JHEREG
By Steven Brust
Book 1
1
of the Adventures of Vlad
Taltos
Let the winds of jungle’s night
Stay the hunter in her flight.
Evening’s breath to witch’s mind;
Let our fates be intertwined.
Jhereg! Do not pass me by.
Show me where thine egg doth lie.
Contents
Prologue The Cycle Phoenix sinks into decay Haughty dragon yearns to slay. Lyorn growls and lowers horn Tiassa dreams and plots are born. Hawk looks down from lofty flight Dzur stalks and blends with night. Issola strikes from courtly bow Tsalmoth maintains though none knows how. Vallista rends and then rebuilds Jhereg feeds on others’ kills. Quiet iorich won’t forget Sly chreotha weaves his net. Yendi coils and strikes, unseen Orca circles, hard and lean. Frightened teckla hides in grass Jhegaala shifts as moments pass Athyra rules minds’ interplay Phoenix rises from ashes, gray. next Book 1 by publishing order,
not
internal series chronology.
Back
previous |
Table of Contents |
next Prologue
There is a similarity, if I may be permitted an excursion into
tenuous metaphor, between the feel of a chilly breeze and the feel
of a knife’s blade, as either is laid across the back of the
neck. I can call up memories of both, if I work at it. The chilly
breeze is invariably going to be the more pleasant memory. For
instance . . .
I was eleven years old, and clearing tables in my father’s
restaurant. It was a quiet evening, with only a couple of tables
occupied. A group had just left, and I was walking over to the
table they’d used.
The table in the corner was a deuce. One male, one female. Both
Dragaeran, of course. For some reason, humans rarely came into our
place; perhaps because we were human too, and they didn’t
want the stigma, or something. My father himself always avoided
doing business with other “Easterners.”
There were three at the table along the far wall. All of them
were male, and Dragaeran. I noted that there was no tip at the
table I was clearing, and heard a gasp from behind me.
I turned as one member of the threesome let his head fall into
his plate of lyorn leg with red peppers. My father had let me make
the sauce for it that time, and, crazily, my first thought was to
wonder if I’d built it wrong.
The other two stood up smoothly, seemingly not the least bit
worried about their friend. They began moving toward the door, and
I realized that they were planning to leave without paying. I
looked for my father, but he was in back.
I glanced once more at the table, wondering whether I should try
to help the fellow who was choking, or intercept the two who were
trying to walk out on their bill.
Then I saw the blood.
The hilt of a dagger was protruding from the throat of the
fellow whose face was lying in his plate. It slowly dawned on me
what had happened, and I decided that, no, I wasn’t going to
ask the two gentlemen who were leaving for money.
They didn’t run, or even hurry. They walked quickly and
quietly past me toward the door. I didn’t move. I don’t
think I was even breathing. I remember suddenly becoming very much
aware of my own heartbeat.
One set of footsteps stopped, directly behind me. I remained
frozen, while in my mind, I cried out to Verra, the Demon
Goddess.
At that moment, something cold and hard touched the back of my
neck. I was too frozen to flinch. I would have closed my eyes if I
could have. Instead, I stared straight ahead. I wasn’t
consciously aware of it at the time, but the Dragaeran girl was
looking at me, and she started to rise then. I noticed her when her
companion reached out a hand to stop her, which she brushed
off.
Then I heard a soft, almost silky voice in my ear. “You
didn’t see a thing,” it said. “Got that?”
If I had had as much experience then as I do now, I would have
known that I was in no real danger—if he’d had any
intention of killing me he would have done so already. But I
didn’t, and so I shook. I felt I should nod, but
couldn’t manage. The Dragaeran girl was almost up to us now,
and I imagine the guy behind me noticed her, because the blade was
gone suddenly and I heard retreating footsteps.
I was shaking uncontrollably. The tall Dragaeran girl gently
placed her hand on my shoulder. I saw sympathy on her face. It was
a look I had never before been given from a Dragaeran, and it was,
in its own way, as frightening as the experience I’d just
been through. I had an urge to fall forward into her arms, but I
didn’t let myself. I became aware that she was speaking,
softly, gently. “It’s all right, they’ve left.
Nothing is going to happen. Just take it easy, you’ll be
fine . . . ”
My father came storming in from the other room.
“Vlad!” he called, “what’s going on
around here? Why—”
He stopped. He saw the body. I heard him getting sick and I felt
ashamed for him. The hand on my shoulder tightened, then. I felt
myself stop trembling, and looked at the girl in front of me.
Girl? I really couldn’t judge her age at all, but, being
Dragaeran, she could be anywhere from a hundred to a thousand years
old. Her clothing was black and gray, which I knew meant she was of
House Jhereg. Her companion, who was now approaching us, was also a
Jhereg. The three who had been at the other table were of the same
House. Nothing of any significance there; it was mostly Jhereg, or
an occasional Teckla (each Dragaeran House bears the name of one of
our native creatures), who came into our restaurant.
Her companion stood behind her.
“Your name is Vlad?” she asked me.
I nodded.
“I’m Kiera,” she said. I only nodded again.
She smiled once more and turned to her companion. They paid their
bill and left. I went back to help clean up after the murdered
man—and my father.
“
Kiera,” I thought to myself, “
I won’t forget you.”
When the Phoenix guards arrived some time later, I was in back,
and I heard my father telling them that, no, no one had seen what
had happened, we’d all been in back. But I never forgot the
feel of a knife blade, as it is laid across the back of the
neck.
And for another instance . . .
I was sixteen, and walking alone through the jungles west of
Adrilankha. The city was somewhat more than a hundred miles away,
and it was night. I was enjoying the feeling of solitude, and even
the slight fear within my middle as I considered the possibility
that I might run into a wild dzur, or a lyorn, or even, Verra
preserve me, a dragon.
The ground under my boots alternated between
“crunch” and “squish.” I didn’t make
any effort to move quietly; I hoped that the noise I made would
frighten off any beast which would otherwise frighten
me
off. The logic of that escapes me now.
I looked up, but there was no break in the overcast that
blankets the Dragaeran Empire. My grandfather had told me that
there was no such orange-red sky above his Eastern homeland.
He’d said that one could see stars at night, and I had seen
them through his eyes. He could open his mind to me, and did,
often. It was part of his method for teaching witchcraft; a method
that brought me, at age sixteen, to the jungles.
The sky lit the jungle enough for me to pick my way. I ignored
the scratches on face and arms from the foliage. Slowly, my stomach
settled down from the nausea that had hit when I had done the