Dead Stars - Part One (The Emaneska Series) (14 page)

BOOK: Dead Stars - Part One (The Emaneska Series)
7.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘To business then,’ announced the Duke.

Kiltyrin walked over to the table and snatched up the leather bag. Farden quickly stood up. The Duke couldn’t help but sneer. He flicked the bag as if to throw it, but then changed his mind at the very last second. The mage flinched, and then glared. ‘Look at you,’ chuckled the Duke. ‘I’ve had you figured out since we first met at the Bartering. Part of me hoped that under my wing you might have shone, grown, blossomed even, set yourself apart from the rest of the brainless thugs outside that door. I hoped a man like you might actually be different from the drunkards and the brawlers. You could have become my right-hand man. A lord in your own right. But instead all I see in the man slouching before me is just another blade for hire, a drug addict, a beggar on a street with his hand out for charity, just like the rest. Look at you, eyeing this,’ he jiggled the leather bag in his hand. ‘It’s all you want, isn’t it?’

Farden took a step forward and for the tiniest of moments the Duke’s contemptuous expression cracked just a little. Only for a moment. Farden pulled his black hood over his throbbing head. ‘What I’d like to know is, why does everybody think it’s their right to tell me what’s wrong with me?’

‘Because there’s barely any right in you to mention,’ he spat. ‘Now, are you going to kill the Duke, or have you had enough? Hmm?’ The Duke waggled the pouch of coins.

‘Do I have a choice?’

‘You’ve always had a choice, Farden. Keep doing what I say or go back to living in a hovel in the hills like a leper, with no coin and no nevermar. Who knows, maybe you could take up holding passersby at knifepoint? I imagine that would be easy to turn your hand to.’

‘Unlike you, I still have morals to which I abide.’
Did he though, really?

That made Kiltyrin grin. ‘Do you now? An assassin, with morals. Tell me, which of us in this room is the murderer?’

Who’s more of a murderer, the one who holds the knife, or the one who pays him to hold it?
The mage thought, but he said nothing. ‘I want four times the coin,’ he spat.

‘Two times.’

‘Three.’

‘Twice. One now. One when you return. That should keep you in your beloved nevermar for at least a few months.’

Farden bit his lip again, and stiffly held out a hand. He soon found a heavy pouch of coin occupying it. ‘Give me your orders then,’ he muttered.

Kiltyrin waved his hand. ‘On the table, near the door.’

Farden looked confused.

The Duke turned his back on the mage and walked to his window, waving his hand at the door, the paintings, and the grisly trophies. ‘Rats have ears, Farden. Rats have very, very good ears. Now get out of my sight.’

Farden turned around and sauntered over to the little table by the door. He spied a lonely slip of parchment sitting on top of it. But as he reached out for it, it was the shining object sitting just to the right of the little table, the object perching on top of a flat-topped oak chest, the object that gleamed and shone in the light, forcing the flames to play in its facets and polished curves, that caught his attention.

Farden almost tripped when he saw it.

‘Something wrong?’ asked Kiltyrin, watching intently from the windowsill.

Farden could feel his eyes on the back of his head, and his thoughts turned to the vambraces nestled deep and safe in his pack. Farden cleared his throat, and stamped his boot on the floor, as if punishing it for tripping him. He kept his back to Kiltyrin. ‘No,’ he coughed.

Farden approached the table and picked up the folded parchment that held the particulars of his next murder. He pretended to fold it and fiddle with it while his eyes eagerly took in every glistening inch of the armour, barely a foot from him. Forged from the trademark gold and red metal, it was a Scalussen breastplate, and a fine one at that. Its scales were etched with circles and spirals and filigreed runes. No straps could be spied at its edges, no fastenings. No strings. No hinges reared their greased heads, and no rivets dared to show their flat and beaten faces. There was a depiction of an insect on its central plate; a shallow carving of a beetle in flight, with two tiny rubies for eyes. Like every piece of Scalussen work, magick or ordinary, it was a work of art. Farden’s finger itched to touch it, to feel it. To test it.

‘Caught your eye, has it?’ asked the Duke, smiling proudly. He strolled towards the mage.

Farden played innocent. His pack suddenly felt very heavy on his shoulders. ‘What?’

‘That, there, by your elbow. That
exquisite
piece of armour.’

‘Oh, that,’ replied Farden, trying to sound nonchalant.

‘Yes, that. A present from a friend in the Crumbled Empire. I did a deal with him a few months ago, and seeing as most of the old Skölgard nobles are considerably short of coin these days, he paid me with this. I think I came off the richer of the two, don’t you?’

Farden nodded. He stared at the breastplate, trying to find a fault in it, a scratch, something that screamed
fake
. If only he could run a finger across it to feel if it had any power, he strained. See if it shivered like his other pieces did.

‘I suppose you’ve seen a few like it, in your time?’ asked Kiltyrin. Farden shook his head and the Duke laughed. Of course he had. ‘Now I doubt that very much. You must have seen Scalussen armour before today?’

Farden tapped his shoulders. ‘Never bothered much with armour. Used to slow the magick.’ It was true. Some metals like lead and bronze slowed the flow of magick, while others, like the Arka blacksmiths made for the Arkathedral and Evernia guard, could deflect it. Steel was usually fine. Iron tended to melt. It depended on whatever spells the blacksmith uttered or carved into the metal during the making. But Scalussen was different. It allowed magick to flow as freely as it did through skin and bone. It had been one of the first reasons for his falling in love with it.

Kiltyrin kept pressing. ‘Well, surely you must have heard of it? Heard the fables of its Smiths? The eddas?’ he asked.

The mage shook his head and shrugged again. ‘A few. Impenetrable stuff.’

Kiltyrin walked forward to admire his prize. Even he didn’t touch it, as if it were deathly fragile. They both knew that was far, far from the truth. ‘All Scalussen armour is extraordinary, but only a precious few, if they even exist at all, are legendary. The eddas say that in the troubled times of the old Scattered Kingdoms, the Scalussen smiths created nine suits of flawless armour, perfect in every way. Impenetrable, as you said. In fact, they even protected their wearers in ways the smiths didn’t originally intend. Not just against swords and spears, but
time
itself, Farden.
Age
. This armour protected its wearer from the weapons and wounds of time itself. So it was that the smiths decided that in such war-torn times there should be a set of knights that could wear the Nine, and protect their makers and Emaneska. Of course, like all noble ideals, they failed.

‘The Nine filled every king, queen, duke, and lord with either greed or fear. Army after army marched on Scalussen, and war was declared on the smiths and their Scalussen Knights. In time, they were wiped from the earth, all their secrets and skill lost.’ Kiltyrin paused to smirk. ‘According to the skalds the Knights threw themselves into a volcano to stop the war, to rid the world of the armour, once and for all. But I know better. You don’t just throw away something like that. Stolen and scattered, I think. Like in some of your Arka songs. Pieces of the Nine out there somewhere, I believe it. Not that I think this is one of the Nine, mind you, but even ordinary Scalussen armour is said to have some strange properties to it. Magick or not, it’s mine now. I’d like to see an assassin’s dagger get through that.’

Farden snorted. He felt like braying with laughter. So the Duke’s latest scheme was hunting the Nine. Of course it was. It made perfect sense. There wasn’t a single thread in Emaneska that Kiltyrin wasn’t trying to tug at with his greedy, conniving fingers. Farden knew that better than anyone. If the thread couldn’t be tugged, wrapped around Kiltyrin’s finger, Farden was sent to cut it. That was how it had worked, for fifteen years.

A fear dawned on him then. Was the Duke aware of his vambraces, his gauntlets, or his greaves? Did he know? He had eyes everywhere, after all. But Farden had been more than meticulous. Before, he would have worn them brazenly and smirked in the face of anyone who challenged him for it. These days, anybody who was lucky enough to glimpse his armour found their throat slit soon after. Farden had realised very early on that now, in this life, in this current company, it was far wiser to avoid greedy eyes, his current company especially. Farden would never have admitted it, but hiding under his skin was the fear that he could no longer protect it if he was challenged.

‘What?’ the Duke was eyeing him intensely.

Farden tucked his orders into the pocket of his grey trousers. He felt the urge to leave. ‘There’s always something, Kiltyrin. There’s always a piece of armour that stops you ageing, or a sword that shoots fireballs, or some sort of cheese that makes you bloody invisible. The eddas wouldn’t be eddas without them. When are people going to learn they’re just songs?’ he said with a sigh, trying his best to appear as though he didn’t care If Kiltyrin was hunting the Nine, then Farden would have to redouble his efforts to keep his armour out of sight.

Kiltyrin narrowed his eyes. ‘Probably when they stop being true,’ he said. ‘Didn’t I tell you to get out of my sight? Get out. And remember, I want Wodehallow’s head. I don’t care how. Slink back to whatever hole you hide in, but make sure the job gets done. You have two weeks.’

Farden walked to the door. ‘Clear a space on your wall. And have the coin ready.’

Kiltyrin watched him leave. The door clicked shut behind him and the Duke shook his head. He grabbed the Scalussen breastplate with one hand and lifted it up to shake it viciously back and forth. It wobbled and moaned until something inside it twanged, like the sound of a tense ljot string giving up on life. The Duke threw the flimsy fake onto his bed and went back to his window. It had done its job.

He heard the man let himself in and lock the door behind him, but he ignored him for a moment, waiting for him to announce himself.

‘It’s all arranged,’ said the man.

Kiltyrin nodded.

‘Did it work?’ the man asked.

‘Exactly as we hoped. Couldn’t take his eyes off it. Make sure you congratulate your man in the forge.’

A silence. ‘Do you think he still has them?’

‘You’ve seen his face. He hasn’t aged a day. You were right.’

‘Well, we’ll know for sure tonight.’

‘Make sure he doesn’t spot you.’

‘Nobody ever does.’

‘You’d better hope not. If he doesn’t rip your throat out, I will.’

There was a polite chuckle. ‘Without me, Duke, you’d be none the wiser. Just remember our deal.’

Farden left the Duke’s room and scuffed his boots along the limestone floor. A man walked towards him, a tall man in a bear-leather jacket with a shaven head and a broken nose. He had a flat cap in his hands. He nodded to the mage and smiled. Farden just scowled and walked past him. He had no friends in Tayn. He didn’t need to pretend.

A lesser man might have emerged from such a meeting with a tremble on his lip and a down-trodden heart. A better man wouldn’t have entertained the thought of such a meeting at all. Farden thought himself somewhere in the middle. Coin was coin. All his life, he had been trained to kill, so why should he not charge for it now? As a drunk man had once whispered to him in a lonely tavern, if you are good at something, never do it for free. Besides, he had spent a long time learning to ignore, and to justify, the sour taste of his contemptible profession. He was now somewhat of an expert at it. What did he care about the people of Albion?

But it was not his murderous job that was tugging at his mind, it was the Duke himself. Kiltyrin’s vindictive words had stung the mage. The mention of the Nine had prickled him, and the meeting had dug at some old wounds and sore spots that Farden had thought he had buried. A life he had left behind. Mistakes he had made. Fortunately, Farden had learnt exactly how to deal with these sorts of thoughts too. Like little corpses that refused to stay dead, the answer was to bury them once again. Only deeper.

The mage retraced his steps back to the lower levels of the castle, avoiding Kint and Fat Forluss in the process. He traipsed through the corridors and hallways and found his way to one of the smaller banquet halls, near to the north wing of Castle Tayn, where the windows tentatively peered out over the precipitous edge of the limestone spire. The hall was empty for the most part. A few of the castle’s kitchen boys lounged in a corner, laughing and tossing a pair of dice against the wall, betting meals and days off. They stiffened at the sound of boots, but Farden ignored them, and so they went back to their huddled gambling.

Farden wasn’t interested in them. He was interested in the colourful little character that was crouched on a stool in the far corner of the room, squinting at an upside-down book and humming to himself. Farden walked towards him, quickly, eagerly, hand already molesting the warm coins in his pocket.

Other books

Not Just a Convenient Marriage by Lucy Gordon - Not Just a Convenient Marriage
Fruit and Nutcase by Jean Ure
Too Dangerous to Desire by Cara Elliott
Women and Men by Joseph McElroy
Hart by Kelly Martin
Hater 1: Hater by David Moody