“Hated traitor,” I said in a singsong voice out of the corner of my mouth.
“And as his reward,” Sarad Nukpana was saying. “Magus Silvanus will be the representative of our new government in the elven capital until such time as I can appoint a regency there.”
Carnades kept the smile on his face, but sucked in his breath through his clenched teeth.
I bit my bottom lip against a smile. You know, it was downright enjoyable when Sarad Nukpana did his sadistic bit with someone I hated. “He didn’t mention anything about you being king, did he? You think that’s just an oversight?”
Out of the corner of my eye, I could see that two Khrynsani black mages were closely watching Carnades. They had been standing on either side of the elf mage before Nukpana gestured him over to me.
“Those two are sticking close enough to you to qualify as a second skin. They must be a recent acquisition. I don’t believe they were with you when you confiscated the Scythe of Nen from me, were they? You can’t risk hiding it anywhere in the temple, so you’ve got it on you.”
Carnades’s left eyelid twitched once.
“I’ll take that as a yes. You shared the evacuation routes and elven defenses with Nukpana, but you didn’t share your shiny, new dagger. Best friends should share everything.”
Carnades’s upper lip was beading with nervous sweat. “You wouldn’t dare.”
“Oh, you bet your baby blues I would. Give me that dagger, put it in my hand, or I’ll share you with Nukpana.”
“You’re bluffing. If you tell him I have the dagger, he’ll take it and you will still have nothing.”
“Wrong. I’ll be taking you down with me. Either way I win.”
“What’s to stop me from giving it to you and then telling Sarad that you have it?”
“I’ll say you gave it to me to destroy the Saghred, traitor. You wanted to be king of the elves. Nukpana just screwed you over in front of everyone, so you’re trying to use me to take your revenge.”
Carnades turned smug. “He’ll never believe you.”
“Think not? I’m naked under this gown; I’m not even wearing shoes. Nukpana’s mom personally oversaw my undressing and dressing to make sure I didn’t pick up any sharp trinkets. You’re the one who searched me when we were caught, and I know the guards with you recall you finding and pocketing a certain silver dagger.”
“Filthy bitch.”
“I’ll have you know I just had a bath.” I put my free hand at my side and beside Carnades’s robes. “I either get to destroy the Saghred, or I will destroy you. I win either way.” I gave his robe a sharp tug. “I know you’ve got it where you can get to it. Put that dagger in my hand now, and both of us might just make it out of here alive.”
Carnades’s breath came in a hiss, but two seconds later, he slipped the Scythe of Nen into my waiting hand.
Yes.
I closed my hand around the small scabbard, my fingers quickly working to free the blade. Suddenly, the temple went completely silent.
Sarad Nukpana had stopped talking and was looking at us.
Carnades’s voice rang out. “Raine Benares has the Scythe of Nen!”
Asshole.
An unseen hand snatched the dagger free of the scabbard, slicing my fingers as it was pulled away from me.
The Scythe of Nen now glittered in Sarad Nukpana’s upraised hand.
My hand was bleeding, and the Saghred blazed red.
Oh, crap.
Chapter 21
I dropped the scabbard and pressed my bleeding fingers as hard as I could against my thigh, desperate to get the bleeding stopped. That blazing red glow told me the rock was getting impatient. It must not like long speeches.
Sarad Nukpana tucked the Scythe in his sash and leisurely walked toward us, his own personal spotlight keeping perfect pace with him. This was a game to him, entertainment for his guests, and Carnades and I were the game pieces the goblin was playing with at the moment.
“Raine, do not concern yourself with the Saghred’s intentions,” Nukpana said. “It assured me it would not take you until such time as I give it leave to do so.” His black eyes glittered as he shifted his attention to Carnades. “The Saghred’s loyalty is unquestioned.”
Ouch.
“From her injured hand, it is quite obvious that Mistress Benares was in possession of the Scythe—however briefly,” Nukpana continued smoothly. “But that begs the question of how she came by it. She has been closely watched.”
“Told you so,” I muttered to Carnades.
“She’s a thief who picked my pocket and stole it before I could present it to you,” the elf mage replied.
I had to hand it to him; Carnades was doing a fine impersonation of righteous indignation.
“Nice recovery, but no dice,” I told him.
Carnades bristled.
Nukpana’s voice was amused. “Magus Silvanus, nothing happens in this temple that I do not know—or am made aware of.”
The elf mage drew himself up. “Are you questioning my loyalty?”
I snorted. “He’s already said the rock’s more loyal than you.”
Carnades turned on me and hissed, “Shut up!”
Fear makes a man so much easier to goad. I smiled. “Wrong move. I won.”
The elf mage froze as if the Scythe of Nen had already been plunged into his back. He could feel Sarad Nukpana’s presence looming behind him like Death himself. The goblin was holding out his arm and hand, stopping his personal guard from coming any closer. This was still a game and Nukpana wasn’t finished playing yet.
“Magus Silvanus, I permitted your conversation with Mistress Benares because I wanted confirmation that you had the Scythe in your possession, instead of being forced to be so crass as to have my new partner searched. As a host, I owe that courtesy to my guests. You have abused my hospitality.”
Carnades’s face twisted into something ugly. “You promised that I would be king of the elves.”
“I promised nothing aside from what I have just told my people,” Nukpana replied mildly.
Unlike Carnades, the goblin had himself under complete control. Then again, he wasn’t the one staring Death in the face.
“Any conclusions you arrived at were driven by your own grandiose imagination,” Nukpana added. Then he smiled. “I possess a unique gift of simultaneously speaking and listening from a distance. It is a talent I have cultivated over many years in the goblin court. As Mistress Benares so eloquently stated, everyone hates a traitor. By keeping the Scythe of Nen from me, you have unequivocally proven that you cannot be trusted by anyone. Therefore you have no worth to me.” He lowered his arm, the only thing that was keeping his guards at bay.
Game over.
“Strip him of that robe and then burn it,” Nukpana told his guards. “It’s been tainted. Then prepare him for the altar.”
Carnades Silvanus was in the top 5 percent of the most powerful mages in the seven kingdoms. Did he cut loose with everything he had? Try to take out as many Khrynsani as he could before they brought him down?
No and no.
Carnades knew this was a fight he was going to lose. Badly. So what did he do? The chickenshit coward used me as a shield. I was shackled to the Saghred and couldn’t move, so I didn’t know what he hoped to accomplish.
Sarad Nukpana’s voice dripped with contempt. “Once again, Magus Silvanus, you lay hands on what is mine.”
Faster than thought, Nukpana shoved me aside, grabbed Carnades’s shoulder, and plunged the Scythe of Nen to the hilt in the elf’s chest. The goblin gripped Carnades’s shoulder, holding the elf upright until the last signs of life had faded from his ice blue eyes. Then and only then did Nukpana release him, and Carnades Silvanus’s dead body slid off of the blade and crumpled at my feet.
“Dispose of that,” Nukpana told the guards.