Paladin's Faith (The Saint of Steel, #4)

Wren, once Shane released her, picked up her axe and cleaned it, face blank and lifeless. Her eyes looked like holes in her skin.

Marguerite wanted to go to her, but cold practicality exerted itself. Getting the door open will keep us all alive.

“Davith,” Marguerite murmured. “Do you want me to try that?”

“What are they?” he asked in a clipped whisper, ignoring the question.

“What?”

“Them. Those aren’t ordinary bodyguards.” One of the picks bent and he pressed his lips together until they went white.

“No.” She thought about lying, but there didn’t seem to be much point now. She glanced over her shoulders. Shane had picked up his broken sword and was studying it. After a moment, he slid what was left of it back in its sheath. “They’re paladins of the Saint of Steel.”

“The Saint of…” Davith rested his forehead against the door and gave a single bark of laughter.

“Of course those would be your bodyguards. That’s almost brilliant, in a twisted sort of way.”

Marguerite did not feel particularly brilliant at the moment. “Move over,” she said. “Let me give the lock a try.”

He yielded. She worked the lock carefully. It wasn’t difficult, but the mechanism was heavy and required a sure hand. She realized that she was holding her breath, a lousy habit, and took a deep, deliberate breath, whereupon the lock popped open as if it had been waiting for an excuse.

“I loosened that jar lid for you,” muttered Davith.





“Sure you did,” she said, rising to her feet. “Come on. I can’t imagine they’ve got many more people to send after us, but I don’t want to find out that I’m wrong.”

Wren nodded mechanically and went through the door, her face still blank. Marguerite took a step after her, lifting a hand to touch her shoulder.

Shane caught her arm. His gauntlets were caked in gore, but Marguerite refused to flinch away.

This is what it looks like when men die. This is what the game you play costs. You don’t get to look away.

She looked from his mailed hand up to his face and waited for him to apologize for Wren, or for not stopping Wren, or maybe for not killing everyone even faster. He had that look that usually preceded an apology.

Instead he leaned forward, his lips almost at her ear, and said softly, “You asked me once what paladins knew of darkness.”

Marguerite’s breath went out in a long sigh and she felt unexpectedly ashamed. “I’m sorry,” she said, almost inaudibly. “I knew, but I didn’t understand.”

He nodded and released her. Marguerite moved to the front of the party and glanced back to see him guarding the back, as remote and unreachable as a star.

NO ONE TRIED to stop them on their way out. The door led to another storage room, and then another much larger one. There were several large elevators, apparently for moving supplies up from the docks, and several more sets of stairs. Laborers were working there by torchlight. Marguerite paused in the shadows, considering her options. Sneak past? All those stairs are in use, can’t imagine we’d make it. Pretend like we belong here? I’ve got two people covered in armor and other people’s blood.

“Right,” she said, turning back to the others. “We’re just going to brazen it out. You all with me?”

She met Wren’s eyes in particular. The other woman took a deep breath and squared her shoulders. Marguerite could actually see her take the horror and shove it away somewhere else, a trick she recognized because she had done it herself so many times.

“I’m with you,” Wren said. And then, to a space six inches to the right of Davith’s head, “I’m sorry about what happened earlier.”

Davith shrugged. “Eh,” he said, “I probably deserved it. Let’s just get out of here in one piece.”

Marguerite didn’t know if he genuinely meant it or if he was simply trying to appease someone who had come perilously close to putting an axe into his head. Probably it didn’t matter. People will remember that he was with us, so he’s a dead man walking if the Sail gets to him.

“Okay.” She looked over the two paladins, both of whom were splattered with other people’s blood. (Well, Shane was splattered. Wren looked as if she’d been bathing in it. It was something of an education in the difference between axe and sword fighting.) “Wren, take my cloak and try to hide

some of that blood. Shane, you’re going to be drunk. Davith, take one side of him. Wren, stick close behind us and look apologetic.”

For some reason she expected Shane to argue about pretending to be drunk, but he nodded, slung his arm over Davith’s shoulders, and leaned heavily on the smaller man.

“Ooof!” Davith said. “Are you a paladin or a side of beef?” Shane smiled and leaned harder.

Marguerite took Shane’s other arm and led him directly toward the widest set of stairs. “Pardon,”

she said to the first person who noticed them, “but can you point me to the fastest way outside? My friend here really needs some air.”

“M’fine,” mumbled Shane.

“Buddy, you are so far from fine that you can’t see fine from here,” Davith told him.

The laborer looked from Shane back to Marguerite, who gave her most winning and apologetic smile. “He’s had a bit much to drink.”

“Have not.”

“How did you even get down here?” the man wanted to know.

“Stairs,” said Davith grimly. “So many goddamn stairs. He refused to do the elevators, so I had to carry him—yes, I’m talking about you, you sod.”

“M’ fine.”

“I told you, man, she wasn’t worth it. No woman’s worth this.”

Shane’s grip on Davith’s shoulders briefly resembled a headlock. Davith coughed. “Come on, man, your breath would kill a horse.”

Marguerite didn’t know whether to bless Davith or strangle him herself. “Please?” she said to the laborer. “He’s a tame duelist and we really don’t want his boss to see him like this.”

“Oh, aye, I can see that.” The man’s lip curled and he waved an arm. “Take the left staircase.

Don’t want him getting underfoot on the main one.”

“You are a life saver,” said Marguerite fervently, and began steering Shane toward the stairs in question. The paladin stumbled a little too theatrically and she gritted her teeth.

No one else tried to stop them, although heads turned to watch their progress. Marguerite kept up a line of patter, not even listening to herself. “Come on, come on, you can do it, just a little farther, some fresh air will do you a world of good…”

And then, just like that, they were down the stairs and through the door and out of the fortress.

Out, thought Marguerite, with unspeakable relief, as the night air touched their faces. Free. Now we just get to the docks, find a captain we can bribe to take us across the lake without dropping us over the side halfway through, and we’ll be on the road and well away before anyone finds those bodies.

They hurried along the narrow wharf, no longer bothering to be stealthy. Speed was more important now. Marguerite pointed, and they rounded a stack of crates, onto the dock dedicated to lake traffic.

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