Chapter 9

 

 

Innowen could smell the tension as Taelyn's force at last rode through the city's main gate and into Parendur. He leaned back against Razkili and flicked away a bead of sweat that threatened to sting his right eye. Rascal's arms tightened around him, and they swayed together in rhythm to the horse's stride.

Throngs of Isporans lined the streets, eager for a glimpse of their liberators. Their cheers swelled through the city. Men hurried forward with buckets of water and ladles, offering drink to the victorious soldiers. Others pushed closer to touch them, to run one hand quickly along a leg or foot, before vanishing with a small gasp back into the crowd.

Innowen felt nothing when they brushed his limbs, but he was still grateful to be on a horse. The height and the size of the animal gave him some safety from the human mass. He pitied the poor footmen when they entered the gate.

Though the crowd roared its gratitude, Taelyn's men kept almost silent. Not even the people's jubilance and the spontaneous celebrations that filled every alley and street corner along their course dulled the collective edge of the army's smoldering anger. Beside Innowen and Razkili, Taelyn sat rigidly on his mount, his face a grim mask. He stared straight ahead, not seeming to blink at all, oblivious to the citizens and all their noise.

Once before, Innowen had seen the palace at Parendur. His heart quickened as he approached it now. In all his travels, he had seen only a few structures to match its grandeur. It stood two stories high. Banks of columns painted red and white supported its porches and parapets. It was not fortified, but sat atop a central hill whose summit had been leveled by the great labor of slaves and workmen. The rest of the city sprawled below it.

As they reached the road that led upward toward the palace, a squad of soldiers from Kyrin's First Army pushed the crowd back. A mounted captain of the guard blocked their way. Taelyn drew back on his reins and raised one hand to signal for his own men to halt.

The captain saluted politely. "Welcome, Commander. The people hail you as the savior of Parendur." He smiled and indicated the throng that tried to press closer. "Kyrin sends you greetings and awaits you in his personal megaron. The rest of your men may quarter with the garrison. We'll feed them well and see to your wounded. You have the gratitude of the entire city."

"To the hells with your gratitude and with Kyrin's greeting," Taelyn snarled. "Who gave the order to keep the gates sealed last night? Or to keep us outside until dawn? Some of my wounded men died because they couldn't get the attention they needed."

The captain looked stunned, then averted his eyes.

"Don't bother to answer," Taelyn told him. "I don't blame the garrison, soldier. I know where the order came from." He turned to one of his own officers, the man who had found Innowen on the battlefield. "See that my men are cared for. The wounded first; they get first food and the best beds, you understand me?" The man nodded. Taelyn looked back at the garrison captain and gestured toward Innowen. "This is the son of Minarik, and the other is his companion. They come with me. I know Minarik is here. It's him I'll see first. Tell Kyrin he can wait until he shits an emerald. I'll not see him." He beckoned to Innowen and Razkili, and they rode up the hill past the shame-faced captain.

At the top, they passed another escort of honor guards who raised their spears in salute and fell in behind the three. They kept a strained silence, though, and wore a kind of beaten expression. "I think they wanted to fight," Innowen whispered to Razkili. "Kyrin must have held them back."

But Razkili's attention was on the palace. The look on his face was rapt. "It outshines anything in Osirit," he said quietly. "Even the palace at Taruisa is not so fine."

"The first time I saw it, I cried," Innowen confessed. "When I lived in my cottage in the woods, Shandisti seemed like a wondrous place to me. I had no concept of Ispor's greatness. Not even Whisperstone, as awesome a place as it is, prepared me for this."

At the beginning of a long, cobbled walkway, they dismounted. Razkili eased Innowen down and cradled him in his arms.

The captain of the escort stepped up. "Sir, if he's wounded, we can care for him." He beckoned two of his men forward.

"Get away," Razkili said, scowling as they reached for Innowen. "I take care of him. No one else."

"Do as he says," Taelyn ordered before the captain could protest. "Don't touch the boy."

Innowen frowned at that word but said nothing. He rested one arm around Razkili's shoulder as the two soldiers instead took their reins and led the horses away.

Taelyn beckoned for them to follow him, and they started down a path, flanked on either side by rows of tall fluted columns of painted stone, which led into the central courtyard. Smaller pedestals with bowl-shaped depressions in their tops stood between each pair of columns. From these came the smell of fresh oil.

The walls of the palace rose around them. At the far end of the courtyard, on the upper terrace, a pair of ladies stared briefly their way, then averted their faces and vanished quietly inside.

In the northwestern corner, a team of sweat-gleaming slaves worked with hoes and spades and buckets of water at the bases of a pair of lemon trees. Innowen watched them over his shoulder as Razkili carried him, then he glanced around at the rest of the courtyard. The drought had done damage even here. The green eucalyptus bushes were edged with brown and yellow. Most of the flowers were shriveled little weeds. The fruit trees bore small infertile nuggets of pulp that would never reach ripeness.

Only an odd kind of faded beauty remained. The air smelled of sweet herbs and citrus, but Innowen realized that was because pots of incense had been placed among the branches nearest the walkway. Wind chimes played a tinkling funereal music over the dying garden. The white cobbles and the sparkling sandstone terraces, the occasional marble benches, all made a powerful contrast to the parched and struggling greenery.

"I wish you could see this in bloom," Innowen said with soft regret close to his friend's ear. "On my first visit, this became my favorite place."

Razkili shifted Innowen in his arms as he nodded somberly.

The entrance walkway from the garden into the palace was also colonnaded. It took a moment for Innowen's eyes to adjust as they passed from the hot sunlight into the palace. It was very close and warm, and only a little of the outside brightness filtered through narrow slits in the upper walls.

"I've never seen such floors!" Razkili muttered suddenly in amazement.

Colored pebbles made mosaic patterns upon the walkways, all of oceanic motifs. Elaborate sea-flowers and sea-weeds swirled, entwined in one another. Impressionistic fish nibbled at the leaves and petals, swam and played among clams and coral, blew little streams of bubbles. Even in the dim light, the artistry revealed itself.

"It's meant to remind us of another time in our history," Innowen whispered. "The stones were carried from the shores of the Tasmian Sea and through the Akrotir mountains on foot. Ispor was a great sailing power until Wendur, our first capitol, was sacked and destroyed by raiders. That was over a century ago and on the other side of the mountains. Each of those pebbles was hand-painted. Except for private chambers, there isn't a plain floor in the palace. Even the public spaces have floors just as grand as this."

The room they had entered was immense. Huge sealed pithoi jars, taller than any man, lined the walls. Many of the ground level rooms in the palace were used for storage and contained such vessels, which were far too heavy to convey either upstairs or to basement levels. Razkili had never seen their like.

"Olive oil," Taelyn said absently, answering Razkili's unspoken question as he led the way toward a staircase on the room's farthest side. "The jars are full of it. It's a major export for Parendur, that and wine. The banks of the mountains are loaded with olive trees and vineyards. Or were, before this damned drought."

Before they could mount the staircase, a host of servants appeared at the top. Through their ranks stepped another man dressed in fine robes, his perfect black beard oiled and braided, eyes darkly kohled. He raised a hand, the smallest gesture of a wave, and the soldiers who had escorted them inside turned wordlessly and departed.

"Welcome, Taelyn," the man said as he descended one more step and stopped. "It seems you've won a great victory. Kyrin is waiting to congratulate you in his megaron."

There was no courtesy in Taelyn's response. "Get out of my way, Riloosa. It's Minarik I report to, and I can find his chambers without your guidance, so crawl back into your hole." He started up the stairs.

Riloosa blocked his way. "Kyrin is waiting," he repeated. It was a poorly concealed threat. "He's not in a very good mood."

Taelyn reached up, caught the front of Riloosa's robe, and pulled him down another step. At the same time, he ascended a step. They had exchanged places. Taelyn looked down on Riloosa and sneered. "I don't give a gods damn about his mood. My men waited outside the city gates for hours until the sun came up, and some of them bled their lives needlessly into the dirt while you were safe and comfortable in here." His gaze flickered past Riloosa for a moment and settled on Innowen. "So let Kyrin do the waiting now. I'll see him after the sun goes down, or when Minarik orders me to see him. Not before."

Riloosa glowered. His fingers curled around the hand Taelyn still had clutched in his robe. He made a subtle, but visible, effort to free himself and failed, his strength the lesser of the two men. "If you want to keep that hand, release me!" His voice was a controlled whisper full of menace. "I have friends with sharp knives who value my honor and well-being!"

Innowen caught his breath. Stony-faced, Taelyn forced Riloosa to the very edge of the staircase and bent him backward. It wasn't a high drop if he pushed him, but the suddenness of the move surprised everyone, especially Riloosa. His eyes snapped wide, and he flailed his arms to catch his balance.

Taelyn pulled him back to safety. "Life is very delicate, Counselor," he said, smoothing the wrinkle his grip had made in Riloosa's fine garment. "One moment you have it, then you don't. It's that way for all of us." His hand descended on Riloosa's shoulder, and he dug ever so slightly into the soft place under the collar bone with his thumb until Riloosa winced. "All of us," he emphasized. "Even serpents like you."

Riloosa glared at all three of them before he turned and strode up the stairs. Innowen watched him go, knowing with certainty he had made an enemy without saying a word. Rascal's arms tightened protectively about him. His friend knew it, too.

"Who is he?" he questioned Taelyn softly so the servants at the top of the stair couldn't hear.

"The ass end of a snake," came the answer. "Or Kyrin's advisor, whichever is lower." He shouted up to the servants. "This is Minarik's son. Prepare rooms for him near his father's quarters, and see that he and his companion are treated well."

The servants scurried away. He turned back to Innowen and Razkili as they climbed the stairs. "I'll be staying with my soldiers at the garrison after I've talked with Minarik." They started down a long corridor and entered the western wing of the palace. "But listen to me. Watch your backs around here." He looked directly at Innowen. "You wanted to be Razkili's spear-mate on the field. Well, it'll be twice the job here. Out there you knew the enemy. Here?" He shook his head. "This is not the same Parendur you visited five years ago."

"Why should it be?" Innowen agreed. "It's not the same Ispor."

"The deadliest spider weaves a beautiful web," Razkili muttered.

Innowen pinched his friend's cheek and grinned. "Osiri philosophy," he explained to Taelyn. "He's full of it."

"That wasn't Osiri," Taelyn answered with a serious face. "It's a saying that comes from Syraeus."

"So does Riloosa, unless I miss my guess," said Razkili.

A servant appeared from a doorway just ahead and beckoned to them. The rooms prepared for Innowen and Razkili were spacious and airy. A pair of couches ornately carved from white wood occupied the central chamber. Embroidered cushions lay piled upon them. Close at hand stood a small table. A tray of cold meat strips, a cheese, and half a loaf of bread rested there, along with a wine-filled oinochoe jug, whose urfirnis finish gleamed in the sunlight that filled the room. Beyond was an open terrace with a view of the garden. Two bedrooms also opened onto the terrace.

Razkili placed Innowen on one of the couches and propped pillows around him.

Taelyn helped himself to a strip of meat, chewed it, and washed it down with a drink from the wine vessel. A servant emerged from the south bedroom bearing linens. Taelyn caught him by the arm. "A soldier might tip a bottle, but bring goblets for Minarik's son and his friend." The servant nodded and hurried to obey. "Now, I've got to find Minarik. Take some advice and don't wander around. Rest. You both need it." Tearing a piece of bread from the loaf and popping it into his mouth, he left them.

No sooner was Taelyn gone than Riloosa appeared in the entrance. He intercepted the servant returning with a tray of golden goblets. "I'll take those," he said, dismissing the servant. He stepped across the threshold, walked between the couches, and set the tray on the table. "Are you comfortable?" he asked Innowen as he seated himself on the opposite couch. He poured wine into two of the goblets and offered one to Innowen. He sipped from the other himself. "We have much to discuss, you and I," he added over the rim of his vessel.

"In Osirit," Razkili said dryly, "it's customary to wait at the door until you are invited to enter."

Riloosa spared a disdainful glance at Razkili, then leaned closer to Innowen. "Could you send your slave elsewhere? We should talk in private...."

Innowen bristled. His hand shot out across the short distance and caught the front of Riloosa's already wrinkled robe, and he pulled the Syraean's face even closer to his own. "This is Prince Razkili," he said acidly, "fifth son of Osirit's royal family, and of better lineage than you." Innowen released him and eased back. "You come here to curry favor, and instead manage to insult us both with your first breath." He shook his head and looked away from Riloosa, turning up his nose. "Now we're a bit weary from last night's adventure. We're going to eat this food, drink this very fine wine, and sleep."

Razkili came to the head of Innowen's couch, folded his arms over his broad chest, and glared at Riloosa with narrowed, menacing eyes. "Allow this poor slave to throw him out on his head, Master."

Riloosa set his goblet aside and rose stiffly to his feet. He looked at them both with a gaze colder than any wind that ever blew on the Akrotir peaks. "I really must change my garment," he said silkily. "This one has become unduly soiled."

"An unexpected release of urine, no doubt," Innowen said, as their uninvited guest strode through the door.

"What do you suppose he wanted?" Razkili wondered when they were alone again.

"I don't care," Innowen answered. "I'm too tired to play games. We've only slept in snatches since we arrived in Ispor, and it's catching up with me." He sipped the wine and licked his lower lip. "Can you drag one of these couches onto the terrace? It's cooler there with the breeze."

"Whatever the master wishes," Razkili quipped. He bent over the empty couch and began to drag it.

"Don't do that," Innowen said earnestly.

Razkili set the couch down and straightened. "Do you want it on the terrace or not?"

"Don't call me master," he said, "or anything like that. I don't like it. It's not funny. Too many people think because you bear me about and care for me that I own you. I don't like to hear it from them, and I especially don't like it from you. Please, Rascal."

Razkili grinned. "You are tired," he said, dragging the couch again. When it was in place on the terrace, he carried Innowen out and laid him gently upon it. Then he went back to drag the other couch outside, too.

"Bring the wine," Innowen suggested. "We can get drunk quietly before somebody calls us for dinner."

But he didn't get a chance to drink. The breeze blew warmly over him as he leaned back into the cushions.

He closed his eyes and sank into sleep.

 

* * *

 

He awoke aware of a presence on the couch beside him. Assuming it was Razkili, he stretched, yawned, then slowly opened his eyes.

"Welcome home, Innocent."

He sat up quickly. "Minarik! Father!" He threw his arms around the older man, and they embraced.

Five years had marked Minarik. The gray that once had colored his temples had spread throughout his mane. His beard, too, had taken on a cloudy shade. Deep lines radiated from around his eyes and shot across his brow. He was still a large man and powerful, and his grip on Innowen's arm betrayed no weakness, yet there was something different, a vitality that seemed to be missing.

"Did you find our Witch?" Minarik asked quietly.

Innowen pushed himself back against the cushions into a better sitting position and realized he had done so with his legs. He had not even noticed that the sun had gone down. He drew his feet up close and hugged his knees. On the other couch, Razkili lay asleep with his back to them.

He shook his head. "But I have hope again suddenly, when I thought all hope was gone. Five years of searching, and I found no trace of her. Then, last night in the battle, I saw her man, Vashni. I'm sure it was him."

Minarik's eyes smoldered with the dark fire of disappointment. His gaze burned into Innowen. For long moments he stared, and Innowen couldn't bring himself to avert his eyes. He suffered under the scrutiny of that glare until his adoptive father suddenly patted his knee and stood.

"We'll speak of it later, but now we must bathe," he said. "Wake your friend. Kyrin is hosting a banquet tonight."

"In Taelyn's honor?" Innowen inquired, rising.

"I would hardly put it that way," Minarik said, walking to the edge of the terrace and gazing down into the garden below. "As Taelyn always manages to do these days, he's irritated our good and beloved king. But he'll be there. He's the people's hero, at least for the hour, and that'll provide him with a certain temporary safety. Now wake your friend."

They woke Razkili, and Innowen made formal introductions. Afterward, Minarik led them through another maze of lamp-lit corridors, down a flight of stairs to the first level again, out into the garden, and back through another doorway into the palace. They entered a small, bare room with several stone stools placed at intervals.

"Undress," Innowen told Razkili solemnly. All three men removed their garments and sandals, folded them, and placed them carefully on the stools. Minarik approached another door in the opposite wall and pushed it open. The red-gold glow of braziers shimmered on a pool of water within. A sweet incense diffused on the air.

"Once you enter the lustral chamber," he advised Razkili, "do not speak. It's a holy place, a place to cleanse body and mind before we enter the hall beyond, which is both a throne room and a temple to our gods."

Razkili nodded and followed Minarik through the door. Innowen, the last to enter, pulled it closed. A graceful staircase descended into the pool. Naked, they lowered themselves into the cool water and bathed each other. Soft cloths had been left in a basket on the pool's edge. As Innowen lifted one, crushed herbs fell from between its folds. He pressed it to his face and breathed the sweetness, then wet it and passed it over Rascal's back. The fireglow sheened in the drops of moisture that trickled down the Osiri's spine. Innowen caught one on his fingertip, studied it in the ruddy light, then touched it to his tongue.

He felt Minarik's hand and a soft cloth on the nape of his neck and closed his eyes while his father washed him. Then Razkili appeared before him with a cloth, too. The herb scent filled his nostrils, and the texture of the fabric against his skin seemed almost too much to bear. Gooseflesh rose on his arms, and the fine hairs stood on end. He listened, and the only sounds were their breaths and a gentle splashing of water. Even so, there was a music in it, and it reminded him that he must dance soon.

They wrung out their cloths and placed them in another basket beside the first. A second staircase at the pool's far end led out of the water and to a room beyond. Dripping, they passed over the threshold and closed another door.

The new room was brighter than the lustral chamber. Mirrors of copper metal mounted behind four wall lamps cast light into every corner. Five stone benches were the only furnishings. Upon one of them they found a stack of towels and clean white chitons. To Razkili's surprise, their sandals were also there.

"A slave brought them," Minarik told him. "There's a passage from the outer chamber to this one that bypasses the lustral pool. The same slave is at this moment burning your old clothes. They were filthy with dust and blood. I picked these for you."

Razkili thanked him as he slipped the soft, draping garment over his head and belted it.

But Minarik was the first dressed. "Take your time, Innocent," he said. "I want to test the temperature at the banquet table. I'll return for you."

"Are you expecting some trouble?" Innowen asked.

Minarik raised an eyebrow. "This is Kyrin's party," he answered. "You'd do well to stay light on your feet." He passed through one more door, and they were alone.

"Innowen?"

He turned back to Razkili. "Hmmm?"

"Considering how you looked forward to this reunion, your father seems somewhat reserved."

Innowen hugged his towel around his shoulders and sat down. "I failed him, Rascal," he said quietly. "My quest to find the Witch was his quest, as well. There's some history they share that even I don't completely understand. He expected me to find her."

"But you tried," Razkili reminded him, laying a hand consolingly on his shoulder.

"Trying doesn't ease his disappointment." He threw off the towel and reached for the remaining chiton and pulled it on. Then he laced up his sandals. Beneath one of the oil lamps was a small shelf mounted on the wall. Several grooming utensils rested there. Innowen picked up a pale shell comb, instructed his friend to sit, moved behind him, and began to pass it through Rascal's damp hair.

"I've been curious," Razkili began, changing the subject. "Where do you keep your women? I saw two on the terrace when we arrived, and they ran away like deer in a hunter's sights. I've seen none at all except those."

Innowen concentrated on the comb. "Oh, I'm sure you saw some in the crowd when we rode through the streets. And if you traveled through the farming villages you'd find them right beside their men." He drew a part in Rascal's short locks and worked the hair with his fingers. "But in the cities, women are treated differently, like a commodity, kept hidden. High-born women, once they reach a marriageable age, are seldom seen at all, except at prearranged audiences. There will be none at this banquet tonight."

Razkili nodded. "Yet I recall you speaking of Kyrin's daughter."

"Dyan," Innowen remembered. "Yes, but she was a child when I met her, and the rules are somewhat different for girl children. Five years have passed, though. She won't just be wandering around anymore. I wasn't allowed to see her the last time I was here. I doubt if I'll see her this time."

Razkili reached up and caught the comb. "Do you want to see her?"

Innowen looked thoughtful. "I've never forgotten her music," he confessed. "I bought a gift for her in Milas just before I met you. It's in our bags with the rest of my collection. Taelyn said everything would be brought to our rooms. If it hasn't been damaged, I'd still like the chance to give it to her."

Razkili sat Innowen down. It was his turn to work the comb. He slid it with ease through Innowen's straight long hair.

"Have I thanked you," Innowen said, "for taking care of me the way you do?"

"Don't," Razkili answered, giving his friend's hair a twist to wring the water from it, starting his combing again. "I prefer you as an ungrateful wretch."

Innowen changed his tone. "Don't twist so hard," he whined. "And watch the comb, you're raking my scalp. Can't you do anything right?" A sly grin spread over his face, and he resumed his normal voice. "Is that better."

Razkili bent low, wrapped his arms around Innowen, and hugged him. Straightening again, he rapped Innowen's head playfully with the comb.

Minarik returned, closed the door, leaned against it for a moment, and pursed his lips. "The tension is thicker than the gravy," he said. "Kyrin is already seated. Taelyn's here, too, so I have to hurry back. He's my general, after all, though he's inclined to forget that at times," He hesitated, looked at Razkili, then at Innowen. "Anyway, my son, keep your friend close and mind his manners. This isn't a road tavern where you dine tonight, but the very heart and soul of Ispor."

Innowen's jaw dropped. He stared, stunned by his father's own bad manners, while Minarik opened the door for them. A warmth flooded his face as he felt himself blush with anger. He stepped beside his father, placed his hand against the door, and pushed it firmly shut again. "I know you're disappointed that I didn't find the Witch. Take that disappointment out on me, if you must, but you and everyone here will treat Razkili with courtesy." His expression softened somewhat, but a certain confusion lingered. "I've never heard you utter an unkindness, but that was unkind."

Minarik studied him for a long moment, but his stony face masked his thoughts. "I'm sorry," he answered at last. "I meant no offense, but this is a formal occasion. He is Osiri and not familiar with our customs." He pulled open the door again. "Now come. Already food is being served." He left ahead of them.

"Have you noticed," Razkili said off-handedly, "how softly everyone seems to talk around here? Almost in whispers?"

"Let's both fart loudly after the cheese course," Innowen said through clenched teeth.

The throne room was a huge, dark chamber lit by scores of oil lamps and braziers. Just as in the rest of the palace, the floor was a pebble mosaic, but the walls, too, were painted with elaborate sea frescoes, and the low ceiling was covered with stucco swirls and spirals made to resemble delicate shells. Time and smoke from the lamps had dimmed the once bright paint and blackened the tiniest recesses of the ceiling's artwork. Still, the room possessed an immense sense of grandeur.

The actual throne was a pink marble chair built as part of the east wall. Stone benches lined all the walls. Above those, set in deep niches, stood the shadowed sculptures which represented the various gods of Ispor.

"You said this was a temple as well as a throne room," Razkili whispered to Innowen. "I've never heard you talk much about your gods."

"Kyrin is as much a priest as a king," Innowen answered. "The city-dwellers, especially in Parendur, are ruled much more by the formalities of religion. But I grew up in the woods; a small village was the closest thing to a city. We didn't have a temple. With the day-to-day toils, we didn't have much time to carve statues, and sheep and cattle were far too valuable to waste as sacrifices." He cast his gaze over the cold stone figures in their gloomy niches, feeling no life in them at all. "I don't know the names of half of these," he confessed. "I've never had time for gods."

"Yet you searched hard for the Witch of Shanalane and for some trace of her god."

"That's different," Innowen said softly.

A long table with benches stood near the south wall. Kyrin was already seated. Five years had aged him, too, and it startled Innowen to note how strong a resemblance he bore to Minarik. His foster father and Taelyn and another officer stood in one corner talking among themselves. Riloosa maintained a place behind Kyrin and to his right. His eyes roamed everywhere, studied everything. There were other men, perhaps twenty. City officials, priests and minor priests, garrison officers, Innowen figured. He didn't recognize any of them.

Already there was food on the table, but Innowen guided Razkili toward Minarik and Taelyn. There was not even time to introduce themselves to the third man there before Kyrin called them all to sit. At his order, ten slaves entered bearing silver bowls of water with clean cloths draped over their arms. They proceeded to wash the hands of every guest. Only then did they pour wine into each man's cup, and the dinner began.

Razkili lifted his own slender kylix and poured a dollop from it onto, the floor. "For those who've gone before," he uttered.

Innowen clenched his teeth, and felt his shoulders draw up. All eyes stared. Mouths fell open, then shut. No one said a word, but slowly they turned toward Kyrin. The king's face screwed up with anger and disgust.

Realizing he'd done something wrong, Razkili quietly lowered his vessel. He whispered to Innowen out of the corner of his mouth. "I thought you taught me..."

Innowen squeezed his friend's leg under the table to silence him.

"That toast," Kyrin said coldly, "is for the outdoors, foreigner. Do you have any idea what it takes to clean the filth from a mosaic floor such as this?"

"Yes, Rascal," Taelyn interjected, seizing the earliest opportunity to make a verbal slash at Kyrin, "by all means, consider the knees of our poor slaves. You only helped save a city; you didn't conquer one."

That, at least, diverted Kyrin's attention from Razkili, and Innowen forced his shoulders back down, though he still ground his teeth.

"Ah, our guest of honor," Kyrin said, raising his kylix. "Let's drink to the city's newest hero and take a lesson from him, that a man may raise himself to a pinnacle even from so low a background as a common house slave."

Cups rose to lips, but hesitated as Taelyn spoke up. "If I have a lesson to teach, my lord, let it be phrased so: A good sword knows no nobility."

King and commander glared at each other over the rims of their wine vessels. Minarik let escape a small sigh and gazed wearily at his son. The rest of the guests looked as if they were considering a quiet slide under the table. It was going to be a long evening. Innowen exchanged glances with Rascal and did his best to relax.

On his right, the coals of a brazier flared suddenly, shooting a popping little flame into the air. Its sudden light faded quickly, and Innowen cast his gaze around the throne room. Lamps and braziers were everywhere, but they were not enough to hold back all the darkness. In the red flickering, he found his shadow on the wall, and Rascal's shadow, and all their shadows cavorting and twisting at the whims of the flames.

Shadows everywhere he looked, and all of them dancing.