Bruce Blake - Heart of the King

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“Why are you here? Are you one of the Archon’s tricks?”

The expression on her face soured at his mention of the other woman.

“I have nothing to do with Sheyndust.”

“Then why?”

“I have come to tell you that the king-bearer and his companion are on their way to rescue your son.”

“What? Graymon?”

She nodded her response. The constriction around Therrador’s heart expanded to include his lungs.

I’ve given up my son’s best hope to the enemy.

“I have to do something. I told the Archon of his coming.”

The woman touched his forearm and it surprised him to feel the pressure of her hand despite her lack of opacity. He looked down at her fingers, at the paleness of her flesh. The tightness in his chest diminished.

“I know,” she said and smiled. Therrador saw a hint of sadness in the expression and a shiver of guilt threatened to rock his spine. “You have nothing to be ashamed of. Things must happen the way they must happen and you are a part of that.”

“But I-”

“Arrangements must be made for what’s to come.”

Therrador looked from the woman to the door, thought about the undead Kanosee soldier standing guard on the other side, then looked back at her. She had taken her hand off his arm and he felt the lack of it.

“I can’t leave. She has me under guard night and day.”

The woman regarded him then rose from her seat. He watched her cross the room to the far corner, her feet leaving no impression on the fur of the deer skin rug arrayed on the floor. She stopped when she reached the corner and gestured for him to join her.

“There,” she said pointing to a square block amongst other square blocks in the wall.

Therrador pursed his lips, a question forming behind them, but he held it and reached toward the brick instead. His fingers brushed it and he noted it felt no different than any other brick: the same hardness and texture, no feeling of magic or power radiating from it. He looked back at the woman and she nodded, encouraging him. Therrador pushed the brick. At first, nothing happened, so he exerted more pressure until it shifted with the grinding sound of stone against stone. It moved only an inch, but an inch was all it needed to activate a switch concealed behind it.

The wall to Therrador’s right shifted, opening a crack between lines of stone. The dust of countless years tumbled down the face of the wall in a tiny, inconsequential avalanche. He followed its progress with his eyes, watching it tumble, thin, and disappear, before looking back at the crack. It was slight, but wide enough to get his fingers between. He inserted his fingertips carefully to avoid jostling his wounded hand, and looked back at the woman.

“Go ahead.”

He braced himself and pulled, putting all his strength into the effort. The wall moved much more easily than he would have imagined, swinging on some cantilever cleverly hidden in the masonry. The wall swung out and he stared into a stone passageway hung with cobwebs.

“I didn’t know anything like this existed.”

“Few do since the Shaman died,” she said. “It hasn’t been used for a very long time. It will give you access to the fortress. If you are careful, you will be able to come and go without them suspecting; the rest is up to you.”

Therrador nodded and looked down the passage. The light shining in from the room ended at the top of a set of stairs leading down into darkness.

“I need-” He turned back to the woman but she was gone. He glanced over his shoulder, pivoted in a tight circle; she was nowhere to be seen. “Gods above.”

He shook his head and crossed the room to the taper sitting on the mantle over the fireplace. Out of habit, he tried to pick up the candle holder with his right hand, cursed himself a fool as he fumbled it, then used his left to light the wick from the hearth. He returned to the secret door, using his injured hand to shelter the flame, and stepped across the threshold.

Therrador hesitated before proceeding, undecided as to what to do with his unexpected freedom. Graymon was too far away for him to consider going after his son, but not far enough to trust he'd be safe from the Archon's wrath if they discovered the king was gone. The presence of that threat meant he couldn't leave the fortress, yet he needed to do something to save his kingdom. His lips thinned to a hard line, his eyes narrowed in thought.

Sienhin.

The general would have to be his eyes and ears, his hands and voice. It was the only way, but would his old friend trust him after all that had come to pass? Therrador wasn't sure he would trust himself were he in Sir Alton's place, but neither of them had any choice.

“Here we go,” he said aloud and drew a breath of air that smelled of must and disuse.

Determined to find his way to the general's quarters, Therrador grasped a handle mounted on the back side of the wall and pulled the section closed. He descended the stairs in the flickering light of the taper without knowing where they would lead him or if he should truly put his trust in the ghostly woman. This was the same doubt and distrust his friend would feel when he saw him.

What choice do we have?

***

Sir Alton Sienhin wiped remnants of ale out of his bushy mustache with the back of his left hand and slammed the pewter flagon in his right back to the table. He stared at the empty chair set across the table and chewed on the stray hairs of his mustache curled over his top lip.

“Where have you gone, Therrador?”

He stared straight ahead at the plain stone wall and simple furnishings-not the decor to which he'd become accustomed, but his quarters had been given to some Kanosee general when Therrador invited the enemy in. The regent’s decision to open the fortress gates to the invaders had confused him, angered him, but Sienhin knew his place, and his place was to support his king. Through good and bad. Even through this.

“I haven’t gone as far as you may think, Sir Alton. Nor as far as you might like.”

The older knight jumped at the sound of the king’s voice behind him, and stood abruptly, upsetting the flagon. Dark ale spilled across the table, flowing along the wood’s grain to the end where it dribbled onto the floor.

“Therrador,” Sir Alton breathed, turning.

Therrador crossed from the doorway to stand before the other man, but made no move to embrace him or greet him. Sir Alton felt grateful for the king’s choice-after the events of the past few weeks, he didn’t think he could bear it.

“You heard what happened?”

“I heard Sir Matte was the latest to give his life for you,” the knight grumbled, his words calculated to prod the king like the tip of a dagger. “And that the Archon took you. Where have you been?”

“The dungeon, for a while. Now I am Sheyndust's captive.”

The general crooked a shaggy eyebrow. “Then how are-?

“How I got here doesn’t matter. Hahn is in league with the enemy.”

Sienhin puffed his cheeks out and blew a breath through his lips. His hands went to his hips giving him the look of a matron chastising her charges.

“Is anyone but me left faithful to the kingdom?”

Therrador ignored his barb. “The man who carries the king’s essence nears the fortress. We must ready for his arrival.”

“What? The king yet survives? How do you know this?”

Some of the certainty in Therrador’s expression flagged for a moment.

“A ghost woman told me.”

“Ha,” Sir Alton guffawed. “I’m supposed to believe this?”

“It doesn’t matter what you believe. We have to return to our original plan of alerting the troops. The army must be ready.”

“But Perdaro knows this plan.”

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