CHAPTER FIFTEEN

My clothes weren’t made for those nights. The still air was cold and the bitterness of it seeped into my bones. Under the feet of the shleths, the sands were hard with ice; ahead the last of the Rakes clawed at a purple sky pricked through with stars, stars as bright as sparkles of sunlight on the sea. The Shiver Barrens: a land that burned with vicious heat by day, and stole the warmth from our bodies by night, a land that killed so easily, yet possessed a beguiling beauty destined to linger on in memory.

A land frightening in its mysteries.

My head pounded. Yesterday’s strangeness had been real; I had the sword to prove it. And those visions, they must have been real too. I had walked under these killer sands, and lived. Something nonhuman had spoken to me. Something had shown me a vision of unspeakable brutality. And something had told me that thing I didn’t want to think about.

I felt sick. Confused. Afraid.

And then those memories Brand had coaxed out of me with his taunting words…Had he any idea of what he had done to me? He had scoured my life of its illusions. What did I have now to replace the mockery of destroyed childhood dreams? The love of a slave, perhaps? I thought not. Or the love of an enemy, a man destined to marry another? Hardly that either. No, all I had in that empty space was the blight left behind by the deepest of betrayals.

I shivered.

‘Are you cold?’ Temellin asked.

We were walking our mounts, because apparently this last band of the sands was narrow, and there was no need to hurry. Garis and Brand were ahead of us, leading the pack shleth, and having their own conversation. By the sound of it, Garis was being amusing.

‘Cold? Yes, a little.’ In the vast emptiness of that landscape, my voice seemed frail, the whimper of a worm before the might of a god.

He fumbled in one of his saddlebags, and tossed me a blanket woven of shleth wool. ‘Put this around you.’

I smiled my thanks, draped it over my shoulders and asked the first thing that popped into my head. Anything to stop thinking about what had happened the day before. Anything to be Ligea Gayed again.

‘Is slavery the only reason you fight Tyr?’ I asked.

I had previously avoided talking about Kardi politics. I had been wary of doing anything out of keeping with the personality of a woman brought up as a slave, but the time for that kind of caution was over. I hoped that by now Temellin trusted me, and I needed to know a lot more than I did. A lot more than what I could find out from observation and judicious eavesdropping.

‘Why do you ask?’ Temellin countered.

‘You risk so much,’ I said, choosing my words with care. ‘All of you. Have you any idea what can happen to you?’

He shrugged, apparently indifferent.

‘I don’t think you really understand,’ I told him, and the urgency I felt was genuine. ‘Listen, let me tell you about a place called Crestos. General Gayed’s brother was the Governor there for some years, and the Gayed family used to holiday there. It’s a large island in the Sea of Iss. The Crestians rebelled against Tyranian rule, oh, about ten years ago. They drove the legions out, slaughtered every Tyranian they could find on the island. They were left alone for a year or two, but the Exaltarch was just planning his revenge. He built a new fleet, landed legionnaires on every beach of Crestos, and killed every man between the ages of twelve and sixty. Then he repopulated the place with Tyranian soldiers who were retiring from military life. They were granted land or town properties. The only catch was that they weren’t allowed to take any women with them. So you can imagine what happened. Every child born on Crestos thereafter was half-Tyranian.’

He nodded, his emotions sober. ‘I’ve heard the story.’

‘I was on Crestos once, with the Gayed family, when I was about thirteen, before all this happened. I remember a peaceful, prosperous nation with a thriving commercial centre and port, a fine theatre and some of the best sculptors in the Exaltarchy. They had a good life then. They ended up with nothing. Not even their bloodlines. Was it worth it, Tem? Is what you do here worth the risk?’ To add a little verisimilitude to my anxiety, I added, ‘I don’t want to see you dead.’

He grinned at me. ‘I hope you won’t.’

‘Then maybe you could negotiate. Have the Magor swear allegiance to the Exaltarch in exchange for making Kardiastan slave-free. Kardi slaves are not popular in Tyr, I do know that. It would be no great loss to the Exaltarchy, and they would save on the number of legionnaires they have to have quartered here.’

He raised an eyebrow. ‘Is that your idea, or the Legata’s?’

‘I believe she was going to mention something along those lines to the Governor. She could arrange it.’ Perhaps.

‘You don’t understand,’ he said. ‘How could you? You weren’t brought up here! This is our land, Derya. Ours! It doesn’t belong to Bator Korbus and his legions. It is our right to govern ourselves. To be free. To decide what sort of buildings to have, what sort of law, what sort of punishment for wrongdoers. To decide how to educate our children, and what language they should learn.’

I tightened my hold on the blanket over my shoulders, trying to keep out the cold. ‘But hasn’t Tyrans brought you many advantages? The Tyranian road system, for example.’

‘Built with the blood and sweat of Kardi slaves.’

‘The theatres. The stadia. The games. The schools. The baths. The libraries. I’ve seen all these things in Sandmurram and Madrinya. There would be more, if there was peace here.’ I heard a hint of desperation in my voice, and wondered at myself.

‘All built with slave labour, on the Tyranian model. The theatres perform works that have nothing to do with us, in a language which is not our own, playing music that is not ours. The games encourage a competitive culture foreign to us. The schools would teach our children to be Tyranian, if they could. They certainly try. Bathing naked in public and lying about afterwards being pandered to by a bevy of slaves—or even servants—is not our custom. And the libraries don’t contain works written by us. In fact, if any book or scroll written in Kardi is ever found, it is destroyed. We have lost our literature by the promulgation of Tyranian law, Derya. So much has been taken from us—can’t you understand that? Because if you can’t, then you ought to return to Tyrans. All we want is to be left alone to rule ourselves. To be equal to Tyrans, not subjugated to it. Why is that too much to ask?’

‘And yet, from what Garis and others have told me, the ordinary Kardi never did rule. Ruling was the prerogative of the Magor.’ That’s right, Ligea. Slide the knife in, right where it hurts.

He was silent for a moment. I glanced across at him, and he was staring straight ahead, his face grim. He didn’t like the implied criticism. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘That’s correct. And I’m not going to apologise for it. We at least are Kardi. We speak the same language, and live by the same code. We have special abilities that make us eminently suited to rule. And we ourselves are governed by laws of service to all.’

‘That last is exactly what Legata Ligea would say about the Tyranian authorities.’

He almost spat his contempt. ‘Can you really believe we have anything in common with their methods of governance and commerce? You’ve lived in Tyr! You’ve seen what happens there, surely.’

‘Yes,’ I said. ‘And I know what slavery is.’

He was instantly contrite. ‘Ah, by the Mirage, I’m sorry. Of course you do. Better by far than I.’ He looked at me then, and smiled his apology. ‘You are right to question, for only by questioning can we learn. You have come far for someone who was brought up a slave.’

Something unpleasant crawled across my skin to nibble at my soul. My own lies, perhaps, so cleverly worded to be sure he wouldn’t sense the falsehoods. I said, ‘Don’t think of me as someone who emptied the chamberpots or scrubbed the dishpans. Ligea took her slave with her everywhere—to school as a child, and then later to the theatre and the debates and the poetry evenings. Her slave learned along with her.’ True enough, although the slave had been Brand. I hoped Temellin would believe it of Derya.

He stopped and stared at me. Almost immediately, the ice beneath his mount began to melt, and the sands stirred. I halted alongside, wondering just what part of my statement had put that peculiar expression on his face. ‘I’ve been a fool,’ he said quietly. ‘You have been her companion all your remembered life. You love her, don’t you? She is as an older sister to you. You don’t want to betray her.’

‘Slaves don’t find it so hard to betray their owners,’ I said woodenly. My mount shuffled uneasily as sand grains bubbled around its feet.

‘Nonetheless. If you had to choose between the two of us, Ligea or me, who would it be?’

‘I already have chosen.’

‘No. You chose between freedom and slavery.’

‘I would not willingly see anything happen to Ligea. But then—I wouldn’t want anything to happen to you, either.’ And that was true enough. Derya had vanquished Ligea in that particular battle.

He nodded, accepting I could go no further than that, and we continued on.