deadly to females. Thamalon rubbed it on his lips, then applied it to my daughter's mouth with a kiss.'

'That's monstrous,' Shamur said. 'Did you actually let this medusa go?'

'Yes. You would have done the same, had you given your word. Besides, she was only a tool. What I cared about was finding the fiend who instigated my daughter's death.'

'Yet when you finally identified him, you did nothing!' she exploded. 'Why didn't you tell me at the time?'

The old man lowered his eyes. 'I feared the consequences. Our finances still hadn't fully recovered from the disasters Thamalon had inflicted upon us, and by that time our commercial ventures were thoroughly entwined with his own. If something disrupted that partnership, the House of Karn might yet fall into ruin. I reckoned vengeance wouldn't bring my daughter back, and I had the welfare of my other children to consider. And I was thinking of you.'

'Me?'

'Yes. By that time, you were the mistress of a great House and the mother of a three year-old son you adored. I didn't want to tear your life apart.'

'Then why in Mask's name are you doing it now?'

'Because it seems to me now that I was wrong. You have a right to know, and this was my final chance to tell you.'

She struggled to compose herself. 'Thank you. You… you have told me, and I'll need to sit alone and ponder what to do about it. For now, may we talk of other matters? What would you like me to do to help Fendolac and his siblings in the days ahead?'

He answered, but she barely heard him, for her mind was in turmoil. The gods knew, she didn't love Thamalon, far from it. Still, he was her husband of nearly thirty years, the father of her children, and never had she imagined him capable of such malevolence. Yet Lindrian, his illness notwithstanding, seemed entirely lucid, nor could she conceive of any reason for him to lie.

Somehow she had to discover the truth, and if Thamalon truly had murdered the innocent lass who'd adored him, if he'd engineered the chain of events that had trapped Shamur in a loveless union and a life she loathed, then she already knew he'd have to pay.

Chapter 4

Shamur waited with masked impatience for Glynnis, her personal maid, to help her out of her mourning clothes and into her silk nightgown, and even to see her tucked away in the warmth of her canopy bed. At last the officious, chattering lass, who had apparently decided Lady Uskevren needed special coddling in the wake of her 'father's' death, extinguished the enchanted sconce by touching the raised oval plate at its base, bade her mistress a final good-night, and retired from the suite, softly closing the door behind her.

Shamur gave Glynnis another few seconds to descend farther down the stairs, making absolutely sure she wouldn't hear her mistress stirring. Then she silently threw back the covers, rose, and pulled on the embroidered white cotton dress, hooded maroon wool cloak, and flimsy, frivolous shoes she'd surreptitiously pilfered from the room of Larajin, the clumsiest of the servants and, Shamur suspected, one of Thamalon's lemans as well. Like the other maids, Larajin generally wore livery, so this outfit was presumably a special one reserved for outings and festivals. Still, it was plainly the inexpensive clothing of a commoner, and ought to disguise a noblewoman, mysteriously prowling the benighted streets afoot and unescorted, very well. With luck, Shamur would have it back in the bottom of Larajin's trunk before the girl ever noticed it was missing.

She had two other items to take on her errand: a truncheon of seasoned ash she'd borrowed from the salle and a blue leather pouch of the platinum coins called suns. She tucked both in the fringed, striped sash Larajin used for a belt, placing them in the small of her back where the cloak was sure to hide them.

Lindrian had died an hour after sharing his secret. The old man's obsequies had taken up the next three days, until his kin finally interred him in the Karn ancestral vault. Ever since then, Shamur had been trying to slip away, but in the daylight hours, with servants swarming everywhere, pestering her with their sympathy and their need for instruction, with friends and relatives popping up every few seconds to offer condolences, it had proven impossible. Not since the first years of her marriage had she felt so stifled and confined.

At last it was night, and she fancied she could escape Stormweather Towers just as the adolescent Shamur had been accustomed to sneak out of Argent Hall. On how many nights had she yearned to attempt this very thing, only holding back because the stakes were too high. She would joyfully have risked her own well-being, but not that of her kin, nor, in later years, of her children.

She opened the casement, and a cold winter breeze stung her face. Plump snowflakes drifted down from the clouds. A coach passed on the street five stories below, the bells affixed to the horses' harness chimed in time with their trotting.

Leaning out the window, Shamur peered about. The conical tower housing her apartments rose from the back of the Uskevren mansion. On this side the house had no enclosing, protective wall like the one around the courtyard in the front. Rather, the westernmost face of Stormweather Towers was itself a fortification. Though entablatures, grotesquely carved rainspouts, stained-glass oculi, and other ornamentation abounded higher up, for the bottom two stories, the wall was forbiddingly smooth, with only a sparse scatter of lancet windows too narrow to offer any hope of entry. At the top of the mansion, crenellated battlements wound their way among the profusion of gables and turrets jutting from the roof.

At the moment, no sentry was in view, and Shamur supposed she'd better get moving before one appeared. Despite the hindrance of her cloak and skirt, she agilely climbed out the window, then pushed the casement shut, making sure it didn't latch. That accomplished, she started down the wall.

Larajin's shoes were too loose, and their soles were too slick for safety. If not for the cold, Shamur would have kicked them off and descended barefoot, although so far, with cornices, traceries, finials, and other decorations providing hand- and footholds, she was managing easily enough.

She thought of how awkward it would be to encounter Thazienne now, sneaking out of the mansion in this same fashion, and just for a moment, despite her bleak mood, she smiled.

In two minutes she reached the point where all the carved stone gingerbread abruptly gave way to an expanse of sheer, vertical granite. Larajin's ridiculous slippers were still flopping and sliding around on her feet, and to make things even more interesting, her hands were going numb. Shamur supposed that, having failed to find the maid's gloves, she should have worn a pair of her own. But she didn't own any that weren't sewn with pearls, made of the finest, softest calfskin, or manifestly costly in some other way, and she hadn't realized the cold would seep into her fingers so quickly.

She considered simply jumping, for in her youth, in more desperate situations, she'd dropped farther and survived. Yet on one of those occasions, she'd sprained her ankle. She couldn't afford such an injury tonight, and besides, if she couldn't climb down the wall now, how could she be sure she could climb back up when her errand was through?

So she lowered herself once more, holding her body well away from the wall as Errendar Spillwine, the veteran housebreaker who'd taught her to climb, had always insisted. Her foot groped at the section of wall beneath her. At first, it felt absolutely flat, but according to Errendar, flatness was only a geometer's fancy. No surface, whether found in nature or fashioned by man, was ever entirely smooth. A climber could always find a hold if he knew how to look.

And perhaps the dear old reprobate had been correct, for eventually her toe caught in a slight depression, where the masons had failed to make the mortar flush with the blocks above and below. Considered as a foothold, it was precarious, but if her skill hadn't deserted her, it should do. She tested it, making sure it wasn't brittle, then trusted her weight to it.

The next toehold down was more dubious still, a shallow hollow where time and weather had worn a bit of one of the stone blocks away. The one beyond that should have been easier going, since it was the sill of one of the lancet windows, but evidently the day's sun had failed to warm the narrow recess, and the ledge still wore a veneer of ice.

In short, the climb was as difficult as Shamur had expected. She needed all her strength and skill to negotiate

Вы читаете The Shattered Mask
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×