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Authors: T C Southwell

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic

Sacred Knight of the Veil (24 page)

BOOK: Sacred Knight of the Veil
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Chiana struggled, terror overwhelming her. All rational thought fled as raw instinct took over, making her writhe and strain against her bonds in a desperate, futile bid to escape the water. Mind-bending fear beat inside her like a wild, savage thing that could not be tamed, a primal survival instinct awakened by the danger. Her muscles popped and spasmed, sending waves of pain through her. The ropes cut into her, and she fought the urge to inhale for as long as she could, but lost the battle and sucked in water.

The torturer raised Chiana back into the air, which rushed into her burning lungs, making her cough and wheeze. He waited until she had recovered somewhat, then reached for the end of the plank again.

"I do not know anything!" she croaked.

Her tormentor smiled and lowered her into the tub. This time she had less air, and her chest convulsed as she tried to cough. Her nose and windpipe burnt and her throat was raw. Within moments, she sucked in water, writhing and twisting like a mad thing. When the torturer raised her into the air again, she coughed up foam and wheezed.

Shouts from the soldiers made her open her eyes, blinking away the water that stung them. The Cotti ran about, jumping and grabbing at something in the air. At first she did not understand what was going on, then she realised that they hunted a dove that beat her wings against the walls as she strived to stay out of their reach.

"Inka!" Chiana croaked, tugging at her bonds. "Go! Fly away!"

The dove fluttered around the room, unable to find a safe perch. She shared Chiana's fear through their bond, and it filled her with panic. The soldiers whooped and leapt to catch her, causing her to veer away and crash into a wall. She fluttered to the floor, and Chiana groaned.

A soldier scooped up the bird, causing the regent to cry out as she shared her familiar's pain. The soldiers sniggered, and one brought a cage, into which the man who held Inka thrust her. As soon as he released the bird, Chiana was able breathe easier, and sagged against the plank. Inka fluttered around the cage, then found the perch and sat on it, peering through the bars at her captive friend.

The torturer smiled at the bedraggled Regent, addressing one of the guards. "Go tell the Prince we've captured the woman's familiar."

The man left, and Chiana twisted to gaze at the torturer. "Please let her go."

The Cotti shook his head. "I can't do that. Many a silent tongue has been loosened by a familiar's pain. We find it more effective than torturing the human."

"You bastard. I have nothing to tell you! When are you going to get it through your thick head?"

He shrugged. "That's for the Prince to decide."

Chiana let her head sag, coughing. It was just as well that she knew nothing, she reflected bitterly, for she would not be able to withstand Inka's pain. She summoned Blade's image into her mind to give herself courage, glad that he was free and praying that he remained so.

 

Jadar swung around when the door to the King's study burst open, his eyes widening as Kerrion strode in. His visage was lined and haggard, his eyes burnt with a fanatical light, and dust filmed his wrinkled clothes. Two servants followed the King, one of whom picked up Kerrion's cloak as he shed it, the other poured a cup of wine and offered it to Kerrion. Jadar put down the papers he had been tidying and bowed as Kerrion took the cup and dismissed the servants with a wave of his hand. He downed the wine in a couple of gulps and wiped his chin, his hand rasping over several days' growth of beard.

Never had the chief advisor seen his king in such a state of disarray and despair. Kerrion refilled the goblet and walked around his desk to sink into the chair, unbuckling his sword with a curse when it impeded him. It fell with a clatter, shedding sand. Jadar wondered if he should summon another manservant to tend to the monarch, who looked in dire need of food and a bath. Kerrion's brooding look boded ill for anyone who attempted to tend to his comforts, however, so the advisor stood before the desk, waiting to be addressed or dismissed. After a few minutes of contemplation, Kerrion looked up at him.

"We failed. He escaped during the night. A pox on him and all my brothers!"

"Chaymin?"

Kerrion nodded. "He must have known we were watching him. His familiar never left the estate. Five days ago, one of the sentries I posted around the estate was found dead, and the spy I sent to make enquiries was told that Chaymin left during the night, with a small force of armed men. By the time we found the sentry, the desert had swallowed his tracks."

"That is ill news indeed, Sire."

Kerrion banged the goblet down. "It is catastrophic, Jadar! He was our only hope of finding Minna. I have wasted a tenday watching Rothgan's estate, for nothing."

"What will you do now?"

The King rubbed his face. "Continue the search, what else? I am certainly not giving up."

"But you have already searched every conceivable place around Jadaya."

"Then I will search them again, and go further afield. I shall search until I find her, dead or alive. And if she is dead, god help those who killed her." Kerrion took a gulp of wine, his hand shaking. "What news from Jashimari?"

"Your daughter remains at large, Sire. The troops you dispatched are searching for her, but without success."

A faint smile curled the king's lips. "I told you they would not find her. Endor is a fool if he thinks he will."

"Endor thinks that Regent Chiana knows something. He is torturing her. The population of Jondar is outraged, and beat at the palace gates, demanding the Prince's death."

Kerrion rubbed his brow. "That is worse than I thought. The idiot will start an uprising if he is not careful."

"Or a Jashimari lord will send an assassin to kill the Prince."

Kerrion frowned. "I wish someone would, if I knew it would not put my wife in danger. But it will not win her freedom. Then Trelath would probably demand that Kerra become his captive instead. Anyway, I doubt an assassin would succeed; the palace is a fortress in many respects. When I was held prisoner there, an assassin was sent to kill me, and he used a secret tunnel to gain entry to my room. But that tunnel has since been blocked up."

He paused, looking pensive. "The only man who could succeed is the Regent's husband, but he is retired and with Kerra. If Endor is torturing Chiana, he is looking for trouble with Blade. Have a letter drawn up, warning Endor that harming the Jashimari Regent will do him no good, and possibly endanger his life."

Kerrion's hand tightened on the cup. "I wish I could order his arrest and have him flogged, not send him a bloody warning. Damn him! And Trelath! Damn the whole stinking lot of them!" The King's visage flushed with rage, and he stared at the goblet hard enough to melt the gold.

Jadar hesitated. "Your sons have been asking to see you."

Kerrion ran a hand through his dusty hair. "I must see them. Send a servant to prepare a bath and fresh clothes, then have a meal sent to my rooms."

Jadar bowed. "Yes, Sire."

 

After the advisor left, Kerrion drained the cup and rose to refill it. His limbs were leaden with fatigue, his bones ached and his eyes stung from lack of sleep. Tendays in the sun had deepened his golden tan to bronze, and lightened his tawny hair. All the exercise, plus his lack of appetite and the worry that would not let him sleep, had melted away the excess flesh he had put on around his middle over the years.

Long forgotten muscles had re-emerged from beneath the layer of fat to ridge his belly and bulge his arms like a youth. He turned to study himself in the mirror, barely recognising the gaunt, bearded face that stared back at him with burning eyes. He wondered if his sons would recognise him, and dreaded their questions, trying to formulate answers while he had time.

The four days he and his men had spent living in the desert near Rothgan's estate had been a nightmare of blistering heat and freezing cold, snakes and scorpions. Two horses had died of some unknown disease, a man had been bitten by a burrowing sand snake, and a dog soldier's familiar had become sick, forcing him to send a small group of men home to tend it. When he had learnt of Chaymin's escape, he had wanted to burn Rothgan's estate to the ground, then execute the lord and his entire family for treason. His generals had persuaded him that the lord was more useful alive, however, since they now knew he was in league with the princes, and could be watched.

Kerrion tried not to imagine the deprivations Minna suffered. The thought of her ill treatment sent him into a rage. Already he had wrecked his tent twice in fits of fury brought on by dreams of her bound and hurt, hungry and thirsty, begging him to find her before it was too late. The nightmares filled his sleep with horror, and he tried to stay awake until he was too exhausted to dream. Since he had received the lock of hair and instructions from Chaymin, he had heard nothing of her well-being. He did not even know if she was still alive.

Kerrion turned as a manservant entered and announced that his bath was ready, dismissing the man with a nod. He longed to be back out there, searching for Minna, and only extreme fatigue forced him to eat and rest first.

 

Minna sighed and snuggled closer to the warm, furry body that provided her with a soft cushion, running her hands over sleek muscles under a glossy pelt. Shista's rumbling purr brought the warmth to her heart that was a familiar's gift, without which she would not have survived. The shackles had callused her wrists, and the hard floor bruised her hips and shoulders. She had piled up the sand that covered the floor to try to make a softer bed, with only slight success, and the flies that the latrine bucket attracted plagued her.

At night, squadrons of blood-sucking insects droned around the room, waking her from her uneasy doze. Her stench sickened her, and her misery sometimes found outlet in weeping, whereupon Shista would lick the tears from her cheeks. She dreamt of the day when Kerrion would find her, and the joy it would bring. The food the boy brought did not agree with her, making her queasy when she forced herself to eat it, and her flesh had melted from her bones. The boy still had not spoken, and she was convinced that he had no tongue.

Shista stayed close, and provided what comfort she could, holding the night time cold at bay with her warmth. Often, the wet rasp of the cat's tongue on her cheek woke Minna in the morning. The sand cat lived on whatever little animals dwelt in the dying oasis, and occasionally brought a freshly killed rabbit or bird to try to tempt her friend's appetite. If Minna had been able to cook it, she would have accepted the offerings.

At least Trelath had not returned to torment her, and that could only mean that the King was doing as he was told. She wondered what had been demanded of him, and prayed that he would find her, for she doubted Trelath would ever release her. The deep rumble of Shista's purr lulled her drowsy mind, and she drifted off to sleep again, leaning against the sand cat's lithe, tawny length.

 

Blade stared at the stained ceiling, wondering how much longer he could tolerate this enforced lethargy. For four days, he had studied the various stains on the walls, or listened to the Queen's idle chatter. The girl had proven to be a lively conversationalist, and well educated, but many of the subjects she chose to discuss did not interest him. When this happened, he ignored her, which did not please the young queen.

Blade tried to alleviate the boredom with training, and told her to watch the house across the street and learn all she could about the occupants, as if it was the home of her target. When she had done this, he had told her to pick one as her potential victim and come up with a plan to assassinate him without being discovered. This had kept Kerra quiet for several time-glasses, to the assassin's relief, until she had regaled him with her plan. Although reasonably intelligent, he had picked it apart in a few minutes. When she challenged him to better it, he had put forward one with which she could find no fault, much to her frustration.

The shadows outside lengthened as dusk fell, and Blade, although trained to be infinitely patient, was eager to leave. The danger of the healer's father discovering them was past, and the proprietor assured him that no one had come looking for him. His ribs were considerably improved, the bruising almost gone, and he only had an occasional twinge if he twisted or breathed in deeply. The time spent in idleness now worked against him, denied him vital exercise and decreased his fitness. Blade sat up and stretched, turning to Kerra, who sat next to the window, leaning on the ledge and watching the people walk by below.

"Come, we are leaving."

She looked up, her face brightening. "To Cotti?"

"Yes."

"At last."

Within a few minutes of making his decision, Blade strode from the inn, his bag of possessions slung over his shoulder. After collecting the horses from the livery, he headed down the street that led to the southern gate, detouring to the dress shop, where he purchased the two dresses, a wig and some cosmetics. As dusk sent long fingers of shadow questing across the land, he led the Queen into the wooded region to the south of the city. They travelled by moonlight, and stopped at around midnight to camp amongst the trees, eating cold rations before rolling up in their blankets.

The forest was made up of wir trees, which gave off a pungent, acerbic scent and dropped fluffy golden flowers in a feathery rain. Kerra seemed to find the marrin birds that lived there in flocks fascinating. They filled the air with weird fluting calls and hopped from branch to branch, using the claws that tipped their useless wings to cling like apes. Blade was glad the strange forest distracted the girl, giving him a rest from her girlish banter.

 

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

Blade glanced up, squinting against the sun. The bird that hovered high above had been following them since they had left the city five days ago. They travelled along the steep, narrow trail that led through the mountains, and would reach the desert on the far side by the following day. The Queen remained oblivious to the bird, her face set in a perpetual scowl, her complaints about the rigours and the food only silenced by Blade's terse command.

BOOK: Sacred Knight of the Veil
13.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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