Adept (The Essence Gate War, Book 1) - By Michael Arnquist Page 0,159

his dark, deep-set eyes darted to each of them before settling upon the plate of uneaten food upon the table.

“He’s right, Horek,” the first man rasped. “You risk Borric’s wrath upon all our heads by tarrying overlong, and none of us want that. The Cap’n could flay the bark from a tree at twenty paces with that razor tongue of his, am I right?”

The man’s face split into a lop-sided grin, and Horek found himself relaxing into an answering smile. Borric’s scoldings were indeed things of legend, and it was true that he wanted no part of one directed at him.

“Hell’s breath, but that is true enough,” he said with a chuckle. “Perhaps we had better go at that, lad.” He walked toward the door, and noticed the burly second newcomer still eyeing his plate.

“You are welcome to the food, if you’ve a mind,” Horek told him. “I’ll not have time to finish it, it seems.”

“That’s a good fellow,” the scar-faced man said. He slipped around Horek and strode toward the window. “Before you go, however, can you show me what you saw out there? The Cap’n sure enough was saying something about it, now you mention it, and I’d like to see what all the fuss is about.”

Sivrin turned back toward the window, chattering and pointing. Horek watched them, frowning once more. The nape of his neck prickled with apprehension; the feeling that something was terribly amiss had returned, even more urgent than before. He watched the scar-faced man looking over Sivrin’s shoulder and out the window, heard his friendly murmuring as he conversed with the excited lad. His gaze roved over the man, looking for something out of place, and fell to a bright scarlet dot on the floor by his boot heel.

Horek froze. He found another teardrop of crimson gathered at the bottom of the man’s scabbard, and his eyes traced the rivulet of red up the length of the scabbard to where a thin line of crimson welled from the top, just below the cross-guard of the sword’s hilt. The sound he had heard earlier from below suddenly echoed in his head, the sound that might have been the end of a brief scuffle, the sound that just might have been a well-muffled cry.

“Sivrin, on your guard!” he shouted.

A searing pain ripped through his chest, and he looked down in shock to see a foot of gleaming steel protruding from his chest, streaked with his own blood. As he stared, gaping, the blade slithered back into his chest and was gone. The floor tilted crazily and rose to meet him with a cold, stinging slap. He lay with his check pressed against the stone, amazed at the crushing force that bound him there.

He had landed facing the window, and thus was rewarded with a view of Sivrin’s actions. The lad reacted with remarkable speed, spinning away from the scar-faced man and batting away a dagger thrust. Sivrin drew his blade and lunged to engage the man. The scar-faced man’s bloody sword leapt from its scabbard, and steel rang on steel. Horek felt a thrill of fatherly pride at the young man’s skill; he had trained the lad well.

His vision was momentarily obscured as the heavy tread of the second intruder––his killer––passed over his inert form. He cursed inwardly at being screened thus from the action. The man was so big that he was blocking the very light and casting the room into shadow. No, he realized as a slow chill spread throughout his limbs, that was not the case. Rather, it was his own vision growing dimmer by the second, and this time it was not his aging eyes to blame.

He hoped the lad was giving them hell. By then, his sight had narrowed into a hazy tunnel such that all he could discern was the blurred shuffle of booted feet back and forth across the floor, punctuated by the clash of steel and pants of effort. A sudden sharp cry brought silence in its wake, and another form tumbled heavily to the floor. Wide, clear blue eyes stared back at him, unblinking amid their youthful countenance, and beads of blood trailed across Sivrin’s unwhiskered cheek.

The action came to you at last, lad, Horek thought sadly. Was it all that you wished?

His vision darkened even more, at once both cruel and merciful in that he could no longer see Sivrin’s face. So much like children, the new recruits. So much…

The scar-faced man spat an oath as

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