Cursor's Fury (Codex Alera #3)(109)



Isana folded her arms, one finger tapping in slight impatience, and said nothing.

"Hngh," Giraldi grunted, limping out. "The plot thickens."

Fade entered a few moments later. He was still dressed in the simple, blood-sprinkled smock of a scullion, though he wore a Legion-issue sword belt and his old blade at his side. He had acquired a worn, old cloak of midnight blue, and wore the military boots of a legionare. A bloody rag was tied crudely around his left hand, but if the wound caused him pain, he showed no sign of it.

Fade shut the door behind him and turned to face Isana.

"Tavi?" she asked quietly.

Fade took a steadying breath. "On assignment. Gaius has him in the field."

Isana felt the first flutterings of panic. "Gaius knows?"

"I believe so," Fade said quietly.

"Tavi is alone?"

Fade shook his head, letting his long hair fall forward over his face, as usual, hiding much of his expression. "Antillar Maximus is with him."

"Maximus. The boy whose life Tavi had to save? Twice?"

Fade didn't lift his face, but his voice hardened. "The young man who twice proved his loyalty to his friend and the Realm. Maximus laid down his life to protect Tavi against the son of a High Lord. You cannot ask more than that of anyone."

"I don't deny his willingness to lay down his life," Isana retorted. "It is his aptitude for it that concerns me. Great furies, Araris, Antillar has practice at it."

"Lower your voice, my lady," Fade said, his tone warning and gentle at the same time.

She never understood how he could do that. Isana shook her head tiredly. "Fade," she corrected herself, "I'm not your lady."

"As milady wishes," Fade said.

She frowned at him, then dismissed the argument with an idle throwaway gesture of one hand. "Why didn't you stay with him?"

"My presence would have drawn attention to him," Fade said. "Gaius has inserted him into the newly formed Aleran Legion." He gestured at the horrible brand on his face, the coward's mark of a soldier who had fled combat. "I could not have remained nearby him. If I had to fight, it is probable that someone would recognize me, and it would raise a great many questions about why one of Princeps Septimus's singulares, supposedly dead for twenty years, was guarding the young man."

"Gaius didn't have to send him there," Isana insisted. "He wanted to isolate him. He wanted to make him vulnerable."

"He wanted," Fade disagreed, "to keep him out of the public eye and in a safe location."

"By putting him into a Legion," Isana said, her disbelief heavy in her tone. "At the eruption of a civil war."

Fade shook his head. "You aren't thinking it through, my lady," he said. "The First Aleran is the one Legion that will not see action in a civil war. Not with so many of its troops and officers owing loyalties to cities, lords, and family houses on both sides of the struggle. Further, it has been forming in the western reaches of the Amaranth Vale, far from any fighting, and it would not surprise me to learn that Gaius issued orders to send it even farther west, away from the theater of combat."

Isana frowned and folded her hands on her lap. "Are you sure he's safe?"

"Nowhere would be totally safe," Fade said in a quiet tone. "But now he is hidden among a mass of thousands of men dressed precisely like him, who will not enter combat against any of the High Lords' Legions, and who have been conditioned by training and tradition to protect their own. He's accompanied by young Maximus, who is more dangerous with a blade than any other man his age I've seen-save my lord himself-and a crafter of formidable power. Knowing Gaius, there are more agents nearby about whom I was told nothing."

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