Peter Brett – The Core (страница 33)
Perhaps there was time.
‘Hasik,’ Inevera said. Ashia needed no further instruction, moving quickly to the cold room where Inevera stored the blood of almost every man, woman, and child of note in Krasia.
Normally, Inevera would cleanse the dice between throws, but since Abban’s and Hasik’s fates were now tied, she left his essence to help the spell. Ashia returned with Hasik’s blood, and Inevera fell into her breath, relaxing as she freshly coated the sticky dice.
‘Everam, giver of light and life,’ she prayed. ‘Your children need answers. I beg you for knowledge of Hasik asu Reklan am’Kez am’Kaji, former brother-in-law to Shar’Dama Ka. Where can he be found?’
—Spreading like poison in the North.—
—Nie’s power grows in him.—
—He has turned from Sharak Ka.—
‘Shar’Dama Ka!’ The guards stamped their spears as Asome entered the throne room.
Inevera lounged on her bed of pillows atop the dais beside the electrum-coated Skull Throne. Her pose was practised, artfully appearing relaxed, disinterested, and submissive when she was anything but.
Inevera could not deny her second son looked the part. Like his father, he now wore a warrior’s black under his white outer robe. He carried expert forgeries of the Spear and Crown of Kaji. From a distance, they were indistinguishable from the originals, lost when the Par’chin carried Ahmann into darkness.
The Evejah forbade male clerics from blade weapons, and none save the Deliverer had worn a crown in centuries. They were a message to all that Asome had transcended.
At his back was Inevera’s third son, Hoshkamin the Sharum Ka, followed by their ten
As he drew closer, Inevera could see his spear and crown didn’t have a fraction of the wardings engraved into the originals, but she had observed them in Everam’s light, and they glowed with power not to be underestimated. Made from electrum and priceless gems with cores of
The
But Asome’s crown – like Ahmann’s – had nine horns, each set with a different gemstone. Even Inevera could not guess the full extent of Asome’s magic when he wore it, and she had never seen him outside his wing of the palace without it.
Likely she could still overwhelm him in a battle of magic, but not easily or without risk, and Asome knew it. He was careful not to test his magic against his mother.
Ahmann, confident in his powers and position, had kept his courtroom shielded from sunlight, that he and Inevera might use magic freely. Asome had torn down the thick fabric blocking the great windows of the Deliverer’s court, bathing it in light from east and west and proclaiming court only be held in Everam’s light.
She wanted to believe it was because he feared her, but in her heart Inevera knew it was wisdom, not fear, that guided his actions.
‘Mother.’ Asome reached the top of the steps and gave a slight bow.
‘My son.’ Inevera extended a hand.
Asome could not in politeness refuse, but he was careful as a snake handler as he took her hand and bent to kiss the air above it, offering her no advantage in grip or balance.
‘If I meant to throw you from this dais, I would have done it weeks ago.’ Inevera’s voice was too low for others in the court to hear.
Asome gave her a peck and pulled smoothly back. ‘Unless the dice told you to wait.’ He turned and went to his throne. ‘They have ever been more important to you than blood.’
Below, similar gazes crossed the aisle as the new
Dama Jamere stepped forward from the writing podium Abban had occupied for so long. Since the disappearance of his uncle, the young
Jamere knelt before the steps, putting his hands on the floor and his head between them. ‘You honour the court with your presence, Deliverer.’
Like Abban, Jamere was utterly corrupt. But where his uncle had been corrupt in ways Ahmann and Inevera could use, Jamere’s loyalties were unreadable, even when she peered into his aura in Everam’s light.
And Asome knew Jamere from Sharik Hora. They were of an age, and Inevera hadn’t needed to see his aura to know they had been lovers. Asome and Asukaji were infamous in their class of
Her eyes flicked to her son, watching the richest man in Krasia prostrate himself. There was a slight quirk to Asome’s lips. Perhaps he already had.
‘Rise, my friend,’ Asome said, beckoning with his spear. ‘Your presence is a vast improvement over the court
‘Few can abrade like my dear uncle,’ Jamere said. ‘
Asome nodded. ‘Or if he was lost on my brother’s ill-fated attack on the forest fortress and you are now a permanent member of my court, then that, too, is
Jamere rolled smoothly to his feet, smiling as he climbed the steps. He stopped at the sixth, a step below the dais. His head was well below Asome’s, but close enough to whisper words so softly even Inevera strained to catch them without magic.
‘What is our first order of business?’ Asome asked.
Jamere consulted papers on his writing tablet, but it was all for show. Like his uncle, he had every word memorized. ‘The Kaji, Shar’Dama Ka.’
The Kaji, the largest and most powerful tribe in Krasia, had lost both its leaders in the coup. Asome and Inevera, both Kaji themselves, had taken direct control of the tribe in the interim, but it weakened their ability to be impartial, especially with the Majah in rebellion.
Asome turned to Inevera, but his words were loud enough for the entire court. ‘Mother, when will my sister return from the green lands to take up the black turban of
‘The summons has been sent,’ Inevera said. ‘Your sister will not forsake her responsibilities.’
‘Then where is she?!’ Asome demanded. ‘We should have had an answer by now.’
‘Patience, my son,’ Inevera counselled. ‘It is not as if you have produced a new
‘My son will be
‘Your son is an infant,’ Inevera reminded. ‘Patience.’
Asome smiled. ‘Indeed. And so I have decided to appoint an interim
Jamere gave a signal, and the guards opened the doors to admit a small group of men. At their head was Dama Baden. A man of more than seventy, the
Behind him walked two men. Shar’Dama Raji, Baden’s grandson and heir – another from Asome’s generation – and their
Cashiv.
Inevera’s blood went cold at the sight of him. For years, Inevera had depended on anonymity to shield her family in the bazaar. The
But like Asome and Jamere, Cashiv and Inevera’s brother, Soli, had been lovers. He was one of the only people left alive who remembered the girl she had been, and who her family were.
Her father, Kasaad, had slain Soli on learning he was
Cashiv met her eyes, and she knew.
‘Baden has ever been a thorn in the side of the council,’ Inevera said quietly for her son’s ears only. ‘He is greedy and power-hungry. He cannot be trusted.’
Asome was unperturbed. ‘He has proven trustworthy to me.’
‘And what did he give you in return for his seat at the head of the council?’ Inevera asked.
Asome smiled. ‘Something beyond price.’
Before Inevera could react, he turned back to Jamere. ‘Now that the council is complete once more, you may send in the Majah.’
Baden’s entourage bowed and took their place at the head of the young
When Asome’s Majah brother Maji failed to kill Damaji Aleverak, Asome executed the