XIV. Strike

 

THE DOWNSTAIRS RAID HAD REDUCED THE BULL TROUGH’S TAPROOM TO THE TUMBLED WRACK OF A BATTLEGROUND. TALLOW DIPS STILL burned in the bar’s chandelier. Beneath their sultry glare, the upset trestles, spilled food, and smashed crockery lay scattered over the sawdust, poked through by the splinters of benches destroyed in the throes of combat. If not peace, then the semblance of order prevailed. The last protesting bystanders were being turned out by the fist of crown authority. Others, less innocent, were being detained. Their railing objections raised mayhem enough to keep Jedrey’s task force preoccupied. The man-at-arms posted on guard by the stair became the first to notice the captain’s reappearance on the landing above.

Paused at the newel post to rest his game knee, Mykkael surveyed the activity with professional acuity: the barmaids who knelt with damp rags to minister to the bludgeoned fallen; the alert cordon surrounding the bar, where, on the only upright stool, the garrison’s quartermaster scowled beside a salvaged candlestick, crosschecking the establishment’s books. The whores had all fled. Their provocative splendours had been replaced by a sorry collection of scofflaws, roped by the wrists to the platform rail, until an escort could be assembled to march them back to the keep.

The loose end still remained. Mykkael gritted his jaw, gave up his leaned stance, and pressed his limping step down the stairway. His order collared the attentive young guardsman. ‘Upstairs, soldier. An exceedingly stupid man threw a knife.’

The man-at-arms signalled to a companion, resigned. ‘Fetch a plank, Paunley. We’ve got a corpse to haul down for a pauper’s grave.’

‘Sadly’ Mykkael affirmed. The female shriek to his left spun him round, prepared for a fit of hysterical grief, or the mindless assault the bereaved sometimes launched to vent their outraged denial.

Yet no lissom sweetheart leaped to savage his face. Only the Bull’s indomitable madam stood her ground, unmoved as the mountain rooted to earth in her acres of flounces and skirts.

Eyes on her streaked face, the captain inquired, ‘Did Vangyar have any family?’

The madam shook her ringleted head. ‘None that I knew.’ Her dimpled hands blotted the stream of her tears with the wad of a sequined shawl. ‘Haul him out as you please. His girl won’t be claiming the body’

‘She was a professional, I saw that much.’ Mykkael gathered his balance to pass on his way, then stopped stiff as the madam’s sensuous fingers clasped the wrist underneath his loose sleeve.

‘You didn’t lay’ She sniffed, her sorrow replaced by a glare of ferocious offence. ‘Did my dearie in scarlet not please you?’

Mykkael laughed, not missing the wise, queenly dignity underneath her run paint and histrionics. ‘You have your pride; I see that also.’ Though in evident haste, he permitted her grasp long enough to address her question. ‘Your vixen has charm, but unfortunately, she also has grit and integrity. I suggest you retire her. Some are born with too much spirit for whoring. They’re the ones who always get hurt, no matter how forcefully you warn your johns you won’t allow their rough handling.’

The madam sighed. ‘I know that.’ She released her touch. Her searching pause reassessed him, blue eyes sharpened by an intelligence at odds with her surface display of distress. ‘But Maylie has nowhere else she can go. Her brother’s a halfwit who needs cosseting.’

‘Send the fellow across to the garrison keep,’ Mykkael said. ‘If he can sweep floors and not make useless trouble, he’ll earn his day’s bread. He can sleep by the fire with the cook’s brats.’

He moved on, then, without a glance back, and demanded a summary report from the man set in charge of the prisoners. The captain listened, as he had to the madam, with one hip braced to the railing to ease his bad knee. If his stance seemed too easy, his attention maintained its unswerving intensity. One wretch, he set free. If clemency ruled him, the sheeted burden brought downstairs on the plank refuted the presumption he might keep any slipshod habit of leniency.

All at once, his head turned. ‘Who is that?’

The officer just interviewed followed his glance: saw the broad-shouldered man in plain clothing who had just raised the sheet from the corpse. The jostle as the bearers paused for his review caused the victim’s head to roll off the board. Unsupported, it dangled, wrong way around, like a melon hung from a string.

‘Powers!’ The officer minding the prisoners swallowed fast. Through the scald of churned bile, he grated, ‘That man, standing there? He’s the marshal of the high prince’s honour guard. Came here on leave time, until Sergeant Jedrey accepted his help.’

Before the last word, the captain was moving. Mykkael crossed the wrecked floor, his limp grown pronounced as he hoisted his leg across an overturned trestle. No such hitch marred his reach, as he clamped a fast hand on Jedrey’s immaculate shoulder. The grip must have ground on a nerve, for the large man went boneless. Spun around and bowed backwards against the bar, he lay gasping, the sweat springing down his blanched face.

Behind, the keep’s quartermaster shot straight, his finger still pinned to the disputed sum in the ledger. He drew breath, stopped, thought the better of speaking, then wisely moved back out of range.

The captain’s dark eyes kept their merciless focus. Instinct deferred, shown a cold-cast ferocity that would act before mercy or reason.

‘Devall’s marshal leaves. Now!’ The order held a warning past compromise. ‘No questions, and damn protocol. I’ll have no stranger’s meddling given the sleeve to stir into garrison business!’

Released, Jedrey straightened. His face was wrung pale. The stoop to his shoulders seemed flaccid and aged, and the arm he required to brace his slack knees shook in spasms as he clung to the bar top. ‘The high prince is our ally, you slinking, dumb mongrel. Offend his Highness, and you’ll turn our merchants to paupers. No lowland port will ship goods out of Sessalie if your post-pissing ignorance turns Devall’s monarch against us.’

Mykkael said no word. Just moved, a blur sprung from stillness no wary reflex might track. A snap cracked the air. The sergeant toppled. Jedrey’s frame hit the floor like an axed tree, his left forearm snapped clean through both the long bones between elbow and wrist.

‘Carry on,’ Mykkael said to the dumbstruck quartermaster. ‘You heard my orders. Henceforward, you have the watch.’

At his feet, Sergeant Jedrey’s stunned effort to rise tangled with his horrifically mangled appendage. His shriek of fainting shock sliced through the ignominy, as the garrison captain stepped over him. ‘You’re relieved. Where I trained, we don’t waste the time pissing posts with citations and whippings.’

The raid on the Bull Trough Tavern took over an hour to wrap up. Mykkael chose not to be present throughout, but came and went, one man-at-arms or two at his heels, to prowl the back streets above Falls Gate. The taverns he sampled seemed chosen at random. He quartered their packed taprooms as though testing their mood, taking note of which patrons did what, with no inclination to make more arrests. The Cockatrice, favoured haunt of Prince Kailen, seemed more than usually raucous and jammed. There, Mykkael lingered, absorbed by something he encountered in a dimmed corner, though the guardsman beside him saw nothing.

Before the toll of the watch bell at midnight, the garrison captain was at hand to enforce the quartermaster’s order to march, as the Bull Trough’s catch of malcontents were moved under guard to the gaol in the Lowergate keep. The straggling prisoners could not be moved smartly, roped as they were, the tied wrists of each man attached to the left ankle of the one in procession before him. Any wretch who tried bolting would trip half the line, with the fallen as living anchor. By the time the coffle reached the plank drawbridge, the night mists descended like layers of dropped gauze. Mykkael’s stride was visibly dragging, no longer quite noiseless as he traversed the span over the moat.

For that reason, he led the way into the gate arch, with guardsmen flanking the prisoners on each side, and the quartermaster and a squad of six stalwarts holding position as rearguard. Beneath the dank stone, thick with the rust taint of iron and the gritted smoke of spent torches, the darkness was a jet shroud, punch cut by the ruddy glare from the fire pans in the bailey beyond. What warned Mykkael, whether the brush of stirred cloth, or the note of chance-struck metal, or some whispered change in the air, no man knew.

His reverse was too sudden. The front pair of captives jammed into each other, shouting, as his evasion crashed backwards into them.

Whatever sprang without sound from the shadow lunged after him, thrusting with murderous steel.

Moving with the assault, his shoulder already twisting to narrow the available vital target, Mykkael took the stabbing strike for his heart as a graze across chest and shoulder. The tip of the blade jabbed a prisoner’s arm, raising an ear-splitting yell.

Mykkael dropped, palms flat on wet stone, then rebounded upwards, away from the trampling scuffle of roped legs. He drew, sword screaming from sheath, met and parried attack, to a pealing shriek of clashed steel. The blows exchanged came one after the other like licked fire, scribed out in chance-caught reflection. The clamour belled in a crescendo, then ceased. Something dropped, rolling, to a gurgle of drowned breath, jetting stone walls and panic-stricken men with a spray of let blood.

By the time the roused watch sprinted into the sallyport with lit torches, the dropped body drummed its heels through the spasms of death. Mykkael bent above with his sword slicked bright scarlet. With no pause to survey the carnage before him, he hoisted his fallen assailant by the ankle, and began hauling him shoulder down towards the bailey. The lead captives, milling behind in stunned shock, saw a stranger’s face, still spasmed by its final rictus. The dragged fingers, limp and weaponless, trailed over the stone, splashed with the blood and urine that flooded, still steaming, from the opened viscera.

‘Dark powers of hell!’ gasped a man, while two of the tied captives dropped retching. The inbound guard with the torch recoiled clear as his captain shoved past with his burden.

‘Assassin!’ snapped Mykkael, his temper shaved thin. ‘A boring damned nuisance, now that he’s dead. First, there’s a captive with a stabbed arm that wants binding. Next, I want to know what the moat watch was doing, that this crafty visitor slipped by them. Last, I want a plank set up in the wardroom under good light. I will know what sort of creature dared an ambush on my turf with the thought he could strike without penalty.’

The gate watch scurried, somewhat green at the gills, as Mykkael proceeded with his fresh kill across the width of the bailey. Soon engrossed in his promised review of the corpse, he snapped off more orders. Stablehands were dispatched with buckets and brooms to sluice away the spilled effluent. A boy caught staring was sent to recover the dropped sword, and a knife, if he could find it. The moat watch was called in for reprimand; then the rattled quartermaster was reminded to assert his authority. Men who had never seen battle-raw violence mustered their shocked nerves, and resumed their dropped purpose under their captain’s brisk bidding. Chaos receded. The jangled knot of prisoners began to be sorted, the wounded one doctored by Vensic’s firm hand, while Mykkael retired upstairs. Settled industry ruled for scarcely a minute before upset erupted all over again.

The keep sergeant was left on his own as the next sheet-wrapped body borne on a plank trailed in on the tail of the crisis.

‘He killed twice tonight?’ Vensic sucked in a vexed breath, and swore as he knotted the linen over the captive’s unlucky puncture. ‘Holy powers of mercy’ He tried not to look at the hacked mess that lay, dribbling gore on the wardroom trestle. Then, ‘Don’t go up there,’ he snapped to the quartermaster, who ventured an unwise step towards the stair. ‘You need watch orders? I’ll handle the dispatch. Captain’ll be a rank bundle of nerves. Let him unwind first. Trust me, he’ll come back down when he’s ready’

‘You hear yet, he broke Jedrey’s arm?’ said a man, somewhat shrill, as the neck-broken corpse was manoeuvred inside and laid out alongside the first. More guards milled about, shaken and exclaiming.

‘Poke a dog with a stick, it’ll snap. Sergeant Jed was a fool to provoke him.’

‘Blighted bad call, for those wretches on moat watch!’ a bystander griped in commiseration. ‘You hear what Captain Mykkael said when he dressed down their sad hides for negligence?’

In no mood for gossip, Vensic cracked orders. ‘Canvas and needles, boys, keep it smart! We’ve got two stiffs to sew up for the gravediggers. And this place to scrub down in the meantime. No man sits on his arse till, floor to ceiling, we’re mopped clean as the late queen’s pantry!’

As the room cleared, and the fascinated pack broke away from Mykkael’s morbid handiwork, the keep sergeant collared the quartermaster to hear the official report.

Jussoud padded into the lull of the aftermath, still wearing his fine robe and silk sash with the dragons. He quartered the room once, reviewing the two corpses with unmoved professional quiet. Even under the fluttering candles, the loose tunic and drawstring trousers on the gutted one could not be mistaken for northern dress. As though foreign assassins were commonplace visitors, the tall nomad met Vensic’s leashed-back distress with a calm like unruffled water. ‘Since these two lie past need of my services, where’s your captain?’

‘Taskin sent you?’ Vensic shut his eyes, released a pent breath, then set down the duty slate in his hand. ‘I thank glory for that.’ Exhausted and troubled, he placed the chalk alongside as though it was explosively fragile. ‘Mykkael’s upstairs. Mind how you handle him. He isn’t inclined to want company’

‘By nature, is he a man who craves a woman to let down from the tension of violence?’ Jussoud shrugged, the chink of glass in his satchel too strident amid the strained quiet. ‘Then bide easy. I’ll manage well enough on my own.’

Vensic rubbed his stubbled face with taut hands, nodded, then moved with intent to roust stableboys. ‘You’ll be wanting the wash tub?’

Half turned away to proceed up the stair, Jussoud glanced back in surprise.

And steady, sensible Vensic gave way, his voice cracked rough by an onslaught of shaking. ‘Last I saw, Mykkael looked as if he’d walked through an abattoir. What’s happening? Who sent the foreigner that just tried to kill him?’ Then, as the braced set to those eastern-bred features reached through, his distress snapped to shattering fear. ‘Bright powers, what’s troubled you? Jussoud?’

But the nomad had no assurance to salve his deep worry, that fresh bleeding could be masked by the gore of a kill. ‘Send up filled buckets. Hot water. Leave them outside the door. If I need aught else, I’ll send down to you.’ All business, he spun and mounted the stair, leaving Vensic, struck desolate, behind him.

The door at the top of the landing was ajar. The feeble glow of the clay oil lamp beyond spilled carmine light over the stairhead, where Jussoud took pause to consider the difficult prospect of entry. He shifted his satchel, to a faint clink of glass.

That distinctive sound, or perhaps the earlier tread of his grass sandals, reached Mykkael’s overstrung senses and woke recognition. His flint voice came muffled, from behind that gapped panel, the phrasing in high-caste Serphaidian. ‘Jussoud? Come ahead. Only you.’

The nomad contained his stark apprehension, pushed open the door, and stepped through. The sweet-burning fragrance of incense filled his nostrils, underlaid at next breath by the coppery tang of let blood. Jussoud all but flinched as his tentative first footfall mired in Mykkael’s dropped shirt. The fabric was sodden, more scarlet than white. Rinsed in hellish tones by the lamp on the trestle, Mykkael knelt before what looked like a clothes chest. His posture was upright, buttocks propped on the heel of his good leg, with the bad knee extended at a sideways angle that suggested the scream of pinched nerves. His naked, marked back showed Taskin’s three stripes, the scabs rubbed raw where his harness had chafed. His head stayed bowed, and his hands, tucked before him, were not visible.

He might have been settled in meditative contemplation, except for the tremors that chased in sharp waves through the musculature alongside his spine. ‘There is always reaction,’ he said, almost steady. ‘It will pass. Take care to move slowly until then.’

Jussoud took a deep breath, sampling the incense for narcotic drugs. He smelled none, only the mild blend of herbals used in southern physics for calming. Left to wait, allowed no direct outlet to allay his concern, he softly set down his bundle of remedies. The stained shirt, untangled, showed him two rents: one across the left-hand side of the chest, and beside that, another razor-clean slice through the upper sleeve. Anxious about bleeding, but granted no invitation, the healer crushed down his urgent impatience.

The incense unreeled serpentine smoke, tinted rouge in the flutter of the oil lamp. Mykkael drew in the scent with shuddering long breaths, as though all five senses could be condensed down to one, with the meadow-flower fragrance the ephemeral nail upon which he hung his strained consciousness. Cued by the intuitive awareness that tonight, the ritual was not going to ease him, Jussoud dared a cautious step forward. ‘I’m coming across.’

The captain did not forbid him; only the tremors grew worse as the healer’s slowed step approached. Jussoud reached, ever so carefully gentle. He touched the unmarked right shoulder, felt the animal flinch of recoil, then the lightning-fast surge of roused sinew as the man underneath his poised fingers strangled down the reflexive barqui’ino response.

‘All right,’ Jussoud said. ‘Settle back. You can trust me.’

‘Orannia’s brother,’ Mykkael whispered, the next wracking shudder all too close to the wrench of a sob stifled silent.

Jussoud knelt, gathered the tortured knot of bronze flesh into his steady embrace. ‘In a kinder world, we should have been family’ There he held for long minutes, while Mykkael trembled against him, head turned aside in choked grief. Over his shoulder, on the lid of the clothes chest next to the incense, Jussoud saw the object that had held the captain absorbed: an intricate wooden seal inlaid with gold patterns, until what looked like an axe blow had hewn its symmetry into quarters. ‘Brace up, now, Captain. I’m going to raise you.’

Mykkael cursed his knee, which had forced his collapse, then swore with more venom as he saw the silk sleeves of the robe Jussoud had just spoiled with bloodstains. The inventive, rich phrasing startled the nomad to laughter. ‘I can see we won’t waste any candles testing your eye reflexes for a concussion.’

‘My head wasn’t dunted,’ Mykkael agreed. Leg under him, his wrecked balance back under command, he managed to perch on the stool with his bloodied hands braced on the trestle. ‘Did you know Anja?’ he asked, pointblank.

‘Yes. Forget memory. She is not like Orannia. Let her quandary bide for the moment.’ Jussoud withdrew his steadying touch, caught blindsided as an explosion of tuned instinct whipped Mykkael back to his feet. The move erupted too fast to resist. The nomad stopped cold, awareness shocked through him that, had he owned the speed of reaction to try, the attempt might well have destroyed him. Since the aggression seemed caused by someone’s step on the stair, he chose words in rapid Serphaidian. ‘It’s a boy bearing buckets. Hold fast, do you hear?’

Mykkael disarmed reflex, spun, and propped his stressed frame on the trestle. His hurt tucked into a protective posture, chin averted, he said, ‘I should send you out.’

‘You’re not going to. Stay still.’ The nomad moved, intercepted the boy on the landing. He returned with the steaming buckets, shut the door, then recovered his satchel of remedies. He rummaged inside, trimmed the wicks of four candles, and set them alight one by one. Now able to see clearly, he approached Mykkael and started his treatment in earnest. ‘Do the do’aa ever poison their blades?’

Mykkael turned his head, jerked stiff with surprise. ‘You knew that assassin was oath-sworn?’

‘To mark you? He had to be.’ Jussoud completed his cursory assessment, then selected a soft rag, several herbals and two oils. He tested the first bucket, and made an infusion with the hot water. ‘Answer.’

‘They don’t.’ Mykkael subsided, eyes shut, while those quick, knowing fingers probed at the gash on his chest, then the shallower graze on his bicep. ‘The swords they carry are quite sharp enough.’

‘So I see. Nothing you have here should cause undue worry.’ The nomad dipped his clean rag and pronounced, ‘This will sting. I am sorry. But stitching would badly impair your mobility, and naught else will reliably stanch such a razor-clean cut.’ Fast and sure, he wrung the hot linen and began the unpleasant chore of cleaning the open flesh wounds. No need to waste words to note how a hairsbreadth change in angle would have let the sword’s point pierce the chest wall. Mykkael surely knew how close he had come to the death that had danced with him in the dark.

As often happened, Jussoud’s steady silence invited the overstrung mind to unburden.

‘Had they sent a southerner, I would have died,’ the captain admitted straight out. ‘The fact he had northern skin let me place him.’ He sucked a sharp breath, as Jussoud’s ministrations moved on to the angry slice on his arm. ‘A man sent from that do’aa may have known of the knee. Even odds, and surprise, he should have been able to take me.’

‘Yet he did not.’ Jussoud rinsed his rag, packed the wounds with clean lint, then added a salve that eased the virulent sting like a tonic. ‘Life’s too short to waste looking back.’

‘The two masters I flouted don’t think so,’ Mykkael said, his sadness turned savagely wrenching.

Jussoud rummaged for dry linen, then uncapped a tin with turpentine gum, and softened the contents over the candle. ‘Well, they must get tired of losing trained men.’

‘You saw the seal?’ Mykkael retorted. ‘Smashed crosswise, that means they will quarter the known world. It is sent as an oath-breaker’s promise of vengeance. I had hoped, of the two, Kaien’s do’aa might release me.’

Jussoud dipped the linen into the tin, let the melted gum soak through the fabric. ‘Do you care very much if you itch as you heal?’

Mykkael curled his lip at the strong reek of pine gum. ‘That concoction you’ve got’s going to spare me from having my torso done up in strapping? Great glory. I’ll scratch like a dog, and be grateful.’ Then he flinched, gasping swearwords, as the healer plastered the heated strips over his traumatized flesh.

To divert him from the pain, Jussoud posed a sensitive question. ‘What made you think Kaien might grant you release?’

Eyes shut, head thrown back, with the sweat rolling off his temples in drops and soaking his sable hair, Mykkael jerked out his answer. ‘Such a seal is given, master to student, on the swearing of oath. It is kept on display, then awarded with ceremony upon completion of training. I did not finish my schooling. Not then, not ever, with Kaien’s do’aa. When I deserted without given leave, the master smashed my seal, for dishonour. The first assassin he sent delivered that token. Though that aspirant died by my hand, I sent his disc back, unbroken, along with his ashes. For the second man, I did the same. By my respect for their dead, they would understand I had never shared secrets between do’aa. Tonight, as you see, they dispatched their reply. Third is final. My appeal is not going to be heard.’

‘Outcast,’ Jussoud said. ‘Did you murder that beggar girl?’

That snapped Mykkael out of pain-shocked stupor. Riled beyond hurt, his eyes open and angry, he slammed his taut fists on the trestle. ‘With these hands? No! The spilled blood stained another’s. But, by allowing such knowledge to exist in the world—yes. Which weapon strikes down the victim, the living man or the sword? All of us in that do’aa killed that child. Saddest of all, maybe, that I was the only one there who was shamed enough to walk out.’

‘I spoke for you, today, when I wasn’t sure,’ Jussoud said, in one measured sentence drawing the sting from his test of the captain’s integrity. ‘Brother I lost to Orannia’s madness, I say here, you were good enough to have wed as a prince of the clan.’

That undid Mykkael. He stared, thrown off his balance in surrender, while the nomad’s deft touch steered his unsteady steps towards the pallet. Settled, face down, the tears almost came that the past had never wrung from him. ‘Demon, begotten of demons,’ he murmured, exhausted down to the bone. ‘I had better be good enough now, to recover Isendon’s daughter.’

Jussoud moved in staid calm and fetched the clean bucket. Endlessly patient, he sat on the edge of the cot, sorted among his oils and remedies, and made up a second infusion. This one did not sting, as the warm cloth tenderly swabbed the three livid welts on the desert-bred captain’s back. Jussoud cleaned the spatter of bloodstains, also, everywhere else he could reach. ‘You cannot help her Grace by any means if you don’t keep your head and stay free.’

Mykkael sighed, eyes half lidded and weary, now that he was stretched prone. ‘By that, you know I have a garrison man turned informer?’

‘Do you?’ That steady, soft touch scarcely faltered.

‘The assassin’s dropped sword wasn’t found in the archway when I sent a boy to recover it,’ Mykkael stated, and this time the bitterness blistered. ‘You learned the fact I had two masters from your tribe? Not Taskin.’ Satisfied once that point had been clarified, the captain closed his eyes fully. ‘How much is my oath-breaking likely to cost? If Taskin kept silence, I have to expect the unpleasant truth that somebody knows how severely I’m forsworn with one, if not both of the do’aa.’

With practised mercy, Jussoud ripped off a stuck scab to cleanse the festering flesh underneath. ‘The bald truth you’ve asked for is ugly enough. The king’s trust in fact rests upon your past record of loyalty, and you are foreign-born, which draws enemies. That could see you bound in chains on an implied charge of treason at the slightest hint of provocation. Will you go if you’re summoned?’

‘I don’t know.’ Mykkael shifted his knee, fretful, the fine tremors now more due to pinched nerves than the backlash of excess adrenaline. ‘As your people have said, it’s the ancient problem facing the starving snake who foolishly swallowed its own tail. Go or not, I would find myself damned. Break my oath of crown service by jilting Taskin’s authority, or submit to the chain of command by free choice—Sessalie’s chancellors would clamour for my arraignment either way’

Jussoud blotted his handiwork dry, then set to with more lint and salve. ‘Short-term decision,’ he pronounced at due length, breaking through the strained quiet. ‘Cover these, you’ll feel more comfortable, later. After the last, can you bear it?’

Mykkael swore. ‘Do your worst, healer. By such grace, the doomed man counts his blessing of life. If I pass out, asleep, just be sure that my sword is left underneath my right hand.’

Arisen to warm his tin of congealed resin, Jussoud recovered the harness and blade from the floor. He could not avoid the tragic glance sideways, or fail to acknowledge the sad altar made over the battered wood of the clothes chest. The stick of lit incense had long since burned out. Under the lucent flames of wax candles, the smashed token disc blazed like a brand. Moved by sharp impulse, Jussoud bent and veiled it. He snatched up the stained linen just used to swab down Mykkael’s back, and saw, amazed, that his hand was unsteady with anger.

For long minutes, he walked the floor, after that. He paced until he was certain his hackled emotions had dispersed back to centring calm.

Mykkael watched, eyes slitted with irony. He slept the moment the cold mark on the sword hilt was slid underneath his slack hand. Lightly breathing, he scarcely stirred as Jussoud sealed his back under strips of resin-soaked bandage. Battered unconscious by blinding exhaustion, he thrashed once in a dream, and called Anja’s name. Or perhaps his appeal was Orannia’s. His whisper ran on in an unknown tongue, a wracked cry of desperate, hoarse agony.

Jussoud wept, then blotted his run tears in relief for the gift of blank silence, restored. His hands faltered, then moved on, careful, so careful, not to brush against the bronze skin with the knife blade he required to cut away the stained wrap that supported the lamed knee. Mykkael rested, oblivious. His hands on the coverlet stayed slack and trusting, as perhaps they had during childhood. As the candles burned low, and the mist spun white tendrils past the arrow slits, the masseur finished his labour in unstinting quiet. He eased what he could. At the end, when the oils and the strength of his hands had achieved all the healing he knew, he sewed a fresh binding over the damaged joint with its crippling scars.

This time, with no pang of regret, he used the fine eastern silk embroidered with the Sanouk royal dragons, cut away from the sash at his waist.

To Ride Hell's Chasm
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