David Gemmell. Ironhand’s Daughter

Masrick ran forward and aimed a savage kick which thundered against Obrin’s shoulder. ‘Be silent, wretch!’ he shouted.

‘Even kicks like a goat,’ sneered Obrin.

Masrick drew his dagger. ‘I’ll cut your bastard tongue out!’ he threatened.

Asmidir laid his hand on the officer’s arm. ‘Not here my friend,’ he said. ‘The rugs were expensive, shipped all the way from Kushir.

As Obrin’s laughter sounded, Masrick paled, and his hand trembled. But he slammed the dagger back in its scabbard.

The servant returned, carrying a small enamelled pot. As he paused beside Masrick and bowed, the officer looked at the tall servant. ‘Well, what do you want?’

Ari held out the pot. ‘What is this?’ Masrick asked Asmidir.

‘A healing ointment. Apply it to the lips and you will see.’

Masrick took the pot and removed the lid. The ointment was cream-coloured. Dabbing a finger to it, he spread some on his injury. ‘That is good,’ he said. ‘Soothing! Where did you obtain it?’

‘My servants are a&Al-jiin,’ said Asmidir. ‘They are very skilled with potions.’

Kollarin was only half listening to the exchange, but the words Al-jiin cut through him like a sword of ice. Standing beside the hearth he stiffened, his green eyes flicking to Ari. The man was tall and slender, his skin the colour of age-polished oak; he had a prominent nose, not negroid like Asmidir, but curved and aquiline. In that moment Kollarin wondered how he could ever have been convinced the man was a servant. He glanced at his wine goblet. It was still almost full. How much had he drunk? One mouthful? Two?

Ari turned slowly, his deep dark stare pinning Kollarin. The servant seemed to glide across the room. ‘Are you well, lord? asked Ari. ‘You are looking pale.’

‘I am well at this moment,’ said Kollarin. Reaching out with his Talent, he touched the other man’s mind… and recoiled as if he had thrust his hand into a fire.

‘Perhaps you should sit down, lord,’ offered Ari.

‘Am I to die here?’ pulsed Kollarin.

‘If my Lord wills it so,’ came the response. ‘If you will excuse me,’ he said aloud, ‘I have duties to attend to.’

‘By all means,’ said Kollarin. Ari turned and left the hall and once more Kollarin reached out, seeking not the mind of the servant but choosing instead the soldiers who were waiting outside. He pictured the solid cavalryman, Klebb.

Nothing. One by one he sought out the others.

Still nothing. Were their thoughts being shielded, he wondered?

Sitting by the fire he closed his eyes and dropped his spirit to the second level, opening his mind to more general astral emanations. He felt the castle and its great age, and beyond it the forest and the heartbeat of eternity.

From here it was a simple matter to find the third level. Kollarin gasped. Moving through the castle he could see the restless, disembodied shapes of lost spirits, murdered men who did not yet know they had died.

His eyes snapped open.

All dead. Twenty-eight soldiers, drugged and then strangled. All that remained were the two guards in the room, and Masrick himself. Kollarin’s mouth was dry and he reached out for his wine. What are you doing, fool? Leaving the goblet where it stood, he rose and rubbed his hand across his mouth. Am I under sentence? he wondered.

Asmidir crossed the hall. ‘You seem preoccupied, my boy,’ he said.

Kollarin looked up into the black man’s face, seeing the power there, and the cruelty. ‘YourAl-jiin have completed their work,’ he said softly. ‘Where does that leave me?’

‘Where would you like to be left?’ Asmidir asked.

‘Alive would be pleasant.’

‘What are you two whispering about?’ asked Masrick, picking up Kollarin’s goblet and draining it. He belched and then sat down.

‘We were talking about life and death, Masrick,’ said Asmidir, ‘and the slender thread that separates both.’

‘Nothing slender about it,’ said the officer. ‘It is all a question of skill and courage.’

‘What about luck?’ asked Asmidir. ‘Being in the wrong place at the wrong time?’

‘A man makes his own luck,’ replied Masrick.

‘I’m not sure that’s true,’ said Asmidir. ‘But let us put it to the test. Would it be lucky or unlucky were you to find the woman, Sigarni?’

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