two men wearing masks. That’s all I saw. What do we do now?”
“We wait. He’s an interrogator, one of the best. They make the prisoners do the hard work. He’ll leave her alone so she can think about what he’s done, and what he’s going to do. We’ll move while he’s resting, and she’s helpless.”
“You’re beasts, all templars, every last one of you,” Yohan murmured. “Worse than beasts. You’ve got no conscience.”
Pavek didn’t argue.
They waited, listening, hoping Escrissar would end the torment for the night, and expecting that the midnight gong would strike at any time. Getting through the streets to the wall-passage would be much more difficult and dangerous after curfew. Then, without warning, the moment came: the light in Akashia’s prison dimmed through the tracery and two black-robed men, one quite tall, the other noticeably shorter, came along the corridor. They held their breaths and looked away, lest a flash of light reflecting off an open eye would give them away.
“Let’s go.”
The lightweight tracery panels of precious wood came out easily. They moved into the corridor. Pavek and Yohan unsheathed the long obsidian knives Telhami had provided for them. Ruari, who admitted no skill with edged weapons but claimed to have learned something about picking locks from his elven relations, went a half-step ahead. The mechanical lock was simple and the door flimsy enough that they could have battered it down with little trouble, but Ruari was quieter and almost as quick. Using a fragile contraption of straw and sinew, he eased the bolt free. It struck the floor behind the door with a thunk that common sense insisted was no where near as loud as it seemed to three jittery men in the corridor.
Ruari reached for the handle. Both Pavek and Yohan grabbed him before he clasped it and pulled him aside. The door swung toward them of its own weight. Standing out of harm’s way, Pavek caught the handle with the tip of his knife. He let it swing open.
“Kashi?” he whispered.
“Pavek!”
The voice was feminine, but the woman who came out of the room with a short-sword in her hand wasn’t Akashia.
“Dovanne.” The only light came from a oil flame inside the room, but Dovanne with her cropped hair and serpent-circled arm was unmistakable.
She’d been the lamp-bearing templar who’d gone down the corridor. He hadn’t seen her face or her arm. Still, if they had to face a templar guard, she was the best they could have hoped for. Dovanne took one look at him and came on guard behind her sword. She didn’t care about Ruari and Yohan dashing past to rescue Akashia. She didn’t care about anything except spilling his guts on the floor and wouldn’t sound an alarm or call for help until she was finished with him.
Dovanne, being smaller, had a slight advantage in the confined space of the corridor, but otherwise they were evenly matched. Her iron sword had a guard that offered some protection for her wrist. It also had a curved blade and had been sharpened along the outer edge only. His obsidian knife was a composite weapon, cheaper than metal, but every bit as deadly, with curved wedges of sharp black glass carefully fitted into a straight, laminated wood-and-sinew blade. It was long as her short-sword, had a naked hilt, and was razor-sharp along both edges and at the point.
She feinted first, a probing cut toward his weapon-side wrist. He parried and she withdrew. The blades sang—gray metal against glassy stone—but softly: neither of them wanted to attract attention. He dropped his guard two hand-spans, inviting an attack. She remembered that move from the countless times they’d bouted against each other while they were friends.
“Take a chance,” he taunted in a hoarse whisper. “You always said I was slow.”
Yohan and Ruari had gotten Akashia unbound and were trying—without much success by the sound of it—to get her on her feet. Dovanne heard the same sounds and belatedly realized what was happening in the room, what would happen to her if she failed her duty to Escrissar.
Beginning her attack with a low slash to his off-weapon thigh, which he had to parry, Dovanne tucked and rolled into Akashia’s room—“Yohan!” he shouted as loudly as he dared. She came up to her feet with the sword poised for a downward slice—
Into Yohan’s obsidian blade as Pavek came through the door.
He knew her well enough to see the thoughts forming behind her eyes: two against one. She was going to call