Authors: E.C. Blake
But it didn't matter. She knew where they were now. She had passed through this chamber herself during her time in the Palace, though she had never realized the corridor from which they had just emerged joined up with the tunnel down which she had been taken to the warehouse and its loathsome warden. From here she knew exactly how to get to where she needed to be.
More importantly, she knew how to get the armed infiltrators she had left in the corridor where
they
needed to be. She turned and went back down the corridor. Whiteblaze scrambled to his feet, grinning at her. “I've got my bearings, so everything proceeds as we discussed,” she said swiftly. “Keltan is a Watcher, so he can move freely. He will escort me to âmy'âGreff'sâchambers. As we go, I'll show him the route to the throne room.” She glanced at Keltan. “If we're stopped, you explain that you found me outside the Palace, distraught over my parents' death. No doubt there was consternation when Greff didn't return from his meeting in the guardhouse. Say you've been ordered to stand watch outside my room. Your Mask will show anyone who questions it that you're telling the truth, so they'll have no choice but to believe you.”
Keltan nodded.
“The rest of you,” she said, turning back, “wait here. I doubt this tunnel is used except when there is a Masking, so it should remained deserted. If anyone does come down it, you'll have to quietly take care of whomever it is.”
“No problem,” Hyram said.
“When I'm summoned to go to the Autarchâand I suspect that will happen the moment Edrik makes his presence known, because the Autarch will want all his magical resources at hand the moment he feels even the slightest threatâKeltan will return and lead you to the throne room. Keep everyone else out while I deal with the Autarch.”
“You're talking about the Sun Guards,” Hyram said.
“Sun Guards?” Antril said.
“The Autarch's elite bodyguards,” Hyram said.
“Oh,” Antril said. “Good to know.”
“Probably,” Mara said. “But whatever I have to do to defeat the Autarch, I can't do it with a Watcher dagger in my back.”
“I have seen the foyer to the throne room,” Chell said, not to Mara, but to the rest of the force. “With ten fighters, we can defend it against an army . . . for a time.”
“Whatever happens in the throne room,” Mara said, “won't take long.”
One way or another.
“Keltan, let's go.”
“Good luck,” said Chell.
Mara didn't expect Hyram to say anything. But as he had when she and Keltan had ridden away from the army after donning their false Masks, he surprised her. “Good fortune,” he said gruffly. And then, as if to make certain she understood him, added, “To both of you.”
“Thank you,” Mara said, finding her own voice surprisingly rough. She knelt beside Whiteblaze. “Stay,” she told him. “Follow Chell.” She exerted a little magic to be sure he understood. He whined, but she knew he would do as she said.
She got back to her feet, and together she and Keltan walked into the Palace.
Murmuring instructions as necessary, Mara guided Keltan to the chambers of the Child Guard. They rounded a corner and saw the entry door Greff had described to them dead aheadâand on either side of it, the expected Watcher guards.
The two men stiffened as Mara and Keltan came into view. “Greff!” one of them snarled. “You bloody brat, where the hell have youâ”
“He had some bad news from home,” Keltan said. “He took it hard.”
The man's gaze shifted to him. “Who are you?” he said suspiciously.
“Hyram,” Keltan said. “New to the city. Was serving in Yellowgrass.” He jerked his thumb at Mara. “Prilk down in the guardhouse grabbed me off my regular street patrol and told me to go after this one. Ran off after hearing from a girl from his village his parents had died. Led me on a merry chase, too. Lost him for a while, but finally picked him up down by the Market Gate. Prilk told me once I found him to bring him hereâand stand guard over him until morning, make sure he doesn't try to run off again.”
“He won't run off with
us
here,” the Watcher growled.
“Don't I know it,” Keltan said sourly. “But I have my orders, senseless though they seem. I've got to stand outside his room for the rest of the night.”
The guards exchanged glances, then the one who had been doing all the talking shrugged. “No skin off our noses. Go tuck him in. Third room on the right.”
The other guard opened the door, and Keltan shoved Mara through it. The third door on the right stood open. Mara stepped into the room beyond and looked around. There was a bed, a table, a chair, a lamp, and a chamber pot. That was it. Aside from the fact everything was clean, it wasn't much of an improvement over the cells down in the warehouse.
More like a stable for a prized milk cow
, she thought.
“Mara . . .” Keltan whispered as he stood in the doorway, but she shook her head sharply and closed the door in his face. Good-byes were a risk they could not take. The die was cast, and they had to live with the roll.
She lay down on the bed. No doubt, Child Guard were able to remove their Masks while they slept, but she kept hers on, as she kept her borrowed clothes. She did not expect to sleep anyway.
As it happened, she was wrong about that. She dozed almost at once, her body more exhausted than she had guessed.
She woke to a sound she had never heard before: a deep, shuddering moan that made the hair stand up on the back of her neck even as she gasped her way out of sleep.
T
HE DOOR SWUNG OPEN,
just a crack. “They're coming,” Keltan whispered, and the door closed again. Mara swung her legs over the side of the bed and stood up. Her heart pounded in her chest as though trying to break free from the cage of her ribs. Despite all the planning and thought that had gone into this moment, despite all the fear and horror and heart-wrenching grief that had led her to this placeâor maybe
because
of itâshe felt woefully unprepared.
What have I done?
she thought in sudden terror.
I can't defeat the Autarch. It's ludicrous.
But from somewhere deep inside her rose a bubble of calm, though it was the kind of surface calm that holds back fiery rage.
Yes, we can.
We?
“What's going on?” she heard Keltan say. “What's that noise? I've never heard it before.”
“No one has,” said a gruff voice. “It's the general alarm. It means the city faces imminent attack. Autarch wants the Child Guard,
now
. And you'd better get back to your post or they'll be hanging you outside Traitors' Gate for desertion.”
“Yes, sir,” Keltan said. She sensed his hesitation, but it would have made no sense for a Watcher to say good-bye to the Child Guard he'd hauled home in disgrace, and he must have known it. She heard his footsteps run off down the hall.
Now she truly was alone.
The door swung wide and a Watcher stared in at her. “Good, you're dressed,” he growled. “In the hall
now
.”
Mara stepped out into the hall. She was the first of the Child Guard to do so, the others presumably having to don their robes, whereas she had slept in hers, but it did not take them long to muster. “Where were you last night?” whispered a girl, taller than her, who stepped in beside Mara, but Mara didn't dare answer and kept her eyes down. She couldn't even remember if they were the same color as Greff's. She dared not look anyone in the face.
In another moment it wasn't a problem. “Quick march,” snapped the Watcher, and the Child Guard broke into a fast trot along the corridor. They went out, turned, followed another hall, turned again, climbed multiple flights of stairs . . . and emerged onto the landing in front of the tall golden doors of the throne room. Those doors stood open. They were ushered in.
The Autarch sat on the Sun Throne, though the sun was not yet up and so no light came through the glass behind the massive replica of his Mask that hung above the golden chair. Rather than blazing like fire, the eyes of that giant Mask instead were dull and gray.
The last time Mara had stood in the throne room she had worn the iron Mask that blocked her Gift, and the black basin that stood beside the throne had appeared empty. Now she could see that it brimmed with magic. But she could see more than that. She could also see that it could not be emptied of its magic, not easily: for the magic flowed up into it from underneath.
There must be a vast reservoir below the throne
, she thought.
Magic from the mine.
Magic extracted through the pain and suffering and degradation of the unMasked.
She felt anger that she fought to hold down, though somehow it seemed disconnected from the anger she sensed inside the calm that now overlay her thoughts.
That
anger seemed to come from outside her, as if it belonged to someone else.
What's going on?
With the precision born of long practice, the Child Guard ranged themselves on the steps of the dais, each sitting on one of the blue cushions that rested on the white marble, much like the wolves had once ranged themselves around the Lady of Pain and Fire. Mara hesitated only a moment before seeing the space where Greff would be expected to go. She went to it and sat down on the cushion.
Now what?
More people came into the throne room: a half-dozen in all. One she recognized as Shelra, the Mistress of Magic, who had trained her in its use. Another wore a Mask of silver, like the Child Guardâbut unlike the Masks of the Child Guard, this one was adorned with gems: blue on the forehead, green on the cheeks, silver tracing the entire periphery. She had seen such a Mask just once before, though the details were different. That would be the Guardian of Security, the replacement for Stanik, whom she had slain when her father had died.
These half-dozen men and women, then, must be the Circle: the Autarch's closest advisers, tasked with the day-to-day governance of the Autarchy. “Guardian Flinik,” said the Autarch. “What exactly is the threat outside our walls?”
“It appears to be a bandit force,” the Guardian of Security said. “All unMasked. Mostly men, a few women. We put the number at about a hundred.”
“One hundred,” the Autarch said. “And they dare to attack Tamita?”
“Ordinarily,” the Guardian said, “they would pose little threat. But as you know,” his voice trembled a little as though he feared what he had to say next, but he pressed on, “almost all of the battle-trained Watchers we have were sent north to deal with the rebel stronghold my predecessor uncovered the existence of. The messenger who arrived yesterday assures us the Watcher Army is aware of this threat and is riding south to meet it, but it is not here yet. If this bandit army is able to penetrate the walls, they could do much damage.”
“
Can
they penetrate the walls?” asked the Autarch.
“Repairs are far from complete on the portion of the wall destroyed on the day my predecessor . . . predeceased me. The repairs have been slow. The bandits appear to be well aware of that fact. There is a risk.” He paused. “A risk made greater,” he finally continued, “by their unknown magical abilities. The reports from the messengersâof the complete destruction of the magic mineâare . . . worrisome.”
Silence fell in the throne room for a long moment. Then the Autarch growled, “This cannot be borne. It is a direct affront to me and to my authority as Autarch. And therefore I will deal with it. Have your Watchers pull back, Flinik. They are to surround and protect the Palace.”
“Your Highness?” Flinik said. “But that will leave the walls undefended!”
“No,” said the Autarch. “It will not. This is an attack on the ordinary citizens of Tamita. And therefore the ordinary citizens of Tamita will defend the walls.” He dipped his hand into the basin of magic at his right side . . . and Mara almost gasped out loud. She saw the magic pour into him, so rapidly and eagerly that the level in the basin visibly dropped even though she could sense more magic surging up like a geyser from the reservoir somewhere below them. But the Autarch did not hold it in himself. Instead, it went . . . elsewhere. She could feel it spreading out from the throne room as though the Sun Throne were the sun in earnest, casting its rays across the whole city. “Everyone but the Child Guard, leave me,” said the Autarch. “I must concentrate. Flinik, array your forces as I ordered. I believe your doubts will be allayed before you even reach the wall . . . unh.” The Autarch's eyes closed behind his golden Mask, and his chest heaved. The Circle exchanged glances, then fled. The throne room door closed behind them . . .
slammed
closed, as though shut in haste.
Muffled cries and thuds sounded beyond the door. Mara sensed, though from too far away for it to flow to her, the escape of magic from a dying man.
Hyram and Chell and Keltan
were waiting for them. The members of the Circle have been killed or captured. So far, so good.
But that wouldn't matter in the slightest if she could not cut off the head of the beast. She got to her feet.
The Autarch gasped againâand suddenly the Child Guard stiffened all around her, moaning as one, lighting up in her Gifted sight like torches, burning with magic which the Autarch drew eagerly to himself.
He has all that magic in the basin and the reservoir below to draw on
, she thought.
Why does he need theirs?
But she knew the answer. He didn't need ordinary magic, he needed
their
magic, the deep, raw magic of their young bodies, not to do whatever he was doing to defend the city, but to protect and restore his own aging body. Just like the Lady, sucking magic from the unMasked she had murdered in the mines, he lusted for power with no thought of the cost to those he tore it from, callously cutting short others' lives so he could extend his own.
The anger in her burned as bright as the Child Guard's bodies. She took a step toward the Autarchâ
His eyes opened again behind his Mask of gold. “At last,” he said. “At last.”
And just like that, she couldn't move.
She looked down at herself. Red magic enwrapped her body, magic she could not touch, magic that had turned the air itself solid so that she might as well have been frozen in ice. She looked up again. “Did you really think,” the Autarch said, the scorn in his voice sharp as a knife, “that I could be fooled by that crude copy of a Child Guard's Mask? I knew who you were the moment you entered the throne room.”
“Then why didn't you kill me on the spot?” Mara said. She felt helpless and foolish and furious and guilty.
No guilt?
She had no
right
to try to move past her guilt. Once again, she had failed. Once again, she had made the wrong decision. Once again, people would die for her.
More shouts from outside the throne room. Mara could not see what was happening out there, but she could guess. The Sun Guards must be attacking, trying to fight through her companions to reach the Autarch. But the Autarch seemed unconcerned by the sounds of battle. “Kill you? Kill my old friend Arilla? The girl of my dreams?”
Arilla? The Lady of Pain and Fire?
“I'm notâ” she started to say . . .
...but then, suddenly, she
was
.
That strange disconnected bubble of rage wrapped in unnatural calm that had seemed so separate from her swelled like a bladder filling with water. It pushed Mara out of the center of her own mind, drove her to the edges, squeezed her into immobility, turned her into a spectator in her own brain. And suddenly, too late, she understood many things that had happened since she fired the crossbow bolt into the head of the Lady and Arilla's overwhelming power had rushed into her: the strange sense that she had in many ways become more like the Lady than ever before, the knowledge of the Lady's plans she could not remember how she had come by, the surprising ease with which she had altered the Masks of Greff's parents and Greff himself. The Lady's soulprint had not just
changed
her, it had
possessed
her. Some piece of the Lady survived in her body . . . and now it had seized control.
“I think it is time to prepare the way for your final fate,”
the Lady had said. Was
this
the fate she'd had in mind?
Always
had in mind? Possession? To discard her own aging body in favor of Mara's young fresh one?
But she died!
Mara cried silently.
I killed her before she could act!
Not soon enough, apparently.
“I have dreamed about you, too,” said Mara's voice, but it was the Lady who provided the words. “I have dreamed about how I would kill you, the many ways you would suffer before you died. And now here I am.”
“Here you are,” said the Autarch. “How is that working out for you?”
He stood then, and came over to where Mara waited, frozen. “We are so much alike,” he said softly. “Variations of the same Gift. I cannot pull magic directly from the living as you can, but through my Masks I have that same power . . . as you see.” He gestured at the Child Guard, each as stiff and frozen as Mara. “And clearly you, too, have thought long and hard about how to use that power to live forever. I had thought I could simply save this body,” he gestured at it, “and I have done wonders with it, but I have known for some time that the ultimate solution is to take a new body. The difficulty, of course, is that that body must have the same Gift as ours, and that Gift is vanishingly rare. But then this girl came along.” He reached out and caressed Mara's cheek. She would have shuddered at the touch if she had been able to move. “I allowed myself to be âconvinced' by the Mistress of Magic that she should be spared. I had thought to keep her around the Palace until I was ready to possess her. But that fool Stanik managed to let her escape. Thank you so much for bringing her back to me.”
“You can't have her,” the Lady said. “She is already mine.”
“Arilla,” the Autarch said softly. “You are only a ghost. Do you think I cannot tell? You are an echo of a fading song, a dying coal from a once-great fire. You are dead. I am alive. You cannot prevent me from taking her.”
“We'll see.”
“Yes,” the Autarch said. “We will.”
He reached up and took off his Golden Mask, revealing . . . not what Mara expected. He looked younger than he should have, when she knew he was at least eighty. The effect of drawing magic from the Child Guard, she guessed. Yet apparently it was not enough. He wanted her. He wanted to possess her. To become her.