414 lines
21 KiB
TeX
414 lines
21 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-14-villain}{%
|
|
\chapter{Villain}\label{chapter-14-villain}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``All lessons worth learning are drenched in blood.''}{Dread Empress Triumphant, First and Only of Her Name}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We rode for Ater.
|
|
|
|
I forced myself awake for my sword lessons and kept up my readings, but
|
|
I hadn't spoken a word to Black since Summerholm. The Fields stretched
|
|
in every direction around us, farms and grasslands as far as the eye
|
|
could see: empty, most of them. The farmer seemed aware an Imperial
|
|
party was coming through and they avoided the sight of us. I spent my
|
|
evenings in silence, staring at closed books and thinking about the city
|
|
I'd just left. I'd made a mistake. There were things about the way I'd
|
|
reacted on the day of the hangings that bothered me, and I had no real
|
|
explanation for them. Oh, I was still more disgusted than I could
|
|
properly put into words. I'd taken lives before, but learning about the
|
|
sacrifices had been a different matter. I'd killed for justice, when no
|
|
one else was willing to give it. I'd killed in battle, when my enemies
|
|
left me no other choice. That three prisoners, no matter how they'd
|
|
ended up on death row, had been slaughtered like cattle to keep me alive
|
|
still made me nauseous. They hadn't died for a greater purpose, they'd
|
|
died for my sake. Used up for their blood like animals. Their deaths had
|
|
been unasked for, and they were not my fault, but the were my
|
|
responsibility nonetheless.
|
|
|
|
As for the hangings\ldots{} I could see, now that the heat of the moment
|
|
had passed, that they'd been doomed to die. The Knight wasn't wrong that
|
|
they'd committed treason. Sparing them would have weakened Imperial
|
|
authority and let a pack of conspirators who'd already been part of the
|
|
murder of a Governor on the loose. That thought did not, however, extend
|
|
to the sympathizers who'd died like the rest. How many in the Lost Crown
|
|
had actually been part of the Sons of Streges? The group had been a
|
|
small one, and ineffective before the Lone Swordsman had gotten
|
|
involved. \emph{There certainly weren't fifty of them, and that's how
|
|
many got the noose.} Were they innocent? No, perhaps not. But they were
|
|
mainly guilty of hating the Empire, and how could they be blamed for
|
|
that? If Black hung every sympathizer in Summerholm, there'd be nobody
|
|
left in the city but the Legions.
|
|
|
|
It wasn't enough, though. There was more to it. It hadn't helped that
|
|
I'd nearly lost my life the night before and been told of death after
|
|
death the moment I woke up. My hands still shook when I thought of how
|
|
close I'd come to dying that night, slowly bleeding out on the floor as
|
|
the hero walked away. If he'd been even a little more thorough, just a
|
|
little less sure my wound would kill me\ldots{} I took a deep breath a
|
|
steadied my hand. The thought of going into a fight again had dread
|
|
creeping up my spine, and I hated every moment of it. The whispers from
|
|
the crowd had pushed me, in a way. For all that I'd pushed through as I
|
|
walked, even now the memory of them stung. I'd thought I was prepared to
|
|
be called a traitor by my people, I'd gone into this knowing they'd
|
|
consider me one, but after actually living through it I knew I'd been
|
|
anything but. Some part of me had wanted to set myself apart from what
|
|
was happening, to prove I wasn't betraying the land I wanted to save.
|
|
|
|
My conversation with the Swordsman kept plaguing my thoughts.
|
|
``\emph{How can you possibly justify working for these tyrants?''} he'd
|
|
asked.I'd dismissed him as yet another heroic imbecile, back then, but-
|
|
I frowned. There was no but. There should be no but. Why did a single
|
|
conversation with a man I held no real respect for shake me so? It
|
|
wasn't like he'd made any good arguments. Just platitudes about kingdoms
|
|
and banners, the kind of sentimental logic someone with no solid
|
|
reasoning would use. There was something at play here I didn't
|
|
understand. I still couldn't feel my Name, and the last time I had was
|
|
in the wake of letting the hero go -- they were related, in some way.
|
|
I'd failed some sort of test: my Role had found me wanting in some
|
|
manner. It burned me that the only person I could have discussed this
|
|
with was the Black Knight, and I just \emph{couldn't}. Putting aside
|
|
that I'd knowingly tried to push a hero into starting an insurrection in
|
|
Callow, just the sight of the man was enough to fill me with cold anger.
|
|
|
|
Three times, his voice had turned strange as he gave orders. Three times
|
|
I had obeyed, regardless of what I wanted. That he'd casually
|
|
commandeered my own body wasn't something I ever intended to forget --
|
|
and no one held grudges quite like Callowans.
|
|
|
|
The days passed one after another and I dug into the books. Most of them
|
|
were history, as it turned out. Praes had been a mess before the Empire
|
|
was even declared: there'd been no less than four Soninke kingdoms in
|
|
the north, fighting each other over land, and in the Hungering Sands the
|
|
desert tribes had slaughtered each other brutally over ever-scarce
|
|
resources. They only people they'd hated more were each other: the
|
|
Taghreb had frequently raided into the southernmost Soninke kingdoms,
|
|
stealing everything they could get their hands on and burning the rest.
|
|
Back then the goblin tribes in the Grey Eyries had been nothing more
|
|
than a presence looming in the background, though they'd already been
|
|
forging iron weaponry when everyone else was still using bronze. In a
|
|
sense the Clans had been the force to be reckoned with, back in those
|
|
days: humans tread lightly around them, fearful of the great greenskin
|
|
hordes in the Steppes that descended like a flood of death every few
|
|
decades.
|
|
|
|
It was a feeble distraction, though, and the tension rose with every
|
|
passing day. It had become nearly intolerable by the time we got to the
|
|
Blessed Isle. The barren rock in the middle of the Wasaliti River had
|
|
been the furthest Miezan stronghold on the continent, meant to be the
|
|
stepping stone for an invasion of ancient Callow before the Licerian
|
|
Wars put an abrupt end to those prospects. It had changed hands hundreds
|
|
of times since those days, but the massive stone bridge linking the
|
|
island to the ground from both sides still stood unbroken as a testament
|
|
to superior Miezan engineering. The ancient fort had become a massive
|
|
castle in the wake of Dread Empress Triumphant's fall, when the Kingdom
|
|
of Callow had finally claimed it as its own. Before the Conquest it had
|
|
been the fortress-temple of the Order of the White Hand, the steel-clad
|
|
paladins who guarded the eastern border of the kingdom. For centuries
|
|
they'd been a plague on the Empire, raiding beyond even the Green
|
|
Stretch. There were still songs sung about the time they'd ridden up to
|
|
the Nine Gates of Ater, leaving the corpse of a Praesi general in sight
|
|
of the city walls as a warning against designs to the west.
|
|
|
|
It was a ruin now, the very stone blackened and burned by the largest
|
|
deployment of goblinfire in Praesi history. The Order of the White Hand
|
|
had been wiped out root and stem as the opening move of the Conquest,
|
|
the paladins killed to the last man and woman so that they could never
|
|
rise again. It had been the moment when Callow started taking the newest
|
|
Black Knight seriously, though not quite enough: two weeks later the
|
|
infamous massacre on the Fields of Streges had effectively broken the
|
|
better part of the Kingdom's military strength. We rode under the broken
|
|
arches of the only gate in silence, the wind hurling itself at the ruins
|
|
sounding eerily like a dirge. It was said that if you listened closely
|
|
you could still hear the screams of the two thousand who'd burned alive.
|
|
|
|
The sun was setting and the Blackguards immediately set to making camp
|
|
under one of the larger towers, putting up the tents and starting a
|
|
fire. Some of them had left the party to hunt earlier and caught a
|
|
handful of rabbits they were intent on turning into stew, skinning the
|
|
beasts and putting them into an iron cooking pot. I left Zombie in what
|
|
must have once been the outer stables, avoiding the company of Black and
|
|
Captain who were sitting by the fire. I could have just retired to my
|
|
tent with a book and a candle, but after a long day's ride I felt like
|
|
stretching my legs: I wandered off into the ruins, not quite sure what I
|
|
expected to find. The fortress had been thoroughly ruined, I found out.
|
|
Even the inside of most structures was scorched, and not a single roof
|
|
had survived the taking of the Isle. Here and there skeletons peeked out
|
|
from under the debris, the bones themselves blackened and warped as a
|
|
grim reminder of the dangers of goblinfire.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't sure why the Empire had never bothered to rebuild and garrison
|
|
the Blessed Isle, truth be told. As the only way across the river it
|
|
seemed like a key position to hold, but the Praesi seemed happy enough
|
|
to leave it a wreck. A warning against defiance, maybe? Maybe even they
|
|
were unsettled by what had happened here during the Conquest. I let my
|
|
feet take me wherever they felt, eventually ending up by the southern
|
|
wall. The view from there was striking. To the west fields swallowed the
|
|
horizon, tinted red by the light of the setting sun, and to the east the
|
|
Imperial road stretched beyond what the eye could see. It went all the
|
|
way to Ater, I knew, one of the larger projects undertaken by the
|
|
Empire. \emph{Dread Emperor Tenebrous}, I dredged up. He was the one to
|
|
get it done. He'd seemed like a promising ruler early in his reign,
|
|
until he'd made one deal too many with the Underworld and become
|
|
convinced he was a giant spider stuck in a man's body. Things had
|
|
swiftly gone downhill after that.
|
|
|
|
I got bored with the sights eventually, walking down a half-ruined set
|
|
of stairs to make my way back to camp. I was getting hungry, and I still
|
|
had some readings to get done before I went to bed. I crossed into an
|
|
open courtyard surrounded by a quartet of smaller bastions but stopped
|
|
dead in my tracks when I realized I was no longer alone. Lounging on a
|
|
miraculously untouched stone bench, a strikingly beautiful Soninke girl
|
|
was watching me with a pleasant smile. I reached for my my sword before
|
|
realizing I'd left it back in camp -- I no longer wore it outside of my
|
|
lessons. All I had was my knife, and even in the dying light I could see
|
|
that the Heiress had a bared blade resting across her lap.
|
|
|
|
``Catherine Foundling,'' the dark-skinned girl spoke amiably, her
|
|
sing-song Mthethwa accent caressing the words. ``It was past time we met
|
|
properly.''
|
|
|
|
``Heiress,'' I replied. ``Didn't think you'd be inclined to talk, after
|
|
what you did in Summerholm.''
|
|
|
|
The aristocrat shrugged elegantly.
|
|
|
|
``It was nothing personal, Catherine,'' she told me. ``I thought you
|
|
were a threat, back then. This is how the game is played, yes?''
|
|
|
|
I grit my teeth. She'd set the other three claimants -- well, maybe two,
|
|
Rashid likely had gotten there on his own -- on me and it was
|
|
\emph{nothing personal}? After a heartbeat I frowned.
|
|
|
|
``Back then,'' I repeated carefully.
|
|
|
|
Heiress smiled, warm and friendly. ``I know better, now. I wasn't sure,
|
|
after you let the hero go, but after that display in the Court of Swords
|
|
there can be no doubt.''
|
|
|
|
My blood ran cold. There'd been nobody else on the walls, when I'd
|
|
pushed the Lone Swordsman into the river. How could she- No.~She might
|
|
be guessing. No need to hand her leverage she might not have.
|
|
|
|
``Not sure what you're talking about,'' I grunted. ``The Swordsman got
|
|
away on his own -- heroes do that, you know.''
|
|
|
|
The beautiful girl laughed. ``Of course he did. I withdraw any
|
|
implication to the contrary. Still, there's no need for us to be
|
|
enemies. I've come with a peace offering, you see.''
|
|
|
|
I raised an eyebrow. ``I was under the impression that your Role and
|
|
mine were supposed to be at odds,'' I pointed out.
|
|
|
|
``We would be,'' she agreed. ``If you were a real Squire.''
|
|
|
|
My fingers closed against the handle of my knife.
|
|
|
|
``Would you care to repeat that?'' I whispered. ``I didn't quite catch
|
|
what you said.''
|
|
|
|
She waved away the threat. ``Come now, Foundling -- you don't actually
|
|
\emph{want} to be the Squire, do you? If you did, that deplorable scene
|
|
in Summerholm wouldn't have happened.''
|
|
|
|
``I've killed for this Name,'' I replied coldly. ``Careful, Heiress.''
|
|
|
|
``I've killed for good theatre seats, my dear,'' the Soninke chuckled.
|
|
``That's the way of things, in the Wasteland. That's why you're so
|
|
disgusted with us, isn't it?''
|
|
|
|
``If you're looking for an impassioned defence of the Praesi moral
|
|
fibre,'' I said through gritted teeth, ``I'm afraid you're barking up
|
|
the wrong tree.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, I quite agree with you,'' Heiress told me feelingly. ``You're
|
|
different, Catherine. Trying to be one of us can only hurt you. It's why
|
|
I'm offering you a way out.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{What?}
|
|
|
|
``You're feeling trapped, right now,'' the other girl told me, ``but you
|
|
don't have to be. I have a ship waiting, and I can get you back to Laure
|
|
safely. Or anywhere else you want to go, for that matter. You can start
|
|
over without all this mess hanging over your head. Tonight. Just say the
|
|
word.''
|
|
|
|
My heartbeat stilled. She was saying the truth. I knew it in my guts,
|
|
she was saying the truth. If I accepted, I'd set out on a ship tonight
|
|
and leave before anyone could catch me. I couldn't go back to Laure,
|
|
obviously, but I could sail down the Wasaliti until Mercantis and make
|
|
my way into the Free Cities. I'd be beyond the Empire's reach, there.
|
|
Safe.
|
|
|
|
``And if I refuse?'' I asked quietly.
|
|
|
|
``Are you?'' Heiress murmured, pleasant smile unwavering. ``Refusing?''
|
|
|
|
It was such a pretty smile she had. Shame about the way it didn't reach
|
|
her eyes.
|
|
|
|
``I think I am,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
She sighed, crossing her legs.
|
|
|
|
``I'd hoped we could do this without resorting to unpleasantness,'' she
|
|
spoke. ``Are you quite sure we can't come to terms?''
|
|
|
|
``More sure by the moment,'' I replied flatly.
|
|
|
|
``Well, then,'' Heiress said, all pretence of pleasantness melting away.
|
|
``As we speak, I have men surrounding your orphanage in Laure. If I give
|
|
the word everyone inside will be dead by morning. The matron, the girls
|
|
you shared a dormitory with, even the children. Put to the sword, every
|
|
last one of them, unless you abandon your Name tonight.''
|
|
|
|
For the second time, my blood ran cold. She'd spoken her threat the way
|
|
other people talked of the weather -- like it was nothing particularly
|
|
noteworthy, just a way to make conversation. Was she bluffing? Maybe.
|
|
But she had the resources to arrange this, and she didn't seem like the
|
|
kind of person afraid to use every tool at her disposal.
|
|
|
|
``I'm not asking for your life,'' Heiress told me patiently. ``Merely
|
|
that you get out of my way.''
|
|
|
|
``If you give the word,'' I repeated. ``That assumes you're alive to do
|
|
so.''
|
|
|
|
She laughed. ``I have come in the fullness of my Name, Catherine. You're
|
|
powerless and as good as unarmed. And if that's not enough for
|
|
you\ldots{}''
|
|
|
|
She snapped her fingers and in near-silence four silhouettes stepped out
|
|
of the spreading shadows. Thick cloaks hid their features, but there was
|
|
no hiding the crossbows they were pointing at me. They were spread out
|
|
in the courtyard, their lines of fire overlapping only on me.
|
|
|
|
``Be reasonable, Catherine,'' the Soninke said. ``Surrender is the only
|
|
rational course left to you.''
|
|
|
|
I closed my eyes. How many girls were there, in the orphanage? At least
|
|
forty, and a third of them no older than ten. She'd kill them and not
|
|
lose a wink of sleep over it, if she thought she had to. Gods, I was so
|
|
sick of this. Not even a month and I was so very tired. I opened my eyes
|
|
and exhaled, looking up into the sky. The moon was out. I laughed.
|
|
|
|
``Thank you,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Heiress frowned.
|
|
|
|
``I should thank Black too, I suppose,'' I continued quietly. ``This was
|
|
a lesson I needed to learn.''
|
|
|
|
``I don't follow,'' my rival admitted.
|
|
|
|
``I've been thinking about this all wrong, you see. I was raised in
|
|
Callow, and we see things differently. The shepherd boy picks up the
|
|
fated sword, slays the dragon and is revealed to have been a prince all
|
|
along.'' I smiled at her. ``This was never going to be that kind of
|
|
story.''
|
|
|
|
Gods, I'd wanted it to. Deep down, I'd thought that just doing good
|
|
things under an Evil Role would see me through this. That I could walk
|
|
that line without every really dirtying my hands in a way I'd regret for
|
|
the rest of my life.
|
|
|
|
``Do it,'' I said. `` Kill them. If I give in once, you'll just use it
|
|
against me over and over again.''
|
|
|
|
I couldn't beat the monsters by being better than them. I'd never had
|
|
that in me. Too much impatience, too much recklessness. That was all
|
|
right, though. There was another way: \emph{be the bigger monster.}
|
|
|
|
``Do you think I'm bluffing?'' Heiress asked, voice low and dangerous.
|
|
|
|
``I know you're not,'' I admitted. ``Which is why I'm going to say this:
|
|
if a single one of them dies, \emph{I will} \emph{make a monument to
|
|
ruin of you}. All that has ever given you joy, I will turn to ashes.
|
|
Everyone you've ever loved, I will break so thoroughly they die cursing
|
|
your name. I will undo everything you've ever accomplished, wipe the
|
|
slate of your existence so clean there won't be a person alive that
|
|
remembers you were ever born. I will take no pleasure in it, but I will
|
|
do it.''
|
|
|
|
Eyes cold as ice, I bared my teeth.
|
|
|
|
``I will do it, so that the next time some smug Praesi prick tells me to
|
|
surrender I can point to the wasteland that was once your home and watch
|
|
them flinch.''
|
|
|
|
``You don't have it in you,'' she replied, face blank.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Try me},'' I hissed.
|
|
|
|
There was fear lurking under the beautiful mask and I relished it. It
|
|
was about time those fuckers started taking me seriously.
|
|
|
|
``I could kill you, here and now,'' Heiress said.
|
|
|
|
``You could try,'' I corrected with a breathless laugh. ``Here I am,
|
|
abandoned by my Name with only a knife to defend myself. You've got four
|
|
big men with crossbows and a fancy sword in your lap. Look into my eyes,
|
|
Heiress -- do I look afraid to you? You've stacked the odds, but have
|
|
you stacked them \emph{enough}?''
|
|
|
|
She hesitated. I'd never felt more alive than I did in that moment, when
|
|
that clever little wretch took a look at me standing alone in her trap
|
|
and faltered. I had nothing to me but my anger, but that was more than
|
|
enough. I'd fought without a Name, long before I ever met the
|
|
Calamities. I could do it again.
|
|
|
|
``Kill her,'' Heiress ordered, but I was already moving knife in hand.
|
|
|
|
Three strings twanged and I felt a bolt come within a hair's breadth of
|
|
my throat. \emph{Too slow.} I was on the first man before he could even
|
|
drop his crossbow: I slid behind him, letting the last shot bury itself
|
|
in his stomach. Laying a hand on his shoulder, I slid my knife across
|
|
his throat and and let him drop to the ground. By the time I was moving
|
|
again, Heiress was nowhere in sight. \emph{Stupid of you, my dear. If
|
|
you'd stayed you might have won.} The second man had his sword out when
|
|
I got to him, but after fighting real monsters every morning I could
|
|
have laughed at how sloppy his stance was. He swung too wild and I
|
|
slipped inside his guard, burying my blade in his eye to the hilt. I
|
|
snatched his sword before it could drop to the ground, letting the third
|
|
one come to me as the last henchman finished reloading. I flicked the
|
|
tip of the blade in his direction and he backed off warily, though I
|
|
circled to keep him between me and the man with the crossbow.
|
|
|
|
He seemed reluctant to attack and I grinned when I realized why: he was
|
|
afraid of me. They both were. I'd just killed the other two like it was
|
|
a stroll through the market and sent their employer running without even
|
|
needing to fight her. I pushed forward, letting him catch my sword in a
|
|
parry -- he was too eager to keep me far away, and it cost him when I
|
|
dropped the sword to catch his wrist. His eyes widened in panic but
|
|
before he could say a word I punched him in the belly. No armour, only
|
|
soft flesh, and I pried his fingers loose of his sword before hacking
|
|
into his neck with it like I was reaping wheat. I turned my eyes to the
|
|
last one, bloodied blade in hand as the tip of his crossbow shook in his
|
|
unsteady hands.
|
|
|
|
``Pray you don't miss,'' I said. ``You'll be dead before you get to
|
|
reload.''
|
|
|
|
Steadying his hands, the man took aim carefully. Whether I could have
|
|
dodged the quarrel or not would remain a mystery: before he could do
|
|
anything, a hand of shadow slithered its way up his throat and started
|
|
choking him. The minion pawed at it frantically, but the shadow stayed
|
|
on his skin. A minute passed before he fell to the ground, blue in the
|
|
face and eyes bloodshot. I cast an eye around the courtyard and saw
|
|
Black sitting on top of the wall in the back, legs dangling off the
|
|
edge. He seemed amused, the mask of indolence he liked to affect once
|
|
more painted over his face. The dark-haired man remained silent,
|
|
breaking off a piece of bread and popping it into his mouth. I strode
|
|
towards the first man I'd killed, wrenching out my knife and wiping the
|
|
blade on his cloak. I felt my Name stir deep inside of me as I sheathed
|
|
the knife and smiled a hard smile. \emph{Liked that, did you? Good.
|
|
We're far from done, you and I.} Slowly, I turned to face the Black
|
|
Knight.
|
|
|
|
``I've missed enough lessons,'' I said. ``Let's get to work.''
|
|
|
|
\emph{How can you justify working for these tyrants?} the Lone Swordsman
|
|
had asked. I finally had my answer. \emph{Justifications only matter to
|
|
the just.}
|