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Authors: Melanie Rawn

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BOOK: The Diviner
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“How did Meryem fail to discover your madness?” Azzad asked, and his voice to his own hearing was as an echo coming up from the valley far below.
“Madness?” His words came from blackening shadow. “Is it madness to kill you before the army of Sheyqa Nizzira comes—so that with you already dead, the land and the people will not suffer?”
Fadhil had chosen a vial from the litter on the ground, and forced it to Azzad's lips. “Drink. Quickly.”
He gulped, and coughed at the sour taste. Surely this could not be happening. Not to him. Not now. Not after all he had been through and all he had done—
“As for Challa Meryem—she knew nothing of my thoughts or my plans. None of them did. More fools,” he added with a shrug. “She and Challa Leyliah will be the first to admit their errors and accept me as Abb Shagara, or they will be the first to die.”
Fadhil sprang to his feet and cuffed him across the face.
Haffiz staggered, tripped over the Jemilha's little castle of pebbles, smashed it beneath his boot heel. He caught his balance, then coughed and spat out blood. “Another perversion. Would you sin against all Shagara by murdering a fellow Haddiyat?”
Azzad was not sure if the world was darkening because of the poisoned knife or the gathering dusk. But when his friend knelt before him and took both his hands, he knew. Even in the darkness he saw his own death in Fadhil's tear-filled eyes. Numbness had spread up his arm to his shoulder, across his back, and would soon find both his head and his heart. It occurred to him that the Mualeef boy would be finishing his book rather sooner than either of them had expected. Ayia, an interesting ending to an interesting life.
But it was not yet over, and there were things he must say.
“Even if Haffiz is correct,” Azzad said slowly, “and Nizzira's army spares the people, my wife and children will not be spared. See them safe, Fadhil. Please.”
“I will do it. After I kill Haffiz.”
“No. Do not break your ancient laws. He matters nothing.” He heard Haffiz suck in a breath at this insult. He wondered briefly why Haffiz was content to stand and watch Azzad die, then decided he must truly be mad, to think that killing a single man would solve all his problems, fulfill all his dreams, make him Abb Shagara. Fadhil was safe from him; Shagara tradition would not allow him to kill another Haddiyat.
“Azzad—” Fadhil's voice was cloudy with tears.
“Take Jemilha and the children away. Now. Tonight. Take all the horses. Leave—” His lips felt cold and stiff. “Leave only fire behind you. Especially the maqtabba. They must not know the names of those I employ in Rimmal Madar.”
“It will be done, al-Ma'aliq. I will make all appear as if everyone died in the fire.”
As his mother and sisters and aunts and cousins had died. Perhaps it would work. If Fadhil left talishann enough, the Qoundi Ammar would believe. He tried to say this, but his mouth was reluctant to form words. It didn't matter, anyway; Fadhil would know what to do.
But there was more he must say. He struggled, purposely biting his tongue to feel pain, refusing to be frightened when the response was sluggish and muted, and managed, “Children—tell them—”
“I will, Azzad. I will tell them how much you love them.”
A long while seemed to pass. He seemed to hear the shrieking of a hawk somewhere above the trees. He tasted blood, coppery-sweet, flooding away the bitter medicine, and then he could taste nothing at all.
Now, at the last: “Jemilha.”
“Yes, Azzad. I will tell her.”
Ayia, she was never “just any woman,” my Jemilha,
he thought, wishing he could smile. The numbness that had claimed his lips reached his heart, and then, through the gathering darkness, his eyes as he looked down at the tiny lights that marked his home, where his children were, and Jemilha. Fadhil would see them safe.
The army of Rimmal Madar invaded, plundering and burning, putting all to the sword. From the coast they marched inland, where the terrified city of Hazganni surrendered rather than be destroyed. When Sheyqir Za'aid, Nizzira's son and leader of the army, learned that the trees around the city were the trees of Azzad al-Ma'aliq, he ordered them hacked down. With the Qoundi Ammar to control the land with sword and ax and fear, he declared it part of the realm of Rimmal Madar.
Haffiz had not been alone in his disaffection; six young Shagara who thought as he did, and as secretly, had stolen into the house in Sihabbah. Haddiyat all, armed with hazziri to cancel those set by Fadhil—as those made by Haffiz had unworked those worn by Azzad—they slaughtered the family within and set the house afire. When Fadhil, mourning over Azzad's newly dead body up on the mountainside, looked down to see the blaze, he struck Haffiz a blow that sent him tumbling over the cliff to his death in the night shadows below.
Fadhil ran down to Sihabbah, and spent his body's strength in fighting the fire beside the people of the town. The house went up in flames, and the stables. The rest of Sihabbah was spared.
At dawn, by the embers' glow, Fadhil saw Azzad carried down from the mountainside by six grieving women. Yaminna had discovered the corpse; Feyrah and Sabbah had washed and shrouded him. He was buried beside the noble Khamsin. Of Jemilha and the children, there was nothing identifiable to bury.
As the last clods of earth fell, Fadhil raised his eyes from the grave to the pasture, and caught sight of a tall young boy on horseback. There was nothing that could lift the darkness from his heart, but sight of the boy was like a distant glimmer that might yet shine. Fadhil rose painfully to his feet and waited for the rider to approach. Together he and Alessid left Sihabbah.
—FERRHAN MUALEEF,
Deeds of Il-Kadiri,
654
Il-Nazzari
631-698
Let me tell you of him.
Orphaned through treachery at the age of fourteen, taken to live with the Shagara who had repeatedly saved his father's life, it would be natural to assume that he would spend his life in obscurity, hiding from his enemies in the desert.
Instead, he became the ancestor of empresses.
By Acuyib, the Wonderful and Strange, that which follows is the truth.
 
—RAFFIQ MURAH,
Deeds of Il-Nazzari,
701
11
A
long and bitter journey it was from Sihabbah. Alessid spent much of it unable to see clearly for the tears that came to his eyes no matter how he fought them. Ayia, he was a man now and should be past childish weeping. But weep he did—though only at night, when Fadhil couldn't see him in the moondark wasteland.
They rested during the hottest part of each day and rode on at dusk, stopping at dawn to graze and water the horses. Of all that had belonged to the al-Ma'aliq in Sihabbah, only the horses were left—those, and Azzad's rings. Fadhil had shown them to Alessid, offered them silently in an outstretched palm. He shook his head sharply, refusing them.
He refused everything about his father now. He had to. Azzad al-Ma'aliq had been a fool—and Alessid knew that to be like him, to admire him, to love him still, would make of Azzad's son an even greater fool.
He had always adored his father. He had wanted to be just like Azzad al-Ma'aliq: tall and handsome, always smiling, beloved by his family, cherished by his friends. Alessid, during near-sleepless afternoons and long, starhazed nights, examined the events of his own scant fourteen years of life and determined that from now on he would work very hard to be as different from his father as possible.
I am alive
, he would tell himself when the tears blurred his vision.
I am alive, and everyone else is dead. My Ab'ya is dead, because he was a fool.
Everyone knew the story of how Azzad had been dallying with a mistress in the city of Dayira Azreyq when the al-Ma'aliq were massacred. He had survived by the Grace of Acuyib, not through his own cunning. It had happened differently for Alessid.
It happened again and again in his memory as he rode to the Shagara camp. Again, and again, and again . . .
Mother was greatly annoyed when Father and Fadhil did not return for dinner. Later, after everyone had gone up to bed, Alessid was awakened by the sound of footsteps in the hall. Thinking that his father had at last returned, Alessid went to his door—about to open it and warn that Mother was very angry. Then he realized there were far too many footsteps, and a voice he didn't know said, “Two more boys, and the two girls. The infant will be with the woman. Pay heed to their hazziri—we don't know what Fadhil made for them.”
Geysh Dushann—again. But how had they entered past the protections? And how did they know Fadhil's name? Alessid ran to his balcony, flung open the carved wooden screens, and shinnied down the flowery trellis to the ground. Moonlight shone on the garden and the pastures beyond—but brighter was the red glow from his parents' windows. Before he could do more than blink, the glass burst and fire gushed outward like Chaydann's gloating laughter from a fissure in the earth.
Alessid sprinted for the door of Uncle Bazir's maqtabba. Within, he coughed on smoke gushing down from the upper floor. His mother, brothers, sisters—where was Father? Had he and Fadhil returned? Did they burn, too, in the inferno overhead?
Alessid heard more footsteps, and peered from behind the maqtabba door. Six men clattered down the stairs a mere jump ahead of the hungry flames.
“Ayia, we shouldn't have been so merciful,” grumbled one man, “to kill them and all their servants before the fire took them. The walls have been silenced. No one would have heard them scream.”
Another man snorted. “More merciful than the Geysh Dushann would be—or the soldiers of Sheyqa Nizzira.” He paused to cough smoke from his throat. “Hurry. We must set the rest afire before we meet Haffiz at the boundary stone.”
“Did we get them all? The biggest boy was wearing no hazziri that I could see.”
It was then that Alessid knew that Addad, son of his mother's favorite maidservant, his friend and playmate all the fourteen years of their lives, had been mistaken for him and had died in his place. Their rooms were not so far from each other, a circumstance that had allowed for much midnight mischief in the past. Knuckling his eyes, Alessid slipped out the back door and looked upward. The whole top floor was burning. The roof above his parents' chambers fell in with a horrific crash. And just as al-Ma'aliq had died nearly twenty years ago, so al-Ma'aliq died tonight.
Alessid could see moving shadows through silk curtains on the ground floor. He dragged a heavy wooden bench over to the doors, blocking them. Only then did he see the runes drawn over Fadhil's subtle and beautiful patterns, like smears of spoor marking a trespassing animal's usurped territory.
He ran back to the garden doors and to barricade them toppled two of his father's prized potted orange trees. For the kitchen door, he used a bench and a pile of large wooden toys the younger children had left in the yard—Zellim's painted wagon, Azzifa's rocking horse, Meryem's doll-cart. At the front of the house, he put his shoulder to the stone pedestal and bronze basin where guests washed their hands before entering the house. None of these barriers would hold for long, but he didn't need much time.
He ran for the stables. Mazzud and Annif, who slept above, surely should have awakened by now. So, in fact, should the whole of Sihabbah. Silencing the walls was one thing; disguising the sudden blaze of flames and the acrid smell of smoke was quite another. Alessid recalled his father's tales of how empty the streets of Dayira Azreyq had been, how he had seen no one but the royal guard. There had been no spells then, but there was magic here tonight. The assassins were not Geysh Dushann, and not of the al-Ammarizzad—and they had scrawled Shagara symbols on the walls and doors. Perhaps other symbols had been drawn on other doors and windows tonight, and the people of Sihabbah would not know what had happened until the estate burned to the ground.
Alessid heard horses screaming. The fire would spread, and the horses knew it. He kicked open doors and flung open stalls, and they fled at the gallop. He yelled for Mazzud, for Annif, for anyone at all. There was no reply. Last of all he freed his beloved Zaqia, pausing to bridle her before leaping up onto her back. He tried to rein her around into the streets of Sihabbah, thinking to alert the town to the danger. But she was having none of it; she reared once, whinnied, and her iron shoes struck sparks from the stable yard cobbles in her flight.
She finally slowed, responding at last to his hands and heels, in a forest clearing miles from Sihabbah. She had found others of the al-Ma'aliq herd—in their terror, they had jumped fences previously judged too high for them. Alessid spent a long time gathering strays, usually with only a few sharp whistles that alerted them to his presence. They seemed relieved to find him, and their stablemates, and by daybreak Alessid had rounded up almost sixty horses.
BOOK: The Diviner
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