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Seeds of Betrayal: Book 2 of the Winds of the Forelands Tetralogy

Page 58

by DAVID B. COE

When he spoke again, he surprised her, as much with his words as the gentle tone of his voice. “I can see why Paegar loved you.”

  Her face grew hot.

  “You do know that he did.”

  “Yes, Weaver.”

  “But you still loved your king.”

  She nodded, feeling fear rising in her throat. Had he found some way to read her thoughts without her consent?

  “Those whom I hurt as I did you usually relent before I have to resort to pain a second time. That you continue to resist speaks well of your courage if not your sense.”

  “Thank you, Weaver.”

  “While I wouldn’t go so far as to say that I need you, I will admit that winning the loyalties of Eibithar’s archminister would be a great boon for the Qirsi movement. For that reason, I’ll give you time to reconsider your decision to refuse me. I’ll come to you again a few nights hence, at which point you will open yourself to me or die. I’m afraid there are no other choices. I have given you gold and I have revealed myself to you. Even granting you this small grace, I risk all. But I’m hopeful that with such a gesture I can convince you to trust me.”

  Keziah nearly laughed aloud. You’re threatening to kill me, she wanted to say. And this is supposed to make me trust you?

  Instead she lowered her gaze and said, “Thank you, Weaver.”

  He nodded once. “We’ll speak again soon.”

  Keziah opened her eyes to find herself lying in bed, her sleeping gown, bed linens, and hair soaked with sweat. She sat up and felt her room lurch, as if from an earth tremor. For several moments she held herself utterly still, gritting her teeth against the bile rising from her gut. Then, surrendering, she rushed across her room to her chamber pot and vomited until her stomach was empty and her throat ached.

  She washed her mouth and face with frigid water and sank to the hard floor, tears coursing down her face again.

  More than anything, she wanted to go to Kearney, to confess all and seek comfort in the warmth of his arms. The king couldn’t protect her, of course. Not from this enemy. Neither could Gershon, though she knew that she should go to the swordmaster and tell him of the Weaver. Keziah had felt the power of the man’s magic—there wasn’t an Eandi noble in all the Forelands who could stand against him. Few Qirsi could either. Certainly she couldn’t save herself.

  In her foolishness and her arrogance she had thought to defeat the conspiracy on her own. She felt like a general who leads an army to battle, only to find himself overwhelmed by the strength of his foe. True, there weren’t thousands of lives to be lost here, at least not yet. There were only two. Her own and Grinsa’s. But it might as well have been all the soldiers of the seven realms. For she was certain that if anyone could defeat this Weaver, it was her brother. And she feared that before long, the Weaver would know this as well.

  Chapter Thirty-one

  Mertesse, Aneira

  Their first few days in Mertesse had been no better than their conflict-ridden journey north from Dantrielle. Despite the understanding Dario thought they had reached during the night they spent at the inn just outside the northern city, Cadel remained a difficult business partner, finding fault with nearly everything Dario did, not only musically, but also with respect to their other profession.

  The lutenist thought he understood the cause of Cadel’s dark moods. They still had not learned the name of the Qirsi they were to kill, they knew nothing of his powers, and they couldn’t even be certain that he intended to return to Mertesse with the duke’s company. Dario could not deny being on edge as well, and he wasn’t the one who would have to kill the sorcerer when the time came. This had to be far worse for Cadel. Still, that didn’t excuse the man for treating him this way. Young as he was, Dario was no child. There wasn’t a lutenist north of Noltierre who could play with him, and while he might not have been killing for hire as long as Cadel or for as much gold, he knew how to use a blade and defend himself in a fight. Hearing how the singer picked at him, one might think that he was still apprenticing.

  They did manage to get a job playing in the west quarter of the city, just a short distance from the marketplace. The tavern, called the Swallow’s Nest, bore a disturbing resemblance to Dantrielle’s Red Boar, though the clientele seemed a bit more respectable. They were paid six qinde for each night they played and given a room and all their food for free. They had to pay for their ales, but neither of them drank much. All in all, the arrangement suited them well. It was a job, and getting it should have pleased Cadel.

  Instead, it just made matters worse. Now that they had committed themselves to nightly performances, he grew even more critical of Dario’s playing, until the lutenist began to wonder if any amount of gold could justify remaining with the man.

  Cadel’s mood finally changed for the better on the Night of Two Moons, though Dario couldn’t really say why. The duke’s company had not yet returned, and though their performance of The Paean to the Moons went quite well that night, the crowd was no better than any other.

  When they returned to their room late that night, Dario asked Cadel why he seemed so pleased. The singer merely smiled mysteriously and said, “The wisdom of the moons, boy. At times the legends are worth more to men like us than Uulranni blades.”

  No doubt Dario should have tried to think through what the man meant, but he was so angry at being called “boy” that he barely heard the rest of what Cadel said.

  Four days later, the duke finally returned to Mertesse. Few saw him enter the city. Coming north from Solkara, he entered the castle through the south gate, without passing through the city’s marketplace. Word of his return spread quickly, however, as did rumors of the grave condition of his first minister.

  The following morning, Cadel and Dario ventured into the city streets and, choosing a prominent spot among the peddlers’ carts began to play. Dario did not like playing his lute outside, particularly with the air so cold, but he knew that Cadel had reasons for asking him to do so. They told the innkeeper at the Swallow’s Nest that they were hoping to draw more customers to the tavern by giving the city folk a taste of their music. In reality, Cadel hoped to draw some of the castle guards into conversation between songs.

  It worked. The first minister, one soldier told them, was not nearly as ill as some believed. She had suffered greatly from the poisoning and had slowed the company’s return to Mertesse, but she would live and she continued to serve the duke.

  “I had heard the duke has a new minister,” Cadel said casually as Dario pretended to tune his lute yet again.

  The guard shook his head. “The traitor you mean? No. The duke would never stoop to making him a minister, not even a lesser one.”

  The traitor! Dario forced himself to keep his eyes on the instrument in his hands.

  “Why do you call him the traitor?”

  “You don’t know?” the guard said, obviously pleased to be the bearer of such fascinating news. “You must not be from here. Caerissan aren’t you?”

  Cadel smiled, though Dario could see that it was forced.

  “Yes, I am.”

  “Thought so. I can pick any accent in the Forelands. Not just realms mind you. But even cities. I’d guess you’re from Jetaya.”

  “Very good. That’s quite close.”

  Actually, Cadel had once told Dario that he came from the Adlana dukedom, which was more than fifty leagues south of Jetaya, but if he didn’t care to correct the man, Dario certainly wouldn’t.

  “The traitor?” Cadel prompted after a brief silence.

  “Oh, right. He used to be first minister in Kentigern. They say he betrayed his duke during the siege and was given asylum here.”

  “And he lives in the castle?”

  “He lives in the first minister’s quarters,” the man said with a wink. “If you get my meaning.”

  The singer gave the same thin smile and nodded. “I once met a minister in Kentigern. I performed there many years ago. Perhaps it’s the same man. I believe his name was
Bekthad jal Pors.”

  The guard shook his head. “No. I think this one’s called Shurik jal…something. Those white-hair names give me trouble.”

  “Oh, well. It was worth a try.” He glanced at Dario. “Are you tuned yet?”

  The lutenist began to play another song, and eventually the guards moved off.

  Shortly after, Dario and Cadel returned to the tavern. For the first time since their initial encounter in Dantrielle, the older man seemed truly pleased.

  “I’m impressed,” Dario told him over their midday meal. “That guard would have told you even more if you’d given him the chance.”

  “Probably,” Cadel agreed. “He certainly would have kept talking. I’m not sure we would have been interested in anything else he had to say.”

  “So now we know where to find this Qirsi. How do we kill him?”

  Cadel gave him the same mysterious grin he had offered on the Night of Two Moons. “We wait.”

  “For what?”

  “Don’t you know the moon legends?”

  Dario shrugged. “Some of them. To tell you the truth, half the time I don’t even know which turn we’re in.”

  “Well, you should.”

  The lutenist cursed himself for his honesty. No doubt Cadel would see it as another occasion to lecture him.

  “An assassin uses every weapon he can,” Cadel said, “every scrap of information. What turn is this?”

  Dario thought a moment. “Qirsar’s.”

  “And what do the legends say about Qirsar’s Moon?”

  He shrugged. “I guess something about the Qirsi.”

  “Something about the Qirsi,” Cadel repeated, shaking his head. “Yes, they say something about the Qirsi. On the Night of Two Moons, a Qirsi’s magic is more powerful than on any other night of the year. And what about on Pitch Night?”

  It came to him in a rush. For all Cadel’s bluster, in this instance, there could be no arguing with him. Dario should have remembered. It was brilliant.

  “On Pitch Night in Qirsar’s Moon,” he answered, so excited he barely managed to keep his voice low, “a Qirsi has no power at all.”

  Cadel nodded, sitting back in his chair. “Very good. Very good, indeed.”

  “We have more than half the waning to wait,” Dario said.

  “That’s all right. We still have some planning to do. I doubt our friend will be venturing far from the castle, especially on that night. We’ll spend our evenings singing and our days preparing for Pitch Night.”

  The lutenist nodded. It seemed a sensible plan.

  That night, however, the Swallow’s Nest was so crowded the two musicians had almost no room to perform. The innkeeper said he had never seen so many people in his tavern and he credited his success to the daytime performance they had given in the streets of Mertesse. He offered to raise their nightly wage to seven qinde, provided they agreed to return to the marketplace each day. Posing as wandering musicians, they could hardly refuse.

  The day following his ill-fated attempt to speak with Keziah was quite possibly the longest of Grinsa’s life. Of course he intended to reach for his sister again that evening, and the wait for nightfall nearly drove him to madness. Consumed by his fear and frustration, he set a punishing pace throughout the day, which Tavis managed somehow to match. They encountered no Solkaran soldiers and covered several leagues, stopping for the evening near a village that Grinsa knew to be only a day’s walk from the northern edge of the Great Forest. If they continued to evade the royal guard, they would be in Mertesse in another four or five days.

  Their meal consisted of roots and berries once again. Tavis grumbled about it, but Grinsa hardly noticed. He wasn’t hungry and he had little to say to the boy. He just stared to the east, waiting for the moons to rise. After some time, Tavis lay down to sleep offering a curt “Goodnight.”

  Grinsa marked Panya’s progress through the sky with an anxious eye, but it was Ilias he awaited. As soon as he saw the red moon top the trees, he closed his eyes and reached for Keziah.

  Upon entering her dreams, he turned a full circle, scanning the plain for any sign of the dark sky he had seen the night before. Seeing none, he felt something loosen in his chest.

  “Kezi?” he called.

  She came into view an instant later, walking quickly toward him, her face as white as new snow, dark purple lines under her yellow eyes. Reaching him, she fell against his chest, sobbing like a hurt child so that her whole body shook. Grinsa merely held her, stroking her soft hair.

  After a long time, she stepped back, wiping her tears, though more still flowed down her cheeks.

  “Tell me,” he said.

  Swallowing, she looked away for a moment, as if she didn’t want to talk at all. Once more, he was reminded of how she had looked as a young girl.

  At last she began to speak, telling him first of Paegar and their friendship, and then of his death and the gold she found in his chambers. By the time she started to explain her idea for attracting the notice of the conspiracy, Grinsa understood everything he needed to know. At least he thought he did.

  “I find it hard to believe that Kearney allowed you to do this,” he said, not bothering to mask his anger.

  “Kearney doesn’t know.”

  Then, finally, he truly grasped all that she had endured. “Oh, Kezi,” he breathed. “I’m so sorry. There’s no one you can tell? Not even one of the other ministers.”

  “I’ve told Gershon everything, but no one else.”

  “Gershon?” he repeated. His expression must have been comical, because she smiled through her tears.

  “Yes. He’s actually been quite kind to me.”

  “He shouldn’t have let you do this. He should have known how dangerous it would be.”

  It was the type of statement that would have drawn an argument from her a few turns before. This night, she only gave a small shrug. “Neither of us knew there would be a Weaver.”

  Grinsa hadn’t thought of it either. It wasn’t his place to fault his sister or the swordmaster.

  “I felt what he did to you,” he said. “Are you all right?”

  “I am for now. That was the only time he hurt me.”

  “Did you finally do what he wanted?”

  Her tears started to fall again. “Of course not. How could I? As soon as I open my mind to him he’ll kill me. He’ll know about you, he’ll realize that I’ve been deceiving him.” She shook her head. “Had I known that I’d be contacted by a Weaver, I never would have tried this.”

  “So end it now.” But as soon as Grinsa spoke the words, he knew that it would do no good.

  “Ending it does nothing, Grinsa. You of all people should know that. He knows who I am and how to find me. He told me he’d return in a few days and that when he did I’d have to open myself to him or he’d kill me.” She faltered, looking away briefly. “Can he really do that? Can a Weaver kill someone through their dreams?”

  He would have liked to lie to her, to put her mind at ease, but it would only have made matters worse, and she would have sensed that he was hiding the truth.

  “Yes,” he told her. “He can kill you, just as he hurt you last night.”

  “So what can I do? How do I deceive a Weaver?”

  “I don’t know,” he said gently. “I’ve never had to try. I suppose you have to find a way to keep some of your thoughts from him while making him believe that your mind is completely open to him.”

  “But how? Is my mind open to you right now?”

  “No. But I’ve never wanted it to be. I’m content to speak with you, and learn from you what you want me to know.”

  She raked a rigid hand through her hair. “I’m dead,” she whispered.

  “No, you’re not. You’re stronger than you think. You need only find your strength.”

  Keziah gave a small nod, but she wouldn’t look him in the eye.

  “Did you learn anything about the Weaver?” he asked. “His name, perhaps, or where he lives?”


  “I learned nothing. He kept himself in darkness and summoned a bright light from behind. I couldn’t see anything.”

  “I saw that he had darkened the sky, and I thought I saw something glowing at its center.”

  “How is that possible?” she asked, frowning. “The Weaver saw nothing of the sky you created. I did, but he didn’t.”

  “You’re certain?”

  She nodded, then appeared to shiver. “He would have said something.”

  “Interesting,” he said, allowing himself a small grin.

  “Why are you smiling like that?”

  “Last night, as I was walking toward you in the dream, I almost thought I could hear you calling to me, telling me to leave you.”

  “I was, but you wouldn’t listen.”

  “I know. I should have. I’m sorry.” He narrowed his eyes. “Did the Weaver hear those thoughts? Did he know I was there?”

  “Of course not.”

  “Then there’s your answer.”

  Keziah blinked. “I don’t understand.”

  “You already know how to hide your thoughts from a Weaver. You allowed me to see what you were seeing, to hear and feel all that was going on in your dream, without revealing me to the Weaver.”

  “But my mind was closed to him.”

  “Not entirely, not enough to keep him from your dreams. The words ‘opening your mind’ offer an image, nothing more. There’s no door in your head that keeps one set of thoughts separate from another. Opening your mind simply means allowing him to read all your thoughts rather than some of them. The secret lies in showing him what you need to while making him believe that there’s nothing more.”

  “I don’t know if I can do that.”

  “You did it last night.”

  “Maybe, but I don’t know how.”

  He reached out a hand to brush the hair back from her brow. “Somewhere inside, you do. You have to find that knowledge, Kezi, and you have to trust your power. If I could do this for you I would. You know that. But this is your burden. You chose to carry it, and now you have to live with that decision.” Or die with it. Grinsa didn’t say it. He didn’t have to.

 

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