Sworn in Steel (65 page)

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Authors: Douglas Hulick

BOOK: Sworn in Steel
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I turned my attention back to my jaw and watched the entrance for any more signs of life.

The tribunal had gone to hell after Gold’s fist had connected with my jaw. Voices had been raised, hands had slapped hilts, and Degan had stepped forward, ready to both defend me and to
try and clarify the twists I’d put in my story about him and his Oath. He never got the chance to do either. Before I knew it, Brass and a degan I later came to know as Lead had pulled me and
Degan’s sword aside and put their heads together over the blade, while Stone had made it clear that anyone who came after Degan
or
me would have him to answer to. After a bit more
muttering and steel touching in the corner, it was announced to the assembly that yes, indeed, I was under Oath, and no, it had not yet been honored.

A situation that was quickly put to right, at least to a small degree, by my ass being sat down in a rickety chair and me being compelled via Oath to tell the assembled—what? Onslaught?
Revenge? I still didn’t know what to call a gathering of them—degans what had happened with Iron, and then later with Wolf and Ivory.

The story hadn’t pleased anyone. In fact, there seemed to be bits for almost everyone to dislike, but that hadn’t stopped the assembled swordsmen and -women from deciding that while
they still needed to sit in judgment of Degan, they now had to do it in a different light. Another round of questions later I was thanked, dismissed, and escorted once more out to the courtyard,
where I was amazed to find the sun not even halfway down toward the western horizon. This time, though, they made sure to keep a guard on me at all times while the Order conducted their
business.

Now I sat and watched as degans dribbled out in pairs and groups. All told, I guessed there was less than two score of them, although Stone had told me that at least four hadn’t shown up.
In the past the assumption was that they either were too far away to make it back in time or had Oath-related business to tend to, but with the rash of bodies of late, I got the impression that
some members were being reminded of what it was like to truly worry about a brother’s or a sister’s absence. Degans, as Ivory had said, were hard to kill, but the difference between
“hard” and “impossible” was being served up as a hard reminder.

Finally, Degan stepped out into the light, his sword hanging at his side. Brass was with him. When she saw me stand to meet them, she grinned and let out a chuckle.

“I’ll say this: You sure know how to make an entrance, Kin.”

“I’ve been spending more time than I like to admit around actors lately,” I said. “You pick things up.”

“Well, you picked them up well.” Brass turned to Degan. “I’m sorry I wasn’t more help in there.”

“You stood your ground like a degan,” he said, “and against Gold’s onslaught, too. That’s no small feat. I couldn’t have asked more of anyone.”

Brass tilted her head to the side and put a hand on Degan’s cheek. “Ah, that’s sweet of you to say so, but we both know you’re full of shit. I needed a Kin to kick down
the door and save your ass when I couldn’t do it. That’s a failure in my book.”

“Maybe,” said Degan, “but I still consider us even for Yrenstone.”

“Oh, hell yes,” said Brass. “I’m not about to let you hold that over me any longer. Seventy years is long enough.” She turned to me. “It’s been a
pleasure, Rapier. I look forward to our paths crossing again.”

She turned and glided away down the steps, her feet touching but not quite seeming to land on the ground. Stone gave me a wink as well and lumbered away. Crystal simply turned and left.

“So,” I said, turning back to Degan and eyeing his sword, “I take it you’re back in?”

“In a manner of speaking.”

“What is that supposed to mean?”

“It means that while the Order decided I violated my Oath when I fought and killed Iron, they also realize that, with the actual laws before them for the first time in two-hundred-plus
years, there might be extenuating circumstances they’ve forgotten about up to now.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning they’re going to hold off closing the tribunal until they’ve had a chance to study what I . . . what we brought back.”

“In other words,” I said, “they may never get around to deciding to hold you to account.”

“Oh, they’ll decide,” said Degan. “I’ll make sure of that. I won’t let Iron’s death linger over me or the Order. He deserves better than
that.”

Just like Degan to not take the easy out. Still, what did I expect?

I sat back down on the steps. Degan joined me. More degans were coming out of the keep now, some talking in small groups, others heading for the stables. A few were clearly lingering off to one
side or another, waiting on Degan. He nodded to them but didn’t seem in a hurry to go catch up. I noted and appreciated that.

“And in the meantime?” I said.

“In the meantime, we’ve decided we need to figure out what to do with Ivory’s sword and the laws. When he first left, no one much worried about the Oaths we’d all sworn
on it; then later, it seemed as if he and the blade had both vanished. But now, with it back, we need to decide just how we want to deal with the bindings it contains. In the right hands, that
blade could bring the entire Order to its knees, at least for the short term.”

“Can you break the Oaths that were sworn on it? Make them, I don’t know, go away?”

“I don’t know,” said Degan. “Nor am I sure if we’d want to.”

“What? Why the hell not?”

“Because we’re used to being bound,” said Degan. “Think: We’ve been swearing Oaths since our founding, attaching ourselves to people and causes, one after the
other. I don’t think we want to stop that—it’s too much a part of who we are.”

“And the emperor’s Oath?” I said.

Degan leaned forward and picked up a few pieces of loose gravel, began tossing them down the steps. “That’s going to be harder. We’re still split over what our Oath means, but
having the sword and the laws at least gives us the opportunity to try and settle the question—or maybe recast it.”

“You have a plan?”

“I’m sure several people have plans, or at least the beginnings of them, at this point.”

“Meaning Gold?” I said.

“Probably Gold, but others, too.”

“You worried?”

“Right now I’m too busy enjoying breathing to worry. Ask me again in a week.”

I chuckled. So did Degan.

“But you do have a plan?” I said after a moment.

Degan sighed and eyed me sidelong. Finally, he relented.

“I wasn’t joking when I said Steel was right,” he said. “We need to rethink what and who we serve, and how we do it. All of us being bound to one person, be it the
emperor or a sheikh of the degans, isn’t the answer. The last two centuries have shown us that. We’re just not sure where to go yet. Me, I’m going to give some more thought to
Steel’s idea of us treating one another more like a tribe or a clan, and less like a sworn brotherhood. There’s a, I don’t know, pomposity to what we have right now that makes it
easy to keep one another at arm’s distance. After two hundred years, you’d think we’d be able to be frank with one another, but it happens less than you think.”

I chuckled and shook my head.

“What?” said Degan.

“Only you would think a bunch of immortal swordsmen being more open with one another is a good idea.”

“We’re not immortal,” said Degan, “just long-lived.”

“Oh, well, that makes all the difference, then.”

He smiled and cast more gravel at the ground. “Maybe you’re right. But we have to try something different than what we’ve been doing.”

“At least you don’t have to worry about growing old while you debate the topic.”

“There is that.” Degan brushed his hands together. “Thank you, by the way.”

“For what?”

“For not listening to me, for one thing.”

“Oh, that. I’ve had a lot of practice at it. Not a problem.”

“And for coming back and taking the risk.”

“You risked far more for me than I could ever hope to do in return,” I said. “It’s the least I could do.”

Degan rubbed at his bottom lip. “So what about you?”

“What about me?”

“Well, assuming it’s still standing, you’ve saved your organization, not to mention put yourself in a position to start taking shipments of glimmer from el-Qaddice. Seems to me
like you’re in a sweet spot, wet-behind-the-ears Gray Prince or not. What’s next?”

It was my turn to pick up a handful of small stones and throw them at nothing in particular. “I’ve been thinking about that as well,” I said. “Both on the road and while
I was waiting just now.”

“And?”

“And I think I’m done.”

“With what?”

“Being a Gray Prince.”

“What?”

“If going to Djan taught me anything, it’s that I’m a crap prince. I don’t think like one, don’t plan like one, and certainly don’t act like one. I’m
street, down to the bone. It’s what I do.” It was stupid that it had taken nearly getting dusted in a foreign city to realize it: I was a better Nose than I was a Gray Prince. I always
would be. No matter how many years I spent at it, I knew deep down that my first instinct would be to scrounge the whispers and mumbles, not make them. I could direct Ears and spread rumors now and
then, but to coordinate dodges and manipulate gangs, not just in Ildrecca but eventually across the empire? That wasn’t me—not on the scale I needed it to be. “Nosing is what I do
and where I belong.”

It felt good to say it. Free.

“What about your people?” said Degan. “Your organization?”

“What organization?” I said. “I have a bunch of Noses, some Cutters, and a few smugglers right now, along with an Upright Man who doesn’t know better, Angels bless him.
They’d all of them be better off under someone who knew how to watch out for them—Kells, say, if he wants the title. Or Solitude. That, or they can head out on their own. I’ve
been nothing but a target on people’s backs since I got handed the title.”

“And Fowler?”

“Hell, she might just break down and kiss me, it’d make her job so much easier.”

“I think you underestimate her.”

“Habitually.”

Degan pushed his hat back on his head and ran a palm across his brow. “Drothe, you can’t just walk away from being a Gray Prince.”

“Sure I can,” I said, sounding leagues more confident than I felt. “I walked into it, I’ll walk back out. Oh, it’ll take some planning and a few deals and rumors,
but I’ve been a prince for such a short time, I expect everyone will have forgotten me within six months. The trick will just be staying alive and out of sight until them.”

Could I do it? Would it be possible, let alone that simple? I wasn’t sure—certainly, no one had done it before that I was aware of. Then again, no one had made the jump from street
operator to prince like I had, either. A big step up can mean a big fall down, but if you were planning the fall? If you turned it into just as big a step as the one you’d made on the way
up?

Angels knew it was better to try than to wait for more coves to pile up in the street because of my bad decisions.

“That’s not what I mean,” said Degan, his voice becoming tight. “You can’t quit. It’s—”

“Dangerous, I know,” I said. “But if I plan it out and think it through; if I make sure the other princes have no reason to—”

“Stop,” said Degan. “You’re not listening.”

I shifted to face him. “Fine. I’m listening. Tell me why I can’t quit, O wise degan.”

Degan met my eyes, then looked away. “Because I won’t let you.”

I smiled. “This isn’t a room full of degans. You can’t just—”

“And the Order won’t let you, either.”

“The Order? What the hell do they care . . . ?” I let the sentence trail off as a cold, hard ball of premonition began to form in my stomach.

“We’ve already started talking about what we want to accomplish,” said Degan. “How we want to serve the Empire. You have to understand that we’ve built up an
impressive collection of debts and favors over the years. Some, like yours, are recent, but there are others that go back a century or more and are still waiting to be called in. Banks, merchants,
guilds, families—it’s a tapestry of Oaths, all woven together, with the Order at its center.”

The ball had solidified now and was beginning to work its way up toward my mouth. I tried to swallow it back down, to banish the dread it was bringing with it, but I couldn’t—just as
I couldn’t take my eyes off Degan even as he refused to meet mine.

“Before today, we were saving those promises for the day we needed them to serve the emperor. But now, with us looking at alternatives? With us beginning to think about breaking that first
bond? Well, we’re going to need those debts, those Oaths, among the bankers and guild masters and high and low families.”

No . . .

“And among the Kin.”

“No.” The ball had finally reached my tongue, had pushed itself up and out past my lips, into the world. “You can’t be telling me this. Not now. Not after all this. Not
after what we just went through, after what we just did.”

Degan turned his face back to mine, met my burning eyes with his ravaged blue ones. “I’m a degan again, Drothe,” he said. “You helped see to that.”

“You can’t. Not after all this, damn you. You can’t.”

Degan stood up slowly—almost as slowly as you’d expect a two-hundred-and-forty-two-year-old man to stand—and looked down at me. “Drothepholous Pasikrates, I call in your
Oath. I, and my Order, would have you remain a Gray Prince.” Degan paused a moment, then added, “And help us preserve the empire.”

Son of a bitch.

Epilogue

T
he door swung open and hit the wall behind it with a satisfying
thunk
. On the other side of the room, a tall man with a gray beard and a
shock of white hair looked up from his desk and cleared a dagger in one smooth motion. The man who’d been sitting in front of him did even better. The door hadn’t even bounced off the
wall before he was out of his seat, blade in his hand, eyes on the doorway.

He was good. But then, that’s what bodyguards were for.

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