So was he: he hadn’t shaved, or washed, or changed his clothes for days. His eyes were red with exhaustion and malice – or grief – and his hands curled in front of him as if he badly needed a sword.
Facing Artagel from the edge of his cot, he rasped distinctly, “I’m going to disembowel the man who let you in here.”
The air was foul with dirt, rancid sweat, food gone to maggots. Artagel stifled an impulse to gag. Pretending that his nauseated expression was a smile, he replied, “No, you won’t.” Deliberately, he found a chair and sat down. “If you want to get him, you’ll have to get me first. And you won’t do that. You won’t dare. I’m the most popular man in Orison.”
“Hog-puke.” The Castellan blinked malevolently. “Eremis is the most popular man in Orison.” In spite of his tone, however, he didn’t leave the bed. “You’re just an invalid who’s still alive because he got lucky the last time he met Gart.
“That’s probably why they sent you. They think I won’t hurt a man who’s so weak a woman could knock him over.”
Feigning nonchalance, Artagel inquired, “ ‘They’?”
“They. The Tor. King Joyse. Half the rutting dogs in this stink-hole. The bastard who let you in. The ones who think Eremis is the best thing since King Joyse invented sunshine. The ones who think I ought to be castrated because I slapped that rank whore a couple of times. They.
“They want me to come out so they can jump me. They want you to make me come out.”
“Sorry.” Artagel loathed dealing with Lebbick like this; he would have preferred to meet the High King’s Monomach without a sword. As a result, he sounded incongruously happy, as if he were having a wonderful time. “I hate to contradict you when you’re in such a good mood. But the truth is, I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about. I just came to tell you Geraden didn’t kill Nyle.”
“I know that,” snapped Lebbick. “Don’t tell me. Tell them.”
“Wait a minute.” Artagel would have been less startled if the Castellan had started foaming at the mouth. “Wait. What do you mean, you know that? How do you know?”
“I know” – Castellan Lebbick glared at his visitor as if Artagel were hideous – “because that piss-drinking slut was in my bed. In my bed. ”
Now it was Artagel’s turn to blink. “Wait a minute,” he repeated. “Wait.”
Lebbick didn’t wait. “I came right through that door” – he pointed fiercely at the door – “and she was in my bed.” He pounded the cot. “Naked as shit. Smiling at me. Wagging her tits. Of course Geraden didn’t kill Nyle.”
Then his ferocity dimmed. “I would have believed anybody except that woman.”
Artagel held his breath and said nothing.
“She made me think about it over and over again. She kept making me go back to the beginning. But when she was wrong about that secret passage – I was sure. And I saw her escaping, I saw her. With Quillon. King Joyse’s friend. Then I found his body. I caught up with her. She was with Gilbur. I was sure. Gilbur told me they were allies. Of course I was sure. Of course Geraden killed Nyle. She must have escaped with Gilbur, not Quillon. She was a traitor, a murderer. That proved Geraden was guilty.
“Isn’t that what they told you?”
“No,” Artagel murmured. “They haven’t told me a thing.”
“Well, they will,” Lebbick snarled. “Give them a chance. They’re all talking about me. They whisper behind my back.” A wild grin stretched his mouth. “Eremis is a hero. Everything that woman said about him is a lie. Geraden killed Nyle. She put him up to it. She helped him escape. Then Gilbur helped her escape. They killed Quillon. I’m a monster. Nobody understands why King Joyse hasn’t had me gutted.
“Eremis is a hero.”
Groping for some measure of sanity in the conversation, Artagel drawled, “I doubt it. Terisa must have told you Nyle is still alive. She certainly tried to tell me.
“I didn’t believe her,” he admitted, “but I’ve been kicking myself for that ever since.” Generally, he wasn’t much inclined to regret; nevertheless he regretted intensely the things he had said to Terisa. He should have looked at that body more closely. “I finally figured out what must have happened.” Geraden is your brother. You’ve known him all his life. “They must have switched the bodies. Underwell and Nyle. That’s why they used Imagery – why they let creatures feed on the bodies. To disfigure them. So we would think Underwell was Nyle.
“Geraden wouldn’t do a thing like that. It’s impossible. I know him better than that.”
As if he were discussing the weather, Artagel added, “If he didn’t do it, that just leaves Eremis. We don’t have anybody else to blame it on.”
“I know that.” Grief twisted Castellan Lebbick’s features. Softly, he repeated, “I know that. Why do you think I hit her so hard? Why do you think I kept hitting her? I was trying to get her to tell me the truth.
“It was Quillon who helped that woman escape. That’s the truth. He did it because King Joyse told him to. To get her away from me. He ordered me to do my job, and then he tried to sneak her away from me. That’s why he leaves me alone now. He hasn’t sent for me in days. He knows I was just following orders.
“He wants to break me. He wants me to hide down here until I rot. Because he doesn’t trust me.”
Artagel felt frantically that he was getting nowhere. He was tempted to back out of the room, put some distance between himself and the Castellan’s lunacy. But his regret was stronger than his alarm. He had already let both Terisa and Geraden down.
Instead of retreating, he tried a different approach.
“Well, he must trust you some.” Artagel made an effort to sound hearty, without much success. “You’re still in command, aren’t you? You’re still the Castellan.”
Lebbick nodded as if he hadn’t heard the question.
“Speaking of things you’re in command of, how’s the defense going?” continued Artagel. “I heard a rumor that Kragen hasn’t so much as thrown a rock at us since the first day. Is that true?”
The Castellan nodded again. “Margonal’s whoreson,” he growled, “is just sitting out there staring at us.”
“Why? What makes him think he can get away with that? Isn’t he afraid of Cadwal?”
“I can only think of two explanations.” As if by accident, some of the tension in Lebbick’s face loosened. On some level, Artagel had distracted him. “He knows Festten isn’t coming – for some reason – and we don’t because he doesn’t let the news get to us. Or Alend and Cadwal have made an alliance.”
There: that was an improvement. Castellan Lebbick still had some lucidity left in him. Carefully, Artagel said, “Then I guess Cadwal isn’t coming. If Festten and Margonal had an alliance, Kragen wouldn’t have tried to attack us alone.”
“That’s probably true,” agreed the Castellan morosely. “Festten wouldn’t have made an alliance unless he could be sure Margonal wouldn’t get to the Congery ahead of him.”
Artagel nodded. After a moment, he went on, “Speaking of the Congery—”