"You see?" Haroun said again.
Balfour remained firm.
Haroun again spoke the tongue of emperors.
A dark umbra formed round the witch's head. She spoke.
She hadn't much to tell. This was a minor Nine, its only noteworthy member the man who had come north to hide.
Haroun squeezed his fingers into a fist. The woman dropped, tightened into a fetal ball.
"Colonel? Must I?"
Despite the draft in that old stone pile, Balfour was wet with sweat. But he was a hard man himself. Suddenly, he sprang.
Haroun expected it.
Below, villagers filled Hammerfest's streets, their torches painting the storybook houses with terrible, crawling shadows. They watched the castle, and shuddered each time it reverberated to one of those horrible cries.
They were being torn from a throat which couldn't respond to the will trying to control it.
Balfour was stubborn. He withstood Haroun's worst for hours. But Haroun's torments weren't physical, which a stubborn man could school himself to ignore. These were torments of the mind, of the soul. Witch-man Haroun bin Yousif conjured demons he sent into the soldier. They clawed through mind and soul and took control of his mouth, babbling both truth and lies. Haroun repeated his questions again and again. In the end he thought he had gotten everything to be had. He thought there were no more secrets....
He finally used his sword.
Then he slept, with corpses to frighten off evil dreams.
Haroun bin Yousif had lived this way for so long that it hardly disturbed him.
He wakened shortly before nightfall, finished what needed finishing, went down the hill.
The Hammerfesters remained in the streets, frightened. The fat man stood before them, shaking.
Haroun drew back his cloak. "You may return to your castle, Thane. I have no need of it now. Wait." He tossed a coin. "Bury them."
That cruel smile crossed his lips.
Nearly twenty men faced him, but eased out of his path. His unrelieved arrogance assured them that they had no choice. This dread man would pay for their funerals too if they argued.
"Thane."
"Yes?"
"Forget your game of Nines. It brings on the dire evils."
"I will, sir."
"I believe you will." Smiling, Haroun went to Bors' inn, took a room. He paid his due, as ever he did-be it in silver or evil.
He fell asleep thinking this Nine had been a puerile little conspiracy, fit for nothing but hiding men who had grown too hot elsewhere. But there were other Nines that might shake the roots of mountains.
Next morning he purchased a horse and rode southward. Traveling alone.
He knew no other way. Even in crowds this dread, deadly man traveled alone.
SIXTEEN: Deaths and Disappearances.
Ragnarson woke with a start. "Eh?"
"Colonel Oryon, Marshall."
"Thank you, Derel."
His dream had been grim. He had been trapped at the heart of a whirling mandala with good and evil chasing one another around him, the champions of one as vicious as those of the other. The struggle had consumed everything he loved.
Fiana. Elana. Two children. Mocker. Already gone. Who would be next?
Rolf? What had become of Rolf, anyway? Bragi hadn't seen him since returning from Karak Strabger. Commanding the Palace Guard wasn't much, but it was a job, with its duties.
Would it be Haaken? Or Reskird, a friend of two decades? Haroun?
The Haroun he knew and loved was an idealization of the Haroun with whom he had adventured. He didn't know the Haroun of today. Today's Haroun was a different man.
Who else? His children. Especially Ragnar, in whom he saw his immortality. Ahring. Altenkirk. Gjerdrum.... They were friends, but they hadn't gotten the grip on his soul the others had, perhaps because he had met them later, after the world had hardened him. Likewise Valther and Mist. Nepanthe, though.... He had a soft spot for Nepanthe and Ethrian, his godson.
And for Ravelin. Kavelin had its claws in him. And he couldn't comprehend it.
"Marshall? You wanted to see me?"
"Oh, I'm sorry." Ragnarson's hair had grown shaggy through inattention. He brushed it from his eyes. "Grab a chair. Derel, bring something to sip."
"Your secretary says you've got something new on Balfour."
"Yes. But hang on a minute. There's a couple people I want to sit in."
Valther and Mist were a long time arriving. More than an hour later than he expected. He tried to make small talk, reminiscing about the El Murid wars, the civil war, basic training at High Crag, whatever he and the Colonel had in common. Oryon waited it out. But he got antsy. He had his evacuation to prepare.
"Derel, what's taking them so long?"
"I don't know, sir. I was told they'd be here as soon as possible."
"Must be a family crisis," Ragnarson told Oryon. "Pretty sickly, their kids. Derel, have you seen Captain Preshka?"
"No sir. I've been meaning to mention it. He hasn't turned in his pay sheets. He's gone to pieces the last week."
"I'll talk to him."
"Here's Valther now, sir."
Valther and Mist filed in, Valther slump-shouldered, pale.
"What happened? You look like death warmed over."
"Trouble. Nepanthe and Ethrian are gone."
"What? How?"
"I don't know. Gundar was the only one who saw what happened. He doesn't make much sense. Says a man came. Nepanthe went away with him. She packed for herself and Ethrian, and went. Gundar thinks the man said he was supposed to take her to Mocker, who's hiding because you and Haroun want to kill him."
"I'll talk to him later. There's got to be more. Derel. Put out the word. How long have they been gone?"
Valther shrugged. "Since this morning. They've got at least four hours' start."
"Another move against us?"
"Probably. This's starting to look big, isn't it?"
"Yeah. I found a new angle, too. That's why I wanted you.
"I had a visitor. Right after you left, Colonel. Bin Yousif's wife."
Bragi let them settle down before adding, "She's also El Murid's daughter. That's not as important as what she told me. About why Haroun has been so peaceful. And about Mocker and Balfour."
He told the story. It elicited a covey of questions.
"Look, I don't have any answers. Valther, fit the pieces into your puzzle. Mist. The man in black. Tervola?"
"He must be. But the mask isn't familiar. It sounds like Chin's, but the black and gold are wrong.... We could check. Didn't you capture Chin's mask at Baxendala?"
"There was a mask. I don't know whose."
"Chin. I remember. Get it for me. I'll tell you if it was Chin."
"Derel. See if you can dig the thing up. It's in the Treasury vault. We were going to display it when the army got rich enough to afford its own museum."
Prataxis bowed and departed. His writing materials he left lying in a sarcastic scatter.
"I'm getting that man's goat," Bragi observed. "If Gjerdrum don't get back pretty soon, he'll quit on me. I don't think I can manage without him. Colonel. You haven't said anything."
"I don't know. I don't like it. Our people conspiring with Shinsan? If that came out it could destroy the Guild's credibility."
"Yet you don't dismiss the possibility. How come?"
Three pairs of eyes fixed on Oryon.
"Because of something my adjutant told me. We talked a long time, after this morning."
"Ah?"
"He didn't know what it was about, but he once found a message to Balfour, from High Crag, partially destroyed in the Colonel's fireplace. The little he made out violated standing orders. The message was signed The Nine.' I'd heard rumors before that Balfour might be one of the Nine."
"What's that? I've never heard of it."
"Not many people have, even inside High Crag. It's a story that's been going around for several years. It says there's a cabal of senior officers trying to grab control. Whenever one of the old boys dies, you hear somebody say the Nine murdered him.