Read The Providence of Fire Online
Authors: Brian Staveley
Il Tornja shifted his gaze to the Aedolian. “That is why I am the
kenarang
and you are a guard.”
“How do you
know
?” Adare demanded.
He fixed her with that hollow stare and once again she felt that dizzying vertigo, as though she teetered on the very lip of a bottomless well, as though if she fell forward, she would fall forever. Finally, he turned away, gesturing to the far bank.
“How many trees?” he asked.
Adare stared. “What?”
“The trees. How many are there?”
She shook her head, staring at the dark ranks of fir and pine. Even as she watched, the Urghul were slipping into the shadows between those trunks. Retreating, she realized. They were pulling back.
“I've no idea,” she said. “Why does it evenâ”
“Two thousand six hundred and eight, between the mouth of the river and the stone point.”
Adare stared.
“You've been counting trees this whole battle?”
He turned the empty pits of his eyes on her. “I don't need to count them, Adare. That is what I have tried to tell you. This thing you call thought, call reason, this plodding, deliberative mental processâit is ⦠unnecessary to my kind.”
“That doesn't make sense,” she said. “Thought and reason were the essence of the Csestriim. All the histories agree.”
He bent his face into a smile. “Ah. The histories.” He raised a hand, held up two fingers. “How many?”
Adare stared. “What?”
“How many fingers am I holding up?”
She shook her head. “Two.”
“How do you know?”
“I justâ”
“Did you count?”
“Of course not. I just ⦠see them.”
The
kenarang
nodded. “In the same way, I just see”âhe waved a hand at the slaughter taking place behind himâ“all this.”
For a while all she could do was watch dumbly as the men screamed and the blood flowed. Il Tornja's claim was too big, like being told there was another sky behind the sky.
“So we won?” she asked at last.
In an instant, the
kenarang
slipped back into his habitual wry smile. The horrifying emptiness drained from his eyes. “We?” he asked, amusement in his voice. “Yes, Your Radiance. We won.”
The words should have been a relief, but when she thought a moment about what they meant, about what this general of hers could do, about how tenuously Adare herself understood the kenning that bound him to her will, his victory seemed suddenly sharp and cold, a knife in the dead of winter pressed against her ribs.
Â
The armies arrived too late.
Not too late to fight the Urghulâthere was fighting aplenty when the legions and the Sons of Flame finally caught the horsemen between them, streets washed in blood, men and women locked in furious battle just about everywhere Valyn lookedâbut too late to make a difference for Gwenna and Talal.
The vanguard of il Tornja's army arrived a little over an hour after the two Kettral set off the starshatter, killing half of Balendin's prisoners and maiming most of the rest. It was a horrific, gruesome spectacle, bodies and parts of bodies strewn about like meat in an untidy abattoir. Valyn had watched one man cradling his own severed leg as though it were a baby, weeping into his lap until he bled out and died. Of Gwenna and Talal there was no sign. It was possible they'd escaped, or been crushed beneath the remnants of the wall. Valyn had scanned the bloody ground for them, sweeping the long lens back and forth, staring at corpse after corpse, his heart growing heavier and heavier inside his chest.
The blast worked. That much was clear. It didn't kill Balendin, didn't even seem to hurt him, but it severed his connection with his well, and, as he turned in shock to stare at the rising smoke, at the mangled wreckage of his prisoners, the two bridges sagged, then collapsed into the dark water beneath, carrying dozens of riders with them.
Not that that ended the fight. If anything, the violence redoubled with the collapse of the bridges. Thousands of Urghul had forced their way onto the westernmost island before the spans went down, twice that number remained on the eastern island, and the far bank teemed with the rest of the enormous force. The trapped riders fought with a renewed savagery, understanding that their only hope of survival lay in a crushing victory, and the Annurian forces, outnumbered and exhausted from their march, reeled beneath the assault, struggling to form up in the unfamiliar terrain. It looked altogether possible that, despite the fallen bridges, despite the arrival of the imperial armies, the Urghul would still win.
Then il Tornja arrived on the roof of the signal tower.
Valyn had taken up the position initially because it offered the best sight lines over the town. From the tower, he could see both armies, consider their deployment, then choose the best angle of attack when the time came. That the
kenarang
might use the 'Kent-kissing thing as his command center had seemed too much to hope.
Valyn had watched, gut tight, as il Tornja rode down the muddy street, guards behind and before him. It was tempting to take the shot then. To kill the general in the midst of so much swirling chaos seemed almost trivial, and Valyn went so far as to level the wound-up flatbow and sight in on the man's forehead. It was Laith who stopped him. Laith and Gwenna and Talal. As far as Valyn knew, all three of them were dead somewhere in the twisted wreckage, all to hold back the Urghul. Finishing the battle was il Tornja's job, and Valyn would be shipped to 'Shael before he undercut his Wing's sacrifice. He eased his finger off the trigger. Adare said the man was a genius, and judging from the madness below he was going to need to be.
For most of the morning, Valyn lay still, hidden on the roof of the tower just a few feet from the
kenarang,
listening as he wove his inscrutable web. Despite a lifetime of military training, most of the orders made no sense at all to Valyn. Il Tornja abandoned points he could have held and held points he should have abandoned. He would send a runner with one message, then, moments later, contradict it with another runner or a signal arrow. He sent directives to let cornered Urghul escape, and more than once he gave direct orders that led to the capture of his own soldiers. And he killed men, killed them by the scores and by the hundreds, sacrificing entire units to Urghul traps that he could see clearly from the rooftops, sending men into fights they couldn't possibly win, demanding that they hold positions they couldn't possibly hold. It was insanity, utter insanity. And it worked.
Valyn had no idea how, but as the sun labored steadily higher, the Annurians began to win. There was no single victory that could account for it, no stunning charge or heroic stand. At least, not if you ignored the circle of death that surrounded Annick and Pyrre for hour after hour until they were pressed back behind a building and Valyn lost sight of them. In fact, he was hard-pressed to make any sense at all of the individual scenes of brutality and suffering playing out below.
He could, however, see the larger pattern as it emerged. The Annurians were pushing back the Urghul. Nothing startled the
kenarang,
nothing shocked him. Not the collapse of an entire company of archers, not the Urghul pressing up against the tower itself, not even Adare's unexpected arrival on the tower roof. Valyn tried to catch the man's smell. The world was awash in mud and blood and terror, but from il Tornjaânothing. He smelled like stone. Like snow. Like emptiness.
When the
kenarang
finally announced that the battle was over, all Valyn could do was stare. Men still screamed and died in the streets below, buildings still burned, steel still smashed against naked steel. It looked anything but over, and yet he could hear il Tornja rising to his feet below, could hear the messengers and signalmen departing down the stairwell, the trapdoor clattering shut behind them.
So,
he thought, breathing out a slow, even breath,
it is time
.
He put his ear to the roof, listening to the people below. Adare and il Tornja continued to talk, and he could hear the Aedolian breathing, the grating of his armor as he shifted in place. The attack would have to be quick and brutal. Unfortunately, the
kenarang
had moved to the other side of the floor below. Valyn considered changing position before he struck, but the roof was warped and creaky. Any movement now would give him away. Striking from his current position would mean going through the Aedolian, but Valyn could cut his way through a guardsman. He would have preferred not to kill the man, but he would have preferred a lot of things.
The time for setting up and second-guessing was over. Just a few feet below and a couple paces distant stood the man who had murdered his father, the one responsible for the slaughter of Kaden's monks, for Amie's murder, and Ha Lin's. Valyn felt as though he'd been waiting forever, but the waiting was over. He took a deep breath, bared his teeth, and went.
The Aedolian managed to block the first blow, getting his armored forearm between his neck and Valyn's knife at the last moment. The man was smart. Instead of reaching for his own sword, a reaction that would have given Valyn the space and time necessary to finish him, he pressed forward, counting on his armor to block the knife, trying to bring his weight to bear as he lunged for Valyn's throat.
“Adare,” he shouted roughly, eyes wide, lips turned back in a snarl. “Get back! Get
down
.”
Someone had trained the Aedolian well. Most fighters instinctively limited their attacks, taking only the shots from which they thought they could recover safely. This man hurled himself forward with one intention only: clobbering Valyn back brutally enough to buy time for Adare to escape. It was a bold, brave attack. It was suicide. Valyn pivoted, knocking the Aedolian's hands clear, slipping inside his guard, driving the small dagger up into the unarmored space beneath the armpit. He twisted it hard, then spun away, pulling it free.
The guard collapsed, blood drooling from his lips, eyes glazing. Valyn tossed the knife to the ground behind him, drew his double blades, and fixed his eyes on the man across the fire pit.
If the
kenarang
was shocked by the attack, he didn't show it. Before Fulton's body hit the floor, his own blade had whispered from its sheath. He held it level between them in a type of hybrid low guard Valyn didn't recognize. Il Tornja's eyes flitted to the dead guardsman, to the trapdoor behind him, then back to Valyn. Valyn could smell Adare's grief and panic, could feel it deep in his lungs. From Ran il Tornja, however, there was nothing. He might have been made from the stone beneath his feet. The man looked calm, ready, which suited Valyn just fine. This was better than a bolt in the heart. He was looking forward to shattering that calm, to taking the bastard apart one finger at time.
“Valyn hui'Malkeenian,” the
kenarang
said. His voice was smooth as brushed velvet.
Valyn opened his mouth to respond, but Adare shoved her way forward, putting herself between them, arms stretched out as though her slender hands could hold back the blades.
“No, Valyn!” she screamed, staring at the crumpled body of the guard. “Oh sweet 'Shael, Fulton!”
“He's dead,” Valyn said, his own voice flat, emotionless.
“No,” Adare said, stepping across the fire pit, collapsing to her knees beside the Aedolian. “No!
Why?
”
Valyn didn't look down, but he could hear her scrabbling pointlessly at the man's armor behind him, as though she could find the wound, could stanch the flow of blood.
“He might have been part of it,” Valyn said, stepping forward. “A part of the plot. The men who came for Kaden were all Aedolians.”
“He wasn't part of
anything,
” she wailed. “All he did was try to keep me
safe
!”
“Well, he knew what he was signing up for.” Maybe the man was guilty. Maybe he was innocent. It didn't matter. A lot of innocent people had died already.
“You've made a mistake, Valyn,” il Tornja said, not lowering his guard.
Valyn took a half step to the left, and the
kenarang
turned with him, adjusting the angle of his blade. Valyn moved right, two steps, and again il Tornja adjusted, the movements subtle but precise. So. The man could keep his cool during an attack, and he knew how to fight.
“I've made plenty of mistakes,” Valyn said. “But this isn't one of them. You murdered my father. You ripped out the heart of Annur, and I'm going to rip out yours.”
“He just
saved
Annur!” Adare spat. “This fight, this battle, this whole fucking thing ⦠we won because of him!”
“And now that we've won,” Valyn said, keeping his eyes on the
kenarang,
testing his responses to changes in guard, posture, “we are finished with him.”
“And what about you, Valyn?” il Tornja asked, cocking his head to the side. “Where have
you
been while we battled back the Urghul?” He gestured toward the fighting still raging below. “What role did you play in saving Annur?”
“I was waiting for you.”
“And while you waited,” Adare snarled from behind him, “people died. Were you huddled up there the whole time? This is about
more
than your own personal vendetta.”
“Don't talk to me,” Valyn said, trying to still the sudden trembling in his hands, “about watching people die.” Memories of the night before filled his mind, of Laith fighting on the bridge, of the flier falling, spears buried in his flesh. “While you've been primping and playing emperor, I've been fighting my way across this whole fucking continentâ”
“You were sent here,” Adare protested, “by Long Fist. By the bastard who just attacked the empire.”