Night Angel: The Complete Trilogy

Read Night Angel: The Complete Trilogy for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Night Angel: The Complete Trilogy for Free Online
Authors: Brent Weeks
you’re the only piece I have left to play. Surprise them. Be smarter, better, braver, and faster than anyone expects. It’s not a fair burden for me to put on you, but I must. I’m counting on you. House Gyre is counting on you. All our retainers and vassals are counting on you, and maybe even the kingdom itself.”
    Duke Gyre swung up onto his huge white destrier. “I love you, son. But don’t let me down.”

6
    T he darkness was as close and cold as the dead’s embrace. Azoth squatted against the alley wall, hoping the night wind covered the sound of thunder in his heart. The fifth big who’d joined him had stolen a shiv from Rat’s weapons cache, and Azoth clutched the thin metal so tightly his hand hurt.
    There was still no motion in the alley. Azoth stuck the blade in the dirtof the alley and put his hands in his armpits to keep them warm. Nothing might happen for hours. It didn’t matter. He was running out of chances. He’d wasted too much time as it was.
    Rat wasn’t stupid. He was cruel, but he had plans. Azoth didn’t. He’d been flailing in his fear for three months. Flailing when he could have been planning. The Fist had declared his intentions. That made it easy enough. Azoth knew some of what he was planning; all he had to do was piece together how. Now, as he thought, he could feel himself slipping into Rat’s skin all too easily, thinking Rat’s thoughts.
    A purge isn’t good enough. A purge will give me safety for a couple of years. Other guild heads have killed to keep their power. Killing doesn’t make me different.
Azoth worked on the idea. Rat didn’t have small ambitions. Rat had bottled up his hatred for three months. Why would he be willing to not even hit Azoth for three months?
    Destruction. That’s what it came down to. Rat would destroy him in spectacular fashion. He would sate his own cruelty and advance his power. He would do something so awful that Azoth would become a story the guilds would tell. He might not even kill him, just leave him maimed in some horrific way so that everyone who met Azoth would fear Rat more.
    There was a shuffling sound in the alley and Azoth tensed. Slowly, so slowly, he pulled out the shiv. The alley was tight, the buildings sagging so close a grown man could touch both walls at the same time. Azoth had chosen it for that reason. He wouldn’t let his quarry slip past him. But now the walls seemed malevolent, stretching hungry fingers toward each other, closing out the stars, grabbing for him. Wind muttered over the roofs, telling tales of murder.
    Azoth heard the shuffle again and relaxed. A scarred old rat emerged from under a pile of moldering boards and sniffed. Azoth held still as the rat waddled forward. It sniffed at Azoth’s bare feet, nudged them with a wet nose, and sensing no danger, moved forward to feed.
    Just as the rat moved to bite, Azoth buried the shiv behind its ear and into the ground beneath. It jerked but didn’t squeak. He withdrew the thin iron, satisfied with his stealth. He checked the alley again. Still nothing.
    So where am I weak? What would
I
do to destroy me if I were Rat?
    Something tickled his neck and he brushed it away.
Curse the bugs.
    Bugs? It’s freezing out here.
His hand came down from his neck warm and sticky.
    Azoth turned and lashed out, but the shiv went spinning from his hand as something struck his wrist.
    Durzo Blint squatted on his heels not a foot away. He didn’t speak. He just stared, his eyes colder than the night.
    There was a long pause as they stared at each other, neither saying a word. “You saw the rat,” Azoth said.
    An eyebrow lifted.
    “You cut me where I cut it. You were showing me that you’re as much better than me as I am better than the rat.”
    A hint of a smile. “A strange little guild rat you are. So smart, so stupid.”
    Azoth looked at the shiv—now magically in Durzo’s hand—and felt ashamed. He
was
stupid. What had he been thinking? He was going to threaten a

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