The King's Blood
several at the temple, but I have found the location of another. I believe that with it, the goddess can be killed, her power broken. And so I am going to find it and go back to my home. And I will go to that sacred cavern at last.”
“That’s a stupid plan,” Marcus said. “It’s more likely to get you killed than anything else. How am I supposed to fit into this?”
“As my sword-bearer. The spiders in me dislike the blade. I don’t believe I could carry it all the way back myself. I think you could. Of all the men I’ve met in my years after the temple, I believe that you particularly could.”
Marcus shook his head.
“It all sounds a bit overheated and dramatic, Kit. The paired adventurers rushing to find the enchanted sword? Are you sure this isn’t an outline of some old play about defeating a demon queen?”
Kit chuckled.
“I have spent a certain amount of time onstage. My perspective on the world may come from standing on the boards. But I believe I’m right all the same,” he said. And then, gently: “Come with me. I need you.”
“You’ve got the wrong man, Kit. I’m not some sort of chosen one.”
“Yes you are. I’ve chosen you.”
The excitement—the joy—that woke in Marcus was like being pulled by a wave. It was what he’d wanted, what he’d been wordlessly longing for all the dire, grinding weeks in Porte Oliva. And now God was giving it to him on a gold plate. He dug in his heels.
“I can’t. Cithrin’s in Camnipol. I have to protect her.”
“Do you think you can?”
“Yes,” Marcus said.
Kit raised a finger. His smile was gentle, half amused and half sorrowful.
“Remember who you’re talking to. I know parlor tricks,” he said. “Do you think you can?”
Marcus looked down at his filthy hands. The nails were cracked and broken from scrabbling at his restraints. He didn’t have a blade or enough coin to buy a meal. Something thickened his throat.
“No.”
“Neither do I,” Kit said. “Neither does Yardem or that unpleasant notary the bank brought in. And I would be willing to wager that Cithrin doesn’t expect it of you. If she’s in need of rescue, I don’t think her strategy will be to wait meekly for her adoptive father to fix things.”
“She’s not my daughter. I don’t think of her that way.”
“If you say so,” Kit said.
“All right, that’s going to get annoying,” Marcus said.
“Marcus, it seems to me your life in Porte Oliva is over. Perhaps there’s a way to return to it, forge it into armor that doesn’t bite when you strap it on, but I don’t see how.”
“When Cithrin’s back. When she’s safe.”
“No one’s safe, Marcus. Not ever. We both know that. I believe you’re looking for a noble cause to die in,” Kit said. “As it happens, I have one. If we win, it will save Cithrin and countless other innocents besides. Or tell me you’d rather go back to enforcing loans, and I’ll leave you.”
His belly felt heavy, the truth of his situation pressing against him like being buried in sand. Still, he managed a smile.
“Unchain me before you go?”
Kit rose, put his hand on Marcus’s shoulder, and turned him around. It took only a few moments, and the leather strap that had bound Marcus for what seemed like a lifetime fell away. Marcus scratched at the skin where the restraints had been, reveling in the freedom of being in command of his own body. One of the doves hopped back in through its hole and took a place on its perch.
Kit stepped back. The silence between them was woven from light and dread. Marcus had put his life in this man’s hands more than once. He knew he could turn away now, go and exact vengeance on Yardem and try again to find Cithrin. The idea was still profoundly pleasant, and like all pleasant things, suspect. Kit waited.
It was idiocy. It was doomed from the start. Diving into ancient mysteries and solving the problems of the world in some grand, transforming gesture was something for the daydreams of children who didn’t know the world.
“These priests. Their goddess. They’re as bad as you make them out?”
“I believe they are.”
“And this magic sword of yours. Where is it supposed to be?”
“In a reliquary on the northern shore of Lyoneia.”
Marcus nodded.
“We’ll need a boat,” he said.
Dawson
D
awson locked his jaw shut as they beat him. They were young men for the most part. He knew their names, he knew their fathers. Two at least had played
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