The Gathering Storm, by Django Wexler
Chapter Five
Ral Zarek had never been much for pets.
Once, in his much younger days, he and Elias had owned a puppy. This had been shortly after Ral had begun working for Bolas, and Elias's poetic career had begun to take off under the dragon's hidden patronage. Combined with the income from Ral's work, they had enough to move to apartments that weren't actually falling to pieces, and Elias had insisted on the dog. Having a small dog was the done thing at the time among the literary set, and ultimately Ral had never been able to refuse Elias anything.
He'd ended up doing most of the work, of course, feeding and cleaning up after the thing, and especially walking it, a task to which the frail Elias was constitutionally unsuited. More years had passed since that time than Ral cared to admit, but he could still remember the feeling of trying to proceed down the street with a modicum of dignity, while being pulled back and forth by the mad dashes of that half-crazed animal.
The point was that walking with Hekara was a very similar experience. While they weren't actually attached by a leash, Ral felt obliged to wait for her when she got distracted, which was constantly. As they walked toward Vitu-Ghazi, the great world-tree that was the center of the Selesnya's power, they passed onto a network of elevated roadways called the Grand Concourse. On holy days these would be lined with nature worshippers, but today they served as an impromptu market, where Selesnya adherents and outsiders could mingle, and guild members could sell their produce. Men and women knelt on blankets, with the wares spread out in front of them. Every ten feet, Hekara dashed off, spotting another strange fruit or unusual spice she simply had to examine.
Maybe I should get her a leash. Rakdos cultists had worn stranger things. And while the puppy had eventually gotten away from Elias's unreliable attention and escaped to greener pastures—much to Ral's relief—for the moment he couldn't afford for the same to happen to Hekara.
"See these?" she said, as he came up behind her. She gestured down at an arrangement of unusually shaped gourds. "You can dice them with peppers, an' some other stuffs, an' it comes out like mmmmm." She turned to him with a bright smile. "Also I once killed this one guy with one of 'em. The trick is, if you snap it off at the stem, it fits right—"
"Hekara," Ral said. "They're expecting me."
"Right." Hekara waved to the shocked-looking Selesnya woman behind the gourds, who seemed to be examining her merchandise in a new light. "Keen. Let's move!"
They started walking again. Vitu-Ghazi loomed over everything here, a mammoth tree nearly as tall as New Prahv. Buildings shaped from the living wood nestled in its huge, curving branches, connected by an intricate network of hanging bridges and ladder. Inside the main trunk, Ral knew, there was a cathedral to nature, every bit the size of the Orzhov's stone-and-glass version. The leaves of the overhanging tree kept the rain off, at least, the water funneling down through carefully designed gutters.
"Hekara an' Ral," Hekara said in a happy sing-song as they walked. "Partners! Mates! Comrades—"
"Hekara."
"What?"
"We are not partners." Ral blew out a breath. "I am doing my job, and you are here to observe. When we get inside, please observe, and don't contribute."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean be quiet."
After another few steps, he risked a glance over his shoulder. Hekara was still following, her eyes big and forlorn. The puppy had looked at him like that, he recalled. Usually when it had pissed somewhere it wasn't supposed to and he was trying to chastise it.
I knew this was a bad idea.
"Hey," she said, after another minute.
"What?" Ral growled.
"We're not inside yet, so can I contribute something?"
"If you must."
"Somebody's following us."
Ral glanced over his shoulder again.
"The woman in the black coat," Hekara said. "She's a ways back, but she's been there since we got to the Concourse." Her face brightened. "You want me to kill her?"
"No." Ral locked eyes with the figure in black, and got a nod. Lavinia. "I'll talk to her. Stay here."
"I should—"
"I said stay."
Hekara gave a huge sigh and wandered over to the blankets by the side of the street. Ral turned and walked back to where Lavinia stood, arms crossed under her dark coat. He spotted the gleam of metal at her side.
"I thought you didn't want to be seen with me," Ral said.
"You didn't give me much of a choice," Lavinia said. "I was making sure I was the only one on your tail."
"And?"
"You're clear, for the moment. The Selesnya have a surprisingly good counter-intelligence arm." She glanced at Hekara. "Who's your companion?"
Ral grimaced. "The emissary from Rakdos. The old monster insisted she accompany me so he can be sure we're not plotting against him."
"That sounds like Rakdos." Lavinia smiled slightly. "You're having greater success than I anticipated."
"So far." Ral nodded at the world-tree. "We'll see."
"I wanted to warn you. Bolas's people have something planned for Selesnya."
"'Something' meaning what?"
"I don't know. I can only intercept a fraction of their communications. But there have definitely been several messages related to something going on here, and soon. It may be timed to coincide with your visit."
"Wonderful. So I need to be careful, but you can't tell me how or what to do about it."
"Welcome to my world," Lavinia said. "They're clever, determined, and extremely well-funded. I'm doing the best I can."
The strain was obvious in her pale face, dark circles blooming under her eyes, and Ral felt an unexpected pang of sympathy. He'd always thought of Lavinia as the tireless enforcer of justice, an invincible pillar of the Azorius, but now she was operating outside her former guild and against a much more dangerous opponent.
"All right," he said, more gently. "I'll do my best. And you be careful, too."
"Of course." She pulled her coat tighter.
"Actually," he said. "I wanted to ask you something."
"What?"
"Vraska," he said. "The new queen of the Golgari. How much do you know about her?"
"She tried to kill Beleren once. Not much else off the top of my head. Why?"
"She wants to meet," Ral said. "I need to know what her position is now."
"I'll see what I can find out," Lavinia said. "Nothing's for certain."
"Of course." Ral inclined his head. "Thanks for the warning."
Lavinia turned and walked away, fading into the crowd. Up ahead, Hekara was in a shouting match with an elf girl over some delicate glass ornaments the Rakdos emissary had apparently broken by accident. Ral rolled his eyes and heaved a sigh.
Once, in his much younger days, he and Elias had owned a puppy. This had been shortly after Ral had begun working for Bolas, and Elias's poetic career had begun to take off under the dragon's hidden patronage. Combined with the income from Ral's work, they had enough to move to apartments that weren't actually falling to pieces, and Elias had insisted on the dog. Having a small dog was the done thing at the time among the literary set, and ultimately Ral had never been able to refuse Elias anything.
He'd ended up doing most of the work, of course, feeding and cleaning up after the thing, and especially walking it, a task to which the frail Elias was constitutionally unsuited. More years had passed since that time than Ral cared to admit, but he could still remember the feeling of trying to proceed down the street with a modicum of dignity, while being pulled back and forth by the mad dashes of that half-crazed animal.
The point was that walking with Hekara was a very similar experience. While they weren't actually attached by a leash, Ral felt obliged to wait for her when she got distracted, which was constantly. As they walked toward Vitu-Ghazi, the great world-tree that was the center of the Selesnya's power, they passed onto a network of elevated roadways called the Grand Concourse. On holy days these would be lined with nature worshippers, but today they served as an impromptu market, where Selesnya adherents and outsiders could mingle, and guild members could sell their produce. Men and women knelt on blankets, with the wares spread out in front of them. Every ten feet, Hekara dashed off, spotting another strange fruit or unusual spice she simply had to examine.
Maybe I should get her a leash. Rakdos cultists had worn stranger things. And while the puppy had eventually gotten away from Elias's unreliable attention and escaped to greener pastures—much to Ral's relief—for the moment he couldn't afford for the same to happen to Hekara.
"See these?" she said, as he came up behind her. She gestured down at an arrangement of unusually shaped gourds. "You can dice them with peppers, an' some other stuffs, an' it comes out like mmmmm." She turned to him with a bright smile. "Also I once killed this one guy with one of 'em. The trick is, if you snap it off at the stem, it fits right—"
"Hekara," Ral said. "They're expecting me."
"Right." Hekara waved to the shocked-looking Selesnya woman behind the gourds, who seemed to be examining her merchandise in a new light. "Keen. Let's move!"
They started walking again. Vitu-Ghazi loomed over everything here, a mammoth tree nearly as tall as New Prahv. Buildings shaped from the living wood nestled in its huge, curving branches, connected by an intricate network of hanging bridges and ladder. Inside the main trunk, Ral knew, there was a cathedral to nature, every bit the size of the Orzhov's stone-and-glass version. The leaves of the overhanging tree kept the rain off, at least, the water funneling down through carefully designed gutters.
"Hekara an' Ral," Hekara said in a happy sing-song as they walked. "Partners! Mates! Comrades—"
"Hekara."
"What?"
"We are not partners." Ral blew out a breath. "I am doing my job, and you are here to observe. When we get inside, please observe, and don't contribute."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean be quiet."
After another few steps, he risked a glance over his shoulder. Hekara was still following, her eyes big and forlorn. The puppy had looked at him like that, he recalled. Usually when it had pissed somewhere it wasn't supposed to and he was trying to chastise it.
I knew this was a bad idea.
"Hey," she said, after another minute.
"What?" Ral growled.
"We're not inside yet, so can I contribute something?"
"If you must."
"Somebody's following us."
Ral glanced over his shoulder again.
"The woman in the black coat," Hekara said. "She's a ways back, but she's been there since we got to the Concourse." Her face brightened. "You want me to kill her?"
"No." Ral locked eyes with the figure in black, and got a nod. Lavinia. "I'll talk to her. Stay here."
"I should—"
"I said stay."
Hekara gave a huge sigh and wandered over to the blankets by the side of the street. Ral turned and walked back to where Lavinia stood, arms crossed under her dark coat. He spotted the gleam of metal at her side.
"I thought you didn't want to be seen with me," Ral said.
"You didn't give me much of a choice," Lavinia said. "I was making sure I was the only one on your tail."
"And?"
"You're clear, for the moment. The Selesnya have a surprisingly good counter-intelligence arm." She glanced at Hekara. "Who's your companion?"
Ral grimaced. "The emissary from Rakdos. The old monster insisted she accompany me so he can be sure we're not plotting against him."
"That sounds like Rakdos." Lavinia smiled slightly. "You're having greater success than I anticipated."
"So far." Ral nodded at the world-tree. "We'll see."
"I wanted to warn you. Bolas's people have something planned for Selesnya."
"'Something' meaning what?"
"I don't know. I can only intercept a fraction of their communications. But there have definitely been several messages related to something going on here, and soon. It may be timed to coincide with your visit."
"Wonderful. So I need to be careful, but you can't tell me how or what to do about it."
"Welcome to my world," Lavinia said. "They're clever, determined, and extremely well-funded. I'm doing the best I can."
The strain was obvious in her pale face, dark circles blooming under her eyes, and Ral felt an unexpected pang of sympathy. He'd always thought of Lavinia as the tireless enforcer of justice, an invincible pillar of the Azorius, but now she was operating outside her former guild and against a much more dangerous opponent.
"All right," he said, more gently. "I'll do my best. And you be careful, too."
"Of course." She pulled her coat tighter.
"Actually," he said. "I wanted to ask you something."
"What?"
"Vraska," he said. "The new queen of the Golgari. How much do you know about her?"
"She tried to kill Beleren once. Not much else off the top of my head. Why?"
"She wants to meet," Ral said. "I need to know what her position is now."
"I'll see what I can find out," Lavinia said. "Nothing's for certain."
"Of course." Ral inclined his head. "Thanks for the warning."
Lavinia turned and walked away, fading into the crowd. Up ahead, Hekara was in a shouting match with an elf girl over some delicate glass ornaments the Rakdos emissary had apparently broken by accident. Ral rolled his eyes and heaved a sigh.
A centaur woman, clad in
flexible wooden armor, greeted Ral and Hekara at the entrance and took them
away from the main cathedral, toward the smaller buildings alongside the great
tree. She moved at an easy walk, ascending a long, curving stair that was
clearly designed with her race in mind.
"Don't ask," Ral said, when he saw Hekara staring at their escort.
"Why not?"
"Because asking a centaur if you can ride her is a good way to get your head kicked in," Ral said quietly. "Trust me."
"Don't ask," Ral said, when he saw Hekara staring at their escort.
"Why not?"
"Because asking a centaur if you can ride her is a good way to get your head kicked in," Ral said quietly. "Trust me."
"Yeah? Keen, good
advice." Hekara looked around curiously. "Lot of blades around, don't
you think?"
"Mmm," Ral said
noncommittally.
He'd noticed the heavy
military presence himself. Soldiers in green-and-brown armor were everywhere,
humans and elves for the most part, but also centaurs and elephant-headed
loxodons. On his few previous visits to the world-tree, he didn't remember such
heavy security. Maybe they got wind of whatever Lavinia was worried about,
too.
Emmara Tandris was waiting
for them outside a multi-story building wrapping in a spiral around an enormous
branch. She was tall, slim, and graceful, with a mass of golden hair, wearing a
shimmering green dress that made her look like a part of the tree herself.
Hekara raised her eyebrows appreciatively.
"Remember," Ral
hissed. "Observe."
"Right."
A squad of soldiers flanked
Emmara, led by a frowning sergeant, their hands on their weapons. She stepped
forward to bow to Ral, and he returned the gesture, keeping his expression
formal. He hadn't met Emmara since the Implicit Maze debacle, and while they
hadn't been precisely enemies, she'd been close with Beleren and Ral
doubted he'd made a good impression.
"Master Zarek," she
said, in a musical voice. "Thank you for agreeing to see me. I know you
must be busy."
"Of course," Ral
said. "I'm hoping we can reach an agreement for your guild to participate
in the summit."
"I would like that very
much," Emmara said, and he caught a hint of frustration in her voice.
"Why don't you come inside?"
The sergeant stepped forward
and cleared his throat. "You'll have to surrender your weapons, sir."
Ral glanced at Emmara, then
shrugged. He undid the straps on his bracers and the accumulator, and handed
them over to one of the soldiers.
"That's the latest
model," Ral said. "Be careful with it."
"You'll get your gadgets
back safe and sound," the sergeant said dismissively.
"I hope so," Ral
said. "They've been known explode if they get knocked around."
The sergeant and his men
exchanged a worried look, and Ral kept a straight face. It wasn't true, but the
Izzet did have that reputation. Another soldier approached Hekara,
nervously, and she spread her arms and twirled in a circle, bell tinkling in
her hair.
"Nothing but me,
yeah?" She grinned at him. "That's dangerous enough."
The soldiers seemed
satisfied. They stood aside to let Ral and Hekara join Emmara, and together
they walked through the open door into the building. Like all Selesnya
structures, it had a curved, organic look, walls and partitions growing
smoothly down from the floor and ceiling. Instead of glass windows, a dense
screen of thin branches and leaves let in a soft, friendly light. In the
intersection between two corridors, a small, organic fountain burbled quietly.
"I'm sorry about
that," Emmara said. "Glademaster Garo has insisted on increased
security."
"Any particular
reason?" Ral said.
"It's . . . complicated." She went quiet as a
group of soldiers passed by. "I'll explain in private." She glanced
back at Hekara. "Who's your companion?"
"Oh." Ral took a
deep breath. "This is Hekara, the emissary from Rakdos. Hekara, this is
Emmara Tandris."
"Keen!" Hekara
nodded enthusiastically, producing a gentle tinkling. "So you're like, the
head elf in these parts?"
"Not exactly,"
Emmara said, with a quiet smile. "We don't have much formal hierarchy in
Selesnya. I have some influence, but . . ." She stopped
again as a robed loxodon clomped heavily past, then pointed to a closed door.
"In here."
They'd climbed at least two
stories up a curving ramp to reach this room, Ral guessed. It was a simple
sitting room, with chairs woven from dried branches and a couple of spindly
tables. A serving girl was cleaning when they arrived, but she bowed hurriedly
to Emmara and rushed out, leaving them alone.
"Sorry," Emmara
said, when they were alone. "As I said, things
are . . . complicated."
"Evidently," Ral
murmured. "I've never heard of dissension in Selesnya."
"The current situation
is unprecedented." Emmara motioned for them to sit. Ral did, while Hekara
wandered over to the window and started trying to pry the weave of branches
apart. After a moment, Emmara shrugged and took the seat next to Ral.
"Ordinarily, the dryads interpret the will of Mat'Selesnya, the
Worldsoul, and guide guild policy, with the Trostani at their head."
"It's a triumvirate,
yes?" Ral said. "A council of three dryads who rule Selesnya."
"Not exactly."
Emmara sighed. "It's so hard to explain to outsiders. The Trostani are not
three separate beings, but three aspects of the same being, a single
entity that moves according to the world spirit's desires. Their three aspects
embody Life, Order, and Harmony. Sometimes the needs of one aspect clash with
another, but it is never long until they regain consensus."
"Until now?" Ral
said.
"Until now," Emmara
said sorrowfully. "Harmony has withdrawn entirely, and Life and Order are
at cross purposes. The dryads are paralyzed, and we have no way to know the
will of Mat'Selesnya. It has thrown the guild into chaos."
"Oh!" Hekara said
from by the window. "Have you tried killing two of them? That might
help."
"I . . ." Emmara glanced at Ral, then shook her head.
"I do not think that would be useful."
"Really? Usually fixes my
problems." Hekara shrugged.
"While the deadlock
continues," Ral said, "who rules Selesnya?"
"As I said, no one rules."
Emmara pursed her lips. "I have . . . some influence.
Many who believe the guild should be more involved in the affairs of Ravnica
agree with my ideas. But Glademaster Garo also has his followers, and he thinks
the most prudent course would be to retreat into our enclaves and defend our
borders until the trouble has passed."
"The trouble isn't going
to just pass," Ral said. "Not this time. This is Nicol Bolas.
I know it's hard to understand what that means, where he comes from, but—"
"That he's a
Planeswalker?" Emmara looked thoughtful. "The idea isn't as
disturbing as I thought it might be. It
feels . . . familiar." She shifted uncomfortably.
"But Garo doesn't see why we should risk working with the other guilds
when we might not even be threatened."
"Then I need to speak to
Garo," Ral said. "I'll convince him otherwise."
"I asked him to attend
this meeting," Emmara said unhappily. "But he refuses."
Ral frowned. "The
soldiers are his?"
"They serve the
Conclave," Emmara said. "But yes, many of our more martial members
count themselves as his adherents."
"Then it seems like he
has the whip hand."
"What?" Emmara's
brow wrinkled, and then she laughed. "Oh, no. Garo would not attempt to
settle this by the blade. He is not a bad person, Master Zarek, please believe
me. Only . . . somewhat more cautious then I would like, and
firm in his convictions."
Ral let out a breath,
fighting frustration. "All right. So what do we do?"
"I am hopeful that you
can speak to a few influential people while you're here. It may serve to tip
the balance—"
The door opened, quietly, and
the serving girl re-entered, bearing a tray with a steaming pot of tea. Emmara
looked up.
"That's not
necessary," she said. "Please, leave us be."
"Sorry, Mistress
Emmara." The girl came over and set the tray on one of the tables. "I
didn't mean to interrupt."
Emmara waved a hand,
dismissively, and the girl turned to go. Turned—
And reached behind her back—
Ral moved fast, leaping out
of his chair and throwing himself toward Emmara. The girl's hand emerged with a
long, slim dagger, which she swung overhand in an arc that would bury it in
Emmara's breast. Emmara herself was looking up, startled, as it came down.
His arm took her around the
waist, pulling her down and knocking the lightweight chair out of the way. The
assassin's dagger missed its target, slashing a line of red across Emmara's
upper arm instead. Emmara hit the floor, eyes wide with shock, and Ral turned
away from her to find the girl raising her blade for another strike. He brought
his hand up, electricity crackling between his fingers, cursing the officious
sergeant who'd taken his accumulator—
And then Hekara was standing
behind the assassin, as casually as if she'd never moved at all. The Rakdos
emissary raised a hand, and steel gleamed between her fingers. She brought the
blade down and across in a single smooth motion. A moment later, a crimson line
drew itself across the Selesnya girl's throat. The assassin clutched her neck,
blood forcing its way between her fingers. She fell to her knees, then toppled,
shuddering.
"Keen!" Hekara
said. She tossed her bloody knife into the air, and it vanished before it came
down.
"Emmara!" Ral said.
"I'm all right,"
Emmara said through gritted teeth. She sat up, prodding her bleeding forearm.
"It's not deep."
"Was she one of Garo's
people?"
Emmara glanced at the dead
servant and shook her head. "I told you, Garo would never do such a thing.
He has been an honorable defender of the Conclave for years."
"Hekara?" Ral said.
"Can you poke your head out and see if anything's going on?"
"Yessir!" Hekara
said, with an exaggerated salute. She rushed to the door and peered out into
the hall. "Lots of soldiers around. Not going anywhere, just sort of
waiting. Nobody else."
"This is a coup,"
Ral said, shaking his head when Emmara started to object. "Maybe Garo's
not as honorable as you think he is, or maybe someone's pulling his strings.
Doesn't matter. We need to get out of here—"
Hekara danced back from the door
as it opened. An elven soldier in wooden armor came in, his eyes widening at
the sight of the bloody mess on the floor. Another pair were close behind him,
but Hekara threw herself at the door, slamming it shut in their faces. Ral
rushed the man who'd gotten inside. The elf went for his sword, but Ral's
lightning was faster, arcing out from his hand to shimmer briefly across the
man's body. It was a light burst, toppling him to the floor and leaving him
shuddering but conscious.
Emmara, who'd gotten to her
feet, had torn a strip from her ethereal gown and tied it into a makeshift
bandage around her wound. She came over to where the stricken soldier lay, and
waved one hand, glowing a brilliant green. Wooden tendrils grew out of the
floor, wrapping around the man's wrists and ankles and fixing him in place.
"What in the name of the
Worldsoul is going on?" she demanded. "By whose authority are you
here? What do you know about this?"
"I—" The elf shook
his head frantically. "You were—we were told—"
"What were you
told?" Ral said, electricity crackling dangerous between his fingers.
"And by whom?"
"Glademaster Garo said
that Mistress Emmara had been murdered!" the elf said. His eyes went to
Ral. "By, um, you, Master Zarek."
"Clearly I have not
been murdered," Emmara said, rubbing her arm, "although it was a near
thing. Where is Garo now?"
"Upstairs, in the
council room."
Emmara got to her feet.
"I will go and see him."
"Don't be foolish,"
Ral said. He grabbed her uninjured arm and pulled her away from the bound
soldiers. "He's already tried to kill you once. If you walk in there, I
guarantee you're not going to walk out again."
"And if I flee?"
Emmara said. "What then? Civil war? I will not have it." She shook
her head, and Ral saw tears at the corners of her eyes. "I will confront
him now, while we can still stop this."
"Ah, Ral?" Hekara
said.
"One moment," Ral
growled.
"I know I'm supposed to
observe," she said, "but these guys are really interested in
getting through this door. So if you don't want 'em to get in here, it'd be
keen if you helped me out?"
Ral turned. Hekara was
leaning against the door with all her weight, and it shook and shuddered under
repeated blows from the other side. Her boots scraped up splinters from the
floor as she was pushed slowly back.
"At least," Ral
hissed, "let me get my equipment back before you confront him. Then I can
defend you."
"I can defend
myself." Emmara made a half-circle in the air, and the wood of the walls
flowed down and around the door, locking it in place. Hekara stepped back with
a sigh of relief and stuck her tongue out at the soldiers beyond. "But
your assistance would be welcome. The security office is on the first
floor."
"How do we get
there?" Ral said.
"Out the window?!"
Hekara said, bouncing with excitement. "Right?! Keen!"
Emmara nodded. Another
gesture sent the branches that sealed off the window bending away, leaving a
clear space. The Rakdos emissary ran happily over, doing an impromptu cartwheel
in a storm of jingling bells, and threw herself outside.
"I . . . was going to offer to grow us some handholds,"
Emmara said, looking after her.
"She'll be fine."
Ral looked out at the drop, which was considerable—three stories of building,
and hundreds of feet more through the branches of the tree to the city below.
"But I'll take you up on it."
Fortunately, the wood of the
world-tree was as easily molded as clay, at least in Emmara's hands, and so the
climb down the outside of the building was not particularly difficult. Hekara
managed by producing small blades and jamming them into the wood as she went,
which made Emmara wince every time. They bypassed the second-floor windows,
working their way around the opposite side of the spiraling building from the
front entrance. The grounds, Ral could see, were swarming with soldiers.
On the first floor, Emmara
found a window that led to an unoccupied corridor and let them in. Hekara was
still bouncing in excitement.
"Where's the security
office?" Ral said.
"Around that corner,"
Emmara said. "But there will be guards."
Ral looked at his hands,
feeling the coiled power within them. "I can handle one or two.
Hekara?"
"Hmmmm?" She
grinned at him. "Can I help somehow?"
"How many of those
little knives have you got?" He frowned. "Where were you keeping
them, anyway?"
Hekara blinked. "I'm a
razorwitch. I didn't tell you?"
She held up an empty hand,
twisted it with a flourish, and was suddenly holding a double-ended,
diamond-shaped blade by the tip. Another flourish, and there was a second one
beside it, then a third and a fourth. She opened her hand, and the steel had
vanished before it hit the ground.
"That's handy," Ral
muttered. The blades were sharp on both sides, he noted, and up close he could
see her fingers were thickly cross-hatched with tiny cuts. All Rakdos are
mad. "All right. Try not to kill anyone if you don't have to. We don't
know who is actually working with Garo and who's just doing their jobs."
"Sigh," Hekara said
aloud. "Buzzkill."
"Come on." He
beckoned to Emmara, and the three of them went around the corner.
A single door led into the
security office, with an armored soldier standing on either side of it. Ral
strode up to the first one in a business-like fashion, and before he could bark
out a warning Ral slapped a palm against his chest, giving him a sharp jolt of
electricity that had him flopping like a landed fish. Emmara gestured sharply
at the other, and the wood of the wall reached out and wrapped around his hand
as he went for his sword. Ral ignored his shout of alarm and kicked the door.
Two more men sat on either
side of a desk in the office, already drawing their weapons. Ral raised his
hand, but instead of a lightning bolt only a weak spark crackled between his
fingers. He swore and threw himself sideways as the soldier lunged. There was a
rapid thunk-thunk-thunk sound, knives biting into wood. Emmara grabbed
the man who'd attacked by the wrist and used his own momentum against him,
tossing him over her shoulder to land in the corner with a clatter. At a
gesture, wood rose around him, sealing him in place. When Ral got up, he could
see the other soldier was pinned to the opposite wall by a blade thrown into the
palm of his hand, and two more bracketed his head. His eyes were as wide as
saucers.
"Don't mind us,"
Hekara said gayly.
Ral spotted his accumulator
and bracers in the corner and snatched them up. Slinging the thing across his
back felt like a drink of cold water after a long, thirsty run. He felt his
hair rising into its customary frizz, and power crackled over the bracer's
mizzium studs as he strapped them on. Emmara raised a questioning eyebrow.
"All right," Ral
said. "Now we can go and find Garo."
There were more soldiers in
the hall outside, but Emmara held up her hands before they could attack. Their
leader, the sergeant Ral had seen earlier, hesitated.
"I don't know what
you've been told," Emmara said, "but there has been a terrible
misunderstanding. I am going upstairs at this moment to confer with Glademaster
Garo."
"What about them?"
the sergeant said. "I've got orders to arrest them."
"For my murder?"
Emmara said.
"I . . ." The sergeant frowned.
"They will be coming
with me. Everyone else, please remain at your posts."
She swept up the ramp, dress
trailing dramatically behind her. Ral found himself smiling as he hurried along
in her wake. I can always appreciate a good sense of drama. Two floors
up, there was a similar scene, and again the soldiers fell back at Emmara's
command. Maybe she's right. Maybe just the one girl was paid off, and this isn't
a full-scale coup.
On the top floor, a double
door led into a wide circular chamber with a large table growing out of the
floor in the center of it. At one end of the table was a mess of maps, and a
man and a woman stood looking down at them. The man wore living wooden armor,
more elaborate than most of the Selesnya soldiers. This, Ral assumed, was
Glademaster Garo. The woman beside him was a human in a green robe, red curls
spilling out from her head as she leaned over the table. Behind the pair, two
heavily armored soldiers waited.
"Garo!" Emmara
said.
Garo looked up. It was hard
to judge ages, with elves, but his face was more heavily lined than most Ral
had seen, and his long white hair was pulled back in a neat queue. For a
moment, their gazes met, and Ral felt something deeply wrong in the
man's eyes. There was something dead there, as though his skull had been
hollowed out and replaced with something vile.
"Emmara," he said.
"I had hoped my reports were wrong. Thank goodness you're all right."
"What is going on?"
Emmara said. "Someone tried to kill me!"
"I know," Garo
said. "Ral Zarek. Thankfully, we have him close to hand."
"What?" Emmara's
eyes narrowed. "You . . ."
The red-haired woman
gestured, and the doors slammed behind them, wood flowing across them. Garo
nodded in their direction.
"Since you've so
conveniently brought yourself to my doorstep," he said, "we can
dispense with the pleasantries. Kill them all, please. Although I'd prefer
Zarek's body be reasonably intact, for display."
Emmara gave a shout of rage
and raised her hand, circles of green energy shimmering into life around her.
The wooden table groaned and began to twist out of shape, long tendrils winding
over and around one another, building up a crude simulacrum of the human form.
The red-haired mage made a similar gesture, and another elemental began taking
shape in front of her, the two hulking shapes rising up simultaneously.
The two armored soldiers
split up, moving around the table in opposite directions. Ral gestured Hekara
to the right, and took the other man for himself. The elf closed in, drawing
his sword, and Ral sent a bolt of lightning slamming out from one bracer. It
connected them in an arc of coruscating electricity, but the blue-white
tendrils spun and danced on a sphere centered on the soldier, not quite
reaching him.
Warded. Ral permitted
himself a tight smile. But they weren't prepared for me. Ral
poured power into the blast, making the hissing, spitting line of power twitch
and writhe like a frantic snake, and he felt the elf's protections start to
crumble. With an almighty bang, the shield collapsed, and the concussion
blew the soldier across the room. He hit the wall beside Garo and slumped
motionless to the floor, gouts of smoke rising from gaps in his armor.
Across the room, Hekara was
dancing around the second Selesnya soldier, avoiding his long blade and slicing
nimbly at the joints in his armor with her knives. A steady patter of blood
already coated the floor beneath him. In the center of the room, the two
elementals thrashed, huge wooden limbs ripping and tearing at one another.
Emmara and the red-haired mage stood on opposite sides, leaning in as though
physically pressed against one another, green energy flaring.
That left Garo. The
glademaster frowned and drew his sword, a wooden blade as thin as a razor and
etched with glowing runes. Ral aimed a lightning bolt at his head, but he
intercepted with his blade, the energy crackling harmlessly over the weapon
before dissipating.
"Ral Zarek." Garo
closed, and Ral's bracers rippled with power. "I should have known you'd
cause trouble."
"I'm sorry," Ral
said. "Have we met?"
"Oh, yes." Garo
smiled. "You don't remember?"
The elf attacked, smooth and
fast. Ral backed away from the first slash and took the second on a bracer,
lightning thrashing over the elf's sword arm. He slashed his hand, and Garo had
to duck a wave of lightning and retreat a step. The elf began to circle.
"I think I would
recall," Ral said. "Give it up. You're finished."
"Far from it. I've only
just begun."
Garo came at him again, a
slashing, vicious assault that forced Ral to give ground, blocking with his
bracers and countering with slashing waves of plasma. The elf's attacks grew
ever more wild, until he finally left a clear opening, swinging his blade wide
and letting Ral slam a shoulder into him and knock him off balance. Before Garo
could recover, Ral struck, white-hot power tearing through his wooden armor.
Garo let his blade clatter to the ground, sagging against Ral. He coughed, and
then smiled, teeth stained crimson.
"You still owe me, Ral
Zarek. Oh, yes." The dying elf coughed again. "And you're going to
pay. One way . . . or the other . . ."
The voice was different. But
the tone, the cadence, were all the same. Ral went still.
"Bolas," he
breathed.
"Not quite," Garo
said. "But . . . the next best thing." Blood poured
from his mouth, staining Ral's shoulder, and he fell to his knees. "See
you . . . soon."
Garo collapsed. Ral raised
his head, shakily, and saw that the fight was over. One of the elementals had
been torn to splinters, and Emmara and her own creature stood over the
red-haired mage, who had fallen to her knees, gasping for breath. The second
armored soldier was down, too, in a pool of blood. Hekara prodded him, idly,
like a cat toying with a dead mouse.
"This . . ." Emmara looked at Ral, then down at Garo.
"This is a tragedy."
"It would have been more
of a tragedy if he'd succeeded," Ral said. Kill Emmara, blame me for
it, and you'd derail the entire summit. Exactly what Bolas would want.
See you
soon . . .
"I agree," Emmara
said. She was breathing hard, but there was a hard, wild look in her eyes.
"Clearly we have some . . . housekeeping to do. But
rest assured, Master Zarek, Selesnya will be at your summit."
"Good." Ral leaned
against the wall and ran one hand through his hair with a static crackle,
restoring its frizz. "Now we're getting somewhere."
"This is ridiculous," Kaya said. "I look ridiculous."
"Would you be quiet?" Tomik said, fiddling with his glasses. "The gray sisters don't talk."
"The gray sisters are withered corpses," Kaya said. "Someone is going to notice that I'm still, you know. Plump."
"Just keep your head down. Next time you can climb up the outside of the tower again."
Kaya snorted, but stayed quiet. They were back in Orzhova, climbing toward the high cell where Teysa was held. Bringing Kaya through in disguise had been Tomik's idea. The gray sisters were robed nuns who handled all the menial chores in the cathedral, and could therefore come and go as they pleased. Unfortunately, they were exclusively recruited from deceased worshippers. The robe they'd stolen hadn't been cleaned since it was last used, Kaya was certain. The smell seemed to be getting worse by the minute.
"Last guard," Tomik muttered.
Kaya kept her head down, saying nothing as Tomik exchanged greetings with the armored soldier. The man let them pass with barely a grunt. As Teysa's personal secretary, Tomik was the only one allowed in to see her. "Mostly," he'd told Kaya downstairs, "because I'm too unimportant to bother anyone."
Teysa was waiting when they entered, drumming her fingers impatiently on the table. She jumped up as Tomik closed the door. Kaya concentrated for a moment and stepped out through the robe, letting the filthy thing fall to the floor.
"You're late," Teysa said.
"Sorry," Tomik said. "They've increased security since last time."
"So what's so important that we need to risk a meeting?" Kaya said. "I thought you didn't want me in here until you were ready."
"I would like to know that as well," Teysa said, looking at Tomik. "You're the one who suggested this."
"You are?" Kaya looked at the secretary, who gave an uncomfortable shrug.
"I have . . . an idea. A plan, maybe. I don't like it, but I can't think of anything better." He took a deep breath. "I might be able to get us the distraction we need to give Kaya a shot at the Ghost Council."
"And keep me alive in the process?" Teysa said. "I'm listening."
"I would prefer to remain alive, too," Kaya said. "If that's important to your planning. What's your distraction?"
A pained look passed over Tomik's face. "Ral Zarek."
Teysa frowned. "The Izzet guildmage?"
"Yes." Tomik's cheeks flushed. "He and I are . . . close."
"Close?" Teysa said.
"He means they're sleeping together," Kaya advised her, in a stage whisper.
Tomik's blushed deepened further, but he nodded. "Ral has a position of considerable authority at the Izzet. If he were to arrange for an attack on the cathedral, that would certainly give us the opening we're looking for."
"And potentially start a guild war," Teysa said.
"Not if you become guildmaster afterward," Tomik said.
"Question," Kaya said, raising her hand. "Is this Zarek so desperately in love with you that he'd commit guild forces to this just because you asked him to?"
"I . . . doubt it." Tomik shook his head. "We have to offer him something."
"Gold?" Teysa said.
"He doesn't care about gold. But he's arranging a guild summit, and he needs all ten guilds to participate. I know the Obzedat has rejected his invitation outright. If you were to promise to accept it . . ."
"Then he'd have every incentive to help us," Kaya finished. "I like it. Everyone wins."
"Except Grandfather." Teysa grinned. "What's the subject of the summit?"
"Ral believes that Ravnica will soon be under attack by an ancient dragon named Nicol Bolas," Tomik said. "He wants to organize a common defense of some kind." He shrugged nervously. "At least, that's the word on the street."
Kaya felt as though someone had removed a wall she'd been leaning against, leaving her stumbling forward. An attack by Bolas? He's coming here? She exchanged a look with Teysa, but the Orzhov heir had more practice concealing her emotions. Her face was unreadable.
"I'm certain that's a topic that's worthy of . . . discussion," she said. "As long as Kaya is amenable?"
"Yeah. Sure." Kaya shook her head. I need to think about this. "Sounds fine to me."
"All right." Tomik pushed nervously at his glasses. "I'll ask him, then."
"Would you rather I do it?" Kaya said. She could tell this wasn't easy for the secretary. He's braver than he looks.
"No," Tomik said, a little sadly. "Ral trusts me."
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