"A sign of humility and atonement," Seregil whispered to Alec as they crept away. "Nazien's taking his nephew's actions hard."

  By contrast, Viresse tupa was ablaze with light well past midnight. Keeping to the shadows, they spotted the sen'gai of half a dozen clans among the people out on the streets. The house of Ulan i Sathil was too risky to burgle, but lurking nearby, they saw the khirnari of Khatme enter, accompanied by Moriel a Moriel of Ra'basi.

  Despite this apparent show of support, bands of Viresse watchmen patrolled the boundaries of the tupa, where angry supporters of Klia roamed looking for a fight. Many wore the green-and-brown sen'gai of Akhendi.

  "Do you suppose that's a spontaneous show of support, or is our friend Rhaish i Arlisandin making certain his greatest rival is made uncomfortable?" asked Seregil.

  "Perhaps we should pay Akhendi tupa one last visit."

  The whole of the Akhendi delegation seemed to have taken to the streets for the night, and Seregil and Alec were hailed as friends, commiserated with, and plied with liquor and questions.

  News of the poisoner's ring had sealed Ulan's fate in the minds of most, and some were convinced that the Haman were in collusion with him. All agreed that it was a great coup for Akhendi, having their most hated opponent besmirched with even the hint of scandal.

  "We knew they'd do anything to protect themselves, but assassination!" a taverner exclaimed, treating them to mugs of her best. "Maybe the Khatme are right about too much contact with outsiders. No offense to present company of course. I'm talking of the Plenimarans."

  "You won't hear us defending them," Seregil assured her.

  Stopping in at another tavern, they met Rhaish i Arlisandin, accompanied by several younger kinsmen. The khirnari seemed surprised to see them.

  "With all the unrest in the city tonight, we thought we'd stop by and see that you and your people are safe," Seregil explained, joining him at a long table and accepting a mug of ale.

  "I thank you for that," Rhaish replied. "These are uncertain times indeed when the insidious weapons of Plenimar are found in Sarikali."

  "It chills my heart," Seregil agreed. "I thought you'd be at Torsin's funeral."

  Rhaish shook his head sadly. "As you say, the mood of the city is so uncertain tonight, I thought it would be better if I remained with my own people."

  As if to underscore this, the sound of angry shouting broke out suddenly in the direction of Khatme tupa.

  "Aura protect us!" Rhaish groaned, sending men to investigate. "See that none of our people are doing violence!"

  "Perhaps you're wise to remain close to home," Seregil observed. "Those who struck at us may strike at our closest allies, too."

  "Just as you say," Rhaish acknowledged wearily. "But surely the guilt of the Viresse is clear? Why hasn't Klia declared teth'sag against them?"

  "Skalans." Seregil shrugged and spread his hands, as if that explained everything.

  "I must attend my people," Rhaish said, rising to go. "I trust you'll keep me informed of any new discoveries?"

  "Of course. Aura's Light shine on you."

  "And you." The khirnari's escort closed ranks behind him as he continued on his way.

  Alec watched the stooped figure fade into the night. "Poor fellow. Except for Gedre and us, no one else stands to lose as much when everything goes to pieces. And it's going to, isn't it?"

  Seregil said nothing for a moment, listening as the distant shouting took on a more dire tone. "I didn't come home for this, Alec. Not to watch the two lands I've called home bring each other down. We've got to uncover the truth of all this, and soon."

  A moment later a tiny point of bluish light flickered into being just in front of them, one of Thero's message spheres. The wizard's voice issued softly from it, drained of emotion: "Come back at once."

  37

  Worse News

  The arrangements for Torsin's funeral came

  together quickly, thanks to Nyal. He'd

  even turned up a bundle of spices some-

  where, and with these Kheeta's mother

  had skillfully overseen the preparation of the

  corpse. By the time she and her helpers had

  sewn it into layers of canvas and patterned

  silk, the odor was almost tolerable.

  Unwilling to spare too many soldiers from guarding the house, Beka took only Nyal, Kheeta, and her three corporals as torchbearers. A cart draped with cloaks and prayer scrolls served as catafalque, bearing Torsin out to a site on the plain outside the city. Adzriel and Saaban accompanied them, each with a painted prayer kite honoring the dead man. It was fully dark now, but the soft gleam of massed wizard lights was guide enough.

  "Well, look at that, would you?" Nikides exclaimed softly.

  In spite of the general unrest, at least a hundred Aurenfaie had gathered on the moon-washed plain. The pyre, a rectangular stack of cedar and oak logs fifteen feet high, was surmounted by a pair of carved dragon heads. Dozens of prayer scrolls fluttered against its sides.

  "You'd think he was one of their own," said Corporal Zir.

  "He was a good man," Nyal said.

  Beka hadn't known Torsin well, but sensed a rightness in this final moment; the man had spent his life, and perhaps given it, trying to bring the two races together.

  Kallas and Nikides slid the body into a shelflike opening near the top of the pyre. Adzriel made a few prayers in the dead man's behalf, then stepped back. Beka and her riders were about to light the tinder when another rider galloped out to join them. It was Sergeant Rhylin, and even in the warm glow of the torches, the tall sergeant's face looked grey.

  "Thero sent this—to be put on the pyre," he whispered hoarsely, thrusting a small, canvas-wrapped parcel into Beka's hands.

  "What is it?" she asked, already dreading the answer. The stiff cloth was tied up with a knotted thong and weighed almost nothing.

  "Klia—" he began, as tears rolled down his cheeks.

  "Sakor's Flame!" Beka's fingers felt numb and clumsy as she yanked the thong free and unrolled the cloth. The smell gagged her, but she went on, unable to stop.

  Two black, swollen, fingers—first and middle—were packed in fresh cedar tips and rose petals. They were still joined by a sizable wedge of discolored flesh; the white tips of two neatly severed bones poked out from the raw lower edge. "Mydri saved the hand, then?" she asked, spilling petals as she hurriedly tied the bundle up again.

  Rhylin wiped at his eyes. "She isn't sure yet. The rot was spreading too fast. Thero worked a spell over Klia. We didn't even have to hold her down."

  Beka's mind skittered away from the images that summoned, wondering instead if her commander would ever hold a bow again. "Thank the Maker it wasn't her sword hand," she mumbled. Climbing up the side of the pyre, she reached in and laid the little bundle on Torsin's breast, above his heart.

  On the ground again, she knelt and thrust a torch into the thick bed of tinder and kindling packed under the logs. The Urgazhi sang a soldiers' dirge as flames fueled by beeswax and fragrant resins leaped up to engulf it.

  The song ended, leaving only the crackle of the flames in its wake. As the thick white smoke went dark, a sorrowful keening started somewhere among the 'faie. It spread through the crowd and swelled to an uncanny, full-throated wail that rose and fell wordlessly and without cease. Her riders tensed, shooting Beka worried looks.

  She shrugged and turned back to watch the roaring blaze.

  The keening went on for hours, until the blaze had reduced itself to smoldering embers. Sometime during the night, hardly realizing what they did, the Skalans joined in.

  Beka and the others returned to the guest house through a hazy red dawn, hoarse, light-headed, and covered in soot. The quiver holding Torsin's ashes hung warm against her thigh as she rode. In the end, they'd had to break the longer bones to fit them in.

  Mercalle was standing by the stable with the day's courier, Urien, and his guide. The Akhendi had a nasty-looking bruise
over his right cheekbone.

  "What happened to you, my friend?" Nyal asked, squinting at him with smoke-reddened eyes.

  The man gave him a cool stare and shrugged. "A slight disagreement with some of your kinsmen."

  "Some of the Ra'basi support Viresse," Mercalle told Beka, not looking at the interpreter.

  "I'm sure we'll get it all sorted out by the time the vote comes around," Beka replied.

  "Captain!" a rider called out from the kitchen doorway. "Captain Beka, are you there?"

  Beka turned and saw Kipa looking anxiously around the yard.

  "Oh, there you are, Captain," she called, spotting Beka. "I've been watching for you. Lord Thero said I was to bring you as soon as you came in."

  "Is it Klia? Has she—?" Beka asked, following the younger woman inside.

  "I don't know, Captain, but it sure feels like bad news."

  Beka could hardly breathe as she ran up to Klia's room. Mydri met her in the doorway, balancing a basin full of bloody water and rags against one hip.

  "She took a bad turn last night," she told Beka. "She's sleeping again. For now."

  The bedchamber's window was shuttered, the room lit only by the glow of a sizable bed of coals on the hearth. The stench of blood and seared flesh still hung heavily on the air. Thankfully, all other evidence of the amputation had been cleared away.

  Klia lay pale and still, thick new bandages swathed around her hand. Seregil and Alec slept awkwardly in chairs beside the bed. Judging by their plain, rumpled clothing, they'd been about their own business most of the night.

  Beka took a step toward the bed, then tensed as movement in a far corner caught her eye. Her hand flew to her knife.

  "It's me," Thero whispered, coming far enough into the light for her to make out his swollen, red-rimmed eyes.

  "I suppose it's best that it's over with," Beka said, pushing away the image of those severed fingers.

  "I only hope she survives the shock of it," said Thero. "She's shown no signs of waking and it worries me, and Mydri, as well."

  Seregil opened his eyes, then nudged Alec's knee. The younger man jerked awake and looked around blearily.

  "Any trouble at the funeral?" he asked, voice raw with exhaustion.

  "No. The 'faie who showed up gave him a good send-off. Were you here?" She gestured at Klia's bandaged hand.

  "No. We just got back a little while ago," said Alec.

  Seregil hooked a chair her way, then passed her a half-full flask of wine. "Here, you'll need this."

  Beka drank deeply, then looked around at the others. "So, now what's happened?" Her heart sank when Thero sealed the room, then pulled a letter folded in Magyana's characteristic fashion from the air.

  "Something none of us thought possible," he told her. "This is hard to make out. I'll read it for you. It begins, 'My friends, I write you as I flee Mycena and the queen's displeasure. Phoria has ordered an attack against Gedre to secure the port.' "

  Beka let out a gasp of disbelief. "An attack!"

  Seregil motioned her to silence.

  " 'There is a spy in your midst,' " Thero continued. " 'Someone has been sending reports of the Iia'sidra's reluctance to act. I have seen these with my own eyes. In this way the queen also learned that it was I who sent you word of the old queen's death. I am banished.

  " 'Make no mistake; Phoria was preparing for such a strike in any case. Recent attacks on Skala's western shores have given her the excuse she needed to secure the support for this madness. Her recent victories in Mycena have cemented the loyalty of most. Generals who a month ago would have questioned such an action now

  support her. Those who don't keep silent in the wake of the execution of General Hylus.' "

  "Hylus?" said Beka. "Why in the world would she execute him? He was a brilliant tactician, and a loyal soldier."

  "Loyal to Idrilain," Seregil observed with a cynical frown. "Go on, Thero."

  " 'Prince Korathan left Rhiminee harbor with three fast warships yesterday at dawn. I believe he means to approach under the flag of a messenger ship and take the port by surprise. The surprise is more likely to be his. He might be reasoned with, if only you can find some way to prevent his arrival! Even if he is able to secure Gedre, whatever brief advantage this might afford will never offset the loss of Aurenen as an ally. If the 'faie turn against us now, what hope have we for Skala and the Oreska?' That's all she says." Thero folded the letter, and it vanished between his fingers.

  Beka rested her head in her hands, feeling ill. "Bilairy's Balls. Does the Iia'sidra know?"

  "Not yet, as far as we can tell," Alec replied. "Everyone is still busy accusing everyone else of poisoning Klia."

  "It's only a matter of time before news leaks out," Seregil cautioned. "This will undo everything. Not only is it an act of war, but it proves every suspicion Ulan has raised about Phoria's motives."

  "How could Phoria do this?" asked Alec. "Doesn't she understand what this means? Klia could be killed, or held hostage."

  "Phoria's a general," Beka told him. "In war generals spend the lives of a few to gain advantage for the rest. She's decided we're expendable; Still—her own sister!"

  Seregil let out a bitter laugh. "Klia's always been the people's darling, and the cavalry's. Now, with Korathan being promoted and their other brothers dead, she's next in line as High Commander of the Queen's Cavalry. It's her right by birth, unless Aralain is forced into it. I don't think Phoria wants her youngest sister quite so powerful."

  "Phoria is using what's happened here to double advantage," said Thero. "Klia is gotten out of the way, and Phoria gains justification for taking what she wants from Aurenen."

  Shock was already giving way to anger. Beka rose, pulse racing the way it did before a raid. "We have to get Klia away to safety before the 'faie find out."

  Thero shook his head. "She's far too ill to move."

  "What about by magic?"

  "Especially not by magic," Thero replied. "Even if we could find someone to do a translocation, the flux would kill her."

  "She's safe here," said Seregil.

  "How can you say that? Beka snapped, rounding on him. "Take a good look at her! This is what all their talk of guest laws and sacred ground amounts to. Now they're fighting each other in the streets!"

  "I wouldn't have thought it possible, not in Sarikali," Seregil admitted. "But now we know the danger, and we're guarded by your riders and by the Bokthersans."

  "I've put protections in place around the grounds," Thero added. "No one will get in or visit any magicks on us without my knowing about it."

  "That still leaves us trapped here when word of Korathan's mission gets out," Beka growled.

  "I know," said Seregil. "That's why we've got to do as Magyana's asked—try to head him off before anyone's the wiser."

  "How do you suggest we manage that? I doubt sending him a polite note is going to do it, even if it got to him in time."

  Seregil exchanged a veiled look with Alec. "I think it's time I prove Idrilain right in sending me along."

  "There's a traitor's moon tonight," Alec told her, as if that explained everything.

  Seregil chuckled. "How's that for an omen, eh?"

  "What the hell are you talking about?" Beka demanded. "We've got to find a way to stop Korathan—" Breaking off, she stared at him. "You're not saying you mean to go?"

  "Well, Alec and I."

  Alec grinned. "Know anyone else you trust with this information who can pass as Aurenfaie?"

  "But the proscriptions! If you're caught they'll kill you. And maybe Alec, too!"

  Suddenly it wasn't a spy or coconspirator she was looking at but the man who'd been friend and uncle to her since her birth, who'd carried her on his shoulders, brought exotic presents, and taught her the finer points of fighting. And Alec—-Tears stung her eyes and she turned quickly away.

  Seregil clasped her shoulders, turning her to face him again. "Then we'd damn well better not get caught," he told her. "Besi
des, we'll be in Akhendi territory, then Gedre. They may haul me

  back, but they won't hurt me. I know it's risky, but there's no other way. Your father would understand. I'm hoping you will, too. We need your help, Captain."

  The subtle rebuke stung just enough to clear her head. "All right, then. What's the soonest Korathan will reach Gedre?"

  "With a good following wind? Four or five days. We can reach the coast in three and sail out to meet him before he comes in sight of the port."

  "Time enough, barring accidents," she said, frowning. "But I still say it's suicide for you to go. Perhaps Alec and I could pull it off, or Thero."

  Seregil shook his head. "Korathan is going to take a lot of convincing to cross his sister, and with all due respect, I think I'm the one who can best carry that off. He knows me, and he knows the regard his mother had for me. Loyal as he is to Phoria, he's the more reasonable of the pair. I think I can sway him."

  "How do you plan to reach Gedre without getting caught? I assume someone will go after you as soon as they find out you're missing."

  "They'll have to find us first. There are other routes over the mountains. The one I have in mind is tough going in places, but shorter than the trail we came over. My uncle used to bring us down that way on smuggling runs."

  "Are those passes protected by magic, too?" asked Thero. "If anything happens to you, what will Alec do? He can't get through that any more than we could."

  "We'll worry about that when we need to," Seregil replied. "Right now we need to figure out a way to get out of the city without being seen."

  "The moon's in our favor, at least," said Alec. "With Aurenfaie clothes and horses, we shouldn't attract much attention. It could be morning before we're missed."

  "Perhaps longer, if I can manage a few tricks," said the wizard.

  "You could go out as escorts with one of my dispatch riders," Beka mused. "Steal different horses once you're well away from the city, while the rider takes yours with her and leaves a false trail."

  "Sometimes I forget whose daughter you are," chuckled Seregil. His smile faded as he continued, however. "We have to keep this among ourselves. Except for the rider, no one else can know, not even our own people, since anyone who does will be forced to lie sooner or later.