Sword Dancer - Sword Sworn - BestLightNovel.com
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I did bathe yesterday." I reconsidered. "Well, half of me got bathed. I'll let you do the clean half.
And you might want to put some on your face, even with the hood."
Del shook herself out of her reverie and bent to cut off leaves. I watched her. Clearly the body was present, but the thoughts were not.
"Have you grown immune to my charms?"
With great concentration she slit the leaf open, frowning. "What?"
"You're not listening to a word I say, are you?"
She flicked a glance at me, then walked around behind me and slapped the leaf sap-down on my back. "I want to get going. We can talk on the way." Strong fingers began to rub oil into my skin.
She wanted to eat on the way, talk on the way. I suppose I was lucky she hadn't insisted I p.i.s.s on the way. "Fine," I said tersely.
After that we worked in silence, which seemed to suit Del. Me, I just got grumpy. It's a sad thing when a dead woman's bones are more talkative than a living woman's mouth.
I insisted we stop briefly at the big oasis at which Alric and I had spent the night. Del clearly wanted to continue, but she'd learned that in the desert one never pa.s.ses up the chance to refill botas and rest the horses.
She did, however, protest as I pulled up at the outskirts of the oasis, taking time to mark the other travelers present. "What are we waiting for?"
"Oh, I don't know-maybe checking to see if any sword-dancers are here," I remarked pointedly. "We ride straight in without looking and I could end up dead in very short order, and then where would your precious Neesha be?"
Del was annoyed, but she shut her mouth on further protest.
"There's a spring about halfway in. Follow the main path. Keep your eyes open. I'll take the perimeter, then come in from the other side. All right?"
She nodded, giving the gelding a touch of her heels. Sighing, I reined the stud aside and began to reconnointer as I rode the perimeter of the big oasis.
I did not see anyone lying in wait for me, but that didn't mean no one who might challenge me was absent. I aimed the stud down the center path leading toward the spring and remained mounted. Being ahorse gives a man an advantage, usually. Being atop the stud gives me a huge advantage always, as he doesn't take kindly to a.s.sailants rus.h.i.+ng up at him, even if his rider is the target.
Of course, I didn't know any sword-dancers stupid enough to do such a thing.
We-they-aren't a.s.sa.s.sins, though we will take on death-dances depending on circ.u.mstances; the goal is the rit-ual and the challenge, not out and out murder.
Then again, there were no guarantees all sword-dancers would adhere to that unspoken custom. Me killing Musa in a dance had proven to all witnesses that out and out murder might in fact be easier. Of course, supposedly Umir wanted me alive, but I suspected there'd be a few sword-dancers willing to forgo the reward simply for the pleasure of killing me.
I rode down the path, poised for attack. There was a scattering of wagons here and there, with unhitched dray animals resting quietly in such shade as palm trees offer; half-dressed children running around, heedless of the heat-why is it we notice it more when we're adults?-and burnous-clad men and women visiting in small groups, exchanging tales of their travels, describing plans for when they arrived at their destinations. Someone was playing a reed pipe; the thin, wailing melody cut the air. No fires, as there had been the evening Alric and I stayed, merely fire rings with quiet coals h.o.a.rded against the evening meal.
As I rode up, Del was at the spring watering the gelding. He had lost his brilliant red ta.s.sels at the Vashni encampment, where someone had presented Del with a browband of dangling leather thongs, ornamented with blue beads. He still looked rather silly, especially with the black paint around his eyes, but not as ridiculous as he had wearing Silk's crimson ta.s.sels.
She had watered herself as well as her horse and had braided her hair into a single thick plait. To tie it off she'd robbed the gelding of one thong; blue beads clacked quietly against each other when she moved her head. They matched her eyes.
"All right," I said in answer to her expression, "so we didn't run into any trouble. But we might have." I dropped off the stud and let him nose his way in past the gelding, urging him aside with an absent nipping motion of his mouth.
Del handed me a dripping gourd ladle. "I didn't say anything."
I drank, swallowing heavily, not caring when water splashed down my bare torso to dampen my dhoti. I now wore a gritty layer of fine dust sticking to the alia oil from head to toe.
So much for the half a bath in Julah.
"You didn't have to." I handed the gourd back. "I can read your expression: Hurry up; let's go; stop wasting time. And don't try to tell me none of those comments pa.s.sed through your mind. I know better."
Del did not attempt it, though clearly she was irritated. "You said Umir's place wasn't far from here."
"We'll make it well before sundown."
"Then hand me your empty botas," she said, "and I can fill them." Because, I knew, it would speed things up.
Shaking my head, I unhooked and handed her two flaccid botas. The others I unloaded and dipped down via tie-ropes into the water, soaking the rough sacking that formed an outer casing for the leather. While wet it helped cool the water, but it wouldn't stay that way for long beneath the sun. And since I doubted Umir would be much interested in replenis.h.i.+ng our supplies, and Nayyib might have none as we departed, we needed to conserve.
"You're filthy," Del commented, sounding somewhat conciliatory-if you want to call being told you're dirty a peace offering. "You could wash off here, cool down a little."
"It'll strip off too much of the oil." I stood, botas dripping, and began to tie them back onto the stud's saddle. "And I doubt you'd allow me the time to go bargain for a burnous."
"If the oil is working . . ." Wisely, she let it trail off.
I took the refilled botas from her, tied them on. "Let's go, basha. We're burning daylight."
I suspect she knew I was not pleased. But she didn't ask why or suggest I shouldn't be; she simply mounted the gelding and allowed me to take the lead as we rode out of the oasis.
Umir's place wasn't far, and we did arrive well before sundown. There were no gates, merely an arched opening in the white-painted walls, and I pulled up in front. "Whatever happens," I said, "you've got my back."
"What are you planning to do?"
"Ride up to his front door and ask for Nayyib." I set the stud into a walk.
"Tiger, be serious."
"I am being serious. Sometimes the only way to get what you want is to ride up to the front door and ask."
"Umir may set some sword-dancers on you!"
"Or not." I rode under the archway and into the paved courtyard with its tiled fountain. "Do you want the kid or not?"
Del kept her mouth shut. She held the gelding a few steps behind the stud, undoubtedly examining every visible nook and cranny in Umir's walled gardens. I suspected she had unsheathed and now held the sword across her saddlebow. That belief was confirmed when I caught a metallic flash of light thrown against the white-painted walls.
I halted the stud beside the fountain, marking how much room there was for him to pivot and take off if given the order. Del knew better than to crowd him, so there was no chance of a collision. I reached down to the pouch behind my right leg and undid the thong, flipping back the flap.
"Umir!" I shouted, as the stud rang a shod hoof off courtyard pavers. "Umir the Ruthless!"
As expected, it was a servant who came out to see what the ruckus was all about.
I greeted him politely. "Now, go fetch your master. Tell him we have business to transact, he and I."
The servant opened his mouth to refuse-I looked about as disreputable now as I did when Rafiq and friends had brought me in-then thought better of it. He departed.
After making us wait just long enough to notice, Umir put in an appearance. He wore a costly gold-striped robe, gem-weighted belt, soft kidskin house slippers. His expression was austere. "I do not conduct business out here in the heat and dust." His eyes a.s.sessed my condition, found it lacking. "I am a man of refinement."
Cheerfully, I told him what he could do with his refinement. "You have someone here, Umir. A young man, name of Nayyib. In fact, you're very likely guesting him in the same room I occupied. Have you replaced the bedframe, yet, or is it still missing a leg?"
"I have no guests at present," Umir retorted. "All of the sword-dancers have left to look for you."
"Well, too bad for you I decided to come here on my own. Makes them all look kind of bad, doesn't it? Especially after I outdanced Musa." I flicked a glance past him, toward the depths of the house. "We've come for Nayyib. Have someone saddle his horse while someone else escorts him out here."
"Why should I do any such thing, Sandtiger?"
"Because you want your book back."
His eyes sharpened. "You have it? With you?"
I reached into the pouch, closed my hand on the cover, and dragged it out.
The tanzeer took a hungry step forward. "Give it to me!"
I smiled. "Nayyib first."
Umir turned and snapped out an order to an invisible servant. Then he swung back. "Let me have it."
I rested the fat book atop the saddle pommel. "Not until the kid is brought out here and is mounted on his horse."
"You don't have any idea what that book is!" Umir said. "Don't be a fool-let me have it!"
"No wonder you don't conduct business out here," I observed. "The sun boils yours brains."
"The boy is being brought!"
"Fine. Once he's mounted and on his way, you'll get your book back."
A white indentation circling Umir's mouth appeared on his face. Pale eyes were icy with anger. "Do you expect this to lift the reward I've placed on you?"
"As I understand it, the reward was for my return-alive. Well, here I am. How about you pay up?"
"Pay you the reward?"
"Call it a delicious irony," I suggested. I traced with two fingers the scuffs in the leather binding. "The Book of Udre-Natha." I turned back the cover, began to riffle pages.
"Interesting."
"Don't touch it!" Umir cried. "You'll soil the pages!"
I pinned down a page with a forefinger. "What do you suppose this says?"
"Don't read it!" He glared up at me. "Not that you could. I doubt you can read your own language."
"Just a big, dumb sword-dancer, am I?" I shrugged. "Ah, well. We can't all be born tanzeers."
"Chula," he spat.
I continued turning pages. "Hmmm . . . what do you suppose this means?"
Umir couldn't control himself. "Stop it! Stop it!" Hands reached out. "Give it to me!"
I looked beyond him as I saw movement in the doorway. Nayyib, escorted by Umir's servant, exited the house. His near-black hair was sticking up all over his head as if he'd been rousted from a nap. In fact, his eyes looked a little bleary, too. Had Umir drugged him?
I looked at the tanzeer. "Horse." "Coming," he retorted.
And so it was, as another servant led the bay around from the stable block. Bridled and saddled, saddlepouches and botas tied on, ready to go.
I glanced at Nayyib. He was in a sad way, blinking woozily out at the sun-washed courtyard. Umir's little joke, to drug the boy. And neither Del nor I could chance giving him a hand, or we'd endanger the entire rescue. "You," I began, "have caused me no small amount of trouble. How about you get up on your horse and head out of here? Now."
Nayyib nodded vaguely, scrubbing vigorously at his stubbled face. But didn't move.
I pointed. "That horse right there."
"Neesha," Del said, still waiting behind me. The tone was a complex combination of relief, concern, and command. And something I couldn't identify.
Umir glared at me. "The book."
"When the boy is mounted and heading out of here."
Nayyib finally bestirred himself to walk haphazardly to his horse and stick a foot in the stirrup. With great effort he pulled himself up. I heard the sound of a burnous seam ripping as he fell into the saddle. I wondered if I'd have any teeth left by the time we exited the courtyard.
Already my jaw ached from clenching it.
"Go," Del told him, as Nayyib lifted reins.
The stud, taking a closer look at the bay, suddenly filled the courtyard with a ringing neigh.
I winced.
Del's voice again: "Neesha. Go."
Neesha went.
"You too, bascha." I heard retreating hoofs clopping agains the pavers. Then I smiled down at Umir. "Your book."
I thought he might send a servant to take it from me. But Umir came himself, lower lip caught in white teeth as he reached up for it.