124761.fb2 Magic Steps - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 12

Magic Steps - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 12

Sandry, back, at her embroidery, was fascinated. She had, to suppose that the baron and, the duke had done this many times, She knew her great-uncle; if the baron made tart observations in situations like this it was be cause the: duke wanted him to.

They stir the pot, and see what bubbles to the top, she thought.

"The provost thinks it is not a business matter, when murder is done with such violence," Qasam explained, staring at the glass in his hands. "She expects a slighted husband or lover, or a madman." He began to tremble again. "She does not understand the Dihanur. They are heartless, little better than animals—,"

"You said that," the baron interrupted. "Tell us some thing new."

Now Qasam did look up. His skin gleamed with sweat. "We are rivals. They have the frankincense trade and desire our monopoly on myrrh as well, the greedy pigs. And somehow they have learned, they found—," He drained his glass and set it down, shaking so hard that he nearly dropped it. "Today I received word they have gained the upper hand. In Bihan, in Janaal. My—my father is dead, my mother, their parents, my sisters, and their husbands…" He covered his face with his hands.

"You believe your brothers killing was part of this." Duke Vedris made it a statement, not a question.

Qasam lowered his hands. "They mean to wipe our house from the world. In Bihan, in Janaal, they have succeeded. Now they send their murderers here. My brother Jamar was the first—they will not stop until they have killed every Rokat in Emelan."

The duke got to his feet; the baron and Qasam did the same. Sandry began to rise, but the duke shook his head at her.

"They shall commit no mass slaughter here," Vedris told Qasam. "Tell all this to my lady provost and her harriers—they will find it useful. You may have obstructed their search by keeping information back, and think of the rest of your family in Emelan—they will need protection."

"Don't bunch up in one building," said Erdogun. "You don't want to make it easy for them."

Qasam nodded. He was spent with emotion; Sandry wondered if he'd slept at all last night.

"I am curious," the duke remarked, standing idly at rest. "Were you told how your brother was found?"

The merchant nodded, wiping his face again.

"Murderers rarely stop to arrange their work. The way they left things suggests" — Vedris paused, searching for the right word, while his eyes never left Qasam's drooping form—, "it suggests a message. Particularly the display of your brother's head. Am I correct? Was a message intended?"

"It refers to a thing that, that was done," whispered Qasam.. "My brother in Janaal is—was—intemperate. A Dihanur thrust ahead of our great-uncle as they went into the temple of Tirpu. The insult was avenged on Palaq Dihanur, their patriarch. Then my brother showed, all the city what became of those who did not treat the elders of Rokat House with the proper respect."

"He displayed the head—?” prodded the baron.

"On the city walls. Over the south gate, for all to see."

"And you wonder why they're angry," Baron Erdogun growled, disgusted.

Qasam shook his head and looked at the duke. "You will help? Please, I am not… My brothers, my uncles, my father, all have spilled blood to defend our house. I am only a bookkeeper, they do not even listen to me. Please say we are under your protection."

"Everyone in Emelan is under my protection," the duke said evenly. "Be sure you inform my lady provost that I suggested you explain these further details to her."

Qasam bowed, touching his forehead and chest. Sandry looked at her uncle reproachfully. Did he really mean to send this poor man back to the city without guards? Qasam would have his own guards, under the circumstances, but the presence of the Duke's Guard would show he was under her uncle's eye. The duke glanced at her. His mouth twitched.

"Erdo, go with Master Rokat. Detail a pair of guards to accompany him to my lady provost."

"I must stop at home." Qasam's face was suddenly brighter. "For papers…"

"Yes, very well," said the duke. "My guards will stay with you."

Erdoguns bow conveyed respect mingled with reproach that the duke would bother to give this man extra protection. "By your command, your grace," he said coolly, and ushered their guest out the door.

* * *

Alzena waited across the street from Qasam Rokat's home, her curved sword balanced on her knees. She was clad in the essence of nothingness, like her husband Nurhar, and the mage, who was tucked in a niche in a nearby wall. The nothingness was the mage's special power, the unmagic that got them past the cleverest guards and the most powerful spells. It cloaked her and Nurhar and even himself in sheer emptiness. Guards and magical protections felt nothing because nothing was there. She could not even see Nurhar or the mage as she peered through the tiny slit in the spells that enabled her to look at the real world. Late at night she sometimes wondered how it would feel, if that slit were to close. Would the nothingness eat her, as it seemed to have eaten the mage?

What ate him is dragonsalt, her practical self scolded. Keep your mind on the task!

Here came Rokat. She stirred. She had expected his own, guards, two in front and two behind. The surprise was that somehow he'd talked Duke Vedris out of a pair of soldiers. They will do him as much good as his own bodyguards, she thought, getting to her feet.

She couldn't see Nurhar, but she knew he had gone to work when the confusion balls burst. They had two for the bodyguards ahead of Rokat, and two for those body guards behind him. The guards reeled; their horses staggered as the enclosed drug went into sensitive noses. The balls were good for three minutes, and they hadn't brought extras to cover the duke's men. She would just have to be quick, quicker than the soldiers—but that was why the family had honored her with the task.

As silent as a shark streaking toward prey, Alzena Dihanur ran across the cobblestones, between the lurching horses. The two Duke's Guards closed in around the sweating Rokat, their weapons drawn. Down went the Guardsman's horse on Rokat's left, blood pouring from two hacked legs. That would be Nurhar. He knew if he crippled the mount the rider would be too busy to interfere. Alzena dodged to that side as horse and man top pled away from her target. Sweeping her curved blade up, she sliced through Rokat's saddle girth, not caring that the razor edge bit deep into his animal's side. Grabbing Rokat's clothes, she yanked.

Down he tumbled, screaming, as the other Guardsman tried to shove past the flailing bodyguards to reach him. Alzena hacked Rokat across the belly and thighs, then got into position for her third cut, and made it. Gripping the head by the beard, she thrust it into a bag, spelled like the rest of her with unmagic, and raced down the street with it. She was invincible as long as she bumped into no one; they would never see her, because she was nothing. On she ran, giddy with blood. Nurhar would collect the mage, and return with him to the inn. It was her job to display the head, and she knew just where she would leave it.

* * *

The duke's fist struck the mahogany table, making plates and silver jump. "Shurri curse them!" he whispered. "Atop the Market Square fountain, for the world to see!"

Sandry glared at the Provost's Guard who had brought the news. She had just gotten her uncle to sit down to supper when the messenger came with word of Qasam Rokat's murder. Couldn't the servants have kept the woman back until the duke had eaten?

She bowed her head, ashamed of her anger, but a fact was a fact. Qasam Rokat was dead. She'd like to keep her uncle from following him out of life.

"What of the Guardsmen with Rokat?” the duke wanted to know.

"Guryil broke his leg when his mare dropped on him," replied the Provosts Guard. "He's in your infirmary now. His partner, Lebua, is with him. Our people are taking their story."

The duke stood. Sandry got to her feet, fighting to push her heavy chair back

"My dear," Vedris began, "there is really no need for you to—," He met her eyes and smiled ruefully. "Forgive me. I forgot who I was talking to. I become like poor Rokat, trying to shelter you when you do not want such care." To the messenger he said, "My servants will give you food and a mount for your return. Tell my lady provost I appreciate the prompt notification."

The messenger bowed her thanks.

The walk to the infirmary was a brisk one. Sandry wanted to protest the pace, but the bleak look in her uncle's eyes discouraged her. I can't coddle him forever, she thought as she trotted to keep up. He'll just get impatient and overdo.

Knowing that, it was still hard not to protest. She couldn't forget how he'd looked when, only six weeks ago, she got word that he'd collapsed in his library. When she had reached him the duke was in bed, his face ash gray and pain-twisted. He looked old and. half-dead. It had taken all her strength to bind his spirit to his body until the healers could do their work. She never, ever wanted to see him like that again.

As if he felt her worry, the duke slowed near the infirmary door and waited for her to catch up. I’ll be all right," he murmured as a guard opened the door for them. "and I promise I will eat as soon as we're done here."

The injured Guryil lay in a curtained alcove at the rear of the small infirmary. A healer sat with him, one hand on his wrist, the other on a leg braced with splints. To Sandry's magical vision the healer's power was a cool silvery blaze that ran through the Guardsman. It flickered in the broken leg, as if the magic fought something there.

"Guryil has broken that leg several times," remarked a short, stocky man who watched from the curtains edge. "He’s built up a resistance to healing." The speaker was only a handful of inches taller than Sandry, with curly white-and-gray hair cropped short, a salt-and- pepper mustache, and full, dark eyes. He spoke with a crisp Namornese accent, and wore the uniform of the Provost's Guard. His insignia was two yellow concentric circles surrounded by a rayed circle, which meant he was a colonel. The fastenings and trim on his uniform were all white, he was a mage.

"I am told his mount fell," remarked the duke quietly.

"Collapsed, poor beast," the stocky man replied. “Tendons cut in the right fore and hind legs."

"I swear, I saw nothing!" cried the young man beside the bed. He, too, wore the uniform of the Duke's Guards, he clung desperately to Guryil's free hand. "Not a midget, not a child—Gury's too good to let anyone get close like that, and they didn't use confusion balls on us, just Rokat's bodyguards!"

"Confusion balls?" Sandry whispered to the duke.

The stocky man heard and replied, "Clever devices. Mix spells for addlement and visions, throw in a drug to give the horse the staggers, and stitch them in a ball. Throw it at a man's chest, it bursts, and you've got him and his horse useless for three or five minutes, depending."

"They are illegal," said the duke coldly.