“I was far away from that battle,” I said.
“And now you are far from Jador again.”
He looked inquisitive, too polite to ask directly what was on his mind.
“We go east,” I told him. I turned to Cricket. “It’s all right. Show yourself.”
She pulled back her hood, shaking out her brown hair to the astonishment of the Ganjeese. Sariyah’s mouth fell open, but he closed it quickly, inclining his head. His sons just stared.
“We go east, too,” said Sariyah. “To Zura for spices.”
“Our business is in Akyre,” I replied.
Sariyah hid his surprise poorly but said, “We have bread to share and good drink from Ganjor. And I have heard you are talented at killing rass, Bronze Knight. We can ride together as far as Arad. Is it a bargain?”
Cricket glanced a warning at me, but Sariyah was right-it was too hot for games.
“We welcome the company,” I told Sariyah. In Ganjeese, I said, “Our water is yours.”
* * *
We ate and drank with Sariyah and his sons, spending the hottest part of the day beneath a tent while trading stories about the desert. Sariyah was good at telling stories. Cricket and I both relaxed quickly around him. He told us about sleeping in the sand with scorpions and how to pit stone fruit with your teeth and how the stars and moon follow him when he rides at night but not the others with him. He told us about Ganjor and about the wife and daughters waiting for him there, and how his spice business had grown, so that now he and his family had everything they needed. And like a true man of the desert, he asked few questions, careful to walk the thin line between his code and curiosity.
I learned quickly that Sariyah wasn’t a man to be feared, though he did look fearsome to me. He kept his scimitar as close to him as I kept my sword, and he was at least as tall as me and probably twice as heavy. They talk in the desert about men who are lions, and Sariyah was surely one of them. His voice was a quiet roar, his manners commanding. His sons didn’t just respect him but, rather, did his bidding with something like reverence. Even Cricket warmed to him, laughing at his tales. In Ganjor a girl her age had almost no rights at all, and yet Sariyah and his sons treated her with respect.
I didn’t want our time beneath the tent to end, but the day was still young and we had many miles left to go.
* * *
We rode into the desert night, refreshed by the cool air and the brightest moon I’d ever seen.
“You see?” Sariyah laughed as it he pointed at the sky. “It follows me!”
We all followed Sariyah, even me, riding beside him at the front of our arrowhead. Cricket rode a few paces back, while Sariyah’s youngest son, Asadel, eyed her the way boys that age naturally do. Cricket blushed at the attention but not enough to say she minded it, and that’s when I realized I didn’t have a girl with me, but a young woman. Sariyah glanced at them, then leaned over and spoke to me softly.
“I have three daughters,” he whispered. “Never would I bring one to the Bitter Kingdoms.”
“Three daughters and three sons? You’re quite a man, Sariyah,” I joked.
Sariyah grinned. “My wife likes to be busy,” he said. But I had my opening and took it.
“What can you tell me about the Bitter Kingdoms?” I asked. “I’ve never been to that part of the world. I only know what I hear.”
“Then you should know it’s not a place to take a girl. The kings there are lawless. They do nothing but fight and kill. I would not be going myself if there was a better way to Zura.” Sariyah looked down at his big knuckles. “I wonder if this trip will be my last.”
“If it’s so dangerous why are you going?”
“Because that’s where the spices are, Lukien. Your world lives on spices! They are like gold. Many men get rich sending spices to the continent. If Vala wills it, I will be one of them.” Sariyah’s smile filled his face. “My sons have families to feed. We are together in this. One day we will be rich. Like Anton Fallon.”
“Fallon? I know that name.” I thought about it a moment, sure I’d heard of him once in Norvor. “A spice trader, right?”
“He is the prince of spices,” said Sariyah. “Anton Fallon is the most powerful man in the Bitter Kingdoms. And not a drop of royal blood! They say he has a palace as big as a sea. The most beautiful women in the world serve him.” He wagged a finger in the air. “Spices, Lukien.”
“And you want to be like that? Wealthy?”
“I will be like that,” Sariyah declared. “Anton Fallon is just a man like me. Two hands and a brain is all any man needs. If he has the will of Vala.”
I tried to smile, but to me Vala was a superstition, just like the Fate I’d grown up with in Liiria.
“Lukien, ride with me,” said Sariyah. He urged his drowa on more quickly, breaking away from the rest of us. I looked back at Cricket, who looked puzzled.
“It’s just to talk,” I assured her, spurring my horse to catch up with Sariyah. Sariyah did not speak until he was sure no one could hear us.
“Don’t go to Akyre, Lukien,” he said. “Nothing good there. Only trouble. I cannot speak these things in front of the girl.” His voice dropped lower. “There is death magic in Akyre.”
Now that was a phrase I’d never heard before. I sidled closer to him. “Tell me.”
“Do they talk about Diriel in Jador?”
I shook my head.
“Diriel is King in Akyre. Calls himself Emperor now, of all the Bitter Kingdoms. An army of dead men serve him. Men without souls.”
“Dead men?” I must have grinned, because Sariyah looked annoyed. “You’ve seen them?” I asked.
“No. And Vala willing I will not. I will ride straight to Zura with my sons, far from Akyre. You must do the same, Lukien. Whatever you seek in Akyre cannot be so important.”
“It’s more important than wealth, Sariyah, and yet you’ll risk yourself for that.”
“You do not believe me?” asked Sariyah. “Men I trust have told me this, Lukien. Diriel commands death itself. His army without souls marches.”
I was glad Cricket couldn’t hear us. “Sariyah,” I said, “I’m not going to turn around because of some stories. You say you’ve heard about me. If so, you know what I can do. If there’s trouble in Akyre, I can handle it.”
Sariyah looked down at my sword. “It is enchanted?”
“It has. . power.”
“A spirit?”
I nodded. “An Akari. An ancient being, like a ghost.”
Sariyah frowned. “Like death.”
I thought about that a moment. Then I thought about that picture Malator drew in the sand. Death was following me, and I didn’t know why.
Or maybe I was riding toward it.
“I’m not a superstitious man, Sariyah,” I said. “I’ve seen a lot of things that make little sense. If you tell me there’s an army of dead people waiting for me in Akyre, I believe you. One thing, though-maybe someone should warn them about what’s coming, too.”
7
Sariyah described Arad a day before we arrived. When I finally saw the city for myself, I realized he had lied by calling it a ‘cesspit.’ Like most desert people, Sariyah was too polite.
There are places in the world where laws are meaningless and human life holds no regard. I had seen those kinds of places in Norvor, a fractured country where I’d spent far too much of my life, and as I rode into Arad I smelled that same stink of debauchery. Arad, a city just beyond the borders of both the continent and the desert, was how the Bitter Kingdoms greeted new comers, where all the effluence of those places sloshed together in a pool of human vices. We were no more than a minute past the city outskirts when I saw the crowded slave market.
“Cricket,” I said, trying to get her attention, but it was too late. She gaped at the men and women on the rickety stage, surrounded by onlookers. A naked woman stood before the crowd, sucking the finger of a prospective buyer as he roughly checked her teeth. Men from the continent and men from the desert leered at the woman, their pockets bulging with money.