In that instant Frostinch’s pose of languid unconcern evaporated. “What do you know of that?”
“I know that your aunt has the power to create a clant so vivid that when he stabbed the clant, it bled. He believed he had succeeded.”
“No one can make a clant that…” Then he concentrated on refastening his breeches. “You saw this?”
“My friend saw it. After he stole the poison Luvix had intended to use and gave it to Bexoi.”
Anonoei watched him process the fact that she had known of the poison.
“And you have been spying on me?” he asked.
She repeated his conversation of the day before with one of his agents, whom he met in a garden, pretending she was a woman he desired. He did not understand that no one believed any more that he had the slightest interest in women.
He listened, nodding. “So either you have been spying through a gate, or my dear and trusted friend has betrayed me.”
“She has not betrayed you,” said Anonoei. “But by all means have her killed. Destroy another of your own weapons. Make yourself weaker. I’ll wait till Bexoi has trapped you and made you her puppet, and then you’ll be ready to listen to me. But alas you’ll also be completely useless to me by then. So you’ll betray me, in order to curry favor with Bexoi, hoping she’ll drop you a crumb of power. Only she’ll laugh at you. ‘Anonoei is dead,’ she’ll tell you.”
“You?” asked Frostinch. “Anonoei? Prayard’s mistress?”
“Not as dead as everyone assumes,” said Anonoei.
“And your sons?”
“Alive and out of your reach,” said Anonoei. “Just as I am out of your reach.”
She knew before she said it that he already had his hand on the dagger he kept in the back of his trousers. Now he whipped it out to slash it across her body. But she stepped back into the gate Wad had prepared for her, reappeared directly behind him, and shoved him forward. Already overbalanced by his own lunge, he toppled over. It gave her time to pick up his chamberpot and pour it out onto his body, spoiling his clothes.
“You are nothing, Frostinch, compared to mages with real power. I have passed through a Great Gate.”
“Impossible,” he said. “The Gate Thief allows no-”
“Don’t you know how to think?” she demanded. “It does not occur to you that my friend is the Gate Thief?”
He laughed nervously, getting up, reaching for something to brush the foulness from his clothing. Then he pulled off his tunic and unfastened his trousers, standing naked and completely uninterested as he regarded her. “My body is washable,” he said, “and I can get my clothing cleaned. These efforts to humiliate me are pointless.”
“So was your attempt to slash me with your dagger,” said Anonoei. “I came to offer you our help against your aunt. But you remain too stupid to realize how much you need our help.”
“Has Bexoi passed through a Great Gate as well?”
“If she ever does,” said Anonoei, “she will rule all of Westil. Without passage through a Great Gate, she is the most powerful mage of our time. Even with my passage through a Great Gate, I doubt that I alone am any match for her.”
“If she’s no Sparrowfriend, what then is her magery?” asked Frostinch.
“Why should I tell a fool?” asked Anonoei. “You are the Sparrowfriend, the weakling. Couldn’t you see how she mocked your pathetic magery?”
“I’m a Hawkbrother,” said Frostinch.
“Hawk?” asked Anonoei. “Oh, so I’ve heard. But the birds that come to you, the birds you ride, the birds who spy for you-all I’ve seen you use are crows.”
He grinned. “Crows are little noticed. Alone, they steal whatever I need them to steal. In a pack, they can tear the meat off an enemy in minutes.”
“I don’t disparage the many talents of crows,” said Anonoei. “What I despise are people who pretend to be nobler than they are. Hawkfriend.”
“I have ridden hawks,” said Frostinch.
“They shuddered at your presence, and tried to kill themselves to be rid of you.”
For the first time, he was genuinely angry and humiliated. “How could you know that! It was years-”
“I have spied on you for days, but the Gate Thief has watched you for years. When you’re dead, who will be Jarling of Gray?”
His face went ashen. “Is that her plot?”
“She has high hopes for her son by Prayard. Your father and you think you have nothing to fear from the baby, because you imagine that she has no talent to pass on to him. Here is the power she has: power to rule in his name. Once you are dead, have no doubt that your father will name this baby in her womb to be his heir. Then, when he is born, both your father and Prayard will die-very differently, but die they will-and she will rule in the baby’s name. Have you any doubt that such a plan would work?”
Frostinch walked to the window. His skin was covered with gooseflesh, though it might be the bitter cold from the window. He kept his closeroom cold, the windows uncovered. To kill the stink perhaps. Or to make him feel that he was strong and hardy, a true man of war, instead of the man of crowlike cunning that he was.
“What do you hope to gain from me?” he asked. “If she’s so powerful and clever and dangerous, then she’ll succeed and I can’t stop her.”
“True,” said Anonoei. “She has already blocked you at every point. But there are things you could do that would prevent her plot.”
“I already tried to have her killed,” said Frostinch, “though not because I feared her.”
“No, you merely thought your father was coddling Iceway for her sake, and you wanted to have another bloody war and kill Prayard and wear the crown of Iceway on your own head.”
“Why should I be a mere Jarl when I might be a king?”
“Fool to care about the title,” said Anonoei. “Power is the only fact. Titles are decorations. Names are lies. Do you finally understand that until you see things as they truly are, you can accomplish nothing?”
“How are things, really, then!” he said defiantly.
“You’re naked and cold at the window,” said Anonoei. “I could push you out.”
“And then you’d have no use of me.”
“Exactly,” said Anonoei. “And Bexoi has not killed you yet because until she has a child that she can show your father, and use to win his heart, you are more useful alive. Only when he is already the doting uncle, impressed with Prayard’s loyalty to him, and his devotion to your father’s younger sister, only then will your tragic death lead to him naming his nephew as his heir.”
“So I have time.”
“A little,” said Anonoei, “if you know how to use it.”
“And what do you and your friend the Gate Thief-if that’s who he really is-intend for me to do with this time you say I have?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” said Anonoei. “Kill your father now and become the Jarl yourself.”
Then she stepped through the gate and returned to Wad.
The Gate Thief shook his head. “He used to be clever,” said Wad. “You made him stupid.”
“I made him believe that he was stupid,” said Anonoei, “and then told him how to be clever. I hardly need to be a manmage to do that-learned people do it all the time.”
“But I saw your manmagery all the same,” said Wad. “He practically worships you.”
“Most men do, if I want them to,” said Anonoei.
“Will he kill his father?” asked Wad.
“He’ll try,” said Anonoei. “And because he really is clever, he’ll probably succeed even without our help.”
“But you intend to help him.”
“Kill the man who defeated and humiliated Iceway? Yes, I think I will, unless you stop providing me with gates.”
“Remember how few of them I have,” said Wad.
“So passage through the Great Gate didn’t increase their number?”
“It increased how long they last, how strong they are, my ability to manipulate them, my sense of other gates and where they lead. But no, passage through a Great Gate does not add any new gates to my store.”