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Chapter no 30 – Kazi

Dance of Thieves

When I had stirred in the predawn hours this morning, it was to a memory, a scent, a touch.ย Jase.ย He was kissing my neck; we danced beneath the moon; he pressed a wish stalk to my ankle; he was whispering about tomorrows. But when I opened my eyes to reach out for him, he wasnโ€™t there, and the nightmare of the night before flooded back in. Had I dreamed it all?

The horrible, cramping pain was gone, but when I wiggled my toes there was a stiff ache. I remembered Jaseโ€™s anger and his accusing questions, and when he walked through the door with a breakfast tray a few minutes later I braced myself for the worst. Instead, he set the tray on a side table and didnโ€™t mention the last part of the night at all, but the strain of what he wasnโ€™t saying showed in his stiff movements.

โ€œJase, about last nightโ€ฆโ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry for shouting,โ€ he said, โ€œespecially since you were in so much pain. I should have warned you about the dogs. Maybe then you wouldnโ€™t have slipped past the guards.โ€

Ah, there it was. An accusation couched in an apology. โ€œI didnโ€™t slip past the guards, Jase. I walked past them, and they didnโ€™t stop me. I guess with all the activity they didnโ€™t notice me. I didnโ€™t know I needed permission to visit the vault. Do I?โ€

A thousand questions swirled behind his eyes. He looked back at the tray, pouring me hot tea. โ€œI plan to take you right now. Are you up to it?โ€

Now? I knew my answer had to be yes. I quickly wolfed down my breakfast, and we left for the vault. I still had a limp, but it looked worse than it felt. Jase slowed his pace as we walked.

We turned down the first passageway and stopped about twenty yards in when we reached an enormous steel door. He spun the wheel in the middle of it, and it seemed forever before a loudย thunk,ย chink, andย whooshย sounded, like a hundred locks had slipped out of place.

โ€œStand back,โ€ he advised.

The door appeared far too large for him to pull back on his ownโ€”it was twice his height and wide enough for two wagons to pass throughโ€”but it moved easily at his touch. It swung open and open, like the endless maw of some ancient hungry beast, and revealed a dark cavern behind it. The musty age of the world behind the door reached out, gripping me with anticipation. If ghosts walked anywhere, it was here.

โ€œHold on,โ€ Jase said, and he slipped inside. I heard some stirring, and then a flicker of light was followed by a burst of illumination that lit the entire cavern with an eerie yellow glow.

He waved me in, explaining that there was a lighting system in here that used thousands of mirrors. A single lantern could light an entire room.

A hall lay before us that was roughly hewn from the granite mountain, and either side of it was lined with empty steel shelves. At least half of them were collapsed into heaps. Rusty girders jutted upward like broken bones.

โ€œThe family quarters are in better shape. This way,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat about that?โ€ I asked, pointing to another steel door.

โ€œWe call it the greenhouse,โ€ he said, โ€œbut itโ€™s just a cave. The only other way in is through a hole about a hundred feet up, but it lets in enough water and sunlight to keep the rest green.โ€ He said it was overgrown and a few animals like snakes, badgers, and squirrels that survived the fall through the hole lived inside. Once they encountered an injured Candok bear. The first Ballengers foraged in there and actually grew a few things to survive. โ€œIโ€™ll show you that another time. We donโ€™t go in unless weโ€™re armed with spears and nets.โ€

We turned down another passageway and came to a smaller, more ordinary door. Jase opened it and lit another lantern.

It wasnโ€™t what I expected. A chill crawled down my spine. The thick metal frames of hundreds of bunks lined the walls like an army barracks. A few were collapsed, but most stood at attention like they were still waiting for occupants. The mattresses were long eaten away, and wispy filaments hung from the frames like ghostly skirts. The smooth walls were an eerie mottled gray. โ€œWhat is this place?โ€ I finally asked.

โ€œThis is where it began,โ€ he answered. โ€œIt was a shelter meant for hundreds. Only twenty-three made it.โ€

โ€œBut the writing?โ€ I said as I walked down the aisle between the beds. Scrawled over every inch of the walls were words. Thousands of words written in a language I didnโ€™t know. Jase said it was the earliest version of Landese, which had changed over the centuries, but I did recognize names

โ€”those hadnโ€™t changed. I saw Miandre and Greyson. More names, Leesha, Reyn, Cameron, James, Theo, Fujiko, Gina, Razim.

โ€œIt was the last order of Aaron Ballengerโ€”to write it all down as well as they could remember. They did. There was no paper, so they used the walls. Thereโ€™s more. This way.โ€

He took me into another room, and another. A kitchen, a study, a sick room, all of it covered with words. There was no reason to where or how they wrote. Some sentences stretched the length of the room in large block letters. Others were tiny balls of sentences, barely readable.

โ€œAll of these rooms? Supplies? And there was no paper?โ€

โ€œThey burned it for fuel.โ€ He pointed to the empty shelves in the study. โ€œThese were probably filled with books. They were trapped inside for a long time. Scavengers waited for them outside.โ€

โ€œYou know what all these say?โ€

He nodded and looked at a group of words next to him. โ€œThis is one of my favorites.โ€ He translated it for me.

I hate Greyson. He looks over my shoulder as I write this. I want him to know. I hate him with the heat of a thousand fiery coals. He is cruel and savage and deserves to die.

โ€”Miandre, age 13

โ€œBut werenโ€™t theyโ€”โ€

Jase smirked. โ€œYears later. I guess she changed her mind.โ€

โ€œIt still doesnโ€™t say much for your revered leader.โ€

โ€œHe was fourteen. He kept them all alive. That says everything.โ€ โ€œWhy do they write their ages, after every entry?โ€ I asked.

โ€œThis might explain it.โ€ He crossed the room to the opposite wall and crouched to read an entry near the floor.

Today is Fujikoโ€™s birthday. Miandre made a cake from a ration of cornmeal. She says birthdays used to be celebrated and we must do the same because we donโ€™t know how many more we will have. Every year is a victory, she says.

After we eat the cake, I write all of our ages after our writings.

Someday we will all write 20, 30, or 40, I say to everyone. By then we will run out of walls, Miandre says.

By then we will have new walls, I answer.

It is the first time I have thought of a future in a world that has always been about After. Torโ€™s Watch is our new Beginning.

โ€”Greyson Ballenger, 15

โ€œDonโ€™t you think itโ€™s strange that they wrote their thoughts on the walls for everyone to see?โ€

โ€œI think everything about their lives was strange. Living in here was strange. Maybe when youโ€™re fighting to survive, you need to share things with other peopleโ€”even your deepest secrets.โ€

I knew it was no accident that his eyes landed back on me with his last few words. Digging. Did he still suspect something about my encounter with the dogs?

โ€œMaybe,โ€ I answered.

โ€œWe canโ€™t always judge a world by our own. I try to see it through their eyes, not mine.โ€

He walked to another wall and read more to me. Only six of those who lived in here were witness to the stars that fell. The rest were born later. Of the six, only a fewโ€”Greyson, Miandre, Leesha, and Razimโ€”had any memory of the world of the Ancients. They saw the ruins before they were ruins. They lived in the shining towers that reached into the sky, flew in

winged carriages, and remembered all manner of magic the Ancients controlled with their fingertipsโ€”the light, the voices, bending the laws of the earth, and soaring above it. One thing was certain, these were children leading and protecting other children from predators.

It explained a lot about the Ballengers.

It made me wonder if their claim was trueโ€”that they were the first kingdom. Torโ€™s Watch appeared to have begun less than a decade after the devastation. Morrighan was established six decades after that. The other kingdoms, centuries later. When Pauline had first told us histories that were different from the ones that Vendans knew, I remembered we had all been skeptical.

Jase crossed the room to read more entries on the wall.

They promised they would leave if we gave them supplies. Instead they stabbed Razim and tried to take more. We do not know if he will live. I cannot stand the weeping any longer. The vault is full of beds, but no weapons. I use tools to rip one apart and hoist the metal upward, testing it with my arm. If it were sharp, it would make a good spear, and hundreds of beds could make hundreds of spears.

โ€”Greyson, 15

Razim has recovered. He is an angrier and tougher Razim.

He sharpens spears all day long now. I help him. There will never be enough, because more scavengers always come.

โ€”Fujiko, 12

My grandfather was a great man and he ruled a great land. He has been dead for a year now. If we ever get out of here, I will go back to where he died and give him a proper burial. I will pile rocks high in his honor. I am not a savage as Miandre thinks, but sometimes Iโ€™m forced to make savage choices. There is a difference.

โ€”Greyson, 15

I looked up to see Jase studying me. He wasnโ€™t reading the passages to me, but reciting them from memory. His shoulders were leveled, his chin lifted, his stance like a wall that couldnโ€™t be moved.

โ€œWhy did you bring me here, Jase?โ€

โ€œI want you to know our history and understand a little bit more about who we are before we head out.โ€

โ€œHead out? What do you mean?โ€

He laid it out quickly. The supplies had come in, and we were leaving this morning for the settlement site. The timing was good. Things were quiet here for now, but still, he couldnโ€™t be gone for more than a day.

โ€œBut you saidโ€”โ€

โ€œNo more than a day, Kazi. I agreed to help. I will. Iโ€™ll dig a fence post or two and make sure the plans are set, but tomorrow morning I have to return to Torโ€™s Watch. My greater responsibilities are here. Iโ€™ve already been gone for too long. I canโ€™t turn right around and disappear for days again.โ€

โ€œAnd who will make sure the work gets done?โ€

โ€œOne of my brothers or someone else I trust will always be there supervising.โ€

I rolled my eyes. โ€œNot Gunner, I hope.โ€ โ€œHeโ€™ll do as I ask.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s right. Youโ€™reย Patrei. Just so you know, the Vendans arenโ€™t impressed by titles.โ€

โ€œThen we have something in common.โ€

* * *

As we left the vault, I paused and looked down the opposite wayโ€” somewhere at the end of this long, dark tunnel was a locked door, poisonous dogs, and maybe poisonous secrets.

โ€œGo ahead,โ€ Jase said. โ€œAsk.โ€ โ€œWhatโ€™s behind the door?โ€

โ€œUs, Kazi. We are behind the door. Thereโ€™s nothing on the other side. Itโ€™s only another portal into and out of Torโ€™s Watch. Every good stronghold has more than one way out. Otherwise you could be trapped. It leads to a path

that goes down the back side of Torโ€™s Watch. Itโ€™s narrow and more treacherous, but itโ€™s a way out. Or in. We have to keep it guarded.โ€

An exit? I had imagined something far more sinister on the other side of the door, like a large dark room with Illarion sitting in the center of it hiding from the world. I thought back to the ambassador I had mistakenly stabbed, and the face I had searched for over and over again that never materialized. I wondered if the captain could be an elusive ghost too, not hiding behind any doors, as far from this world as the face that haunted me.

The thin line of light I saw could have been from sunlight shining behind it. And I had felt a draft coming from beneath it. Maybe it added up. Maybe it was a simple portal, guarded by dogs just as the front gates were.

โ€œWhen we get back, Iโ€™ll show you. There isnโ€™t time now.โ€

I nodded. Pushing the point would reveal I had been searching for something and not just lost, and since he was open to showing me, it didnโ€™t appear that he was hiding anything.

But when we reached the main tunnel, I noticed there was a guard stationed at the entrance who hadnโ€™t been there before.

โ€œA new guard?โ€ I asked.

โ€œThereโ€™s always been a guard posted here. He must have just stepped away when you passed by yesterday.โ€

* * *

With every mile we traveled, the tension grew thicker. Jase rode ahead with his brothers. More followed behind usโ€”strazaย and drivers with empty wagons to haul Vendans and their belongings to the new site. Jalaine and Priya had wanted to come too, but Jase said he needed their muscle keeping an eye on the books and trades at the arena more than he needed them stringing together chicken coops or digging fence posts.

Even Aram and Samuel, who were by far the most convivial of the boys, were stiff-backed and mostly silent. They had only looked back at Wren once. It was clear now that what Jase wanted me to understand this morning was that though the Ballengers would fulfill their end of the agreement, they werenโ€™t going to pretend to be happy about it.

โ€œIt should be quite a jolly time when we dish up dinner tonight,โ€ Synovรฉ quipped. Jase had insisted Wren and Synovรฉ come too, as additional buffers

between the Ballengers and settlers.

It was difficult for the three of us to talk freely as we rode. A brisk wind at our backs carried our words forward.

โ€œLooks like youโ€™ve lost some admirers,โ€ I whispered. Wren snorted like she didnโ€™t care.

โ€œDid you ever figure out who was who?โ€ I asked.

โ€œEasy,โ€ Wren answered. โ€œSamuel has longer lashes than Aram. From the back, itโ€™s all about hair curl.โ€ She motioned to the boys riding on either side of Mason. โ€œSamuel on right. Aram on left.โ€

Both of them had straight hair.

Synovรฉ and I looked at each other, mystified, then laughed.

As disgruntled as the Ballenger boys were about the day, Synovรฉ was ebullient. She didnโ€™t worry about her voice being carried, and in fact, that was sometimes entirely her point. She talked about the extreme foolishness of keeping poisonous dogs, the superiority of Vendan steel, and how perfectly well her dress fit last night, as smooth as butter. Most of her taunts were aimed at Mason. He completely ignored her, but his reactions could still be seen in the tilt of his head, as if he was working to get a kink out of his neck. She talked about his finesse as a dancer, that he would be good if it wasnโ€™t for his four feet. They were quite large and always getting in the way.

โ€œAnd look at that,โ€ Synovรฉ said loudly. โ€œI wish someone would make him stop. He canโ€™t keep his eyes off me!โ€

Mason predictably shook his head in frustration, certainly counting the miles until we reached the settlement. We all silently giggled.

As we neared the Vendan settlement midmorning, Jase galloped back to where I rode. It was agreed that he should approach the settlement with me at his side, while his brothers and the rest hung backโ€”including hisย straza

โ€”so we didnโ€™t look like a hostile army descending upon them.

โ€œItโ€™s time. Weโ€™re getting close,โ€ he said, and I rode forward with him.

His jaw was clenched. This went against everything he believed. He saw it as rewarding people who had trespassed.

โ€œRemember, Jase. Itโ€™s not officially your land. Itโ€™s part of the Cam Lanteux and was granted to them by the King of Eislandia. They have a reason to be angry too.โ€

I knew it was a sore spot for him, but it had to be said. Just as he had wanted me to understand the mindset of his family this morning, I needed him to understand the mindset of Caemus and the others. He was not going to be greeted with open arms or gratitude.

He was silent and his eyes remained fixed on the rolling hills, waiting for the settlement to emerge from behind one of them.

โ€œHowโ€™s your ankle?โ€ he finally asked. โ€œBetter than your jaw.โ€

He turned and looked at me. โ€œWhat?โ€ โ€œStop clenching it.โ€

His eyes were ice, and his jaw remained rigid.

At last, the settlement came into view. Our long line of horses and wagons had to be a formidable sight. One by one, settlers gathered in front of their homes carrying hoes, shovels, and pikes. When we were still a good distance off, Jase raised his hand to the line of those behind us as a signal to stop and wait.

As we neared, Jase stopped to look at the barn, burned down to the timbers, a hulking skeleton ready to fall over in a stiff wind. His eyes swept the charred sheds next, and then the pens that were noticeably empty. Only a few chickens pecked and scratched near a trough. The scorched grass reached all the way to the homes. The only thing that was green was the small vegetable garden we had seen Caemus hoeing the last time we were here. The settlers looked like they were ready to defend it to the death.

โ€œWatavo, kadravรฉs!โ€ I called. โ€œSava Kazi vi Brightmist. Le ne porchio kege Patrei Jase Ballenger ashea te terrema. Oso torโ€”โ€

Caemus glared at Jase. โ€œRiz liet fikatande chaba vi daka renad!โ€

I looked at Jase but didnโ€™t dare translate. โ€œHeโ€™s happy to see you,โ€ I said. Jase scowled and got down from his horse, bypassing my mediation.

โ€œYou understand Landese?โ€ he asked Caemus. โ€œWe understand,โ€ Caemus answered.

โ€œGood. And I know enough Vendan to know when Iโ€™ve been called a horseโ€™s ass. Letโ€™s get this straight right now, Caemus. Iโ€™m going to offer you a deal, and itโ€™s a helluva one. But itโ€™s only good for this minute, right now, right here, and it will never happen again because I hope to never lay eyes on you again after today. Weโ€™re going to move you. Everything. And weโ€™re going to rebuild your settlement on a better piece of land thatโ€™s far away

from us.โ€ Jase spit the terms and details out firmly, then took another long, scrutinizing scan of the burned buildings. โ€œWe took your shorthorn as payment for trespassing, but we didnโ€™t do this and donโ€™t know who did. Weโ€™ll try to make sure it doesnโ€™t happen again, but if you ever wrongly accuse us again, itโ€™s going to be more than a barn that you lose. Accept or not?โ€

Before Caemus could answer, a small boy whoโ€™d been standing behind him ran forward wielding a stick and swung it into Jaseโ€™s knee with a loudย smack.

Jase bent over, wincing, cursing, grabbing his knee with one hand and yanking the boy by the collar with the other. โ€œYou littleโ€”โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t hurt him!โ€ Caemus said, stepping forward.

Jase looked puzzled by Caemusโ€™s command but turned his attention back to the boy. โ€œWhatโ€™s your name?โ€ he growled.

The boy was smaller than Nash, and even though an angry man held him by his collar, his large brown eyes were still full of defiance. โ€œKerry of Fogswallow!โ€ he snapped back.

โ€œWell, Kerry of Fogswallow, you are personally going to help me dig fence posts. A lot of them. Understand?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not afraid of you!โ€

Jaseโ€™s eyes narrowed. โ€œThen I guess Iโ€™ll have to work harder on that.โ€

The boyโ€™s eyes grew just a little bit wider. Jase released him, and the boy ran back behind Caemus.

โ€œWe accept,โ€ Caemus said.

I heaved out a controlled sigh. As Synovรฉ might say, this was off to a jolly start.

The next hour was spent walking the property, taking inventory, assessing what was salvageable, loading up tools and chickens, grains and crates, dishes and people. As the brothers surveyed the grounds, I sensed there was a sobering awareness of how little time it took to collect all the Vendansโ€™ worldly goods. At times, Jase simply stared, as if he was trying to figure out why they were here at all. He eyed the tethers of bones hanging from their hips too. Vendans didnโ€™t wear them into town because of the attention they drew, but here the bones clattered at their sides as a remembrance of sacrifice.

Wren, Synovรฉ, and I quickly helped a few women pluck ripe beans from the garden, dig up root vegetables, and then layer them into barrels with straw. We pulled up the herbs, root balls and all, and placed them in crates for replanting later. Anything that could go would go. As we worked, I spotted Jase, Gunner, and Mason walking up a hill some distance away. It seemed odd because there was nothing out thereโ€”no outbuildings or livestock. They carried rocks in their hands, and when they reached the crest they placed them on a mound of rocks that I hadnโ€™t noticed before.

When they returned from the hill, I asked Jase about it. He said it was a memorial marking the spot where Greyson Ballenger had covered his dead grandfather with rocks to keep animals from dragging away the body.

* * *

The new site was fifteen miles south, but with so many wagons, supplies, and horses, it took the whole afternoon to get there. On the long ride, Jase and I rode at the head of the caravan together. He was mostly quiet, still stewing over something.

โ€œSo you understand some Vendan after all?โ€ I asked.

He shook his head and smirked. โ€œNo, but some words donโ€™t need interpretation. Itโ€™s all in the delivery.โ€

โ€œWell, you were astonishingly accurate. I guess itโ€™s not hard to interpret a club to the knee either. Howโ€™s it doing?โ€

โ€œI have a decent knot. Iโ€™m lucky the little demon didnโ€™t crack my kneecap.โ€

โ€œI guess heโ€™s the lucky one, getting off with digging fence posts.โ€

โ€œItโ€™ll be good for him. Weโ€™ll feed everyone first. They canโ€™t dig on empty stomachs.โ€ He reached around behind him and began rummaging through his pack. โ€œI almost forgot. I meant to give this to you earlier.โ€ He handed me a small lidded basket. โ€œGo ahead. Open it.โ€

I pulled the lid off and gawked at the small square. โ€œIs this what I thinkโ€ฆโ€ I put my nose close to take a deep whiff.

โ€œSage cake,โ€ Jase confirmed.

โ€œYou remembered!โ€ I broke off a corner and shoved it in my mouth. I moaned with pleasure. It was every bit as heavenly as I recalled. I licked the crumbs from my fingers. โ€œHere,โ€ I said, leaning over and popping a piece

into his mouth. He nodded approval, swallowing, but clearly not loving it as much as I did. โ€œHow?โ€ I asked. โ€œDid Doliseโ€”โ€

โ€œNo. I hired a new cook. You can thank her yourself when we get back to Torโ€™s Watch.โ€

* * *

We entered a wide, gentle valley. Low, forest-covered hills were on one side, a meandering river on the other, and dark lush grass not yet brown with summer waved beneath us. When I spotted the supply wagons in the distance, I knew this was the site. By now Caemus was riding at our sides, and we all paused, taking it in. It was breathtaking. Caemus got down from his horse and grabbed a spade from a wagon. He shoved it into the earth and turned it over, revealing a chunk of dark, rich, loamy soil. It crumbled easily as he passed the spade over it. I remembered him hoeing the hard clay ground at the other site.

He looked up at Jase, his expression stern. โ€œGood soil.โ€ โ€œI know,โ€ Jase answered.

The rest of the Vendans poured out of the wagons, walking the rest of the way. I watched them stoop, feeling the ground, running their hands over the grass. The scent here was fresh and full of promise.

I got down from my horse too and walked in circles, taking in every view. A nearby forest for hunting and wood. A close abundant water source. Good soil and level land. Some stately oaks in the center to provide shade. I looked back at Jase, still in his saddle, my throat swelling. Caemus and I had both doubted him.

โ€œItโ€™s perfect, Jase. Perfect.โ€

โ€œNot perfect. But theyโ€™ll get better production. And itโ€™s a tucked-away valley. They wonโ€™t be bothered here.โ€

Like they were at the last site. I believed Jase, and I think maybe Caemus did too. It wasnโ€™t the Ballengers who had attacked the settlers. But whoever did wanted it to look like them.

I watched the Vendans continuing to walk down the valley. I saw the wonder in their footsteps, and a different kind of wonder crept into me. This site was far superior to the last one. Was the Eislandian king really so inept and uninformed about the northern reaches that he randomly chose the old

site? Was it only coincidence that it happened to be close to Torโ€™s Watch and in clear view of the Ballenger rock memorial? Or was it a deliberate choice, meant to stir trouble? To be a burr in the saddle of the family? Was that his revenge for not getting the full bounty of the taxes the Ballengers collected?

Jase surveyed the valley, calculations already spinning behind his eyes. He was far more invested in this than he would admit. The emotion that had swelled in my throat now crept to my chest.

What is this?

The answer was never as close to my lips as it was now.

โ€œWe should catch up,โ€ he said. โ€œThereโ€™s only a few good hours of daylight left, and I want to get some of the settlement layout established with Caemus. I have some ideas where the barn should go. And I promised you a fence post. I want to dig that much before I leave in the morning.โ€

โ€œYou have Kerry to help you now too.โ€

He rubbed his knee and his mouth twisted with a malevolent grin. โ€œYes, Iโ€™ll keep the little urchin busy.

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