“Be on your way and I’ll tell no one what you did,” he says.
The quake in his sword arm shows itself in his voice and brings a smile to my face. This man is scared of me.
He should be.
“Why should I leave you alive?” I flick the end of my sword at him, spattering him with more of his friend’s essence. He flinches and falls back a step. “You and your friends would have had your way with me, probably killed me. Do you not deserve the same?”
“N-no. You’ve got it wrong. We was just having fun is all. We wasn't going to hurt you.”
His eyes flicker away from mine and linger on his fallen friends before returning to me. Had I chosen to do so, he’d have met his end in that second.
“Of course you say that when you’re looking into the eyes of your executioner.”
I see the argument going on behind his eyes: attack me and hope for the best? Turn and run? Wait it out and see what I do? To a man who has just watched his companions fall like untrained children, surely none of the options seem like good ones.
He opts for the first.
His blade lashes out and I deflect his blow with a flick of my wrist. Exhilaration pounds through my veins, fortifies my limbs. The first two kills were surprise attacks-neither man had a chance-but this is one-on-one combat and I know I can best this man without expending any real effort.
He strikes again and I parry. He’s been trained, though not well. Another blow and another, wild and unplanned. I block one and side-step the next, toying with him. Another swing. Another. I haven’t yet swung a blow in offence, yet sweat drenches his brow and his breathing is labored, fearful.
He comes at me again; I step aside and land the pommel of my sword in the small of his back. He stumbles but doesn’t fall. When he faces me, I step in and relieve him of his weapon with the snap of my wrist, then the point of my blade is at his throat. His eyes widen, crossing as they look down on the silver steel, then find their way along its length until he sees the smile on my face. I wait for him to beg for his life. He doesn’t let me down.
“Please, my lady.”
“Shariel.”
The name feels odd to my lips, as though it isn’t mine. Not so long ago, it wasn’t.
“I beg you, don’t kill me. I’ll do anything.”
I raise my eyebrow theatrically. “Anything?”
He nods frantically, like an enthusiastic child, but stops abruptly at the feel of the edge of my blade rubbing against his throat. It’s not enthusiasm that prompts his nod, it’s fear. I believe he really would do anything, though he’d never tell anyone he did. A thought crosses my mind, surprising at first, then comfortable, like a shirt well worn.
He’s young. Underneath the dirt and bravado, he’s not unattractive.
“Remove your clothes,” I tell him, a smile on my lips. He looks at me like I spoke a foreign language.
“My clothes?”
I nod and wait, the sword tip hovering an inch from the man-lump in his throat. He complies, removing his sword belt first, slowly, careful not to lean forward and pierce his windpipe. Next comes his armor, then his shirt and breeches. As his underclothes fall to the grass, my smile broadens. I’m glad for whatever suggested this action to me.
The act is familiar but uncomfortable, though it’s because of him, not because of the act itself. He’s nervous and afraid, clumsy. I make the best of it, coaxing as much out of him as I can. I’ve done this before, I know. Many times.
When I come to my end, he does, too. As my last satisfied gasp fades from my mouth, my lips find his and I take his breath. Then I break his heart.
I use his shirt to wipe his seed from between my legs and discard it on his naked corpse. Fat, lazy flies nearing the end of their lives in the autumn chill buzz around his companions as they grow stiff under the midday sun. A part of me feels reviled by what I’ve done, but whether it’s the killing or the fucking, I’m not sure. Truth is, most of me enjoyed both. They complement each other.
My clothes are back on my body, my sword belt at my waist when she appears. At first I think to hide like I’ve been caught doing something forbidden me, but I stand my ground. I’m no match for this woman, whoever she is, but I know she didn’t bring me back to be a coward.
“How did it feel?” she asks, and I wonder if she means the death or the sex before she continues. “How did it feel to kill your first man?”
I shrug and suppress the excited feeling in my stomach.
“He’s dead.”
The hole in the cowl laughs and I can’t help smiling.
“You have done well, Shariel, but this is only the beginning. Practice, if you will.” She moves closer, the tall grass making it seem like she floats over the ground. “There will be others. And the man Khirro will know you. He is dangerous.”
His name takes the smile from my lips. I tighten my belt one more notch and straighten the scabbard at my side.
“He will die.”
The black cowl moves, nodding, then the woman raises her arm, the sleeve falling away from a pale hand and painted fingertips. She points south.
“Go to Poltghasa,” she says. I recognize the name: the last Free City. The city of thieves and murderers. “That is where you will find him.”
I open my mouth to speak but she’s gone, disappeared as though never there.
“Poltghasa,” I say to the corpses around me. None of them offer comment.
I step over the body of my lover and head for the southern edge of the forest. A gust of wind swirls fallen leaves across my path, some of them the same color as the blood I wipe from my sword. I want to find them beautiful but can’t.
Not as long as the man called Khirro lives.
Chapter Eleven
The copper-sized circle of sky visible through the opening high above was barely distinguishable from the sides of the pit itself. Hours had passed. Khirro’s head hurt; he rubbed his temples, tentatively moved first one arm, then the other. When both worked, he did the same with his legs.
I’m lucky.
He pushed himself to a sitting position, wincing at the pain in his head. Other than the headache, he'd have a bruise on his hip, but nothing else hurt too badly; he seemed to have survived the fall relatively unscathed. That made twice now he’d taken major falls and survived. He hoped Athryn fared so well.
Athryn!
Khirro lurched to his feet, the sudden movement making his head spin and throb. He paused a moment to settle himself, then turned a tight circle, surveying the dimly lit pit. He saw nothing, so shuffled a wider arc, feet leaving divots in the pile of straw and moss that had cushioned his fall. Still no sign of his companion. He fell to his knees, looking for signs of the magician and what happened to him, where he had gone. His fingers grasped dry straw, sifted through loose dirt, but the lack of light made his search difficult as he scuffled around the thick layer set at the bottom of the pit.
This pit isn’t here by accident. But why? The only answer he could think of unsettled him: hunting.
His thoughts were interrupted when his hand found a wide path cut in the mossy pillow, like a track left when something was dragged away. He followed it a few feet until his hand touched a wet and tacky spot of dirt that stuck to the palm of his hand.
Blood.
Khirro held his breath and reached for the Mourning Sword, but his fingers found an empty scabbard. His mind searched back through what had happened; he recalled having the sword in his hand when he plummeted into the pit. He must have dropped it during the fall.