"I am not stopping," he said.
"May I ask why not?"
"They are going to kill Otah-kvo."
"Yes," Cehmai agreed, his voice calm and equable. Maati might as well
have said that winter would be cold.
"And I have a few days to find whose crimes he's carrying."
Cehmai frowned and took a pose of query.
"They'll kill him anyway," Cehmai said. "If he killed Biitrah, they'll
execute him for that. If he didn't, Danat will do the thing to keep his
claim to be the Khai. Either way he's a dead man."
"That's likely true," Maati said. "But I've done everything else I can
think to do, and this is still left, so I'll do this. If there is
anything at all I can do, I have to do it."
"In order to save your teacher," Cehmai said, as if he understood.
"To sleep better twenty years from now," Maati said, correcting him. "If
anyone asks, I want to he able to say that I did what could be done. And
I want to be able to mean it. "That's more important to me than saving him."
Cehmai seemed puzzled, but Maati found no better way to express it
without mentioning his son's name, and that would open more than it
would close. Instead he waited, letting the silence argue for him.
Cehmai took a pose of acceptance at last, and then tilted his head.
"Maati-kvo ... I'm sorry, but when was the last time you slept?"
Maati smiled and ignored the question.
"I'm going to meet with one of the armsmen who saw my assassin killed,"
he said. "I was wondering if I could impose on you to find some servant
from Danat's household with whom I might speak later this evening. I
have a few questions about him ..
DANAT MACIII ARRIVED LIKE. A HERO. THE STREETS WERE FILLET) WITH people
cheering and singing. Festivals filled the squares. Young girls danced
through the streets in lines, garlands of summer blossoms in their hair.
And from his litter strewn with woven gold and silver, Danat Machi
looked out like a protective father indulging a well-loved child. Idaan
had been present when the word came that Danat Machi waited at the
bridge for his father's permission to enter the city. She had gone down
behind the runner to watch the doors fly open and the celebration that
had been building spill out into the dark stone streets. They would have
sting as loud for Kaiin, if Danat had been dead.
While Danat's caravan slogged its way through the crowds, Idaan
retreated to the palaces. The panoply of the utkhaiem was hardly more
restrained than the common folk. Members of all the high families
appeared as if by chance outside the Third Palace's great hall.
Musicians and singers entertained with beautiful ballads of great
warriors returning home from the field, of time and life renewed in a
new generation. They were songs of the proper function of the world. It
was as if no one had known Biitrah or Kaiin, as if the wheel of the
world were not greased with her family's blood. Idaan watched with a
calm, pleasant expression while her soul twisted with disgust.
When Danat reached the long, broad yard and stepped down from his
litter, a cheer went up from all those present; even from her. Danat
raised his arms and smiled to them all, beaming like a child on Candles
Night. His gaze found her, and he strode through the crowd to her side.
Idaan raised her chin and took a pose of greeting. It was what she was
expected to do. He ignored it and picked her up in a great hug, swinging
her around as if she weighed nothing, and then placed her back on her
own feet.
"Sister," he said, smiling into her eyes. "I can't say how glad I am to
see you.
"Danat-kya," she said, and then failed.
"How are things with our father?"
The sorrow that was called for here was at least easier than the feigned
delight. She saw it echoed in Danat's eyes. So close to him, she could
see the angry red in the whites of his eyes, the pallor in his skin. He
was wearing paint, she realized. Rouge on his cheeks and lips and some
warm-toned powder to lend his skin the glow of health. Beneath it, he
was sallow. She wondered if he'd grown sick, and whether there was some
slow poison that might be blamed for his death.
"He has been looking forward to seeing you," she said.
"Yes. Yes, of course. And I hear that you're to become a Vaunyogi. I'm
pleased for you. Adrah's a good man."
"I love him," she said, surprised to find that in some dim way it was
still truth. "But how are you, brother? Are you ... are things well with
you?"
For a moment, Danat seemed about to answer. She thought she saw
something weaken in him, his mouth losing its smile, his eyes looking
into a darkness like the one she carried. In the end, he shook himself
and kissed her forehead, then turned again to the crowd and made his way
to the Khai's palace, greeting and rejoicing with everyone who crossed
his path. And it was only the beginning. Danat and their father would be
closeted away for a time, then the ritual welcome from the heads of the
families of the utkhaicm. And then festivities and celebrations, feasts
and dances and revelry in the streets and palaces and teahouses.
Idaan made her way to the compound of the Vaunyogi, and to Adrah and his
father. The house servants greeted her with smiles and poses of welcome.
The chief overseer led her to a small meeting room in the hack. If it
seemed odd that this room-windowless and dark-was used now in the summer
when most gatherings were in gardens or open pavilions, the overseer
made no note of it. Nothing could have been more different from the mood
in the city than the one here; like a winter night that had crept into
summer.
"Has House Vaunyogi forgotten where it put its candles?" she asked, and
turned to the overseer. "Find a lantern or two. These fine men may be
suffering from their drink, but I've hardly begun to celebrate."
The overseer took a pose that acknowledged the command and scampered
off, returning immediately with his gathered light. Adrah and his father
sat at a long stone table. Dark tapestries hung from the wall, red and
orange and gold. When the doors were safely closed behind them, Idaan
pulled out one of the stools and sat on it. tier gaze moved from the
father's face to the son's. She took a pose of query.
"You seem distressed," she said. "The whole city is loud with my
brother's glory, and you two are skulking in here like criminals."
"We have reason to be distressed," Daaya Vaunyogi said. She wondered