Read The Guild of Assassins Online

Authors: Anna Kashina

Tags: #fantasy, #assassins, #Majat Code, #Blades of the Old Empire, #Black Diamond, #Kaddim

The Guild of Assassins (12 page)

Mai lifted his chin. “I have done
right
. And in the depth of your heart you know it, Aghat Oden Lan.”

The Guildmaster’s eyes narrowed. “Surrender your weapon to Gahang Khall, Aghat.”

The Jade took a step forward, but Mai’s short glance stopped him.

“If I surrender my weapon now, I’m as good as dead.”

Oden Lan pursed his lips. “You sealed your death warrant when you made your choice to disobey your order, Aghat Mai. It was good of you to answer your summons and come here yourself, so that you could spare us the trouble of searching for you, but it doesn’t change a thing.”

“Yes, it does,” Mai said. “I came of my own will and walked freely into the Fortress.”

“So what?”

“By the Code, this leaves me the right to issue an Ultimate Challenge.”

A whisper ran through the rows around the Guildmaster as dozens of eyes clashed on Mai.

Khall stepped forward. “An Ultimate Challenge can only be issued against a Diamond, Aghat Mai. By the Code, you can’t challenge the Guildmaster. Who is it that you wish to challenge?”

Mai slid a quick glance over him and turned back to Oden Lan.

“I challenge the Guild,” he said.

Oden Lan looked at him in disbelief. “You wish to fight the entire Guild?”

“Yes.”

The Guildmaster shook his head. “If you had learned the basics of Majat history, Aghat Mai, you would realize how futile that is.”

Mai kept his gaze. “I know my history, Aghat Oden Lan.”

“Then, you must know how such a challenge has ended before.”

Many glances slid up the Guildmaster’s tower where the rusted iron rings were still sticking out of the weather-beaten stone. Kara had read the chronicles too, how the challenger had been chained up there and used for the Jades’ target practice, starting with the extremities. They said he had still been alive when the arrows finally severed his limbs two days later, sending him down to his death fall. She suppressed a shiver, doing her best to maintain her confident posture.

“I know,” Mai said.

“And you still insist on going through with this outrage?”

“Yes. Somebody in this Guild should have the courage to stand up for what’s right.”

Oden Lan leaned forward. “You will face the entire Guild alone?”

Kara stepped forward to Mai’s side. She saw Oden Lan’s face twitch as he finally looked her way. His lips quivered, as if suppressing a sting of pain.

She knew how he felt. It hurt her too, to see him like this. But there was no going back.

“Aghat Mai is not alone,” she said. “I join his challenge. You may pretend I don’t exist anymore, Aghat Oden Lan, but I am here, and I will stand by his side as long as I can hold a weapon.”

His eyes narrowed.

“By the Code–”

“–none of the Guild members can help him,” she finished. “But I am no longer a Guild member, am I? The Code never bothered to prohibit outsiders from participating in the Ultimate Challenge. So, here I am, an outsider, willing to stand up to whatever you choose to throw at us, Aghat.”

In the ensuing pause the courtyard went so still that even the gusts of the low breeze seemed too loud. Everyone held their breaths, looking at the Guildmaster.

“Very well,” Oden Lan said. “The challenge begins tomorrow. You may sleep in a cell in the east courtyard. Under lock. No aid will be given to you in your preparations. At sunrise, your lives are forfeit.”

A whizz of a lone arrow cut through the silence. Mai’s hand shot up, catching it in front of Kara’s face. They both spun around, searching for the source of the attack.

A man stood at the opposite side of the circle, on top of the wall. Streaming sunlight illuminated his freckled face, blue eyes opened in an expression of childlike wonder. He held a lowered bow with an arrow fitted in. Then, his face contorted in anger as he raised his bow again.

“Sharrim,” Mai said quietly.

Kara recognized him too. The Jade who had been sent with Mai on the assignment to kill her. She shivered at the memory. He was a superb archer, their Guild’s best. Back then, he had wounded her in the arm. And now, she felt the memory sting as he aimed his bow at her.

“Stand down, Gahang Sharrim!” Khall barked. “We’re in ceasefire!”

Mai’s shoulders stiffened as he brought the arrow to his face.

“What is it?” Kara asked quietly.

“Black Death. The arrow’s coated with it.”

Kara’s skin prickled. Were any other of the arrows the Jades shot at them earlier poisoned too? She had minor scratches, and her forearm burned where the crossbow bolt had grazed over it – a light wound, but if the bolt had been coated with Black Death...

A new arrow whizzed through the air, aimed at Kara’s face. She shot out her hand to catch it, but another, sneaky one followed right behind it.

As if in a bad dream she saw Mai step into the way of the arrow, shielding her. His body shook as the arrow hit, piercing through his shoulder.

Blood rushed into Kara’s face. Supporting Mai with her left hand, she used her right one to draw two throwing knifes, balancing them in her palm. Stepping around Mai, she sent them forward in a sneaky spin, the force of the blow making the air whistle with a low hum that echoed clearly through the courtyard.

The daggers spiraled through the air in perfect unison, as if connected to each other. She knew it was nearly impossible for a man of any skill to deflect them, or even to see that it was two blades flying in place of one. Any disturbance to one of the daggers sent the other in an unpredictable direction. Only a few in the history of their Guild could master this shadow throw, and Kara had always prided herself on being good at it, even though she had never before used it on a live target.

Sharrim saw it coming, but he clearly did not realize the danger he was in. His hand darted to the sheath at his back, drawing a curved saber. It hit one dagger as it approached, sending the other off at an angle, straight into his chest.

Kara heard the thud as the Jade hit the floor, followed by shouting and running. She didn’t bother to look as she turned back to Mai. He swayed, his face ashen pale. Kara steadied him, fighting a sinking feeling in her heart.

He wasn’t supposed to get hit. Not after a ceasefire, after they deflected whatever their Guild’s best Jades were able to throw at them in an impossible standoff.

And now, there was no hope left. Even if the wound wasn’t deadly, it made it unthinkable for Mai to fight tomorrow. But if the arrow was also coated with Black Death...

It was a slow and potent poison that caused delirium, followed by violent agony and a painful death within a few hours. There was no known antidote. She could sense its bittersweet smell on the arrow point protruding from Mai’s shoulder.

“Would you like to withdraw your challenge, Aghat Mai?” Oden Lan asked. “Under the circumstances, I will let you do it and surrender instead, to face your punishment.”

Mai met Kara’s gaze. She slightly shook her head.

Mai steadied himself against her arm and stood straight, turning to face the Guildmaster. She knew what this show was costing him, but she kept it to herself, standing still by his side with a smile on her face.

“The challenge stands, Aghat Oden Lan,” Mai said.

The Guildmaster looked at him for a moment in disbelief. He did not look at Kara at all.

“So be it,” he said. Then he turned and strode away.

 

14
WOUNDS

Egey Bashi watched Kara and Mai led away, surrounded in a protective ring of the Jades. Mai was using Kara’s arm for support, but it took a man closely familiar with both of them to see the effort it was costing to keep him upright.

Kara marched with her head high under the stares of the crowd. Egey Bashi admired her for her composure. He knew that without Mai she did not stand a chance in hell of surviving what was coming tomorrow. Yet, he also knew that even with Mai’s skill they were likely doomed.

Still, he had to do everything in his power to help.

He looked at Kyth.

“Perhaps you could try to meet with the Guildmaster tonight,” he said. “Not much hope, of course, but if he does see us, something we say might help find a way out of this situation.”

Kyth nodded. “I already sent a request, but the initial response was not encouraging. I don’t think they even relayed it to him. I’ll try again, of course.”

Egey Bashi shook his head. Tomorrow this Guild might be witnessing the biggest bloodbath in the history of the Majat, at least in the count of the top gem ranks that were likely to perish in the mêlée. Raishan’s injury added to the numbers. He needed to see if he could do something, at least about this one.

“With your permission, Prince Kythar,” he said, “I need to attend to something urgent.” He signaled for Ellah to follow and set off in the direction he had seen the Jades carry Raishan earlier.

They slowed down as they approached the medical barracks. The Majat Guild had some of the best doctors for taking care of wounds, and Egey Bashi knew that over the years they must have developed many potent substances to make healing effective, but he also knew that the Keepers were far ahead of them. The small vial he was clutching in his hand could heal Raishan in no time, even if the wound was very grave. But it couldn’t be done unless the Diamond’s life was out of danger, and it certainly had no power to bring him back from the dead. The Magister had to hurry.

Inside, he easily guessed where to go by a trail of forlorn Jades lining the corridor and crowding in the doorway ahead. Egey Bashi made sure Ellah was keeping up as he pushed through into the room.

Raishan lay on a table in the center, his pale face showing no signs of life. Several men in medics’ uniforms bustled over him, and the middle-aged doctor with graying hair and thin, long fingers, gave quiet orders as two of his associates tied a white coverall over his clothes. The tart, metallic smell of blood filled the room. Egey Bashi heard Ellah stifle a half-gasp, half-sob as she pushed into the room in his wake.

When Egey Bashi stepped up to Raishan’s side all the action in the room halted, the concerned expressions around them turning to disbelief, then suspicion. The Keeper kept his eyes on the doctor. Master Lestor, if he wasn’t mistaken. In Egey Bashi’s dealings with the Majat Guild he did his best to put names to many important faces.

He felt somewhat relieved. Lestor was the best doctor he knew outside the Keepers’ White Citadel. He was also a reasonable man.

“How deep is the wound?” he asked.

Lestor surveyed him for a moment with an appraising glance, as if deciding whether to have him thrown out or let him speak. Egey Bashi hoped his expression was sufficiently determined to convince the doctor to settle on the latter option.

“Magister Egey Bashi,” Lestor said. “I’m about to remove the bolt. Perhaps this conversation can wait until after that?”

Egey Bashi took out the small vial and held it up.

“This substance,” he said, “can cure deadly wounds in a matter of minutes, helping them to disappear without a trace. It causes excruciating pain, but I doubt Aghat Raishan in his condition would even notice.”

Lestor’s gaze wavered, his eyes flicking to his patient and back to the Keeper.

“I fear,” he said, “the bolt might have penetrated the lung and its point definitely sits very close to the heart. Can your substance handle that, Magister?”

Egey Bashi let out a sigh. “He has to be alive and in no immediate danger before we can apply the substance.”

The doctor nodded. “I thought so. Perhaps you can step aside and let me do my job? If Aghat Raishan survives this surgery, I will welcome any cure you can bring.”

Egey Bashi gestured to his side. “Ellah is an apprentice Keeper who knows how to use the substance. I will leave her here. If the cure is warranted she’ll know what to do.” He met Ellah’s frightened gaze and placed a calming hand on her shoulder.

“It will be all right,” he said quietly. “Master Lestor is the best. He will do everything possible to save Aghat Raishan’s life.”

Leaving Ellah in a chair in the corner of the room he stepped outside and proceeded to another room down the hall, also attended by the Jades. As he strode in, he was met with more suspicious glances but no one tried to stop him as he approached the bedside.

Sharrim lay very still, but he was clearly awake, his eyes following the Magister’s approach with caution. Two medics bustled over him, dressing his bleeding chest wound. The bloodied throwing dagger lay in a metal dish on a side table and the Magister glanced at it with interest. By the look of it, the dagger had gone in at an angle, to about two thirds of its length, twisting toward the right side, which was probably what saved Sharrim’s life. It was a hell of a throw, one Egey Bashi had only heard about but never thought possible to witness in real life.

“I’m glad to see you are going to live, Gahang,” Egey Bashi said. “For a moment out there I feared the worst.”

The Jade’s gaze wavered and to his surprise Egey Bashi saw a tear standing in the corner of his eye.

“I never meant to hurt him,” Sharrim whispered. “I...”

“You wanted to kill Kara, didn’t you?”

Sharrim nodded. “It was our assignment to kill her, his and mine, together. His failure is my responsibility too.” His lips trembled. “I was so angry with him when I learned what he’d done. I couldn’t forgive him for deceiving me. But when I saw him today...” A tear rolled down his cheek as he subsided back into his pillow. A medic by his side glanced up at Egey Bashi with irritation.

The Keeper crossed his arms on his chest, thoughtfully looking down at the wounded man. He’d seen Mai stir up this reaction in women many times over. But to see a man feel this way was strange.

“How much Black Death do you put on your arrows?” he asked.

Sharrim looked at him in surprise. “Why?”

Egey Bashi leaned closer. “If you want me to try to help Aghat Mai, I need to know.”

The Jade nodded earnestly, causing another irritated glance from the medic. “Ten drops,” he said. “I coat the arrowhead and two inches of the shaft. This way even when the arrow goes through it still leaves enough poison to...” His lips trembled again. “What have I done, Magister?” he whispered.

Egey Bashi lightly patted him on the shoulder.

“Don’t think about it, Gahang,” he said. “Just focus on getting well. I appreciate your help.”

He turned and strode away.

Doctor Lestor stood outside Raishan’s room, surveying the crossbow bolt in a small dish pooled with blood. His arms were bloodied up to the elbows and splotches of it stained his white coverall. He raised his eyes in response to Egey Bashi’s silent question.

“He’s lost a lot of blood,” he said. “And he’s barely hanging on. I asked your apprentice to wait until his condition is stabilized.”

Egey Bashi nodded. “If you need my help, please don’t hesitate to call me. Aghat Raishan and I worked together on many assignments. His life is very precious to me.”

“As it is to all of us,” Lestor said. “This was a nasty incident getting out of hand, and everyone here is deeply regretting it. I assure you, Magister, I will do everything it takes.”

“Are you also going to treat Aghat Mai’s wound?” Egey Bashi asked.

Lestor lowered his eyes. The Keeper watched him with a sinking heart.

“Aghat Mai’s life is forfeit,” the doctor said at length. “By the Guildmaster’s orders. If I did anything to help him, I would share his fate.”

“But…”

The doctor’s eyes showed regret.

“I share your feelings, Magister. Believe me. This is all such a waste. And now, come tomorrow, we will lose two of the best fighters our Guild has ever known in this senseless challenge – along with Shal Addim knows how many others, if this fight indeed goes through as planned.”

“And you will just stand by and let it happen?”

The doctor sighed. “Following orders is the price we all must pay for being the Majat. The best I can do is treat Aghat Raishan before I receive orders to the contrary. Given the Guildmaster’s feelings in the matter and the circumstances of Aghat Raishan’s injury, I wouldn’t be surprised to see such orders forthcoming. I am trying to do my best to give him a chance.”

“But Aghat Mai–”

Lestor’s glance cut him off. “Even if he was in top shape, I see no way he and Aghat Kara could win this challenge against the entire Guild. But I also know more. Gahang Sharrim’s arrow that shot Aghat Mai was coated with Black Death. Even my skill cannot save him now.”

Egey Bashi nodded. He knew better, but telling that to the doctor would serve no purpose except to put him into a precarious position.

As he strode back to the guest quarters, he heard hasty footsteps behind. He turned, watching a lean, wiry man with large dark eyes approach. A crossbow protruded from above his left shoulder and a suffused green jade glistened in his armband.

“Magister Egey Bashi,” the man said. “I overheard you back there, talking to Gahang Sharrim, and later to Master Lestor. Is there anything you can do to help Aghat Mai?”

Egey Bashi stopped, looking at the man keenly.

“Why?”

“I…” the man hesitated. “You probably know what I’m risking by saying this, but I don’t believe it would be right to stand back and let current events run their course. Not if anything can be done about it.”

Egey Bashi peered into his eyes, seeing nothing but honesty in the man’s urgent gaze. He was impressed. With people like this, the Majat Guild had hope indeed.

“You’re a good man,” he said.

The Jade lowered his eyes. “I love my Guild, Magister. I cannot possibly stand by injustice.”

The Keeper nodded. “Do you know where Kara and Mai are kept?”

“Yes, in a cell by the east courtyard. They’re under lock. The whole courtyard has been ordered off limits until tomorrow’s challenge.”

“Do you think you can find your way in there?”

The Jade hesitated. “I can always go into that courtyard to check on security, yes. I cannot get the key to their cell, though.”

“Can you get anything to them?”

The Jade nodded. “The cell is protected by a grate, large enough to pass things through.”

“Good.” Egey Bashi rummaged in the pouch at his belt and brought out another small dark vial, similar to the one that he had just left in Ellah’s care – his private stash even Mother Keeper did not know about. He pushed the vial into the Jade’s hand. “Give them this. Aghat Mai should know what to do – if he is still conscious. If not, tell Kara to coat the arrow shaft with this liquid and pull it through.”

The Jade’s hand quivered. “Master Lestor believes Aghat Mai will die of poison. I heard your conversation. Do you know something he doesn’t, Magister?”

“Yes, I do, Gahang, even though I’d appreciate it if you keep this knowledge from circulating. Aghat Mai is far more resistant to Black Death than anyone else. With the amount he had, he should be able to recover by morning, assuming that his wound is treated within an hour or so.”

The Jade put the vial into his pocket with great care.

“You should also give them some lanterns,” Egey Bashi said. “It’s getting dark and Kara will need all the light possible to do what’s needed. And… I’m not sure how Majat prisoners are kept, but it would of course be good to make sure they have food and water. They need to replenish their strength. Walk with me; I’ll tell you more details.”

The Keeper parted with the Jade at the entrance courtyard, watching the man retreat in hasty steps. He hoped this man would do what he promised. So fortunate that, back in the Grasslands during their fight with the Kaddim, Egey Bashi had used a small dose of Black Death on Mai, to treat a seriously infected wound. Very few knew of the medicinal properties of this poison – or the fact that small doses of it made a man resistant to Black Death for life.

He hoped, with the Jade’s help, Mai would give a nasty surprise to their Guildmaster by appearing in the arena in top shape tomorrow. This still didn’t leave much chance for him and Kara to win the challenge, but at least it somewhat improved the odds.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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