Night of Masks and Knives: Book 1 – Chapter 7
Night of Masks and Knives (The Broken Kingdoms Book 4)
The deeper into the shop we went, the mustier the smell. Sea winds rattled the wooden walls, and shadows played games with my mind.
This could be one deadly mistake, but I feared it was too late to turn back.
Sigurdâs main level office wasnât large. A narrow desk, messy with parchment, took up one corner, and two wooden chairs set against the wall. I sat in the nearest chair and folded my hands in my lap.
Sigurd spared me a glance, as if to give me one last chance to change my mind, then opened the back door.
Three dark figures, two men and a woman, stood shoulder to shoulder in the doorway. Masked to the nose, black lines scratched down their cheeks, and dark runes lined their foreheads.
â³Come in,â Sigurd said, moving aside.
The womanâs ebony hair was shaved on one side and the rest was piled high on her head, like curled satin ribbons. Her skin was a smooth toasted brown, and her eyes were the strangest eyes Iâd ever seen. Black slits cut through a dazzling luminescent color. Like a cat in the night.
The next man pulled down his half mask, revealing his cunning grin. As if he knew a secret I was not privy to.
He was paler than the woman with thick cornhusk hair, and ice crystal eyes. The sleeves of his black tunic were rolled to his elbows, and at his sides, his fingers never stopped twitching.
Behind them the second man removed a cloak, next his mask.
A choked sound ran up my throat like swallowing too much water all at once.
â³
.â By the hells. The rounded face, the glassy eyes, the patchy beard of the bastard who told me about the Guild of Kryv stared back at me. âWhat . . . what are you doing here?â
Elof stepped between the other two Kryv. At first glance, he seemed the weakest in build, but they parted for him. Kryv stepped aside.
. My eyes dropped to the thick belt on his waist. Both hips were draped in bone cutting knives. Across his back was a short blade made of heavy iron.
â³I warned you, . I know of the Kryv.â
â³Know of them? You a Kryv.â
â³Observant, this one,â said the woman, snatching a few paper-wrapped sweets from a clay bowl on Sigurdâs desk. âMay we proceed, or do you wish to babble all day?â
Elof had tricked me. Did Ansel deceive me too? Or was he unaware of Elofâs connections to the Guild of Kryv?
My mind reeled through interactions between the grounds master and Elof at House Strom. Nothing stood amiss in my mind. Brisk, to the point. Typical men who cared little about friendship with fellow servants.
In three quick strides, the Kryv with frosty eyes had me backed against the wall without trouble. âGot a name, lovey?â
â³Mal. Strom,â I stammered. âMalin Strom.â
The Kryv smirked, and he dragged one knuckle across my cheek, clearly undisturbed by how close he stood. âRaum. And I like Mal better. The beauty over there,â he said with a nod at the woman, âis Tova. And you know that ugly sod.â
Tova unwrapped another sweet and tossed it onto her tongue. âOur time is valuable, so letâs get on with it.â
Words dried up like bits of ash on my tongue.
â³Sit,â Elof said, gesturing to the chair Iâd leaped from moments before.
I narrowed my eyes to seem wholly composed. In truth, I thought I might retch any moment.
â³Huh, Iâm going to go out on a limb and say this was a waste of time,â said Raum. He perched on the back of the second wooden chair, so his feet were flat on the seat, and one knee bounced incessantly. âIâm not sure this one has it in her.â
â³I disagree,â Elof said. âAt least, I thought I did.â
Being spineless would do nothing to help Hagen. I was an Alverâa rare Alverâwho frightened crooks like Hob. I could make a deal with the Kryv. âI want you to answer my questions first.â
â³Weâre not here for that,â Elof said. âIn fact, if it werenât for your recklessness, we might not be in this situation at all.â
â³My recklessness? I did not bring the masque. I did not take Hagen.â My voice went shrill, and I could not stop the maelstrom coiling in my chest. âIâve hunted the masquerade for turns, and I will not lose my brother the same way I lost . . .â I shook my head. There was no need to bring Kase into this. Not yet. âI will not lose him.â
Elofâs cheek twitched. âHunting the masquerade to discover its secrets has nothing to do with the way you tried to barge into a unit of skydguard. Had you not forced me to intervene and drag you away, your dear brother might be with his bleeding family tonight. Warm. Happy.
.â
I chuckled. âHis family? I would not describe House Strom as warm and happy.â
â³Not House Strom. I meant your brotherâs family. His children. His lover.â
If he had slapped me across the jaw, I would not have been as stunned. Breath caught in the back of my throat, sweat coated my palms. âMy brother does not have children.â
â³He does,â Elof said, almost bored. âFrom the Northern Kingdom. Where you believed he traveled for business, really, he traveled to be with them.â
â³No.â I shook my head. âNo, if Hagen had a family elsewhere, they would be brought here to be with him.â
â³Ah, not everything is so simple. The north once made it impossible for them to travel. Your brother has spent endless turns trying to change that. The last visit, he crossed a line. Why do you think he was tossed into a sea prison, ?â
My lips parted. âHe . . . he had a business arrangement go wrong.â
â³Fine. Go with that story,â Elof said. âYour brother will be a dead man soon since you cannot stop questioning us. I wish I could say itâs been a pleasure.â
Elof stood, the other two Kryv made moves to follow.
â³Wait!â I shot out one hand. A flutter of desperation scorched the skin on the back of my neck. âIf he had a family, I donât understand, why did he not tell me?â
â³Whoâs to say, but he didnât.â Elofâs jaw tightened. âI donât much care why, what I care about is you interfered in our attempt to snatch him.â
â³Why?â I narrowed my eyes at Elof, hating him and desiring he keep speaking all at once. âWhy did you want him? What were your plans with him?â
â³We were hired to retrieve Hagen Strom and return him to his family. That is all.â Elof crossed the space between us and crowded against me. His face nearly touched mine; his voice grew low and dark. âWe were prepared, weâd arranged his release. But because I intervened to stop you, a mark was missed.â
My shoulders stiffened as I butted my chest against his, enjoying too much how his brows twitched in a bit of surprise. âDo not blame me. I reacted as anyone who cared would. You were just as surprised as me that the masquerade wagons arrived.â
â³Perhaps, but I know how to not react emotionally.â
â³Is having a heart so wrong?â
â³Yes. When it gets others killed it is a deadly thing to have,â Elof said. The shadows of his face eased as he forced a snide grin. âBut we canât look back any longer. We alter course. Seeing how you ruined our original planââ
â³I didnâtââ I tried to interject, but Elofâs voice overpowered mine as he barreled on.
â³We have no choice but to add another deal to our previously made arrangement. What are you prepared to barter, Strom? You came to make a deal. Make one.â
â³But everything has changed.â I scoffed. âYou are already going after Hagen by your own admission. A deal with me will be redundant.â
â³No. Our plan was in place. One we have tirelessly conceived for some time. One that did not involve traipsing to the masquerade because an emotional woman stood in the way of our grab.â
If I stabbed Elof, surely the Kryv would still help me. I was certain they mustâve found him as irritating as I did.
â³The point is,â Elof went on, âwe are facing new plays, new games. Dangerous ones. Weâll need more backing if our guild is to continue. If not, we will cut our losses, and deliver the dreadful news to your brotherâs Northern family that he was irretrievable.â
It was a fist to the heart. âYouâd let him suffer, die, at the masque because itâs ? I thought you were the formidable Guild of Kryv.â
â³We are,â Raum said. âDid we not establish this already?â
â³Weâre not fools,â Tova said. âWhat youâre asking has never been done. Our original deal did not do the impossible. You understand, donât you? Risk increases, so does our price.â
â³Donât get us wrong, we donât shy away from the impossible.â Raum laughed and clapped Elof on the back.
â³No, but we bleeding better get paid to do it,â Elof said. âGive us something we can leverage against you.â
â³I am not so stupid to give you something to use against me. Get your price increase from this supposed family in the north,â I said as powerfully as I could manage. Still, a tremble dressed every word.
Elof folded his arms over his chest. âI did not expect you to be so callous toward your dear brother.â
â³I am not callous. Iâll get him myself, but I wonât be manipulated by the likes of you.â On my feet, I made a move for the door, but shuddered when Elof curled his hand around my arm, holding firm.
His eyes were dark and burdened. âBe honest with yourself. What is your move? What is your plan? How will you get past the skydguard, or the Lord Magnateâs personal armies? How will you reach Hagen when you donât know where the Alver chambers are kept? Tell me how you will hide your gift when the Lord Magnate is always looking for new mesmer?â
My body tensed. He could be lying. He could be saying all this to terrify me into making a deal. In truth, I mightâve brushed his warnings away if I had not already witnessed how quickly folk disappeared at the masquerade.
If a boyâs screams did not haunt my memories night after night.
â³You know how to get through all that?â I asked, voice soft.
â³In due time.â He dropped his hand from my arm, and I felt a little emptier. Odd. He frightened me and brought safety in the same breath.
â³So, if I donât make a deal with you, the Kryv will abandon the plan to take Hagen?â
â³Our deal in the north did not extend to this level of risk. If you wish us to continue, then, as Tova said, when risk increases, our price must increase. What are you willing to pay? How desperate are you?â
His voice had taken on a hard edge.
All I had to give were bone dust memories. A prize the Kryv could not even use without me. They were valuable. Memories filled with fetishes, secrets, the sort of things folk like the Kryv would pay well to possess if it gave them power to bribe another.
But if I gave them, I would need to join the Kryv. In a way, Iâd be part of the payment.
â³I can offer memories Iâve gathered over the turns,â I whispered. âMemories of corruption, murder, and secrets folk would never want the Guild of Kryv to know.â
Elof tilted his head. âHow do you expect us to use these memories?â
â³Through my Talent. It could be of use.â
Raum grinned. âIâve never seen a memory Alver work before. Didnât really know they existed, to be honest.â
â³I would need to . . . join you,â I said. âNo one else can read them, but once I read them, I can share them with you.â
The three Kryv went quiet. Only Elof looked at me as if heâd expected this, as if he knew a great deal more than he was letting on.
Silence grated down my spine like sharp fingernails.
When Tova scoffed, I nearly cried out in relief.
â³We donât take in strays.â Tova glanced at her fellow Kryv, as if urging them to back her. âI say no deal.â
â³I have nothing more to give.
.â A hot ache gathered behind my eyes. Exhaustion, fear, all of it crushed me where I stood.
â³There it is,â Elof said with a vicious sneer. âDesperation.â
Tova and Raum chuckled, and I didnât understand the shift in their demeanor.
â³All right. No need to beg,â Tova said. âBut before we accept memories as payment, show us how it works. I want to make sure youâre good for it.â
Elof stepped aside, inviting me forward.
I rubbed the back of my neck. âSigurd, to show how I can share memories, may I take one from you?â
He wore a look of surprise, hesitated, but soon came to my side. Perhaps curious where I planned to go with this. âHow?â
â³Iâll need to kiss you.â
â³Well, this got interesting,â Raum said, nudging Tova with his elbow.
Sigurd cleared his throat, but didnât protest. I swallowed against my own disquiet, stood on my toes, and kissed him.
Sigurd was not a poor choice to kiss. Clean. Unassuming. Willing. The smoke returned to mind, molding and building shapes, drawing clearer images of little gasps, a sapphire necklace, clothes in heaps on the floor, the scent of skin and friction.
I grinned slyly. âSigurd, you scoundrel. I wonder what would happen should Lady Ashtonâs husband discover your love affair.â
â³Bleeding skies.â Bewilderment shadowed Sigurdâs face. âWhat did you do? I can still . . . well, maybe I canât remember it.â
â³Only a glimpse of the memory is there. I took the rest.â I frowned and looked to Elof. I had desired him at House Strom, feared him, yet he brought a strange calm. âYou seem to lead this meet. If you care to see Sigurdâs memory, I must do the same to you.â
A muscle pulsed in his jaw. His entire body stiffened, as if the thought disgusted him. I fought to keep my composure, tried not to react. He meant nothing to me, so it did not matter if the idea of his mouth on mine disgusted him or not.
â³Share it only,â he snapped at long last. âDo not even think of looking in my head or Iâll cut you where you stand.â
â³Your head is not a place I would ever go on my own accord, I assure you.â
Face to face, Elof held my stare for a single heartbeat before I closed my eyes against what I was going to do. I kissed him.
His mouth was warm, inviting. A rush of heat rolled through my stomach. Hells. A man such as him should not stir such things.
Smoke and ash billowed in my head again, only this time the wisps curled around Sigurdâs salacious moment with Lady Ashton. Like a cold wind filled my mind, the images blew away until nothing but dark, shapeless mist remained.
My breath tangled with Elofâs. Slow. Gentle. I exhaled the memory onto his tongue. When I could not exhale more, I pulled back. An unwanted reluctance bloomed in my chest. I hid the whole of it beneath a narrowed glare.
Elofâs eyes fluttered open. It took only a few moments before one corner of his mouth lifted. He faced the other two Kryv. âI see it plainly.â
â³Gods, think of what secrets you could spread, lovey,â Raum said, nudging me like heâd nudged Tova. As if we were friendly and he was not terrifying.
â³My mesmer is strange and feared,â I said. âIâve trusted you with it.â
Elof added nothing, simply peeled my skin back with his eyes. My gaze drifted to his lips, and I hated myself a little for imagining touching them again.
â³This makes you one of those Anomalies, right?â Sigurd asked. âI know a bit about Alvers. Have an aunt who is a Mediski with a little healing shop near Liten.â
â³Ah,â was all I said. An Alver healer did not fit with the odd, strangeness of Anomali Alvers.
Mediski Alvers were healers. Elixists were talented alchemists. Rifters were frightening. Destroyers. Killers, really. But Profetik and Hypnotik Alvers played games with the mind through illusion or uncanny senses. Frightening in their own way. Anomalies were mutts. A collision of different Talents, usually more feared than the others.
â³Your mesmer is interesting,â Tova said. âBut should Ivar learn of it, youâll be more of a risk than an asset.â
âBut can we ignore the potential of such a Talent?â Elof argued.
â³And if sheâs got memories with secrets she can share, well, Iâd like to be the ones to get those secrets,â Raum said.
Elof sat on the edge of Sigurdâs desk. âWhere are these stolen memories, ?â
â³I have them hidden.â A rush of excitement boiled in my blood. They were going to help me. Iâd get Hagen back. After it was over, I might even be trusted enough theyâd help me find Kase. âAt House Strom.â
â³Where?â
â³Iâm not telling you.â I folded my arms over my chest, barring myself against them. âWell, what do you say? Is it enough?â
â³This isnât going to be over tomorrow,â Tova said. âItâs like the inside of a clock, each piece, each cog must be working to turn the hands. You arenât a piece in our world.â
â³I will be.â
Elof shook his head. âYou donât know what youâre asking.â
â³And you donât know what lengths I will go, lengths I have gone, to find people I love.â
âTrue enough.â He glanced at his fellow Kryv. âWell?â
âWeâre taking in a dealmaker, and planning to take from the Masque av Aska,â Tova said. âThis is what weâre doing, right? Iâm understanding the madness well enough?â
â³Yes,â Elof said without a change in his expression.
Tova nodded and took another sweet. âAs long as Iâm clear. Do as you please, but make the choice. Iâm hungry and wish to leave.â
â³Raum?â Elof pressed.
Raum shrugged. âIâm in. Iâm always in.â
â³All right.â Something in Elofâs voice raised the hair on the back of my neck. Like he knew things I didnât, and Iâd walked into a trap. âAs you wishâwelcome to the Kryv.â