A Path to Coldness of Heart tlcotde-3

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A Path to Coldness of Heart tlcotde-3 Page 38

by Glen Cook


  It was the season to indulge in a psychotic level of caution.

  He brought the winged horse to earth near the pool. The donkeys stil carried their travel packs, the horses their saddles. The kil er had become too entranced to take care.

  He did not ease their burdens himself, though it would have taken but a moment to have the Windmjirnerhorn deliver fodder and grooms of a golem kind. The idea never occurred.

  Obviously, the kil er had been taken by the tower. No mystery, that.

  A conjured haunting, crocheted from true, wicked ghosts captured and constrained to carry out targeted missions, could endure indefinitely. Numerous such infested the world, many this same devil’s handiwork, abandoned in place once he finished using them.

  The old being looked at that ruin, then at his mount. Not a long walk but a walk nevertheless. So much easier just to drop in from above.

  Easier. But a stubborn beast made the walk a must. Was there a real threat? Come to think, the original setup made its victim circle the tower several times before the entrance revealed itself. Was the animal just being difficult? Why start at this late date?

  He walked. His patience did not last. After one circuit, with his soles and legs aching, he settled onto a boulder and fingered valves on the Windmjirnerhorn while trying to think how best to avoid further exercise.

  He spied the dark gap of the entrance, groaned. So. He had to go on in like a regular victim.

  He got up. He limped. He ached. How much longer must he endure before his parole final y came through?

  Chapter Twenty-Seven:

  Winter, Year 1018 AFE:

  Spiraling In

  "I didn’t get much sleep last night,” Ragnarson announced. “My own fault. I wanted to catch up on the real story around here.” He sat at the same table he had used for smal conferences before he went out east. Inger used it for her own meetings. This morning’s gathering was the biggest there since soon after Ragnarson’s disappearance. The Queen and her main henchmen were present. So were Aral Dantice, Michael Trebilcock, Ozora Mundwil er, and Kristen Gjerdrumsdottir. The tension was less than expected despite Bragi’s prior assertion that the meeting would continue til he was satisfied that their conflicts had been resolved.

  He tipped a thumb at a corner. Fulk and the younger Bragi were playing with blocks brought in by Babeltausque’s girlfriend. The children had no trouble getting along—though Carrie al owed them no opportunity to test anyone’s patience.

  The newcomers had no interest in the girlfriend. She was furniture, easy to look at but otherwise just there. The Queen’s faction, though, considered her an amazement.

  Carrie Depar was much more than an opportunistic baby hooker. Babeltausque enjoyed their reluctant admiration for his pretty.

  There was, however, almost a clang of meeting steel when he crossed gazes with Michael Trebilcock.

  Trebilcock felt Babeltausque’s attraction to Haida Heltkler.

  He did not want Haida abused any more than she had been already.

  There was quiet lethality in looks Josiah Gales laid on Michael Trebilcock, too. Gales knew the likely source of the maladies he suffered because of his captivity.

  Similar looks ran Aral’s way from Babeltausque. He was sure that the men who tried to kil him had been sent by Dantice—if not that ironhearted old Mundwil er woman, whose accent, when she spoke at al , exactly matched that of the would-be kil ers.

  Kristen and Inger, too, often exchanged less than loving looks. Ragnarson knew he had to keep al those conflicts subdued. He dared show neither favoritism nor tolerance.

  Like that kid wrangling the boys. She tolerated nothing. She had paddled Fulk for launching a sulk, crushing it before it became a tantrum. Fulk had been stunned. Usual y he got away with everything because he was sickly.

  “So I’m tired,” Ragnarson said. “With me that means impatient and cranky, too, so let’s see if we can’t get through this and start looking toward tomorrow. By which I mean Kavelin’s tomorrow, not yours or mine or the literal morning after.”

  None of these people, nor anyone in town for the Thingmeet, had yet chal enged his right to strol in and take over—though as yet he had garnered not one royal honorific.

  “This may be faint praise, Inger,” he said. “But I think you did as wel as you could once you worked up the gumption to arrest Dane. I hear of no harm done since then.” People stirred uncomfortably. Ozora Mundwil er had a thought but chose to reserve it.

  “Kristen, you slipping away after Colonel Abaca passed looks like the best thing you could have done, too. You being away and Inger arresting the Duke let the Marena Dimura back off and just posture while they took advantage of the summer.”

  There had been a change, down in the bedrock of Ragnarson’s soul, more profound than he knew. It had quickened when he stepped through the barrier separating the hidden temple from the kingdom that had conquered his heart so long ago.

  His rage at what Kavelin had cost him had evaporated. He was indifferent to the chance that the cannibal state would keep feeding on his heart and soul. “I hear talk about a Kavelin disease. I’m a true sufferer. And it infected you al once the Duke was out of the way. Not so?” Babeltausque said, “The catalyst was a child named Phyletia Plens. None of us ever met Phyletia but her death touched us way more than the Duke’s removal did. It gave us a whole new perspective, maybe because it was inconsequential in a strategic or statistical sense. It shouldn’t have influenced us. Children die. But sometimes something is so ugly that it grabs you by the throat and won’t let go. It jerks you around til your whole life looks different.”

  Inger, Josiah Gales, and Nathan Wolf bobbed their heads in agreement, Wolf and Inger slightly red.

  Ragnarson conceded, “That was one of the darker situations I ever heard of, and I saw some pretty disgusting stuff when I was young.”

  “What wormed into us wasn’t just the crime’s ugliness but the triviality of what drove that priest.” The sorcerer stumbled, his throat tightening. Ragnarson caught the subtle encouragement the Depar girl flashed him as wel as the suspicion implicit in the arch of Michael’s eyebrows. Babeltausque’s secret reputation might not quite fit the actuality but, clearly, even the sorcerer himself feared that it could.

  Ragnarson said, “The year is almost over. I want its conflicts and bad feelings put behind. I want us to put our heads together and come up with something we can take to the Thing.”

  Ozora Mundwil er grumbled, “And quickly. Delegates already think the Thingmeet is just a device Inger can use to get some money coming into Vorgreberg.”

  Ragnarson nodded. “My mother said that no good deed goes unpunished. For sure no good deed is seen that way by everybody. You can be a saint who is cal ed a saint of al saints by the saints themselves and somebody wil be convinced that you’re up to no good.”

  “That would be a somebody who can’t live with himself.” Josiah Gales, looking like he had fal en asleep, chin on his chest, added, “Those with wicked hearts make their claims to divert attention from the reek of evil coming off of them.” Silence fol owed. Everyone eyed the Colonel. Ragnarson figured he was paraphrasing somebody. Gales did not go on, nor did he give credit.

  Michael said, “That’s true. But it doesn’t matter. That kind aren’t a problem now and they won’t be if they’re given no fuel for the fires they want to set.”

  “We’l find a way.”

  Everyone looked at Ragnarson. That made no sense. He added, “You wanted to engineer unity by showing off a transfer gate.” He looked at his wife. “A good idea, only some Nordmen obstructionist wil claim that it was left over from the occupation or when Mist was here.” Gales said, “That point did not elude us. It wouldn’t stand up, though. Everyone knows that Varthlokkur has been underfoot. The Unborn has been around a lot, too, and easterners have been seen by people definitely not part of our cabal.”

  Nathan Wolf offered his first comment. “Most people want an excuse to get along. Today’s di
visions mostly start right here, with us.”

  Gales grunted agreement. The sorcerer did the same.

  Ragnarson said, “You’re right.” He waited. Nobody else had a comment. He looked Inger in the eye. She looked back without flinching.

  Memories were in the air, not al nostalgic. Sherilee was on both their minds. Ragnarson did understand that his liaison had hurt Inger.

  He had not thought that way before. He got caught in the moment… Which was not unusual. People did not think ahead and did not worry about consequences. But now he had positioned himself so that thinking that way was expected. His role demanded it. Making bad personal choices promised bad choices made as a ruler—and had that not shown itself clearly in the east already?

  “Understand this. The Bragi Ragnarson you see here isn’t the Bragi Ragnarson who roared off through the Savernake Gap. That Bragi’s ordeal forged a better man—I hope.” Ozora Mundwil er proclaimed, “Here comes the part you won’t like.”

  Ragnarson scowled. She was not intimidated. He was half her age and a man besides. She had spent the night with him, observing, chiding, once threatening to paddle his behind if he kept on being immature.

  “The most excel ent lady from Sedlmayr is correct. This won’t be popular but it wil help you stop wondering about my relationship with Shinsan.”

  Inger said, “Do talk about that, husband. The Thing wil bring it up, I promise.”

  Everyone wondered how he and Michael could materialize so suddenly. Michael might have been close by al along, yes, but they al knew that he had not been.

  “Both… Varthlokkur and Shinsan have joined forces.

  Haroun bin Yousif and the Disciple are with them, too, believe it or not. They have combined to battle the world’s oldest fiend. The prospects don’t excite me but I may choose to get in on that, too.”

  Michael gestured a demand for quiet. “Yes. Him. The first step on that path is that we no longer mention him directly.

  We don’t name anything commonly associated with him, either. There are spel s floating around that warn him whenever people start talking about him.” Ragnarson said, “Michael may choose to participate, too.” Inger announced, “I don’t understand. Why?” The others nodded.

  Even the sorcerer’s girlfriend seemed curious.

  “I’m not sure I get it al myself. You’d need to be Mist or Varthlokkur to do that, I guess. It’s like the Kavelin disease, only for the whole wide world. On the surface it does seem like a good idea to get shot of the mind behind the world’s pain.”

  Michael volunteered, “We’re like soldiers on the line. We’re letting the generals do the fine thinking. Maybe we’l fight.

  They hope we wil . They’ve conveyed their reasoning. We can do our part without grasping the nuance. No one can make a case that this enemy is good for the world.” Ragnarson and Trebilcock understood a fraction of what Mist and Varthlokkur were up to—which was an order of magnitude more than anyone else did. The Star Rider was not just weather, he was weather that happened somewhere else. He was not real y real to most people.

  Ragnarson stipulated that. “I don’t expect conviction from you if we get caught up in this, just that you give us the benefit of the doubt during the struggle.” He sounded like he was leaning toward getting involved.

  Michael gave him no chance to clarify. “We’l probably participate because it wil require the combined efforts of a lot of people—most of whom spend their lives at each other’s throats because of him.”

  Ragnarson added, “If his victims gang up… It wouldn’t mean an end to conflict. I’m not naïve enough to think that.

  But persistent aberrations like Hammad al Nakir, grotesqueries like the Great Eastern Wars and Shinsan’s massively destructive conflicts with Matayanga and Escalon, that wil al be a lot less likely. That old vil ain won’t be shuffling from faction to faction, stirring the cauldron. He won’t be pushing Magden Norath and Greyfel s types in where things would stay peaceful otherwise.” Inger said, “You can only put some of what happened off on other people.”

  “Too true. I paid in pain, misery, and loss, and I’m stil paying.”

  Trebilcock said, “You meant to whip up support by making Shinsan a boogerman. Wel , Shinsan has been up to mischief involving Kavelin, but nothing wicked. The Empress wanted…” He could not explain just what Mist had in mind. That could be nostalgia at work instead of Kavelin being a cog in the machinery meant to silence the tyranny of the Star Rider. Her invisible engine remained perfectly hidden inside her own mind. Her progress toward assembling its parts remained obscure.

  Ragnarson thought he knew al the people and parts but he could not get them to sift down into a recognizable pattern.

  He did see that she had stripped the vil ain of resources—if you cal ed people he used resources, like timber and ore.

  Old Meddler must stil be whining about the loss of Magden Norath.

  “Bragi!”

  He started. Inger was barking. “What?”

  “You stopped talking in the middle of tel ing us how Shinsan has become our beloved friend. Where did you go?” Sarcasm? He had not seen that side of his wife before.

  “The land of confusion. Boggled by the awesome scope of my ignorance.” He paused, chose his words. “I don’t trust anybody much anymore. Not even me. Maybe especial y not me. But I do trust Mist, on this, as far as I trust anybody.” Michael grumbled, “You’re saying the same stuff over, pretty much.”

  “I’m out of practice saying things out loud.”

  “He was in solitary confinement.”

  “Hel , I wasn’t even conscious for a long time. Luck and a good turn I did earlier are the only reason my bones aren’t scattered across that hil side, too.”

  He went away again, to that day and the last angry hour of his embarrassment, when men ran at the critical instant, the moment when a touch of stubborn would have claimed the day. For half his captivity his purpose had been to get back here so he could inflict deep and abiding pain on those who had abandoned him.

  He was not over that yet. The rage remained but he had a harness on it now. It no longer obsessed him. And, he realized, he no longer recal ed exactly who he had scheduled for the headsman’s ax. Anger had become habit.

  Inger demanded his attention again. “You haven’t made clear what you hope to accomplish personal y, nor have you given us any convincing reason why we should put up with you trying to do it here.”

  There it was, on the table, not bluntly, but insistence that he make a case for his right to strol in and take charge.

  The suggestion that he had lost that right caught him on the wrong foot—despite his having spent months wanting to make war on his own people. But that had been a lust for draconian vengeance, not an assertion of a right to rule.

  Not even his enemies could argue that he was not king.

  Could they?

  He said it. “I am the King.”

  And Michael said, “There it is. The gauntlet thrown down, without forethought, in an unfavorable venue. Majesty.” The latter spoken with an edge.

  “Huh?”

  Oh.

  Babeltausque suddenly wore a bland, inane, innocent expression.

  Not good, that.

  Bragi had trotted right into a diminutive version of his disaster in the east. Once again he had moved without thinking, never real y considering the chance that these people would not accept him.

  Wel , yes, he had thought about it, some, but not seriously.

  He did have that blind spot. Why would they resist? He was the King.

  But it was clear that Inger’s men would resist if she wanted that. They could make this as unhappy a day as the one on that hil .

  Castle Krief ’s dungeon would not be as comfy as the Karkha Tower.

  Babeltausque, Gales, and Wolf awaited their cue from Inger. Even the babysitter seemed ready to act. And her potential was entirely unknown.

  Michael did not look ready to sacrifice himself. The other
s, Kristen included, showed little interest in anything but watching. Which was exceedingly irksome.

  He tried to remain calm. “I didn’t come here looking for a fight.”

  Inger said, “Of course you didn’t. It never occurred to you that anyone would do anything but jump when you barked.” He was perplexed. Maybe Inger was not articulating clearly.

  She continued, “I’l take a passive approach. I’l give you your head. A dole out the rope strategy. Wil you embarrass yourself?”

  She was less frightened and rattled than she had been.

  She had a plan. She would let him strangle himself. He had shown that he could.

  Would her thugs try to nudge him off the precipice?

  She said, “I paid attention back when I was your new bed bunny.”

  That hurt. He had not thought of her as a toy, ever. He never thought that about any woman he loved.

  He nearly broke a smile. Some of his lovers might not agree. Women saw things through different eyes.

  Inger said, “So I wil defer, publicly. I’l be the dutiful wife. I won’t make your road any rockier. I’l help where I can and I’l remain blind in the matter of that…girl. Your mistress.

  Purported.”

  Kristen hissed. There was no readiness to forgive in her.

  Inger said, “I had nothing to do with what happened.” Ragnarson nodded. “I know. I got to interview the assassin, courtesy of Varthlokkur and the Unborn.” Kristen hissed again.

  “I’ve made my peace with that, as much as I can.” He had made arrangements to bring Sherilee to Vorgreberg. She would lie not far from Fiana and Elana… Where their ghosts might meet?

  Inger’s henchmen were more relaxed now. Wolf seemed mildly disappointed.

  Inger said, “Let’s stay focused on the Thingmeet. You can explain Shinsan’s plans then.”

  “No. Mist wants to be remembered as the one who saved the world from its worst ever plague. We can’t just shout out and let him know it’s coming.”

  Babeltausque asked, “Wil her feelings be hurt if you don’t convince us?”

 

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