“Shot through the gut.” The assassin grimaced. “Took me… a long while to get here. The Knife wanted to come to you.”
“My knife?” But the dagger Eyul drew was of dull metal with a twisted, bloodstained hilt. Sarmin pulled back from it.
“Can… you hear them…? Pelar and Asham-?” Eyul wobbled against the bedpost. He took Sarmin’s right hand and pressed the ugly weapon into his palm. “No damnation,” he whispered.
In the instant of that first touch Sarmin felt the blood throb in his veins, in the palace, in the ways, the yards, the Maze, all the spilled blood pulsing to his design, ready to flow in new patterns. He felt the wrongness and the rightness of it, like impossible decisions: kill the one for the many, the many for the one.
Sarmin pushed back his covers and stood, the knife in his hand. “There was a time I’d have relished this moment. I’d have slit your throat and still not felt the debt repaid. But you didn’t take my brothers from me-neither did my father, not really. You are the emperor’s Knife, the sharp edge of his decisions. And the emperor is the empire, the voice of its will…’
Eyul’s head lolled, his attention turned inwards, to his blood and pain.
Sarmin frowned. “Lie back. You’re hurt.” He examined Eyul’s wound. “I have no skill in medicine. I can take things apart… making is harder, mending more so, I imagine.” Sarmin took Eyul’s hand and settled beside him. “I would call Govnan if I could. He might be able to help.” The assassin looked old, older even than when he had woken Sarmin just moments before. Age wrinkled around his eyes; a thin string of drool crept from the corner of his mouth. Sarmin held his hand. It’s not good to be alone. He spoke in a quiet voice, like the old mothers to small children. “It was the empire, you see, the empire that protects us all. There must be sacrifices. On the Settu board you cannot make the Push without losing pieces. The Pattern Master understands this. I understand it now.”
Eyul raised his head and smiled. “The Knife,” he said.
“Yes, I have it.”
“No damnation… but I am sorry, nonetheless.” Sarmin felt sure the man was dying. “Grada!”
He found her in her travels, sand between her toes, sun hot on her back. “My Prince.”
“There is a man dying here. What should I do?”
She showed him images: her father, her sister, her neighbour. Life in the Maze was fleeting and desperate. If hunger or disease didn’t catch you, then likely the violence would. She had sat by many deathbeds, helped dig a dozen holes. He cried for her.
“Hold his hand,” she said, “speak of Mirra.”
“I would have taken her fishing.” Eyul spoke in whispers, his eyes fixed on the ceiling gods, not seeing.
Sarmin pulled him close.
“It’s not right-” Eyul’s words came with his breath, “-the things they make us do.”
And they sat together and Sarmin held the assassin as he once held his brother, and spoke of Mirra.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Mesema dreamed of riding Tumble. She crashed through the tall wheat and took the sharp turns by the riverbed that only her father’s best Riders would attempt. She galloped back up the hill and jumped the sheep fence, scaring the animals and the Red Hoof thralls in the pen. She raced along the mountain road, avoiding the mud and waterfalls of spring, until she had a view of the plains stretching beyond her father’s lands and into the realms of the traders-who-walked.
The wind blew, raising dust from twenty thousand horses and fifty thousand feet. She saw Windreader, Black Horse, Blue River, Flat Earth, even Red Hoof ribbons raised aloft on spears. The Cerani marched beside them, breastplates bright in the sun, their lines straight, their shoulders proud. The enemy poured down to meet them from the eastern mountains, descending on strange shaggy mounts, so many that she couldn’t see the stone beneath their feet. The enemy’s cloaks made a pattern of shifting colours and light, unmistakable once recognised, not the Pattern Master’s design, but threatening nonetheless. It spread over the grass and reached beneath the feet of her father’s men. Mesema tried to shout a warning, but her mouth would not open.
“Mesema.” Someone shook her shoulder. “Mesema, dawn approaches.”
“I’m awake,” she said, sitting up and opening her eyes. Her voice sounded loud, and she realised Beyon had been whispering.
“You had a bad dream.” He fiddled with a bundle under his arm. “I got blankets and food.”
“You shouldn’t have gone. It’s dangerous.”
“It’s dangerous to stay here. In fact, I was thinking we should hide in the tomb until nightfall.”
“We are in the tomb.”
He motioned behind him. “I meant in the tomb. It has airholes-we can close the lid. That way if anyone comes in here they won’t see us.”
Mesema looked with horror at the sarcophagus. The lid had been turned diagonally to its base, as if someone had put something inside it, or taken something out. “I think we should go back to the ways, find Sarmin.”
“At nightfall.” He paused. “The ways are full of Carriers.”
“They didn’t catch you.”
“I know. I can hear them.”
“How long have you been able to hear them?”
He bit his lip. “For a few hours.”
Mesema looked again at Beyon’s tomb. She wondered if Carrier voices could influence him, compel him, without his knowing. She shook her head. “How does it make a difference if we find Sarmin by day or by night? We should go now.”
“I’m tired,” he said, and she wondered if he meant something beyond sleep. “I need to rest.”
Mesema wanted Sarmin more than anything in that moment, his soft voice, his kind face. The way he could look at something difficult and give it a name, change it. Mesema glanced at Beyon. She knew he was different from the night before, but she couldn’t say how. “All right, we’ll rest. And then, if the coast is clear, we’ll go straight to Sarmin.”
“Good. I’ll lift you over.” But when Beyon hoisted her above the rim of the gold-and-silver-filigreed tomb, the feeling of wrongness overcame her once again. The silk wrappings meant for his corpse already waited in place. A ceremonial sword made of gold rested on its side, along with an elaborate crown. Beyon would never wear such a crown or such a sword. A strong resin smell rose from it all, a smell of storage chests and funerals.
“No! It’s not right-put me down. Put me down!” Fright overwhelmed her caution.
“Shhh.” He pushed her over the edge and began his own climb.
She knelt among the rich silks of his shroud. “Listen. I don’t like it. I really don’t like it.” Something terrible is going to happen.
He settled beside her and rolled open his bundle. “You’ve always been so brave-I can’t believe you’re screaming about a tomb.” Between the rough material of his stolen blankets Beyon had hidden bread, cheese, dried meats and fruits, and even a skin full of liquid.
Mesema stared at the feast. “I’m very hungry.”
“Then eat.” He turned his attention to the lid, pushing it in line with the tomb, closing them in.
She could see the weight of it written in the straining of his muscles. She didn’t think she could open it alone. She swallowed, and tried to stop her heart from beating so quickly. The stitches, do the stitches. She embroidered a garden of flowers in her mind, lily, rose, and thorn. The lid settled into place, and the filigree dappled the morning light, putting Beyon’s face half in shadow. His marks looked darker of a sudden.
“I thought you were going to eat.” Beyon’s eyes flashed towards her.
“I am, I just…” A puff of air escaped her mouth.
Beyon cocked his head, as if listening to something she couldn’t hear.
Mesema put a date in her mouth and pressed it with her tongue.
“Mesema.” He touched her cheek. “Do not be frightened.”
“I’m trying.”