The old man gave Vai a bitter look. “Yee have boasted yee have a certain means to kill him.”
“It is no boast. It is the truth.”
This was not only too much, it was terrifying, for they meant to throw away Vai’s life!
I jumped to my feet. “Vai is worth far more to everyone alive. If you demand he try to assassinate the general, you’ll only be making him throw away his life on a task he can’t accomplish.”
“Catherine!”
“One man with adequate fighting skills, pitted against trained soldiers who will have crossbows? The mansa can’t have known cold magic is so weak here or I can’t believe he’d have sent you. In Europa, there’s no one you could not destroy. Here, without truly powerful cold magic to protect yourself, the general’s people will cut you down before you can get close enough to draw blood.”
I desperately needed some way to persuade Vai away from this foredoomed course of action. I recalled Brennan’s words when we had been digging through the wreckage of the airship. “Why do you radicals see the general as your enemy? Why do you want him dead?”
The old man waved a hand like wiping away a stain. “We ancestors escaped an empire. Shall we help raise another? A man who is on his father’s side a Keita, a descendant of the Malian royal lineage? Even from over the ocean, such an emperor can come back and say he have the right to trample us because we ancestors once served his.”
“Brennan Du told me that if you examine Camjiata’s legal code, you’ll see he understands he can only succeed by offering rights and privileges to the common people that their masters have denied them. Why kill him? Have you considered making an alliance with him against the Council?”
“A question,” said the old man, “made more interesting by the fact that yee is the one who have posed it.”
“Yee do know, fire bane,” remarked the middle-aged man, “that this gal is known to have arrived on the jetty in the company of James Drake, a notorious fire mage?”
Vai’s mouth turned down, and his shoulders stiffened. “I know that. Have you a point?”
“Beside the point ’tis rumored he have used unwilling people—dying people—as catch-fires to absorb his magic?”
I choked, but no one was watching me. They were all watching Vai.