Sapphire Crescent (27 page)

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Authors: Thomas M. Reid

BOOK: Sapphire Crescent
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“Of course,” the man named Bartimus said, then he turned and ambled off.

Denrick came back around to face Emriana.

“Well, I guess you’ve earned yourself a short reprieve. If I were you, I would spend it giving careful consideration to the repercussions of continuing to defy me. My patience is growing thin, and you must realize that, sooner or later, I will get what I want. You might as well make it easy on yourself and not anger me further.”

He spun on his heel and left the room, walking confidently and quickly out the door.

As soon as their tormentor was gone, Jaleene burst into tears.

“Oh, Mistress Emriana, I’m so sorry! He’s a wretched man, but you mustn’t be afraid. He’ll do what he’s going to do and be finished, and it’s only one moment. Don’t fight him and make him angry, Em. Just let him finish and he’ll leave us alone.”

Like hell I will, the girl thought, and she screamed through her gag as loudly as she could, forcing Jaleene to stop her chattering. The handmaiden looked at Emriana, her eyes wide with fear.

“Mmph,” the girl vocalized, then jerked her head down toward her arm, which was bound by the cloth.

“What is it?” Jaleene asked. “What do you want me to do?”

“Mmph!” Emriana yelled, rolling her eyes.

She gave her companion a look of patience and, taking a deep breath, she began to rock her chair from side to side. Jaleene watched her, confusion still obvious in her visage, but Emriana had to concentrate on her own movements. Slowly, steadily, she got a rhythm going, making the chair tip just the slightest bit each

time she shifted her weight. As she worked, she made the rocking grow a little with each pass, until soon she was riding up on two legs each time, making the chair lean way over from side to side.

Finally, Emriana threw her weight as hard as she could toward Jaleene, causing the chair to tip once more, hanging in the air on two legs, and her center of balance shifted enough. The chair continued over, and it would have fallen completely sideways, had it not come to rest against Jaleene’s chair. Emriana’s hand and Jaleene’s were close enough that they could touch.

“Mmph!” Emriana said, reaching for Jaleene’s wrist.

She didn’t have a lot of room to work, as her own arm was lower than her handmaiden’s, but she had enough play in her bonds that she could begin to work on the knot that held Jaleene immobile. Desperately, ignoring the ache growing in her fingers, Emriana pulled at the knot, trying to loosen it and free the woman. At first, the tie wouldn’t budge at all. The girl delivered a number of frustrated grunts and moans as she worked on it. Then, slowly, she began to feel some progress. Frantically, sensing that at any moment Denrick could return, she jerked at the knot, feeling it slip little by little. Suddenly, Jaleene was able to slip her arm free.

“Oh, thank goodness!” the woman said, reaching over to untie her other hand. “If Waukeen is with us, perhaps we can slip out through the porch and into the garden. You’ll have to show me how to sneak, of course, but—”

“Mmph!” Emriana screamed in exasperation, wanting Jaleene to stop her prattling and pay attention. “Mmph,” she repeated, wiggling her own arm.

Please, she thought, free me first.

Jaleene stared at Emriana like the girl was being intractable.

“Yes, of course I’ll untie you next. I’m not going to leave you, you know.”

Emriana rolled her eyes and gave the best exasperated sigh she possibly could with a gag wedged into her teeth.

“Mmph!” she ordered, wiggling her arm again.

“Oh, all right, don’t get into a snit,” Jaleene grumbled, reaching over and working on Emriana’s knot. “I thought it would be better to get me completely free, first, so I could perhaps get away and get help if he came back before both of us were undone, but goodness gracious, you still act like the spoiled child sometimes.”

As soon as Emriana was able, she jerked her arm free and reached up to tug the sour-tasting gag out of her mouth.

“Hush,” was all she said as she took hold of the opal pendant Vambran had given her.

Closing her eyes and concentrating, she envisioned her brother’s face and, when it was clear in her mind, she felt a stronger connection between herself and the mercenary.

“Vambran, help me! Denrick has taken us prisoner! They have the house guards on their side. Jaleene and I are tied up in my rooms—” and the connection shifted somehow, and Emriana knew that the rest of her plea was not getting through.

Almost immediately, though, she heard her brother’s voice, as though he was sitting beside her, talking to her in a soft tone.

Hang on, Em. We’re coming. Stay strong

And that was it.

Except that it wasn’t. Just as Emriana was letting go of the stone and trying to start untying her other arm, Denrick returned.

“Hey!” he shouted, seeing that his prisoners were about to get free. He charged across the room as Emriana and Jaleene both struggled frantically

to jerk free of the last bonds. He was by far the quicker. Grabbing at Emriana’s free wrist in his painfully strong grip, Denrick jerked her hand away from the knot she’d been struggling with and pinned it down against the chair arm again, righting the seat in the process. Then he got his face right down in hers.

“I warned you,” he said. “You just won’t listen. If you’re not careful, I’ll let them do to you what I had them do to Jithelle.”

Emriana swallowed hard as she tried to lean back, away from her captor’s vicious gaze. His eyes told her he was not lying.

“I was afraid you wouldn’t be able to find me if I left the porch,” Kovrim explained as the entire group of people, including the platoon of mercenaries from the Sapphire Crescent, headed closer to the Matrell estate. “But I didn’t see any choice. Those were some of Grozier Talricci’s men, and they were sniffing me out pretty well.”

“Well, we did find you,” Xaphira said, “and Vambran here is going to get us inside the estate, right?” ,

Vambran nodded grimly. Having heard Kovrim’s full tale—Houses Matrell, Talricci, and Pharaboldi were all pooling their resources to fund a professional army and launch an attack on one of the other city-states in old Chondath—he was more fretful than ever about getting back to their family. If Dregaul was actively courting the other two Houses, that meant he was aware of a great many things that he hadn’t been letting on. And the fact that Grand Trabbar Lavant was keeping the whole alliance a secret seemed to suggest that not everything was on the up and up, which Vambran obviously already knew. It was then just a matter of how hard the heads of the

three Houses were going to work to keep everything quiet. How many more deaths would there be before all was said and done?

At the same time, the thug leader’s cryptic words and maddening disappearance were also weighing heavily on the lieutenant’s mind.

How could he know about it? Vambran wondered. And what did he mean about already working for him?

The thought gave Vambran a cold sensation in the pit of his stomach.

“Vambran,” Xaphira said. “Are you listening to us?”

“Hmm?” the mercenary said, coming out of his thoughts. “I’m sorry, I was thinking. What did you ask me?”

“We were just discussing the fact that we don’t really know the state of things at the house,” Kovrim said. “It might behoove us to let you go in first, playing innocent, and see just what’s happening.”

“No. Remember,” the lieutenant replied, “the leader back there admitted that the three heads of the households were gathering to seal the deal. And with his escape, I fear we may be too late to—”

Vambran, help me! Denrick has taken us prisoner! They have the house guards on their side. Jaleene and I are tied up in my moms—

Vambran nearly stumbled as the words echoed in his mind.

“Hang on, Em. We’re coming. Stay strong,” he replied. To all the puzzled faces around him, he said in a tight voice, “All hell’s broken loose. Em’s been taken captive by Denrick Pharaboldi. The house guards have been turned. Dregaul may be part of it. We have to hurry.”

And he took off in a near sprint.

“Vambran, wait!” Xaphira called from behind. “Now, more than ever, we need a plan.”

When he wouldn’t stop, she called after him, “If you just go barging in there without knowing what’s going on first, you’re only going to risk their lives.”

The mercenary officer closed his eyes and grimaced as he slowed his pace. He knew his aunt was right. He just couldn’t stand the thought of delaying any longer. He stopped in the middle of the street and hugged his own arms, bending over and breathing hard, trying to regain some composure.

If only I hadn’t run off, he berated himself. If only I had stuck around long enough to get a better read on Denrick. Damn it!

He mentally screamed, punching at the air in frustration and pacing around in a circle.

The rest of Vambran’s companions caught up to him. Xaphira took him by the shoulders, forcing him to stop pacing and look at her.

“Stop blaming yourself,” she told him, looking him directly in the eyes. “You have done everything possible to fight this, and now, whether you realize it or not, you’re in a better position to put a final stop to it once and for all.”

“This is where your military training must come to the forefront,” Kovrim said. “Now is the time to put your skills and resources to work. We can surprise them, but only if we keep our heads.”

“They don’t know we’re coming,” Horial said as he and Adyan gathered in with the rest of them. “They think only you’re likely to come back.”

“Assuming they don’t know I defeated the thugs that were after Uncle Kovrim,” Vambran argued. “The leader got away and could easily warn them, and he said that he had some sort of mental connection with his superior, that he would have known if something was going wrong at the estate. That link very well could have worked both ways.”

“Maybe,” said Xaphira, “but he vanished before the Sapphire Crescent showed up. So even if the

conspirators know that the three of us might be on our way, they still don’t know that the platoon is coming, too. We’ve got to use that to our advantage.”

Vambran considered their words, looking for anything he could anchor his emotions to and find some calm. He realized they were right. They had the element of surprise, but they had to make sure they could use it correctly. What they needed, he decided, was some on-the-sly scouting.

“We’ve got to get a peek inside the house, and maybe around the grounds, and see just how bad it really is,” the lieutenant said.

,”I can do that,” Xaphira said. “Since I know the place, I can scout everything out without the chance of getting lost or cornered if something goes wrong.”

Kovrim nodded and said, “All right. But I have another idea that might help. Xaphira can look for a way to get me and the mercenaries inside the walls without being seen. In the meantime, Vambran, since you would like very much to get up there now and check on your family, especially Em, let me do something that will get you there quickly and without notice.”

Vambran was all for it and readily agreed.

As the group neared the Matrell estate, they finalized their plan. Kovrim began to pray, taking a talisman out of his robes and clasping it tightly as he closed his eyes. He uttered the words of a sacred prayer to Waukeen, then touched Vambran. When Kovrim opened his eyes, he looked at his nephew.

“You now have the ability to walk on the air,” the priest said, gesturing for Vambran to try it. “Just imagine that you’re walking up a steep hill, planting your feet on the air in front of you.”

Vambran took a tentative step forward, trying to visualize himself following a sloping path upward. His foot settled solidly on something invisible maybe two feet off the ground. The mercenary took another

step, and another, and suddenly, he was standing at a level higher than his companions’ heads.

“This is magnificent!” he said, taking a few strides more. “What wonderful magic.”

“You can walk levelly or come back down, just by imagining it,” Kovrim explained.

Vambran strolled along for several steps, hovering a good fifteen feet above the street, then he began to descend, just as his uncle had described.

“How long will it last?” the lieutenant asked Kovrim.

“More than an hour,” the priest replied. “Plenty of time to get high in the air and walk in well over the grounds without being spotted.”

“But remember,” Xaphira warned her nephew, “you are not invisible up there, and the moon is bright tonight. You should try to go in from the south side, where the garden is the most overgrown.”

Vambran nodded.

“I’m going to Em’s rooms, first,” he declared. “If I get into any trouble, I’ll send up a flare.”

Everyone else wished the mercenary luck.

“We’ll be working our way in from a different direction,” Kovrim said. “I don’t have a way to contact you when we begin, but I think you’ll know when we set our plan into motion.”

Vambran shook hands with them all and set out. He tried to stick to the shadows as much as possible, gaining altitude quickly by imagining the slope as being quite steep. Very soon, he was high in the sky and looking over the grounds of his own home, trying to figure out a way to smuggle himself inside without being seen. The irony was not lost on him, but he spared no time worrying about it. Instead, when he was satisfied that he was far enough over the ground that no one would be likely to spot him, Vambran leveled off in his walk.

He took a quick glance around and, despite the urgency of his goal, had to stand for a moment and

simply appreciate the beauty of the entire city spread out before him. Arrabar had always been an amazing city to the mercenary’s eyes, though he usually only gazed across it during the daytime. At night, it took on a different but no less enchanting demeanor, with its twinkling lights spread out in undulating waves across the gentle hills stretching from the perimeter walls down to the bay. The water there glowed in its own right, the shimmering light of the bright, nearly full moon glimmering across its glassy surface. It was a magnificent city.

Vambran shook his head, refocusing his thoughts on the task at hand. He began to move toward the interior of the estate, peering down. He moved slowly, keeping an eye out below for any potential threats, but it was as Xaphira said; the garden was at its densest and most overgrown there, with lots of trees to obscure the night sky from anyone down below.

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