The Blinding Knife

Chapter 101

 

 

“Your intelligence is abysmal,” Gavin told the generals around the cabin. “Their plan—their first plan, at least—is simple. They stop our ships before we can get there. Without our troops and supplies, Ru will fall in days. You didn’t come prepared for a sea battle. We’ve got a dozen warships; they have fifty.”

 

“You’ve invented some new means of travel,” Andross Guile said. He was the reason this room was bathed in blue light. “That’s how you’re scouting. Tell us about this.”

 

Gavin ignored him and left to get some rest before the battle. He woke before dawn, and started laughing quietly. He dressed in the darkness and bound his hair back. A knock jostled the door in its loose hinges.

 

“Commander,” Gavin said. They walked out onto the deck together where the Blackguards were checking their gear, some quietly joking, some doing the morning ka, whatever it took to soothe the pre-battle nerves. They’d taken down the biggest ship in the Color Prince’s navy yesterday, but they were professionals; they knew they weren’t invincible. A musket ball didn’t care if it had been fired by a man on a great ship or an idiot in a dory. Anyone could die, anytime.

 

Kip was standing with them, looking like he was wound tight enough to thrum.

 

“I’m not going with you today,” Gavin told Ironfist. He didn’t bother lowering his voice. Let the Blackguards overhear. He was asking them to risk their lives. “I’ve other work to do that may give us some slim chance for victory. Probably not, but it’s worth trying.”

 

“Can I send anyone with you?” Ironfist asked.

 

“Not for this. I won’t be in danger, though. Not physical danger anyway.”

 

“Kip?” Ironfist asked.

 

Gavin turned and looked at the boy, who was eavesdropping and making a small attempt at pretending not to be. “Kip, you can’t come with me. Not for this. You can make up your own mind about whether you want to go with the Blackguards to sink ships.”

 

“I’ll fight, sir.”

 

Yes, you will.

 

“High Lord Prism?” a thick Blackguard asked. He was an orange/yellow bichrome named Little Piper. Gavin nodded for him to continue. “Will you look at a design we’ve put together?”

 

Gavin followed them over to a pile of munitions. Someone had designed great disks, bigger than a shield, with a grenado’s trigger mechanism. Gavin didn’t understand.

 

Little Piper pushed a tiny woman forward. “It’s Nerra’s design,” Little Piper said.

 

She wasn’t even one of the Blackguards who’d gone with them yesterday. She had to clear her throat twice before she was able to speak. “From hearing the stories, I figure the best advantage we have is that we can close quickly.” She showed how the disk had teeth and red luxin on the bottom. “The driver brings the sea chariot right next to the ship, and the archer slaps this onto the hull.”

 

Gavin took a breath. It was brilliant in its simplicity. But the design wasn’t right. The disk could be hardened at the back so that most of the explosive force went into the hull. And there was no way you’d want such a short fuse on an explosive this powerful. And it needed shrapnel. And the red on the back side needed to be covered with a thin layer of yellow that could be stripped off just prior to placement so the red didn’t lose its stickiness and so the disks could be stacked. Then the sea chariots would need to be—He was getting ahead of himself.

 

He started calling out for the items he needed, and the Blackguards delivered them promptly. Then Gavin made two different designs, one lighter and one heavier. He hefted both. The heavier one packed more explosive power, but power was no good if you couldn’t get it where it was needed. He handed them around.

 

“The heavier,” the Blackguards agreed.

 

Gavin gave them instructions then and they made a line, the Blackguards copying the backplate and filling the reservoir half full with nails and musket balls and forming the hooks. Gavin made the fuses and the yellow and red luxin mixture to fill the reservoir. A couple of reds applied the right amount of sticky red luxin to the backs, another drafter put a tiny layer of lubricative orange on top of that, and Gavin covered it with a thin plate of yellow.

 

“Hullwrecker,” Gavin said, barely pausing as he checked that the fuses on every one were drafted correctly. Then he climbed down the rope ladder to the sea chariots and drafted a place for the hullwreckers to be stacked, and an extra support to keep whichever Blackguard placed the explosive from tumbling off the back of his own chariot. He’d replaced the sea chariots that had been destroyed yesterday, and even drafted extras. Today, fifty Blackguards would be able to head out at once.

 

“Well done, Nerra,” Gavin said. She looked embarrassed. “You’ve saved a lot of lives today.”

 

“But my lord, you made it a hundred times better.”

 

“So I saved lives, too,” Gavin said. “We’re a team, right?” He smiled at her and she blushed.

 

Gavin moved to get onto his own sea chariot. It was slightly modified from the earlier versions. Another experiment. He was always experimenting. A young Blackguard was standing there to hold the boat steady when Gavin pulled it loose of the rest. It was Gavin Greyling.

 

It felt like a sledge hit the center of Gavin’s chest. He met the eyes of the young man who’d lied to save his life. “I’ll try to be worthy of it,” Gavin said quietly.

 

The young Blackguard said nothing. His face showed nothing.

 

Gavin got on his sea chariot. He wanted to give more orders and advice to Commander Ironfist, but the man knew what he was doing. He would do the maximum damage with the minimum loss of life possible. He didn’t need Gavin to tell him how to do that. So Gavin left.

 

He sped across the seas, which today were a great deal calmer than they had been yesterday. That fact alone would probably save more of the Blackguards than Nerra’s and Gavin’s invention.

 

For Gavin, it didn’t mean much except that his trip was somewhat smoother and faster than it would have been.

 

The sun was past its zenith when Gavin turned the skimmer into the bay at Seers Island. He could see that his seawall was still in excellent order, and there were dozens of fishing dories out in the bay. People waved at him, greeting him like a returning hero. There was a town on the shore now, the jungle had been pushed back, and alongside temporary shacks, more permanent buildings were under construction. There were even farms.

 

The change was profound. Gavin wasn’t sure why he was surprised, but he was. He hadn’t even been gone very long, but he’d helped establish the fundamentals. They’d warehoused the tens of thousands of yellow bricks he’d made, and they’d obviously been putting them to good use. Fifty thousand people with purpose, good leadership, and all the tools they needed could do a lot of work in a short time. What didn’t surprise him was that the Third Eye was waiting for him on the beach.

 

Being a Seer must be terribly handy.

 

Which was why he was here. He couldn’t believe he hadn’t thought of it sooner. He was going into battle and he’d spent—perhaps wasted was more accurate—several days scouting out their positions. While he knew a Seer. A True Seer who didn’t couch what she saw in mystical jargon and vague pronouncements.

 

Gavin beached the skimmer and jumped lightly onto the sand. The Third Eye was dressed in a simple white dress, belted with a golden sash. She’d once said that she was usually modest. It was, he’d come to see, actually true. She held a hand out, and Gavin kissed it. She smiled, delighted, and Gavin thought there was something softer about her this time.

 

“My apologies about last time,” she said.

 

“My lady?”

 

“If I spoiled your marriage for you, the last time you washed up on my beach. I try to not ruin futures for people, but I was under some stress. I make mistakes.”

 

Gavin looked at her radiant face and was glad she had reminded him he was a married man. He was terribly in love with Karris, but this woman tugged at him on several layers beneath the rational. “Me, too,” he said. He knuckled his forehead. “Just exactly how much do you…”

 

“Hold on, Corvan is right down on the pier. I think he’s been so busy he may not have seen you come in.”

 

She offered her arm and he took it, escorting her through the crowds. The people noticed, and they stared, and many of them bobbed their heads to both of them, but Gavin knew this kind of deference. It was the kind of respect men on campaign give to their general. The protocol peeled back to its bare, necessary layers. These people were hard at work, and they had worked alongside the Third Eye for months. They adored and respected her, maybe loved her, but they had work to do.

 

And she had no bodyguards now. That spoke either to an unprecedented level of peace here or perhaps to her prescience. Hard to kill a Seer, one would guess.

 

They walked together out to the pier, where Corvan Danavis was speaking to three men who were gesturing to what appeared to be plans for a shipyard.

 

He turned and looked shocked. He ran—literally ran—over to Gavin and embraced him. Gavin loved him for that. He embraced his one true friend hard, and then released him. “Corvan, you old dog, you look well.”

 

Corvan was growing out his mustache again, though it wasn’t yet long enough to dangle beads in. He looked ten years younger. “Do you know how hard it is to negotiate with people who can see the future, Lord Prism? I can’t believe you did this to me. But yes, I suppose that working twenty hours a day agrees with me. Or perhaps it’s the company I get to keep during the other four.” He grinned.

 

Gavin had no idea what he was talking about. Then he saw the ring on Corvan’s finger a moment before the man stepped over to the Third Eye and kissed her, picked her up, and spun her in a quick circle.

 

Gavin laughed. “No disaster?” he asked the Third Eye.

 

She smiled mischievously. “It was… a political necessity,” she said with mock gravity, teasing Corvan.

 

“A duty. A burden,” Corvan said gravely.

 

Gavin couldn’t believe he hadn’t seen it. Of course it probably had been a political necessity. Corvan the leader of the invaders; the Third Eye not quite the leader but the most respected among the island’s inhabitants. Both single, both desperately needing to bind their people together. It had been a duty. But sometimes fate is kind, and that which is your duty is also exactly what you were made for.

 

It also would have made things incredibly awkward if Gavin had bedded the woman his best friend ended up marrying. A disaster.

 

“Are you going to tell him?” the Third Eye asked.

 

“Tell him?”

 

“Men!” she said. “You went to the Spectrum and…”

 

“You know?” Gavin asked. “Oh, of course. Orholam, that’s unnerving. You haven’t told him?”

 

“I hate spoiling the future. Besides, you’re the one who paid the price for it. It’s only right you should get to tell him.”

 

“Tell me what?” Corvan asked.

 

“You’re a full satrap, High Lord Danavis,” Gavin said.

 

“I’m a—What? What?” Corvan said.

 

“Full satrap, full responsibilities, full privileges. You get to name your own Color. A small flotilla of ships carrying supplies and diplomats is already on its way here.”

 

“Three weeks out,” the Third Eye said, “and bringing along more than a few problems, along with their lifesaving goods and medicines.”

 

“You knew about this?” Corvan asked.

 

“You didn’t think I’d marry some mere washed-up general, do you?” the Third Eye asked.

 

Gavin could tell it was an inside joke. Corvan smiled fondly and shook his head. “A satrap? You said it would be honorary at best. That getting votes would be the work of future generations.”

 

“Meh.” Gavin shrugged. “They stabbed me in the back. I replied in kind. By the way, you voted for war.”

 

“Did I have good reason?”

 

“Mmm.”

 

“Color Prince?”

 

“None other.”

 

“You left me here, you know. Abandoned me. Do you know how hard it is to be married to a woman who knows everything?”

 

“Almost as hard as it is to be married to a man who exaggerates,” the Third Eye said.

 

They were deeply in love. Smitten. At their age. Sad.

 

“I hear you finally came to your senses,” Corvan said to Gavin.

 

“She told you about Karris?” Gavin asked.

 

“Orholam is kind,” Corvan said.

 

Orholam? I thought you barely believed in him. “Corvan, I’d love to spend the next six months here, but I need to speak with your wife. The war’s moving on, and I need to leave within two hours to make it back before I run out of light.”

 

They went to a tavern nearby and sat outside—“Absolute necessity for civilization,” Corvan had said when Gavin commented sardonically—and took seats in the back. Gavin filled them in on everything that had happened. Everything, from destroying the blue island to throwing that girl off the balcony. He was glad to see that the Third Eye hadn’t known all of it.

 

Then he asked her, “Can we save Ru?”

 

“The real question is if we can save the Seven Satrapies.”

 

“Can we save Ru?” he insisted.

 

“One time in a thousand,” she said. “Your father would have to think that he was the brilliant mind coming up with half a dozen strategies that you simply aren’t in a good place to feed to him.” She touched Gavin’s hand, and the yellow luxin eye tattooed into her forehead glowed. She took a deep breath, continued to hold his hand, and the glow brightened, brightened until it was blinding.

 

She threw Gavin’s hand away from her like it was a serpent. She stood abruptly and went out. Gavin stood, bewildered, but Corvan was faster. “Stay,” he said. “I’ll take care of this.”

 

He was gone for five minutes. Gavin tried some of the ale that a very nervous woman handed him. It was surprisingly good. If he hadn’t known that the Third Eye was the real thing, he would have been suspicious. The skeptic in him was stirring even now. This seemed perfectly orchestrated to paralyze or terrorize him.

 

The Third Eye came back in unsteadily. She avoided looking Gavin in the eye as she sat across from him.

 

“You want to know the disposition of forces at Ru. I can tell you that.”

 

“Are you trying to scare the hell out of me?” Gavin asked.

 

“Gavin, listen to your mother.”

 

“Now that, that is the kind of thing I expect from a charlatan,” Gavin said. “I thought you weren’t big on parlor tricks.”

 

“You remember Koios White Oak?”

 

“I remember seeing a wall fall on him sixteen years ago.”

 

“He’s the Color Prince.”

 

“I saw a wall fall on him. A burning wall.”

 

“He’s the Color Prince.”

 

“I saw a wall—”

 

“I’m not the moron in this conversation, Guile. Please don’t speak to me as if I am. How many times have you escaped certain death? You think your enemies might never have the same good fortune?”

 

Gavin’s mouth went suddenly dry. “What—but I—does Karris know this?” Koios. That night when Karris had wept about her dead brothers, she’d said his name. She’d been trying to work up the nerve to tell him. But even telling him would have felt like betraying her brother.

 

“Have you told Karris all your secrets?”

 

Fair question. He’d told her most of them, but no, not all.

 

“You’re wasting time,” the Third Eye said. She was suddenly hard and cold, like it was all she could do to get herself through this. “You need to go back to the Chromeria and get Karris.”

 

“She’s injured.”

 

“Stop interrupting. She’ll be well enough to fight. The men your father sent to beat her were very careful, very professional. They were told to inflict pain, not injury.”

 

“It was my father? That piece of—”

 

“That part isn’t important right now. If you don’t get her… just get her.”

 

“Tell me,” Gavin demanded.

 

“Telling you changes things,” she said tensely. Her golden eye was glowing.

 

“Tell me!”

 

“If you don’t get her, you’ll die. A musket ball tomorrow or a green wight the next day. If you do… the old gods waken, Gavin.”

 

“The old gods waken?! That’s all you tell me?”

 

“You’ve lost green. You know what happens. This battle to save Ru, it’s noble, but it’s the wrong battle. You already know that.”

 

“There’s a green bane, like the blue?”

 

“You can’t stop them all, Gavin. It’s impossible.”

 

“Where is it?” he insisted.

 

“If I tell you, you’ll be in the wrong place.”

 

“Tell me.”

 

“If I tell you, you’ll die, you damned fool,” she said, temper flaring. “Ask the right questions!”

 

“Am I going to—” He balled his fists. “What do I need to do?”

 

“Mercy isn’t weakness, and love carries a heavy price.”

 

“I think I’m more the kind of a man who—”

 

“If you don’t figure out exactly what kind of man you are, there’s no hope for you at all.”

 

“If you were going for ominous, that was pretty good.”

 

“I do omens for a living. You want better? Then go now and bed your wife. Bruised and broken as you are, it may be your last chance.”

 

“Now that, that was ominous.” Gavin stood with a bravado he didn’t feel. He’d learned things, but not the way he’d wanted to.

 

“Gavin,” the Third Eye said, “you came to ask where their forces are. They’ve taken the fort on Ruic Head, though they haven’t put up their own flag. They hope to sink your fleet at the neck. And Ru has several hundred traitors already in the city, including the mercenaries the Atashians hired to protect them. The prince’s men have been hard at work.”

 

Gavin hesitated. “How long until I lose the rest of my colors?”

 

“That depends on what kind of man you are.”

 

“What would you guess?” Gavin asked, irritated.

 

“If you’re as good of a man as I think you are, you don’t have as much time left as you think you do.” Her eyes were full of compassion—except for that pitiless third eye, which saw only truth.

 

Gavin walked out the door, and saw Corvan. The man had been weeping, but had dried his eyes and was trying to pretend he hadn’t been.

 

Orholam’s great hairies, it couldn’t be that bad, could it?

 

The men embraced. Said nothing. Walked together down to the beach. The Third Eye followed them. People had gathered, realizing who Gavin was. They watched from a distance. They knelt. It was like they didn’t know how to tell Gavin what he meant to them. It was just as well, because he didn’t know how to take it. He waved to them, nodded.

 

“You said before that you were sometimes wrong, right?” he asked Corvan’s beautiful wife.

 

“Sometimes,” she said sadly.

 

One in a thousand. He’d faced worse.

 

“Dazen,” Corvan said quietly. He swallowed, looking out to sea, looking at nothing. “My lord, she tells me if I go with you, I can only make it worse. Otherwise, I’d… My lord, it’s been an honor.”

 

And then, as Gavin got onto the skimmer and Corvan pushed the boat out into the gentle surf, The Third Eye said, “Orholam guide you back, Lord Prism.”

 

He was sure that she didn’t mean back to the island.

 

 

 

 

 

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