Elaene offered up prayers to any god that would hear her,
not only the King in the Deep, but any and all of the four lesser as well. Then
she spoke.
“I’m as surprised and dismayed as you are to see him in this
state.”
Her words came out as hard and cold as ice. “All I wanted
was to help Olean. I thought… I thought I could make some kind of a difference.”
She stared off into the distance. “Lito… Lito used me.”
The Carpenter raised his eyebrows. “Lito used you?”
“She swore that the guards she was sending were for my
protection alone. They must have followed Paene after the meeting…” She shook
her said. “Sunken hells, if you don’t believe me you can torture me. Gods know
there’s no one alive to collaborate my story.”
“That turns out not to be the case,” the Carpenter said. “Lito
is still alive.”
Thank the gods.
“Let’s pay her a visit, then, shall we?” The Carpenter
opened the door, smiling slightly. “I would hate to do anything rash.”
* *
* * *
* * *
Lito crouched in her cell, hands chained to the ceiling. The
sight of it made Elaene’s heart ache, but she pushed past it and steeled
herself for what was, in all likelihood, coming.
“Lito Laeth,” the Carpenter drawled. “It is time we had
another conversation.”
“The gruesome public torture at last?” Lito spat.
“No… no, that will come later, I assure you. This will be
much more private,” the Carpenter said. “Elaene claims that you betrayed her. She
volunteered to smooth things out between you and me and act as an emissary. She
claims that you leant her guards for her protection, and used those very guards
to betray our peaceful meeting.”
Lito blinked.
The Carpenter continued. “It is useless, I think, to have
either you or Elaene elaborate on your stories further. I cannot trust what
either one of you is saying. Elaene could have done it on her own initiative,
it would surprise me, but it is possible, and could be drowning you to push
herself up—and you might object to that, wouldn’t you? But she could also be
doing it to get into my organization and strike at an inopportune time—and you
would be fine with that.” He showed his hands. “You see? If you say that you
did do this, I must assume that you are lying to help her infiltrate my trust.
If you say that you did not, I must assume that you are doing it out of a
desire to save yourself.”
“That is a conundrum,” Lito said, finally.
“The only person who can help us unravel this little mystery
is currently sitting on a table, in great pain, and it is up to the gods as to
whether he will awake again.”
The Carpenter pulled out a knife, and handed it to Elaene.
“I have always found torture to be an adequate, if imperfect
way of determining the truth. I know that people will lie under duress, but
gods know that they lie all the more in comfort. And so, Elaene, let us confirm
your story. Please torture the Sunset Knight.”
Elaene stepped forward into the cell.
It was the same problem all over again. If she didn’t
torture Lito, the Carpenter would figure that she was lying and kill them both
horribly. If she did torture Lito and she was able to stick to the story… she
might still be able to break Lito out later.
Elaene bit her lip. If this was the only way to gain the
Carpenter’s trust, it had to be done. She knew that the trust would be tenuous
at best, but it only needed to hold for a bit.
She let the rage at the Carpenter, the whole situation with
the world, and her own shame fill her mind, channeling it into her performance.
“You betrayed me,” Elaene whispered. “You lied to me, you
used me like a pawn. Like one of your
soldiers.”
She slashed Lito on her brow. Head wounds bled terribly,
which looked impressive. Elaene was worried about injuring anything critical to
fighting, because if she was able to
break Lito out later on, she needed her at a good condition in case things went
wrong.
As she did this, she looked Lito in the eye, trying to pass
all of the information through her sorrowful glance—that she was acting, that
Lito needed to act too if she had any chance of getting through this.
“I would do it again,” Lito said, hoarsely. “I would do it
all again.”
Elaene cut her again, this time on her shoulder. She
continued to accuse, Lito continued to defend, and Elaene spirits started to
rise.
Maybe this will work
after all.
“Cut her ear off,” the Carpenter said. He was leaning
against the wall, watching, almost bored with the proceedings.
Elaene froze.
“Did I say something wrong?” the Carpenter asked. His tone
of voice hardened. “Cut her ear off.”
Elaene tugged on the ear closest to her, pulling away from
Lito’s head. She placed her knife on the top of the ear.
She looked Lito in the eye. There wasn’t a trace of fear in
her eyes. They were steel gray. She nodded.
Pulling tight on the ear with her left hand, she struck
straight down with her right. Elaene had been expected, had been hoping, had
been praying that the ear would come
off.
But it didn’t. Elaene wasn’t strong enough. Her knife came about halfway down, and stopped. Blood was streaking out of the wound, and Lito screamed. Elaene hacked at it a bit more, breathing heavily.
She was dead surprised that she wasn’t making any sound.
Inside she was crying, but nothing escaped her lips.
The ear came off. Elaene threw it on the ground, and
savagely ground it into the stone floor.
“Good,” the Carpenter said. “Leave the other ear. I want her
to hear the jeers and the screams when we finish her off.”
Elaene nodded.
The Carpenter nodded. “Continue.”
Elaene paused. She didn’t want to cut anything else off, if
she could help it. And there was a limit to how much damage she could
reasonably do if she wanted Lito to be useful.
She ran her fingers through Lito’s hair—rich, thick, and
lovely, even being somewhat short..
Hair wasn’t important. Not in combat, anyway.
She ripped the knife through Lito’s hair, cutting as close
to the scalp as she dared. Hair and blood started to run in tiny streams down
Lito’s face and her neck.
Elaene was startled as she continued to cut.
Lito was crying.
She was so surprised she almost stopped cutting—but the
Carpenter was watching, and Elaene knew she had to continue.
Elaene was finished soon. She took a step back, to look at
her handiwork.
Blood and tears had mingled on Lito Laeth’s face. She was
bald, with irregular stubble along the crown of her head—with cuts and blood
welling up amidst them.
“Well done,” the Carpenter said. He was smiling now, broad
and energetic. “Well done.”
He knelt down next to the Sunset Knight. “Were you
responsible for capturing Paene Umber, against our treaty agreement?”
“Yes,” Lito whispered.
“You can stop this, you know,” the Carpenter said. “I will
kill you, now, quickly and without pain if you tell me the truth.”
“I told you the truth,” Lito said. “Do you want me to change
my answer and lie?”
The Carpenter stood up. “No,” he said. “I was joking,
anyway. You’re valuable, Sunset Knight. Too valuable to waste in a mercy
killing.”
They left the cell soon after that. Elaene prayed that she
could go off alone and cry soon.
“I have some tasks for you that you can get started with,”
the Carpenter said. “We need to, ah, advertise the celebrations that are coming
up. Spread the word among the priests and priestesses in the area—we’ll start
slow, public executions of the rest of the Sunset Knight’s forces. I should
have my devices ready for Lito in a week or so. Spread the word, and make it
clear that attendance is mandatory.”
“Anything else?” Elaene asked in a deadened voice.
“Yes,” the Carpenter said. “Spread the word that the
programs have ended. People can do what they want, now—they’re free.”
Free.
Chapter 23 1,214 | 51,952/50,000
Author’s Note in Comments
Hello, dear readers,
ReplyDeleteAnother short chapter you tonight, and another bit of damage control. I had a complicated outline for this ending section, and it has fallen apart a bit-- I think I have things well in hand, now.
This chapter-a-day pace will be hard, with so much fun going on out here. I hope to keep the goodness (or, um, okay-ness) coming, though, so look forward to the next chapter tomorrow.
Thanks, as always, for reading,
john
John, keep up the great work and play a couple interesting games for me.
ReplyDelete