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Stephen Deas: The King's assassin

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Stephen Deas The King's assassin

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‘I like to think we were friends, back when Sword-Master Silvestre was teaching us both.’ He seemed to struggle with himself for a moment. ‘I know the child he means. I suppose everyone does. He’s back in Tethis, fit and feisty. I don’t know where the one he’s carrying came from and I don’t think I want to, but we brought no children with us when we sailed. Perhaps it’s best you know that.’ He stepped away, saluted and followed the others.

31

THE SACKING OF TETHIS

Berren crushed the paper in his fist. Later he threw it into the fire. It was something Talon could never see, nor Tarn, nor the other Hawks he called his friends. He stared on into the flames long after the paper was ash. It won’t be difficult for you . Berren watched the embers flicker and die and begged to differ. There would be a price, there always was. I think you might even enjoy it . He had no illusions as to what she meant. She wanted Syannis dead.

‘Why me, though? Why ask me?’ The flames and the embers that followed them had no answer.

‘I’m afraid of what will happen,’ he said to Talon one night. Talon had seen the change in him as clearly as if his skin had turned red.

‘As am I, Master Berren, as am I.’ He looked far away and Berren knew they were talking about utterly different things. He felt a sudden urge to take Talon by the shoulders and shake him and tell him that this was all wrong. Tell him that no one was to be trusted, not even him. Tell him of the warlock and of Gelisya’s offer, everything, and then make him stop, or else do the one thing that would save them all and take the crown of Tethis for himself. But he couldn’t. When he opened his mouth, the words refused to come. Why? Because of Fasha? Because of a woman he barely knew who’d shared his bed for one night three years ago? Because of a child he’d never seen? He should walk away, just as he should have walked away years ago, but he couldn’t, and still for the same reason. Syannis and all that lay between them. Even Talon, who was so astute on the battlefield, whose tactics and strategies were the stuff of legend among the free companies, had a blindness when it came to his own brother.

Three days after Vallas Kuy had given Berren his choice, sixteen cohorts of men sailed for Forgenver, and Berren was with them. The old camp outside the town was still there. The tents were gone but the wooden huts remained and a tiny shanty town had sprung up. The place stank and Berren felt a wild urge to race into its midst and burn it to the ground, to chase off everyone who would flee and slaughter the ones who would not and give it back to the ghosts of all the men he’d once known but would never see again.

They marched from Forgenver down the south road towards Galsmouth and Tethis. Berren rode at the front of the army on a horse he’d stolen from some officer of the sun-king who’d found himself on the wrong end of a javelin. He could have had his own cohort if he’d asked for it but he never did, preferring his own company. In the south he’d fought with Tarn, or with Talon, or wherever else he thought he could make a difference. Where the enemy was strongest, or weakest, or simply the easiest to reach. Today he rode with what was left of the Deephaven lancers. There were a dozen of them now, the rest dead or drifted away, and he was as much one of them as he was anything else after the last season in the south. And besides, he didn’t want to be with Tarn for this. Not with a friend he might see killed for such a sour and selfish business. Everywhere he looked, he saw reminders of the last time he’d come this way. The anger, the hunger, the hope, the desire. They’d come to free Syannis, to free Fasha and Gelisya and to kill Saffran Kuy, and for all their victories they’d done none of that.

At least there was no endless rain this time, no need for carefully prepared caches of food; now they lived off the land. As they reached Galsmouth, half the company, the half made up of the veterans who had fought against Meridian, marched openly towards the town, welcomed with open arms by the soldiers that now made up the garrison there. The rest, Berren, the other foreigners and southerners, the men with strange faces and sun-darkened skin, skirted the town and vanished into the hills. They left behind their colours and their badges, took on new ones and became the Thousand Ghosts. A forgery of renegades whispered in the winter winds in Kalda, masquerading beneath carefully planted stories of brigands and rapists, of looters and pillagers.

Talon’s plan was absurdly simple: the Thousand Ghosts were a story carefully made and spread over months. For one night they would become real. They would throw themselves on the city of Tethis and for a few perilous hours it would seem as though the town stood on the edge of destruction; then Talon and his Hawks would arrive in the nick of time, the wicked brigands would flee and all would be safe once more. Everything would happen in a blur of confusion, too quick for anyone to count the Thousand Ghosts and realise they were more like a hundred. It would be over in a night. In the chaos Talon would sweep away the warlocks, and in that blur kings and princes would die.

On the last day out from Tethis Talon slipped away from his men too. He put on a helm that covered his face, hid his colourful cloak and banner behind leathers and furs, and joined the Thousand Ghosts. They waited all through the night, until before the first gleam of dawn on the horizon. From the light of the stars and the moon, they could all see the castle where king Aimes was doubtless sleeping, little more than a bow shot away.

‘You know where to go.’ Berren nodded. Talon turned to the three men who would lead the charge on the castle. ‘And you? Sure you know what to do?’ They nodded too. ‘Smoke and noise, friends, no more. This is my home.’ Maybe it was the moonlight, but Talon seemed to have turned pale, almost white as though he’d seen a ghost. Finally the Prince of War took a deep breath. He gave the sign and the Thousand Ghosts began to creep in silence towards Tethis and the castle that loomed before them.

‘Let it begin.’ He sounded grim.

Berren mounted his horse. He waved to the lancers and rode towards the river and its gorge. In the time it took for the Thousand Ghosts to rouse the castle guard, Berren would come from another way. They would leave their horses at the top of the gorge and slide silently into the castle, following the same path that he and Syannis had used years ago. He had no key this time, but he had a dozen men and he had a small ram. They’d appear inside just as he had done before. He’d slip through the darkness and find Aimes and kill him for Talon and then open the gates and the castle would fall. Except his own plan was a little different. He would not search for Aimes but for Gelisya and for Fasha and for his son. He’d take them all, and then, and only then, decide who he would allow to live and who would die.

They reached the top of the gorge and there everything started to go wrong. There were king’s guard, a dozen of them, maybe more, already making their way along the river and into the fields. They couldn’t possibly have come so far from the castle unless they’d already left before the attack had begun, and there was only one thing that could mean.

Syannis knew.

The soldiers sent up a cry of alarm; the lancers, who knew no better, rode them down. Berren screamed after them and charged in their wake. The lancers scythed down half the guards on their first pass and turned hard for a second. Berren watched, lost for words. Most of the survivors broke and ran. The horsemen chased them down. In the middle someone was still standing. Whoever it was had his back to him. Berren lowered his spear and cut him down.

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