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    King's Blades 01 - The Gilded Chain

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      must be even worse. He had, in retrospect,

      dismissed his wife very brusquely; she had not

      wanted to visit her family, but he had insisted.

      That was a reasonable precaution if he expected

      to be arrested, so it could not be the missing clue. A

      man facing financial ruin ought to be trimming his

      construction costs and household expenses,

      surely? Well, perhaps not. Courtiers were

      notoriously lax in paying tradesmen and

      domestics, and any hint of economy might

      spook his creditors. The turd probably did

      not know what economy was, anyway. He could

      no longer swindle money out of the navy or sell

      his sister's influence with the King. Fixing fencing

      matches might be a lucrative sideline, but

      he was up to something more. What was coming next? He was

      demanding full evening wear, as if planning to go to a

      ball or banquet. Nobody invited him to those

      anymore.

      What else was he up to? Why was he not more

      morose? That was what was wrong! Ever since he

      came home, he had been smirking. Six thousand

      crowns at odds of five to one meant, um,

      thirty thousand. Was that enough to save him from ruin? Or

      was there some other foulness in the wind?

      The Marquis ordered dinner and ate in

      satisfied silence with his Blade sulking at the

      other side of the table. Then, instead of calling for his

      coach, he demanded a cloak and boots.

      Apparently he was going out for a walk--in the

      dark? This was utterly unprecedented, completely

      out of character.

      Durendal spoke for the first time since he gave

      up the sword breaker. "Where are we going, my

      lord?"

      His ward smiled mysteriously. "Wait and

      see."

      There was moonlight, but for a gentleman to walk

      the ill-reputed streets of Grandon by night was a

      rashness that set his Blade's binding jangling like

      bells. It was his clear duty to prevent such

      folly, even by force if necessary. Against that,

      Durendal was so exhilarated by the thought that his

      skills might possibly be required at last

      that he suppressed his wiser instincts. Thus he

      found himself escorting the devious Marquis through

      noisome, sinister alleys without even a lantern

      between them. He quivered with joy like a racehorse

      at the gate, praying for someone to leap out of the

      shadows at them. Fortunately or

      unfortunately, no one did. Once or twice

      he thought he detected footsteps some distance behind

      them and cursed himself for a nervous ninny.

      The Marquis obviously heard nothing. He

      knew where he was going, although he seemed to have

      learned the route by rote, for he muttered to himself

      at every corner. Then he began counting doors, but

      when he found the one he wanted, it was clearly

      defined by an octogram sign that glowed with

      enchanted light. A conjuring order that hid itself in

      a slum must specialize in very murky

      conjurations, and supplicants who came in the

      middle of the night must have very murky needs. Two

      footmen in imposing livery admitted the callers

      and led them to a salon whose decor of jarring reds and

      purples, salacious paintings, and contorted

      erotic sculptures revealed exactly what

      sort of enchantment was available. Soft music

      played in the distance and the air was fetid with hot,

      musky odors. Shamefully, Durendal felt

      his flesh responding to the sensual mood.

      Other conspirators had already arrived. The

      elderly man was easily recognizable as the

      Earl of Eastness, former governor of Nostrimia

      and the elder of Nutting's notorious uncles. The

      woman was veiled, but her identity could be in no

      doubt.

      She sprang up in alarm. "You fool! Why

      did you bring him here?" Even her voice was

      unforgettable. The pale hand she pointed at

      Durendal was long-fingered and graceful.

      The Marquis laughed and strolled across to her.

      He lifted her veil back and kissed her

      cheek. "I can't shake him off. He sticks like

      a birthmark. Besides, he is an ideal

      accomplice. He wouldn't betray me under

      torture. Would you, Sir Durendal?"

      Durendal ignored the mockery and tried

      to ignore the loveliest face in the kingdom as

      well. "What foulness are you plotting, my lord?

      You must remember that I am a servant of the

      King."

      "But I come first! And I stand or fall with my

      accomplices here, so you can betray none of us."

      Smirk, smirk, smirk!

      Anyone else who provoked Durendal like this

      would be dead already, although he had never drawn his

      sword in anger and had believed he never would.

      "I cannot betray you, so I must stop you. It is

      obvious that you are planning to use conjuration against

      His Majesty, and that is a capital offense."

      His logic was leading him to an unbearable conclusion.

      Nutting glanced briefly at his sister and his

      self-confidence wavered. "Indeed? Just how do you

      propose to stop me?"

      Durendal, too, looked at the Countess.

      She shrank back, anger turning to fear.

      He said, "You are plotting to restore the whore

      to royal favor. I cannot harm you, Tab

      Nillway, but she is not so favored." Could he

      really slay a woman in cold blood? Yes,

      if his ward's safety demanded it. Perhaps

      mutilation would suffice, but that might be even harder

      to do and would be less certain. Disfigurement could be

      cured. Death could not.

      The Countess gasped and made a dive for the

      door. She stopped with Harvest's razor edge

      before her face like a rail. Eastness roared an

      oath and reached for his sword.

      "Don't be a fool, Uncle!" Nutting

      snapped. "He'll filet you before any of us can

      move an inch. You are too late already, lad.

      You cannot possibly hope to kill a countess and not

      have the crime discovered. The inquisitors will question

      us, perhaps even put one of us to the Question--you, most

      like, as you are not of the nobility. Our intentions will be

      revealed, and intentions are enough in cases of

      treason. There is nothing you can do."

      A carillon of conflicting emotions clamored

      in Durendal's mind. His voice came out

      hoarse and shaky. "It is still a better chance than

      letting you attempt an impossible crime."

      "A very possible crime. Put up your sword

      and I shall explain."

      "No. Say what you must and be quick."

      The Countess backed away from the sword, and

      he let her go. Whatever was coming, he

      knew that he had lost.

      The Marquis, also, seemed to have realized that, for

      his oily smoothness flowed back. "A candle,

      only a candle. Quite harmless. It will be attuned

      to my sister's body. When it burns and the King

      inhales the fumes, his desire for her will


      return, stronger than ever. He will reinstate her

      at court; my fortunes will be restored also. I was

      not lying about debtors' prison, Sir

      Durendal. The King will take no harm."

      Durendal shuddered. "Others may be affected

      also."

      "What matter? Hundreds have lusted for her in

      their time. Only one counts."

      "You cannot hope to bring such a conjurement within reach

      of the King."

      "No? You underestimate me. The Queen has

      retired to Bondhill for her confinement.

      Ambrose already has the place so stiff with

      enchantments that no sniffer can go near it. He

      visits her there regularly. We have made

      arrangements."

      It sounded all too horribly plausible, just

      the sort of slimy trick the turd would think up.

      And, no, there was nothing Durendal could do to stop

      him. Treason! Where was honor now? Where were the

      bright hopes of his youth? Where ...

      "A dramatic scene," said a new voice.

      In the doorway stood a woman dressed all in

      scarlet. Only an ageless pale face was

      visible within the wimple that enclosed her head, and the

      irises of her eyes were red, also. Rich robes

      of the same shade cascaded from her shoulders to the

      rug. Her bearing left no doubt that she was in

      charge of the elementary and the order that ran it.

      The Marquis bowed. "It had its moments, my

      lady, but I think my young friend has seen

      reason."

      The Prioress turned her nightmare gaze

      on Durendal. "Do you think we are unaware of the

      dangers? Would we undertake this venture lightly?

      If you misbehave, young man, then none of you will

      leave these precincts alive. We have ways of

      disposing of evidence."

      He hesitated even then, wondering if he could

      slay that foul creature as well. The need

      to keep his ward from harm restrained him, for

      obviously an order that dealt in such evils would

      have strong defenses. The Marquis knew he had

      won, smirking already. The Countess was

      recovering her anger. The old uncle had shrunk

      back into unwilling despair.

      Durendal sheathed his sword. Truly, he had

      no choice. He must carry on as normally as he

      could, being a perfect accomplice, trustworthy

      to death itself. Tomorrow he would even throw the final bout

      of the King's Cup in a demonstration of his shame and

      failure. His binding would not let him kill himself.

      He watched in sick self-hate as the

      Marquis paid over the money that had come from the

      sword breaker, the King's gift. The prioress

      scanned the scroll with satisfaction and then led the

      way into a chapel that was itself an octogram, a

      tall chamber of white marble with sixteen walls

      defining eight points. Each of these alcoves was

      in some way--mostly very obviously and crudely--

      dedicated to an element. One was empty,

      representing air, with a ewer of water opposite,

      a sword to portray chance, and so on. Fire's

      brazier provided the only light in the big

      chamber. Durendal considered much of the symbolism

      questionable or just in bad taste, like the skull for death

      or the huge gold heart for love. It set his

      teeth to scraping, but perhaps it impressed the sort

      of customers such a place attracted. Although he

      could sense the presence of spirits strongly, here they

      did not give him the comforting feeling of support that

      he had experienced at Ironhall. Here they

      unsettled him and felt wrong.

      The four supplicants were joined by three more

      conjurers in scarlet gowns--two men and another

      woman. All eight were then placed in position

      by the prioress. Durendal was ordered to stand before the

      black pedestal from which the skull grinned down, so

      he was at death--which felt very appropriate in his

      present mood. It was the standard octogram, so

      he had air on his left and earth on his right.

      Nutting was at chance, his uncle at time, and the

      Countess, of course, was love, opposite

      Durendal.

      When the conjurer chanting the role of Dispenser

      began banishing unwanted elements, Nutting, his

      uncle, and Durendal were required to turn their

      backs. That was their only participation in the

      ritual, but Durendal could make out enough of the

      chanting to guess roughly what was going on behind him.

      Standing in the place of death he should be less

      involved in the proceedings than any of the others, and

      yet--to his utter disgust--the erotic spirits roused

      him to panting, sweating, trembling lust.

      The only consolation he was able to wring from the night's

      events was that he was not forced to watch the

      obscenities being performed upon the naked body of the

      most beautiful woman in Chivial.

      It was near dawn when the Marquis returned

      to Nutting House and demanded his valet be wakened

      to put him to bed. Durendal just paced--up and down

      stairs, through completed rooms and rooms still being

      plastered, along corridors, past piles of

      furniture in dustcovers. Even for a Blade,

      it was no way to prepare for an honest fencing match

      but perhaps a good way to prepare for a match he must

      throw. It might be the start of madness. He

      looked back with contempt on the idealism of his

      youth, the time before Harvest's death had sealed his

      fate. He marveled at how far he had fallen

      from those dreams, how fast he had become a cheat

      and a traitor.

      He could still hope for the conspiracy to be

      uncovered, yet he could do nothing to expose it.

      He would cheer with the best of them when the headsman

      raised the Marquis's head for the crowds to see,

      even if his own neck was to be next on the

      block. He hoped it would be. A ward's death

      was always a shattering bereavement for his Blade; when

      the ward died by violence, the Blade rarely

      survived. Beheading definitely classed as

      violence.

      A clatter of hooves at sunrise roused

      him from his brooding. He sprinted downstairs and

      slithered to a halt at the front door just ahead

      of the porter, a former sailor named Piewasher,

      who had regaled him during many a long night with

      improbable tales of travel, foreign ports,

      foreign women, and children of various shades. Before either

      of them could say a word, a stave thundered against the

      panel and a voice demanded that it open in the King's

      name.

      Piewasher gasped with dismay, then stared

      blankly at Durendal who was laughing.

      So! The fox had been tracked to its lair

      already. The jig was up. Now it had happened, he

      had no doubts about what he must do. He spun

      Piewasher around. "Go and tell the Marquis!

      Quickly!"

      Sailors did not question orders. The old man

      scurried off across the hallway at the

      be
    st speed he could muster.

      The Marquis's only hope of escape was the

      servants' stair at the back. The chance that any

      exit from the house had been left unguarded was very

      slim, but Durendal's duty now was to give his

      ward the longest possible start. He could die with his

      sword in his hand.

      He waited for the second demand, then snapped

      open the spy hole cover. He saw a gaunt and

      bloodless face framed by lank, mousy locks and

      topped by a black biretta. That and the black

      robes were the uniform of His Majesty's Office

      of General Inquiry. Behind the inquisitor stood

      at least a dozen men-at-arms of the Watch.

      "His lordship is not at home."

      "That is a lie."

      The prospect of action had lifted the burden

      and set all Durendal's muscles tingling. "I

      did not mean it literally. It's a social

      fiction. You can't possibly believe that I would

      be so foolish as to try to lie to an inquisitor,

      can you? No, I was merely presenting the customary

      excuse the gentry use whenever they do not wish--"

      "You are trying to delay us." The young man had

      a harsh, unpleasant voice.

      "I am attempting to further your education.

      Now, it is possible that his lordship might consent

      to receive visitors if he were--"

      The inquisitor gestured without taking his

      glassy stare off Durendal. The nearest

      man-at-arms slammed the butt of his pike against

      the door and bellowed again, "Open in the King's

      name!"

      Even a marquis did not rate more than three

      warnings. Durendal shut the peephole and marched

      across the hallway, detouring past the fireplace

      to pick up the poker. He mourned the absence of his

      sword breaker in what would be his first and final real

      blood-on-the-floor fight, but the poker might

      deflect those heavy pikes better. It was a

      pity, too, that when her ladyship insisted on a

      main staircase of pink granite, her grandiose

      taste had required it to be of such width that it

      required at least three men to hold it

      adequately. Why hadn't she thought of that? The

      defenses could be improved, though. On high

      pedestals at either side loomed pretentious

      creamy marble statues of mythical figures. The

      Marquise had been very excited when these two

      eyesores were delivered a week ago,

      but she would not grudge them in a good cause.

      The lock on the front door clicked open.

      The chain rattled loose of its own accord.

     


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