A Betrayal in Winter (lpq-2)

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Book: Read A Betrayal in Winter (lpq-2) for Free Online
Authors: Daniel Abraham
Tags: sf_fantasy
still a journeyman, he had
    found a kind of joy in it. Amiit knew what his talents were, and chose
    assignments for him in which he could do well. And in return for the
    trust of the house and the esteem of his fellows, Otah did the best work
    he could, brokering information, speculation, gossip, and intrigue. He
    had traveled through the summer cities in the south, west to the plains
    and the cities that traded directly with the Westlands, up the eastern
    coasts where his knowledge of obscure east island tongues had served him
    well. By design or happy coincidence, he had never gone farther north
    than Yalakeht. He had not been called on to see the winter cities.
     
    Until now.
     
    "There's trouble in the north," Amiit said as he tucked the last of the
    opened letters into his sleeve.
     
    "I'd heard," Otah said. "The succession's started in Machi."
     
    "Amnat-"Ian, Machi, Cetani. All of them have something brewing. You may
    need to get some heavier robes."
     
    "I didn't think House Siyanti had much trade there," Otah said, trying
    to keep the unease out of his voice.
     
    "We don't. That doesn't mean we never will. And take your time. There's
    something I'm waiting for from the west. I won't be sending you out for
    a month at least, so you can have some time to spend you money. Unless ..."
     
    The overseer's eyes narrowed. His hands took a pose of query.
     
    "I just dislike the cold," Otah said, making a joke to cover his unease.
    "I grew up in Saraykeht. It seemed like water never froze there."
     
    "It's a hard life," Amiit said. "I can try to give the commissions to
    other men, if you'd prefer."
     
    And have them wonder why it was that I wouldn't go, Otah thought. He
    took a pose of thanks that also implied rejection.
     
    "I'll take what there is," he said. "And heavy wool robes besides."
     
    "It really isn't so bad up there in summer," Amiit said. "It's the
    winters that break your stones."
     
    "Then by all means, send someone else in the winter."
     
    They exchanged a few final pleasantries, and Otah left the name of
    Kiyan's wayhouse as the place to send for him, if he was needed. He
    spent the afternoon in a teahouse at the edge of the warehouse district,
    talking with old acquaintances and trading news. He kept an ear out for
    word from Machi, but there was nothing fresh. The eldest son had been
    poisoned, and his remaining brothers had gone to ground. No one knew
    where they were nor which had begun the traditional struggle. There were
    only a few murmurs of the near-forgotten sixth son, but every time he
    heard his old name, it was like hearing a distant, threatening noise.
     
    He returned to the wayhouse as darkness began to thicken the treetops
    and the streets fell into twilight, brooding. It wasn't safe, of course,
    to take a commission in Machi, but neither could he safely refuse one.
    Not without a reason. He knew when gossip and speculation had grown hot
    enough to melt like sugar and stick. There would be a dozen reports of
    Otah Mach] from all over the cities, and likely beyond as well. If even
    a suggestion was made that he was not who he presented himself to be, he
    ran the risk of being exposed, dragged into the constant, empty, vicious
    drama of succession. He would sacrifice quite a lot to keep that from
    happening. Going north, doing his work, and returning was what he would
    have done, had he been the man he claimed to be. And so perhaps it was
    the wiser strategy.
     
    And also he wondered what sort of man his father was. What sort of man
    his brother had been. Whether his mother had wept when she sent her boy
    away to the school where the excess sons of the high familes became
    poets or fell forever from grace.
     
    As he entered the courtyard, his dark reverie was interrupted by
    laughter and music from the main hall, and the scent of roast pork and
    baked yams mixed with the pine resin. When he stepped in, Old Mani
    slapped an earthenware bowl of wine into his hands and steered him to

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