the commander of the Blackguard again?” Disbelief.
“Seems like.”
Ironfist’s jaw tightened with suppressed emotion. “There are others who can do the job.”
“Oh, I know, you’re not that special,” Dazen said. “But I already offered it to all of them. Every last one said they’d love the job, but they’d rather serve under you instead. Threatened to resign en masse if you didn’t get it, actually. So if you don’t take the post, the Blackguard is finished. It’ll be a hundred years before it recovers. If ever.”
Ironfist’s lips compressed, and his forehead tightened. He whispered, “They didn’t really . . .”
“They did. But honestly, I don’t think they like you that much. I think they just really want a chance to hit you with one of those Blackguard Names. You know, one of those sort-of-respectful, more-kind-of-mocking things?”
“They want to change my Name?”
“Yeah, I dunno, maybe Ironfist’s too flashy and original for ’em. I don’t know if they conspired on this or what—they’re so insubordinate sometimes—but you’d have to accept the new Name if you came back.”
“Do you know what it is?”
“Yeah.”
“Well?”
“I think they’re gonna call you ‘Rex.’ ”
Ironfist laughed, then winced. “ ‘Commander Rex’? Those little shits!”
But the man seemed to glow. He was suddenly soaking all of this up, a great treasure of joy that he would examine later. His Blackguards meant so much to him, and that they loved him still was favor he didn’t believe he merited. It was precious to him beyond all words.
Then he pressed his lips together, and his eyes hollowed. “I miss ’em,” he said. “All of ’em we lost the day you made this.” He gestured to the white luxin. “And since. My sister. And my brother most of all.”
“Me, too,” Dazen said quietly.
“So is that it?”
“There is a condition,” Dazen said, taking Ironfist’s acceptance for granted.
“Yeah, I figured,” Ironfist said. “Several, I guessed. You are still a Guile.”
The truth was, if Dazen hadn’t been at least a little bit of an asshole as he delivered his offer, he knew that Ironfist would get stuck in his own head, and might actually have turned it down. Being an asshole about it directed Ironfist’s gaze outward, to the job, to the people who needed him, to the personalities he saw himself needing to rein in.
But that was fine. Dazen could pretend to be an asshole when required.
Pretend.
He said, “There’s just the one condition—well, for me. A few other people have to sign off on this, and they might really need convincing, but you know what? I am really convincing.”
“Hadn’t noticed that about you,” Ironfist said.
“So here’s the thing,” Dazen said as if it pained him. “I need you to get up, like, right now, while everyone’s distracted with the big wedding spectacle, and come do that thing with me.”
“ ‘That thing’?” Ironfist asked, sitting up more in bed. He was trying to look irritated, but Dazen could tell he was on the hook already. A man like Ironfist needed to be needed, needed to be active, or he’d just die. “You mean that adventure? I thought you were joking.”
“Nope. Has to be you. Has to be now, while everyone’s distracted.”
Ironfist hesitated. “What are you going to do with the Blinding Knife while everyone’s distracted?”
“We, you mean. As in ‘What are we going to do?’ ”
“No, I meant you. I’m not touching that thing.”
“Right, agreed. That’s fine. And I meant you’re going to help me get there to do what I have to do. So you can parse that as us doing it or as me doing it while you help me, I mean, whatever floats your—”
“Gavin!”
“Dazen.”
“Whatever!”
“Well, here’s the thing. You’ve been there, too, like I have. And there’s no one else I can trust to not succumb to them. And we’ve only got one chance to do this. Any other time, and I’m afraid they’d have allies show up. I know you don’t feel well right now. And regardless of how good I look, I’m not at my full strength, either, so I guess we’ll just be wounded warlords together.”
“ ‘Wounded warriors,’ you mean?”
“Eh, you and me? Come on. We’re a bit more than just ‘warriors,’ don’t you think?”
“Just shut up and tell me.”
Dazen finally got serious. “It’s now or never. I’ve always been proud, Harrdun. I’ve always wanted my greatness to be known, to be acknowledged. This? This will be the greatest thing I ever do, and no one will ever know it. That’s my penance. Or at least my way of showing I’ve