The attendant brought water in a bucket and she scrubbed her hands, then Tali looked up and started. ‘But you’re bleeding! The wound’s bleeding.’ Tobry’s teeth were bared; he seemed in more pain than before. ‘I’ve made it worse.’
‘Bleeding and pain are good,’ gasped Tobry. ‘It might mean there’s not enough caitsthe in me to heal the wound.’
‘An impressive demonstration,’ said the chancellor smoothly. ‘Though the shifter side may restore itself the way a damaged liver can regrow. Lagger may always require the healing blood, and so may all those
Tali stared at the chancellor, trying to work out what he meant. Each breath rasped in her throat. Had she made the most dreadful mistake of her life?
‘I can only take a handful of people into exile,’ he went on, ‘and if we’re to counterattack and win Caulderon back, I can’t lose any one of them.’
He paced across the room, then back, studying Tali all the while. ‘Saving those bitten will require much Pale blood, and there’s only one place we can get it.’ He looked down at Rannilt. ‘Two places, if the child survives.’
Tali reeled and the scar on her shoulder burnt. It had once been her slave mark, then the symbol of her nobility. And now enslavement again, by her own people? A far worse kind of slavery — to be milked of her blood like a beast of the stables? No, it could not be borne.
The chancellor gestured to the captain of his personal guard, who had moved in close without anyone noticing. ‘Bind the two Pale and bring them.’
Rix let out a great roar and sprang for his sword, but two guards brought him down from behind and pinned him to the floor. Tali darted for Rannilt, unable to leave her yet knowing that any attempt to rescue her was not only hopeless, it would doom them both.
The captain seized her around the chest. Tobry staggered towards her, trying to shift, but before he could do so another pair of guards disarmed him.
‘Chief Magian,’ said the chancellor, his eyes glittering like chunks of anthracite, ‘would you put Rixium’s blade to the test you found in the archives?’
‘What test?’ said Rix.
His captors allowed him to rise but held his arms behind him. Rix wasn’t struggling, though Tali felt sure he was planning to break free, and two ordinary men could hardly hold him. Could he save them? The chancellor had fifteen men here, and surely not even Rix could beat those odds.
The black writing Tali had seen from a distance at the Honouring appeared on the sword.
‘It’s Maloch!’ said the chief magian, and the small amount of grey hair on his head stood up.
Rix tensed. ‘What the blazes is Maloch?’
‘The dire sword that Herovian swine Axil Grandys brought here.’ The chancellor’s smile twisted, his eyes burned. ‘A foul blade, enchanted to protect none but himself and his direct descendants.’
‘But I’m not his descendant. Mother had those documents forged …’ Rix faltered. ‘What are you saying?’
‘Oh, yes,’ said the chancellor softly. ‘
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Your father wasn’t descended from Axil Grandys,’ the chancellor said with gleeful malice. ‘The sword came to you down your
Rix’s mouth opened and closed. Tali felt sick. If revenge was meat and drink to the chancellor, this was a royal banquet.
‘The sword protected you,’ said the chancellor. ‘Therefore, you were already of the First Circle. You’re descended directly from Grandys — via your mother.’
‘You utter bastard,’ spat Tobry. ‘You guessed that at the Honouring, yet you allowed Lady Ricinus to go on so you could publicly humiliate her.’
The chancellor did not bother to look his way. ‘Two days before the Honouring, Tali informed me that Lady and Lord Ricinus were plotting my assassination.’
Rix’s head shot around and she saw the shock in his eyes, the accusation, the feeling of betrayal.
‘How could I tell you?’ she said softly. ‘It would have put you in an impossible position.’
‘I was already in an impossible position. It was my right to know.’
‘If I told you, it would have endangered you too.’
‘Am I a child, that I need to be protected?’ Rix said, low and deadly.
She could not reply. He was lost to her now.
‘The treason had nothing to do with Rix,’ Tobry said hastily. ‘Besides, he told you …’ He trailed off.
‘The lord and lady stand for the house. Therefore
‘Rix is one of our greatest fighters, and an inspiring leader,’ murmured the captain.
‘And I wanted him by my side,’ said the chancellor, ‘but I could never trust a man who would betray his own mother, and I won’t have a Herovian at any price.’
‘I never knew I was,’ Rix said. ‘But since you’ve taken away everything else I had, and now name me Herovian,
In her head, Tali heard an irresistible ice sheet grinding against an immoveable glacier. What was Rix going to do —
‘Your kind will be at the top of the enemy’s death list,’ said the chancellor, unperturbed. ‘I’ll leave you to them.’
Two guards began to drag Tali towards the door. ‘What about Tobry?’ she cried, struggling uselessly against the lashings. ‘What’s he going to do without my blood?’
The chancellor’s smile was terrifying. ‘He won’t need it. Heave him over the side.’
Two burly guardsmen swept Tobry up and began to drag him towards the wall. His eyes met Tali’s and she saw the same despairing look there as when she had told him she loved Rix.
‘
But Tobry did not shift. Had her healing blood doomed him? Or did he just want it to end?
‘Rix! Do something!’
Rix seemed to be in shock, for he simply stood there. Then in a blinding movement he wrenched free, flattened his captors with single blows and leapt towards Tobry. Another pair of guards, swords out, blocked him. Rix went into a crouch, swaying from side to side.
‘Tobry, why?’ he said quietly.
‘I’m making way,’ said Tobry. ‘You’re the better man.’
Rix let out a great groan. ‘You bloody fool! Tali lied to save me from myself. It’s you she wants.’
‘Me?’ Tobry’s head inched around towards Tali.
‘Yes,’ she whispered, realising what she should have known ages ago. ‘Ever since you took me to the ball.’
Tobry’s eyes blazed and he tried to tear free.
‘Get him over, quick,’ rapped the chancellor.
Three guards took hold of Tobry, dragged him to the wall and tried to heave him into the air. He punched one in the throat, jammed an elbow into the eye of another, then convulsed and Tali saw his nails lengthen, his back arch. He was trying to shift, but it was going too slowly. Tali’s breath thickened in her throat. Could he do it? Not with so many guards swarming after him.
Rix kicked one of his opponents in the knee, the other in the belly, snatched a falling sword out of the air and attacked. His first blow, with the side of the blade, hurled one of Tobry’s captors ten feet, into the wall. A