Victor nodded thoughtfully. "It shouldn't be too hard to find a branded Night Master," he mused aloud.
Alias nodded in agreement, then paused. "How did you know Melman was branded?"
Victor opened his mouth and closed it. "Didn't you mention it?" he asked, perplexed.
Alias frowned, reviewing in her perfect memory every conversation she'd had with Victor concerning Melman. She'd said the Faceless had branded someone, but not who. "No, I'm certain I didn't," she said.
Victor crossed to where Alias stood and laid a warm hand on her shoulder. "My love, I have my own sources."
"What sources?" Alias demanded. "Victor, I have to know. You can't keep hiding things from me."
"Alias, I have other friends besides you who have been investigating the Night Masters for me, but I can't reveal their names. You have to trust me. You do trust me, don't you?"
Alias was about to assure him that she did when she looked up into his eyes. There was something calculating there, and the words died in her throat. Dragonbait's warnings came back to her immediately. She thought, too, of Kimbel. The former assassin had been at the ball, but had avoided the golem rampages, then returned to the castle and sat quietly at the fireside, prepared for Victor's return, unruffled by the affairs of the evening.
She was suddenly overly conscious of Westgate's reputation for intrigue and betrayal. "Of course I trust you," she managed to say, but she knew her voice sounded hollow.
Victor took her glass of Evermead from her hands and sipped at it. "We need to be careful in the next few days," the noble said, his eyes pinning her in place. "After all that has happened, the city is going to be full of rumors and unrest. I think we should tell the people that we've found the Faceless, that he's dead. It will help settle things down more quickly."
There was something hypnotic about Victor's voice, and Alias had to shake herself to throw off its influence. She raised a hand to touch Victor's cheek, trying to reassure him of her loyalty even as she argued with herself. "Victor, a lie like that is a two-edged sword. It can help you at first, but in the end it can cut you in half. We have to tell the truth, that we found your father murdered wearing the Faceless's regalia, but that the Faceless may still be at large."
"As you wish," Victor purred. He bent his face down and pressed his lips against her own, but there was nothing gentle or warm in his kiss. It was indifferent and brief-a farewell kiss to a dismissed lover.
Alias grabbed at the nobleman's sleeve. "Now is the time to pursue the Faceless even harder," she said, still anxiously trying to convince him she was right. "He must think he's safe, having framed someone else. He's likely to get careless-"
Victor slashed the back of his hand across her face, tearing at her flesh with a spiked ring much like the one sported by the extortionist Littleboy. Alias gasped as a searing pain streaked down her left cheek.
The adventuress jerked away from the nobleman and tried to draw her sword from its scabbard, but her muscles failed her. The sword felt as heavy as lead, and her hand spasmed uncontrollably, so she could not grip the hilt. The poison on/the ring was quick-acting. Her face, her throat, and her arm burned with an inner fire.
The room seemed to sway like the deck of a tempest-tossed ship. Alias tried to focus on Victor, who stood there sipping the Evermead from her glass. Despite her swollen tongue, she managed to slur out the words, "Victor, why?"
Victor laughed harshly as he set down her emptied glass. "I gave you the chance to lie for me, but you could not do so, could you, my darling? It's just as well. You make a better legend than a lover. Besides, I really don't feel like sharing my city with anyone."
Victor chuckled some more, amused by her feeble, jerking steps in his direction. When her knees gave out beneath her, the nobleman stepped forward to catch her, his eyes sparkling with a sick delight. "You poor dear," he said, looking into her wildly dilated eyes. "You served me so well, but I'm going to have to let you go. Still, I ought to thank you properly for all your help."
He kissed her with a cruel passion, ignoring the way her body twitched and spasmed from the poison running through her veins. He was possessed with a feeling of absolute power. Like a vampire in a bloodlust, he didn't pull away from her until he felt sated-sated on the control he'd taken of her emotions, of her actions, of her very life. By then, although the swordswoman was still twitching slightly, her breathing was shallow and irregular. It was only a matter of time before the poison reached her heart and stilled it in an icy grip.
Victor lifted the swordswoman, a little surprised at how heavy her dead weight was. He carried her from the library, through the main hall, then down a narrow spiral stairs to the wine cellar. He pushed on a bottle of wine, and a section of wall slid away, revealing a hidden passage. At the other end of the passage was a secret room.
Kimbel was waiting there, in the company of two prisoners shackled at.the neck, wrists, and ankles to a thick iron post in the center of the room-Dragonbait and Mintassan. The saurial had been muzzled. The sage wore a disjointed, idiot's expression on his face, and his tongue lolled out of the side of his mouth.
The lizard paladin lunged toward Victor, hissing -through his iron muzzle, but he was halted by the iron collar around his throat. The sage fixed Victor with a desperate look and gibbered in a high voice.
Kimbel lifted an eyebrow at the appearance of the noble's burden. "Is she dead?" he asked, curious.
"Not yet," Victor replied as he laid the swordswoman down on a worktable. He smiled gleefully as Alias shuddered. "To what do we owe the honor of Mintassan's company?" he asked.
"He spotted me carrying off the saurial," the assassin explained, "but he fumbled his ambush attempt. I had someone from the Temple of Mask place him under a feeblemind spell until you decide what to do with him."
The sage gibbered hysterically, beseeching the nobleman with his clouded eyes. Victor turned from the figure in cold disgust. "You'll have to kill him. You can destroy the lizard, too, now that we are finished using his mistress. Make sure none of the bodies are found."
"No one is going to believe all three just left town," Kimbel pointed out.
Victor peered down at Alias. He stroked the tattoo on her sword arm. "Have her lovely arm wash ashore at low tide, clutching a domino mask. Nice and ambiguous. The Faceless can reassure the Night Masters that he was responsible for the death of their foe, and Lord Victor can tell his people that a victory has been struck against the Night Masks, albeit at a great cost-the death of his love, the hero Alias. I won't need to keep up the worried lover act. I can go straight to being the mourning lover-so much more sympathetic. See to the details."
"Yes, milord," Kimbel replied. "This one may last a while yet," he noted, staring down at Alias, who still drew gasping breaths.
"Well, I've dismissed her. She's no longer in House Dhostar's employ, so she's yours to play with," Victor said. "Just not here. Be a good flunky and make sure she expires someplace where her vengeful spirit can't haunt me. When you're finished taking care of the bodiee, loot the sage's workshop. Do it legally' Kick Jamal out on the street. With Mintas*an gone, we can take care of her at our leisure." "And what will you, be doing, milord?"
Til be sleeping. Pm worn out from my battles at the ball," Victor said with an evil chuckle. He left Kimbel alone in the workshop with the prisoners.
The assassin could hear his master's voice drift down the spiral staircase. The merchant lord was singing the jaunty tune he'd learned from Alias:
"For all of their dancing, Posturing, prancing, They'll fight with their backs to the wall. Till then they are eating And drinking and meeting; Their battles are fought at the ball."