Read Jayne Castle [Jayne Ann Krentz] Online
Authors: Crystal Flame
By
Jayne Ann Krentz
ONE
Itwas understood throughout the great Northern Continent of Zantalia that assassins were invariably
male.
Clutching the marriage contract in one hand, Kalena stood on the wide threshold of the Traders' Guild
Hall and considered what it meant to be an exception to that rule. She had been waiting since the summer
of her twelfth year to carry out the lethal task that would set her free. Now she was finally on the brink of
a future she had only been able to dream of in hazy images; a future as a freewoman with obligations to
no one but herself.
She gazed in wonder at the noisy, bustling activity going on inside the wide hall. She had arrived in the
thriving town ofCrosspurposes only a day earlier, but already her life back home in the farming town
ofInterlock seemed very distant. That was fine with Kalena. She had no intention of ever going back to
the rich, fertile fields of the Interlock valley with its prim, conservative farmers and villagers. Nor did she
have any desire to return ever to the harsh, bitter company of her aunt. The marriage contract she held in
her hand was her ticket out of bucolic boredom and the stifling demands of her aunt. But for Kalena, the
contract was more important as her first step toward freedom.
Still, Kalena wasn't yet completely free of the past. There was a price on all things, and she still had to
pay for her ticket to a new life. The packet of poison she carried sewn into her journey bag was the
means by which she would fulfill her final duty to the House of the Ice Harvest.
Kalena, the last daughter of the Great House of the Ice Harvest, had been sent to Crosspurposes to
avenge her devastated clan. The mandate had been handed down from the last Lady of the House, her
father's sister, Olara. Olara knew as well as anyone that entrusting a mission of vengeance to a woman
was a risky thing to do, but there was no choice. Olara and Kalena were the only members of the House
of the Ice Harvest left. Kalena's mother had died shortly after learning of the deaths of her husband and
her son. Olara herself was a Healer, and so could not kill. That left only Kalena.
Kalena had known for some time that Olara wasn't particularly satisfied with her niece as a potential
assassin, but neither she nor her aunt had any choice. Someone hadto carry out the task of assassinating
the man responsible for the deaths of men of the House of the Ice Harvest. More than murder hadbeen
done. An entire Great House had been terminated with the deaths of the men of the clan. Such an act
required the most extreme form of vengeance, and if there was only a woman left to mete out justice then
so be it. Olara had made her plans accordingly. What Olara didn't know was that Kalena had a plan of
her own.
Kalena gazed at the colorful scene before her and tasted the first, heady essence of freedom. She would
do her duty as honor demanded. There was no question of that. Kalena had been taught the importance
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of one's responsibility to one's honor before she could walk. But she hoped to buymore than vengeance
with her victim's death. She intended to use his death to buy a new future for herself, the kind of unlimited
future most women on the Northern Continent never knew.
She had been working on her plan to accomplish these two goals since the summer of her twelfth year.
Never for a moment had Aunt Olara allowed her to forget her destiny. But once she had recovered from
the shock of the death of her family and accepted her dangerous task, Kalena had begun to dream her
own dreams.
So be it. Life was Spectrum. For every action there was another, opposing action that would ensure an
ultimate balance. Kalena understood that fundamental philosophical principle. She might have been raised
in a farming town since the fall of her House, but she'd had an excellent education. Aunt Olara had seen
to it that the last daughter of the House had been brought up in accordance with the high standards that
befitted her heritage. The works of Zantalia's most influential polarity philosophers had been available for
her to read. Kalena had studied well.
Now she looked up at the second tier of offices that ringed the large Guild hall. She couldn't help being
impressed by the elaborate architecture. There was nothing quite like this back home inInterlockValley .
The building was two stories high with massive, arched windows lining the ground floor, and flooding the
open central hall with light. The second floor was lined with small rooms on all four sides. Every facet of
construction, from the elaborately inlaid floor to the heavily carved pillars of expensive moonwood,
served to emphasize the wealth that the business of trade brought to Crosspurposes.
Overhead several people were lounging against the upper railing watching the crowds down on the main
floor. Kalena wondered which, if any, of those strange faces belonged to the man whose name was on
the marriage contract alongside her own.
A trio of laughing, joking men arrived in the open doorway behind Kalena. Their lanti skin boots were
caked with dried mud and their trousers and wide-sleeved shirts were dusty from travel. Kalena guessed
that they were traders returning from a venture and she stepped out of their way. As they went past two
of them hailed a friend they spotted in the crowd. The third man turned his head and saw Kalena standing
in the shadow of the arched doorway. He grinned wickedly and started to say something toher. But
before he could speak another group of males sauntered through the door, providing a shield for Kalena.
She used the small distraction to slip into the crowd.
Moving through the busy hall, she searched for someone who looked as if he or she would be willing to
take a minute to help her. Most of the people she passed seemed noisily intent on business and
boisterous conversation.
As Kalena made her way through the large, two-tiered hall she surreptitiously observed the clothing of
the few women present in the crowd. The first thing she noticed was that the colorful tunics they wore
over their narrow trousers were much shorter, almost knee length, and slit far higher up the side than her
own. Earlier, she had noted the same type of clothing on women she had passed in the street.
Town fashion was obviously a great deal more daring than the styles favored in the Interlock valley.
Kalena made a mental note to make some changes in her own wardrobe as soon as possible. She would
have to do something about her hair, too. The women here in town all seemed to wear theirs quite short
in back, with chin-length ringlets of curls framing their faces. Kalena felt distinctly old-fashioned with her
own thick mass of golden red curls held back from her face by a wide, embroidered band.
One of the women she was studying turned suddenly and Kalena's eyes collided with the stranger's.
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Embarrassed for having been caught staring, she started to turn aside and then changed her mind. It
would be easier to ask another woman for directions than to try to get the attention of one of the rough
and burly male traders. Tentatively, Kalena smiled.
"Could you help me, please? I'm trying to find someone. I was told he would probably be here in the
Guild hall at this time of day"
The other woman eyed her intently for a moment, taking in her obviously provincial appearance. She
apparently decided to take pity on the young woman, and asked in a kind voice, "Who is it you're trying
to find?" She stepped closer to Kalena so they would be able to converse above the din.
"A man named Ridge. I don't know the name of his House. He works for the Trade Baron Quintel of the
House of the Gliding Fallon."
The woman's eyebrows rose and she pursed her lips for a few seconds. "You have business with the
Fire Whip?"
Kalena shook her head. "No, Ridge is his name. I'm quite sure of it. It's written here on the contract."
Curiously, the woman glanced at the folded document in Kalena's hand. "Contract? What sort of
contract do you have with Quintel's Fire Whip?"
"A trade marriage agreement." Kalena felt quite daring as she said the words aloud. Trade marriages
might be legal, but they were hardly respectable. She had a hunch the woman in front of her knew all
about trade marriages. "And I've explained, it's not with someone called Whip. It's with a man named
Ridge."
"The Ridge who works for Quintel is known as the Fire Whip," the woman explained impatiently. "Here,
let me see that contract. I can't believe you've really got a trade marriage arrangement with him. He's not
a regular trader. He's Quintel's private weapon. Quintel uses him the way another man uses a sintar."
"I see,"Kalena said, although she didn't. "Is . . . is Fire Whip the House name of this man, Ridge?"
The other woman laughed as if Kalena's question was genuinely funny. "Hardly. Ridge has no House.
He's a bastard. In more ways than one, some people say. Has a temper that can make—" She broke off
at the sight of Kalena's chagrined expression. "Never mind. Let's just say that wise folks do not go out of
their way to provoke him."
"If he works for Quintel, then he's the man I seek," Kalena said quietly. The other woman didn't
understand, Kalena realized. She wasn't upset because her future husband had a reputedly fiery temper;
Kalena didn't expect to be around this Ridge person long enough to provoke him. Rather, she was
startled to learn that she was signing a marriage contract—even something as straightforward as atrade
marriage contract—with a man who could claim no House at all, not even a small one. Olara hadn't
warned her about that aspect of the situation.
Kalena hesitated, then handed over the trade marriage agreement, watching closely as her new
acquaintance scanned the legal document. She was fascinated by her first encounter with what appeared
to be a freewoman who made her own living and her own decisions. With a little luck and a little
successful vengeance, Kalena herself might be joining the ranks of such free females.
The woman in front of her was a few years older than Kalena. She had a strong, full-figured body and
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carried herself with an almost aggressive air. Her hair was dark and done in the town fashion, the long
side curls framing a handsome face and challenging eyes. She wore no House band on her wrist, which
was not surprising. Only members of the Great Houses wore such symbols of rank and recognition. The
families that comprised the vast majority of less important Houses were not entitled to wear them.
Under most circumstances, no female member of a Great House would have been allowed to involve
herself in trade or any other similar business. Kalena's ability to do so was only one of the many
exceptional circumstances of her life. Her own House band was hidden away in her travel bag along with
her father's jeweled sintar and the packet of poison. She had not been allowed to use her real House
name since the summer of her twelfth year. Olara had forbidden it in an effort to hide her niece's identity.
Kalena had grown accustomed to introducing herself as a daughter of a small House called the Summer
Wind. But in her heart she was always conscious of her rightful name and heritage.
But what fascinated Kalena about her new friend was not so much her lack of a Great House band as it
was her lack of a man's lock and key around her throat. In Kalena's experience, females who had
reached this woman's age were invariably married. At least that was the case in the Interlock valley.
Kalena was somewhat taken aback by this first tangible proof of the kind of freedom that was really
possible. Until now Kalena's imagination had been able to conjure up only vague, uncertain images of
what it meant to be a freewoman; she was quickly realizing a whole new way of life truly did wait for her.
Her dreams could more than come true. She couldn't wait.
The woman looked up abruptly, her eyes minoring a kind of wry amazement. "By the Stones, you're
telling the truth, aren't you? You truly do have a trade marriage contract with Quintel's Fire Whip. And