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The Infernal City Page 13


  His spirits had been sinking with the altitude, because he was certain they were already in Elsweyr. It would be more difficult for his friends to find him here; few of them had ever been south of the border, and the cats were less than friendly with the Empire they had once been a part of. Any force that tried to retrieve him might be seen as an invasion.

  But then he saw a glimmer of hope in the situation.

  By the time they were camping for the night, it was clear to everyone Draeg was probably more than delayed. The glimmer brightened.

  “Trolls, probably,” Radhasa opined. “The hills stink with them.”

  “I can’t imagine Draeg having trouble with a troll—or much else for that matter,” Sharwa said. “More likely he just decided this deal was too dangerous.”

  “We were supposed to kill him,” Tsani said. “That’s what we were paid to do. Now we potentially have two powerful enemies—the Emperor and our employer.”

  “He will be thought dead,” Radhasa replied. “There’s nothing to worry about.”

  “I’m not—at least not enough to scratch at the money. But Draeg—he’s a worrier.”

  “Well, more for us, then,” Radhasa said. “Tsani, you go back and take his position.”

  “Fine. Are we going into Riverhold?”

  “Are you crazy? It’s swarming with Imperial agents. We’d have to keep his highness gagged, and that might attract attention. No, there’s a little market town a few miles west of there, Sheeraln. Ma-fwath and J’yas will go in and trade our horses for slarjei and water.”

  They came to the crest of the last of the hills before sundown, and the plains of Anequina stretched out to the horizon. He’d always imagined Elsweyr as an unrelieved desert, but here it was green. The tall grass of the upland prairies had been replaced by a short stubble, but that still seemed a far cry from the naked sand he’d been expecting. Streams were visible by the swaying palms, light-skinned cottonwood, and delicate tamarisk that lined them. A herd of red cattle grazed in the near distance.

  Riverhold was visible a bit east, sprung up at the convergence of three dusty-looking roads. The walls were saffron, irregular, and not particularly high. Behind them, domes and towers of faded azure and cream, vermilion and chocolate, gold and jet, crowded together like a gaggle of overdressed courtiers waiting in the foyer of the throne room. It was a city that seemed at once tired and exuberant.

  He wished they were going there.

  But instead they did as Radhasa planned—they followed a goat trail into a copse of trees along a meandering stream, where he was forced to dismount. Then Ma-fwath and J’yas took the horses.

  “Bathe,” Radhasa told him. “You’re starting to smell.”

  “Hard to do with these bands on.”

  “You promise to be good?”

  His heart sped a bit. “Yes,” he said.

  “Swear it on your honor that you won’t try to run.”

  “On my honor,” he replied.

  She shrugged, came up behind him, and untied the ropes.

  “There,” she said. “Go, then, bathe.”

  He stripped off his stinking clothes, feeling watched and somehow ashamed. Radhasa had seen him undressed before—had helped undress him, in fact. He hadn’t felt in the least uncomfortable then. Now he hurried into the water and submerged himself as quickly as possible.

  The water was cool, and felt unbelievably good. He let it wash over him, closing his eyes and trying to concentrate only on the sensation.

  It might have been a half an hour before he opened them. When he did, he saw that Radhasa was the only one besides himself in the camp. She was sitting with her back to a tree, not quite facing him. She seemed deep in thought.

  Between him and her lay a pile of gear, and protruding from it was the hilt of his sword, Flashing.

  He didn’t hesitate, but launched himself out of the water toward the weapon. Radhasa saw him, but even then didn’t seem to understand the situation until he actually had the weapon in his hand. Then she came slowly to her feet.

  “You promised,” she accused. “On your honor.”

  “I promised not to run,” he corrected.

  She drew her sword. “Ah,” she said. “I see.”

  He circled her, waiting. She wasn’t in armor, so there was no advantage there. And he’d fought her before, knew her signals.

  He feinted, but she didn’t twitch. He cut deeper, and she evaded with a quick sidestep. Then she did what he knew she would; her whole body sagged, the tell that she was about to make a hard attack.

  She started forward; he threw up his parry and stepped to meet her …

  Except that her attack was suddenly short, and he was blocking nothing but air. Then she was in motion again, cutting at his exposed legs. He tried to jump back, but he had too much momentum, and so dropped his blade to parry.

  But that was also a feint, and in an instant she was inside, right on him, and her off-weapon hand wrenched at his grip in a strange, painful manner, and then he was facedown on the ground. Flashing thumped to earth a few feet away.

  Radhasa stepped back.

  “Want to try again?”

  Growling, he once more took up the blade and came at her with his famous six-edge attack, but halfway through it her point was at his throat.

  “Again?” she asked.

  Enraged, he flew at her with everything, but almost without seeming to work at it she had him disarmed and on the ground once more.

  “You—You lost on purpose, when you were applying,” he said.

  “You think?”

  He climbed back to his feet. “You’ll have to kill me,” he said.

  “No I won’t. I’ll just knock you out again.”

  “Why did you do this? For entertainment?”

  Her usually beautiful face twisted into something rather ugly.

  “I wanted you to know,” she said. “I hate losing, and I hate pretending to lose.”

  “Then why did you? Back at my villa?”

  “Orders, Prince.”

  “From your employer? To get me to let my guard down?”

  She rolled her eyes. “From Gulan, you idiot. Don’t you understand yet? You’re a worse than mediocre fighter. You’ve never fought a fair fight in your life. You’ve never been in a battle that wasn’t a rigged, foregone conclusion. Until now.”

  Attrebus suddenly realized he’d missed something about Radhasa; she wasn’t merely deceptive, treacherous, and greedy—she was completely insane.

  “Sure,” he said. “Whatever you say. Clearly you hate me, although I don’t know why. I was nice to you, took you into my guard.”

  “I don’t hate you as such,” she said, “I just hate what you are. It’s not your fault really—this was done to you. Yet I can’t help feeling that if you’d ever used your brain just once, if you had the slightest ability to step outside of your narcissistic little world—”

  “You’ve been with me two days. What do you know about me?”

  “Everyone interviewed for your guard is told, Attrebus. And they all talk, don’t they? How could they not? The way you blustered about as if they were your friends, the casual, everyday condescension—I don’t see how any of them stood it for more than two days. I mean, yes, the pay is good, and in general you’re assured fairly safe situations, but Boethiah’s ass, it’s annoying.”

  A slow, gentle cold was working its way up from his belly.

  “This isn’t true,” he said. “My men loved me.”

  “They mocked you behind your back. The least of them was worth three of you. Did you really think you’re the hero in the songs, in the books? Were the odds really ten-to-one at Dogtrot Ford?”

  “Some authors tend to exaggerate, but it’s all basically true. I can’t help the mistakes some bard in Cheydinhal makes. But I did those things.”

  “At Dogtrot Ford you faced half your number, and they weren’t insurgents, they were condemned criminals told that if they survived, they would be freed.


  “That’s a lie.”

  He felt dizzy, very dizzy. He leaned against a tree.

  “You’re starting to see it, aren’t you? Because somewhere in that skull of yours you have at least half of your father’s brain.”

  “Just shut up,” he said. “I’ve no idea why you’re saying this, but I won’t listen to it anymore. Kill me, tie me back up, but just shut up, for the love of the Divines.”

  She wrinkled her brow and leaned on her sword. “Are you really that dense?”

  He charged at her, howling. A moment later he was on the ground again.

  “If it’s any consolation,” she said, placing her foot on his throat, “even if by some fluke you managed to kill me, Urmuk and Sharwa have been watching the whole time.”

  As she said it, he saw the orc and the Khajiit appear from behind a copse of bamboo.

  The boot came off of his neck. He turned his head and saw someone else—a lean, hawk-nosed man with charcoal skin and molten red eyes striding purposefully into the clearing. Had he missed someone?

  “You there!” Sharwa shouted. “What do you—”

  The man kept coming, but he thrust out his arm, and his hand flashed white-hot. Sharwa’s hideous yowl was like nothing Attrebus had ever heard before.

  Radhasa kicked him in the head, and he rolled, groaning, sparks flashing behind his eyes. Sobbing in pain, he came to his feet and rubbed the tears from his eyes.

  He was just in time to see the orc lose his other hand, making him—presumably—Urmuk the Handless. The newcomer’s long, copper-colored blade pulled right through his wrist, then angled up to deflect a murderous head blow from Radhasa. Urmuk stumbled back and tripped over Sharwa, who seemed to be trying to stand, despite the smoke rising from her chest.

  Radhasa jumped back and continued to retreat. Attrebus didn’t blame her. This wasn’t a man—this was some daedra summoned from the darkness beyond the world, a fiend.

  “What do you want?” Radhasa screamed. “You’ve no business with us.”

  The fiend didn’t say anything. He just picked up the pace, half running toward Radhasa, and then suddenly bounding forward. She planted herself and then danced nimbly aside as his blade soughed by her, and her own weapon came down two-handed toward the juncture of his neck and shoulder.

  He caught her blade with his off-weapon hand. Attrebus saw Radhasa close her eyes, and then his blade went in through the pit of her left arm so deeply the point came out through her ribs on the other side.

  He withdrew the weapon and stalked toward Urmuk, who was holding the bleeding stump of his wrist. Whatever Urmuk was, he wasn’t a coward, and he hurled the massive weight of his body at his attacker, clubbing at him with the iron ball he had fixed to his left hand. Sharwa was crawling away on her belly.

  Urmuk fell and the fiend turned on Sharwa.

  “You can’t,” Attrebus managed. “She’s injured—”

  But her head was off by then.

  And now the fiend turned on him.

  Attrebus snapped out of his paralysis and ran toward his sword, but when he had it, he saw the killer was merely watching him.

  Attrebus brought his weapon to guard.

  “I killed a Bosmer back in the hills and a Breton on the ridge back there,” the man said. His voice was hard and scratchy. “I make there are two more—Khajiit. Where are they?”

  “They went to some village,” he replied. “To change the horses for slarjei, whatever they are.”

  “Slarjei are better in the desert than horses,” the man said. “How long have they been gone?”

  “An hour, maybe.”

  “Well, Prince Attrebus, we ought to be going, then.”

  “Who are you? How do you know who I am?”

  “My name is Sul.”

  “Did my father send you?”

  “He did not,” Sul replied.

  Now that he was closer and not in constant motion, Attrebus had a better look at him. He was old, his dark skin pulled in tightly against his bones. His hair was black and gray and cropped nearly to his skull.

  “Who, then?”

  “My reasons are my own,” he replied. “Would you rather I hadn’t come?”

  “I don’t know the answer to that yet, do I?” Attrebus said.

  “I’m not here to kill you,” Sul assured him. “I’m not here to hurt you. We have a common destiny, you and I. We both seek the island that flies.”

  Attrebus blinked. He felt as if the earth kept shifting beneath his feet. “You know of it?”

  “I just said so.”

  “And what is your concern with it?”

  “I will destroy it or send it back to Oblivion. Isn’t that what you want?”

  “I … yes.” What was happening?

  “Then we are together, yes?” Sul said. “Now, should we go or wait around so that I have to fight the other two as well?”

  “You didn’t have much trouble with these,” Attrebus noticed.

  “Most men die surprised,” Sul said. “One of those two might have a surprise for me. I don’t fight anyone without a reason. I have you, and I don’t want slarjei unless we need to go south into the desert. Do we need to go south?”

  “No.”

  “Well, pick the direction, and let’s be off.”

  Attrebus stared at him, teasing that out. Then he understood. “You don’t know where Umbriel is.”

  Sul barked out something that might have been a laugh. “Umbriel. Of course. Vuhon …” He trailed off. “No, I don’t know where it is.”

  “How do I know you won’t kill me as soon as I tell you?”

  “Because I need you,” Sul said.

  “Why?”

  “I’m not sure. But I know I do.”

  Attrebus considered his reply for a long moment. But really, what did he have to lose?

  “East,” he said. “It’s over Black Marsh now, heading north.”

  “North toward Morrowind,” Sul sighed. “Of course.”

  “Does that mean something to you?”

  “Nothing that matters right now. Very well. East we go, then.”

  “Let me get my things,” Attrebus said.

  “Hurry, then.”

  Attrebus was glad Coo was in Radhasa’s haversack and not on her body. The idea of approaching her, seeing what Sul made of her, made him sick. True, she was a lying traitor, but she had been warm in the bed with him not long ago. Alive and beautiful, sweaty, enthusiastic—or so she had seemed. Of all of the women he’d been with, she was the first to be—well, dead. At least so far as he knew. It was upsetting.

  Sul gathered a few things from the bodies, then led him upstream among the trees for some distance until they finally came to three horses—two roan geldings that looked as though they were from the same mother and a brown mare. One of the roans was packed up, the other two horses were saddled.

  “Ride the gelding,” Sul said.

  Attrebus sighed, feeling that was somehow fitting. A few moments later he was riding east with the man who had saved his life, wondering what would happen if he tried to run north, to Cyrodiil, to home.

  And he had to admit that at the moment he didn’t have the courage or the confidence to find out.

  SEVEN

  Colin curbed the impulse to pace, but although he had walked into the room of his own free will—and there was no evidence that he couldn’t leave it—he felt caged somehow. But his mind had been spinning for two days now, and the thread it turned out was beginning to look more like a garrote.

  The vanishment of Prince Attrebus wasn’t his first case—it was his third. The first had been simple enough; he’d planted spurious intelligence in the minister of war’s office and waited for it to come out somewhere. When one of their agents in a local Thalmor nest reported it, he easily backtracked the leak to a mid-level official who was apparently hemorrhaging information to a mistress who was—as it turned out—a Thalmor sympathizer. It was simple, clean. No arrests and no bodies. Once the lea
k was known, it was more useful to leave it in place.

  His second assignment had been to discover the whereabouts of a certain sorcerer named Laeva Cuontus. He’d found her without ever knowing why he was looking for her. He didn’t know what happened to her after he reported her location, and he didn’t want to know.

  When he’d been sent out with the patrol to locate Prince Attrebus, it hadn’t seemed that odd. Apparently the prince often had to be shadowed, and it didn’t require a particularly senior member of the organization to do the job of what amounted to a bit of tracking, questioning, and bribing.

  But now he was in the middle of something pretty bad, and a sensation between his sternum and his pelvis told him that it hadn’t been an accident that such a junior inspector had been sent to discover such nasty business.

  He didn’t have any proof of that, of course. Just that feeling, and the certainty that he was missing some piece of the puzzle. And now he was in a well-furnished room on the second floor of the ministry, which was apparently the office of no one.

  He turned as Intendant Marall entered the room, followed by two other men. One was Remar Vel, administrator of the Penitus Oculatus. The other …

  “Your majesty,” he blurted, taking a knee. He felt suddenly in awe, an emotion he hadn’t experienced in a while. As a child he’d worshipped this man. Apparently some part of him still did.

  “Rise up,” the Emperor said.

  “Yes, highness.”

  The Emperor just stood there for a moment, hands clasped behind his back.

  “You were there,” he finally said. “Is my son dead?”

  Colin considered his answer for a moment. If anyone else had asked him … But this wasn’t anyone else.

  “Sire,” he said, “I do not believe so.”

  Titus Mede’s eyes widened slightly and his brow relaxed, but that was his only reaction.

  “And yet his body was recovered,” Administrator Vel said drily.

  “A body, sir,” Colin said. “A headless body.”

  “It’s said that the rebels in that area take heads,” the Emperor said. “Other heads were taken.”

  “I don’t believe the Natives were responsible, majesty.”