Rebellion ttr-2 Read online

Page 7

They lowered themselves until their eyes were just above the water and edged around the door to face the shore. Mist danced and drifted in the wind, revealing then concealing the guards patrolling the edge of the lake. A burly officer was running towards a group of guards, waving a signal flag and shouting.

  “What’s he saying?” said Glynnie. “Is it about us?”

  “I couldn’t hear. But I’m prepared to bet it is. Back.”

  Rix turned the door and began to push it out into the lake, using great scissor kicks. The effort sent jags of pain through his wrist; it felt as though the join was on fire again.

  “We can’t leave Benn,” said Glynnie.

  It was a struggle to break through the pain now. Just speaking took an effort. “He’s lost to us, Glynnie, and he wouldn’t want you — ”

  “How would you know what Benn would want?” she hissed. “You don’t know him. You don’t know any of us.”

  “I know he loved his big sister,” said Rix. “And he’d do anything to protect you.”

  She did not respond.

  Rix started panting. It was the only way to control the pain.

  “What’s the matter?” said Glynnie sharply. “You sound like you’re having a baby.”

  “I’m all right.” He lifted his arm off the door, into the water. The cold did not ease the pain this time.

  Glynnie lifted his arm. His wrist was crimson and swollen all around the join with his dead hand.

  “Oh!” she said, like a healer realising the worst.

  Onshore, the officer skidded to a stop, let out an indecipherable bellow, then pointed out into the lake towards the submerged outlet of the drainpipe. Several of the guards ran to him. Others raced back along the shore and were lost behind a banner of mist.

  “They know how we got out, and they’ll have a boat in the water in minutes.” He looked around for inspiration but found none in the grey water or the leaden sky. Hope evaporated. “I can’t fight any more. We’re lost.”

  “We’re never giving up, Lord,” Glynnie said fiercely. “We got to survive — then come back and find Benn.”

  “Yes,” he said dully.

  They were making slow progress, less than ten yards in a minute, and it was not enough. The cold was seeping into Rix’s bones now and it was a struggle to think. He vaguely remembered seeing something earlier that might help them, but could not dredge up the memory.

  “Nowhere to go — can’t swim ashore — find us right away — ”

  “What about a boat?” said Glynnie. “There are dinghies on the shore.”

  “We can’t get to them.”

  “We’ll have to leave the door in a minute. It’s too big; too easily spotted.”

  Glynnie’s teeth chattered again. She was trembling from the cold and her lips were blue. “Where can we go?”

  “We can’t stay in the water much longer,” said Rix, kicking as hard as he could. “But we’ve no way of getting out.”

  “There’s a lot of rubbish floating further out.”

  The memory resurfaced — that gyre where all the timber had collected, forming a great wheel of debris on the water. If the wind hadn’t drifted it away.

  A rattling sound echoed across the water, followed by a thump, then a rhythmical splashing.

  “What’s that?” said Glynnie.

  “Someone pulling up an anchor chain and rowing to the outlet. Then they’ll check the mooring piles…”

  Another anchor chain was pulled up, and a third. The enemy must know that the escapee was Rix, and they were determined to find him. He had fought Lyf twice with Maloch, and hurt him, too. Lyf would want him dead.

  “And then?” said Glynnie.

  The light was fading now, though it could not save them.

  “With three boats, and lanterns, they can search the whole area in half an hour, and turn over every bit of floating debris.”

  Nothing would escape them. No one.

  CHAPTER 7

  “How fares the destruction, General?”

  Lyf was perched on the wall at the top of Rix’s leaning tower, half a day after the fall of Caulderon. He was often drawn to the place, perhaps for the contrast with his reeking temple and his ever-more frantic search for the key.

  “My king, a third of Palace Ricinus had been blasted down already,” said General Hillish, a squat, muscle-bound man with slash-tattoos across his forehead. A round head joined his torso without any visible neck. He stood on a box so he could see over the wall and pointed out the details.

  “I have a thousand Hightspaller slaves hauling the rubble away,” Hillish continued. “Another thousand are digging out the cleared area to expose the foundations of the kings’ palace of old.”

  “Very good,” said Lyf. “Before the invaders came, our palace stood there since the beginning of recorded history. Are you searching out its original stones?”

  “We are, my king. Many were re-used in later buildings. I have a hundred masons checking every stone and marking all those from the kings’ palace.”

  “Excellent. I’m going to rebuild it exactly the way it was before, to show that Cythe will always prevail. Where’s Rochlis?”

  “Here, my king,” said General Rochlis, from the doorway.

  “What progress can you report?”

  “We’ve rounded up more than half the people on your list, including a goodly number of Herovians, and taken them away… to be dealt with.”

  “Why did you hesitate, Rochlis?”

  “My king, I’m a professional soldier. In battle I ask no quarter, and give none…”

  “But?” said Lyf, irritably. One after another, his people were questioning or reinterpreting his orders.

  “But putting people to death simply because they might cause trouble… my king, it…” Rochlis, an honourable man who always did his best, was struggling to find the words.

  “It’s not that many,” said Lyf. “Barely two hundred.”

  “Nonetheless, it turns my stomach. I’m sorry, my king.”

  Lyf had once been an honourable man too. He was no longer honourable, but a good leader was careful not to drive his people too far.

  “I won’t force you,” said Lyf, making his displeasure evident. “I’ll see to the executions myself.”

  “My king,” said Rochlis, sweating, “I believe it to be unwise. It can only make the ones who escaped — ”

  “Who escaped?” cried Lyf. “The city was sealed.”

  “The chancellor and his retinue, for starters.”

  “I suppose I should have expected him to get away. He’s a wily foe.”

  “But he’s taken Tali with him.”

  Lyf’s face froze. “How did this happen?”

  “He must have had a hidden escape tunnel, further concealed by magery.”

  “Find her! If the chancellor discovers that she bears the master pearl, and cuts it out, his magians might be able to command my four pearls.”

  “We’re hunting her now, with every means at our disposal.”

  “What about my other enemies?”

  “We can’t find Rixium Ricinus,” said Rochlis.

  Lyf let out a bellow of fury. “You told me the shifters had him trapped way down under the palace.”

  “He killed them and disappeared.”

  “One man killed a whole pack of shifters? How?”

  “With that underground explosion we felt earlier. We believe he set off a sump full of stink-damp and burned them alive.”

  “But not himself?”

  “It’s thought that he crawled through a freshly opened fissure and found a way down into the ancient tunnels. We haven’t mapped them all yet.”

  “He’s too quick, too clever,” said Lyf. “He must not escape.”

  Not just because Rix was descended from that treacherous swine, Axil Grandys, who had betrayed, mutilated and murdered Lyf so long ago. And not just because Rix bore the cursed sword, Maloch, that had caused Lyf an aeon of pain and torment. Rix had fought Lyf twice, a
nd twice had wounded him. He had a genius for escaping; he was an intuitive fighter and a leader who inspired loyalty. That made him a most dangerous man.

  “Find him. And if he looks like getting away, kill him.”

  CHAPTER 8

  Regg carried Tali down three flights of an age-blackened stairway to a once grand, ornately decorated chamber with a carved ceiling and elaborate cornices. One half was now a fifteen-foot-wide corridor with an iron door at the far end. The other half had been divided into a dozen large, cold cells. The guard opened the fifth cell, dropped her on the bunk and locked her in.

  The bunk was a mouldy palliasse, the toilet a filthy wooden bucket; the floor was puddled with water oozing from every crack in the ceiling and walls. The side and rear walls were stone, but the front wall was made of wrought-iron bars that writhed and twisted like a lunatic’s nightmare. Large portholes had been carved through the side walls and she could see into the adjoining cells, though the portholes were also meshed with tormented iron bars.

  It was a struggle to stand up, but she had to know where she was. Tali tottered across to the right porthole and clung to the bars. Five or six cells away, a bent old man was shuffling back and forth. She called out several times but he did not look up. None of the other cells were occupied.

  She wrapped her coat around her and lay on the palliasse. How long before the chancellor sent another healer to take her blood? He was a vengeful man, and how better to punish Tali than by rendering her so weak that she could not cause any more trouble?

  She closed her eyes, longing for the oblivion of sleep, but it would not come. Enslaved again, and it was all her fault. Everything was her fault.

  “Tali?” said a shrill little voice she had not heard in more than a week.

  She looked up. “Rannilt?”

  Two of the chancellor’s personal guards were at the door, one working the massive lock while the other held the child by the arm. She was a skinny, knock-kneed little thing, though not as skinny as the last time Tali had seen her.

  Rannilt turned to her, frowned, looked up at the guards questioningly, then back.

  “Where’s Tali?” she said, taking a dragging step through the door. The guards locked it and turned away.

  “I’m right here,” said Tali. What was the matter?

  Rannilt stretched out a skinny finger. A little golden bubble formed at her fingertip, some product of her unfathomable gift for magery. It separated, drifted towards Tali and burst on the tip of her nose with a small, cold pop, and Tali felt something stir inside her, her own buried magery. But it subsided again.

  “Ah!” sighed Rannilt. “Chief magian put a glamour on, to hide you.”

  She bolted across the cell and threw herself at Tali so hard that she was knocked back against the wall. Rannilt hauled Tali to her feet and danced her around the cell until her head whirled.

  “Enough, child,” she said, groping back for the bed. “If I don’t sit down, I’m going to throw up.”

  Rannilt sat beside Tali, holding her right arm with both hands and staring hungrily at her.

  “I didn’t know there was a glamour,” Tali said hoarsely. She hadn’t seen her face since leaving Caulderon. “Can you see the real me?”

  “Of course not, silly,” said Rannilt.

  Tali’s shoulders slumped. “Then how do you know it’s me?”

  “Checked your aura, of course.”

  “Didn’t know I had one.”

  “Don’t worry.” Rannilt patted Tali’s shoulder condescendingly. “You’re still Tali on the inside.”

  “You can’t call me by name,” said Tali. “Lyf’s after me.”

  “I know. Old Chancellor said to call you Grizel.”

  An ugly name, thought Tali. He’s doing it to punish me.

  “Someone’s comin’, Grizel,” said Rannilt.

  They squatted in the corner while orderlies bustled in and out, sweeping the puddles down a drain hole, exchanging Tali’s mouldy mattress for a fresh one and bringing in another bunk for Rannilt, providing a table and two chairs and, finally, a steaming bowl of stew, two plates, cutlery and a third of a loaf of grainy bread. All was done under the watchful eyes of the chancellor’s guards, then the cell was relocked and they were alone.

  “You’re shakin’,” said Rannilt, helping Tali across to her bunk. “Are you sick?”

  Tali leaned back against the cold wall. Rannilt snuggled up against her. The child, starved of human contact most of her life, had always been clingy, but Tali needed the contact now. She put an arm around her.

  “They’ve taken pints and pints of my blood,” she said dully. “I’m so weak I can barely walk. Aren’t they taking yours?”

  “Healer Dibly took some on the first day out of Caulderon. But only half a cup, and she was really cross about it. She called the old chancellor some wicked names, I can tell you.”

  “Really?” said Tali, revising her opinion of Madam Dibly.

  “I’m sorry she’s dead,” said Rannilt. “I liked her.”

  “Did they only take your blood the once?”

  “Yes, Dibly said it didn’t heal. But she kept feedin’ me just as much. Said I needed feedin’ up.”

  “And so you do,” said Tali, feeling ravenous herself. “Could you get me something to eat?”

  Rannilt went to the table, spooned stew onto the plates and brought them back. When Tali had first met her, Rannilt had been as skinny as a stick and covered in bruises, for the other slave girls had picked on her constantly.

  Tali lowered her voice. “We’re in trouble, child. Did you hear — ”

  “About the gauntlin’? Yes.”

  Tali ate some stew. “We’ve got to escape, like we did from Cython. Can you wake my gift again?”

  Without Rannilt’s last-minute intervention that had, in some inexplicable way, roused Tali’s gift, she would have died in the sunstone shaft within sight of her destination, beheaded by Overseer Banj’s Living Blade, and Rannilt, too.

  “No,” said Rannilt. “Chancellor told me to make sure you don’t escape.”

  Tali pulled away. “I thought you were on my side.”

  Rannilt put her plate down, snuggled up and curled Tali’s arm around her. “I am, Grizel. The only place you’re safe is here, under guard.”

  If only you knew, thought Tali.

  “I’m no good to you anyway,” said Rannilt. “As soon as it’s dark…” She shuddered. “Things get bad when it’s dark.”

  “What kind of things?”

  “It was really bad after we went to Precipitous Crag and fought Lyf’s wicked old wrythen.”

  “I was sure you were going to die,” said Tali, realising that she needed to know what had happened. “What did he do to you?”

  Lyf had made some kind of connection to Rannilt’s gift and had started drawing it out of her. He had fed on it to strengthen himself so he could escape his intangible wrythen form and get back a real, physical body that would make him so much more powerful — and free him from the caverns the wrythen was bound to.

  Rannilt’s eyes turned inward. “I don’t know. He was suckin’ the gift out of me. The golden threads were streamin’ out and up and away, but I couldn’t do nothin’ about it. I was gettin’ weaker and weaker. I knew I was goin’ to die.”

  “We were really worried about you,” said Tali. “Me and Rix and Tobry.”

  “I really miss them,” said Rannilt wistfully. “Especially Tobry. He was so kind to me.”

  “Me too,” said Tali, turning away. Her eyes blurred.

  “When my eyes were closed I saw all kinds of things I didn’t want to see.”

  “Were they coming from the wrythen?” said Tali.

  Rannilt shrugged her thin shoulders. “Maybe. Stories were gushin’ into my head, a hundred at once. Wars and traitors and people bein’ killed just for nothin’. Had to hide in my own head to get away.”

  Tali sat up. She’d thought that Rannilt had collapsed because Lyf had stolen too much of
her gift, but if she had retreated to escape the unbearable stories flooding into her mind, it put a very different complexion on matters.

  “Then there was the healin’,” Rannilt added, reflecting.

  “What about it?”

  “The old kings of Cython were the only ones who were allowed to use magery, and they used it only for healin’. Healin’ the land, and healin’ their people.”

  Tali knew that, but did not say so. It was so good to hear Rannilt talking again.

  “It’s why that rotter Axil Grandys betrayed King Lyf, then chopped his feet off and walled him up in the Cat — Catacombs, to die,” the girl added. “He wanted the king-magery for himself, but he could only steal it when Lyf died and the magery was released — ”

  Tali finished the sentence. “To pass to the new king. But it didn’t pass on, did it?”

  “It couldn’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “Because no one in Cython knew what had happened to Lyf.” Rannilt thought for a moment. “And without his body they couldn’t do all the fancy stuff to make sure his gift went to the new king. The king-magery left him when he died, but Axil Grandys didn’t get it. No one knows where it went.”

  “That’s why Lyf became a wrythen,” said Tali. “Without the proper rituals, his spirit couldn’t pass on, either.”

  “Serves him right, after all the horrid things he did.”

  “He hadn’t done them, then. Until he was betrayed and left to die, Lyf was a good king.”

  Rannilt shivered. “I’d love to be a proper healer. Reckon I’d be a good one.” She studied her small hands. Several of her fingers were crooked, as if they’d been broken more than once.

  “I’m sure you would,” Tali said absently. “Though it’s curious your blood doesn’t heal.”

  “What if that’s what old Lyf was really after?” said Rannilt. “My healin’ gift. Maybe that’s what he was tryin’ to steal from me.”

  “Why would he want your healing gift when he has his own?” said Tali.

  “He’s healed all sorts of things, but he’s never been able to heal his legs, has he? I’ll bet he wants that more than anythin’.”

  And if he had stolen Rannilt’s healing gift, rendering her blood useless for healing, maybe he could do it, too. All the more reason for Tali to uncover his secret, as soon as possible.