“You’re being very . . . generous,” she said, the doubt back in her voice.
“No, I’m not,” he said firmly. “I don’t want you to wake in the morning, thinking, well, at least that’s over.”
She blinked, because that very thought had just been going through her mind, “Don’t you want – ?”
“I do, but not as a reward for anything I have done, or as a means of avoiding other matters between us. I don’t want you to give me your body but not your spirit; flesh is sweet, but spirit is a treasure.” He saw her bristle. “When I am what you want, not something you accept instead of what you fear, then I will be overjoyed to spend the night – and the daytime – exploring your passions and my own together.” He took her hands in his, holding it without force. “But that time hasn’t come yet, and I’m prepared to wait.”
“What if the time never comes?”
“It will.”
She tossed her head. “That wasn’t what was bothering me,” she lied. “But it is good of you, whatever your motives.”
He shook his head and gave a single, rueful chuckle. “Yes. You aren’t ready.”
“Then what will happen tonight?” She held her breath as he answered, certain that anything he said would be important to them both.
“Tonight, we sleep. If you can’t sleep,” he said easily, “you can tell me about how you were as a child, about your life, about your dreams, and I’ll tell you how my father and I became alienated, and why I stay away from the Drowned World for long periods of time, singing songs and doing entertainments. You can tell me about your first Change, and I’ll tell you why my half-brother is a fool.”
“Why do you want to know these things? Why would you tell me about your life?” she asked.
Doms’ smile glinted. “Because that’s what people do when they’re falling in love.”
* * *
Rai Pareo was looking a bit green as he stumbled into Poyneilum Zhanf’s chamber, out of breath and disheveled. Gone was his courtly hauteur – his clothes were in disarray, and there was a scrape on his cheek that was dotted with blood. His respect was minimal, more habitual than courteous. He coughed, almost gagging, then visibly steadied himself. “Magsto Zhanf,” he said, his voice three notes higher than usual. “Magsto. You must – “
The afternoon sun filled the room with pale light, and the evening chill was already in the air making the chamber a bit too cold for comfort. Zhanf was busy with a revelation-spell, and held up a hand as signal for Pareo to wait while the last of the spell was completed. He finished the incantation, then made the required gestures, flicking a spark off the end of his fingers. As he saw the small poof of blue smoke arise from the cerements of the spell-mummy, he nodded his satisfaction and turned to Pareo. “What is it, Imperial Secretary?” His respect to Pareo was truncated, for he was alarmed by Pareo’s appearance.
“I’ve been out to the North Tower. I was looking for . . . nothing terribly important.” He seemed abashed. “It doesn’t matter.”
“Then why are you here?” Zhanf asked, wondering why Gaxamirin’s Secretary should be in that part of the Castle, and why he should look as if he had been in a fight. His suspicions mounted.
“I found something . . . Something . . . “ He sat down on the nearest chair as if his legs had failed him.
“Pareo, are you ill?” Zhanf asked.
“Shaken,” he answered. “Badly.”
Zhanf came toward him, his face carefully blank. “What has shaken you, Pareo?”
“What has happened?”
“I went into the North Tower,” Pareo said, and was silent again.
“Why were you there?” Zhanf asked, hoping to encourage Pareo to talk. “What were you doing?”
“I had something to check on,” Pareo said remotely. “It’s not important.”
“And what happened?” It was an effort not to goad him, but Zhanf saw that Pareo was profoundly distressed, and so he pressed no harder.
“Terrible.”
“Yes? What was terrible?” He put his hand on Pareo’s shoulder and was surprised to find the man was shaking. “Hoftstan Ruch will be here shortly. If you want to wait until he arrives – ”
Pareo began to laugh, the sound high and grating. He kept it up for about a hundred heartbeats, then went silent. “Skinned and quartered,” he muttered, his terror increasing.
“Someone was skinned and quartered?” Zhanf asked, appalled at such an idea. “In the North Tower?”
Pareo nodded repeatedly. “I found him. In pieces.”
“Who was it?” Zhanf demanded. “Whom did you find?”
It took Pareo a short time to summon up the courage to answer. “Ruch.”
Zhanf paled. “Hoftstan Ruch?”
Again Pareo nodded. “In pieces.” He retched, doubling over. “The blood was dry and turning very dark. The smell – ” He gagged at the memory. “May Zaythomaj, the Retributionist, serve the same to his murderer.”
Zhanf thought back to the last time he had seen Hoftstan. It had been the night before, while the spell-hounds were making their nightly round of the Castle, when they had had their usual evening meeting to review the events of the day. Hoftstan had said nothing then about visiting the North Tower. What had taken him there? He knew he should send for the Captain of the Night Guard, for Senijer ae-Miratdien ought to know something about this. “I want you to show me. At once.”
Pareo struggled to get to his feet. He was even more pale than when he had come into the room, and his hands were shaking. “I can’t go back in that tower, Magsto. I just can’t.”
“You won’t have to.” Zhanf took a small faceted mirror and thrust it into the depths of the sleeve of his gaihups. “Come. I need to see for myself what you have found.” He tugged at Pareo’s arm unapologetically. “Now. Before someone else finds it and the whole Castle gets into a uproar.”
Pareo tried to nod his agreement, but he lagged behind Zhanf, clearly reluctant to be drawn back to the hideous sight he had described. “I . . . I’d rather not.”
As Zhanf closed the door of his quarters behind them, he said, “This isn’t a matter you get to choose. You’re coming with me. And I will summon one of the guards to accompany us.”
“Why must I come with you?” Pareo was whining now, and so unlike his usual comportment that this commanded Zhanf’s attention.
“If a man has been brutally killed, I’d be a fool to go alone to the place where his body lies. I’ll bring a guard for protection, and you to answer any questions I may have. What if you are the one who killed him, and this is all a performance for my benefit? No? I need to see the place for myself, and if the spell-mirror exonerates you, then I will ask your pardon for my suspicions. But I will want you to answer my questions.” He held up his long, bony finger. “Don’t tell me that if you were in my place, you wouldn’t do the same thing.” He moved more quickly now, rushing down stairs and along corridors until he reached the North Door that led out toward the inner paddocks. “Is this the way you came?”
“Yes,” mumbled Pareo.
“Why were you out here?” Zhanf asked, attempting again to find out Pareo’s reason for visiting the North Tower.
“I had . . . something to do,” he said, once again unwilling to answer directly. “I won’t do it now.”
Glancing up at the inner battlements, Zhanf let out a shout. “You there! Machrin
Jeth!”
The young officer leaned over the parapet and called down. “Magsto Zhanf! What is it?”
“If you will come with us to the North Tower, at once? Thank you.” He turned to Pareo. “Tell him nothing – do you understand?”
“I’ll stay quiet,” Pareo vowed, relieved.
Now that they were in sunlight, Zhanf could see that Pareo’s dark hupslan had a smear of blood over his left knee, and there was a stain on one wide sleeve – nothing like the amount of blood he would show if he had cut up a body, but enough to lend credence to his report. Clearly the secre
tary was shaken. But, Zhanf reminded himself, that deed was done some hours ago – plenty of time for Pareo to kill, bathe and change, and then stage his discovery, complete with his own simulated distress. He saw Jeth coming toward them. “Thank you. I fear I may need your services for some little time. Whom have you left in charge?”
“Demantheon Elerot and Wixerin Berianoroz. They’ll handle anything that comes their way.” The young officer said confidently. “They don’t really need me.”
“Let us hope they won’t,” said Zhanf grimly, and set off toward the North Tower, Pareo three steps behind him and looking miserable. As they got nearer to the tower, Zhanf asked, “Where is he?”
“In the arming room under the watch platform,” said Pareo. “All but the head.”
“And where is that?”
“On the stairs leading up to the platform.”
Jeth was so startled he nearly stumbled. “Head?”
“I’m afraid so,” said Zhanf, “if what Secretary Pareo here tells me is the truth.”
“Head?” Jeth repeated.
Zhanf continued on in silence, moving quickly to the base of the tower. “No one is to enter or leave this tower until I say otherwise. Is that clear?” He looked directly at Jeth. “You will come up with me now and as soon as we have ascertained the accuracy of Pareo’s claim, I will decide how we’re to deal with this.” To Pareo he said, “You wait here. If you leave, we will find you.”
“I won’t leave,” said Pareo, his voice now colorless as the weathered bench where he chose to sit. “I don’t want to go anywhere.”
Zhanf made no answer to this. He flung open the door and went toward the wooden staircase leading to the arming room above them. As he set foot on the first tread, the presence of malice possessed him, and he steeled himself for what lay ahead. As he climbed, he caught the first metallic whiff of blood. Behind him, Jeth faltered. “Stay with me, Jeth.”
“That I will,” said Jeth in a quavering voice.
As he emerged in the arming room, Zhanf saw blood – pools of it, now dried and dark – standing on the rough planks of the floor. The walls were festooned with sprays of it, and even the ceiling had spatters of reddish-black across it, like grisly, torn ribbons. Next to the stairs lay a torso, limbs hacked off and the abdomen marked with gaping wounds, testament to the fury that had been visited upon him. His right arm was laid out straight at the wall, pointing north. His left arm was pointing south. Hoftstan’s right leg was under the stairs up to the platform, pointing east, and the left pointed west. “It’s very bad,” he warned Jeth as he stepped carefully into the havoc of the arming room.
Jeth’s eyes widened as he had his first look at what lay in the arming room. He made a sound in his throat, but continued to climb. “This is very bad, Magsto.”
“Yes, it is,” said Zhanf. Trying not to step in any of the blood, he went to the next flight of stairs. Pareo had been right – Hoftstan’s head was propped up on the sixth stair, mouth fixed in a silent, eternal scream.
Aghast at the sight of the slaughter around him, Jeth said, “The Night Priests of Ayon-Tur – they were said to kill this way.”
“So the stories say,” Zhanf agreed, his thoughts carefully contained. The similarities of this murder to the killings of the Night Priests of Ayon-Tur hadn’t escaped him – that ancient and destructive Order had inspired fear throughout the Great World – his own Priests of Mirvex-Doz had had a number of hideous spell-battles with them. Everyone knew the stories, even now, when the Night Priests had been obliterated more than a century ago. This ritual of agonizing death harkened back to the tales still told, but Zhanf put that, and all other considerations, out of his thoughts. He couldn’t afford to let legends, grief, or sympathy blind him to what had been done. “Is there anything missing from the weapons’ rack?”
“Not . . . not that I’m aware of,” said Jeth.
“Go look,” said Zhanf. “I want to know what did this, and how. And why none of the Night Guard reported anything amiss last night.” This last was the most disturbing, for its implications were agitating. He quieted his mind and went about looking at everything in the room.
“Nothing’s missing,” said Jeth a bit later. “There are bloodstains on some of the weapons, but they are drops, not smears.”
Zhanf nodded. “Very well. Go back into the Castle and find General Rocazin. Take her aside and tell her what has happened, as kindly as such news can be given. Then send for Lumiren Koriat. She has to be told, and it should be that General Rocazin is the one to tell her with the Duzeons away; let it be soon, or the gossip will reach her before we can offer her what comfort we may.” He dreaded speaking to Hoftstan Ruch’s wife, and to his sons. “The sooner it’s done, the better for all.”
Grateful for a reason to leave, Jeth said, “At once, Magsto,” and hastily departed, clattering down the stairs in unseemly rush.
Zhanf stood alone in the carnage and shook his head. He knew he would have to summon Hoftstan Ruch’s niedaj before a ghost could form – the spirit of the dead man might be able to tell him something useful. It would have to be done shortly after sunset, in this place. The very thought of it sickened Zhanf, and he strove to keep from gagging.
Pareo was looking ill again as he appeared at the bottom of the stair-well. “I believe Merinex is coming.”
It wasn’t surprising that Merinex should be aware of something amiss in this part of the Castle, given he was the Castle’s magician, but Zhanf didn’t want to be distracted by the well-meaning but somewhat inept fellow, who would undoubtedly be distraught by the hideous corpse of his friend.
“Bontaj!” Zhanf swore, and sighed. “Very well. Admit him, but call me down to speak to him. The fewer people who see this, the better.”
“That’s certain,” said Pareo with feeling.
“I’ll have to ask someone to make drawings of this,” Zhanf stated, and wondered whom he should ask. With Hoftstan dead, he had almost no one to advise him on Castle matters. He took a deep breath and continued to look around the butchery evident everywhere.
A short time later, Pareo called up to him, “Heijot Merinex is here, Magsto. He says he wants to see what’s happened.”
“Tell him to wait a moment before – “
Merinex interrupted the Imperial Secretary. “I believe I should be able to see what has transpired in Vildecaz Castle. After all, I am the Castle magician, and everything that happens here has importance to me.”
This was one of the most forthright statements Zhanf had heard Merinex make, and for that reason alone, he considered it. Finally, as he stared at Hoftstan’s half-closed eyes, wishing he knew what the seneschal had seen, he said, “All right, if you must, you may come up. But I warn you, Merinex, that you will not like what you see.”
“I’m prepared for the worst,” said Merinex gamely.
In the corner of the room, Pareo gagged.
Zhanf doubted that Merinex was as ready as he claimed, but he knew that challenging Merinex on that point would bring nothing but acrimony at a time that would be a problem. He said nothing as he moved away from the stairwell and called, “Come up, then, but tread softly.”
Merinex mounted the stairs at a sober pace. “What greater misfortune has fallen on Vildecaz? You convince me by your tone that this is a misfortune. What more are we asked to endure?”
“You’ll see for yourself.” Zhanf had folded his arms as he watched Merinex’s head appear above the opening in the floor. “It is a grim sight.”
“Gremmi bontaj,” Merinex exclaimed as he glimpsed the appalling room, and the body of Hoftstan Ruch. He continued upward, but more slowly than before. “”How he must have suffered.” Licking his lips, he stared at the blood on the floor and walls and ceiling. “A repugnant – “
”It must have happened last night, for the blood is long dry, hard to the touch and without heat. The blood on the floor was hard,” He indicated the severed limbs. “You see how they are placed?”
“It
must be a sign,” said Merinex, his eyes as flat as pebbles. “Why would anyone do such a thing?”
“The Night Priests of Ayon-Tur killed in this way, a century ago.” Zhanf saw only a flicker of recognition on Merinex’s face. “They were quite powerful, at that time, and they made it their work to have enemies.”
“But they were crushed and forced to disband,” Merinex said patiently.
“So they were,” Zhanf agreed. “But their legend is still strong. Ask anyone in any of the Six Worlds, and they will know tales of the Night Priests.”
Merinex rounded on him. “Do you mean that someone is attempting to imitate their rites?” The shock of this notion seemed to shake the Castle magician more than the body of Hoftstan had done.
“I think it is something we must consider,” said Zhanf heavily. “I will notify the Priests of Mirvex-Doz this day, and send a written message with a courier to confirm what I say.” He regarded the body. “And I will try to reach the Duzeons. They need to know about this.”
“And what will your Order do then?” Merinex scoffed. “How can they fight what doesn’t exist?”
“They can warn other Orders, and inform the secular authorities of the dangers that may be among us. It is my duty to preserve the practice of magic from such perversions as the Night Priests of Ayon-Tur made of their talents. No? The Duzeons may well be in danger, you realize. If Hoftstan is dead, they lack support here, and they may require more reinforcement than I can provide alone.” He shook once, his whole body responding to this new threat, then pulled himself together. “I want to summon Hoftstan's niedaj before it fades away. It may be able to show us who attacked him.”
Merinex pressed his lips together, then gasped as something small fell from his sleeve. He bent to pick it up, holding it out for Zhanf to see. “My wandlet. I apologize for letting it go. This . . . this place has unnerved me. The thought of having to see the niedaj after all this – it may do nothing but scream. Looking on his body, I think that may be all you could achieve.”
“It is a possibility I’m prepared to deal with,” said Zhanf. “You must see that there is nothing else we can do.”
Agnith's Promise: The Vildecaz Talents, Book 3 Page 3