Red Queen's War: The Liar's Key - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I don't think that thing can be described as safe." I sat up to face him. "Show it to me."
With reluctance Snorri tied his line to the oarlock and drew the key from his s.h.i.+rt. It didn't look like part of the world. It looked as if it had no place there in the daylight. As the key turned on its thong it seemed to change, flickering from one possibility to the next. I supposed a key that could open any lock had to entertain many shapes. I reached for it, but Snorri pushed my hand aside.
"Best not."
"You're worried I'll drop it in the sea?" I asked.
"You might."
"I won't." Hand held out.
Snorri raised a brow. A simple but eloquent expression. I had been known to lie before.
"We came as close to dying for this thing as men can come, Snorri. Both of us. I have a right."
"It wasn't for the key." Voice low, eyes seeing past me now. "We didn't go for the key."
"But it's all we got," I said, angry that he should deny me.
"It's not a thing you want to touch, Jal. There's no joy in it. As a friend I say don't do this."
"As a prince of Red March I say give me the f.u.c.king key."
Snorri lifted the thong from about his neck and with a sigh dangled the key into my palm, still retaining the tie.
I closed my hand about it. For the briefest moment I considered ripping it free and arcing it out across the water. In the end I lacked either the courage or the cruelty to do it. I'm not sure which.
"Thank you." The thing seemed to s.h.i.+ft in my grasp and I squeezed it to force one form upon it.
There isn't much I remember about my mother. Her hair-long, dark, smelling of softness. I recall how safe her arms felt. I remember the comfort in her praise, though I could summon none of the words to mind. The sickness that took her I recollected as the story I told about it when people asked. A story without drama or tragedy, just the everyday futility of existence. A beautiful princess laid low by common disease, wasted away without romance by a flux. Isolated by her contagion-her last words spoken to me through a screen. The betrayal a child feels when a parent abandons them returned to me now-still sharp.
"Oh." And without transition the key was no longer a key. I held my mother's hand, or she held mine, a seven-year-old boy's hand encompa.s.sed in hers. I caught her scent, something fragrant as honeysuckle.
Snorri nodded, his eyes sympathetic. "Oh."
Without warning the boat, the sea, Snorri, all of it vanished, just for the beat of a heart. A blinding light took its place, dazzling, dying away as I blinked to reveal a familiar chamber with star-shaped roundels studding the ceiling. A drawing room in the Roma Hall where my brothers and I would play on winter nights. Mother stood there, half bent toward me, a smile on her face-the face in my locket, but smiling, eyes bright. All replaced a moment later with the boat, the sky, the waves. "What?" I dropped the key as though it had bitten me. It swung from Snorri's hand on the thong. "What!"
"I'm sorry." Snorri tucked the key away. "I warned you."
"No." I shook my head. Too young she was for the a.s.sa.s.sin's blade. Taproot's words, as if he spoke them in my ear. "No." I stood up, staggered by the swell. I closed my eyes and saw it again. Mother bending toward me, smiling. The man's face looming over her shoulder. No smile there. Half-familiar but not a friend. Features shadowed, offered only in rumour, hair so black as to be almost the blue beneath a magpie's wing, with grey spreading up from the temples.
The world returned. Two steps brought me to the mast and I clung for support, the sail flapping inches from my nose.
"Jal!" Snorri called, motioning for me to come back and sit before the sweep of the boom took me into the water.
"There was a blade, Snorri." Each blink revealed it, light splintering from the edge of a sword held low and casual, the fist at his side clenched about its hilt. "He had a sword!" I saw it again, some secret hidden in the dazzle of its steel, putting an ache in my chest and a pain behind my eyes.
"I want the truth." I stared at Kara. Aslaug hadn't arrived with the setting sun. To me, that was proof enough of the volva's power. "You can help me," I told her.
Kara sighed and bound the tiller. The wind had fallen to a breeze. The sails would soon be furled. She sat beside me on the bench and looked up to study my face. "Truth is rarely what people want, Prince Jalan."
"I need to know."
"Knowledge and truth are different things," Kara said. She brushed stray hair from her mouth. "I want to know, myself. I want to know many things. I braved the voyage to Beerentoppen, sought out Skilfar, all in search of knowing. But knowledge is a dangerous thing. You touched the key-against Snorri's strongest advice-and it brought you no peace. Now I advise you to wait. We're aimed at your homeland. Ask your questions there, the traditional way. The answers are likely not secrets, just facts you've avoided or misplaced whilst growing up."
"I can't wait." The boat had become a prison, the sea an endless wall. I sat trapped there, with neither s.p.a.ce nor answers. Too young she was for the a.s.sa.s.sin's blade. I remembered, on the journey north, wiping the soup from my locket and at Snorri's insistence really seeing it for the first time in years. The scales had fallen from my eyes and I had discovered a treasure. Now I feared what I might see if I looked again at my past-but not looking had ceased to be an option. The key had unlocked the door to memories long buried. Now I had to throw that door wide. "Help me to remember."
"I have little skill, Prince Jalan." Kara looked down at her hands, folded in her lap, nails bitten short, fingers callused by ropework. "Find another way . . . Perhaps the key-"
"It's Loki's key," I snapped, filling the words with more harshness than intended. "It's black with lies. I need to know if what I saw, what I remember, are true memories, or the trickery of some pagan spirit."
Evening thickened, spreading across the face of the sea, the glow of the swallowed sun faded among the clouded western skies. A fat raindrop struck my hand, another grazed my cheek. Snorri watched us from the prow, huddled in his cloak. Tuttugu sat closer, whittling some piece of driftwood he'd snagged from the water.
"All I know of memory is in the blood," Kara said. "A man's blood can tell the secrets of his line. The story of his life lies there, the story of his father too, and his father's father. But-"
"Let's do that then. I like a good story, and if it's about me-all the better!"
"But," she kept to her thread with the tone that always means the speaker is heading toward "no." "I am a novice. It takes a lifetime to learn the blood-tongue. Skilfar might show you a day of your choosing, or hunt out some secret held too deep for speaking. My art is less . . . precise."
"Try?" I used that vulnerable look that makes women melt.
Kara pressed her lips together in a thin line and studied my face. Her eyes, very blue, moved as if I were a book she could read. I saw her pupils dilate. Somehow she was falling for my puppy dog routine. I felt slightly disappointed. I had wanted her to be more . . . magic. Stronger. I've found over the years that women want to save me. No matter how bad I am. No matter how bad they see me being-perhaps I've cast aside their friends when I've had my fun, or cheated with a handful of court wives, a new one each day-if I but show them some small hope that I might be redeemed, many, even some of the cleverest of them, the most moral, the most wise, step into my trap. It seems that the prospect of taming a dangerous reprobate who is unlikely to truly care for them is sweeter honey to some than, say, a strong and moral man like Snorri. Don't ask me why. It makes no sense to me-I just thank G.o.d for making the world this way.
There in the boat though, wanting the truth, wanting for perhaps the first time in my life to know myself, I would rather have been sat beside a woman who could see right through me.
"Please," I said, widening my eyes. "I know this will help me to be a better man."
And like that she fell for it. "If you're sure, Jalan." She started to rummage in the covered s.p.a.ce beneath the bench.
"I am." I wasn't sure of much except that the experience was d.a.m.ned unlikely to make me a better man. I was sure though that it was what I wanted, and getting what I want has always been my main priority. Aslaug says it shows strength of character. I forget what Baraqel called it.
"Here!" She pulled out a long case of polished bone from the locker and sat up. A single rune had been burned into the front of the box. It looked familiar.
"Thorns." Kara set a finger to the rune in answer to the query in my raised eyebrow. "The first thing we'll be needing is some blood. And for that-a thorn." She clicked the case open to reveal the longest needle I'd ever seen.
"Ah," I said, making to get up. "Perhaps we could do this later." But Snorri and Tuttugu had crowded around now, both snorting as though I were play-acting for their amus.e.m.e.nt.
The weight of their expectation pressed me back into my seat. "Ha. As if I were scared of a little needle." I managed a dry laugh. "Have at me, madam witch."
"I have to say the incantations first." She offered a small smile and all of a sudden despite the foot-long needle that sat between us, and the fact she'd promised to meet my next advance with a knife to the b.a.l.l.s, I found myself wanting her. She hadn't Astrid's voluptuousness or Edda's slender form, or the prettiness of either . . . maybe it was just being forbidden that sparked my l.u.s.t, but more than that it was the strength in her. Old witches aside, like Skilfar and my grandmother, I'd never met a woman more capable. Like Snorri she had something about her that made it impossible to believe she would ever let you down, ever be afraid, ever run.
Kara lit a lantern. Speaking in the old tongue of the north, she dipped the needle into the sea, then ran it through the flame. She spoke my name in the mix. More than once. It sounded well upon her lips.
"When the needle is blooded you must taste it. Then whatever is to be revealed will come."
"I've tasted my blood before. It didn't tell me much." I must have swallowed a gallon of the stuff when Astrid punched me. Once my nose starts bleeding it never wants to stop.
"This will be different." Again that smile. "Hold out your hand."
So I did. I wasn't sure how deep the needle would p.r.i.c.k but I steeled myself. Squealing like a little girl probably wouldn't help me in my new quest to bed her.
Kara took my hand, fingers probing, as if to find the ideal spot. I sat still, content to have her hold my hand, feeling a heat build between us.
"Now . . ." She circled the needle over my palm as if searching.
"Ow! Dear G.o.d! Sweet Jesu! The b.i.t.c.h stabbed me!" I yanked my hand away, transfixed by the needle that Kara had driven entirely through it in one smooth motion. "Jesu!" Six inches of crimson-beaded steel protruded from the back of my hand.
"Quick! Taste it. The longer you delay the further back the memories!" Kara grabbed my wrist and tried to steer the hand toward my mouth.
"You f.u.c.king stabbed me!" I couldn't quite believe it. Blackness crowded my vision and I felt faint with shock. Curiously there wasn't much pain.
"Help me with him." Kara glanced at Snorri and used both hands on my wrist. The b.l.o.o.d.y needle lurched toward my face. d.a.m.ned if I was letting her do it though. She'd stab the thing through my mouth given half a chance! I pushed back. "Stop fighting me, Jalan. There's not much time."
Snorri lent his strength to the task and a moment later the needle wiped the complaint off my tongue. Kara pulled the steel free then. That's when it started to hurt-as the needle grated across the small bones in my palm.
"Concentrate now, Jalan! This bit is important." She clamped my face between her treacherous stabby hands. She probably said some other stuff after that, but by then I'd fainted clean away.
I'm flying. Or I'm the sky. These things are equal. The day is ending and far below me the land folds, falls, and rises. The mountains still catch the sun, forests sweep out in shadow, rivers run, or dawdle, each according to their nature, but all bound for the sea. The ocean lies distant, crinkled with the dying light.
Lower.
The country below runs from plains, green with growing, toward arid hills, stone crested. Trails of smoke lace the air like threads, twisted by the wind. Fields lie blackened where the fire has consumed them. A wood, acres wide, stands ablaze.
Lower.
A castle sprawls across a high ridge, commanding views into two valleys that run toward the garden lands. A huge castle, its outer wall thick as a house, taller than trees, punctuated by seven round towers. Enclosed within this perimeter, a small town in stone and Builder-brick, then a second wall, yards thick and higher than the first, and within that, barracks, armouries, a well-house, and a keep tower. The keep I recognize-or think I do. It reminds me of the Ameroth Tower that stands on the edge of the Scorpions, a range of hills straddling the region where Red March, Slov, and Florence meet. I visited the tower once. I must have been ten. Father had sent Martus to be squired to Lord Marsden who keeps his household there. Darin and I tagged along as part of our education. The tower had been the tallest building I'd ever seen. It still is. A work of the Builders. An ugly rectangular structure, fas.h.i.+oned from poured stone, without windows or ornament. I recall that it had been surrounded by rubble and the village lay a mile off, the locals too fearful of ghosts to dwell any closer. Darin and I had ridden the surrounding hills, being still young enough to explore and play. I remember that the rocks thereabouts sported peculiar scorch marks. Geometric patterns fractured into them in ways I couldn't explain.
Lower.
An army stands camped about the castle, arrayed for siege. An army so numerous that the tents of the different units colour the ground like crops in great fields. The horses for their cavalry are corralled in herds thousands strong. Forests have been felled to build the machinery that waits at the foremost edge of the host. Rocks are piled beside each in pyramids ten, twenty, thirty feet high. The throwing arms of trebuchet, catapults and mangols are drawn back, loaded, ready to unleash.
Lower.
The stink and the cacophony of the horde are intolerable. Such a press of humanity and animals in such close confines. On the higher ground pavilions stand, decked with crests of arms. The great houses of Slov are there. The high and the mighty have come with their knights and levies. Among the forests of standards are the arms of n.o.bles from Zagre, Sudriech, even Mayar. There cannot be less than thirty thousand men here. Perhaps fifty thousand.
I'm falling. Falling. Toward the outer wall. Unseen I descend among the troops that crowd the top of the east-most wall tower. There are a hundred archers here, smooth iron skullcaps fluted across the neck, chain-mail coifs, leather jerkins set with iron plates, skirts of overlapping leather strips, iron-studded. I have seen such armour on stands along the long gallery of Roma Hall. As a child I used to hide behind one suit in particular, by the west stair, and leap out to shock the maids.
A scorpion bolt-lobber stands at the front of the tower, aimed out between the crenulations at the distant foe. The operating crew are holding back a respectful distance whilst gathered immediately behind the engine a small group of n.o.bility debate some issue.
In a moment I stand amongst them. Next to me is a huge warrior in battered platemail, heavy-duty stuff fas.h.i.+oned in the old style from black iron. He glances my way but he sees through me.
"We can hold for relief. If it takes two months we can hold," he says, eyes fierce and dark, set in a brutal face, a black beard bristling over his lantern jaw, threaded by a pale scar.
"d.a.m.n that!" The speaker whirls from her contemplation of the enemy. She stands four fingers over six foot, her build athletic, strong, young with it . . . maybe eighteen. Her armour is gilded, and worked in enamels across it are the burning spears of the Red March. No vanity this though, the steel is full gauge and without ornament. A soldier's armour. "If we let them bide here the Czar's path west lies open. The Steppes will be at Vermillion's gates before the harvest."
I watch her face, broad and angular, pale for a woman of the March-beneath a shock of dark red hair, angry hazel eyes, full lips. I know this face.
"Contaph." She advances on the knight beside me. Even a woman of her stature has to look up at the man. "Can we attack? Sally forth? They won't be expecting an attack."
An intake of breath at this from the men around her, knight captains and lords by their armour. I can understand this. There are not enough troops within the castle to challenge the host outside. I know this without looking. The castle could not hold so many.
"They won't be expecting an attack, princess," says Contaph. "But they are ready for one, even so. Kerwcjz is no fool."
"A deputation!" This from a man at the wall, with a spygla.s.s to his eye.
The princess leads the n.o.bles to the battlements, archers parting to make s.p.a.ce. "Tell me," she says.
"Ten riders under a white flag. An emissary. And a prisoner. A woman. A girl-"
The princess s.n.a.t.c.hes the spygla.s.s and sets it to her own eye. "Gwen!"
"Kerwcjz has your sister?" Contaph's fist tightens on the pommel of his sword, the iron plates of his gauntlet grating one against the next. "This means Omera has fallen."
"Give me your bow," the princess demands of the nearest archer.
"Alica!" A strained whisper from the man beside her, smaller but similar in his colouring.
"Princess," she says. The bow is in her hands, her eyes on his-dangerous. "Call me by my name again, cousin, and I will drop you from this wall."
She pulls an arrow from the archer's quiver. "It's a good bow?"
"Y-yes . . . princess." The archer stutters it out. "Pulls a hair to the left if you over-draw. But that's not a worry-it's too much bow for a wo-"
Princess Alica strings the arrow and draws it to her ear, pointing up at the great keep tower back beyond the second wall. "Yes?"
"A hair to the left, your majesty." The man backs away. "Two fingers on a fifty-yard target."