War of Shadows (38 page)

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Authors: Gail Z. Martin

Tags: #Fiction / Action & Adventure, #Fiction / Fantasy / Epic, #Fiction / Fantasy / Historical

BOOK: War of Shadows
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Carensa gripped both arms of her chair, feeling as if she might pass out. The guards in the room assured that neither she nor Guran could physically overpower Quintrel. She knew her magic was no match for Quintrel’s.
Guran might be strong enough, perhaps, but what then?
she thought frantically.
We can’t cross Quintrel unless we’re willing to kill him, and if we do, his loyalists will carry on without him
.

“The more complex the information, the more digging it takes to rip it out of your mind,” Quintrel said, with the tone of a bored lecturer. “Thank you for confirming that Tormod Solveig is a necromancer. That’s helpful to know, although his tricks won’t be as useful against Rostivan’s troops. Useful also to know that Verner’s forces have been essentially wiped out. Very useful.”

Carr’s breath was ragged. His hands balled into fists. Blood streamed from the gashes the
divi
had torn.

Quintrel paused, as if he were listening to something the rest of them could not hear. Carensa wondered if the
divi
was feeding him suggestions. “Let’s find out more about McFadden himself.”

Quintrel stood in front of Carr, hands on hips. “What effect has anchoring the magic had on McFadden?”

Carr gave Quintrel a baleful look. His body tensed, and it looked to Carensa as if Carr was determined to fight Quintrel’s intrusion.

Quintrel’s hand moved. The
divi
light was blindingly bright, and this time, it played across Carr’s features as if it sensed his determination to balk.

Three new bloody gashes slashed across Carr’s face. A second
swipe opened new slashes on his chest. Carr’s whole body trembled with his struggle to block Quintrel, a fight he could not hope to win without magic. His screams echoed in the small room, and even Guran blanched. Carensa wavered in her chair, dizzy from holding her breath, trembling with rage.

Quintrel tilted his head as he received his answer, a surprised and pleased expression on his face. “He’s dying,” Quintrel said as a triumphant smile touched his lips. “That’s what you’ve been trying to hide. Anchoring the magic is killing him. Strong magic nearby wounds him.” He chuckled. “It doesn’t matter what his troop strength is. If magic is his bane, we can use that against him.”

Carr hung limply against the invisible bonds that held him. His hair covered his face, and Carensa could not tell whether he was conscious. Only his shuddering breaths reassured her that Carr still lived.

“Vigus, please! Give him time to reconsider,” Carensa said. “You’ve made your point. He could still be a valuable ally, but he’s worth nothing if you kill him.”

Quintrel gave Carensa an evaluating gaze, and for a moment she wondered if his
divi
would rip into her mind, wrest her secrets, and see how much she hated him. She hoped her expression was hopeful and guileless, but she doubted she was that good a liar.

“For your sake, Carensa, I will offer him mercy,” Quintrel said finally as the
divi
orb dimmed. He strode over to where Carr slumped in his chair and pushed his head up.

“I’ll give you two candlemarks to think over my offer. Cooperate, and your stay here can be comfortable and long. Fight me, and I will rip every secret from your mind, and the
talishte
will feast on your memories.”

Quintrel signaled the guards, who walked toward Carr. He
made a gesture, and Carr’s bonds vanished. He tumbled to the floor. “Guard his door. No one gets in. No one,” he repeated, looking directly at Carensa. The two guards grabbed Carr by the arms and dragged him out of the room.

The door closed behind Carr, and Quintrel began to pace. “What’s the real reason Carr McFadden’s here?” Quintrel wondered aloud, frowning. “Do you really think McFadden would risk his brother as a spy?”

“From what he said, there’s bad blood between them,” Guran noted. Carensa was grateful that Guran responded. She did not think she could speak without her voice giving her away. Her throat ached from choking back tears, and her nails raised bloody half-moons in her palms.

“Interesting,” Quintrel replied. “Do you know why?”

Guran shook his head. “No. But if I had to hazard a guess, I’d say that McFadden left the rest of the family in the lurch when he killed his father and got sent off to the end of the world. I imagine the young man’s prospects dimmed dramatically at that point, along with the family fortune.”

Quintrel looked to Carensa. “You knew the whole McFadden family. What do you make of it?”

Carensa had steadied herself enough to appear disinterested. “Carr was a lot younger, always getting in the way,” she said with a shrug. “There were too many years between Blaine and Carr for them to be close.” She paused. “Things were hard on the family after Blaine’s exile. Guran’s right; the scandal hurt Carr’s prospects, and banished the family from court.”

“So why assume Carr McFadden is a spy?” Guran said. “His brother mucks things up, destroys the family reputation, gets exiled as a murderer, and then comes back six years later and expects a hero’s welcome and reclaims the title. Perhaps Carr was less than pleased to see him.”

Quintrel reached for his glass and took a long sip of brandy. “I had been thinking along the same lines. He could be valuable. Certainly he has information about McFadden’s plans and troops, maybe about the magic as well. If we can gain his trust, stoke his anger, perhaps he’ll tell us what he knows.”

Guran shrugged. “And if he won’t, you’ll get your answers the hard way.” He paused. “Do you think he’s much use as a bargaining chip? Would McFadden care that we have his brother, if it’s true the two didn’t like each other?”

“Obviously blood only counts for so much with McFadden, since he was willing to kill his own father,” Quintrel replied. “If you mean, would McFadden trade himself for his brother? I doubt it.”

“Which brings us back to wondering about Carr’s reasons,” Guran replied. “Maybe he’s figured out that there’s no place for him in the new lord’s plans.”

Carensa knew what Guran was doing, and she appreciated it. By making Quintrel question Carr’s motives, Guran hoped to make Carr more valuable alive than dead, buying time. And by keeping Quintrel engaged in conversation, Guran helped Carensa avoid answering any questions that might increase Carr’s danger.

“Younger sons shouldn’t be shocked by that. It’s possible he began to count on keeping the title once McFadden was exiled,” Quintrel remarked. “For all the good it would have done him.”

Quintrel knocked back the rest of his liquor. “Wounded pride has cost many a king his crown,” he observed. He looked to Carensa. “What else can you tell me about Carr?”

Carensa shrugged. “I really never paid him much attention at all,” she lied. “But he was always reckless. Then again, he was Ian’s son. That’s in the blood.”

Quintrel seemed to debate the matter for a moment in his
mind, and then he let out a breath and gestured for them to move on. “Any other news?” he asked.

Guran nodded and set his empty glass aside. “One of our
talishte
spies just got back from the north. Said that Lysander went up against the Solveigs and got pushed back. On the bright side, Verner is no longer a problem. Our mages with Lysander got in a direct hit. McFadden and Theilsson showed up and turned the battle.”

Carensa repressed a smile at Guran’s skill. He was feeding Quintrel enough information to cover them, but framing it in a way that strengthened Blaine’s position.

Quintrel frowned. “For a man who was supposed to be dead, McFadden causes a lot of trouble.” He leaned against the mantle and toyed with his empty glass. “Our forces, combined with Lysander’s, should outnumber McFadden’s army. We will need to ensure future attacks are more coordinated.”

“If you want to be rid of McFadden, why not just wear him down with magic?” Guran asked. “He’s the sole anchor—strong magic drains him. Send enough of it against him, you could bleed him dry, so to speak, without needing to lay a hand on him.”

Quintrel swore under his breath. “Too costly, too uncertain. We would badly drain ourselves in the process, leaving us vulnerable should one of McFadden’s allies attack.” He shook his head. “Assassination is easier to arrange—and much less expensive.”

“When you’re counting battle forces, have you figured in Voss’s soldiers?” Guran asked, expertly pivoting the conversation now that he had gotten the information he wanted. “At Valshoa, Traher Voss’s army made quite a showing.”

“Voss,” Quintrel spat. “He’s a problem. Still, he’s not a mage.”

“Don’t discount the
talishte
helping McFadden. You’ll have
to factor them into your plan,” Guran said. “Penhallow, the Wraith Lord, the Knights of Esthrane.”

Quintrel made a dismissive gesture. “A small number to worry about.”

“I don’t think we dare ignore them, Vigus,” Guran replied. “They can do damage out of proportion to their numbers.”

Quintrel stroked the
divi
orb, and it seemed to purr under his attention. What he heard from the
divi
Carensa did not know, or want to know, but Quintrel seemed satisfied with the answers only he could hear. “There are ways for the magic to remove that threat,” he replied. “I’m not worried about
talishte
.”

“What about Pollard? Fostering an alliance there could increase our troops as well,” Guran said. “Our
talishte
say Reese has been imprisoned by his own. Reese wanted to stop the magic from coming back. It’s back. Pollard is tricky enough to change his plans when the winds shift.” Carensa only half listened to their discussion, trying to figure out a pretense to get in to see Carr.

Quintrel nodded. “I’ve directed Rostivan to ally with both Lysander and Pollard. It suits our purposes. Pollard’s always hated the McFaddens,” Quintrel added. “Even if magic wasn’t at stake, I suspect Pollard would be trying to expand his lands at their expense.”

“He has reason to side against McFadden,” Guran pointed out. “Pollard’s troops took a beating at Valshoa. He went off to lick his wounds. Without Reese, he’ll have no control over the
talishte
. He’s in need of allies.”

“Vedran Pollard and Ian McFadden were cut from the same cloth,” Carensa said. “Don’t turn your back on him.”

Quintrel chuckled. “I won’t need to worry about that,” he replied, fingering the strap that held the
divi
’s orb.

“What new plans do you have for Lysander?” Guran asked.

Quintrel gave the matter some thought while he finished his drink. “I have a few options in mind. Let’s see what I can learn from McFadden’s brother. There might be something that chooses our course for us.”

“We’d best get back to our work,” Guran said. “Especially with more fighting sure to be happening soon.”

Quintrel nodded. “Yes, of course. But I want both of you with me when I call for the prisoner. I want to know what you make of what he tells us.”

“You’re certain he’ll cooperate?” Guran asked.

“I’ll have a
talishte
with me,” Quintrel replied. “He’ll cooperate—one way or another.”

Carensa was grateful that they passed few people in the corridors. She hung on to her composure with sheer willpower, and her control was slipping quickly. Guran opened the door to one of the workrooms and glanced around to assure that it was empty. He muttered words of power and warded the door for silence.

Carensa collapsed into a chair, weeping. Guran knelt beside her. “I can’t keep the warding up long. Vigus will sense it—if he doesn’t already.”

“What he did… the
divi
…”

Guran nodded and let her cry into his shoulder. “I know. I saw. I’ve known Vigus for decades. He has an ego. He can be thoughtless. But it’s new for him to use magic to torture someone.” He shook his head. “I don’t think that’s all Vigus’s doing. He’s been corrupted by the
divi
.”

“Maybe,” Carensa allowed, drying her tears on the back of her hand and daubing her face with her sleeve. “But Vigus opened himself to the
divi
to get what he wanted. He didn’t worry about who got hurt. I can’t forgive him for that.” She
drew a ragged breath. “I can’t forgive him for what he did to Carr. Gods above, Guran! Carr’s just a boy.”

Guran took both her hands in his. “He’s a soldier, Carensa. You heard him. And he chose to come here as a spy. He knew the risks.”

“He didn’t know Vigus could rip his thoughts from his mind,” she argued.

“Maybe. But he has to know that
talishte
can read a person’s blood,” Guran replied. “Or that he could be hanged—or worse—if he got caught.”

“We’ve got to do something,” Carensa said miserably. “Vigus won’t leave him sane.”

Guran met her gaze. “You’ve got a choice to make, Carensa. Save Carr, defy Vigus now, and it’s over. You won’t be able to help Blaine. Vigus will cast you out, or lock you up. And you’ll have no way to stop what he’s planning, when he’s at the forefront of a massive army trampling his way across Donderath.”

“How can we stop that?”

“I don’t know yet,” Guran admitted. “But I do know that you’ve got to make a choice. Save Carr, or save Blaine. You can’t save both of them.”

He gave her a warning shake of his head, and dispelled the warding. “I like the progress you’ve made on the translation,” he said, rising. “Keep at it—you’re almost done.”

Carensa nodded miserably. “I will,” she said, her voice choked. “Thank you.”

Guran shut the workshop door behind him. Carensa slumped across the table, her head on her arms. The tears were gone, leaving behind cold rage and the closest thing she had ever felt to pure hatred.
Guran’s right
, she thought.
Even though I don’t want to admit it. I can’t take the risk of saving Carr and
losing the opportunity to strike at Vigus when the chance appears to turn the tide of battle. I may not be able to save Carr, but by all the gods, large and small, I will avenge him
.

The candlemarks passed too quickly, and Quintrel sent for Guran and Carensa to meet him at the room where Carr was imprisoned. With Quintrel was Stanton, a dark-haired
talishte
Carensa recognized but did not know. She memorized his face, for later. For the reckoning.

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