The Saints of the Sword (7 page)

“Touched by heaven,” he muttered.

“Touched by heaven?” came an echo. “What does that mean?”

The voice startled Alazrian, who turned around to see yet another Naren stranger. A man, wide as a wall, with dark hair and brooding eyes and shoulders like an ox. He wore plain clothing but his black boots were of a military style. Alazrian wondered if he were a soldier, one of Nar’s legionnaires. The big man came over to him and looked down, blocking the light like an eclipse. His eyes shifted toward the book on the desk and swiftly scanned the title.

“You’re interested in Lucel-Lor?” the man asked. His tone was neither friendly nor threatening.

“Do I know you?”

“Not yet,” said the man. “But I know you, Alazrian Leth.”

“You’re one of the Inquisitor’s men,” Alazrian deduced. “Have you been following me?”

The man pulled up one of the chairs, sitting down backward on it and folding his arms over its back. “I wasn’t really following you. I was looking out for you, that’s all.” He picked up the book and frowned. “Why are you reading this?”

“Who are you?” asked Alazrian, perturbed. “What’s your name?”

“Donhedris is my name.” He flipped through the pages curiously.

“And?”

“What?”

“What do you do, Donhedris? Why are you following me? What do you want?”

“I don’t know this book,” said Donhedris. He seemed more interested in the text than in the boy. “It’s big.”

Alazrian sat back. “Why are you looking out for me?”

Donhedris closed the book and shoved it back across the desk, then smiled at Alazrian. “I’m just here to check on you. It’s a big city. Lots of things go wrong.”

More nonsense. Alazrian felt a nervous sweat break out on his brow. He tried to calm himself, guessing that it was
all part of Dakel’s game. His mother had warned him about Biagio and the Inquisitor.

“I don’t need a bodyguard, Donhedris. Please tell your master that for me. You do work for Minister Dakel, yes?”

Donhedris shrugged. “Tomorrow is the Protectorate,” he remarked. “You going?”

“I have to,” said Alazrian.

“Is Dakel going to make you testify?”

“Shouldn’t you know that already?”

“Are you afraid?”

“Yes,” Alazrian confessed. He fidgeted in his chair looking for a quick way to end the conversation. “I should go now,” he said, getting to his feet. Donhedris remained seated.

“I’m guessing it’s your father the Inquisitor is after. You may not have to testify at all. That would be good, wouldn’t it?”

“Yes, I suppose. Really, I should go …”

“I have a friend who can help you,” said Donhedris. “He could get you out of facing Dakel if you’re interested.”

It was bait, and Alazrian was afraid to rise to it. But he was also curious. “What friend?”

“Someone with influence,” Donhedris replied evasively. “You’d have to cooperate, of course. But I think my friend can help you.”

“You keep saying friend. What are you talking about?”

“It’s late,” observed Donhedris. He yawned theatrically, putting his hand over his mouth and getting out of his chair. “You just be there tomorrow when your father testifies. I’ll find you.”

“What? Wait …” blurted Alazrian, but it was too late. Donhedris had vanished around a corner.

Alazrian stood in the library, blinking in confusion. He didn’t know what had just happened. He didn’t know who Donhedris was or who he worked for or what strange friends he had. But Alazrian knew one thing—he was in over his head, and the water was rising.

THREE

A
bloodred moon hung above the harbor and a mournful fog crawled across the docks. Somewhere over the sea a gull cried through the moonlight, and the distant din of boat winches whined from the water as the fishermen worked through the night dropping their nets onto the decks of shrimp boats. A welcome breeze swept through the harbor tempering the stink of fish and salt, and along the boardwalks and dingy avenues staggered sailors and fishermen, drunk from southern rum, their arms looped around willing whores. The clouds above threatened rain, but to the men and women from this side of Nar, any storm was a small inconvenience. The outskirts of the Black City grew hearty men and rats as big as dogs, and no one ran from a rainstorm.

Blair Kasrin, captain of the Naren vessel
Dread Sovereign
, meandered down the street with a flower in his hand, his head awash with cheap liquor. He was on his way to see a lady named Meleda, and the state of his rum-soaked brain made the wilting rose in his fist seem priceless and perfect. By his side was his friend and first officer, Laney, who expertly flipped a gold piece as he walked, telling jokes too loudly for a sober man. It was well past midnight, but the two sailors had little sense of the time. Lately, time hadn’t mattered to the men of the
Dread Sovereign
. They had nowhere in particular to go.

“I should ask her to marry me,” Kasrin quipped, not meaning it at all. “And we will have pups and I will give up the sea and the
Sovereign
for good.”

“And you won’t drink, either,” added Laney, snatching his coin off a high toss. “Yes, I believe you.” He handed the gold piece to his captain. “Here. You’ll need this. Meleda loves you so much, she can’t bear not to take your money.”

They both laughed. “She’s a good girl,” said Kasrin.

“Her mother would be proud.”

More laughter broke them up, but when they neared the house where Meleda worked, Kasrin grew serious. He straightened his crimson cape, squared his shoulders, and pulled the rim of his triangular hat down rakishly over his brow. A nearby window provided a reflection.

“How do I look?”

Laney grinned. “Beautiful as ever.”

“You’re a charmer. Coming up with me?”

“No,” said Laney. “Not tonight.”

“What? Why not?”

“I don’t know. Don’t feel like it, I guess.”

Kasrin wasn’t satisfied. He could always tell when his friend was hiding something. “So you walked me all the way from the
Sovereign
just for the hell of it?”

His first officer grinned sheepishly. “Yeah.”

“Rot.” Kasrin stared at Laney, looking for the truth and realizing it quickly. “You just want to make sure I’m all right. I don’t need a wet-nurse, Laney. I’m not that drunk.”

“I never said that.”

“You didn’t have to,” snapped the captain. He lowered his hands and let the flower dangle at his side, then leaned against the dingy stone wall. Suddenly he wished he was back aboard his ship. “Goddamn it, now I’m getting pity from
you
. Nicabar should have thrown me in the brig with the rapists and deserters. I’d have been better off.”

“Oh, they would have loved you,” quipped Laney. He reached out and pinched his captain’s cheek. “Pretty young thing.”

“Stop it,” said Kasrin, batting away the hand. Then he laughed, adding, “I’m spoken for.”

“Go upstairs, Blair. I’ll see you back on board in the morning.”

The morning. And the morning after that, and the one after that, too, and every bloody morning until the
Dread Sovereign
could set sail again. Kasrin set his jaw, his good mood shattered. The thought of being land-locked for another month made him grim. He looked up into the dark sky. From the height of the moon, morning was only hours away. The dawn of another dreadful day spent cleaning a ship that never got dirty. Kasrin hated his life these days. It wasn’t what he’d dreamt of as a boy, watching the Black Fleet from the dockside.

“Do you think I was wrong?” he asked quietly.

The first officer of the
Dread Sovereign
grinned. “Permission to speak frankly, Captain?”

“Sure, why not?”

“I think it doesn’t matter what I think,” said Laney. He reached out and tugged on Kasrin’s hat, pulling it down farther over his brow. “I think you’re the captain. Now get in there. Have some fun.”

Laney didn’t wait for his captain to reply, but turned and walked off into the fog, whistling a broken tune. Kasrin had asked Laney for his opinion a dozen times since being beached, and he always got the same stupid answer. It really didn’t matter to Laney what he or the other crewmen thought of Kasrin’s decision. Kasrin was still a hero in their eyes and would remain so no matter how Nicabar punished them. It was like a curse for Kasrin, who loved Laney like a brother and hated to see his friend’s career ruined for the sake of misplaced loyalty. But it was also something to be proud of and Kasrin wore their fealty like a naval ribbon. Even Nicabar didn’t have so fine a crew.

“Piss on you, Nicabar,” growled Kasrin. “And your slack-wristed emperor.”

Men like Nicabar and Biagio were what was wrong with the world. They were blue-eyed devils who took drugs to steal life and butchered children to spread their reign. They were both to blame for Kasrin’s state and he
loathed them. But it was a good loathing and it sustained Kasrin. Whenever he felt defeated, he fed on his hatred and steeled himself with the knowledge that someday, somehow, he would have revenge on them.

Captain Kasrin twirled the flower in his hand, regarding it bemusedly. The
Dread Sovereign
had been docked for more than two months. And Nicabar hadn’t let him anchor his ship in the main harbor but had instead forced him into this dingy corner of Nar, away from the rest of the fleet. From here he could see the smokestacks of the city, but he couldn’t hear the incinerators or smell the pollution. It was like being on an island, this sad little fishing port, and the loneliness was maddening. The movement of the sea still rushed through Kasrin’s blood like it had when he was a boy. In those days, he’d go down to the docks and shipyards with a pocketful of sweets, eating them slowly and dreaming of the day when he was old enough to captain his own vessel. That time had come and gone and though Kasrin was still considered young by his peers, he felt curiously old.

“Nicabar,” he whispered, closing his eyes and calling up an image of his foe. The admiral had been his hero once. “God, but you’re a bastard.”

Kasrin wouldn’t have his revenge tonight. Tonight all that he would have was the purchased love of a woman.

Good enough
, he thought, then left the dock and went inside.

The “house” Meleda worked in was a two-story structure with a long bar on the first floor and little rooms on the second. It was old and smelled of rum and unclean men. Gamblers and fishermen huddled around card tables and diced at gaming booths while two bar-men slid glasses down the bar with practiced ease, spilling not a drop of the foaming beer. There was a good crowd for the late hour, and Kasrin recognized many of the unshaven faces. They had become his friends. At first they hadn’t trusted him, unable to fathom how a high-ranking naval man had ended up in their little armpit, but Kasrin could hold his rum and tell a good story, and he didn’t look down on the
hard-working men and women of the town. In a melancholy way, they reminded him of his parents. Kasrin surveyed the room, smiling as he searched out Meleda. He found her dealing cards at a faro table. There was a glowing pipe next to her glass of rum and her hair was pulled back from her face and tied with red ribbon, exposing her laughing eyes and infectious smile. When she sighted Kasrin, she waved.

“Here, honey,” she called, bidding him over. The men around the faro table tossed coins and studied their cards, greeting Kasrin with grunts.

“Gentlemen,” Kasrin said. He handed the rose to Meleda. “For you.”

Meleda smiled. “Oooh, thanks, lover,” she cooed, admiring the flower. “It’s a beauty.”

The men around the table chuckled and poked at Kasrin, ribbing him for the gift. Kasrin laughed and ignored them, looking at Meleda. She was beautiful, and he longed for her—not just in a physical way. That lust would be over in an hour. But there was something else about the woman, a sense of permanence and warmth. It could have been any woman, Kasrin knew. The hunger was for acceptance. For a gold coin, Meleda would sell acceptance to any man.

“You want to go upstairs?” she asked, giving him a wink.

“Well, I’m not here to play cards.”

Meleda grinned. “Just give me a minute. I’ll be right with you.”

Knowing the procedure perfectly, Kasrin went upstairs and found the room Meleda always used to “entertain,” dropping down on the bed and pulling off his shoes. It was hot, so he opened a window, letting in the fresh salty breeze, taking a deep breath. Kasrin could see his ship bobbing in the distance. A little dingy was rowing toward it with three men aboard.

Laney
, thought Kasrin.
Heading back. Good man
.

A very good man, really. Like all the men of the
Dread Sovereign
. A ship of fools, willingly sailing with the king
imbecile. Kasrin turned away from the window, not wanting to see his lonely ship. He took off his shirt and tossed it into the corner, then laid back on the bed, staring pensively at the ceiling while he waited for Meleda. Finally, he heard footfalls in the hall outside.

“Get in here, you beauty,” he called.

There was a hesitation outside the door. Kasrin laughed.

“Come on, kitten. Don’t play games with me.”

The door opened slowly. Kasrin started unbuttoning his trousers. And then a little man peeked inside, grinning.

“Disappointed, darling?” joked the man. Kasrin buttoned up his pants.

“And angry,” he growled, staring down the intruder. “Who the hell are you?”

“I’m a messenger, Captain Kasrin. And you’re an inconvenient man to find.” He went to the corner and picked up Kasrin’s shirt, then tossed it at the captain. “Here. Get dressed.”

“The hell I will,” snapped Kasrin. He threw the shirt away and stalked toward the man, staring down at him threateningly. “I’m busy. Now, what’s your message?”

The man didn’t seem at all frightened. “You’re my message, Kasrin,” he said. “I’m to take you to see my lord. There’s a carriage waiting for us downstairs. I’d suggest you hurry. My master doesn’t like to be kept waiting.”

“Oh, really? Am I supposed to care?”

“You would if you knew my master. He has an infamous temper.”

“Listen, you little troll,” said Kasrin, grabbing hold of the man’s lapel and lifting him to his toes. “You’d better tell me who the hell you are in two seconds, or I swear to heaven I’ll twist your head off!”

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