari merchant walked at the head of the column with Lord Titus and Halfdan. The merchant’s easy manner had ingratiated him to Lord Titus, and the two had become friends.

  It was just as well. Caina doubted Claudia could have handled Irzaris’s attentions with good grace for much longer.

  “Splendid,” said Titus. “A good bed would be welcome. And I must present the Emperor’s message to the Masked Ones.”

  Irzaris smiled. “My lord, have you never been to Catekharon before?”

  “I fear not, master merchant,” said Titus. “To my knowledge, no lord of the Empire has ever crossed its gates. You Catekhari are not sociable folk. But I have visited the other free cities, and so the Emperor chose me as his Lord Ambassador.”

  Irzaris grinned. “Then you are in for a splendid sight.”

  Caina took a step forward, blinked, and shook her head.

  “Are you all right, mistress?” said Corvalis, stepping closer.

  “I’m…fine,” said Caina, shaking her head again. The tingling had gotten worse, and her temples throbbed. “Just…I could use some water, that’s all.”

  The road rounded a curve of the hill, and the city of Catekharon came into sight below.

  Caina’s eyes widened, and exclamations went up from Lord Titus and his men.

  “Gods,” breathed Corvalis. “That lake…”

  “It’s called a caldera,” said Claudia, voice soft. “In ancient times, a volcanic mountain stood there. It exploded with enough force to destroy the mountain entirely…and the resultant crater became the lake.”

  “Just,” muttered Caina, “as Old Kyrace was destroyed.”

  A brilliant blue lake, perhaps four miles across, stretched below. An island filled the center of the lake, an enormous white tower rising from its heart. Stone terraces adorned the rest of the island, supporting elaborate palaces built of wood with peaked roofs, their walls carved with intricate figures. A dozen different bridges connected the island to the ring-shaped shore. A wall of white stone, its face adorned with sigils of gleaming silver, encircled the lake, and between the wall and the shore stood a city, a hodgepodge of houses and temples and warehouses and tenements built in the architectural styles of every nation upon earth.

  “Behold Catekharon,” said Irzaris, “the City of the Artificers.”

  A strange cherry-red glow rose from the ring of the city and the bridges connecting it to the island in the crater lake.

  Halfdan frowned. “Is the city on fire?”

  “Only in a sense,” said Irzaris. “Look closer.”

  Caina felt her eyes grow wider.

  The bridges were actually aqueducts connecting to the central island, joining in a series of concentric rings running through the outer city. But water did not flow through those aqueducts and canals.

  Molten steel, glowing white-hot, filled the channels.

  Rivers of liquid steel encircled the City of the Artificers.

  Chapter 6 - The City of the Artificers

  Caina gazed at the molten steel flowing through the canals.

  If the Masked Ones possessed the power to do that…then perhaps their claim of a mighty weapon was no bluff.

  “How is that even possible?” said Lord Titus, wonder in his voice. “Surely all the coal in the world, burned at once, could not melt that much steel. And keep it liquid, for that matter.”

  Irzaris shrugged. “I am no sorcerer, my lord. But from what I understand, a great spirit of fire was once imprisoned below the volcano. Its rage destroyed the mountain, and when the Scholae fled here after the fall of the Kingdom of the Rising Sun, they discovered the spirit sleeping below the lake. They bound it to fuel their sorceries.”

  Caina shared a dismayed look with Corvalis and Claudia.

  If Irzaris was right, that meant the Masked Ones had bound a greater fire elemental. Ranarius had tried to awaken the greater earth elemental within the Stone of Cyrioch, and if he had been successful, he would have destroyed the city and killed countless thousands. And centuries ago, the stormsingers of Old Kyrace had bound a greater fire elemental beneath their island.

  The breaking of that binding had been the destruction of Old Kyrace.

  “I fear this is where we part ways, my lord,” said Irzaris. “My warehouse is on the western end of the city, and it is easier to steer wagons outside the walls than within.”

  Titus offered a gracious nod. “Farewell, Master Khaltep. If you ever travel to the Empire, seek me out. I may have a use for a man of your talents.”

  Irzaris bowed again, and his wagons and Catekhari guards broke off from Lord Titus’s column and circled around the city. The Imperial Guards continued towards the eastern gates of Catekharon, the golden eagle of the Emperor flying on its purple banner overhead.

  A wave of dizziness went through Caina, the prickling getting worse with every step.

  “Are you all right?” said Corvalis.

  “Probably not,” said Caina, and pulled herself into the seat of Halfdan’s wagon. Saddiq and his tribesmen followed the wagon, staring at the city and the huge white tower with wide eyes. Caina could not blame them. The tower rising from the island dwarfed even the Palace of Splendors in Cyrioch.

  “Well?” said Halfdan, voice low.

  “There’s power inside the city,” said Caina. “Unlike anything I’ve ever felt. Stronger than Maglarion, stronger than Kalastus.” She swallowed. “Even stronger than Jadriga, I think.”

  “You heard,” said Halfdan, “Irzaris’s story about the fire spirit?”

  “Aye,” said Caina. “Ranarius thought he could harness the earth elemental, but I think the Masked Ones actually did it. And if they have the power to do that…then they truly could create a weapon to conquer the world.”

  Halfdan nodded. “Can you cope? I know the presence of sorcery…affects you, for want of a better word.”

  “I’ll manage,” said Caina.

  “Good,” said Halfdan. “Walk with Claudia. I’d like the two of you to watch the city and tell me what you learn. Try not to kill her if you can avoid it.”

  “Do accidents count?” said Caina.

  Halfdan raised an eyebrow.

  Caina nodded. “As you wish.” She pushed off the seat, caught her balance, and circled past Saddiq and his mercenaries. Claudia walked at the side of the road, gazing at the city’s white walls with Corvalis.

  “What do you think?” said Caina.

  “Defensible,” said Corvalis. “Those walls are solid, and with that lake in the crater they’ll have all the water they’ll ever need.”

  Claudia laughed, her voice a little wild. “Those walls are an affectation. The Scholae doesn’t need them.” She waved her hand, and Caina felt the faint prickle as Claudia worked the spell to sense sorcery. “They have the kind of power that could sweep an army from the field like dust. Those sigils upon the walls? Warding spells.
When activated, those walls would be impervious to any physical or sorcerous attack.” She shivered. “And that is only a defensive spell. I cannot imagine…I cannot image what their sorcery would do if they wielded it for attack.” Again she shivered. “I thought…I thought I knew what power was. Our father had it. The high magi of the Magisterium had it. But this…this is power.”

  Her tone was horrified, but Caina saw an intrigued light in her eyes. Like a child enraptured by a fire, right before he burned his hand.

  “Think of all the good the Masked Ones could do with that power,” said Claudia.

  “Yes,” said Caina. “Like creating a terrible weapon to sell to the highest bidder.”

  Claudia blinked, and the strange look faded from her eyes.

  “Come on,” said Caina. “Let’s see what kind of men would create such a weapon.”

  ###

  Lord Titus rode through the great gate of white stone, flanked by his Imperial Guards. A large open square stood on the other side of the gate, ringed by a curious mixture of buildings. Caina saw an inn built in the Nighmarian style, a whitewashed Cyrican townhouse, a Kyracian ziggurat, and a score of other buildings. Yet many of them looked dilapidated or abandoned.

  Caina guessed that many people came to Catekharon in hopes of learning or profiting from the Masked Ones only to be disappointed.

  Lord Titus reined up his horse, and his bodyguard and Imperial Guards spread around him, an array of pomp and splendor and power.

  A single man in a robe of white linen awaited them.

  For an alarmed instant Caina thought the Masked One she and Corvalis had killed in Cyrioch had returned. The robed man wore the same jade mask and carried the same silvery rod. Yet this man was fatter and taller. And Caina saw the pattern of hieroglyphics upon the mask was different.

  “Titus, Lord of House Iconias!” boomed Titus’s herald in High Nighmarian. “As the Lord Ambassador of the Emperor Alexius of House Naerius, he comes to treat in the Emperor’s name with the Scholae of Catekharon!”

  The masked figure in the linen robe stepped forward, and Caina felt the power in his mask and rod.

 

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