Isidore d’Aiglemort threw his head back, eyes blazing. "What possible reason would I have to take it, anguissette?"
"I am Phèdre nó Delaunay," I said softly, "and I can give you a reason, my lord. Because if you do not, and Selig prevails, Melisande Shahrizai will dance upon your grave."
I have seen men take their death-wounds, and their faces looked much like d’Aiglemort’s, contorted in a terrible rictus, as if hearing some dreadful jest. His eyes, blazing horribly in his stricken face, never left mine. I had gambled, and guessed aright. He’d not known of Melisande’s betrayal.
"Melisande was in league with Selig?" he asked harshly.
"Yes, my lord. I saw a letter, in her own hand. I know it well. I ought to." I dared not take my eyes from his. "You would be well-advised to do her no more favors."
He turned away then with a curse, staring out over the valley, where his army was arrayed. Leather and steel creaked as the Alban forces shifted, waiting. Ghislain de Somerville stood as stolid as an oak, and with as much expression. Drustan watched, dark eyes thoughtful. Joscelin hovered at my elbow in Cassiline attentiveness, and I was glad of his presence.
What Isidore d’Aiglemort thought, I cannot guess.
"I am the sword you would plunge into Selig’s heart," he said presently, not turning around.
"Yes, your grace." It was Ghislain who answered. "Camael’s sword."
D’Aiglemort laughed humorlessly. "The betrayer of the nation turned its savior." He stood motionless, looking down at his army. A knot of men surrounded our three heralds, not to ward, but to listen, starved for news. They were D’Angelines alike, after all, and no one tells tales like a sailor, except perhaps for Tsingani and Mendicants. Faint snatches of sound and laughter rose from the valley, as Phèdre’s Boys sounded their marching-chant. Whip us till we’re on the floor…"Will you feed them?" d’Aiglemort asked abruptly. "Ysandre cut off our supply-train, and sealed the doors of Camlach against us."
"We will," Ghislain said quietly.
D’Aiglemort turned around then and met his eyes. "What do you propose?"
"I propose that we unite our forces and mount an attack on Selig’s army." Ghislain gave a faint, wry smile. "And strike as hard as we can for Waldemar Selig. No one’s asking you to die alone, cousin."
"Selig is mine." The tone was calm, but the black eyes glittered. "Swear it, and I will grant what you ask."
"I swear," Ghislain de Somerville said, and his face grew stern. "Do you pledge your fealty to Ysandre de la Courcel, on Camael’s honor, and in the name of Blessed Elua?"
"I’ll pledge my loyalty to the destruction of Melisande Shahrizai," d’Aiglemort said in his harsh voice. Ghislain glanced at me. I touched the diamond at my throat and nodded.
It would do.
Chapter Eighty-Five
Descending into the valley to join d’Aiglemort’s army was tense. I did not think he intended to betray his word-he couldn’t break the Skaldi siege without our aid, any more than we could without his-but if he did, that would be the time to do it, when our forces were strung out in long winding lines, bringing down not only the men, but provisions, pack-mules, and the unwieldy war-chariots the Dalriada would not abandon.
I know Ghislain de Somerville and Drustan mab Necthana were both alert and wary to the possibility, remaining mounted and full-armed throughout the journey. Isidore d’Aiglemort, who had ridden bare-headed to meet us, watched with a hint of contempt. Guiding his mount effortlessly down the steep trail, he came alongside us.
"You were the Cassiline, weren’t you?" he asked Joscelin. "I remember. Melisande’s favor."
"Yes, my lord." Joscelin’s tone was edged with bitterness. "I was the Cassiline. Joscelin Verreuil, formerly of the Cassiline Brotherhood."
"You’re better off," d’Aiglemort said dryly. "Steel and faith are an unnatural mix. I’m impressed, though. I’d have thought slavery would kill a Cassiline. I’ll want to hear, later, all you know of Waldemar Selig." Nudging his horse, he left us. Joscelin stared after him.
"If we didn’t need him," he said savagely, "I swear, I’d put a knife in his heart! How can you possibly trust him?"
"He was a hero, once," I murmured. "Whatever else he may have been, he was that. If we succeed, or even if we die trying, he’ll be remembered as a hero in the end. Without this, his name will ring through D’Angeline history-whatever remains of us to tell it-as Waldemar Selig’s dupe. And he dies knowing Melisande used him to do it."
Joscelin was silent for a moment. "She could have gained the nation with him," he said presently. "Why?"
I shook my head. "The Skaldi would still have invaded. Selig was using him too. Who knows what he promised her? At his side…she stands to gain two nations. Ten thousand Camaelines know Isidore d’Aiglemort betrayed the Crown, he had an army at his back. Melisande plays a deep game. If Selig wins, you can count the survivors who know her role on one hand. He’ll have an empire. And he’ll take a Queen to consolidate it."
"Is that what you think?" Joscelin threw his head back, shocked. I gave him a rueful smile.
"What else? Melisande plays for high stakes. I can’t think of any higher. Unless," I added thoughtfully, "it would be to eliminate Selig once he’d gained the throne and mastered his realm."
"How could she bear so much blood on her hands?" Joscelin asked softly, gazing at the Camaeline army sprawled in the valley before us. "How could anyone?"
"I don’t know." I shook my head again. "Except that it’s the game that compels her. I don’t think she ever reckoned the cost in human lives, not truly." Delaunay, I thought, had been the same, a little bit, though his reasons were nobler. They had their pride alike, in the playing out of their deep-laid schemes. I remembered how he had showed me to her, when all the City was buzzing to know about his second protégé. And I remembered how she had let him know, through me, that she was the architect behind the fall of House Trevalion.
"Either way," Joscelin said soberly, "it’s monstrous." I did not disagree.
We reached the valley floor without incident, crowded together in a throng of D’Angelines and Albans alike. The Allies of Camlach stared at our forces, the blue-painted Cruithne, in wonder. They were gaunt and feverish, with a fierce, fugitive air; we wasted no time in setting up an encampment and beginning the process of sharing out our foodstuffs.
It was a strange mood that prevailed, and my own mood was no less peculiar. Gaiety and despair commingled as word spread of the planned assault. I thought that my mood would lighten, with the success of our endeavor; whatever happened, at least, I would not be responsible for leading anyone to die at d’Aiglemort’s hands. Instead, it deepened. Everything seemed very clear and sharp to me, and yet it was as if I stood outside myself, watching.
They made conference long into the night, tallying the numbers, arranging our joined forces into the most effective array of legions. D’Aiglemort and his captain of infantry; Ghislain; Drustan and the Twins; and I, on hand to translate, with Joscelin as my ever-present protector. The Cruithne and the Dalriada had little notion of battle formation, but they grasped it quickly enough.
Still, it was agreed that the Camaeline infantry would form the front line of our attack. Isidore d’Aiglemort’s reputation was no fluke; he was an extremely skilled soldier, and every man who served under him was trained and disciplined. Once the Skaldi had begun to rally, we would loose the Alban army, cavalry and chariots sweeping around the outer flanks, followed by the hordes of foot soldiers.