
“If you're fond of bloodless, turgid
fantasy with characters as thin as newspaper and as boring as
plaster saints, Joe Abercrombie is really going to ruin your day. A
long career for this guy would be a gift to our genre.” —Scott
Lynch, author of The Lies of Locke Lamora
The Blade Itself
The First Law: Book One
Joe
Abercrombie
The End
Logen plunged through the trees, bare feet
slipping and sliding on the wet earth, the slush, the wet pine
needles, breath rasping in his chest, blood thumping in his head. He
stumbled and sprawled onto his side, nearly cut his chest open with
his own axe, lay there panting, peering through the shadowy forest.
The Dogman had been with him until a moment
before, he was sure, but there wasn’t any sign of him now. As for
the others, there was no telling. Some leader, getting split up from
his boys like that. He should’ve been trying to get back, but the
Shanka were all around. He could feel them moving between the trees,
his nose was full of the smell of them. Sounded as if there was some
shouting somewhere on his left, fighting maybe. Logen crept slowly
to his feet, trying to stay quiet. A twig snapped and he whipped
round.
There was a spear coming at him. A
cruel-looking spear, coming at him fast with a Shanka on the other
end of it.
“Shit,” said Logen. He threw himself to one
side, slipped and fell on his face, rolled away thrashing through
the brush, expecting the spear through his back at any moment. He
scrambled up, breathing hard. He saw the bright point poking at him
again, dodged out of the way, slithered behind a big tree trunk. He
peered out and the Flathead hissed and stabbed at him. He showed
himself on the other side, just for a moment, then ducked away,
jumped round the tree and swung the axe down, roaring loud as he
could. There was a loud crack as the blade buried itself deep in the
Shanka’s skull. Lucky that, but then Logen reckoned he was due a
little luck.
The Flathead stood there, blinking at him.
Then it started to sway from side to side, blood dribbling down its
face. Then it dropped like a stone, dragging the axe from Logen’s
fingers, thrashing around on the ground at his feet. He tried to
grab hold of his axe-handle but the Shanka still somehow had a grip
on its spear and the point was flailing around in the air.
“Gah!” squawked Logen as the spear cut a
nick in his arm. He felt a shadow fall across his face. Another
Flathead. A damn big one. Already in the air, arms outstretched. No
time to get the axe. No time to get out of the way. Logen’s mouth
opened, but there was no time to say anything. What do you say at a
time like that?
They crashed to the wet ground together,
rolled together through the dirt and the thorns and the broken
branches, tearing and punching and growling at each other. A tree
root hit Logen in the head, hard, and made his ears ring. He had a
knife somewhere, but he couldn’t remember where. They rolled on, and
on, downhill, the world flipping and flipping around, Logen trying
to shake the fuzz out of his head and throttle the big Flathead at
the same time. There was no stopping.
It had seemed a clever notion to pitch camp
near the gorge. No chance of anyone sneaking up behind. Now, as
Logen slid over the edge of the cliff on his belly, the idea lost
much of its appeal. His hands scrabbled at the wet earth. Only dirt
and brown pine needles. His fingers clutched, clutched at nothing.
He was beginning to fall. He let go a little whimper.
His hands closed around something. A tree
root, sticking out from the earth at the very edge of the gorge. He
swung in space, gasping, but his grip was firm.
“Hah!” he shouted. “Hah!” He was still
alive. It would take more than a few Flatheads to put an end to
Logen Ninefingers. He started to pull himself up onto the bank but
couldn’t manage it. There was some great weight around his legs. He
peered down.
The gorge was deep. Very deep with sheer,
rocky sides. Here and there a tree clung to a crack, growing out
into the empty air and spreading its leaves into space. The river
hissed away far below, fast and angry, foaming white water fringed
by jagged black stone. That was all bad, for sure, but the real
problem was closer to hand. The big Shanka was still with him,
swinging gently back and forth with its dirty hands clamped tight
around his left ankle.
“Shit,” muttered Logen. It was quite a
scrape he was in. He’d been in some bad ones alright, and lived to
sing the songs, but it was hard to see how this could get much
worse. That got him thinking about his life. It seemed a bitter,
pointless sort of a life now. No one was any better off because of
it. Full of violence and pain, with not much but disappointment and
hardship in between. His hands were starting to tire now, his
forearms were burning. The big Flathead didn’t look like it was
going to fall off any time soon. In fact, it had dragged itself up
his leg a way. It paused, glaring up at him.
If Logen had been the one clinging to the
Shanka’s foot, he would most likely have thought, “My life depends
on this leg I’m hanging from—best not take any chances.” A man would
rather save himself than kill his enemy. Trouble was that the Shanka
didn’t think that way, and Logen knew it. So it wasn’t much of a
surprise when it opened its big mouth and sank its teeth into his
calf.
“Aaaargh!” Logen grunted, and squealed and
kicked out as hard as he could with his bare heel, kicked a bloody
gash in the Shanka’s head, but it wouldn’t stop biting, and the
harder he kicked, the more his hands slipped on the greasy root
above. There wasn’t much root left to hold on to, now, and what
there was looked like snapping off any moment. He tried to think
past the pain in his hands, the pain in his arms, the Flathead’s
teeth in his leg. He was going to fall. The only choice was between
falling on rocks or falling on water, and that was a choice that
more or less made itself.
Once you’ve got a task to do, it’s better to
do it than to live with the fear of it. That’s what Logen’s father
would have said. So he planted his free foot firmly on the rock
face, took one last deep breath, and flung himself out into empty
space with all the strength he had left. He felt the biting teeth
let go of him, then the grasping hands, and for a moment he was
free.
Then he began to fall. Fast. The sides of
the gorge flashed past—grey rock, green moss, patches of white snow,
all tumbling around him.
Logen turned over slowly in the air, limbs
flailing pointlessly, too scared to scream. The rushing wind whipped
at his eyes, tugged at his clothes, plucked the breath out of his
mouth. He saw the big Shanka hit the rock face beside him. He saw it
break and bounce and flop off, dead for sure. That was a pleasing
sight, but Logen’s satisfaction was short-lived.
The water came up to meet him. It hit him in
the side like a charging bull, punched the air out of his lungs,
knocked the sense out of his head, sucked him in and down into the
cold darkness . . .
Part One
"The blade itself incites to deeds of violence" -
Homer
The
Survivors
The lapping of water in his ears. That was
the first thing. The lapping of water, the rustling of trees, the
odd click and twitter of a bird.
Logen opened his eyes a crack. Light, blurry
bright through leaves. This was death? Then why did it hurt so much?
His whole left side was throbbing. He tried to take a proper breath,
choked, coughed up water, spat out mud. He groaned, flopped over
onto his hands and knees, dragged himself up out of the river,
gasping through clenched teeth, rolled onto his back in the moss and
slime and rotten sticks at the water’s edge.
He lay there for a moment, staring up at the
grey sky beyond the black branches, breath wheezing in his raw
throat.
“I am still alive,” he croaked to himself.
Still alive, in spite of the best efforts of nature, Shanka, men and
beasts. Soaking wet and flat on his back, he started to chuckle.
Reedy, gurgling laughter. Say one thing for Logen Ninefingers, say
he’s a survivor.
A cold wind blew across the rotting river
bank, and Logen’s laughter slowly died. Alive he might be, but
staying alive, that was another question. He sat up, wincing at the
pain. He tottered to his feet, leaning against the nearest tree
trunk. He scraped the dirt out of his nose, his eyes, his ears. He
pulled up his wet shirt to take a look at the damage.
His side was covered in bruises from the
fall. Blue and purple stains all up his ribs. Tender to the touch,
and no mistake, but it didn’t feel like anything was broken. His leg
was a mess. Torn and bloody from the Shanka’s teeth. It hurt bad,
but his foot still moved well enough, and that was the main thing.
He’d need his foot, if he was going to get out of this.
He still had his knife in the sheath at his
belt, and he was mightily glad to see it. You could never have too
many knives in Logen’s experience, and this was a good one, but the
outlook was still bleak. He was on his own, in woods crawling with
Flatheads. He had no idea where he was, but he could follow the
river. The rivers all flowed north, from the mountains to the cold
sea. Follow the river southwards, against the current. Follow the
river and climb up, into the High Places where the Shanka couldn’t
find him. That was his only chance.
It would be cold up there, this time of
year. Deadly cold. He looked down at his bare feet. It was just his
luck that the Shanka had come while he had his boots off, trimming
his blisters. No coat either—he’d been sitting near the fire. Like
this, he wouldn’t last a day in the mountains. His hands and feet
would turn black in the night, and he’d die bit by bit before he
even reached the passes. If he didn’t starve first.
“Shit,” he muttered. He had to go back to
the camp. He had to hope the Flatheads had moved on, hope they’d
left something behind. Something he could use to survive. That was
an awful lot of hoping, but he had no choice. He never had any
choices.
It had started to rain by the time Logen
found the place. Spitting drops that plastered his hair to his
skull, kept his clothes wet through. He pressed himself against a
mossy trunk and peered out towards the camp, heart pounding, fingers
of his right hand curled painful tight around the slippery grip of
his knife.
He saw the blackened circle where the fire
had been, half-burned sticks and ash trampled round it. He saw the
big log Threetrees and Dow had been sitting on when the Flatheads
came. He saw odd bits of torn and broken gear scattered across the
clearing. He counted three dead Shanka crumpled on the ground, one
with an arrow poking out of its chest. Three dead ones, but no sign
of any alive. That was lucky. Just lucky enough to survive, as
always. Still, they might be back at any moment. He had to be quick.
Logen scuttled out from the trees, casting
about on the ground. His boots were still there where he’d left
them. He snatched them up and dragged them on to his freezing feet,
hopping around, almost slipping in his haste. His coat was there
too, wedged under the log, battered and scarred from ten years of
weather and war, torn and stitched back together, missing half a
sleeve. His pack was lying shapeless in the brush nearby, its
contents strewn out down the slope. He crouched, breathless,
throwing it all back inside. A length of rope, his old clay pipe,
some strips of dried meat, needle and twine, a dented flask with
some liquor still sloshing inside. All good. All useful.
There was a tattered blanket snagged on a
branch, wet and half caked in grime. Logen pulled it up, and
grinned. His old, battered cook pot was underneath. Lying on its
side, kicked off the fire in the fight maybe. He grabbed hold of it
with both hands. It felt safe, familiar, dented and blackened from
years of hard use. He’d had that pot a long time. It had followed
him all through the wars, across the North and back again. They had
all cooked in it together, out on the trail, all eaten out of it.
Forley, Grim, the Dogman, all of them.
Logen looked over the campsite again. Three
dead Shanka, but none of his people. Maybe they were still out
there. Maybe if he took a risk, tried to look—
“No.” He said it quietly, under his breath.
He knew better than that. There had been a lot of Flatheads. An
awful lot. He had no idea how long he’d lain on the river bank. Even
if a couple of the boys had got away, the Shanka would be hunting
them, hunting them down in the forests. They were nothing but
corpses now, for sure, scattered across the high valleys. All Logen
could do was make for the mountains, and try to save his own sorry
life. You have to be realistic. Have to be, however much it hurts.
“It’s just you and me now,” said Logen as he
stuffed the pot into his pack and threw it over his shoulder. He
started to limp off, as fast as he could. Uphill, towards the river,
towards the mountains.
Just the two of them. Him and the pot.
They were the only survivors.
Questions
Why do I do this? Inquisitor Glokta
asked himself for the thousandth time as he limped down the
corridor. The walls were rendered and whitewashed, though none too
recently. There was a seedy feel to the place and a smell of damp.
There were no windows, as the hallway was deep beneath the ground,
and the lanterns cast slow flowing shadows into every corner.
Why would anyone want to do this?
Glokta’s walking made a steady rhythm on the grimy tiles of the
floor. First the confident click of his right heel, then the tap of
his cane, then the endless sliding of his left foot, with the
familiar stabbing pains in the ankle, knee, arse and back. Click,
tap, pain. That was the rhythm of his walking.
The dirty monotony of the corridor was
broken from time to time by a heavy door, bound and studded with
pitted iron. On one occasion, Glokta thought he heard a muffled cry
of pain from behind one. I wonder what poor fool is being
questioned in there? What crime they are guilty, or innocent of?
What secrets are being picked at, what lies cut through, what
treasons laid bare? He didn’t wonder long though. He was
interrupted by the steps.
If Glokta had been given the opportunity to
torture any one man, anyone at all, he would surely have chosen the
inventor of steps. When he was young and widely admired, before his
misfortunes, he had never really noticed them. He had sprung down
them two at a time and gone blithely on his way. No more. They’re
everywhere. You really can’t change floors without them. And down is
worse than up, that’s the thing people never realise. Going up, you
usually don’t fall that far.
He knew this flight well. Sixteen steps, cut
from smooth stone, a little worn toward the centre, slightly damp,
like everything down here. There was no banister, nothing to cling
to. Sixteen enemies. A challenge indeed. It had taken Glokta
a long time to develop the least painful method of descending
stairs. He went sideways like a crab. Cane first, then left foot,
then right, with more than the usual agony as his left leg took his
weight, joined by a persistent stabbing in the neck. Why should
it hurt in my neck when I go down stairs? Does my neck take my
weight? Does it? Yet the pain could not be denied.
Glokta paused four steps from the bottom. He
had nearly beaten them. His hand was trembling on the handle of his
cane, his left leg aching like fury. He tongued his gums where his
front teeth used to be, took a deep breath and stepped forward. His
ankle gave way with a horrifying wrench and he plunged into space,
twisting, lurching, his mind a cauldron of horror and despair. He
stumbled onto the next step like a drunkard, fingernails scratching
at the smooth wall, giving a squeal of terror. You stupid, stupid
bastard! His cane clattered to the floor, his clumsy feet
wrestled with the stones and he found himself at the bottom, by some
miracle still standing.
And here it is. That horrible, beautiful,
stretched out moment between stubbing your toe and feeling the hurt.
How long do I have before the pain comes? How bad will it be when it
does? Gasping, slack-jawed at the foot of the steps, Glokta felt
a tingling of anticipation. Here it comes . . .
The agony was unspeakable, a searing spasm
up his left side from foot to jaw. He squeezed his watering eyes
tight shut, clamped his right hand over his mouth so hard that the
knuckles clicked. His remaining teeth grated against each other as
he locked his jaws together, but a high-pitched, jagged moan still
whistled from him. Am I screaming or laughing? How do I tell the
difference? He breathed, in heaving gasps, through his nose,
snot bubbling out onto his hand, his twisted body shaking with the
effort of staying upright.
The spasm passed. Glokta moved his limbs
cautiously, one by one, testing the damage. His leg was on fire, his
foot numb, his neck clicked with every movement, sending vicious
little stings down his spine. Pretty good, considering. He
bent down with an effort and snatched up his cane between two
fingers, drew himself up once more, wiped the snot and tears on the
back of his hand. Truly a thrill. Did I enjoy it? For most people
stairs are a mundane affair. For me, an adventure! He limped off
down the corridor, giggling quietly to himself. He was still smiling
ever so faintly when he reached his own door and shuffled inside.
A grubby white box with two doors facing
each other. The ceiling was too low for comfort, the room too
brightly lit by blazing lamps. Damp was creeping out of one corner
and the plaster had erupted with flaking blisters, speckled with
black mould. Someone had tried to scrub a long bloodstain from one
wall, but hadn’t tried nearly hard enough.
Practical Frost was standing on the other
side of the room, big arms folded across his big chest. He nodded to
Glokta, with all the emotion of a stone, and Glokta nodded back.
Between them stood a scarred, stained wooden table, bolted to the
floor and flanked by two chairs. A naked fat man sat in one of them,
hands tied tightly behind him and with a brown canvas bag over his
head. His quick, muffled breathing was the only sound. It was cold
down here, but he was sweating. As well he should be.
Glokta limped over to the other chair,
leaned his cane carefully against the edge of the table top and
slowly, cautiously, painfully sat down. He stretched his neck to the
left and right, then allowed his body to slump into a position
approaching comfort. If Glokta had been given the opportunity to
shake the hand of any one man, any one at all, he would surely have
chosen the inventor of chairs. He has made my life almost
bearable.
Frost stepped silently out of the corner and
took hold of the loose top of the bag between meaty, pale finger and
heavy, white thumb. Glokta nodded and the Practical ripped it off,
leaving Salem Rews blinking in the harsh light.
A mean, piggy, ugly little face. You
mean, ugly pig, Rews. You disgusting swine. You’re ready to confess
right now, I’ll bet, ready to talk and talk without interruption,
until we’re all sick of it. There was a big dark bruise across
his cheek and another on his jaw above his double chin. As his
watering eyes adjusted to the brightness he recognised Glokta
sitting opposite him, and his face suddenly filled with hope. A
sadly, sadly misplaced hope.
“Glokta, you have to help me!” he squealed,
leaning forward as far as his bonds would allow, words bubbling out
in a desperate, mumbling mess. “I’m falsely accused, you know it,
I’m innocent! You’ve come to help me, yes? You’re my friend! You
have influence here. We’re friends, friends! You could say something
for me! I’m an innocent man, falsely accused! I’m—”
Glokta held up his hand for silence. He
stared at Rews’ familiar face for a moment, as though he had never
laid eyes on him before. Then he turned to Frost. “Am I supposed to
know this man?”
The albino said nothing. The bottom part of
his face was hidden by his Practical’s mask, and the top half gave
nothing away. He stared unblinking at the prisoner in the chair,
pink eyes as dead as a corpse. He hadn’t blinked once since Glokta
came into the room. How can he do that?
“It’s me, Rews!” hissed the fat man, the
pitch of his voice rising steadily towards panic. “Salem Rews, you
know me, Glokta! I was with you in the war, before . . . you
know . . . we’re
friends! We—”
Glokta held up his hand again and sat back,
tapping one of his few remaining teeth with a fingernail as though
deep in thought. “Rews. The name is familiar. A merchant, a member
of the Guild of Mercers. A rich man by all accounts. I remember now . . .”
Glokta leaned forward, pausing for effect. “He was a traitor! He was
taken by the Inquisition, his property confiscated. You see, he had
conspired to avoid the King’s taxes.” Rews’ mouth was hanging open.
“The King’s taxes!” screamed Glokta, smashing his hand down on the
table. The fat man stared, wide eyed, and licked at a tooth.
Upper right side, second from the back.
“But where are our manners?” asked Glokta of
no one in particular. “We may or may not have known each other once,
but I don’t think you and my assistant have been properly
introduced. Practical Frost, say hello to this fat man.”
It was an open-handed blow, but powerful
enough to knock Rews clean out of his seat. The chair rattled but
was otherwise unaffected. How is that done? To knock him to the
ground but leave the chair standing? Rews sprawled gurgling
across the floor, face flattened on the tiles.
“He reminds me of a beached whale,” said
Glokta absently. The albino grabbed Rews under the arm and hauled
him up, flung him back into the chair. Blood seeped from a cut on
his cheek, but his piggy eyes were hard now. Blows make most men
soften up, but some men harden. I never would have taken this one
for a tough man, but life is full of surprises.
Rews spat blood onto the table top. “You’ve
gone too far here, Glokta, oh yes! The Mercers are an honourable
guild; we have influence! They won’t put up with this! I’m a known
man! Even now my wife will be petitioning the King to hear my case!”
“Ah, your wife.” Glokta smiled sadly. “Your
wife is a very beautiful woman. Beautiful, and young. I fear,
perhaps, a little too young for you. I fear she took the opportunity
to be rid of you. I fear she came forward with your books. All the
books.” Rews’ face paled.
“We looked at those books,” Glokta indicated
an imaginary pile of papers on his left, “we looked at the books in
the treasury,” indicating another on his right. “Imagine our
surprise when we could not make the numbers add up. And then there
were the night-time visits by your employees to warehouses in the
old quarter, the small unregistered boats, the payments to
officials, the forged documentation. Must I go on?” asked Glokta,
shaking his head in profound disapproval. The fat man swallowed and
licked his lips.
Pen and ink were placed before the prisoner,
and the paper of confession, filled out in detail in Frost’s
beautiful, careful script, awaiting only the signature. I’ll get
him right here and now.
“Confess, Rews,” Glokta whispered softly,
“and put a painless end to this regrettable business. Confess and
name your accomplices. We already know who they are. It will be
easier on all of us. I don’t want to hurt you, believe me, it will
give me no pleasure.” Nothing will. “Confess. Confess, and
you will be spared. Exile in Angland is not so bad as they would
have you believe. There is still pleasure to be had from life there,
and the satisfaction of a day of honest work, in the service of your
King. Confess!” Rews stared at the floor, licking at his tooth.
Glokta sat back and sighed.
“Or not,” he said, “and I can come back with
my instruments.” Frost moved forward, his massive shadow falling
across the fat man’s face. “Body found floating by the docks,”
Glokta breathed, “bloated by seawater and horribly mutilated . . . far . . . far
beyond recognition.” He’s ready to talk. He’s fat and ripe and
ready to burst. “Were the injuries inflicted before or after
death?” he asked the ceiling breezily. “Was the mysterious deceased
a man or a woman even?” Glokta shrugged. “Who can say?”
There was a sharp knock at the door. Rews’
face jerked up, filled with hope again. Not now, damn it!
Frost went to the door, opened it a crack. Something was said. The
door shut, Frost leaned down to whisper in Glokta’s ear.
“Ith Theverar,” came the half-tongued
mumble, by which Glokta understood that Severard was at the door.
Already? Glokta smiled and nodded, as
if it was good news. Rews’ face fell a little. How could a man
whose business has been concealment find it impossible to hide his
emotions in this room? But Glokta knew how. It’s hard to stay
calm when you’re terrified, helpless, alone, at the mercy of men
with no mercy at all. Who could know that better than me? He
sighed, and using his most world-weary tone of voice asked, “Do you
wish to confess?”
“No!” The defiance had returned to the
prisoner’s piggy eyes now. He stared back, silent and watchful, and
sucked. Surprising. Very surprising. But then we’re just getting
started.
“Is that tooth bothering you, Rews?” There
was nothing Glokta didn’t know about teeth. His own mouth had been
worked on by the very best. Or the very worst, depending on how
you look at it. “It seems that I must leave you now, but while
I’m away, I’ll be thinking about that tooth. I’ll be considering
very carefully what to do with it.” He took hold of his cane. “I
want you to think about me, thinking about your tooth. And I also
want you to think, very carefully, about signing your confession.”
Glokta got awkwardly to his feet, shaking
out his aching leg. “I think you may respond well to a
straightforward beating however, so I’m going to leave you in the
company of Practical Frost for half an hour.” Rews’ mouth became a
silent circle of surprise. The albino picked up the chair, fat man
and all, and turned it slowly around. “He’s absolutely the best
there is at this kind of thing.” Frost took out a pair of battered
leather gloves and began to pull them carefully onto his big white
hands, one finger at a time. “You always did like to have the very
best of everything, eh, Rews?” Glokta made for the door.
“Wait! Glokta!” wailed Rews over his
shoulder. “Wait I—”
Practical Frost clamped a gloved hand over
the fat man’s mouth and held a finger to his mask. “Thhhhhhh,” he
said. The door clicked shut.
Severard was leaning against the wall in the
corridor, one foot propped on the plaster behind him, whistling
tunelessly beneath his mask and running a hand through his long,
lanky hair. As Glokta came through the door he straightened up and
gave a little bow, and it was plain by his eyes that he was smiling.
He’s always smiling.
“Superior Kalyne wants to see you,” he said
in his broad, common accent, “and I’m of the opinion that I never
saw him angrier.”
“Severard, you poor thing, you must be
terrified. Do you have the box?”
“I do.”
“And you took something out for Frost?”
“I did.”
“And something for your wife too, I hope?”
“Oh yes,” said Severard, his eyes smiling
more than ever, “My wife will be well taken care of. If I ever get
one.”
“Good. I hasten to answer the call of the
Superior. When I have been with him for five minutes, come in with
the box.”
“Just barge into his office?”
“Barge in and stab him in the face for all I
care.”
“I’d consider that done, Inquisitor.”
Glokta nodded, turned away, then turned
back. “Don’t really stab him, eh, Severard?”
The Practical smiled with his eyes and
sheathed his vicious-looking knife. Glokta rolled his eyes up to the
ceiling, then limped off, his cane tapping on the tiles, his leg
throbbing. Click, tap, pain. That was the rhythm of his walking.
The Superior’s office was a large and richly
appointed room high up in the House of Questions, a room in which
everything was too big and too fancy. A huge, intricate window
dominated one wood-panelled wall, offering a view over the
well-tended gardens in the courtyard below. An equally huge and
ornate desk stood in the centre of a richly coloured carpet from
somewhere warm and exotic. The head of a fierce animal from
somewhere cold and exotic was mounted above a magnificent stone
fireplace with a tiny, mean fire close to burning out inside.
Superior Kalyne himself made his office look
small and drab. A vast, florid man in his late fifties, he had
over-compensated for his thinning hair with magnificent white side
whiskers. He was considered a daunting presence even within the
Inquisition, but Glokta was past scaring, and they both knew it.
There was a big, fancy chair behind the
desk, but the Superior was pacing up and down while he screamed, his
arms waving. Glokta was seated on something which, while doubtless
expensive, had clearly been designed to make its occupant as
uncomfortable as possible. It doesn’t bother me much, though.
Uncomfortable is as good as I ever get.
He amused himself with the thought of
Kalyne’s head mounted above the fireplace instead of that fierce
animal’s, while the Superior ranted at him. He’s every bit like
his fireplace, the big dolt. Looks impressive, but there’s not much
going on underneath. I wonder how he’d respond to an interrogation?
I’d start with those ridiculous side whiskers. But Glokta’s face
was a mask of attention and respect.
“Well you’ve outdone yourself this time,
Glokta, you mad cripple! When the Mercers find out about this
they’ll have you flayed!”
“I’ve tried flaying, it tickles.” Damn
it, keep your mouth shut and smile. Where’s that whistling fool
Severard? I’ll have him flayed when I get out of here.
“Oh yes, that’s good, that’s very good,
Glokta, look at me laugh! And evasion of the King’s taxes?” The
Superior glowered down, whiskers bristling. “The King’s taxes?” he
screamed, spraying Glokta with spit. “They’re all at it! The
Mercers, the Spicers, all of them! Every damn fool with a boat!”
“But this was so open, Superior. It was an
insult to us. I felt we had to—”
“You felt?” Kalyne was red-faced and
vibrating with rage. “You were explicitly told to keep away from the
Mercers, away from the Spicers, away from all the big guilds!” He
strode up and down with ever greater speed. You’ll wear your
carpet out at this rate. The big guilds will have to buy you a new
one.
“You felt, did you? Well he’ll have to go
back! We’ll have to release him and you’ll have to feel your way to
a grovelling apology! It’s a damn disgrace! You’ve made me look
ridiculous! Where is he now?”
“I left him in the company of Practical
Frost.”
“With that mumbling animal?” The Superior
tore at his hair in desperation. “Well that’s it then, isn’t it?
He’ll be a ruin now! We can’t send him back in that condition!
You’re finished here, Glokta! Finished! I’m going straight to the
Arch Lector! Straight to the Arch Lector!”
The huge door was kicked open and Severard
sauntered in carrying a wooden box. And not a moment too soon.
The Superior stared, speechless, open-mouthed with wrath, as
Severard dropped it on the desk with a thump and a jingle.
“What the hell is the meaning of . . .”
Severard pulled open the lid, and Kalyne saw the money. All that
lovely money. He stopped in mid-rant, mouth stuck forming the
next sound. He looked surprised, then he looked puzzled, then he
looked cautious. He pursed his lips and slowly sat down.
“Thank you, Practical Severard,” said Glokta.
“You may go.” The Superior was stroking thoughtfully at his side
whiskers as Severard strolled out, his face returning gradually to
its usual shade of pink. “Confiscated from Rews. The property of the
Crown now, of course. I thought that I should give it to you, as my
direct superior, so that you could pass it on to the Treasury.”
Or buy a bigger desk, you leech.
Glokta leaned forward, hands on his knees.
“You could say, perhaps, that Rews went too far, that questions had
been asked, that an example had to be made. We can’t be seen to do
nothing, after all. It’ll make the big guilds nervous, keep them in
line.” It’ll make them nervous and you can screw more out of
them. “Or you could always tell them that I’m a mad cripple, and
blame me for it.”
The Superior was starting to like it now,
Glokta could tell. He was trying not to show it, but his whiskers
were quivering at the sight of all that money. “Alright, Glokta.
Alright. Very well.” He reached out and carefully shut the lid of
the box. “But if you ever think of doing something like this again . . . talk
to me first, would you? I don’t like surprises.”
Glokta struggled to his feet, limped towards
the door. “Oh, and one more thing!” He turned stiffly back. Kalyne
was staring at him severely from beneath his big, fancy brows. “When
I go to see the Mercers, I’ll need to take Rews’ confession.”
Glokta smiled broadly, showing the yawning
gap in his front teeth. “That shouldn’t be a problem, Superior.”
Kalyne had been right. There was no way that
Rews could have gone back in this condition. His lips were split and
bloody, his sides covered in darkening bruises, his head lolled
sideways, face swollen almost past recognition. In short, he
looks like a man ready to confess.
“I don’t imagine you enjoyed the last half
hour, Rews, I don’t imagine you enjoyed it much at all. Perhaps it
was the worst half hour of your life, I really couldn’t say. I’m
thinking about what we have for you here, though, and the sad fact
is . . . that’s
about as good as it gets. That’s the high life.” Glokta leaned
forward, his face just inches from the bloody pulp of Rews’ nose.
“Practical Frost’s a little girl compared to me,” he whispered.
“He’s a kitten. Once I get started with you, Rews, you’ll be looking
back on this with nostalgia. You’ll be begging me to give you half
an hour with the Practical. Do you understand?” Rews was silent,
except for the air whistling through his broken nose.
“Show him the instruments,” whispered Glokta.
Frost stepped forward and opened the
polished case with a theatrical flourish. It was a masterful piece
of craftsmanship. As the lid was pulled back, the many trays inside
lifted and fanned out, displaying Glokta’s tools in all their
gruesome glory. There were blades of every size and shape, needles
curved and straight, bottles of oil and acid, nails and screws,
clamps and pliers, saws, hammers, chisels. Metal, wood and glass
glittered in the bright lamplight, all polished to mirror brightness
and honed to a murderous sharpness. A big purple swelling under Rews’
left eye had closed it completely, but the other darted over the
instruments: terrified, fascinated. The functions of some were
horribly obvious, the functions of others were horribly obscure.
Which scare him more, I wonder?
“We were talking about your tooth, I think,”
murmured Glokta. Rews’ eye flicked up to look at him. “Or would you
like to confess” I have him, here he comes. Confess, confess,
confess, confess . . .
There was a sharp knock at the door. Damn
it again! Frost opened it a crack and there was a brief
whispering. Rews licked at his bloated lip. The door shut, the
albino leaned to whisper in Glokta’s ear.
“Ith the Arth Ector.” Glokta froze. The
money was not enough. While I was shuffling back from Kalyne’s
office, the old bastard was reporting me to the Arch Lector. Am I
finished then? He felt a guilty thrill at the thought. Well,
I’ll see to this fat pig first.
“Tell Severard I’m on my way.” Glokta turned
back to talk to his prisoner, but Frost put a big white hand on his
shoulder.
“O. The Arth Ector,” Frost pointed to the
door, “he’th ere. Ow.”
Here? Glokta could feel his eyelid
twitching. Why? He pushed himself up using the edge of the
table. Will they find me in the canal tomorrow? Dead and bloated,
far . . . far
beyond recognition? The only emotion that he felt at the idea
was a flutter of mild relief. No more stairs.
The Arch Lector of His Majesty’s Inquisition
was standing outside in the corridor. The grimy walls looked almost
brown behind him, so brilliantly spotless were his long white coat,
his white gloves, his shock of white hair. He was past sixty, but
showed none of the infirmity of age. Every tall, clean-shaven,
fine-boned inch of him was immaculately turned out. He looks like
a man who has never once in his life been surprised by anything.
They had met once before, six years earlier
when Glokta joined the Inquisition, and he hardly seemed to have
changed. Arch Lector Sult. One of the most powerful men in the
Union. One of the most powerful men in the world, come to that.
Behind him, almost like outsized shadows, loomed two enormous,
silent, black-masked Practicals.
The Arch Lector gave a thin smile when he
saw Glokta shuffle out of his door. It said a lot, that smile.
Mild scorn, mild pity, the very slightest touch of menace. Anything
but amusement. “Inquisitor Glokta,” he said, holding out one
white-gloved hand, palm down. A ring with a huge purple stone
flashed on his finger.
“I serve and obey, your Eminence.” Glokta
could not help grimacing as he bent slowly forward to touch his lips
to the ring. A difficult and painful manoeuvre, it seemed to take
forever. When he finally hoisted himself back upright, Sult was
gazing at him calmly with his cool blue eyes. A look that implied he
already understood Glokta completely, and was unimpressed.
“Come with me.” The Arch Lector turned and
swept away down the corridor. Glokta limped along after him, the
silent Practicals marching close behind. Sult moved with an
effortless, languid confidence, coat tails flapping gracefully out
behind him. Bastard. Soon they reached a door, much like his
own. The Arch Lector unlocked it and went inside, the Practicals
took up positions either side of the doorway, arms folded. A
private interview then. One which I, perhaps, will never leave.
Glokta stepped over the threshold.
A box of grubby white plaster too brightly
lit and with a ceiling too low for comfort. It had a big crack
instead of a damp patch, but was otherwise identical to his own
room. It had the scarred table, the cheap chairs, it even had a
poorly cleaned bloodstain. I wonder if they’re painted on, for
the effect? One of the Practicals suddenly pulled the door shut
with a loud bang. Glokta was intended to jump, but he couldn’t be
bothered.
Arch Lector Sult lowered himself gracefully
into one of the seats, drew a heavy sheaf of yellowing papers across
the table towards him. He waved his hand at the other chair, the one
that would be used by the prisoner. The implications were not lost
on Glokta.
“I prefer to stand, your Eminence.”
Sult smiled at him. He had lovely, pointy
teeth, all shiny white. “No, you don’t.”
He has me there. Glokta lowered
himself ungracefully into the prisoner’s chair while the Arch Lector
turned over the first page of his wedge of documents, frowned and
shook his head gently as though horribly disappointed by what he
saw. The details of my illustrious career, perhaps?
“I had a visit from Superior Kalyne not long
ago. He was most upset.” Sult’s hard blue eyes came up from his
papers. “Upset with you, Glokta. He was quite vocal on the subject.
He told me that you are an uncontrollable menace, that you act
without a thought for the consequences, that you are a mad cripple.
He demanded that you be removed from his department.” The Arch
Lector smiled, a cold, nasty smile, the kind Glokta used on his
prisoners. But with more teeth. “I think he had it in mind that you
be removed . . . altogether.”
They stared at each other across the table.
Is this where I beg for mercy? Is this
where I crawl on the ground and kiss your feet? Well, I don’t care
enough to beg and I’m far too stiff to crawl. Your Practicals will
have to kill me sitting down. Cut my throat. Bash my head in.
Whatever. As long as they get on with it.
But Sult was in no rush. The white-gloved
hands moved neatly, precisely, the pages hissed and crackled. “We
have few men like you in the Inquisition, Glokta. A nobleman, from
an excellent family. A champion swordsman, a dashing cavalry
officer. A man once groomed for the very top.” Sult looked him up
and down as though he could hardly believe it.
“That was before the war, Arch Lector.”
“Obviously. There was much dismay at your
capture, and little hope that you would be returned alive. As the
war dragged on and the months passed, hope diminished to nothing,
but when the treaty was signed, you were among those prisoners
returned to the Union.” He peered at Glokta through narrowed eyes.
“Did you talk?”
Glokta couldn’t help himself, he spluttered
with shrill laughter. It echoed strangely in the cold room. Not a
sound you often heard down here. “Did I talk? I talked until my
throat was raw. I told them everything I could think of. I screamed
every secret I’d ever heard. I babbled like a fool. When I ran out
of things to tell them I made things up. I pissed myself and cried
like a girl. Everyone does.”
“But not everyone survives. Two years in the
Emperor’s prisons. No one else lasted half that long. The physicians
were sure you would never leave your bed again, but a year later you
made your application to the Inquisition.” We both know it. We
were both there. What do you want from me, and why not get on with
it? I suppose some men just love the sound of their own voices.
“I was told that you were crippled, that you
were broken, that you could never be mended, that you could never be
trusted. But I was inclined to give you a chance. Some fool wins the
Contest every year, and wars produce many promising soldiers, but
your achievement in surviving those two years was unique. So you
were sent to the North, and put in charge of one of our mines there.
What did you make of Angland?”
A filthy sink of violence and corruption.
A prison where we have made slaves of the innocent and guilty alike
in the name of freedom. A stinking hole where we send those we hate
and those we are ashamed of to die of hunger, and disease, and hard
labour. “It was cold,” said Glokta.
“And so were you. You made few friends in
Angland. Precious few among the Inquisition, and none among the
exiles.” He plucked a tattered letter from among the papers and cast
a critical eye over it. “Superior Goyle told me that you were a cold
fish, had no blood in you at all. He thought you’d never amount to
anything, that he could make no use of you.” Goyle. That bastard.
That butcher. I’d rather have no blood than no brains.
“But after three years, production was up.
It was doubled in fact. So you were brought back to Adua, to work
under Superior Kalyne. I thought perhaps you would learn discipline
with him, but it seems I was wrong. You insist on going your own
way.” The Arch Lector frowned up at him. “To be frank, I think that
Kalyne is afraid of you. I think they all are. They don’t like your
arrogance, they don’t like your methods, they don’t like your . . . special
insight into our work.”
“And what do you think, Arch Lector?”
“Honestly? I’m not sure I like your methods
much either, and I doubt that your arrogance is entirely deserved.
But I like your results. I like your results very much.” He slapped
the bundle of papers closed and rested one hand on top of it,
leaning across the table towards Glokta. As I might lean towards
my prisoners when I ask them to confess. “I have a task for you.
A task that should make better use of your talents than chasing
around after petty smugglers. A task that may allow you to redeem
yourself in the eyes of the Inquisition.” The Arch Lector paused for
a long moment. “I want you to arrest Sepp dan Teufel.”
Glokta frowned. Teufel? “The Master
of the Mints, your Eminence?”
“The very same.”
The Master of the Royal Mints. An
important man from an important family. A very big fish, to be
hooked in my little tank. A fish with powerful friends. It could be
dangerous, arresting a man like that. It could be fatal. “May I
ask why?”
“You may not. Let me worry about the whys.
You concentrate on obtaining a confession.”
“A confession to what, Arch Lector?”
“Why, to corruption and high treason! It
seems our friend the Master of the Mints has been most indiscreet in
some of his personal dealings. It seems he has been taking bribes,
conspiring with the Guild of Mercers to defraud the King. As such,
it would be very useful if a ranking Mercer were to name him, in
some unfortunate connection.”
It can hardly be a coincidence that I
have a ranking Mercer in my interrogation room, even as we speak.
Glokta shrugged. “Once people start talking, it’s shocking the
names that tumble out.”
“Good.” The Arch Lector waved his hand. “You
may go, Inquisitor. I will come for Teufel’s confession this time
tomorrow. You had better have it.”
Glokta breathed slowly as he laboured back
along the corridor. Breath in, breath out. Calm. He had not
expected to leave that room alive. And now I find myself moving
in powerful circles. A personal task for the Arch Lector, squeezing
a confession to high treason from one of the Union’s most trusted
officials. The most powerful of circles, but for how long? Why me?
Because of my results?
Or because I won’t be missed?
“I apologise for all the interruptions
today, really I do, it’s like a brothel in here with all the coming
and going.” Rews twisted his cracked and swollen lips into a sad
smile. Smiling at a time like this, he’s a marvel. But all things
must end. “Let us be honest, Rews. No one is coming to help you.
Not today, not tomorrow, not ever. You will confess. The only
choices you have are when, and the state you’ll be in when you do.
There’s really nothing to be gained by putting it off. Except pain.
We’ve got lots of that for you.”
It was hard to read the expression on Rews’
bloody face, but his shoulders sagged. He dipped the pen in the ink
with a trembling hand, wrote his name, slightly slanted, across the
bottom of the paper of confession. I win again. Does my leg hurt
any less? Do I have my teeth back? Has it helped me to destroy this
man, who I once called a friend? Then why do I do this? The
scratching of the nib on the paper was the only reply.
“Excellent,” said Glokta. Practical Frost
turned the document over. “And this is the list of your
accomplices?” He let his eye scan lazily over the names. A
handful of junior Mercers, three ship’s captains, an officer of the
city watch, a pair of minor customs officials. A tedious recipe
indeed. Let us see if we can add some spice. Glokta turned it
around and pushed it back across the table. “Add Sepp dan Teufel’s
name to the list, Rews.”
The fat man looked confused. “The Master of
the Mints?” he mumbled, through his thick lips.
“That’s the one.”
“But I never met the man.”
“So?” snapped Glokta. “Do as I tell you.”
Rews paused, mouth a little open. “Write, you fat pig.” Practical
Frost cracked his knuckles.
Rews licked his lips. “Sepp . . . dan . . . Teufel,”
he mumbled to himself as he wrote.
“Excellent.” Glokta carefully shut the lid
on his horrible, beautiful instruments. “I’m glad for both our sakes
that we won’t be needing these today.”
Frost snapped the manacles shut on the
prisoner’s wrists and dragged him to his feet, started to march him
toward the door at the back of the room. “What now?” shouted Rews
over his shoulder.
“Angland, Rews, Angland. Don’t forget to
pack something warm.” The door cracked shut behind him. Glokta
looked at the list of names in his hands. Sepp dan Teufel’s sat at
the bottom. One name. On the face of it, just like the others.
Teufel. Just one more name. But such a perilous one.
Severard was waiting outside in the
corridor, smiling as always. “Shall I put the fat man in the canal?”
“No, Severard. Put him in the next boat to
Angland.”
“You’re in a merciful mood today,
Inquisitor.”
Glokta snorted. “Mercy would be the canal.
That swine won’t last six weeks in the North. Forget him. We have to
arrest Sepp dan Teufel tonight.”
Severard’s eyebrows rose. “Not the Master of
the Mints?”
“None other. On the express orders of his
Eminence the Arch Lector. It seems he’s been taking money from the
Mercers.”
“Oh, for shame.”
“We’ll leave as soon as it gets dark. Tell
Frost to be ready.”
The thin Practical nodded, his long hair
swaying. Glokta turned and hobbled up the corridor, cane tapping on
the grimy tiles, left leg burning.
Why do I do this? He asked himself
again.
Why do I do this?
No Choice
At All
Logen woke with a painful jolt. He was lying
awkwardly, head twisted against something hard, knees drawn up
towards his chest. He opened his eyes a bleary crack. It was dark,
but there was a faint glow coming from somewhere. Light through
snow.
Panic stabbed at him. He knew where he was
now. He’d piled some snow in the entrance to the tiny cave, to try
and keep in the warmth, such as it was. It must have snowed while he
was sleeping, and sealed him in. If the fall had been a heavy one
there could be a lot of snow out there. Drifts deeper than a man was
tall. He might never get out. He could have climbed all the way up
out of the high valleys just to die in a hole in the rock, too
cramped for him to even stretch out his legs.
Logen twisted round in the narrow space as
best he could, dug away at the snow with his numb hands, floundering
at it, grappling with it, hacking through it, mouthing breathless
curses to himself. Light spilled in suddenly, searing bright. He
shoved the last of the snow out of the way and dragged himself
through into the open air.
The sky was a brilliant blue, the sun was
blazing overhead. He turned his face towards it, closed his stinging
eyes and let the light wash over him. The air was painful cold in
his throat. Cutting cold. His mouth was dry as dust, his tongue a
piece of wood, badly carved. He scooped up snow and shoved it into
his mouth. It melted, he swallowed. Cold, it made his head hurt.
There was a graveyard stink coming from
somewhere. Not just his own damp and sour sweat smell, though that
was bad enough. It was the blanket, starting to rot. He had two
pieces of it wrapped round his hands like mittens, tied round his
wrists with twine, another round his head, like a dirty,
foul-smelling hood. His boots were stuffed tight with it. The rest
was wrapped round and round his body, under his coat. It smelled
bad, but it had saved his life last night, and that was a good trade
to Logen’s mind. It would stink a good deal more before he could
afford to get rid of it.
He floundered to his feet and stared about.
A narrow valley, steep sided and choked with snow. Three great peaks
surrounded it, piles of dark grey stone and white snow against the
blue sky. He knew them. Old friends, in fact. The only ones he had
left. He was up in the High Places. The roof of the world. He was
safe.
“Safe,” he croaked to himself, but without
much joy. Safe from food, certainly. Safe from warmth, without a
doubt. Neither of those things would be troubling him up here. He’d
escaped the Shanka, maybe, but this was a place for the dead, and if
he stayed he’d be joining them.
He was brutal hungry as it was. His belly
was a great, painful hole that called to him with piercing cries. He
fumbled in his pack for the last strip of meat. An old, brown,
greasy thing like a dry twig. That would hardly fill the gap, but it
was all he had. He tore at it with his teeth, tough as old boot
leather, and choked it down with some snow.
Logen shielded his eyes with his arm and
looked northward down the valley, the way he’d come the day before.
The ground dropped slowly away, snow and rock giving way to the
pine-covered fells of the high valleys, trees giving way to a
crinkled strip of grazing land, grassy hills giving way to the sea,
a sparkling line on the far horizon. Home. The thought of it made
Logen feel sick.
Home. That was where his family was. His
father—wise and strong, a good man, a good leader to his people. His
wife, his children. They were a good family. They deserved a better
son, a better husband, a better father. His friends were there too.
Old and new together. It would be good to see them all again, very
good. To speak to his father in the long hall. To play with his
children, to sit with his wife by the river. To talk of tactics with
Threetrees. To hunt with the Dogman in the high valleys, crashing
through the forest with a spear, laughing like a fool.
Logen felt a sudden painful longing. He
nearly choked on the pain of it. Trouble was, they were all dead.
The hall was a ring of black splinters, the river a sewer. He’d
never forget coming over the hill, seeing the burnt-out ruin in the
valley below. Crawling through the ashes, fumbling for signs that
someone got away, while the Dogman pulled at his shoulder and told
him to give it up. Nothing but corpses, rotted past knowing. He was
done looking for signs. They were all dead as the Shanka could make
them, and that was dead for sure. He spat in the snow, brown spit
from the dry meat. Dead and cold and rotted, or burned to ashes.
Gone back to the mud.
Logen set his jaw and clenched his fists
under the rotten shreds of blanket. He could go back to the ruins of
the village by the sea, just one last time. He could charge down
with a fighting roar in his throat, the way he had done at Carleon,
when he’d lost a finger and won a reputation. He could put a few
Shanka out of the world. Split them like he’d split Shama Heartless,
shoulder to guts so his insides fell out. He could get vengeance for
his father, his wife, his children, his friends. That would be a
fitting end for the one they called the Bloody-Nine. To die killing.
That might be a song worth the singing.
But at Carleon he’d been young and strong,
and with his friends behind him. Now he was weak, and hungry, and
alone as could be. He’d killed Shama Heartless with a long sword,
sharp as anything. He looked down at his knife. It might be a good
one, but he’d get precious little vengeance with it. And who’d sing
the song anyway? The Shanka had poor singing voices and worse
imaginations, if they even recognised the stinking beggar in the
blanket after they’d shot him full of arrows. Perhaps the vengeance
could wait, at least until he had a bigger blade to work with. You
have to be realistic, after all.
South then, and become a wanderer. There was
always work for a man with his skills. Hard work perhaps, and dark,
but work all the same. There was an appeal in it, he had to admit.
To have no one depending on him but himself, for his decisions to
hold no importance, for no one’s life or death to be in his hands.
He had enemies in the south, that was a fact. But the Bloody-Nine
had dealt with enemies before.
He spat again. Now that he had some spit he
thought he might make the most of it. It was about all he did
have—spit, an old pot, and some stinking bits of blanket. Dead in
the north or alive in the south. That was what it came down to, and
that was no choice at all.
You carry on. That’s what he’d always done.
That’s the task that comes with surviving, whether you deserve to
live or not. You remember the dead as best you can. You say some
words for them. Then you carry on, and you hope for better.
Logen took in a long, cold breath, and blew
it out. “Fare you well, my friends,” he muttered. “Fare you well.”
Then he threw his pack over his shoulder, turned, and began to
flounder through the deep snow. Downwards, southwards, out of the
mountains.
It was raining, still. A soft rain that
coated everything in cold dew, collected on the branches, on the
leaves, on the needles, and dripped off in great fat drops that
soaked through Logen’s wet clothes and onto his wet skin.
He squatted, still and silent, in the damp
brush, water running down his face, the bright blade of his knife
glistening with wet. He felt the great motion of the forest and
heard all its thousand sounds. The countless crawling of the
insects, the blind scuttling of the moles, the timid rustling of the
deer, the slow pulsing of the sap in the old tree trunks. Each thing
alive in the forest was in search of its own kind of food, and he
was the same. He let his mind settle on an animal close to him,
moving cautiously through the woods to his right. Delicious. The
forest grew silent but for the endless dripping of water from the
branches. The world shrank down to Logen and his next meal.
When he reckoned it was close enough, he
sprang forward and bore it down onto the wet ground. A young deer.
It kicked and struggled but he was strong and quick, and he stabbed
his knife into its neck and chopped the throat out. Hot blood surged
from the wound, spilled out across Logen’s hands, onto the wet
earth.
He picked up the carcass and slung it over
his shoulders. That would be good in a stew, maybe with some
mushrooms. Very good. Then, once he’d eaten, he would ask the
spirits for guidance. Their guidance was pretty useless, but the
company would be welcome.
When he reached his camp it was close to
sunset. It was a dwelling fit for a hero of Logen’s stature—two big
sticks holding a load of damp branches over a hollow in the dirt.
Still, it was halfway dry in there, and the rain had stopped. He
would have a fire tonight. It was a long time since he’d had a treat
like that. A fire, and all his own.
Later, well fed and rested, Logen pressed a
lump of chagga into his pipe. He’d found it growing a few days
before at the base of a tree, big moist yellow discs of it. He’d
broken off a good chunk for himself, but it hadn’t dried out enough
to smoke until today. Now he took a burning twig from the fire and
stuck it in the bowl, puffing away hard until the fungus caught and
began to burn, giving off its familiar earthy-sweet smell.
Logen coughed, blew out brown smoke and
stared into the shifting flames. His mind went back to other times
and other campfires. The Dogman was there, grinning, the light
gleaming on his pointy teeth. Tul Duru was sitting opposite, big as
a mountain, laughing like thunder. Forley the Weakest too, with
those nervous eyes darting around, always a little scared. Rudd
Threetrees was there, and Harding Grim, saying nothing. He never did
say anything. That was why they called him Grim.
They were all there. Only they weren’t. They
were all dead, gone back to the mud. Logen tapped the pipe out into
the fire and shoved it away. He had no taste for it now. His father
had been right. You should never smoke alone.
He unscrewed the cap of the battered flask,
took a mouthful, and blew it out in a spray of tiny drops. A gout of
flame went up into the cold air. Logen wiped his lips, savouring the
hot, bitter taste. Then he sat back against the knotted trunk of a
pine, and waited.
It was a while before they came. Three of
them. They came silently from the dancing shadows among the trees
and made slowly for the fire, taking shape as they moved into the
light.
“Ninefingers,” said the first.
“Ninefingers,” the second.
“Ninefingers,” the third, voices like the
thousand sounds of the forest.
“You’re right welcome to my fire,” said
Logen. The spirits squatted and stared at him without expression.
“Only three tonight?”
The one on the right spoke first. “Every
year fewer of us wake from the winter. We are all that remain. A few
more winters will pass, and we will sleep also. There will be none
of us left to answer your call.”
Logen nodded sadly. “Any news from the
world?”
“We heard a man fell off a cliff but washed
up alive, then crossed the High Places at the start of spring,
wrapped in a rotten blanket, but we put no faith in such rumours.”
“Very wise.”
“Bethod has been making war,” said the
spirit in the centre.
Logen frowned. “Bethod is always making war.
That’s what he does.”
“Yes. He has won so many fights now, with
your help, he has given himself a golden hat.”
“Shit on that bastard,” said Logen, spitting
into the fire, “what else?”
“North of the mountains, the Shanka run
around and burn things.”
“They love the fire,” said the spirit in the
centre.
“They do,” said the one on the left, “even
more than your kind, Ninefingers. They love and fear it.” The spirit
leaned forwards. “We heard there is a man seeking for you in the
moors to the south.”
“A powerful man,” said the one in the
centre.
“A Magus of the Old Time,” the one on the
left.
Logen frowned. He’d heard of these Magi. He
met a sorcerer once, but he’d been easy to kill. No unnatural powers
in particular, not that Logen had noticed. But a Magus was something
else.
“We heard that the Magi are wise and
strong,” said the spirit in the centre, “and that such a one could
take a man far and show him many things. But they are crafty too,
and have their own purposes.”
“What does he want?”
“Ask him.” Spirits cared little for the
business of men, they were always weak on the details. Still, this
was better than the usual talk about trees.
“What will you do, Ninefingers?”
Logen considered a moment. “I will go south
and find this Magus, and ask him what he wants from me.”
The spirits nodded. They didn’t show whether
they thought it was a good idea or bad. They didn’t care.
“Farewell then, Ninefingers,” said the
spirit on the right, “perhaps for the last time.”
“I’ll try to struggle on without you.”
Logen’s wit was wasted on them. They rose
and moved away from the fire, fading gradually into the darkness.
Soon they were gone, but Logen had to admit they had been more use
than he dared to hope. They had given him a purpose.
He would head south in the morning, head
south and find this Magus. Who knew? He might be a good talker. Had
to be better than being shot full of arrows for nothing, at least.
Logen looked into the flames, nodding slowly to himself.
He remembered other times and other
campfires, when he had not been alone.
Playing
With Knives
It was a beautiful spring day in Adua, and
the sun shone pleasantly through the branches of the aromatic cedar,
casting a dappled shade on the players beneath. A pleasing breeze
fluttered through the courtyard, so the cards were clutched tightly
or weighted down with glasses or coins. Birds twittered from the
trees, and the shears of a gardener clacked across from the far side
of the lawn, making faint, agreeable echoes against the tall white
buildings of the quadrangle. Whether or not the players found the
large sum of money in the centre of the table pleasant depended, of
course, on the cards they held.
Captain Jezal dan Luthar certainly liked it.
He had discovered an uncanny talent for the game since he gained his
commission in the King’s Own, a talent which he had used to win
large sums of money from his comrades. He didn’t really need the
money, of course, coming from such a wealthy family, but it had
allowed him to maintain an illusion of thrift while spending like a
sailor. Whenever Jezal went home, his father bored everyone on the
subject of his good fiscal planning, and had rewarded him by buying
his Captaincy just six months ago. His brothers had not been happy.
Yes, the money was certainly useful, and there’s nothing half so
amusing as humiliating one’s closest friends.
Jezal half sat, half lay back on his bench
with one leg stretched out, and allowed his eyes to wander over the
other players. Major West had rocked his chair so far onto its back
legs that he looked in imminent danger of tipping over entirely. He
was holding his glass up to the sun, admiring the way that the light
filtered through the amber spirit inside. He had a faint, mysterious
smile which seemed to say, “I am not a nobleman, and may be your
social inferior, but I won a Contest and the King’s favour on the
battlefield and that makes me the better man, so you children will
damn well do as I say.” He was out of this hand though, and, in
Jezal’s opinion, far too cautious with his money anyway.
Lieutenant Kaspa was sitting forward,
frowning and scratching his sandy beard, staring intently at his
cards as though they were sums he didn’t understand. He was a good-humoured
young man but an oaf of a card player, and was always most
appreciative when Jezal bought him drinks with his own money. Still,
he could well afford to lose it: his father was one of the biggest
landowners in the Union.
Jezal had often observed that the ever so
slightly stupid will act more stupidly in clever company. Having
lost the high ground already, they scramble eagerly for the position
of likeable idiot, stay out of arguments they will only lose, and
can hence be everyone’s friend. Kaspa’s look of baffled
concentration seemed to say, “I am not clever, but honest and
likeable, which is much more important. Cleverness is overrated. Oh,
and I’m very, very rich, so everyone likes me regardless.”
“I believe I’ll stay with you,” said Kaspa,
and tossed a small stack of silver coins onto the table. They broke
and flashed in the sun with a cheerful jingle. Jezal absently added
up the total in his head. A new uniform perhaps? Kaspa always got a
little quivery when he really held good cards, and he was not
trembling now. To say that he was bluffing was to give him far too
much credit; more likely he was simply bored with sitting out. Jezal
had no doubt that he would fold up like a cheap tent on the next
round of betting.
Lieutenant Jalenhorm scowled and tossed his
cards onto the table. “I’ve had nothing but shit today!” he rumbled.
He sat back in his chair and hunched his brawny shoulders with a
frown that said, “I am big and manly, and have a quick temper, so I
should be treated with respect by everyone.” Respect was precisely
what Jezal never gave him at the card table. A bad temper might be
useful in a fight, but it’s a liability where money is concerned. It
was a shame his hand hadn’t been a little better, or Jezal could’ve
bullied him out of half his pay. Jalenhorm drained his glass and
reached for the bottle.
That just left Brint, the youngest and
poorest of the group. He licked his lips with an expression at once
careful and slightly desperate, an expression which seemed to say,
“I am not young or poor. I can afford to lose this money. I am every
bit as important as the rest of you.” He had a lot of money today;
perhaps his allowance had just come in. Perhaps that was all he had
to live on for the next couple of months. Jezal planned to take that
money away from him and waste it all on women and drink. He had to
stop himself giggling at the thought. He could giggle when he’d won
the hand. Brint sat back and considered carefully. He might be some
time making his decision, so Jezal took his pipe from the table.
He lit it at the lamp provided especially
for that purpose and blew ragged smoke rings up into the branches of
the cedar. He wasn’t half as good at smoking as he was at cards,
unfortunately, and most of the rings were no more than ugly puffs of
yellow-brown vapour. If he was being completely honest, he didn’t
really enjoy smoking. It made him feel a bit sick, but it was very
fashionable and very expensive, and Jezal would be damned if he
would miss out on something fashionable just because he didn’t like
it. Besides, his father had bought him a beautiful ivory pipe the
last time he was in the city, and it looked very well on him. His
brothers had not been happy about that either, come to think of it.
“I’m in,” said Brint.
Jezal swung his leg off the bench. “Then I
raise you a hundred marks or so.” He shoved his whole stack into the
centre of the table. West sucked air through his teeth. A coin fell
from the top of the pile, landed on its edge and rolled along the
wood. It dropped to the flags beneath with the unmistakeable sound
of falling money. The head of the gardener on the other side of the
lawn snapped up instinctively, before he returned to his clipping of
the grass.
Kaspa shoved his cards away as though they
were burning his fingers and shook his head. “Damn it but I’m an oaf
of a card player,” he lamented, and leaned back against the rough
brown trunk of the tree.
Jezal stared straight at Lieutenant Brint, a
slight smile on his face, giving nothing away. “He’s bluffing,”
rumbled Jalenhorm, “don’t let him push you around, Brint.”
“Don’t do it, Lieutenant,” said West, but
Jezal knew he would. He had to look as if he could afford to lose.
Brint didn’t hesitate, he pushed all his own coins in with a
careless flourish.
“That’s a hundred, give or take.” Brint was
trying his hardest to sound masterful in front of the older
officers, but his voice had a charming note of hysteria.
“Good enough,” said Jezal, “we’re all
friends here. What do you have, Lieutenant?”
“I have earth.” Brint’s eyes had a slightly
feverish look to them as he showed his cards to the group.
Jezal savoured the tense atmosphere. He
frowned, shrugged, raised his eyebrows. He scratched his head
thoughtfully. He watched Brint’s expression change as he changed his
own. Hope, despair, hope, despair. At length Jezal spread his cards
out on the table. “Oh look. I have suns, again.”
Brint’s face was a picture. West gave a sigh
and shook his head. Jalenhorm frowned. “I was sure he was bluffing,”
he said.
“How does he do it?” asked Kaspa, flicking a
stray coin across the table.
Jezal shrugged. “It’s all about the players,
and nothing about the cards.” He began to scoop up the heap of
silver while Brint looked on, teeth gritted, face pale. The money
jingled into the bag with a pleasant sound. Pleasant to Jezal,
anyway. A coin dropped from the table and fell next to Brint’s boot.
“You couldn’t fetch that for me could you Lieutenant?” asked Jezal,
with a syrupy smile.
Brint stood up quickly, knocking into the
table and making the coins and glasses jump and rattle. “I’ve things
to do,” he said in a thick voice, then shouldered roughly past Jezal,
barging him against the trunk of the tree, and strode off toward the
edge of the courtyard. He disappeared into the officers’ quarters,
head down.
“Did you see that?” Jezal was becoming ever
more indignant with each passing moment. “Barging me like that, it’s
damn impolite! And me his superior officer as well! I’ve a good mind
to put him on report!” A chorus of disapproving sounds greeted this
mention of reports. “Well, he’s a bad loser is all!”
Jalenhorm looked sternly out from beneath
his brows. “You shouldn’t bite him so hard. He isn’t rich. He can’t
afford to lose.”
“Well if he can’t afford to lose he
shouldn’t play!” snapped Jezal, upset. “Who’s the one told him I was
bluffing? You should keep your big mouth shut!”
“He’s new here,” said West, “he just wants
to fit in. Weren’t you new once?”
“What are you, my father?” Jezal remembered
being new with painful clarity, and the mention of it made him feel
just a little ashamed.
Kaspa waved his hand. “I’ll lend him some
money, don’t worry.”
“He won’t take it,” said Jalenhorm.
“Well, that’s his business.” Kaspa closed
his eyes and turned his face up to the sun. “Hot. Winter is truly
over. Must be getting past midday.”
“Shit!” shouted Jezal, starting up and
gathering his things. The gardener paused in his trimming of the
lawn and looked over at them. “Why didn’t you say something, West?”
“What am I, your father?” asked the Major.
Kaspa sniggered.
“Late again,” said Jalenhorm, blowing out
his cheeks. “The Lord Marshal will not be happy!”
Jezal snatched up his fencing steels and ran
for the far side of the lawn. Major West ambled after him. “Come
on!” shouted Jezal.
“I’m right behind you, Captain,” he said.
“Right behind you.”
“Jab, jab, Jezal, jab, jab!” barked Lord
Marshal Varuz, whacking him on the arm with his stick.
“Ow,” yelped Jezal, and hefted the metal bar
again.
“I want to see that right arm moving,
Captain, darting like a snake! I want to be blinded by the speed of
those hands!”
Jezal made a couple more clumsy lunges with
the unwieldy lump of iron. It was utter torture. His fingers, his
wrist, his forearm, his shoulder, were burning with the effort. He
was soaked to the skin with sweat; it flew from his face in big
drops. Marshal Varuz flicked his feeble efforts away. “Now, cut! Cut
with the left!”
Jezal swung the big smith’s hammer at the
old man’s head with all the strength in his left arm. He could
barely lift the damn thing on a good day. Marshal Varuz stepped
effortlessly aside and whacked him in the face with the stick.
“Yow!” wailed Jezal, as he stumbled back. He
fumbled the hammer and it dropped on his foot. “Aaargh!” The iron
bar clanged to the floor as he bent down to grab his screaming toes.
He felt a stinging pain as Varuz whacked him across the arse, the
sharp smack echoing across the courtyard, and he sprawled onto his
face.
“That’s pitiful!” shouted the old man. “You
are embarrassing me in front of Major West!” The Major had rocked
his chair back and was shaking with muffled laughter. Jezal stared
at the Marshal’s immaculately polished boots, seeing no pressing
need to get up.
“Up, Captain Luthar!” shouted Varuz. “My
time at least is valuable!”
“Alright! Alright!” Jezal clambered wearily
to his feet and stood there swaying in the hot sun, panting for air,
running with sweat.
Varuz stepped close to him and sniffed at
his breath. “Have you been drinking today already?” he demanded, his
grey moustaches bristling. “And last night too, no doubt!” Jezal had
no reply. “Well damn you, then! We have work to do, Captain Luthar,
and I cannot do it alone! Four months until the Contest, four months
to make a master swordsman of you!”
Varuz waited for a reply, but Jezal could
not think of one. He was only really doing this to make his father
happy, but somehow he didn’t think that was what the old soldier
wanted to hear, and he could do without being hit again. “Bah!”
Varuz barked in Jezal’s face, and turned away, stick clenched tight
behind him in both hands.
“Marshal Var—” Jezal began, but before he
could finish the old soldier spun around and jabbed him right in the
stomach.
“Gargh,” said Jezal as he sank to his knees.
Varuz stood over him.
“You are going to go on a little run for me,
Captain.”
“Aaaargh.”
“You are going to run from here to the Tower
of Chains. You are going to run up the tower to the parapet. We will
know when you have arrived, as the Major and I will be enjoying a
relaxing game of squares on the roof,” he indicated the six-storey
building behind him, “in plain view of the top of the tower. I will
be able to see you with my eye-glass, so there will be no cheating
this time!” and he whacked Jezal on the top of the head.
“Ow,” said Jezal, rubbing his scalp.
“Having shown yourself on the roof, you will
run back. You will run as fast as you can, and I know this to be
true, because if you have not returned by the time we have finished
our game, you will go again.” Jezal winced. “Major West is an
excellent hand at squares, so it should take me half an hour to beat
him. I suggest you begin at once.”
Jezal lurched to his feet and jogged toward
the archway at the far side of the courtyard, muttering curses.
“You’ll need to go faster than that,
Captain!” Varuz called after him. Jezal’s legs were blocks of lead,
but he urged them on.
“Knees up!” shouted Major West cheerily.
Jezal clattered down the passageway, past a
smirking porter sitting by the door, and out onto into the broad
avenue beyond. He jogged past the ivy-covered walls of the
University, cursing the names of Varuz and West under his heaving
breath, then by the near windowless mass of the House of Questions,
its heavy front gate sealed tight. He passed a few colourless clerks
hurrying this way and that, but the Agriont was quiet at this time
of the afternoon, and Jezal saw nobody of interest until he passed
into the park.
Three fashionable young ladies were sitting
in the shade of a spreading willow by the lake, accompanied by an
elderly chaperone. Jezal upped his pace immediately, and replaced
his tortured expression with a nonchalant smile.
“Ladies,” he said as he flashed past. He
heard them giggling to one another behind him and silently
congratulated himself, but slowed to half the speed as soon as he
was out of sight.
“Varuz be damned,” he said to himself,
nearly walking as he turned onto the Kingsway, but had to speed up
again straight away. Crown Prince Ladisla was not twenty strides
off, holding forth to his enormous, brightly coloured retinue.
“Captain Luthar!” shouted his Highness,
sunlight flashing off his outrageous golden buttons, “run for all
you’re worth! I have a thousand marks on you to win the Contest!”
Jezal had it on good authority that the
Prince had backed Bremer dan Gorst to the tune of two thousand
marks, but he still bowed as low as he possibly could while running.
The prince’s entourage of dandies cheered and shouted half-hearted
encouragements at his receding back. “Bloody idiots,” hissed Jezal
under his breath, but he would have loved to be one of them.
He passed the huge stone effigies of six
hundred years of High Kings on his right, the statues of their loyal
retainers, slightly smaller, on his left. He nodded to the great
Magus Bayaz just before he turned into the Square of Marshals, but
the wizard frowned back as disapprovingly as ever, the awe-inspiring
effect only slightly diminished by a streak of white pigeon shit on
his stony cheek.
With the Open Council in session the square
was almost empty, and Jezal was able to amble over to the gate of
the Halls Martial. A thick set sergeant nodded to him as he passed
through, and Jezal wondered whether he might be from his own
company—the common soldiers all looked the same, after all. He
ignored the man and ran on between the towering white buildings.
“Perfect,” muttered Jezal. Jalenhorm and
Kaspa were sitting by the door to the Tower of Chains, smoking pipes
and laughing. The bastards must have guessed that he’d be coming
this way.
“For honour, and glory!” bellowed Kaspa,
rattling his sword in its scabbard as Jezal ran by. “Don’t keep the
Lord Marshal waiting!” he shouted from behind, and Jezal heard the
big man roaring with amusement.
“Bloody idiots,” panted Jezal, shouldering
open the heavy door, breath rasping as he started up the steep
spiral staircase. It was one of the highest towers in the Agriont:
there were two hundred and ninety-one steps in all. “Bloody steps,”
he cursed to himself. By the time he reached the hundredth his legs
were burning and his chest was heaving. By the time he reached the
two-hundredth he was a wreck. He walked the rest of the way, every
footfall torture, and eventually burst out through a turret onto the
roof and leaned on the parapet, blinking in the sudden brightness.
To the south the city was spread out below
him, an endless carpet of white houses stretching all around the
glittering bay. In the other direction, the view over the Agriont
was even more impressive. A great confusion of magnificent buildings
piled one upon the other, broken up by green lawns and great trees,
circled by its wide moat and its towering wall, studded with a
hundred lofty towers. The Kingsway sliced straight through the
centre toward the Lords’ Round, its bronze dome shining in the
sunlight. The tall spires of the University stood behind, and beyond
them loomed the grim immensity of the House of the Maker, rearing
high over all like a dark mountain, casting its long shadow across
the buildings below.
Jezal fancied that he saw the sun glint on
Marshal Varuz’s eye-glass in the distance. He cursed once again and
made for the stairs.
Jezal was immensely relieved when he finally
made it to the roof and saw that there were still a few white pieces
on the board.
Marshal Varuz frowned up at him. “You are
very lucky. The Major has put up an exceptionally determined defence.”
A smile broke West’s features. “You must somehow have earned his
respect, even if you have yet to win mine.”
Jezal bent over with his hands on his knees,
blowing hard and dripping sweat onto the floor. Varuz took the long
case from the table, walked over to Jezal and flipped it open. “Show
us your forms.”
Jezal took the short steel in his left hand
and the long in his right. They felt light as feathers after the
heavy iron. Marshal Varuz backed away a step. “Begin.”
He snapped into the first form, right arm
extended, left close to the body. The blades swished and weaved
through the air, glittering in the afternoon sun as Jezal moved from
one familiar stance to the next with a practised smoothness. At
length he was finished, and he let the steels drop to his sides.
Varuz nodded. “The Captain has fast hands,
has he not?”
“Truly excellent,” said Major West, smiling
broadly. “A damn sight better than ever I was.”
The Lord Marshal was less impressed. “Your
knees are too far bent in the third form, and you must strive for
more extension on the left arm in the fourth, but otherwise,” he
paused, “passable.” Jezal breathed a sigh of relief. That was high
praise indeed.
“Hah!” shouted the old man, striking him in
the ribs with the end of the case. Jezal sank to the floor, hardly
able to breathe. “Your reflexes need work, though, Captain. You
should always be ready. Always. If you have steels in your hands.
you damn well keep them up.”
“Yes, sir,” croaked Jezal.
“And your stamina is a disgrace, you are
blowing like a carp. I have it on good authority that Bremer dan
Gorst runs ten miles a day, and barely shows a sweat.” Marshal Varuz
leaned down over him. “From now on you will do the same. Oh yes. A
circuit of the wall of the Agriont every morning at six, followed by
an hour of sparring with Major West, who has been kind enough to
agree to act as your partner. I am confident that he will point up
all the little weaknesses in your technique.”
Jezal winced and rubbed his aching ribs. “As
for the carousing, I want an end to it. I am all for revelry in its
proper place, but there will be time for celebration after the
Contest, providing you have worked hard enough to win. Until then,
clean living is what we need. Do you understand me, Captain Luthar?”
He leaned down further, pronouncing every word with great care.
“Clean. Living. Captain.”
“Yes, Marshal Varuz,” mumbled Jezal.
Six hours later he was drunker than shit.
Laughing like a lunatic he plunged out into the street, head
spinning. The cold air slapped him hard in the face, the mean little
buildings weaved and swayed, the ill-lit road tipped like a sinking
ship. Jezal wrestled manfully with the urge to vomit, took a
swaggering step out into the street, turned to face the door. Smeary
bright light and loud sounds of laughter and shouting washed out at
him. A ragged shape flew from the tavern and struck him in the
chest. Jezal grappled with it desperately, then fell. He hit the
ground with a bone-jarring crash.
The world was dark for a moment, then he
found himself squashed into the dirt with Kaspa on top of him. “Damn
it!” he gurgled, tongue thick and clumsy in his mouth. He shoved the
giggling Lieutenant away with his elbow, rolled over and lurched up,
stumbling about as the street seesawed around him. Kaspa lay on his
back in the dirt, choking with laughter, reeking of cheap booze and
sour smoke. Jezal made a lame attempt to brush the dirt from his
uniform. There was a big wet patch on his chest that smelled of
beer. “Damn it!” he mumbled again. When had that happened?
He became aware of some shouting on the
other side of the road. Two men grappling in a doorway. Jezal
squinted hard, strained against the gloom. A big man had hold of
some well-dressed fellow, and seemed to be tying his hands behind
his back. Now he was forcing some kind of bag over his head. Jezal
blinked in disbelief. It was far from a reputable area, but this
seemed somewhat strong.
The door of the tavern banged open and West
and Jalenhorm came out, deep in drunken conversation, something
about someone’s sister. Bright light cut across the street and
illuminated the two struggling men starkly. The big one was dressed
all in black, with a mask over the lower part of his face. He had
white hair, white eyebrows, skin white as milk. Jezal stared at the
white devil across the road, and he glared back with narrowed pink
eyes.
“Help!” It was the fellow with the bag on
his head, his voice shrill with fear. “Help, I am—” The white man
dealt him a savage blow in the midriff and he folded up with a sigh.
“You there!” shouted West.
Jalenhorm was already rushing across the
street.
“What?” said Kaspa, propped up on his elbows
in the road.
Jezal’s mind was full of mud, but his feet
seemed to be following Jalenhorm, so he stumbled along with them,
feeling very sick. West came behind him. The white ghost started up
and turned to stand between them and his prisoner. Another man moved
briskly out of the shadows, tall and thin, dressed all in black and
masked, but with long greasy hair. He held up a gloved hand.
“Gentlemen,” his whining commoner’s voice
was muffled by his mask, “gentlemen please, we’re on the King’s
business!”
“The King conducts his business in the
day-time,” growled Jalenhorm.
The new arrival’s mask twitched slightly as
he smiled. “That’s why he needs us for the night-time stuff, eh,
friend?”
“Who is this man?” West was pointing at the
fellow with the bag on his head.
The prisoner was struggling up again. “I am
Sepp dan—oof!” The white monster silenced him with a heavy fist in
the face, knocking him limp into the road.
Jalenhorm put a hand on the hilt of his
sword, jaw clenching, and the white ghost loomed forward with a
terrible speed. Close up he was even more massive, alien, and
terrifying. Jalenhorm took an involuntary step back, stumbled on the
rutted surface of the road and pitched onto his back with a crash.
Jezal’s head was thumping.
“Back!” bellowed West. His sword whipped out
of its scabbard with a faint ringing.
“Thaaaaah!” hissed the monster, fists
clenched like two big white rocks.
“Aargh,” gurgled the man with the bag on his
head.
Jezal’s heart was in his mouth. He looked at
the thin man. The thin man’s eyes smiled back. How could anyone
smile at a time like this? Jezal was surprised to see that he had a
long, ugly knife in his hand. Where did that come from? He fumbled
drunkenly for his sword.
“Major West!” came a voice from the shadows
down the street. Jezal paused, uncertain, steel halfway out.
Jalenhorm scrambled to his feet, the back of his uniform crusted
with mud, pulled out his own sword. The pale monster stared at them
unblinking, not retreating a finger’s breadth.
“Major West!” came the voice again,
accompanied now by a clicking, scraping sound. West’s face had
turned pale. A figure emerged from the shadows, limping badly, cane
tapping on the dirt. His broad-brimmed hat obscured the upper part
of his face, but his mouth was twisted into a strange smile. Jezal
noticed with a sudden wave of nausea that his four front teeth were
missing. He shuffled towards them, ignoring all the naked steel, and
offered his free hand to West.
The Major slowly sheathed his sword, took
the hand and shook it limply. “Colonel Glokta?” he asked in a husky
voice.
“Your humble servant, though I’m no longer
an army man. I’m with the King’s Inquisition now.” He reached up
slowly and removed his hat. His face was deathly pale, deeply lined,
close-cropped hair scattered with grey. His eyes stared out feverish
bright from deep, dark rings, the left one noticeably narrower than
the right, pink-rimmed and glistening wet. “And these are my
assistants, Practicals Severard,” the lanky one gave a mockery of a
bow, “and Frost.”
The white monster jerked the prisoner to his
feet with one hand. “Hold on,” said Jalenhorm, stepping forward, but
the Inquisitor put a gentle hand on his arm.
“This man is a prisoner of His Majesty’s
Inquisition, Lieutenant Jalenhorm.” The big man paused, surprised to
be called by name. “I realise your motives are of the best, but he
is a criminal, a traitor. I have a warrant for him, signed by Arch
Lector Sult himself. He is most unworthy of your assistance, believe
me.”
Jalenhorm frowned and stared balefully at
Practical Frost. The pale devil looked terrified. About as terrified
as a stone. He hauled the prisoner over his shoulder without
apparent effort and turned up the street. The one called Severard
smiled with his eyes, sheathed his knife, bowed again and followed
his companion, whistling tunelessly as he sauntered off.
The Inquisitor’s left eyelid began to
flutter and tears rolled down his pale cheek. He wiped it carefully
on the back of his hand. “Please forgive me. Honestly. It’s coming
to something when a man can’t control his own eyes, eh? Damn weeping
jelly. Sometimes I think I should just have it out, and make do with
a patch.” Jezal’s stomach roiled. “How long has it been, West? Seven
years? Eight?”
A muscle was working on the side of the
Major’s head. “Nine.”
“Imagine that. Nine years. Can you believe
it? It seems like only yesterday. It was on the ridge, wasn’t it,
where we parted?”
“On the ridge, yes.”
“Don’t worry, West, I don’t blame you in the
least.” Glokta slapped the Major warmly on the arm. “Not for that,
anyway. You tried to talk me out of it, I remember. I had time
enough to think about it in Gurkhul, after all. Lots of time to
think. You were always a good friend to me. And now young Collem
West, a Major in the King’s Own, imagine that.” Jezal had not the
slightest idea what they were talking about. He wanted only to be
sick, then go to bed.
Inquisitor Glokta turned toward him with a
smile, displaying once again the hideous gap in his teeth. “And this
must be Captain Luthar, for whom everyone has such high hopes in the
coming Contest. Marshal Varuz is a hard master, is he not?” He waved
his cane weakly at Jezal. “Jab, jab, eh, Captain? Jab, jab.”
Jezal felt his bile rising. He coughed and
looked down at his feet, willing the world to remain motionless. The
Inquisitor looked around expectantly at each of them in turn. West
looked pale. Jalenhorm mud-stained and sulky. Kaspa was still
sitting in the road. None of them had anything to say.
Glokta cleared his throat. “Well, duty
calls,” he bowed stiffly, “but I hope to see you all again. Very
soon.” Jezal found himself hoping he never saw the man again.
“Perhaps we might fence again sometime?”
muttered Major West.
Glokta gave a good natured laugh. “Oh, I
would enjoy that, West, but I find that I’m ever so slightly
crippled these days. If you’re after a fight, I’m sure that
Practical Frost could oblige you,” he looked over at Jalenhorm, “but
I must warn you, he doesn’t fight like a gentleman. I wish you all a
pleasant evening.” He placed his hat back on his head then turned
slowly and shuffled off down the dingy street.
The three officers watched him limp away in
an interminable, awkward silence. Kaspa finally stumbled over. “What
was all that about?” he asked.
“Nothing,” said West through gritted teeth.
“Best we forget it ever happened.”
Teeth and
Fingers
Time is short. We must work quickly.
Glokta nodded to Severard, and he smiled and pulled the bag off Sepp
dan Teufel’s head.
The Master of the Mints was a strong,
noble-looking man. His face was already starting to bruise. “What is
the meaning of this?” he roared, all bluster and bravado. “Do you
know who I am?”
Glokta snorted. “Of course we know who you
are. Do you think we are in the habit of snatching people from the
streets at random?”
“I am the Master of the Royal Mints!” yelled
the prisoner, struggling at his bonds. Practical Frost looked on
impassively, arms folded. The irons were already glowing orange in
the brazier. “How dare you . . .”
“We cannot have these constant
interruptions!” shouted Glokta. Frost kicked Teufel savagely in the
shin and he yelped with pain. “How can our prisoner sign his paper
of confession if his hands are tied? Please release him.”
Teufel stared suspiciously around as the
albino untied his wrists. Then he saw the cleaver. The polished
blade shone mirror bright in the harsh lamp light. Truly a thing
of beauty. You’d like to have that, wouldn’t you, Teufel? I bet
you’d like to cut my head off with it. Glokta almost hoped that
he would, his right hand seemed to be reaching for it, but he used
it to shove the paper of confession away instead.
“Ah,” said Glokta, “the Master of the Mints
is a right-handed gentleman.”
“A right-handed gentleman,” Severard hissed
in the prisoner’s ear.
Teufel was staring across the table through
narrowed eyes. “I know you! Glokta, isn’t it? The one who was
captured in Gurkhul, the one they tortured. Sand dan Glokta, am I
right? Well, you’re in over your head this time, I can tell you!
Right in over your head! When High Justice Marovia hears about this . . .”
Glokta sprang to his feet, his chair
screeching on the tiles. His left leg was agony, but he ignored it.
“Look at this!” he hissed, then opened his mouth wide, giving the
horrified prisoner a good look at his teeth. Or what’s left of
them. “You see that? You see? Where they cracked out the teeth
above, they left them below, and where they took them out below,
they left them above, all the way to the back. See?” Glokta pul |