Have I amused Your Shininess in some way?

Jhiral cleared his throat, turned a little to his slaves and soldiers, playing for the gallery. Well, your facility with our tongue is to be commended, my lord. Quite remarkable in a northerner, truly. But it seems your range in Tethanne is somewhat limited after all. You mean Radiance.

Do I? said Ringil tonelessly.

He held the Emperor s eye a moment longer, as if fixing the imperial countenance in some special place of memory. His lips twisted in a smile as thin as the scar across his cheek. He nodded as if told something by a voice that others could not hear.

Then he turned and walked away.

So that s what you ve been doing for a living the last ten years, is it?

If you mean serving the Burnished Throne and its people to the best of my ability, hissed Archeth, then yes, it is. I saw it as somehow more productive than hiding in a mountain backwater, spinning yarns about my heroic exploits for pocket money, and paying the stable boys to fuck me.

Well, some of us can t afford slaves for that particular purpose.

Fuck you, Gil!

Jagged loss of control on her accented Naomic, and a yell that had to carry. They d jammed to an abrupt halt in the midst of the gardens, barely out of earshot of the balcony and the imperial party, and almost nose-to- nose. Rakan stood by, unable to follow the sudden switch to a foreign tongue, but needing little insight to understand the tone. Ringil sneering now, hungover ill temper flaring, opening his mouth to

Behind him, something gusted past, keening.

He felt its touch distinctly, like cool fingers on the nape of his neck. He frowned, forgot what he was going to say.

A single leaf spiraled down from above, caught in a blade of sunlight lancing through the trees. He watched it fall, bemused. Sparse morning light gleamed farther off in the foliage, but it seemed cold and distant. Here, around him, the air was shadowy and cool, and something

Something was not right.

If they kill the Dragonbane, he said, more quietly. I will put this palace to the torch. You know I will.

Yeah, Archeth snapped, apparently untouched by the cool shift around them. You and whose army? The war is over, Gil. This isn t Gallows Gap.

No. It isn t as clean.

Oh, give me a fucking break. She raised spread palms, struck them to her forehead, a gesture so purely Kiriath, so purely her father, that for a moment he saw Flaradnam s features stamped across hers in the act. This is civilization , Gil. You know, the thing we were fighting to save? You you and Egar both you can t just stalk about, steel in hand, murdering your grievances.

That s right. These days, that s reserved for the likes of that little prick back there and his cabal. Civilization. Privileges of rank.

You had rank, Gil. You threw it away.

Yeah. And you clung to yours.

Her eyes widened. She drew back, as if a jagged chasm had opened up through the paving between them.

My lady, Rakan interjected. He looked at Ringil, wet his lips. My lord. Taran Alman is waiting. The Emperor s will is clear. We should not delay.

For a moment, neither of them spoke. Then Ringil nodded, switched to Tethanne. He s right, Archeth. You d better not keep the Reach waiting.

We, Gil. Urgently, because she could see what was in his eyes. We had better not keep them waiting.

But he was already moving. Past Rakan with a glance that said all he needed to the Throne Eternal captain lowered his head and gave him ground. Away from Archeth s desperate voice, calling him back.

Gil! Gil, you can t just

Tell them everything you can dredge up, he told her, not bothering to use Naomic, not bothering to turn. The more, the better. Keep them talking.

I can t just let you go, she shouted.

You can t stop me. His voice trailed back to her, oddly faded amid the greenery and growth. Grashgal and your father saw to that. You know what they wrote on this blade.

He turned a corner, and was gone.

The morning light seemed to strengthen in his absence.

CHAPTER 36

Trackle of embers, bathed in wavering orange glow.

Go easy, Dragonbane. Don t drown yourself this time. You re not safe here.

Egar glowered down into the pipe bowl, let the dark smoke come barreling aboard with its icy-cool cargo of release. He coughed a little with the depth of his draw. Clung to a fading caution for a moment, then let it go.

Not safe anywhere in this fucking city. Isn t it about time you did the smart thing and just got out of town?

It was, he had to admit, looking that way.

Yeah, but for now

He d made for the same pipe house with cold calculation. Close to recent events, but that might work to his advantage his enemies were almost certainly looking for him farther downriver. He had some sense of the local streets, too, which would count in a pinch. And they knew him here just another smelly, derelict veteran in search of cheap oblivion. Nothing to talk about. Go somewhere else, there was no telling if he d raise a ripple the chatter-worthy wake of a new vessel through new waters.

It seemed like sense, but he was too shattered to be sure. And his strategic judgment, well, the less said about that the better right now, Dragonbane.

But he could still not quite believe how badly things had come unraveled, and with how much violent speed. Could still not believe the way it had gone down, even as he watched the events dance in iridescent memory collide and coalesce, behind eyelids lowering closed under the cool weight of the flandrijn, rushing in

The lizard s head, gay and garish with lantern light, raucous bursts of laughter flung out of open windows like the contents of chamber pots. The head itself glistened wetly in its raised iron cage, faint, bandlit silver shifting to brighter, lamplit gold each time the tavern door banged open on the serving wenches and the heavily laden trays they carried. The trestles set outside were full, all seats taken by bulky figures upending tankards and bottles, either in moody isolation or with roars of approval and an eerie kind of unison that resembled a drill. The ground around was littered with discarded edged weapons and packs, and, even this early, the bonelessly slack forms of a couple of unseasoned drinkers who d overdone it. The tavern had drawn its usual bag of variegated fighting muscle. Eg spotted half a dozen different regimental rigs in the crowd, sown in among the more common black or oatmeal-colored cloaks of uncommissioned freebooters.

The Black Folk Span bulked stark against the stars above, broke the shimmering arc of the band where it dipped earthward.

Egar limped closer, keeping warily back from the light of the hung lanterns and tabletop oil lamps just another shambling drinker in the gloom. He scanned the lit faces as he moved from trestle to trestle, searching for Harath, listening for the younger man s raised, excited tones. With luck, he d find the Ishlinak out here, wouldn t even have to duck inside the confines of the tavern itself. A quick word and

Eg? Fucking Egar?

And of course, like a fool, he lurched around, into the light, at the sound of that familiar voice. Saw Darhan, now on his feet, staring and clearly pretty drunk.

What the fuck are you doing here, Dragonspanker? he rasped in Majak. Don t you know the City Guard are out after your carcass?

Heads turning at the trestle behind him.

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