Cinnabar Shadows - Lynn Abbey Page 0,3

and Elabon Escrissar, that day when the half-elf interrogator took a knife, carved his family’s crest into Kakzim’s flesh, then permanently stained the scars with soot. Both of them had given false promises, but Kakzim’s lies went deeper than the templar’s. He’d been lying from the moment he selected Escrissar as a suitable partner in his life’s work.

No halfling could tolerate the restraints of forced slavery; it was beyond their nature. They sickened and died, as Escrissar should have known… would have known, if Kakzim hadn’t clouded the templar’s already warped judgment with pleas, promises and temptations. Escrissar had ambitions. He had wealth and power as a high templar, but he wanted more than the Lion-King would concede to any favorite. In time, with Kakzim’s careful prompting, Escrissar came to want Lord Hamanu’s throne and Urik itself. Failing that—and Kakzim had known from the start that the Lion-King could not be deposed—it had been possible to convince Escrissar that what he couldn’t have should be destroyed.

Reflecting on the long years of their association, Kakzim could see that they’d both been deluded by their ambitions. But then, without warning from the Black-Tree or anything Kakzim could recognize as their assistance, Sorcerer-King Kalak of Tyr was brought down. Less than a decade later Borys the Dragon and the ancient sorcerer Rajaat—whom the Black-Tree Brethren called the Deceiver—were vanquished as well.

For the first time in a millennium there was reason for a Black-Tree brother to expect success in his life’s work.

Kakzim sent a message back across the Ringing Mountains—his first in fifteen years. It was not a request for instructions, but an announcement: The time had come to unlock the ancient halfling pharmacopoeia, the lore Kakzim had memorized while he dwelt among the Black-Tree’s roots. The time had, in fact, come and passed.

Kakzim informed the elders that he and the man who thought he was Kakzim’s master were making Laq—an ancient, dangerous elixir that restored those on exhaustion’s brink, but enslaved and destroyed those who took it too often. Their source was innocuous zarneeka powder they’d found in Urik’s cavernous warehouses. The supply, for their needs and purposes, was virtually unlimited.

The seductive poison spread quickly through the ranks of the desperate or despondent, sowing death. He and Escrissar planned to expand their trade to include the city-state of Nibenay. When both cities were contaminated, their sorcerer-kings would blame each other. There’d be war. There’d be annihilation and, thanks to him, Brother Kakzim, the Black-Tree Brethren would see their cause victorious.

Kakzim promised on his life. He’d opened the old scars above his heart and signed his message with his own blood.

He’d had no doubts. Escrissar was the perfect dupe: cruel, avaricious, enthralled by his own importance, blind to his flaws, easily exploited, yet blessed with vast wealth and indulged by Lord Hamanu, the very enemy they both hoped to bring down. The plans Kakzim had made were elegant, and everything was going their way until a templar of the lowest sort blundered across their path.

Paddle, Puddle, Pickle… Kakzim couldn’t remember the ugly human’s name. He’d seen him once only, at night in the city warehouse when catastrophe had been the furthest thought from his mind. The yellow-robed dolt was boneheaded stupid, throwing himself into battles he couldn’t hope to win. It beggared halfling imagination to think that templar Pickle could stand in their way at all, much less bring them down. But the bonehead had done just that, with a motley collection of allies and the kind of luck that didn’t come by chance.

Kakzim had abandoned Escrissar the moment he saw disaster looming. Halflings weren’t slaves; Black-Tree Brethren weren’t martyrs, not for the likes of Elabon Escrissar. Kakzim raided Escrissar’s treasury and went to ground while the high templar marched to his doom on the salt wastes.

Ever dutiful to the elder brothers of the Black-Tree, Kakzim had sent another message across the Ringing Mountains. He admitted his failure and promised to forfeit his now-worthless life. Kakzim used all the right words, but his admissions and promises were lies. He knew he’d made mistakes; he’d been bested, but not, absolutely not, defeated. He’d learned hard lessons and was ready to try again. The cause was more important than any one brother’s life, especially his.

Brother Kakzim wasn’t any sort of martyr. He told the elder brothers what they’d want to hear and fervently hoped they’d believe his promise of self-annihilation and never bother him again. He was deep in his next plotting, here in the market-village