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Authors: Megan Derr

Tags: #General Fiction

Prisoner (24 page)

BOOK: Prisoner
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"I do not know much," Dieter said. He leaned back against the wall, and Sol noticed for the first time how exhausted Dieter look. How still and… not quite defeated, but almost. It was not a natural look for him, and while Sol knew he should be relieved Dieter would no longer be around to dominate the battlefield, a man such a Dieter should not have to go out in such a way. What was it the Krians said? His leaf should fall from the tree; instead it was being ripped away. "But one should know his enemies better than his friends." He switched back to the matter at hand. "So you want me to help you get Beraht? Never mind that's impossible, for what purpose, and why should I?"

Sol slid down to sit on the ground, wanting to be more comfortable while explained. "Two hundred years ago, the Illussor had magic that was sufficient, but nothing like it is now. They were the equal of the Salharans, and now they are far superior. If we've survived encounters with them, it is only because we know enough tricks to avoid the worst of what they can do."

"Shadow killers," Dieter said scathingly.

"Salhara does what it must. I did not come here to argue with you over the rights and wrongs of what we all do. The Illussor found a way to make their magic stronger, including giving them a trick that changed even what they are now called."

There had been a time when that trick had not existed. Back when the Illussor had fought only to keep their own hold on the Regenbogen—a piece of land Kria took control over shortly before the Illussor displayed the skill that gave them their new name.

"It was meant to only last for a few years, through one generation. Something to give Illussor an edge they desperately needed, back when the war had a clearer purpose. It didn't die with the soldier who had it, however. They passed it on to their children. So too the others who acquired it—royalty and a handful of nobles. Now it has somehow spread to the entire nation. What was meant to be limited to a few has become something upon which the entire country is dependant."

Sol breathed out on a slow sigh. "It is beginning to kill some of them. Headaches, at first, and only in the very old or very young. No one has made the connection to magic except those who know its deepest secrets. In order to stop it, to get rid of the magic and keep it from killing the Illussor, they need a Breaker."

"A Breaker," Dieter repeated.

"Yes." Sol looked up at him. "Someone of uncorrupted Illussor blood who does not have the magic that the rest of the Illussor possess. He's the only one who can break that which gives Illussor its magic."

"Beraht," Dieter said. "The Kaiser was the one who pointed out to me that he looked half-Illussor."

Sol nodded. "I did not notice it either until I learned he was the Breaker."

"You came here hoping to find him? How did you know I had him?"

"I didn't. I came here to learn what had happened to the Scarlet. A Brother was supposed to find Beraht and bring him to me—ostensibly to learn why the Illussor attacked the Scarlet to get to a Salharan. My comrade does not know the game I play."

Dieter laughed. "You want me to help you get your Breaker out of the Kaiser's claws, is that it? I don't see how that is possible."

Sol stood up and pulled the small glass vial from where he'd stowed it in his belt. In the weak light of the torch and moon, the liquid inside appeared black. "Give him this," Sol said, "and tell him to meet us at the crossroads a mile beyond the palace. He'll manage the rest."

"Arcen," Dieter said, sneering in contempt. "How do you propose I get it to him?" He lifted his hands, bound by heavy manacles. Already they were making his wrists raw. "I have less access than you."

"So you'll help?" Sol asked in a voice laced with disbelief and hope.

Dieter snorted. "No. I'm merely curious as to what you're planning. Why should I? It matters little to me what becomes of the lot of you. Twenty years I did my duties and more. I have ceased to care. Nor will I turn traitor with my last moments. He will not get that satisfaction."

"You'll stay loyal to a country that has done nothing, but betray you? Why?"

"If you think such logic will sway me, Sol deVry, you are mistaken."

Sol held the vial tight, mind racing for something that would sway him. "Is this the revenge you wanted for Beraht?"

Dieter, for once, did not come back with a scathing reply. "The Coliseum I did not anticipate. I should have. Beraht was meant to die with me in a formal execution. It has been done before with soldiers and the prisoners they claim for personal vengeance."

"So you're perfectly willing to leave him to whatever the Kaiser devises? Knowing full well he'll take out on Beraht what he could not inflict upon you?"

"He will kill him."

"Yes, but only after he does what?" Sol pressed, sensing he'd gained the advantage. "It's unacceptable for him to kill your men in their beds, but you can leave him to suffer the tortures you always avoided?"

Dieter glared. "Do not preach to me, Salharan. A man who plays three sides has no right to lecture anyone. Nor is it my duty to help you with your treachery. Let the Illussor take care of their own problems. How weak that they need two Salharans to rescue them from a mess of their own devising."

"How weak that you're content to sit here and let everyone suffer when you could help. Did you spend your whole life hating one man so much that you can't see past that?"

Chains rattled as Dieter shifted, nearly standing up. He calmed himself at the last and sat back on the small, creaking bench. "You have no idea what you're talking about."

Sol realized he finally had a chance to ask the question that had burned from the moment he realized the situation. "Why the hatred? It makes no sense. I've never been able to learn the reason. Why does he hate you?"

Dieter laughed again. It was slow, tired, and sad. "Do you know, Sol deVry, that you are the first one to ever ask me? No one ever dared to pose the question. They feared that if they gave the impression of not hating the Wolf, they would turn the Kaiser's hatred their way, and they had not the protection of being the Scarlet General. The Kaiser hates me because he was jealous. He thought I took what belonged to him."

"I see," Sol said, not really seeing at all, but he had indulged himself as much as he would permit. "Is there no way I can convince you to help us? What would it cost you to do so?"

"What would it gain me?"

Sol set the vial down on the bench and drew his hood up. He was done. There was nothing more he could really say. "A life not completely wasted. If you choose, give it to him when you say goodbye." The torch he left, unable to bring himself to take it away. The door creaked as it opened and closed, and then Sol left as quietly as he had come.

The wind howled as he made his way back across the field to the palace, deeper and colder, snatching at his cloak and whipping the hood away. After the third time, Sol gave up keeping it in place. Only the howling wind offered any sound; perhaps in anticipation of the next morning, everyone had bedded for sleep. If there were games afoot, they were quietly played.

However, he was not the only one up, Sol realized when he reached the top of the stairs and turned down the hallway to his room. He nodded politely to Burkhard. "Fair evening, Burkhard. Can't sleep?"

"Yes. And yourself?"

"I think the walk took the energy out of me. The cold saps it. My bed sounds good right about now. So I will see you in the morning." Sol smiled, nodded a good night, and continued on his way. Sol knocked softly on his door, and at Iah's demand for identity offered his in Salharan. When the door opened he smiled at Iah, reaching out a hand to greet him with a touch on the shoulder. "How did it go?" Iah asked, stepping back to let him in.

The sound of boot scraping stone was the only warning he had, and Sol turned just in time to avoid a fatal blow. Burkhard's eyes were dark and feverish with hate. "Salharan!"

Biting down against a cry of pain, Sol wrenched free of Burkhard's grip, the dagger still in his shoulder. Grabbing Burkhard roughly, he shoved Iah aside and threw himself and Burkhard into the room. "Lock the door!" he snapped, speaking in Krian.

"You're Salharan." Burkhard picked himself up. "Your eyes. How did I never notice them?"

Sol swore. He'd thought the glow past, the tiny sip of magic used up by the evening's tricks. His edge really was gone. With a rough cry he wrenched the dagger from his shoulder, holding it tightly as Burkhard approached. "Burkhard, stop! Please! I don't—"

"You've lied. All this time! I called you friend."

"I am—" Sol dodged away, holding the dagger close, reluctant to go that far. His shoulder burned with agony, and he could feel the blood soaking through his clothes, making them sticky. He fell for a feint, and the punch sent him reeling, tripping. Reaching out to catch himself on a chair, he instead only sent it crashing to the ground with him. The dagger went skittering away, and then his world was a blur of fists and angry words as he tried to block Burkhard's assault.

Even considered vulgar for a Salharan, he was woefully inadequate for fighting a Krian. Sol continued to struggle, but the wound in his shoulder worked against him. He did not want to resort to arcen, did not want to have to kill Burkhard.

Suddenly Burkhard stilled above him, eyes wide. He collapsed on top of Sol, who struggled for a moment before throwing him off. There was a dagger in his back. Holding his shoulder, Sol struggled to his feet and crossed the room to where Iah stood. "Thank you," he murmured, and held Iah in a loose embrace.

"You're bleeding," Iah said. His fingers sought and found the wound at Sol's shoulder as he turned his face up. He frowned.

"A minor wound," Sol said and slid his arm from around Iah shoulders, holding his hand over Iah's own on his wound, letting Iah feel as he cast a spell to close the gash. "I'll be fine." He made to pull away.

Iah wouldn't let him. "You should be more careful."

"I know," Sol said quietly, fingers reaching up of their own accord to touch Iah's cheek. "I'm sorry. Thank you for saving me."

Iah leaned closer, and Sol tried not to notice how he smelled—like soap and wine, but also fresh, like the beginning of spring. "It's funny," Iah said, voice unsteady. "I was raised as a Duke, and even when I gave that up I was quickly promoted to Captain. I've been in command of others for as long as I can remember. People lean on me. I don't like that, for the rest of my life, I will have to lean on others." He tilted his head a bit more, leaned in a little closer. "But I don't mind leaning on you. As terrified as I am of being blind, it scares me more that I almost lost you."

Sol drew a breath. "Iah—" Before he could say anything more, Iah had closed the remaining space between them, kissing him with a confidence he rarely showed for anything else. He tasted liked mulled wine, dark and spiced and laden with cloves. There was something else too, a lighter flavor, something that was only Iah. Sol opened his mouth to take the kiss deeper, hand sliding down Iah's spine before wrapping around his waist.

Perhaps Burkhard had killed him, and this was a dying dream. His life was not one that permitted such things. "Sol." The voice that whispered his name, breathing against his mouth, sounded real enough. "I hope I didn't just offend you."

"No, Iah." Sol dared to lean down and take a second kiss, this one softer, slower. "It is… unexpected. Certainly nothing to which I'm entitled."

Iah laughed. "Things seldom happen because they should. More often, it's only the things that
shouldn't
happen which do."

"True enough." Sol let him go before he lost his focus completely. "I have to take care of Burkhard and make plans for tomorrow."

"Of course." Iah cocked his head, frowning. "What will you do with him?"

Sol folded his arms and thought, looking at Burkhard's body. It hurt. Lord Grau had counted Burkhard a friend. He'd never wished Burkhard ill—had hoped he'd live to a ripe old age. Now he was dead, had died feeling betrayed. Sol wondered if he'd be the last. Wearily he moved to the desk and took a large dose of yellow arcen. As sweet as it was, as useful as it was, he loathed it. Moving back toward Burkhard, be began working.

A spell to transfer—one of the harder spells. It would be easier if he used red, but that was one thing he did not want to do until he had absolutely no other choice. His eyes were yellow; he did not want to see them turn to orange and eventually to red.

Sol steeled himself then cast the spell. He focused on the body and on the field between palace, library, cathedral and Coliseum. Several minutes later, the body vanished. Gasping, tumbling forward, Sol took a long, slow breath and forced himself up. "They will find him in the morning," he said, "and think he was involved in some quarrel. It is not unheard of. There will be no way of knowing we were involved. Now I must pack our things because our best chance to slip away will be when everyone departs for the Coliseum first thing in the morning. We will be spending most of the day out in the cold."

Though he guessed he shouldn't have been, Sol was still surprised when Iah stepped close to embrace him. "I'm sorry," he said. "I know you counted Burkhard a true friend."

"Yes," Sol said, allowing himself to hold Iah briefly. It was a foreign feeling, and one the Salharan in him screamed was wrong, but he had not felt Salharan for a very long time. It was just one more strike against him that it did not matter so much. "Let me pack, and then I guess we had best talk."

BOOK: Prisoner
2.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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