In Legend Born (17 page)

Read In Legend Born Online

Authors: Laura Resnick

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy Fiction, #Epic, #General, #Fantasy

"As you showed me what you wanted me to see."

Tansen nodded. "Your first lesson, Josarian. Never take anyone for granted, and
never
let pride lead you into a fight."

"You speak as if there will be more lessons."

"There may be."

"If you didn't mean to do this Valdani commander's bidding, then why did you come looking for me after you left Cavasar? Why not just disappear?"

"I've seen many things, too," Tansen said, studying the outlaw with an assessing gaze. "I've been to half of the Kintish Kingdoms, and I've traveled from one end of the Moorlands to the other. I've been to the edge of the Great Northern Desert, I've crossed the Sirinakara River, and I've even been inside the Palace of Heaven."

"What is that?"

"It's the largest palace in the world, where the Kintish High King lives." He continued, "I've killed men, and I've seen many killed. But until I reached Cavasar, I had never heard of a
shallah
fighting back and killing an Outlooker. Not since the Disarmament."

"Why should that matter to you?"

"Because I'm a
shallah
, too!" Tansen said with more passion than he had meant to show. "Because the Valdani destroyed everything I ever loved, and because I've seen them doing the same thing all over the world." Uncomfortable with his companion's fascinated gaze, he rose to his feet. "We've been slaves to them for centuries. We used to be... A thousand years ago, this was the strongest land, the proudest people in the world, and now we bow down to the Valdani like beggars who are thankful for a lenient beating."

"You know, then," Josarian murmured. "You
do
understand."

"When I was in Cavasar, I saw something I thought I would never see in my whole life. Koroll, that Valdani officer, with thousands of Outlookers under his command, with the weight of the Empire behind him... He's
afraid
of you. He's afraid of a single
shallah
who said
no
."

"Who wouldn't bow down." Josarian rose to his feet, too.

"Who wouldn't run away." Their gazes locked and held in the flickering firelight.

"Or beg for mercy," said Josarian.

"Or go meekly to the mines."

"Who tells others to fight back, too."

"Yes. He's so afraid," Tansen said, "that he half believes you can't be killed."

"Maybe I can't be. Not yet." Josarian grinned exultantly. "Maybe Dar Herself is tired of these Valdani and wants them gone."

"You and I can't get rid of them all," Tansen warned.

"No, but we can kill enough to count. Enough to make the Emperor pay dearly for holding Sileria."

"Yes." Tansen nodded and clasped the hand Josarian offered him, pressing their scarred palms together. "And I think I know where to start."

"Oh?"

"You haven't heard about what happened in Emeldar last night, have you?"

Fear washed across a face which had shown none until now. Josarian gripped Tansen's tunic. "My family? My friends? Tell me quickly."

And so he did.

 

 

They headed north the next day by going straight up the side of Mount Orlenar, a trek that only
shallaheen
would attempt. They needed to move fast if they were to reach the fortress near Britar in good time to prevent the Outlookers from killing any of the men they had taken from Emeldar.

"I'm almost sorry I got rid of Koroll's horse," Tansen admitted when they finally stopped for the night. Keeping pace with Josarian over these mountains was liable to kill him.

"A horse?" Josarian made a dismissive sound. "It couldn't survive the mountains, and I can't travel by road. I might be caught."

"I know."

"A horse is too easy to track, anyhow. If we had one now,
everyone
would know where we were." Josarian started gathering wood for the evening fire. "What did you do with his horse? Turn it loose? Let someone steal it?"

"I sold it to some traders who will probably wind up taking it all the way to Liron. Since Koroll thought I should take it, I saw no reason not to turn a profit from it."

Josarian grinned. "So now the Valdan will never know what happened to his horse. Or be able to find you."

"Yes, that, too." Why draw Koroll a map, after all? Sooner or later he would realize he'd been betrayed, but Tansen didn't have to make it easy for him.

Josarian shook his head and mused, "A horse. He sent you to seek me out here on
horseback
. Ah, the
roshaheen
defy all reason, don't they?"

"Their latest scheme certainly seems to." Tansen assembled the kindling. "Why has Koroll had twenty men taken from Emeldar
now
? I still—"

"Oh, I don't think this Commander Koroll ordered it. He probably doesn't even know yet."

Tansen glanced at him. "Who, then?"

"A
toren
named Porsall."

The
toreni
were the traditional aristocrats and landowners of Sileria. Many Valdani had taken the title as well as the lands; and Porsall was definitely a Valdani name.

"Oh? What did you do to him?" Tansen asked dryly.

"I stole some gold trinkets that had been in his family for two hundred years. They were very pretty, too. Pearl-studded, jewel-encrusted..." Seeing Tansen's expression, he shrugged. "Well, why not?
His
family stole them from Silerians, after all."

"Why not, indeed?" Watching him curiously, Tansen asked, "What did you do with Porsall's gold?"

"I gave it to the Sisterhood."

Tansen blinked in surprise. "All of it?"

"Yes." Seeing his expression, Josarian shrugged. "Well, who else would I give it to? They saved my life, after all, and they're less likely than anyone else to get caught melting it down and selling it off. The Valdani ignore the Sisters."

"I, uh... Yes, I see." Tansen cleared his throat. "How did Porsall know it was you?"

"He saw me and asked who I was. I thought it would be bad manners to cast the blame on someone else."

"You robbed him
personally
?" Tansen asked in surprise. "A
toren
? There were no bodyguards with him?"

"Of course not." Josarian grinned. "He was in bed with his wife at the time."

Tansen laughed. "How in the Fires did you find your way into a
toren
's bedroom?"

"Zimran told me how. He finds his way into the lady's bedroom every time the
toren
is away on business."

"By Dar, I wish I'd been there to see Porsall's face." The kindling blazed to life. Still smiling with amusement, Tansen started skinning and cleaning a hare that Josarian had killed that afternoon.

After several unsuccessful attempts to break a stubborn branch in two by stomping on it, Josarian said, "Could you chop this in half for me?"

"I have no ax," Tansen pointed out.

"I meant with one of your swords." A moment later he laughed at the expression on Tansen's face. "When I was a boy, my mother once looked that way at a
zanar
who tried to convince me to go off to Darshon with him."

"
Chop wood?
With
these
?" Tansen's voice was rich with outrage. "These are among the finest swords in the world!" He unsheathed one suddenly, pleased to see Josarian jump back. "The steel of a
shatai
's swords comes only from a secret source in the Stone Forest, guarded by sorcerers who are bound by holy oaths to the
shatai-kaj
."

Josarian blinked. "Where? Who?"

"These blades were tempered in sacred fires, blessed in my name, and honored by the hands of my
shatai-kaj
. It's a sacrilege for anyone to even touch them without my permission." He still burned at the memory of Koroll pawing them in Cavasar.

"I didn't mean—"

"When a
shatai
is killed, his swords must never be used again. Pilgrims are honor-bound to take them back to his
shatai-kaj
, who then returns them to the sorcerers of the Stone Forest."

Josarian looked at him skeptically. "You don't really believe that the Valdani honor such Kintish cus—"

"No." Tansen turned the blade so it shone in the firelight. "The Valdani keep such swords as trophies. Sometimes they display them, so that everyone will know they've killed a Kintish swordmaster. Sometimes..." His mouth twisted with disgust. "I've seen Valdani aristocrats fighting with a single Kintish sword. Fouling it with their hands."

"Only one sword?"

"They don't know how to use two. Only
shatai
do that." Tansen added, "I saw a Valdan try once. He cut himself to ribbons."

"I suppose it's harder than it looks," Josarian ventured politely.

Tansen's gaze flashed from his sword to his companion. He realized that Josarian's ignorant request had been made innocently enough and had not called for a lecture on Kintish propriety. Embarrassed by his outburst, he sheathed his sword and said, "Here, you hold the wood. I'll jump on it."

Now that the subject had been introduced, however, Josarian was apparently interested in pursuing it. "How did you become a... a
shatai
?" he asked, hesitating over the strange word.

Tansen waited for him to elevate the wood, then started stomping on a spot that looked vulnerable. "I saw a
shatai
for the first time in Kashala. It's a Kintish port city," he added.

"Yes, I know. I've helped Zimran smuggle goods shipped from there." Josarian put pressure on the branch, bending it as it started to give way beneath Tansen's assault.

"He..." Tansen grunted as he drove his heel down again, and the wood gave way with a sharp crack. "... killed three armed men in less time than it's taken you and me to break this branch."

They each seized an end of the branch and started twisting in opposite directions. The wood would make a good fire, and it was brisk atop Mount Orlenar tonight.

"Were they Valdani?" Josarian asked, dropping his half when it was free.

"The men he killed? No." Tansen tossed aside the wood and brushed off his hands. "They were Kintish pirates who had raped a local girl. All of her father's relatives contributed money to hire a
shatai
to kill them."

Josarian tended the fire while Tansen returned to cleaning the hare. "So
shatai
are like Society assassins, then?"

"No. We're warriors," Tansen said tersely. "We work for hire, and we do not swear allegiance to a waterlord or anyone else. My loyalty is to my
shatai-kaj
, my teacher. He's, oh... a kind of priest as well as a
shatai
. It was his duty not only to teach me to fight, but to teach me to use my skills with good judgment."

"But he doesn't tell you who to kill?"

"No. When the
shatai-kaj 
decides he has taught you well enough, he gives you a test—some kind of mission or quest. Each
shatai-kaj 
designs his own test, and each of his students must pass it with honor before he can become a
shatai
."

"With honor?"

"Yes."

"What if a student is dishonorable?"

"It depends on what happened, what he did. Sometimes the
shatai-kaj 
will kill him. Sometimes the next student will be tested by being sent to kill him. And sometimes the
shatai-kaj 
will regard his student's failure as his own and kill himself."

"I take it you passed your test?" Josarian said dryly.

"Yes. I had a good teacher." Tansen handed Josarian the hare, which was ready to be spit and roasted.

"And after a
shatai
passes his teacher's test?"

"He goes out into the world to live as a
shatai
."

"And what else does a
shatai
do besides avenge abused women and promise to kill Silerian outlaws?"

"He encounters reality," Tansen admitted wryly. "He learns that in the real world, he has few chances to use his swords for good and many occasions where he may use them for evil—whether by mistake or through sheer greed. And believe me, Josarian, many people offer a
shatai
wealth beyond your dreams in exchange for the skills he possesses."

"Ah, no wonder we've never seen a
shatai
in these mountains before," Josarian said. "No money."

"
Shallaheen
enjoy killing each other too much to pay a
roshah
to do it," Tansen pointed out. "And as for professional killings, the Honored Society would never tolerate the competition."

"We are a difficult people," Josarian acknowledged. "There's no denying it."

"Still, despite the expense, a
shatai
costs less than an assassin in the long run." Tansen stared into the fire. "Once you've paid a
shatai
, you owe him nothing and he goes his way. But once an assassin has done you a service, you are indebted to him forever."

Josarian balanced the hare's carcass over the fire. They were too hungry to wait until the flames had died down to glowing embers, though the meat would have been better that way.

Other books

Honest Betrayal by Girard, Dara
Paradise Fields by Katie Fforde
Quarry's Choice by Max Allan Collins
Death in the Dolomites by David P Wagner
Marrying the Enemy by Nicola Marsh
The Love Letters by Beverly Lewis
The Warlock's Curse by Hobson, M.K.
Following the Sun by John Hanson Mitchell
Trail of Broken Wings by Badani, Sejal