Book 4 - The Fire in His Hands

Book 4 - The Fire in His Hands by Glen Cook Read Free Book Online

Book: Book 4 - The Fire in His Hands by Glen Cook Read Free Book Online
Authors: Glen Cook
Tags: Fiction, Science-Fiction, Fantasy
or the discipline of the western kingdoms.”
    Radetic nodded. These people would be hopelessly overmatched in any war with the west.
    Warfare, like everything else, evolved. The style of the Children of Hammad al Nakir had evolved in a direction suited only to the desert.
    “But his jihad doesn’t terrify me yet. That’s a long way off,” Yousif continued. “The struggle here is what frightens me. He has to win his homeland first. And to do that he will have to tear the belly out of Hammad al Nakir. So. I want to draw his fangs now. By fair means or foul.”
    “You live by different rules,” Radetic observed. It was becoming a favorite saying. “I have to go think about what you’ve said.” He finished his drink, rose, nodded to Fuad, and departed. He seated himself outside the tent flap, in the position for meditation. He listened while Yousif instructed Fuad how to approach King Aboud with news of this opportunity. Embittered by the
    foolishness of it, the injustice of it, he sealed them out, contemplated his surroundings.
    The Royal Compound occupied five acres bordering the southwest flank of the Mrazkim
    Shrines, which were the religious heart of Hammad al Nakir. Today, because it was Disharhun,
    the compound was infested with royal relatives, favor seekers and sycophants. Most of the
    captains, sheiyeks and wahligs had brought their entire households. Traders and artisans, hoping to achieve some small advantage over their competitors, virtually besieged the Compound’s
    boundaries. Ambassadors and foreign mercantile factors roamed everywhere. The smells were
    overwhelming. Men, animals, machines, and insects made noises which melded into an
    overpowering din.
    And beyond the mad anthill of the Compound lay vast encampments of ordinary pilgrims.
    Their tents swept up the sides of the bowl-shaped valley containing the capital and Shrines.
    Thousands upon thousands more than customary had made the journey this year—because El
    Murid’s visit had been rumored for months. They had come because they did not want to miss
    the inevitable collision between dissidence and authority.
    Yousif was playing with fire, Radetic reflected as he watched Fuad stride toward Aboud’s
    palatial tent. This monarchy, unlike its predecessor in Ilkazar, did not have the power to rule by decree. Today even the most obnoxious rabble-rouser could not be denied his hour in court, his opportunity to speak in his own defense.
    A shy Haroun came to sit with his teacher. He put his hand into Radetic’s.
    “Sometimes, Haroun, you’re too crafty for your own good.” There was no rancor in Radetic’s
    voice, though. The gesture touched him, genuine or not.
    “I did wrong, Megelin?”
    “There’s some disagreement.” Radetic surveyed the human panorama briefly. “You should
    think, Haroun. You can’t simply act. That is your people’s biggest handicap. They yield to
    impulse without ever considering the consequences.”
    “I’m sorry, Megelin.”
    “The hell you are. You’re sorry you got caught. You don’t care a whit how much you hurt
    that man.”
    “He’s our enemy.”
    “How do you know? You never saw him before. You’ve never talked to him. He’s never hurt
    you.”
    “Ali said—”
    “Ali is like your uncle Fuad. He says a lot. His mouth is always open. And because of that,
    someday somebody else who doesn’t think is going to shove his fist down Ali’s throat. How often is he right? How often does pure foolishness come out of that open mouth?”
    Radetic was letting his frustrations run wild. He had never encountered a student more
    unyieldingly unteachable than Ali bin Yousif.
    “Then he isn’t our enemy?”
    “I didn’t say that. Of course he is. He’s your bitterest enemy. But not because Ali says he is.
    El Murid is an enemy in his ideals. I don’t think he’d harm you physically if he had the chance.
    He’d just rob you of everything that’s important to you. Someday, I hope, you’ll understand

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