Twilight of Kerberos - [Shadowmage 01-03] - The Shadowmage Trilogy (Shadowmage; Night's Haunting; Legacy's Price) (32 page)

BOOK: Twilight of Kerberos - [Shadowmage 01-03] - The Shadowmage Trilogy (Shadowmage; Night's Haunting; Legacy's Price)
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The analogy seemed to hold true as she strode across the empty warehouse, dust curling up behind her footsteps.

“I am not yours to summon and command, Lucius,” she said, contempt evident in her voice. He sighed inwardly, knowing his mission here was not going to be easy.

“You turn your back on us, ignore the calls of Master Forbeck, abandon the training generously offered to you, and then expect... what? Why have you called me here?”

“Good evening, Adrianna,” he said, forcing a grim smile.

“Just get to the point.”

“Your current employers are finished,” he said. “Within the next day, their hold on the city will be shattered, their members scattered and bleeding.”

Adrianna’s pace had slowed as she approached him, and now she stopped altogether, her expression a mixture of puzzlement and exasperation.

“Perhaps you have not been keeping up with recent events,” she said carefully, and he realised she was studying him closely. She had not assumed he was bluffing, instead trying to determine the path he had chosen; she was no longer dismissing him as unimportant. “The Hands are in retreat all over the city, your guildmaster and most of the Council are dead, and you are now just waiting for the end.”

“I’m waiting for nothing, Aidy. I told you, this war will be over within the next day.”

“This is not your fight, Lucius. Leave them. Leave the Hands. There is no future there, and your allegiance should not be to a den of thieves. You could be so much more than that.”

“So you have told me.”

“Then why stay with the Hands?”

He smiled wolfishly at her. “I like them.”

Snorting at that, Adrianna shook her head. “Are they worth dying for?”

Considering her words, he finally shrugged. “They are certainly worth fighting for, and that is what I intend to do. Without me, they will all die, or otherwise be all but enslaved by the Guild. I can make the difference here, Aidy.”

Placing a hand on her hip, she looked at him curiously. “And when did you find something to believe in? Where is the selfish Lucius we have come to know and despise, the one who runs from responsibility? They cannot be paying you that much at the moment, I know. If there is no profit, why are you staying to defend them?”

Lucius opened his mouth to answer, then found precious few words. “That is something of a surprise to me as well,” he finally muttered.

“If only you had found a similar loyalty for us.”

“I still may.” The words amazed him as much as they did Adrianna. Somewhere along the line, he found he had decided to stay in the city, to carve his own niche, and no one would be forcing him out. Not the Guild, not Adrianna and definitely not the Shadowmages. Turnitia was after all, his home. He was done with running.

“What are you saying?” she asked, suspiciously, still expecting a trap somewhere down the line. As it happened, she was not so very wrong.

“I’ll tell you what I am going to do,” he said. “And I’ll ask a simple request. What happens then is up to you. You will have the chance, at the very least, to protect your employer’s interests, and perhaps deliver victory in this war to them single-handed. That would do much for the reputation of the Shadowmages and herald their return to the city, would it not?”

“Go on.”

“Loredo has been clever, building alliances and ensuring he has some of the best thieves in the city on his side. Even his thugs are well-directed and motivated. He has a Shadowmage in his employ, and can call upon the services of demons from the sea. But central to his plans are his ties to the Vos guard.”

“And these are the enemies you are determined to make?” Adrianna asked. “You have a chance to escape all of this, and there are those within the Shadowmages who would protect you from further harm if you walked away now. Remember, we always look after our own.”

“In a way, I am counting on that,” Lucius said, but evaded her questioning look. “However, it is plain that we cannot fight them all, not in open battle.”

He ran a hand through his hair as he debated his next words. If he had misread Adrianna, what he was about to say could finish the Hands before a single attack was launched. Still, he forged ahead, determined to test his own instincts.

“We are going to strike them down from the shadows, hit the power base of the Guild,” he said. “The enforcers on the streets, the contacts that form their network of spies, the highest earning merchants in their protection rackets, Loredo and Jewel themselves.”

“You have already tried to take down Jewel,” Adrianna interjected. “That did not go so well.”

“We’ll be prepared this time, and she won’t have so many allies to call upon when we make the move. I’ll do it myself, if I have to.”

“Have a care. She is as dangerous as her reputation suggests.”

“Your concern is touching,” Lucius said, but when he saw Adrianna about to react to that, he waved her fury away. “By the time I reach Jewel, she will have a great many things to occupy her thoughts.”

“Such as?”

“This all happens tomorrow evening. The Hands will leave their guildhouse and kill everyone connected with Loredo that can be found.” He was acutely conscious that if Adrianna did not do as he expected, he had just doomed every member of the Hands.

“How can you be sure you will be able to find all the targets you seek? You know Loredo has moved the location of his guildhouse, specifically to avoid any reprisal like this?”

He did not know that, and Lucius hesitated before offering up the final part of the plan hatched by the Hands. “We have the beggars on side. They are watching the movements of the Guild, tracking down everyone we have deemed important to Loredo’s operations. They’ll find their new base of power.”

“The beggars? Clever.” Her compliment was muted, and he could see her mind was ticking away, gauging the threat he and the Hands posed, and how it affected her position with her employer.

“It was Magnus, not me, that brought the beggars into the fold. And he paid for the alliance with his life.”

“And what, exactly, is your part in all of this, Lucius?” Adrianna asked.

“I’ll be there every step of the way, Aidy. I’ll lead the attack.”

“You realise, of course, that this will likely bring you into direct conflict with another Shadowmage.”

“I have no quarrel with you, Aidy. I am not looking to fight you.”

“If you are leading the assault, it becomes damn well near impossible to avoid, doesn’t it?” she said, her anger finally boiling over. “Do you understand what you risk, Lucius? Not the dangers in fighting the Guild, but in taking a stand against us?”

“I’m not taking a stand against you or the other Shadowmages, Aidy.”

“My contract with the Guild predates your involvement with the Hands, and so takes precedence!”

“I have no contract, Aidy. I am here because I have to be, because these people need me. Because they will die without me, and that is not something I can walk away from. I fight because I have to fight.”

“God damn you, Lucius!” Adrianna spat, and went on cursing him, decrying amateur practitioners and their lack of respect for the Shadowmages’ guild. He let her anger ride out, knowing he risked her striking him down on the spot, but also hoping he had understood how her loyalties ran.

When her fury was spent, she whirled back on him. “You don’t leave me any damned choice, do you?”

He waited for her next words, though he found it difficult to hold her stare.

Closing her eyes, Adrianna sighed, and with the release of breath, so the fire of her rage seemed to dissipate. “It seems you have a personal stake in this war, Lucius, and it is clear that I don’t. I’ll release myself from the contract with the Guild. To continue would risk coming into conflict with another Shadowmage and however agreeable that may be on one level, I will not do it.”

“Thank you, Aidy,” he said.

“Oh, don’t thank me, Lucius,” she said. “I am well aware I have been played, and there will be a reckoning after this war is done.”

He nodded slowly, then played his next card. “After this, I will take up my training in earnest.”

That made her look twice at him, and she frowned.

“It is a promise I make to both you and Master Forbeck,” he said. “I will dedicate myself to the Shadowmages, learn all I can, and abide by the rules of the guild.”

Clearly sceptical, Adrianna cocked her head. “Why?”

“I am going to stay in this city, Aidy,” he said. “It is going to become my home again. I’ll always have an allegiance to the Hands, but I will also pledge myself to the Shadowmages. I want to learn about our gift. I want to be more than I have been.”

“Your record in this matter is hardly sterling.”

“True,” he had to concede. “But please allow that a man can change. I don’t want to be your enemy, Aidy. We should not be enemies.”

Taking a step closer, Adrianna dark eyes bored into his own, as if trying to plumb the depths of his mind for the truth. “If you do as you say, Lucius, you will have my support. But my God, if you should prove false...”

“I know,” he said simply.

She took a step back, preparing to leave. “We have an understanding, then. I will not interfere with your plans, and will henceforth break off contact with Loredo and his Guild.”

“There was... just one more thing,” Lucius said.

“Oh, with you there always is,” Adrianna said, but waited patiently to hear him out.

He took a breath, preparing himself to see how far his relationship with Adrianna truly stretched. “The Hands’ assault on the Guild begins this evening.”

She frowned. “I thought you said...”

“Tomorrow is when the Hands move as a whole. In a few hours, however, I will enter the Citadel and strike at the heart of the Vos guard. Their captain, von Minterheim.”

Adrianna just looked at him, mouth open, dumbstruck.

“That is the signal for the Hands to begin. With the guard paralysed and leaderless, they will be of little aid to the Guild, for a time at least.”

It took a while for Adrianna to find her voice again. “That... is either incredibly stupid and ill-conceived, or...” She trailed off.

“Whatever it is, it won’t be easy. However, my request...” He hesitated for a moment before steeling himself to continue. “I wanted to ask you if you would come with me, to fight by my side and ensure the mission’s success.”

Trying very hard to ignore Adrianna’s dark eyes, Lucius began to explain. “I cannot offer you money or anything that would be the equal of the contract you have lost, but this is important to me Aidy, and–”

“Fine.”

“What?”

“Fine,” she said with a shrug. “I’ll come with you. Then we’ll see just how good a practitioner you have become.”

Lucius had expected argument, threat and disparagement, but not an easy acquiescence. It caught him off guard.

“You better tell me what you have planned,” Adrianna said. “Then I can tell you where you are going wrong, and how to fix it.”

 

 

T
HE
C
ITADEL LAY
silhouetted against the giant sphere of Kerberos that hung imposingly across half the evening sky. Bands of clouds raced across its surface like the wake from a ship moving at speed. The Five Markets were quiet, just a few late traders desperately trying to hawk the last of their day’s stock.

Lucius’ initial plan had been scotched by Adrianna almost immediately in favour of an easier and less complicated approach. He had envisioned an assault upon the walls, a stealthy dash through the courtyard and then a sweep of the keep in order to locate their prey. Instead, the more experienced Shadowmage had suggested they allow von Minterheim to come to them. The changing of the guard was an event undertaken with typical Vos regularity, and it was always overseen by the captain so long as he was present in the city. That meant not a dangerous and probably futile attempt to gain access to the keep, but instead a hard-hitting strike executed in the main courtyard of the Citadel.

Quickly warming to the idea, Lucius had seen its promise. The point of the attack was not simply to avenge himself and the Hands on von Minterheim, but to shatter the guard. To paralyse their ability to retaliate to the Hands’ next move against the Guild, however briefly. The Vos army could not be destroyed in Turnitia, but it could be made to stumble. The aim therefore, was to eliminate von Minterheim and cause as much disruption as possible while inside the Citadel. It was a mission that two Shadowmages, working in concert, could excel at.

They shuffled along the short line of people heading toward the southern gate of the Citadel, cloaked and hooded. The others entering the gate were, for the most part, visitors and tourists who often made it a point to witness the precision display the Vos military enacted while changing the guard. In just a few short years since the invasion, it had become as much a part of city life as the Five Markets or the great barriers at the docks. It was a piece of what made Turnitia what it was.

Lucius had left behind his sword and mail under Adrianna’s guidance. Reluctantly at first, but she had pointed out that everyone entering the Citadel legitimately was searched for weapons and contraband, and it would do their mission no good if they were detained at the gate and forced to fight their way through. Besides, Adrianna had said, a real Shadowmage had no need of mundane weapons.

Only partly agreeing, Lucius had refused to relinquish the daggers sheathed inside his boots, and he felt grateful for their hard, metallic presence as they paced, ever so slowly, toward the gate.

The delay was down to the more rigorous than usual searches being performed by the gate guards, halting each person in turn and patting them down before nodding them ahead and turning to the next. The rumour flowing down the line was that the guards had been spooked by a breakout the other night, and their lives depended upon no more trouble erupting in the heart of the Vos military presence. Few believed such an escape attempt was likely, but it made Lucius smile.

He strode up to one of the guards as they approached the gate, its arch soaring high above them while the eight-inch-thick reinforced greywood gates lay invitingly open. Raising his arms, he felt the guard’s hands sweep over his chest, back and legs, and was thankful he had not tried to smuggle through his armour or sword, as it would have been found immediately. His hood was jerked back, and the guard, barely more than a lad sporting the first wisps of a beard, stared intently into his face. Lucius smiled back pleasantly, playing the part of a curious visitor, and it seemed to work. The guard jerked a thumb over his shoulder, indicating Lucius should continue, and Adrianna stepped up for inspection. Glancing over his shoulder as he crossed the threshold, Lucius had to suppress a smile as her hood was thrown back and a wilful glare dared the young guardsman to get too familiar during his search. Despite his years, it seemed as though the guard had wisdom enough not to take liberties and Adrianna was quickly directed through.

BOOK: Twilight of Kerberos - [Shadowmage 01-03] - The Shadowmage Trilogy (Shadowmage; Night's Haunting; Legacy's Price)
7.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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