Read A Confusion of Princes Online
Authors: Garth Nix
W
HILE I HAD the beginning of a plan, I certainly didn’t have the middle, or most important, the end. Nor did I get the time to develop my plan any further. After the duel, I returned to the guest house I had been allocated, had my feet treated by Uncle Hormidh, and then suffered a number of semiofficial visits from Princes who wanted the newest winner of the Imperial Star of Valour to join their Houses. All of them had to be offered drinks, and I forced myself to listen to their ‘compelling’ reasons why joining their particular House would be of enormous benefit to me.
Unsurprisingly, there was no ambassador from House Jerrazis. When the tenth Prince, a member of House Izhwall, left, I collapsed back in my rather thronelike armchair and ordered Haddad to admit no more. Night had fallen outside, and I wanted time to think through my plan before the announcement of the Imperial candidates was made.
But I did not get that time. I had barely sat back and taken the proffered goblet of wine from Haddad when I received a priority communication in mindspeech from the Imperial Mind.
:Hier Imperial Highness has chosen the thousand candidates who will contend for the throne. The Princes chosen are . . .:
I tried to tune out as the long list of names rolled through my head but gave a start when I heard my own name. Right up until that moment there had always been the slight possibility that Morojal had lied for her own purposes, or even that she was wrong. That slim hope was now denied to me.
I took a sip of the wine. It was chilled and delicious, something based on an old Earth variety that was both fruity and dry, and that left a slight tang in the mouth after you swallowed.
But after that swallow, I couldn’t move. I tried to turn my head without success. Even my eyes would not move in their sockets. Yet none of my warning systems had alerted me. They still said the wine was only wine.
Haddad moved into my field of vision and bowed his head.
Leaning forward, he stripped me of my weapons, carefully tucking them away in the pockets of his own robe. Then he put a pair of light slippers on my recently tended feet and stepped back.
:Haddad? You have poisoned me?:
‘I regret that this is so, Highness,’ confirmed Haddad.
:But you’re my Master of Assassins . . .:
‘I am foremost a Priest of the Emperor, in Hier Aspect of the Shadowed Blade,’ said Haddad. ‘This is part of becoming a candidate, Highness. It is not a poison but a nanoinhibitor tuned particularly to you. The effects are temporary. You will soon be mobile again but will be weakened for a short time, your augmentation and some internal systems turned off.’
:Weakened?:
‘Princes have been known to attempt unauthorised winnowing of other candidates before commencement,’ said Haddad. ‘This . . . pacification . . . ensures that all candidates embark upon the initial test.’
I tried to move my hand and was rewarded with a twitch of two fingers. I followed that up by clearing my throat, and found that I could move my tongue clumsily and talk, after a fashion.
‘I would have complied without this,’ I whispered. ‘I always thought I could trust you, Haddad. Always.’
Haddad sighed and looked down at me.
‘We are what we are made to be,’ he said. ‘I am utterly loyal to you, Highness, in all matters save the direct order of the Mind. As in this circumstance, my Prince, I could no more disobey than you could yourself. Try to stand up now.’
I stood up, very shakily. I was as weak as when I had emerged in my nonaugmented body and would have fallen, except Haddad caught my arm. He held me up and propelled me toward the front door. We passed through the reception hall, which had been populated with my priests and Haddad’s apprentices only a short time before. Now it was empty.
Outside, the moon was up, hanging huge and low on the near horizon. Not just any moon, but a pale disk that I knew from long-ago history lessons in my candidate temple. Bright but cold; the pattern of its craters and mountains signified that it was the moon of ancient Earth.
Haddad watched me gaping up at this unexpected satellite and foresaw my question.
‘It
is
the moon of Earth,’ he said quietly. ‘The fifty-fourth Emperor had it brought here. It is in an eccentric, guided orbit and is illuminated only on the night the candidates go forth, once every twenty years.’
I looked around me, across the gardens. Out of every guest house nearby, a stumbling, weakened Prince was being led and supported by his or her Master of Assassins.
‘You lied about Prince Emzhyl,’ I croaked. ‘You took her, as you are taking me.’
‘Yes, Highness,’ said Haddad. ‘Again, upon the orders of the Mind.’
We did not speak after that. It took all my energy to lift and move my feet. Without Haddad I would have fallen and lain on the grass, twitching like a bug that has reached the end of its short season of life.
All of us shuffling Princes were being herded in the same direction, toward the moon. Its light fell like a silver highway across the gardens, drawing us along, over lawns, through courtyards, down converging lanes and paths.
We probably travelled no more than a thousand metres, but to me it felt like one of the longest journeys I had ever undertaken. I was weary in both body and mind, and bitter, because I had always trusted Haddad, and at least some part of me had built up the irrational feeling that he really was my friend, one of my family, and that he would take my part even against the Empire.
If I had examined this feeling, I would have known it was false. Haddad was as much a creature of the Empire as everybody else, as all we Princes were. He could not escape the strictures and conditioning of his calling any more than I could.
We came to the top of a low hill. Though I could barely turn my head, I saw that there were many Princes to either side of me. Some were in worse shape than I, their Masters of Assassins practically carrying them. Yet again, Haddad had proved to be a most superior assassin, dosing me exactly as required and no more.
All the Princes were being lined up in one long, extended rank along the ridge of the hill. I looked down and saw dark water below. A broad lake, whose far shore I could not see, as my eyes suffered the same weakness as my muscles.
The light of the moon fell only on the closer shore below us. It was a sandy beach that stretched to the left and right as far as the line of Princes was long, perhaps two thousand metres. Drawn up on the beach there was an answering row of one thousand slim, sharp-prowed boats, each not much wider or longer than a man.
‘The candidate boats,’ said Haddad quietly, close to my ear. His fellow Masters were telling their Princes the same thing, at the same time, making an odd noise, like the shuffling of many leaves caught by a slight and momentary breeze.
We advanced down the hill, the thousand Princes and the thousand assassins, each pair going to a particular boat that was straight ahead, so there was no need to cross paths or shuffle sideways. Everything was perfectly arranged.
:Welcome to the first stage of the testing, Princes <
Haddad had to lift my feet to get me into the boat and then help me down. As I lay back, and pseudopods rose up and lashed around my legs, chest, and arms, I realised that it was not exactly a boat, though it was dipping and floating on the water. It was some kind of Bitek organism, and it was holding me very tightly indeed.
‘Good luck, Highness,’ whispered Haddad. He laid his hand very lightly on my chest, then slowly withdrew it, his fingers curling as if he had reluctantly let go of something that he had once treasured. Then he stepped back and was gone.
A translucent membrane closed over the top of the pod, sealing me in, and the Imperial Mind spoke inside my head.
Only it felt slightly different from the way it usually did, with a more distinctive mental voice that somehow came across as being very weary.
:The candidate boats are controlled by Psitek <
That was the Emperor Hierself,
I thought. Not the collective voice of the Imperial Mind. Taking a personal interest in whichever Prince would replace them and allow them to sink into the gestalt entity. From the weary, resigned feel of that communication, I thought the Emperor was looking forward to that outcome.
This only further confirmed that I really did not want to become the Emperor.
But my choices had narrowed. I had to compete or die.
The pod shuddered under me, a vibration coming from the sides as whatever propulsion system it used sprang into life. The boat began to rock more as it headed out into the open waters of the lake.
Though I was still physically weak and none of my Mektek systems or Bitek glands were operational, my Psitek senses did appear less affected. I reached out, seeking the echo of a Psitek system. But I caught nothing from the boat, though I did pick up several Princes nearby, catching angry mental swipes as they sent Psitek probes all around them.
I started to get seriously concerned. But as I mentally searched the boat again, I did feel a response, an echo that reminded me of
Korker
’s Bitek brain. I focused on it, exerting my mental strength, and eventually it answered. It was not self-aware, like
Korker
, or anywhere near as sophisticated, but after a few minutes of exploration and experiment I worked out how to stimulate different parts of its simple brain to regulate the speed and pitch of the flippers that were the boat’s propulsion and steering systems.
Not that this did me a lot of good, because I was held down by the pseudopods and couldn’t see anything except the sky above me. A sky almost totally dark, save for the faint sliver of a moon rapidly disappearing behind my boat. So how could I steer the boat to a middle channel of the waterfall ahead?
It occurred to me that I could just do nothing. After all, Morojal had said there were really only five possible candidates out of all the thousand who were now launched upon the lake. Surely they wouldn’t risk losing one of the five so early and, if Morojal was to be believed, their favourite candidate?
If Morojal was to be believed . . . that was not something I was prepared to stake my life on.
I needed to be able to see, or use some other senses to steer, as I had done when I had accessed the rescue beast’s sonar in the reservoir back in the Kharalcha Habitat.
Someone else’s senses. Best of all, someone else’s eyes.
:Haddad. Are you there?:
:Yes, Highness:
:Will you obey me?:
:In anything I am permitted to do by the Imperial Mind, Highness:
:I need to see through your eyes, so I may steer my boat:
:Yes, Highness. That is why we remain here, on the shore. Please proceed:
He didn’t explain to me how to proceed. But I instinctively knew. I shut my own eyes and followed the mental trail established by our communication microseconds before. I felt myself enter Haddad’s mind, or some contained portion of it, and then the darkness behind my eyelids was suddenly replaced by a clear vista: a view of the lake, all the way across, for Haddad’s vision was greatly enhanced by his Bitek eye. There was even a map overlay, and a grid, and a pointer indicating my own boat and the desired channel I must take.
The channel was almost straight ahead of me, at least partly confirming that Morojal had spoken the truth. I had been placed in a very favourable candidate boat. Several hundred of the others, far to my left and right, would have no chance of making the central channel, even if they did work out how to see and steer. As I looked through Haddad’s eyes, it was clear very few of them had figured out how to use their assassin’s eyes, or if they had managed that part, had not discovered how to steer.
Even in this contest, the Empire was trying to adjust things the way the Imperial Mind wanted.
But I had little time to think about my fellow Princes. There were a number of strong currents rushing my boat toward the waterfall, but
not
toward the correct channel. I had to urge my boat to swim hard, its flippers digging deep as it drove diagonally across the lake, sliding this way and that as various currents pushed it off course.
I found that in my weakened state even the mental effort of directing the boat and looking through Haddad’s eyes was exhausting. It took all my willpower to keep my Psitek focused on both activities, and for a moment I thought I would faint with the effort. But I hung on, and then all of a sudden I saw the pointer for my boat was in the right channel and that I was on the very edge of the waterfall, and then— Everything went black as I lost the connection to Haddad. I opened my eyes, but all I could see was darkness, and there was water roaring all around the boat as it suddenly flipped up on its end and the pseudopods released me. I was hurled against the transparent membrane, which was now as hard as if it was an armoured shell. The boat corkscrewed violently, and I felt water strike my face and legs.
:Hold your breath. This really is farewell, Khemri. Either way:
The mental voice was very faint. It was the last thing I ever heard from Haddad. I suppose in many ways he was like the father I’d never had, or perhaps some wise uncle, saddled with a foolish nephew. At the last, I caught some thought like this from him as well, a moment of sadness that we were both caught in our Imperial roles. The sadness was for himself, as well as for me.
I followed Haddad’s final advice at once, gulping several great lungfuls of air before I held it in, a moment before the water I could feel bursting into the boat completely filled it. As it reached my head, I scanned the pod’s brain again, searching for a nerve impulse that would free me from the clutches of its pseudopods. I had not found one initially, but now it was there, as plain as day. I mentally stabbed at it, and the entire boat fell apart around me, the pseudopods shrivelling back as if withered by acid.