Authors: Tanya Huff
Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction, #Canadian Fiction, #Fantasy Fiction; American, #Assassins
"You could have sent word, told me. You're quick enough sending the kigh about for other reasons."
She spread her hands. "I didn't want to chance having to disobey yet another direct order."
"I don't see what difference that makes," he muttered grumpily. "You're a bard.
Bards are supposed to keep me informed." After a moment he sighed and sat back in his chair. "Oh, all right. The lot of you destroyed a very real threat to my people; I suppose that's as much defense as you need." Unexpectedly, he smiled.
"Considering the lives this Kars had already taken and the ones he could have taken, I am very grateful he was stopped. I'd order a public celebration," he added brushing crumbs off his lap, "but I don't want the public to know about the whole horrific incident until the bards have had a chance to present this undead kigh thing in such a way as to cause the least amount of panic. I don't suppose you or Karlene had a chance to come up with anything on the way back to Elbasan?"
"On the way back to Elbasan," Annice repeated dryly, "Karlene and I spent our time answering questions from other bards—Kars' laying to rest having reverberated across the entire kingdom. The only time we got a moment's peace was when we were inside an inn, on the second floor, with the shutters closed, and blankets over our heads; at which point we were so exhausted all we did was sleep."
"And the others?"
She stared down into the red-brown surface of her soup, remembering short tempers and long silences brought about by exhaustion and emotional overload.
The only high point had been watching Vree and Bannon attempting to reclaim their past, using Gerek and Magda as their template for a sibling relationship. "I can give you a full recall," she offered, "but you wouldn't enjoy it much."
"Then you can wait until after lunch." Theron sighed, removed the napkin, and picked up a spoon fancifully carved from a piece of narwhale horn. "Not that I'm enjoying lunch much. Magda has straightened things out with the Healers' Hall?"
"If she hasn't, she soon will."
Theron snorted, amused. "She's got that whole place wrapped around her little finger. What about the two doomed lovers? Who, not surprisingly, have been the inspiration for some truly bad ballads."
Delaying her response with a mouthful of broth, Annice thought back on Vree and Gyhard. From the little she'd seen, it hadn't looked good—Vree had ridden as far from the cart holding Gyhard and Magda as she could. Could love endure being ripped apart as theirs had? Had his moment of sharing a body with a dead kigh changed Gyhard in Vree's eyes? Annice shook her head, both in answer to her own thoughts and Theron's question. "I don't know. But, if they want to stay in Shkoder, you should give them some show of appreciation in return for taking care of Kars."
"Show of appreciation?"
"Land, money; you know, the usual."
"The usual? Annice, this is not something that happens quarterly." He raised a hand to cut her off. "I'll see that they're suitably rewarded—perhaps I'll speak to the Due of Bicaz about that empty timber-holding. What about young Otavas'
bodyguard?"
"I expect he's back guarding the prince's body." She leaned forward slightly, Theron having finally directed the conversation where she wanted it. "The Emperor arranged Otavas' visit, you know, in order that Bannon would have a reason to be in Shkoder."
"No, I didn't know," the king growled. "And how do you know?"
"Bards know everything." Then her teasing smile vanished. "His Imperial Majesty wanted the boy to kidnap his sister and take her back to the Empire."
"Why?"
"Because he only found out that Gyhard was alive after he—they—left the Empire and Gyhard was apparently involved in a number of treasonous acts against the Imperial Throne."
His eyes narrowed as the brother disappeared within the king. "I assume you're referring to the rebellion he instigated as Governor Aralt and his intention to murder an Imperial Prince in order to take over his body?"
"You know about that?"
"Kings may not know as much as bards," he told her grimly, "but we're kept fairly well informed. I had been assured, however, that His Imperial Majesty thought Gyhard had died."
"Bannon blamed Gyhard for the loss of Vree, and he…"
"Decided to get even?" When she nodded, Theron shook his head. "Wonderful.
An immature assassin. That aside, I was also informed that if Gyhard paid for those crimes, it would destroy Vree."
Annice spread her hands. "Vree and Gyhard are now separate people. Bannon could now take Gyhard back to the Empire without
physically
destroying Vree."
"Physically," Theron grunted. The emphasis made the alternative obvious.
"What do you want me to do, Annice?"
"Intervene with the Emperor on Bannon's behalf."
"Intervene with the Emperor on behalf of an Imperial assassin refusing a direct order to deal with an Imperial treason?" Grasping the edge of the table, he leaned toward her, just barely maintaining a grip on his temper. "I don't think so."
She reached across the luncheon dishes and laid a hand over one of his. "Then intervene on behalf of a brother who doesn't want to hurt a sister he dearly loves."
Theron looked down at their hands then up at her face. He struggled silently for a moment then sighed, knowing when he'd been flanked. "I'll speak with Karlene.
She knows the particulars better than anyone; perhaps we can work something out."
"What I find most curious, Majesty, is that the Emperor went to so much trouble." Karlene frowned down at the plush carpet covering the floor of the king's office, seeking answers in the pattern that turned and looped around upon itself.
"Why send Bannon secretly when he could have just sent a message to you to have the traitor returned?"
"Perhaps he assumed I would agree with the bards that the innocent body worn by the traitor would not be destroyed. Understandable, since it was a pair of Shkoden bards who assured him Gyhard had been destroyed."
Karlene looked up to find the king regarding her with something less than approval. "But, Majesty, you did agree with the bards or you'd have sent them back the moment you were given my recall."
"The moment I was
eventually
given your recall," Theron amended.
Standing quietly to one side, Kovar winced.
"But since I have been assured from the beginning that this is a bardic matter,"
the king continued, shooting an unreadable look at the new Bardic Captain, then turning his gaze back to Karlene, "I would like to hear a bardic solution. With your help, and the help of my niece, Vireyda and Albannon Magaly and Gyhard i'Stevana have done Shkoder a great service and I would prefer that none of them be sent back to the Empire to be executed for treason. I would also prefer not to have to explain to His Imperial Majesty that Bardic Oaths supercede oaths sworn to him when he demands that I have you and Gabris executed for harboring a known traitor."
Karlene slowly shook her head. "He won't demand it, Majesty."
"That fond of you, is he?"
"No, Majesty. But if he were going to do it, he would have already done it. The Emperor wanted Gyhard back in the Capital, but he wanted it done quietly. He wanted something and he wanted as few people as possible to know about it. He has to want Gyhard for something more than merely treason."
Theron's brows rose. "Merely treason?"
Kovar stepped forward before Karlene could answer. "What does Gyhard have that's worth such convoluted planning?"
The office fell silent as the two bards and the king spent a moment in thought.
When Theron's stomach growled, he remembered his consort in tears, his heir pitched suddenly onto the throne, long lists of instructions from his healer, and innumerable bowls of broth. "I know," he said, remembering the pain, and terror, and the cold weight of death pressing against his chest.
"Eternal life?" Magda looked around the room at the king and the pair of bards and pulled a wet curl from the corner of her mouth. "Well, I
suppose
His Imperial Majesty might think that Gyhard had the secret of eternal life. I mean, he has lived a
very
long time moving his kigh from body to body, but it's no secret how he did it."
"How, Magda?" Theron demanded, eyes gleaming. "How?"
Recognizing where his interest originated, she smiled a little sadly. "All it takes is a fear of death so complete that you'd do
anything
to escape."
"There must be more," Kovar protested. "Or we'd have kigh jumping out of the dying all the time."
The young healer sighed. "You don't understand. You have to be willing, if only at that moment, to do
anything
." She stepped toward the desk. "Majesty, when you thought you were dying, did you fear death so much that you would have given an innocent life to survive?"
Theron slowly shook his head, left hand rising to twist his collar button. "No."
She nodded, satisfied. "And I don't think His Imperial Majesty would either."
"But there are those who would," Kovar pointed out.
"Those sorts of people," Magda replied, wondering why it was so obvious to her and so apparently difficult for anyone else, "are not the sort with the strength to throw themselves into the heart of their fear over and over again."
"But if Gyhard is such a person…"
"He isn't." Frowning, she reconsidered. "Well, I guess he
was
, but he isn't anymore."
"Magda, true love conquering all is a bardic tale." When she started to bristle indignantly, Theron leaned forward and held out his hand. "Child, the known path to immortality would be too great for anyone to deny."
"He doesn't have to
deny
it. He can't
do
it. When he was willing to die rather than take over Prince Otavas' body it was because he'd found something he couldn't do—which, I would like to point out," she added, chin lifting, "had
less
to do with the prince than it did with his
love
for Vree…"
In spite of the seriousness of the situation, both bards hid a smile at her tone.
The young healer had matured a great deal since Vree and Gyhard had come to Elbasan, but she was still only seventeen.
"… at which time he lost his all-encompassing fear of death."
"You don't know that, Magda…"
"I
do
know that. I just spent
days
helping him anchor his kigh in the body he now wears."
"So he'll grow old and die just like the rest of us." Theron sighed. "Does he know?"
"Does it matter?" Magda demanded. "Immortality now has a price he's unwilling to pay. Why diminish him by telling him he couldn't pay it if he wanted to?"
After a long moment, Theron nodded, and sat back in his chair, thumb tracing the design of the crowned ship carved into the broad arm. "Why indeed? Which brings us back to the problem of His Imperial Majesty."
"The Emperor is a realist, Sire. He realizes that, occasionally, the birds he flies will miss their strike."
The other three people in the room blinked at Karlene in confusion. She cleared her throat sheepishly. "Sorry. You get into the habit of hawking analogies around the Imperial Court. Why not tell him that Gyhard is now just a man, no longer immortal and, furthermore, a man wearing a Shkoden body which cannot be executed for a treason committed by the body of an Imperial citizen. If you will not allow Ban-non to remove Gyhard—in his new body from Shkoder—then whether or not Bannon is disobeying an Imperial order becomes irrelevant." Theron snorted.
"He won't like that much."
"For what it's worth," Magda offered earnestly, "I really,
really
don't think we could have stopped Kars without Gyhard and Bannon."
Within the masking of his beard, the king's lips twitched. "So I've been told."
Twisting the ivory button between his fingertips—they'd stopped pulling off when his tailor began sewing them on with sailmaker's thread—Theron examined Karlene's suggestion from all sides. "It does have the advantage of being the truth,"
he said at last. "And it does solve young Bannon's problem, as even an Imperial assassin can hardly be expected to start a war by taking the man out of the country if
I
won't allow them to leave. However…" He glanced over at the beautifully detailed map that covered one wall of his office. Shkoder was a small country, bordered on three sides by mountains and the fourth by the sea. It was smaller than three of the Havakeen Empire's seven provinces and the Empire was running out of room to expand. "… we'd best come up with a way to sweeten the pot."
In the long, paneled corridor outside the king's private office, Magda fell into step beside Karlene and sighed. "I'm worried."
Shortening her stride, Karlene glanced down at the top of the healer's head.
"About what?"
"Vree and Gyhard. Vree never came near him all the way back to Elbasan."
"She also never took her eyes off of him."
"Are you sure?"
"I'm sure," Karlene told her with sardonic emphasis. "Trust me, I would've noticed if she'd looked away."
Magda glanced up at the taller woman. "You like her, don't you? I mean, not just like but…" She could feel the blood rise to her cheeks. "I could be a little in love with her, yes."
"Gerek, too," Magda said as they walked through a set of double doors and out into the public areas of the palace. "He's with Her Royal Highness, so I guess I'd better wait for him in his suite."
"Do you think he's going to need a healer?"
"Not unless he's forgotten everything Tadeus ever taught him about charm." She smiled up at the bard. "Thanks for reassuring me about Vree and Gyhard."
"No problem." Karlene stood and watched the young healer effortlessly move through the crowds and wished she felt as reassured. As much as she might have wanted to believe otherwise, His Majesty had been right—true love seldom conquered all outside of a bardic tale.
"I had thought you understood that I wanted your sister and the assassin returned directly from Bartek Springs?" The Heir of Shkoder leaned back and locked eyes with the Heir of Ohrid over steepled fingers. "I believe my exact words were, 'I neither want my cousin with her unique and irreplaceable talents endangering herself by confronting this bardic abomination nor do I want an assassin with two not entirely stable kigh wandering around Shkoder.' "