“What…!?” Meinyt glanced from Quaeryt to the four figures on the floor by the archway, then at the two troopers who had sprinted across the room.
Quaeryt contracted his shields and hurried toward the archway.
“Sir?” protested one of the troopers.
Quaeryt ignored the man-as well as the throbbing headache that had arrived with his imaging-and dashed into the kitchen, where two other men held knives at the throats of the black-haired woman and a blond woman scarcely more than a girl.
“Stop right there!”
Quaeryt stopped, imaged the knives out of the hands of the two Bovarians, and then imaged them through the men’s boots and feet, pinning them to the floor.
The women jumped free, but the older woman shuddered as she looked at Quaeryt.
“Namer’s spawn!” swore the taller Bovarian.
“Pharsi bastard!”
No one had time to say anything else before a squad of Telaryn troopers burst into the kitchen.
The squad leader glanced to Quaeryt. “Are you all right, sir?”
“I’m fine.” What else can you say?
“Tie them up!” snapped the squad leader.
Quaeryt waited until the two were restrained before walking toward the taller Bovarian. “How did you get in?”
“Wouldn’t you like to know?”
Quaeryt smiled, then image-wrapped a shield around the man’s head, so tightly that the Bovarian couldn’t breathe. “I don’t like assassins. I especially don’t like assassins who threaten to slit the throats of their own people.” As the man struggled, trying to gasp for air, Quaeryt looked to the black-haired woman. “Do you know?”
Her hand shaking, she pointed to a narrow door, slightly ajar. “They must have come up from the cellars. They didn’t come in from the courtyard.”
“Who let them in there?”
“The innkeeper, no doubt,” said Skarpa from the archway into the public room. “The men caught him trying to sneak away.”
Quaeryt turned back to the taller Bovarian, who was turning a dark red, and lifted the shield. “You are a prisoner, and you will be civil.” He image-projected absolute authority, although he had the feeling it was overlaid with rage.
The man whitened, then crumpled.
“We were just following orders!” insisted the remaining Bovarian. “We were!”
Quaeryt didn’t doubt that, either, not from what he’d heard and observed in the last year. He turned to Skarpa. “Perhaps you should have someone talk to these two. You can always summon me if you have to.”
“In addition to being a good commander, Major Falossn is excellent at interrogation.” Skarpa looked to the troopers. “Make sure those bonds are secure before you remove the knives.”
The blond girl looked down, then stared at the knives, each pinning a boot and foot to the wide plank floor. What color had remained in her face drained away.
“If the subcommander hadn’t done that,” Skarpa said mildly. “You’d be dead.”
The black-haired woman continued to stare at Quaeryt, but said not a word.
After making certain that the two remaining assassins were on their way to Major Falossn, Skarpa and Quaeryt turned to head back to the public room.
As he moved to the archway, he caught a few words murmured by the older woman. “… black coney and ancient Pharsi lord … worst of all…”
Quaeryt managed not to break step.
Once he and Skarpa were in the public room, Meinyt walked back from the main entrance, where he’d apparently been directing the removal of the dead would-be assassins. He looked at Quaeryt with a half-humorous smile. “I thought so, but you’ve been very careful.”
“I didn’t have a choice here,” Quaeryt said dryly. Then he laughed ironically. “Actually, if I weren’t so tired, I probably could have misdirected the crossbow bolts, caused them to slip, and various other mishaps to occur.” He took a deep breath. “I was too tired to think straight or do anything else.”
“Why…?”
“Why haven’t I done more at times?” Quaeryt followed Skarpa’s example, sitting down in one of the chairs at another table. “Because I’ve usually done everything I can.” Not always, but usually. “It takes strength, and the ability to see. When I get near my limits, I can’t even see. I can barely stay in the saddle. It’s a different kind of fighting, but it takes a lot of effort.”
“That’s when you’ve gotten hurt or wounded, isn’t it?” Meinyt’s voice was low as he eased into the adjoining chair.
Quaeryt nodded. “I’ve also had to protect the undercaptains until they can learn better how to protect themselves.”
“Since it’s in the open, between us, anyway,” said Skarpa, sounding not at all surprised, “who else knows?”
“The only one who knows besides the undercaptains and you two, so far as I know, is Lord Bhayar. Myskyl suspects something. Others may as well. It’s been hard to disguise it and still be effective.”
Skarpa nodded, then grinned. “Well … since Lord Bhayar knows, he’ll obviously have told Deucalon and Myskyl. So we don’t need to report anything.”
Meinyt grinned as well. “I think you’re right about that, sir.”
“Far be it from me to disobey a superior,” added Quaeryt.
“What about the men?” asked Meinyt.
“Don’t make a fuss about it. If an officer says anything, just tell him that the imagers need an imager to lead them, as if it’s absolutely normal.” Skarpa turned to Quaeryt. “There are already rumors, and you couldn’t keep it hidden much longer anyway.”
Quaeryt nodded. That will cause other problems, but there will always be problems.
A trooper appeared with three mugs of lager, setting them on the table. “We tapped a new keg, sirs, and we had the women drink some first.”
“Thank you,” said Skarpa.
Quaeryt just nodded and reached for his lager, immediately taking a slow but long swallow, hoping it would ease the pain behind his eyes. It had been a long day already.
“There’s another question,” offered Meinyt. “How did they know we’d be here? They had to have been there since sometime last night.”
Skarpa laughed. “We’ve been predictable. All they had to do is ask what we did in any town we’ve taken. We haven’t commandeered houses in the larger towns, and this is the best inn. Where else would we be?”
“So they sent scouts back?”
“Spies. They couldn’t have gone in uniform. They probably just left people behind, men who were from the area and posing as deserters who didn’t want to get caught by either us or Kharst. People would certainly believe that. They know how brutal Kharst can be. Then those men would pass on the information. Right now, there’s not much we can do about it-except check the cellars and closets of every public house we go into first.”
“But…” Meinyt shook his head. “I suppose they’re everywhere.”
“I’d be very surprised if they weren’t,” replied Skarpa. “We’ll never know. If we hold this part of Bovaria, and we will, they’ll become deserters in truth, and we won’t know the difference. Even if we discover some of them, we certainly can’t hang them unless they break laws in some other way, because we’ll never know if they were truly deserters or truly spies.”
Just another aspect of war you hadn’t considered. But Quaeryt understood exactly what Skarpa meant. To most people, deserters were those who didn’t want to fight or who opposed Kharst. While some might think them cowards, and while desertion was a hanging offense, for Bhayar to have ordered them executed for effectively supporting Telaryn would have seemed cruel and hypocritical. Besides, most people would likely be wary of them for the rest of their lives.
He took another swallow of lager, better than most he’d had since leaving Nordruil more than a month before. He thought his headache was easing.