Arc 5: Chapter 10: Crisis and Command
We returned to the castle hours before dawn. Immediately, it became clear something was wrong.
There were more guards at the gate than usual, including a contingent Storm Knights, the elite garrison of the Fulgurkeep. I recognized them by the brassy sheen of their steel plate, treated to give it a hue very near gold, and the sea-blue cloth of their capes and surcoats. Every tower had been festooned with lit braziers and alchemical lights in unison, making the massive castle complex and its bridge gates seem as though they had erupted like a smoldering volcano.
I was stopped at the gate by sentries with hard eyes and twitching hands. After announcing myself and putting them at relative ease, I recognized one of them and grabbed him by the shoulder before going through.
âWhatâs happening?â I asked. Even as I spoke, a group of armored riders emerged from the gate and tore into the city at speed.
The knight turned his attention to me. Ser Moonbrand was a Karledaler, one of Rosannaâs veterans whoâd integrated into the castleâs royal guard in order to help bridge her people and her husbandâs. Though he wore the brassy plate and blue cloth of a Storm Knight, the medallion worked into his armorâs heart protector remained emblazoned with the star of House Silvering.
Iâd known him since well before his clipped hair had gone fully gray. Moonbrand had an angular face, gaunt cheeks, and a thin mouth almost always set in sour disapproval. Most notable was the scar tissue marring the right side of his face, very similar in color to frostbite. His right eye had a paler color than the left, closer to silver than blue.
Despite his fastidious manners, I knew him to be a fierce man-at-arms. Heâd been my first choice to take on Emmaâs training, if something were to happen to me. The knightâs mismatched eyes lit up when he saw me.
âHewer.â He nodded a greeting. âI thought youâd been called back. You havenât heard?â
âApparently not,â I said dryly. Somewhere out in the city, bells were ringing. âWhat is all this?â
âThere was an attack,â Ser Moonbrand told me, then corrected himself with a grimace. âSeveral attacks. Weâre still getting reports in, but so far weâve had news of at least six different assaults across the city.â
âSix?â I asked dumbly. âOn who?â
âLord Halburan and his wife are both dead,â Moonbrand said in a grim voice. âSer Alencourt is in critical condition. They brought him in half an hour ago. Heâd been in the city celebrating the birth of a son. He⦠looked in a bad way.â
Ser Alencourt was another Fulgurkeep elite, a veteran like Moonbrand and well respected. I did not know the other name.
Moonbrand lowered his voice. âIt very much all seems coordinated. Weâve got the palace locked down until we learn more, on the Lord Stewardâs order.â
âMy disciple and I were attacked,â I told him, then provided the details.
âMarions?â Ser Moonbrandâs skin lost some color. âYouâre certain?â
âIntimately.â I nodded to the castle. âI need to go.â
âThe Emperor and the Lord Steward are both in the council chamber,â Moonbrand informed me. âIâll take you there directly. Youâre the only one whose seen the attackers so far and can talk. The council will want to hear.â
âSo we werenât the only ones,â Emma said to me as we passed into the âKeep with the knight some paces ahead. âPerhaps this wasnât personal after all?â
âMy thought too,â I said. I wasnât sure how to feel about that. Iâd expected assassins would try me at some point. This, on the other handâ¦
I quickened my pace. Before we passed into the waiting maw of the Fulgurkeep, my eyes were drawn up by the crack of stony wings.
The castleâs gargoyles were all awake, and circling the towers in flocks.
I am not only tall, but brawny, and that combined with the glint of gold in my eyes, my black armor, and my red shroud made most give way for me. The presence of a Storm Knight helped as well, and soon enough Iâd been ushered up myriad flights of stairs and regal corridors to where the Emperor waited. Despite the late hour, or early hour, the castle had come alive.
As though weâre under siege, I thought. Hell, perhaps we were.
Every step up those countless stairs felt like a dirk in my leg, and some smaller but no less keen blade in my chest. I tried to hide the discomfort, but Emma noticed.
âYou shouldnât be on your feet,â she muttered.
âNo choice,â I said. âItâs just pain. Iâll be fine.â
Emma said nothing, but I sensed her concern. I put it from my thoughts.
The guard admitted me into the same room where Iâd had my meeting with Markham earlier in the day. The previous day, as we were already well past midnight. They kept Emma outside, which I knew frustrated her, but she caught my face and settled back to wait in the hall with some other servants and lesser officials.
Markham stood at the head of the long war table, with a number of attendants and councilors I recognized. The Lord Steward towered over the gathering, his hands clasped behind his back and his cherubâs face set in an expression of dour concentration.
Oradyn Fen Harus was there in the background, his sagely visage tempered by the dire atmosphere. I also noted Ser Jocelyn, the Ironleaf Knight, whose company of errant adventurers had come to the city for the tournament. He wore his armor of brassy scales and green chain with all its medals, as he had every time Iâd seen him, his almost effeminate features serene.
Rosanna was there at her husbandâs side. I froze at the sight of her, then mastered myself and redirected my attention.
The First Sword of House Forger, whose true name I hadnât learned but who many called the Twinbolt Knight for his helmet, listened to Ser Moonbrand whisper into his ear before nodding and taking me straight to the Emperor. Markham was in the middle of listening to a report from a harrowed looking messenger I suspected had sprinted across half the city, by his red face and breathless voice.
When the council heard Iâd seen the attackers, all fell silent and turned to me. I felt Rosannaâs green eyes on me, but forced myself not look at her.
âThey were Marions,â I told them. âA group of them, directed by a puppeteer using a miniature stage as a focus.â
When they started asking me for details, most of the questions coming from the officials present and not Markham or his head advisor, I told most of the story. I left out Catrinâs involvement, only saying weâd survived the attack due to still being awake when it started.
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âA single puppet master couldnât have conducted an attack on this scale,â the Steward said to Markham.
He was right. I especially didnât think that frightened old man Catrin had captured could have. Then again, appearances could be deceiving. There was every chance heâd prepared his own creations to silence him if he were caught.
But why would he have been close to me in a poor dock district, if heâd been coordinating attacks across the city? No, it didnât add up.
One of the councilors present, a middle aged man whose name I didnât know, spoke up. âI have a report here that the Lady Sandra was set upon by men wearing the colors and gear of city guard. She killed one of them, and the rest committed suicide before her own guards could apprehend them.â
The man lifted his eyes from the letter. âTheir identities are presently unknown, and this report came in half an hour ago. There is nothing here about animate puppets.â
I folded my arms, taking that new information in.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âAnd what of the Lady Sandra?â The Steward asked.
The courtier whoâd given that report swallowed. âDead, my lord. She expired from her injuries in her estate, according to this letter. It is from her eldest son.â
âGod be with them bothâ the Royal Clericon said, her aged face tensing with sympathy.
Rosanna turned to me. âWhat became of the assassin you encountered, Ser Headsman?â
She was very much the Empress then, all business. Sheâd been woken in the middle of the night, and though she looked every inch the monarch, she lacked much of the more elaborate accoutrements Iâd seen her in most other occasions. She had two handmaidens with her, both young and silent, as well as Lisette, a young cleric whoâd become one of her personal attendants. Ser Kaia, armored and acting in her role as the Empressâs personal knight just as the Twinbolt was to Markham, loomed nearby.
âDead,â I told them. âOne of his own puppets shot him before I could get answers.â
Someone along the long war table scoffed. I didnât catch who.
âAnd you just happened to be awake in the dead of night, and survive multiple attackers?â One of the noblemen present asked me, not bothering to hide his skepticism.
I met the speakerâs gaze. It hadnât been so long now that everyone had forgotten about my raid on Rose Malin, and I have been told I have a dour glare. He flinched. I turned to speak to Markham.
âI got lucky, Your Grace. How many attacks were there?â
âWe have reports of seven so far,â the Steward answered. âWe believe there are more.â
My heart sank, even as one of the nobles present gave voice to the thought I suspected went through every head. âAre we under attack? Is this war?â
Markham stared at the piling missives being dropped in front of him, then lifted his eyes to the room. More than thirty people, all powerful, all important in his government, and all very afraid, met that royal gaze.
âSo far,â the Emperor said, âthese have all been isolated attacks on individuals. The culprits have all used different methods â Marions attacked Lord Alken, assassins disguised as guardsmen invaded the mansion of Lady Sandra, and Ser Alencourt was stabbed in a tavern by a serving maid in front of several of my own officers. We are still verifying the rest, but everything here indicates that these assaults have been individualized. Only the timing seems coordinated.â
âWhat of this maid who stabbed your captain, Your Grace?â One of the nobles asked.
Markhamâs lips twisted into a deeper scowl. âDead. She committed suicide half a block away, just as those guards who set upon Lady Sandra did.â
I frowned, looking at the pile of missives on the table. Messengers were coming in and adding to it every few minutes, most of them from guard captains and other officials out in the city. âWho have been the rest of the targets so far?â
The Steward answered in clipped, formal tones. âLord Halburan of House Rathur, along with his wife and daughters, were killed by what seems to be some sort of alchemical device. Poisonous gas, poured into their manor. Ser Brackswine, a knight from the Gylden, and several of his friends were shot on a gondola in the lagoon while taking a night of leisure. Lady Elmira of House Worthy and her lover, a mercenary from the continent, were both poisoned at a gala. We have also heard that Ser Tegan of House Barker was found just an hour ago some blocks from his fatherâs estate, badly beaten.â
âSer Tegan?â I asked, stunned. Iâd just seen the man the day before, healthy and cheerful. Then, something else clicked into place in my thoughts. Lady Elmira was a famous duelist, and I had heard rumors that Alencourt had been picked by the Storm Knights to represent them in the upcoming competition.
âLord Halburan,â I asked no one in particular, cutting through the noise. âAnd Lady Sandra⦠were they both fighters?â
Rosanna glanced at me, her attention mirrored by the Steward. Ser Jocelyn, not far away and in earshot, also perked up. The Emperor didnât look up from his reports, but I sensed he listened.
âLord Halburan is⦠was a famed warrior from Reynwellâs eastern countryside,â the Empress informed me. âLady Sandra is not, but her son just recently returned from errantry. He was the one who found her.â
I inhaled deeply. âThese are all tourney knights.â
More of those nearby fell quiet. Markham finally looked up from the table.
The Steward lifted his drooping brow, giving me a glimpse of one bright blue eye. Then, with a hesitance uncharacteristic for the royal advisor he said, âWe would have to check the lists, butâ¦â
âSer Jocelyn was attacked here in the palace,â Markham said.
We all turned to the Ironleaf, who gave a hesitant nod. In his almost shy alto the glorysworn knight said, âI did not see my attacker. They vanished into the corridors.â
âYou are unharmed?â Rosanna asked.
Ser Jocelyn bowed, causing his brown hair to fall around his face. âI am well, Your Grace.â
âWe are having every nook and cranny of the fortress searched,â the Steward told us. âThe Fulgurkeep is large, but we have ensured there are no idle hands. Even stillâ¦â
âWe cannot discount the possibility these attacks have not ended.â The Empress finished the advisorâs statement. âIf this happened anywhere else, I would think it a coup. Howeverâ¦â
Markham finished for his wife. âNo one of high station has been targeted, so far as we know. None of the monarchs. The most notable name among these was Halburan's. He was one of my barons.â
Rosanna lifted her thumb to her lips, stopping just short of biting the nail. I remembered the old habit. âIf whoever is behind this did have targets of higher station, then they have certainly tipped their hand. We are on alert now.â
The Lady Ark, whoâd been present in the room but silent until then, replied to the Empress. âPerhaps it was meant to create panic, Your Grace? Get this exact reaction from us?â
âOr make our city seem unsafe,â the Steward suggested softly to Markham. âTo undermine your credibility, Your Grace.â
That chilled me. I had suspicions about Yithâs actions being meant to ferment fear in the city. Was he behind this? Then, another thought came on the tail of that.
âWhere are the Vykes?â I asked.
The Lord Steward gave me a dip of his chin. âOur guests from Talsyn have been alerted to these happenings, and are being kept secure in their chambers. No harm will come to them, not under the Fulgurkeepâs protection.â
Fancy code for we have them under watch, and they arenât going anywhere. I gave him a sharp nod, oddly grateful for the usually frustrating advisor in that moment.
Markham placed hand on the table. Something about his manner drew the roomâs attention. When all had gone quiet, the Emperor spoke to the lords and ladies whoâd gathered in the orotund tones of authority. âRegardless of the reasons or purpose, we have come under attack. This will not stand, and those responsible will be found. Justice will be meted out.â
His steely eyes ran across the nobles, lingering on me. I felt a moment of trepidation, sensing something in that look.
âSome of you in this room are already aware,â Markham continued. âBut just yesterday, Alken Hewer, who some call the Headsman of Seydis, was restored to the peerage.â
Stunned silence. Somehow, I think that surprised many of them as much as it had me when it had happened. I did my best to stand straight, look suitably dour, and pretend like I wasnât venting half the fluid in my body through my ribs just then. Hopefully, I didnât start to drip.
Markham turned to me. âAs of this moment, Ser Headsman, you are being given your first official order. By my authority as Emperor, I command you to find who is responsible for these attacks and bring them to justice. Learn their reasons, their benefactors, find any and all who might have given them aid or succor. Use any means at your disposal to bring this evil into the light.â
This time, I wasnât taken so fully off guard. Aware of the many eyes on me, I knelt and dipped my head, even as my injured knee let out a despairing scream of protest. Hiding my wince I said, âIt will be done, Your Grace.â
âRise,â Markham ordered. I did, just managing not to wobble.
The Emperor studied me a moment, then turned to the courtiers. âQuestions will be asked. Whoever did this had resources. All of you will cooperate with Ser Alken, or you will answer to me.â
Heâs making this as official as he can, I realized. It might not get the whole city to open their doors to me, but it was a start at least.
It also made me a target. If anyone involved stood in this room, or heard about thisâ¦
I put it out of my mind. Iâd gone up against long odds before. And I had it now, the thing Iâd been looking for.
A course.