you.â
With that, I âmagickedâ a nail into my fingers. A rusty spike, three inches long. The man wet himself. There on the steps. Burlow gave an oath and kicked him, hard. When Renton got his breath back, he told me everything he knew. It took almost an hour. Then we gave him to the peasants and they burned him.
I watched the good folk of Norwood dance around their fire. I watched the flames lick above their heads. Thereâs a pattern in fire, as if somethingâs written there, and thereâs folk who say they can read it too. Not me, though. It would have been nice to find some answers in the flames. I had questions: it was a thirst for the Countâs blood that had set me on the road. But somehow Iâd given it up. Somehow I set it aside and told myself it was a sacrifice to strength.
I sipped my beer. Four years on the road. Always going somewhere, always doing something, but now, with my feet pointed toward home, it felt like Iâd been lost all that time. Lost or led.
I tried to remember when Iâd given up on the Count, and why. Nothing came to me, just the glimpse of my hand on a door, and the sensation of falling into space.
âIâm going home,â I said.
The dull ache between my eyes became a rusty nail, driven deep. I finished my beer, but it did nothing for me. I had an older kind of thirst.
11
Four years earlier
I followed Lundist out into the day.
âWait.â He held his baton to my chest. âIt never pays to walk blind. Especially not in your own castle where familiarity hides so muchâeven when we have the eyes to see.â
We stood for a moment on the steps, blinking away the sunlight, letting the heat soak in. Release from the gloom of the schoolroom held no great surprise. Four days in seven my studies kept me at Lundistâs side, sometimes in the schoolroom, the observatory, or library, but as often as not the hours would pass in a hunt for wonders. Whether it was the mechanics of the siege machinery held in the Arnheim Hall, or the mystery of the Builder-light that shone without flame in the salt cellar, every part of the Tall Castle held a lesson that Lundist could tease out.
âListen,â he said.
I knew this game. Lundist held that a man who can observe is a man apart. Such a man can see opportunities where others see only the obstacles on the surface of each situation.
âI hear wood on wood. Training swords. The squires at play,â I said.
âSome might not call it play. Deeper! What else?â
âI hear birdsong. Skylarks.â There it was, a silver chain of sound, dropped from on high, so sweet and light Iâd missed it at first.
âDeeper.â
I closed my eyes. What else? Green fought red on the back of my eyelids. The clack of swords, the grunts, panting, muted scuffle of shoe on stone, the song of skylarks. What else?
âFluttering.â On the edge of hearingâI was probably imagining it.
âGood,â Lundist said. âWhat is it?â
âNot wings. Itâs deeper than that. Something in the wind,â I said.
âThereâs no wind in the courtyard,â Lundist said.
âUp high then.â I had it. âA flag!â
âWhich flag? Donât look. Just tell me.â Lundist pressed the baton harder.
âNot the festival flag. Not the Kingâs flag, thatâs flown from the north wall. Not the colours, weâre not at war.â No, not the colours. Any curiosity in me died at that reminder of Count Renarâs purchase. I wondered, if theyâd slain me also, would the price of a pardon have been higher? An extra horse?
âWell?â Lundist asked.
âThe execution flag, black on scarlet,â I said.
Itâs always been that way with me. Answers come when I stop trying to think it through and just speak. The best plan Iâll come up with is the one that happens when I act.
âGood.â
I opened my eyes. The
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