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‘Scabandari Bloodeye is dead-’
‘Not his spirit. It remains… somewhere. I intend to find it.’
‘To what end?’
‘We have been usurped. All of us. By the one behind that sword. No-one else can save us, Trull. I mean to find Scabandari Bloodeye. If he is bound, I mean to free him. His spirit. We shall return together, or not at all.’
Trull knew his brother well enough to cease arguing. Fear had found a new purpose, and with it he intended to flee… from everything, and everyone, else. ‘How will you get out of the city? They will be looking for us – it’s probable they are doing so even now.’
‘Hull once told me that Seren Pedac had her home here.’ Fear shook his head. ‘I don’t know, I don’t understand it myself, but I believe she might help.’
‘Why?’
Fear shook his head.
‘How do you know where she lives?’
‘I don’t. But it’s… this way.’
He began walking. Trull quickly caught up to him and gripped his arm. ‘Listen – no, I don’t mean to prevent you. But listen to me, please.’
‘Very well, but let us walk in the meantime.’
‘All right. Do you not wonder at all this, Fear? How did I find you? It should have been impossible, yet here we are. And now you, and this house – the Acquitor’s house – Fear, something is guiding us. We are being manipulated-’
His brother’s smile was wry. ‘What of it?’
To that, Trull had no answer. Silent, he walked with Fear. Coming upon a score of dead Letherii, he paused to collect a sword and scabbard. He strapped it on, ignoring Fear’s raised brows, not out of some ambivalent emotion, but because he himself did not know why he had picked up the weapon. They walked on.
Until they came to a modest house.
Trull’s chest seemed to clench tight upon seeing her standing in the doorway. He could not understand it – no, he could, but it was impossible. Absurd. He’d only seen Seren Pedac a few times. Had but exchanged a few score words, if that. Yet, as he studied her face, the shock writ there, so at odds with the appalling depth in her eyes, he felt himself falling forward in his mind-
‘What?’ she asked, gaze darting between him and Fear. ‘What are you…’
‘I need your help,’ Fear said.
‘I ca
Sisters take me, I would give my heart to this woman. This Letherii…
Fear said, ‘I am fleeing. My brother, the emperor. I need a guide to take me through the city unseen. Tonight.’
‘How did you find me?’
‘I don’t know. I don’t even know why… why I have this belief that only you can help me.’
She looked then at Trull, and he saw her eyes hold on his for what seemed a long moment, slowly widening. ‘And you, Trull Sengar?’ she asked. ‘Are coming with us?’
With us. She will do this. Why? What need within her does this answer? The pressure in his chest constricted suddenly, even as the fateful words left him, ‘I ca
Something like resignation filled her eyes.
As if he had wounded something that already bore a thousand scars.
And Trull wanted to cry out. Instead, he said, ‘I am sorry. But I will await your return – both of you-’
‘We shall return here?’ she asked, glancing at Fear. ‘Why?’
‘To end this,’ Fear said.
‘To end what?’
‘The tyra
‘You would kill Rhulad? Your own brother?’
‘Kill him? That would not work, as you know. No. But I shall find another way. I shall.’
Oh, who has grasped hold of my soul this night? He found himself unhitching the sword, heard himself saying, ‘I don’t know if you have a weapon, Acquitor,’ and knew his own disbelief at the absurdity of his own words, the shallowness of his reasoning, ‘so I will give you mine…’ And he was holding the sheathed sword out to her.
At the threshold of her home.
Fear turned, studied him, but Trull could not look away from her, not even to see what must be realization dawning in his face.
Letherii though she was, Seren Pedac clearly understood, her gaze becoming confused, then clearing. ‘Just that, I take it. A weapon… for me to use.’
No. ‘Yes… Acquitor. A weapon…’
She accepted it, but the gesture was without meaning now.
Trull found himself stepping back. ‘I have to go now. I will tell Rhulad I saw you, Fear, down at the docks.’
‘You ca
‘I can but try. Go well, Fear.’
And he was walking away. It was best, he decided through sudden tears. They would probably never return. Nor would she have accepted the sword. Which was why she asked him before reaching out for it. A weapon to use. Only that.
He was being a fool. A moment of profound weakness, a love that made no sense, no sense at all. No, better by far the way it had played out. She’d understood, and so she’d made certain. No other meaning. No proclamation. Simply a gesture in the night.
A weapon to use. Only that.
They remained standing at the threshold. Trull was gone, his footsteps swallowed by distance. Fear studied Seren Pedac as she looked down at the sword in her hands. Then, glancing up, she saw his fixed regard and smiled wryly.
‘Your brother… startled me. For a moment, I thought… never mind.’
Then why, Seren Pedac, is there such pain in your eyes? Fear hesitated, was about to speak, when a child’s voice spoke behind him.
‘Are you Seren Pedac?’
He spun round, sword hissing from its scabbard.
The Acquitor stepped past, holding out a hand to stay him. ‘Do I know you?’ she asked the small girl standing at the gate.
‘I am Kettle. Iron Bars said you would help us. We need to leave the city. With no-one seeing.’
‘We?’
The girl walked forward, and behind her came a tall, robed and hooded figure. Then a shadow wraith, dragging a body.
A startled sound from Seren. ‘Errant fend, this is about to get a lot harder.’
Fear said to her, ‘Acquitor, I would berate you for your generosity this night, had it not included me. Can you still manage this?’
She was studying the tall, hooded figure as she replied, ‘Probably. There are tu
Fear faced the girl and her party once more. His gaze focused on the wraith. ‘You, why are you not serving the emperor this night?’
‘I am unbound, Fear Sengar. You are fleeing? This is… unexpected.’
He disliked the amusement in its voice. ‘And who is that you are pulling behind you?’
‘The slave Udinaas.’
Fear said to Seren, ‘They will be hunting in earnest for these ones, Acquitor. For that slave.’
‘I remember him,’ she said.
‘His betrayal of the emperor has exacted a high price,’ Fear said. ‘More, I believe he killed Mayen-’
‘Believe what you like,’ the wraith said, ‘but you are wrong. You forget, Fear Sengar, this man is a slave. A thing to be used, and used he has been. By me, by the Wyval that even now circles us in the dark overhead. For what befell Rhulad, for Mayen – neither of these tragedies belong to Udinaas.’
As you say.
‘We can argue this later,’ Seren said. ‘Kettle, who is this disguised man?’
She was about to answer when the figure said, ‘I am Selekis, of the Azath tower.’
‘From the Azath tower?’ Seren asked. ‘Amusing. Well, you’re as tall as an Edur, Selekis. Can we not see your face?’
‘I would rather not, Seren Pedac. Not yet, in any case.’ It seemed its hidden gaze was on Fear as it continued, ‘Perhaps later, once we have quitted this city and have the time to discuss our eventual destinations. It may be, indeed, that we will travel together for some time.’
‘I think not,’ Fear said. ‘I go to find Father Shadow.’
‘Indeed? And Scabandari Bloodeye still lives?’
Shocked, Fear said nothing. He must be a Tiste Edur. One of the other tribes, perhaps. Also fleeing. No different from me, then.