Read Assassin's Gambit: The Hearts and Thrones Series Online
Authors: Amy Raby
She hesitated a moment, but nodded.
“And yet you do not cry.” His mouth twisted as he lifted her chin with his finger. “My name is Bayard. I’m going to be your friend, Kolta. Would you like that?”
She was silent.
“The people here don’t treat you very well, do they? They don’t like dark-haired girls. But I’m going to take you somewhere else. Somewhere you’ll be loved, Kolta. Do you want to be loved?”
Her chin began to tremble.
“Of course you do.” He folded her into his arms, and she began to cry. “It’s what we all want.”
• • •
Lucien limped on his artificial leg through the doorway into his office, fell into his chair, and leaned his crutch against the wall. Four years he’d been emperor, and still a shiver went down his spine every time he crossed that threshold. He’d spent too much time in the opposite chair, the one on the other side of the desk, facing a loud and frightening father he could never please.
Septian, his bodyguard, a head taller than Lucien and twice as broad, moved in almost perfect silence as he took his customary place behind the chair and shouldered a musket. He carried the weapon more for show than for any real need; it would be a rare enemy Septian couldn’t handle with a sword or a knife or even his bare hands. Lucien had been escorted by Legaciatti all his life, but since ascending the throne, he’d become hyperaware of them, especially Septian. The man rarely spoke, and his face was impossible to read. What did he think of Lucien? Did he recognize Lucien’s head for military strategy? Or, like Florian, did he privately roll his eyes at what he perceived as a useless, crippled boy?
Lucien rubbed his forehead. His empire was fragile, precarious. He had problems to solve.
Real
problems. What his bodyguards thought of him should be the least of his concerns.
Septian cleared his throat.
Lucien raised his head and saw the man standing in the doorway. “Remus. Come.”
The Legaciattus entered, bowed his obeisance, and sat in the chair across from him. The door guards shut him in.
“What’s the schedule today?” asked Lucien.
“You’re seeing Legatus Cassian Nikolaos this morning.”
Lucien made a face. “Pox. Is he waiting outside?”
“Yes, sir. And this afternoon, you were going to speak to the new recruits at the palaestra. Then there’s the meetings with your advisors.”
Lucien nodded. The morning would be a harassment, but the afternoon wasn’t so bad. He liked public speaking, especially when the audience was young soldiers—it wasn’t long since he’d been one himself. He’d seen action on the battlefield, and frontline soldiers tended to respect that.
Was there a gap in his schedule? His meeting with Cassian would not take all morning. “Remus, has that woman who won in Beryl arrived yet?”
Remus smiled. “She arrived by ship yesterday, Your Imperial Majesty, and awaits your pleasure.”
Lucien brightened. “Have her ready to play by midmorning.”
“Very good, Your Imperial Majesty. Shall I send in Cassian?”
“Yes.”
Remus left, and the guards admitted Legatus Cassian Nikolaos, Lucien’s highest-ranking military officer. Cassian was a longtime friend of Lucien’s father, the former emperor, and he was everything Lucien wasn’t. Big, burly, whole—that is, possessed of all four limbs—and afraid of nothing. Middle-aged, he had decades of command experience behind him, and it rankled him to report to an emperor in his twenties. “Legatus,” said Lucien, granting the man permission to speak.
“Your Imperial Majesty.” Cassian bowed.
Lucien’s eyes narrowed. The bow wasn’t as low as it ought to be. It bordered on insolence, yet the slight was subtle. He would look foolish if he drew attention to it. “Have a seat.” He’d tried several strategies for winning Cassian’s respect. Flattery hadn’t worked. Neither had pointing out the patently obvious holes in the man’s proposed strategies. In the end, he’d given up and fallen back on the style he’d used with his equally intractable father, a tone of breezy, uncaring confidence. It didn’t work either.
Cassian began, “Lucien, about the Riorcan rebels—”
“That’s Sir or Your Imperial Majesty,” snapped Lucien. “And I’m not going to decimate the Riorcans.”
Cassian stiffened. “Sir, you’ve let their crimes go unpunished far too long. They flaunt their disrespect in a hundred tiny ways every day, and their Obsidian Circle sabotages our supply lines and assassinates our officers.”
“I have a battalion combing the hills in search of the Circle. It’s not easy to find. In the past year, we’ve found only two enclaves, neither of which had more than twenty people in it. And you know what my soldiers discovered when they broke in.”
“Corpses,” said Cassian.
“They killed themselves rather than risk interrogation. We know nothing about where their headquarters are or who’s in charge.”
“Sir, this is why you have to decimate the Riorcan villages. We can’t find the Circle, but we
can
find the villagers who support them. Punish them, and that support will end.”
“Cassian.” Lucien paused, considering his words carefully. “You are one of Kjall’s finest commanders, and I have a tremendous respect for your experience in the field. But you haven’t been in Riorca. I have—”
“For two years!” spat Cassian.
“Two years longer than you have, and those years opened my eyes. Most Riorcans want nothing more than to live their lives and raise their families in peace. The rebels are a minority. Your opinion is noted, but my mind is made up. We will not decimate Riorca.”
“Yes, sir.” Instead of leaving, Cassian sat quietly in his chair.
Lucien eyed him narrowly. “You are dismissed, Legatus.”
“Sir, about last night’s state dinner . . .” He hesitated.
“Didn’t like my speech?”
“Your oration was superlative and the food exquisite. But you deprived us of the court’s brightest jewel, the imperial princess.”
Lucien’s mouth tightened. “Celeste chose not to attend.”
“At your urging, no doubt.”
“She is thirteen years old, Legatus, and she finds state dinners tedious.” Indeed, he could hardly blame his sister for not wanting to spend an evening being slobbered over by older men looking to insert themselves into the line of succession. In Cassian’s case, it was particularly disgusting, because he was already married. He would divorce his wife in a heartbeat if he thought he could remarry more advantageously. And while politically motivated divorces and marriages were common in Kjall, Lucien considered the practice repugnant.
“Perhaps she found them dull when she was a child, but she’s a young woman now. Young women love to be the center of attention. Perhaps she would like to attend the upcoming dinner for the Asclepian delegates? I should be glad to escort her.”
Lucien stared at him stonily. “No.”
“If you should change your mind—” began Cassian.
“You are dismissed, Legatus.”
• • •
Vitala paced nervously in her suite. The door guard—a new one, thank the gods; there must have been a shift change—had informed her the emperor would see her later that morning. Soon, the moment would come, the moment she’d spent eleven years preparing for. Could she seduce and kill Emperor Lucien?
Seduction was the easy part, but she’d never targeted an emperor before.
We know very little about his love life,
Bayard had told her.
Only that he must have one.
What if he liked only blondes or redheads? Gods, what if he preferred men?
She’d suggested to Bayard that she lose her first Caturanga game with Lucien. She’d seduced a Kjallan officer once with a similar technique. She played the part of a foolish bufflehead searching for a misplaced glove, which turned out to be under her chair. A little flattery and flirtation, a touch here and there, and he was hers. But soldiers were easy; an emperor was something else. Lucien was probably approached by beautiful, sexually receptive women on a daily basis. She had to make herself stand out.
You must win the initial game,
Bayard had said.
He may lose interest if he thinks you have nothing to teach him. And we don’t know how long it will take you to lure him into bed. This man is powerful. He has his choice of women. And he may be particular.
Thanks for the encouragement,
she had retorted.
We suspect he likes strong women.
How can you tell, if you know nothing about his love life?
she asked.
Because the closest relationship he’s ever had with a woman was with his cousin Rhianne,
said Bayard.
The one who ran off to Mosar?
She was rebellious as a child, and Lucien was her partner in crime. Word is he misses her. We think the more you remind him of Rhianne, the more interested in you he’ll be.
Fine. She would win the first game. But how to proceed from there?
Someone knocked at her door. “Miss Vitala? His Imperial Majesty will see you now.”
2
L
ucien Florian Nigellus. Vitala had never met him, yet he’d occupied her thoughts and shaped her studies for years. His biographical information painted a picture of an isolated man. Both his elder brothers were dead; his father had been forcibly deposed and imprisoned on the island of Mosar. He had no heirs and had not yet married. His only close relatives were an aunt, a female cousin, and a younger sister, none of whom were eligible for the throne.
He’s crippled and alone,
Bayard had said.
Kill him, and you will spark a succession battle that will tear the empire apart.
As she walked to the emperor’s quarters, escorted by two Legaciatti, she glanced at the wall hangings and carved ceilings, relaxing her mind to see the magic anchored in them. Usually, magic dissipated quickly. A mage pulled a bit of magic from the Rift and used it to accomplish some purpose; then it drizzled away. But some mages—Warders—had the ability to anchor magic in the physical world. They could make it last. Anchored magics were invisible to most eyes, but Vitala could see them.
A blue glow infused the wall hangings; they’d been warded against parasites. The faint red line across a doorway she passed was an enemy ward, set to sound an alarm if someone crossed it with the intent to harm. Each ward possessed a tiny contact point—literally, a hole in the Rift—through which the magic was anchored and made to persist. Vitala could see those contact points. And she could break them, sending their magic harmlessly back to the Rift.
Where were all the heat-glows? Since entering the palace, she hadn’t seen a single one. They tended to be eyesores, but how did the imperial staff heat the palace without them? Perhaps the glows were hidden from view, inside the walls or behind the hangings.
Her escort slowed. Just ahead, four Legaciatti guarded a set of double doors. She’d reached the emperor’s quarters.
“Vitala Salonius?” The door guard directed the question to her escort.
“This is Miss Salonius,” one of her guards confirmed.
“The emperor is ready for her.” They opened the double doors, and Vitala relaxed her mind to scan the threshold for wards.
There weren’t any.
How could that be? Bayard had assured her they used enemy wards in the palace. She’d seen one already, across a different door. Was it possible they’d developed a ward she couldn’t see? Would she trigger it if she stepped across the threshold?
One of the door guards raised an eyebrow at her. “Miss Salonius?”
“Sorry,” she stammered. “I’m nervous.”
He winked. “Don’t be. He’s not like his father.”
Vitala’s nerves sang as she stepped through the doorway, but nothing happened. There truly was no ward there. Why?
She was in a sitting room similar to the one at the entrance to her suite, but larger. She scanned the floor for wards and saw none. Then she lifted her eyes to a table at the far end of the room, where a man sat before a Caturanga board. Emperor Lucien.
She’d spent so many years studying this man and plotting to kill him that she felt a perverse and unwelcome intimacy with him. Having only a rough description of what he looked like, she’d constructed a mental image, which she saw was accurate in the broad strokes but wrong in all the details. He was taller than she’d expected, his build slim and muscular. As he struggled upright from his chair and slipped a crutch under one arm, she could not help taking in the most obvious fact about him, that he was missing the lower half of his left leg. She’d known he was an amputee, but it was different seeing it in person. She swallowed uncomfortably.
He wore a wooden leg of simple design, a straight post of polished mahogany banded in gold. He limped on it, supporting himself with a matching crutch. As he moved toward her, smiling broadly, she forced her attention away from his leg. He wore a fine syrtos of blue silk, over which glittered a jeweled loros, the mark of his rank. Like most Kjallans, he had a hawk nose. Coupled with the clean, masculine lines of his face, it gave him a commanding appearance despite his youth. His black hair, slightly mussed, dipped over his forehead—he needed a haircut—and his eyes, so dark they were almost black, regarded her with intensity and intelligence.
He didn’t look like the sort of man who would enslave half her people and starve the rest with outrageous demands for tribute. He didn’t look like the man who’d massacred her people at Stenhus. But one couldn’t judge a man by his looks.
She sank into a submission curtsy, acknowledging their vast difference in rank.
He took her hand and lifted her up. “Vitala Salonius.”
“Your Imperial Majesty,” she answered.
He looked her over, and his eyebrows rose. He smiled appreciatively. “I’ve been looking forward to meeting you.”
He led her to the table, and she gaped at the Caturanga set. She’d never seen anything like it, not even at the tournament in Beryl. The water piece, nearest her, was a clump of swirling blue mist—obviously magicked. Her hand moved unconsciously toward it, but, remembering her manners, she yanked it back. “May I?”
“Go ahead.” Lucien leaned his crutch against the wall and lowered himself into a chair.
She picked it up. Underneath its pyrotechnic enchantment, the piece was made of stone. Perhaps carved agate, like the set in her rooms. The mist swirled over her fingers. “It’s amazing. I’ve never seen anything like this.”
Lucien grinned. “I have talented pyrotechnics on staff.”
She set down the water piece and picked up the Traitor. Standing in the palm of her hand, he moved like a living thing, scanning his surroundings and tucking a dagger behind his back. As she turned him, he shifted the weapon from hand to hand, keeping it from her view. Curious, she relaxed her mind and spotted the contact point that held the enchantment in the physical world.
With her mind already in the proper state, she glanced at Lucien to view his wards. A fertility ward glowed purplish blue; there was nothing else. That couldn’t be right. She looked again, convinced she’d made a mistake. No, she hadn’t, unless the Kjallans had invented a new sort of ward she couldn’t see. He had no wards at all to protect against disease or parasites. He wanted to avoid siring bastards, but he didn’t care if he got sick? That made no sense.
She forced her mind back to the physical world and set the piece down. “I’m speechless.” She motioned at the Soldier, Sage, and Vagabond pieces, each of which was a hovering, glowing moon, one orange, one white, and one blue. “Those I fear even to touch.”
Lucien picked up the brilliant white Sage, rolled it about in his hand, and set it down again. “They’re quite safe—just harmless magic. Let’s get started. My time is limited.”
She sat. From the way the board was arranged, she would be playing blue and Lucien red.
“I’ve been so eager for a game,” said Lucien. “You’re the first woman I’ve played Caturanga with. Well, besides my cousin, but she hates the game. You, on the other hand—you won at Beryl!”
She nodded uncertainly, wondering whether he expected modesty or pride from her. “I’ve had excellent instructors,” she said, and turned her attention to the board. She was playing blue, so the first move was hers. She chose a flexible opening, the modified Soldier’s Gambit. It gave her an edge in gaining control of the middle top tier.
He responded with the Ilonian Countergambit. She smiled. He was
that
sort of player. It was an aggressive move that ceded her the middle top tier but claimed the outer edges from which he might make an end run. This was going to be fun.
She made a bid for the Sage’s influence and won it, but Lucien made her pay for it with two cavalry units and a weakened center position. He also trapped her Tribune behind a mountain.
She bit her lip. So much for this being easy. He was the emperor—far too busy a man to spend eight hours a day practicing Caturanga strategies, like she had. She ought to have the advantage. But he had a blazing intellect, and no doubt he’d had fine tutors. She tried a supply-line ruse; he saw through it and broke it. She skipped her Traitor into the back ranks, ready to wreak havoc, but he launched a counterattack that forced her to retreat and regroup. Exasperating!
She shook her head and grinned, thoroughly enjoying herself.
Lucien hovered over the board like a spring, tightly coiled and ready to explode into action. His eyes darted over every space, concerned and calculating, and when she made a good move, his cheeks flushed.
If she could only get her battalions around the water trap he’d set, she could bring her troops under the Soldier’s influence. Her Traitor was well positioned to take advantage of the Vagabond, and she already had the Sage. But her Tribune was under threat, and she couldn’t ignore that.
Gods curse it.
She leaned back in her chair, staring at the board.
Lucien smiled, tugging absently at his left earlobe.
Could she lure him with Pelonius? Maybe. He was neglecting the bottom tier a bit, focusing on the top. She made a couple of setup moves and offered her Tribune as bait. Lucien leapt to capture it. She made her end run, and he was left in a squeeze—the state in which any move he made could only harm his position. Frowning, he chose the move of least disadvantage. She moved in for the kill. Half a dozen moves later, the game was over.
“Excellent game, Your Imperial Majesty.” She offered him her arm.
The emperor clasped wrists with her, still staring at the carnage on the board. “I don’t believe it.”
“You’re a very fine player,” she said. “I admire your bold style.”
“How did you—? I thought you were going to—” He shook his head. “Your Tribune. That was a strategic sacrifice, wasn’t it?”
“It was indeed. Pelonius’s Mire, Your Imperial Majesty.”
“Yes, I know Pelonius, but it’s not normally played on the bottom tier, is it?”
“No, it’s a top-tier strategy. I adapted it.”
He shook his head ruefully.
Maybe Bayard was wrong. Maybe it had been a mistake to win—she’d embarrassed him. Worse, she’d gotten so caught up in the game that she’d forgotten all about seduction.
Suddenly, he laughed. “Three gods, that’s the most fun I’ve had in ages. You
must
play me again.” He scooped up the red pieces and began resetting them. “Hurry. I’ve got an afternoon appointment.”
Relieved, she slid her blue pieces back to their starting positions.
“I’ve beaten the last two Beryl champions who came here,” he prattled. “Though I’m not certain I earned those wins. I think they might have let me win.”
“I doubt that, Your Imperial Majesty.”
“Please, call me Lucien.” He replaced the Soldier, Sage, and Vagabond in their respective tiers. “I’m glad you’re not afraid to beat me. If I’m going to get better at this, I need someone who will give me a challenge.”
“Your game is excellent,” she said, settling back in her chair. “It would be an insult to you not to play at the best of my ability.”
“I’ll beat you this game. Or the next one.” He rested his elbows on the table and propped his chin in his hands. “I dare you to try Pelonius on me again.”
She smiled and reached for a cavalry unit, trying a different opening.
He tugged at his earlobe.
A heavy knock came at the door. “Your Imperial Majesty,” called a muffled voice.
“Pox,” muttered Lucien. “Come, Remus.”
The double doors opened. Remus stared uncomfortably at Vitala. “Sir, we’ve had a message from Tasox.”
“A signal?”
“No, sir. A message, delivered on horseback.”
“What’s the message?” asked Lucien.
Remus’s eyes went to Vitala, his unspoken message clear.
Not in front of her.
He crossed the room and whispered in Lucien’s ear.
Lucien grimaced. “Clear my afternoon.” He turned to Vitala. “I’m afraid we’ll have to play some other time. The guards will show you out.” He struggled upward, placed the crutch under his arm, and followed Remus to the door.
Vitala felt strangely bereft. She’d enjoyed the emperor’s enthusiasm and fierce energy so much so that for a while she’d half forgotten who he was—and why she was here. She hadn’t made the least bit of progress in seducing him. And he seemed so pleasant, hardly the sort of man who would visit horrors upon her people.
Never forget,
she told herself as he disappeared from view.
This man has done terrible things, and you are here to kill him.
• • •
The inside of the cave was cold. Kolta gawped at the people standing around her. Men and women, children and adults, yellow-haired Riorcans and dark-haired Kjallans. Except the ones who looked like Kjallans weren’t really Kjallans. For that matter, neither was she. She shivered.
Bayard shoved her forward, gentle but firm.
The man beside the cup seized her arm and drew a knife. With a squeal of terror, she yanked at her captured arm, trying to flee, but Bayard held her still.
The man sliced her wrist, spilling a few drops of her blood into the cup. Then he ran his finger along the wound. The pain ceased. Though her wrist was still smeared with blood, it was whole.
Kolta stopped struggling. “You’re a Healer.”
The man with the knife smiled. “I am.”
She’d heard of men with such magic, but never before seen one.
He took the cup and held it to her lips. “Drink.”
She stared at the cup’s contents and wrinkled her nose. There was a lot more blood in there than what her wrist had spilled. No way would she drink that.
“Everyone has contributed,” said Bayard. “Including myself. Drink—one sip is enough—and you will be one of us. If you will not join us, you must return to your family.”
She swallowed and stared again at the cup. She wanted to belong. She wanted to be one of these people. They’d been kind to her, mostly. They’d given her food every day, not just on the good days, and they had magical Healers. She screwed up her face and sipped.
Bayard took the cup from her lips. “You are one of us, now and forever.” He raised his voice to address the crowd. “Welcome, Kolta, to the Obsidian Circle.”