The Fall of Ventaris (19 page)

Read The Fall of Ventaris Online

Authors: Neil McGarry,Daniel Ravipinto,Amy Houser

Tags: #Gay & Lesbian, #Literature & Fiction, #Fiction, #Gay, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Genre Fiction

After a long moment, she slid from her seat. Even in his state, Pollux reacted like a warrior, jerking upright and grasping vainly at his waist for a sword. But there was no blade there, nor even a belt, and only then did he seem to realize his nakedness. He stared about wildly, unseeing.

“Be at ease,” she said gently. “You’re safe.”

His head snapped up, his ears following the sound of her voice, his eyes still blind and useless. Looking anything but convinced, Pollux drew up his legs as if to protect himself. He tried to speak but all that came out was a croak. He coughed up more red bile, slapping at his limbs as if to awaken them. “You’re the false feaster,” he rasped, wiping his mouth. “Back in the cell.”

“You remember me?”

“I can’t see you, but it’s the same voice. Your makeup was good, but not quite right for a follower of Naru.”

Duchess was impressed. “A memory as sharp as a blade,” she said admiringly.

He did not acknowledge the compliment, but turned his face toward her. She could tell by the blankness of his gaze he still could not see her. Another side-effect of the moonshadow. “Which hell is this?”

She smiled. “Just the Shallows, which according to some is much like some of the lower ones.” She lifted the candle and traced a slow circle. “Can you see this?”

His gray eyes were still red and bloodshot, but now they seemed a bit clearer. “Light. Dim, and blurry.” He spat out more red and grimaced at the taste. “The Shallows? I think I’d rather it
was
hell.”

She smiled. “You’re not the first to say that. Here.” She handed him the wineskin Jadis had left. “Drink this. It’ll make you feel better.” He looked at her warily, and she snorted. “If I’d wanted you dead I’d have simply buried you in that shroud and thrown away the shovel.” His skeptical expression persisted. “Fine, fine...hand it over.” She took it back, popped the cork and drank deep. The wine was as sour as the smell had promised. “Not a remarkable vintage,” she remarked, “but hardly poison.” She handed back the skin. “Drink.”

He took a careful sip, holding the wine on his tongue a long moment. He grimaced. “You’re
sure
it isn’t poison?”

“For a man newly returned through Mayu’s gates, you certainly have a sense of humor. Take some more, but just a little at a time.” He took another mouthful, and she was impressed that she hadn’t had to grab the skin to prevent him from gulping. A man of discipline. They sat in silence for awhile, with Pollux sipping and Duchess watching. Although it was hard to tell in the dim light, she thought his color was returning, although the hand that held the wineskin still trembled. When he seemed able to keep the wine down, she passed him the grapes. “And now these,” she said, pressing the fruit into his calloused hands. “And before you ask...” She popped a grape into her mouth. It was luscious as Jadis had promised.

He went at the grapes as if they might suddenly vanish. “Whatever you gave me was in that tart, wasn’t it?” he said around a mouthful. She shrugged. “What in all the hells did you do?”

“I gave you a way out. And not through death’s door.”

“And where does Takkis think I am?”

“I hope he thinks you’re dead.”

He stopped eating and gave her a hard look. “Why?” he asked, and she understood his question had nothing to do with Takkis.

“You were in difficulty,” she replied. “I like to help people who are in difficulty.”

“And what will you want in return?”

“Your friendship.”

He laughed harshly. “My friendship is worth less than your wine.” He popped another grape into his mouth, chewed, swallowed. “What happens if I decide to just walk out of here and not look back?”

She shrugged. “Then I suppose I’ve wasted a good deal of effort.” She had thought hard about what to say next. Any future she had with this man depended on it. “But before you leave, consider this. Your old life is gone. You can’t rejoin the Whites, and if you go back to your cell...well, eventually someone will give you
real
poison, and that will be the end of that.” He said nothing, watching her with those gray eyes. “You can find work as a sellsword, but of course you’ll spend the rest of your life wondering if the caravan master or merchant who hired you might someday find out who you really are. Then someone — another White, a blackarm, or an assassin sent from someone from the imperial court — would kill you, and this time you’d stay dead. Or you could leave the city and try to lose yourself in the Territories, leaving behind everything you might have cared about.” She saw something in those eyes shift, and she realized she’d struck home.
 

“Are you offering a better choice?” he said at last, his voice flat. There was warning in that tone, yes, but also perhaps a bit of curiosity? She took a breath and plunged in.

“You can be reborn...
resurrected
...as someone new. Someone who won’t be stopped when he tries to take care of the things he loves. Someone who understands the value of friendship, and is willing to return it.” She smiled, trying to appear perfectly at ease. “It’s your good fortune that I’m someone who believes in showing my friendship first, otherwise you’d still be rotting in that cell.” She nudged Jadis’ bag towards him. “I’ve given you a new life, but for now you’ll have to make do with your old clothes.”

If Pollux was discomfited by the reminder of his nakedness he gave no sign, but rummaged in the bag and started to dress. “And what will this cost me? What will you want in return for my friendship?” he asked, pulling on a pair of breeches.

“Nothing you aren’t willing to give,” she replied, and watched him slip a stained tunic over his head. As he pulled on his boots she reached into her purse and produced a florin, which she extended to him. She almost hated to do it, considering how much she owed Antony, but she had to give him
something
. “With a new life comes new opportunities, if you’re willing to take them. The gold is a gift, nothing more. Before you make any decisions, ask around about Duchess of the Shallows. I think you’ll like what you hear.” Pollux closed his hand around the gold, and for a moment she was reminded of the three florin Noam had given her before she left the bakery.

“You’re a duchess?” he said at last, unsmiling.

She shrugged, grinning. “So they tell me. Makes me easy to find, don’t you think?” They stood there in the dark for a long moment, neither speaking. Then, with the slightest bow of his head, Pollux strode past her, up the stairs and into the night. She sank back into her seat, feeling weak-kneed.
 

She’d begun the evening waiting for death’s arrival and had ended it in the company of a rogue White. She wasn’t certain which was the more dangerous.

Chapter Twelve: A name for a prophecy

In the week since she’d rescued Pollux from the blackarms, Duchess had racked her brain for a way she might winkle a license for Jana from the weaver’s guild.
Fruning
was a wonderful tool, but it was not magic, and thus far it had yielded nothing more substantial than what she’d learned from Ferroc. In the right hands, that nugget of information concerning Tremaine’s religious affiliation was a lever that might move even the Guildmaster, but that meant approaching the faceless and enigmatic followers of the Lady of Wisdom.

Though ninth bell had hardly ceased its ringing, the Godswalk was already crowded with the pious and the penitent, a jostling mass of beggars, priests, and citizens both noble and common. For once the bustle failed to distract, for Duchess had eyes only for the pale marble steps that led to the Sanctum of Anassa.

She shivered, even though the morning fog had already yielded to the summer heat. She’d had no dealings with the facets since the night she’d stolen the baron’s dagger, which suited her just fine, but she couldn’t see any alternative. Simply asking Tremaine to admit Jana to the guild would do no good, and she lacked both the funds to bribe and the knowledge to blackmail. The only way forward went through the Sanctum.

Duchess crossed the grassy center of the Walk, heading towards the great statue of Anassa: a woman robed and masked, holding above her head the long and multifaceted shape of the Splinter of Wisdom. Along the length of that carven shard were inlaid countless mirrors that reflected the wan morning light in every direction, making the single-eyed visage of the goddess seem as if it wore a veil of light and shadow.
 

Her eye wandered past the statue to the Sanctum itself, and the mass of humanity gathered there. A thousand voices shouted a thousand questions to the Lady, and before them all, standing sentry, masked and still as their Lady’s image, was a row of facets. She noted, not for the first time, how unearthly the priestesses seemed, each one identical in height and girth, and every movement perfectly and elegantly coordinated. Her belly felt tight and hard. It was one thing to banter with a facet at a party, but quite another to seek entry to her very home, where few were permitted. Lysander’s warning about tempting fate arose in her mind, and she found herself turning away along the Walk, putting off the moment when she must face the facets.

She passed beggars, and petty priests of a thousand different faiths, the former concerned with the contents of her purse and the latter with the contents of her soul. She wondered which was the more sincere. Minette had taught her that money was power, but after that strange display in the Halls of Dawn, she had come to suspect that faith had a strength all its own.

She looked up to find herself near the other Lady of the Walk: Mayu, goddess of death, justice and growing things, holding her lamp aloft, with her gardens just behind. The ivy-grown walls and brick arch of the Garden were much more welcoming than the cold marble perfection of the Sanctum, and before she knew it, her feet had turned in that direction. Ordinary folk were welcome in the Garden of Mayu, or so she had heard, and she felt a sudden desire to explore...and to put off even longer a confrontation with the facets. She had barely taken a step when she heard a cough from behind and turned to find First Keeper Jadis and his smile, both attended by a black-robed coterie of lesser keepers.
 

“Contemplating mortality?” he asked gaily, as if greeting an old friend.

She smiled thinly to cover her dismay. Had the man lost his wits, to approach her so openly? The Godswalk was as public a space as could be imagined, and she was certain the rumors were already germinating. “I said we would meet again,” he said, and his voice was so rich with mischief she was certain he sensed her discomfort. “Although if you insist upon following me so openly, people will begin to talk.” He took her hand in both of his own. “Perhaps we should give them a reason, what do you say?”
 

Duchess gently disengaged her fingers. “First Keeper,” she said formally, keenly aware of the beggars watching from all sides. “I...had not expected to meet you here.”
 

Evidently unconcerned about who might be watching, he lifted an eyebrow in surprise. “Where else should I be?” he asked, gesturing to the great statue of Mayu along the Walk. “Perhaps I should ask what brings
you
here, under the very shadow of our Lady?”

Feeling both flustered and annoyed, she floundered for an answer. “I have never seen Mayu’s gardens up close, and I thought...”
 

“...that you needed a guide.” Jadis smiled broadly. “I would be delighted to serve in that capacity, my sweet.” He waved a pudgy hand at his retinue. “Leave us; the lady does not need more than one guide.” He winked at her. “I’ll keep her safe enough.” The keepers bowed and moved off wordlessly, and Jadis took her arm and steered her towards the arch.
 

“We shouldn’t be seen together,” she hissed.

“No? Is it not a keeper’s first duty to shepherd Mayu’s children?” He patted her arm soothingly. “Besides, our business remains ours. If others whisper in corners, what of it? Come now, the Gardens await.”
 

With no other choice she let herself be escorted. Great iron lanterns, mounted directly into the stone, glowed on each side of the portal, and by their light Duchess could see that the inner walls and ceiling of the arch were thickly festooned with green ivy. She hesitated. “How does it grow so well under here, without any sun?”

“Mayu’s garden grows as it will,” Jadis replied placidly. “Only in court is Ventaris ascendant.” She glanced at him, wondering, but before she could ask he ushered her through the heavy iron gates and into the garden proper. The space inside the walls was wide and grassy, with flowering shrubs, trees large and small, and tall hedges that formed nooks and alcoves where the faithful could reflect and pray with relative privacy. Either there were no worshipers at the moment or they were hidden by the cleverly placed topiary, but a few black-robed keepers moved about, clipping here, raking there. A few glanced in their direction but just as quickly looked away. Apparently, what the First Keeper did in the Gardens was his own business. “Now that we are alone,” he murmured as they ambled along, “Perhaps you will tell me why you are
really
here. On the Godswalk, I mean.”

She regarded him for a long moment, trying to divine his intentions. He seemed harmless enough, but of course no one rose to such an exalted position as First Keeper by being harmless. Then again, he likely knew more about the facets than anyone in the city. She decided a little honesty was in order.

“I suppose I came for wisdom. And a prophecy.”

He blinked theatrically. “Then I think you’re on rather the wrong side of the Walk.”
 

She frowned. “I’d hoped you’d have more to offer than
that
.”

By way of answer, Jadis gestured deeper into the Garden. She followed him along a crushed stone path and into a large, hedge-enclosed space filled with carved wooden benches and flowering plants. On a plinth stood a smaller version of the statue of Mayu Duchess had seen on the Godswalk: a woman, cloaked and hooded, wearing a belt heavy with tools, one hand holding aloft a lantern. They were in the heart of a bustling city, but this nook was so tranquil it might as well have been a thousand miles away. Even the air smelled green. Jadis seemed to note her appreciation and nodded approval. Her attention was drawn by a sharp clicking sound, like wood on wood. The noise seemed to be coming from amongst the plants, and, looking more closely, she spied movement in the soil.
 

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