Svarta fagren, sajflikk henne, trant i glumen för d’
lunna Yngling, far t’ tvillingarna pa befanningen a Kassi ty
han villa äga jener.
Gryma Kassi, feg erövren,
Belsabubb han å sa hette, stamfar han a orkahodern.
Imperator, döjd vä kjäären, klöv
ijäl a mäkti Järnhann, huven ligganne i dyen hel
sväädlent fra blori halsen.
Alste hon d’ mäkti kjämpe, dråvare a
hennes far, han som stypte jätten Kassi.
Ålste Ynglingen å villa riska livet, bli d’
nödi a befria ham fra Drckå
[The dark seeress, black-skinned beauty, yearned to hold again
the calm-eyed
Youngling, sire of her twin infants by command of the Lord
Kazi so that he would hold his genes.
Cruel Kazi, cowardly conqueror,
Beelzebub had been his byname, founder of the orcish
armies.
Caesar, rotting by the reed fen, smote to death by mighty
Ironhand, proud head resting in the muck now, sword’s length
from his severed neck lay.
Yes she loved the mighty warrior, loved the man who’d
slain her father, he who’d felled the ogre Kazi.
Loved the Youngling and was willing to risk death if that was
needed to deliver him from Draco.]
From THE JÅRNHANN SAGA, Kumalo translation
Moshe the Cerberus was responsible for the security of all
prisoners during his watch. Very personally responsible. Should one
escape or suicide, Moshe’s punishment would be slow,
excruciating, and terminal. So he disliked anything not routine and
would not tolerate confusion. Confusion made it difficult to
monitor thoughts and feelings—nearly impossible to read the subtler
nuances.
When the Master was still alive, the danger of escape had been
academic, and cerberus—dungeon captain—had been an envied job,
comfortable and often enjoyable, while the hazard of prisoner
suicide could be minimized by denying means and by monitoring.
During the present power struggle however, two attempts had been
made to free men from Draco’s dungeon, and rumors of plots
were heard almost weekly. Security had been tightened and drills
held regularly.
The night watch had been on duty for only minutes when the
signal whistle shrilled. It was no alarm, only a signal from the
entry guard above, but the two guards at the foot of the stairwell
quickly nocked arrows while others clattered out of the guard
quarters with pikes or drawn swords.
Moshe stepped to the speaking tube. “What is
it?”
“It’s the Lady Nephthys, Sir. She wishes to come
down with her attendants. She wants to look at the star people and
the barbarian.”
“Wait twenty breaths, then let them pass.”
The Lady Nephthys! The clearest evidence that the Master had
favored Lord Draco over the dog Ahmed was his gift to him of
Nephthys. Moshe had seen her only at a little distance, but it was
said that, close up, her aura was so compelling that statues had
lost control of their parts and as punishment had been unmanned
with hammer and chisel.
He pulled the lever releasing the entry lock, then strode out of
the guard office. Protocol demanded that such a personage be met by
the officer in charge. Within the tall stone stairwell he snapped
his way through armed men, stopped two paces back from the stone
stairs, and stood at attention, a bowman at each side with arrow
ready but pointed downward. Behind them were two pairs of
swordsmen. Next were four pikemen shoulder to shoulder behind tall
shields. Last, just outside the doorway, two men stood by a lever,
ready to drop a heavy iron door into place to shut off the
stairwell should an attack threaten to succeed.
Three new men, replacing others wounded in an off-duty brawl,
had been assigned to standby in the guard room until Moshe could
drill them properly.
His stance became more rigid as footsteps sounded softly above;
there were no orc boots in her company. Her bodyguards turned into
sight—two magnificent blacks, giants, stripped to the waist,
armorless except for helmets. Fleetingly beneath his screen, Moshe
wondered if they were entire. They must be, he decided, for their
muscles were fatless and strongly defined beneath their skin.
Entire, then, and well supplied with girls so they could walk tall
and haughty, their auras cold and proud despite her nearness.
As soon as she turned into sight behind them, hers was all the
aura he was aware of—power, commanding beauty, and a cool sexuality
that numbed his will. For seconds he was actually unaware of the
presence of her female attendants. As she descended, so gracefully,
her visual beauty became one with her aura, and there was no
swagger at all to the stiff-spined dungeon captain when he greeted
her.
“My Lady!” He couldn’t tell whether he’d
spoken or only croaked.
Perfect teeth showed briefly, coolly, in her smooth-skinned
black face. There was no hair, not even eyebrows, and the shape of
her unadorned head was perfect on a strong, regally slim neck. She
was slender, rounded, taller than himself, with a filmy white gown
caught artfully about her, skin as jet black as her father’s.
Beside her, her bodyguards were only dark brown, and for the first
time in his life Moshe was self-conscious of his own light
skin.
It took an effort to maintain his screen so near her. The poor
bastards behind him weren’t up to it at all, and the wash of
flustered awe and fear and male response was a psychic stink.
Perhaps behind her cool reserve she laughed.
She spoke, and he led the party from the stairwell, past the
rigid standby, to a dully-lit passage between two rows of cells.
Some were empty; in others inmates stared or slept. Before the cage
of Chandra Queiros she stopped, and slowly he sat up, huddling
within his own weak-folded arms. In his unscreened mind,
despondency, pain, and dull fear partially gave way to wonder and a
vague sexual stirring.
“Ah! The star man,” she said. “I hear my Lord
had use of him today. I’m told he sings.” She examined
him deliberately, body and soul, then laughed, a throaty arpeggio
in the cell block, and the prisoner, in sudden self-awareness,
covered his nakedness with his hands.
“He’s a poor thing,” she observed as they
walked on. “Where is the woman?”
“She has not been returned. Perhaps she’s being
retained for entertainment.” For a moment the orc’s
mind, unscreened, was outside Nephthys’s spell and suddenly
sadistically avid.
Dark eyes glanced at him in amusement, and the cerberus’s
mind withdrew in confusion behind its screen again.
The barbarian was in the farthest cell.
“Hmm. So this is the Northman, the one who escaped the
arena.” She seemed to purr. “Draco won’t give him
a chance to do that again.”
The Northman rose with insolent carelessness, his unscreened
mind a meaningless hum discernable among the others only by
concentrating. His aura, subdued now and unobtrusive, was none the
less one of strength, detachment, purpose.
“He looks different,” she commented. “His
scalp wasn’t shaved then.” She turned to one of her
bodyguards. “If you faced each other with knives, Mahmut,
could you kill him?”
The black face did not change expression, but keen hardness
glinted from his mind. Moshe realized then that the man had no
tongue, could not speak aloud.
“I’m surprised he seems uninjured,” Nephthys
continued. “I thought my Lord questioned him.”
“Not roughly, my Lady. His face is blistered, as you see,
and I’m sure his knees are painful, but that’s
all.”
“No doubt he has plans for him.” She examined the
prisoner for additional seconds. “I’m disappointed. He
isn’t as much as I’d heard, close up. There are others
as big, and he is only flesh after all. When Draco wishes, he will
become quivering flesh.”
When the royal party had left, the guardsmen relaxed in their
quarters. Alone in the guard room the cerberus took the flagon from
his table and drank, but not deeply. That would be unwise on duty.
Then he sent it into the guard quarters. As a commander he tried to
be generous as well as hard; the combination made for loyalty as
well as discipline. When the bottle was returned he swirled what
remained, considered briefly, drank again and corked it.
Within an hour the drugged wine had felled all but three—the new
men, who’d only feigned drinking. These with swords
dispatched the others, walked quickly to the last cell, whispered
with their minds to the Northman and took the chains from his
ankles. At sword point they led him down the passage. The prisoners
who saw felt brief pity, or dread, or nothing, as he passed.
They paused at the guard room long enough to free his wrists,
had him don a tunic and black cape, and pulled the hood over his
skull, shadowing his face. At the head of the three long flights of
stairs, one turned the lock in the entry door and opened it. The
guard outside was bored and thinking of other things; he did not
expect danger from below, and the telepathic rebels screened well.
Although a telepath himself, he was pulled through the door and
dead in seconds. One of the three stood in his place to give the
others time.
The remaining two walked briskly down the corridor with
Nils, in step, orc boots clopping, and soon turned through a plain
inset door. Narrow stairs angled sharply upward to a passage whose
stone walls were moist with condensation. Occasional oil lamps
bracketed on the walls flickered sluggishly in the stale air, and
twice they passed manholes dogged into a wall, each with a massive
lock. After some two hundred meters they pulled open a trapdoor and
lowered themselves on metal rungs into another passage. Here the
air was fouler, the lamps so low and far apart it was like night.
His guides took off their boots, slung them over their shoulders,
and led him quietly through the darkness. At length they climbed
upward into an unlit room, re-donned their boots, and exited beneath
stars. Alert for the sound or sense of a possible soft-shod night
patrol, they entered a nearby alley. One straddled a manhole,
gripped the stone cover by a ring with both hands, and removed it
with a grunt. He lowered himself and disappeared.
“Now you,” the other whispered to Nils. “I
must stay up here to replace the cover.”
Nils lowered himself, hung by his fingers for a second, then
dropped into blackness. His tortured knees buckled at the bottom,
sprawling him onto rough stone paving. Carefully he rose, and heard
the manhole cover being lowered into place.
His remaining escort whispered to him in Anglic.
“I’m taking you to a storm sewer that you can follow to
the canal. They have gratings across them at intervals that a man
can’t crawl through; this joins one of them below the last
grate. If half that is said of you is true, once you cross the
canal you should be able to get away without any
trouble.”
Psychically Nils nodded. The man was barefoot again, and they
padded through the narrow tunnel in utter darkness, his guide with
a sense of knowing the way. Before long they came to an end, a
door, and the Northman sensed the other feeling for a latch,
finding it. It would not move. He grasped it with both hands, still
couldn’t budge it, and fear surged through him. Nils nudged
him aside, explored with his fingers, closed powerful fists on it
and pulled, then jerked. Then he pushed, finally lunging against it
with a heavy shoulder. The orc took out his sword and pried,
carefully at first, then desperately so that the point snapped.
His fear dulled to despondency. “We’re
trapped,” he said with his mind. “This route’s
been blocked. And we can’t get back out the way we came;
it’s too high.”
Nils’s mind questioned.
“No, the other way is a dead end just beyond the shaft we
came down.”
Reaching up, Nils found he could touch the overhead.
“Let’s go back to the shaft,” he thought.
“There’s something I want to try.”
Mentally the man shrugged. Nils led, one hand following the
wall, the fingers of the other brushing along the overhead until
they found the emptiness of the shaft down which they’d
dropped. It was perhaps a meter and a half wide, and round,
impossible to climb. He dropped to one knee, hands against the damp
wall. “Squat on my shoulders,” he instructed.
“When I get up, put your hands on the side of the shaft and
stand. See if you can reach the cover.”
Slowly Nils stood with his burden, and carefully the orc rose to
his feet; with the return of hope had come fear again.
“I can’t reach it.”
“Stand on my hands and I’ll lift you.”
The man raised his left foot, put it on one of Nils’s
palms, then repeated with the other, steadying himself shakily
with his hands against the wall. Nils grasped both feet firmly, and
slowly raised him to arm’s length overhead. He sensed the orc
reaching upward almost hesitantly, touching pavement above, lingers
feeling for the edges that defined the cover, finding them. Nils
braced his legs, the thick muscles of his arms and shoulders
swelling as the man pushed upward against the heavy disk. It gave a
little, a centimeter, then the man’s arms were fully extended
and could lift no higher. Nils raised up slowly on the balls of his
feet, and for just a moment they gained a little more. Then the orc
fell backward, striking his head against the side of the shaft
before landing heavily on the stones below. There was a stab of
pain in his left elbow.
Nils knelt beside him. The orc radiated hopelessness. “I
couldn’t raise it,” he whispered. “Not enough. It
must be eight centimeters thick.”
Nils’s mind acknowledged. “Now what?” he
asked.
“We stay here until they come for us.”
“Come for us?”
“They have dogs. For tracking, a dog’s nose is
better than telepathy. When they find what happened in the dungeon
they’ll track us down.”
Nils sensed the man fumbling through a belt pouch, hunting for
death. He pressed an object like a pebble into Nils’s palm.
“Swallow it,” he instructed. “You’ll go to
sleep and there will be no wakening. If they take us alive, after
what happened . . . When they have done with
us, even dying would bring no peace. The agony would follow beyond
death itself.”
Nils regarded him calmly, and after a moment the other mind
shrugged. The man put the pill in his dry mouth, far back on his
tongue, swallowed, shuddered, then breathed deeply and relaxed.
Nils sat beside him. Presently the orc slumped against him and Nils
cradled his head and shoulders. The mind was drifting, fading, the
breathing shallow. Before long Nils was alone.
Svarta fagren, sajflikk henne, trant i glumen för d’
lunna Yngling, far t’ tvillingarna pa befanningen a Kassi ty
han villa äga jener.
Gryma Kassi, feg erövren,
Belsabubb han å sa hette, stamfar han a orkahodern.
Imperator, döjd vä kjäären, klöv
ijäl a mäkti Järnhann, huven ligganne i dyen hel
sväädlent fra blori halsen.
Alste hon d’ mäkti kjämpe, dråvare a
hennes far, han som stypte jätten Kassi.
Ålste Ynglingen å villa riska livet, bli d’
nödi a befria ham fra Drckå
[The dark seeress, black-skinned beauty, yearned to hold again
the calm-eyed
Youngling, sire of her twin infants by command of the Lord
Kazi so that he would hold his genes.
Cruel Kazi, cowardly conqueror,
Beelzebub had been his byname, founder of the orcish
armies.
Caesar, rotting by the reed fen, smote to death by mighty
Ironhand, proud head resting in the muck now, sword’s length
from his severed neck lay.
Yes she loved the mighty warrior, loved the man who’d
slain her father, he who’d felled the ogre Kazi.
Loved the Youngling and was willing to risk death if that was
needed to deliver him from Draco.]
From THE JÅRNHANN SAGA, Kumalo translation
Moshe the Cerberus was responsible for the security of all
prisoners during his watch. Very personally responsible. Should one
escape or suicide, Moshe’s punishment would be slow,
excruciating, and terminal. So he disliked anything not routine and
would not tolerate confusion. Confusion made it difficult to
monitor thoughts and feelings—nearly impossible to read the subtler
nuances.
When the Master was still alive, the danger of escape had been
academic, and cerberus—dungeon captain—had been an envied job,
comfortable and often enjoyable, while the hazard of prisoner
suicide could be minimized by denying means and by monitoring.
During the present power struggle however, two attempts had been
made to free men from Draco’s dungeon, and rumors of plots
were heard almost weekly. Security had been tightened and drills
held regularly.
The night watch had been on duty for only minutes when the
signal whistle shrilled. It was no alarm, only a signal from the
entry guard above, but the two guards at the foot of the stairwell
quickly nocked arrows while others clattered out of the guard
quarters with pikes or drawn swords.
Moshe stepped to the speaking tube. “What is
it?”
“It’s the Lady Nephthys, Sir. She wishes to come
down with her attendants. She wants to look at the star people and
the barbarian.”
“Wait twenty breaths, then let them pass.”
The Lady Nephthys! The clearest evidence that the Master had
favored Lord Draco over the dog Ahmed was his gift to him of
Nephthys. Moshe had seen her only at a little distance, but it was
said that, close up, her aura was so compelling that statues had
lost control of their parts and as punishment had been unmanned
with hammer and chisel.
He pulled the lever releasing the entry lock, then strode out of
the guard office. Protocol demanded that such a personage be met by
the officer in charge. Within the tall stone stairwell he snapped
his way through armed men, stopped two paces back from the stone
stairs, and stood at attention, a bowman at each side with arrow
ready but pointed downward. Behind them were two pairs of
swordsmen. Next were four pikemen shoulder to shoulder behind tall
shields. Last, just outside the doorway, two men stood by a lever,
ready to drop a heavy iron door into place to shut off the
stairwell should an attack threaten to succeed.
Three new men, replacing others wounded in an off-duty brawl,
had been assigned to standby in the guard room until Moshe could
drill them properly.
His stance became more rigid as footsteps sounded softly above;
there were no orc boots in her company. Her bodyguards turned into
sight—two magnificent blacks, giants, stripped to the waist,
armorless except for helmets. Fleetingly beneath his screen, Moshe
wondered if they were entire. They must be, he decided, for their
muscles were fatless and strongly defined beneath their skin.
Entire, then, and well supplied with girls so they could walk tall
and haughty, their auras cold and proud despite her nearness.
As soon as she turned into sight behind them, hers was all the
aura he was aware of—power, commanding beauty, and a cool sexuality
that numbed his will. For seconds he was actually unaware of the
presence of her female attendants. As she descended, so gracefully,
her visual beauty became one with her aura, and there was no
swagger at all to the stiff-spined dungeon captain when he greeted
her.
“My Lady!” He couldn’t tell whether he’d
spoken or only croaked.
Perfect teeth showed briefly, coolly, in her smooth-skinned
black face. There was no hair, not even eyebrows, and the shape of
her unadorned head was perfect on a strong, regally slim neck. She
was slender, rounded, taller than himself, with a filmy white gown
caught artfully about her, skin as jet black as her father’s.
Beside her, her bodyguards were only dark brown, and for the first
time in his life Moshe was self-conscious of his own light
skin.
It took an effort to maintain his screen so near her. The poor
bastards behind him weren’t up to it at all, and the wash of
flustered awe and fear and male response was a psychic stink.
Perhaps behind her cool reserve she laughed.
She spoke, and he led the party from the stairwell, past the
rigid standby, to a dully-lit passage between two rows of cells.
Some were empty; in others inmates stared or slept. Before the cage
of Chandra Queiros she stopped, and slowly he sat up, huddling
within his own weak-folded arms. In his unscreened mind,
despondency, pain, and dull fear partially gave way to wonder and a
vague sexual stirring.
“Ah! The star man,” she said. “I hear my Lord
had use of him today. I’m told he sings.” She examined
him deliberately, body and soul, then laughed, a throaty arpeggio
in the cell block, and the prisoner, in sudden self-awareness,
covered his nakedness with his hands.
“He’s a poor thing,” she observed as they
walked on. “Where is the woman?”
“She has not been returned. Perhaps she’s being
retained for entertainment.” For a moment the orc’s
mind, unscreened, was outside Nephthys’s spell and suddenly
sadistically avid.
Dark eyes glanced at him in amusement, and the cerberus’s
mind withdrew in confusion behind its screen again.
The barbarian was in the farthest cell.
“Hmm. So this is the Northman, the one who escaped the
arena.” She seemed to purr. “Draco won’t give him
a chance to do that again.”
The Northman rose with insolent carelessness, his unscreened
mind a meaningless hum discernable among the others only by
concentrating. His aura, subdued now and unobtrusive, was none the
less one of strength, detachment, purpose.
“He looks different,” she commented. “His
scalp wasn’t shaved then.” She turned to one of her
bodyguards. “If you faced each other with knives, Mahmut,
could you kill him?”
The black face did not change expression, but keen hardness
glinted from his mind. Moshe realized then that the man had no
tongue, could not speak aloud.
“I’m surprised he seems uninjured,” Nephthys
continued. “I thought my Lord questioned him.”
“Not roughly, my Lady. His face is blistered, as you see,
and I’m sure his knees are painful, but that’s
all.”
“No doubt he has plans for him.” She examined the
prisoner for additional seconds. “I’m disappointed. He
isn’t as much as I’d heard, close up. There are others
as big, and he is only flesh after all. When Draco wishes, he will
become quivering flesh.”
When the royal party had left, the guardsmen relaxed in their
quarters. Alone in the guard room the cerberus took the flagon from
his table and drank, but not deeply. That would be unwise on duty.
Then he sent it into the guard quarters. As a commander he tried to
be generous as well as hard; the combination made for loyalty as
well as discipline. When the bottle was returned he swirled what
remained, considered briefly, drank again and corked it.
Within an hour the drugged wine had felled all but three—the new
men, who’d only feigned drinking. These with swords
dispatched the others, walked quickly to the last cell, whispered
with their minds to the Northman and took the chains from his
ankles. At sword point they led him down the passage. The prisoners
who saw felt brief pity, or dread, or nothing, as he passed.
They paused at the guard room long enough to free his wrists,
had him don a tunic and black cape, and pulled the hood over his
skull, shadowing his face. At the head of the three long flights of
stairs, one turned the lock in the entry door and opened it. The
guard outside was bored and thinking of other things; he did not
expect danger from below, and the telepathic rebels screened well.
Although a telepath himself, he was pulled through the door and
dead in seconds. One of the three stood in his place to give the
others time.
The remaining two walked briskly down the corridor with
Nils, in step, orc boots clopping, and soon turned through a plain
inset door. Narrow stairs angled sharply upward to a passage whose
stone walls were moist with condensation. Occasional oil lamps
bracketed on the walls flickered sluggishly in the stale air, and
twice they passed manholes dogged into a wall, each with a massive
lock. After some two hundred meters they pulled open a trapdoor and
lowered themselves on metal rungs into another passage. Here the
air was fouler, the lamps so low and far apart it was like night.
His guides took off their boots, slung them over their shoulders,
and led him quietly through the darkness. At length they climbed
upward into an unlit room, re-donned their boots, and exited beneath
stars. Alert for the sound or sense of a possible soft-shod night
patrol, they entered a nearby alley. One straddled a manhole,
gripped the stone cover by a ring with both hands, and removed it
with a grunt. He lowered himself and disappeared.
“Now you,” the other whispered to Nils. “I
must stay up here to replace the cover.”
Nils lowered himself, hung by his fingers for a second, then
dropped into blackness. His tortured knees buckled at the bottom,
sprawling him onto rough stone paving. Carefully he rose, and heard
the manhole cover being lowered into place.
His remaining escort whispered to him in Anglic.
“I’m taking you to a storm sewer that you can follow to
the canal. They have gratings across them at intervals that a man
can’t crawl through; this joins one of them below the last
grate. If half that is said of you is true, once you cross the
canal you should be able to get away without any
trouble.”
Psychically Nils nodded. The man was barefoot again, and they
padded through the narrow tunnel in utter darkness, his guide with
a sense of knowing the way. Before long they came to an end, a
door, and the Northman sensed the other feeling for a latch,
finding it. It would not move. He grasped it with both hands, still
couldn’t budge it, and fear surged through him. Nils nudged
him aside, explored with his fingers, closed powerful fists on it
and pulled, then jerked. Then he pushed, finally lunging against it
with a heavy shoulder. The orc took out his sword and pried,
carefully at first, then desperately so that the point snapped.
His fear dulled to despondency. “We’re
trapped,” he said with his mind. “This route’s
been blocked. And we can’t get back out the way we came;
it’s too high.”
Nils’s mind questioned.
“No, the other way is a dead end just beyond the shaft we
came down.”
Reaching up, Nils found he could touch the overhead.
“Let’s go back to the shaft,” he thought.
“There’s something I want to try.”
Mentally the man shrugged. Nils led, one hand following the
wall, the fingers of the other brushing along the overhead until
they found the emptiness of the shaft down which they’d
dropped. It was perhaps a meter and a half wide, and round,
impossible to climb. He dropped to one knee, hands against the damp
wall. “Squat on my shoulders,” he instructed.
“When I get up, put your hands on the side of the shaft and
stand. See if you can reach the cover.”
Slowly Nils stood with his burden, and carefully the orc rose to
his feet; with the return of hope had come fear again.
“I can’t reach it.”
“Stand on my hands and I’ll lift you.”
The man raised his left foot, put it on one of Nils’s
palms, then repeated with the other, steadying himself shakily
with his hands against the wall. Nils grasped both feet firmly, and
slowly raised him to arm’s length overhead. He sensed the orc
reaching upward almost hesitantly, touching pavement above, lingers
feeling for the edges that defined the cover, finding them. Nils
braced his legs, the thick muscles of his arms and shoulders
swelling as the man pushed upward against the heavy disk. It gave a
little, a centimeter, then the man’s arms were fully extended
and could lift no higher. Nils raised up slowly on the balls of his
feet, and for just a moment they gained a little more. Then the orc
fell backward, striking his head against the side of the shaft
before landing heavily on the stones below. There was a stab of
pain in his left elbow.
Nils knelt beside him. The orc radiated hopelessness. “I
couldn’t raise it,” he whispered. “Not enough. It
must be eight centimeters thick.”
Nils’s mind acknowledged. “Now what?” he
asked.
“We stay here until they come for us.”
“Come for us?”
“They have dogs. For tracking, a dog’s nose is
better than telepathy. When they find what happened in the dungeon
they’ll track us down.”
Nils sensed the man fumbling through a belt pouch, hunting for
death. He pressed an object like a pebble into Nils’s palm.
“Swallow it,” he instructed. “You’ll go to
sleep and there will be no wakening. If they take us alive, after
what happened . . . When they have done with
us, even dying would bring no peace. The agony would follow beyond
death itself.”
Nils regarded him calmly, and after a moment the other mind
shrugged. The man put the pill in his dry mouth, far back on his
tongue, swallowed, shuddered, then breathed deeply and relaxed.
Nils sat beside him. Presently the orc slumped against him and Nils
cradled his head and shoulders. The mind was drifting, fading, the
breathing shallow. Before long Nils was alone.