“Yes,” Dhairr said, but the familiar conviction did not come. Perhaps it was because he again faced his own mortality.
When he had first known her, nothing about Alytia seemed to matter—not her magic, her defiance, or even her association with the great meddlers of Faerûn. He’d hardly cared about anything save her beauty, her breath feathering his chest in the night, and the child they conceived after a year of such blissful ignorance.
While his son lay wailing in his crib, assassins laid open Dhairr’s throat and left him bleeding on the floor of his bedchamber. He’d survived, but his eyes had been brutally opened.
He never learned the identities of the assassins, never knew for certain whether it was hatred of his wife’s magic or her dangerous alliances that drove them, but he had taken no chances.
“Leave one alive,” Dhairr said, turning his attention back to Balram, “to question.”
“I will tell Meraik—”
“No.” Dhairr cut him off. “I’ll tell them myself. I’m going down.”
“Is that wise?”
The lord of Morel house smiled grimly, but his face possessed a gray tinge, a wasted look enhanced by the scar at his throat. “I tire of waiting.”
Balram half-bowed as Dhairr swept from the room. He watched through the windows as his lord crossed the garden, heading for the broad arcade that fringed the outer wall.
Stationed along the courtyard and beyond were the house guards, most handpicked and trained by Balram. They nodded respectfully as their lord passed.
The guard captain raised an open palm, surprised at the sweat he felt beneath his leather glove. The slight tremble to his fingers was even more distressing, but he dismissed it as heightened awareness, anticipation of the battle to come.
“You make for a fascinating study, Kortrun. Were you not, I believe I would have abandoned you and your little project long ago.”
Balram did not turn at the voice. Soril Angildaen—Daen to those who knew him as a killer—would remain in his presence as long as Daen saw fit, whether Balram acknowledged the man or not.
“Lord Morel prefers soft wine to stronger drink, as the latter leaves his senses dull,” Daen continued, unaffected by his companion’s silence. He strolled into the room, his fur-capped boots making no sound as he moved to stand next to Balram. “Chessenta’s finest fruit-white, as I recall you saying. I believe he keeps several bottles locked beneath an insultingly simple false bottom in this chest.” He tapped the box sitting behind Morel’s desk with his heel. “You might have shared a bottle, just now.”
“We might have,” Balram agreed, “and have, many times in the past.”
“A noteworthy indication of friendship from Lord Morel, a man who, for the whole of twelve years, has demanded his food tasted for him, and scouts every door for a dagger point. Yet he drinks, uncaring, with you.”
“He trusts me.”
“Without question. Enlighten me, then; why is your esteemed lord and friend not dead?”
“He will be, very soon,” Balram assured him.
Daen crossed his arms over a barrel stomach. Balram had no idea how the rogue managed to move so silently while lugging such a gut. He wore a yards-long, gray silk vest tucked snugly into a sash of the same color embroidered in silver threads. His shirt lay open at the neck, exposing pale hairs and a square-cut onyx gem clasped in a silver claw. Balram often wondered if the necklace didn’t contain some form of magic. Unlike the rest of Amn, the Shadow Thieves were not known to shy from employing wizards.
“You could have slain him painlessly just then—a quick poison, a mark of mercy. Easier still, you could leave him alive—take his men and join us now, your conscience unfettered by the murder of a friend. Yet you plan this assassination in the same bloody manner as almost caused your friend’s downfall twelve years ago. I applaud the irony and your enthusiasm, of course, but you risk much.”
With much to gain, thought Balram. Like Morel, he had used his years wisely. “The men I have trained, the men who, if this attempt succeeds, will be assets to your organization,” he added pointedly, “have not been tested.”
“Ah, unfortunate,” Daen agreed. “Men loyal to Balram but not yet weaned from Morel’s purse. You have no idea if they will actually be able to betray the man who feeds and shelters them. Which brings up a point close to my heart,” he added, as if the thought had only just occurred to him, “and those of my colleagues. How will you be able to survive without Morel’s considerable income, should you succeed? The gem road connects his doorstep to Keczulla, and his fortunes look only to increase with the growth of that city. Forgive me, but financially, the jewel-lord of Esmeltaran is a more favorable prospect for the Shadow Thieves than the mercenary, Balram Kortrun.”
“I have served Morel a decade this winter. I am not without assets.”
“Oh, splendid,” Daen chortled. “You have been hoarding the pearls, so to speak. No doubt Morel was willing to pay his guard captain a satisfactory price to keep his family and fortune safe from assassins.”
A larger price than Daen would ever conceive, Balram agreed silently. Twelve years of looking over his shoulder had wrought more taints in Dhairr than just paranoia, but that condition had helped Balram’s cause the most. Morel had been more than willing to offer his captain the coin and latitude to do as he desired.
More than willing to open his home to a coinless mercenary and his starving son.
The trembling sensation returned to his hands. Balram fisted one on the naked blade of his sword until he felt flesh give. Like the severing of a wire, the tension inside him eased.
You have outgrown Lord Morel, he reminded himself. The Shadow Thieves could offer him more than a life of servitude. They would take him and Aazen into their protection, allowing Balram to expand on the foundation he’d built. In quieter days, he would allow himself to regret killing Morel and his son, even to grieve for them—but not now. Now, he could afford no feeling, no compassion, for the Shadow Thieves—despite Daen’s jovial bluster—permitted neither.
If the plan failed … no, it would not, not as long as secrecy prevailed. He had warned Dhairr to avoid drawing suspicion, but even on his guard, Morel could not stand against so many. His men would use all caution.
From the window, he had a clear view of the west tower of the estate, its aviary alive with the cries of hawks and other raptors. A guard stepped into view at one of the arched openings. Balram raised a hand.
The guard caught the gesture and slipped into the shadows of the tower. A breath passed, and the bird cries intensified. When the guard re-emerged, his sword lay bare in his hand, and his face was covered by a dark hood that obscured all but his eyes. In his other hand, he held a flaming scrap of cloth stuffed into a green glass bottle.
Without hesitating, the guard threw the concoction of fire down into the central courtyard, where it smashed against a lattice of wood and climbing roses.
Shouts and smoke immediately filled the courtyard. Balram stepped away from the window. He slid his uninjured hand inside a carefully sewn pocket at the breast of his tunic. His fingers closed around a hard, circular object that seemed to pulse under leather and flesh.
All caution. He repeated the mantra. And if that wasn’t enough, well, Daen wasn’t the only one who possessed magic.
Chapter Two
Kall couldn’t think. He looked desperately to the shore, at Dencer nocking another arrow to his longbow. The other figures were on the move, covering their faces with some sort of hood, fading back into the trees in the direction of his father’s estate. Kall could see the tips of its two domed towers in the distance.