Traitor’s Knot: Fourth Book of The Alliance of Light. Janny Wurts

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Traitor’s Knot: Fourth Book of The Alliance of Light - Janny Wurts

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words could settle his harrowing dread. The alley he sought would be hidden from sight, guarded by ward since Avenor’s harsh interdict, which outlawed the practice of talent. As ranking commander of the Alliance war host, Sulfin Evend knew he risked his life simply by showing his face here.

      He pressed onwards, regardless. The artefacts he held bundled inside one of Lysaer’s silk dress-shirts left him no rational alternative. His rapacious profile masked under his hood, Sulfin Evend closed his eyes and edged forward. One blind step, two; his third footfall raised a crawling chill. The eerie sensation surged through his boot-sole, chased up his spine, and prickled his nape into gooseflesh.

      Sulfin Evend kept his face averted and cautiously unsealed his sight.

      The town-gate loomed ahead, alight in the glow of the watch lamps. To his right, a narrow, nondescript archway opened into rank darkness. Sulfin Evend resisted the urge to use more than peripheral vision. If he tried, the uncanny portal would vanish, not to reappear without use of initiate knowledge. He sucked a deep breath. Braced by a courage as dauntless as any demanded of him on a battle-field, he turned away from the main thoroughfare and plunged through the queer, lightless entry.

      Darkness and cold ran through him like water, then as suddenly fell away. He found himself in a squalid back alley, little more than an uneven footpath overhung by ramshackle eaves and sagged stairways. The prankish gusts jangled the tin talismans of iyat banes, a dissonance that seemed to frame uncanny speech as he picked his uncertain way forward. The ground-level tenements were shuttered, but not locked. Here, the prospective thief was a fool, who ventured without invitation. Sulfin Evend picked his way forward, the chink of fallen slates underfoot driving vermin into the crannies. The stairway he sought had carved gryphon posts, a detail he was forced to determine by touch, since no lamps burned in this quarter. No wine-shop opened its door to the night, and no lit window offered him guidance.

      By starlight, Sulfin Evend mounted the stair. The creaking, slat risers bore his weight sullenly, no doubt inlaid with spells to warn away the unwary. Against quailing nerves, he reached the top landing, just as the door swung open to meet him.

      ‘You’ve come to the right place,’ said a paper-dry voice. Backlit by a glimmer of candle-flame, a wizened old woman in rags beckoned her visitor inward.

      Heart pounding, skin turned clammy, Sulfin Evend understood there would be a price. Nonetheless, he crossed over her threshold.

      ‘You’ve been expected,’ the crone stated as she fastened the latches behind him.

      Sulfin Evend believed his surprise was contained, until her crowed laughter said otherwise. Hunchbacked and ancient, she spun to confront him. Eyes blinded with cataracts picked at his thoughts as thoroughly as any dissection. No coward, he resisted his urge to step back as her seeress’s talent unmasked him.

      ‘What did you expect?’ she admonished, not smiling. ‘You come to consult, have you not? Would you rather have met with a charlatan?’

      He bowed to her, managed not to sound shaken as he named her with careful respect. ‘Enithen Tuer. Rightly or not, I have come to the only place where I might seek help within Erdane.’

      ‘I know why you’ve come,’ said the crone, fingers tucked in her mismatched layers of fringed shawls. ‘Years, I have known. So many long years, that I am left weary with waiting.’

      Her clipped gesture offered a rough, wooden chair.

      Released all at once from her piercing regard, Sulfin Evend sat down as she bade him. Her attic was tiny, shelves and table-tops jammed with balled twine and strange leather sacks, filmed with the dust of years. Wrapped in the fragrance of drying herbals, smoke, and stale grease, the Alliance man-at-arms huddled under his cloak, afraid to disturb the unnerving items clutched in his awkward grasp. ‘What do you require to lend me your services?’

      ‘No coin.’ Enithen Tuer shuffled to the hob. Her stumpy feet were bound in frayed flannel, and her fingers, chapped rough as a ragman’s. She snapped a flint striker to give him more light. ‘There is peril in this. Are you prepared? Can’t be turning back once you’ve chosen.’ Eerie, milk eyes surveyed him, unblinking, while the tallow-dips hissed on the mantel. ‘Be aware, warrior. The cost will test and try you. If you are weak, you’ll be broken.’

      ‘What cost, old woman?’ Struck cold, Sulfin Evend suppressed his impatience. ‘I don’t care for riddles or the drama of veiled threats. A man that I speak for lies dying.’

      But Enithen Tuer would not be rushed. Her uncanny awareness seemed to press like a blade against the raced pulse at his neck. ‘Beware who should carry your heart’s pledge, brave man. The wise would walk softly, and rightly so. Lysaer s’Ilessid has been declared outcast from the terms of the Fellowship’s compact.’ The crone sensed his start; nodded. ‘Ah, truly, then you do understand what that sentence means.’

      ‘Explain anyway’ Unnerved by the pitfalls that might arise from the folly of a presumption, Sulfin Evend dropped pride. ‘My sources at Hanshire might not have been accurate.’

      Enithen Tuer decided to humour him. ‘For breaking the sureties sworn by the Sorcerers, your prince’s licence to inhabit this world is revoked. His fate will be ruled by Paravian law. All the worse, for the trouble you carry tonight. As a man disbarred, Lysaer can’t ask for the grace of a Fellowship intercession.’

      ‘But the Paravians are vanished!’ Sulfin Evend shoved back his hood, ruffled as a jessed hawk. ‘Should I fear the old races’ absent reprisal? There are other powers abroad on Athera. Perhaps I should present my liege’s appeal to the Order of the Koriathain.’

      The seer raised frosty eyebrows. ‘Would you indeed?’

      Sulfin Evend steadied his rankled poise, aware all at once he was bargaining. ‘Their oath of debt might give me the more lenient terms.’ The sisterhood had chafed for thousands of years under the yoke of the Sorcerers’ compact. Surely, in the breach of Paravian presence, they would extend arcane help if he asked them.

      Enithen Tuer gave that prospect short shrift. ‘Koriathain will not treat with the powers that currently shadow your prince. Why else, worthy man, did you come here? After the scandal that destroyed your grand-uncle, surely you recognized Lysaer’s malaise as a blood-bound tie of compulsion?’

      Sulfin Evend could not mask the straight fear that shot through him. ‘How I’d hoped not. You’re certain?’

      The crone tucked bowed shoulders. ‘Sure enough.’ She seemed suddenly tired as her gesture encompassed the objects swathed under his cloak. ‘The items you carry will show us which faction.

      ‘No!’ she exclaimed, arresting his move to unveil the unpleasant contents. ‘Not so fast! Never, without wards of protection where such a cult has engaged active workings!’ Porcelain eyes glinted, nailing him down with the force of their occult regard. ‘I, too, must demand my due reckoning for this service. Will you bear the cost and the consequence?’

      Her swift, stabbing finger forestalled his response. ‘I will help. But know this, young man. You bring me my death. The moment I opened my door to admit you, that forecast outcome was set. I have waited to go, for years longed for the day I would greet the turn of Fate’s Wheel. What are you willing to pay in exchange? Would you give your heart, if I ask, or the last breath in your lungs? Will you stand firm, and risk all you hold dear to salvage the life of your master?’

      The Alliance Lord Commander

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