“Oh, but that little man is so greedy! I do not trust him to take only those that are truly old and valuable. And I do not want to lose my husband’s possessions. They are all I have left.”
Pasevalles knew that what she really wanted was to have him to herself for a while out of the public eye, and to draw him deeper into her circle. Idela was not entirely satisfied being only the mother of the heir, and was an active participant in the Hayholt’s incessant contests of power and influence. But was that all? She had certainly pursued him for much of the last year, seeking him out, asking his opinion. Pasevalles was beginning to wonder whether she had some deeper interest in him. She was not an astonishing beauty, but she was certainly comely, with large eyes and a fine, straight nose much like her father Osric’s. A man seeking to improve his position could do worse than a dalliance with the prince’s widow.
As long as that man could keep her sweet, he reminded himself. That was a less certain proposition. Her power depended on something that could not be undone, so she was immune to most forms of persuasion.
In any case, it was a knotty problem, and not one Pasevalles wished to spend time on now.
He took the princess’s hand and kissed it. “You do me too much credit, Highness. I am ignorant of most such matters of scholarship—my schooling was more the rough and tumble sort one gets in a backwater court like Metessa. But I will put my mind to your problem and come to you with a solution very soon. Will you give me your leave to resume my less interesting duties?” And he smiled, hoping it would serve as a reassurance no matter what she truly planned.
“Of course, good Pasevalles. You are the best of men. Go and do what you must do. I know that the king and queen must have left you a dreadful burden to carry in Eolair’s absence.”
And you are a significant part of that burden, lady—or might become that if I do not deal with you carefully. “You are too kind, Princess.” He made a bow, then left her. Behind him he heard Idela and her ladies giggling softly among themselves, like fairy music on the wind.
10 Hymns of the Lightless
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Nobody who lived in Nakkiga could be completely surprised to find soldiers at their door, but Viyeki had not expected a troop of the feared Hamakha Wormslayer Guards to arrive at his house in the middle hours of the night to demand that he accompany them. Faceless in their helmets, stern and utterly formal in their speech, the soldiers made no threats but it was clear that he had no choice except to go with them.
Viyeki knew all too well that such invitations were generally the formal precursor to an execution. Despite his overwhelming shock, he still could not help wondering why, if he had fallen from her grace so completely, the Mother of All had given him an audience and new orders just a few days earlier. Could this arrest be some private scheme of Akhenabi’s instead, using the queen’s authority to remove him? If so, it seemed to be a new tactic: ordinarily, the Lord of Song’s enemies simply disappeared, or succumbed to sudden and mysterious ailments.
Still, the guard chieftain had a summons that bore the queen’s seal, which meant Viyeki could only go with them and try to prepare himself for whatever might follow.
Viyeki’s secretary Yemon was suspiciously absent from the household, so he directed his second cleric to ask the Hamakha guards to wait a short time for the dignity of his office. He bade his servants dress him in his magisterial robes, his great outer tunic, his sashes and belts, and did his best to stand unmoving as they did so, keeping limbs, face, and breathing respectably calm.
“Where am I being taken?” Viyeki asked as his ornamented collar was tied in place.
“That is not for me to say,” the Wormslayer chieftain replied. “Only that you are to make haste to come with us, High Magister.”
At that moment his wife burst into the room, startling one of Viyeki’s servants into dropping the magister’s ceremonial mattock. As the tool clattered on the stones, the Wormslayers calmly leveled their spears at her. “What happens here?” she demanded. Despite the dishevelment of her nightwear, Khimabu eyed the Hamakha guards with contempt. Viyeki noticed that she also darted a glance at his bed, no doubt to see if Tzoja had been with him. “Why do these people trouble us, husband?”
“I truly do not know, my lady wife, but it is a lawful summons in the queen’s name. We will trust to the wisdom of Our Mother that all will be resolved as it should be. I have done nothing wrong.” He looked at the empty features of the chieftain. “Is that not correct?”
The leader stared forward, unblinking. “It is not for me to say, High Magister.”
“Ah, yes. So you mentioned.” Viyeki snapped his fingers, and his servants stepped forward to help him with the last of his clothing, the heavy over-mantle. “How should I call you, officer? Do you have a name?”
“I am a chieftain of the Silent Court of the Hamakha Clan,” the officer said. “That is all you need to know.”
Such stiffness—such rote prosecution of duty! thought Viyeki. He wondered if the chieftain might be a halfblood like his daughter Nezeru; they were common these days, especially in the ranks of the Sacrifices and clan guards. How many of the Wormslayers here on his doorstep were the fruits of such couplings? They seemed to make up most of the soldiery these days—but were they, as his master Yaarike had once hoped, truly Hikeda’ya, through and through? Or were they merely crude imitations, attack dogs dressed up in the finery of the Garden?
What does it matter, he asked himself with a touch of dark amusement, if they are only here to lead me to execution?Even a trained hound could do that. “Very well . . . Chieftain,” he said. “I am ready to accompany you.”
As he stepped out the front door, past his household guards and into the wide, silent street, his wife followed them to the doorway. “Husband!” she called. “Do not disgrace our family.”
“How could I, kind Lady Khimabu,” he replied, “with your faithful support to hearten me?”
The last he saw of her—the last he might ever see of her, he could not help thinking—was her long pale shape in the doorway, ordering the servants back inside before the other denizens of the Noble Tier saw the family’s shame.
• • •
Whatever hopes Viyeki might have entertained that this was merely another summons to the palace vanished quickly. Instead of climbing the great staircase to the sacred Third Tier and the Omeiyo Hamakh, his guards led him downward instead into the labyrinth of the city. They passed across the deserted New Moon Market and along the edge of the ghostly, web-festooned Spider Groves as they made their way outward toward the edge of Nakkiga, through the mist clouds thrown up by the thundering Tearfall, then past the massive vertical column of Tzaaita’s Stone. At last they reached the Heartwall Stair and followed it down to the levels stacked below the city. Viyeki had given up trying to guess where he was being taken, because each new destination he could think of seemed grimmer than the last.
The first level was filled with the community temples and mass burial grounds of the lower castes, the sojeno nigago-zhe or “little gardens of memory.” Hikeda’ya who were too poor or too humble to have family tombs, but too proud to see their dead thrown into fiery crevices or left on burning ash heaps in the Field of the Nameless, had built the shared memorial parks, each full of symbols of the Lost Garden, each with its single, silver-faced Guardian, a simple upright stone figure presiding over those places of rest as the Queen herself ruled the waking world. As they passed, Viyeki could not help envying the sleepers in these humble shared graves: he feared he was fated for an even less exalted resting place.