‘You try a man’s nerves, unrelenting,’ he managed, the moment his tight throat released.
Lysaer’s regard remained unabashed. ‘I won’t ask. If my Crown Examiner at Avenor might wish to burn you for achieving my redemption, the rumours will only raise eyebrows.’
‘Hackles, more like,’ Sulfin Evend snapped back. ‘Don’t try that again. The bit player won’t stand the repeat performance.’
No move rustled the pillows, but the smile that threatened suggested a self-conscious chagrin. Then, said with unflinching care, ‘The dead priest, Jeriayish. Did his fell work with the scrying entrap me?’
Sulfin Evend chose unsparing words in reply. ‘His filthy blood ritual permitted the groundwork. But he was no master of dark arts, or necromancy. That kind do not show themselves, under daylight. The priest would have been no more than a link in a clandestine chain of suborned tools.’
Lysaer closed his lids. ‘I feared as much, as I pondered the quandary while waiting for you to awake.’ The fine hands on the coverlet again wore the ring bearing Tysan’s star-and-crown blazon. The seal was now paired with the diamond setting incised with the sunwheel of the Alliance. The glitter of gemstones stayed nailed in stilled light, as Lysaer pronounced with edged clarity, ‘Good men died in Daon Ramon. Their loss, at my order, has surely fuelled someone’s unscrupulous plotting.’ The burning eyes opened. ‘There won’t be redress, until judgement is done.’
‘You can’t dream you’ll fight necromancy,’ Sulfin Evend gasped, shocked. ‘Do you know what I risked to achieve your release? We are lucky to be here, breathing and free! There are horrors abroad in this world that even the Fellowship Sorcerers handle with wariness. I would die before watching the price of such meddling. You have no concept to measure the evil you might raise through your blindside ideals and bullheaded ignorance.’
‘More than innocents have been thrown into jeopardy, drawn by the Light into slaughter.’ At rest on the pillows, Lysaer said, unequivocal, ‘I cannot stand down. Not since an invested acolyte was involved! The integrity of the Light can’t be compromised.’
Undercut by a horrid, gut-sucking fear, Sulfin Evend refused to give pause through the stir, as the Blessed Prince signalled his valet to serve sorely needed refreshment. ‘Fool! Challenge that, and you’re baring your idiot neck to the knife! If your priests are corrupted, you will have to disown them! All their works are now suspect. You don’t know, in your absence, how deeply their claws have been sunk into Tysan’s crown council.’
Shown no break in that regal, unwavering calm, Sulfin Evend unsheathed his temper. ‘Don’t put on your airs, prince! You are no god, to call down the Spear of Dharkaron’s vengeance on a cult whose foul webs have been spun for thousands of years under the cover of darkness.’
Lysaer’s response came brisk, through the clink of porcelain as the valet doled out honeyed tea. ‘You have known such corruption exists, before this?’
‘Mercy upon me, I surely have not.’ Unthinking reflex let Sulfin Evend take the cup pressed into his rigid hand. ‘There are nightmares too vile. Madness lies on the black side of witchcraft. The wise talent steers well clear of that morass. Respect such restraint! There are fears you can’t counter through mortal awareness. Lacking the discipline of initiate mage training, no unleashed emotion is harmless. The entrapment of active attention is real. The slip of one random thought, made unguarded, can invite the fell things that poison the mind.’
‘Is this your best counsel?’ Lysaer said, bleak. ‘To tuck tail and hide without ever putting the question?’
‘Yes.’ Sulfin Evend sipped at the scalding tea, shameless in his need to chase off the creeping, deep chill of alarm. ‘Abandon Avenor. Revoke your sanctioned connections at once. Buy your war host the arcane protection it lacks, and relocate to your reinforced stronghold at Etarra.’
‘Retreat without salvage?’ Thin hands moved and locked, and now the pale jewels sparked to the simmer of outrage. ‘That’s a brutal remedy, and a coward’s expedience, to leave the botched brunt for others to bear.’
‘I did try to warn you,’ Sulfin Evend said, too weary to steer the discussion away from disaster. ‘Again and again, I begged you to consider a basic arcane defence.’ His stance had invoked Lysaer’s wrath before this, despite every logical argument, that forged weapons could never eradicate sorcery, and troops sent to battle against invoked spell-craft could not survive without any shielding bulwark.
‘I was badly influenced,’ Lysaer stated. Harrowed still by the winter’s unconscionable string of defeats, he did not mask his face, or offer excuses to deny the horrific burden of full culpability.
Sulfin Evend lost his breath. The last thing he wished was a stripping confession. Still raw with rancour, he might strike out, or inflict a worse cruelty, given his liege’s torn nerves and wretched state of convalescence. He gulped down more tea to constrain his tried patience. ‘Your Grace, I am earnest. You must seek protection. Walk softly and watch whom you bind as your ally. Erdane is a dangerous stew of old intrigues. I cautioned you once, and will say yet again. Beware of the factions who offer you gold without an apparent agenda.’
‘Such ones work for necromancers?’ Even wrung by remorse, Lysaer’s probing thrust stayed dispassionate. ‘Then why should such ill-starred, slinking creatures stand in support of the Light?’
Sulfin Evend shut his eyes, fighting lassitude. ‘They want what you want,’ he said with brute candour. ‘Break the Fellowship’s compact, kill off the clan blood lines, and eradicate the free practice of sorcery from Athera. Once that’s done, initiate knowledge is sundered. Nobody’s left with the masterful force to oppose what steps in through the breach.’
Lysaer’s response seemed oddly removed, as though his voice dimmed into distance. ‘What about the Koriathain?’
‘The witches won’t become the implacable enemy of such powers until the moment they’ve ceased being useful.’ Sulfin Evend slid his emptied cup on the side-table. His fingers were shaking. The valet’s bitter brew had done nothing at all to lift his clouding exhaustion. ‘As long as the order’s active enmity ties up the Fellowship’s hands, none of the black cults will touch them.’
Lysaer’s inquiry continued, a relentless assault that pummelled against flagging faculties. ‘Ath’s adepts?’
‘You know they won’t practise outside of their hostels.’ Sulfin braced, prepared for rebuttal, since he had never spoken against Lysaer’s entrenched belief that Ath’s Brotherhood worked in league with Shadow.
Yet needling contention never arose. Lysaer lay quiet, if not actively hostile, at least choosing the threads of his arguments.
Chin propped on his fists, but resistant to the overpowering need to ease his numbed feet with a bolster, Sulfin Evend marshalled his strayed thoughts and qualified. ‘Some scholars suggest if this world falls to entropy, the Brotherhood will simply fade from Athera, much as the Paravian races have done since the Mistwraith encroached on the sunlight.’
‘My valet can undress you,’ Lysaer said, all at once crisply smiling. ‘Will you save trouble and grant him permission before you pass out in a heap?’
Caught with his head drooping, Sulfin Evend snatched up short. The room spun around him. Porcelain rattled as he jammed his arm on the table to salvage his sudden, swayed balance. ‘What have you done, prince!’ But his slurred voice already affirmed the fact that the drink had masked a remedy potion. ‘I don’t recall giving any man leave to dose me out on valerian.’
‘Sleep,’ murmured Lysaer. ‘You look pounded to pulp. The least I could do was to grant you relief from a duty too harsh for the asking. Let go and rest. The matter at hand can be left to wait until you’ve made a recovery. As well, my friend, we’ll fare best by appearance if you