Part 3
“So...” Ba-Khu-Ra asked as she hovered around the Princess’s bed, unwilling to go too far while everyone was watching her carefully. “Does this mean I won?”
“So...” Ba-Khu-Ra asked as she hovered around the Princess’s bed, unwilling to go too far while everyone was watching her carefully. “Does this mean I won?”
“No.”
The girl shook her head, winced and brought a hand to the back of her head where
it had hit the marble floor, “We got caught.”
“We
were in the treasury.” Ba-Khu-Ra hissed, irritated despite the bag of gold and
jewels hidden in her tunic. “I won.”
“No,
we were in the doorway so technically neither of us won.” The Princess hissed
back, “And I just saved your life, so a little gratitude would be nice.”
“Gratitude?”
Ba-Khu-Ra snapped back, keeping her tone low, “When you’re trying to screw me
out of my treasure?”
“Look,”
The Princess glowered at her, her own voice barely above a whisper, “I’ve just
gotten you permission to study magic with MY teacher. And I can see that full
bag, the guards might have missed the extra lump in your clothes but I haven’t.
You’re not as hard done by as you’re making...”
The
thief scowled and moved away as the physician darted into the room and came
straight over to their patient. He was closely followed by Mahad, who, though
Abasi called him over, first darted over to the Princess’s side where he got
into a very quiet but very intense conversation before he was politely shooed
away by the healer.
“Outside.”
Mahad growled at her, grabbing her by the arm and dragging her out. When Ba-Khu-Ra
dug her heels in, he leaned in and whispered, “Unless you want me to tell the
guards your secret.”
“I’ll
tell them hers if you do.” Ba-Khu-Ra subtly gestured towards the bed.
Realisation
settled on Mahad’s face, then anger. “Outside now.” He snapped, one hand
reaching for the bronze dagger at his belt, the other still wrapped around her
arm.
She
was pretty sure she could take him in a fight. He was softer than her, more
spoilt from the life inside the palace and while he had obviously been trained
to defend himself and his charge, she was pretty sure that he would fight fair
while she never had.
She
followed him out of the room and down the corridor. Amusingly in the time it
took them to find an out of the way corner, she had already worked out six
different escape routes, none of which required magic to use.
“I
should kill you.” Mahad snapped at her the instant they were alone and could
not be overheard, drawing his dagger.
Bakura
responded by stamping on his foot, forcing him to let her go. She slipped straight
into the darkness, vanishing with practised ease but sticking close enough for
him to hear her voice. “If your Princess wanted me dead, she could have had me
killed already. But perhaps I’m not the one you should contemplate ending.” She
moved around the room, circling him, keeping him off balance, “There’s far
worse than me within your walls. But then I’m the only one who knows the evil
for what it is.”
“What
do you mean?” Mahad demanded, concerned and confused and still angry.
“Look
into your priests and your precious golden treasures. And try asking about a
village called Kul Elna.” Ba-Khu-Ra taunted, “Perhaps you’ll know what I know by
the time I come back for my magic lessons. Or maybe not. Perhaps you’re just as
blind as the rest of them.” With that she was gone, slipping into the darkness
with practised ease and escaping out of the nearest window.
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