Devil's Bargain (20 page)

Read Devil's Bargain Online

Authors: Judith Tarr

BOOK: Devil's Bargain
8.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
C
HAPTER
T
WENTY-TWO

A
hmad entrusted the Berber to his own personal servants, who were instructed to treat him as if he were a prince of the Faith. The boy was properly grateful, which showed the excellence of his upbringing, but he could not help but betray his deeper feelings. He wanted to be part of what Ahmad did. He wanted to share in the saving of her.

“You’ve already done your share and more,” Ahmad told him. “Now let me do mine—and rest. We’ll call on you later, have no fear. Then you’ll need your strength.”

That reconciled him, somewhat. Ahmad drew him into a quick embrace, as if they were brothers. “Be at ease,” he said. “I’ll bring her out of that place.”

Mustafa nodded. His eyes were rebellious still, and his back was stiff, but his face was pale; he was swaying on his feet. Rashid and Maimoun took him in hand before he fell over, and carried him off into the inner regions of Ahmad’s tent, to be bathed and fed and put to bed.

Ahmad drew a long, steadying breath. Alone, without the need to be strong, he could yield for a moment to the shock of
the news that Mustafa had brought. He had had no sign—no inkling. Not even a shiver in the spine. Which might prove that there was no magic in this plot, but it troubled him nevertheless.

She was not dead. If she had died, there would be a gaping wound where his heart had been, and a great span of emptiness at the core of his magic. She had become that much to him, nor had he known it until he heard that she might be put to death for a murder she was incapable, to the very soul, of committing.

That she could kill—he did believe that. But she would kill in battle or in defense of someone or something that she loved. Not at random, with calculated cruelty, to spite an enemy.

Mustafa was well taken care of. Ahmad called to him the captain of his personal troops and gave him instructions that he would follow to the letter. He did not like them; his face darkened as he listened. But he was obedient.

Then Ahmad could put on a plain coat in which was sewn a coat of mail, and fill a satchel with certain articles from a locked and hidden chest, and mount the horse that waited for him. She was not a horse of heaven, but she was hardy and she was wise, and most of all she was steadfast. She would stand firm and keep her rider on her back, even if the world went mad.

“My lord, will you go alone?”

He looked down from the saddle into his servant’s face. “Allah is with me,” he said.

“But, lord,” said Hasan, “Allah loves best those who help Him to perform His will.”

Ahmad smiled in honest affection. “Dear friend,” he said, “the boy in my tent is much loved by one whom I love as my very self. Tend him for me; guard him and protect him. Keep him safe until I come back.”

Hasan bowed to the ground. He was weeping, poor man, but Ahmad would not shame him by remarking on it. “Allah’s blessing on you,” he said, and touched his mare’s side with a heel.

 

She went forward willingly, at ease, although the tilt of her ears told him that she knew there would be dangers ahead. He ran a hand down her neck—grimacing, then laughing briefly at the handful of red-brown hair that came away with it. Truly it was spring: the mare was letting go her winter coat.

For this journey he could not simply close the space between a place that was his—his house, his tent, his garden—and another on which he had set the seal of his magic. Even if he had not been traveling into the hands of enemies, he could not spare as much power as it would take to create and maintain the working. Instead he must travel by mages’ roads, which Sioned called straight tracks. Her mother’s country, she had said, was full of them. So too was this one, with its heritage of ancient magic.

He found the first road not far from his camp. It seemed a goat track, but it ran too straight for that, up over a long hill and out of the world that mortals knew. The seasons changed strangely there. Sometimes the land through which he rode was green with spring, and sometimes it was locked in winter. Sometimes there was no telling what season it was or what world he had entered; it was too strange to understand.

In all the worlds through which the road passed, he rode north and somewhat east. With each passage out of his own world, he traversed a whole day’s journey in an hour’s time. He paused for the hours of prayer, praying with all his heart, as Mustafa had done, that it was not too late.

As he drew nearer his destination, the passages became more difficult. The power that held this land was inimical, if not to all that he was, then to the particulars of his name and race and allegiance. But he must go on, if he was to do what he had set out to do.

At the gate of the last passage, which had the semblance of a stone arch opening into a valley of shimmering stones, Safiyah sat waiting for him. She seemed a stone herself, hunched and shapeless, clad in dusty black, but the power in her was like a cry of exultation.

He bowed to her as to the queen of mages that she was. The
hand that he raised to his lips was frail; the flesh was burning away from the spirit within. “Lady,” he said. “You had no need.”

“I had every need,” she said. “What were you thinking, to come here all alone?”

He could not say to her what he had said to Hasan. It would be presumptuous. Her, he gave the truth. “I couldn’t ask anyone else to run this risk.”

“Could not?” she inquired. “Or would not?”

He flushed. She had always had the power to reduce him to a stumbling boy. But often, as now, she softened it with a smile. “It was noble of you, and wise in its way. Where you go, an army would never be enough, but a man alone might win the prize. Will you let me give you a gift?”

“Your gifts are beyond price,” he said.

She inclined her head to the truth of it, then drew his head down to hers, touching brow to brow. “Have strength,” she said. “Have courage. But in the moment of extremity, if all is lost—turn to mist and water. Become one with the air. Melt and vanish away.”

The words were like a wash of cold fire. He shivered at the touch of them, and gasped as they came to rest in his heart. They were a spell of dissolution; yet also a blessing, and an escape if he would take it.

She kissed his eyelids and brushed her fingers across his cheek, soft as the touch of a spider’s web. “God go with you,” she said.

The way was open. She was gone from the gate. He knew a moment’s profound loneliness, cold as a wind in the wasteland; then the warmth of her blessing washed over him. He was smiling as he passed through the portal and rode down through the valley of stones.

 

The gate out of the valley, like the gate into it, was occupied. But this was no friend to Ahmad or any of his kin. It was a shape in white, the color of mourning and of death. Its face was
shrouded, its eyes hidden in whiteness. In its white-swathed hand was a dagger with a blade like a sliver of night.

Ahmad faced it without either stealth or fear. He made no move to draw weapon, but his hands knew where to find each one of them. “Take me to your master,” he said.

The guardian spirit regarded him with unseen eyes. He had laid no compulsion on it, apart from the expectation that he would be obeyed. Spirits respected strength; they scorned bluster and empty show.

He waited in patience, sitting very still on the back of the most steadfast of his horses. The mare let one hip drop and let her head sink, seizing the opportunity for a nap.

Was that amusement in the tilt of the shrouded head? The spirit whipped about abruptly, dissolving into a whirlwind, and spun through the gate.

Where had been a vision of nothingness was a harsh and inhospitable landscape, a wilderness of stony crags. It was bleak and barren, but it was his own living earth, lit by a familiar sun and inhabited by a swirl of earthly spirits. They gathered always in places of power, even places of such terror as that which loomed on the crag above him.

Masyaf. Ahmad knew it well enough. When he was much younger, he had ridden with his brother to attack it; they had failed, and its Master had only grown stronger in the years since.

He could feel the great magic throbbing in his bones, drawn up from deep wells of the earth. Here was a center, a foregathering of powers. The crags were as thick with spirits as a hive with bees, swirling and swarming in the air and among the stones.

It had not been so twenty years ago. There had been spirits, yes, and Sinan had been a sorcerer of some repute, but all too obviously he had spent the years between increasing his power beyond anything that Ahmad could muster against him.

Ahmad’s heart quailed. He called up the memory of her face and the thought of the world without her, and his strength flooded back. It was the strength of desperation, but it was all the greater for that.

His mare clambered patiently up the steep and narrow track. She did not care that arrows could fall from above, or a rain of boiling oil. That was a concern for men. She had hopes of a stable to rest in and cut fodder to eat, and a handful of grain if her hosts were generous.

Her equine practicality was a bulwark against fear. Focused on his own stomach, thinking of bread and meat, fruit and spices, sweet cakes and cups of steaming kaffé, Ahmad passed through the clouds of spirits as if he had been invisible. He was too purely of earth for them, his magic too thoroughly concealed.

They were simple spirits, most of them, but the higher he ascended, the more alarming they became. Their faces altered from fantastical to grotesque; they bristled with fangs and talons.

But worse were the battles among them. Spirits in their right minds, or such minds as they had, coexisted in an airy amity. These were as contentious as a pack of starving dogs. The more power they fed on, the greedier they became; they could never be sated. These in their turn fed the power in the castle atop the crag.

He fought his way through it as through a storm of wind—but this was no wind of earth. It buffeted his heart; it tore at his spirit. It tempted him almost beyond bearing, to fling himself into the cloud of living essences, to become a blind and mindless part of them. To surrender, to give way; to serve the Master on the rock and be served by him, feed and be fed, until there was nothing left of him, not even a whisper of fading breath.

He was no longer guiding the mare. She carried him of her own will, up and ever upward, with steadfast persistence. He clung to the saddle out of sheer bodily refusal to fall.

He must master himself; must win back the sight of eyes and mind. He must gather the tatters of his magic. He must be strong.

He found that strength in the stubbornness that was one of his less endearing faults; in the memory of her. Even her face
was gone from his sight, so full was it with the swirl of warring spirits, but he remembered her scent and the softness of her hair, and the taste of her lips on his.

Her eyes. He could see her eyes. Violet, she called them, for the flower of her native country: a deep and dreaming color, like shadows in twilight. They were large and wide-set under a strong arch of brows; they met his stare directly, with a clear intelligence.

He felt her hands clasp his. She drew him up the track. With each step, the world became clearer. He saw the stones under the mare’s hooves, and the steepness of the slope, and looking up, he saw the castle now unexpectedly close.

It seemed deserted. He saw and sensed no archers on the walls, arrow nocked to string, ready to shoot him down. The battlements were empty of guards. The gate was shut.

That was the last of the defenses: darkness and silence and the vision of emptiness. He rode up to the gate and stood with his head back, measuring the loom of it. Calmly then, with the power that had remained coiled in him through all the buffets of this journey, he smote the gate.

It rocked as if struck by a ram, and its iron hinges cracked. The mare shook her head at the sudden blast of sound. He sat quietly on her back and waited.

The sun had been low when he struck the gate. It nearly touched the horizon when at last the glamour faded from the castle. The gate was still cracked; with the passing of the enchantment, it groaned and sagged on its weakened hinges.

Slowly and somewhat gingerly, a smaller gate opened in the greater one. A man in white peered out. He was unquestionably mortal; he was old, if hale, and his face was deeply seamed with age.

Other books

Murder in Plain Sight by Marta Perry
Queen of Angels by Greg Bear
Thornghost by Tone Almhjell
The Empty Chair by Bruce Wagner
They Who Fell by Kevin Kneupper
Fat Cat by Robin Brande
In Place of Death by Craig Robertson
High-Caliber Holiday by Susan Sleeman
Sugar Crash by Aitken, Elena