Part 36 (2/2)

She wondered idly if this was how the Commonwealers had conducted the war, and whether that explained everything. From that reflection, her mind turned to Thalric and her other companions. They were close, she knew: she could feel Thalric's arrowhead of a mind out there, seeking ways to cut at the knot of her captors and set her free. She dared not let her mind wander too far, or exercise her little-understood powers too much. The Empress was still out there, and who could know how far her feelers might stretch from her nest in the heart of Capitas? Surely she had not forgotten Che, her unwished-for peer and sister. And if the Beetle girl's consciousness should brush against her, then who knew what new magical attack Seda might unleash? Che had no wish to be banished into the back of her own head once more.

This night, as the advance force camped, the scouts seemed to have more positive information. They had already made up a lot of the lost ground, Che came to understand from the snippets of talk she overheard. Another day, or even less, and they would catch up with the brigands, and Tynisa. And then Salme Ela.s.s would have her revenge.

There were perhaps forty or fifty in the cavalry party, and they were the cream of the Commonweal, n.o.bles and their retainers armoured in glittering sh.e.l.l and steel, skilled with bow and sword and lance. Che had glumly concluded that it didn't matter how much help Tisamon's ghost could lend to his daughter, Tynisa would not be able to triumph over her enemies this time, not even with a motley collection of brigands at her back. And she would not run for long, Che knew, for Tisamon would not have run. Perhaps Tynisa did not even think of her actions so far as escaping, rather than just escorting and guarding the villains she had freed. The moment she thought that she was running from something, then she would turn and fight. It was what Tisamon himself would have done, and the instinct had surely killed enough Mantis-kinden over the years. Che had a fairly strong conviction that Tisamon's ghost had only one aim in its damaged mind: that Tynisa would die as a Mantis should die: b.l.o.o.d.y-handed and in company.

So, the ghost's play had reached its endgame, and Che's own had clearly failed. She was in no position to save Tynisa from anything, nor even herself.

She started as someone crouched down next to her, sitting back on his haunches. She recognized him as Isandter, the silver-haired Mantis-kinden. His eyes were wintry and cold, and Che knew well enough the sword-and-circle brooch he wore.

'What do you want?' she asked him.

He was studying her with a slight frown. 'You are a n.o.ble of the Lowlands, a woman of importance?'

She almost laughed at that. 'We don't have an aristocracy. Bloodline won't get you far on its own, where I come from. But my uncle Stenwold is a man of note, back in Collegium. I imagine he'll take it personally if he hears that something bad has happened to me. Not that it'll do me much good by then, of course.'

Isendter nodded soberly. 'Maker Stenwold,' he enunciated carefully. 'That is the name of the Lowlander who spoke to the Monarch at Prince Felipe's court.'

Che raised her eyebrows. 'The very same, Master Whitehand. You've a good memory.'

'It was much talked about, at the time. And you are important, then, so it's a mistake to treat you thus.'

She waited, but the words were not a prelude to any attempt on his part to secure her freedom. Instead he surprised her by sitting down beside her, as though the two of them were simply exchanging pleasantries.

'You know our ways a little. You learned that from your uncle, no doubt. You were right, in what you said: the girl is not in her right mind, not her own master. My lady has erred by setting herself on this course. No good will come of it.' He spoke low, so that his voice would not carry further than Che's ears. She had a sudden insight that he had come to speak to her because these words, prying their way out of him, were too dangerous to voice to any other.

'If you're looking for sympathy from your prisoner, you'll find none here. She's your mistress.'

'Not by choice. I am the t.i.the paid by my people: the service of a Weaponsmaster in exchange for my kin to live untroubled in the deep places. I have served the Salmae most of my life.'

'No doubt the prince was a better master, when he lived,' Che suggested. For all her caveats about sympathy, she could not retain a stern face. The old man seemed oddly frail and vulnerable in thus confessing to her, for all that he was a Mantis-kinden killer and a master of the blade.

'He was not.' Isendter stared up at the stars. 'He was thoroughly vainglorious, and he would not listen. He died in the war's early years, leading a pointless charge against a superior foe, because he could not conceive of ever being wrong. He did not die alone.' The Mantid's expression was sour, hollow. 'Others of the Salmae fell in similar ways, serving their Monarch, and yet giving precious little of value, until there was the princess and her son. Her sons. But, then you said you knew the boy, Dien.'

'Very much so,' Che agreed. 'He was a good friend.'

Isendter let out a long breath. 'Felipe Shah took him into his household, as kin obligate. It was a great honour, of course, but the Salmae would have refused it, if they dared. Prince Felipe thought he saw something in the boy worth saving, and took him to Suon Ren to raise as his own son. And he was right, it would seem.'

'I take it Alain wasn't of the same stamp?'

There was a long silence then, and Che a.s.sumed that the man's unburdening had come to an end, but at last his voice emerged again, in barely more than a whisper. 'Without honour, he was, and with no sense of a n.o.bleman's responsibility. Not one of the old n.o.bility, like Felipe Shah or Lowre Cean, men who take their duty seriously. Instead, a boy who was denied nothing, who acknowledged no boundaries, around whom no woman was safe. Who bred vice instead of virtue, resentment instead of loyalty and I am bound to avenge him, or die trying.'

'Why are you telling me this?' Che asked him.

'Because you alone here might understand, and who else would? I would have warned your sister, save that she was under Alain's spell before I ever met her. I know Lisan Dea did her best to turn the girl away. This time, though, the boy took on more than he could manage. A Weaponsmaster, wounded in mind, unpredictable, fierce, a killer that is your sister. He thought he could keep her spinning about him like a moth about a candle but, this once, he mistook who was the flame.'

'She killed him,' Che said flatly, 'She killed your prince.'

'She is a fugitive, a murderess, she has robbed the family of its cherished son.' His brooding expression deepened. 'Still, I can feel no grief in me that the boy is dead.'

Forty-One.

First he donned his cap and arming jacket, their padded cloth now the worse for wear, still bearing all their old stains of blood and sweat like badges of honour. The hauberk came next, a long-sleeved coat of mail that fell to his knees. Not the heavy chain of an Ant-kinden line soldier but fine links that flowed like water, yet would bunch like solid metal under the impact of sword or arrow. The weight of it pressed on his shoulders, resting against the additional thickness of the arming jacket there, but it did not burden him. Instead, he felt lighter and freer with that comforting pressure about him. He donned his coif, a hood of the same delicate mail, shaking his head a little to centre it, tugging the collar straight.

Then came the breast- and backplates, fitted together and hinged shut to form the centre of his steel carapace. Both pieces bore a punched hole, the edges long since filed blunt, where a snapbow bolt had winged its way right through him, armour and all, and thereby ended the era of the battlefield sentinel.

The end of my world, thought Varmen, but then they did not have snapbows in the Commonweal.

All this he could do alone, from long practice, but it was easier with a companion to arm him. Back in the days when he had belonged to an army, he and his comrades had garbed each other, like a ceremony and a ritual before going into battle.

A belt strapped around the lower edges of the breast- and backplates to keep them closed, and then Thalric buckled on his leg armour, piece by piece: cuisses for the thighs, poleyns for the knee, armoured boots for the feet, and then greaves over them for the calves. The ex-Rekef man made a slow job of the work, having to be ordered and directed, segment by segment, but he grew more confident as he progressed. Had Varmen been on his own he would have had to start with the feet and work up; with the breastplate already on, he could not reach down that far.

A skirt of segmented ta.s.sets overlaid the cuisses to just above the knee, hooked to both breast- and backplates, and then Thalric had turned to the arms, fitting the same sequence of articulated, overlapping plates, defending from all angles and allowing only the bare minimum of gaps and those backed by the light mail and yet none of it enc.u.mbering, none of it slowing Varmen at all, not after a lifetime spent encased in armour such as this.

About his neck was fastened a crescent-shaped gorget, denying his enemies the gap between the breastplate rip and his helm. He drew on his own gauntlets, as a point of pride, while Thalric laced and buckled on his pauldrons, three curved plates on each shoulder, with a vertical crest r.i.m.m.i.n.g the innermost to protect the side of his neck. He buckled on his swordbelt then, fingers still finding their way surely despite the steel about them. The heavy blade was a comforting presence at his side.

'I'm ready,' he proclaimed, and Maure brought his helm forward, her expression solemn. Varmen nodded to Thalric, who made a wry face and stepped back, giving the two of them their privacy.

'You've seen the ghost about me, haven't you?' Varmen muttered.

Maure just nodded and the Wasp scowled.

'I don't believe in ghosts. No such thing.' He took the helm from her and stared into its faceless visage. 'A Dragonfly girl.'

'Even so,' Maure agreed.

'So tell me, is she real? Or just in my head? I fought the girl once, one on one. I was trying to save my men.' His face was blankly uncomprehending. 'It's stayed with me, all this time. She had a good voice, a beautiful voice: even when she was demanding our surrender and telling us we couldn't win out. It's odd what you remember.'

'It doesn't make a difference whether it's a ghost from her death, or a ghost from your mind. It's no less real,' Maure told him. 'Or no more real, seeing as you don't believe in them.'

'Not in the slightest,' Varmen agreed. 'You're going to stay back, you hear? No getting in the way.'

'I'm no warrior, me,' she agreed. 'I'd tell you all the ways in which I'll be helping you, but you wouldn't believe me in that, either.'

'Probably not.' He tried a smile, but it was a bleak and stillborn thing. 'Back in the b.l.o.o.d.y Commonweal. I feel like this place has been waiting for me ever since the war ended. He took a deep breath that set the plates of his armour rising and grating against one another. 'I should have died on the field with the Seventh, when their snapbows cut us down like wheat.' Balancing the helm in one hand he touched the entry hole with an armoured finger. 'But I'd rather have died fighting that girl here in the Commonweal. Then I'd not have had to see the end of us, the end of all of our ways.' He glanced off into the darkness. 'Just like all the old Commonweal magic, eh? They used to put such faith in us, and then one day . . . n.o.body believed in us any more.'

He reached up and placed the helm on his head, his world reducing to a slit, and yet he felt that he somehow saw more, sensed more, now that his armour was complete. He had regained a connection to the world, feeling all of its tricks and changes. He was something elemental.

'Pride of the Sixth,' he murmured, tugging the chinstrap tight. He swung the helm to find Maure, saw her expression. 'Such a long road just to come back here,' he said, his voice loud in his own ears.

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