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Chapter no 78

We Free the Stars (Sands of Arawiya, 2)

Six safin were dead. The number itself was insignificant, but this was no casualty of one of Altairโ€™s wars. It was slaughter in the main jumuโ€™a of Sultanโ€™s Keep, a square meant for decrees and announcements, a place where his baby brotherโ€™s birth was once celebrated.

All six of the safin had been gutted, their innards smeared across the gray stone, arms stretched and pinned across erect beams, eyes gouged by eager predators. Altair sensed a reason behind such specificity, but it was yet another detail his father hadnโ€™t confided in him. Hundreds of stones littered the ground, tainted red.

The messenger, panting and shivering in Demenhurโ€™s cold, hadnโ€™t skimped on a single detail.

They were being punished for abandoning Arawiya after magic disappeared, the new king proclaimed. It should have wrought horror in the hearts of people, a leader fresh on the throne establishing his rule with vitriol and violence. Instead, delight was widespread, and it was only then that Altair realized how angry ordinary Arawiyans had been. They had craved justice long enough that the form in which it was achieved ceased to matter.

The second messenger arrived immediately after, reiterating Haythamโ€™s message of a swath of darkness bleeding across Sarasinโ€™s skies, confirming their suspicions that the new caliph was indeed an ifrit wearing the mortal skin of the merchant Muzaffar. There was no other reason the caliphate remained silent as fiery-staved ifrit trampled people and, worst of all, children left and right. Confusion held them in a transitory restraint as they waited for their caliph to act on their behalf.

Chaos Altair could handle, but it was this careful upending from the root that unnerved him, for everything Altair and Benyamin had worked for was slowly beginning to unravel.

โ€œIf you grip that beam any tighter, the entire palace might fall on us,โ€ Kifah called over the continuousย whip, whip, whipย of her spear.

If there was one thing that drove Altairโ€™s mind to red, raging anger, it was the death of children, the senseless loss of innocence.

He loosened his grip andโ€”hating that he had to turn his entire head to see whatever was on his leftโ€”looked to Nasir, only to find the prince absent. Akhh, so that was why he was more silent than usual.

โ€œWhereโ€™d he go?โ€

Kifah shrugged. โ€œIโ€™m not his mother.โ€

Altair scowled and left the war room with its collection of unfurled maps and plans that had once been used to thwart him and his armies. Or to attempt to do so, at least. Altair wasnโ€™t a prize general for nothing. Oh, how the tables had turned. Here he was in Demenhur, bumping noses with the caliphโ€™s wazir and befriending generals heโ€™d once leveled swords with in battle.

The Demenhune palace was thick with fear. The dignitaries were adamant in their attempts to leave, fearful that ifrit were coming for them, that they were next on the Lionโ€™s list to be halved like fish on a board. Altair had almost laughed. If only they knew the truth.

โ€œWe need to discuss Zafira,โ€ Kifah said, somehow following his line of thought.

โ€œSheโ€™s not some โ€ฆย thingย to be discussed.โ€ โ€œYou know what I mean.โ€

โ€œJust as you know that thereโ€™s nothing we can do,โ€ Altair said tiredly.

Kifah sighed. โ€œWe canโ€™t shut her away. If it was really the Jawarat that made her kill him, she needs us.โ€

She needed them regardless. She was their friend. A small girl stepped into the hall and stopped short at the sight of him. He recognized her sharp featuresโ€”sheโ€™d been in the room the night before, staring unflinchingly at the caliphโ€™s mutilated corpse. There was something about the way she held herself that reminded him vaguely of Aya, but he brushed it away.

โ€œPeace unto you. Howโ€™s Zafira?โ€ he asked.

โ€œWhy do you ask?โ€ she replied defensively, studying him with warm brown eyes.

โ€œIโ€™m her friend.โ€

โ€œA friend wouldnโ€™t have abandoned her the way you did.โ€

Shame burned his neck. Heโ€™d been meaning to see her. To make sense of what sheโ€™d done. He hadnโ€™tโ€”sultanโ€™s teeth.

โ€œShe left,โ€ the girl continued. โ€œDonโ€™t lie.โ€

โ€œLying is dishonorable,โ€ she said in dismay.

If heโ€™d had any doubts before, he was utterly certain now that the girl was Zafiraโ€™s sister, and he was this close to demanding an answer at swordpoint.

He crouched. โ€œIf you tell me, little one, Iโ€™ll ask the kitchens for an extra piece of kanafah just for you.โ€

She lifted an eyebrow at him. โ€œIโ€™m fourteen, and I can weave a needle through your remaining eyelid.โ€

Altair burst out laughing and threw a glance at Kifah. โ€œAs Iskandar as they come. Sheโ€™s โ€ฆ quite small for fourteen.โ€

โ€œMy name is Lana. Andย youย are quite large,โ€ she replied.

โ€œNot an insult,โ€ he said with a grin, and Kifah groaned. โ€œWhat do you mean โ€˜she leftโ€™?โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s going to find a lion.โ€

It took him a moment to realize that Lana had said โ€œtheโ€ and not โ€œa,โ€ and that this lion was decidedly not a cat. Altair was suddenly very, very tired.

โ€œSo sheโ€™s heading to Sultanโ€™s Keep?โ€ Lana nodded.

โ€œAlone? She shouldnโ€™t even be able toโ€”โ€ He stopped at her wide-eyed look and dragged a hand down his face.ย Khara.ย โ€œI should have kept that boy on a leash.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s the crown prince.โ€ Lana sniffed, offended on behalf of a fool she didnโ€™t even know.

โ€œCrown prince myโ€”โ€ Kifah cleared her throat.

โ€œMy what?โ€ Lana asked sweetly. Altair growled. โ€œAsk your sister.โ€

โ€œShe also took the dagger from your room. The one wrapped in a turban and wedged between the bookshelves. A terrible spot, really.โ€

Altair blinked, disbelief slowing his brain. โ€œYouโ€”sheโ€” what?โ€

โ€œLana? Where are you?โ€ A voice called from the hall to their right. Lana gulped, eyes as wide as qahwa cups. She darted a glance to Kifah and fled down the hall before he could stop her.

Altair stomped after her with a frown, but only caught the fluttering end of a blue shawl and heard the swish of a falling curtain. That voice. It had been strangely familiar in cadence, but alluringly melodic andโ€”Now is not the time.

Kifah was watching him with mild amusement and his frown deepened.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he snapped. She shrugged.

โ€œSayyidi?โ€

Altair spun around with a snarl. Zafira was gone, Nasir was gone, the black dagger he had lost an entire eye to retrieve was gone. He forced air through his nose. Panic and stress never helped a soul.

โ€œWeโ€”we found you theโ€”a falcon,โ€ the perplexed guard stammered.

โ€œWell, where is it?โ€ Altair snapped, the boyโ€™s gray eyes reminding him of Nasir.

As the guard led them back to the war room, Altair let his thoughts roam. He and Kifah were bound to leave for their third of the plan soon enough, but they were meant to leave together with Nasir. Not like this. Without a farewell. Without even a note. Oddly enough, it stung.

A blur of brown and cream swooped past the double doors, and the guard ducked with an inhuman squawk. Altair stopped in his tracks.ย Is thatโ€ฆ?ย He held out his arm and the bird perched on his gauntlet.

โ€œWe found him sitting on the gates, and someone thought he was one of ours,โ€ the guard explained.

No, not one of theirs.ย His.

โ€œHirsi?โ€ Altair couldnโ€™t keep the strain from his voice. โ€œAkhh, boy, did you follow me all this way?โ€ With a contented, answering thrill, the bird rubbed his golden beak against Altairโ€™s brow.

Kifah laughed. โ€œIs there anything you donโ€™t love?โ€

โ€œMy father,โ€ Altair said simply, but at some point during his captivity, heย hadย felt something for his father. Not love, but

understanding, in the smallest of morsels. He snatched his letter from the desk, giving it one final read.

His mother was the last person Altair wanted to address, but Kifah was nowhere near as skilled a miragi as she was, and the Silver Witch was an integral part of making this plan work.

โ€œAre we certain this will work?โ€ Kifah asked. โ€œHow do we know sheโ€™ll even be in the Hessa Isles to receive it? How do we know sheโ€™ll agree to an illusion on that large a scale? What if sheโ€™s still injured? What ifย weย donโ€™t arrive in time?โ€

Altair finished tying the note to Hirsiโ€™s leg.

โ€œI am forever humbled by your unwavering faith in me, One of Nine. Hereโ€™s another question for your list: Why couldnโ€™t Nasir tell us he was leaving with Zafira?โ€

Kifah pursed her lips. โ€œIf thereโ€™s one thing the Prince of Death is known for, itโ€™s following orders. Heโ€™ll do his part.โ€

โ€œA thousand questions for me, and somehow you believe in him without a sliver of a doubt,โ€ Altair said.

โ€œYouย believe in him,โ€ Kifah said, meeting his gaze. โ€œThatโ€™s enough for me.โ€

Altair smiled, taken by the warmth in her dark gaze. A man could get lost in them for days.

Kifah lifted her brows. โ€œWell? Shall we?โ€ Akhh, the woman was not one for sentiment.

โ€œWait,โ€ Altair said, remembering something he once never left without. He opened his trunk and drew two blades, strapping on his sheaths and sliding the scimitars snugly into the leather grips. He straightened with a heavy breath.

This time, Kifah did smile. โ€œJust like old times, eh?โ€

โ€œIf only,โ€ he said. He would use just one of his scimitars. The other would be for balance, and because he loved both his children equally.

โ€œMaybe itโ€™s a good thing heโ€™s taken Zafira with him,โ€ Kifah said. โ€œWe left her out of our plans when we shouldnโ€™t have. At the very least, we should have been there when she woke up.โ€

It wasnโ€™t that heโ€™d purposely avoided her. There were missives to send out, dignitaries to placate, blames to place. And then it was too late.

He could only hope Nasir would stick to the plan and head for Leil. Not Sultanโ€™s Keep. And that he would keep that daama dagger safe.

The same gray-eyed guard led them down to the stables. Hirsi perched obediently on Altairโ€™s shoulder, his head darting this way and that.

Altair pilfered an oily dolma on the way to the stables, swinging onto a dark steed and grinning when Kifah swung onto a flea-bitten gray with ease. โ€œAkhh, One of Nine. Thereโ€™s no one else Iโ€™d rather ride with.โ€

She arched an eyebrow into a perfect curve, and Altair learned there really was something he couldnโ€™t do. With a pang, he remembered he had an eternity ahead of him, and only half his sight. He foresaw lament as his close companion for some time.

โ€œMust your every comment allude to your โ€ฆ tendencies?โ€ she asked.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what youโ€™re talking about. I sincerely admire our friendship, and there is truly no one else I would rather make this journey with andโ€”โ€

โ€œTell me one more lie, and Iโ€™ll make sure this horseโ€™s shoe is the last thing you see.โ€

The stable boy snickered.

Altair sighed dreamily. โ€œNot a soul treats me as kindly as you do.โ€ He gestured to the entrance and tossed the boy a coin. โ€œAfter you, sayyida.โ€

Kifah looked at freedom the way a besotted person looked at a lover. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to tell me twice.โ€

They charged down the snow-steeped hill from the palace, Kifahโ€™s ululation echoing in the frigid air. Hirsi took to the air with a shrill promise, and the streets of the city soon echoed with the clamor of hooves. Spindly trees bent over like old men, and fat camels wended slower than their owners. People greeted them as they passed, smiles wide and eyes bright, for the Demenhune had always been more amiable than the rest of the kingdom.

โ€œThese rebels, do you think we can trust them?โ€ Kifah shouted over the rush of the wind.

Whoever they were, Altair intended to make use of them. They were short on support, and Arawiya was short on a future.

โ€œWhat we do know is that my charm will win them over to our side. Weโ€™ll have ourselves a little army in no time.โ€

He heard her snort loud and clear.

They had no choice; this wasnโ€™t a skirmish over territory. It was all of their tomorrows in one fragile fist. They slowed in the thick of Thalj, where the sooq bustled with the midday crowd.

Kifah drew up her horse with a curse and disappeared into an alley. โ€œOi, look at this.โ€

โ€œI was always warned not to follow strangers into dark alleys,โ€ Altair mocked darkly. โ€œIs thatโ€ฆ?โ€

Kifah ripped a sheet of papyrus from the wall, and Altair stared at the face he knew as well as his own. Nasir. The countenance was almost exact, even to the scar slashing down his right eye.

โ€œโ€˜A thousand dinars,โ€™โ€ he read, โ€œโ€˜dead or alive.โ€™โ€

โ€œBleeding Guljul. Should I be insulted that you and I are completely worthless?โ€ Kifah asked.

โ€œI would never admit this to his face, but my brother looks far better in person,โ€ Altair said.

Kifah snarled in frustration.

โ€œWhat? They didnโ€™t get his nose right!โ€ Altair exclaimed. โ€œCould you at leastย pretendย to be concerned?โ€

Altair looked at her. โ€œWhat should I do? Weep?โ€ he asked, more harshly than he should have. โ€œWill that make the posters disappear? Will that make my eye come back? Benyamin, too?โ€

Kifah looked away.

Altair exhaled long and slow.

โ€œAkhh, letโ€™s leave being woeful to Nasir, laa?โ€ Kifah eagerly obliged, passing him the poster.

โ€œItโ€™s the perfect way for the Lion to turn the peopleโ€™s fear of the Prince of Death into a reward.โ€ Altair rolled up the poster and tucked it into his bag. โ€œAnd heโ€™s using the ifrit to spread word. No one else can travel so quickly. Khara, with them on his side,ย everythingย will move quickly. He might not see a need to prioritize the hearts, but itโ€™s clear he sees us as a threat.โ€

โ€œThen letโ€™s prove him right,โ€ Kifah said. She paused, studying him in the dusty light of the alley. โ€œYouโ€™re starting to worry.โ€

Altair scoffed. โ€œAnd risk my hair turning gray?โ€ โ€œYouโ€™re bursting with quips,โ€ Kifah pointed out.

Altair was too stunned to think of a comeback. Nearly a century and he didnโ€™t notice that tell?

โ€œDo you ever think about how the Sisters failed?โ€ she asked.

โ€œThey trusted my charming mother.โ€

Kifah shook her head. โ€œWeโ€™re a zumra made of mismatched ends, one goal holding us together, unafraid to ask for help. We have the โ€˜asabiyyah they didnโ€™t.โ€

โ€œโ€˜Asabiyyah?โ€

โ€œThe essence of our zumra,โ€ Kifah said with a shrug. โ€œUnity based on shared purpose, loyalty to one another over that of kinship.โ€ She looked at her inked arm. โ€œI never really understood the concept until now. Until us.โ€

โ€œThe Sisters had that, too,โ€ Altair argued.

โ€œEvery rule has within itself the seeds of its own downfall, and the Sistersโ€™ was no different. They trusted theirย ownย and no one else. If thereโ€™s anyone who can save Arawiya, itโ€™s us.โ€

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

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