blade as Kattanan was hurried out. He turned to the emir. âAm I not to stay with my student?â
The emir ignored him as he addressed the wizard. âMy most trusted men have readied your reward if you will go with them.â A small group of guards stood aside from a dark door. Jordan moved into the emirâs line of sight and repeated his question, with more than a little concern. The emir laughed soundlessly as the guards moved forward. Before the monk could respond, they snapped a chain about his wrists and propelled him toward the smaller door. âHow dare you? I am a servant of the Goddessâand Kattanan needs me!â
âI will not have men around me of such great stature and such little humility.â
The wizard grinned widely and bowed to the emir.
When Jordan struggled, the little men cast him off-balance, and dragged him bodily through the door. The wizard followed, shutting the door behind him. âMay the Goddess wreak her justice on both of you!â the monk howled, forced to his knees.
âOh, the Goddessâthat paltry wench.â The wizard looked around in the dark hall, turning his back to the guards even as one of them readied his sword. âYou would have come to this without my help. Iâm just sorry I cannot stay to witness your fate or that of your little student. You never told him about yourself, and now youâve lost the chance. I wonder what you have been teaching him.â The wizard laughed again, and made an obscene gesture as he turned to go. Jordan tore free from the guards and sprang at his back, swinging the chain around the wizardâs neck. The man clawed at him, mouthing hoarse words of power in a vain attempt to defend himself. He was already off-balance, and fell to the floor with Jordan on top. The chain tore at Jordanâs own wrists even as it bit into the wizardâs throat. The guards stood back and whispered even as the wizard ceased to struggle and slumped against the floor.
Jordan straightened over the body, panting with the exertion. He untwined the chain from his enemyâs throat and stared limply at the mingling blood and the wizardâs bulging eyes. One hand leapt to his mouth as he choked back a cry, his own eyes wide. âOh, Great Lady, what have I done?â Dark hands roughly pulled him away, accompanied by incongruous laughter when they looked upon the wizardâs body. His face as pale as his victimâs, Jordan no longer fought them as they hauled him along to what fate he neither knew nor cared.
Â
KATTANAN WAS rushed out the great door, along a different hall. The flush of pride for a song well made and well accepted still filled him, so it was not until they finally stopped before a door that it occurred to him to look for Jordan, the only link he had to his home. The corridor was empty save himself and the servants. âWhere is Jordan?â They blinked and mumbled to each other, still gesturing for him to enter the door. âWhere is my friend?â Kattanan thrust his arms in the air to indicate the monkâs height, and held his hair off his face, as if bald. âWhere?â
One of the servants nodded rapidly. âHe goâ¦â The man stumbled over a foreign word. âHow say?â He made as if to surround himself with a long garment, and drew himself up.
âThe wizard?â The man grinned, and Kattanan floundered. âHe went with the wizard?â
âYes, wizard. Is go in now?â He offered the open door.
Kattanan looked back down the hall. âWhen is he coming here?â
âIs not here. Is go with wizard.â He added a flurry of his own speech and some inexplicable gestures at which the others nodded firmly.
When the singer took a few steps into the room, the servants bobbed their heads from the hall, then hurried off. There was only one low bed in the room, and one chair at the table. A scented basin and towel had been laid out there.