Authors: Bruce R. Cordell
Raidon had never heard of the Temple of Yarom before. He shook his head and said, “I will not kill strangers in cold blood in the very halls of their temple, no matter their dogma.”
“No?” Chun still sounded bored. “I’m afraid you’ve come too far to back out now. You know us. We know you. You must be brought in all the way, ot…” Chun shrugged.
“I must restore the honor of my family.”
“Honor is what you seek? I give you this”Chun swirled the tip of the daito”and your family’s honor is restored, is that it?”
Raidon’s earlier guess was on the mark. Chun wasn’t sipping tea in the monk’s favored tea house by chance.
“Our honor is too besmirched for such easy mending.”
“I don’t know about your family, but all I see before me is a baying mongrel dog,” Chun noted.
A strand of Raidon’s carefully woven serenity slipped free, but he held his focus. Despite his control, heat flushed his cheeks.
Chun continued. “I saw your name as a petitioner. I’ve watched you since then. I wondered if you were merely a revenge-minded idiot. Prove me wrong, and you get to live. Prove me right, and join your father. He made excellent pig fodder, and I guess you will, too.”
Fury bloomed and crowned Raidon, choking his reply to an inarticulate snarl. His viewpoint conttacted; his anger expanded.
Chun kicked the table onto its side, simultaneously rushing Raidon, trying for a disemboweling strike. Raidon flipped backward, head over heels three times, rolling to his feet twenty paces away, out in the busy stteet.
Chun lost the advantage of his attack by stumbling on the overturned table. The thug rushed forward unhindered and tried to shove a dirk into the monk’s face.
Raidon leaned forward and slightly to his left; the knife flashed past his right ear. Before his attacker could retract his arm, Raidon caught the man’s wtist in a painful grip. He twisted the wrist, levered the man around, and flung the shrieking thug onto Chun’s advancing blade.
Screams, yells, and a few whistles blared in Raidon’s ears. He hadn’t wanted a fight. He had simply intended to demand that Chun hand over the blade. He hadn’t realized Chun was trained in sword play. But Raidon was committed to seeing through what he’d statted, despite the foolhardiness of engaging in a fight. A tea house in the market district of Shou Town was too public for anything prolonged and bloody. Chun had expertly baited Raidon, made him forget himself; he’d lost his center. Raidon concentrated on walling off his
anger, separating it from the skill and grace that marked him as a Xiang Temple graduate.
His enemy, finally clear of the table, charged. Chun’s blade perfectly shielded the center line of his body, and was simultaneously set to deliver any number of killing strikes to Raidon’s head, neck, stomach, or wrists
Raidon dropped and swept Chun’s legs with his own. Unprepared, Chun toppled, his sword out of alignment. As the man hit the ground, Raidon rolled onto Chun’s chest, his knees painfully squeezing the man’s sides. He trapped the hand that gripped the sword on the ground with his right hand, and smashed the man’s temple with his left elbow.
Chun went limp and the sword fell from his grasp.
Raidon stood. He clutched his grandfather’s daito in one hand, raised it in a salute. Raidon had never held it before, only admired it from afar when his father had shown it to him as a child. It was perfectly balanced, a wonder of craftsmanship. His anger relented. Honor was his once more, and his family’s.
He allowed himself a nod of acceptance, then noticed seveial newcomers on the scene.
A gang of tattooed men pushed through the crowded street toward him. They’d been hiding all along, watching Chun, waiting to ambush Raidon should he prove intractable. His anger had blinded him to all the clues of their presence. There were too many to fight. And why should he? He had what he’d come for, and Chun had been shamed.
He fled.
Behind him, a call went up. Chun’s voice, bleary but loud, followed. “You’re dead! Dead! You’ve crossed the Nine Golden Swords, whelp! You can’t hide from us! Nowhere in Thesk is safe for you!” The man’s half-hysterical threat faded behind him. But his words rang with truth, Raidon knew. The Nine Golden Swords made examples of those who crossed them.
He was a marked man.
Raidon Kane dashed through the market throng, swatting a fat man from his path. The man fell, his arms windmilling, into a fruit seller’s cart. One hand knocked out the bottom row of a perfectly stacked display of ted fruit, causing an apple-lanche.
Shoppers clogged the streets, mostly locals, but also adventurous tourists from the surrounding city of Telflamm. It was a perfect day for Raidon to lose himself in the crowd. He darted through a shouting match over bok choy, past the live turtle vendot, and into the chicken seller’s shop. He didn’t pause, but hastened through the piled cages and acrid odors, ignored the owner’s shout, and patted the heavy felt material of the shop’s back wall with a swipe of the daito.
He emerged on an unfamiliar side street. Dark bars clustered here, small, dark, and smoky. Men diced away their salaries and drank through their sorrows. Above the slanted roofs, Raidon spied the top of the towering Shou Town Gate. Getting his bearings from the landmark, he ran north down the narrow avenue, the daito extended behind him so he wouldn’t alarm onlookers. He received a few curious stares. The Nine Golden Swords would soon know he’d gone this way.
And whete was he going? He hadn’t thought about it, and without conscious direction, his body was directing him back to the odiferous room he rented. If he’d planned ahead, he would have headed toward Xiang Temple. He recalled it fondly: brightly painted on the outside, wteathed in incense smoke so strong it brought tears to the eyes of the uninitiated. The temple was a sanctuary for the common person. Especially a person who had graduated its exacting training.
But Xiang was in the opposite ditection across Shou Town. Better to continue toward his lodging. In fact, the Nine
Golden Swords probably expected him to flee to the temple. They might have an ambush set up, anticipating that response. He would be wise to stay away. He’d collect his things from his apartment and leave. He had no future in Telflamm. His mother had departed, his father was dead, and he had no siblings. He’d completed his training at the Xiang Temple, discharged his duty to the master. He had no debts to keep him in the city. But where would he go?
Raidon arrived at the three-story tenement and climbed the outer stairs to the top floor room he shared. The door was open. Good. Perhaps the chamber would be aired out
A man flew from the open door, a staff in his grip. His tattooed hand proclaimed his Golden Swords allegiance, though Raidon could hardly discern it through the blood that streaked the man’s hands and forearms. What had he been up to?
The newcomer stabbed at Raidon’s neck with the staff’s sharp butt. Raidon deflected it with his left forearm, making a wide circle. He held the daito in his right handhe could better defend himself if he dropped the blade, but he couldn’t bring himself to dishonor the implement he’d spent so many months recovering. Instead, he grasped the wrapped tsuka and brought the blade up.
A daito wasn’t the perfect weapon to defend against a staff wielder, who had longer reach. But Raidon’s advantage was his ability to put his mind outside his body. When he could coolly observe a conflict, he could take in every variable, every possibility, and react in a way most likely to end the conflict quickly in his favor.
Raidon feinted and stepped back, then again. The staff wielder advanced, encouraged by Raidon’s backpedaling, jabbing with the probing end of the long wooden rod. When the man tried to push him off the walkway’s edge, Raidon wove the end of the daito around the advancing pole, allowing the
end to push into his space, but avoiding its tip. He hooked the staff and pulled, stepping to the side. The staff and its wielder flew off the three-story walkway.
He couldn’t afford the time to watch the result of his maneuver. He dashed into his lodge, on guard for other Golden Swords. But the only one present was Huang. What was left of him.
He had never liked Huang, but he regretted the man’s end. His lodge mate was staked to the wall, his extremities removed by a hatchet, which lay on the floot amid the awful mess. Raidon pulled his focus even further from his body to avoid reacting. Time was too precious to mourn Huang, or lose the tea he’d consumed to nausea.
Everything was in shambles, but Raidon found the pack he’d secreted behind the wall panel undisturbed. He’d prepared it a few tendays ago, in case his petition was granted and he penetrated the Nine Golden Swords compound. That hadn’t happened; fate had stepped in and delivered his target early. The pack contained some food, a small tea kettle and four cups, an expensive packet of loose Long Jing tea, a pouch of coins, a change of clothing. Next to the pack was a delicate cedar box. He stuffed that into the bag, too.
What lay inside the box was more precious to him than the daito.
He left the room, his feet leaving behind a few bloody prints.
Five men pounded up the stairway, heavy swords unsheathed. They reached the second floor as Raidon watched. The monk tightened the packs straps holding it to his back, held the daito straight out with one hand, then flipped off the edge of the walkway not far from where he’d pushed Huang’s tormentor. Unlike the bloody-handed hatchet wielder, who still lay groaning, his limbs painfully askew, Raidon dropped in a series of graceful rolls, one hand
free to catch, slow, and moderate his fall. He landed none the worse for wear and sprinted north, toward Waihun Road.
The men in the lead saw him, yelled, and turned to dash back the way they’d come, but the men below, who hadn’t seen Raidon jump down, suddenly became obstacles to those higher up who reversed course.
Raidon left them all behind. He plunged into the cloaking anonymity of the crowd.
The monk passed into the gloriously decorated Shou Gate. The grand sttucture marked the most widely used route between the Shou community and the greatei city of Telflamm that hosted the foreign district. Elaborate lamps sculpted to resemble golden dragons lit the way. Raidon had played near the gate, against the directives of his mother and father, as a child. Pretending to be some silk-draped trader arriving from mysterious eastern lands had been his favorite diversion.
As the gate fell behind his carefully measured steps, he wondered if he’d ever see it again.
The streets of greater Telflamm were different from Shou Town. Alien. He recognized many Shou walking the streets, but the smells, the markets, the structures, even the people, Shou and non-Shou alikeeverything was atypical of the streets just blocks away. He wondered why the Shou Towners kept themselves apart from the natives of the lands they now called home. Afraid of losing their traditions? Unhappy with the culture of the indigents? Western traditions were somewhat known to Raidon. He suspected he was about to become intimately familiar with many things formerly unknown.
As he walked, he decided against the docksit was the first place he’d thought of to flee Telflamm. The Nine Golden Swords would hit on the same strategy. So he hurried down the cobblestone streets in the opposite direction. His
destination was the trade road that passed southeast out of the city. Perhaps he could sign onto a caravan heading to Two Stars. He’d always wanted to make that trip. It would be his coming-of-age journey, he decided.
Perhaps he eluded the Nine Golden Swords. Or maybe they gave up the chase of theit own accord. Whatever the reason, Raidon was unmolested when he exited the city proper through high gates. As best he could determine, no Golden Sword marked his departure.
He questioned a few seedy-looking merchants whose wheeled stalls were set up just outside Telflamm’s legal boundary. They pointed him down the road toward a rambling edifice surrounded by stables, carts, and several large warehousesan eatery called the Leaping Ogre Taproom. According to one gap-toothed fellow, the place was a touchstone used by caravans departing and arriving in Telflamm down the Golden Way. Raidon learned he could get a job working a trade wagon if he was “good with that swotd you got therewatch it! Put it away, why don’t you?”
Raidon required a sheath for his daitoa saya, as they called it in Shou Town. Carrying a naked blade in one free hand was attracting unwelcome attention. And despite his joy at regaining the blade, it proved awkward for all activities not related to fighting. He asked among the vendots and found his way to an old chicken keeper. The suspicious looking woman sold him a ratty saya for an obscene price. Raidon didn’t have time to haggle. He had enough coins in his pouch to cover the price, barely, and besides, he’d soon find work on the road.
The Leaping Ogre Taproom was a bustle of activity. Raidon quickly learned that all new work was assigned at dawn outside, in front of the tavern. In the meantime, would he like a tankard of mead?
Raidon demurred, and instead spent the remainder of his coin on a room for the evening, a private room. He didn’t
want to find any more lodge mates strung up and dismembered. Tomorrow, if he landed a position with an outgoing trader, he’d be sharing living space with other hired hands soon enough.
He pulled out the cedar box where he kept his mother’s forget-me-not. He hadn’t gazed at the shining blue stone for some tendays. He’d been too busy as his plans for infiltrating the Nine Golden Swords moved toward culmination.
Raidon considered. Was his attachment to the old amulet a childish behavior he should leave behind with his departure from his home? It looked valuable; he could probably sell it for a reasonable sum. But his sentimental attachment to the object was forged over a decade of ownership. Raidon believed that as long as the stone shone, his mother, wherever she had gone, kept him in her thoughts. Selling it was out of the question.
He opened the box
and saw in an instant that the blue field around the tree was obscured in darkness.
Raidon’s eyes lost focus and he blinked tapidly. His stomach clenched. What was he seeing? He couldn’t understand. He looked in the pack for the real cedar boxthis couldn’t be it…