The Diviner (5 page)

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Authors: Melanie Rawn

BOOK: The Diviner
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Acuyib smiled on Azzad once more, for just as the moon rose to light the rugged rocks, he came upon two bodies: hunters, nondescript in their clothing and wearing no distinguishing jewelry. Identification at this point would have defeated their own mothers; desiccating sun and scavenging animals had obliterated features and flesh. One of the men was a fair match for Azzad in height. Staring down at the corpses, wondering how they had died, he pondered many alternatives before deciding that the thing could be done.
Intending to heft the taller man across Khamsin's saddle and go stage his scene closer to the main road where it would be more readily discovered, he grappled with the limp body for a moment, then blurted in surprise as he learned rather abruptly what had caused the man's death. There was a knife stuck in his lower back. Azzad turned the second man over and found that a smaller knife had ripped through his belly. Crouching beside the corpse, wincing at the still painful wound in his thigh, he pondered for a time, then nodded. Definitely the thing could be done.
By sunrise the depiction of his own murder was complete. The taller man was dressed in Azzad's clothes, the knife stuck through them. Realism demanded bloodstains on the garments; Azzad unwrapped the bandage from his thigh and carefully coaxed fresh blood from the wound. That it was alarmingly easy to do so worried him for only a moment. He'd concern himself with healing later.
“His” corpse also wore a silver armband regretfully donated to the ruse. The golden key of the postern gate lock was tucked into the sash. But a gold ring set with a dark topaz Azzad would not relinquish; carved with the leaf symbol of the al-Ma'aliq, it was a present from his mother. The second man lay on his back this time instead of his belly, with Azzad's own eminently identifiable knife thrust into his gut.
As dawn glimmered through the deep canyons of The Steeps, the last of the al-Ma'aliq sat in the dust, patiently unknotting the pearls. He stashed most of them in his belt, intending to sacrifice ten to the embellishment of the murder. Cradling them and the flower-petal clasp in his palm, he looked from one body to the other and decided that “his” corpse was the better choice. Accordingly, he dropped the pearls and the clasp near one lifeless hand and then limped back from the scene to evaluate his work.
If the Qoundi Ammar indeed followed him, and he had every reason to think that they would, they would discover the half-eaten corpses. With luck, they would soon identify the personal items—the armband, the key, the knife—and return to tell the Sheyqa that Azzad al-Ma'aliq was dead. They would go no farther; they would not reach the crimson tents and ask about a lone traveler. Azzad would be free to descend, claim the rights of hospitality, and depart for the western desert, knowing no one would ever come after him. They would never know who he was.
But even if a caravan or other hunters found the bodies, it was of no real consequence; when armband and knife were taken to be sold and the key taken to be melted down, someone among the city's merchants would know. He was—
had been
, he reminded himself—popular among the crafters of Dayira Azreyq, lavish in his spending on trinkets for himself and his mistresses. The clasp in particular was unique to a certain jeweler, who would certainly remember Azzad. And if there weren't enough pearls left to make the necklace the clasp had originally adorned—well, it was dusty here, and windy, and there were excuses enough for their absence. There was the key, as well: the most identifiable item of all, for its design incorporated the graceful leaf of the al-Ma'aliq. Someone would recognize it. He was certain.
It seemed his dissolute ways, deplored by his family, might save his life twice. Visiting one woman had spared him on the night of the massacre, and giving jewels to the others could confirm his death. Never had he been so glad—or so ashamed—of his misspent youth.
And how odd it was, he reflected, that at twenty years old, he considered youth irretrievably gone.
Khamsin's hoofprints to and from this place would lead riders off the main road to discovery of the scene. As he rode away wearing the dead hunter's clothes, bow and quiver on his shoulder, he apologized to his horse. “I know you'd never leave me, not even if I really was lying there dead. But we have to make it look as if you did.”
And then it occurred to him that the horse was more loyal to him than he had been to his family.
Ayia, what good would it serve if he too had died? Who would be left to avenge the al-Ma'aliq? The new granddaughter? Not even if Nizzira allowed her to live. Indoctrinated from her first breath, taught to despise half her heritage—
No. Azzad had been spared for a reason. And as he rode brashly through the pass in the gathering heat of the day, he thought of his family for what he swore must be the last time until he was ready to exact retribution for their deaths. When word filtered through the city that he was dead, there would be no one to mourn. Never again would he watch with hawk's eyes as his friends blushed in his sisters' silked and scented presence. Never again would he see his mother arch a sardonic brow at his latest exploit or listen to his father and uncles recite
The Lessons of Acuyib
at dawn prayers. And never again would his grandfather peer at him from beneath bristling white brows and bark, “Well, boy? Which pretty charmer have you seduced now? Would I have risked
my
venerable balls for ten minutes alone with her?”—and then laugh until he choked on his glee.
Azzad arrived at the tents of the Ammarad the next day. The vast mass of the encampment was denied him; he was not allowed past the outermost tents, which were reserved for travelers who had no shelter of their own. As the laws of hospitality required, the wound on his thigh was tended by the tribe's chief tabbib, a grizzled old man whose treatment seemed to rely more on incantations and the pattern of thrown stones on a carved wooden plate than on any medicines in his satchel. But the chants did no harm, and the wrappings he used on Azzad's thigh were clean and smelled of a spicy salve. Khamsin was fed and watered, Azzad was shown a corner of a tent to sleep in, and everyone appeared to believe his story of going out to prove his worth to his father by hunting down a sand-tiger—which had so vehemently left its mark on his leg.
It rankled to accept their food and drink, but he did just that for three days. For Khamsin's sake, he told himself. He could guess what lay ahead of them in the desert.
“And where do you go now?” the elderly tabbib asked as he prepared to leave.
“East,” Azzad lied.
“I know all the tribes who make their camps in the east, Zaqir.” The unspoken question was
From which do you come?
Azzad had called himself falcon, for he intended to fly as free and swift as a hawk and kill with utter ruthlessness. But he had not mentioned a family name. “I would not disgrace my tribe by naming them,” he said slowly. “I failed in my quest.”
A shrug of bony shoulders. “That you did not succeed in taking the rimmal nimir's pelt is no dishonor, Zaqir. You have the marks to prove you faced the beast. And I am certain your mother will be just as glad that you lived to tell of it.”
Azzad gave a nod and a slight smile of thanks. He thought about the tabbib's words as he rode away to the west. His mother would indeed be glad he had survived, he knew that—but what would she think of his means of survival? He'd paid more heed to an illicit tryst than to a royal command, and then he had run away. Still, he was alive, and to squander that gift would be to dishonor those who had died. Azzad vowed to be worthy of survival—and put back on his finger the al-Ma'aliq ring before turning Khamsin south, to the Devil's Graveyard.
 
“But who can he be?”
“Besides a fool, you mean?” A clucking of tongue against teeth. “You tell me, Leyliah. What do you learn from looking at him?”
“Rich, of course—”
“His clothes were ragged.”
“But the ring—”
“Stolen.”
Azzad opened his eyes and denied it strenuously—or thought he did. Leyliah's voice was young; the other woman's was older. Both were lilting, liquid voices, oddly accented around the
r
sounds, but he understood them readily enough.
“The horse was stolen, too?” Leyliah asked shrewdly.
“Sometimes you are my favorite student, and at others you make me despair that you will ever learn how to trim a hangnail! Don't look at the
things
, Leyliah. Look at the
man
.”
There was a pause. Azzad called frantically on every muscle in his body. Not a single one responded.
“His hands,” Leyliah said at last. “There are no old calluses—only new ones, from recent blisters.”
“Very good. What else?”
“His feet are rubbed raw where very soft, very fine boot leather has worn away.”
“Therefore . . .”
“Therefore he must be rich, as I said before!”
“Or he stole the boots as well.”
Sightless, frustrated in his need to move, he was forced to use his other senses. Scents of dry wool and sensuous spices; taste of skin-stored water flavored with an herb he couldn't identify; and, past the voices of the two women, the faint ring of hammers on metal and a light breeze ruffling wind chimes. Not much information; nothing to comfort him. Except that they hadn't killed him. Yet.
“You were right,” the older woman admitted, “but using the wrong evidence. The ring and the horse and the boots could have been stolen. The clothes tell us nothing. The things tell us nothing. But the body, this tells us all. We have here a spoiled, wealthy, feckless young fool who tried to cross the Gabannah. He has paid for it with heat sickness, scorched skin, feet that will not carry him for at least fifteen days, and the festering claw-marks of a rimmal nimir, bandaged by either an ignorant fool or someone who wanted him dead. Now, the next thing we ask ourselves is why he would attempt so dangerous a journey. He was not ill before he began it, so he cannot be one of those who seek our healing. Have you any answers?”
“None, Challa Meryem. Unless he truly is crazy—in which case we'd better tie him to the tent poles to prevent his doing us or himself any damage.”
“Pampered men such as this one do not stir themselves to folly without good reason. Deadly reason, I suspect. Even a fool must be aware that the Gabannah is death to those who do not know it intimately. So perhaps there is another death behind him, chasing him—one he feared more than the death that nearly found him here.”
Leyliah's voice dropped to a whisper. “Do you think he killed someone?”
“Ayia, more likely someone wants to kill him. And by the look of him, for seducing a wife or daughter or sister.”
“I'd wondered if you'd noticed! Long eyelashes, long nose, long legs, long—”
Azzad felt sudden heat in his face; had he been able to, he would have turned away in embarrassment. Not at the words of praise, which he knew he deserved; nor that the words came from a woman, for his mistresses had made similar observations; but that the woman who said these things was unknown to him and had seen him naked.
All at once he wondered if she was pretty.
“Keep your eyes in your head, Leyliah, and your tongue between your teeth—and your fingers inside your qufaz when you salve his skin. Who knows what diseases may slither from him to you at contact with his blood?”
“But the texts all say—”
“The texts are no substitute for practical experience. Now, spoon more medicine down his throat, and we'll leave him to heal.”
A gentle finger inside a whisper-thin leather glove parted Azzad's lips. Water slid onto his tongue, tasting sticky-sweet with herbs and honey. Again he tried to move, and again failed. Instinct made him swallow against his conscious will. And within a remarkably short time instinct, consciousness, and will all faded away.
 
When next he woke, it was to the sound of men's voices. His eyes opened readily enough, and he could shift his muscles, though sluggishly, legacy of whatever the women had given him. It was dim inside the wool tent, and hellishly hot.
“Chal Kabir, he wakes.”
Shuffling footsteps crossed thick carpeting, then sudden light flared as the tent flap was shoved aside. Azzad blinked and put a hand over his eyes. His fingers encountered sweat-sticky hair tumbling down his brow. Running his hand down his face, he was appalled to discover a thick beard. How long had he lain here?
“Eleven days,” said a young man's voice from an old man's gray-bearded face. Azzad blinked again. “The date is the second of Ta'awil Annam.”
He had left Dayira Azreyq nearly sixty days ago. Why did he remember so few of them?
“Bad water,” the ancient continued, as if in answer to the unspoken question. He seated himself on a tripod stool beside the heaped carpets that were Azzad's bed. “It takes the belly in sickness, and the memory as well. Ayia, city boys are too stupid not to fill their bellies at Ma'ar Yazhrad. Worse, they water their horses. The beast died, you know.”
Azzad's whole body spasmed, and he moaned. “No! Khamsin—!”
Chal Kabir nodded. “You see, Fadhil,” he said over his shoulder, “he cares more for the horse than himself. A good sign.” Then, to Azzad: “Your Khamsin is safe. I told you otherwise as a test. There will be many more before you are allowed out of this tent.”
“Khamsin—?” Azzad managed, relief and suspicion flooding him simultaneously.
“Safe,” Chal Kabir repeated, settling his sand-colored robes around him. An unusual ring of braided silver and gold and copper flashed from his left thumb.
“I want to see him.”

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