Chapter Fifteen
Suyin woke with a start, cursing at the empty spot beside her in the bed. She dressed in a rush and flew from the chambers to an unusual amount of activity at the front of the house. Her shoulders sank with relief when she saw that Li Tao hadn’t left. He stood beside the stables, overseeing his men as they loaded packs on to their horses.
‘Where are you going?’ She moved to stand beside him, ignoring the chill of the morning air.
‘You and I are going to see Emperor Shen.’
Her mouth fell open, unable to find words. She blinked at him as questions filled her mind. He inspected her from head to toe and her skin warmed beneath the thin robe she’d pulled on hastily.
‘You’ll need to change your clothing.’
Frowning, she folded her arms over her chest. He gave her nothing but a half-smile in grim enjoyment at her confusion. Too many questions hovered on her tongue. When had he decided? What had made him change his mind?
‘I’ll never understand you,’ she said.
He guided her towards the house, keeping her close to his side. His warmth was more than welcome in the cool morning.
‘It occurred to me, Lady Ling, that you have a history of surviving the worst of circumstances. I’d be wise to follow your lead.’
He was trying to make light of the situation, which only made her more nervous. ‘I know Emperor Shen will listen to you. He must. He needs you.’
‘I should let you speak then, as confident as you are of this plan.’
‘Tell him everything you’ve done is for the sake of the empire. Don’t be so stubborn. Admit your mistakes…’ Her voice trailed off as she realised he was mocking her. ‘Can’t you pretend to be humble?’
He shook his head. Everything about him was so direct and uncompromising. No wonder Gao could spin his traps so easily. Imperial politics required a delicate balance of persuasion and intimidation. She didn’t know that this was the right thing to do, but it had to be better than staying here to wait for death to march upon them.
They halted at the front hall. Finally alone, he turned to face her, cradling her cheek against his palm. She wanted to close her eyes and savour the caress.
‘You know the danger of declaring your allegiance to me,’ he said.
‘I do.’
‘I will not blindly surrender to Shen.’
Her heart plummeted at his warning. ‘I know that as well.’
It was a great concession for him to consider negotiating with the Emperor, but Li Tao would stand behind his principles to the death. It was in his blood and nothing could change that about him. To approach the Emperor was a great risk, but for the first time in a long while, she dared to hope. Li Tao wasn’t resigned to civil war and execution as she had feared. He was considering another way.
His face showed neither hope nor relief as he watched her. If anything, the tension had become more clearly etched in the lines around his eyes.
‘See what power you have over me,’ he said.
She tried not to be wounded by the bite of cynicism. ‘The Emperor is an honourable man. Shen will be moved by your gesture of compromise.’
‘I can still fulfil our bargain and relinquish you to Shen, as we agreed.’ His jaw tightened even as he suggested it. ‘You can stay clear of this conflict and go free.’
Li Tao was in an unpredictable position and his domain was the heart of danger. She would be reckless to stay, she couldn’t ignore that. Survival was a matter she knew more than a little about. She’d always managed to choose the right side whenever the current changed within the imperial palace.
But what life did she have alone, running and hiding? She didn’t have Changan any more or the mansion by the river that the late emperor had built for her. Li Tao, as calculated as he was, was willing to take a chance. She could be his equal beside him. She could try. Wasn’t that what she was asking for, what she hadn’t known how to ask for, just several nights ago?
And delicate politics was also a matter she knew more than a little about.
‘Tao, let us be honest.’ She took his arm. ‘Our original agreement was an illusion. It means nothing any more.’
Li Tao was stepping into the unknown and doing it willingly, but he didn’t like it.
It was like the first time he had taken a knife in his hands. He hadn’t even known how to grip the weapon. It was like his first battle. It was worse. He was no longer a man with only his own life to lose.
If his negotiation with Shen failed, then it meant war for him and for the empire. Imperial and regional armies fighting and killing one another. The neighbouring kingdoms and the barbarian invaders of the west could simply wait for the empire to burn down its own house. Li Tao had come to realise that he didn’t want that either.
Suyin was seated before him in the saddle. She was becoming more accustomed to the ride, no longer digging her nails into his arm. The best swordsmen of the first battalion rode at the flank and rear guard. They were safe within the borders of the province, but he couldn’t guarantee anything beyond the barricades.
He’d been content to take orders under the rule of Emperor Li, but those were different times. The Emperor had given him command of the district and Li Tao had known nothing about how to govern, how to lead men, how to gain respect. He had studied warlords like Shen and Gao, but he’d always known that he couldn’t mimic them. The August Emperor had needed a different sort of force. Li Ming had known about the balance of power and how it was so easily toppled.
They cleared the shade of the forest and Suyin tilted her face up to the sun to soak in the light.
‘You look like you’ve been released from prison.’ His arm tightened around her.
She leaned back against his shoulder and glanced at him through her lashes. ‘I’ve seen nothing but the same rooms for days and days.’
It had been nearly a month since he’d first found her. ‘You were content to stay by your river and wither away.’
‘No longer. When we return, you should show me every corner of this province.’
Her tone was too bright, lacking in its usual fluid harmony. He’d come to expect more subtlety from Suyin. He moved his focus to the road ahead.
‘Be assured of your success and you cannot fail,’ she said quietly.
So they had become adept enough at reading each other’s moods. She pressed close and he touched his chin to the top of her head in silent acknowledgement.
This venture was not at all assured. He would meet Shen face to face, without soldiers and courtiers, if Shen would even allow it. Suyin was asking him to rely on the Emperor’s sense of honour and sentiment. He’d criticised Shen for those very same traits. Honour and sentiment were unpredictable.
Their first stop was an instalment of soldiers positioned at the crossroads. A guard station had been built to provide rudimentary shelter for the men. The structure stood out as an ominous reminder that the roads winding through the province were no longer open to all.
After a short rest, they rode on.
By night-time, they reached an encampment outfitted by a thousand soldiers. A span of tents swept through the clearing and the men milled about around the crackling bonfires. This was the Rising Guard, the specially trained warriors of Li Tao’s first battalion.
Suyin scanned the barracks. ‘They’re waiting for battle, aren’t they?’
‘I need them centralised so they can move quickly.’
‘There are so many…’
‘This is not even a fourth of my army.’
She twisted around to face him. ‘Gao has accused you of raising an army to challenge Changan.’
‘Half of which is true.’
He dismounted, then settled his hands around her waist to lift her from the saddle. He could see her questions taking shape, but he shook his head once, sharply. Suyin clamped her mouth shut.
‘Good decision,’ he murmured close to her ear before ordering the men to ready a tent for the night
She aimed a piercing look at him. ‘Later,’ she promised.
This was not the time to question his authority, but he was certain she would interrogate him until dawn when she had the chance. He left her with his head guardsman and went to inspect the camp. He trusted her opinion on matters of the court. For now, she would have to trust him when it came to commanding an army.
When he finally retired to his tent, Suyin was seated on the cot that constituted a bed in the field. A lantern flickered beside it.
‘Your bodyguards wouldn’t allow me outside.’
She held herself with slender shoulders pulled back regally. Her hands were folded over one knee. Elegant to her very fingertips, even in these less than luxurious surroundings.
He refrained from going to her. ‘Women are a rare sight in camp.’
‘Would I really have anything to fear amongst your disciplined soldiers?’
‘No.’ He was certain of that. ‘But why torment them needlessly?’
The way every glimpse of her tormented him. Each time they parted, the reunion was always like this. A small bit of diplomacy exchanged to renegotiate the terms between them. He was in complete control. She was a glorious and mysterious woman. He was not in complete control. His heart took a running leap, falling just a drop faster. Rising just a bit more.
‘Your army must be tens of thousands. Large enough to challenge the Emperor,’ she said.
‘That would be rash. An attack against imperial forces would only incite the other warlords.’
‘That wasn’t what I was asking.’ There was more sadness than accusation in her tone.
He went and seated himself beside her. ‘Only the strong survive amongst the jiedushi. Gao has been looking to the south for years, gradually poisoning the court with rumours. I knew I had to strengthen my hold. If I wasn’t a threat, then I would have been destroyed long ago.’
Her knee brushed against his leg as she turned to him. He still couldn’t absorb the incongruity of having this enchanted creature here with him, among the dusty barracks.
‘Don’t you see? Gao pushed you to this,’ she insisted. ‘You played into the rumours.’
‘There was nothing that could be done for that. Gao’s family is of noble birth, intermarried with the imperial line in past generations. He’s always shunned those of the lower class who were elevated in rank.’
‘You’re wrong.’ She shook her head for emphasis. ‘Perhaps some of the other warlords feel that way, but not Gao. The reason is never personal for him. He’s very much like you, in that respect.’
His eyes found hers. ‘You seem to know much about Gao.’
A look of pain crossed her face and she started to make her escape, but he caught her gently. As gently as she would allow.
‘Do you think I would turn you away because of a past association?’ His arms closed around her. ‘I know you were somehow associated with Gao. It’s not unexpected, the way alliances are made and broken within the court.’
But now she was by his side. His.
Suyin finally ceased struggling and he lowered her on to the mattress of rugs and furs, laying himself alongside her. The discussion about Gao had stolen away her poise.
She lay stiff in his arms. ‘I escaped from Gao’s grasp long ago. He hoped to use me when I became the Emperor’s favourite. But I freed myself. I found a protector more powerful than Gao. I escaped.’
And now, years later, Gao wanted her dead. Anger flowed hot through his veins. Suyin was wrong. His reasons could be very personal.
‘Gao won’t ever come near you again,’ he vowed.
‘He uses others to achieve his goals. He never acts himself.’ Her voice sounded drained, listless. She blinked up, focusing on nothing in particular. ‘It’s madness to go to Shen, but it’s madness not to. I’m not certain this was the right path.’
‘I don’t know either,’ he said after a pause.
The men who served him were loyal, steadfast and followed orders impeccably. Suyin was the only person who ever questioned him without fear. She had made him realise that there was no way to win if he stayed in the south, barricaded in a defensive position. He’d defeat Gao’s first wave, only to be attacked by imperial forces as well as the other warlords who would swoop in like vultures for their share of the kill.
Gao was too powerful. Li Tao needed to do something unexpected to challenge him.
Suyin turned in his hold to nestle against his shoulder, and he pushed the thoughts of war to the corners of his mind. He fought these battles in his head all day and in his dreams. These moments of peace were his only luxury.
‘Tao, what made you change your mind?’
‘Isn’t it clear?’ His hand trailed a soothing path along her spine.
‘No,’ she whispered mournfully. ‘No, it’s never clear with you.’
He didn’t know what else she demanded. He shifted and took her face in his hands, kissing her with his lips pressed earnestly to hers.
She broke away. ‘You’ll never say the words.’
His muscles wound tight, as if he was readying himself for impending battle. He didn’t have an answer for her.
He kissed her again with a growing urgency, tasting her as she opened herself to him. He’d make love to her if he could. They could lose themselves in each other. The roughness of the bed would fade quickly.
But the warmth didn’t quicken into passion as it always did between them. Gradually Suyin sank against him, too exhausted to stay awake. He was weary as well. The day had been full of changes. Instead of removing her clothes, he brushed back her hair and pressed his lips to her forehead. Her breathing had grown heavy and he imagined she was already asleep.
The Dragon and the Pearl
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