Fall of Thanes

Fall of Thanes by Brian Ruckley

Book: Fall of Thanes by Brian Ruckley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Brian Ruckley
Tags: dark fantasy
chair, drawing his hand back to press it against his chest. "We should eat."
    The food was neither plentiful nor elegant. Bread and broth and a single haunch of mutton. They ate in silence. All save Aeglyss. He touched nothing, only watched.
    A serving girl made her way around the table, pouring out wine from a clay jug. She came to Aeglyss last, and wiped the lip of the jug clean with a cloth before emptying the last of its contents into his cup. Aeglyss pushed away his plateful of neglected food. He lifted the cup to his lips and drank deeply. As he set it down again his hand gave a brief involuntary jerk, spilling wine on the table.
    Kanin saw Cannek lay down a hunk of bread he had been gnawing. The Inkallim was watching Aeglyss intently. Others caught the change in mood. Conversations died.
    Aeglyss' face was white, paler even than it had been before. His eyes, the pupils dilated, were gleaming wetly. A muscle in his left cheek twitched, though his jaw was tight clenched. Otherwise, he was as motionless as a statue. Kanin looked around. Every eye was upon the halfbreed.
    Still Aeglyss had not moved. His white fingernails were digging into the rough surface of the table. His eyes stared rigidly at Cannek. The Inkallim was quite calm.
    "What have you done?" Shraeve said softly.
    Abruptly Aeglyss retched, gripped by a convulsion that rose from deep in his midriff. He hunched forward and then straightened with a great gasp. The movement seemed to release all the tension from his body. He put one hand to his mouth and spat a small dark object into his palm. He held it out: a perfect orb of black matter the size of an eyeball, with strands of saliva still clinging to it.
    "Yours, I think," said Aeglyss thickly to Cannek. He set it down upon the table, where it rested like a dull, sodden marble a child had discarded. Cannek regarded it thoughtfully for a moment or two, his hands clasped together before him. The globule lost its form, slumping into a viscous stain.
    "That's very clever," Cannek murmured with a smile.
    "What is this?" Goedellin asked, his voice all indignant puzzlement. "Poison?"
    Cannek's hands parted, and there was a blade in one of them. Shraeve's arm snapped up. One of her swords, still sheathed, came spinning across the table. Cannek ducked and swayed to one side, so that the sword went cartwheeling away off the side of his head. It was enough to spoil his own aim. His knife, sent darting out with a flick of his wrist, flashed past Aeglyss' shoulder. Shraeve followed her sword, vaulting the table, pivoting on one hand to drive a straight-legged kick into Cannek's chest. The Hunt Inkallim went crashing back with his chair, rolling and rising smoothly to a crouch.
    But Shraeve was too fast even for him. In the moment it took Cannek to recover his balance, she hit him with her full weight, wrapping an arm about his neck, splaying her other hand over his eyes. She took him backwards, tumbled the pair of them across the floor. And out of that blur of movement rose a clear, long cracking.
    Shraeve stood. Cannek lay, eyes and mouth open, head tilted sideways on a broken neck. Shraeve brushed dust from her knees. The assembled warriors stared in a mixture of amazement and confusion at the dead Inkallim. Only Kanin turned back at once to Aeglyss. And found the na'kyrim watching him. Aeglyss wiped the back of his hand across his lips. He was breathing fast.
    "Is that what you all require?" the halfbreed said loudly, and was at once the focus of all attention once more. "That's the kind of answer you people demand, isn't it? There's fate for you. There's the choice made for you. I live."
    Kanin wondered if he was the only one to hear the contempt, the bitterness, that suffused Aeglyss' words. Silently, he raged against the immobility of his limbs, and against the impotence of his own anger. His sword was within reach--he imagined it calling out to him--but Aeglyss, the idea of Aeglyss, filled his field of vision: out of

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