Read Glasswrights' Apprentice Online

Authors: Mindy L Klasky

Glasswrights' Apprentice (37 page)

“And that is better?” Rani imagined the battles and the bloodshed - she had heard the bards' tales of warfare.

Bardo laughed and ruffled her hair. “Of course it's better. The best man wins! We will never again be forced to beg food from the Merchants' Council. We will never again need to pray for a shred of justice from castes who could care less, who hate us.”

“But what if we're not the best?”

Bardo's laughter filled the cathedral. “Not the best! Such doubts, and in one so young!”

“What if the king is better? What if Tuvashanoran was the best?”

“You don't know what you're saying. The king is an old man, Rani. I know he's been kind to you, and I know that you feel you owe him, but he is an evil man. He is the reason the rest of the castes survive. He is the reason our father was so unhappy. Must I remind you that he killed our family?”

“But that was because he thought that we killed Tuvashanoran! The prince was all his hope! He would have been a very good king.”

“Tuvashanoran would have continued the old caste system all his life,” Bardo snapped. “He would have ruled supreme until he ran the castes, and himself, and all of us into the ground! Tuvashanoran was a liar and a cheat. He promised himself to the Brotherhood; he even bore our mark. But he strayed from our mission and forgot our goals. He did not want to compete to lead us; he thought the title of ‘king' should come to him because of his birth status. When his father decided to name him Defender of the Faith, Tuvashanoran forgot all he ever knew of Brotherhood and equality.”

Rani began to see the Brotherhood's twisted logic. She could find the pattern behind Bardo's words; she reconciled his thoughts and his actions. “So,” she began slowly, “with Tuvashanoran gone, you can change the old system. If you can put your own king on the throne, you'll succeed in bringing the Brotherhood to power.”

“Precisely!” Bardo congratulated her. “And that's where you come in. It is very important that the initial change look like happenstance. We know that the people aren't ready for the Brotherhood yet. The castes are still too strong. We need to put the right man on the throne, and then we'll have a lifetime, his entire rule, to consolidate our power. We know the Brotherhood won't lead the way in one year, or in two, or maybe even in ten, but with time on our side.…”

“And the right man is -”

“Bashanorandi,” Bardo completed her sentence. “He is liked by the people, and his mother has taught him all the ways of her folk. And when, in years to come, certain records come to light, showing that King Bashanorandi is not truly descended from the line of Jair, the people will come to realize that their old hierarchies, their old castes, are completely without meaning. The Brotherhood will win, without costing a life.”

“Except,” Rani corrected, “Tuvashanoran, who would have been the king. And Halaravilli - he's the Crown Prince, not Bashi.”

“And, for that matter, King Shanoranvilli himself,” Bardo agreed. “But now is the time. The Brotherhood is at its greatest strength, and we have you -
you
- in the Palace every day. You can weave the last threads into our pattern and make the end of the castes more than just a bard's tale. You can guarantee that Bashanorandi is our next king.”

Rani stared at Bardo in disbelief. She must have misunderstood him. She must have misheard his words. Bardo could not be telling her to murder Hal. “I don't know what you're talking about, Bardo.”

“I think you do, Rani. I think you understand the Brotherhood's mission. We are so close… You can join us, dearest sister. You can be a full member of the Brotherhood, if only you do this one thing. Kill the pretender. Dispatch Prince Halaravilli and join the Brotherhood.”

“No!” Rani cried, protesting the suggestion, protesting the Brotherhood, protesting the fanatical light in Bardo's eyes. “You don't know what you're saying! Hal is the
hope
of Morenia. He can grow to fill Tuvashanoran's shoes.”

“ Prince Halaravilli is a babbling idiot! He can barely string together ten words in a coherent sentence!”

“That's all an act,” Rani pleaded. “He chants and rhymes to protect himself, to save himself from …” she swallowed hard, but forced herself to complete the sentence, “from those who wish him dead.”

Bardo's hands closed over her arms, hunching her shoulders close about her ears. “Listen to yourself, Rani. He is a liar, a cheat. Does such a man deserve to be king? With one quick thrust of a blade, with one draught of poison, you can change all that. You can save the kingdom!”

“She's already said no.”

The voice rang out in the cathedral, deadly cold against the passion of Bardo's plea. Rani whirled toward the sound, grateful for an ally in this mad battle, but her heart froze as she saw the speaker.

“Let her go, Bardo. She's made her choice.” Guildmistress Salina stepped into the pool of flickering light beside Roat's altar.

“Salina!” Bardo started guiltily, as if he and his sister had been caught in some immoral tryst. “What are you doing here?”

“Larindolian sent me. He did not think you had the power to bring this one into our ranks.” Salina sniffed and leveled her agate eyes on her former apprentice. “We've waited long enough for her to come around. We'll end that all tonight.”

“What do you mean?” Even as Rani choked on the chill pronouncement, Bardo maneuvered himself so that he stood between his sister and her guildmistress.

“She's had her chance, Bardo. You've told her all about us - more than any outsider has heard in all the existence of the Brotherhood - and still she hesitates. We can't take the risk. We can't endanger the lives of a hundred faithful followers for one mewling apprentice who refuses to listen to reason.”

“She'll listen, Salina!” Rani had never heard Bardo plead before. “I had not finished explaining.”

“You've told her more than any
true
follower of Justice should need to hear. Step aside, Bardo.” Salina raised one arm, and a troop of armor-clad men stepped from the cathedral shadows, coalescing like a deadly midnight fog.

“Guildmistress Salina,” Rani began.

“Silence!” snapped the old woman, and Rani was obedient enough to her former caste that she held her tongue. Bardo, though, was not so constrained.

“We
need
Rani, Salina. You argued for her recruitment yourself. You said that we needed to get a pilgrim into the Palace, that we needed to plant an agent who was above suspicion.”

“Ahhhh,” sighed Salina. “I feared as much.” Her words were heavy, like iron, like death. “You are willing to set aside the bonds of Brotherhood for her.”

“I'm not doing any such thing!” Bardo protested, pulling Rani close to his chest. She felt hardened leather beneath his tunic, as if he had feared this ambush in the cathedral.

“Enough of this foolishness!” Salina clapped her hands, and the ring of soldiers tightened around Bardo and Rani. Long steel knives glinted in the flickering candle-light, poisonous tongues darting back and forth like serpents. “Make your choice, Bardo. The Brotherhood, or that treacherous rat!”

Rani squirmed, fighting against Bardo's sinewy arm to look into his face. His breath came harsh, as if he had raced the wolves outside the City, as if he had rung the Pilgrims' Bell with all his might. He did not look at her; instead, his eyes stared into the cathedral's dark heart, as if he were seeking advice from First God Ait and all the Thousand Gods.

Rani felt the pulse in his arm, felt the desperation in his breath. She longed to speak, but she was afraid to topple the balance, afraid to unravel the pattern she could only hope was forming. As she glared daggers at Salina, the guildmistress measured Bardo's response with her own narrowed eyes. “Choose, Bardo, or I'll take the choice from you.”

The soldiers shifted restlessly, and Rani saw the fire lick their knives. There was no choice. There was no decision. Bardo could hand her over to the Brotherhood, or he could accept her fate for both of them. The Brotherhood's soldiers would not be content until they had sheathed their blades in blood.

Bardo read the same message in the eyes of his erstwhile allies. His fingers were icy tongs as he turned Rani to face him. “Go with them, Ranikaleka. They'll keep you until we have finished our work. When the Brotherhood is done, you'll be free to join me.”

Salina rolled her eyes in exasperation, and the soldiers shifted nearer, using their long knives to herd Rani from her brother's side. “Go, Rani!” The command was spoken with the power that Bardo had had over her entire life - the power of a favorite brother. “Go with them, Rani, and all will be fine!”

“Bardo!”

Her anguished cry was cut off by a new clatter of mail-clad soldiers, by countless boots on stone. “Halt!” The command rang out in the cathedral, and the space was suddenly filled with torches. A company of guards, all dressed in the king's livery, streamed down the aisle. “Halt in the name of King Shanoranvilli!”

Rani was so relieved that she nearly collapsed by Roat's altar. Before she could speak her gratitude, the captain of the guard signaled for his men to surround the Brotherhood's soldiers, to close ranks around Guildmistress Salina and Bardo. Only when the Brotherhood's threat had been quelled did the captain pay attention to the quaking apprentice in the middle of the cathedral aisle.

“Ranita Glasswright!” he announced, leveling his own heavy sword at her throat. “Stand forth and submit to the justice of the rightful king of all Morenia. Answer to King Shanoranvilli for the death of Prince Tuvashanoran!”

 

 

Chapter 15

 

 

“Eat, girl. Build your strength for the questions you'll be asked today.” The soldier laughed harshly as he flung a bowl of thin gruel through the iron bars of Rani's cell. A tin cup of water followed, sloshing as the guard made his hurried way along the dungeon's dank corridor.

Rani barely looked up at the voice. In the - how long had it been? three days? - that she had been imprisoned in King Shanoranvilli's dungeons, she had not been able to swallow more than a bite of the poor fare that passed as breakfast, lunch, and dinner. In her fitful sleep, she remembered fine meals she had enjoyed, even the riches that Narda had shared with her so long ago in the marketplace, but she could not force her belly to accept the watery porridge.

“Aye,” came a sarcastic voice from the cell across the cramped corridor. “There's a good girl. Your family would be proud of you.”

Her family. The guards had made no secret of Rani's identity as they dragged her into the dungeons. The other prisoners had reacted with the patriotism of the bored; Rani had been spat at and called foul names. More than one wit made a two handed fist, waggling a single thumb in her direction as an obscene reminder of the glasswrights who had been methodically tortured while Rani roamed the city streets.

The prisoners knew that she had murdered Prince Tuvashanoran; they needed no silly formality like a trial. Rani had not tried to defend herself as she walked along the stinking, damp corridor. She hoped there would be time for that later, time to tell the truth before King Shanoranvilli passed sentence on her.

Of course, the other glasswrights had had no trial. The prisoners made sure she learned the details. The apprentice glasswrights had been dragged from their cells, screaming, and returned to the cold stone rooms with bloody stumps where their thumbs had been. It had taken weeks, but finally all the glasswrights were maimed - the apprentices butchered, the Instructors questioned and bled until they were little more than ghosts. Some had died and been buried in the criminals' graveyard outside the City walls, forever denied the purification of a funeral pyre. Others had at last been set free, to forage whatever life they could in the hostile City streets. Not a glasswright remained in the dungeons.

Rani's family had had no trial either. They had huddled in their cell, crouching against the back wall so that the other prisoners could not witness their shame. The jailed scum had seen enough, though, to tell Rani details she had hoped never to learn. She knew the order in which her brothers and sisters had been taken from the prison. Now, she could recite the tortures they had suffered as they refused to divulge the absolutely unknown whereabouts of their missing daughter-sister, and Rani's far-too-active imagination taught her the feel of the rough rope about their necks before they were hanged like common thieves. Over and over again, she pulled her imagination away from their graves in the cold, winter earth. Unsuccessfully, she forbade herself to think of worms and dirt and putrefying flesh.

First her brothers, then her sisters. Her mother. Her father.

And now she had only one brother left alive - Bardo, who had been willing to hand her over to the harsh mercy of the Brotherhood of Justice. Rani found small comfort in the knowledge that the soldiers who had dragged her back to the dungeons had rounded up the Brotherhood as well. Bardo and Salina's armed guards were penned elsewhere in the warrens beneath the castle.

Guildmistress Salina had been here also, in this desolate dungeon full of women and the rare unfortunate family. After the woman had shouted herself hoarse, she had taken to banging her tin cup against her cell's irons bars. The guards wrestled away the cup, only to be serenaded with a hard-soled leather shoe. At last, the guildmistress had been carted off amid much swearing - her teeth had found at least one soldier.

Even though Rani had come to despise the old woman, she longed to cheer the spirit of such rebellion. Then she remembered the evil that Salina had directed toward her, the concerted decision the guildmistress had made when she permitted Rani's fellow apprentice, Larinda, to be maimed. Salina had had the power to stop the madness even then, but she had not acted. Now, Rani was certain that the guildmistress had drawn on the Brotherhood's dark loyalties to arrange her own escape, weeks ago, when all the glasswrights were first imprisoned. She had been freed to work her continuing evil in the City streets, and all of the guildsmen she had sworn to lead were maimed as Salina prowled the Brotherhood's warren inside the City walls.

Other books

Blind Arrows by Anthony Quinn
Plague in the Mirror by Deborah Noyes
Triple Infinity by K. J. Jackson
Post Captain by Patrick O'Brian
Good Bones by Margaret Atwood
Pearl Harbor Christmas by Stanley Weintraub