Shadow and Betrayal

Shadow and Betrayal by Daniel Abraham Page B

Book: Shadow and Betrayal by Daniel Abraham Read Free Book Online
Authors: Daniel Abraham
Tags: Fantasy
would have pushed his teacher away.
    ‘Stings, doesn’t it? Not being wanted,’ a soft voice murmured behind him. Maati spun. Seedless stood on the opened porch in a robe of perfect black shot with an indigo so deep it was hard to see where it blended with the deeper darkness. The dark, mocking eyes considered him. Maati took no pose, spoke no words. Seedless nodded all the same, as if he had replied. ‘We can talk later, you and I.’
    ‘I have nothing to say to you.’
    ‘All the better. I’ll talk. You can listen.’
    The poet Heshai clomped down the stairs, a fresh robe, brown silk over cream, in place. The stubble had been erased from his jowls. Poet and andat considered each other for a breathless moment, and then turned and walked together down the path. Maati watched them go - the small, awkward shape of the master; the slim, elegant shadow of the slave. They walked, Maati noticed, with the same pace, the same length of stride. They might almost have been old friends, but for the careful way they never brushed each other, even walking abreast.
    As they topped the rise of the bridge, Seedless looked back, and raised a perfect, pale hand to him in farewell.
     
    ‘ She doesn’t know.’
    Marchat Wilsin half-rose from the bath, cool water streaming off his body. His expression was strange - anger, relief, something else more obscure than these. The young man he had been meeting with stared at Amat, open-mouthed with shock at seeing a clothed woman in the bathhouse. Amat restrained herself from making an obscene gesture at him.
    ‘Tsani-cha,’ Wilsin said, addressing the young man though his gaze was locked on Amat. ‘Forgive me. My overseer and I have pressing business. I will send a runner with the full proposal.’
    ‘But Wilsin-cha,’ the young man began, his voice trailing off when the old Galt turned to him. Amat saw something in Wilsin’s face that would have made her blanch too, had she been less fueled by her rage. The young man took a pose of thanks appropriate to closing an audience, hopped noisily out of the bath and strode out.
    ‘Have you seen her?’ Amat demanded, leaning on her cane. ‘Have you spoken with her?’
    ‘No, I haven’t. Close the door, Amat.’
    ‘She thinks—’
    ‘I said close the door; I meant close the door. ’
    Amat paused, then limped over and slammed the wooden door shut. The sounds of the bathhouse faded. When she turned back, Wilsin was sitting on the edge of the recessed bath, his head in his hands. The bald spot at the top of his head was flushed pink. Amat moved forward.
    ‘What were you thinking, Amat?’
    ‘That this can’t be right,’ she said. ‘I met with the girl. She doesn’t know about the sad trade. She’s an innocent.’
    ‘She’s the only one in this whole damned city, then. Did you tell her? Did you warn her?’
    ‘Without knowing what this is? Of course not. When was the last time you knew me to act without understanding the situation?’
    ‘This morning,’ he snapped. ‘Now. Just now. Gods. And where did you learn to speak Nippu anyway?’
    Amat stood beside him and then slowly lowered herself to the blue-green tiles. Her hip flared painfully, but she pushed it out of her mind.
    ‘What is this?’ she asked. ‘You’re hiring the Khai to end a pregnancy, and the mother doesn’t know that’s what you’re doing? You’re killing a wanted child? It doesn’t make sense.’
    ‘I can’t tell you. I can’t explain. I’m . . . I’m not allowed.’
    ‘At least promise me that the child is going to live. Can you promise me that?’
    He looked over at her, his pale eyes empty as a corpse.
    ‘Gods,’ Amat breathed.
    ‘I never wanted to come here,’ he said. ‘This city. That was my uncle’s idea. I wanted to run the tripled trade. Silver and iron from Eddensea south to Bakta for sugar and rum, then to Far Galt for cedar and spicewood and back to Eddensea. I wanted to fight pirates. Isn’t that ridiculous? Me. Fighting

Similar Books

A Cast of Vultures

Judith Flanders

Five Parts Dead

Tim Pegler

Wings of Lomay

Devri Walls

Can't Shake You

Molly McLain

Cheri Red (sWet)

Charisma Knight

Through the Fire

Donna Hill

Charmed by His Love

Janet Chapman

Angel Stations

Gary Gibson