is as nothing, and yet we keep them from the emperor.â She led him through the entrance hall, past the statued relics of the rock-sworn.
âInvisible defences against invisible enemies. It puts me in mind of the old fable wherein the emperor buys a set of invisible clothes,â Tuvaini said. He paused at the last of the statues. âWell, well. Old High Mage Kobar. His prisoner finally escaped.â
The mage turned back. If she took offence, none of it reached her face. âAll bound spirits seek release.â
Tuvaini shuddered: to have something like that inside, growing and gaining power, until at last it no longer serves, but masters⦠The idea filled him with peculiar horror.
âLead on,â he said.
They reached the stairs. Tuvaini remembered them well; he saved his breath for the climb.
The high mage kept his rooms not at the top of the Tower, but in the middle. Tuvaini had no notion what the upper half of the Tower housed. His escort led him to Govnanâs door, and took her leave with the briefest of bows.
âItâs not locked.â
The voice from behind the door took Tuvaini by surprise. He cast a glance left, then right, to see if anyone had seen him startle, but the corridor lay empty. He straightened the sash of his robe and stepped through.
Govnan watched him enter from his seat, an iron chair set against the far wall. The back rose over him and curled forwards in a vaguely claw-like manner, enclosing Govnan within its grip. He was a wizened ember of a man, but his eyes were bright in a shadowed face. Every Tower mage Tuvaini had met was either a youth or an elder, as though the burden of power stole away their middle years.
âHigh Mage.â Tuvaini inclined his head by the smallest fraction.
âVizier.â Govnan waved away formality with an agitated hand. Tuvaini took two steps into the room. It smelled of char. The place lay bare, with no stick of furniture save the high mageâs chair, nor any hint of ornament.
âI come on a matter of the utmost importance.â Tuvaini returned his gaze to Govnan.
âWhat else would drag you to the Tower?â The high mageâs voice held a crackle of irritation. The flame-sworn were always tetchy. âYou have not seen fit to seek our counsel in eighteen years. I am fascinated to learn what has finally brought you to our doors.â
âI am concerned for the health of the emperor,â Tuvaini said. Govnan held silent. He could have been rock-sworn, for all the motion in him.
The silence stretched.
âAnd for the health of his brother.â There was no way Govnan could know what was happening in the palace, but his gaze unsettled Tuvaini nonetheless.
A tight smile flickered across Govnanâs face. âYou never forgave the Tower for his brother, did you, Vizier?â
âYou broke with tradition.â Tuvaini let his anger speak. âYou broke Tahalâs law, and now we have a madman who might do anythingâa raving prince who cannot rule.â Tuvaini smacked fist to palm and strode forwards. âBeyon has no other heirââ
Govnan stood, sudden and unexpected. There was a fire behind his eyes. âIf Sarmin is mad, that is no oneâs fault but your own, Vizier. The Tower spoke to save the child. It was you who incarcerated him.â
âHe had to be held secret. Any foolââ
Tuvaini staggered before a blast of heat. His words dried on his tongue.
Fire blossomed in Govnanâs hands, and they burned as though soaked in oil. His lips peeled back in a snarl from blackened teeth in a mouth stretched so wide that it hurt to watch.
âCage what you fear, and when it escapes it will consume you utterly!â A tongue of flame crackled from the mageâs mouth as he spoke in an inferno roar.
Tuvaini could smell his hair smouldering. His skin felt tight, scorched before the heat, and yet some force held him so he couldnât turn