Paene forced himself to look at the Wall, contemplating the
giant hole in it.
His arm was still troubling him, and he still felt weak from
severe blood loss. Lito had left him to die when the Carpenter had made his
move, and they hadn’t found him for what felt like hours and hours.
Paene had only woken up recently, and had demanded to see
the Wall and the city before he did anything else. Crick Hasting probably knew
that Paene was awake and active by now, but he had not yet sought him out. Or
perhaps he hadn’t found him yet.
Paene had taken the opportunity to question some of the
guards on how the takeover had proceeded. The Carpenter was in control, which
Paene could only take to mean than that takeover was brutal. The stories had
confirmed his suspicion: people had been burned to death inside their homes,
guards had been tortured in the city streets in a variety of ways, and other
monstrosities.
He put his head in his hands, shaking.
You should be used to
this, Paene told himself. And he was, in a way—he had seen disgusting and
disturbing acts of violence with Crick often. But he had always told himself
that he was letting these things happen for a reason, that the evil of the King Enclosed and his programs was
worth it, and that the brutality would stop when Crick took control.
But the Carpenter had used fear, and fear alone to bring the
people to his side. And Paene knew, deep down, that fear alone would help him
keep it. Only through a continuous campaign against dissenters would prevent
the Carpenter from being overthrown.
So what could be done about that? Paene sat by the wreckage
of the Wall for a long time, and thought and thought about it.
* *
* * *
* * *
“Stay safe, Paene. She’s a wild one. Even chained up… I don’t
know, I saw her, fighting our support group during the fight. She killed a lot
of people. Don’t do anything stupid.”
“I am not in the habit of doing so,” Paene replied.
The jail keeper nodded, and opened the cell to let Paene
inside.
The Sunset Knight saw within. She was chained, her arms
stretched to the ceiling, just high enough that she couldn’t sit down comfortably.
The alternative was to stand, and so stand she did.
“Leave us,” Paene said. “And do not return until I have
called for you.”
The jail keeper nodded, and withdrew, leaving Paene Umber
and Lito Laeth alone.
She rolled her head around, and looked at him coldly. “Are
you here to torture me?”
Paene said nothing, but sat down on the cell floor, his back
to the wall. He looked at Lito, expressionless.
“I wouldn’t blame you if you did,” the Sunset Knight said. “Take
your revenge. I’m surprised to see you alive, actually.”
“I won’t be fighting any time soon,” Paene said, “the wound
has left me quite weak. But my mental faculties remained unchanged. You have
nothing to fear from me. I could not torture you, in this state, I suspect.”
“Even a child can wield a knife,” Lito said. “There are a
few places were even a gentle amount of pressure can inflict immense pain.”
“I suppose that is true,” Paene said. “But, I say again,
that’s not what I’m here for. I want to talk. I want your advice.”
She scoffed. “I don’t believe you. There’s nothing you could
say that would make me believe you.”
Paene considered this. “That’s a dangerous position to take,”
he said. “But I will ask you regardless. First things first.”
He handed the Sunset Knight a piece of paper—one that he had
received from one of the guards shortly after he awoke.
“Can we trust it?”
Lito looked at him. “Why are you asking me?”
“Because Dane was your subordinate, and I believe he became
your spy as well. You should be able to tell whether the message was accurate.”
The piece of paper detailed the attack on Invercard—it was
sent upriver as fast as possible, apparently. Dane had survived an initial
assault, but pleaded with the Sunset Knight to send more troops.
Lito shook her head. “Why would you think this wasn’t an
actual plea for help?”
Paene shrugged. “I didn’t become second in command of the
Carpenter’s forces because I liked torture or because I was good at it. I don’t
like it, and all of my successes were completely unintentional. I notice
things. I don’t take anything for granted. And I don’t take this, either.”
“Consider this,” Paene said. “Dane knows that he’s sent down
with a paltry sum of forces. He knows that, in all likelihood, the Carpenter
will be in command after he leaves. So he sends a message asking for help, to
get our troops out of Caeledonia, so that the people can overthrow the
Carpenter. He could be pulling our trick on us.”
“That’s a lot of assumptions,” Lito said.
“Not necessarily,” Paene counted them off on his fingers. “I
think it’s likely that he does know the situation up here, or has guessed. And
I think that it’s a good strategy. The Carpenter is too dependent on fear, and
it only works if he can deliver on his promises. If the city was to empty of
the Carpenter’s men… the locals would overthrow him.”
“You’re asking me whether you should send forces down?” Lito
asked.
Paene looked around, to make sure that the jail keeper hadn’t
returned. “Not… exactly,” he said. “I have already decided to send forces down.
If the prisoners are going to attack again, I need to send men down to help
defend. And if the prisoners are not, and Dane is lying… doing this will still
serve my own ends.”
“How?” The Sunset Knight asked. “You just admitted that the
Carpenter will, in all probability, be overthrown if you send men out of the
city.”
“Yes,” said Paene, “I did.” He waited for Lito Laeth to put
the pieces together.
She started to laugh. “You are all so ambitious,” she said. “Your ambition and greed will ruin you all. You betray the Carpenter, the next man down will betray you, and so on. This is pathetic.”
Paene chose his next words carefully, keenly aware of his
surroundings. “You have no imagination, Lito. Recall what I have told you: the
Carpenter cannot continue to keep the people in thrall by fear alone. He needs
to make a gesture to show that he truly does have their best interests at
heart. Even if Dane is lying, sending troops down and making a show of it will
have a chance at revitalizing the people’s opinion of him.”
“After what you’ve done, I doubt it’s going to work.”
Paene shrugged. “It may not,” he said. “But I’m going to propose
it regardless. Crick may agree, he may not—but your advice on this would be
appreciated, when we have that discussion. I hope it doesn’t come to torture, I
truly do, but we will try to get the truth as to the letter’s veracity out one
way or another.”
“And then death?”
“If that is what the Carpenter plans for you… then yes, I
suppose so.”
Chapter 22 1,214 | 50,738/50,000
Author’s Note in Comments
Hello, dear readers,
ReplyDeleteWe have a short (I think the shortest?) chapter for you tonight. I was going to write more, but we have had to get cars out of snowy situations, shovel the driveway, get groceries, all the little things that will make this vacation go smoothly. On top of that, I got very, very little sleep last night, so this chapter was like pulling teeth.
That being said-- this has pushed us over the edge, which means that I have WON NANOWRIMO.
HOORAY.
But the goal is to get the novel done as well.
We have 6 days left, and 7 chapters left to write.
I'm hoping to at least stick to my schedule of a chapter per day, although Thanksgiving fun may prevent me. If necessary, I'll spend the entire drive back writing.
Thanks, as always, for reading!
john