The Diviner (8 page)

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Authors: Melanie Rawn

BOOK: The Diviner
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Khamsin wouldn't like it—he'd graduated from that training exercise years ago—but it was better than nothing. The rest of the morning was spent thus, with Khamsin galloping in circles and every so often testing the rope's strength with a lunge. At the end of the exercise session the muscles of Azzad's back were stretched to breaking, and his arms felt ready to pop out of their shoulder sockets. But he walked Khamsin until the horse cooled, then rubbed him down with handfuls of dry fodder.
On the way back to the dawa'an sheymma, they passed a tent where a very young man dressed for travel stood among a knot of women. Some of them were crying as the youth embraced and kissed them.
Recalling his own spurious excuse for the welts left by the sand-tiger—completely healed now by the Shagara—Azzad asked, “Is he off to prove his manhood?”
“To do
what
?” Fadhil blinked.
“With a dangerous hunt, or a journey through perilous territory, or something of the sort,” Azzad explained, wondering why he had to clarify. All the wilderness tribes he'd ever heard tales of required some sort of test to initiate a boy into full male status within the group. All the northern tribes, anyway. “Proving his courage and resourcefulness, his ability to survive.”
“We need no such proof that a boy has become a man. Except,” Fadhil added with a shrug, “fathering a child. No, he will marry next month, and today goes to join his wife's tribe. We keep our women here.”
“And bring husbands from other tribes into the Shagara?” No wonder these people were so poor. With no competition for the smartest, cleverest young girls to marry into a family and become designers and guardians of its wealth—but perhaps such competition occurred over the men instead. In Rimmal Madar, the best of the sons were kept in the family to attract the best of the daughters from other families. One of Za'avedra al-Ibrafidia's main complaints about Azzad had been his spectacular unwillingness to use his looks and his charm to secure in marriage a brilliant girl who might eventually take her place. The Shagara did things backward, it seemed to Azzad. He worked his mind around this new eccentricity, and at length he asked, “Will you be married outside the Shagara one day?”
“No.”
“Why not?” He paused, then added, “If I may ask.”
“A student of Chal Kabir is of more value than he would bring in a husband-price.”
At least this began to make sense. Of a Shagara kind, anyway. “The other tribes pay to marry your men?”
“Of course. We are Shagara.” As if that explained everything.
The midday meal was waiting. Azzad fell on the food, and when his hunger was satisfied, he returned to his questioning. Fadhil sighed quietly and answered as best he could.
“Will that young man go to his wife's tribe alone? No servants, no friends?”
“He will go with one of his brothers, who will stay until the wedding—and perhaps longer, if one of the maidens finds him pleasing. There are few tribes who can boast Shagara husbands. The Tallib, the Tariq, the Azwadh, the Tabbor, the Harirri, the Ammal—these are the Za'aba Izim, the Seven Names, the people we marry. There are other tribes—the al-Kassira, who rule that city, for instance—but we do not marry them. They are not allied to us in peace and war.”
“War? Over what?” He gestured to the stony desert beyond the open tent flap.
Fadhil mimicked his outswept arm. “Water.”
“Of course. That was stupid of me. My people make war over other things.” He considered Sheyqa Nizzira. “Power. Envy. Money. Land. Greed.”
“Here, water is all. It is power over death. I can understand envy,” he mused, “for those who have little water must desire more. Money I do not understand, and land even less so.”
“Money to buy people—and land to feed them.”
“Every man has his price, but a man who can be bought for mere money is no man at all.”
“There we agree perfectly,” Azzad smiled.
“But who can own the land?”
“If it's got your troops all over it—”
“That is not ownership,” Fadhil said severely. “That is occupancy. Greed—do you mean in the way a child is greedy for sweets?”
“Very like that, yes.”
“But what use is more of everything beyond the sufficiency for living?”
“What use, indeed,” Azzad sighed.
“Did you leave your country—this Rimmal Madar—because you tired of war?”
“No. It would take too long to explain.” And because Fadhil was obviously about to ask him for that explanation, he said, “Did you never go to war with the barbarians?”
“Forgive me, but everyone not Shagara is a barbarian.” Fadhil laughed suddenly. “But you have the makings of a civilized man—if you try very hard.”
“My thanks, Fadhil! I meant the barbarians who believe in a Mother and a Son as their deities. They invade and demand that the people abandon Acuyib and swear to their faith.”
“Oh, them.” Fadhil sounded bored. “There are stories of their coming in great carts that floated on the sea. They were stopped at the fishing villages on the coast. It was a long time ago, and nothing to do with us.” He paused, then added thoughtfully, “They rode astride their horses, as well. Is this something your people learned from them?”
“Certainly not!” Azzad had studied history and tactics in futile preparation for joining the Qoundi Ammar—though, in truth, he had been more interested in how fine a figure he would cut in the elegant robes, riding a gorgeous white horse. That had been before Khamsin, naturally. But he recalled the treatises very well, and said, “Their horses weren't as good as Khamsin. One reason they invaded Rimmal Madar was to steal our horses to improve their own cavalry—troops of riders,” he explained when Fadhil looked blank. “With swords and axes and—”
“What matter this ‘cavalry' against the Shagara?”
“You mean your good luck charms?” Azzad laughed. He stopped laughing when Fadhil gave him a sidelong look.
“I have discovered,” the boy said, “that you often speak at great length of things you know nothing about. Now I believe you should sleep. You are not accustomed to such exercise. Chal Kabir will not thank me for allowing you to lose what strength you have regained.”
Azzad had to agree with him, and lay back on his carpets. He dreamed of the al-Ma'aliq castle in the northern mountains, where hundreds of swift, long-limbed horses galloped free through the pastures. He woke, hot and sweating, with a curse on his lips for the magnificent animals that now belonged to Sheyqa Nizzira.
Idling around these tents set his feet not one step on his path to revenge. There was no money to be made here, no influence to be gained. Two days, three at the most, and he would thank the Shagara as profoundly as he knew how, ask directions to the nearest substantial town, and leave.
That evening Chal Kabir and Fadhil came in supporting a limp, travel-worn man. Azzad watched in fascination as the man was stripped, washed, and examined, for it was his first chance to observe the brisk efficiency of the Shagara healers.
“What's wrong with him?”
His question was ignored. Azzad hoped the man had nothing infectious. He wasn't a Shagara; his skin was darkly tanned, his hair was straight and brown with a reddish sheen by lamplight, and his filthy robe might once have been red.
Kabir mumbled irritably to himself, then sent Fadhil out of the tent. The boy returned a little while later with two clay jugs. One of them he placed on the low table near the sick man's bedding, and the other he gave to Azzad.
“Qawah?” Azzad asked, trying not to sound dismayed.
“Wine, to strengthen the blood.”
As Kabir and Fadhil bent over the new arrival, Azzad leaned back into his pillows and drank. It was surprisingly good, sharp and dry just as he liked it, with a hint of berries.
In the middle of his dreaming he remembered that he didn't remember falling asleep. He couldn't move, not even in his dream. But he could hear, and the voices were feminine and familiar.
Something in the wine,
he thought, and knew he wasn't dreaming at all.
“And so, Leyliah, what is your judgment of this man's sickness?”
“It is of the circulation of the blood,” the younger woman replied with confidence.
“Exactly,” said Challa Meryem. “Very good. Were we to look inside, we would find his blood paths thickened and in some places nearly shut. Now, what is the appropriate treatment for his condition?”
Azzad listened, immobile and mute with the drugged wine. Women as healers. And the Shagara didn't want him to know. Fadhil had thus far protected him. But if the others thought he knew, they would never let him leave. They would kill him.
There was something basically illogical about that: Why heal a man only to kill him if he discovered the tribe's secret? Then he thought about the women and how valuable they were. A woman with skill beyond a male physician's would be well worth abducting. Shocking, this thought, but if the Shagara did not allow their women to marry outside the tribe—and Meryem had said that people came to the Shagara for healing. Wherever they made camp, people would come from great distances. Those thorn fences were not portable, so there must be others well-established in other places. Azzad wondered how many and where.
“I approve the treatment, Leyliah,” said Challa Meryem. “Write it down for Kabir and Fadhil and then go to bed.”
One set of soft footsteps left the tent. Then he heard Meryem's voice directly over his head—so startling that if he'd been able to move, he would have leaped right out of his skin.
“As well you will be leaving us soon, Azzad al-Ma'aliq,” she murmured. “I do not trust you, nor the looks Leyliah gives you—though one cannot blame her for them.”
He wondered once more whether Leyliah was beautiful. If Grandfather would find her worth the trouble . . . .
Azzad woke suddenly some hours later, wondering what had disturbed him. The eastern wall of the tent was pale, hinting of dawn. Lying on his side, keeping his body still and his breathing soft and regular, he listened carefully.
And heard the barest whisper of a footstep on the floor.
Kabir or Fadhil would simply have walked across the carpets. Meryem or Leyliah would be quieter, lighter, but not stealthy. Not like this.
Another step. Azzad risked slitting one eyelid open, peering through the spider-legs of his lashes. The “sick” man was moving with exquisite slowness toward him. And even in the feeble light the sheen of steel was unmistakable.
Thanks be to Acuyib, the wine had worn off. He tensed and relaxed all his muscles in turn. His hearing was acute, his head clear. He tried to guess: heart or throat? Quiet demanded the latter. It was the more difficult attack—not a straight knife-thrust between the ribs but a grab of the hair and a slice from ear to ear, to make sure the windpipe was severed and no sound could be made, or a brutal thrust right into the throat. A chest was a much larger target. He shut his eyelid, risked giving a sigh and a snort as a sleeping man might, and shifted as if in a dream.
A long silence. Then another step, and another. The man was good at his trade. Azzad again wondered what had awakened him earlier. It did not matter. His shifting had let him place one hand on his chest to block a knife and the other on his belly to strike at the man's ribs; his right leg sprawled to the side, ready to dig into the bedding for leverage.
Another step. He could hear the man's breathing.
And then the whisper: “For the honor of the al-Ammarizzad—
die
, alMa'aliq—”
The hiss of the blade, the fingers snarling in his hair—the sinewy wrist in his grip, the crunch of his fist against bone—and they were on the floor, rolling, tangled and tumbling like a rapist and a furious virgin, all in silence. It was not a knife the assassin wielded but an axe that skittered away, ringing as it hit a brass tub in the corner. Azzad kicked and struck, overturning a table, and felt liquid splash on his face as a pitcher went flying. He heard clay crack against the central tent pole and shatter. Shaking his eyes clear, he grunted as a knee drove into his belly and knocked the wind from his lungs. Desperately, Azzad pushed off with a foot and rolled the pair of them over and over again until his ribs hit the tent pole.
Suddenly the hands were gone from his throat. Gasping for breath, he staggered to his feet. The man's lips were parted in a soundless cry, his eyes gaping wide with astonishment, his hands twitching limply—and his legs moved not at all. Azzad kicked him onto his side and saw a thick shard of the pitcher's broken handle protruding from his spine and a small spreading bloodstain on his white bedshirt.
Not in all his time here had Azzad ever sensed that the tent was guarded by night. He'd been a fool to think otherwise, he realized, when a golden-skinned face appeared at the tent flap, wide-eyed. Azzad waved a casual hand at him to indicate he was unharmed, and the boy vanished.
Wearily, he sat on his carpets and worked on catching his breath. It seemed he wasn't quite as recovered as he'd thought. He kept an eye on his assailant, curious about how long it would take him to die.
A little while later, Fadhil came into the tent at a run. “Azzad! What happened?”
“As you see,” he managed, irked that he was still so exhausted. After this paltry exertion, he was as wrung out and sore as if he were a rug and a servant had just washed and beaten him. He wondered how long the Shagara would give him to sleep it off before they sent him on his way.
“Who is this man?” Fadhil demanded.
“Your other patient. Not just that, of course.” He watched as Fadhil finally noticed the shard sticking out of the man's spine. “Perhaps Chal Kabir is needed,” he suggested mildly.

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