"Fallon, Jennifer - Demon Child Trilogy 02 - Treason Keep" - читать интересную книгу автора (Fallon Jennifer)
Treason
TREASON KEEP
THE DEMON CHILD TRILOGY BOOK 02
Jennifer Fallon
Also
by Jennifer Fallon
Medalon
Harshini
A DF Books
NERDs Release
This is a
work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the
products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Any
resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons,
living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of
either the author or the publisher.
Jennifer Fallon
asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
Print edition first
published in February 2001 by Voyager, an imprint of HarperCollins
Publishers Pty Limited.
http://www.voyageronline.com.au
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Additional
e-book features
Map
PART 1
POLITICS AND POWER GAMES
Chapter
1
Chapter
2
Chapter
3
Chapter
4
Chapter
5
Chapter
6
Chapter
7
Chapter
8
Chapter
9
Chapter
10
Chapter
11
Chapter
12
Chapter
13
Chapter
14
Chapter
15
Chapter
16
Chapter
17
Chapter
18
Chapter
19
Chapter
20
PART 2
BATTLE LINES
Chapter
21
Chapter
22
Chapter
23
Chapter
24
Chapter
25
Chapter
26
Chapter
27
Chapter
28
Chapter
29
Chapter
30
Chapter
31
Chapter
32
Chapter
33
Chapter
34
Chapter
35
PART 3
THE POLITICS OF SEDUCTION
Chapter
36
Chapter
37
Chapter
38
Chapter
39
Chapter
40
Chapter
41
Chapter
42
Chapter
43
Chapter
44
Chapter
45
Chapter
46
Chapter
47
Chapter
48
Chapter
49
Chapter
50
Chapter
51
Chapter
52
Chapter
53
PART 4
CONSEQUENCES
Chapter
54
Chapter
55
Chapter
56
Chapter
57
Chapter
58
Chapter
59
Chapter
60
Chapter
61
Chapter
62
Chapter
63
Chapter
64
Chapter
65
Chapter
66
Chapter
67
Glossary
About
the Author
About
Book Three, Harshini
Excerpt
from Book Three, Harshini
Illustrations
by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Reading
Notes
Credits
About
Voyager
About
the Publisher
For Dace Mikel O’Brien,
the original God of Thieves,
and as always, Adele Robinson
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My life is many things, but boring isn’t
one of
them. Despite a wedding, a birth, a book launch, two house moves, a new
business and a few other rather traumatic incidents that I would rather
not relive, this book was written in considerably less time than Medalon.
As always, there are the usual suspects who deserve my thanks for
their unswerving faith and their high tolerance levels in putting up
with me during the creation of this work. In particular, I would like
to thank my children, Amanda, TJ and David for their support and for
filling my life with so many distractions that I have, though sheer
necessity, mastered the art of focussing on writing to the exclusion of
all else. They will readily attest to this fact, although they may be
surprised how often I’ve heard them lament to each other
“don’t bother
asking her anything, she’s writingâ€.
I would like to thank Stephanie Smith, Darian Causby and Midge
McCall, and all the other people at HarperCollins who I have never met
but who have contributed to this series, along with Lyn Tranter and
Cathy Perkins at Australian Literary Management and also Sarah
Endacott. Stephanie Pui-Mun Law has once again created an awesome cover
and I remain one of her most ardent fans.
With my dying breath, I will be thanking Harshini Bhoola for her
never-ending enthusiasm and her constant re-reading of the manuscripts,
and it still won’t repay her. Thanks also to my good friend
Peter
Jackson for encouraging me to take a step into the unknown and my
favourite sycophants, Toni-Maree and John Elferink MLA for helping me
keep my feet on the ground while my head was in the clouds.
“Her Most Serene Highness took the news
well?â€
Lecter inquired cautiously of the King as he slipped through the door.
Hablet glared at the eunuch. “Of course she didn’t
take it well.
She’s livid.â€
“In time she will adjust to the idea.â€
“She’d better,†the King grumbled. He pushed
himself to his feet and
walked to the window. The gardens below were a riot of colour and the
faint sounds of children’s laughter drifted up from the
fountain in the
centre court. The sound soothed him. He wondered what it was about his
children that meant he only seemed to like them before they reached
puberty. Once they grew up, they were no fun at all. They learnt to
manipulate and grew greedy and caused him no end of trouble. But the
little ones — ah, now they were his true joy in life. He had
adored
Adrina when she was ten. Now he was almost frightened of her.
“Might I suggest you place a guard on the princess? She
could decide
to defy you.â€
“She won’t defy me,†Hablet assured him.
“It will occur to her soon
enough that she’ll be the Karien Queen one day. Adrina
isn’t stupid,
Lecter. She’ll do what I want, but not because it pleases me.
She’ll do
it because it pleases her.â€
“I hope your trust in her is not misplaced, your
Majesty.â€
“Trust has nothing to do with it. She’s been dying
to escape the
palace, and I’ve just given her a crown.â€
“A crown she could turn on you one day?†Lecter
suggested
tentatively.
“Hah! Adrina? And that simpering, Karien Prince? I
don’t think so!
Adrina might have it in her to commit such treachery, but Cratyn is as
spineless as a jellyfish. Did you see what they’ve agreed to?
How much
timber they’re willing to part with, just to get access to
Solanndy Bay
and the Gulf? They’re idiots!â€
“You control the only access to their holiest shrine, your
Majesty,
not to mention any chance they have of sea-going trade. You
didn’t
really leave them much choice.â€
“They want the secret of my cannon,†Hablet added.
“They want that
even more than they want trade or access to that miserable Isle of
Slarn. What sort of god chooses a lump of rock like Slarn to make his
home, anyway?â€
“The same sort of god who will demand your daughter convert
to his
worship. Your grandchildren will be followers of Xaphista.â€
“Adrina pointed out the same thing,†the King mused,
walking back to
his desk. “Odd to hear you two in agreement on any point.
Still,
Laryssa is due to whelp any day now. She’ll give me a son and
it won’t
matter how many Karien bastards Adrina has.â€
“Of course, your Majesty.†It was clear Lecter was
as doubtful of
the possibility as everyone else was. But surely Jelanna would not deny
him again. Laryssa, the eighth woman he had taken to wife, had proved
her fertility. She’d already given him two healthy bastard
sons. Hablet
had decided he would not marry any woman who could not produce sons and
it was perfectly reasonable to assume that she would not let him down
this time. The thought warmed him, almost making him forget his anger
at Adrina. A legitimate son. Nothing would make him happier.
It wasn’t that Hablet didn’t love his baseborn sons.
On the
contrary, he adored them. But naming one his heir would cause problems.
The throne needed a clear line of succession, and the law was clear,
although not well known: either he sired a son himself, or the crown
would go to Hythria, thanks to an almost forgotten twelve
hundred-year-old agreement that Hablet had been trying to find a way
around for thirty years. As he would rather fall on a rusty blade than
see that happen, the only solution, if he did not have a legitimate son
of his own, was to name one of his bastards heir. But he could not do
that until he had removed the threat of any Hythrun heirs to his
throne, a situation he planned to see to personally once he was across
the border into Hythria. Then, if Laryssa failed to whelp a boy, he
could legitimise one of his baseborn sons, probably Tristan, and not
just because he was the eldest. Tristan was the brightest, the most
personable, and the least likely to allow Adrina to control him.
Although, given last night’s disastrous escapade, Hablet was
beginning
to wonder about that. Perhaps it wasn’t a good idea to send him
north
with Adrina . . .
Hablet sighed. It was a moot point. Laryssa would give him a
son. Adrina would be off his hands, out of sight and out of mind in
Karien. Let her play Queen of the Realm in the north. He had their
timber, their gold and their iron. In return they were getting his most
troublesome daughter and a promise he had no intention of keeping.
All in all, Hablet decided, looking down at the pile of debts Adrina
had accumulated last night, it was a good bargain.
“So how are our Karien guests this morning?†he
asked, pushing the
pile to one side of the gilded desk. “Have they calmed
down?â€
“The prince was somewhat mollified by your generous
offer.â€
“So he damned well should be!â€
“I noted,†Lecter continued, mopping his brow,
“that the Kariens
showed an unnatural interest in your offer to send a regiment with
Adrina as her personal guard.â€
“I trust Adrina to keep them out of harm’s way. She
was right about
one thing. I’d never have risked sending them with
Cassandra.â€
“If I may be so bold as to offer my opinion, your Majesty,
one
wonders if it is a good idea to send any troops north at all.â€
“What do you mean? If I don’t send her to Karien in
a manner
befitting her station, they’ll know something is going
on.â€
“I agree, your Majesty, but I have received more than one
report
that the Harshini have returned. There have been sightings in
Greenharbour, at the Sorcerer’s Collective, and even as far
away as
Testra, in Medalon.â€
“So? What has that got to do with us?â€
“The Kariens are dedicated to the destruction of the
Harshini, your
Majesty. Marrying your daughter to their Crown Prince, and sending her
north with your soldiers might be . . .
misconstrued.â€
“You mean I might offend the Harshini?†Hablet
scratched his beard
as he sank down into his chair. “If the Harshini have returned,
Lecter,
and I seriously doubt they have, then why are they not here? I am the
King of Fardohnya! If they were back the first thing they would
do is send an Emissary to my court. Instead, all you can offer me are
unfounded rumours about Harshini in Hythria. I have served the gods
faithfully. Why would they send their people to that degenerate in
Greenharbour, when they could come here?â€
“High Prince Lernen has always supported the
Sorcerer’s Collective
and the temples most generously.â€
“Lernen doesn’t support anyone but himself,â€
Hablet scoffed. “If the
Harshini had returned, I would know about it. They are dead and gone,
Lecter, so we will just have to stumble on without them as we have done
for the past two hundred years.â€
“Of course, your Majesty.â€
Lecter mopped his brow again, looking rather uncomfortable. On days
like this he annoyed Hablet. His grovelling manner was intolerable at
times, but he had a sharp political mind and no scruples at all, that
Hablet could discern. It made him an excellent chamberlain, if a
tiresome one.
“What else, Lecter? I can tell there’s something
bothering you.â€
“It’s a small matter, your Majesty. One that hardly
needs your
attention.â€
“Out with it, Lecter! I don’t have time for your
games this morning.
Cratyn will be here at any moment.â€
“There have been other rumours, Sire, particularly in
Medalon. About
the demon child.â€
“Lorandranek’s legendary half-human child? Those
rumours have been
around ever since the Harshini disappeared. Surely you don’t
believe
them?â€
“I don’t believe anything, your Majesty, until I
have proof.
However, I feel they might be worthy of investigation. I could
send . . .â€
“No,†Hablet declared bluntly. “I’ll
not have you wasting time and
money chasing fairytales. The Harshini are extinct and there is no
fabled demon child. I would much rather you spent your time fruitfully.
Like finding out why the High Prince of Hythria sent his nephew to
Medalon to fight with the Defenders.â€
“My sources tell me Lernen has little or no control over his
nephew.
I doubt he sent him anywhere.â€
“Then find out why young Wolfblade went north. I want a free
path
into Hythria, Lecter. I don’t want a battalion of Defenders on
my back,
and Wolfblade needs to die.â€
“The Kariens will keep the Defenders off your back, Sire,
and I am
sure they can be prevailed upon to dispose of the Hythrun Prince. Why
else would we support their coming war with Medalon?â€
“I hope you’re right, Lecter, because I’ll
be very put out if this
doesn’t work.â€
Before Lecter could offer another obsequious reply, the doors opened
and the Karien Prince strode in, accompanied by his retinue. Hablet
greeted them expansively and ordered the guards to bring chairs for the
new arrivals.
Lecter bowed low, mopped his brow and backed out of the room,
leaving the King to his guests.
CHAPTER 4
Everyone’s eyes were on Adrina as she
strode down
the long hall. As if to mock her, at the end of the hall, the
princeling in question was heading toward her, with his gaggle of
priests in tow.
Except for the ball held in his honour the day of his arrival a week
ago, Adrina had not seen the young Prince, and counted herself lucky.
He had spent the entire ball blushing an interesting shade of pink
every time he caught sight of a Fardohnyan woman’s bare
midriff. As
every one of the two hundred or so women present had been dressed in a
similar fashion, he was damned near apoplectic by the end of the
evening. For a fleeting moment, she debated doing something truly
outrageous, right here in the Hall, which would ensure the Kariens
would reject her as a potential bride. But she had caught the expectant
look on Lecter Turon’s smug, fat face as he slipped through the
door to
attend the King, and thought better of it. He would keep.
She stopped and waited as the young prince approached. Tall, serious
and boring did not particularly appeal to Adrina, but he was civilised
enough, she supposed. He was a little taller than her, with
unremarkable brown hair, and eyes the colour of dried mud. At least he
knew how to chew with his mouth closed.
“Prince Cretin,†she said, offering him her hand.
The older man on
Cratyn’s right looked a little put out that she had greeted his
prince
as an equal, but Cratyn did not appear to notice. He was too busy
staring at the pearl in her navel. “My father has just informed
me that
we are to be married.â€
Cratyn dropped her hand, jerked his head up and met her eye. He
looked at her black eye curiously for a moment, but made no comment
about it. Instead, he nodded — rather miserably, she noted with
interest.
“Karien welcomes Fardohnya’s favourite daughter,
your Serene
Highness,†he said in his clipped Karien. “We look
forward to a new era
of prosperity and friendship between our two great nations.â€
Someone sniggered in the background at the idea. Adrina looked at
Cratyn curiously, wondering if he was really as naive as he sounded.
“I look forward to serving Fardohnya and Karien,
your
Highness,†she replied graciously, in heavily accented Karien.
Two
could play this game, and Adrina could mouth meaningless platitudes in
any number of languages, when the mood took her. “Now, if you
will
excuse me, I have arrangements to make for my journey.â€
Cratyn stepped aside for her, forcing the rest of his party to do
the same.
Adrina continued regally on through the hall. Until she came up with
a way to escape her father’s decree, she had no choice but to
play
along with it.
At least the meeting with the young Karien Prince had not gone too
badly. She had made it clear to the Kariens that she held a rank equal
to their prince, and Cratyn had been rather overawed by her, she
decided with satisfaction. But he wasn’t very happy with the
idea of an
arranged marriage. That much was obvious. It could simply be his
distaste for a foreign bride — or perhaps he was smarter than
he
looked, and had some idea of how treacherous and unreliable her father
was. She was almost back to her rooms, and still trying to puzzle it
out, when a rather shamefaced Tristan caught up with her.
“The last I heard, you were running away like a cur with its
tail
between its legs,†she snapped as he fell into step beside her.
Tristan was younger than Adrina by two days, and until an hour ago,
she had considered him her best friend. Tristan’s mother was a
Hythrun court’esa,
one of Hablet’s favourites, who still lived in the palace
harem, even
though she no longer took the King’s fancy. She had been a
beautiful
woman in her youth and Tristan had inherited most of her charm, as well
as her fair hair and golden eyes. He turned all of that charm on his
half-sister now, to absolutely no effect.
“Would I desert you in your hour of need?â€
“I didn’t happen to notice you helping me when I
needed you, just
now.â€
“I was busy,†he shrugged, with an apologetic smile.
“Do you know what he’s done?†There was no
need to elaborate on who he
was.
“Married you off to the Karien Prince and ordered me north
with the
regiment?â€
She turned on him furiously. “You knew!â€
“My orders were waiting for me at the South Gate. The ink
wasn’t
even dry. You really pushed him too far this time, Adrina.â€
“You were there, too! I only tried docking the damned boat
because
you dared me . . .â€
“It’s a ship, not a boat,†he corrected.
“Anyway, this might be fun.â€
“Fun? I have to marry that snivelling, pious little
cretin.â€
“And one day that snivelling, pious little cretin will be
the Karien
King. That’s more than you’ll ever get here, Adrina.
You might be the
eldest legitimate child, but Hablet will turn atheist before he lets a
woman inherit the Fardohnyan crown. You’ve always known
he’d sell you
to the highest bidder. At least, this way, you get to be a
queen.â€
Adrina listened to her brother thoughtfully, as she considered
possibilities that had not had time to register.
“And what about you?†she asked.
“He’s banished you north as well.â€
Tristan shrugged. “I’ve got fourteen half-brothers,
Adrina. When
Hablet tires of trying to get a legitimate son on one of his wives,
there’ll be a rather spirited competition for our
father’s favour.
That’s a bloodbath I’ll be more than happy to
miss.â€
“This does present some interesting opportunities,
doesn’t it?†she
agreed.
Tristan laughed. “You know, sometimes, you’re so
like Hablet it’s
scary.â€
Adrina stopped and looked up at him. “The regiment
that’s going
north, what’s its function?â€
“They’ll be the Princess’s Guard,â€
Tristan told her. “Under your
command, to use as you see fit.â€
“And you are the Captain of the Guard?â€
“Naturally,†he said with a smug grin.
“Is Father sending any cannon with you?â€
Tristan’s grin vanished. He glanced up and down the hall
before
answering in a low voice. “No, and I’m not certain the
Kariens will
ever see any artillery.â€
“But he’s promised them!â€
“You know as well as I do how much Father’s promises
are worth.
He’ll take their gold and their timber and happily send his
daughter to
Karien as a bride to prove his good intentions, but he really
doesn’t
want to hand the Kariens anything as dangerous as a cannon.
He’s had
every man in Talabar who even thinks he knows how to make gunpowder
taken into custody.â€
“He could be doing that just to drive up the price.â€
“I suppose.â€
“So the regiment going north are just light cavalry then?
Tristan nodded warily. “For the most part. What are you up
to,
Adrina?â€
“Nothing,†she replied. “Not yet, anyway.
Can you get me that list?
Before we sail? And I want to know who Hablet arrested, too.â€
“Why?â€
She ignored the question. “And I want you to do something
else for
me. Find out why Cratyn is so unhappy about this marriage.â€
“He’s probably heard about you,â€
Tristan suggested.
Adrina frowned at him, but did not rise to the bait. “Maybe,
but
I’ve got a feeling there’s more to it than that. I want
to know what it
is.â€
“As you command, your Serene Highness,†Tristan said
with a mocking
bow.
“One other thing,†she added as she turned to walk
away. “Do any of
the regiment speak Karien?â€
“Most of them, as far I as know,†Tristan said.
“Then the first order you are to give them is to conceal
that
knowledge,†Adrina told him. “The men are to act dumb.
I want the
Kariens to think they don’t understand any orders but mine.
Including
you. If I have to go through with this, I’ll do it on my
terms.â€
Tristan was as good as his word, and by early
afternoon Adrina had the names of every man in her regiment, and every
man and woman rounded up by Hablet prior to the arrival of the Karien
Prince, to prevent the secret of gunpowder falling into the wrong
hands. She studied both lists carefully. The names on the first list,
for the most part, meant nothing to her. She was not permitted to
socialise with Tristan’s fellow officers, although a few of the
names
she had heard spoken in court. The second list was much more
interesting. She studied it carefully, delighted when one name appeared
that she knew — by reputation at least.
Adrina spent the rest of the day driving her slaves mad as she made
them drag the entire contents of her wardrobe out, so that she could
decide what she should take with her on her journey north. By the end
of the afternoon, the floor of her chamber was littered with discarded
outfits. At that point, Adrina loudly announced that she simply had
nothing to wear, and certainly nothing suitable for a future queen. She
threw a rather impressive tantrum that had the entire palace scurrying
out of her way. Just on dusk, Hablet sent word that she could send for
the tailor of her choice and order whatever she liked.
The following morning Mhergon, the palace tailor, arrived, nervously
clutching a bundle of cloth swatches. Adrina refused to see him and
demanded to see Japinel instead. He was the only tailor in Talabar
worthy of such a task, she declared. Nobody else would do. She threw
another tantrum, just to make her point, and then sat back and waited.
She did not have to wait long. Less than an hour after Mhergon had
fled her chambers, Lecter Turon arrived. Adrina, draped over the chaise
in her morning room, graciously granted him an audience.
“Where is Japinel?â€
“He is unavailable, your Highness. Your father, his Majesty
the King
—â€
“I know who my father is, Turon. Get to the point.â€
“Mhergon is eminently qualified as a master tailor, your
Highness.â€
“Mhergon couldn’t make a sack out of
homespun,†Adrina scoffed. “My
father said the tailor of my choice. I want Japinel.â€
“Japinel dabbles, your Highness, in tailoring as he does in
everything else. The last I heard he was calling himself an alchemist.
I cannot see why —â€
“You don’t have to, Turon. Get me Japinel or I will
come to dinner
tonight naked. We’ll see what his Royal Highness, the Crown
Prince of
Karien thinks of that!â€
Lecter Turon waddled off in a foul mood, but Adrina knew she had
won. Just on sunset a very pale and confused-looking Japinel was
ushered into her chambers. He seemed stunned that the Princess Adrina
had even heard of him, let alone wanted him to design her trousseau.
Adrina ordered her slaves out and waited until they were alone, before
she allowed him to speak.
“Your Serene Highness!†Japinel cried as he
prostrated himself at
her feet.
“Oh, do get up! I don’t have time for that!â€
Japinel was a weedy little man with eyes set too close together. He
scrambled to his feet, managing to bow at least half a dozen times on
the way up.
“I am honoured, your Highness. I will design you a trousseau
that
the gods will envy. I will create —â€
“Shut up, fool! I wouldn’t wear something designed
by you if my life
depended on it.â€
“But your Highness! Chamberlain Turon said —â€
“I have gowns enough to sink my father’s
flagship,†she told him. It
was a poor analogy under the circumstances. “I want something
else from
you, Japinel. If you do as I say, you’ll be rewarded as if you
really
did create my trousseau. If you don’t, I’ll make sure
you never see the
light of day again.â€
Japinel might have been a scoundrel, but he wasn’t stupid.
His eyes
narrowed greedily.
“What is it you want, your Highness?â€
“I want to know how to make gunpowder,â€
Japinel’s eyes widened. “But I’m a tailor,
your Highness. What would
I know about such things?â€
“My father is currently holding you in custody because you
claimed
you did know.â€
Japinel wrung his hands and shrugged helplessly. “A mistake,
your
Highness. I had thought to try a different career . . .
I boasted unwisely . . .â€
Adrina could have strangled the little worm. “Where are they
holding
you and the others?â€
“In the slave quarters, your Highness.â€
“Then that’s where you will return. I will see you
again tomorrow. I
suggest you get the formula from one of your cell mates. I leave
Talabar in three days, Japinel. If I don’t have what I want by
then, I
will have you sent to the salt mines in Parkinoor and you won’t
see
Talabar until your grandsons are old men.â€
After he left, Adrina cursed for a full ten minutes. She was still
cursing when Tamylan arrived to help her dress for dinner.
CHAPTER 5
Captain Wain Loclon was forced to wait for almost
an hour outside the Lord Defender’s office before Garet Warner
arrived.
In that hour he had rehearsed, over and over again, what he planned to
say. It sounded reasonable and logical and he was certain of success
—
right up until the moment the commandant appeared.
The commandant glanced at him briefly as he opened the door, his
expression more put-upon than welcoming. Loclon followed him into the
office, taking a deep breath. Although of lesser rank than the Lord
Defender, Loclon wished it were Jenga, not Garet Warner, that he was
forced to confront. The Lord Defender was predictable, and much easier
to read than the enigmatic commander of Defender Intelligence.
“I see you’ve recovered,†Garet remarked as
Loclon closed the door
behind them.
Garet lit the lantern on the Lord Defender’s desk and
studied the
younger man in the flickering light for a moment, before seating
himself in the padded leather chair behind the heavy wooden desk.
“I was released from the infirmary this morning,â€
Loclon confirmed.
Garet nodded. “And you are ready to return to your
duties?â€
“Yes, sir.â€
“Good. Report to Commandant Arkin. He’ll find you
something useful
to do. Sergeant Jocan will arrange for you to be accommodated in the
Officers’ Barracks, unless you prefer to make your own
arrangements.â€
“I have rooms near the main gate, sir. I was planning to
return
there.â€
“As you wish. Was there anything else?â€
Loclon swallowed before answering. “Actually, I was hoping I
could
request an assignment, sir.â€
Garet looked up curiously. “Request away, Captain, although
I’ve no
guarantee you’ll get what you ask for.â€
“I want to be part of the detail assigned to hunting down
Tarja
Tenragan.â€
Garet Warner smiled briefly. “Is that so?â€
“Yes, sir.â€
“Well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news, Captain, but
there are
no details hunting Tarja down. The First Sister has pardoned
him.â€
“Sir?†Loclon thought he was hearing things. He had
been out of
touch for the past few months as he recovered from the wounds inflicted
on him by R’shiel and Tarja, but he could not imagine any
circumstance
that could have arisen in that time that would give the First Sister
reason to pardon her wayward son.
“You heard correctly, Captain. Tarja has been pardoned and
restored
to the Defenders.â€
“But after all that he’s
done . . .â€
“All of which has been forgiven. Was there anything
else?â€
“Sir, I cannot believe that the First Sister would simply
pardon
him! What of the Defenders he killed? The heathen rebellion he led?
What of his desertion? And what of his sister?â€
“R’shiel? She has also been the recipient of the
First Sister’s
mercy.â€
“I don’t believe it.â€
“Believe what you will, Captain. The fact is they have been
pardoned. While I can understand your distress, considering the
circumstances, there is nothing you or I can do about it.â€
Loclon refused to accept Garet Warner’s calm assurances.
“Sir, I
believe I have the right to insist that charges be pressed. After what
they did to me . . .â€
“Ah, yes, I read your report. You allege R’shiel
used heathen magic
on you.â€
“I do not allege, sir, I know she did. It was she
who gave
me this.†Loclon pulled down the collar of his high-necked red
Defender’s jacket to reveal a savage pink scar that ran from
one side
of his throat to the other. It made an interesting counterpoint to the
puckered scar that ran from the corner of his left eye to his mouth.
His misshapen nose was the final touch on his ruined — but once
handsome — face.
“Quite an impressive collection of scars,†Garet
noted. “But hardly
proof that R’shiel is a heathen.â€
“I know what I saw, sir,†he insisted. They
can’t do this to me,
not now. Not when he was finally ready to seek revenge.
“Just exactly what were you doing when R’shiel
revealed this
unexpected talent for wielding heathen magic, Captain? Your report was
rather vague on that point.â€
Loclon hesitated as images filled his mind of R’shiel, naked
to the
waist, her pale breasts stark in the jagged lightning, her eyes
glittering and totally black, filled with forbidden heathen power. He
could still taste her lips and the raindrops on her skin. He could
still feel the blade she had used to cut his throat. Hatred burned
through his veins like acid.
“She was attempting to escape, sir.â€
“And succeeded, as I understand it,†Garet pointed
out. “This entire
episode is something of a blemish on your record, Captain. I would have
thought you’d be anxious to let the matter drop.â€
“She is dangerous, sir, and so is Tarja. They must be
punished.â€
Garet shook his head. “Unfortunately, the First Sister does
not
agree with you. Report to Commandant Arkin for reassignment and let the
matter drop.â€
“May I ask where they are now?†It took all he had
to ask the
question calmly.
“Tarja is with the Lord Defender and the First Sister is on
the
northern border. As for R’shiel, I assume she is with them,
although I
cannot say for certain. I’m leaving for the northern border in
the
morning. I’ll give Tarja your regards, shall I?â€
Garet Warner was mocking him, but there was nothing he could do
about it. “Permission to accompany you, Commandant!â€
“Denied. Arkin will be in charge until the Lord Defender or
I
return. You are dismissed.â€
“But sir —â€
“I said you are dismissed, Captain.â€
Loclon saluted sharply, rage burning in the depths of his blue eyes,
the scar on his face a livid reflection of his mood. He slammed the
door behind him, thinking that if Garet Warner thought that he would so
easily forget the pair who had tried to destroy him, then he was sadly
mistaken.
Later that evening, after he had reclaimed his
rooms in Mistress Longeaves’ Boarding House, Loclon made his
way
through the torchlit streets of the Citadel to the eastern side of the
city. An earlier shower of rain made the cobbles glisten and the
footing treacherous as he neared the seedier part of town. Passers-by
became more rare, then stopped completely, as he walked through the
darkened warehouse district. Only the sudden harsh bark of an alert
watchdog and the scurrying feet of rats disturbed the night. He had not
been here in almost a year, but the route was familiar enough that he
walked with assurance; unafraid of anything he might meet, as the
streets narrowed into shadowed pockets of darkness. The cutpurses of
the Citadel would be plying their trade along Tavern Street, where the
pickings were more fruitful.
When he reached his destination, he knocked on the dilapidated door
that was squeezed into a laneway between two warehouses. When he
received no response to his summons, he pounded louder and was rewarded
by a metallic screech, as the spy-hole in the door was forced open. A
pair of suspicious dark eyes glared at him, taking in his red uniform
with a frown.
“What d’ya want?â€
“I want to come in. Mistress Heaner knows me.â€
“Yeah? What’s her cat’s name then?â€
“Fluffy,†he replied, hoping the scabby creature had
not died in the
past year. Mistress Heaner was fond of her cat and it amused her to use
his name as a password.
“Hang on.â€
Loclon tapped his foot impatiently as the locks were drawn back. The
door opened just enough for him to squeeze through. He waited as the
man pushed the door shut and bolted it after them. The narrow alley was
littered with garbage, and Loclon covered his nose against the smell as
the hunched little man led him forward toward a square of light at the
end of the lane. When they reached it, the man stepped back to let
Loclon enter, then turned and disappeared into the darkness, presumably
back to his post by the door.
The main room was sumptuous and belied the paltriness of the
exterior. Cut crystal lanterns lit the soft draperies, and carpet thick
enough to hide in stretched the full length of the room. Comfortable
sofas were scattered through the room, each in its own private alcove,
separated by diaphanous curtains that revealed as much as they
concealed. Mistress Heaner’s House was exclusive; known only to
a few
and only those who could afford the unique entertainments she provided.
A captain’s pay was not usually enough to allow one the funds
to
patronise Mistress Heaner’s, but Loclon had just received
several
months’ backpay and he intended to treat himself, this one
night at
least. Back in the days when he had been the champion of the Arena, his
winnings had assured him a place here any time he wanted it.
“Captain.â€
Mistress Heaner glided toward him with a smile. Her gown was simple,
black and plainly cut, although the material was expensive and the
emerald necklace that circled her wrinkled throat was worth more than
he could earn in a lifetime as an officer.
“Mistress,†Loclon replied, with a low bow. She
insisted on
courtesy. One could do whatever they wished to the young men and women
she employed, but the slightest hint of bad manners would see one
banned for life.
“We’ve not had the pleasure of your company for some
time, sir.â€
“I’ve been away.â€
“Then you must be looking for some . . .
special . . . entertainment?†she suggested,
with an
elegantly raised brow. “I’ve several new girls that
might interest you.
Even a young man or two that might tempt a jaded palate.â€
“I’ve no interest in your fancy boys, Mistress. I
want a woman. A
redhead.â€
“Not an easy request, Captain.†Mistress Heaner
appeared to think
for a moment, as if she did not know the physical characteristics of
every soul in her employ. “Red is an unusual colour. Is there
anything
else that might tempt you?â€
“No. She must be a redhead. And tall. Preferably
slim.â€
“Such specific requirements can be expensive,
Captain.â€
“How much?â€
“Fifty rivets.â€
Loclon almost baulked at that point. Fifty rivets would leave him
almost penniless until his next pay. It would mean eating in the
barracks and avoiding his landlady.
“Fifty rivets, then.â€
Mistress Heaner watched carefully as he counted out the coins into
her arthritic hand.
“You may use the Blue Room,†she said, as her
claw-like fingers
closed over the money. “I will send Peny to you.â€
Loclon nodded and pushed his way past a flimsy curtain hanging over
a couch, where a middle-aged man was fondling the breast of a girl
young enough to be his granddaughter. He stepped into the hall and
walked the short distance to the Blue Room, named for the colour of its
door. The Red Room beside it was reserved for those whose tastes ran to
multiple partners and boasted a bed large enough for six. The Green
Room further down the hall, housed a bath the size of a large pool. The
Yellow Room at the end was the domain of those who got pleasure from
their own pain, and was better equipped than the cell where the
Defenders carried out their more “persuasiveâ€
interrogations. The Blue
Room was reserved for less exotic pleasures, and Loclon was not
surprised to find it unchanged since his last visit.
The room was lavishly furnished, with a carved four-poster, whose
woodwork glowed softly in the lamplight. White sheets peeked out from
under the blue quilt on the bed, and a pitcher of chilled wine with two
glasses waited on the side table. Satisfied with the room, Loclon
turned as the door opened and a woman stepped through. She was older
than he would have liked, thirty-five perhaps — or maybe the
life she
led had aged her faster than normal. Her hair was carrot-red, obviously
died, and her body was too full under the thin shift she wore.
Disappointed, Loclon ignored her welcoming smile and turned to the wine
pitcher. He poured himself a good measure and swallowed it in a gulp.
“My name is Peny,†she said.
Loclon turned to her, his eyes cold. “No. Tonight your name
is
R’shiel.â€
The woman shrugged. “If you wish.â€
“Come here.â€
She complied willingly enough, and began to unlace her shift as she
approached.
“No. Leave it.â€
“What would you like me to do, then?†she asked.
“Beg for mercy,†he replied and then he hit her. She
cried out, but
nobody would come to her rescue. Fifty rivets bought silence along with
Mistress Heaner’s whores. He hit her again, in the face this
time,
throwing her back against the carved bedpost. She cracked her head and
slumped on the expensive blue quilt, too stunned to protect herself
from his blows.
“Beg for mercy, R’shiel! â€
If she replied he didn’t notice. His rage consumed him as he
took
out his frustration on the hapless court’esa. The
desire to
beat her into submission left no room for any other thought.
CHAPTER 6
Damin Wolfblade was drunk. He knew he was drunk
because the walls of the tent were starting to spin, and he could no
longer feel his toes. Tarja Tenragan was even drunker. He had been at
this longer, and was drinking to drown his sorrows. Damin, on the other
hand, was simply drinking to be sociable.
“A toast,†he declared, as Tarja uncorked another
bottle. The floor
of the tent was littered with empty flagons — an impressive
testament
to the amount of alcohol they had consumed.
“To . . . to
your horse. What’s his name?â€
“Her name is Shadow,†Tarja corrected. He
wasn’t even
slurring his words. Damin was impressed. The man must have a stomach
lined with lead.
“To Shadow, then,†Damin declared, raising his cup.
“May she carry
you safely into battle.â€
“I’d be happier if she carried me safely out
of it,†Tarja
remarked, taking a long swig from the newly uncorked flagon.
Damin laughed and downed the contents of his cup in a swallow. He
held out his cup and Tarja refilled it with a surprisingly steady hand.
“I’ll drink to that, too! May she see you safely
home again.â€
“You’ll drink to anything. I’m surprised you
haven’t started
toasting the gods.â€
“The night is young, my friend,†Damin laughed,
relieved to see that
Tarja appeared to be coming out of the deep melancholy that had
possessed him all day. The Medalonian captain had good days and bad
days. Today had been particularly bad. “And when we run out of
gods, we
can always start on my brothers and sisters.â€
“Thanks, but I’d rather we stuck to the
gods,†Tarja said, taking
another mouthful. “You’ve enough of them to keep us
going for days.â€
“True, true,†Damin agreed, silently cursing himself
for bringing up
the topic of brothers and sisters. Tarja’s grief was centred on
the
woman he once believed was his sister. Reminding him of that was the
last thing Damin wanted at this point. “To the gods,
then!â€
He downed his cup and glanced at Tarja in concern. The man had not
touched the flagon, but was staring at him thoughtfully.
“What?â€
“Your gods. They’d know if she’s still
alive, wouldn’t they?â€
Damin shrugged uncomfortably. “I suppose.â€
“How do we ask them?†Tarja demanded.
He shook his head. “It’s not so simple, my friend.
The gods do not
speak directly to the likes of you and me. Perhaps, if Brak were
here . . .â€
“Well, he’s not here!â€
Brak had vanished only days after the Hythrun had ridden into
Testra, some five months ago. Nobody had seen or heard of him since.
“Hey, isn’t Dace a god? He spoke to us. Hell, he travelled
with us. Can’t we contact him?â€
“If you have a reliable way of contacting the gods, then
enlighten
me, Tarja. Dacendaran appears when the mood takes him, as does any
other god. I doubt if putting the mind of a non-believer at ease about
whether the demon child lives or dies is enough to warrant even the
fleeting attention of the God of Thieves.†He placed his cup on
the
small table next to the guttering candle. “If R’shiel
is still alive,
she’ll be back some day. If not, do your grieving and be done
with it.
Either way, you can’t spend the rest of your life moping about
the
girl.â€
“When I need sanctimonious advice from you, I’ll let
you know. In
the meantime, mind your own damned business.â€
“It is my business,†Damin replied, “when
your misery affects the
decisions you make. Particularly when it concerns the safety of my
Raiders.â€
“Your Raiders?†Damin could see the anger,
the pain in the
other man’s eyes. “Your damned Raiders are nothing but
a bunch of
cutthroat mercenaries. And I’ve done nothing to endanger
anybody.â€
“That’s for certain,†Damin retorted,
deliberately goading him.
“You’ve done nothing at all but sit here on the border
and lament your
great and tragic loss. Well, I have news for you, Captain.
There’s a
Karien army heading this way and they don’t give a pinch of
pig-shit
about your tender sensibilities. Dead or alive, R’shiel is
gone, and
you can’t afford to sit here wallowing in self-pity.â€
The punch came out of nowhere as Tarja threw himself across the
table, sending Damin backward off his stool. He rolled to the side as
Tarja lunged for him, tangling himself in the tent as their brawl
spilled outside. The candle fell from the overturned table and landed
in a puddle of spilled wine, where it quickly caught and began lapping
at the canvas tent walls. By the time they staggered to their feet in
the clearing, the blazing tent provided a ruddy backdrop to their fight.
They were both drunk, so the blows they traded lacked the strength
or accuracy of sobriety, but Damin was still surprised at the force
behind Tarja’s fist. Damin had time to wonder if it was guilt,
even
more than grief, which was eating up Tarja, before the Medalonian
charged him with a wordless cry.
By now their altercation had drawn the attention of the other men
occupying the surrounding tents, who quickly formed a cheering circle
of red-coated Defenders, brown-shirted rebels, and leather-clad Hythrun
Raiders, cheering on their officers as they brawled liked a couple of
drunken sailors.
Damin didn’t know who was getting the better of the fight.
Tarja was
a professional soldier, but he was operating on instinct as much as
anything. Damin knew his own battle-trained reflexes were the only
thing saving him from serious injury. His mind was too wine-muddled to
think anything through, other than trading hit and miss blows with his
equally inebriated adversary. He felt his bottom lip split as
Tarja’s
fist connected with his face, snapping his head back, but he blocked
the next blow with his left arm and slammed his fist into
Tarja’s gut.
The other man grunted in pain, but kept his feet and came at him again,
a feral grin on his face that looked all the more evil for being
blood-streaked and illuminated by the blazing firelight from the tent.
He ducked another blow and landed a glancing hit on Tarja’s
jaw, as the
breathtaking shock of icy water brought the conflict to an abrupt halt.
Damin staggered backwards, shaking the water from his drenched fair
hair, as Tarja did the same, looking about for the source of the
interruption. Mahina Cortanen stood not two paces from them, empty
bucket in hand, her expression thunderous. Lord Jenga stood just behind
her, and a pace or so behind Jenga stood the suddenly quiet spectators,
their faces ruddy in the flickering light of the burning tent.
“Is this something you gentlemen need to discuss
privately?†she
asked, with a voice that was colder than the water she had thrown on
them.
Damin glanced at Tarja, whose grin was now rather more sheepish than
feral. Both of his eyes were beginning to blacken, and blood streamed
from his nose and the corner of his mouth. His normally immaculate
uniform was torn and muddied. Damin had no doubt that he looked just as
bad.
“We were discussing . . . the differences in
Medalonian and Hythrun . . . hand-to-hand combat, my
Lady,†Damin explained, as he gasped for air, with a quick grin
in
Tarja’s direction. “We had just
moved . . . from a
theoretical discussion to a more . . . practical
demonstration of the techniques involved. A . . . most
useful exercise, I must say.†With the back of his tender hand,
he
wiped the blood from his mouth, and smiled ingenuously at Mahina. The
spectators, Defender, rebel and Hythrun alike, nodded their agreement.
Mahina glared at him then turned on Tarja. “And what do you
have to
say for yourself?â€
Tarja hesitated for a moment, his chest heaving, before he
straightened up and smiled through his split lip at the former First
Sister. “I’d say . . . both techniques
were useful,
given . . . the right circumstances, however
—â€
“Oh, spare me!†Mahina cried. “Perhaps now
that you’ve finished your
discussion, you might attend me and the Lord Defender in the
Keep? A matter of some urgency has arisen that requires your attention,
gentlemen. If you can find the time, of course.â€
Damin rubbed his tender jaw and glanced at Tarja, who seemed the
better for their fight, despite his physical condition. Damin made a
mental note to make certain that the next time Tarja felt the need to
hit something, he arranged for somebody else to be the target.
“I believe we can accommodate you, my Lady,†Damin
said, as if
accepting a dinner invitation. “Shall we, Captain?â€
“Certainly.†He looked around at the gathered
spectators, suddenly
noticing them for the first time. “Did you men want something
to do?â€
Several Defenders had taken it upon themselves to douse the blazing
tent. The rest of the Defenders and rebels faded into the darkness with
impressive speed. One look in the direction of his Raiders was enough
to have the same effect on them. Looking idle was a thing to be avoided
at all costs; every soldier in the camp knew that. Lord Jenga stood
behind Mahina, a rare smile on his contour-map face as he watched the
troops vanish back into their tents. Mahina glanced over her shoulder
at him. He quickly wiped the smile off his face.
“Something amuses you, my Lord?â€
“Youthful high spirits always amuse me, my Lady,†he
replied evenly.
“Is that what you call it? I can think of a better
description.†She
turned back to the two combatants with a frown. “Clean
yourselves up,
then meet me in the Keep.†She turned on her heel, still
clutching the
wooden bucket, and stormed off into the darkness.
“Has something happened?†Damin asked the Lord
Defender. Mahina was
fairly even tempered as a rule. Anger seemed strange in a woman who
looked like somebody’s grandmother.
“We have a visitor from the Citadel,†Jenga told
them.
“Who?†Tarja asked. The shock from Mahina’s
bucket of water seemed
to have sobered him. Damin wished he could recover so quickly.
“Garet Warner.â€
Damin turned to him, trying to think of an intelligent question. It
was quite depressing to be drunk under the table by a Medalonian. He
had to give at least give the impression that he could think straight.
“Is he on our side, this Garet Warner?â€
Tarja shrugged. “That remains to be seen.â€
Garet Warner proved to be a nondescript-looking
man of average height, who wore the red jacket of a Defender and the
rank insignia of a commandant. He had a balding head, a deceptively
quiet voice and a piercing mind. The Warlord studied him by the
torchlight of the hastily reconstructed great hall of Treason Keep.
Damin was unsure where the name had come from. It certainly
wasn’t
officially named that, and one referred to the ruin as “Treason
Keepâ€
in the Lord Defender’s hearing at their peril. It seemed
fitting,
though. The Defenders were here to protect their nation from invasion,
but they had broken any number of oaths to get here.
The ruin was deserted when they arrived some months ago, and a much
sturdier and strategically more useful keep, closer to the northern
border, would soon replace it. In the interim, Treason Keep was the
closest thing to a permanent structure on the open, grassy plains of
northern Medalon.
The commandant’s expression gave away nothing as Tarja and
Damin
entered the hall. Garet Warner stood in front of the huge fireplace,
his hands clasped behind his back as they walked toward him. Mahina sat
in a chair on his right; Jenga in another chair opposite the former
First Sister.
Tarja nodded warily to Garet when they reached the hearth.
“Garet.â€
“Tarja,†Garet acknowledged. “You’ve
a knack for keeping your head
on your shoulders, I’ll grant you that.â€
Tarja smiled faintly, which made Damin rest a little easier. There
was something about this visitor that marked him as dangerous, although
Damin wasn’t thinking clearly enough to define the feeling
exactly. He
hoped this man was on their side. He would be a bad enemy.
“I can’t help being hard to kill. Commandant Warner,
this is the
Warlord of Krakandar, Damin Wolfblade.â€
“Our new and somewhat unexpected ally. My Lord.â€
“Commandant,†Damin greeted him. “You come
from the Citadel, I hear.
Do you have news?â€
“Questions, more than news,†Garet replied, his
glance taking in all
of them. “The Quorum is understandably suspicious about the
First
Sister’s extended absence from the Citadel. The orders arriving
at the
Citadel, under her seal, seem rather at odds with
her . . . previous decisions.â€
“The First Sister has had a change of heart in recent
months,†Tarja
said.
“Is she still alive?â€
“Of course, she’s alive,†Jenga declared.
“Do you think I would be a
party to murder?â€
“I’m not here to give my opinion, my Lord,â€
Garet told him with a
shrug. “I am here to investigate the issues raised by the
Quorum. And
there is plenty of reason to be suspicious. You left the Citadel with
an army to capture and execute an escaped convict. Six months later,
here you are, sitting on the northern border with that same escaped
convict pardoned and a member of your staff, a foreign warlord, as your
ally, preparing to fight a nation we very recently considered our
friend. All with the approval of the First Sister, who, it is widely
acknowledged, was in complete disagreement with you on all of those
matters. The remarkable thing about all this is that they
haven’t sent
someone to investigate sooner.â€
“There’s a perfectly logical explanation,â€
Damin offered helpfully.
“And I look forward to hearing it,†Garet told him.
“It will be
fascinating, I’m sure. But first, I must insist on seeing
Sister
Joyhinia.â€
“You doubt my word, Garet?†Jenga asked.
“Not at all, my Lord. But I have my orders.â€
“Very well,†Jenga agreed, with some reluctance.
“You shall see her.
Perhaps once you have, things will make a little more sense.â€
“I hope so, my Lord.â€
“Sister Mahina? Would you be so kind as escort Commandant
Warner to
the First Sister’s quarters?â€
Mahina frowned. “I don’t like to disturb her this
late at night.â€
“It cannot be avoided, I fear. I doubt the commandant wants
to wait
until morning.â€
“Very well,†Mahina agreed. She stood up and pointed
toward the
narrow staircase that led to the upper level. “If you will
follow me,
Commandant.â€
Damin and Tarja stood back to let them pass, watching the old woman
and the Defender until they vanished into the gloom. Once he was
certain they were out of earshot, Tarja turned to Jenga with concern.
“This could be awkward,†Tarja said, leaning on the
long table for
support. The movement heartened Damin. Tarja was not nearly as sober as
he pretended.
“Awkward? This is bloody impossible! I have never been happy
with
this subterfuge! Something like this was bound to happen, sooner or
later.â€
“Do you have a better alternative?â€
“But to send orders to the Citadel? Under Joyhinia’s
seal? Orders
that anybody in their right mind would know did not come from
her?â€
Damin found himself stepping between the two men, and between an
argument that had been unresolved for months. “With all due
respect, my
Lord, the orders have come from Joyhinia. She has signed and
sealed everyone of them.â€
“She has the mind of a child,†Jenga retorted.
“You could place an
order for her own hanging in front of her and she’d sign it
with a
giggle. I’m not as adept as you and Tarja at twisting the truth
to
placate my honour, Lord Wolfblade. What we have done is tantamount to
treason.â€
“Refusing to slaughter three hundred innocent men was
treason,
Jenga,†Tarja pointed out. “Everything flowing from
that action is
merely consequences. The treason is done and past. Our duty now is to
protect Medalon.â€
“And the end justifies the means?†Jenga asked
bitterly. “I wish I
had your ability to see the world so . . .
conveniently.â€
“I wish I had your ability to argue the same point
endlessly,†Damin
added impatiently. “You Medalonians have a bad habit of not
knowing
when it’s time to let a matter rest. What I want to know is who
this
Garet Warner is, and why you’re all so afraid of him?â€
Both Tarja and Jenga looked at him in surprise.
“Afraid of him?†Jenga asked.
“Afraid is not the right word, but it pays to be wary of
him,†Tarja
said. “Garet Warner is the head of Defender Intelligence. And a
loyal
officer.â€
“Loyal to whom, exactly?â€
“We’ll find that out soon enough,†Jenga
predicted grimly.
CHAPTER 7
Consciousness was a long time coming to
R’shiel,
but it pulled at her relentlessly, forcing her to acknowledge her
existence. She did not want to awaken. She was perfectly content where
she was, lost in a warm nothingness where no pain, no misery, no fear
could intrude. The silence was complete, the darkness total. Were it
not for the annoying, insistent voice calling her name, she could
happily have stayed here forever. She had no sense of time in this
place, no way to judge how long she had been here. All she knew was
that she had no great desire to leave.
Yet the voice called to her and she was unable to resist it.
“Welcome back.â€
She stared at the man who spoke for a long time before she
remembered who he was. His faded blue eyes were full of concern. And
something else. Suspicion, perhaps?
“Brak.â€
“No, don’t try to sit up. You’ve been
unconscious for quite a while.
It’ll take a little time to get your strength back.â€
R’shiel let her head flop back onto the pillow, and
contented
herself with simply moving her head to study her surroundings. The room
was large and lit by streaming sunlight; the air was heavy with the
scent of wildflowers.
“Where am I?â€
“Sanctuary.â€
She turned her head to look at him. “How did I get here? I
don’t
remember anything. We were in Testra, I
think . . .â€
“Don’t worry, it’ll come back to you, and
sooner than you want.
You’ve been very sick, R’shiel. Cheltaran himself had
to heal you.â€
“Who’s Cheltaran?â€
“The God of Healing. You should feel honoured. He
doesn’t often
interfere directly with anyone, human or Harshini.â€
She closed her eyes for a moment, wondering why the knowledge did
not surprise or frighten her. They seemed to be emotions that for the
moment were out of reach.
“Tarja . . .?â€
“He’s fine. He’s up north, on the
border.â€
Even that news failed to ignite much more than a small sense of
relief in her. She wondered if she should feel something more. Perhaps
she was simply too lethargic to care. Later, when she gained her
strength, she could worry about such things.
“What are you doing here?â€
“This is my home, R’shiel. It’s your home
too.â€
“Is it?â€
Brak smiled, as if her vagueness amused him. “Go back to
sleep,
R’shiel. When you wake up the Harshini will attend you. They
are a
gentle people, so mind your manners. And try not to scream when you see
their eyes. I didn’t bring you all this way so you could
embarrass me.â€
R’shiel smiled vacantly. “I’ll be a good
girl.â€
He nodded and moved away from the bed.
“Brak.â€
“What?â€
“I owe you my life, don’t I?â€
“In ways you can’t imagine,†he replied.
“How long has she been like this?â€
Garet asked.
They had settled in around the fire in the crumbling great hall,
Garet in the chair that had been occupied by Mahina the previous
evening. Tarja sat on the edge of the hearth near Jenga, who had taken
the only other chair.
“Since Testra,†Jenga told him, staring into the
flames, not meeting
the eye of the other officer.
Damin stood leaning against the mantle, stoking the inadequate fire
with an iron poker. Fuel was a major problem on this treeless plain,
and a sizeable number of their force had been occupied gathering enough
wood to see them through the coming winter. Were it not for the vast
number of horses here, many of the camp’s fires would be sorry
affairs
indeed. It was a small extravagance to burn the wood, but Damin was
grateful to be spared the sting of burning dung in the Hall.
“How did it happen?â€
“I’m not certain.â€
Damin laughed softly at the Lord Defender’s discomfort.
“Dacendaran,
the God of Thieves, stole her intellect, Commandant. The Lord Defender
has some difficulty dealing with the concept.â€
“A difficulty I share, my Lord. We do not believe in your
gods.â€
“Believe in them or not,†Damin shrugged.
“It’s the truth. Ask
Tarja.â€
Garet turned his gaze on the younger man. “Tarja?â€
“Somebody told me once that he believed in the gods, he just
didn’t
know if they were worthy of adoration. That sums it up fairly well, I
think. The gods exist, Garet, and they took a hand in our conflict, as
Joyhinia’s condition proves.â€
“And you’ve been issuing orders in her name ever
since?†It was
impossible to tell what the man was thinking. He was a master in the
art of inscrutability, Damin decided. He would have made a brilliant
Fardohnyan merchant.
“Once the Karien Envoy was murdered on Medalon soil, the
threat of a
Karien invasion moved from a theory to a certainty,†Tarja
explained.
“Had Jenga returned to the Citadel with Joyhinia, the Quorum
would still
be in session, arguing about what to do next. At least this way
preparations could be made.â€
“Did you kill him?†he asked.
“No, but I led the raid. I suppose I’m
responsible.â€
Garet shook his head wearily and turned his attention back to Jenga.
“I’ve known you a long time, Jenga. I’m trying
to imagine what finally
pushed you into this. By any definition, this is treason.â€
The Lord Defender nodded heavily. “We discussed this once,
you and
I. I asked you what you would do if faced with an order you found
morally reprehensible. I recall you said you would refuse it, and the
consequences be damned. I find myself in that position now.â€
Garet leaned back in his seat and studied the three men before him.
“Knowing Joyhinia, I find that easy enough to believe, but how
long do
you think you can get away with this? The First Sister’s
absence from
the Citadel is causing a great deal of unrest. And the orders
she’s
sending are too strange to be accepted without question. You’ve
pardoned Tarja. You’ve ordered an end to the Purge and freed
half the
prisoners in the Grimfield. You’ve ordered troops north.
You’re
spending money like the treasury is a bottomless pit and you’ve
signed
a treaty with a Hythrun Warlord. Joyhinia would never be a willing
party to any of these actions.â€
“The next Gathering is only months away,†Tarja
pointed out.
“Joyhinia will send a letter to the Quorum announcing her
retirement
and nominating Mahina in her place. With her vote, and the votes of
Jacomina and Louhina, who will automatically vote for anything Joyhinia
suggests, we should be safe.â€
Garet shook his head. “It will never work, Tarja.â€
“It has to work,†he insisted. “The
alternative is a civil war, and
that would leave us wide open to a Karien invasion.â€
“We’re not trying to bring down the Sisterhood,
Garet,†Jenga added,
a little defensively. “Merely bring some sanity to it.â€
“Sanity? That’s a strange word coming from men who
think they can
fool the world into believing that Joyhinia Tenragan is alive and well,
when in fact she’s a babbling idiot.â€
Damin listened to the discussion with interest. He was a Warlord and
therefore absolute ruler of his province. He never had to justify
anything he did to anybody, and it fascinated him, watching the
Medalonians trying to convince themselves and each other that their
actions were either honourable or necessary, or both.
“The fact is, my friends, you can argue the rights and
wrongs of
this until you’re old men,†he interjected.
“What I’d really like to
know is what you are planning to do about it,
Commandant?â€
Garet Warner looked up at him. “I have two choices that I
can see. I
can go along with this farce, or I can return to the Citadel and tell
the Quorum what’s really going on up here.â€
“No, you have one choice, Commandant. You can go along with
this
farce, or I’ll kill you.â€
“Damin!â€
“Be realistic, Tarja. If you let him go, he’ll be
back here in a
month with a full force of Defenders, and you’ll have the very
civil
war you’re trying so hard to avoid. Killing one Defender now
may save
you from having to kill a damn sight more of them later on.
I’ll do it,
if it bothers you.â€
Garet stared at the Warlord for a moment. “A pragmatist, I
see. Not
a quality I expected to find in a heathen who believes in the Primal
gods.â€
“Then you sorely underestimate me, Commandant,â€
Damin warned.
“I fear I’ve sorely underestimated a lot of things
in my life, but I
manage to get by.†He turned back to Tarja, giving no
indication that
Damin’s threat bothered him. “The Quorum will not
accept Joyhinia’s
resignation without seeing her. How, in the name of the Founders, do
you expect to pull this off?â€
“I have no idea, Garet,†Tarja admitted.
“But we have to. Somehow.â€
“Who else knows of her true condition?â€
“The three of us,†Jenga told him. “Draco,
of course. Mahina and
Affiana know for certain. The Defenders and the heathens who were in
Testra when it happened don’t fully comprehend the full extent
of
her . . . condition, and we’ve kept up the
illusion that
she is in command, so far.â€
“Who is this Affiana?â€
“A friend,†Tarja said. “She takes care of
Joyhinia most of the
time.â€
“I see,†Garet said. He steepled his fingers under
his chin and
stared into the fire for a long moment. Damin wondered what he was
thinking, his hand resting on the hilt of his dagger. Garet Warner
would not leave this room alive if Damin doubted him for a moment.
“Let’s put aside the issue of Joyhinia, for the moment.
What of the
rumours that the Harshini have returned? You’ve made no mention
of
them.â€
“They, at least, are true. We’ve seen a few of
them,†Tarja told
him. “But not for months. I’ve no idea what
they’re planning, or where
they are. Believe me, if I could find them, I would have.â€
“To what purpose?†Garet asked.
“You’ve acquired enough strange
allies as it is,†he added, looking pointedly at Damin.
“They have R’shiel,†Tarja explained, his
voice remarkably
unemotional under the circumstances. “The Harshini believe she
is the
demon child.â€
Even Garet Warner could not hide his surprise at the news.
“R’shiel?
The demon child? Why in the name of the Founders would they think
that?â€
“They don’t think she’s the demon
child, Commandant, they know
she is. If she is still alive, the Harshini have her and I imagine they
won’t let her go until she has performed the task for which she
was
created.â€
“What task?â€
“They want her to destroy Xaphista,†Tarja said.
“The Karien god?†Garet shook his head in disbelief.
“If this is
some sort of joke, then you have me, Tarja. I’m afraid I
—â€
“My Lords?†the urgent voice rang out from the
shadows near the
door. “I seek Lord Wolfblade.â€
“Come in, Almodavar,†Damin called, recognising the
voice of his
captain. “What is it?â€
“You’d better come see, my Lord,†Almodavar
said in Hythrun, as he
materialised out of the shadows. “The western patrol is
bringing in two
spies they captured.â€
There had been a number of forays across the border by the
half-a-thousand knights camped north of the border for most of the
summer, although rarely did a knight sully his hands with anything so
demeaning as reconnaissance. It was always some hapless page or squire,
attempting to breach the border. It was an ambitious undertaking,
particularly for city-bred youths who thought Xaphista’s
blessing was
all the protection they needed on their journey. It had taken Damin
quite some time to accept that the forays were genuine, not merely a
feint to disguise a more effective attack. He had trouble believing
that anybody could be that stupid.
“Can’t you deal with it, Captain?†he asked
in Hythrun. It was an
advantage, sometimes, speaking a language his allies did not
understand. Tarja was attempting to learn Hythrun, be he could not
follow such a rapid exchange yet.
“They have news, my Lord.â€
Damin frowned and turned to the Defenders. “I’d
better see to this,â€
he told them. “I’ll be back in a while.†He
followed Almodavar out of
the Hall and into the night, to the curious stares of his companions.
The two spies proved to be boys, frightened and
defiant. Both had mousy brown hair and freckled skin, and they were
enough alike to be brothers. The older of the two wore a sullen
expression and the evidence of a beating. The younger was more defiant,
angry and belligerent. He wore a pendant with the five-pointed star and
lightning bolt of Xaphista, and leapt to his feet when Damin entered
the tent. The older brother did not rise from the floor. Perhaps he
could not. Almodavar was not renowned for his tender interrogation
techniques.
“Hythrun dog!†the younger boy cried,
spitting on the ground
in front of Damin. Almodavar stepped forward and slapped the boy down
with the back of his gauntleted hand. The lad fell backwards, landing
on his backside.
“That’s Lord Hythrun Dog, to you
boy,†Damin told him,
placing his hands on his hips and glaring at the youth. The boy cowered
under his gaze.
“They are Jaymes and Mikel of Kirkland,†Almodavar
told him. “From
Lord Laetho’s duchy in Northern Karien.â€
Duke Laetho’s banner had been identified months ago. He was
a rich
man with a large retinue, but rumour had it he was more bluster than
bravery, a fact borne out by the presence of these two boys. Who but a
fool would send children to do his reconnaissance for him?
“Almodavar says you have interesting news, boy. Tell me now,
and I
might let you live.â€
“We would give our lives for the Overlord,†the
older brother
snarled from the floor. “Tell him nothing, Mikel.â€
“No, I’ll tell him, Jaymes. I want to see the
Hythrun quivering in
their boots when they learn what is coming.â€
“Then out with it, boy,†Damin said. “It
would be most unfortunate
if I have you put to death for the glory of the Overlord before you get
the chance to see me quivering, won’t it?â€
“Your day of reckoning is coming. Even now, the Karien
knights
advance on you.â€
“They’ve been doing that for months. I’m
scared witless at the mere
thought.â€
“You should be,†Mikel spat. “When our
Fardohnyan allies join with
us to overrun this pitiful nation of atheists, we will descend on
Hythria and you will be knee-deep in pagan blood.â€
Damin glanced at Almodavar questioningly before turning his
attention back to the boy. “Fardohnyan allies?â€
“Prince Cratyn is to marry Princess Cassandra of
Fardohnya,†Mikel
announced triumphantly. “You cannot defeat the might of two
such great
nations.â€
“You’re lying. You’re a frightened child
making up wild stories.
Kill them, Almodavar — just don’t leave the corpses
where I can smell
them.†He turned his back on the youths and pushed back the
flap of the
tent.
“I do not lie!†the boy yelled after him.
“Our father is the Duke
Laetho’s Third Steward in Yarnarrow, and he was there when the
King
received the offer from King Hablet.â€
That had the ring of truth to it, Damin decided, although he did not
stop or turn back. Once they were clear of the tent, he turned to his
captain, his face reflecting concern and firelight in almost equal
measure.
“You think he speaks the truth?â€
“Aye, he’s too scared to think up a convincing
lie.â€
“This changes the rules of engagement somewhat,†he
said
thoughtfully. “Perhaps our visitor from the Citadel can shed
some light
on the news. He’s supposed to be in Intelligence, after
all.â€
“And the boys? Did you really want me to kill them?â€
“Of course not. They’re children. Put them to work
some place they
can’t cause any trouble. I believe the Kariens think hard work
is good
for the soul.â€
The captain smiled wickedly. “And deny them a chance to die
as
martyrs for the Overlord? You’re a cruel man, my Lord.â€
CHAPTER 9
Adrina’s departure from Talabar was an
occasion of
some note, and Hablet was determined to see his daughter off in style.
The hastily repaired wharf was lined with soldiers in their white dress
uniforms, a band played merry tunes to keep the spectators entertained,
and even Bhren, the God of Storms, was smiling on Fardohnya this day.
The weather was perfect — a flawless sky, a calm sea. The
sprawling
city of Talabar glowed pink in the warm sunlight; the flat-roofed
houses closest to the docks were lined with curious Fardohnyans come to
see the last of their princess.
Hablet stepped down from his litter and looked around with
satisfaction, waving to his people and accepting their cheers with a
wave of his bear-like arms. He had just about everything he wanted from
this treaty and was feeling unusually magnanimous. He had secured
enough of the tall, straight Karien lumber to build the ships he
wanted, enough gold to pay for their construction and, in a few months,
with the Kariens and the Defenders embroiled in a war in the north, he
would have a clear run across the southern plains of Medalon into
Hythria. Best of all, he would finally destroy Lernen Wolfblade, the
Hythrun High Prince — and his heirs — for an insult
over thirty years
old that very few people even remembered.
Hablet never forgot an insult.
He had conceded surprisingly little to the Kariens in return. True,
he had agreed to allow Karien ships unhindered access to Solanndy Bay,
where the Ironbrook River met the ocean, but they would pay dearly for
the privilege. He had granted the Kariens sovereignty over the Isle of
Slarn too, but that measly lump of rock perched in the Gulf was hardly
a prime piece of real estate and it had no value to anyone but the
Kariens. Of course, the casual observer would never have guessed how
little the island meant to him. But he had the Kariens believing it was
as dear to him as one of his limbs, and had made them pay accordingly.
As for the secret of gunpowder, he had promised that, too, but had
wisely proposed sending an expert in the science to Karien to suggest
an appropriate location for a mill, before divulging the formula. When
Hablet finally got around to sending someone, it was a foregone
conclusion that the search for such a location would take years. A lot
could happen in that time.
But the unexpected bonus was that he had finally found a way to get
rid of Adrina.
He loved his eldest child, it was true. In fact he had often
lamented the twist of fate that had seen her born a girl. She would
have made a fine son. Unfortunately, that fiery spirit, that biting
wit, that piercing intelligence, was positively dangerous in a woman.
Adrina was, to put it bluntly, a troublesome, spoilt little bitch.
Hablet was quite certain he would find it much easier to dote on his
daughter from a distance.
His previous efforts to find Adrina a husband had all failed
miserably. The last potential suitor, Lord Dundrake, had even suggested
that he would rather face a century of Hythrun Raiders, alone and
unarmed, than spend one night with Her Most Serene Highness. He claimed
he would have a better chance of survival. Adrina had despised the man
on sight, declaring she would never marry a man who couldn’t
tell the
difference between a dinner fork and his fingers. Dundrake was a little
rough around the edges, certainly. Hablet had hoped his provincial
charm would entice her. It had proved an idle hope. Adrina was
attracted to power, and there was no way that Hablet would allow her to
wed a powerful man. She needed a husband who would hold her back. There
were other men who would have married her gladly, and she them
— not
for love, but the power they brought each other. Hablet had refused all
such offers out of hand.
The Karien Prince had turned out to be the perfect solution. He was
a meek boy, so constrained by the edicts of his religion that Adrina
would never be able to cajole him into anything. He was so inhibited by
his religious distaste of all matters sexual, that even her legendary
powers of seduction would be wasted. He believed in his God and little
else. Poor Adrina. She would be the Karien Queen one day; she had
agreed to go north for no other reason than the power it might
eventually bring her. She was going to be very disappointed.
The band finished their tune and struck up a dour Karien number,
heralding the arrival of Prince Cratyn and his party. The brightly
painted Karien brigantine was tied up at the end of the wharf, awaiting
her prince. Hablet frowned at the ship and decided he probably had no
one but himself to blame for its hideous design. Fardohnyan ship
builders were the best in the world, but their secrets were guarded
more closely than his treasury. The Kariens built poor copies that were
vastly inferior to their Fardohnyan originals. The irony was, Fardohnya
had little in the way of timber for shipbuilding. It all had to be
imported from Karien. What the Kariens did not have, besides
generations of skilled craftsman, was the Fardohnyan secret of
hardening and waterproofing the timber.
The King turned his attention back to the ceremony, smiling
expansively at the young prince. For a moment, as Hablet studied his
solemn face, he felt sorry for the boy. He was stuck with Adrina for
life. The sorry fool was not even able to take a lover to console him.
Ah well, that was the price one paid for being a Karien Prince. Cratyn
bowed politely to the King and began a rather long-winded speech,
thanking the King for his generosity, his kindness, his hospitality,
and so on — in the Karien language, as the prince did not speak
Fardohnyan. Hablet only half listened to the young man, thinking that
he looked a little inbred. They were always marrying their cousins up
north. The Karien Royal Family would benefit from a bit of fresh blood.
“Her Most Serene Highness, Princess Adrina!â€
The fanfare that accompanied Adrina’s arrival was not on the
program
that Hablet had approved. He smiled at her audacity, and she was handed
down from her open litter by a handsome young slave wearing nothing but
a white loin cloth and a great deal of oil on his well-formed muscles.
She was planning to make her departure memorable, it seemed.
A number of white-robed young girls hurried to assemble in front of
the princess and proceeded to scatter petals on the ground before her,
so that her feet would not have to touch the grubby docks. Hablet
considered that the ultimate irony, considering a week ago she thought
she could sail a damned warship. He glanced at Cratyn’s
disapproving
frown and forcibly swallowed his laughter. The boy was only just
beginning to discover what he was marrying.
Adrina trod the flower-strewn path regally until she reached her
father and curtsied gracefully. She was a beautiful woman, and in her
prime. Although she was not particularly tall, and lacked
Cassandra’s
delicate perfection, she had outgrown her sister’s awkwardness
of youth
and had blossomed into a stunning creature. Her eyes were her best
feature: emerald green and wide set. Her body was voluptuous and
well-toned, rather than the slender gawkiness of a teenager. Cratyn
would be a lucky young man if he had the sense to appreciate what he
was getting. Provided Adrina kept her mouth shut.
Lecter Turon waddled forward and presented Hablet with a slender
blade wrapped in a jewelled sheath. He took the dagger and held it out
to Adrina.
“This is the Bride’s Blade your mother
carried.â€
“I hope it brings me better luck,†Adrina replied,
accepting the
gift. Adrina’s mother was not a topic discussed at court.
“It breaks my heart to lose you, my petal,†he
declared, almost, but
not quite believing it.
Adrina’s eyes glittered dangerously. “It’s
not too late to change
your mind, Father.â€
He knew that look. She had learnt it at his knee.
“Oh yes it is, my petal.â€
“Then you will just have to live with the consequences,
won’t you?â€
Hablet smiled. Only Adrina would dare threaten him. He swept her up
into a bear hug and the crowd cheered at this obvious display of
affection between the King and the princess.
“If you cross me, I’ll personally see to it that you
spend the rest
of your life suffering in the coldest, most miserable place I can
imagine,†he whispered affectionately as he held her.
“Think up a better threat, Daddy,†she whispered
back. “You’ve
already done that.â€
He let her go and held her at arm’s length for a moment. She
met his
gaze evenly. Her mother had been like that. Fearless and ambitious. It
was such a pity her ambition had run away with her. Had she learnt to
control it, she might not have lost her head . . . But
Adrina was everything her mother was and more. He felt overcome with
love for his child. Hopefully, the feeling would soon pass.
He took her hand and ceremoniously placed it in Cratyn’s
hand. The
crowd went wild. Hablet suspected it had more to do with the idea of
Adrina finally getting married than any affection for the Karien groom.
“May the gods bless this great union!†Hablet
boomed. “May Fardohnya
and Karien, from this day forward, live in peace!â€
The crowd cheered, although most of them knew Hablet’s
declaration
had little to do with his own feelings. By law, no Fardohnyan could
declare war on the house of a family united by marriage. That law
included the King. The Kariens knew about it too, which was no doubt
why they had put aside their prejudice and accepted a foreign bride. A
Fardohnyan queen was a small price to pay for the guarantee that Hablet
was unable to make war on them.
Cratyn squirmed a little as he stood there holding Adrina’s
hand.
His daughter smiled and waved to the people. They liked the princess.
She was an astute politician and had made a point of being generous to
those lesser creatures outside the palace. She was a tyrant around
anyone else, but the people remembered her small kindnesses and were
probably genuinely sorry to see her go.
The guard snapped to attention as the Karien Prince and Adrina
walked down the dock towards the ship. Hablet watched them leaving with
some relief. As they boarded the gangway, he waved his hand to the
Captain of the Guard. Tristan dismissed his men and came to stand
before his father.
“You can come back next winter,†he told the young
man brusquely. “I
should have forgiven you by then.â€
Tristan grinned. “You are too kind, Sire.â€
“Don’t take that tone with me, boy. You’re
lucky I didn’t send you
to the eastern passes.â€
“To be honest, Father, I would have preferred that you did.
I’d
rather fight Hythrun bandits than play toy soldiers in Karien.â€
“I need you to look after Adrina.â€
“Adrina doesn’t need looking after.â€
“Well, keep an eye on her, then. And don’t get mixed
up in her
schemes. I want you back in year, boy. I expect you to stay out of
trouble.†He hugged his eldest bastard with genuine affection.
“I’ll
have a legitimate son by then.â€
Tristan shook his head wryly. “Father, don’t you
worry sometimes
that one of us might want the throne for himself?â€
“There’s none of you strong enough to challenge me,
Tristan.â€
“But if you were to die before you name your
heir . . .â€
Hablet laughed. “Then you’ll have Adrina to contend
with, my boy,
and I’m damned certain none of you are strong enough to
challenge her.â€
CHAPTER 10
“Knights. About five hundred of
them.â€
Damin handed Tarja the small hollow tube he was using to examine the
golden plain below. It had taken them most of the morning to climb up
to this vantage on the side of the mountain that overlooked the border.
Although rocky, the ledge was comfortably wide and he, Garet and Damin
were stretched out on their bellies as they watched the tents of the
enemy below, occasionally brushing away curious insects come to
investigate the intruders.
Tarja put the tube to his eye and was enthralled to see the distant
figures of the knights, their white circular tents and impressive
entourage, grow larger through the lens. Damin called it a looking
glass.
The knights camped on the Karien side of the border did not bother
Tarja nearly so much as the infantry Jasnoff could throw against them.
The knights were impressive, but they would be a minority in the final
battle. More worrisome were the countless foot soldiers that the
Kariens could muster. They had yet to arrive at the front. The knights
below were as much an intimidating show of force as a serious vanguard
of any incursion over the border. With a sigh, he moved the looking
glass around to examine the fortifications on their side of the border.
The Defenders only hope to keep the conflict manageable was to force
the Kariens to attack down a path chosen by the Medalonians. Trenches
filled with sharpened stakes scored the plain like sword cuts in the
red earth. The ground was pockmarked with holes dug to hamper the
movement of the heavy Karien destriers. Mangonels, protected by earth
mounds, stood silently out of Karien bow range, waiting for the coming
battle like giant insects. But they had a vast front to cover and their
defences looked woefully inadequate from this height.
“I thought there’d be more of them,†Garet
remarked as he took the
looking glass from Tarja to study the Kariens.
“Ah, now that’s the problem with a feudal
government,†Damin
remarked sagely. “You have to waste an awful lot of time
getting your
army together. You have to call in favours, bribe people, marry off
your children, and convince your Dukes that there’s a profit in
your
war. Monumental waste of time and money, if you ask me. Standing armies
are much more efficient.†The fair-haired Hythrun frowned at
Garet’s
surprised expression. It was obvious that Damin neither liked nor
trusted Garet Warner. “I’m not a complete barbarian,
you know,
Commandant. Even Warlords need an education. What were you expecting my
tactical assessment to be? Me Warlord. Me kill Kariens.â€
Garet smiled thinly. “Not exactly.â€
Damin grinned suddenly and pushed himself backward along the ledge.
He sat against the cliff, leaning comfortably in the shade, with his
long legs stretched out in front. He crossed his booted feet at the
ankles as he took a long swig from his waterskin.
“You underestimate me again, Commandant,†he said,
offering Tarja
the waterskin as Garet turned to face him. “But, for your
information,
I was educated by the finest tutors in Hythria. And I’m right.
The
Kariens don’t keep a standing army, for all that they can field
a huge
one, once they finally get organised. It’s a fatal flaw.
Jasnoff’s
vassals owe him sixty days each a year, which means that by the time
they get here, it will almost be time to go home again, but
they’re
stuck here while the Church supports the war. Even fighting for the
glory of the Overlord starts to pale when it’s costing you
money and
there’s no plunder in sight.†He swatted idly at an
annoying insect.
“You Medalonians have the right idea. Toss the nobility,
promote on
merit and keep a standing army.â€
“Toss the nobility? If Hythria adopted that policy,
you’d be out of
a job.â€
Tarja wondered if he should warn Garet about the inadvisability of
getting into a discussion about the merits of various systems of
government with this man.
“Worse, Commandant, I’d be the first in line to be
beheaded. My
uncle is the High Prince of Hythria. I’m his heir,
unfortunately.â€
“Unfortunately?†Tarja asked.
“Taking the Hythrun throne isn’t going to be easy,
and keeping it
will be even harder. The other Warlords think I’m a
bit . . . precocious. There may come a time when I call
on Medalon for assistance. Assuming the Kariens and their Fardohnyan
allies don’t come pouring over your border to wipe us all
out.â€
Tarja had wondered what the price of Damin’s assistance
would be.
“I’m sure Medalon will remember your aid when the time
comes.â€
“You’re very free with your promises,
Tarja,†Garet remarked.
“You’re not the Lord Defender yet.â€
Tarja glanced at the commandant, but did not answer him.
“Well, for the time being, I think we’re safe
enough,†Damin said.
“Jasnoff can order his knights to the border with little
ceremony, but
we’ve time yet before the bulk of his army arrives. Although if
they
don’t get here soon, winter will be on us.â€
“That would be too much to hope for,†Tarja
remarked. “The Kariens
must know how hard a winter campaign will be.â€
“Lord Setenton is Jasnoff’s
Commander-in-Chief,†Damin agreed. “He’s
too experienced to try campaigning in the snow.â€
“You need to train your men to deal with armoured knights,
too,â€
Garet added. “A man encased in armour can be hard to kill, and
neither
the Defenders nor the Hythrun have much experience fighting
them.â€
“But he’s easy enough to disable. Just knock him of
his horse and
jump up and down on him for a while. That’ll knock the fight
out him.â€
Tarja smiled. “I’ll let you inform the troops of
that sage piece of
tactical advice.â€
Damin shrugged. “It sounds silly, but it works. Have you any
idea
how hard it is to get up wearing a suit of armour? Hell, they
can’t
even mount their horses without a block and tackle rig. Knock them on
their backs and thrust your sword through the eye slit. Works like a
treat. But the knights aren’t our problem. The true problem
lies with
Hablet and the Fardohnyans if he puts his artillery at
Jasnoff’s
disposal.â€
“Cannon, you mean?â€
Damin nodded. “I’ve never seen one myself, but
I’ve spoken to a few
who have. The only thing in our favour is that Hablet guards the secret
of what makes them work as if it’s more precious to him than
all his
children put together. I suspect he’ll find it a lot easier to
give
away his daughter than his precious cannon.â€
“I’d heard rumours of an alliance,†Garet
added, taking the
waterskin from Tarja. “But nothing substantial. I’ve
also heard rumours
that the reason Hablet guards the secret so closely is because his
cannon are notoriously unreliable, inaccurate, and just as likely to
kill the cannoneers as they are the enemy. Hablet’s weapon is
his
enemies’ fear of the cannon, not the cannon themselves.â€
“Even if that’s true, I don’t want to face
cannon fire with swords
and arrows.â€
“Even without cannon, if there is an alliance, Fardohnya
could
attack from the south,†Garet pointed out. “We
can’t afford to split
our forces.â€
He said our forces, not your forces. Tarja wondered
if the slip was accidental, or if it meant Garet had finally chosen
which side he was on.
“We’ll need time,†Tarja agreed with a
frown. “Until we gain control
of the Citadel, the Defenders we can put in the field are barely half
the number we need.â€
Damin nodded in agreement. “I can spare another three
centuries of
Raiders, but any more than that and Krakandar Province will begin to
look a little bit too inviting to my neighbours. I can always send to
Elasapine, if worst comes to worst. Narvell would send me five
centuries of his Raiders if I asked him nicely. I imagine that many
Hythrun troops garrisoned in Bordertown would make Hablet think twice
about sailing up the Glass River.â€
“Narvell?†Tarja asked.
“Narvell Hawksword, the Warlord of Elasapine,†Damin
explained.
“He’s my half-brother. My mother’s second
husband was his father.â€
“How many husbands has your mother had?†Tarja asked.
“Five, the last time I counted,†Garet remarked,
obviously
surprising Damin with his knowledge. He looked at the Warlord and
shrugged. “I run the Defender Intelligence Corps, my Lord.
I’m supposed
to know these things.â€
“Then you should know she might have married again, by now.
She had
her eye on a very rich Greenharbour gem merchant when I saw her
last.â€
Tarja shook his head in amazement. It was rare for Sisters of the
Blade to marry or have more than one or two children. Only the farmers
of Medalon, for whom children were a convenient source of cheap labour,
tended towards large families.
“But even with a thousand Hythrun raiders, we still need the
Defenders in full force,†Tarja pointed out with a frown,
getting back
to the problem at hand. “At the moment, we’ve got your
seven hundred
Raiders and about six thousand Defenders here, and that’s less
than
half.â€
“How many longbowmen do you have?â€
“Five hundred. The rest are still at the Citadel.
Why?â€
“I’ve been watching them train. I doubt if I could
draw one of those
damned bows.â€
“We train them from boyhood,†Tarja told him.
“They’re selected from
the cadets and they grow up with their bows. As they get stronger, the
bows get longer, until they can draw a full-sized weapon.
They’re very
good, I’ll grant you, but they’re irreplaceable. You
can’t just hand
the bow along to the next man in line when a longbowman falls. And even
with the others still at the Citadel, they number less than fifteen
hundred.â€
“We can use them to our advantage. Assuming Hablet
doesn’t arm the
Kariens with cannon, your longbows out-range any weapon they can bring
to bear against you. Kariens consider the bow and arrow a peasant
weapon. They have archers, but nothing of the calibre of your longbows.
If we concentrate on protecting them, you could cut down any
advance like a farmer mowing hay with a scythe.â€
“And your mounted archers?†Garet asked.
“We’re hit-and-run specialists,†Damin
shrugged. “Any man of mine
can fire three arrows into a target the size of an apple at a gallop in
under a minute, but our bows are short-range weapons. There are too
many Kariens for that sort of tactic.â€
“What about the rebels?â€
Tarja shrugged. “Another thousand at the most. Most of them
have
never held a weapon. Jasnoff can field an army of over a hundred
thousand with the Church supporting him. With the Fardohnyans as
allies . . . I’m not sure I can count that high.
I
suppose they could pray for us.â€
“Never underestimate the power of prayer,†Damin
warned. “If
Zegarnald, the God of War, takes our side, we should do well. And
we’ve
yet to hear from the Harshini.â€
Tarja did not argue the point. He had no faith in Damin’s
gods.
“I thought the Harshini were incapable of killing?â€
Garet asked
“There’s plenty of ways to frustrate the enemy
without killing him.â€
“I suppose,†Tarja agreed, a little doubtfully.
“Maybe they could
bring their demons and scare the Kariens to death.â€
“If the Kariens bring their priests with them, we will need
the
protection of the Harshini and their magic,†Damin warned.
“When Lord
Brakandaran returns, we will know more.â€
Tarja frowned at the mention of Brak. “He’s been
gone more than five
months. What makes you think he’s planning to return at
all?â€
“He’ll be back,†Damin assured him.
“I wish I shared your confidence.â€
The fact was he wanted to see the Harshini rebel very badly
— and
not simply because he needed to know what help the Harshini could offer
in the coming battle. Brak would know if R’shiel lived. Months
had
passed since she had vanished, quite literally, but he had seen enough
wounds in his time to know that hers was fatal. Yet the Harshini were
magical creatures and R’shiel was half-Harshini. A small spark
of hope
still burned in him that she had somehow survived Joyhinia’s
sword
thrust, but as the days, weeks and then months passed with no word from
her, his hope was fading.
“Is something wrong?â€
Tarja shook his head. “I was just thinking of someone,
that’s all.â€
“The demon child.â€
“I wasn’t thinking of her in those terms,â€
Tarja said wryly. “But I
was thinking of R’shiel, yes.â€
“Her fate is in the hands of the gods, my friend,â€
Damin reminded
him. “There is nothing you can do about her. On the other hand,
there
is something we can do about those damned knights.â€
“What did you have in mind?†Garet asked, a little
suspiciously.
“They’re looking a bit too comfortable for my
liking. I think we
should wake them up.â€
“What does that mean exactly?â€
Damin laughed. “It means putting aside your damnable
Defender’s
honour for a time and learning to be sneaky.†He climbed to his
feet
and dusted off his trousers. “We need to do something about
their
supply lines, for one thing. What about it, Commandant? Are you with
us?â€
Tarja glanced at Garet curiously, knowing there was much more to
Damin’s simple question than whether or not he wanted to attack
the
Karien camp. The older man studied them both in silence for a moment.
“I’ll not be a party to anything thing that reeks of
stupidity,†he
warned, climbing to his feet and handing the looking glass back to
Damin. “That also includes your ludicrous scheme for replacing
Joyhinia, Tarja. Come up with something workable, and I’ll back
you to
the hilt. But what you are planning is insane. And I plan to die in my
bed a very old man.â€
“That’s the most uncommitted excuse for an agreement
I’ve ever
heard.â€
“Be satisfied with it. It’s the best you’re
likely to get until you
show me something devised by brains, not wishful thinking.â€
Damin glanced at the two of them and shook his head.
“Let’s just
push him off the cliff and be done with it, Tarja,†he
suggested.
“I hear you have a reputation as a cunning warrior, Lord
Wolfblade.
I can’t for the life of me imagine how you came about
it.†He pushed
past Damin on the ledge and began to climb down to the narrow trail
where their horses were tethered below.
“If this man was not your friend,
Tarja . . .†Damin
began.
“He’s just testing you. We need him.â€
“No, you need him. I’d just as soon see him
dead. And I warn
you, every moment I spend in his company, the idea becomes more
attractive.â€
Damin slammed the delicate looking glass back into its leather case
and began to follow the path that Garet had taken.
Tarja shook his head. The last thing they needed was Damin Wolfblade
threatening to kill Garet Warner. With Garet’s assistance, it
would be
far easier to fool the Quorum into believing all was well with the
First Sister and his help was essential if they were to eventually
replace her. And if the Kariens really had allied with
Fardohnya, their only hope of preventing a southern incursion was
Damin’s Hythrun Raiders.
Not for the first time since Joyhinia had won the First
Sister’s
mantle, Tarja wished he had let her hang him. He would never have
become involved in the rebellion. He would never have led the raid to
rescue R’shiel that resulted in the death of the Karien Envoy,
and they
would not be facing an invasion. But what hurt most, when he let
himself think on it, was R’shiel. If not for him, she would be
alive
and probably in blissful ignorance of what she really was.
But then again, maybe nothing would be different, even if he had
died. The Harshini had known all along what R’shiel was and had
sent
Brak to find her. Garet and he had identified the Karien threat long
before any of these other events took shape. Whichever way he looked at
it, he was caught in circumstances that seemed to be constantly
spiralling out of control. He remembered thinking, more than a year
ago, when he was riding toward capture in Testra at the hands of Lord
Draco, the man who turned out to be his father, that life was no longer
certain.
He was starting to wryly think of those times as the good old days.
The ride back to the Defender’s camp was
tense.
Damin was angry and Garet silent. Tarja wished he could think of
something to say that would bring some sanity to the situation. He had
always liked and respected Garet Warner, yet he had found a rare
friendship with Damin Wolfblade — ironically, a man he had
spent four
years on the southern border trying to kill.
It was late afternoon when Treason Keep appeared on the horizon.
Although the engineers had done their best, it was unlikely the Keep
would ever be useful as anything but a temporary headquarters. Tarja
wondered what had happened to Bereth and her orphans. There was no sign
of them at the Keep. Had they survived? Or had Bereth found a safer
place for her brood? Tarja wished he had the time to discover their
fate.
The tents of their army covered a vast area surrounding the old
ruin. The Hythrun were camped on the western side of the plain, and as
they neared the sea of tents, Damin reined in his mount and studied the
camp thoughtfully. Tarja stopped beside him. Garet rode on, not
interested in the view.
The Defender’s tents were laid out in precise lines, each
housing
four men, with spears and pikes stacked in neat piles between them.
Their camp was as neat and orderly as Defender discipline demanded. The
much smaller Hythrun camp looked like a motley collection of warriors
out on a hunting expedition. No two tents were alike, and they had been
erected anywhere the Raiders felt like making camp. A pall of smoke
hung over the camp from the cook fires and the huge open-air forge
built against the southern wall of the Keep. Even from this distance,
Tarja could faintly hear the rhythmic ringing of the smiths’
hammers as
they pounded the metal into shape. The need for additional swords,
pikes and arrowheads was urgent. Jenga had decided that making them on
site was preferable to shipping them from the Citadel, although the
lack of fuel for the hungry fires almost outweighed the advantages of
being able to make and repair their weapons at the front.
North of the camp lay the training grounds, marked by a vast expanse
of scuffed ground and lines of tall hay bales, to which rough outlines
of man-shapes had been secured to give the trainees something to aim
at. Mounted, red-coated sentries patrolled the camp perimeter in pairs.
The Hythrun sentries were out of sight, hidden by the long grass.
To the south was the sprawling tent city that housed the rebels, the
camp followers and anyone else in Medalon who thought there was a quick
fortune to be made in a war. Jenga had given up trying to make them
leave.
“The Fardohnyans have me worried,†Damin admitted
eventually, once
Garet was out of their hearing. “Karien knights are fools. They
expect
everyone to play by the same rules as they do, and are therefore
predictable.â€
“And the Fardohnyans?†Tarja had never fought them.
In his
experience they preferred trade to conflict. But an enemy that caused
the Hythrun Warlord concern was an enemy to fear.
“Hablet keeps a huge standing army. His troops are well
trained and
they think on the run,†Damin warned. “They
won’t play by the same
rules as the Kariens. It’s one of the reasons Hythria has
avoided an
open conflict with Fardohnya. And then there’s Hablet’s
cannon . . .â€
“What do you suggest?â€
Damin shrugged. “I think we need help.â€
“Point me at it,†Tarja said wearily.
Damin glanced at him and then laughed. “I think it’s
time I spoke to
my god. I am, after all, His most worthy subject. Zegarnald owes me a
favour or two.â€
“I thought you said you didn’t know how to contact
the gods?â€
“I believe I said I didn’t know how to contact the
God of Thieves.
The God of War is a different matter entirely. He speaks to me
often.â€
“What does he say?†Tarja asked curiously.
“Ah, now that is between me and my god. You return to the
Keep and
try to keep things under control. I will see what I can do about some
divine assistance.â€
“Damin!†Tarja called uselessly, as the Warlord
spurred his
magnificent stallion forward. Damin ignored him and galloped toward the
camp.
Tarja watched him go, wondering about the wisdom of allying himself
with someone who thought the fickle Primal gods could help them against
the might of the Karien army, allied with the almost uncountable
Fardohnyans.
Garet was right, he thought heavily as he spurred Shadow on towards
the camp. He was trying to win a war with wishful thinking.
Find the answer within yourself.
R’shiel didn’t even try. She liked the Harshini
— it was impossible
to dislike them — but she had no desire to become embroiled in
some
divine conflict. She accepted that there were gods. She had even met a
few of them since coming here, but they did not impress her, and she
certainly felt no desire to worship them. If the gods didn’t
like one
of their underlings getting above his station, then they should have
thought about that before creating the problem in the first place.
She did not share her opinion with Korandellan. He was willing to
answer any question she asked and teach her anything she wanted to
know, but his aversion to violence made the subject of Xaphista an
awkward one. That suited R’shiel just fine — she had no
desire to
discuss the matter anyway.
Time was a fluid quantity in Sanctuary, so
R’shiel
had no way of gauging how long she had been here. It seemed as if
everyday she learnt something new, but if each day was a new one, or
simply the same day repeated over and over, she could not tell. She
regained her strength and then grew even stronger, exploring the vast
network of halls that made up the Harshini settlement.
There were rooms here that were so like the Citadel she sometimes
had to remind herself where she was. The artwork that was so
determinedly concealed in the Citadel was exposed here, in all its
glory. Although the walls were generally white, there wasn’t a
flat
surface in the place that was not adorned with some type of artwork,
large or small. It seemed every Harshini was an artist of some
description. There were delicately painted friezes lining the halls and
crystal statues in every corner. There were galleries full of paintings
depicting everything from broad sweeping landscapes to tiny,
exquisitely detailed paintings of insects and birds. The Harshini
studied life and then captured its essence in their art.
Curiously, the one thing she expected did not happen here. The walls
did not glow with the coming of each new day and fade with the onset of
night. The Brightening and Dimming that characterised the Citadel was
missing. The Harshini used candles and lanterns like any normal human,
although admittedly they could light them with a thought and extinguish
them just as easily.
The valley floor, which looked so wild and untended from the
balconies, proved to be a complex series of connecting gardens and the
source for much of the Harshini food in the settlement. At least it
should have been, Korandellan had explained, with a slight frown. The
abundant gardens were trapped in time, as was the whole settlement. The
vines never wilted, the flowers never faded. Bees buzzed between the
bushes, crickets chirruped happily, worms wiggled their way through the
fertile soil — but a picked berry was gone forever. Like the
Harshini,
and every animal in Sanctuary, they could not reproduce. The issue of
food was becoming critical, so much so, that Korandellan had allowed a
number of Harshini to leave the settlement. Some of them went openly,
like Glenanaran, who had returned to Hythria to teach at the
Sorcerers’
Collective. Others went out into the human world, disguised and
cautious, to barter or trade for some badly needed supplies. Although
he never said it aloud, R’shiel guessed it was fear of Xaphista
and the
Karien priests that kept them hidden.
They were performers, too, R’shiel discovered soon after she
was
allowed the freedom of Sanctuary. In the amphitheatre in the hollow
centre of the gardens, against the permanent rainbow that hovered over
the tinkling cascade, they held concerts in the twilight as the sun
settled behind the mountains. The first time R’shiel had heard
the
Harshini sing she had cried. Nothing had prepared her for the beauty of
their voices or their skill with instruments she had never seen in the
human world.
Sometimes the concerts were impromptu affairs, where members of the
audience would step forward, either alone or in groups, to perform for
their friends. Other times the concerts were as well organised as any
Founder’s Day Parade, and then the massed choir of the Harshini
would
transport R’shiel to a place she had never even glimpsed
before. “The
Song of Gimlorieâ€, the Harshini called it. The gift of the God
of
Music. A prayer in its own right, it had the power to devour
one’s
soul. The cadence of the song, the subtle harmonies, and the pure,
crystalline voices of the Harshini, combined to create images in the
mind that could be as euphoric as they were dangerous. The demons would
appear in the amphitheatre whenever they sang for Gimlorie, their eyes
wide, their bodies uncharacteristically still as they listened to the
music with rapt expressions. R’shiel understood their
fascination with
the music and lamented its loss to the human world.
It was following the last concert she attended that R’shiel
came to
an important decision. Tarja was a pleasant, fading memory. Joyhinia
and Loclon were so far buried in the back of her mind that she barely
even acknowledged their existence. Xaphista was the gods’
problem, not
hers. There was supposed to be a war going on, but it did not intrude
on the serenity of this other-worldly realm. Sanctuary was peaceful,
and the troubles of the outside world could not touch her in this
magical place. She was half-Harshini after all, and welcome here.
R’shiel decided that she didn’t really care if she
never returned to
the outside world at all.
CHAPTER 13
Karien was a vast country, full of tall
evergreens, rugged valleys and steep, but distant, snow-capped
mountains to the east. With autumn approaching the weather grew colder
as they sailed north. Adrina found herself shivering each morning when
she took her daily exercise on deck.
The Ironbrook was a heavily populated waterway. They sailed past
numerous villages, some large and prosperous, some mean and depressing,
some barely deserving of the name at all. They seemed dirty and crowded
to a princess raised in the spacious, pink-walled cities of Fardohnya.
In fact, Karien seemed a nation lacking in colour. The villages were
drab, the people even more so, and the frequently overcast weather
leeched the remaining pigment from the world. She was not looking
forward to spending her life among these people, not even as their
queen.
Adrina was easily bored and the seemingly endless journey up the
Ironbrook River toward Yarnarrow offered little in the way of
entertainment. She had exhausted most of the opportunities for
distraction available to her. She had admired all the scenery she could
bear and waved at so many ragged peasants lining the riverbank that her
arm felt ready to drop off. When she wasn’t being hounded by
Madren
regarding the proper way to behave in a Karien court, Vonulus dogged
her heels with his instruction in the unbelievably demanding laws of
the Karien Church. Adrina was beginning to think the reason so many
people sinned was because it wasn’t humanly possible to
remember
everything that would lead one into temptation.
The only other activity Adrina had to while away the long days on
the river was socialising with her ladies-in-waiting. She was not
certain what a lady-in-waiting was supposed to do. They hovered around
her like flies around a corpse, and seemed anxious to perform small,
meaningless tasks for her, but they were offended if she treated them
as servants and too sheltered to serve as entertaining companions.
Adrina was unusually cautious in dealing with them. It would not do
for these young women (virgins one and all) to learn that for her
sixteenth birthday her father had given her a handsome young court’esa.
Nor would it do to disillusion the Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and
Chastity regarding her virtue. As far as Adrina could tell, every one
of them had been raised in finest Karien tradition, which meant they
could read (barely), sing (acceptably), play a musical instrument
(tolerably well) and discuss such riveting topics as needlework,
banquet menus and the convoluted family bloodlines of the Karien
nobility. All of these topics left Adrina cold, so she listened and
smiled and pretended she didn’t understand them when the
conversation
became unbearable.
Today was proving particularly trying. Tall, dour, Pacifica had
taken it upon herself to enlighten Adrina regarding the long and
incredibly dull history of her family, the Gullwings of Mount Pike. She
had only got as far as Lord Gullwing the Pious, who lived three
centuries past, when Vonulus disturbed them. Adrina welcomed him into
the crowded cabin. Even a lesson in the complex duties of a woman
according to the Church of Xaphista was preferable to another three
hundred years of Dullwings.
“Vonulus! Have you come to instruct me?†she asked.
“Or perhaps
another discussion about the definition of sin?â€
“You would do well to heed both, your Highness,â€
Pacifica advised, a
little put out at Adrina’s shift in attention.
“We may discuss whatever you wish, your Highness.â€
Adrina glanced at Pacifica and her companions thoughtfully.
“Sin
shall be the topic today, I think. I am interested in your definition
of adultery.â€
Predictably, the Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and Chastity gasped at
the suggestion. Vonulus, however, was not so easily rattled.
“Certainly, your Highness. What were you planning?â€
Adrina’s eyes widened innocently. “Planning? Why
nothing, sir. I
simply seek to avoid pitfalls. I have no wish to do or say something
that in my country would be considered perfectly normal, but in yours
would see me stoned.â€
“A reasonable precaution,†he noted with a look that
said he didn’t
believe her for a minute. “What exactly did you want to
know?â€
“Define adultery. The Karien definition.â€
“It is not the Karien definition, your Highness. It is the
Overlord’s definition, and therefore, the only acceptable
definition.â€
Adrina chose not to pursue that particular argument. “As you
wish,
define it for me.â€
“Adultery, according to the Overlord, is any thought or deed
that
causes a man to lust after another man’s wife, or a woman to
lust after
another woman’s husband.â€
Adrina’s brow furrowed. “So, let me see if I
understand you. If I
lust after an unmarried man, then I have not committed adultery, but if
I lust after a married man, I have? Is that right?â€
“I think you take my meaning too literally, your
Highness,†Vonulus
began with a shake of his head, but Adrina did not allow him time to
continue.
“So that would work the other way, too, I suppose?â€
she asked. “If
my husband . . . well, for argument’s sake,
let’s
pretend Cretin falls madly in love with one of my
ladies . . .†she glanced around at the four
rather
appalled young women, before fixing her eyes on Chastity.
“Say . . . the Lady Chastity
here . . .â€
“Your Highness!†Chastity cried in horror.
Adrina smiled sweetly. “Oh never mind, Chastity, I only use
you to
demonstrate my point. With a name like yours, how could you be anything
but pure? Anyway, let’s pretend that Cretin and
Chastity . . . indulge in a bit of . . .
sin . . . then by your definition, Cretin would get off
free as a bird, because Chastity is unmarried, yet my poor Lady would
be stoned, because Cretin is married to me. Is that right?â€
Vonulus did not look pleased. “That could be regarded as the
strictest definition, I suppose, however —â€
“I see,†Adrina cut in. “And I can sin
merely by thinking
something lustful?†Gods! Am I in trouble! “How
would you know
what I’m thinking?â€
“I don’t need to know, your Highness. Xaphista sees
all. The
Overlord would know.â€
“He must be a very busy god, then,†she remarked
irreverently.
“It is by resisting such thoughts, that we spare our god the
need to
constantly watch over us,†Vonulus replied.
“And do you ladies resist temptation?â€
The young women nodded quickly in agreement. Too quickly,
she thought, with a private little smirk.
“The Overlord teaches us that to resist temptation is to
ensure a
place at His table in the next life,†Pacifica said.
“You mean if you’re a good little girl in this life,
you won’t come
back as a cockroach in the next?â€
Vonulus sighed heavily. “Your Highness, I believe we
discussed the
matter of reincarnation several days ago. There is no such thing. We
are given one life. When we die, our spirit ascends to the
Overlord’s
table if we have lived according to his rules.â€
“And you drown in the Sea of Despair for eternity, if you
don’t,â€
Adrina replied with a nod. “I remember our discussion. That
would mean,
that by your definition, every soul who ever lived, who didn’t
worship
Xaphista, is splashing about in the Sea of Despair, wondering where
they went wrong. It must be pretty crowded down there.â€
“Your irreverence will lead you into trouble, your
Highness,â€
Vonulus warned. “Have a care when you reach Yarnarrow. Such
comments
will not sit well at court.â€
Adrina met the priest’s gaze evenly. “Can’t
your religion stand a
bit of scrutiny, Vonulus? You wish me to believe in your god, yet you
resent me questioning anything I do not understand. My gods may be
numerous, but at least they have a sense of humour.â€
“Your Highness, a sense of humour will be of little help to
you,
should you be out of grace when you die. The Primal gods you worship
are nothing more than natural events to which the unenlightened have
attached divinity. You should be thankful that by marrying Prince
Cratyn, you have an opportunity to embrace the one true god.â€
Adrina smiled apologetically, realising that she had pushed the
priest far enough for one day. It did not particularly matter to her
that they expected her to worship their god. She wasn’t a fool
and had
every intention of acting as if she had converted. But her own beliefs
ran too deep to be overturned by a priest, no matter how clever or
articulate.
“I appreciate your advice, sir,†she demurred.
“I hope the Overlord
will forgive my pagan ignorance.â€
Vonulus looked a little suspicious, but he nodded. “The
Overlord can
see into your heart, your Highness. He will judge you
accordingly.â€
“Well, I don’t have anything to worry about then, do
I?†she asked
brightly.
“I’m sure you don’t,†Vonulus agreed
warily.
Tarja returned to the camp late in the day,
letting Shadow set her own pace, still brooding over his last argument
with Jenga. The Lord Defender was trying to hold together a disparate
force, Tarja knew that, and the knowledge that he was doing it through
deception weighed heavily on him. But it didn’t excuse his
intransigence over the matter of attacking the Kariens. The Lord
Defender was willing to defend his border, but he refused to make the
first move. He wanted to wait until the Kariens invaded. Tarja
disagreed. The Karien camp had grown considerably from the five hundred
knights that had been camped there all through summer. They should be
taking the fight to the enemy and they should do it now, before the
Karien force grew so large that they would simply be overrun.
Jenga was furious when he heard that Tarja had crossed the border.
Using the same Hythrun tactics that were so effective in the south, on
their numerous cattle raids into Medalon, he had taken a handful of men
into Karien under cover of darkness and stampeded the enemy’s
horses
through their camp. The ensuing destruction had been extremely
gratifying — it had probably set back their war effort by
weeks. He’d
only lost three men to injury, and had considered the entire affair a
small, if significant, victory.
Jenga did not see it that way. He had exploded with fury when he
learnt of the attack, accusing Damin of being a reckless barbarian for
suggesting the idea, and Tarja of being an undisciplined fool for
listening to him.
Following his desertion two years ago, Tarja had often longed for
the chance to return to the security and brotherhood of the Corps. But
now that he was back, he discovered it was not the easy ride he had
hoped. He had liked being in command of the rebels, he realised
now. He had been raised to command, and knew, without vanity, that he
was good at it. Tarja respected Jenga, but had grown accustomed to
making his own decisions. Jenga was a good soldier but he’d
been Lord
Defender for more than twenty years, and that meant he had more
practice with politics than war. Tarja had spent the best part of his
adult life at war with the Hythrun, the Defenders and now the Kariens.
Jenga had not raised his sword in anger in decades.
They still had only six thousand of the twelve thousand Defenders
they could count on, and a thousand Hythrun Raiders from Krakandar. As
he thought of the Hythrun, he wondered, as he had already done
countless times, where Damin Wolfblade was.
Nobody had seen the Warlord for nearly a month — not since
the
argument with Jenga after the raid, when he announced that he was going
to speak with his god. If Almodavar knew where he was, he
wasn’t
saying. The grizzled Hythrun captain seemed unconcerned by his
Lord’s
absence. If Damin wished to speak with the God of War, to seek his
blessing, then his troops were not about to object. They fervently
believed Zegarnald would help them. They were counting on it, in fact.
When he reached the camp, on impulse Tarja turned toward the
scattered Hythrun tents. Perhaps Almodavar had heard something. It was
becoming increasingly difficult to reassure Jenga that Damin had not
simply deserted them.
He rode through the camp, acknowledging the occasional wave from the
Hythrun troops. The Raiders were much less respectful of rank than the
Defenders. Among the Raiders, one earnt respect through battle, not
promotion or pretty insignia. But some of these men had faced Tarja on
the southern border. They knew him for a warrior and found nothing
strange in their Warlord’s alliance with his former enemy.
The Defenders had been far less accommodating. They resented the
presence of the Hythrun and made no secret of it. Tarja thought that
much of the impressive discipline the Defenders displayed was designed
to show the Hythrun how things were done in a “properâ€
army. The
Defenders despised mercenaries, and most of Damin’s Raiders
were just
that. Tarja was a little more tolerant. Had the rebellion not
intervened, he would likely be a mercenary himself, by now. But
feelings ran strong between the two camps and fights broke out
frequently. In the beginning, Tarja and Damin had organised training
bouts between the two armies, ostensibly to foster some sort of
cohesion between the two forces. Three fatalities put paid to that
laudable sentiment, and Jenga had ordered them stopped. Now the
training was strictly segregated.
He reached the centre of the Hythrun camp and discovered a large
number of the Raiders in a cheering circle, obviously wagering on some
sort of contest. As he neared the group a cheer went up, almost
drowning out an unmistakable cry of pain. Tarja dismounted curiously,
threw the reins over Shadow’s neck and pushed his way through
the crowd.
The source of the Hythrun entertainment proved to be two boys, both
bloodied and wounded. The brawl must have been going on for quite some
time, by the look of the two combatants. The older of the two was a
well-muscled, fair-haired Hythrun lad of about sixteen, an apprentice
blacksmith that Tarja had seen once or twice around the forge. The
younger boy could not have been more than ten or eleven and was
unmistakably Karien, but despite the difference in their sizes, he
appeared to be giving a good account of himself, although he was
clearly on the brink of collapse. His freckled face was almost totally
obscured by blood, his clothes torn, his eyes burning with hatred. He
was staggering to his feet as Tarja pushed through to the front of the
crowd.
Tarja winced sympathetically as the older boy ran at the disoriented
Karien lad and delivered a kick to the boy’s chin that snapped
his neck
back almost hard enough to break it. With a pain-filled grunt, the
Karien boy dropped to the ground. Breathing heavily, the apprentice
laughed, triumphantly standing over his vanquished foe. He reached down
and snatched the pendant from around the boy’s neck and held it
up high
to the cheers of the spectators. The five-pointed star and lightning
bolt of the Overlord glittered dully in the afternoon light. Someone
started up a cry of “Finish him!†which was quickly
taken up by the
rest of the spectators. The apprentice grinned at the chant and pulled
his dagger from his belt. Tarja glanced around the Hythrun and
realised, with horror, that they were serious.
“Enough!†he shouted, stepping into the clearing,
his red jacket
stark against the motley browns and black chain mail of the Hythrun.
Silence descended on the circle of Raiders. Only then did Tarja
wonder about the advisability of walking into the centre of thirty-odd
Hythrun Raiders crying for blood. The Raiders stared at him, their
stillness more threatening than their chanting. He covered the distance
to the startled apprentice and snatched the dagger from his hand.
“Get back to work, boy,†he ordered in a tone that
brooked no
argument.
The Hythrun boy glared at him, but stepped away from the fallen
Karien. A discontented mutter rippled through the men, until one of
them, a slender man, with a puckered scar across his throat that looked
as if he had survived having it cut, stepped forward.
“You’ve no authority here, Defender,†he
said. “Go back to your
pretty-boys and leave us to deal with the Karien scum as we
wish.â€
Tarja could feel the animosity from the Hythrun mercenaries
surrounding him. He was far from his own troops, and Damin’s
restraining influence had weakened in his absence. With a jolt, Tarja
realised he may not get out of this alive. The mercenary stepped closer
and Tarja did the only thing he could think of, under the
circumstances. He brought his elbow up sharply into the
Hythrun’s face
and then kicked the stunned mercenary’s legs from under him.
The
Hythrun hit the ground before the others could react. Tarja slammed his
boot down across the man’s scarred throat and then looked up at
the
startled Raiders.
“Anyone else?†he asked with an equanimity he did
not feel. The man
beneath his boot squirmed desperately, gasping for air, lack of oxygen
draining his strength to escape the pressure of Tarja’s boot.
“I think you’ve made your point, Captain.â€
Tarja had to consciously stop himself from sagging with relief as
Almodavar appeared in the circle. The Hythrun captain barked a harsh
order at his men in their own language and the circle dissolved. Tarja
took his boot off the throat of his challenger and the man scrambled to
his feet and ran off without looking back, clutching at his neck.
Almodavar smiled grimly.
“I never thought you had a death wish, Captain,†the
Hythrun
remarked with a shake of his head. “You should know better than
to
interfere with Raiders when their blood is up.â€
“Your Raiders should know better than to encourage
cold-blooded
murder,†Tarja retorted, turning to the prone form of the
Karien boy.
He knelt down beside the lad and was relieved to see his eyes
fluttering open blankly.
The Hythrun captain looked down at the boy and shrugged.
“Don’t
blame my Raiders too quickly, Captain. That one asks for it daily. He
wants to die for his Overlord.â€
Tarja pulled the boy to his feet. Far from being grateful, the boy
seemed disappointed that Tarja had saved him. He shook himself free and
staggered a little before drawing himself up to his full height.
“I need no help from an atheist!†he spat defiantly
in broken
Hythrun. He had obviously been in the camp long enough to pick up some
of the language. He would never have learnt a heathen language in
Karien.
Tarja glanced at Almodavar and then back at the boy.
“Ungrateful
little whelp, isn’t he?†he said in Karien, so the boy
would understand
him.
Almodavar, for all that he looked like an illiterate pirate, spoke
Karien almost as well as he spoke Medalonian and Fardohnyan. Damin held
that understanding an enemy’s language, was the first step to
understanding an enemy. He had been surprised to learn that most of
Damin’s Raiders spoke several languages. His Defenders, the
officers at
least, could speak Medalonian and Karien. It had been considered polite
to converse with one’s allies in their own language, but few
bothered
to learn the languages of the south. It was a lesson Tarja had taken to
heart, although trying to convince Jenga that the Defenders should
learn to speak Hythrun was proving something of a chore.
“Aye,†Almodavar agreed, easily falling into the
language of their
enemy. “This isn’t the first time, and I’ll
wager it won’t be the last,
that he’s caused trouble. He and his brother were the ones who
brought
the news of the alliance. His brother isn’t much trouble, but
you’d
think this one planned to defeat us single handed.â€
Tarja studied the boy curiously for a moment. “This
is the
Karien spy?â€
The boy bristled at Tarja’s amusement. “Atheist pig!
The Overlord
will see you drown in the Sea of Despair!â€
“I’m starting to regret saving your neck,
boy,†Tarja warned. “Have
a care with that mouth of yours.â€
“The Overlord will protect me!â€
“I didn’t see him around just now,â€
Almodavar chuckled, and then he
changed back to speaking Medalonian without missing a beat.
“You
wouldn’t consider taking him back with you, I suppose?â€
he asked. “I
doubt he’ll last much longer around here with that
attitude.â€
Tarja frowned. The last thing he needed was an uncontrollable
ten-year-old reeking havoc in their camp in the name of the Overlord.
But Almodavar was correct in his assertion that he would not last long
among the Hythrun. He pondered the problem for a moment then turned to
the captain.
“Very well, I’ll take him back with me,†he
agreed, speaking Karien
so the boy could follow the conversation. “You keep his brother
here.
If the boy gives me any trouble, I’ll send word. You can send
back a
finger from his brother’s hand each time you hear from me. When
we run
out of fingers, start on his toes. Perhaps the prospect of seeing his
brother dismembered bit by bit will teach him a little self-control.
It’s obviously not a virtue the Overlord encourages.â€
The boy’s blood-streaked face paled, tears of fear and
horror
welling up in his eyes. “You are a vicious, evil, barbarian
bastard!â€
he cried.
“A fact you would do well to remember, boy,†Tarja
warned. He dare
not look at Almodavar. The Hythrun captain made a noise that sounded
like a cough, but which Tarja suspected was a futile attempt to stifle
a laugh. “Go and fetch your belongings. If you’re not
back here in five
minutes, you’ll find out what your brother looks like without
his left
ear.â€
The boy fled as Almodavar burst out laughing. “Captain, I
swear
you’re turning into a Hythrun.â€
“What did you expect from a vicious, evil, barbarian
bastard?â€
“Truly,†Almodavar agreed. “You’ve
had a busy day. First you take on
my Raiders, and then you subdue a Karien fanatic with a few words.
What’s next?â€
“I was hoping you could tell me,†Tarja said.
“You’ve no word from
Lord Wolfblade?â€
“None. Don’t let it concern you, Captain.
He’ll be back.â€
Tarja sighed, not really expecting any other answer.
He’ll be
back. But before or after the war is over? he wondered.
CHAPTER 15
Yarnarrow was a huge city, rivalling Talabar in
size, although it lacked the southern capital’s grace and
aesthetic
beauty. Steep pitched roofs of grey slate covered the more substantial
buildings; while the poorer districts were simply hovels thrown
together with whatever material their pitiful inhabitants could
scrounge. The vast Yarnarrow Castle loomed over the city like a
shadowed hand, and was even more forbidding than the city, which had
grown up around its slanted walls. Adrina longed for the flat-roofed
pink stone villas of Talabar, the broad balconies, the flower-laden
trellises and the heavy scent of their perfume on the still air. She
missed the wide, tree-lined streets and the gaily-dressed citizens.
Everything was grey here — the city, the sky, even the people.
Yarnarrow was depressing and dirty, and the most pervasive odour was
stale wood-smoke that hung like a pall over the city as if it were
constantly wrapped in fog.
She despaired at the thought of spending her life here.
The wedding took place with almost indecent haste, the day after
Adrina arrived. Vonulus had instructed her in the Karien wedding vows,
and Madren had ensured that she knew exactly what was expected of her.
They had barely landed in Yarnarrow when she was whisked away to her
large and rather draughty apartments to prepare herself for the
ceremony the following day. She was not even accorded the honour of an
introduction to King Jasnoff or Queen Aringard, a slight against her
that had her fuming.
Tamylan, the only slave she had been allowed to keep, helped her
dress on the morning of the wedding. Her ladies-in-waiting had other
duties to attend to, it seemed, which did not bother Adrina at all. She
defiantly ignored the stiff, grey silk dress that Madren had informed
her was her wedding gown, and dressed instead in the traditional
Fardohnyan bridal outfit she had brought with her. It had been made for
Cassandra originally, but they were about the same size, so Adrina had
appropriated the gown from her younger sister, rather than explain why
Japinel had not designed a new one. It was a little tight, and she knew
it would cause a commotion, but she was still smarting over
Cratyn’s
obvious distaste for his Fardohnyan bride.
Among the more interesting things she had learnt during her short
stay at Setenton Castle was that prior to the treaty with her father,
Cratyn had previously been betrothed to Chastity, and that he had
broken the engagement to marry Adrina. It accounted for
Cratyn’s
reluctance, and Chastity’s pitiful demeanour whenever the
prince was in
the room. The girl was obviously hopelessly in love with him and Adrina
suspected he reciprocated the young woman’s feelings. She had
every
intention of making him forget the silly cow ever lived, and if
anything was going to advertise her matchless beauty, it was the
traditional gown of a Fardohnyan bride.
The gown was in two pieces. The bodice was made of deep blue lace,
threaded with diamonds, with long narrow sleeves and a low neckline
that offered a tantalising view of her ample bosom and left her midriff
bare. The skirt sat snugly on her hips, the same glorious blue as the
bodice, made up of layer upon layer of transparent silk that flowed
like a waterfall against her legs. The skirt was belted with a layer of
silver mesh. In the mesh was sheathed the small jewelled dagger that
had once belonged to her mother. Centuries ago, Fardohnyan brides had
carried a sword, but it was tradition, rather than necessity, that
required the Bride’s Blade these days, and the blade was more
ornamental than practical. It was sharp, though. She had cut her finger
testing its edge after Hablet had presented it to her the day she left
Talabar.
The Fardohnyan bridal jewels completed her outfit. In her navel
nested a blue diamond of immeasurable value, matched by the sapphire
and diamond choker that encased her long neck. She wore her hair down,
and it hung past her waist in an ebony fall of silken waves, as was the
tradition for all Fardohnyan brides. Over it all, she wore a shimmering
blue veil that covered her head and the lower half of her face. The
veil trailed ten paces behind her, floating on the slight current of
air created by her passage as she took the long walk down the aisle of
the vast Temple of Xaphista to the shocked gasps of the gathered Karien
nobility.
As she traversed the length of the vast temple, Adrina was quite
overwhelmed by the opulence of the building. Having seen the bleak,
austere monastery on the Isle of Slarn, the Temple of Xaphista seemed
almost garish by comparison. Tall, fluted columns of gold-flecked
marble were spaced evenly down the centre of the cathedral, supporting
a vaulted ceiling that led to a dome over the altar. The dome was lined
with thousands of tiny mother-of-pearl tiles, which reflected the sun
onto the worshippers in a spray of rainbow light.
The temple was filled to capacity with every nobleman and noblewoman
in Karien who had managed to get themselves invited to the royal
wedding. Adrina heard their shocked whispers. There was no sign of
warmth among the gathering. No familiar faces or encouraging smiles.
Tristan had not been allowed to attend, nor had any of her Guard. They
waited outside, not permitted to sully the sacred temple with their
pagan presence. The only familiar face she saw during her interminable
walk down the aisle was Vonulus, standing with the other priests at the
front of the temple, dressed in his elaborate ceremonial robes and
clutching his precious staff. The priest shook his head faintly as she
caught his eye, as if scolding her for her defiance.
She turned her attention back to the altar and the somewhat aghast
figure of Prince Cratyn. He wore black, from head to toe, the severity
of his outfit relieved only by a thin golden coronet on his head and a
gold and silver pendant in the shape of the star and lightning bolt of
the Overlord. His expression was as close to anger as she had ever seen
it, in her limited acquaintance with him. To the Seven Hells with
him, she decided. To the Seven Hells with all of them.
The ceremony was blessedly short, requiring little more from her
than her agreement to obey Cratyn in all things and be a good and
upstanding Defender of the Faith. Almost before she knew it, she was
married. The High Priest, who had spent the entire ceremony trying not
to see the considerable amount of bare flesh she was displaying,
declared them man and wife and then prostrated himself on the floor of
the altar. Carefully instructed by Vonulus, Adrina knew this was
coming, and with Cratyn at her side, followed suit. Biting back a gasp
as her bare skin touched the icy marble floor of the temple, Adrina
momentarily regretted her impulse to wear her own gown. She had
forgotten about this part of the ceremony. Every person present was
required to prostrate themselves before their god and by the sound of
the muffled grunts and groans behind them, some were finding the task
easier than others.
They lay prone on the floor of the temple for a full ten minutes,
the entire temple hushed, as each member of the congregation examined
their conscience and contemplated their service to the Overlord. Adrina
spent the time wishing she could get up. That floor was freezing.
Finally, the High Priest climbed awkwardly to his feet, and the
congregation followed. Adrina turned to Cratyn and smiled, deciding to
be gracious, at least in public. He took her hand uncertainly and led
her through the temple to the muted, and rather unenthusiastic applause
of the wedding guests.
When they reached the entrance, she was relieved to find Tristan and
her Guard, once again in their glorious dress whites, waiting to escort
them back to the castle. He smiled at her encouragingly, his men
holding back the crowd, as Cratyn handed her up into the open carriage
for the ride through the streets.
She sat down and smoothed her skirts before glancing at her new
husband. He was not looking at her, but back at the temple where a
sobbing Chastity had just emerged into the rare sunlight. Adrina
frowned. How did one compete with such an insipid rival?
“You could smile, you know, husband. Getting married
is
supposed to be a joyous occasion. At least in Fardohnya, it is.â€
“We are not in Fardohnya now,†Cratyn pointed out,
as they moved off
with a jerk. “You would do well to remember that.â€
Startled by his icy tone, Adrina retorted without thinking.
“You
would do well to remember who you married. Chastity will just
have to stay that way, I’m afraid.â€
Cratyn glared at her, but did not reply. Despite the unusually warm
day and the waving crowds, the ride back to Yarnarrow Castle was
thoroughly unpleasant.
Had she been married in Fardohnya, the rest of the
week would have been spent feasting and dancing to celebrate the
occasion of her marriage. In Karien such revelry was considered
wasteful and unseemly. On reaching Yarnarrow Castle, Adrina was
escorted to the royal apartments to meet the Karien King — not
to
celebrate her marriage, but to formalise the treaty between Fardohnya
and Karien.
Jasnoff proved to be a more rotund version of his son, with the same
brown eyes and hair, although his was flecked with grey. He also wore
the same shocked expression when he saw what she was wearing. He made
no comment about it, however, and simply rose from his small throne and
accepted her curtsy as was his due.
“You will sign here,†Jasnoff ordered, as soon as
the pleasantries
were taken care of. He pointed to a parchment scroll waiting on the
small, slanted desk, a tonsured scribe holding out an inked quill
expectantly.
“Certainly, your Majesty. What exactly is it that
I’m signing?â€
“It is a letter to your father,†Cratyn explained
behind her. “It
informs him that you are married in accordance with Karien law, and
that we have kept our side of the bargain. On receipt of this letter,
he will send your dowry and begin preparations for the invasion of
Medalon.â€
“My dowry? Ah, you mean he will sign over sovereignty of the
Isle of
Slarn, don’t you?â€
Adrina took the quill from the scribe. There was something vaguely
degrading about being traded for a lump of rock. She signed the letter
with a flourish and handed the quill back to the scribe.
Jasnoff nodded with satisfaction and turned to his son.
“Your mother
and I will look forward to seeing you at dinner. And your wife, of
course,†he added as an afterthought.
Cratyn bowed to his father and Adrina dropped into another low
curtsy as the King and his scribe strode from the room, leaving them
alone. Adrina turned to Cratyn questioningly. Vonulus and Madren had
spent a great deal of time instructing her on the Karien wedding
ceremony, but had barely mentioned what was supposed to happen
afterwards.
“So what now, Cretin?†she asked. She waited for him
to blush. This
was the first time they had ever been alone, and she had no doubt the
poor boy was probably dreading his marital duty. That, or he’d
rather
be doing it with Chastity.
The slap, when it came, took her completely by surprise. Her head
snapped back and his signet cut her cheek, leaving a thin smear of
blood on the back of his hand.
Cratyn was not blushing, he was furious.
“Fardohnyan whore!†He slapped her again, this time
even harder, and
she staggered under the blow. “You will never disgrace
me or
the Royal House again by such a wanton public display!â€
Adrina quickly decided to forgo trading blows with him. Cratyn might
be a fool, but he was stronger than she was. Such rare common sense was
the last rational thought she had as her own anger exploded.
“You will never lay a hand on me again, you
gutless
little turd! How dare you hit me!â€
“I dare what I please, your Highness,†he told her,
his voice a
quiet rage. “I am your husband!â€
“That remains to be seen! I seriously doubt your manhood is
going to
be up to the task. Perhaps if I simper and pout and let you call me
Chastity, it will be easier for you?â€
Cratyn raised his hand to strike her again, but this time she was
ready for him. She had her delicate and wickedly sharp Bride’s
Blade at
his throat, faster than he could credit. With eyes wide, he slowly
lowered his arm.
“That’s better,†she said, holding the thin
blade to his neck with
her outstretched hand. “Husband you may be, Cretin, but if you ever
lay a hand on me again, I will slit your miserable throat. Do we
understand each other?â€
Cratyn nodded slowly and she lowered the knife. He rubbed his neck
where she had jabbed him, fingering the small bead of blood that came
away on his finger. He stared at her, but his expression was far from
apologetic.
“I should not have hit you,†he conceded.
“It was unworthy of me.
But don’t play me for a fool, Adrina, or think your threats and
a table
dagger have me cowed.†He moved to the side table and poured
himself a
generous cup of wine before he turned back to her, his anger replaced
with quiet certitude. “Did you really believe that we knew
nothing of
your reputation? Of your lovers? I have known since we first met what
you are. Your sister’s wanton behaviour in Talabar merely
played into
our hands.â€
The admission stunned her. “What are you saying? You
actually wanted
to marry me?â€
“I married Hablet’s eldest legitimate
child,†Cratyn corrected
coldly. “Any issue of yours will be heir to the Fardohnyan
throne.â€
“Not if my father has a legitimate son. And I have fifteen
bastard
half-brothers. Father could legitimise one of them any time he wanted
to.â€
“If he does, they will die. The Overlord has willed it.
Fardohnya
will become the Overlord’s through the ascension of a Karien
king to
the throne.â€
“You are out of your mind if you think I will aid you in
this!â€
“You are my wife, Adrina,†he insisted stubbornly,
as if there was
nothing further to be discussed on the matter. Then he added, almost as
an afterthought, “Another thing, I will require you to order
your Guard
to place themselves under my command. I will be taking them to the
front with me.â€
“Oh no you won’t! My father never gave you leave to
use my Guard in
battle. They are under my command.â€
“Then you will command them according to my wishes.â€
“The Seven Hells I will! My Guard isn’t going
anywhere
without me, least of all to some soggy battlefield to fight your wars
for you.â€
“As you wish, Adrina,†Cratyn shrugged. “If
you insist, you will
accompany your Guard, but they will fight.â€
“How in the name of the gods do you plan to make me order
them into
battle? I’ll die before I give such an order.â€
Cratyn placed the cup down carefully and crossed his arms as he
studied her. “You swear by the Primal gods. That is an offence
punishable by death. You are my wife and have sworn to obey me in the
eyes of my God and every nobleman in Yarnarrow. To defy me is
punishable by death. If that does not convince you, I am sure it will
only take your bastard half-brother and his pagans a few days to break
some church law punishable by death.â€
“You hypocritical son-of-a-bitch! You have the gall to
preach piety
to me yet you would calmly murder my brother in the name of your
pitiful god!â€
“Be careful, Adrina,†Cratyn warned.
“Insulting the Overlord is
punishable —â€
“By death,†she finished impatiently. “I get
the idea, your
Highness.â€
“Then you will do as I command?â€
Adrina could barely credit the change in him. He seemed so sure of
himself, here in Yarnarrow. The blushing princeling who had almost
fainted at the sight of the barely dressed Fardohnyan women was still
there, underneath the confident exterior, but this was his God
speaking. His faith ran so deep it was impossible to shake his belief
that everything would turn out as Xaphista willed it. As the
realisation came to her, Adrina forced her anger down. She could not
fight this by having a tantrum. She needed to have her wits about her
to find a way out of this terrible bargain.
“I have conditions,†she said.
“I have no need to grant you anything, Adrina.â€
“No, you don’t,†she agreed. “But
you want my cooperation, and
believe me, I am much more tractable when I have my own way.â€
He nodded slightly. “As you wish, what are your
conditions?â€
Adrina’s mind was racing ahead, trying to think what she
could ask
for that would not raise suspicion. “If I am to accompany you
to the
Medalon border, I wish to do so in a manner befitting my station as
your wife. I want my full retinue, including my
ladies-in-waiting.†There!
Let’s see how your precious Chastity likes roughing it on the
front
with a few thousand smelly soldiers, she thought.
“I believe that can be arranged,†he conceded.
“Was that all?â€
“No. I want to be included in your war council. I will not
allow you
to waste Fardohnyan lives without being fully informed as to your
plans.â€
“Absolutely not! A council of war is no place for a
woman.â€
“Suit yourself,†she shrugged. “If you
refuse me, then I will stand
up at dinner tonight and scream at the top of my voice that Xaphista is
a lying, hypocritical bastard. Somewhat like you, I imagine. Such an
act would be punishable by death, would it not? If I die,
you’ll have
no heir to the Fardohnyan throne and no troops to throw at the
Medalonians. If you think I’m bluffing, then by all means,
refuse me.â€
He thought for a moment, weighing up, no doubt, the advisability of
calling her bluff, against the reaction of his Dukes to a woman in
their war council.
Finally he nodded, albeit reluctantly. “Very well.â€
“And one other thing,†she added as an afterthought.
“I want every
Fardohnyan under my command given special exemption by the Church. As
you pointed out, they are bound to break some unknown Church law,
sooner or later. It will be a lot easier for both of us if you
don’t
whittle away at their numbers by hanging every transgressor for some
slight, real or imagined, against your precious god.â€
Although he bristled at her tone, he was not so foolish as to deny
the logic of her request. He nodded.
“That’s it then,†she said. “I will
do as you ask.†For now,
she amended silently.
“I have some conditions of my own,†Cratyn told her
as she turned
away.
“Such as?â€
“You will never dress in such a provocative manner again.
You will
behave in a manner befitting a Karien Princess, or, Fardohnyan heir or
not, I will see you stoned.â€
“Of course, your Highness,†she agreed, her voiced
laced with
sarcasm. “Perhaps a hair shirt would be more suitable?â€
He ignored the jibe. “And you will not speak to your
half-brother,
or any of your Guard unless Vonulus is present. I will not have you
making your own plans behind my back.†Now that could prove awkward, she thought in annoyance, but
she did not see a way around it. “You show a disturbing lack of
trust
in me, your Highness.â€
“A warranted lack of trust,†he retorted.
“Do you agree?â€
She nodded slowly. “I agree.â€
“Good. In that case, you may return to your rooms and dress
in
something more . . . appropriate . . .
for dinner. Tomorrow, I will have the nuns sent to you, to discuss the
most opportune time in your cycle to consummate our marriage. I do not
intend to spend one moment longer in your bed than I have to.â€
Of all that had been said in the past hour, that shocked her the
most. It even hurt! How dare he!
“Just be sure that when you do deign to come to my bed, you
have
some idea of what you’re supposed to do,†she retorted
coldly. “As you
apparently know, I have been taught the art of lovemaking by
professionals. It would be most unfortunate if your much-needed heir to
the Fardohnyan and Karien thrones fails to be consummated because I
couldn’t stop laughing.â€
The insult hit the mark as she intended, but she swept up her skirts
and strode from the room before he had a chance to answer her.
CHAPTER 16
For longer than human memory, Sanctuary had
remained hidden in the mountains named for it. It had weathered
nature’s inevitable passage of time, untouched by anything but
the
magical peace and serenity that seeped through its very walls. The vast
white-spired complex had watched ages come and go, kingdoms rise and
fall, mortals live and die. The gods roamed its halls at will and the
Harshini who lived there sought nothing more than wisdom and knowledge
and safety from the foibles of humanity.
Nothing had ever disturbed it.
Until now.
Until the demon child.
Brakandaran heard the laughter as he approached
Korandellan’s
chambers and winced. It wasn’t that nobody laughed in
Sanctuary, on the
contrary, the Harshini were happy by nature. But this was not the
polite, considerate laugh of an amused Harshini. This laugh was loud
and heartfelt and unmistakably female. The laughter echoed through the
halls with startling clarity, turning the heads of the white robed
Harshini who glided silently past him in the hall. Their black eyes
were either curious or indulgent, depending on whether or not they had
any knowledge of its source.
Brak hurried on, almost afraid to discover the reason for the demon
child’s mirth. Korandellan was a tolerant king — he had
ruled the
Harshini through some of its most turbulent history — but he
was
ill-equipped to handle R’shiel. She had a knack for saying the
wrong
thing at the wrong time, asking awkward and frequently unanswerable
questions, and she was totally unimpressed by the pivotal role she was
expected to play in the conflict of the gods. Nor was the Harshini King
easily able to deal with the fact that she was an instrument of
destruction. It was hard for him to accept that the demon
child’s
purpose was to destroy. Harder yet for him to teach her what she needed
to know to enable her to complete the task. Lorandranek,
R’shiel’s
father, had been driven insane by the knowledge.
Brak opened the door to Korandellan’s chambers with a
thought. The
King leapt to his feet with a relieved smile at the sight of him. He
and R’shiel were on the balcony, overlooking the hollow valley
that
Sanctuary encompassed, a crystal pitcher of chilled wine between them.
Both the King and the demon child were dressed in the light linen robes
that were all the protection one needed in the atmosphere-controlled
vicinity of the Citadel. His black leathers seemed out of place. Brak
crossed the white tiled floor and bowed to his king, who seemed
inordinately glad to see him.
“Brakandaran!†Korandellan cried.
“You’re back!â€
“So it would seem.â€
“R’shiel and I were just discussing her childhood at
the Citadel,â€
the King explained. “She has had a most interesting
life.†Interesting is something of an understatement, Brak
thought, but it did not explain R’shiel’s laughter.
“The King asked me if I missed my mother,†she
explained, as if she
understood his confusion. “It struck me as rather
funny.â€
“Our worthy monarch has no concept of a personality like the
First
Sister’s,†Brak agreed wryly. “But it’s
good to hear you laughing.
You’re looking much better.â€
Another understatement. He had never seen her look better.
Cheltaran, the God of Healing, had done more than heal the near-fatal
wound she received in Testra. It was as if he had healed her soul as
well. Or maybe it was because Death had forsaken any claim on her until
the life Brak had offered in return for hers was forfeited. Her violet
eyes were shining, and her skin was golden rather than sallow. She had
put on weight, too, now that she was eating a diet more suited to her
Harshini metabolism. He realised they would not be able to keep her
here much longer, and wondered if Korandellan realised it too. They
would have taught her much about her Harshini heritage and the power
she had at her command, but this girl was destined to destroy a god.
She would not, could not, learn all she needed within
Sanctuary’s peace-filled walls.
“What news have you, Brakandaran?†the King asked.
He waved his arm
and a chair appeared at the table for him. Korandellan took his own
seat and poured him a cup of wine with his own hand. Brak wanted to
tell him it wasn’t necessary, but it would have been useless.
For more
than twenty years, Korandellan had been trying to prove to him that he
did not hold him responsible for Lorandranek’s death. Every
small
gesture meant something to the King. Brak took the offered seat and
accepted the wine.
“Not good news, I fear,†he said, glancing at
R’shiel. He wondered
what her reaction would be to the news he carried. Much of her current
serenity was a direct result of Sanctuary’s magical atmosphere.
And, he
privately suspected, a deliberate glamour laid on her, to take the edge
off her more extreme human emotions while her body and mind recovered.
That glamour would not hold if she ever realised it was there. She was
easily powerful enough to break through it. Ignorance of the spell was
the only thing protecting the gentle Harshini from her violent human
side.
“Are the Kariens still planning to invade Medalon?â€
Korandellan
asked with concern. The mere thought of a war made him pale. It
wasn’t
cowardice; it was simply part of being a Harshini. A part that neither
Brak nor R’shiel, being half-human, were susceptible to.
“It’s worse than that,†Brak told him.
“They have allied with the
Fardohnyans.â€
Korandellan shook his head, tears glistening in his totally black
eyes. “Foolish humans. Don’t they realise what such a
war will cost?â€
“They realise,†Brak said. “They just
don’t care.â€
R’shiel frowned. “Even if the Fardohnyans
don’t join in the conflict
in the north, they could still send troops up the Glass River in the
south. The Defenders can’t fight a war on two fronts. They
barely have
the numbers to fight on one, even with Hythrun allies.â€
Brak wondered who had told her about the Hythrun. Probably the
demons. They could gossip like old women when something caught their
fancy. Korandellan said nothing, just shook his head. He was no more
able to discuss tactics than he was able to contemplate murder.
“It’s liable to escalate beyond Medalon,â€
Brak agreed. “If the
Fardohnyans enter Medalon from the south then they can cross into
Hythria without having to go over the Sunrise Mountains. Hablet has no
interest in Medalon, but he’d love to get his grubby little
hands on
Hythria.â€
“We must do something!†Korandellan exclaimed.
“We cannot allow the
entire world to be plunged into war. Perhaps if I ask the
gods . . .â€
“Well, I don’t suggest you mention it to
Zegarnald,†Brak suggested.
“A global conflict would rather please the God of War. In fact,
I
wouldn’t mind betting that he’s been giving it a bit of
a nudge. It
must get pretty boring looking down on all those measly little border
skirmishes. We haven’t had a decent war in centuries.â€
“Your disrespect will prove fatal one day,
Brakandaran.â€
Brak started at the voice as the overwhelming presence of the God of
War suddenly filled the chamber. Brak should have known better than to
even mention His name. Here in Sanctuary, more than any other place, to
name a god was to call him. He turned in his chair but did not rise,
although R’shiel and Korandellan did. Zegarnald took shape
before them,
so tall his golden helmet brushed the ceiling, dressed in a simple dark
robe that covered him from head to toe, out of respect for Korandellan,
no doubt. The Harshini were uncomfortable with weapons and Zegarnald
carried at least one of every weapon his worshippers had devised, from
a dagger to a longbow. Brak would have bet money he had the odd
catapult stashed about his person somewhere.
“Divine One, you honour us with your presence,â€
Korandellan greeted
him sombrely.
The War God smiled, if such a grimace could be called a smile.
“Well, some seem more honoured than others. I would think,
Brakandaran,
that you of all the Harshini would be pleased to see me. I do not
offend your sensibilities, as I do your king’s, yet he can find
it in
himself to be gracious.â€
“I’m half-human,†Brak shrugged.
“What can I say?â€
“You could start by not saying anything,†Zegarnald
retorted.
“Particularly about matters you know nothing of.â€
Korandellan laid a restraining hand on Brak’s shoulder
— a silent
plea not to argue with the god. “Brakandaran means no
disrespect,
Divine One.â€
“On the contrary, Korandellan, that’s exactly what
he intends.
However, in this case, he is correct. I have been giving this war a nudge,
as he so elegantly puts it.â€
“Why?†R’shiel asked curiously. She had come
to accept the sudden
appearance of the gods, along with a lot of other things that Brak
suspected she would not be nearly so accepting of, were she outside
Sanctuary’s magical walls.
Zegarnald turned his gaze on the demon child, as if noticing her for
the first time. “When you understand that, demon child, you
will be
ready to face Xaphista.â€
“I really think your faith in me is misplaced. I
wouldn’t know the
first thing about killing a god.â€
Surprisingly, Zegarnald nodded in agreement. “Unfortunately,
you
speak the truth. Korandellan would have more chance of defeating him
than you at present, a situation I have decided to remedy.â€
Brak looked at Zegarnald suspiciously. “How?â€
“The demon child must leave Sanctuary and return to the
humans,†the
god decreed. “You have helped her, Korandellan, but your
peaceful
ministrations and Sanctuary’s magic are destroying the
instincts she
will need to survive Xaphista.â€
Korandellan did not appear pleased by the order. “No
Harshini will
be turned out of Sanctuary, Divine One, not even when decreed by a god.
The demon child may leave if she wishes, but I will not send her
away.â€
“As you wish,†Zegarnald agreed, then he turned to
R’shiel. “What
say you, child? Do you wish to return to your human friends?â€
R’shiel barely hesitated. “No. I want to stay
here.â€
Zegarnald seemed almost as surprised as Brak by her words. The god
studied her closely for a moment then nodded. “I see. You are
more
devious than I suspected, Korandellan, but the glamour that holds back
her emotions cannot last forever. Brakandaran, I suggest you take the
demon child into the mountains for a day. Let her breathe the air
outside of Sanctuary for a time and then ask her the same question. Her
answer will differ a great deal, I suspect.â€
“What do you mean? I feel fine.â€
“And happy, and calm, and contented,†Zegarnald
agreed. “But can you
feel pain? Or anger? Or grief? I think you will discover such emotions
beyond you while you live within these walls.â€
R’shiel looked puzzled, uncertain. Korandellan looked
decidedly
unhappy.
“Is this true?†she asked the Harshini king.
“Have you done
something to me that stops me feeling those things?â€
“It was necessary, child,†Korandellan told her, as
incapable of
lying as he was of causing pain.
“But it can’t be,†she insisted. “I
have no holes in my memory. I
remember everything. And everyone.â€
“And yet you feel nothing?†the god asked.
“You feel no loss for
your friends, no anger at being betrayed, no fear for their safety?
Take my advice, leave these walls for a time and see if you feel the
same. When you wish to return to your friends, call me. I will see you
delivered safely to them.â€
The god was gone an instant later, leaving a very confused young
woman behind. Brak glanced at the King and shook his head. “You
cannot
fight the inevitable, Korandellan.â€
The King sighed. “I’m Harshini, Brakandaran. I
cannot fight
anything.â€
CHAPTER 17
Adrina intended to make Cratyn pay for striking
her, and pay dearly. Such an act was beyond unforgivable. In the finest
traditions of mort’eda — the ancient Fardohnyan
art of revenge
— she quite coldly and deliberately planned to make him rue the
day he
ever laid eyes on her.
Her first step was acquiescing to his demands. Overnight, Adrina
became the perfect Karien Princess — so perfect that it brought
suspicious stares from Madren and Vonulus, both of whom viewed her
transformation with suspicion. Lacking proof to the contrary, however,
there was little they could do, given Adrina’s exemplary
behaviour.
Cratyn did not seem surprised. He no doubt considered it a direct
result of his ultimatum, and Adrina was happy to let him think that way
until she was ready to teach him otherwise.
Adrina dressed according to Karien custom, wore her hair in a snood,
as was proper for married Karien Ladies, and followed Cratyn the
required three paces behind him whenever they appeared in public
together. She converted to the Overlord with remarkable conviction and
even attended morning prayers in the chilly Temple with Queen Aringard
each morning at dawn. She embroidered with her ladies and planned menus
with commendable frugality. She gave alms to the poor on Fifthdays and
met with the nobles of her husband’s court with eyes lowered
demurely.
She wore no cosmetics and trimmed her long nails to the short blunt
shape the Kariens preferred. In short, she gave nobody a single excuse
to fault her behaviour.
Of course, there were any number of ways to get at Cratyn, the
easiest target being the hapless Lady Chastity.
Adrina suddenly decided that she preferred the Lady
Chastity’s
company to others’. She began to foster a friendship with the
girl that
culminated some three weeks after her wedding in a long session of
“girl-talkâ€, which centred mostly on Cratyn. A single
afternoon was all
it took to reduce the poor girl to tears as Adrina waxed lyrically
about the prince, about how many children they would have, about how
handsome he was and how lucky she was that some other woman
hadn’t
snatched him up before now. When Chastity had all she could stomach she
excused herself hastily. Adrina could hear her sobbing from down the
hall.
Teasing Chastity was poor sport, though, and it put Cratyn in a foul
mood. He burst into her rooms as she bent over her needlework and
ordered Tamylan out, his pale face flushed with rage.
“What did you do?â€
“I wasn’t aware that I had done anything, your
Highness. Could you
be a little more specific?â€
“The Lady Chastity is distraught! What did you say to
her?â€
“We were merely discussing married life. I was endeavouring
to
enlighten her about the joys of conjugal bliss.†She smiled at
him
sweetly and added, “Such that it is.â€
“You are not to discuss such things with her!â€
“Why ever not?†There was nothing she had said or
done that he could
fault her for without crossing into dangerous moral territory, and they
both knew it. “Could it be that the Lady Chastity still
harbours some
affection for you, my dear? Now that would be awkward wouldn’t
it, you
being married to me . . .â€
She let the rest of the sentence hang. The young prince stormed out
of the room, muttering to himself about foreign whores.
Adrina was getting very tired of being referred to as a foreign
whore.
But there were other ways to punish him. Her first real chance came
when they began their preparations for their trip to the border. Adrina
held Cratyn strictly to his promise to see her accommodated in a manner
befitting her station, and by the time they left Yarnarrow, her
entourage was almost as large as the force of knights and foot soldiers
accompanying them. She would happily have beggared him, given half a
chance, and it was only Jasnoff’s intervention that prevented
her from
doing just that. As soon as the King complained, Adrina ceased her
outrageous demands, but by then the damage had been done. Adrina and
her ladies were going off to war in style.
Adrina’s most subtle, and by far her most effective revenge
she
aimed at Cratyn’s manhood. The nuns had dutifully visited
Adrina the
day after her wedding to discuss her cycle in rather unpleasant detail,
and they determined the most opportune time to conceive was eight days
after the wedding. Adrina’s bed remained empty until that time.
When
the designated night finally arrived, Adrina excused herself early and
spent a considerable amount of time preparing for Cratyn’s
visit,
including preparing a small quantity of the mixture that would ensure
that in the unlikely event that Cratyn actually desired her, his body
would not respond.
Getting Cratyn to accept the laced wine had been easy. She had a
feeling he could only bring himself to touch her if he wasn’t
entirely
sober. She then waited, with an expectant look, for Cratyn to make the
first move. His fumbling and ultimately futile attempts to consummate
their union left her weak with ridiculing laughter. Cratyn fled the
chamber in embarrassment and she did not lay eyes on him for two whole
days afterwards. Altogether an entirely satisfactory outcome, she
decided.
But Adrina was determined that no child would ever come from this
union, so she set about making certain it never did. She knew enough
herb lore to ensure she would not suffer an unwanted pregnancy
— it was
a necessity for any woman in a society where court’esa
were the
norm. But the easiest way to prevent a pregnancy was simply not to let
Cratyn into her bed on the days designated by the nuns as suitable.
There was also the added bonus that if the marriage remained
unconsummated for a year and a day, under Karien law she would be free
of Cratyn entirely.
One of the lesser-known advantages of being instructed in the arts
of love by a court’esa was learning how to cool a
man’s ardour
as easily as arousing it. It was a skill every court’esa owned
— even professional lovers needed a night off occasionally
— but it was
a skill rarely passed on to their masters or mistresses. If
one’s
paramour knew what one was up to, it was impossible to guarantee
success. It only worked on an inexperienced lover, and that description
fitted Cratyn better than his custom-made armour. There were drugs too,
one could use, although they were a closely guarded secret among the court’esa.
Adrina had extracted those secrets from Lynel, a dark-eyed court’esa
from Mission Rock in southern Fardohnya, for the promise of a minor
title. So grateful had she been to learn the arts and acquire the
drugs, that she even kept her promise, and as far as she knew, Lynel
was still happily ensconced in his own small manor near Kalinpoor on
the Jalanar plains. In the days and weeks that followed her marriage to
Cratyn, she often had cause to silently thank the man.
But her revenge did not stop there. While it was intensely
satisfying to her to watch Cratyn crumble with mortification every time
she glanced at him, the real fun came from making it known that the
Crown Prince of Karien was impotent.
Her first step was to cry, quite convincingly, on Madren’s
shoulder
about her inability to arouse her husband. Madren, of all her retinue,
was the most suspicious and the most watchful. Adrina blamed herself,
of course and almost choked when Madren delivered her stiff and rather
unimaginative suggestions on how to deal with the situation. As she had
made certain that the servants would overhear her heartbroken
confession, within a day the news was all through the castle. Tamylan
reported that the kitchens were abuzz with rumours and that even the
stableboys had heard. By the time their vast caravan left Yarnarrow
there was not a man or woman in the castle, serf or noble, who had not
heard the rumour that Cratyn’s manhood was in doubt.
The effect such rumours had on Chastity was predictable. The girl
was torn between horror that her love might be impotent and delight
that he had not slept with Adrina. That the pale skinned blonde lusted
after Cratyn was so obvious, Adrina wondered that she hadn’t
been
hauled off and stoned for her adulterous thoughts. On the other hand,
there was many a duke who would have preferred a Karien queen, and
Adrina wondered if she would survive the birth of a son, should she be
so foolish as to conceive. A claimant to the Fardohnyan throne did not
need a Fardohnyan mother to raise him, and everybody knew how perilous
childbirth could be.
Adrina refused to give any of these fanatics an opportunity to
rearrange the world to their liking. She would suffer the humiliation
of Cratyn only coming to her rooms when she was likely to conceive; she
would tolerate Madren’s hawk-like scrutiny and Vonulus’
pious
instruction. She would bear King Jasnoff’s obvious distaste and
Queen
Aringard’s sour disapproval. She would even put up with the
miserable
Karien weather.
Until she found a way out of this mess, Adrina didn’t really
have
much choice.
Tristan was predicably unhappy about being ordered to the border,
but as she had promised Cratyn she would not speak to him alone, she
had not had the chance to explain it to him before they left Yarnarrow.
In fact, getting a message to Tristan became more and more important as
they drew closer to the border. She was afraid he would do something
reckless. He knew the terms of the agreement under which he and his
soldiers were in Karien, and knew that she was flying in the face of
Hablet’s express wishes by ordering her Guard to the front.
Hablet wanted the Hythrun so involved in the Medalon conflict that
they would not notice the direction his army was heading when then
crossed the southern border of Medalon. Loaning her Guard to Cratyn to
ensure a quick victory in the north was not liable to help her
father’s
cause, and she was far more concerned about his reaction than anything
Cratyn might threaten her with. Hablet was not a man who took
disruption of his plans well. The problem kept her awake night after
night, until one morning, as she sat on a small stool in her sumptuous
travelling tent, while Tamylan brushed out her long hair before she
dressed for the day’s travel. She studied the former slave in
the
mirror thoughtfully. She really was quite a pretty young woman.
“Tam, do you like Tristan?â€
The question startled her. “Tristan?â€
“Yes. You know, Tristan. Tall. Fair. Golden eyes. Good
looking and
entirely too aware of the fact?â€
Tamylan smiled. “Do I like him? I suppose.â€
“Good,†Adrina announced with satisfaction.
“I want you to become
his lover.â€
The brush halted mid-stroke as Tam stared at her in the mirror.
“You
want me to be Tristan’s lover?â€
“Don’t act so thick, Tam. You heard me.
You’re both Fardohnyan, far
from home. Nobody would look twice.â€
“Your Highness, I appreciate your . . .
thoughtfulness . . . but somehow, I don’t think
your
brother is interested in the likes of me.â€
“Don’t be so hard on yourself, Tam,†Adrina
told her cheerily.
“You’re very pretty and there isn’t a court’esa
for a thousand
leagues, so Tristan can hardly afford to be choosy now, can
he?†She
laughed at the young woman’s expression. “Oh Tam,
don’t look so
horrified. Don’t you see? I can’t speak to Tristan
without that vulture
Vonulus around. If everyone thinks you and Tristan are lovers, they
won’t question you visiting him.â€
“If they think Tristan and I are lovers, I’m likely
to get stoned.â€
“No you won’t. The Fardohnyans have been given a
special exemption
by the Church. You’ll be safe enough. Far safer than me, in
fact.â€
Tamylan scowled unhappily. “I don’t like this place,
your Highness.
I’d rather you figured out a way to get us home.â€
“I’m working on it, Tam,†Adrina assured
her. “Believe me, I’m
working on it.â€
There was one bright spot in her miserable existence, and it came
from the most unexpected source. The day after her wedding, Drendyn,
Cratyn’s cheerful cousin, had paid her a visit carrying a large
wicker
basket, which he placed gently on the rug in front of the hearth before
turning to her with a beaming smile.
“I have brought you a wedding gift,†he announced.
“And it’s a beautiful basket, too,†she
agreed graciously.
“Basket? Oh! No! It’s what’s inside!â€
Curiously Adrina lifted the lid and peered inside. A wet nose thrust
itself at her and a long sloppy tongue slapped her face. Laughing
delightedly, she threw back the lid and lifted the puppy out. He was
tan in colour, his shaggy coat thick and soft. The pup was enormous,
even at such a young age, and she struggled to lift him.
“He’s beautiful!†she cried. “What
is he?â€
“He’s a dog,†Drendyn explained, a little
confused.
“I know he’s a dog, silly, but what sort of
dog? We have
nothing this big in Fardohnya. If he gets much bigger I’ll be
able to
saddle him!â€
“He’s a Karien hunting dog,†the young Earl
told her. “You said you
liked hunting, so I thought you could train him now. We breed the best
hounds in Karien in Tiler’s Pass. Do you like him?â€
She pushed away the sloppy kisses of her new friend and laughed.
“Oh
Drendyn, I love him. Thank you so much.â€
The Earl looked very pleased with himself. “Nothing is too
good for
our future queen. You will have to think of a name for him.â€
“I shall call him . . . Tiler! In honour of
your
home.â€
Tiler had not left her side since. The dog grew at an alarming rate,
and consumed enough to keep a peasant family well fed. He was, besides
Tamylan and Tristan, the only soul in Karien who seemed to love her
unreservedly. Adrina found it strange that she, having been raised in
excessive luxury with anything she wanted there for the asking, should
find such joy in such a shaggy, clumsy beast.
CHAPTER 18
Brak could have followed R’shiel’s
path through
the mountains with little difficulty, even had a demon not appeared to
show him the way. The little grey creature was young and it could
barely speak, but it tittered with concern and kept looking over its
small grey shoulder to ensure Brak was still following, as it led the
way through a forest carpeted in the fiery shades of autumn.
When he finally reached her he hesitated. She was sitting on the
edge of a precipice, dressed in dark riding leathers, her feet dangling
over a long sheer drop that disappeared into mist.
“I’m not suicidal, if that’s what
you’re worried about,†she said
without looking at him. The little demon scrambled up the rest of the
path and climbed into her lap.
“Did you bring him here? Traitor.â€
She turned to face Brak. Her eyes were red and swollen, her cheeks
tear stained. “Did they send you to find me?â€
“It’s a curse. All I seem to do these days is chase
after you.†When
he reached the ledge he sat down beside her and admired the view
silently for a moment. The steep mountains were still snow capped, even
at this time of year, and the air was pleasantly cool. He could see
Sanctuary’s tall spires in the distance, but only because he
knew they
were there. To mere human eyes, the spires looked like any other steep
peaks in this vast range full of them. “Korandellan was worried
about
you.â€
“He did this to me. It serves him right.â€
“Nobody meant to hurt you, R’shiel. They did it to
protect you.â€
“Did they know how much it would hurt when it wore
off?â€
“Probably not. Harshini don’t really understand
human emotions. But
when you came here, you were dying. They did what they had to.â€
She wiped her eyes impatiently. “I know that. That’s
what makes it
so infuriating. You have no idea how hard it is to stay angry at these
people.â€
“I do know,†he assured her. “Better than
you, girl. I’ve lived
between two worlds for centuries.â€
She glanced at him curiously. “Will I live as long as
you?â€
Brak shrugged. “I don’t know. I suppose you will.
Most half-humans
seem to inherit Harshini longevity. You might fall off this precipice
at any moment too, so don’t tie yourself into knots trying to
predict
the future.â€
“Is that how you get by?â€
“That and large quantities of mead,†he replied with
a thin smile.
She looked at him sharply then smiled when she realised he was
joking. “You don’t really fit in here, do you
Brak?â€
“No more than I fit in a human world. But don’t let
my inability to
find my niche in the world deter you from trying to find yours.â€
“I was under the impression my niche was already carved in
stone,â€
she pointed out sourly. “I am the demon child, am I
not?â€
“R’shiel, nobody is going to make you face Xaphista
until you’re
ready. Stop worrying about it. If you really are meant to tackle
Xaphista, there will come a time when you won’t need to be
asked.
You’ll want to do it.â€
“I can’t see that happening anytime soon.â€
“As I said, don’t tie yourself into knots trying to
predict the
future.â€
R’shiel did not answer him for a while. She stared out over
the
mountains, idly scratching the young demon behind its large wrinkled
ear. Finally she turned to him, the tears under control for the time
being.
“Does Tarja think I’m dead?â€
The question surprised him a little. He had not expected her to be
able to think things through so rationally yet. The first time he had
broken through a glamour designed to suppress his emotions,
he’d been
incoherent for days.
“I suppose so. Nobody has told him otherwise that
I’m aware of.â€
“He’s done his grieving then,†she sighed.
“And I will live to see
him whither and die an old man. I’m not sure I can deal with
that.â€
“The way Tarja finds trouble, it’ll be a bloody miracle
if
he lives to be an old man, so I wouldn’t let that stand in your
way.â€
She frowned at his poor attempt at humour. “You’re
pretty tactless,
for a Harshini, aren’t you?â€
“I’m the bane of their existence,†he
agreed. “At least I was until
you came along and relieved me of the title. However, it seems I am
doomed to serve your cause, whether I like it or not.â€
“There’s no need to be so gallant about it.â€
She turned back to the
glorious view and was silent for a time before she spoke. “I
wish I
knew what to do, Brak.â€
“What do you want to do?â€
“I want to go home. But there’s a small problem. I
don’t seem to have
a home any longer. Sanctuary isn’t where I belong, I know that
now, and
I can hardly go back to the Citadel.â€
“No, that’s probably not a good idea,†he
agreed with a faint smile.
“What happened to Joyhinia?†she asked abruptly.
“Did Tarja kill
her?â€
“Dacendaran stole her intellect. Then Tarja destroyed it.
She lives,
but she’s as innocent and harmless as a child, now. I suppose
she’s on
the border with the Defenders. We’d have heard if she returned
to the
Citadel in that condition.â€
“And this Hythrun who is helping Tarja, what’s he
like?â€
“Damin Wolfblade? You’d like him. He’s
almost as good at finding
trouble as Tarja. I sometimes think it was a mistake bringing those two
together. I’m not sure the world is ready for either of
them.â€
“And Lord Draco?â€
Brak sighed heavily. “R’shiel, if you’re so
anxious to see how they
are, go to them. Zegarnald has already offered to take you. You
can’t stay here forever and you don’t want to, anyway.
Follow your
instincts. Destiny has a habit of catching up with you, no matter how
hard you try to outrun it. Believe me, I speak from experience.â€
“Were you destined to kill my father?â€
Brak stared at her, aghast at the question. It took him a moment to
recover himself enough to answer her. “I don’t know,
R’shiel. Perhaps I
was. One of the advantages of being destined to do things, is
that it can take the place of a conscience for a while.â€
“Korandellan says you’ve been trying to outrun your
destiny your
whole life.â€
“Does Korandellan often discuss my failings with
you?â€
“He uses you to illustrate the pitfalls of being
half-human.â€
Brak scowled at her but offered no comment.
“You think I should go back, don’t you?†she
sighed.
“It doesn’t matter what I think. It’s what
you think that counts.â€
“I’m afraid,†she admitted.
“Of what?†he asked curiously.
“Tarja?â€
She nodded. “I’m afraid he’s accepted that
I’m dead. Suppose he’s
moved on? Suppose he’s found someone else?â€
Brak snorted impatiently. “Suppose you stop being such an
idiot!
Gods, R’shiel! Zegarnald was right. You’re turning into
a mouse. Have a
bit of faith, girl! The man loves you. Six months wondering if
you’re
dead isn’t going to change that. If it has, then he never loved
you in
the first place, so you might as well be rid of him. Either way, put us
all out of our misery and go find out for yourself instead of sitting
here on the top of a mountain bemoaning your lot in life.†He
did not
add that Kalianah had made certain Tarja would never love another. She
did not need to know that.
R’shiel glared at him, startled at his outburst. Months of
the
eternally accommodating Harshini had left her unprepared for a little
human aggravation.
“Don’t tell me what to do!â€
“Why not? That’s what you’ve been asking me.
You want me to tell you
what you should do, so that if it doesn’t work out you
won’t have to
blame yourself. Well, thanks, R’shiel, but I have enough of my
own
burdens to lug around without taking on yours as well.â€
He watched the anger flare in her violet eyes with relief. Her
spirit was still there, underneath the shock from the glamour and the
effects of her time spent in the smothering peace of Sanctuary. It was
rare that he agreed with the War God, but in this case, Zegarnald was
right. R’shiel would wither if she stayed here much longer.
This girl
had faced down three hundred angry rebels, she had been raped,
imprisoned, and mortally wounded by the woman she grew up thinking was
her mother. None of it had been able to break her. But much longer
within Sanctuary’s calming walls and the human shell that had
protected
her inner strength would be dissolved.
Pushing the demon from her lap, she scrambled to her feet and
brushed down the leathers before turning on him. “I
don’t need you to
tell me what I want to do. I’ll go where I want, when I want,
and you
can go to the lowest of the Seven Hells, for all I care!â€
She stormed off down the path, the little demon tumbling in her
wake. Brak watched her go with a faint smile.
“Deftly handled, Lord Brakandaran.â€
Brak turned towards the deep voice, unsurprised to find the old
demon Dranymire behind him. “I thought you’d be around
somewhere. You
could have helped, you know.â€
The little demon sat down beside Brak with a smug expression.
“If
she had fallen off this cliff, I would have been there in an instant.
But some things are best left to one’s own kind.â€
“It’s not my responsibility to protect her.
That’s supposed to be
your job.â€
Dranymire nodded sagely. “And protect her I will,
Brakandaran,†he
said. “But I can only save her from outside danger. I cannot
save her
from herself.â€
CHAPTER 19
Mikel of Kirkland found it hard to be brave in the
Defender Camp. Among the Hythrun it had been easy. There he had Jaymes
to support him. Jaymes was always brave. Jaymes hadn’t blabbed
about
the Fardohnyan alliance trying to make himself sound important. Jaymes
had been quiet and sullen and strong.
The Hythrun were quick to anger and easy to provoke, and Mikel felt
it was his solemn duty to do what he could to sabotage their war
effort. He had honoured the Overlord countless times in the weeks he
spent among them, cursing the soldiers, spitting in their stew whenever
he got the chance, and making a general nuisance of himself. It had
been easier once the Warlord left. The big blonde Hythrun had
frightened the boy more than he was willing to admit, but once he was
gone, Mikel found his courage increased. The fight with the
blacksmith’s apprentice had been the last in a long line of
skirmishes
with his captors.
The Defenders were different, however. They did not listen to his
insults or his curses, or if they heard them, they simply laughed
indulgently at him. Even more humiliating was the fact that the captain
who had saved him from the apprentice and taken him to the other camp
had placed him in the care of a woman! Her name was Mahina and he was
supposed to call her Sister, even though she wasn’t a nun and
didn’t
deserve the title. Worse, when the little old lady, who reminded him of
his own Nana, had gotten hold of him, she took one whiff of his ragged
tunic and ordered him to bathe. She then stood over him while the deed
was done, to ensure he was properly clean. Everybody knew that taking
off all your clothes was a sin against the Overlord and it was a
well-known fact that total immersion in water was bad for you and gave
rise to unhealthy vapours. But she had stood there like a slave-master
on a Fardohnyan galley and made him wash every part of his body. She
then added insult to injury by trimming his hair and making him wear a
pair of cast-off Defender’s trousers and a pleated linen shirt
several
sizes too big for him. His tunic and hose she rather ceremoniously
burned on the hearth, holding her nose as she did so.
As praying to the Overlord had always evoked a reaction from the
Hythrun, he was startled when his prayers drew nothing from Mahina and
the Defenders but bored looks and, in some cases, stifled yawns. The
Defenders did not seem offended by his prayers. They just
didn’t care!
His devotions meant nothing to them. They were atheists who considered
worshipping the gods a quaint and rather laughable custom. That hurt
almost as much as the thought that his misbehaviour might cost Jaymes a
finger.
The Defenders were frighteningly well disciplined, a fact which
surprised the boy. They were under the command of a tall, hard-looking
man called Lord Jenga, but it was the captain who had brought him here
who scared him most. His name was Tarja Tenragan, and every night, when
Mikel said his prayers to the Overlord, he prayed his god would strike
the man down.
Mikel burned with hatred for the tall Medalonian who had so calmly
ordered Jaymes dismembered if Mikel misbehaved. Although he was only a
captain, everybody seemed to listen to him, even Lord Jenga, and he had
faced down the Hythrun Raiders without blinking. Mikel was sure there
was nothing on this world that could scare him — and that
scared Mikel,
because he knew that in battle, the Medalonians would not run in the
face of the first concerted charge, as he had often heard Duke Laetho
boast.
In fact, much of what Mikel had heard in the Karien camp was proving
to be incorrect. The Hythrun did not eat human babies for breakfast and
the red-coated Defenders weren’t weaklings dressed up in fancy
uniforms
and playing at being soldiers. They were hard men and well trained.
Much better trained than the Kariens, Mikel suspected. Where the Karien
camp spent time boasting of past victories on the jousting field or
anticipating future glories, these soldiers were on the training field
in Medalon.
They were much better supplied too, Mikel discovered. Unlike the
Kariens, the Medalonians and their Hythrun allies had a constant supply
line from the Glass River, and they lived like kings compared to his
own people. He had eaten more since being a captive than he had since
arriving on the front as Lord Laetho’s page some four months
ago. He
began to wonder if it was a sin to eat so well, but when he refused to
eat, Mahina had threatened to have him force fed. When that threat had
not worked, Mahina called Tarja in. The captain had looked at him
coldly and simply asked one question.
“Left hand or right hand?â€
Mikel had not missed a meal since and never again brought up the
topic of sinning by eating too well.
Mahina had set him to performing chores around the camp, which in
truth did not vary much from what had been asked of him as Lord
Laetho’s page. He waited tables and filled wine jugs and ran
errands
for the old woman, all the while keeping his eyes and ears open. Mikel
was certain he would eventually be rescued. If not, there was always a
chance he could escape — except that if he did, Tarja was
likely to
kill Jaymes, so he tried not to think about it too much. But if the
chance ever arose, he wanted to take back as much intelligence as
possible to Lord Laetho. Perhaps even Prince Cratyn or King Jasnoff
would want to hear his information. Mikel managed to spend a good deal
of time in idle dreams of his triumphant return to the Karien camp,
bearing the one vital piece of information that would ensure a Karien
victory.
In the meantime, he performed his chores doggedly, determined to
give Tarja no reason to harm his older brother. Mahina was often
distracted, but she was not unkind and it was hard to hate her. In
fact, it was hard to hate many of the Medalonians, although his
loathing of Tarja Tenragan never wavered. Most of them treated him
well, if not out of kindness, exactly. Mikel suspected it was because
they did not consider him a threat. He had grandiose, if rather vague
plans to disabuse them of that notion some day and he prayed to the
Overlord every night before he slept that his god would show him the
way.
The Defenders’ camp spread out across the plain in neat
lines of
identical tents, radiating from the old keep in the centre, which
served as the temporary command post for the Medalonian forces. The
Defenders called it Treason Keep, which Mikel thought the strangest
name. It was here that Mikel did his chores for Mahina. It was here
that Lord Jenga, Tarja Tenragan and another dangerous looking man
called Garet Warner met with the savage Captain Almodavar and a
passionate young man called Ghari, to make their plans. Mikel had not
worked out exactly what Ghari’s position was in the Medalon
forces, but
he was often called in to discuss matters of import, although he had
little to offer in the way of tactical advice. He seemed to be in
charge of all sorts of other things — tasks that were vital to
the war
effort but not directly involved in the fighting.
Mikel was amazed at how little time the Medalonians spent discussing
actual battle plans. They spent a lot more time worrying about supplies
and ammunition and feed for the horses and securing enough fuel to see
them through the winter. He supposed it was because they did not have
the Overlord to protect them. Such mundane matters were rarely
discussed in the Karien camp. The Overlord would provide.
Mikel had a natural ear for languages, and it was not long before he
could make sense of what they were saying. Astonishingly, once Mahina
realised he could understand what was being said, far from discouraging
him, she took time out to give him lessons and even boasted to Tarja at
how quickly he was picking up the language. Tarja had actually smiled!
Of all things in the Defenders’ camp that confused or
surprised
Mikel, the strangest by far was the Crazy Lady. She had rooms in the
restored upper level of Treason Keep, heavily guarded by Defenders and
a sad looking man called Lord Draco who said little and kept to himself
in the chambers above the great hall. Lord Draco frightened Mikel, and
not simply because of his physical resemblance to Tarja. The man had an
air about him that spoke of emotions Mikel was too young to define. The
only redeeming features that Mikel could see were his devotion to the
Crazy Lady and the fact that any time Lord Draco and Tarja were in the
same room you could almost see the hatred between them like streaks of
jagged lightning. He did not know why Tarja hated Lord Draco and was
too afraid to ask anyone the reason, but it made him feel a little
better to know that all was not as perfect as it seemed in the
Medalonian camp.
The Crazy Lady never left her room. Mikel had seen her once, when
Mahina had sent him to her chamber with a document she had to sign. The
guards had opened the door for him and Affiana, the tall, no-nonsense
woman who seemed to be the Crazy Lady’s nurse, had met him
inside.
Affiana had relieved him of the scroll and bustled him out the door,
but not before he caught a glimpse of the Crazy Lady sitting on the
floor in the centre of the chamber, clutching a ragged doll and humming
tunelessly. The guards outside had shooed him away, leaving him burning
with curiosity regarding the Crazy Lady’s identity.
The third week into Mikel’s internment in the Defender camp,
Mahina
sent him to find Tarja. A messenger had arrived from the front with
news, and she wanted to see him. It must be something important, he
knew, but he was sent away before he could learn what it was.
While Mikel dreaded the thought of seeking Tarja out, he was looking
forward to the opportunity to visit the training ground legitimately.
He hurried through the camp, ignored by Defenders who considered him
not worth noticing. The day was quite cold and still. Swirls of dust
floated through the camp like smoke eddies. Mikel all but ran, knowing
the quicker he got there, the more time he could spend watching the
Defenders before he had to approach Tarja.
The training ground covered a vast area north of Treason Keep. It
was dusty and noisy, the long grass scuffed bare by the boots of
thousands of men training for war. He slowed as he reached the field,
weaving his way cautiously between groups of men charging with pikes at
targets nailed to posts buried deep in the ground. A little further on
another troop bearing red-painted shields was practising a set of
striking sword blows. The sergeant in charge bellowed impatient
instructions about turning hands, and standing side-on, and told one
hapless young man that if he continued to use his shield as a
counter-balance instead of protection he would undoubtedly have the
honour of being the first trooper to die in defence of Medalon.
A little further on Mikel watched in awe as a troop of Hythrun
Raiders practised, mounted on their beautiful golden steeds. They were
shooting into melons mounted on short poles, which exploded in a ruddy
mess as wave after wave of them galloped towards the targets; they
loosed their arrows side-on, reloaded and fired at the next target
without missing a beat. The Raiders steered their horses with their
knees and rode as if nothing could unseat them. Karien knights picked
their horses for their ability to carry the weight of an armoured man.
Agility and speed were secondary concerns. Mikel thought of Lord
Laetho’s huge and very expensive warhorse, which looked clumsy
and
cumbersome compared to the sleek Hythrun mounts, and wondered how he
would fare in a battle.
He moved on in the direction Mahina had told him Tarja would be,
watching the Hythrun horsemen over his shoulder as he hurried forward.
He stopped again for a moment to watch another group attacking a number
of armoured targets, practising slowly and deliberately as they aimed
for the vulnerable places in the armour with deadly precision. Mikel
frowned as he watched them. Although every man here was training for
war, these men were specifically training to kill or disable the
knights who would lead the charge. He shuddered at the thought. The
Medalonians seemed to be taking this war a lot more seriously that his
own people. But then they had to, he reminded himself. They
were outnumbered and they did not have the Overlord on their side.
“Here, lad, what are you doing hanging about the
field?â€
Mikel jumped guiltily and turned to the man who had challenged him.
It was Ghari, he discovered with relief. Ghari did not frighten him
nearly as much as the Defenders.
“Sister Mahina sent me to find Captain Tenragan.â€
Ghari placed his hand on Mikel’s shoulder with a friendly
smile.
“Let’s go find him then, shall we? I’m looking
for him too.â€
Mikel nodded a little uncertainly and let Ghari lead the way. He
watched the man out of the corner of his eye, expecting to see some
sign that Ghari’s friendliness was feigned, but the young man
simply
glanced down at him and smiled again. Mikel could not understand these
people at all.
Tarja was on the far side of the training ground, stripped down to
trousers and boots and sweating in the cold sunlight. He was training
with another man, a little older than he, and both men were breathing
hard, dust clinging to their sweaty skin as they traded blows. Both had
the musculature of men who spent hours with a sword, but Mikel was
astounded to see Tarja’s back scarred with the unmistakable
mark of the
lash. He was savagely pleased to think that someone had lashed Tarja.
He would like to meet the man and thank him.
The sound of metal against metal rang loudly as Tarja and his
opponent moved back and forth, neither man trying to gain the
advantage, simply working muscles to the point of fatigue and beyond to
strengthen them. Mikel had heard one of the Medalonians say that it was
the training you did after you reached the point of exhaustion that
really counted. Everything you did up to that point was just warming up.
Tarja saw them approaching and held up his hand to halt the fight.
His opponent lowered his sword and glanced at Mikel and Ghari.
Realising that their appearance heralded the end of their bout, he
raised his blade in salute to Tarja with a weary smile.
“You’re getting slow, Tarja. I can still stand
up.â€
“I’m getting slow,†Tarja laughed as
he returned the salute.
“More likely some Karien knight is going to make a trophy of
your hide.â€
The older man chuckled. “Perhaps, but he’ll have
trampled you
getting to me.†Captain Alcarnen picked up his shirt off the
ground and
wiped his forehead with it, then threw it over his shoulder.
“Ghari,â€
he said with a nod as he walked past the young man.
“Captain,†Ghari replied, with a surprising amount
of angst. Mikel
looked at him curiously. He didn’t like Nheal at all, that much
was
obvious.
“You didn’t come looking for me for the pleasure of
my company, I
suppose?†Tarja asked. He slipped his shirt over his head but
did not
bother to tuck it in to his trousers.
“No,†Ghari agreed. “There’s a bit
of trouble brewing in the
followers’ camp. I thought maybe you could do
something.â€
The captain did not seem pleased. “What is it this
time?â€
“Some of our people tried to set up a temple to Zegarnald.
The
Defenders tore it down.â€
“Heathen worship is against the law, Ghari. You know that
and so do
they.â€
Ghari placed his hands on his hips and glared at Tarja.
“Damn it,
Tarja, we followed you here to save Medalon from the Kariens. You told
us things would change, that we’d be free to worship our gods
—â€
“All right, I’ll speak to Jenga,†Tarja
promised, obviously not
pleased by the prospect then he turned his gaze on Mikel, who shivered
with apprehension.
“And what of you, boy?†he asked abruptly.
“What are you doing here?â€
“Sister Mahina . . . she sent me
to . . . a messenger came . . . from the
front . . . she said . . .†Mikel
could
have cried as he stuttered under the scrutiny of the captain.
“I gather that means Sister Mahina has received a messenger
from the
front and she wants to see me?†he translated condescendingly.
Mikel’s
hatred surged through his veins like lava. I will kill this man one
day, he swore silently. Tarja seemed oblivious to his animosity.
“This could mean things are about to get interesting.â€
“You think the rest of the Kariens have arrived?â€
Ghari asked.
“Either that, or they’ve packed up and gone home,
which would be too
much to hope for,†he said, sheathing his blade. “Has
anyone told —â€
Tarja’s words were cut off by an ear-shattering whoop as the
Hythrun
Raiders suddenly thundered past them at a gallop, leaving them coated
in a cloud of fine dust. Tarja glared at the troop angrily, spitting
grit as he watched them vanish into the dust. “What in the name
of the
Founders are they up to?â€
Ghari wiped his eyes. “Something’s caught their
attention.â€
Tarja shook his head in annoyance and followed the path of the
Raiders. He strode ahead of Ghari and Mikel, who had to run to catch
up. The Raiders had not gone far. They were milling about, shouting
incomprehensibly a mere fifty paces from the edge of the camp, kicking
up a cloud of dust as thick as a winter fog in Yarnarrow. Mikel watched
the Raiders curiously, coughing as the dust tickled the back of his
throat. He glanced over his shoulder and discovered most of the men on
the training ground had stopped what they were doing and had turned to
see what the commotion was about.
Tarja strode on, then suddenly stopped, frozen to the spot, as three
figures began to materialise out of the dust. All three were on foot,
and Mikel immediately recognised the figure in the centre, leading his
lathered golden stallion, as the Hythrun Warlord who had been missing
these past weeks. The man on his left Mikel had never seen before, but
he was tall and lean with dark hair and walked with long, easy strides.
Damin Wolfblade was grinning like a fool, obviously enormously pleased
with himself. The tall man beside him simply looked satisfied. The
figure to the right of the Warlord made Mikel gasp. It was a woman, he
realised, wearing close-fitting dark leathers that showed every line of
her statuesque body in startling detail, an outfit that would have seen
her stoned had she dared wear it in Karien. As she neared them, the
Warlord and the other man stopped and waited, letting her walk on
alone. She was very tall and had long, dark red hair that fell in a
thick braid to her waist. She was the most beautiful woman Mikel had
ever seen, even when he was at court; prettier even than the Lady
Chastity, who was supposed to be the most beautiful woman in all of
Karien.
He glanced up at Tarja, whose expression had changed from anger to
awe. As the woman walked towards him, Mikel thought he could have
killed Tarja, had he a knife, and the captain would not have noticed,
so enthralled did he seem at the sight of the pretty lady.
“By the gods!†Ghari breathed softly behind him.
“She’s alive!â€
Ghari apparently knew who the pretty lady was, but his words seemed
to break the spell that held Tarja motionless. The captain walked out
to meet her, and as soon as she saw him, the pretty lady broke into a
run. She collided with Tarja, who swept her off the ground and spun her
around in a full circle with an inarticulate cry. He was kissing her
before her feet touched the ground, a deed that had the gathered army
cheering and Mikel blushing with embarrassment at such a wanton public
display.
“Who is she?†Mikel asked Ghari. He looked up at the
young man and
was startled to see his eyes misted with tears.
“R’shiel,†Ghari explained, although the
name meant nothing to him.
Ghari glanced down at him and ruffled his cropped hair with a grin.
“She’s the demon child. She’s come back to
us!â€
That description meant as little to Mikel as the lady’s
name, but it
seemed fitting that a man as evil as Tarja would be attracted to a
demon. The crowd flowed past him as the soldiers all converged on the
returning Warlord and his companions. He quickly lost sight of Tarja
and R’shiel as the crowd swallowed them.
Mikel turned away, his heart heavy. It was bad enough that these
Medalonians seemed so organised and battle ready, but it was patently
unfair that Tarja Tenragan was allowed to be happy, or that they had
demons on their side. He impatiently brushed away tears of anger and
said a silent prayer to Xaphista. Help me, he prayed. The demon child has returned to
help our enemies.
Mikel had no way of knowing if Xaphista had heard him or not.
He would have been astonished and delighted to know that he had.
CHAPTER 20
The Karien war camp proved to be as uncomfortable
as Adrina had feared. Cratyn’s army was slow in gathering and
many of
his knights had been here far longer than they ever intended. The sixty
days they owed their king was long past. What kept them at the border
now was the hope of recovering some of the cost of their expedition
once they reached Medalon, and the exhortations of the priesthood that
this was a holy war. When one feared eternal damnation, it was easier
to stay and fight. Food was scarce and so was fuel; winter was fast
approaching. Nobody had expected the Defenders to be waiting on the
border when the knights arrived.
The original force of five hundred had been deemed sufficient to cow
the unprepared Medalonians and punish them for their temerity. Instead
they were met by a large force of Defenders with Hythrun allies and
defences that left the knights gasping. There was nothing hurried or
hastily thought-out about their earthworks. Even to the inexperienced
eye it was obvious that the Defenders planned to force the battle along
a path of their choosing. Although Adrina heard some of the knights
boast that the first sight of an armoured charge would send the
Defenders scurrying, she knew better. Whoever had planned the defence
of the Medalon border had planned this long ago — and planned
it well.
Taking Medalon was not going to be easy, despite the Kariens’
numerical
superiority and the much-talked-about blessing of the Overlord.
Not surprisingly, Adrina’s first appearance at the war
council
caused a stir, even more than Tristan’s inclusion. Tristan was
a man,
after all, and a warrior, for all that he was foreign. It was not
considered seemly for a woman to involve herself in such manly pursuits
as war, even in the unlikely event that she would have anything
constructive to offer. Adrina bore the insults stoically, letting
Cratyn defend his decision to his vassals. If he was going to lead
these men, he needed the practice, anyway.
The war council was made up of the eight Dukes of Karien. The
loudest was a heavy-set man with a thick neck and an even thicker
intellect — Laetho, the Duke of Kirkland. Adrina marked him as
a
dangerous fool. He had apparently lost two of his servants a few months
back, having sent the children over the border to spy on the
Medalonians. It was safely assumed they were both dead. Only an idiot
would, quite literally, send boys out to do a man’s job.
The man next to Laetho was as tall, but only half his girth. Lord
Roache, the Duke of Morrus. He said little and gave the impression that
he wasn’t listening, more often than not, but when he did
comment, it
was obvious he had not missed a word of the discussion. Adrina regarded
him with caution.
Next to Roache, she was delighted to discover Cratyn’s
cousin
Drendyn, the Earl of Tiler’s Pass. His father was too infirm to
make
the journey to the border and had sent his son in his place. Drendyn
was young and enthusiastic, but dangerously inexperienced. He had never
faced a man in battle, never had his life seriously threatened. Adrina
thought it likely he would die, sooner rather than later, no doubt
doing something exceptionally foolish, which he considered
exceptionally brave. It was a pity really, because she quite liked the
young Earl.
The fourth member of the council was even younger and more
inexperienced than Drendyn. Jannis, the Earl of Menthall, was also here
in the place of his father, although Tam had heard it rumoured that the
reason the old Duke was absent had something to do with the
“wages of
sinâ€. Adrina wondered if it meant he’d caught the pox,
but it was
hardly a question she could put to any of her Karien companions, and
the reason hardly mattered anyway. Dark and slender, Jannis was barely
more than a child and agreed with everyone, even when they disagreed
with each other.
On the other side of the long trestle table set up in the large
command tent was Palen, the Duke of Lake Isony. He was a lot smarter
than he looked. He had the ruddy face of a peasant and the mind of a
general, Adrina decided. If Cratyn listened to his advice, he might
even win this war. On Palen’s right sat Ervin, the Duke of
Windhaven.
His purpose seemed entirely decorative. He was dressed in blue velvet
with snowy lace collar and cuffs, and spent more time fiddling with his
moustaches than he did taking part in the conversation. When he did
speak up it was usually on a point that had been passed over ten
minutes before.
Next to Ervin was a stout, middle-aged man with a patch over one
eye. The Duke of Nerlin, Wherland had the unfortunate nickname of
Whirlin’ Nerlin, but he was an experienced fighter, having
spent time
in the gulf fighting Fardohnyan pirates. His advice was always preceded
with the comment, “When I was in the navy . . .
â€. But
he wasn’t a fool, and when he finally figured out how to fight
on dry
land, he would be a dangerous opponent.
The last of the Dukes should have been Chastity’s father
Terbolt,
the Duke of Setenton; however, he had sent his brother, Lord Ciril, in
his place. A heavier version of his older brother, Ciril did not look
surprised at her inclusion. He had already suffered through her
unwelcome presence when she visited his brother’s castle on the
way to
Yarnarrow. Adrina wondered why Terbolt had stayed at home, hoping there
was nothing sinister in his unexplained absence. As for Ciril, she
marked him as a stolid, if unimaginative knight, who would advise
caution, but would see any battle plan through to the bitter end.
She said nothing during the first meeting of the council and had,
via Tamylan, advised Tristan to do the same. If they asked him a direct
question, she translated it for him and then dutifully repeated his
answers to the Dukes. To his credit, Tristan gave no sign that he
understood a word of the discussion going on around him, even when the
Kariens suggested things that, under normal circumstances, would have
made him laugh out loud. By the time the meeting broke up, nothing had
been decided, and there were eight dukes with eight different ideas as
to how the battle should be engaged, well, seven in reality —
Jannis
agreed with everyone — and one very confused young prince.
When the tent finally emptied, leaving Cratyn and Adrina alone, she
turned to him with a hopeful smile.
“It is the right time in my cycle, your Highness. Can I
expect you
tonight?â€
“I’ll see. I have a lot to do.â€
“Of course, however, it’s been several months now
and we still
haven’t consummated our union. Perhaps here, on the
battlefield, you
might find the . . . fortitude . . . to
get the job done.â€
Cratyn glared at her, his expression a mixture of hatred and
despair. “Don’t push me, Adrina.â€
“Push you, husband? I doubt pushing you would achieve any
more than
pulling your limp sword has so far.â€
“You taunt me at your peril, Adrina.â€
She laughed. “Peril? What peril? What are you going to do,
Cretin?
Hit me again?â€
“I’m warning you . . .â€
“Does your sword get hard when you think of Chastity, my
dear?â€
Cratyn flew out his chair and turned to face her. He was red faced
with shame and shaking with fury. “Don’t you even mention
her
name, you pagan whore! I’m not fooled by this act you are
putting on!
If I cannot lay with you, it is because the Overlord does not wish me
to sully myself in your filth!â€
Adrina took a step backwards, her hand on Tiler’s collar.
The dog
took exception to Cratyn’s tone and he was growling softly,
warningly.
“Perhaps you’re right, Cretin. Perhaps you are
cast in the
image of your god. He’s undoubtedly an emasculated idiot,
too.â€
Cratyn snatched up a map from the table and made a show of studying
it. His hands were shaking with suppressed rage. “Return to
your tent,
Adrina, and take that damned beast with you. I will come to you when
the Overlord assures me the time is right, not to satisfy your crude
heathen lust.â€
“Lust? Now there’s a word I never thought to
associate with
you. Are you sure you know what it means?â€
“Get out.â€
“Get out, your Highness,†she corrected.
He slammed the map onto the table. “Get out! Go back to your
tent
and stay there! I will not tolerate your pagan disrespect a moment
longer!â€
His shout had Tiler lunging against her hold. He bared his teeth at
the prince defiantly.
“Don’t you dare take that tone with me, you impotent
fool! I am a
Princess of Fardohnya!â€
“You are a heathen slut,†he cried angrily.
She could not hold Tiler any longer. He slipped her hold and lunged
for the prince. Cratyn threw his hand up to protect his face as the dog
flew at him. His cry brought the guards running from outside the tent.
It almost happened too quickly for Adrina to see. Tiler had Cratyn
pinned against the table. The guards saw nothing but their prince under
attack. Adrina saw the blade in the hand of the guard and screamed as
she realised what they intended. She threw herself at the dog, but the
guards were quicker. Tiler squealed with agony as the guard ran him
through.
“No!†she sobbed as the dog slid to the ground.
“Sire? Are you all right?†the guard asked with
concern as he helped
Cratyn up. Tiler had savaged his arm, but he had managed to fend off
the worst of the attack.
“You killed my dog!†Adrina accused, unaware of the
tears coursing
down her face. “I want him punished, Cretin! He killed my
dog!â€
“Your damned dog was trying to kill me!†Cratyn
gasped, still
shaking from fear and shock. “I’m more inclined to
knight him.â€
Adrina brushed away her tears and gently kissed Tiler’s limp
head
before climbing to her feet.
“You’ll pay for this,†she warned, then she
turned and walked out of
the tent with all the regal bearing her breeding and ancestry allowed.
When she reached her own tent she dismissed her ladies-in-waiting
impatiently and called for Tam. When her maid found her, she was
tearing at the laces of her bodice impatiently, sobbing inconsolably.
“Here, let me do that,†Tam offered, as she saw
Adrina struggling.
The princess knocked the offered hand away.
“No! I can do it myself! I want you to go and see Tristan.
We’re
getting out of here.â€
The young woman studied her closely. “Out of here?
How?â€
“I haven’t the faintest idea. But we’re
leaving and I don’t care
what it does to the alliance, to the war, or to my father. I’ve
had
enough!â€
“We’re a thousand leagues from home in the middle of
a battlefield
on the border of an enemy nation,†Tamylan pointed out.
“Where are you
planning to go, your Highness?â€
Adrina glared at her in annoyance then sagged onto her bed. It was a
large four-poster that had taken a full team of oxen to bring it to the
front. One of the trappings of her station designed to inconvenience
Cratyn.
“I don’t know,†she sniffed, wiping her
eyes. “Oh, Tam, they killed
Tiler!â€
The slave opened her arms and she sobbed against Tamylan’s
shoulder
hopelessly. Grief was a new emotion for Adrina. She had never before
lost a living soul she had loved.
“There, there, I know it hurts, but it will pass in
time,†Tam
advised.
Adrina wiped her eyes and sat up determinedly. “I
can’t do this any
more, Tamylan. I don’t care if there’s a crown at the
end of it. I
cannot bear these people. It’s like a prison.â€
“I understand, your Highness, but think it through before
you act
too hastily. This might be a prison, but it’s a sight more
comfortable
than the one awaiting you on the other side of the border, or worse, if
you were caught by the Kariens trying to run away.â€
Adrina looked up at the slave who had been by her side for as long
as she could remember. “You always did say more than was proper
for a
slave.â€
“That’s because I’ve always been your friend
first, Adrina.â€
Adrina smiled wanly. “Even though you were my slave?â€
“Slavery is a state of mind, your Highness,†she
shrugged. “You’re a
princess, yet you’ve less freedom than I have. I never minded
being a
slave. It just meant that I knew where I stood.â€
After Tamylan left, Adrina lay on the bed and thought on what the
slave had said. She was right. Even being a princess didn’t
stop you
from being used by other people for their own ends, or save you from
being hurt. If anything, it made you more vulnerable. Well, enough was
enough. She would find a way out of this and she would never, as long
as she lived, ever allow a man to hurt her again.
And by the gods, she vowed, she would make Cratyn pay.
PART 2
BATTLE LINES
CHAPTER 21
Loclon may have been responsible for letting
Medalon’s most notorious criminal escape, but his expertise
with a
blade was widely acknowledged. Commandant Arkin assigned him to the
cadets. His days were spent in the Arena teaching future Defenders the
finer points of swordplay.
Following his initial annoyance at not being assigned to active
duty, he found he enjoyed the job. He had regained his fitness quickly.
The cadets were in awe of both his skill and his fearsome scars, and
the rumour that he had killed a man in the Arena enhanced his
reputation considerably.
The work gave Loclon a rare feeling of omnipotence. While they were
in his charge, he had the power of life and death over these young men,
and he wielded it liberally. Demerits were earnt easily in his classes
and, almost without exception, the cadets treated him with gratifying
obsequiousness to avoid incurring his wrath. Of course, there was the
odd dissenter. Occasionally, a cadet would fancy himself a cut above
the rest of his classmates. There was one such foolhardy soul in the
Infirmary now. His temerity had cost him his right eye. Commandant
Geendel, the officer in charge of the cadets, had demanded an
explanation, of course, but the word of an officer was always taken
over the word of a mere cadet.
Loclon smiled to himself as he rode through the Citadel toward his
lodgings, thinking of the expressions on the cadets’ faces when
he had
appeared in the Arena this morning. No doubt they had all been hoping
Geendel would relieve him of his duty. Well, they had learnt a valuable
lesson today. In the Defenders, the officers would always close ranks
around their own. Loclon had learnt that lesson the hard way, too.
On impulse, Loclon turned down Tavern Street, deciding he owed
himself a drink to celebrate his victory over the cadets. He reined in
outside the Blue Bull Tavern, handed his mount over to a waiting
stableboy and walked inside, his boots echoing hollowly on the wooden
verandah. Business was slow this early, but he spied a familiar figure
hugging his ale near the fireplace. He ordered ale from the barkeep and
crossed the room to join his friend.
“Gawn.â€
The captain looked up. “Loclon. Finished for the
day?â€
Loclon nodded and took the seat opposite. Although Gawn had been a
year or two ahead of Loclon when they were cadets, their friendship was
a recent one. They had discovered they shared a loathing of Tarja
Tenragan that few in the Defenders understood. Gawn had spent time on
the southern border with Tarja and blamed him for just about everything
that happened to him while he was there, starting with an arrow he took
during a Hythrun raid, to the tavern keeper’s daughter he had
impregnated and been forced to marry.
Loclon had met the girl once, a slovenly, lazy slut who spoke with a
thick southern accent. To make matters worse, the child had been
stillborn and Gawn was left with a wife he loathed, who would hold back
his career just as surely as Tarja and R’shiel’s escape
from the
Grimfield would hold back Loclon’s.
“I heard there was some trouble with a cadet.â€
Loclon shrugged. “Nothing I can’t handle. What are
you doing here so
early?â€
“Parenor was called to a meeting with Commandant
Arkin.†Captain
Parenor was the Citadel’s Quartermaster. Gawn had been assigned
as his
adjutant on his return to the Citadel. It was an administrative
position and a grave insult to a battle-experienced officer.
“They are
asking for even more supplies on the border.â€
Nobody in the Citadel was exactly sure what was really happening on
the northern border. Near half the Defenders in the Citadel had been
sent north, supposedly to push back an attack by the Kariens. The
reason the Kariens were attacking varied, according to which rumours
one believed. Loclon believed the one that fitted with his own view of
the world — that the Kariens were invading to avenge the death
of their
Envoy at Tarja’s hand. But it did not explain Tarja’s
reinstatement to
the Defenders, or the sudden alliance with the Warlord of Krakandar, or
the First Sister’s change of heart. Even Gawn, who knew the
southern
border well, was at a loss to explain how near a thousand Hythrun
Raiders could cross into Medalon without being noticed.
“I heard something else today that might interest
you.â€
“What’s that?â€
“The Warlord of Elasapine crossed into Medalon with five
hundred
Raiders and placed himself at the disposal of Commandant Verkin in
Bordertown, supposedly to help fight off an expected attack by the
Fardohnyans.â€
“I though we were fighting the Kariens?â€
“Apparently, the Fardohnyan king married one of his
daughters to
Prince Cratyn. Parenor is furious because now Verkin is sending in
supply requisitions that he can’t fill, and the local merchants
have
got wind of the fact. The price of grain has doubled in the past
month.â€
Loclon could not have cared less about the price of grain, but it
irked him that he was sitting here in the Citadel while there was a war
going on.
“If we have to fight on two fronts, they’ll need
every officer they
can get their hands on. You and I might finally get a chance to do what
we were trained for, my friend.â€
“Instead of me pushing parchment around and you nursemaiding
a bunch
of homesick cadets? I’ll drink to that!†Gawn swallowed
his ale in a
gulp. Loclon signalled the barkeep for another but the captain shook
his head. “Better not, Loclon. If I don’t get home soon
she’ll be after
me with a carving knife. Founders, how I loathe that bitch!â€
Loclon smiled sympathetically. “Why go home at all?â€
“I’ve not the money for any other sort of
entertainment. She takes
every rivet I earn. Speaking of which, could you fix up the tavern
keeper for me? I’m afraid I’ve overspent,
somewhat.â€
“Very well,†he agreed, thinking of what Gawn
already owed him. The
amount did not bother him. He had no problem with cash these days, but
it was time Gawn did something to earn such generosity. “On one
condition. You come with me to Mistress Heaner’s
tonight.â€
Gawn pulled a face. “If I can’t afford to pay my
tavern bill, how do
you expect me to afford that sort of place?â€
Loclon smiled. “The same way I do, my friend.â€
In the months that had passed since then, Loclon
never wanted for anything. His rent was paid on time by an anonymous
donor. He often arrived home to find a small purse sitting on his side
table, filled with gold rivets. He was welcomed at Mistress
Heaner’s
and was never asked for payment, although he had been careful not to
kill another court’esa. In fact, the urge had
dissipated
somewhat, now that the promise of a chance at R’shiel was in
the
offing. He no longer considered his actions treasonous. He had been
offered a chance for revenge, a chance that the Defenders had refused
him. That justified everything.
But teaching cadets meant there was a limit to the information
Loclon was privy to, and Mistress Heaner was growing impatient with
him. Gawn, on the other hand, was far better placed to provide the
intelligence she demanded. By bringing Gawn into the fold, his position
would be secured and his chance at R’shiel would be certain.
Of course, he needed to find something to convince Gawn to join
them, and as he settled his companion’s account with the
barkeep, it
came to him. In return for his service to the Overlord, Loclon would
relieve Gawn of his most onerous possession.
He would kill his wife for him.
Mikel emptied the bucket of water from the well in
the corner of the old Keep’s yard into another bucket,
grumbling as the
icy water splashed his trousers. Today was not going well at all.
First, Tarja had so rudely awakened him to find Lord Brakandaran,
and then Mahina had snapped at him for being late with her tea. And
then the soldiers on the Keep gate had teasingly refused to let him
pass when she sent him with a message for Lord Jenga. And then Lord
Jenga had yelled at him when he almost got himself trampled by the
horses milling about in one of the vast corrals south of the camp.
No, today was not going well at all.
To add to his misery, the atmosphere in the Defenders’ camp
had
changed noticeably following the return of the Hythrun Warlord and his
two unexpected companions. For one thing, Tarja was smiling a lot these
days, which made him a little less fearsome but did not alter
Mikel’s
loathing for him. If anything, it increased it. How dare he
look so smug! As for the pair who had returned with Damin Wolfblade,
Mikel had been horrified to hear someone say they were Harshini.
Mikel found that hard to swallow. Did they think him a child to
believe such wild stories? Everybody knew that the Harshini were
monsters with wart-covered skin, sharp pointed teeth and drooling
mouths who ate wicked Karien children, particularly if they wavered in
their devotion to the Overlord. Lord Brakandaran looked just like any
other man and the pretty lady was more beautiful than Lady Chastity, so
she couldn’t possibly be a Harshini monster. Mahina had
introduced her
as Lady R’shiel and warned him to treat her with respect, or
suffer the
consequences. The Lady had smiled at him pleasantly, but otherwise paid
him little attention. Had it not been for her obvious attachment to
Tarja, he could have almost allowed himself to like her.
Mikel hefted the bucket and turned towards the hall, muttering
miserably to himself, but he had only taken a few steps when a
scratching sound behind the well caught his attention. Glancing around
to ensure he was unobserved, he put down the bucket and walked
cautiously around the stone lip of the well. A heap of rubble from the
crumbled outer wall was piled up on the other side. He heard the sound
again and moved toward the source, wondering if it was a cat, or
perhaps a fox who had inadvertently wandered into the Keep. He hoped it
was a cat. He liked cats. Perhaps he could catch it and keep it for a
pet . . .
The area near the well was one of the warmest in the Keep, with the
forge on the other side of the wall. It would be a good place to hide.
Mikel listened hard, trying to hear over the rhythmic clanging coming
from the smiths on the other side. The scratching sound came again,
louder this time, from a dark hole formed by the fallen masonry. With a
careful hand, Mikel reached into the darkness.
Whatever it was, it bit him with a force that made him cry out in
pain. He scrambled backwards around the well, tripped over the bucket
and landed on his backside in a puddle of icy mud. His hand was
bleeding profusely and throbbing, and tears of fright and pain and
humiliation were streaming down his face. Laughter wafted down from the
guards on the wall-walk who had looked down at the commotion. A grey
streak emerged from the rubble with a screech and bolted past him
towards the Keep. He watched it race past and into the arms of the Lady
R’shiel.
She caught the creature with a smile and turned to Mikel.
“Don’t
worry, I think you frightened her as much as she frightened
you.â€
Mikel stared at the little monster with wide eyes. He didn’t
know
what it was, but it was clinging to R’shiel, chattering
unintelligibly
in a screeching voice and pointing at him with huge black accusing eyes.
“Oh look, you’re hurt.â€
She shooed the creature away and it literally vanished into thin
air. Mikel traced the star of the Overlord on his forehead to ward off
evil as the Lady walked over to him and squatted down, smiling
reassuringly.
“Here, let me look at it,†she said. He held out his
throbbing hand
wordlessly, too afraid to do anything else. She took his hand in her
own and almost instantly the pain vanished. He snatched his hand back
in astonishment. The bite was gone, the skin as smooth as if it had
never been broken.
Mikel screamed.
R’shiel waved back a curious guard come to see what all the
fuss was
about. She sat back on her heels until he ran out of breath then smiled.
“Feeling better?â€
“Wha— what did you do to me?†he demanded.
Had she used magic on
him? Would he be condemned to drown in the Sea of Despair for eternity
because she had infected him with evil spirits? Mikel was weak with
fear at the prospect. “You used the power of the pagan gods on
me!â€
“Never fear, little one, it’s the same power as that
of the
Overlord, so it shouldn’t do you any lasting harm.â€
Mikel shrank away from her. She did not look like a monster, but she
could use magic — and the little creature, who was obviously
some sort
of evil-spawned monster, had run to her for comfort. Perhaps she was
Harshini. Maybe under those close-fitting leathers was warty skin that
peeled when you touched it and gave you diseases that had no cure and
made you do nasty things to people and turned you into —
“I said, your name is Mikel, isn’t it?â€
Mikel forced away the terrifying images that filled his head. He
nodded, afraid that if he did not answer her, she would turn him into a
beetle.
“And your brother? Where is he?â€
Mikel’s eyes narrowed at the question. Why does she want
to know
that?
“The Hythrun have him,†he told her sullenly.
“It must be pretty scary for you, Mikel. You’re a
long way from home
and surrounded by strangers. I know how that feels.â€
Try as he did to despise her, he knew she meant what she said. She
really did understand how he felt. The thought frightened him.
Had she used more magic on him? There is only the Overlord, he
reminded himself. He was relieved when the prayer came so easily.
Xaphista was still with him.
“Nothing scares me,†he declared defiantly.
She laughed. “Maybe nothing does, at that. Are you all right
now?â€
He nodded and suffered her assistance as he climbed to his feet. As
soon as she let him go, he snatched up his empty bucket and ran back to
the hall as if all the demons of the Harshini were on his heels.
Several days later the Medalonians held their most
important meeting since Mikel had been in the Defender’s camp.
Everyone
was in attendance. Tarja and Lord Jenga, Sister Mahina and Garet
Warner, Ghari, Lord Wolfblade and the mean-looking Captain Almodavar,
and Lord Brakandaran. The only one missing was the Lady
R’shiel. Mikel
did not know where she was. Perhaps even the Medalonians were afraid to
share their battle plans with a Harshini magician. They obviously did
not share the same feeling for the small Karien boy who served them.
Mikel moved among the adults, filling wine cups and collecting empty
platters left over from their meal. Nobody seemed to notice him. The
hall was cold — it was not possible to seal all the cracks in
the
draughty old ruin — and torches sputtered fitfully, flaring
occasionally as an errant draught fanned them into brightness. The fire
did little to relieve the chill. If anything, it made the gathered
people look more sinister, but if it was the cold or fear that made
Mikel shiver, he could not say.
“This may sound like a stupid question,†Lord
Brakandaran was saying
as Mikel silently filled his cup. “But has anyone thought to
offer the
Kariens a settlement?â€
“What? You mean offer them peace?â€
the Hythrun
Warlord gasped with mock horror. “Bite your tongue,
man!â€
“Perhaps not so stupid,†Sister Mahina mused.
“They must have
realised by now that even if they win, it will be an expensive victory.
Perhaps they would consider a peaceful settlement.â€
Tarja shook his head. “I doubt it, but I suppose
it’s worth a try.â€
“At the very least, it might delay them for a
while,†Jenga agreed.
“That would take us well into winter before the first attack.
Those big
warhorses, weighted down with armour, will be a liability rather than
an asset if it snows. Even a decent rainstorm will turn the battlefield
into a quagmire.â€
“I’ll be very disappointed if they agree,â€
Damin said. “And
surprised. They’ve too much at stake to withdraw at this
point.â€
“You’re right,†Garet Warner said in his
soft, dangerous voice,
which seemed to startle the Warlord. Damin Wolfblade didn’t
seem to
like the commandant much. “The banner flying over their command
tent is
Cratyn’s, not Jasnoff’s. He’s young and he
needs to prove himself.
Agreeing to a settlement would imply weakness. He won’t back
down.â€
“And what of the Fardohnyans?†Mahina asked.
“Perhaps they might
persuade him?â€
Garet shook his head. “Again, I doubt it. They were sent to
Karien
as the Princess’ Guard, and the first thing Adrina did was
bring them
to the border to aid her husband. They obviously share a common
purpose.â€
“Adrina?†Damin Wolfblade asked in surprise.
“I thought he married
Cassandra?â€
“He married Adrina,†Brak confirmed. “She
left Talabar with Cratyn
several months ago. Her progress up the Ironbrook was something of an
event, I hear.â€
“Gods!†Damin muttered. He looked concerned.
“Is that a problem?†Lord Jenga asked.
“It could be,†Brak answered. “Adrina is
Hablet’s eldest legitimate
child. Adrina’s son could claim the Fardohnyan throne.â€
“Who cares?†Mahina asked. “Our problem is
here and now, not whether
or not there is a Karien heir to Fardohnya.â€
“Our problem could be Adrina herself,†Damin warned
them. “If she’s
half as bad as her reputation suggests, then she’s the one to
look out
for, not Cratyn.†The Warlord glanced at his captain who nodded
in
agreement.
“Do you know her?†Tarja asked Damin curiously.
“No, thank the gods! She was in Greenharbour a couple of
years ago
for my uncle’s birthday.†Suddenly he grinned.
“Despite my uncle’s
wishes, and a number of dangerously close calls, I managed to avoid an
encounter with Her Serene Highness.â€
“How bad can the woman be?â€
“Bad,†Damin assured him. “She’s got
the body of a goddess and the
heart of a hyena. Hablet offered a dowry for her that was beyond the
dreams of avarice — and he still couldn’t marry her
off. Adrina married
to the Karien Crown Prince is not a happy prospect. I wonder how poor
Cratyn is coping.â€
“He can’t be doing too badly,†Garet said.
“She’s followed him to
the front with her troops. Maybe she’s found her soul
mate.â€
“If she has, then I’m packing up and going home
now,†the Warlord
announced, although Mikel didn’t think he was serious.
“I’d like to meet the woman that makes you turn tail
and run,
Damin,†Tarja chuckled.
“Does it really matter?†Mahina asked, obviously
annoyed by the
banter between Tarja and the Warlord. “We were discussing the
advisability of sending an emissary to the Kariens, I believe?â€
“Assuming we do, who would we send?†Jenga asked.
“I’m in no mood to
give them a hostage, should they not honour our flag of truce.â€
Mikel
was quite offended at the idea that his prince would do any such thing.
How dare they impugn Cratyn’s honour!
“What about the boy?†Lord Brakandaran suggested.
All eyes turned to
Mikel curiously. He quivered under their unrelenting gaze.
“Are you crazy?†Tarja said.
“It’s no crazier than some ideas I’ve heard
lately.†He turned back
to the others to explain. “His return could be considered a
gesture of
good faith. The child has been here for months and he will tell the
Kariens everything he’s seen. It might give them pause, even if
your
offer of peace falls on deaf ears.â€
“But he’s a child,†Jenga objected.
“All the more reason to send him home.â€
All eyes turned at the sound of the imperious voice and Mikel was
suddenly forgotten. The Crazy Lady descended the stairs regally,
dressed in a long, high-necked white gown. She had icy blue eyes and a
haughty expression and surveyed the room as if everyone in it was
beneath contempt.
“You will bow in the presence of the First Sister!â€
she snapped.
Instinctively, the stunned Medalonians almost did as she demanded.
Lord Wolfblade’s jaw was hanging slackly in astonishment and
Tarja wore
an expression of such hatred that it made Mikel take a step backwards.
Only Lord Brakandaran did not seem startled by her appearance.
“Impressive, Lord Dranymire,†he said.
Suddenly the Crazy Lady seemed to wobble and her expression changed
from contempt to amusement.
“Spoilsport!†R’shiel accused, stepping out
of the shadows on the
staircase. She looked at the others who still sat frozen in various
poses ranging from amazement to outright shock, and laughed.
“You
should see your faces!â€
“Humans are far too easy to impress,†the Crazy Lady
remarked, in a
male voice much deeper than the one she had spoken with a moment ago.
Mikel was certain he had been swallowed up whole and sucked into
some sort of pagan hell. The Crazy Lady wobbled again and Mikel watched
in horror as she literally fell apart. Then the room was swarming with
little grey creatures like the one that had bitten him by the well. The
creatures fell about laughing in high twittering voices, as if they
were privy to some marvellous prank. It was more than Mikel could cope
with. He screamed in terror as the creatures neared him.
His scream brought the others out of their torpor. They all began
talking at once and Mikel could make no sense of what they were saying.
He did not try. He could hear someone crying and it took a little while
to realise it was he. R’shiel walked toward him, pushing the
monsters
out of her way impatiently. He shied away from her in fear.
“I’m sorry, Mikel. I didn’t mean to frighten
you. They’re demons,
that’s all. They won’t hurt you.†She turned
impatiently. “You’re
scaring the poor child to death. Be gone!â€
The demons vanished almost instantly, shocking the grown-ups almost
as much as Mikel. “The Overlord will protect me. The
Overlord will
protect me. The Overlord will protect me,†he chanted
softly as the
tears streamed down his face.
“Let the boy take the message to the Kariens, Lord
Jenga,†she
pleaded. “Send him home. He doesn’t belong
here.â€
Jenga looked at Brak uncertainly. “You said he would tell
his people
what he’s seen here. Do you really want him to report what
he’s seen
here tonight?â€
Brak shrugged. “The Karien priests will know we are here
soon
enough. It might even give them pause.â€
“Or they won’t believe him,†Garet pointed
out. “I certainly don’t
believe what I just saw.â€
A meaningful glance passed between the adults before Jenga turned on
him. “Boy! Go get your gear packed. You’re leaving
first thing in the
morning. You will take our offer of peace back to Prince Cratyn, is
that clear?â€
Mikel nodded. Tears of joy, as opposed to fright, threatened to
unman him. “And . . . my brother?†he
ventured
cautiously.
“He stays,†the Hythrun Warlord announced, before
anybody else could
answer. “He will be a hostage to your good behaviour. If your
prince
accepts our offer, we’ll send him home.â€
It would have been too much to hope for any other answer, although
he wondered if he’d waited and asked the Lady R’shiel
when she was
alone, the result might have been different. But it was too late now.
Mikel nodded and the Lady R’shiel smiled at him
reassuringly. He was
going home. The Overlord had finally answered his prayers —
some of
them, at least. By tomorrow evening, he would be standing before his
prince and his priests and he could finally tell them of the evil that
resided south of the border in the camp of the Defenders.
CHAPTER 24
They sent him back to the Karien camp mounted on a
nondescript dun gelding. Tarja Tenragan and Damin Wolfblade escorted
Mikel as far as the earthworks that were constructed along the front.
It was the first close look Mikel had got of the Medalonian defences.
He tried to remember every detail to tell Prince Cratyn, but it
wasn’t
easy with Damin on one side of him on a huge golden stallion, and Tarja
on the other on a sleek black mare. As if they knew the reason for his
swivelling head and wide eyes, they began to point out various features
of the defences to each other over the top of his head, describing in
rather graphic and gory detail the affect they would have on any
attacking Karien force.
The earthworks gave cover for a vast number of bowmen, Tarja
explained cheerfully to the Warlord, which would decimate the vanguard
of any Karien attack. Even if the knights were armoured, their horses
would founder under the rain of arrows. Each archer carried around
fifty arrows, and if they took their time, they could keep up the
deadly hail for an hour or more. Being trapped under a dead warhorse
while it rained arrows was not a happy prospect, Damin agreed with
relish. And, he added, if they were so foolish as to send unarmoured
men to lead the attack, it would be a massacre. Mikel tried very hard
not to listen to them. They were teasing him, he knew, and his courage
was growing stronger the closer he came to the border. The Overlord was
with him and he was on his way home. There was nothing they could do to
him that would quell his growing excitement.
“This is as far as we go, boy,†Damin said
eventually, reining his
horse in as they reached the edge of the field that the Medalonians
ominously referred to as the “killing groundâ€. He
looked down at Mikel
and grinned. “Just head north, boy. You’ll reach Karien
sooner or
later.â€
“And carry this,†Tarja added, thrusting a broken
spear into his
hand, to which had been tied a scrap of white linen.
“My people won’t harm me!†Mikel said, quite
offended by the flag of
truce. “I am going home!â€
“You’re going home wearing a Defender’s
uniform,†Tarja pointed out.
“I’m sure they won’t kill you if they know who
you are, but you’re not
going to get close enough to tell them, dressed like that. Take
it.†He
looked across at Damin and added with a grin, “Mind you,
they’d never
believe a Defender could be so short.â€
Reluctantly, Mikel accepted the flag.
“You have the message?†Damin asked.
He nodded glumly and patted the bulge under he jacket where the
sealed letter from Lord Jenga was securely tucked, as the two men he
hated most in this world talked to him like a small child. They would
ask if he’d washed behind his ears next!
“Then scat!†the Warlord said, slapping the flank of
the gelding.
The horse surged forward and Mikel nearly lost his seat as he galloped
headlong toward the border.
Not an experienced rider, Mikel clung grimly to the pommel until he
remembered to use the reins. The slightest touch and the well-trained
cavalry mount slowed his headlong rush to a more manageable pace. With
a sigh of relief, Mikel remembered the flag, and propped it up against
his thigh as he rode through the waist-high grass of the
no-man’s land
between the two camps. Although he did not know the exact location of
the border, he knew that he would soon be in bow range of the Kariens,
and he would be hard pressed to deliver his intelligence about the
Medalonians with an arrow through his chest.
It annoyed him intensely that it had been Tarja who pointed that out.
He was still half a league or more from the camp when the Karien
sentries found him. The sight of Lord Laetho’s purple pennant,
with its
three tall pines worked in red, brought tears of relief to his eyes,
which he hastily brushed away as the knights approached. The Overlord
was truly with him, he knew now. Not only had he been released, but he
had sent his own people to meet him. Mikel was giddy with relief as the
tall knight in the lead lifted his faceplate. It was Sir Andony,
Laetho’s nephew, newly knighted last summer and enormously
proud of the
fact. Andony studied him for a moment, waving away the drawn swords of
his three companions.
“Sir Andony!†he cried, urging his horse forward.
“Mikel?†he asked in astonishment. “We
thought you long dead, lad!â€
“They sent me back. I have a message for the prince.â€
Andony frowned. “You seem remarkably well fed for someone
kept
prisoner these past months, boy. And you wear the uniform of the
enemy.â€
Mikel glanced down at his rolled up Defender’s trousers and
the
too-big, warm red jacket they had given him in the Medalonian camp.
“They took my clothes and burned them. You must take me to the
prince!
I’ve seen so much, Sir! I have to tell him!â€
Andony nodded, not entirely convinced. “Well, we’ll
see if Lord
Laetho wants you to speak with his Highness. Come!â€
Andony wheeled his big horse around and fell in beside Mikel. One of
the other knights took station on his left and the other two fell in
behind. Mikel rode into the Karien camp, not in triumph as he had
dreamt, but a barely disguised prisoner.
“They offer peace,†Prince Cratyn
announced,
throwing the parchment Mikel had delivered onto the long table in the
command tent. Smoking torches threw tall shadows on the canvas walls,
which made Mikel’s eyes water. The braziers did little to warm
the big
tent.
“They offer nothing!†Lord Laetho corrected,
pointing at the
document with scorn. “They ask us to pack up and go home! They
offer no
compensation! They do not even apologise for murdering Lord
Pieter!â€
Mikel could not read, but even if he had been able, he had not been
given an opportunity to examine the contents of the sealed document he
had delivered. He wondered at Lord Laetho’s interpretation of
the
offer. Sister Mahina had been quite hopeful that a peaceful solution
might be reached.
“I would not go quite that far,†Lord Roache
corrected. “But you are
right, in that it is somewhat arrogant in its tone. The Medalonians
appear to think they might prevail.â€
The full war council had convened upon hearing of the letter from
the Defenders, even though it was the middle of the night. Mikel had
spent the day being questioned by Lord Laetho and now stood just inside
the flap of the command tent, chewing his bottom lip nervously. In his
dreams, when he faced the war council, he had not been nervous, or
cold, or afraid. Mikel glanced around, rubbing his eyes and trying not
to yawn. The movement caught the eye of the tall Fardohnyan captain who
stood opposite him on the other side of the tent, near the Princess
Adrina. The man winked at him solemnly. The small gesture gave Mikel a
much needed morale boost.
Princess Adrina had obviously dressed in a hurry. Her long dark hair
was tied back with a plain blue ribbon and she wore a simple dress of
fine grey wool, covered with a warm fur cloak. Mikel watched her,
thinking that she was just as pretty as the Lady R’shiel, which
was
only proper, since she was married to Prince Cratyn. But she did not
look at Cratyn the same way Lady R’shiel looked at Tarja. There
was no
warmth in her eyes at all, except when she addressed the fair-haired
Fardohnyan captain. And Prince Cratyn’s gaze did not linger on
Adrina,
the way Tarja’s lingered on R’shiel.
No, he decided, his prince and princess knew how to behave in
public. Nobody would ever come upon them kissing where anybody
could see them. The princess was far too well bred to lean back
suggestively against her husband, while she talked of war to her
council, or dress in skin-tight leathers, or ride astride like a man.
It was comforting to be back among people who acted with decorum and
restraint.
“It is a sign of their weakness,†Earl Drendyn
announced, leaning
back in his chair. “They have seen the force we have gathered
and are
afraid!â€
“Even the lowest creature can fight savagely when
it’s frightened,â€
Duke Wherland reminded them. His eye-patch looked decidedly ominous in
the sputtering light. “I learnt that in the navy.â€
“It may be a ruse,†Duke Palen agreed, scratching at
his greying
beard thoughtfully. “A delaying tactic, perhaps?†He
turned in his
seat, his gaze falling on Mikel, who gulped nervously. “What
say you,
boy? Laetho tells me you were there when they decided to make this
offer.â€
Mikel swallowed again, his mouth suddenly dry.
“The boy knows nothing useful,†Duke Ervin scoffed,
pulling on the
ends of his waxed moustaches. “I don’t know why you
bothered to bring
him here.â€
“My Lords,†the princess intruded cautiously, her
eyes lowered
demurely. She was such a perfect lady. “Children, like women,
are
frequently overlooked in a war camp. You may find he knows more than
the Medalonians realise.â€
Prince Cratyn looked up sharply as the Princess spoke, but it was
Lord Ciril who answered her. “Her Highness shows remarkable
insight for
a woman. Come forward, boy!â€
Mikel stepped forward hastily, although his throat was so dry it
felt as if somebody had sandpapered it.
“My . . . My
Lord?â€
“You were there when they composed this message?â€
Duke Roache asked.
Mikel shook his head. “No, my Lord. But I heard them
discussing it.â€
“Well? What did they say, boy?†Duke Ervin demanded
impatiently.
“Sister Mahina, she said we could
win . . .â€
“There! What did I tell you!†Drendyn laughed. He
took a long swig
from his wine cup. He looked very pleased with himself. “They
know we
will defeat them!â€
“Shut up, fool!†Palen snorted, before turning his
ruddy peasant’s
face to Mikel. “Carry on, boy.â€
“But she said it would be an expensive victory,†he
finished,
gaining a little confidence in the face of the elder Duke’s
support.
“Lord Jenga . . . he said it
might . . .
give you pause. He said an attack in winter . . . in the
mud or the snow . . . would be hard for armoured
knights.â€
“Any fool knows that,†Roache muttered
The Fardohnyan captain said something Mikel could not understand,
and the others turned to the princess expectantly. “My captain
asks if
the child heard what the Hythrun Warlord had to say.â€
Eleven heads turned to look at him expectantly. Mikel suddenly
remembered all the horrible things Damin Wolfblade had said about the
lovely princess and paled. He could not repeat that!
“He said . . . he said that if you accepted
the peace
offering he would be very disappointed. He said you have too much at
stake to withdraw now.†The princess smiled at him before she
translated the answer for her captain and his heart fluttered. This was
how a true lady should look and behave. Decorous, elegant and modest.
And Damin Wolfblade said she had the heart of a hyena! How dare he!
“The Medalonians don’t appear to be suffering under
too many false
illusions,†Lord Wherland remarked, “if what the boy
says is true.â€
“Aye,†Lord Palen agreed, “and they are
correct about the snow. It
would seriously hamper the knights.â€
“Then we need to attack before it snows, gentlemen,â€
Prince Cratyn
announced. Mikel’s heart swelled with pride as he watched the
young
prince. He was so noble and serious. He did not joke about death or
make lewd comments about women. He was renowned for his piety. And he
would crush the Defenders, Mikel thought fiercely. The Overlord
was with him and he had the most beautiful, well-mannered princess in
the whole world by his side. Nothing could defeat them.
“Aye,†Palen agreed. “We’ve sat on
our backsides too long. It is
time to teach these atheists a lesson. Only a fool would wait until
winter to attack. Do you have anything else to tell us, boy?â€
Mikel faced a moment of indecision. Should he mention the Harshini?
Should he say he had seen a demon? Lots of demons? If he did, would
they believe him? Or would they send him to the priests for Absolution
Through Pain for lying? Should he tell them that Jaymes would only be
released if they agreed to the peace offering? It had all seemed so
clear when he was a prisoner among the Defenders. But now, faced with
the war council and their stern expressions, his courage deserted him.
“My Lords, the child is exhausted,†Princess Adrina
said, saving him
from having to answer. “It is the middle of the night and he is
almost
falling over with fatigue, as am I. Perhaps I could take the child and
see him settled for the night while you make your plans? After all, a
war council is no place for a lady,†she added, bringing nods
of
agreement from the men. Mikel thought she was beyond perfect. She was
the embodiment of Karien femininity. “Once he’s rested,
I am sure he
will remember more. In fact, I would be happy to take it upon myself to
interview the child, thus freeing my Lords for more important business.
It would be my small contribution to your war effort.†The
gathered
Dukes nodded, as impressed by her words as Mikel was. “Do I
have your
leave to depart, your Highness?â€
Prince Cratyn waved his agreement with a furrowed brow, as if
something concerned him, but he was probably just worried about the
princess. She should not have been dragged from a warm bed at this hour
of the night.
“Then I bid you goodnight, my Lords,†she said,
rising gracefully
from her seat. “May the Overlord be with you as you make your
plans, so
that your victory is quick and decisive. Come, child.â€
She held out her hand and Mikel took it in wonder. He did not notice
the cold as they walked from the tent. He barely even noticed the tall
Fardohnyan following them outside. The princess said something in her
own language to the captain, who nodded and disappeared into the
darkness, then she turned and looked down at him.
“You must be the bravest young man in all of
Karien,†she said with
obvious admiration. “To have spent all that time in the heart
of the
enemy and remain so true to your faith. I want to hear about every
single moment of the time you spent with those nasty Defenders.â€
“I’ll try to remember everything, your
Highness,†he promised her.
For the Princess Adrina he would walk to the Sea of Despair and back.
They rode back in silence, Dranymire sitting atop
the pommel of R’shiel’s saddle until they neared the
camp. He vanished
as the vast followers’ camp came into view. R’shiel
glanced at Brak,
but his expression was still as sour as it had been when they rode out
this morning.
“Stop fretting.â€
“I’ll stop fretting when you start demonstrating
some sense.â€
“We have to do this, Brak. Have you seen the size of the
Karien
army? We need every Defender on the border. We need Mahina in
charge.â€
He shook his head, but did not answer her.
When they reached the corrals on the southern side of the camp, they
dismounted and walked their horses forward. The smell was pungent, with
so many animals so close, and she could feel Wind Dancer’s
thoughts as
the mare sensed the nearness of her kin. Two Hythrun hurried forward as
they neared the coral where the sorcerer-bred mounts were kept, a
little way from the more ordinary Medalonian cavalry horses.
R’shiel
waved them away, preferring to unsaddle the beast herself.
Wind Dancer’s thoughts lingered wistfully on fresh hay.
R’shiel
enjoyed the touch of her equine mind. Everything was so simple. So
uncluttered. Brak moved on a little further, apparently preferring
solitude to her company.
“We have men aplenty to tend your horse, Divine One.â€
R’shiel hefted the saddle clear of Wind Dancer and turned
toward the
voice in the gathering darkness. “Please don’t call me
that, Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“A compromise, then. You call me Damin, and I’ll
call you R’shiel.â€
“Done!†She lifted the saddle over the rail and
turned to him.
“Damin.â€
“Did you enjoy your ride?â€
“Very much. She’s a beautiful horse.â€
“Then she is yours. A gift.â€
“I couldn’t accept anything so valuable,
Lord . . .
Damin.â€
“Why not?†He moved closer, stroking Wind
Dancer’s golden withers as
she removed the bridle. “I’ve already told Tarja I
planned to make you
a gift of her. He didn’t seem to mind.â€
“I don’t need Tarja’s permission to accept a
gift,†she said,
ducking under Wind Dancer’s head, which put the bulk of the
beast
between them. She began rubbing the horse down with more force than was
absolutely necessary. “I’m just afraid you’ll
read more into my
acceptance than is warranted.â€
“I see. You think I’m planning to use my association
with the demon
child for my own political ends, is that it?â€
“Aren’t you?â€
He laughed. “You and my sister would make a great pair.
Kalan thinks
as you do. I offer this gift because I like you, R’shiel. If it
helps
my cause some day, then fine, but I would make the offer even knowing
it might harm my cause.â€
She stopped brushing Wind Dancer and stared at him. “Why are
you
here, Damin?â€
“Lord Brakandaran asked me to come.â€
“So you dropped everything and left your own province
vulnerable to
attack, to help an enemy? Just because Brak asked you? I find that hard
to believe.â€
“You were raised by the Sisterhood, R’shiel. Perhaps
if you’d been
raised among people who place their gods above all else, you’d
understand.â€
“Perhaps,†she muttered, unconvinced. Damin
Wolfblade seemed too
sure of his own place in the world to care much about the gods. But it
was to him that Zegarnald had delivered Brak and her. The War God had a
high opinion of this human Warlord. Maybe that was why she did not
entirely trust him.
“R’shiel, I will be the first to admit that my
association with you
will give the other Warlords pause. If I can call the demon child my
friend, my position will be almost unassailable. I might even find out
what it feels like not to fear an assassin’s blade. But
that’s not the
reason I came. The Karien army has to be stopped before it reaches
Hythria. If not, my people face a war on a scale you cannot imagine.
Hythria is a large nation, but the Defenders are a much more coherent
force than any my people can muster. They are trained to act as one
army. My nation has seven Warlords with seven different ideas as to how
a battle should be fought, even if you could get them to agree to fight
on the same side.â€
“You sound so plausible, I almost believe you.â€
“I do, don’t I? I’ve been working on that
little speech for a while,
although I hadn’t planned to use it on you. I wrote it in a
letter to
my brother Narvell.â€
“Your brother?â€
“He’s the Warlord of Elasapine. I hoped to appeal to
his better
nature and use his forces to block any Fardohnyan incursion into
southern Medalon.â€
“Did he listen to you?â€
“Oh yes, he did as I asked. I also hinted in my letter that
I would
deny him my permission to marry the girl he’s been lusting
after since
he was fifteen, if he didn’t.â€
The darkness had fallen swiftly as they spoke, and the night was lit
by cold starlight; their breath frosted as if their words were things
of substance. R’shiel opened the corral gate and Wind Dancer
trotted
through happily to join her companions. She gathered up her bridle as
Damin lifted the saddle from the rail and together they headed toward
the tent where the tack was stored.
“I think I would rather have you as a friend than an enemy,
Damin.â€
“I could say the same about you.â€
“You’ve nothing to fear from me, I
—†R’shiel stopped in her tracks
as a prickle of magic washed over her. It was faint, but unmistakable.
The feeling was unpleasant, as if someone was channelling magic through
a filter of slime and filth.
“What’s the matter?â€
Brak reached them at a run. “Call your men out, Damin. The
Kariens
are getting ready to attack.â€
Damin looked puzzled, R’shiel even more so. “Is that
what I can
feel?â€
Brak nodded. “The priests are calling on Xaphista. What you
feel is
them working a coercion, R’shiel.â€
She shuddered, thinking this was what she had planned for the
Gathering. She hadn’t known it would feel so unclean.
“When will they attack?†Damin demanded.
“Not for a while yet. But they’d only be doing this
if they planned
to move soon.â€
Damin did not need to be told twice. He dumped the saddle at
R’shiel’s feet and ran toward the Keep.
“Can’t we do something, Brak?â€
“If you want to reveal your presence to Xaphista, by all
means, stop
his priests from calling him.â€
She glared at him before picking up the saddle, lugging it toward
the tent. “What’s the use of having all this power if
you can’t do
anything with it?â€
Brak held back the tent flap for her as she shouldered her way in.
She dumped the saddle and bridle on the racks and then pushed past him
as she stepped outside, looking toward the crumbling old fort. Distant
shouts reached them on the cold air as Damin raised the alarm.
“You can do anything you want, R’shiel,â€
Brak said, following her
gaze. “The trick is knowing when it’s going to cause
more harm than
good.â€
“Like coercing the Gathering?â€
He nodded. “You think what you can feel now is unpleasant.
Wait
until you’re channelling it yourself. The Harshini prohibition
on
coercion isn’t some altruistic principle. It’s
dangerous, R’shiel, and
you are still a babe in arms when it comes to magic.â€
R’shiel glanced at him, but he wasn’t looking at
her. His gaze was
fixed on the rousing army.
“Then what should I do?â€
He turned to her finally and shook his head. “If I knew that
R’shiel, I’d have told you.â€
CHAPTER 27
Brak’s timely warning proved its worth and
the
Defenders were in position long before the Karien army advanced the
following morning. As dawn lightened the sky, Tarja rode behind the
lines to Lord Jenga’s position on a small knoll overlooking the
battlefield, frost crackling under Shadow’s hooves.
Ditches filled with sharpened stakes would force the battle down a
v-shaped corridor, pushing the Kariens into an ever-narrowing field of
fire. The Jagged Mountains to the east, and the Sanctuary Mountains to
the west, formed a natural barricade to any flanking manoeuvres. The
mountains were both a blessing and a curse. The Kariens could not get
past them, but neither could the Defenders. The only way to flank the
enemy was to wait until they had crossed the border and were well into
Medalonian territory.
Damin’s mounted archers had been split into two companies:
one under
the command of the Warlord and one under the command of Captain
Almodavar. They were positioned on the arms of the V-shape and would
harry the enemy flanks as the Kariens advanced. Their mobility and
their astounding accuracy with their short bows meant they would remain
relatively safe from counter-attack, as the Kariens would have to break
ranks and cross the stake-filled ditches to pursue them.
At the apex of the v-shape waited the longbowmen. They were the only
hope of halting the Karien advance. The longbow could out range any
weapon the Kariens could bring to bear on the Defenders, and their
defence lay in the rain of arrows that should decimate the Kariens
before they got close enough to use their own weapons. Behind them
stood the infantry, ready to advance if the Kariens got so close that
the archers were endangered.
Tarja commanded one of the units of light cavalry. His job was to
come at the enemy from behind, once the Kariens were committed to the
battle. The deadly trenches had been carefully measured and dug to
ensure a cavalry mount could clear them, as it was a safe assumption
that a Karien warhorse, weighted down by the knight he carried, would
have no hope of achieving the same feat. What worried Tarja was the
Fardohnyan cavalry. They had dug the trenches before they learnt they
would be facing Fardohnyans as well.
The killing ground was pockmarked with treacherous holes, dug to
trap the charging destriers of the mounted knights. Tarja wondered if
it was a measure of his character that he felt more sympathy for the
horses that would die this day than the men.
He reached the command position and dismounted, as a trooper hurried
forward to hold his mount. Jenga waited under the shelter of a wide
pavilion, talking to Damin and Nheal Alcarnen, who had command of the
reserves. To his surprise, R’shiel and Brak waited with him.
R’shiel looked pale in the dim light. Brak’s
expression revealed
nothing of what he was thinking.
“It’s stopped,†she told him as he entered
the tent, pulling off his
leather gauntlets.
“What’s stopped?†Jenga asked, glancing over
his shoulder.
“The magic. Whatever the Karien priests were doing,
they’re not
doing it any more.â€
“Is that a good sign?â€
Brak shrugged. “Depends on how you look at it. At the very
least, it
means you won’t have long to wait.â€
Jenga frowned, uncomfortable with this talk of magic. Tarja warmed
his hands over the brazier for a moment before turning to Brak and
R’shiel.
“Just exactly what were they doing?â€
“Coercing their troops, Brak thinks,â€
R’shiel told him.
“What does that mean?’
“It could mean they won’t stop attacking, regardless
of what you
throw at them,†Brak warned. “A coercion makes men act
against their
natural instincts. Don’t count on them breaking, even if faced
with
impossible odds. They’ll just keep on coming until it wears
off. That
could be hours or days.â€
Damin looked across the tent at them and nodded. “We have
legends of
battles fought by men under a coercion. They didn’t stop
attacking
until every last man was dead.â€
Jenga listened to the discussion with growing alarm. “This
is
madness! Isn’t there something you can do?â€
“Zegarnald will be with us,†Damin said.
Jenga turned on him impatiently. “Bah! Your gods! I need
practical
solutions, not flights of fancy.â€
“Actually, Zegarnald might be more help than you imagine, my
Lord,â€
Brak said. “Coercing men in a battle is sort of breaking the
rules. It
might be worth appealing to him.â€
Before Jenga could answer the faint sound of a horn reached them. The
Kariens signalling their advance. Jenga turned toward the sound and
frowned.
“You speak to your damned gods, Lord Brakandaran. I have a
battle to
fight.†He strode from the pavilion with Nheal close on his
heels.
Damin pulled on his gauntlets and turned to them with a grin.
“I’ll
see you later, my friends. Try not to get yourselves killed.â€
“Be careful, Damin,†R’shiel called after
him as he strode out of
the tent to his waiting mount, held by a black mailed Raider. Raising
his hand in salute, he swung into the saddle and rode at a canter
towards the coming battle.
Tarja looked at R’shiel curiously. “You and the
Warlord seem to be
getting on well.â€
“Jealous?â€
“Should I be?â€
“Oh for god’s sake!†Brak muttered
impatiently.
Tarja smiled, realising how foolish he sounded. “I have to
go. You
take care of her, Brak. I don’t want her anywhere near the
battle.â€
“I can take care of myself, thank you, Captain,†she
declared. “But
I know what you’re like, Tarja, so just remember this
is a
battle, not a border skirmish. You stay where you’re supposed
to be and
don’t go getting heroic on me, or you’ll wish the
Kariens had
killed you by the time I get through with you.â€
She knew him better than he realised. Tarja had never fought in a
battle on this scale; nobody had in living memory. He would far rather
be in the thick of the fighting than standing back, issuing orders
while his troops died at his command. Even harder, it was Jenga
directing the battle. Tarja respected the Lord Defender, but he had
grown used to being the one in command. In this battle he had his
orders and no leave to do anything more.
With R’shiel’s warning ringing in his ears, Tarja
walked out to his
horse. He could feel the ground trembling faintly as the Kariens
advanced. Calm settled over him like a warm cloak. It always did before
a fight. Before the bloodlust stirred in him. He glanced over his
shoulder and saw her watching him, her expression grim and her arms
crossed, and wondered if he would ever see her again.
Inexplicably, the Kariens sent their infantry to
lead the attack. Rank on rank of motley peasants marched across the
border, armed with short swords and rough wooden shields, which were
painted a riot of colours to declare the province of each man. They
moved erratically, not disciplined enough to march in unison. Tarja
grimaced as he watched them, wondering if they had been given even
basic training. He glanced down the line at the wall of Defender
infantry — men who held their shields steady with their pikes
upright,
like a forest of thin bare trees. The cavalry reserves waited behind,
near two thousand men, ready to move forward at the first sign of a
breach.
But it was the longbowmen who would fight this battle. Each one was
surrounded by a wall of steel that would protect him until the last man
had fallen. Buckets of arrows sat behind each man, and beside him, a
young man, drawn from the ranks of the rebels, whose job it was to
ensure the buckets never emptied.
Tarja could feel the tension building around him as the Kariens
approached, but Jenga held off giving the order to attack. Markers had
been set up on the killing field, and the Defenders waited, discipline
overriding their apprehension as the attackers neared. The Lord
Defender did not intend to waste a single arrow. Every man knew and
understood that. The war cries of the Kariens reached them long before
they passed the markers, and still they did not move.
Jenga waited until nearly half of the Kariens were past the markers
before he finally gave the signal. The air hissed as five hundred
bowmen let their arrows fly. The raw troops advancing on them were
either too inexperienced or too blinded by the coercion laid on them by
their priests to react. More than half of them made no attempt to raise
their shields against the deadly rain. Another hiss and the sky
blackened as the next volley was loosed. More Kariens fell. More arrows
found their target. The archers kept loosing their arrows, almost at a
leisurely pace. There was no need to aim. In the confined area of the
killing field, every arrow hit something. Tarja wanted to scream at the
hapless Karien horde to do something, anything, to defend
themselves. But they simply marched on, stepping over the bodies of
their fallen comrades, walking into the arms of death as if it was
calling to them.
“Founders!†Nheal swore as he rode up beside Tarja.
“Are they brave
— or just plain stupid?â€
“You heard what Brak said about them being coerced.â€
“I’m almost at the point of believing him,â€
Nheal admitted with a
frown. Like Jenga, he had trouble dealing with the concept of magic.
“Jenga wants you to move your men to the eastern flank. He
fears the
Kariens will try to break through there.â€
Tarja nodded and turned his attention back to the battlefield as the
sound of drums reached them. The infantry were almost completely
decimated, but on their heels Karien pikemen marched — five
thousand or
more men, pikes held before them, moving forward like an implacable
spiny hedge. Tarja swore softly. These men were even less well armoured
than the first wave had been. Where were the knights? And the
Fardohnyans?
“This is going to be ugly,†Nheal remarked as he
watched them.
“I can’t understand what they hope to
achieve,†Tarja agreed. “We’ve
not lost a man, yet still they come. This is insane. Who in the
Founders’ name is in charge of the Kariens?â€
“Whoever he is, he appears to be on our side.â€
It was a poor joke, but Nheal was called away before Tarja could
tell him so. He turned back to watching the Karien pikemen as they
passed the markers and met the shower of death sent by his archers.
They kept moving forward. Nothing could stop them, short of death.
He glanced up at the sky and realised with a start that the battle
had been going on for less than an hour, if one could call it a battle.
It was more like systematic extermination. He watched as wounded
Kariens fell atop the dead and was sickened by the sight. No bloodlust
surged through him to take the edge off his sensibilities. No battle
frenzy stole away his conscience. As he turned his horse toward his
troops to move them into position he was left with nothing but a hollow
feeling of disgust.
And still they kept coming.
Tarja was waiting on the eastern flank with his
cavalry when the Fardohnyans finally joined the battle. Although Damin
had spoken of their prowess, he saw little sign of it as they charged
forward, no more careful of the hail of arrows they rode into than the
foot soldiers had been.
The sun had climbed high in the sky but shed little warmth over the
battlefield. The Fardohnyans neared the treacherous, pot-holed field
almost at the same time as the arrows hit them. Tarja had never seen
their soldiers in battle and their speed and discipline impressed him,
although their tactical stupidity left him speechless. There were half
a thousand of them perhaps, keeping to a tight formation as they rode
toward the killing ground. Tarja watched them advancing with a frown.
They wore boiled leather breastplates and metal helms, but other than
that, were unarmoured. Their raised swords caught the rising sun like
flashes of starlight in the dim morning. Their captain rode in the van,
although Tarja could make nothing of his features, except that he had
fair hair and rode well enough to be a Hythrun. They thundered forward
past the markers, but Tarja held off a moment longer, watching their
advance closely. He did not wish to risk his own mounts on that
dangerous terrain. The fair-haired Fardohnyan captain rode through the
hail as if protected by an invisible shield, and his men, those that
were still ahorse, followed him blindly. The air was filled with the
sickening squeals of wounded horses and the cries of dying men.
Damin’s
Raiders were picking off their flanks with the same careless ease they
demonstrated on the practice field shooting at melons.
“Enough of this! Charge!â€
Tarja spurred Shadow forward at a gallop and cleared the trench with
ease, coming up behind the Fardohnyans. His men followed and ploughed
into their rear with swords flashing. The Fardohnyans realised too late
that they were being taken from behind. With thrust and parry, Tarja
sliced his way though the Fardohnyans, their glazed eyes registering
little more that vague surprise as he cut them down.
It took only minutes to slash his way through to their captain. The
man turned at Tarja’s cry, his expression confused. He looked
as if he
wasn’t certain how he came to find himself in the middle of
this
battle. But he was better trained than most, and instinct took over. He
parried Tarja’s attack with unconscious ease, although he
seemed not to
have the wits about him to press home his advantage.
Tarja found himself fighting a real opponent for the first time
since entering the fray. He countered the Fardohnyan’s strike
and let
the man counter-attack, turning the blow with a flick of his wrist so
that his adversary was forced to over-correct to maintain his balance.
Tarja rammed his blade into the man’s side, through the gap in
his
leather armour as soon as he saw the opening, jerking the sword free as
the Fardohnyan cried out in agony.
The young captain let his sword slip from his hand, clutching his
side, blood spilling over his fingers as he toppled from his saddle.
Glancing around, Tarja was surprised to discover that most of the
Fardohnyans were down. Then the sound of a horn reached him: three
long, mournful notes calling the Karien retreat. They had given up, he
realised, although the decision puzzled him. They had won nothing, lost
thousands of men, and had not even tried to throw their knights into
the battle.
“Sir!â€
Tarja turned at the voice and discovered it was the Fardohnyan
captain calling to him. He dismounted and knelt down beside the man.
His wound was fatal, as Tarja knew it would be, but there was a light
of intelligence in his eyes that had been missing before. Perhaps the
shock of impending death had broken through whatever spell the priests
had laid on him.
“Captain.â€
“A . . . message,†he panted through
the pain,
speaking in heavily accented Medalonian. He was already pale from loss
of blood. He would not last much longer.
“To . . . my
sister . . .â€
“Of course,†Tarja agreed, although he had no way of
knowing who
this man was, let alone how to get a message to his sister in
Fardohnya. But the man was dying. It would not hurt to let him die
thinking his last words meant something.
“Treachery . . .†he gasped.
“Priests . . . tricked
us . . .â€
“I’ll tell her,†Tarja promised as he made
to stand up.
The man grabbed his arm with a final burst of desperate strength.
“You must . . . warn
her . . .â€
“I will,†he said soothingly. “I’ll
see if I can get a letter to
her.â€
The young captain shook his head. “No . . . warn
her . . .â€
“Warn her,†Tarja agreed. “What’s
her name?â€
The Fardohnyan closed his eyes and for a moment, Tarja thought he
was dead, but then his chest heaved and he coughed a stream of bright
blood, as his sword-pierced lung tried to cling to life. He muttered
something, a name Tarja could barely make out. He leaned closed as the
young man tried to speak with the last breath left in him.
“Adrina.â€
The name took all his remaining strength and with a gasp, the light
went out of his unusual golden eyes.
CHAPTER 28
Adrina woke to the sounds of battle. Or perhaps it
was more accurate to say the silence woke her. The Karien camp, which
was, even at its quietest, a bustling and noisy place, was ominously
still. She lay in bed for a time, listening to the silence, wondering
what it meant. As sleep gave way to wakefulness, she sat up with a
start and pushed back the heavy embroidered curtains around the bed.
“Your Highness?â€
Mikel looked up sleepily from his pallet near the brazier when he
heard her moving about. The boy had been a permanent fixture since she
had rescued him from the war council. Laetho had long replaced him as a
page, so Adrina had considerately taken him on. He adored her, although
he was obviously suffering under the misconception that she was some
sort of living saint. It suited her to let him think that. He was a
veritable fountain of information about the Medalonians and she figured
she knew more about them than any other person in the Karien camp.
The child had given her some remarkable intelligence, which she fed
the war council piecemeal to ensure her continuing presence. Sooner or
later, Cratyn was bound to give into the Dukes’ pressure to
exclude
her, agreement or no agreement. Adrina was not one for relying on
others when she could do the job better herself. If all it took to
ensure Mikel’s continuing trust was letting him think she was
the
walking embodiment of Karien holiness, then she would bestow her
blessing on him cheerfully. Besides, he reminded her of her youngest
half-brother, Kander. Sometimes it was nice to have somebody around who
loved you, just because you were you. She had actually grown quite fond
of the boy. Tamylan, with her usual lack of tact, had rudely accused
her of using him as a replacement for her lost dog.
“Mikel, go ask the guard why it’s so quiet,â€
she ordered, rubbing
the sleep from her eyes.
The boy scrambled from his pallet, pulled on his boots and
disappeared outside with a hasty bow. Adrina stretched luxuriously,
rather glad she had insisted on the huge feather bed being dragged to
the front. She could have done without the heavily embroidered star and
lightning bolt on the curtains, she thought sourly, but they did keep
out the cold. Perhaps the Overlord was looking after her. In a
roundabout, materialistic sort of way.
“They’re fighting!†Mikel burst out, running
through the tent flap,
his eyes burning with excitement. “We attacked at dawn!â€
Adrina frowned. She had been invited to no war council last night.
Nobody had mentioned attacking the Medalonians this morning.
“Fetch
Tamylan and then find us some breakfast. I want to get dressed.â€
Mikel bobbed his head and raced outside again. He obviously
considered war a grand pursuit. She wondered if he would be quite so
enthusiastic once the casualties started coming in.
Tam was quick to respond, although when she entered the tent, her
expression was grim. But she had obviously been up and about for a
while.
“They left before dawn,†Tam explained, before
Adrina could frame
the question. “Tristan and his men went with them.â€
Adrina was stunned. “Tristan? How? He’s my
captain! Cratyn
can’t order him anywhere.â€
“Vonulus came for him,†Tam told her as she helped
Adrina pull her
gown over her undershift. “I didn’t hear what he said
to Tristan, but
it was enough to get him moving. He told me to tell you he’d
report to
you tonight.â€
“What in the Seven Hells could Vonulus say to him that would
make
him follow Cratyn?†she wondered aloud.
“He didn’t say,†Tam shrugged. “With
Vonulus just outside the tent,
I don’t think he wanted to give away my presence, but all the
troops
were gathered to pray to the Overlord for hours before the
battle.â€
Adrina looked at Tam curiously. “He didn’t want to
betray you to
Vonulus? That’s remarkably considerate of him,†she
said. Tamylan
actually blushed. “Oh Tam, please tell me you’re not
falling in love
with him!â€
“Don’t be absurd!†Tam scoffed, turning
Adrina around with more
force than was absolutely necessary to lace her gown. “You
ordered me
to become his lover. I simply do as I’m told. Slaves have a
tendency to
act that way.â€
Adrina looked over her shoulder. “A duty you have carried
out with
great attention to detail, I see.â€
Tam pulled on the laces so hard, Adrina grunted. “I am your
loyal
servant, your Highness.â€
“You know my father is likely to legitimise him if he fails
to get
an heir, don’t you?†she asked. News had reached them
in Yarnarrow that
Hablet’s eighth wife had delivered another tiresome girl child.
“He’s
always been one of Hablet’s favourites and the more trouble he
gets
into, the more Father likes him. Tristan could never marry you, of
course, but you could have a very rosy future as a favoured court’esa,
if you play your hand right. Quite a step up for a slave girl.â€
“You are reading far too much into this. Tristan and
I . . . we are simply doing your bidding.â€
“Of course,†Adrina agreed with a smile.
For some reason the idea of Tristan and Tamylan falling in love made
her very happy. She loved Tam, as much as one could love a slave, and
Tristan was perhaps the only person in the world she loved
unreservedly, with no thought for what he could do for her, or she for
him. It was the curse of her birthright.
Adrina knew she was always going to be a stepping stone for others.
Every suitor Hablet had ever proposed had been a grasping fortune
hunter, although some had disguised it better than others. Cratyn had
been the first suitor who matched her for title or position, but even
he had plans to use her.
As a child, Adrina had prayed to Kalianah, the Goddess of Love, for
a man who would fall madly in love with her, not her position,
or the wealth she could bring him. She had realised the futility of her
prayers soon enough, once she understood that as Hablet’s
eldest
legitimate child, she had no equal in Fardohnya. No equal in the world
perhaps, with the exception of the younger Prince Cratyn in Karien and
the heir to the throne in far away Hythria, who was undoubtedly as
corrupt and perverted as his uncle, the High Prince Lernen. No, her
prince would never come for her, she knew. Instead, it was a grubby
line of lordlings each dreaming of the prestige attached to making her
his wife. He’d be dreaming of the wealth, the land and the
titles that
Hablet would bestow on him for taking her off his hands.
She had adroitly avoided such a fate by being a harridan.
Considering how greedy some of her would-be suitors had been it had
taken quite an effort on Adrina’s part for them to finally
decide that
no amount of money or titles could compensate them for having to live
with her. Eventually, the offers had dried up. Hablet had plenty of
other daughters who were much more amenable than the dreaded Adrina.
Until Cratyn.
Until, through her own recklessness, she had left herself vulnerable.
She sighed, pleased that at least Tam had found love. Being a
bastard gave Tristan more freedom than she had ever had. And being a
man. That annoyed her even more than the fact that every man who had
ever expressed an interest in her was looking over her shoulder at the
wealth and power that came with her hand.
“Well, I suppose I’ll just have to wait until they
get back,†she
said, taking the small stool so Tam could fix her hair. “Cratyn
has
obviously gone out of his way to prevent me being involved in this.
Would you like to make a small wager on the reaction of the guards if I
ask for my horse, so I can watch the battle?â€
“No need,†Tam replied. “They told me on the
way in that you would
be keeping to your tent today.â€
“He’ll pay for this,†she muttered. Her list
of things Cratyn was
going to pay for was growing so long that she would need to remain
married to him for a lifetime, just to make certain he suffered
sufficiently.
Mikel arrived back before Tam could offer a reply, brimming with
news at how well the battle was going. Adrina paid him little
attention. There was no way the child could know for certain. It was
his loyalty to Karien speaking, but she let him prattle on as they ate
breakfast. His mindless chatter filled the silence and kept her mind
off other things.
The day dragged on interminably. Mid-morning the Ladies Hope,
Pacifica, Grace and Chastity arrived, suggesting that they pray to the
Overlord to protect their men in battle. Adrina agreed absently. On her
knees praying to the Overlord was actually preferable to trying to
engage her ladies-in-waiting in intelligent conversation. Mikel gave
her a look that bordered on worship as she knelt. Poor child. If only
he knew she was silently asking Zegarnald to protect Tristan. And
inflict a festering wound on Cratyn, while he was at it. Preferably a
horribly disfiguring wound that offered a lingering, pain-filled
death . . .
After an hour of kneeling, conversation didn’t seem such a
bad idea
after all. She glanced around at the small circle of young women, at
their pious faces, and inwardly groaned. Gods, these girls are
pathetic!
“Ladies, perhaps we should cease our prayers for the
moment,†she
suggested. “The Overlord has a battle to watch over. I am sure
he has
heard our pleas for victory this day. I think we presume much to
distract him so.â€
The Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and Chastity agreed with her wise
words and climbed stiffly to their feet. Adrina ordered refreshments,
and as the cold sun climbed higher and higher she listened to their
boring talk of inconsequential things — while a battle raged a
few
leagues away. She could not understand how they did it.
It was late afternoon before they learnt anything useful, and the
news was not good. When the guard on the tent was changed, the
newcomers spoke of a dreadful battle, of casualties too numerous to
count. Adrina frowned, but she was unsurprised by the news. Mikel had
told her of the hours the Defenders spent training, of the extensive
earthworks the Kariens would have to breach. Defending a position was
always easier than attacking. All the Medalonians had to do was sit and
wait for the Karien forces to throw themselves over the border and pick
off the attackers at their leisure. She hoped Tristan had the sense to
stay clear of the battle. It was unlikely Cratyn would try to use her
men in battle, she reasoned. He wanted the glory of this victory for
Karien and the Overlord. It just would not do to have a bunch of
heathens do the work for him.
Just on sunset, Adrina discovered how wrong she had been. Second
Lanceman Filip, a young man assigned to her Guard, arrived at the
entrance to her tent seeking an audience. He was bloodied and
exhausted, his eyes hollow, his expression bleak. He fell to one knee,
from exhaustion as much as respect when he saw Adrina. Her heart
lurched at the sight of him. Tristan must have taken vast casualties to
send a Second Lanceman to report.
“What happened?†Fear clutched at her stomach and
her throat was dry.
“It was . . . we were slaughtered, your
Highness,†he
told her, his voice rasping with shock and fatigue. “The
Medalonians
had archers. Thousands of them. The arrows didn’t stop falling
for
hours. When they did, the rocks started falling out of the sky like
hail. The priests . . . they did something to us. It was
as if . . . we just couldn’t stop, your
Highness. It was
like . . . we’d lost our wits. We’d lost
most of the
force before we even saw a red coat, and then they took us from the
rear.â€
Adrina nodded, calling on all her reserves of strength to maintain
her regal posture. The man needed to see her strength. In truth, she
wanted to scream. “How many of the Guard were lost?â€
“There’s barely thirty of us left, your
Highness.â€
Adrina staggered. Barely thirty left! There were five
hundred men in her Guard this morning. Cold anger overwhelmed her
grief. “What exactly did the priests do, Lanceman?â€
“I couldn’t say, your Highness. We gathered on the
field . . . they prayed over us, I think. After that, it
gets a bit hazy . . . The next thing I remember for
certain was the horns sounding the retreat.â€
“Thank you, Lanceman. Go now and find some rest. I will
commend your
report to your captain.â€
The young man looked up at her with eyes full of grief.
“Captain
Tristan is dead, your Highness. He died bravely,
though . . . fighting a Medalonian.
I’m . . . I’m sorry.â€
For a moment, Adrina was numb. She felt nothing. Saw nothing. Did
nothing. But slowly, grief crept over her like a sheath of ice that
clutched at her fingers and toes and worked its way through her body
until it settled around her heart. In the background, faintly, she
heard Tam sobbing. She even had time to notice Mikel standing near the
entrance, his eyes wide with shock.
“Has Prince Cratyn returned from the battlefield?â€
she asked. Her
voice was ice wrapped in anger.
“I . . . I believe so, your Highness.â€
“You are dismissed, Lanceman. Tell the other Guards that I
will
address them later. And tell them I honour their sacrifice and share
their grief.â€
Filip rose wearily to his feet, bowed and backed out of the tent.
“Fetch my cloak, Mikel,†she said calmly. The boy
nodded and hurried
to do her bidding. Adrina did not move. Her anger was like a solid,
tangible thing. Had it been a sword, she could have killed with it.
“Your Highness?†Mikel ventured, holding out her
cloak. She took it
from him and swept it over her shoulders.
“See to it that Tam gets some hot tea, Mikel. She was very
fond of
the captain.â€
At the sound of her name, Tam looked up. She wiped her eyes and
looked at Adrina suspiciously. “Where are you going?â€
“Nowhere you need to concern yourself with.â€
“Adrina!â€
Tam’s anxious cry followed her as she strode through the
camp to the
command tent. Her grief was so overwhelming that she could not breathe,
could not think. She pushed her way into the tent, ignoring the
startled looks of Lord Roache and Lord Palen. The ice shattered as her
rage flared. She marched straight up to Cratyn, pulled him out of his
chair and delivered a stinging backhanded slap across his face.
“You unbelievable, despicable bastard!†she
screamed as he
picked himself up from the table, gingerly fingering a small trickle of
blood from the corner of his mouth. “What did you do to my
Guard? What
evil-spawned spell did your perverted priests cast on my men? You knew
what would happen to them! You and your pathetic, craven knights sat
back and waited in their damned tin suits while my brother and his men
were slaughtered like cattle!â€
Cratyn barely managed not to cower under her rage. He glanced at the
two shocked dukes, taking a step back from her before he spoke.
“The princess is distraught at the news of her
captain’s death,†he
explained warily.
Adrina’s anger turned white hot. “I’m
distraught? You
disgusting, impotent, little moron, don’t you realise what
you’ve done?â€
“In war, hard decisions are necessary, your
Highness,†Lord Roache
said. “When you’ve had time to
consider . . .â€
“Forget your stupid war! You’ve killed one of
Hablet’s sons! He was
planning to legitimise his eldest baseborn son and name him heir. You
just murdered the heir to the Fardohnyan throne!â€
Oddly, her news seemed to strengthen, rather than frighten Cratyn.
“Then it is as the Overlord wills. The heir to the Fardohnyan
throne
will be of Karien blood. A true believer.â€
“Heir! What heir? That limp dick of yours
hasn’t got
the lead to produce an heir, has it, Cretin? Is that why you want to go
to war so badly? Because a banner is the only thing you’re
capable of
raising?â€
They must have heard the rumours, but both Roache and Palen looked
startled by the news. Cratyn, she was viciously pleased to note, was
mortified that she had exposed his impotence so brutally. She would
have severed his useless organ and marched through the camp with it
mounted on a pike at that moment, had someone given her a knife.
“Your Highness! This is not an appropriate place to
discuss . . .â€
“Your precious prince’s manhood? Or rather, his lack
of it.
Don’t worry, Lord Palen, the prince’s impotence is no
longer an issue
because I am going home to Fardohnya, where I plan to inform my father
that his son was murdered by a boy prince who defied every law
the gods hold sacred by coercing his men in battle. You can forget this
damned alliance. There will be no aid, no cannon, no invasion of
southern Medalon. You’ll be lucky if Hablet doesn’t
invade Karien!â€
“Attempting to return to Fardohnya would be extremely
foolish, your
Highness,†Roache told her, his voice dangerous.
“Don’t you dare think you can threaten me, Lord
Roache,†she warned.
“I will do as I please. I will escort my brother’s body
home where he
will be laid to rest on Fardohnyan soil and my father can mourn his
loss.â€
“Guards!†Roache called. Cratyn looked afraid to
take his eyes from
her. She could not tell if her threats scared him. Did not care.
“Escort her Highness to her tent,†the Duke ordered
as soon as the
guards appeared. “She is beside herself with grief and not
aware of
what she is saying. She is not to leave her quarters unless Prince
Cratyn or I expressly order it. Is that clear?â€
The guard saluted smartly and waited for Adrina. A small worm of
sanity tunnelled through her grief reminding her of where she was. It
was only then that she realised the enormity of her error. Roache was a
very dangerous man. She had forgotten that in her anger.
“Have a care, your Highness,†he advised.
“It would be most
unfortunate if we had to advise your father that he had lost a
daughter, as well as a son.â€
CHAPTER 29
As she was escorted back to her tent, Adrina
cursed her temper. With a few careless words she had destroyed months
of hard work convincing the Kariens she had converted to their cause.
Roache’s threat was very real. Would they tell her father she
had died
of grief for her lost brother? Killed herself in despair? Blame a
disease caught in the camp?
Whatever the reason, Adrina knew she had to leave this place, and
the only hope of escape was across the border into Medalon and the
waiting army of Defenders.
Adrina stopped before she entered her tent and took a deep breath.
She wanted nothing more than to throw herself down and sob
uncontrollably for the loss of her brother. The tragedy of his death
staggered her. That such a bright light could be extinguished so easily
for the sake of Karien ambition was more than she could bear. But there
would be time to grieve for Tristan later. Now was a time for clear
thinking. She took another deep breath and entered the tent, a plan
half-formulated over the last few weeks slowly taking on a firmer shape
in her mind.
Tam and Mikel both leapt to their feet as she stepped inside.
Tam’s
eyes were red and swollen. Mikel looked very uncomfortable. He did not
know how to deal with grieving grown-ups. For a moment, Adrina wondered
if he knew how lucky he was that his brother was still a prisoner with
the Hythrun. He would not grieve tonight as she would.
“Your Highness?†he said expectantly.
Adrina looked over her shoulder rather dramatically and waved the
two of them closer. “I have just met with Prince
Cratyn,†she said in a
low, conspiratorial voice. “I have grave news.â€
“About the battle?â€
“Worse! There is a spy in the camp.â€
Tam looked at Adrina suspiciously, but Mikel’s young face
was a
portrait of shock.
“A spy!â€
“Sshh!†Adrina urged. “No one must
know!†She moved further into the
tent, to ensure they were out of hearing of the guards outside.
“It is
the reason for the massacre today. The Medalonians knew we were
coming!†As she watched Mikel lap up every word she uttered,
she had
time to think that the Medalonians would need to be blind, deaf and
completely witless not to notice an army the size of the Karien
advancing on them. “Prince Cratyn needs my help. Our
help.â€
Mikel straightened his shoulders manfully. “What does he
want us to
do, your Highness?â€
She glanced up at Tam, who was looking at her doubtfully. There
would be time to explain things later. “I have to deliver a
message to
my father, the King of Fardohnya. Prince Cratyn needs my
father’s
cannon to help him defeat the Medalonians.â€
Mikel took her at her word. “But how?â€
“We must go to Fardohnya,†she explained in a
whisper. “We must
leave tonight, while both sides are still in confusion after the
battle. We will cross into Medalon and make for the Glass River. We
should be able to secure a Fardohnyan trader to see us safely back to
Talabar from there.â€
“Shall I tell the guards to fetch your horse, your
Highness?â€
“No! Nobody must know about this, Mikel. As I said, there is
a spy
in the camp. If they learn of this mission, our lives would be in
danger!â€
“Would be in danger?†Tam asked with a short,
bitter laugh.
“I’d say they’ll be in danger anyway, traipsing
through Medalon in the
middle of a war.â€
Adrina rolled her eyes. She would never convince Mikel if Tam did
not support her. “I do this for my prince,†she
declared. “I know there
is danger, but who else can convince my father to send the cannon?
Cratyn needs my help. How can I refuse my husband?â€
Mikel laid a comforting hand on hers. “You are so brave,
your
Highness. But the Overlord will be with us.â€
“That gives me such strength,†she agreed sincerely.
“Now you must
listen to me carefully, Mikel. Prince Cratyn and I have worked out a
plan to see us safely over the border, but it needs your assistance.
Will you help me?â€
“Of course!â€
“And you must guard this secret with your life,†she
warned. “We do
not want the spy to learn of Prince Cratyn’s plans.â€
“I cannot believe that any Karien would betray his
countrymen,â€
Mikel protested.
“You have been among the enemy, Mikel. You have seen how
they can
eat away at a man’s faith. Not all the Overlord’s
subjects are as loyal
as you.†She ruffled the child’s head fondly.
“Now listen carefully.
Prince Cratyn pretended to place me under guard, so that the spy will
not note my absence. I need you to seek out a Fardohnyan Lanceman named
Filip and give him a note from me. He will see that we have horses. The
battlefield will be a busy place tonight, with both sides looking for
wounded and the camp followers picking over the dead. We should be able
to slip through unnoticed. Once we are past the battlefield, Tam and I
will pose as Hythrun court’esa returning home. Nobody
will
question us if we are careful.â€
“What’s a court’esa, your
Highness?â€
“An entertainer,†Adrina told him blandly.
“They are very popular in
Hythria and Fardohnya, so nobody should think it odd.â€
“I will protect you, anyway,†Mikel assured her.
“I’ll not let any
harm come to you, your Highness.â€
“I know, Mikel. That’s why I insisted Prince Cratyn
allow you to
accompany me. You have been in the enemy camp and you speak their
language. I cannot think of a better protector.†No need to
disillusion
the child and tell him she spoke Medalonian fluently.
Mikel swelled with pride. “The Overlord will protect us
all!â€
“I certainly hope so,†she agreed. “Now go
and find some warm
clothes. It will be cold tonight. I will write the message for Filip.
We must leave as soon as it’s dark.â€
As soon as the boy had left the tent, Tam turned on Adrina.
“Are you
mad!â€
“Probably, but it’s preferable to the alternative.
Did you pack any
of my clothes from home?â€
“I packed every stitch you own,†she grumbled
unhappily.
“Good. Find us something to wear that would pass as a court’esa’s
costume. The more bare flesh the better. Once we reach the border,
we’ll need to look the part if we are stopped by the
Hythrun.â€
“And if the Defenders stop us?â€
“Then we shall distract them with our feminine
wiles,†she said
impatiently. “Men are men, Tam. Oh! Make sure you pack my
jewellery,
too. I’m not leaving it so Cretin can sell it to finance his
damned
war.â€
“How do you intend to get out of here?â€
“I’ll wear your clothes and leave the tent on an
urgent errand for
the princess before the guard changes,†she said. “Once
the new guards
are on duty, you do the same, making sure they have instructions not to
disturb me. We’ll meet Filip and Mikel on the edge of the
camp.â€
“Do we have to take the boy?â€
“I need him to get a message to Filip and he’s been
in the
Defenders’ camp. We can leave him once we find a boat on the
Glass
River.â€
Tam still looked miserable, but Adrina thought her grief was still
too raw for her to object much. She wanted out of here as much as
Adrina did.
“We’ll never pass as court’esa, your
Highness. Even if you
could act humble enough to convince anybody you weren’t a
princess born
and bred. We have no collars. The Defenders might accept the ruse, but
no Hythrun would.â€
“We have collars,†she said. “Fetch my
jewellery box.â€
Tam did as she asked and watched curiously as Adrina unlocked the
small, beautifully carved chest. She lifted out the top tray, ignoring
the wealth that lay scattered on its velvet surface and reached into
the bottom. She lifted out two exquisitely worked necklets, one silver,
the other gold. Both were in the shape of snarling wolves, with
emerald-set eyes and a fiery line of rubies tracing their twisted
spines.
“Where did you get these?†Tam breathed in
astonishment.
“In Hythria. You remember when I visited Greenharbour? High
Prince
Lernen attended a slave auction while we were there and invited me
along for the sport. It was an awful day. He spent the whole time
complaining about the poor quality of Hythrun slaves these days, not
even bidding on them, when two of the most beautiful young men I have
ever seen were brought to the block. They were identical twins, not
more than fifteen, I suppose. Lernen took one look at them and just had
to own them. He paid a fortune for them — said he wanted to
make a gift
of them to someone, probably his nephew.
“But I knew he planned to taste the fruit before he shared
it
around. Gods, but the Wolfblades are a degenerate lot.
“Anyway, Lernen insisted they ride back to the palace with
us in his
carriage. He couldn’t take his eyes off them. As we were
climbing out
of the carriage back at the palace, one of the boys grabbed my sleeve
and begged me for help. They looked innocent enough, but they knew what
was in store for them.†Adrina hesitated for a moment, not at
all
certain she wanted to relate the rest of the tale.
“What did you do?†Tam asked.
“I gave him my knife.â€
“Gods! Did Lernen find out?â€
Adrina shook her head. “I saw them later that night at
dinner, all
powdered and primped and ripe for the plucking. They were wearing these
collars — and not much else — and Lernen was crowing
over them like a
child with a couple of new dolls to play with. The next morning they
found the boys dead in Lernen’s bed. They slit their wrists and
bled to
death beside him while he slept.â€
“That’s dreadful! Adrina, why didn’t you
tell me about this before?
If the Hythrun realised it was your knife the boys took to
Lernen’s
bed, you could have been hanged.â€
“I thought of that. I claimed I lost it before
dinner.â€
“But how did you get the collars?â€
“Lernen gave them to me. Once he’d stopped screaming
and they’d
cleaned the blood off him, he sent for me. I found him sitting in his
private courtyard just staring at the collars. They were laying there
on the edge of the fountain, still stained with the blood of the boys.
Lernen asked me to get rid of them. Told me he never wanted to see them
again. I’m not sure why I’ve kept them. Maybe to remind
me why I agree
with father when he says Hythria should be invaded and the Wolfblade
line destroyed.â€
“What about his nephew? What was his reaction?â€
“I’ve no idea,†she shrugged, fingering the
gold collar idly. “I
never met him. He probably wasn’t sober enough in the entire
month I
was there to present himself to me. I was never so glad to leave a
place as I was when I left Greenharbour. Until now. Leaving here is
going to feel even better.â€
Tam picked up the open silver collar and studied it thoughtfully.
“Where are the keys?â€
“I don’t have them. Once we put them on
they’ll have to stay there
until we get home and can have them cut off. If I can put up with it,
so can you, Tam. I’d happily cross Medalon in chains if it
means I
never have to lay eyes on Cretin again.â€
As if to prove her point she slipped the collar around her neck and
heard it faintly snick closed, as the wolf swallowed its tail. The gold
was cold against her skin, the sensation odd. She had never wondered if
court’esa objected to being collared. They were always
such
beautiful works of art. The more elaborate and expensive the collar,
the more the court’esa was worth. Tam had been born and
bred a
slave and her reluctance seemed a little strange. Perhaps being
nominally free since arriving in Karien had sparked a little rebellion
in her. “Put it on, Tam. We’re running out of
time.â€
By the time Mikel returned, Adrina had written a short note to Filip
and packed everything she planned to take with her. Considering the
style to which she was accustomed to travelling, it was a pitiful
bundle, but it contained her riding habit, her jewels and the small,
sharp Bride’s Blade. She sent the boy on his way with the note
and
changed into the costume Tam had selected. It had a thin silver bodice
and a split emerald green skirt. It left her midriff bare and pimpled
with gooseflesh in the chilly air. Over that she pulled on
Tamylan’s
high-necked grey woollen tunic, and then Tam’s serviceable
woollen
cloak. The rest of her belongings she wrapped in the linen bag Tam used
to take her laundry to the camp washerwomen. Tam was still dressing
when she left the tent with the hood of her cloak pulled up to shadow
her face. She hurried past the guards, who barely glanced at her. They
had orders to stop the Princess Adrina leaving. Nobody had mentioned a
servant hurrying off with her mistress’ laundry.
It was dark by the time she worked her way through
the camp to rendezvous with Filip. It had been the most nerve-racking
hour of her life as she stumbled over the uneven ground, around groups
of soldiers, too bloodied and exhausted to challenge her right to be
there. By the time she slipped away from the edge of the camp into the
small copse of trees where Filip should be waiting, she was afraid she
was going to be sick. Fear was not an emotion Adrina had much
experience with, and she prayed fervently to whatever god might be
listening that she would not experience it again for a long, long time.
“Your Highness?†Filip’s voice was a
questioning whisper. She
followed the sound and was relived to find Mikel waiting with the young
Lanceman, his eyes burning with the excitement of his adventure.
“You’ve done well, Lanceman,†she said as
she made out the three
dark shadows picking at the sparse dry grass between the trees.
“Mikel,
go and keep an eye out for Tam.†The boy dutifully scurried off
and
left her alone with Filip.
“You are leaving, your Highness?†Filip asked as he
led the horses
forward. It was hard to tell from his tone whether he approved of the
idea or not.
“I’ll not be a party to this monstrous slaughter any
longer,†she
told him. “Fardohnya has shed enough blood to satisfy the
Kariens.â€
“And what of the Guard, your Highness? When the Kariens
discover you
are missing . . .†He did not need to finish the
sentence. She knew their fate as well as he did.
“I want you to cross the border tonight. Take every
Fardohnyan in
the camp with you who is still breathing. If they can’t ride,
tie them
to their saddles. When you reach Medalon, surrender to the
Defenders.â€
“Surrender?†Filip sounded horrified, but it
was hard to make
out his expression in the darkness.
“The Defenders will keep you prisoner for a time, but I
doubt
they’ll harm you. And you’ll eat far better there as a
prisoner than as
a free man on this side of the border. Tell them your religious beliefs
prevent you from taking part in any further fighting. The Defenders
have little experience with the gods. They should believe you.â€
“And what if it is the Hythrun who find us first?â€
“Then tell them Zegarnald ordered you to surrender,â€
she told him
impatiently.
“The War God would never —â€
“It doesn’t matter, Filip,†she snapped.
“Just get your men away. I
would rather have you alive and in the custody of the enemy than put to
death by Cretin because I ran away. Do this for me and I will see every
one of you rewarded when we get back to Fardohnya.â€
“As you command, your Highness.†He sounded
reluctant, but there was
little more she could do. If they chose to disobey her, that was their
decision.
She turned sharply at the sound of scuffing feet and was relieved to
find Mikel returning with Tam. As the Karien boy watched in amazement,
she shed the cloak and tunic to reveal the Fardohnyan costume
underneath. Shivering so hard her teeth were chattering, she pulled out
the fur-lined cloak and wrapped herself in it with relief. Tam shed her
own woollen tunic to reveal a costume almost as decorative and just as
flimsy as Adrina’s.
They were court’esa now, and the collar felt cold
against
her skin as she swung into the saddle and turned her mount south toward
Medalon.
CHAPTER 30
Adrina’s escape from the Karien camp
proved
surprisingly easy. The troops were either too stunned or too tired to
challenge them, and it was doubtful Cratyn had even thought to post
sentries. They rode across the no-man’s land between the camp
and the
border without incident, chilly starlight illuminating their path.
From a distance, the battlefield looked like a surreal, alien
landscape. Dark humps littered the ground as far as the eye could see,
as if mad sappers had tunnelled the field, leaving countless mounds of
black earth in their wake. It was only as they drew nearer that Adrina
realised they were bodies, thousands of them, scattered across the
landscape like discarded, broken dolls.
The smell hit them even before they reached the fallen soldiers. The
heavy stench of blood and excrement hung in the still air, making her
gag. Shadowy figures moved among the corpses. Men looking for fallen
companions, camp followers looking for loot, women searching out
missing loved ones, grim-faced Defenders seeking dying horses, ending
their suffering with a quick sword thrust. Others searched for living
bodies, friend and foe alike, for the life they might save or the
hostage they might take. Huge bonfires on the far side of the
battlefield threw a pall of black smoke over the whole nightmarish
vista.
“We’ll have to lead the horses,†Adrina said
as they reached they
first of the fallen Kariens. “We can’t ride through
this.â€
Tamylan and Mikel complied silently and they began to pick their way
forward, holding cloaks across their faces against the smell. The
ground was treacherous, pockmarked with deep holes, dead soldiers and
broken horses. There was not a red coat among them. The Defenders had
either taken few casualties or their wounded had already been removed.
The battlefield covered a vast area. As they doggedly trudged on,
hour after hour, Adrina began to wonder if it would never end. She
stumbled along and tried not to think about the death surrounding her,
or the grief that she had damned up inside for a time when she would
have the luxury of giving it voice. Instead she pressed on, thinking
only of placing one foot in front of the other, ignoring the soldiers
who reached out to her, crying for help, or the lifeless eyes that
stared accusingly at her as she passed by. This was not her war. It was
not her fault.
The night went on forever and the smoke grew thicker as they neared
the bonfires. Mikel was yawning, wiping streaming eyes, when Tamylan
suddenly gasped. Adrina looked back and discovered the slave had
stopped walking. She was staring at the fires, her expression horrified.
“What’s wrong?â€
“They’re burning the dead!â€
She had heard of the barbaric Medalonian practice of cremation, but
had never seen it practised. The sight disgusted her. But she needed to
be strong. Their survival depended on it.
“There are too many men to bury, Tam. Anyway, what do you
care if
they cremate a few Karien corpses?â€
“It’s not right!â€
“No, but neither is it our concern. Now keep moving.â€
Adrina tugged her horse forward and did not look back to see if
Tamylan was following.
Sometime later, they reached the first Fardohnyan corpse. It was a
young man with vaguely familiar features, although Adrina could not put
a name to him. He lay on his back, his foot still trapped in the
stirrup of his dead horse who had fallen beside him. A long, red
fletched arrow was embedded in his boiled-leather breastplate. His eyes
were wide open and he stared at the sky, as if engrossed in the strange
constellations of the northern sky.
“Oh, gods!†Tamylan breathed as she drew level with
Adrina. “Lien
Korvo.â€
“Was that his name? I didn’t know. I hardly knew any
of them.â€
“And yet they died for you.â€
Adrina looked up sharply. “They didn’t die for me,
Tam. They died
for Cratyn. A debt I intend to make him pay.â€
Tamylan looked around with a shake of her head. “If we
survive this.â€
“We’ll survive.â€
“The Overlord will watch over us,†Mikel added.
Adrina resisted the temptation to turn on the boy. If this was the
Overlord’s work, she wanted no part of it. But she needed the
child.
They still had to get past the Defender’s camp, and he knew its
layout.
“I’m sure he is, Mikel. Come on. We have to keep
on.â€
The closer they came to the edge of the field, the more Fardohnyan
bodies they encountered. Adrina did not look at them, afraid of what
she would see, afraid of who she would find. Tristan was here, lying
dead on this foreign plain, killed by a godless Defender. Her anger
increased with each step, divided equally between the Kariens, who had
condemned her brother to death, and the Medalonians, who had carried
out the sentence. She would have vengeance for this slaughter, although
how or when she did not know. But one day, she vowed, Karien, Medalon
and even Hythria, would pay for the life of her brother and those of
her Guard.
“Here! What are you after?â€
Adrina stopped and turned her head toward the voice. It was a
red-coated Defender although, as she knew nothing of their insignia,
she did not know if he was a private or a commandant.
“We were just looking for loot,†she said, in her
best Medalonian.
“A girl has to look out for herself, y’know!â€
“Who are you? What are your names?†the man
demanded. He peered at
them suspiciously.
“We’re court’esa. From Hythria. I am
Adrina, and this is
Tamylan. The boy is our servant.â€
“Aye, I’ve heard of your kind. Fancy whores is all
you are,†he
said, sounding a little disgusted. The man stared at the jewelled
collar. “I’d have thought that trinket ’round
your neck would be enough
for you, without you needing to loot the dead, as well.â€
“Don’t you touch her!†Mikel cried as the
Defender reached out to
touch the collar. Adrina could have slapped the child. Now was not the
time for bravado.
The Defender laughed sourly but made no move to come any closer.
“Quite a bodyguard you ladies have. Now clear off! Lord Jenga
has
ordered all the looters off the field.â€
“Don’t worry, sir, that’s exactly what we
planned to do.â€
The Defender nodded and watched them as they pulled their mounts
forward. Mikel glared at the man defiantly, but held his tongue.
Adrina’s heart was pounding as they walked away, expecting him
to call
them back. She risked a glance over her shoulder and discovered the man
had moved away towards another group of looters. She let out a breath
she had not realised she was holding and glanced down at Mikel.
“That was very noble and very foolish. In future, try to
curb your
enthusiasm for protecting me.â€
“But your Highness, I —â€
“Don’t call me that!†she hissed.
“You must call me Adrina. At least
until we are away from here. We are trying to be inconspicuous!â€
“I’m sorry, your . . .
Adrina.â€
“That’s all right. Just be on your guard.â€
“Seems a bit rough,†Tamylan said, as she trudged
along beside
Adrina.
“What do you mean?â€
“You just told an enemy officer your real name, yet you
chastise the
boy for trying to protect you.â€
Adrina stared at the slave for a moment, not sure what surprised her
most — Tam’s blatant criticism or the fact that she
could have been so
stupid.
“I never thought . . .â€
“Not thinking is what got us into this mess,†Tam
pointed out
grumpily. “First you don’t think if you can sail a
ship. Then you don’t
think about threatening the Karien Crown Prince. Then you drag us
across a battlefield in the dead of night —â€
“That will be enough, Tamylan. You forget yourself.â€
“Not as often as you do,†the slave muttered under
her breath, but
loud enough that Adrina could hear her.
It was almost dawn by the time they passed the
last of the bodies, but Adrina’s relief was short lived. At
least the
men on the battlefield had been mostly dead. Now they would have to get
through the Defenders and the Hythrun who were alive and on their guard.
They swung into their saddles and moved off toward the scattered
crowd heading away from the field. With luck, they could mingle with
the other camp followers and go unobserved. A few people glanced at
them enviously. They were mounted on Fardohnyan horses, but Adrina had
decided she would claim they had rescued the beasts from the
battlefield if they were challenged.
Daylight finally turned the sky the colour of pewter as Adrina and
her companions left the battleground behind. They rode at a shambling
pace amidst the looters and the walking wounded, tired, hungry, thirsty
and emotionally drained. The war camp and the tent city lay before
them, and beyond that, another two or more weeks to the Glass River.
Perhaps there, with luck, a Fardohnyan trader would be waiting, making
the most of the profits of this war, before Hablet joined the fray and
turned them into enemies.
Nobody challenged them, or even cared about them, it seemed. The
only time anything caught the interest of the people around them was
when a man and a woman galloped past on glorious golden horses. Both
were tall in the saddle and rode with the ease of those born to ride.
The young woman wore dark leathers, much as the old tapestries depicted
the Harshini. She had a thick long braid of dark red hair, and both she
and her companion wore grim expressions. At their passing, several
civilians fell to their knees, but the pair did not notice.
She looked at Mikel, who was on the verge of falling asleep in his
saddle.
“Mikel, do you know who they are?â€
“Who, your . . . Adrina?â€
“That man and woman who just rode by.â€
Mikel looked in the direction of the rapidly dwindling figures of
the horses and shook his head. “I’m sorry,
your . . .
Adrina. I didn’t see.â€
“No matter.â€
Adrina put the pair out of her mind and allowed herself one glance
over her shoulder before fixing her eyes forward. She did not need to
be reminded of the past hours. The images of the battlefield would stay
with her forever.
CHAPTER 31
In the cold morning light, Damin Wolfblade
surveyed with disgust the carnage that was the remnants of their first
serious engagement with the Kariens. It was not what he expected at
all. The air stank of smoke and death. Even the sky was grey with low,
sullen clouds that gazed with disapproval over the battlefield. Like
Tarja, he had never faced a battle on such a scale, and the aftermath
left him strangely unsettled. Although he could not fault the tactics
of the Defenders, this had not been a real battle. It was like killing
cattle in a corral. There had been no opportunity for personal glory,
no chance to fight for the honour of the War God. He had lost one man
to injury and that through a fall. The Defenders had lost a dozen men
and perhaps fifty were injured. It had been a thoroughly unsatisfying
affair.
Lord Jenga was well pleased, though. He had faced down a numerically
superior enemy and not just prevailed, he had triumphed. The Defenders
were in a buoyant mood. The Kariens were decimated, the Fardohnyan
contingent destroyed. Of course, the Kariens still had countless men to
throw at them, but they might think twice before launching such a
suicidal frontal assault again.
Damin suspected the reason for the victory lay as much with the
coercion laid on the enemy by their own priests, as with the brilliance
of the Medalonian defence. Even when the odds were hopeless, the
Kariens did not have the wits about them to retreat. All they could do
was keep moving forward into the arms of certain death.
“My Lord.â€
Damin turned to his captain wearily. He had not slept in two days
and it was starting to tell on him. “What is it,
Almodavar?â€
“Lord Jenga wishes to see you. There’s some
disagreement over your
orders regarding the Fardohnyans.â€
Damin nodded, not surprised by the news. He turned his mount and
rode toward the command pavilion at a canter. The sooner this was
sorted out, the better.
“Lord Wolfblade, is it true you ordered the Fardohnyans
buried?â€
Jenga demanded as soon as he appeared in the entrance. The tent was
crowded with Defenders, most of them congratulating themselves over
their victory.
“I did. They are pagans, my Lord. It is sacrilege for them
to be
cremated. You may do as you wish with the Kariens, but the Fardohnyans
deserve better.â€
“They fought with the Kariens,†Jenga retorted.
“They deserve
nothing. In any case, I’ve not the men or the time to spare
burying
anyone. I’ll have an epidemic on my hands if that field
isn’t cleared
soon.â€
“Then my men will bury them, my Lord. And I’ve no
doubt there are
plenty of pagans in your camp who would aid us.â€
Jenga snorted something unintelligible and turned to an officer
seeking his signature. He signed the document before turning back to
Damin.
“Very well, bury them if you must. I’ve broken
enough laws lately
for another to mean little. But do it away from here. And don’t
use my
Defenders. Not that there are many who would countenance such a
barbaric practice.â€
“Your respect for our religious customs is touching, my
Lord.â€
Jenga frowned but did not reply. Annoyed, Damin strode from the
tent. His men had fought as long and hard as the Defenders. They would
not be pleased with an order to bury nearly five hundred Fardohnyans in
this cold, hard ground.
“Damin!â€
He stopped and waited as R’shiel caught up to him, surprised
to find
her here. He had expected her and Brak to be long gone. “I
heard what
you said to Lord Jenga. You did the right thing.â€
“Then perhaps you could persuade him to lend me some
assistance.â€
“I doubt it. Burial is outlawed in Medalon, Damin.
You’re lucky he
agreed at all.â€
“I know. But sometimes I wonder about this alliance. I have
more in
common with the Fardohnyans and the Kariens than I do with these
people. Were it not for the gods . . .â€
“Were it not for the gods, none of us would be in this
mess,†she
finished with a frown.
Not sure what she meant, Damin shrugged. “You would know
better than
I, demon child.â€
“Please don’t call me that.â€
“I’m sorry. Although I’m a little surprised
to see you here. I
understood you were leaving for the Citadel.â€
“I’m looking for Tarja to say goodbye. Brak and I
are leaving this
morning.â€
“With Garet Warner?â€
She nodded. “You don’t like him much, do
you?â€
“Not in the least. Nor do I trust him. Be careful,
R’shiel.â€
She slipped her arm through his companionably and walked with him.
Damin found her easy familiarity disconcerting. This girl was a living
legend; the embodiment of a myth he had grown up with. He had never
expected to find himself counted among the demon child’s
friends. When
they reached his horse R’shiel let go of his arm and patted the
stallion fondly.
“What’s he thinking?†Damin asked curiously.
“He’s thinking it’s too cold to be standing
around gossiping. He
wants his breakfast.â€
“So do I.â€
She looked at him with a shake of her head. “How can you
even think
of food, at a time like this?â€
“Armies fight on their stomachs, R’shiel. Starving
myself won’t
bring anybody back to life.â€
“I feel sick just thinking about it.â€
Before he could answer her a Defender lieutenant approached them,
saluting Damin smartly before turning to R’shiel. His uniform
was
grubby and soot-stained from a night collecting and burning the dead.
“Captain Tenragan said to ask you to wait for him, my Lady.
He’ll be
along once he’s taken care of the last of the looters.â€
“He’s wasting his time,†Damin remarked.
“Looters and war go
together like sand and sea.â€
The young lieutenant drew himself up and glared at him. “I
understand it’s a common practice in Hythria, my Lord. Even
your court’esa
aren’t above it. In Medalon, however, such a practice is
considered to
be barbaric and disrespectful.â€
“This from a man who burns his dead,†Damin
muttered, then he
glanced at the young man curiously. “What makes you say my court’esa
aren’t above it? There are no court’esa
here.â€
“Perhaps they belong to one of your men, sir, but I stopped
two of
them last night. Laden down with bundles of loot they were. All dressed
up too, with those jewelled collars and dresses that left nothing to
the imagination.â€
“No man of mine could afford court’esa like
that. Are you
certain?â€
“Aye. I spent time on the southern border. I’ve seen
them before.
There was no mistaking them.â€
R’shiel looked at him expectantly as he pondered the news.
“What’s
the matter?â€
“Probably nothing. Did you get their names, Lieutenant?
Where they
were from?â€
The man thought for a moment. “One was called Tam-something,
I
think. The other one said her name was Madina, or something like that.
I didn’t really take much notice of them once they moved
on . . .â€
“Which way were they headed?â€
“South, with everyone else, I suppose.â€
“Of course. Thank you, Lieutenant.â€
He saluted again and headed toward the command pavilion.
“What’s bothering you, Damin?â€
R’shiel asked with a faint smile.
“That there were Hythrun court’esa looting the
battlefield, or
that you don’t own them?â€
“I just seems a bit strange, that’s all. Court’esa
as
valuable as that don’t roam battlefields unescorted.â€
“What’s all this about court’esa?â€
Tarja remarked as he
walked up beside R’shiel. His eyes were bloodshot, no doubt
from
supervising the funeral pyres through the night, and his shoulders were
slumped with fatigue. Damin wondered for a moment if he looked as
haggard.
“One of your men stopped two court’esa
looting the
battlefield last night. Hythrun court’esa, complete
with court
collars, he claims.â€
“You didn’t bring any court’esa to
the front, did you?â€
Tarja asked.
“No.†He shrugged. “It’s probably
just your men confusing some
whores from the followers’ camp. Besides,†he added
with a laugh. “What
self-respecting court’esa would call herself Madina?
They
usually give themselves far more exotic names.â€
“Assuming he got the name right,†R’shiel
added. “She could have
said her name was Adrina, for all we know.â€
Tarja’s eyes narrowed.
“Adrina . . . . Damn!â€
“What?â€
“The Fardohnyan captain I faced yesterday. He begged me with
his
dying breath to warn his sister that they’d been betrayed. In
the heat
of battle, it never occurred to me . . .â€
“What are you talking about?†R’shiel asked
impatiently.
“Let me guess,†Damin said. “His
sister’s name was Adrina?â€
Tarja nodded. R’shiel looked first at Tarja and then Damin
with
growing annoyance. “So?â€
“Hablet’s bastards are usually sent to serve in the
army as officers
once they’re old enough,†Damin explained.
“So Tarja killed one of Hablet’s bastards?â€
she said, throwing her
hands up. “What of it? This is war.â€
“He wanted me to warn Adrina that they’d been
betrayed,†Tarja
reminded her.
Damin glanced at R’shiel then turned to Tarja with a frown.
“And
suddenly there are two court’esa crossing the
battlefield from
Karien? Something bothers me about this. I think we should look into
it.â€
Tarja nodded thoughtfully. “Perhaps we should, at that. If
Adrina is
attempting to send a message back to her father, and she thinks the
Kariens have betrayed her, she couldn’t risk sending the
message by
normal means.â€
“Well, that’s nice!†R’shiel
declared. “You ask me to wait around so
you can say goodbye, then as soon as my back is turned, you’re
off
chasing a couple of floozies in see-through dresses on the off-chance
they’re Fardohnyan spies.â€
With a tired smile, Tarja put his arm around her and pulled her
close. “I’m only going along to keep Damin out of
trouble.â€
“I think you need someone to keep you both out of
trouble!†she
complained unhappily. “You look terrible, by the way. Both of
you.â€
“Speaking of trouble, here comes your watchdog,â€
Damin warned, as
Brak strode across the field toward them.
R’shiel glanced at the approaching figure and then turned to
Tarja.
“I have to go. Promise me you’ll take care.â€
“I’ll take about as much care as you will,
R’shiel,†he said, so
softly Damin could barely make out the words. Damin turned away, to
give them at least the illusion of privacy.
“It’s time we were gone, R’shiel,â€
Brak said when he reached them.
R’shiel drew away from Tarja with some reluctance.
“I know.â€
“Keep her safe, Brak, or you’ll have me to answer
to.â€
The Harshini laughed sourly. “You, Tarja? There’s
more than a few
gods who I’d have at me, if I let anything happen to the demon
child.
You’d have to line up for a chance at what was left of me,
I’m afraid.â€
R’shiel frowned. “I wish you would all stop treating
me like a
fragile doll. I can take care of myself, you know.â€
“He’s knows that, R’shiel. Go and save us
all from the Sisterhood,
while we stay here and skewer Kariens like fish in a barrel, and when
you get back we can all tell each other what heroes we’ve
been.â€
She smiled at Damin and leaned forward, kissing his cheek lightly.
“You are just as bad as he is. You take care of yourself, too.
And
don’t go leading him astray when you find your court’esa.
The
captain is already spoken for.â€
“What court’esa?â€
“Don’t ask, Brak. Let’s just get out of here
before Garet decides to
leave without us.â€
With a final kiss for Tarja and a wave for Damin, R’shiel
followed
Brak to the horses he had waiting for them. He glanced at Tarja.
“Don’t worry. She is the demon child. She has forces
watching over
her that you cannot imagine.â€
Tarja nodded and seemed to force himself to shrug off his
apprehension.
“I’m not worried. Anyway, I thought we were going to
investigate
some floozy in a see-through dress?â€
Damin nodded and swung into his saddle. “Meet me by the
fletchers’
tent. I have to see about burying some Fardohnyans first, then
we’ll
find out what two very expensive court’esa were doing
looting a
battlefield full of dead Kariens in the middle of the night.â€
CHAPTER 32
“What time is it, Tam?â€
The slave looked up at the heavy, overcast sky and shrugged.
“Breakfast time.â€
Adrina’s tummy rumbled in agreement. She was rather
disgusted that
she had not thought to ask Filip to pack any food. Adrina had never had
to worry about where her next meal was coming from. It had not occurred
to her to think of such mundane things when she planned her desperate
flight from Karien. Perhaps when they reached the tents of the camp
followers, there would be a stall or a tavern where they could purchase
a meal. And supplies for the journey south. As she rode, Adrina tried
to calculate what they might need and what it would cost, but she
really had no idea. She had never had to buy her own food, either.
They had made little progress since leaving the battlefield, hemmed
in as they were by the other travellers on the makeshift road. Adrina
fretted at the delay, but knew the crowd was her best protection. Among
these peasants she was just another looter returning home from a long
night robbing the dead. Once they reached the followers’ camp
and had
equipped themselves for their journey, they could make up for lost time.
She wondered if Cratyn had discovered her missing yet. Even if he
had, she realised with some relief that she was safe from him now. He
could not follow her into Medalon, and would not suspect it had been
her destination, in any case. More likely he would send troops
searching the road back toward Yarnarrow. By the time he realised where
she was, she would be in Cauthside, perhaps even on a boat, sailing the
Glass River south for home. The knowledge invigorated her and some of
her exhaustion fell away.
She was free of Karien. Nothing would ever entice her to go back.
Adrina glanced at Tamylan and smiled encouragingly. Mikel slept in
her arms and Adrina led his riderless horse. The poor child was
exhausted and Tamylan had offered to hold him while he slept, for fear
he would fall from his saddle.
Adrina was not certain what to do with the child. He was a sweet
boy, but he was so fanatically devoted to his damned Overlord, he was
liable to do anything. She felt a twinge of guilt over her plans to
abandon him. Perhaps she could find some Medalonian peasant who would
take him in. She could pay for his keep — she had enough
jewellery on
her to buy him a commission in the Defenders, for that matter.
The thunder of hooves brought her out of her musing and she glanced
over her shoulder as a dozen Hythrun Raiders rode by them with a
red-coated Defender in the lead. Probably off to celebrate their victory, she thought sourly.
A little further on the riders slowed and then wheeled their mounts
around, heading back the way they came. With a stab of apprehension,
Adrina stared steadfastly forward, as if by refusing to look at them
they would not notice her.
At a sharp command the Raiders reined in beside her, expertly
cutting her and Tamylan out of the crowd. With no choice but to do as
they indicated, she turned her mount off the road to confront the
Defender and a grubby, unshaven Raider who wore nothing to indicate his
rank.
“Ladies,†the Hythrun said as they approached.
“What a pleasure to
find members of your profession out here.â€
Adrina glared at him with all the withering scorn she could muster,
which was considerable. “Don’t even presume to
think I would
entertain the likes of you!â€
The man seemed more amused than offended by her answer. “Why
not? We
have plenty of money. And that is what you’re doing out
here,
isn’t it? Looking for financial advancement? There’s a
dozen of us
here, and at, say ten rivets a turn, you could make quite a tidy
sum.â€
Adrina flushed angrily, not certain what insulted her most —
that
this barbarian would dare proposition her, or that he would offer a
measly ten rivets for the privilege.
“How dare you!â€
“Adrina,†Tamylan hissed beside her,
warningly. Mikel stirred
sleepily.
“My deepest apologies, madam. Fifteen rivets, then, although
for
that price, you’d better be good.†The dark-haired
Defender who rode at
the Hythrun’s side seemed to find the exchange highly
entertaining.
Adrina forced her temper down. She had to talk her way out of this.
Adopting an air of extreme disdain, she looked down her nose at the
Hythrun and the Defender, both of whom would have benefited
considerably from a bath.
“Fifteen, or fifty rivets, it makes no difference, sir. I am
a bound
court’esa. I am not at liberty to accommodate you. As
you can
see, I wear a collar.â€
“So you do,†the Hythrun said, as if noticing it for
the first time.
“A wolf collar, at that. Am I to understand that you are the
property
of House Wolfblade?â€
“Naturally,†Adrina agreed, with a bad feeling it
was a mistake to
admit such a thing. These mercenaries worked for House Wolfblade. They
might take such an admission as proof that they were entitled to her
services.
“I don’t recall Lord Wolfblade bringing any court’esa
to the
front, do you, Captain?â€
“I’m sure I would have noticed,†the
Defender agreed laconically.
“Perhaps we should take them to him?â€
Adrina blanched at the thought. She did not want anything to do with
Lernen Wolfblade’s degenerate nephew. “No thank you. We
can find our
own way.â€
Mikel woke and wiggled around in Tamylan’s arms to stare
open-mouthed at the Hythrun surrounding them. Adrina threw him a
warning glance, hoping the child would have the sense to remain silent.
“But we insist,†the Hythrun said, with a dangerous
smile. “Lord
Wolfblade will be most anxious to see you. He’s been a long
time out
here in the field and these Medalonian women are all dogs.â€
“My Lady . . .†Mikel whispered
urgently. She ignored
him.
“Thank you, but no. Now get away with you! I’m sure
Lord Wolfblade
didn’t send you out here to harass innocent people going about
their
business. I will be speaking to him about this, I can assure
you!â€
“Your Highness!†Mikel’s whisper was
verging on
panic-stricken.
“You know his lordship then?†the captain asked.
“Of course, you fool! Now get out of my way or Lord
Wolfblade will
have you whipped!†Adrina did not know if that was the case,
but it
seemed a fair assumption, based on what she knew of the family.
“Your Highness! That is Lord Wolfblade!â€
Mikel cried.
Adrina suddenly felt faint.
Her mouth went dry as Damin Wolfblade rode up beside her, so close
his stirrup touched hers. He was nothing like the powdered courtier she
imagined. He was big and dirty and unshaven and looked meaner than King
Jasnoff’s most vicious hunting hound.
For a fleeting moment, she wished she had never left Karien.
Damin Wolfblade looked at her closely. He did not look surprised to
discover her identity. She realised with despair that they had
suspected all along who she was. That nonsense about ten rivets a turn
was obviously his misguided idea of a joke.
“Your Highness.†He bowed with surprising grace, but
it was the
short bow of an equal, not a mere Warlord greeting a royal princess.
“Lord Wolfblade.†Adrina marvelled at how steady she
sounded.
“Tarja, allow me to introduce Her Serene Highness, Princess
Adrina
of Fardohnya, or is it Her Royal Highness, Princess Adrina of Karien,
these days? It’s so hard to keep track of these things.â€
“Move away from me, sir,†she said in a voice that
was colder than
the Fourth Hell.
Wolfblade smiled. “What do you think, Tarja? Will we get
more by
selling her back to the Kariens or her father?â€
“I’ll kill you if you touch her!†Mikel
screamed.
“You!†The Defender glared at the child and
Mikel cowered
under his scrutiny. “Founders, how did you get here, boy? I
thought
we’d seen the last of you!â€
“You coward! How dare you pick on a helpless child! As for
you,†she
added witheringly to the Warlord, “I refuse to be your
hostage!â€
“You refuse to be my hostage? I don’t recall
asking your
permission, your Highness.â€
“Don’t take that tone with me, sir. I am a
Fardohnyan princess of
royal blood!â€
“Quite a step up from a court’esa,â€
the Defender remarked,
not in the least impressed by her declaration.
This was not going well at all. She could not afford to be a
hostage. The first thing they would do was send a message to Cratyn
demanding the gods alone knew what in return for her release. At that
moment, Adrina did not care if the war raged on for another hundred
years.
She was not going back to Karien.
“I refuse to be your hostage, my Lord, because I am seeking
asylum,â€
she announced, the plan formulating in her mind as she spoke.
The Warlord made no effort to hide his astonishment, or his
disbelief. “Asylum?â€
“But, your Highness . . .â€
Mikel began with a
horrified gasp.
“Be quiet, child!â€
“You expect me to believe you are running away?â€
“I am not running away, my Lord, I am altering the
terms of
the Karien-Fardohnyan Treaty. The Kariens have not kept their side of
the bargain, therefore I do not feel compelled to keep mine.â€
“I’d call that running away,†Tarja chuckled.
Damin Wolfblade shook his head, clearly not believing a word she
said. “And what is it you want in return for asylum, your
Highness?â€
“Safe passage to Fardohnya in a manner befitting my
station.â€
“Is that all?†Tarja asked with a sceptical
laugh.
“Safe passage to Fardohnya? So you can get together with
your father
and stir up even more trouble? I don’t think so, your Highness.
Do we
look that foolish?â€
“You question my word, sir? How dare you! I am a
princess!â€
“You’re Hablet’s daughter,†he
corrected. “That makes every word you
utter suspect.â€
She was going to have to put this man in his place, sooner rather
than later. “I will not sit here and be insulted by a
barbarian! I
insist you take me to the Lord Defender this minute, so that I may
present my case to someone with a better understanding of protocol than
a savage, such as yourself!â€
Damin Wolfblade laughed at her. Adrina loftily ignored him and
turned to Tarja Tenragan.
“The boy is under my protection and so is my slave. They
will remain
with me, so that I may have some basic level of service. You will agree
to consult me regarding any offer of ransom made on my behalf. And
under no circumstances, will I agree to return to Karien. Is that quite
clear?â€
Her list of demands seemed to startle him. Wolfblade exchanged a
glance with the Medalonian before turning to her. “You may keep
your
slave, your Highness. As for the boy, his fate will be up to Captain
Tenragan.â€
“And the rest of my demands?â€
The Warlord laughed. “Demands? You are our prisoner,
your
Highness. You’re not at liberty to make demands. But
I’ll promise you
one thing. Give us any trouble at all, and I will see that you learn
what it is to wear the collar of a bound court’esa. Is that
quite clear?†He turned his horse away from her before she
could frame
a suitable retort. “Put the boy on his own horse. He’s
old enough to
ride without a nursemaid.â€
A Raider rode forward and snatched Mikel from Tamylan’s
arms. Other
hands took the reins of her mount, leaving her nothing to do but cling
to the pommel as, surrounded by the Hythrun, she rode toward a
crumbling ruin that must be their command post.
Adrina chewed on her bottom lip and wondered if she’d done
the right
thing, admitting she was trying to get home. Damin Wolfblade clearly
did not believe her, but Tarja Tenragan was hard to read. Perhaps he
would champion her cause? Surely the Medalonians would see the benefit
in letting her go? Her arrival in Talabar was bound to destroy the
treaty.
On the other hand, returning her to Karien would be almost as
effective. They could demand any number of concessions from Cratyn. She
stared at the backs of the two men in whose hands her fate now rested,
and realised her only protection lay in making them want to
shield her from Cratyn’s wrath.
Adrina realised that she was going to have to change her tune.
She was going to have to be nice.
She wondered, for a moment, if she remembered how.
CHAPTER 33
“What in the name of the Founders are we
supposed
to do with her?â€
Jenga paced the hall, hands clasped behind his back, his brow
furrowed with concern. He had hoped for sleep on his return to the
Keep. He had not planned on the discovery that Tarja and Damin had
captured a court’esa who turned out to be the Crown
Princess of
Karien.
“My suggestion is that whatever you do, you do it quickly.
You don’t
want her around causing trouble, my Lord, and believe me, she will
cause trouble.†Damin spoke from the heart, never more certain
of
anything.
“She’s well guarded,†Tarja pointed out.
Damin laughed sceptically. “Then make sure you change them
often. In
a week, she’ll have every man she comes in contact with eating
out of
her hand. A week after that they’ll be helping her escape.
It’s a good
thing we searched her saddlebags. There’s enough here to buy
more than
a few men’s souls.†He glanced at the fortune in
jewellery scattered on
the rough wooden table. The blue diamond alone would feed a small
village for a year.
“You claimed she was a shrew,†Jenga said, stopping
his pacing for a
moment to glance at the gems. The torches painted dark shadows over his
lined face.
“She is,†Damin agreed. “But she’s
also as sharp as a new sword. Now
we’ve deprived her of her purchasing power, she’ll
resort to more
direct methods. She’s court’esa trained. That
may not mean much
here in Medalon, but trust me, it makes her more dangerous than you can
possibly imagine.â€
“What do you mean, court’esa
trained?†Tarja asked. “She’s a
princess.â€
“Your definition of a court’esa and ours is
very different,
Tarja. What you call court’esa in Medalon are merely
common
whores. In Fardohnya and Hythria, they are highly trained specialists,
worth a small fortune to those who can afford them. Adrina was probably
given her first one around the age of sixteen. He would have been a
skilled musician, an artist maybe or a linguist. But first and
foremost, his job would have been to make Adrina more valuable as a
wife by teaching her the art of giving pleasure in the marriage
bed.â€
“So our princess is a whore?†Tarja asked with a
grin.
Damin shook his head impatiently. “You’re missing
the point. She’s
Hablet’s daughter. She’s been trained by the very best
and if she
thinks it will help her cause, she’ll use every skill at her
disposal
to get her own way. And in case you hadn’t noticed,
she’s not exactly
hard to look at. If you don’t believe me, go up there now and
spend an
hour in her company.â€
“No thanks, I’ve seen all of Her Serene Highness I
want to.â€
“You two can argue the lady’s finer points some
other time,†Jenga
snapped. “Right now, I have to decide what to do with
her.â€
“We could ransom her back to Cratyn,†Tarja
suggested. “Surely he
will sue for peace if it means the return of his wife.â€
“I’m not so sure,†Damin said with a shake
of his head. “She seemed
very determined not to go back to Karien. And if that Fardohnyan you
killed was to be believed, then the Kariens have betrayed them.â€
“But Adrina never got the message. There has to be another
reason
she left.â€
“What of Hablet?†Jenga asked. “Perhaps
knowing his daughter is our
hostage will stay his hand?â€
Damin shrugged. “He’s a treacherous bastard. He
could just as easily
abandon her to her fate as try to get her back.†He smiled
sourly.
“We’ve more chance of trading the jewellery, I
fear.â€
“Maybe we should consult her Highness on the
matter?†Tarja
suggested. “She did, after all, demand to be informed of any
negotiations regarding her ransom.â€
“You jest, surely,†Jenga said.
“If only he was joking,†Damin sighed.
“Well, I’ll leave it up to you, Lord Wolfblade. You
captured her, so
I’m making her your responsibility. You may use whatever men
you need
to keep her guarded, but I don’t have time for this
distraction. Give
me your recommendation when you’ve decided what to do. And put
those
gems somewhere safe. Now, if you gentlemen will excuse me, I’m
going to
bed.â€
Damin watched the Lord Defender leave with an unfamiliar feeling of
despair. He turned to Tarja, who seemed more amused than concerned. The
captain wrapped the jewels in their velvet cover and tucked them into
his belt.
“You’ve a fortune there, you know.†Damin
finished his wine with a
grimace and then glared at Tarja. “Don’t look at me
like that, you have
no idea what she’s like.â€
“Oh, I got an inkling today. You’re welcome to
her.â€
Damin rose from his seat by the fireplace and poured himself another
cup of wine. He drank it in a gulp.
“She tried to kill my uncle, you know.â€
“Adrina?â€
Damin nodded. “Hablet sent her to Greenharbour for
Lernen’s birthday
a couple of years ago — the same year you were recalled to the
Citadel,
as I remember. Adrina had obviously been well briefed about my
uncle’s
various weaknesses before she arrived and she pandered to them very
effectively. She dragged him along to the slave auction and coaxed him
into buying a pair of twin boys. The cunning little bitch even made the
boys ride back to the palace in his carriage, no doubt hoping to whet
his appetite. That night they slit their wrists in my uncle’s
bed and
bled to death while he slept. The blade they used was Adrina’s
table
knife. She must have slipped it to them in the carriage. I wonder how
she sleeps knowing they killed themselves rather than do as she
demanded.â€
“I’m surprised you didn’t go to war with
Fardohnya over an attempt
on the High Prince’s life.â€
Damin shrugged and poured another cup of wine. “Nothing
definite
could be proved. I was out hunting that day, and didn’t return
until
late, but I was told Adrina claimed at dinner that she had lost her
knife. We could never connect the boys to her afterwards, and we tried
every avenue of investigation. In the end, we had no choice but to let
the matter drop.†He swallowed the wine and thumped the cup
down on the
table. “You know what really irks me?â€
“What?â€
“That bitch and her slave are wearing the collars Lernen
gave those
two dead boys. I’d recognise them anywhere. Lernen and I had
quite an
argument over their cost. It’s how my mother met her gem
merchant,
incidentally. Adrina no doubt kept them as a souvenir.â€
Tarja frowned, as if he could not conceive of anything so callous.
“So take them back.â€
“No, I think I’ll leave them right where they are
for now. Another
thing you may not understand about Fardohnyans and Hythrun, Tarja, is
that for a noblewoman to be collared like a slave is the worst kind of
insult. Her Serene Highness could well do with a little humiliation.
Anyway, she thinks I need a key to open them. I can keep her collared
for quite some time, while I’m waiting for the keys to arrive
from
Hythria.â€
“Have you sent for them?â€
“No need. There’s a concealed clasp. But the idea
that her good
behaviour will earn her release might keep her tractable for a
time.â€
“I could always offer to dismember her slave,†Tarja
suggested with
a grin. “It worked on the Karien boy.â€
“Adrina would probably tell you to go right ahead and then
ask if
she could watch,†he predicted sourly. “Speaking of the
boy, he is your
responsibility. I don’t want him anywhere near her.
He’d probably run
one of us through if she asked him.â€
Tarja nodded, his expression suddenly glum. “I miss
R’shiel already.
She seemed to be able to get through to the child. And I’d be
happier
if Mahina were here to deal with Adrina.â€
“So would I,†Damin agreed. He poured a cup of wine
then poured
another for Tarja and pushed it across the table to him. “Here.
If I’m
going to get drunk, then you’d better join me. It has been a
thoroughly
unsatisfactory day. That battle was as glorious as a cattle
cull.â€
Tarja took the wine and sipped it as Damin downed his in a gulp.
They were silent for a while, only the crackling fire and the hissing
torches disturbing the silence. Damin filled his cup again.
Tarja glanced at him curiously. “You said it was common
practice
among Hythrun and Fardohnyan nobility to have their sons and daughters
trained by court’esa. Does that mean you were?â€
“Absolutely!†Damin could feel the wine making his
head spin. It was
a rough blend, too young to be drunk with such determination. He drank
it anyway. “Her name was Reyna. I was fifteen when she came to
Krakandar.â€
“It beats fumbling around in the stables with a nervous
Probate, I
suppose.â€
“Having never fumbled around in a stable with a nervous
Probate, I’m
not in a position to comment on the comparison, but I imagine
you’re
correct. Drink up, Captain. I’m getting very drunk here and you
haven’t
finished your first cup.â€
“Perhaps you should get some sleep, Damin. It’s been
a long day.â€
“Yes, mother.â€
“I only meant —â€
“I know what you meant.†He studied the bottom of
his cup for a
moment. “You know, we call rough wine like this
‘Fardohnyan courage’ in
Hythria.â€
Tarja smiled. “We call it Hythrun courage.â€
“I shall ignore such a heinous insult, Captain, because I
like you.â€
Suddenly, he hurled the cup at the fireplace where it shattered into
thousands of clay shards. “Dammit! Why couldn’t she
stay on her own
side of the border?â€
“You really should get to bed, Damin. You’re drunk
and you’re not
thinking straight.â€
“I’ll grant you that I’m drunk,
Tarja,†he conceded. “But as for
thinking straight, I’ve never been surer. Shall we pay her
Highness a
visit?â€
“It’s the middle of the night.â€
“All the more reason to wake her up. Her Royal Sereneness
tried to
kill my uncle and she allied herself with the Kariens. She sent her men
to be slaughtered and then fled the scene of her crime like a cur in
the night. I intend to rattle that bitch until her teeth come
loose.â€
Ignoring Tarja’s pleas for reason, Damin took the crumbling
stairs
to the chambers so recently vacated by Joyhinia, two at a time. Voices
filtered up to him, as someone entered the hall at a run. Damin ignored
them, his eyes focused, (as much as they could focus in his present
state), on the door at the end of the landing, guarded by two
red-coated Defenders. He had no clear idea what he would say to Her
Serene Highness, but he was going to say something, by the gods!
“Damin!â€
Tarja’s voice held an edge of urgency that made him pause
just
before he reached the door. He leaned over the balustrade and looked
down into the torchlit hall.
“Forget the princess! The Fardohnyans have
surrendered!â€
Sobriety returned quickly as the cold night air
caught Damin unawares. The camp surrounding the Keep was surprisingly
busy, considering the lateness of the hour. Men normally well abed by
now were sitting in small groups discussing the battle, dissecting its
every nuance with varying degrees of expertise, depending on how much
ale they had consumed. Morale in the camp was high. Nobody had expected
to weather the first attack with so few casualties. Laughter and the
off-tune baritone of men singing victory songs filled the air. Fires
blazed with little thought to the fuel they were consuming. Thunder
rattled in the distance and a light rain had fallen while he was in the
Keep, dampening the dusty ground. Soon enough, these men would be
forced to take shelter. There would be no frost tonight with this cloud
cover, but if it got much colder it would snow, which should slow the
Kariens down somewhat.
This morning’s battle had been a desperate attempt to break
the
Medalonian defences before winter set in. Damin was rather proud of
himself for working that out. Maybe he wasn’t as drunk as he
thought.
The young man in command of the Fardohnyans was a Second Lanceman
named Filip. He wore an expression of defeat along with his
battle-stained uniform. His eyes were dull, and his exhaustion seemed
to be warring with an emotion that it took Damin a little time to
identify: self-loathing. The thirty or so Fardohnyans stood in a loose
group, surrounded by Defenders, their torches hissing as the occasional
tardy raindrop vanished into the flames.
“Lord Wolfblade.†The Fardohnyan bowed low,
obviously relieved to
see someone who might speak his language. The Defenders who had taken
their surrender had disarmed the men behind him. A few were wounded and
four lay on the wet ground, too seriously injured to stand. Tarja, who
always seemed much better organised when it came to these things,
ordered the wounded removed to the Infirmary Tent and the sleek
Fardohnyan steeds moved to the corrals, leaving Damin to deal with the
prisoners.
“I’ve seen many a strange sight in my time,
Lanceman,†he said in
the young man’s native tongue, “but Fardohnyans
surrendering is not
among them.â€
The lad’s expression clouded. Surrender did not sit well
with him.
“We were ordered to surrender, my Lord.â€
“What did he say?†Tarja asked, coming to stand
beside him.
“He says they were ordered to surrender.â€
“By whom?â€
“Who ordered you to surrender?†he asked in
Fardohnyan.
Filip hesitated, glancing over his shoulder at the men behind him
before answering, rather reluctantly. “Princess Adrina, my
Lord.â€
Tarja did not need that translated. “Ask him why.â€
Damin turned to Tarja impatiently. “You don’t think
I might have
thought to ask that by myself?â€
“Sorry.â€
“Did her Highness give a reason?â€
The Fardohnyan shrugged. “She was beside herself with grief,
my
Lord. She said she did not want any more Fardohnyan blood shed for
Karien.â€
“Pity she didn’t decide that before she sent
her men to be
slaughtered,†he muttered as he turned to Tarja and translated
the
young soldier’s words.
“Grief for whom?†Tarja asked, his sobriety allowing
more clarity of
thought than Damin was capable of.
“Captain Tristan, my Lord,†Filip replied when Damin
translated the
question. “The captain was the princess’s half-brother.
They were very
close.â€
“And where is her Highness now?†He was curious to
discover if this
surrender was part of a plan, or if the young soldier was an innocent
pawn in some devious game that Adrina was playing. Damin desperately
wished his head was clearer.
“With her husband, of course!†Damin would have
known he was lying,
even if Adrina was not currently being held in the Keep behind them.
“I see.†He turned to Tarja questioningly.
“What do you want to do
with them?â€
“That’ll be up to Jenga. For now, I suggest we find
some place to
hold them until morning.†Thunder rumbled louder as another
storm
rolled in. Tarja glanced up at the sky with a frown. “Put them
in the
Keep. They’ll be out of the rain, at least. We can make more
permanent
arrangements tomorrow.â€
Tarja began issuing orders to his men. Damin watched them being
herded toward the Keep, wondering about Adrina’s paradoxical
behaviour.
The woman had cold-bloodedly plotted the murder of the Hythrun High
Prince, yet she’d ordered the remainder of her troops to
surrender,
rather than see them come to harm. Suddenly he was very glad that he
had not made it to the princess’s door.
He had a feeling the only way to face Her Serene Highness, Adrina of
Fardohnya, and survive, was stone cold sober.
CHAPTER 34
Although discovery by the Medalonians had been a
risk, Adrina had not really expected it, and was therefore unprepared
for her sudden change of circumstances.
For two days, she paced her prison cell impatiently, waiting for
something to happen. Meals were delivered regularly by silent,
grim-looking Defenders, but they refused to answer her questions. A
wan, desperate smile — the precursor to establishing a rapport
with her
guards — was a wasted effort. Each shift was made up of
different men
entirely, and once they had left she never saw them again. Nor was
Tamylan allowed to leave the chamber, although the slave did not seem
nearly as bothered by captivity as her mistress. The waiting began to
wear on Adrina’s nerves, and she found herself reassessing the
intelligence of her captors. They were smarter than she had given them
credit for.
The only advantage her isolation provided was the chance to
consolidate her plans to deal with the Medalonians. Her first problem,
she acknowledged readily, was Damin Wolfblade. She had always imagined
him to be something of a dandy, powdered and spoilt, as used to having
his every whim indulged as his uncle was. She had known he was a
Warlord, of course, but she had pictured him as a figurehead. A
gloriously armoured fop who sat astride his decorative stallion while
others did the work for him. That assessment had been wildly
inaccurate. He was a damn sight more ambitious than his uncle, and all
together too certain of his place in the world. But he was still a man,
she reminded herself, and a Wolfblade at that. The family was too
inherently degenerate for the differences to be more than skin deep.
Tarja Tenragan, on the other hand, had been a pleasant surprise.
Dark-haired, handsome and remarkably well mannered, his worst fault,
she decided, was his attitude to poor Mikel. He obviously commanded a
great deal of respect in the camp, and his opinion would carry a lot of
weight with the Lord Defender when it came time to decide her fate. If
she could engineer a meeting with him alone, she was certain she could
entice him to see things her way. She might even enjoy it.
There were good reasons for avoiding such a dangerous game with
Damin Wolfblade. He was a prince of Hythria, for one thing, and while
it was perfectly acceptable to entertain oneself with the lower
classes, frivolous liaisons between members of the nobility were
frowned upon. Such a complication between the heir to the Hythrun
throne and the Fardohnyan King’s eldest daughter did not bear
thinking
about. The most compelling reason, however, was that while Tarja might
be seduced by her court’esa-trained skills, Damin would
more
than likely see straight through them. He probably had a court’esa
as a nursemaid.
No, she would not play that game. She would pick the easier target.
If only someone would please put the target where she could reach
it . . .
Adrina plotted and planned and rehearsed her story a thousand times,
but day after day she was left alone with nothing but Tamylan and her
own anxiety for company.
By the time they finally came for her, Adrina was
seething. Nothing was going according to plan. She had been locked up,
her possessions stolen, her demands ignored and her imagination had had
time to devise all sorts of dreadful fates in store for her. When
finally a sergeant opened the door, without knocking, to escort her
downstairs, she turned on him, fully prepared to give him a piece of
her mind.
“I demand to see someone in authority!â€
“Certainly, your Highness,†the man replied calmly,
although he did
not bow. Hardly surprising. These Medalonian peasants had no experience
with royalty. “I’m here to take you to Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“I want to see the Lord Defender!â€
“That will be up to Lord Wolfblade, your Highness.
You’d better wear
this. It’s raining and you’ll ruin that fur.â€
Adrina snatched the plain, but serviceable woollen cloak from the
man and threw it over her shoulders. She still wore the flimsy court’esa
costume and it was ill suited to the bitterly cold chamber. The fur
cloak she had brought with her from Karien was the only thing that had
kept her from freezing to death.
“If Lord Wolfblade had any manners he would come to
me!â€
The man smiled, as if her posturing amused him and led the way down
into the main hall. Two more Defenders fell in behind as they crossed
the hall and stepped outside into a torrential downpour. Even wrapped
in the Defender’s cloak, Adrina was drenched in seconds.
She stumbled along beside the Defenders as they walked through the
camp, her sodden skirts hampering her steps. The slave collar was cold
against her skin and her hair was plastered to her head, the braid
slapping wetly against her back with every step. The hem of her skirt
was splattered with mud and she was shivering uncontrollably by the
time they reached the edge of the neatly laid out Defender’s
tents and
crossed the open ground between the two camps. She squinted through the
rain, trying to pick out any tent that looked as if it belonged to a
prince, but there were no banners flying, no obvious declarations of
rank. When they finally reached their destination, it proved to be a
plain tent, larger than those surrounding it, but bearing nothing to
indicate its occupant was of noble blood.
“Wait here,†the Defender ordered as he stepped
inside, leaving
Adrina standing in the rain.
Adrina fumed, but did as she was told, certain this little
expedition was nothing more than an attempt to humiliate her. For the
first time in months Adrina found there was someone she hated more than
Cratyn.
“Your Highness.†The sergeant reappeared and held
back the tent flap
for her. Adrina stepped through, glaring at the man to make certain he
was aware of her displeasure. The man smiled in return and left her
alone with the Warlord.
Damin Wolfblade sat at a small desk, writing something that seemed
to take all his concentration. Adrina waited, dripping onto the thick
carpet that covered the floor of the tent and looked around. An
inviting brazier stood in the centre of the tent and she itched to step
closer, but refused to give him the satisfaction. A thick tapestry, of
exquisite Hythrun geometrical design, divided the tent in two,
concealing the sleeping quarters. Besides the writing desk there was a
large table covered in maps against the far wall, and near the brazier,
a pile of thick cushions surrounding a small, low table. The Hythrun
were fond of sitting on the floor.
She turned her attention to the Warlord then and tried to study him
without being obvious. He was a typical Hythrun: tall, blond and well
muscled from hours spent in the saddle. But that was the limit of her
favourable impressions. He had the distinctive Wolfblade profile and an
air about him that reeked of arrogance.
He looked up finally and frowned. He apparently had as low an
opinion of her, as she had of him. “Your Highness.â€
“My Lord.â€
He put down his quill and stood up. “I’m sorry. Is
it raining?
Please, give me that cloak. You must be freezing.†Is it raining? She could barely hear herself think over the
downpour pounding on the taut, oiled canopy. She shed the cloak,
dropping it on the floor behind her, hoping it ruined his damned
carpet, and stepped closer to the brazier. Adrina found herself looking
up at him. That was disconcerting. She had been able to look Cratyn in
the eye.
“Don’t take me for a fool, my Lord. You probably
waited until it was
pouring before you sent for me! You might find such mindless games
amusing, but I merely find them a sign of your inability to grasp the
finer points of courtesy regarding the treatment of prisoners of
rank.â€
Damin looked her up and down, making her very aware of the flimsy,
sodden outfit, then shrugged. “I suppose it won’t serve
my purpose if
you catch pneumonia and die.†He pushed back the tapestry
dividing the
tent and pulled a woollen shirt and trousers from a trunk. “Get
out of
that ridiculous costume. It ill suits a woman of your rank, in any
case. You can get changed in there.â€
Adrina snatched the clothes from him and walked behind the tapestry.
She peeled off her wet skirts, deliberately dropping them on the centre
of the bed before emerging into the main part of the tent. Her
shivering stopped once she was wrapped in the warm shirt, and although
it was clean, the faint smell of him lingered on it. The golden collar
was icy around her throat.
“Please, sit down.â€
Adrina did as he suggested, taking the cushion closest to the fire.
Steam rose off her hair as the brazier warmed her. Damin offered her a
cup of mulled wine, which she stared at warily.
“It’s not poisoned. We’ve already
established that it won’t serve my
cause for you to die.â€
She took the cup and sipped the wine, the welcome warmth flooding
through her. “Your gallantry is overwhelming, sir.â€
“Don’t flatter yourself, Adrina. I’m being
practical, not gallant.â€
“You will address me in a manner befitting my station, my
Lord. I
did not give you leave to address me so informally.â€
Damin lowered himself onto the cushions opposite with surprising
grace for one so tall. “I’ll address you any way I
please, madam.
You’ll find few in this camp who care about your station. Your
only
value at present is your worth as a hostage. That requires that I keep
you alive. It does not require me to bow and scrape and cater to your
every idiotic whim.â€
“In Fardohnya, good manners are not considered an
‘idiotic whim’,â€
she pointed out frostily.
“I’ll bear that in mind when I next visit Fardohnya.
In the
meantime, I suggest your curb your tendency to think every person you
meet is beneath you. The Medalonians have little patience with
nobility. They judge people by their actions, not an accident of
birth.â€
“Ah! And that’s what you’re doing here, I
suppose? You so impressed
these atheist peasants with your heroic actions that they could not
wait to welcome you into the fold?â€
“What I’m doing here is not the issue. The question
is, what are you
doing here, your Highness.â€
“I was going home.â€
“You were betraying the Kariens?â€
“Don’t be absurd. It is simply
that . . . there are a
number of conditions of the Karien–Fardohnyan Treaty that have
not been
met to my satisfaction.â€
“Call it what you like, your Highness, I imagine Cratyn will
consider it treason.†Damin drank his wine thoughtfully.
“That’s what
they call this place you know — Treason Keep. Rather
appropriate, don’t
you think?†Nice, Adrina reminded herself. I have to be nice.
He’ll
send me back to Karien in a heartbeat unless I can convince him to
protect me.
“I . . . I cannot return to Karien, my
Lord.†She
lowered her eyes as she spoke and made sure she added a touching catch
to her voice.
“Why not?â€
“My life there was intolerable.â€
“So you fled to Medalon dressed as a court’esa,
accompanied
by nothing more than a slave and a child?â€
“I just wanted to escape. I didn’t really stop to
think.†Now that
was the truest thing she’d ever said. If she’d stopped
to think, she
wouldn’t be in this predicament.
He obviously didn’t believe a word she said. “There
are those who
think this alliance is merely a ruse, that your father is simply aiding
the Kariens so he can cross into Medalon and then turn south into
Hythria.â€
“Well, if he is, it’s news to me.†Adrina
sipped her wine to hide
her alarm. Was Hablet’s treacherous nature so famous that a
Hythrun
could read him so easily? She composed her features before
continuing. “The Defenders don’t have the troops to
fight a war on two
fronts. If you release me immediately, when I reach Talabar, I will
speak to my father. I should be able to stay his hand.â€
“Perhaps,†Damin said doubtfully.
Adrina wasn’t sure what else she could do to convince him.
“I’ve no
love for Karien, my Lord. I just want to go home.â€
“Does Cratyn know you were planning to leave him?â€
“No. After I discovered what had happened to my troops I
made some
rather foolish threats. It was then that I decided I should
leave.â€
“Are you with child?â€
“Of course not! What a stupid question!â€
“Oh? If you were with child, and Cratyn has his eye on your
father’s
throne, you might simply be taking the shortest route home, to ensure
the child is born on Fardohnyan soil.†Damn him!Where had he gotten that idea? How could some
ill-bred warlord from a thousand leagues away see things so clearly?
“Cratyn had some . . .
difficulty . . . in fulfilling his conjugal
duties.â€
To her surprise, he laughed with genuine humour. “Poor
Cratyn. An
inexperienced Karien princeling is no match for a court’esa-trained
Fardohnyan princess.â€
“No match at all, I fear.â€
For a fraction of a second, they were not enemies, but conspirators,
sharing laughter at the expense of a hated adversary. The moment lasted
just long enough for an uncomfortable silence to descend between them.
“I don’t trust you, Adrina. You’re trying to
play both ends against
the middle. You claim to be running home, yet a week ago you were
standing at Cratyn’s side, throwing your troops into battle for
him.
You are allied in marriage with Karien on one hand, while offering to
hold back your father’s troops with the other. You expect me to
believe
Cratyn doesn’t know where you are. I know he’s
inexperienced, but
nobody is that stupid. Your story is so full of holes I could use it as
a fishing net.â€
“Perhaps the intricacies of politics are beyond you, my
Lord,†she
suggested with saccharine sweetness, forcibly hiding her annoyance. Her
tale had sounded quite reasonable when she’d tried it out on
Tamylan.
She never expected a Hythrun to have even a basic grasp of politics.
“I understand you better than you think. You’re
Hablet’s daughter.
Treachery has been bred into you.â€
“Don’t make the mistake of judging me by my
father.â€
“I’m not likely to. I have a feeling you are far
more dangerous.â€
For some contrary reason, his comment pleased her. “You
can’t keep
me here forever, my Lord. Eventually you will have to release
me.â€
“Not until I’m good and ready, your Highness. And
not until I can
see a profit in it.â€
“I do not intend to sit here and wait upon your mercenary
pleasures,
my Lord,†she retorted, silently cursing her temper. Be nice.
“I suggest you rethink your position, your Highness. Right
now, you
can wait on my mercenary pleasures, or you can go back to your husband.
Neither prospect bothers me unduly.â€
Adrina did not answer. She sipped her wine to hide her expression,
afraid that Damin Wolfblade meant exactly what he said. Nice, she said silently. I have to be nice to him.
“I have asked for your protection, my Lord,†she
said with a demure
smile. “Is that too much to ask?â€
“The Kariens are prepared to go to war over the death of an
Envoy,
your Highness. I hate to think what they’ll do over their crown
princess.â€
“But you could protect me,†she suggested with
wide-eyed admiration.
In her experience, there were few men who could resist a woman who
believed in him so ardently.
Damin Wolfblade was apparently one of them.
“Protect you? And while we’re protecting you
from the wrath
of the Kariens, your Highness, who’s going to protect us from
you?â€
CHAPTER 35
Mounted on sorcerer-bred Hythrun horses,
R’shiel
and her companions reached the small village of Lilyvale in time for
dinner on the first day. Joyhinia, Mahina and Affiana rode in a covered
wagon, one Garet suggested they replace with something more auspicious
as they neared the Citadel. Although the wagon slowed them a little,
Joyhinia was incapable of sitting a horse safely, so they sacrificed
speed for the assurance that the First Sister would reach the Citadel
in one piece.
R’shiel rode with Brak for most of the way, letting the
horse set
its own pace as she listened to him explain the dangers of drawing on
her power to bend others to her will. If he was trying to scare her, he
succeeded, but he said nothing to change her mind. There simply
wasn’t
enough time to reach the Citadel and convince the Quorum to accept
Joyhinia’s resignation and Mahina’s appointment any
other way.
Garet Warner rode with them for a time. He had, somewhat reluctantly
R’shiel thought, agreed with her plan, despite Tarja’s
objections. The
discussion regarding this trip to the Citadel, held hastily and
heatedly as the Medalonians prepared for the coming battle, had been
strained. R’shiel was fairly certain that if she had waited
until after
the battle, Jenga and Mahina would have objected, and certainly Tarja,
with Brak’s assistance, would have found any number of ways to
prevent
it. As it was, everyone was so distracted by the knowledge that the
Kariens were on the move that her desperate plan was spared close
scrutiny.
“The gods’ power is the power of all things
natural,†Brak was
saying, sounding just like Korandellan. “It’s at its
most effective
when used to enhance a natural occurrence.â€
“A convenient way of getting around the facts,â€
Garet said.
“The gods are a natural force, Commandant.â€
“So anything can happen, and you blame a god for your
misfortune.
Don’t you people have free will?â€
Brak appeared to be enjoying the conversation with the atheist
Defender. He seemed to forget about R’shiel. “Kalianah
can make two
people fall in love, but not against their will. Dacendaran can
encourage a thief to steal, but he could not easily make a thief of an
honest man.â€
“You truly are adept at seeing miracles in the
mist,†Garet remarked.
R’shiel listened to the men and realised Brak had not
forgotten
about her at all. He was trying to remind her of the dangers of what
she was planning to do. The gods could amplify a yearning or bring
about an event that might occur eventually without their help, but to
use their power to force an unnatural event was akin to swimming
upstream against the river of magic. In doing so, all the slime and
filth that had sunk to the bottom of the river was stirred up and
brought to the surface. That was why she had been nauseous when she
felt the Karien priests working their coercion. She noticed
Garet’s
sceptical expression and turned to him.
“You don’t believe any of this, do you
Commandant?â€
“I believe that you believe every word. I never
cease to be
astonished at the facility of humans to rationalise perfectly natural
events and award them divinity.â€
“You’ve seen demons, yet you refuse to believe in
them,†Brak
pointed out. “Isn’t that your way of rationalising away
something you
don’t understand?â€
“I’ve seen creatures I cannot explain and illusions
that are
masterful, but that is hardly enough to turn me into a pagan. Watch
even a moderately talented illusionist in the markets of the Citadel
and you will be convinced that a woman can be cut in two and then put
together again. Believing a thing doesn’t make it real.â€
“Yet you’re going to help us,â€
R’shiel said. “If you think this is
just trickery, why bother?â€
“My decision is based on logic, not faith, R’shiel.
Medalon is
facing an enemy that the Sisterhood is not in a position to deal with.
I support Lord Jenga because we are more likely to survive with him in
charge than a committee of selfish women grasping for their own
political survival.â€
R’shiel frowned, but Brak seemed more than satisfied with
the
commandant’s answer. “Assuming we succeed, how soon can
the rest of the
Defenders be mobilised?â€
“Fairly quickly,†Garet assured him.
“I’ll get things moving in
anticipation of your success at the Gathering. If you achieve your
goal, I can have the first of them under way in a matter of
hours.â€
“And if we fail?†R’shiel asked.
“Then I will turn those same men on you and claim I
was
simply playing along with you to gain your confidence and learn your
plans,†he replied calmly.
“No wonder Joyhinia always thought you were
dangerous.â€
“Dangerous?†he shrugged. “I doubt that,
R’shiel. But I am a
survivor, and all the heathen trickery in the world cannot alter
that.â€
Garet kicked his horse forward to the head of their small column,
leaving R’shiel to stare after him thoughtfully.
“Now there’s a rare creature,†Brak remarked.
“What do you mean?â€
“I think Garet Warner is the only truly honest human I have
ever
met.â€
It was mid afternoon some days later when
Dacendaran appeared. They were traversing the open plain, on a road
that slowly wound its way south towards Cauthside, and the ferry that
would take them across the Glass River. The day was overcast and
chilly, with the sharp smell of impending rain hanging in the still
air. R’shiel, with Brak and Garet on her heels, had ridden
ahead of the
wagon. The weather was making Wind Dancer nervous and she wanted to
give the mare a chance to stretch her legs.
She found Dace waiting by the side of the road, sitting cross-legged
atop a large grey boulder. He waved as she neared him, his fair hair
tousled, his motley clothing as mismatched and ill-fitting as
R’shiel
had ever seen it.
The God of Thieves had not been much in evidence while
R’shiel was
at Sanctuary. There was little amusement in those peaceful, hallowed
halls for a god who thrived on larceny. Dacendaran preferred the
company of humans. Although she knew he was a god — could sense
it now
that she knew what to look for — she found it hard to think of
him as
anything but the impudent lad who had befriended her in the Grimfield.
She smiled as she reached the boulder, genuinely pleased to see him.
“Dace! What are you doing here?â€
“I came to see how you were faring out in the big wide
world. Hello,
Brakandaran.†Brak reined beside her followed by Garet who
glared at
the boy suspiciously. The wagon and its attendant guards were still
some way back.
“Dacendaran.â€
“Who’s that?†Dace asked, pointing at Garet.
“Commandant Garet Warner, meet Dacendaran, the God of
Thieves,â€
R’shiel said, smiling at Garet’s expression.
“This is one of your gods?â€
Dace clapped his hands delightedly. “He’s an
atheist!â€
“And you shouldn’t be here,†Brak scolded.
“Go away, Dace.â€
“But I want to help! There are noble deeds afoot and I want
to be a
part of them!â€
“If you really want to do something noble, go steal a few of
Xaphista’s believers,†Brak suggested. “You are
not going
anywhere near the Citadel with us.â€
Dace frowned. “Brakandaran, at some point in the past few
centuries,
someone must have mentioned that mortals do not dictate to the
gods. I will go where I please!â€
“Will someone please explain who this child really
is?†Garet
demanded.
“Ah, how I do like a non-believer!â€
“Dace, listen to Brak, please,†R’shiel
pleaded. “Do something to
annoy Xaphista if you must help, but there is nothing you can do
here.â€
The god sighed melodramatically. “I suppose. I’m obviously
not wanted here.â€
“Stop being such a baby,†R’shiel said.
The god grinned. “I make a poor substitute for the God of
Guilt,
don’t I?â€
“The God of what?†Garet asked incredulously.
Even Brak smiled. “Commandant. I suggest you either ignore
this
entire exchange or start believing in the Primal gods.â€
“I think I’ll ignore it,†he said with a
frown. He turned his mount
and rode back toward the wagon.
“Did I upset him?†Dace asked innocently.
“No more than you usually upset people,†Brak said.
“Why did you let
him see you?â€
“All humans should have the opportunity to look upon a god
every now
and then. It’s an honour.â€
“Not when they don’t believe you exist,â€
R’shiel pointed out.
“Well, now that he’s seen me, he’ll have to
believe in me, won’t he?â€
“Don’t count on it,†Brak warned.
“You always look on the dark side of things, Brakandaran. I
was
going to give you some news, but now I’m not so sure.
You’re bound to
think the worst.â€
“What news?â€
“I’m really not certain that I
should . . .â€
“Dace,†R’shiel cut in impatiently.
“Stop teasing. If you have
something important to tell us, then out with it!â€
The god pouted. “You have been spending far too much time
with
Brakandaran, R’shiel. You’re beginning to sound just
like him.â€
“Come on, R’shiel,†Brak said, gathering up
his reins as he glanced
over his shoulder at the approaching wagon. “He obviously has
nothing
important to tell us, and the others will be here any moment. Goodbye,
Divine One.â€
“Xaphista has believers in the Citadel!†the god
blurted out.
R’shiel stared at Dace with concern. “Believers?
Who?â€
“I don’t know,†Dace shrugged. “All
I know is that the Citadel can
feel them and he doesn’t like it one bit!â€
Confused, R’shiel turned to Brak for an explanation.
“What does he
mean? He speaks as though the Citadel is alive.â€
“It is, sort of,†Brak answered before turning to
Dace. “Has
anything happened yet?â€
“No. You know what he’s like. It takes him a century
just to
remember his own name. But he can feel Xaphista’s taint and
he’s not
happy about it.â€
Brak nodded slowly. R’shiel had absolutely no idea what they
were
talking about.
“Brak, has this got something to do with the power in the
Citadel
that Dranymire spoke of?â€
Before he could answer, the wagon creaked to a stop behind them.
Garet rode forward and frowned at Dace.
“I see your god is still with us. Are you two planning to
sit here
in the middle of the road blocking the way, or can we proceed? In case
you hadn’t noticed, it’s going to rain soon.
I’d like to reach Malacky
before then.â€
“These atheists really are an impatient lot, aren’t
they?â€
Dacendaran remarked loftily. With that, he vanished, leaving Garet wide
eyed.
R’shiel looked at Garet and wondered how the commandant
would
explain Dace’s sudden disappearance to himself, but after a
moment’s
stunned silence, he waved his men and the wagon forward as if
absolutely nothing untoward had happened.
PART 3
THE POLITICS OF SEDUCTION
CHAPTER 36
Mikel was separated from the princess and placed
in the custody of the Defenders’ Master of Horse, a small,
slender man
with dark hair and an affection for the creatures in his charge which
bordered on obsession. Captain Hadly had endless patience with his
horses and none at all for defiant Karien boys. When one of Lord
Wolfblade’s Raiders delivered him into Hadly’s care, he
had glanced at
the note Tarja had hastily scribbled then looked disdainfully at Mikel.
“Captain Tenragan says you are to be placed in my care. He
says that
if you try to escape, or give me any bother at all, I am to inform him
immediately. He also says to remind you about your brother. Do you know
what he means?â€
Mikel nodded sullenly. He had hoped Tarja might forget about Jaymes.
“Good, because I’ve no time to waste on infants.
I’ve damned near
two thousand horses here, boy, and now there’s the Fardohnyan
mounts to
take care of. Go find Sergeant Monthay. He’ll find something
useful for
you to do.â€
With little choice in the matter, he did as he was told.
Besides being sick with worry over the princess,
Mikel was desperate to discover his brother’s fate, but there
seemed
little chance here among the horses. The Hythrun mounts were corralled
away from the Medalonian horses — something to do with the
purity of
the Hythrun breed that Mikel didn’t really understand —
so there was no
chance to question anyone about the Karien boy they held prisoner.
Sergeant Monthay set him to distributing hay, an endless task with so
vast a herd. He spent all day lugging haybales from the cart into the
corrals, then running to catch up as Monthay moved the wagon on to the
next enclosure. It was backbreaking work, but it kept him from thinking
too much, and at night he collapsed into the bedroll Monthay had found
for him in the tack tent, asleep almost before his head hit the saddle
he used for a pillow.
On the fourth day of his captivity, the rain cleared and the weather
grew even colder. The sharp smell of snow lingered on the wind and
Hadly fretted at the lack of protection for his horses. He had
commandeered a large force of workers from the followers’ camp
and had
them erecting canvas covered shelters in the corrals in anticipation of
the coming inclement weather.
Mikel shivered as he went about his chores. Monthay was anxious to
finish for the day and get back to the warmth of his tent. It was
almost midday when they reached the corral where the workers were tying
canvas over another sapling framework. The cold sun did nothing to warm
the day. There was a small fire burning just outside the corral, and
several women were doling out hot soup as the workers took a break from
their labour. Monthay glanced at Mikel, ordered him to keep working,
and went to join them.
He lugged another bale from the cart and dragged it along the ground
toward the corral, cursing Medalonians in general, and Monthay in
particular. He muttered a prayer to the Overlord, asking his god to
strike down the men enjoying the hot soup with dysentery. It seemed
only fitting.
“Xaphista’s far too busy to answer, you
know.â€
Mikel looked up and discovered a boy of about fifteen sitting on the
top rail of the corral. He was dressed in an odd collection of clothes
that looked like cast-offs from some bygone era. Mikel was not aware
that he had spoken aloud.
“You should not speak the name of Xaphista. You’re
an unbeliever.â€
“Not at all! I know Xaphista personally! Can’t say
that I speak to
him much myself, mind you, but he does exist.â€
Mikel straightened and stared at the youth, a little surprised to
hear such an admission from an atheist. He supposed the boy was one of
the workers erecting the shelters.
“What do you want?â€
“Nothing.â€
“Then leave me alone.†He grabbed the twine holding
the bale
together and grunted with the effort of dragging it over the rough
ground towards the corral.
“What are you doing?â€
“What does it look like I’m doing?â€
The fair-haired youth laughed. “That bale is near as big as
you are!â€
“Then why don’t you help me?â€
“Ah, now that would mean work. I don’t do
work.â€
Mikel let go of the bale and glared at him. “What do
you do,
then?â€
“I’m a thief.â€
The news did not surprise Mikel. The lad looked dishonest.
“Thievery
is a sin.â€
“Don’t be absurd! Who told you that? Ah! Xaphista
did, I suppose.
Cheeky sod.â€
“You shouldn’t blaspheme! That’s a sin
too!â€
“There is no such thing as sin . . .
what’s your
name?â€
“Mikel.â€
“Well, Mikel, let me put your mind at ease. There is no such
thing
as sin. A thief is not doing something wrong, he is honouring
Dacendaran, the God of Thieves.â€
“There is only one true god!†Mikel insisted.
The boy frowned and jumped off the rail. “You really believe
that,
don’t you? Are all Kariens like you?â€
“Yes! Now go away and leave me alone!†Mikel made to
reach for the
bale, but the youth sat himself down on it and looked at him closely.
“Mikel, the only reason Xaphista invented the concept of sin
was to
stop his believers honouring the other gods.â€
“There are no other gods!â€
“I can see I’m going to have to educate you, young
man.†The youth
sighed heavily, then suddenly brightened. “I know, I shall
become your
new best friend and lead you to the truth about the Primal
gods!â€
“I already know the truth. Xaphista is the Overlord.â€
“Xaphista is a pompous old windbag, actually, and I shall
delight in
stealing you from him.â€
“Come on, boy! We’ll still be here at midnight at
this rate! Get a
move on!â€
Mikel started as Monthay yelled at him. He turned back to the boy
sitting on the bale and was even more startled to discover he was gone.
“Don’t just stand there talking to yourself like a
fool,†Monthay
scolded as he drew near. “Go get some soup, but be quick about
it.â€
Mikel ran towards the fire and the enticing smell of the hot soup,
wondering where the youth had gone so abruptly. Then he remembered his
rash prayer and hoped that the Overlord had not heard his request about
the dysentery.
Mid-afternoon, two Defenders appeared in the
corrals and told Monthay that Captain Tenragan wanted to see the Karien
boy. Monthay muttered a curse and surrendered him reluctantly, glancing
at the hay still to be distributed. The two Defenders took Mikel into
custody and walked him back toward the Keep. They said nothing, even to
each other, leaving Mikel plenty of time to imagine the worst.
When they reached the old keep, they took him into the main hall
where Tarja was waiting near the huge fireplace. Damin Wolfblade was
sitting at the table, stabbing the tabletop with his dagger as if
something vexed him. Captain Almodavar stood near Tarja and next to
him, to Mikel’s astonishment, was his brother.
“Jaymes!â€
Mikel ran the length of the hall, skidding to a halt a few steps
from his brother, taking a quick inventory to check he had all his
fingers. Jaymes grinned and crossed the small distance between them,
hugging his younger brother warmly.
“They told me you were back, but I wanted to see for
myself!â€
“Oh Jaymes! I’ve been so worried about you! Are you
well? Have they
harmed you?â€
“Of course not!†Jaymes laughed.
“I’m the one who’s been worrying
about you! What happened when you went back to Lord Laetho?â€
Mikel glanced at the men and then back at Jaymes. His brother was
taller, as if he had grown from a boy into a young man while in
captivity. He looked well; much too well for a prisoner.
“I’ll tell you
later.â€
“There won’t be a later, lad,†Almodavar
warned. “Jaymes has work to
do.â€
“He’s right. I have to get back. My training keeps
me pretty busy.
But I’ll try to see you now and then, if I can get
away.â€
“Training?â€
“I’m learning to be a soldier.â€
Mikel took a step backwards. “With the Hythrun?â€
“Of course, with the Hythrun.â€
“You’re a traitor?â€
“I warned you,†Damin muttered to no one in
particular, stabbing the
table to punctuate his words.
Jaymes sighed. “It’s not like that,
Mikel . . .â€
“Have you turned from the Overlord, too? Do you worship the
Primal
gods now? How could you?â€
“The Overlord? What do I care about the Overlord! I want to
be a
soldier, Mikel! I can’t ever be a knight in Karien. I’m
a commoner.
Good for nothing but a pikeman. But the Hythrun don’t care
about that.
They judge men by their ability, not who their father is.â€
“Our father is the Duke of Kirkland’s Third
Steward!â€
“Which is worth shit, and you know it!â€
Tears of anger and betrayal clouded Mikel’s vision. He could
not
believe what he was hearing.
“What have you done to him?†he demanded of Tarja,
although the
Medalonian had not had charge of his brother. Tarja had, however, been
responsible for most of his woes these past few months so it seemed
reasonable to blame him for this, too.
“Your brother made his own choice, boy.â€
“You’ve done something to him! Jaymes would never
betray Karien! He
would never renounce the Overlord!â€
“Grow up, Mikel,†Jaymes sighed. “The
Overlord doesn’t care about
the likes of you and me. He’s the God of Lords and Princes. All
he ever
did for us was make us work for them. You believe in his
generosity if you must, but I plan to follow those who can teach me
what I want to learn.†Jaymes turned to the Warlord and bowed.
“May I
be excused, now, my Lord?â€
“You can go.â€
Jaymes glanced at Mikel and shook his head. “I’m
sorry, little
brother . . .â€
Mikel refused to look at him. “I have no brother.â€
“Maybe when you’re older, Mikel, you’ll
understand.â€
He turned his back as Jaymes and the Hythrun captain walked the
length of the hall. When he heard the door shut, he wiped his eyes and
looked up at Tarja.
“Can I go, too?â€
“No, you may not. You’re going to tell us about the
princess.â€
Jaymes’ betrayal was suddenly forgotten. He glared at Tarja,
drawing
himself up to his full height. “If you have harmed one hair on
her
head . . .â€
“Oh for the god’s sake, child, settle down!â€
Damin snapped. “Your
precious princess is fine.â€
“I shall not betray my Lady!â€
“Nobody is asking you to,†Tarja pointed out
reasonably. “We just
want to know how you came to be in her company.â€
“I was appointed her page. By Prince Cratyn himself!â€
“I see. That’s quite a position of trust.â€
“Prince Cratyn trusts me.â€
“He must trust you a great deal, to ask you to escort her
Highness
through Medalon when your nation is at war with us.â€
Mikel was still young enough that flattery, even from a man he
despised, made his heart swell proudly. “Prince Cratyn knew
that I
would not betray him. No spy . . .â€
“Spy?†Damin asked, glancing up from the tabletop.
“What spy?â€
Mikel took a step backwards, frowning warily. “I said
nothing about
a spy.â€
Damin looked at Tarja and shrugged. “Send him back to the
horses,
Tarja. Adrina has already told us everything we want to know. She was
trying to escape to Fardohnya to get away from Cratyn and stop her
father joining in the war.â€
“That’s a lie!†Mikel shouted, horrified
that they would think such
a thing of the noble princess. “You’re making that
up!â€
“Not at all,†Tarja told him. “Adrina told
us everything.â€
“You must have tortured her!â€
“If you call mulled wine and a warm fire torture,â€
Damin said with a
faint smile, “Quite the opportunist, your princess, Mikel. She
changes
sides more often than most people change their clothes.â€
“Princess Adrina is the most noble, pious, beautiful woman
in the
whole world! She’s brave, too!â€
“Brave?†Tarja scoffed. “She was running
away.â€
“She was not! She was going to see her father to get him to
send the
cannon! So that you would all die!â€
Tarja and Damin glanced at each other as Mikel realised what he had
blurted out. He wanted to cry. He wished the cold flagstones would open
up and swallow him whole. First Jaymes had betrayed him.
Now he had betrayed Adrina.
CHAPTER 37
“Who do you believe? The boy or the
princess?â€
Jenga paced the hearth, rubbing his chin thoughtfully. Gray daylight
flooded the hall but the air was crisp, even this close to the fire.
Damin shrugged. “She’s lying. She’s heading
for Talabar to bring her
father’s cannon into the war. She’s not running
away.â€
Tarja nodded his agreement. “I believe the boy is telling
the truth,
but it’s the truth your princess fed him. She could hardly announce
her intention to run away.†He was sitting in front of the
inadequate
blaze, warming the soles of his boots, obviously pleased that the
decision about what to do with Adrina was not his to make.
“Will you stop calling her my princess!â€
Tarja grinned. “We’ll she’s your problem.
And you’re always telling
me how much better you understand the Fardohnyan nobility than us poor
peasants here in Medalon . . .â€
“Very funny.â€
“I was merely trying to point out that —â€
“Enough, Tarja,†Jenga cut in wearily. “Lord
Wolfblade, would it be
fair to say that you really have no idea what she is doing
here?â€
Damin nodded. “That would be fair.â€
“And we’ve had no emissaries from the Kariens
seeking her out.â€
“I’d be surprised if we did,†Tarja said.
“If she’s on the run, the
last place Cratyn would look for her is Medalon.â€
“And if she’s telling the truth, then he needs to
pretend that
nothing is amiss,†Jenga agreed.
“You know, we’d get a lot more out of Her Serene
Highness if she
thought we believed her.â€
“The rack and a red hot poker would do me just as
well,†Damin
muttered. Jenga threw him an annoyed look before turning to Tarja.
“Explain.â€
“Perhaps, if her status was one of honoured guest rather
than
prisoner, she might let something slip.â€
“She won’t let anything slip. She’s too
smart for that.†Damin
glared at Tarja, not liking the direction this conversation was heading.
“Maybe,†Jenga mused. “What are you
suggesting exactly?â€
“Release her. Give her the freedom of the camp. We should
ask for
something to prove her story, of course. Some piece of intelligence we
can easily verify, as a gesture of good will. And we’d have to
put a
guard on her — there’s no telling what she’d
get up to on her own, but
we can claim it’s for her protection. We can’t let her
get her hands on
her jewels, either, but there is no reason why she shouldn’t
think we
believe her.â€
“If we believed her, we’d send her back to
Fardohnya,†Damin pointed
out. “She won’t fall for it.â€
“Oh, yes, she will. Because you, my Lord, are going to start
acting
as if she’s an ally, not your sworn enemy.â€
“The hell I will!â€
“I’m afraid you’ve lost me, Tarja?â€
Jenga said. “How would that
help?â€
Tarja sighed patiently. “As Damin keeps reminding us,
she’s a very
smart girl. But she never got the message from her brother and she
knows nothing of the Hythrun Raiders stationed in Bordertown. If we
release her, at least conditionally, and our Warlord here can keep a
civil tongue in his head, she’ll come to believe we need her
help in
holding back her father’s troops. I’m not saying
she’ll believe us
right away, but if we act as if we think she’s on our side,
even if
she’s lying, she has to play along with it.â€
“So you think she may end up betraying herself, simply to
maintain
the illusion of cooperation?â€
“Relax your vigilance for more than a heartbeat, and
she’ll slip a
knife between your ribs,†Damin warned.
“Ah, but she’s your princess,
remember?†Tarja said with a
grin. “I don’t plan on getting that close.â€
Damin glared at Tarja. “Nice plan, my friend, but in case
you hadn’t
noticed there’s a war going on out there. I have too much to do
to
waste time playing games of intrigue with a Fardohnyan princess. The
Kariens could attack again at any moment.â€
Jenga shook his head confidently. “Not likely.
They’ve still not
recovered from the last battle and it will snow any day.â€
“Besides, your troops seem to get along very nicely without
you,â€
Tarja added, taking far too much pleasure in Damin’s misery.
“Almodavar
coped quite well while you were off consulting your god for nearly a
month.â€
Damin considered that an entirely unfair argument.
“It’s not the
same thing. My men knew I was gone to consult with the gods.
They’re
not likely to be nearly as understanding if they think I’m
neglecting
them for a woman.â€
“I disagree,†Jenga remarked with a rare smile.
“From what I’ve seen
of your men, Damin, they’d give that just as much
credence.â€
Damin chose to ignore that one. “It won’t
work.â€
“Of course it’ll work,†Tarja assured him.
“Just pray to one of your
gods.â€
Damin gave the captain a withering glare. “We don’t
actually have a
god of Bloody Stupid Ideas, Tarja.â€
Damin did not bother knocking. He ordered the
guards to open the door to Adrina’s chamber and marched in
unannounced.
He was a little disappointed to discover Adrina and her slave sitting
on the pallet that served as a bed, apparently engaged in nothing more
sinister than idle chatter, their legs covered by a blanket to ward off
the cold. Adrina still wore the shirt he had given her in his tent, and
someone had given the slave something warmer to wear as well. The women
looked up as he entered.
“Out!†he ordered the slave. She responded to the
authority in his
voice without thinking and scurried from the room, leaving them alone.
Adrina did not move. He was quite impressed with the way she managed to
look down on him, even though she was sitting and he was standing.
“You have the manners of a barbarian.â€
“You seem to bring out the worst in me, your
Highness.â€
Surprisingly, Adrina smiled. “I have a feeling I’ve
not seen
anything closely resembling your worst, Lord Wolfblade. What do you
have there?â€
She pointed at the sack he carried which he placed on the bed beside
her.
“Jenga ordered your things returned to you. He thought you
might be
more comfortable in your own clothes.â€
“That was considerate of him,†she remarked as she
felt around
inside the bag. “However, my jewellery seems to be
missing.â€
“The Lord Defender was concerned about such valuable
property laying
about unguarded. He will keep your jewels for now. For safe keeping, of
course.â€
“Of course,†she echoed sceptically. “Am I
to assume this sudden
desire to see to my welfare means you have come to a decision about
me?â€
“In a manner of speaking. Although I, for one, don’t
believe a word
of your unlikely tale.†It wouldn’t do to completely
change his tune.
She would see through that in an instant. “The Medalonians,
unfortunately, are much more naive. Jenga believes your story and has
ordered that you be treated as an honoured guest from now on.â€
“Then I am to be released?†Damin could detect the
glimmer of hope
in her voice.
“I said they were naive, your Highness, not stupid. The Lord
Defender wants proof. Once he is convinced, then he will endeavour to
have you returned to Fardohnya. In return for an assurance from King
Hablet that he won’t step foot outside his own borders,
naturally.â€
“And if my father refuses such an assurance?â€
“Then you’d best learn to like Medalonian cooking,
your Highness,
because you won’t be going anywhere without it.â€
Adrina thought for a moment, but Damin could not tell what was going
on behind that lovely face. She was like some exotic piece of coral
that grew on the reefs south of Greenharbour — glorious to look
at,
deadly to touch.
“What sort of proof does he require?†she asked
eventually.
“Information. Something he can corroborate from another
source.â€
Adrina nodded. “I’m not certain I know anything of
strategic value,
my Lord, but I will try to think of something.â€
“Just let the guards outside know, when you think of it.
They’ll see
the message gets to the Lord Defender.â€
He gave her a short bow, out of politeness rather than respect, and
turned to leave, a little surprised that he had managed to remain so
calm.
“My Lord?â€
He turned back. “Was there something else?â€
“May I leave this chamber, now that I’m a guest,
as opposed
to a prisoner?â€
“Only under escort, I’m afraid. You are in the
middle of a war camp,
your Highness. The Lord Defender would not wish any harm to come to
you.â€
“You wouldn’t mind a bit, though, would
you?†She met his eye
evenly, her gaze a blatant challenge. Damin almost let his desire to
strangle this woman get the better of him, before he swallowed his
annoyance and forced himself to smile.
“I am also a guest here, Adrina, and I’m compelled
to abide by the
wishes of my hosts. The Lord Defender wishes to see you treated well,
and I will see that you are. But don’t mistake my cooperation
for
weakness. If I can prove you are lying, I will cheerfully slit your
throat myself.â€
If his declaration frightened her, she gave no sign. Her gaze never
wavered; her expression did not change. “I find your honesty a
refreshing change in a Wolfblade, my Lord. Perhaps there is hope for
your family yet.â€
“Unlike the Fardohnyan Royal Family, we Wolfblades strive
for
quality, not quantity.†Damin almost enjoyed her refusal to
cower in
the face of his unveiled threat.
Adrina’s eyes glittered; they were quite a remarkable shade
of
green. “Ah, quality. Is that what you call it? One can only
hope your
striving for quality has been more successful in your case than
it has been in your uncle’s.â€
Damin was far too aware of his uncle’s peculiarities for her
barb to
have much impact, but he admired her courage. You did not trade insults
with a Hythrun Warlord, or impugn the character of the High Prince,
unless you were very, very sure of yourself. Then she unconsciously
touched her hand to the glittering wolf collar, reminding him sharply
of her true nature. His momentary admiration withered and died in an
instant.
“Perhaps, if you live long enough you’ll find out,
your Highness.â€
He turned from her again, unsure how much longer he could keep his
temper.
“I’d like to get out of here. Out of this keep. I
want to go riding.â€
Damin stopped with his hand on the latch. “I’ll see
what I can
arrange.â€
“And I want this collar off.â€
He shrugged. “It will take time, your Highness. I
don’t make a habit
of carrying court collars and their keys to war.â€
“Not even for your own court’esa?â€
“I don’t make a habit of bringing court’esa
to war, either.â€
She smiled maliciously. “I suppose you hardly need them,
with all
these big handsome soldiers around.â€
He was across the room, his hands around her throat, before he
realised what he was doing. The collar was warm to the touch, and
ironically, was the only thing stopping him from squeezing the life out
of her, there and then.
“Don’t push me too far, Adrina! I could kill
you for even
having possession of this collar!â€
“Get . . . your . . .
hands . . . off . . . me!†Her
voice was
fury coated in ice.
He let her go with a shove and strode from the room, shaking with
anger, slamming the door behind him.
Tarja was waiting for him at the bottom of the stairs. “How
did it
go?â€
“Wonderful!†he growled as he walked past without
stopping.
“So you didn’t try to kill her, then?†Tarja
called after him with a
laugh.
“Only once.â€
It took Tarja a few moments to realise he wasn’t joking.
CHAPTER 38
The next time Mikel met Dace, he had a little girl
with him. She was a pretty little thing and looked to be about five or
six. She had bare feet and wore nothing but a flimsy, sleeveless shift,
despite the cold, although she hardly seemed to notice the weather. The
child examined him with a slight frown then looked up at the older boy.
“He’s so sad!â€
“What do you expect?â€
Mikel glared at the pair, annoyed that they spoke as if he
wasn’t
there. “What are you doing here? Have you come to steal
something?â€
Dace grinned. “In a manner of speaking. This is Kali.
She’s my
sister.â€
The little girl smiled up at him. “Do you love me?â€
“I don’t even know you!†Mikel retorted, a
little taken aback by the
odd question.
She sighed. “Oh well, once you get to know me,
you’ll love me then.
Everybody does.â€
Mikel frowned and wondered what sort of home this odd brother and
sister came from, that Dace would proudly claim to be a thief and Kali
would expect everyone to love her on sight. He glanced around,
expecting Monthay to yell at him, but the sergeant was talking to
another Defender and seemed oblivious to the fact that Mikel had
stopped to talk to the children.
Dace noticed the direction of his gaze and grinned.
“Don’t worry
about him.â€
“Easy enough for you to say,†Mikel grumbled.
“Did you want to come and play with us?†Kali asked.
“I can’t. I’m a prisoner.â€
“What did you do?â€
“I didn’t do anything. I’m a prisoner of
war.â€
“But you’re just a little boy!†Kali sounded
quite upset. She turned
to Dace and tugged on his sleeve. “Go and make that man in the
red coat
let him go. For the afternoon at least. Then we can have some
fun.â€
Dace pulled a face at her. “I don’t do that sort of
stuff.â€
She let out an exasperated sigh. “Think of it as stealing
him away, Dace.â€
“Oh, well if you put it like that,†the older boy
said with a grin.
“That’s easy.â€
Almost as soon as he spoke, Monthay suddenly turned to Mikel.
“Hey! Boy! Take the afternoon off. I don’t want to
see you until
dinner time!â€
Startled, Mikel looked at the children with wide eyes. “How
did you
do that?â€
“Magic,†Dace replied. “Come on!â€
The boy began to walk away, his
sister at his side. “What shall we do, Kali?â€
Mikel hesitated for a moment, then ran to catch up.
“I don’t know. Did you want to visit with your
friends?â€
“I have no friends here,†Mikel told her glumly as
he fell into step
beside them.
“What about your brother?†Dace asked.
“Isn’t he with the Hythrun,
or something?â€
“How did you know . . .†he began,
then he remembered
what Jaymes had become and shook his head. “I have no
brother.â€
Kali looked up at him curiously. “Why are you lying?â€
“I’m not lying.â€
“Yes, you are!†she insisted. “We should
have brought Jakerlon,†she
added to her brother.
“Well, if I’d known he was a liar, I would
have,†Dace replied.
“Who is Jakerlon?â€
“The God of Liars,†Kali explained, giving him an
odd look. “He
doesn’t know much, does he?â€
“That’s Xaphista for you,†Dace shrugged.
“He pretends the rest of
us don’t even exist.â€
“What do you know about Xaphista?â€
“We know lots about Xaphista,†Kali announced
stiffly. “We know he’s
a bully.â€
“And arrogant.â€
“And rude! You wouldn’t believe how rude he can
be!â€
“Stop it! You mustn’t say such things! The Overlord
will strike you
down!â€
“Not likely,†Dace laughed. Then he glanced at Mikel
and noticed his
distress. “I’m sorry. You don’t have to get so
upset, you know. He
really isn’t listening to us. He’s got far too many
problems to care
what we’re saying about him.â€
“Serves him right,†Kali said. “If he
wasn’t so busy trying to rule
the world he’d have time to listen to his believers instead of
ignoring
them.â€
Mikel stopped walking, unable to tolerate their blasphemy any
longer. “Stop it! You have no idea what you’re talking
about! The
Overlord loves us. He listens to every prayer!â€
“Ah, but does he answer them?†Dace asked.
“Of course, He does!â€
“Very well, prove it,†Kali said.
“How?
The little girl thought for a moment. “I’ve a better
idea. I’ll
prove he doesn’t listen. Did you pray to the Overlord to watch
over you
during the war?â€
“Yes.â€
“Then what are you doing here?â€
Mikel couldn’t immediately think of an answer to that one.
Kali laughed at his hesitation. “There! What did I tell
you?â€
“The Overlord works in mysterious ways,†he
retorted, falling back
on a favourite saying of the priests. “He has a reason for
everything
He does!â€
“Nonsense!†Dace scoffed. “You’re
here because Xaphista hasn’t the
time to spare for one insignificant little boy. Your brother has the
right of it, although he shows a distinct lack of sense by choosing to
follow Zegarnald. Still, Zeggie never was that discerning — any
soul
who wants to pick up a sword will usually do for him.â€
“Jaymes is now a follower of Zegarnald?†Mikel asked
in horror.
Kali looked at him with narrowed eyes. “I thought you
didn’t have a
brother?â€
“Leave him alone, Kali. Come on, we were going to find
something to
do. Did you want to learn how to be a thief?â€
“No!â€
“Why don’t we pay Tarja a visit?†Kali
suggested. “He’s your friend,
Dace, and he owes me a big favour, although he doesn’t know it
yet.â€
“I hate Tarja,†Mikel muttered. Kali and Dace both
turned to stare
at him.
“But why?†Kali asked. “He’s really
nice. Well, for a non-believer,
at any rate, even though he knows the gods exist. I think he just
hasn’t decided who he should worship yet.â€
“Well, it won’t be you,†Dace said.
“Not when he finds out what you
did.â€
“Oh? And I suppose you think he’ll follow
you? Just because
you met him first?â€
Mikel looked from brother to sister in complete confusion.
“What are
you talking about?â€
They abruptly stopped arguing and smiled at him guilelessly.
“Nothing,†Dace shrugged.
“I know, let’s go visit Adrina!†Kali
suggested brightly. “You like
her don’t you, Mikel?â€
“Of course I like her! She’s the most noble princess
in the whole
world!†The prospect of seeing the princess raised
Mikel’s spirits
considerably, although he could not imagine how these two could arrange
to get anywhere near the closely guarded keep. “And besides,
she’s a
true believer,†he added, just to remind these pagans who had
the most
worthy god.
“Adrina? Believe in the Overlord? What rubbish!â€
Kali laughed
delightedly at the very idea. “She follows Kalianah, the
Goddess of
Love. She used to pray to the Goddess all the time.â€
“Used to,†Mikel pointed out triumphantly.
“Now she prays to
Xaphista.â€
“No,†Kali said with a sorrowful sigh. “I
think she just gave up.
It’s hard to find love when your father is so powerful. I
always meant
to find someone nice for her when she was old enough, but then she
stopped asking. I wonder why?â€
“What do you mean, you were going to find someone
for her?â€
Mikel asked. “The princess is married! She’s in love
with Prince
Cratyn!â€
“Don’t be silly! Of course she’s not in love
with him.â€
“How do you know?â€
Kali pouted. “I just do, that’s all.â€
“Why don’t you just ask her?†Dace said,
pointing towards the
corrals.
Their walk had taken them past the Medalonian corrals and closer to
the enclosures where the beautiful Hythrun horses were mustered. Unlike
the Medalonians, each Hythrun was responsible for his own mount and
every morning the Raiders would come to the corrals to feed their
mounts, groom them and talk to them as if the horses could understand
every word. There were no ramshackle canvas-covered shelters here. The
Hythrun had actually built stables, which were almost completed, on the
other side of the field. Mikel had heard Hadly complaining about the
waste of precious timber, while staring wistfully in the direction of
the sturdy Hythrun stalls.
Mikel followed Dace’s pointing finger and spied Adrina,
mounted on a
Hythrun steed, in the company of the Warlord. Damin Wolfblade was
talking to the foreman in charge of the construction team, and Adrina
sat patiently beside him, waiting for him to finish. She was dressed in
her dark blue riding habit, her long fur cloak draped over her
shoulders. She sat astride her horse, rather than sidesaddle, as was
proper for a lady. She looked remarkably well, and when the Warlord
turned and spoke to her, she nodded and replied with a faint smile. The
foreman bowed to the princess and returned to his duties. Adrina and
Damin wheeled their mounts around and headed south at a canter.
“He’d better not hurt her,†Mikel muttered,
to himself as much as
his companions.
“He won’t,†Kali assured him. “Pity
he’s one of Zeggie’s
favourites . . .â€
“Don’t even think about it Kali,†Dace
warned. “He’d be so mad at
you if you did anything.â€
“I know. But they do make a nice couple.â€
“Kali . . .â€
“Oh, don’t worry Dace, I’m not that
silly.†She turned to Mikel and
smiled brightly. “Your princess seems to be enjoying herself.
You’d
think she’d be a prisoner too, if she believed in the
Overlord.â€
Mikel had been thinking the same thing. He watched the riders as
they dwindled into the distance, saw them pick up the pace until they
were galloping across the plain. The faint sound of Adrina’s
laughter
lingered on the breeze. His heart constricted as he watched her. She
was his princess. She was married to Prince Cratyn. She
shouldn’t be
out riding alone with a man like Damin Wolfblade.
And she damned well shouldn’t act like she was enjoying it,
either.
Her plans for Tarja having met an unexpected
hitch, Adrina turned her attention, somewhat reluctantly, to Damin
Wolfblade. The more she saw of him, the more she realised she had
misjudged him badly, a fact she found worrying.
He was not a younger version of his uncle. Nor was he a spoilt,
figurehead Warlord. He was intelligent, surprisingly well educated, far
too astute for her liking, and obviously enjoyed the respect of his men
and the Defenders in equal measure. Not a man to underestimate. She
needed to learn as much as she could about the Hythrun prince. She
needed to discover what he liked, what he loathed, whom he admired and
whom he despised, and, more importantly, why he was angry with her.
That she had done something to enrage him was obvious. The day he
came to her room to announce she was to be given the freedom of the
camp, he had come close to killing her. Her snide remarks had not been
enough to provoke such a reaction. She had seen enough of him since
that day to know that he was generally even-tempered, at least around
everybody else. But nothing she had done since her capture warranted
the anger she felt simmering in him, even when he was making an effort
to be civil. It puzzled her. Until she discovered its source, she had
no hope of escaping this place.
They rode far south of the camp, toward a distant line of trees. She
wondered what would happen if she turned her horse and tried to make a
break for it, then glanced at Damin. He would run her down in a
heartbeat and the fragile trust she had fostered among her captors
would be destroyed. She sighed and let her mare follow Damin’s
stallion.
They slowed to a walk as they entered the small copse of thin
poplars. There were stumps littered about, the crude result of the
Defenders’ need for shelter for their horses. The thick carpet
of
fallen leaves muffled their horses’ hooves and the sound of
running
water was the only thing that disturbed the silence. Adrina rode up
beside Damin, assuming an air of nonchalance. It was time to start
working out what made this man who he was, and she was never going to
do that arguing with him. Be nice, she reminded herself.
“It must be hard for you, being Lernen’s
Heir.â€
He shrugged. “It can be a little trying.â€
“You’re not much like him.â€
He turned and looked at her. “Gods! Was that a
compliment?â€
She smiled. “Actually, I think it was. I must be
slipping.â€
Damin laughed. The first genuine laugh she had heard from him since
their embarrassing conversation about Tarja. “Don’t
worry Adrina, we’re
alone. I won’t tell if you don’t.â€
His laugh was infectious. She began to understand what others saw in
him. He was very hard to dislike in this mood. It made him doubly
dangerous.
“Do you miss your family? So far from home?â€
“Sometimes,†he admitted, which surprised her a
little. “Medalon can
be . . . trying at times, too.â€
“I miss my family.†Perhaps empathy would work where
sarcasm had
failed.
“From what I hear, there’s quite a lot of them to
miss.â€
“My father is prolific, if nothing else. Do you have
brothers and
sisters?â€
“In abundance. Although not quite as many as you can claim.
You met
my half-sister in Greenharbour, I believe.â€
“Did I?â€
“She’s the High Arrion.â€
“Kalan is your sister?†She wondered why that nosy
little toad,
Lecter Turon, had never mentioned that the leader of the powerful
Hythrun Sorcerers’ Collective was the High Prince’s
niece. “I didn’t
know.â€
“She’s a couple of years younger than me. My father
was killed in a
border raid when I was only a year old, and my mother remarried with
something close to indecent haste. Even more indecent when you count
the months from the wedding date until Kalan’s and
Narvell’s arrival,â€
he added with a grin.
“Narvell?â€
“Kalan and Narvell are twins.â€
“You mean your mother had a lover while she was married to
your
father?†The idea did not shock her — many noblewomen
took lovers — but
she was a little surprised that Damin seemed so complacent.
“She probably had several. It was an arranged marriage
— Lernen’s
idea — and there was little affection between them.â€
“My father made an offer for the Princess Marla
once.â€
“I know. I think that’s why he married her to my
father, just to
annoy Hablet.â€
“My father still hasn’t forgiven Lernen for
that,†Adrina remarked.
“And you wonder why I don’t trust you?â€
She was sorry she ever brought the subject up. Now was not the time
to remind Damin of the conflict between their monarchs. She ignored the
remark and smiled brightly. “You were telling me about your
sister.â€
Damin looked at her oddly for a moment then continued his tale.
“Kalan’s father was the Warlord of Elasapine’s
son. He and mother
returned to Elasapine after they married, leaving Kalan, Narvell and me
in Krakandar. He died a couple of years later. But Marla kept finding
husbands — and losing them. Every few years she would breeze
in,
introduce us to our latest stepbrother or stepsister, then vanish again
for years at a time. I think Almodavar raised us more than Marla
did.â€
“That’s dreadful!â€
“On the contrary, I had a wonderful childhood. We had a
whole palace
to play in, no parents to interfere and a staff that we chose ourselves
for the most part.â€
“You chose the staff? The children?â€
“It was more a process of elimination,†he laughed.
“If we didn’t
like somebody we had ways of getting rid of them. Half a dozen children
can be very inventive when the need arises.â€
With a twinge of envy, Adrina recalled her own closely guarded
childhood in the nursery of Hablet’s court in Talabar. Such
freedom was
almost beyond her ability to comprehend.
“Did your mother not fear for you? Alone like that?â€
“We weren’t alone. Almodavar was my father’s
closest friend and some
of the people in Krakandar have been there since my
grandfather’s time.â€
“You’re lucky. At least you knew your mother. Hablet
had my mother
beheaded.â€
It was Damin’s turn to look startled. “Why?â€
“My mother was his first wife; a princess from Lanipoor,
from a very
ancient and noble line. He never loved her — he only married
her for
the prestige she brought him — and her very large dowry. He
loved a court’esa,
a Hythrun actually, named Welenara. She and my mother fell pregnant
within days of each other. It was bad enough that my mother had to
endure Welenara so blatantly carrying Hablet’s child, but then,
to add
insult to injury, it was Welenara who produced a son, while the best my
mother could do was a daughter. She was rather put out, by all
accounts. When Tristan was only a week old, she hired an assassin to
poison him and his mother. The assassin failed, my father learnt of the
attempt and had her beheaded.†Adrina shut her mouth abruptly,
stunned
that she had told him so much. She was supposed to be trying to draw
him out, not regale him with her life story. She never
discussed her mother with anyone. It was a forbidden subject around
Hablet.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t know.â€
“Pity is the last thing I need from you, my Lord.â€
Her sudden change of mood had him shaking his head, but he said
nothing. He rode on a little further and then dismounted beside a
leaf-strewn pool. There was steam rising off the still water and the
air tasted faintly of sulphur. Adrina dismounted beside him and looked
around in surprise.
“The water’s hot!â€
“Almost too hot to swim in,†he agreed.
“It’s a thermal spring. The
timber cutters discovered it. I hear Lord Jenga has already had an
approach from some enterprising soul who wants to build a tavern here.
For medicinal purposes, of course.â€
“Of course,†Adrina agreed. She knelt down, peeled
off her riding
glove and dipped her hand into the pool, snatching it out quickly as
the water seared her cold fingers.
“Your brother Tristan was killed in battle, wasn’t
he?†Damin asked
behind her.
Adrina stilled warily. How had he known that?
“Yes.â€
“And that’s the reason you ran away?â€
She stood up and turned to face him. “One of them.â€
“I see,†he said thoughtfully. He was standing by
his horse, a good
five paces from her, but she still felt as if he was crowding her.
“So
the Karien boy was lying. You weren’t trying to sneak through
Medalon
to ask your father for his cannon.â€
Mikel was lucky he was nowhere in reach at that moment. Adrina could
have cheerfully strangled the little brat. “He’s a
child. I told him
that to keep him quiet. He would have run straight to Cratyn if he
thought I was leaving for any other reason.â€
Damin gathered up his reins and swung into his saddle.
“I’m curious.
Why did you order your troops to surrender?â€
“Cratyn would have executed them when he discovered
I’d left. I
couldn’t think of anything else.â€
He nodded, as if she had confirmed something he already knew.
“A
noble gesture, your Highness. Not something I would have expected from
someone like you.â€
Adrina remounted, glaring at him. “What’s that
supposed to mean?â€
But he didn’t answer her. He nudged his horse forward
leaving her to
ponder his words. She had a feeling that if she could figure out what
he meant, she would understand the reason he despised her so much.
Still, she had made progress. It was the first conversation of
substance they had ever had that hadn’t ended with him
threatening to
send her back to Karien. Or to kill her.
CHAPTER 40
Adrina woke with a start, aware that something was
different, although she could not pinpoint exactly what it was. She was
sweating, her palms moist, her heart pounding. She had dreamt again,
the same nightmare that had plagued her since she had left Karien
—
that Cratyn had found her, dragged her back across the border and
forced her to dine with him on a meal that frequently turned out to be
her dead dog. With a shudder, she pushed the memory away. It was a
stupid dream. She refused to be cowed by an over-active imagination.
The chamber was filled with grey light — and silence. It
reminded
her of waking in the Karien camp the morning of the battle. The air had
that same eerie quality, the same stillness, the same feeling of
anticipation. Cautiously, she climbed out of bed. Shivering in the icy
chamber, Adrina snatched up her cloak from the bed where it served as
an extra blanket and threw it over her shoulders. She walked to the
arrow-slit window and looked out, but as far as she could make out, the
world had turned white. It took her a moment to realise what she was
seeing.
When it hit her, she gasped, and hurriedly dressed in her riding
habit, ignoring Tam’s sleepy question from the other pallet in
the
corner of the room. She pulled on her boots and was out the door,
startling the guards with her sudden appearance. Running past them,
down the stairs and through the deserted hall, she jerked open the
heavy door to the Keep and stepped out into a wonderland.
There were a number of mounted Defenders in the yard and the men on
the wall-walk stamped their feet against the cold, but Adrina took no
notice of them. She hurried to the gate and looked out over the
snow-covered camp in astonishment. The landscape had completely
changed. Where there had been the panoply of war yesterday was now a
silent, white vista as far as the eye could see. It was barely dawn and
the soldiers were only just beginning to rouse. Thin smoke rose from
the cookfires. The vast plain had been transformed from a war camp into
a thing of beauty.
“You’ve not seen snow before, have you?â€
Adrina turned at the voice to find Tarja riding up behind her with a
sergeant and a number of troopers in tow. He dismounted, amused by the
expression on her face.
“It’s . . . glorious!â€
“Well, it is for now. Give it a few hours and most of this
will have
turned into slush,†he warned with a wave of his arm.
“It’s too warm
for it to last long and too early in the year for a decent
fall.â€
“Oh,†she said in disappointment.
Tarja seemed to take pity on her. “Would you like to take a
good
look while it’s still in all it’s pristine
glory?â€
“Don’t you have something better to do?â€
“I’ve got plenty to do, but nothing that
can’t wait. Besides, It’s
Founder’s Day. It’s supposed to be a holiday.â€
The red-coated Defender
hurried forward. “Sergeant! Her Highness would like to borrow
your
horse. Tell Hadly I’ve been delayed then go find some
breakfast. I’ll
be back in an hour or so.â€
The man saluted and retrieved his mount for Adrina, holding it for
her while she mounted. Tarja swung into his saddle and walked his horse
forward.
“Ready?â€
“This is very noble of you, Captain.â€
They moved off at a slow walk, letting the horses pick their own way
through the camp.
“Being noble is vastly preferable to discussing the riveting
topic
of horse feed with Hadly, your Highness.â€
She smiled at him, wondering if Damin had lied to her about Tarja.
He seemed anxious for her company. Maybe he was feeling the loss of the
absent demon child. A lonely man was a vulnerable one.
“Well, I still think you’re being noble, Captain.
You have rare good
manners.â€
“For a Medalonian?†he teased.
“That wasn’t what I meant. I just meant that
compared to some people
around here . . .â€
Tarja laughed. “Ah! You speak of our Warlord. I thought you
two were
starting to get along quite well.â€
Adrina frowned and reminded herself that this man was
Damin’s
friend. It would be inadvisable to tell him what she really thought of
the Hythrun.
“Lord Wolfblade can be tolerable, when he’s not
trying to be
abrasive.â€
He looked at her oddly. “Well, you can’t really
blame him, can you?
Not after what you did.â€
“What did I do?â€
He refused to answer her question. Instead, he kicked his horse into
a canter.
“Captain!†she called as she raced after him.
“I believe that
statement demands an explanation!â€
“The sun will be fully up soon,†he remarked as she
caught up with
him, admiring the scenery with determination. “Most of the snow
will be
melted by midday.†They had ridden past the northern edge of
the camp
and crossed into the deserted training grounds.
“Don’t ignore my question! What did you mean by,
‘not after what I
did’?â€
He glanced at her and shrugged. “I’m sorry, I
shouldn’t have said
that. It’s none of my business. You and Damin should sort out
things
between yourselves.â€
“I’d be happy to,†she snapped. “If
I had any idea what you were
talking about!â€
“You really don’t know?â€
“I wouldn’t be asking if I did!â€
Tarja reined in his mount and turned to face her. “He claims
you
tried to kill the High Prince of Hythria.â€
“That’s ridiculous!â€
Tarja shrugged. “I’m just telling you what he told
me. He said you
hired some boys to do the job, but they killed themselves rather than
carry out your orders.â€
Adrina felt her fury rising like a volcano. All her plans to be nice
evaporated in the face of such a terrible accusation. “That
arrogant,
lying . . .â€
“I take it you have a somewhat different opinion?â€
“How dare that . . .
that . . .
degenerate . . . even think such a thing! Let me tell
you about your pet Warlord, Captain! He’s a savage, unfeeling
monster
who doesn’t deserve to breathe! I never tried to kill his
damned uncle,
although I wish I had! I gave those boys my knife to spare them from
the twisted lust of a depraved old man.â€
Tarja was taken aback by her fury, but seemed determined to believe
his friend’s version rather than hers. “Yet you kept
the collars as a
souvenir. Why?â€
“To remind myself why his whole damned family should be
destroyed!â€
He frowned, then suddenly wheeled his horse around. “Come
on,
there’s something I want to show you.â€
He led her north toward the battlefield. Adrina urged her horse to
follow, wishing for a sorcerer-bred mount, rather than this sturdy, but
uninspiring beast. She no longer felt the cold. Her anger warmed her
better than any cloak, better than any fire. As they neared the
snow-covered mangonels, he veered right, away from the field. The
soldiers manning the front paid them little attention as they rode by,
their attention focused on what lay north of the border. This was the
closest she had come to the border since escaping from Karien and she
allowed herself a moment to wonder what Cratyn was doing. He and that
damned Hythrun would have made quite a pair.
Tarja led her east, away from the field until they reached a low
stone wall that encircled a large snow covered mound. Adrina looked
about in puzzlement.
“You brought me here to show me this?â€
“It’s a grave.â€
“Whose grave?â€
“Your Fardohnyans. The men who died on the
battlefield.â€
Adrina swallowed an uncomfortable lump in her throat. It was so big.
Had there been so many? She wiped away bitter tears that suddenly
stung her eyes.
“I thought Medalonians cremated their dead?â€
“We do. Burial is illegal in Medalon but Damin refused to
allow the
Fardohnyans to be cremated. He had his own men dig the grave. He buried
them with their weapons, to honour your War God. Your captain was
buried separately because he was of royal blood.â€
“Tristan! Where? Where did they bury him?â€
Tarja pointed to a small rock cairn on the southern side of the
mound. Adrina flew from the saddle and ran to it, no longer caring if
Tarja saw her crying. Tristan! Oh, Tristan!
Tarja dismounted and followed her slowly, leading her mount with
his. He waited patiently as she knelt by the cairn, not caring that her
knees were being soaked by the snow, her face in her hands, as she let
go of the grief she had so tightly controlled until now. She sobbed
until her throat was raw. She sobbed until she had no more tears to
shed.
Finally, she had no idea how long, she sat back on her heels and
wiped her eyes, the scabbed over wound of her grief lanced and washed
clean by her tears. It was then that she noticed the position of the
cairn in relation to the mound. It was facing southwest. Toward
Fardohnya.
“They buried him facing home.â€
“That’s your savage, unfeeling monster for
you.â€
She turned and looked at him sharply. “Don’t try to
tell me this
proves anything! Cratyn is the most devout man that ever lived, but it
doesn’t stop him from being a bastard!†She sniffed
inelegantly and
climbed to her feet. “I’ll grant you I’m
surprised, but it hardly makes
Wolfblade a saint.â€
“Perhaps not,†he conceded. “But I think you
do him an injustice.â€
“I’m the one falsely accused of attempted
murder.â€
“Then take it up with Damin, your Highness,†Tarja
said wearily. “We
should be getting back. Hadly’s waiting for me.â€
He handed her the reins of her borrowed horse before swinging into
his own saddle. Adrina stared at the mound for a moment, marking the
place in her memory, before mounting the dun gelding.
“How did my brother die?â€
Tarja hesitated for a moment before he answered. “He died in
battle,
your Highness. Isn’t that all you need to know?â€
“I want to know who killed him.â€
“To what purpose?â€
Tarja’s reluctance to give her a straight answer made her
suspicious. “It was Wolfblade, wasn’t it?
That’s why you’re looking so
uncomfortable. Damin Wolfblade killed my brother then buried him here
as some sort of barbaric boast, so he could come and gloat over his
grave.â€
“No,†Tarja replied, looking even more discomforted.
“Damin didn’t
kill your brother.â€
“How can you be certain?†she demanded. “You
said yourself, he died
in battle. How do you know this burial mound isn’t some sick
Hythrun
ritual to mock the dead? How do you —â€
“He died by my hand, Adrina.â€
His admission stunned her into silence. He met her accusing eyes
with genuine regret.
“I’m sorry, Adrina. But this is war and he was
trying to kill me at the time. If it’s any comfort, his last
thoughts
were of you.â€
Tarja gathered up his reins and turned his mount toward the camp.
She stared at his retreating back wishing she could somehow take
vengeance on this man who had robbed her of her beloved brother. But
she had not expected this. Not his confession, nor the pain it had cost
him to make it. Confused and troubled, Adrina followed Tarja back to
the camp in silence, not even seeing the glorious snow-covered plain.
When they reached Treason Keep Tarja helped her dismount without a
word and turned to lead her horse away.
“Tarja?â€
He looked at her over his shoulder.
“Why did you tell me? Why not let me think someone else had
killed
him?â€
“A Defender is honour-bound to speak the truth, your
Highness.â€
“You could have said nothing.â€
“I could have,†he agreed. “But you are
determined to think the
worst of Lord Wolfblade. We could have sued for peace weeks ago. Were
it up to me or the Lord Defender, you would have been ransomed back to
your husband the day we found you. Damin is the only thing standing
between you and the husband you seem so determined to desert. It
didn’t
seem right to let you blame him for that too.â€
Tarja led the horses away and left her standing there. She wondered
for a moment why she felt no burning urge to avenge Tristan. The man
who killed him was right here, within reach.
Then the reason came to her. It was not Tarja who was responsible
for Tristan’s death. He may have wielded the blade, but it was
Cratyn
who had killed him. Cratyn and his sick priests.
Cratyn was the one who would pay.
CHAPTER 41
The news that the First Sister was on her way home
caused a flurry of activity in the Citadel. Everyone seemed intent on
sprucing up their own little patch of the city and even the Defenders
were not immune. Loclon found himself facing an empty arena day after
day, as the cadets were called away to other duties. Learning
swordcraft was all very well, but the First Sister was due and she was
bound to insist on an inspection. One had to get one’s
priorities right.
Left to his own devices, Loclon sought amusement in the Blue Bull,
but even that worthy establishment was suffering the effects of the
First Sister’s impending return. There was nobody drinking in
the
tavern and the benches were stacked on the tabletops as fresh rushes
were laid out. Loclon slammed the door in annoyance and headed back to
his rooms.
When he arrived back at Mistress Longreaves’ Boarding House
he
discovered a note pinned to his door. He looked around before opening
it, but at this time of day, the hall was deserted. I want to see
you, the note said. It was unsigned, but he needed no name to know
who had sent it. He went into his room, threw the note on the fire, and
exchanged his red jacket for a nondescript brown one. It would not do
to be seen entering Mistress Heaner’s in broad daylight in his
uniform.
Lork opened the door for him and stood back to let him enter. He
pointed wordlessly to the hall. Loclon frowned. He did not like meeting
Mistress Heaner in the basement; did not like to be reminded that he
was serving the Overlord.
When he reached the bottom of the stairs, he discovered Mistress
Heaner was not alone. The narrow altar was ablaze, the symbol of
Xaphista glittering malignantly in the candlelight. The old woman was
on her knees, chanting softly. Beside her was a man wearing a brown
cassock, his tonsured head so polished it reflected the candles. How
in the name of the Founders had a Karien priest managed to get into the
city? He waited as they finished their prayers and the priest
helped the old woman to her feet before retrieving his jewelled staff
from the altar. Mistress Heaner studied him with predatory eyes and
turned to her companion.
“This is the man I spoke of. Captain Loclon, this is
Garanus.â€
Loclon nodded warily in the direction of the priest, then looked at
Mistress Heaner. “You said you wanted to see me. I can come
back later
when you’re not busy.â€
“It was I who sent for you,†the priest said. His
voice was accented
and oddly rasping, as if his throat had been burned. He laid the staff
gently on Loclon’s shoulder, waiting for a moment before
withdrawing it
with a faint nod of satisfaction. “Mistress Heaner tells me you
have
something of a history with the demon child.â€
At the mention of R’shiel, Loclon’s doubts vanished.
“Do you know
where she is?â€
The priest nodded. “She will be here within a day. She
accompanies
the First Sister.â€
Loclon burned with the heat of his need. “Then I will kill
her as
soon as she arrives.†Kill her, yes, but slowly and oh-
so-painfully — and only after she begs for mercy.
“You will do no such thing!†the priest snapped.
“Isn’t she destined to destroy your god? I’d
have thought killing
her would be the first thing you’d want.â€
“She was created to destroy him, Captain.
That’s not the
same thing as destiny. The demon child lacks commitment. She has not
accepted the task, or she would be heading for Karien, not the
Citadel.â€
“So . . . what . . . you think
you can
turn her to your cause?â€
“Xaphista is the one true god,†Mistress Heaner
reminded him. “The
demon child will become his ally and destroy the Primal gods. He has
decreed that it will be so.â€
Loclon thought it unwise to point out the flaw in her argument. If
Xaphista really was the only god, then who had created the demon child?
And if the Primal gods did not exist, as the Overlord claimed, what
need for someone to destroy them?
“Your task will be to bring her to us,†Garanus
explained. Then he
added with a slight frown, “Whole and unharmed,
Captain.â€
“I was promised vengeance.â€
“And vengeance you shall have,†the priest assured
him. “Once the
demon child has embraced the Overlord, she will turn on our enemies,
and yours, and destroy them.â€
That wasn’t quite what Loclon had in mind. “What did
you want me to
do?â€
“You will be taking part in the Founder’s Day
Parade, yes?â€
He nodded. Nobody got out of that duty.
“The First Sister will arrive towards the end of the parade.
She has
no doubt timed the event to maximise the impact of her return.â€
“The First Sister is fond of making an entrance,â€
Mistress Heaner
added scornfully.
“You will assign yourself to her party and stay close to
her.â€
“Assign myself? You don’t know much about the
Defenders, Priest. One
doesn’t assign oneself to anything.â€
“If you are nearby when she arrives, and volunteer for the
duty, I
am sure you can manage something.â€
“And what about R’shiel?â€
“It is likely you will not recognise her. She may be using a
glamour
to conceal her identity. But that is not your concern. There is a man
with her. A Harshini half-breed named Brakandaran. You must kill
him.â€
He shrugged. “And then what?â€
“Once you have brought proof that Brakandaran is dead, we
will
discuss the best way to handle R’shiel.â€
Loclon was not very happy with the arrangement. “Are you
sure you
know who you’re dealing with? There is no best way to
handle
R’shiel. She’s a murderous bitch.â€
“The demon child can be controlled, Captain. Her strength is
also
her weakness.†He reached inside his cassock and withdrew a
thin silver
choker with a jewelled clasp in the shape of the star and lightning
bolt of the Overlord. “This will ensure her
cooperation.â€
“You think she’s going to change sides for that
little trinket?†he
scoffed.
“With this ‘little trinket’, as you call
it,†the priest informed
him with a malicious smile, “the demon child will do anything
you want
of her. The more she tries to use her power to fight it, the worse it
will be for her.â€
Loclon took the choker and examined it thoughtfully.
“She’ll do anything, you say?â€
The priest nodded. “Anything.â€
Founder’s Day dawned overcast and dull,
with low
clouds threatening rain and a cold, blustery wind that groped through
any gap in clothing with chill fingers. The crowd was thick around
Francil’s Hall as the citizens gathered for a glimpse of the
returning
First Sister, but their mood was subdued. It was too cold to stand
around waiting and as the parade passed by; many thoughts were turned
to the bonfires and the warm food waiting in the Amphitheatre. If she
did not arrive soon, hunger was likely to win out over curiosity.
Loclon had volunteered for crowd duty, rather than riding in the
parade. He had managed to get himself placed in command of the guards
around the Hall and was well positioned on the steps, just below Sister
Harith and the remainder of the Quorum. Thunder rumbled overhead and
the clouds seemed low enough to touch. Loclon fretted at the time it
was taking the noisy floats to move down the street. There was no sign
of the First Sister.
The last float was rounding the corner of the Administration Hall
when the skies opened. The Quorum hurriedly moved back under the
shelter of the entrance to the Hall while the crowd dived for whatever
cover they could find. Many simply turned and fled, running with cloaks
held over their heads to escape the downpour. Loclon stayed at his
post, drenched by the icy rain, barely even noticing it in his
impatience. Where is she?
There was a moment of anticipation as the crowd waited, but the rain
was a significant deterrent. If the First Sister’s carriage did
not
arrive soon, there would be nobody left to greet her. Loclon watched
the crowd thin with dismay. He had hoped to get to the half-breed in
the crush, but soon there would be nobody left but him. He glanced at
his men who looked desperate to find shelter, warning them with a look,
of the consequences should anybody presume to break ranks. Sister
Harith and the Quorum were conferring under the meagre eaves of the
Hall. With another glance down the street in the direction of the Main
Gate, they vanished inside.
The departure of the Quorum signalled the end of the festivities as
far as the rest of the citizens were concerned. Within minutes the
street was all but deserted and Loclon no longer had an excuse to keep
his men standing in the rain. He muttered a curse and turned to dismiss
them as the First Sister’s retinue arrived.
His men hastily stood to attention as the outriders appeared,
followed by a closed carriage with the shutters pulled tight against
the downpour. Loclon could feel his heart beating faster as the
carriage drew to a halt, waiting to catch sight of her. His hand
caressed the hilt of his knife, ready to draw it in an instant to kill
the half-breed. He had no fear of the consequences. Once a dead
Harshini lay at the First Sister’s feet, he would be a hero.
“Loclon! What in the name of the Founders are you doing out
in this!
Get those men out of here!â€
He started at the anger in Garet Warner’s voice.
“We were waiting for the First Sister, sir! To see if we
could be of
any assistance!â€
The commandant was as sodden as Loclon as he dismounted, but he
didn’t seem bothered by it. “Don’t be absurd!
The First Sister has her
own men. Dismiss your men, Captain.â€
“But sir . . .â€
“I said, dismiss your men!â€
Loclon did as he was ordered and watched helplessly as
Joyhinia’s
guard gathered around the carriage to help the First Sister down. One
of them held a cloak over her head, to shield her from the rain as
another sister disembarked. Although the deluge obscured his vision,
Loclon could have sworn it was Mahina Cortanen. He waited for a moment
longer, but a dark-haired woman and Lord Draco seemed to be the only
other passengers.
He looked about desperately, but there was no sign of
R’shiel, or
the half-breed he was supposed to kill. The First Sister was hurried
inside and the remainder of the Defenders headed gratefully for the
stables with the carriage and the horses.
Loclon stood in the rain, cursing softly. Where is she?
CHAPTER 42
Brak and R’shiel waited in the shelter of
the
gatehouse for the better part of an hour before following the First
Sister into the Citadel. Brak had drawn a glamour over them and their
horses, so that the guards sheltering from the rain did not notice
their presence. It did not make them invisible, but the
guards’attention slid off them like water off an oiled cape.
R’shiel
braided and unbraided her reins nervously as the rain hammered down and
they waited on Bhren, the God of Storms, to finish the task
R’shiel had
asked of him.
Brak had never had much luck communicating with the Storm God. Bhren
was a solitary spirit with cares on a global scale. The insignificant
problems of humans seldom touched him. But he had come when Lorandranek
had called him and had responded just as promptly when his daughter had
asked his help. Brak glanced at the water sheeting down from the low
clouds, then looked at R’shiel with concern.
“You did tell him we just wanted a storm, didn’t
you, not a global
catastrophe?â€
“It’ll stop soon,†she assured him, although
she did not sound
convinced.
The rain had been Lord Draco’s idea, conceived five nights
ago in
Cauthside while they waited on the ferry to take them across the Glass
River. Their method of gaining entrance into the Citadel, without
Joyhinia being immediately overwhelmed by the long list of people who
required an audience with her, had been a matter for hot debate.
Garet Warner insisted that if Joyhinia was thought to be sneaking
back into the Citadel, suspicions would be immediately aroused. She had
to enter in a manner befitting her station. It was expected. But they
could not risk someone speaking to Joyhinia. Her response was likely to
be a childish giggle. And they certainly could not risk her in front of
a crowd.
R’shiel had wanted to use the demon meld, but even Dranymire
had
baulked at that suggestion. The demons had been practising their meld,
but it took a lot out of them and the Gathering was still to be faced.
Brak had suggested a glamour, but that did not solve the problem of
Joyhinia being seen publicly. A glamour would conceal her and that
brought them back to the problem of sneaking into the Citadel.
It was Draco who had remarked that it was a pity they
couldn’t
arrange for it to be raining. No matter how important the personage,
nobody would hang about, cold and wet, for a glimpse of the First
Sister — and neither would they expect the First Sister to
stand about
waving to them. R’shiel had glanced at Brak with that dangerous
light
her in eyes that he was coming to associate with the demon child having
an idea he knew he wouldn’t like.
“You could ask Bhren.â€
“The Storm God is not like Dacendaran, R’shiel. He
spends little
time worrying about the Harshini, and even less time thinking about
humans. The only Harshini I knew who could get any sense out of him was
Lorandranek.†He regretted saying it the moment he uttered the
words.
“Maybe I could ask him?â€
“Ask who, what?†Garet demanded.
“Ask the God of Storms to make it rain the day we arrive at
the
Citadel.â€
Garet stared at her for a moment then shook his head. “I
don’t want
to know about this.†He rose from the table in the Heart and
Hearth
tavern and took the stairs to his room two at a time.
Draco watched him go and then turned back to Brak and
R’shiel. “He
is uncomfortable with your gods.â€
“And you’re not?†R’shiel shot back.
She did not like Draco. Tarja’s
father had been Joyhinia’s creature for thirty years. He had
ordered
the murder of R’shiel’s family and the village where
she was born, and
he had been quite prepared to put his own son, R’shiel, and
three
hundred rebels to the sword at Joyhinia’s command. But the man
reeked
of regret. In many ways he was like Lord Jenga — honourable to
the
point of foolishness. One mistake had set him on a path so far from his
original destination that he was almost completely lost. The man was
trying to claw his way back, to somehow make amends, but neither Tarja
nor R’shiel was ready to forgive him. Brak trusted him more
than Garet
Warner. Garet had his own agenda. All Draco wanted was redemption.
“I’ve seen enough to believe your gods exist,
R’shiel, although I do
not worship them.â€
“You’re more adept at turning on your own kind, you
mean,†R’shiel
snarled. Brak laid a restraining hand on her arm.
“Stop trying to pick a fight, R’shiel.â€
Surprisingly, she did as he asked. Deliberately excluding Draco she
turned to him questioningly. “How do I speak to Bhren?â€
“Very carefully,†Brak had replied, only half
jokingly.
“See, I told you it would stop!â€
Brak forced his attention back to the present to discover the rain
had eased to a light drizzle. “Thank you, Divine One,â€
he said under
his breath, although it was unlikely that Bhren was listening.
“We should get moving,†R’shiel advised,
glancing warily at the
guards. Brak nodded and followed her into the street, still holding the
glamour tightly around them.
It was nearly two hundred years since Brak had been in the Citadel,
and the changes wrought in that time depressed him. Once this had been
his home, before the Sisterhood had snatched it from the Harshini. As a
child, he had played with demons among the vast gardens that were now
replaced by cluttered housing. He had gone exploring in the ancient
woods surrounding the Citadel that had long been cleared to meet the
voracious human appetite for firewood and lumber. Humans had
obliterated all the beauty of the Citadel, all the elegant hallmarks of
Harshini architecture. Only the temples and the Halls of Residence
remained of the original city, but they too had been corrupted, their
artwork painted over, their graceful lines distorted by later additions
to their structures. Brak was glad the Harshini could not see the
Citadel now. It would bruise their souls to see what had been done to
their home.
“I can feel it,†R’shiel breathed in wonder.
“I can feel the
Citadel.â€
“He’s reacting to your presence.â€
She frowned, trying to reach out with senses not yet mature enough
to identify what she was experiencing. The Citadel was welcoming her
home, just as it had watched over her for most of her life. Until now,
she had not been aware of the power that enabled her to feel his
presence.
“I thought only gods could tell what I am?â€
“The spirit of the Citadel is a god,†Brak
explained. “An Incidental
god, not a Primal god, but a god nonetheless.â€
“You mean he’s like Xaphista? He’s a demon
that grew powerful enough
to call himself a god?â€
“No, the Citadel is unique. He came into being as the
complex was
built. He is the essence of the place. Its soul if you like.â€
R’shiel digested the information silently as they approached
the
Temple of the Gods. Brak did not know what the humans called it now,
but once it had been the centre of Harshini life — the place
where any
god, no matter how powerful or insignificant, could be called into
being. He had played with gods and demons in that Temple, back in a
time when life held a great deal of promise. Back in the days before he
understood what it was to be half-human. Back in the days before he had
killed Lorandranek.
“What did Dranymire mean about the Harshini needing access
to the
Citadel to protect themselves?â€
“You can’t kill a Harshini here, R’shiel.
The Citadel won’t permit
it.â€
She looked at him, her violet eyes wide with astonishment.
“You’re
kidding?â€
“No. But don’t get too exited. That protection
doesn’t extend to
half-bloods. You and I are just as mortal as anybody else,
here.â€
“So if the Harshini could come back to the Citadel, they
would be
safe from the Kariens? Even if they cross the border?â€
“It’s the only protection they have, other than
remaining hidden.
Their inability to kill is painfully real, R’shiel.
There’s a story I
heard once about the First Purge. A mob of humans attacked a Harshini
family trying to flee the carnage. They raped the women, butchered the
children and then handed the last Harshini standing a sword. They knelt
in front of him and offered him their exposed throats, taunting him to
kill them. He dropped the sword and threw himself on the ground, hoping
they would take his life too. He couldn’t ask them to do it,
the
prohibition against violence includes suicide.†He did not
realise how
cold his voice had become until R’shiel looked at him with
genuine
concern.
“It’s not just a story, is it, Brak?†she
asked softly.
“No.â€
“What happened?â€
“We arrived too late to save him. But the humans who
attacked them
never lived long enough to gloat about their deeds.â€
“You killed them? How, if the Harshini can’t
kill?â€
“There were a lot more half-bloods in those days. Before the
Sisterhood, mixed marriages were not that uncommon. We were young and
hot-headed and didn’t take the Purge lying down.â€
R’shiel thought about that for a moment. “Where are
the other
half-bloods now?â€
“One half-blood was more dangerous to the Sisterhood than a
dozen
pure Harshini. They made a special effort to eradicate us.â€
They had
ridden past the Hall of the Gods without stopping. Brak was very sorry
he had ever mentioned the First Purge. Although centuries old, the
memories still burned like acid.
“You’re the only one left.â€
“Until you came along.â€
R’shiel did not ask anything further on the subject, for
which Brak
was grateful. He glanced at the low, grey sky and realised that
R’shiel
had been correct in her assertion that rain would force the Gathering
indoors and that the Hall was the only other possible venue.
She was still insisting they coerce the Gathering into accepting
Joyhinia, but Brak had held off showing her how to do it, until the
last possible moment, hoping she would change her mind. He lacked the
power himself, to coerce a large group of people, but he knew the
technique, although working it left him sick to his stomach. Since her
stay at Sanctuary, under the careful guidance of Korandellan and her
Harshini tutors, R’shiel had learnt much about her ability. But
she was
still a babe-in-arms by Harshini standards. A babe who was acquiring
knowledge she lacked the judgment to use wisely, at a frightening rate.
So frightening that Brak found himself being very careful about what he
did in her presence.
She had come a long way since Shananara had tried to teach her
simply how to touch her power. That day by the Glass River, more than a
year ago, seemed to be part of a much more distant past.
If the Citadel’s desecration had cut him
to the
core, then Tavern Street was like rubbing salt into the wound. The
whole cluttered street, which had once been a wide, tree-lined avenue,
wore an aura of shoddy greed. With the rain, the feast in the
Amphitheatre had been washed out and the tables laden with food had
been moved to the verandahs outside the taverns. The street was packed
with people venturing out into the fading drizzle to avail themselves
of the Sisterhood’s generosity. Red coats mingled with
grey-robed
Probates, green-robed Novices and the more varied colours worn by
ordinary people. There were only a few blue Sisters in sight. Most of
them had chosen to stay indoors, rather than fight the crush in the
rain. Of the white-robed Sisters of the Quorum, there was no sign at
all.
“Isn’t there somewhere else we can go?†Brak
asked, eyeing the crowd
uneasily. They had planned to take rooms in a tavern close to the Hall
of the Gods and stay out of sight until the Gathering at sundown.
“But we were supposed to meet Affiana here.â€
“She’ll wait for us.â€
R’shiel thought for a moment then nodded. “The
Amphitheatre will be
deserted with the food moved down here. The caverns should be quiet
enough.â€
R’shiel turned her horse and led the way, although Brak
could have
found his way blindfolded. The caverns had been stables once, built to
house the ancestors of the Hythrun sorcerer-bred horses. They rode into
the torch-lit tunnel and dismounted, leading their horses deep into the
caverns where they were unlikely to be disturbed. Brak looked around
the empty, hollow rooms with a sharp sense of loss.
He shook off the feeling and turned to R’shiel. “Are
you sure you
want to do this?â€
“There’s no other way, Brak.†The darkness
hid her expression, but
it could not hide her excitement. Since returning to the world of
humans, the differences between the demon child and mere mortals were
more evident each day. Those differences were beginning to make her
feel a little too superior for Brak’s comfort. He could
remember
feeling the same way, when he was her age, and he discovered how much
his power set him apart. But that kind of arrogance was dangerous to
R’shiel and everyone around her. She needed to be brought down
a peg or
two, as he had been, and soon.
“What you want to do is wrong, you understand that,
don’t you?â€
“It is necessary.â€
“Are you prepared for the consequences?â€
“What consequences?†For the first time, she
didn’t sound quite so
certain.
“Coercing humans is easy, R’shiel,†he
explained. “People do it to
each other all the time. They don’t use the same sort of power
as we
do, but they have other methods which work just as well.â€
“I don’t understand what you’re getting
at.â€
“You remember when you were fighting with the rebellion? I
saw you
coerce those young hot-heads any number of times and you didn’t
know
anything about the Harshini power you had access to. Tarja convinced
three hundred rebels to attack a full Company of Defenders in Testra
with nothing more than rhetoric. Every mother who cajoles her child
into eating stewed turnips is using coercion.â€
“What’s your point, Brak?â€
“The point is that you could bully the heathens into
fighting
because, deep down, they wanted to. Every rebel who attacked Testra at
Tarja’s behest secretly dreamt of victory. Even the child who
eventually succumbs to the stewed turnips has hunger giving him a push.
Coercing people to act against their will, is an entirely different
matter. You have to get past their natural inclinations and then force
them to move in a different direction. You are robbing them of any
vestige of free will, and free will is something that runs so deep in
the human soul it’s like trying to get the Glass River to flow
backwards.â€
“You think I don’t have the power to do it?â€
she asked, sounding
rather alarmed. “The Karien priests can do it.â€
“R’shiel, you could level a mountain if the mood
took you. Your
power is not the issue. As for the Kariens priests, their ability is an
abomination. Remember that Xaphista was a demon once. During their
initiation ceremony they drink his blood. And it’s not some
slaughtered
animal’s blood they’re drinking either, it really is
Xaphista’s. The
blood links them to their god in the same way we’re linked to
our
demons. Through that link they can call on his strength to weave the
coercion.â€
“But the link must be pretty tenuous,†she said.
“Where did they get
the power to coerce a whole army?â€
“Individually they’re weak, but as a group they can
be devastating.â€
“You’re not worried I’ll start worshipping
the Overlord, are you?â€
she asked with a grin.
Brak could have slapped her for being so flippant. She
wasn’t
listening at all. “It’s what will happen to these
people afterwards,
that worries me. If you coerce them into believing Joyhinia wishes to
retire in favour of Mahina, then that’s exactly what
they’ll do. But
tomorrow, or the week after, or a year from now, when you’re
not around
to suppress their natural feelings, they will begin to wonder why.
They’ll know they’ve been tricked. Mahina’s
reign is likely to be even
shorter than the last time. One dissenting voice will turn into two,
which will turn into ten which will turn into an avalanche.â€
“I’ve already told you, we’ll send the most
likely dissenters
away . . .â€
He shook his head in exasperation. “It won’t matter.
You have no way
of knowing who is susceptible and who isn’t. The ones you think
most
likely to object may take to the coercion like it was mother’s
milk.
But there will be others, people you don’t even suspect, for
whom the
coercion will last less than a day. There will be nearly a thousand
Sisters in that Hall, R’shiel. You can’t watch them
all.â€
“Then we’ll do something to keep them quiet. It only
has to last
long enough for Mahina to issue the orders sending the rest of the
Defenders to the front. She can resign after that and they can hold
another election —â€
“Do what?†Brak cut in.
“I don’t know,†she snapped. “Maybe
if they all got sick, or
something . . .â€
“You mean you’d create an epidemic just to keep the
Sisters
occupied?â€
“I suppose. Nothing serious, just something that keeps them
close to
the garderobes for a few days.â€
“I see. And when this epidemic spreads to the general
population, as
it will, what of the young, too weak to fight it? The old, too frail to
withstand it? Are you ready to kill innocent people to keep your
coercion from falling apart?â€
“Then what do you suggest we do? We have to get the rest of
the
Defenders to the border!â€
“Fine. Have Joyhinia issue the order. Have her resign, too,
if you
must, but the more complex the coercion, the more chance there is of it
blowing up in your face.â€
“But we need Mahina in charge.â€
“Then put her in charge, but let her take control herself.
If you
impose an artificial control, the results could be catastrophic. Trust
her to know what she’s doing. She got caught out once. I
don’t think
she’ll be so foolish this time.â€
“What are you suggesting? That we get through the Gathering
and then
walk away?â€
“Actually, I was thinking of running, not walking. One of
the
hallmarks of maturity for a Harshini is knowing when not to use
your power, R’shiel.â€
“I’m not Harshini. Not completely.â€
“You’re not completely human, either, but
that’s no excuse for
acting like an idiot. Consequences, R’shiel. I ask you again.
Are you
prepared for the consequences?â€
She was silent for a moment, considering her answer carefully.
“The consequences of not acting are liable to be
worse,†she said
finally.
“You don’t know that for certain.â€
“No,†she agreed, then she sighed. “Alright,
I’ll grant you that
letting Mahina establish control in her own right is probably safer
than imposing it artificially. But I will have to coerce them into
accepting her appointment at the Gathering.â€
“And then we leave?â€
“I suppose.â€
“Good. I’ll be waiting outside the Hall with our
horses. It’s too
damned dangerous for you here R’shiel.â€
“Dangerous? Compared to what? The border, where
there’s a war going
on?†She smiled wearily at him. “Show me how
it’s done, Brak. We’re
running out of time.â€
Brak silently admitted defeat. He had done all he could to deter
her, short of refusing her the knowledge outright. But she had felt it
once before, the night before the battle. If he did not instruct her
properly, he knew that she would simply try to copy what the Kariens
priests had done, and the result might be disastrous.
The irony was, using simple human tactics, she was coercing him into
showing her something he thought far too dangerous for her to learn. At
least she had agreed to leave, once the deed was done. Brak
couldn’t
put his finger on it, but he had a feeling of impending danger and it
had been growing steadily stronger ever since he had entered the
Citadel.
He wished the Citadel was easier to read, easier to understand. He
could feel its anxiety and it was making him very nervous.
CHAPTER 43
Loclon waited until almost sundown before finally
accepting that R’shiel and her half-breed companion were not
going to
appear. Cold, wet and thoroughly disgusted, he made his way to the Blue
Bull tavern to meet with Garanus and report his lack of success.
Loclon had thought the tavern an odd choice for a meeting place. It
was far too public for his liking, and a Karien priest would stand out
like a red-coated Defender in a snowstorm. Garanus had shrugged off his
concerns. He had private rooms available, he said, and had paid the
tavern keeper well to ensure her silence. Besides, it was
Founder’s Day
and the Citadel was full of strangers. A few more would barely rate a
mention.
The rain had dwindled to a light drizzle about an hour after the
First Sister arrived and had completely stopped an hour or so after
that. Not wishing to be seen defying Garet Warner’s orders, he
had paid
an urchin to watch Francil’s Hall, and another to keep an eye
on the
Main Gate. It had proved a waste of good coin. Nobody even remotely
fitting R’shiel’s description had entered the Citadel
since the parade.
She had either arrived early, or the priest was wrong.
Tavern Street was still crowded when he arrived, the revellers
determined to get full value from the public holiday, particularly now
the rain had stopped, although the air was bitterly cold and many of
the party-goers stood hugging the small fires that lined the street. He
pushed through them impatiently into the crowded taproom of the Blue
Bull, where he spied Lork standing guard outside the door to one of the
private dining rooms. The big man wore an expression that turned away
the curious, simply by its ferocity. When he reached the door, Lork
barred his way with a low snarl.
“I’m expected,†he said. Lork glared at him
for a moment before
dropping his thick arm. Loclon opened the door and pushed past him.
He froze in shock as the door snicked shut behind him. He was
expecting Mistress Heaner and Garanus to be waiting for him, not five
more Karien priests and a tall man with hooded eyes, who by his bearing
just had to be a Karien nobleman, despite his unremarkable clothing.
“Ah, Captain,†Garanus said, looking up at the sound
of the door
closing. “You bring us good news, I trust?â€
For a fleeting moment, Loclon wanted to run. This was getting out of
hand. His desire to see R’shiel suffer had not included
treason. He had
been able to convince himself for months that his association with
Mistress Heaner was simply a ploy. He had made himself believe that
information he passed on was not critical, that he was using them
rather than the other way around. Confronted with incontrovertible
proof of Karien involvement at the highest level, what was left of his
conscience gave a dying cry of protest. He ignored it.
“Your information was wrong. R’shiel was not with
the First Sister.â€
The Karien Lord glanced at Garanus, frowning. “You claimed
you could
feel her.â€
“I could,†Garanus assured him. He glanced at the
other priests, who
nodded in agreement. Their tonsured heads and pale skin made it hard to
tell one from the other. “We all could. Our captain here may
have
missed them, but the glamour the demon child and her lackey wove to
conceal themselves is like a beacon to those of us who are close to the
Overlord. Trust me, Lord Terbolt, she is here.â€
Loclon studied Terbolt guardedly. The name meant nothing to him, he
had little interest in Karien politics, but he was bound to be a
personage of some note. A man whose good will he needed to foster if he
was to continue on this path.
“They must have arrived earlier, before the parade.â€
Garanus shrugged. “When they arrived is not important. The
fact that
they are here is all that counts.â€
“So what now? I can hardly kill this half-breed if I
can’t find him.â€
Lord Terbolt nodded in agreement. “Nor can we expose this
ungodly
Harshini alliance with the Sisterhood, with either of them on the
loose. Can’t you use your . . . powers, or
whatever it
is that you do, Garanus, to track them down?â€
“What Harshini alliance?†Loclon asked, before the
priest had a
chance to answer.
Lord Terbolt turned to him. “The Sisterhood has been
secretly allied
with the Harshini for years, Captain. The demon child was raised under
their protection. Now they have openly allied with the Hythrun, and the
Harshini, whom the Sisterhood claims have been extinct for more than a
century, begin to reveal themselves once more. We already have reports
of Harshini appearing again in Greenharbour. Before long, they will
overrun the entire continent with their insidious heathen gods. We are
here to put a stop to it.â€
Loclon wasn’t sure that he believed the Karien, but it made
sense.
Until she had run away with Tarja, R’shiel had been training
for the
Sisterhood. Her mother was the First Sister. The thought that his
career had been destroyed by a Harshini bitch who was secretly working
to destroy Medalon burned like acid in his gullet.
“What do you want me to do?â€
“I think we should pay a visit to the First Sister,â€
Terbolt said.
The Sister’s Hall was all but deserted.
Every Blue
Sister in the Citadel was heading for the Gathering. Getting past the
guards was easy. Loclon knew the effect a barked order had on men
conditioned to follow their officers without question. He and Gawn had
led Lord Terbolt, his priests, and the silent Lork to the main
residential wing of the Sister’s Hall quite openly. With their
heads
covered by hooded cloaks, and their staffs hidden in their folds, the
Kariens looked as ordinary as any other visitors to the Citadel.
Gawn’s inclusion was not part of Loclon’s original
plan. The captain
had appeared on the verandah of the Blue Bull as they were leaving,
looking for some entertainment with a willing Probate. Now that he was
a widower, he spent a great deal of his off duty hours entertaining
willing Probates. They were safer than tavern-keepers’
daughters. As a
rule, if you impregnated one, you were not required to marry her.
Gawn’s eyes had widened at the sight of Loclon’s
companions, but he
was even further along the road of treason than Loclon, these days. He
acted as if he really did believe all that nonsense about the Overlord.
A thing made easier, no doubt, by the fact that the Overlord had
answered his prayers and his slut of a wife lay buried these past few
weeks, dead from a fatal dose of heckleweed that she unfortunately
mistook for seasoning. Loclon had grabbed his arm and dragged him
along, explaining the situation in a low voice as they made their way
towards the Sister’s Hall. Gawn had fallen in with them
willingly.
The guards at the entrance were easily dealt with. One did not
question a captain without very good cause. The men on the upper levels
were just as efficiently disposed of. Loclon ordered them downstairs,
accusing them of hiding inside the building to escape the cold. The men
saluted sharply and hurried outside.
The guards in the hall outside the First Sister’s apartments
were a
different matter. These were Garet Warner’s men. Loclon could
order
them about until he turned green without any noticeable effect. He
stopped just out of sight on the landing of the broad, carpeted
staircase and motioned the Kariens to silence.
“What do you think, Gawn?â€
“I think we’re going to have to fight,†the
captain replied softly.
“There is no need to fight,†Terbolt informed them
in a low voice.
“Lork, take care of it.â€
Before Loclon could protest, the big man stepped into the hall and
walked towards the two Defenders standing either side of the First
Sister’s door. The men looked up at his approach, hands on the
hilts of
their swords as they challenged him. Lork did not answer them. He just
kept walking. As soon as he was in reach of the Defenders, who, by this
time, had begun to draw their weapons, he grabbed a man with each of
his plate-sized hands and smashed their heads together so hard Loclon
could hear their skulls cracking. He hurried forward as the men
collapsed at Lork’s feet.
“You fool! You’ve killed them!†he hissed.
“They were agents of evil,†Garanus announced as he
came up behind
them with Lord Terbolt and the other priests. “Their deaths
will please
the Overlord.â€
“Well, they won’t please anyone around here! We have
to get the
bodies out of sight!â€
“We can move them inside,†Terbolt said, turning to
face the
bronze-sheathed door. “Should we knock?â€
Gawn muttered something as the Karien pounded on the door. It was
opened a few moments later by Lord Draco, who took in the fallen guards
and the tonsured priests with a glance, reaching for his sword with a
speed that belied his age. Lord Setenton was prepared, however. He
plunged his dagger into Draco’s breast while the older
man’s blade was
still in its scabbard. The Duke of Setenton shoved him backward into
the room. Draco slid off the blade and collapsed on the expensive
patterned rug, his red jacket darkening with blood. He cried out an
unintelligible warning but there was nobody around to heed it.
Loclon stood frozen in shock, as Lork dragged the bodies of the
guards into the room and locked the door behind him. They had killed
two Defenders. They had killed the Spear of the First Sister.
He was damned whichever way he looked at it.
“Find the First Sister,†Terbolt ordered. The
priests spread out,
checking the numerous doors that led off the main hall of the First
Sister’s apartments. Loclon stared at Draco who lay groaning
softly,
hand clutched uselessly over his punctured chest.
“Finish him, Captain,†Terbolt ordered brusquely.
“His moaning
offends me.â€
“But he’s . . .†Loclon began
uncertainly.
“I’ll do it,†Gawn offered, drawing his
sword. He walked to where
Draco lay dying and barely even hesitated as he plunged the blade into
him, over and over again. Draco was long dead before he stopped.
Loclon watched Gawn mutilating Lord Draco and discovered, somewhat
to his embarrassment, that rather than repulse him, the smell of the
blood was arousing him. He turned away to hide the evidence of his
excitement.
“Can’t bear to watch, eh?â€
Loclon composed himself before turning back, trying to sound
nonchalant. “A bit excessive, don’t you think?â€
Gawn shrugged. “I thought you’d be pleased.â€
“Pleased? To watch you hack an old man to death?â€
“He’s not just an old man, Loclon. I thought you
knew. Lord Draco is
Tarja Tenragan’s father.â€
Before that startling news had time to register, one of the priests
cried out from a room up the hall. They hurried to the door and pushed
their way through.
Across the threshold lay the body of a statuesque middle-aged woman,
blood pooling beneath the knife wound in her chest. Her dark hair
partially covered her face, but could not hide the startled look in her
dead eyes. Loclon stepped over the body and stared, open-mouthed at the
sight before him.
They had found the First Sister.
She was sitting on the floor, dressed in a simple grey tunic, her
long, grey streaked hair undone and hanging limply over her shoulders.
In her hands was a tattered rag doll with one eye missing. She was
rocking back and forth, humming tunelessly.
Joyhinia Tenragan, the most ruthless First Sister in living memory,
the woman who had ordered a Purge that had killed thousands of
Medalonians, looked up as they crowded in her room and smiled at them.
“Do you want to play with dolly?†she said.
CHAPTER 44
Since befriending Dace, Mikel rarely spent a full
day among the horses. Whenever Dace appeared, Sergeant Monthay would
suddenly turn to Mikel and dismiss him, along with the warning that he
did not expect to see him again until dinnertime. Mikel had no idea why
Dace had that effect on the Medalonian and finally decided to stop
questioning his good fortune. Perhaps it was the Overlord’s way
of
sparing him a life of forced labour.
Sometimes, Kali would join her brother on their daily jaunts. Every
time he saw the barefooted little girl, she would stare at him closely
and demand, ‘Do you love me?â€
Mikel thought it the strangest question, and it seemed to annoy Dace
too, but he had begun answering yes, simply because Kali would sulk if
he answered any other way. An answer in the affirmative left her
beaming for the rest of the day. She would hold his hand, and smile at
him a lot, and not say blasphemous things about the Overlord, which
Mikel found something of a relief.
Dace pouted a lot when Kali was with them, and he argued with her
all the time. But he seemed incapable of refusing her anything. If Kali
had been his sister, Mikel thought, he would have ordered her
to stay at home and expected her to comply. These Medalonians really
did lack the proper understanding of the place of a female.
When Dace and Mikel were alone, they spent hours exploring the
Medalonian camp. They were never challenged by the Defenders, never
asked what they were doing, never in trouble. The followers’
camp was
even more interesting. Dace had a knack for smiling at people so
charmingly that they never thought to question his right to be there.
Mikel had no success trying to emulate his companion’s winning
smile.
The one time he had tried it on a Defender, hoping to sneak into the
Keep to find out how the princess was faring, the Defenders on guard
had sent him packing with a blistering reprimand.
Of course, one had to be on their guard around Dace. He was always
trying to coax Mikel into stealing things. He did not seem to care what
Mikel stole, just that he stole something. Its value was
irrelevant, it was the act that mattered. But Mikel had been true to
his faith and had not fallen to the dangerous charms of his new friend.
If anything, he felt he was a positive influence on the young thief and
was certain that he had saved the youth from sinning on more than one
occasion.
Today however, Dace had finally suggested they steal something that
even Mikel could not resist.
There was, according to Dace, a blue swallow’s nest in the
tower of
the old keep. The mother swallow must have gotten her seasons mixed up
because it was almost winter, and the chicks would die if they hatched
at this time of year. Dace’s noble plan was to steal the eggs
from the
nest and take them somewhere warmer, where they could incubate safely.
Once hatched, they could dig up worms for the chicks and nurse them
through the bitter weather. By spring, they would be ready to make it
on their own and the boys could release them.
Try as he might, Mikel could find no fault with Dace’s plan.
Saving
the chicks from a freezing death was a good deed, and brave too, when
one considered where the nest was located. Although Dace insisted on
calling their rescue mission “stealing†he joined in
the escapade
willingly. His enthusiasm pleased the young thief enormously. He acted
almost as happy as his sister Kali, the first time that he had agreed
he really did love her.
Strange people, these Medalonians.
“How are we going to get into the Keep?†Mikel
demanded as he
hurried alongside Dace toward the old fort. Dace had been disturbingly
vague on that point. The ground was slushy underfoot from a light
snowfall the night before which had turned to mud almost as soon as the
sun touched it. Mikel hated this Medalonian weather. He fervently
wished it would snow properly, like it did in Yarnarrow or Kirkland,
not this half-hearted mucky stuff that fell from the skies every few
days with no other purpose than to make everything muddy and damp.
“They change the guard just before sundown,†Dace
explained. “We’ll
sneak in then.â€
Mikel had not been inside Treason Keep since the day he had been
interrogated by Tarja and Lord Wolfblade. He tried hard not to think of
that day. The memories still hurt too much for him to be able to recall
them willingly. Even the Keep’s unofficial name seemed to taunt
him.
“But aren’t there guards on the tower?â€
“Lord Jenga says it’s too dangerous up there and not
worth
repairing. The guards stay on the wall-walk. Once we get inside,
we’ll
be fine.†Mikel could hardly question such a confident
assurance, so he
trudged alongside the thief and prayed to the Overlord that Dace was
right. “Besides,†Dace added cheerily,
“It’s Founder’s Day. Lord Jenga
declared a holiday. There won’t be many guards on duty.â€
“What’s Founder’s Day?â€
“It’s when the Medalonians celebrate the day they
stole Medalon from
the Harshini.†Dace suddenly stopped walking and grinned at
Mikel. “Now
that was an interesting time, let me tell you! The others were steaming
mad. Of course, a theft on that scale made me stronger than Zegarnald
for a time, but then the Sisterhood launched their purge and the
fighting started and I went back to being just plain old me. It was fun
for a while, though.â€
“Dace, what are you talking about?â€
The thief shrugged. “Nothing. Come on, we’d better
hurry. It’s
almost sundown and we won’t be able see the nest in the
dark.â€
Shaking his head, Mikel hurried after Dace. The boy had a habit of
wandering off like that. It was very disconcerting.
As Dace predicted, they were not challenged as they passed through
the gate into the Keep. The Defenders barely even glanced at them.
Mikel followed as he walked boldly across the muddy yard to the
dangerously crumbling steps that led to the tower. As they carefully
climbed the broken stairs, Mikel understood why Lord Jenga had
condemned the tower. The masonry wobbled under even his slight weight.
The sun appeared to be resting on the steep peaks of the Sanctuary
Mountains as they reached the top of the tower. It was a blocky, square
structure but the merlons had crumbled and in one corner there was
nothing but a pile of fallen rubble, almost as tall as Mikel. It was to
the pile that Dace led him, squeezing in through the narrow opening
between the rubble and the wall. It smelled musty in the tiny cave
formed by the ruined masonry, but the mother swallow had picked her
location well. The nest was protected from the wind and from the eye of
any roving hawk looking for an easy meal.
“See! Five eggs!†Dace declared.
“I can’t see a thing!†he complained. It was
so dark inside the
little cavern he could only make out Dace from his glittering eyes.
“Look, it’s over . . .â€
“Sshhh!†Mikel froze as the sound of footsteps
reached him. He
turned slightly, so he could see outside.
It was Princess Adrina. He bit back a cry of surprise as a man
joined her on the tower. The Hythrun Warlord’s profile was
sharp
against the setting sun.
“I trust you have a reason for this perilous
expedition?†the
princess demanded as she turned to stare out over the plain.
“I thought you might enjoy the view, your Highness.â€
Damin Wolfblade really should learn to speak to the princess with
more respect.
“It’s lovely. Can we go now?â€
“Tell me what you see.â€
“I see nothing, and I’m freezing. Is this really
necessary?â€
“You see nothing,†Damin repeated thoughtfully.
“Interesting, don’t
you think?â€
“You find nothing interesting? Well, that’s
hardly
surprising for a man of your limited intellect.â€
Mikel grinned in the darkness of his hidey-hole. That’s
telling
him!
“Adrina, a few leagues from here, your husband’s
army sits and
waits. They do nothing. They don’t attack. They don’t
train. They don’t
even run away. They just sit there, waiting for something. I want to
know what they’re waiting for.â€
Adrina turned north, her expression puzzled. Rather than the biting
retort Mikel was expecting, she shrugged. “I have no
idea.â€
“Were they planning something, before you left? Something
that would
account for their willingness to hold an army of that size immobile for
so long?â€
“I’d tell you if I knew. Their war council did
little more than
argue, and you’ve already seen their idea of battle. The Dukes
of
Karien are not renowned for their tactical genius. When you have
countless troops to throw into battle it isn’t really
necessary.â€
Mikel wasn’t sure he believed what he was hearing. They
sounded
so . . . friendly.
“Could one of the Dukes have advised him to wait?â€
“Lord Roache may have,†Adrina shrugged.
“What did the Duke of Setenton advise?â€
“Lord Terbolt? He’s not there. He sent his brother
Ciril in his
place.â€
The warlord frowned. “Terbolt isn’t there?
He’s Jasnoff’s most
trusted commander. Where is he?â€
“I don’t know. Cratyn didn’t seem surprised
by his absence, though.
Perhaps Jasnoff had other plans for him.â€
“What other plans?†Damin asked, the concern in his
voice obvious
even to Mikel.
“I was permitted to join their war council rather
begrudgingly, my
Lord. They weren’t in the habit of discussing anything of
import while
I was present.â€
Damin laughed softly. “Not an unwise precaution, in light of
recent
events.â€
Adrina turned on the Warlord. “That remark was uncalled for,
my
Lord.â€
Damin sighed. “That’s right, I forgot. You
aren’t committing
treason, you just want to be free.â€
“Free! Get this damned collar off my neck, then I might
remember
what the word means!â€
As Damin moved closer to her, Mikel wanted to leap to the defence of
his princess, but Dace held him back.
“No!†the thief whispered.
Burning with frustration and not at all certain why he remained
hidden, Mikel turned back to watch, thinking the Warlord was much too
close to the princess to be proper.
Damin was fingering the golden collar Adrina wore with surprisingly
gentle fingers. It reflected the setting sun, making the wolf’s
ruby
eyes glitter malignantly. Adrina’s rigid posture betrayed more
than she
imagined.
“What would you give to be free, Adrina?†he asked
softly.
“Unhand me, sir!â€
Damin dropped his hand. “I can see why your marriage was
never
consummated, your Highness.â€
Mikel swallowed a horrified gasp. He knew what
“consummated†meant.
Adrina laughed. She sounded genuinely amused. “You
don’t like me
much, do you? Is that why you take so much pleasure from tormenting
me?â€
“Ah, now there’s the tragedy, your Highness. If you
weren’t such a
treacherous, conniving little bitch, I’d probably be quite
taken with
you.â€
Adrina turned away from him, to study the red streaked clouds. The
sun was almost completely set. “You presume to know an awful
lot about
me, considering the short time of our acquaintance, Damin Wolfblade.
How much is your own opinion, and how much is hearsay, I
wonder?â€
“I make my own judgments. I’ve no need to listen to
hearsay.â€
“I beg to differ, my Lord,†she retorted, turning to
face him. “You
told Captain Tenragan I tried to kill the High Prince. You
weren’t
there. How could you possibly know what happened, unless you listened
to hearsay?â€
“He told you that, did he?â€
“Yes, and it’s a damned lie! I did no such thing!
Your uncle is a
perverted monster, and if those boys would rather die than let him
touch them, I don’t blame them!â€
“So you did give them the knife?â€
“Yes!â€
Damin was silent for a moment. “Why did you take the
collars?â€
“I didn’t take them. Lernen gave them to me. I kept
them as a
remembrance of two children destroyed by a debauched old man. Somebody
owed them that much.â€
He took a step back from her. “It’s cold, your
Highness, and I know
how anxious you are to return indoors. Shall we go?â€
Adrina planted her hands on her hips angrily.
“That’s it? No
apology? No admission that you were wrong? How dare you, sir!â€
The Warlord shrugged. “For all I know, you’re lying
about that, just
as you lie about everything else.â€
“I am not lying!â€
Damin closed the gap between them with frightening speed.
“Then
prove it, Adrina. Tell me the truth! Why did you leave Karien?â€
Although he was looming over her, Adrina held her ground. Mikel watched
helplessly, wanting to kill Damin Wolfblade almost as much as he wanted
to stay hidden and watch this strange scene unfold.
“I’ve told you a thousand times! I left because
Cratyn is a
miserable, cowardly, little cretin! The day we were married he hit me
and called me a Fardohnyan whore and told me all he wanted was a Karien
heir to my father’s throne. It went downhill from
there.â€
Tears misted Mikel’s eyes to hear such words coming from his
princess. She is lying to protect herself, he reasoned
anxiously.
She walked to the other side of the small tower and leaned against
the crumbling merlons, turning her back to the Warlord. The darkness
was settling rapidly, making her features hard to distinguish.
“Was it that bad?†Damin asked, in a surprisingly
sympathetic voice.
“Worse than you could possibly imagine. The bastards even
killed my
dog.†She’s making it up, Mikel told himself, over and
over. She’s
making it up.
“Does your father know what it was like?â€
“Even if he did, he wouldn’t care. Hablet has his
own plans.â€
“To invade Hythria, no doubt.†Adrina looked around
sharply, but
Damin smiled. “Don’t worry, Adrina. I won’t
overtax your ability to
admit the truth any further, this night. Your father’s worst
fault is
his predicability. His plans are easy enough to fathom. It’s
the
Kariens who have me worried at the moment.â€
“I told you, I don’t know what they have
planned.â€
“And oddly enough, I believe you. Come on. The sun has set.
If we
stay up here much longer they’ll be able to decorate their
damned
Founder’s Day banquet with a couple of ice statues.â€
He held out his hand to help her down and, to Mikel’s
disgust, she
accepted it. But she halted at the top of the steps and leaned toward
him in a most unladylike manner. “Tarja showed me the graves,
Damin.
That was a noble thing to do for an enemy.â€
“Careful, your Highness, you might actually get me believing
there’s
a heart hidden beneath that rather impressive bosom.â€
She snatched her hand from his angrily. “You are an
intolerable
bastard! I was trying to be gracious!â€
“Gracious?†he laughed softly. “That
wide-eyed look? Those slightly
parted lips? That eloquent sigh? What’s next? ‘Oh
Damin, won’t you please
let me go’? Gods Adrina! I’ve been around court’esa-trained
noblewomen all my life. You’ll have to do better than
that.â€
“You flatter yourself, my Lord,†Adrina said, her
voice colder than
the rapidly darkening night. “In the unlikely event I ever turn
my
skills on you, you won’t even know what hit you, until
you lay
whimpering at my feet, begging for more!â€
“Don’t try playing that game with me, Adrina. You
might find the
rules a little different this far from Fardohnya.â€
“Rules?†she laughed softly, savagely. “In
this game, my Lord, there
are no rules.â€
Adrina vanished from Mikel’s sight as she descended the
stairs,
followed closely by Damin. Mikel’s breath came out in a rush
and he
discovered he was trembling. He wished he could make sense of even half
of what he had seen and heard. The princess must be very upset to lie
about Prince Cratyn like that. What were they doing to her?
“Psst!â€
Mikel glanced in the direction of the thief who sat squashed in the
dark cavern.
“What?â€
“You have to steal the eggs!â€
Annoyed, Mikel reached in and snatched the fragile speckled eggs
from the nest.
“There! Satisfied?â€
Dace nodded, grinning broadly. “You have honoured the God of
Thieves.â€
“If you say so,†he agreed distractedly. It was a
measure of his
distress that he did not bother to correct the youth. Normally such a
statement received a sharp denial of the existence of any other god.
“Your soul belongs to me now, Mikel,†Dace said,
sounding enormously
satisfied with himself.
“My soul belongs to the Overlord,†he replied
mechanically.
“That’s what you think,†the God of Thieves
smirked.
CHAPTER 45
The Medalonians celebrated Founder’s Day
with a
degree of abandonment that Adrina considered rather inappropriate for
men in the middle of a war. Admittedly, there wasn’t much of a
war
going on at present, so they might as well take this opportunity to
enjoy themselves. Even the Hythrun Raiders joined in as if it were a
festival of the gods. They didn’t care much for
Founder’s Day, she
suspected, but they weren’t going to ignore an excuse for a
party.
There was precious little else to do. One senseless battle and now
Cratyn was sitting on the other side of the border with his vast army
doing precisely nothing.
The hall was filled with people, as Jenga had declared an open house
and many of the officers whose wives and lovers were in the
followers’
camp had brought their women to the party. Someone had managed to find
a quantity of blue linen and had made a hopeful attempt to decorate the
crumbling walls, but there had not been enough to go around. The
decorations had a forlorn, unfinished look. The only source of heat was
the abundant torches and the huge fireplace near the far end, but the
heat of so many bodies pressed together seemed to take the chill off
the air.
There were quite a few court’esa present as well,
although
Adrina thought the term a rather misguided one, when applied to these
ill-bred, uneducated whores, whose only feature in common with real
court’esa was their willingness to trade sexual favours
for coin.
A small band of musicians was playing in the corner, enlisted men
mostly, whose skill with an instrument had got them invited to the
officers’ party. They weren’t bad either, considering
their first
calling was killing people and musicianship was merely a secondary
talent.
With his hand on her elbow, Damin guided Adrina through the crush
towards Lord Jenga, who stood by the stairs that led up to her
quarters, talking to Tarja Tenragan.
Adrina studied him curiously. She had never been able to crack that
calm certitude, even when he admitted to killing her brother. And it
was not for lack of trying. The captain showed no interest in her
— or
any other woman present, she noted, slightly mollified. Perhaps Damin
was right. Perhaps there was nothing any woman here could offer him
that compared with what he already had.
“I’m so glad you could join us, your
Highness,†Lord Jenga said as
they approached.
“I wasn’t aware that I was given a choice in the
matter, my Lord.
Good evening, Captain.â€
“Your Highness. Damin.â€
“I thought you’d be taking part in the festivities,
Captain. I’m
sure there are any number of young ladies here who would be delighted
to keep you company.â€
Tarja shook his head with a faint smile. “I’m sure
there are, your
Highness, if I was willing to spend the coin and didn’t mind
what
diseases I caught. May I get you some wine?â€
“Thank you,†Adrina replied, a little startled by
his blunt answer.
Damin caught her look and leaned forward to whisper in her ear.
“You
deserved that.â€
She glared at him for a moment then turned to Lord Jenga.
“So what
is this party in honour of, my Lord?â€
“Founder’s Day, your Highness. It’s the day
we celebrate the
foundation of the Sisterhood’s rule over Medalon.â€
“And you find that worthy of celebration?â€
“It’s tradition, your Highness,†Jenga
replied. “I’m sure you have
many such traditions in Fardohnya.â€
“Of course, my Lord. I apologise if you took
offence.â€
“Don’t listen to her, Jenga,†Damin warned.
“She’s not in the least
bit sorry.†He ignored the look Adrina gave him, and gave her
no chance
to defend herself. “Her Serene Highness did tell me something
though,
that she’s conveniently neglected to mention until now. The
Duke of
Setenton isn’t with Cratyn.â€
Jenga’s weathered brow furrowed. “That would explain
their tactical
stupidity. Is he out of favour with Jasnoff?â€
“Not that I’m aware of,†Adrina told him.
“Why did you wait until now to tell us?â€
“I didn’t realise you would consider it so
important, my Lord.â€
“Tell us what?†Tarja asked, returning with a cup of
wine for both
Damin and Adrina. She took the tankard and swallowed the wine with a
gulp. How was she supposed to know Lord Terbolt’s absence was
such a
big issue?
“The Duke of Setenton isn’t in the Karien war
camp.â€
“Then where is he?â€
“That’s a question I’d like
answered,†Damin replied, looking
pointedly at Adrina.
“I told you! I don’t where he is.â€
“You’ve told us a great deal, your Highness, half of
which is
probably outright lies, and the rest of which is doubtful.â€
“If we were in Fardohnya, sir, you would be put to death for
insulting me so.â€
“If we were in Hythria, your Highness, you’d
have been
flogged for being —â€
“Damin!†Tarja warned.
Fortunately, the Warlord didn’t finish the threat. Adrina
smiled at
Tarja gratefully, but it was time to escape the company of such an
intolerable man.
“Do you dance, Captain?â€
“Only when I can’t avoid it,†Tarja replied
with a grimace.
“Consider this one of those times. I feel the need for some
entertainment and I find the company in this part of the hall quite
dull.â€
Much to her annoyance, Damin laughed aloud at her comment. She
thrust her wine cup at Lord Jenga and all but dragged Tarja to the
centre of the Hall where a lively jig was in progress. She had no idea
of the steps involved, and did not particularly care. She took her
place in the line and followed the steps of the girl beside her, a
young thing of about sixteen with a pretty face that was ruined by a
missing tooth she displayed when she smiled. The dance was fairly
simple and repetitive so it didn’t take long before she got the
hang of
it. She glanced across the hall and saw Damin watching her. She quite
deliberately turned her head away and smiled winningly at Tarja.
“You don’t have to keep looking at him,â€
Tarja told her when the
dance brought them together for a turn.
“Looking at whom?†she asked, feigning innocence.
“You know who I mean. Are you trying to make him
jealous?â€
“Don’t be absurd! That would imply I care what he
thinks.â€
“And you don’t, of course.â€
“Of course not.â€
They parted then and broke into two lines, men on the right, women
on the left. The steps changed and Adrina found herself having to
follow the toothless peasant girl for a time. When she looked up, she
couldn’t see the Warlord, but she could feel his eyes on her.
The dance
took her back to her partner and she found herself confronting
Tarja’s
infuriatingly calm expression.
Was he really immune to her charms, she wondered? Is
R’shiel so
enticing that even when she is hundreds of leagues away, he can resist
what is right under his nose?
The lines of dancers moved together. When Tarja took her in his arms
for the next part she leaned into him and smiled, meeting his eyes with
an open invitation. There weren’t many men who could deny her
when she
chose to be irresistible. Cratyn and Damin Wolfblade being rather
notable exceptions, she recalled sourly.
Tarja’s reaction was not at all what she expected. His
expression
grew serious. “Damin wasn’t kidding when he said you
were dangerous,
was he?â€
“Do you think I’m dangerous?†she
teased.
“I think you’re a spoilt brat, actually,†he
replied pleasantly. “I
think that’s why you really left your husband. You’re
so used to
getting your own way that you ran away, rather than be denied.â€
“And what would you know about it?â€
“I’m something of an expert on spoilt brats, your
Highness. R’shiel
is fairly famous for it in some circles.â€
Adrina’s anger evaporated in the face of such a startling
admission.
She had never heard Tarja speak of R’shiel before. She was more
curious
about the demon child than she cared to admit.
“Is she very beautiful?â€
“Very.â€
“More beautiful than me?â€
Tarja laughed. “I’m afraid I’ll have to say
yes, but I’m hardly what
you’d call objective. Damin could probably give you a more
accurate
answer.â€
“Thank you, but I’d rather not ask him anything.
Tell me more about
R’shiel. Is she truly the demon child?â€
“So the Harshini claim.â€
“Don’t you believe them?â€
“I’m an atheist. I’m supposed to devote my
life to eradicating the
Harshini.â€
“Yet you have a Harshini lover? A curious way of carrying
out your
orders, Captain.â€
“I have a talent for complicating my life far more than is
necessary, your Highness. And you are a complication I don’t
want or
need, so quit rubbing up against me like that, or I’ll end up
doing
something we’ll both regret, and when R’shiel gets back
she’ll turn you
into a toad and me into something that looks like a smudge on the
road.â€
Adrina smiled. “I like you, Captain. I’ve even
forgiven you. Is the
demon child really so fearsome?â€
“No, just very certain about her territorial
boundaries.â€
“And I’m crossing them?â€
“You’re getting close.â€
Adrina stepped back a little, her ego somewhat appeased. She had
been beginning to wonder if she was losing her touch. The dance ended
with a round of applause and Tarja led her back to the stairs. The Lord
Defender had moved on and was talking to the officer who had charge of
the horses. The musicians struck up another tune and the hall echoed to
the stamping feet of the dancers. Damin was sitting on the stairs
sipping his wine. He did not bother to rise as she approached. His
manners were appalling.
“I see her Highness dances with the same flair she spins
fanciful
stories,†Damin remarked. “You survived, Tarja.
I’m proud of you.â€
“Only just,†Tarja admitted with a smile.
“Your Highness, it’s been
a pleasure, but I have duties to attend to. I’m sure Lord
Wolfblade
would be delighted to keep you entertained.†He bowed and
walked away,
leaving her standing there. His abrupt departure left her speechless.
“Don’t worry Adrina, you didn’t drive him
off. He’s waiting for a
bird from the Citadel. Tonight is more important to the Medalonians
than you know.â€
She turned to Damin curiously. “What do you mean?â€
“Tonight is their annual Gathering at the Citadel.
R’shiel is
planning to make some changes in the Sisterhood and Tarja’s
very
nervous about it. Here, have a seat and drink up. I’m sure
you’ll find
me much more agreeable company if you’re drunk.â€
Adrina accepted the cup and sat beside him on the stairs, drinking
her wine thoughtfully. It was a surprisingly strong blend. “He
told me
about R’shiel.â€
“I’m not surprised. You weren’t being very
subtle, you know. I was
half expecting you to start tearing his jacket off, right there on the
dance floor.â€
“Do you always have to be so crude?â€
“I’m being suitable to the occasion, your Highness.
If you act like
a whore, you shouldn’t be surprised when you get treated like
one.â€
Adrina had taken just about all she intended to from this barbarian.
He had done nothing but taunt her and torment her. It was time to put
him in his place. Time to wipe that superior smirk off his face.
“You’re jealous.â€
“Of you? Don’t flatter yourself.â€
“Of course, you are,†she laughed.
“I’ve misjudged you badly, my
Lord. All this time I thought you were a degenerate pervert like your
uncle, when in fact, you fancy yourself Kalianah’s gift to
women. You
don’t even like me, yet you can’t bear the thought that
I might find
Tarja attractive. How pathetic!â€
“Your attempts to sleep your way to freedom are far more
pathetic
than anything I can come up with, Adrina.â€
“If I’d been trying to ‘sleep my way to
freedom’, as you so crudely
put it, I would have been out of here weeks ago,†she assured
him
confidently.
“You’re that good, are you?â€
She finished the wine in a swallow, surprised at how potent it was.
She had heard that the drier the climate the stronger the wine, but she
hadn’t realised until now the difference between the sweet
blends of
Fardohnya and the hardy Medalonian vintages.
“Well, that’s something you’re never
likely to find out, is
it?â€
Damin refilled her cup from a jug he had on the step by his feet.
“Ah, now that would imply that I would want to find out,
Adrina. Thank
you, but I prefer to sleep with women who aren’t likely to try
slipping
a knife between my ribs.â€
“I imagine that’s all you can do, Damin. Sleep
with
women.†She downed the wine recklessly. She was enjoying this.
To the
Seven Hells with being nice.
“This from the woman who couldn’t even coax a virgin
boy into her
bed,†he said. “I wonder what Cratyn’s doing at
the moment? Praying to
the Overlord for the return of his beloved wife, or thanking him for
getting rid of her?â€
“You’re a pig, Damin Wolfblade!†She stood
up — far too quickly, she
discovered with alarm — and gripped the rough stone wall.
“I’m not
going to sit here and listen to your drunken insults any
longer.â€
“Giving in so easily, your Highness? You disappoint me. I
thought
you’d be good for another hour at least.â€
“You’re drunk!†she accused, turning to
climb the stairs to her
room. She misjudged them and stumbled, but Damin caught her before she
fell.
“Actually, I’m disappointingly sober,†he
corrected. “You, on the
other hand, are well and truly under the weather. How much did you
have?â€
“Let me go!†she demanded, shaking free of him.
“I am not drunk. I
had two cups, that’s all.â€
“They weren’t cups, they were tankards, and the wine
you’re used to
is like mother’s milk compared to this Medalonian stuff. Come
on, let’s
get you upstairs before you really do something to embarrass
yourself.â€
“Take your hands off me!†she hissed. Gripping the
wall, Adrina took
the steps carefully, grateful, but not willing to admit it, that Damin
was behind her. Her head was starting to spin alarmingly.
By the time they reached the door to her room, Adrina felt a little
better. She took a deep breath and turned to Damin, feeling almost
gracious enough to thank him for his assistance. Until she saw the
smirk on his face.
“You’re insufferable! How dare you laugh at
me!â€
“You really should learn not to take yourself so seriously.
You’d be
much more bearable, if you did.â€
“I’ve no interest in making myself bearable to suit
you.â€
“I doubt you could even if you tried, Adrina.â€
A small part of Adrina — that part that was still reasonably
sober —
warned her to let the comment go. But for some reason, she felt
compelled to rise to the challenge. She was sick to death of this man.
“I’ve told you before. In the unlikely event I ever
decide to
entertain myself with you, Damin Wolfblade, you won’t know
what’s hit
you.â€
“So you keep telling me. You’re not quite game to
put it to the
test, though, are you?â€
“You think I couldn’t?â€
“I think you’re afraid of me.â€
“I’m not afraid of anyone, least of all you!â€
“Brave words from a cheap drunk. Go to bed, Adrina.â€
She laughed softly. “You’re afraid of me,
that’s the truth
of it. You even warned Tarja that I’m dangerous.â€
“He told you that?â€
“Yes.â€
“He really does have a bad habit of repeating the most
inconvenient
things, doesn’t he?†He reached across and opened the
door to her
chamber. “Goodnight, Adrina.â€
“I’m right, aren’t I? You’re afraid
of me.†Adrina wasn’t sure why
she was being so insistent. It just seemed that the world would be a
much better place if Damin Wolfblade admitted that he feared her. Even
a little bit.
“Terrified,†he agreed, as if he were speaking to a
small child.
“Now go to bed.â€
“You’re just saying that to get rid of me.â€
“You noticed? Maybe you’re not as drunk as I
thought.â€
“I know why you’re afraid.â€
“Why?â€
“Because of this,†she said, and then she kissed him.
Adrina had intended to bestow one blazing, breathtaking kiss on him
and leave him gasping for more. He would never get any more, of course,
but that was the whole point. Let him have a taste of the forbidden
fruit and then deny him the sweetness forever more.
But she didn’t count on Damin’s reaction. She
didn’t count on him
kissing her back. Didn’t count on finding herself pushed
against the
wall with strong arms holding hers pinned against her body while her
pulse pounded in her ears, blocking out all other sensations. Adrina
had kissed plenty of men before, but no court’esa in
her
service would have dared such unbridled lust. Her grand plan evaporated
in a heartbeat. For a fleeting, dangerous moment, she gave herself up
to the sheer, unexpected pleasure of it.
“Your Highness?â€
Tamylan’s startled greeting brought her back to her senses
and she
pushed Damin away with a shove, gasping for air. Her slave stood in the
open doorway to her chamber, her expression a mixture of astonishment
and horror.
“Are you alright, my Lady?†she asked with concern,
glaring at Damin.
“I’m fine Tam. Go back to bed. I’ll be in
shortly.â€
The slave nodded warily and moved away from the door. Only then did
Adrina feel composed enough to meet Damin’s eye.
“I think I’ve proved my point, don’t
you?â€
Damin’s expression was far too smug. “You think
so?â€
“I hope you enjoyed it, my Lord. You’ll never
receive another. From
now on, you’ll just have to dream about what you’re
missing.â€
Adrina still had enough of her wits about her not to wait for his
answer. She turned on her heel and slammed the door behind her with a
resounding, and most satisfactory, thump.
“What are you playing at, Adrina?†Tamylan demanded
as soon as the
door banged shut. “Have you completely lost your mind?â€
“You forget your place, Tamylan.â€
“So have you, your Highness,†the slave retorted.
“Have you
forgotten where we are? Who he is? What he is?â€
“Be silent!â€
Tamylan shook her head in disgust and left the rest of it unsaid.
CHAPTER 46
For the second time in her life, R’shiel
entered
the Great Hall to attend the annual Gathering of the Sisters of the
Blade, although on this occasion she did not have to scale the outside
of the building in the rain.
This time she walked through the main doors quite brazenly,
concealed by a glamour that made her unnoticeable. She broke from the
crowd at the entrance and made her way to the narrow stairs leading to
the gallery. Once she had climbed the stairs, she walked along the
gallery to almost the exact spot from which she had watched the
Gathering two years ago with Davydd Tailorson. It was odd, and a little
disconcerting that she could barely remember his face. Davydd had died
trying to help her and Tarja escape the Citadel. He deserved to be
remembered more clearly.
R’shiel watched the Hall filling with blue-robed sisters,
fidgeting
nervously. She wanted to call Dranymire, to ensure the demon knew what
was expected of him and his brethren, but she could not risk them being
noticed before she took control of the Gathering. She wanted to know
where Mahina was. She wanted to get a message to Affiana, concerned
that the woman had not been at the pre-arranged meeting place. It could
simply be that she had not waited around. R’shiel and Brak had
been
late arriving at the tavern. R’shiel was worried. Affiana had
not even
left a message for them.
She leaned on the balustrade, watching the growing crowd. Garet
Warner, the ranking officer in the Citadel, stood off to the left of
the dais with two other officers, where Lord Jenga and Tarja had stood
the night Joyhinia had been appointed First Sister. She wished she
could tell what he was thinking. Wished she knew how far he could be
trusted.
R’shiel also wished Brak had come with her, but he had
insisted he
wait outside with the horses, ready for a quick departure. He wanted
her away from this place with a determination that bordered on
obsession. Brak was a hard man to read. The only thing R’shiel
was
certain of was that he would stay by her, regardless of how he felt
about what she was doing. She wasn’t even sure that Brak liked
her very
much, but he took his responsibilities seriously. He had killed the
Harshini King to ensure her survival. To desert her now would make that
act meaningless.
The doors closing with a hollow boom signalled the start of the
meeting and every eye turned forward as the white-robed members of the
Quorum filed on to the dais from the door at the back of the Hall.
Traditionally, the First Sister entered last, a custom R’shiel
was
extremely grateful for. She sent out a mental call for Dranymire. The
demon responded instantly, popping into existence beside her, his
too-large eyes glittering in the gloom. Are you ready? May the gods be with us, Dranymire responded before he
disappeared again.
“Be careful,†she whispered to the vanished demon.
She turned her attention to the dais, as Francil began reciting the
ritual thanksgiving to the Founding Sisters. On the edge of her
awareness, she could feel the demons forming the meld that would be
Joyhinia. She pushed aside the distraction and reached inside herself,
feeling the glow of the Harshini magic that nestled in her mind. She
drew on the power carefully, as Brak had shown her, and formed the
thoughts she wanted to impose on the Gathering although she held back
releasing them. Her eyes darkened until they turned completely black,
the whites of her eyes consumed by the power she gathered to her. As
Francil’s dry voice finished the litany, the door leading from
the
small anteroom opened and the demon meld stepped onto the dais.
Dranymire and his brethren had done an impressive job. The Joyhinia
they had formed was a little too tall perhaps, and her eyes had never
been quite that shade of blue, but one would be hard pressed to tell
her from the genuine article. Joyhinia stepped up to take her place
with a commanding air, nodding in acknowledgment to the Quorum before
turning to face the Gathering. It was against protocol, R’shiel
knew,
but she did not want to risk the meld for a moment longer than she had
to. Joyhinia would stand up, make her announcement and then leave.
R’shiel could not pick out Mahina among the sea of blue-robed
sisters,
but she trusted the old woman to be in place.
She held back the coercion with difficulty. The power, once tapped,
did not like to be restrained. Sweat beaded her forehead and her eyes
burned as she gripped the balustrade. Unconsciously, R’shiel
mouthed
the words of Joyhinia’s rehearsed speech, as the demon meld
addressed
the crowd.
“Sisters! It is good to be back among you, in these trying
times.â€
The voice was too low, almost masculine, but it was so long since any
of the sisters had heard Joyhinia speak, R’shiel doubted
anybody would
notice. “I have been on our northern border, supervising our
efforts to
repel the insolent Karien invasion of our sovereign nation.â€
The
Gathering was silent as they listened to the First Sister, more curious
than concerned. “Medalon will be safe in the hands of the
Defenders and
we must press all our efforts in that direction.â€
“From what I hear, it was a Defender who got us into this
mess!†a
voice called from the back of the Hall.
R’shiel grimaced. She had not coached Dranymire to trade
taunts with
hecklers. The coercion laboured to be released. Her knuckles were white
with the effort of holding it in. Dranymire ignored the comment and
carried on, oddly enough, making the meld seem more like Joyhinia than
ever.
“The single most important issue facing Medalon is our
survival.
Everything else is insignificant in comparison to this. Personal
ambition, feelings and prejudices must be put aside.†That
actually
drew a spattering of applause. There were many Sisters who were more
concerned with their duties than their careers. Having grown up in
Joyhinia’s shadow, R’shiel had to occasionally remind
herself of that.
Joyhinia waited a moment before she continued. R’shiel
fervently
hoped it was Dranymire pausing for dramatic effect, not fighting for
control over the meld.
“To this end, I plan to step down from the position of First
Sister
and nominate the woman who I believe is the only one among us strong
enough to see us through this: Mahina Cortanen.â€
Pandemonium erupted in the Hall at Joyhinia’s announcement.
R’shiel
let go of the coercion, almost gagging as it descended on the Hall,
forcing down the opposition like a wet blanket thrown on a fire.
R’shiel had known it would be uncomfortable, she remembered
the
feeling on the border when the Karien priests had coerced their troops,
but she was not prepared for the wave of debilitating nausea that
washed over her. Her knees buckled as she forced the women below to
accept what they could not accept, to believe the unbelievable. She
gritted her teeth, waiting for Mahina to step forward to accept the
mantle of First Sister. The crowd settled as their thoughts were turned
from rebellion to compliance, but there was no sign of the old woman.
Joyhinia looked up toward the gallery uncertainly.
“I call forth Mahina Cortanen!†Where is she? R’shiel forcibly held back the
suspicions of
the crowd, fighting the sickening feeling with all her strength. A
movement at the back of the crowd caught her attention and she spied
Mahina moving towards the dais with relief. It would be over soon. It
was almost done.
Mahina finally stepped up to the platform and turned to face the
Gathering. R’shiel could not imagine what she was thinking. As
First
Sister she was sworn to destroy all vestiges of Harshini magic, yet her
appointment this night could not happen without it. She faced the
Gathering with an unreadable expression as R’shiel forced the
thousand
or more Sisters present to accept her reinstatement.
“Do you accept my nomination?†Joyhinia asked.
“Yes!†came the unanimous, if somewhat muted reply.
R’shiel needed
them to agree. She did not have the skill to inspire them with
enthusiasm.
“Then I declare Mahina Cortanen First Sister!â€
There was no accompanying cheer, barely a murmur, in fact. Mahina
did not wait for the customary accolades, in any case. The demon meld
wobbled for an instant and R’shiel knew they could not hold it
together
much longer.
“Commandant, as the ranking officer of the Defenders in the
Citadel,
will you take the oath on behalf of the Lord Defender?â€
“I will, your Grace,†Garet replied, stepping
forward into the small
clearing at the foot of the dais.
R’shiel fought off the crippling nausea as Garet drew his
sword and
laid it at the feet of the new First Sister. Not much longer,
she told herself, understanding now why Brak had insisted she work the
coercion and then leave immediately. She wanted to vomit and she
wasn’t
sure how much longer she could stay on her feet.
Garet knelt on one knee and began the oath in a voice that rang
clearly through the Hall. A commotion at the edge of the crowd
distracted R’shiel for a moment, but she ignored it. It was
almost
over. The demon meld shimmered but Dranymire managed to hold his
brethren together. As soon as the Defenders were sworn to Mahina,
Joyhinia could leave. It didn’t matter if the meld
disintegrated the
moment they were out of sight. The important thing was to prevent it
falling into a puddle of little grey demons in full sight of the
Gathering. R’shiel was coercing the Sisters into accepting
Mahina’s
appointment. If she were forced to cover for the demons, she would have
to let that thought go. Even if she had the skill to perform such a
task, she doubted she had the strength left.
R’shiel’s black eyes watered with the effort of
forcing down the
natural opposition of the Sisters in the Hall to this blatant breach of
protocol. It was like trying to hold a surging ocean back with nothing
more than a fishing net. As Brak had warned, for some the coercion
settled on them with barely a flicker of protest, while other minds
rebelled against the thoughts she imposed on them. That opposition
surged up like a stormy sea. No sooner had she quieted one mind than
another screamed in protest. The mental strength it took surprised her.
Physically, she was on the point of exhaustion.
It seemed to take Garet forever to complete the oath. Time slowed as
her vision narrowed to a pinpoint, fixed on the dais. It was all she
could see, all she cared about. As the power consumed her, every sense
not immediately involved in holding the coercion together seemed to
shut down. She could no longer feel her fingers gripping the
balustrade. She could no longer hear anything. The odour of damp wool
cloaks that had permeated the Hall faded into nothing. She was isolated
in a bubble of total concentration that allowed no room for any
distraction.
“Stop this abomination! You are being deceived!â€
The voice rang out from the back of the Hall, a male voice that
startled the Sisters with its harsh Karien accent. R’shiel felt
the
Sisters’resistance to the coercion surge in response to the
sudden cry
and it slipped from her grasp. At almost the same instant, Dranymire
lost control of the meld.
Screams filled the Hall as Joyhinia fell apart, leaving nothing but
a writhing mass of wrinkled grey gnomes who blinked out of existence as
soon as they realised they were exposed. All except one. The little
demon who had attached herself to R’shiel in Sanctuary who
sought
warmth in her bed cowered behind the lectern on the podium, unseen by
the humans surrounding her, trembling with fear.
R’shiel did not see the demon. She had no idea what was
happening.
She collapsed against the balustrade and brought up everything she had
eaten for the past week. Her eyes watered so hard she could not see,
could not find the source of the pounding feet on the narrow stairs
that led to the gallery. She wiped her mouth and glanced up, barely had
time to notice the tonsured man standing over her as a jewelled staff
landed on her shoulder, tearing a scream of unbearable agony from her.
She quivered on the gallery floor as rough hands held her down and
something cold and hard was snapped around her neck. As soon as the
clasp snicked shut, R’shiel felt the last remnants of the
Harshini
power vanish, as if a door had been slammed shut on it.
Dazed and barely able to walk, she was dragged to her feet, pushed
down the winding stairs, then half pulled, half carried to the front of
the Hall. The men holding her threw her to the floor. Simply letting
her go would have had the same effect. Her head cracked against the
bottom step, but she barely noticed the pain or the blood that spurted
from her forehead. She pushed herself up onto her elbows and wiped her
eyes.
More screams filled the hall as the little demon spied
R’shiel and
flew at her, chitterring in terror. She wrapped her arms around
R’shiel’s neck. As soon as the demon came in contact
with the collar,
she squealed with pain and fell to the floor, quivering, temporarily
robbed of every vestige of power, too stunned to disappear and save
herself. R’shiel tried to catch the creature but she was pushed
away
roughly. One of the priests pinned the demon to the floor with his
staff.
R’shiel cried out in protest as the little demon squealed in
agony.
Someone knocked her down. By the time she had pushed herself up again,
the demon was being hurried from the hall by two of the Karien priests.
She looked up then and caught sight of the First Sister.
Joyhinia looked down at her. The real Joyhinia. Savage intelligence
burned in eyes that should have been filled with childish innocence.
She smiled with malicious glee, then held her arms wide to address the
Gathering.
“What has happened here is sorcery, my Sisters! Only with
the help
of Lord Terbolt and the Karien priests have I been able to expose this
treachery. I have not resigned. I do not surrender my position to any
woman.†She spared Mahina a glance, then turned to Garet
Warner.
“Arrest the usurper!â€
Garet did not even hesitate. Mahina was being led away before she
could protest — before anyone could protest. The Commandant had
changed
sides without a whimper. Angrily, R’shiel forced herself to
concentrate
and reach for her power, but all she got in return for her trouble was
a vicious burning sensation around her neck that wrenched an agonised
cry from her lips.
Joyhinia glanced down at R’shiel. She was gloating. Her eyes
were
filled with vengeance waiting to be sated. The aura that surrounded her
was black streaked and tantalisingly familiar. She held her arms wide
again and addressed the Gathering.
“Behold, Sisters! Let me present the author of this
treasonous plot.
I give you the reason for the Purge. I give you the result of relaxing
our vigilance. I give you a Harshini sorcerer! I give you the fabled
demon child!â€
CHAPTER 47
Consciousness returned slowly. It crept up on her
like a thief in the night, so slowly that it took time for her to
realise she was awake. It took even longer for her to realise where she
was.
R’shiel lay on the floor, her head throbbing from the
shallow cut
she received when she had hit the marble steps leading to the dais.
Cold morning light from the highset windows chequered the expensive rug
where she lay. Her neck ached as if it had been burned; the icy collar
that circled her throat a grim reminder of the foolishness of trying to
reach for her power. Her mouth tasted like the floor of a pigsty. Her
hands were tied behind her back, the ropes so tight that her fingers
were numb. She was in a bedchamber, rather than a cell, but she could
not recall how she got there. Her last clear memory was Joyhinia
staring at her with savage, lucid eyes as she destroyed everything
R’shiel had been working toward.
“You’re awake, I see.â€
R’shiel turned her head in the direction of the voice. The
man who
spoke was a Karien.
“Can I have some water?†she croaked.
The Karien nodded and R’shiel felt other hands pulling her
up into a
sitting position. A cool tankard touched her lips and she swallowed the
water gratefully. The man who held her head was Karien too, with the
tonsured head and fanatical expression of a priest. Fear stabbed at her
like a knife. She had been the victim of a Karien priest before. It was
not an experience she wished to repeat.
“You failed in your attempt to subvert the Sisterhood. You
realise
that, don’t you?â€
“Who are you?â€
“I am Lord Terbolt, the Duke of Setenton, Personal Envoy of
King
Jasnoff III and the anointed representative of Xaphista the
Overlord.â€
“Is that supposed to impress me?†she said, pushing
away the
tankard. Too late now to wonder if it had been drugged.
The Karien frowned. “You would do well to show some respect,
demon
child. I can have you put to death with a word.â€
R’shiel stared at him, trying to gather her wits. She
ignored the
pain with an effort. Now was not the time to give into something so
distracting. “I’d be dead already if you were planning
to kill me.â€
Lord Setenton nodded slowly, as if reluctant to admit the truth of
her statement. “You live because the Overlord wishes it, demon
child.
He is liable to change his mind quite rapidly, should you fail to do as
you are told.â€
“Then kill me now,†she suggested.
“I’d rather die than do anything
Xaphista demanded of me.â€
The Karien frowned at her blasphemy. The priest actually gasped.
“No, Garanus!†Terbolt ordered. He was standing
behind her, so
R’shiel could not see what the priest intended.
“She blasphemes, my Lord!â€
“She doesn’t know any better.â€
“But, my Lord . . .â€
“No Garanus, his Majesty was quite specific. She is not to
be
harmed. The Overlord has plans for the demon child.â€
R’shiel struggled to sit up and glared at the Karien.
“Look, I don’t
know where you got the idea that I’m the demon child, but
you’re
gloating over the wrong catch. The Harshini are extinct. I am
human.â€
“You are a liar,†Garanus countered.
“Let her be, Garanus. Her denials are meaningless. Go find
Gawn and
see if there is any word on the half-breed.â€
So they hadn’t caught Brak. The news gave her hope. The
priest
followed the Duke’s orders with some reluctance, closing the
door
behind him. As soon as he was gone, Lord Terbolt rose from his chair
and crossed the room. He untied the ropes holding her then helped her
to her feet. R’shiel winced as the blood returned to her numb
fingers.
“Thank you.â€
“I am not a vicious man, R’shiel. I have no wish to
see you harmed.
I have orders to deliver you to King Jasnoff in one piece. I would
appreciate it if you gave Garanus and his ilk no reason to harm
you.â€
“You mean, if I cooperate, I’ll be safe until you
hand me over to
Xaphista so he can kill me himself? What a tempting offer.â€
“As I understand it, the Overlord wants your cooperation,
not your
death, demon child. I believe he seeks an alliance, not your
destruction.â€
“An alliance? With me? Now I really have heard
everything.â€
Before Terbolt could answer, the door opened and R’shiel
felt the
room sway momentarily as Joyhinia stepped into the room. It was
impossible, she knew, for Joyhinia to have regained her wits.
Dacendaran had stolen them and Tarja had destroyed them. How could she
be standing there? So sure of herself? So obviously aware?
“Did you want something, Captain?†the Duke asked,
addressing the
First Sister with ill-disguised impatience.
R’shiel stared at him in confusion. Captain?
“Garanus wishes to speak with you, my Lord. In private.â€
Joyhinia turned her frighteningly lucid eyes on R’shiel and
smiled
unpleasantly. “I’ll watch the prisoner for you.â€
“She is not to be harmed,†the Duke warned.
“As you wish.â€
Joyhinia closed the door behind the Duke then leaned against it,
studying R’shiel with contempt.
“Your sorcerer’s tricks didn’t help you much
this time, did they?â€
“I don’t know what you’re talking
about.â€
“Oh yes you do! You may have fooled everyone else, but these
Kariens
know what you are. And I’ve seen your evil first hand. Only
this time
Tarja’s not around to save you, is he?â€
It slowly dawned on R’shiel that this was not Joyhinia. The
body was
hers, certainly, but the words were not. She knew the aura surrounding
Joyhinia, and this did not belong to her foster-mother. Neither did the
memories. Joyhinia had never seen her use anything remotely resembling
magic. Nobody in Medalon had, with the exception of her friends still
on the northern border and the Fardohnyan crew of the Maera’s
Daughter. The only other person was . . .
“Loclon!â€
The name evoked a flood of memories she had thought long forgotten.
Nightmares she hoped she would never revisit suddenly threatened to
overwhelm her. R’shiel’s mouth went dry and she took an
involuntary
step backwards, wishing Korandellan had never removed the block on her
emotions. For a brief, sickening moment the pain, the humiliation she
had suffered in this man’s hands tried to swamp her. She fought
a wave
of nausea as bad as the one that had almost crippled her when she tried
to coerce the Gathering.
“In the flesh,†Joyhinia agreed. “Well, in
the First Sister’s flesh
actually. Ironic, don’t you think?â€
“How?†she managed to ask, her head reeling from the
implications of
such a dreadful combination.
Joyhinia shrugged. “I’m not sure how. The priests
did it. They
called on their Overlord, or something. I wasn’t too thrilled
to begin
with, until it occurred to me what I could do as First Sister. By the
look on your face, I’d say it’s occurred to you,
too.â€
Actually, R’shiel was still struggling to come to grips with
the
dreadful spectre of the man she loathed and feared most in this world
controlling the body of the woman she hated almost as much. Her mind
had not had time to deal with the wider implications of all that
sadistic megalomania trapped inside the woman who ruled Medalon.
“You won’t get away with this, Loclon. You
can’t make people believe
you’re the First Sister.â€
“That’s where you’re wrong, demon child. I am
the First
Sister.â€
“Where’s Mahina?â€
“The usurper? Safely under lock and key. She’ll be
tried and hanged
for treason, along with the Lord Defender and Tarja, when I get my
hands on them. I may even keep you alive long enough to watch them
swing.â€
“You’ve no say over what happens to me, you deluded
fool. You’re a
Karien puppet. You’re dancing to their tune.â€
“Only while it suits me.â€
“Don’t kid yourself,†she warned.
“They’ll only keep you alive long
enough to do what they want. And you won’t be able to deny
them.
Where’s your own body, Loclon? Somewhere safe? Being tended by
Karien
priests? Did they promise to watch over you while your mind inhabits
Joyhinia’s body? How long do you think you’ll last if
they slit your
unresisting throat?†R’shiel had no idea if her
prediction was
accurate, but Loclon didn’t know that.
Joyhinia’s face paled a little, small satisfaction though it
was. It
was obvious the Kariens had not explained much about the mechanics of
transferring his mind into Joyhinia’s body. That could work in
her
favour. Loclon was many things, but first and foremost, he was a coward.
“You console yourself anyway you want,
R’shiel,†the First Sister
retorted. “Just remember, I’m the one in control
now.â€
R’shiel had to keep reminding herself that this was Loclon,
not
Joyhinia, and that she needed to deal with him, not her.
“You’re not in control of anything, Loclon, least of
all me. I don’t
care whose face you wear, you’re still nothing but a craven,
petty,
insignificant, little man. The only difference is that now
you’re
wearing a skirt.â€
Loclon took a step toward her, reacting as he always did to her
taunts. R’shiel tentatively reached inside herself and tried to
touch
her power, but even that delicate probe caused the collar to burn. She
understood why the Duke had untied her, why Loclon did not fear her.
They had cut her off from the source of the Harshini magic.
“I intend to make you suffer until you beg for
mercy!†Joyhinia’s
voice hissed, but it was Loclon’s vengeful mind that supplied
the words.
“You’ll be doing nothing of the sort,†the
Duke of Setenton
corrected.
Joyhinia spun around in annoyance to find the Karien standing by the
open door wearing a look of intense displeasure.
“R’shiel is a wanted criminal, my Lord. She belongs
to Medalon.â€
“She belongs to the Overlord, Captain, and if I see any
evidence
that you intend to interfere with the Overlord’s wishes, you
may find
the penalty life-threatening. Your usefulness is limited. There are
other, more cooperative minds who could serve our needs just as
easily.â€
Loclon’s eyes burned with anger in Joyhinia’s face.
She strode from
the room, pushing past Setenton. The duke watched her leave and then
turned to R’shiel.
“You will be confined here until we leave. There are a
number of
things that need to be taken care of first. But we should be able to
leave in a few days. If all goes well, we should be in Karien by the
end of the month.â€
“Then you plan to travel overland? A bit risky,
don’t you think, in
the middle of a war?â€
Lord Setenton smiled coldly. “War? What war? Of course, you
left the
Gathering early, didn’t you? Your nation is no longer at war
with
Karien, my dear. The First Sister has already dispatched the order to
your forces on the border. Medalon has surrendered.â€
CHAPTER 48
“Surrender?†Damin leapt forward
and snatched the
note from Tarja’s hand. “The hell we will! This is a
trick!â€
Tarja looked haggard, as if he hadn’t slept for days.
“The note
carries the correct authentication seal from the Citadel. It’s
genuine.â€
“Who sent it?â€
“The First Sister,†Jenga told him grimly.
“But which First Sister?â€
“Mahina would not betray us,†the Lord Defender
objected.
“Well, somebody did! Probably your precious Garet Warner. I
told you
he wasn’t to be trusted.â€
Tarja sagged against the edge of the long table near the hearth.
“You’re both missing the point here. This message means
that R’shiel
failed. Their demon meld didn’t work.â€
Damin glanced at the Medalonian captain sympathetically.
“I’m sure
she’s fine, Tarja. Perhaps they didn’t arrive in
time.â€
“If they hadn’t arrived in time, then things would
have simply gone
on as they have for months. Something went wrong.†He stood up
and
squared his shoulders determinedly. “I’m going to the
Citadel.â€
“No you’re not, Captain. I need you here.â€
“R’shiel needs me.â€
“There is nothing you can do for her, Tarja,†Jenga
reminded him
with cold practicality. “It would take you weeks to reach the
Citadel
and for all you know she’s already dead.â€
Tarja’s eyes blazed defiantly, but he could not deny
Jenga’s logic.
“That’s it then? We just roll over and die? Shall we
send an emissary
to the Kariens with our surrender, or were you planning to do the
honours yourself, my Lord?â€
“I don’t think we should do anything just
yet,†Damin advised. “Who
else knows about this?â€
“Just the three of us at present.â€
“Then let’s keep it that way for a little bit
longer. I want to have
a word with Her Serene Highness, first.â€
“What can she tell you that we don’t already
know?†Jenga asked. He
did not baulk at holding off carrying out his orders, Damin noticed
with relief.
“I’m not sure. I just have a funny feeling about
this. I’ll tell you
after I’ve spoken with her. Can you have her brought to my
tent?â€
“She’s right up those stairs, Damin,†Tarja
pointed out. “Why not
just go up and ask her now?â€
“I want this discussion to take place on my territory, not
hers.â€
It was a measure of his distress that Tarja didn’t even
smile.
An hour or so later, two Defenders arrived in the
Hythrun camp escorting Adrina. Damin had spent the intervening time
mentally rehearsing what he was going to say.
He had not quite recovered from their last encounter. Adrina had
caught him unawares, and that irked him no end. What really annoyed him
was that he had been expecting her to try something like that ever
since he first laid eyes on her and had steeled himself against it. He
knew her background too well. Knew that if she couldn’t get her
own way
by demanding it, she would eventually resort to using her body. But she
took him by surprise and he’d reacted exactly as she’d
wanted him to.
His only comfort was that she seemed to have been as unnerved by the
incident as he was.
When she arrived, Adrina was dressed for warmth, rather than effect,
wrapped in the woollen shirt he had given her and a warm
Defender’s
cloak. Her skin was flushed from the walk, her dark hair piled loosely
on top of her head. Gods, she was stunning. He wondered why
he’d never
noticed how green her eyes were. Dark lashes almost too long to be real
framed eyes the colour of cut emeralds. Damin mentally berated himself
for a fool as she shook off the cloak and stepped up to the brazier to
warm her outstretched hands.
“You wanted to see me, my Lord?â€
“I thought we might continue our discussion from the other
night.â€
“Which one?†she asked calmly. “The one
about Cratyn’s intentions,
or the one about us?â€
“There is no us, your Highness, so I guess that
leaves
Cratyn.â€
“I’ve told you everything I know.â€
“Then tell me again.â€
“I don’t see the point.â€
“You don’t have to.â€
Adrina’s eyes narrowed cannily. “Something’s
happened, hasn’t it?â€
“I’m sorry, I’m being very remiss as a host.
Can I offer you some
wine?†He turned his back, reaching for the jug on his writing
desk.
“Don’t avoid the question, Damin. What’s
happened?â€
He poured the wine and turned back to her. “The Medalonians
have
been ordered to surrender.â€
Now why had he told her that?
Her face was a portrait of shock. He doubted even Adrina could fake
such a genuine reaction. “In the name of Zegarnald, why?
They’re winning!â€
“I don’t know if I’d go so far as to call
this stalemate winning,â€
he said as he handed her the wine. “But they certainly
aren’t in danger
of imminent defeat.â€
“I don’t understand it.â€
“Neither do I. That’s what I wanted to see you
about. Could this
have anything to do with Setenton’s absence from the
front?â€
“It might,†she nodded thoughtfully. “I
thought it a little odd that
Jasnoff sent Cratyn to the border without Terbolt. But the Kariens are
very big on honour and distinguishing themselves in battle. I always
supposed he wanted to give Cratyn a chance to prove himself to the
Dukes.â€
“If he’s behind this sudden turnabout, that would
explain it. What
about the treaty with your father?â€
Adrina hesitated for a moment, then sighed. “What I told you
before
was the truth, or most of it. Father agreed to invade Medalon from the
south come summer, and to supply the Kariens with cannon.â€
“Cannon? Are they really as devastating as they
claim?â€
She nodded grimly. “The truth? They’re proving more
trouble than
they’re worth. They blow up when you least expect it, only work
sometimes and we still haven’t found the right sort of alloy
that won’t
split after a few shots and kill the men manning the guns. My
father’s
cannon are as much the result of clever rumours as they are
fact.â€
“I see. And what does Hablet get in return for all
this?â€
“Gold and timber. Lots and lots of it.â€
“I know your father’s greedy, Adrina, but there has
to be more to it
than that.â€
“The prize is Hythria, Damin,†she said softly.
“I thought you’d
already worked that out for yourself.â€
He stared at her for a moment, wondering why she had chosen this
moment to reveal Hablet’s plans. “Hablet
doesn’t need the Kariens to
invade Hythria.â€
“No, but he needs the Defenders occupied. You know as well
as I do
how futile it’s been, trying to attack Hythria over the Sunrise
Mountains. There are only a few navigable passes and they can be
defended by a handful of men against the entire Fardohnyan army. A
naval invasion would be just as futile. Your ports are too well
defended. Hythria’s only vulnerable point is the border with
Medalon.
If the Medalonians had territorial ambitions, you’d have been
overrun a
century ago.â€
“So Hablet plans to turn south, once he reaches
Medalon.â€
“And you’ve made the job even easier for him. Your
province borders
Medalon. You’re supposed to be Hythria’s first line of
defence.â€
Damin really didn’t need Adrina pointing out his tactical
error at
that point. He was more than capable of punishing himself for being so
arrogant.
“Did your father know anything about the Karien plans for
Medalon?â€
“If you mean, was he expecting them to surrender, of course
not. His
entire strategy is based on the Kariens keeping the Defenders off his
back. Hablet doubts the Defenders would care if he invaded Hythria, one
way or the other, but they’re likely to take a very dim view of
him
marching through Medalon to do it, particularly since they allied
themselves with you, Damin.â€
That was the second time today she had called him by name. He
wondered if she realised that she was doing it.
“And if Medalon surrenders?â€
“Jasnoff will have time to wonder what my father is up to.
The
Kariens are religious fanatics. It’s bad enough the entire
southern
half of the continent is devoted to pagan worship. They certainly
don’t
want it united under one crown. Hablet will invade Hythria and Karien
will follow to stop him. Either way, Hythria will lose. Your only hope
is to keep me safe from the Kariens.â€
Damin smiled. It was amazing the way she could twist any situation
to her advantage. “Exactly how would that make a
difference?â€
“Any child of mine by Cratyn would have a claim on
Hablet’s throne.
With Medalon defeated, if Hablet ruled Fardohnya and Hythria, the
Kariens would own the entire continent on his death.â€
“A death that would be sooner, rather than later, knowing
the
Kariens.†Damin shook his head at the vast scope of the Karien
plans
for world dominance. Or perhaps they were Xaphista’s plans.
And the demon child, the only one who could stop him, was probably
dead.
“An heir and a spare — and I too become surplus to
requirements,â€
she reminded him grimly.
He studied her for a moment, wondering if he was seeing the real
Adrina for the first time. The woman whose life depended on staying one
step ahead of the men who controlled her. Her father. Her husband. Even
him. Every one of them was trying to use her to further their own
ambitions.
“Is there anything else you haven’t told me,
Adrina?â€
She sipped her wine, looking at him over the rim of her cup.
“Haven’t I told you enough?â€
“That depends on what critical piece of information
you’re holding
back.â€
She lowered the cup and smiled. “You’re the most
suspicious man I’ve
ever met.â€
“With just cause, around you.â€
“Well, I hate to disappoint you, Damin, but you know just
about
everything I do.â€
“It’s the ‘just about’ that concerns
me.â€
“I’ve nothing to gain by lying to you. If Medalon
surrenders, I will
be returned to Karien. I would rather die.â€
Oddly, he believed her. If what she had told him was true, the
Kariens would allow her to live long enough to produce the requisite
heir — and not a moment longer. She had already betrayed them
once.
They wouldn’t be so lax in their vigilance a second time.
Then something else occurred to him, which changed his opinion of
her rather radically.
“Cratyn’s impotence was all your fault,
wasn’t it? You didn’t want
to give him an heir to your father’s throne.â€
The question startled her at first, then she smiled smugly.
“As you
pointed out the first time we spoke, my Lord, an inexperienced Karien
princeling is no match for a court’esa-trained
Fardohnyan
princess.â€
“It seems I’ve misjudged you, your Highness.â€
“Something else I warned you about.â€
He refused to acknowledge her reprimand. “More wine?â€
“Thank you, no. I’ve learnt the folly of consuming
too much
Medalonian wine on an empty stomach.†She held out her empty
cup. “I
should be going. Was there anything else you wanted?â€
He took the cup from her outstretched hand. “Untie your
shirt.â€
“What?â€
Damin smiled. “Untie your shirt.â€
“You have got to kidding.â€
“I’ve never been more serious. Untie your shirt, or
I’ll do it for
you.â€
She glared at him, but to her credit, she didn’t back away.
“You lay
one finger on me and I’ll —â€
“What? Scream?†he finished with a laugh.
“You’re in the middle of
my camp, Adrina. Who’s going to come to your rescue?â€
“I’ll gouge your eyes out if you touch me.â€
He shrugged and turned his back on her, replacing the empty cups on
the desk. “As you wish. I was under the impression you wanted
that
slave collar off. I must have been mistaken.â€
He waited with his back to her. She was silent for a very long time.
“You could have said that’s what you were
planning.â€
“And miss seeing you squirm like that?†he asked
with a grin as he
turned back to her. “I don’t think so. So, shall we
start again? Untie
your shirt. I can’t get to the thing with you bundled up like
that.â€
“Just give me the keys and I’ll do it
myself.â€
“No. And for being so uncooperative now you’re going
to have to say
please.â€
“You are the most unbelievable bastard.â€
“I know.â€
She stepped around the brazier and the cushions, unlacing the shirt
as she went. By the time she reached him the shirt was open far enough
to expose the collar and a tantalising glimpse of pale throat —
and not
a thing more.
“There! Just take the damned thing off!â€
“Say please.â€
“Please!†Her eyes burned with fury.
Getting that much out of her was something of an achievement, so
Damin decided not to push his luck. She might still try to gouge his
eyes out, just on principal.
He took her hand and pulled her closer, then slid his fingers under
the collar. Lernen had only shown him once how the catch worked, and he
wasn’t at all certain he could find it. The jeweller who had
designed
the collars was a craftsman and they were manufactured to prevent a
clever slave finding the means for their emancipation. Adrina closed
her eyes rather than meet his. It was very distracting, holding her so
close. He could feel her hot breath on his face, smell the faint
perfume of the soap she used to wash her hair.
He found the catch and heard it open with a faint snick. Adrina
heard it too. She opened her eyes, a little surprised to find herself
so close to him. She looked up, met his eyes.
Later, Damin couldn’t say who moved first. One moment she
was
staring at him with those impressive green eyes. The next he was
kissing her and she was kissing him back. The collar tumbled forgotten
to the floor. It was almost as if she wanted to devour him. He cursed
the layers of winter clothing they both wore as she tore at the lacing
on his shirt. There was no logic to this, no rational thought.
“This is insane,†Adrina gasped between kisses, as
she fumbled with
the buckle on his sword belt. “I hate you.â€
The sword belt dropped to the floor with a clatter. “I hate
you too.â€
“We shouldn’t be doing this,†she added as
she pulled the shirt over
his head.
“We’ll talk about it later,†he promised as
her shirt fell away,
exposing her glorious pale breasts. They fell onto the scattered
cushions beside the brazier. Adrina landed astride him. Her hair had
come loose and it fell about them in an ebony wave that cut off the
rest of the tent so that it was only Adrina that he could see. It was
only Adrina that he wanted to see, in any case.
“Damin?â€
He pulled her down and kissed her, but she pulled back impatiently.
“Damin!â€
“You’re not going to ask me to be gentle, are
you?â€
She smiled wickedly. “No. I only want one thing from you, my
Lord.â€
“Name it, your Highness.â€
Her smile faded, replaced with a look of unexpected savagery.
“Make
me forget Cratyn.â€
The request did not surprise him nearly as much as her vehemence.
But he understood it. “Say please.â€
“Go to hell.â€
He laughed softly and drew her down again. Before long it was
doubtful if either of them could recall their own names, let alone the
name of Adrina’s husband.
CHAPTER 49
“You did what?â€
Tarja wondered if he’d mis-heard the warlord. He glanced
across at
Damin and feared he hadn’t.
They were supposed to be riding out to inspect the border troops,
but Tarja realised now that Damin’s suggestion had merely been
a ruse.
He wanted to break the news to Tarja out of the hearing of the rest of
the camp. The Hythrun was looking rather shamefaced with all of the
things that had gone wrong in the past few days, this was one
complication they could have done without.
“You heard me.â€
“Founders, Damin, she’s the wife of the Karien Crown
Prince!â€
“I’m aware of that.â€
“I thought you couldn’t stand her?â€
“I can’t. Look, it’s . . .
complicated. It’s hard to
explain.â€
“Well you’d better think of something,â€
Tarja warned. “I imagine
Jenga’s going to want a fairly detailed explanation when she
complains
that you raped her.â€
“I never raped her!†Damin declared, offended by the
very
suggestion. “Her Serene Highness was a very willing
participant, I can
assure you.â€
Tarja shook his head doubtfully. “Even so, when
she’s had time to
think about it, she might change her mind. Just because you
didn’t
throw her on the ground and tear her clothes off, doesn’t mean
she
won’t claim you did.â€
“Perhaps I should get in first,†Damin suggested
with a grin. “She
was the one tearing at my clothes, after all.â€
“Be serious!â€
The Warlord sighed and reined his stallion in. He studied the snow
dotted plain for a moment before turning to Tarja. Their breath frosted
in the early morning light. The sun had risen over the rim of the
Jagged Mountains, but the day was overcast, threatening more snow.
“Is Jenga planning to surrender?â€
Tarja shrugged. “I wish I knew. He’s torn between
duty and reason at
present.â€
“I have to leave, Tarja.â€
“I expected as much,†he agreed without rancour.
“It’s the Defenders
who are being ordered to surrender, not the Hythrun.â€
“I’d have to go in any case,†Damin told
him. “Hablet’s planning to
invade Hythria. I need to be in Krakandar.â€
“Adrina told you that?â€
He nodded. “She confirmed it, but I’ve suspected
that was his
ultimate goal ever since I first heard of the Karien–Fardohnyan
Treaty.
If the Defenders surrender to Karien, there’ll be nothing
stopping him.â€
“Did Adrina tell you this before or after she tore your
clothes off?â€
Damin looked at him and smiled sourly. “I deserved that, I
suppose.
But I’m the Hythrun Heir, Tarja. I can’t sit here
minding your border
while the Fardohnyans pour over mine.â€
“I understand, and so will Jenga.â€
“I didn’t doubt that, Tarja, but are you going to be
so
understanding when I tell you Adrina is coming with me?â€
In light of the Warlord’s recent admission, the news did not
surprise him. However, that didn’t make it any more palatable.
“Don’t be ridiculous, Damin. If we surrender to
Karien, the first
thing they’ll do is demand her return. And if we don’t
surrender,
she’ll make a very useful hostage.â€
“I won’t allow you to return her to Karien,
Tarja.â€
“You slept with her once, Damin. I hardly think that
warrants
throwing her over your saddle and riding off into the sunset with
her.â€
Damin grinned. “Poetic as it may seem, Tarja, my reasons are
far
more pragmatic. Should Adrina and Cratyn have a child, it would have a
claim on both the Karien and Fardohnyan thrones. I don’t intend
to let
that happen.â€
“As opposed to a child with a claim on both the Fardohnyan
and Hythrun
thrones,†he pointed out. “Or had that minor detail
escaped you?â€
Damin looked so surprised that Tarja realised that he probably
hadn’t considered that possibility.
“It’s not the same thing.â€
“It’s exactly the same thing, Damin. A child
who can unite
Karien and Fardohnya is a threat, I’ll grant you that, but a
child who
could bring Hythria and Fardohnya together is even worse. The Kariens
will hunt you down like a criminal. I can’t even begin to guess
what
the other Hythrun Warlords will do when they discover you’ve
run off
with Hablet’s daughter.â€
“I’m not running off with her,†he objected.
“I’m averting a
potential catastrophe.â€
“You’re creating a potential catastrophe.
Founders, man,
think about this! How do you think the Kariens are going to react when
they find out? Taking a lover might not be cause for concern in Hythria
or Medalon, or even Fardohnya, for that matter, but it’s a sin
in Karien and they take their sin very seriously.â€
“I’m not her lover!â€
“If you didn’t take her by force, then what else do
you call it? I’m
sure the Kariens will see it that way. They tend to be very black and
white in their thinking.â€
“All the more reason not to send her back to Karien.
She’d be stoned
if they found out.â€
“A few weeks ago, that prospect wouldn’t have
bothered you one whit.â€
Damin didn’t look pleased at the reminder. “All
right, I’ll concede
that my opinion of her has . . .
softened . . . somewhat.â€
“Softened? That’s one way of putting it, I
suppose.â€
“I won’t send her back, Tarja. Even if what you say
is true, the
fact is we know the Overlord wants a Karien heir to the
Fardohnyan throne. The rest of it is just speculation. I’ll
deal with
the known threat and face the rest of it if and when it
happens.â€
“Jenga’s not going to like this.â€
“I wasn’t planning to ask his permission.
I’m an ally, not a
subordinate.â€
“Have you told Adrina?â€
“Not yet.â€
“What if she objects? She might prefer to go back.â€
“She’d kill herself before she agreed to return to
Karien.â€
“She doesn’t strike me as the suicidal type.â€
“Ask her about Cratyn sometime.â€
Tarja reached forward to pat Shadow’s neck. The mare was
restless,
no doubt picking up his apprehension. “When are you planning to
leave?â€
“The sooner the better. Jenga will have to act on that order
soon,
one way or the other. If he surrenders, this plain will be crawling
with Kariens any day, and if he refuses the order you’ll be
fighting
Karien on one side and your own people on the other. I don’t
want to
get caught in the middle of it. Besides,†he added with a
frown, “when
we crossed into Medalon we had Brak’s help. We’re going
to have to make
our way home by more ordinary means. If I don’t leave now,
Hablet will
be in Krakandar before me.â€
At the mention of Brak, Tarja’s brow furrowed with concern.
Brak was
supposed to be looking after R’shiel. But the Sisterhood had
betrayed
them. R’shiel would never have let that happen willingly.
“If you’re so damned worried about R’shiel,
do something about it,â€
Damin said, guessing the direction of his thoughts.
“That would mean deserting my post.â€
“Well, you’ve done that before,†the Warlord
pointed out rather
tactlessly, “so it should be easier the next time round.
Anyway, if
Jenga surrenders, how long do you think your head is going to stay
attached to your neck, my friend? You’re responsible for the
death of
the Karien Envoy, remember? I’ll bet you any sum you care to
name that
your head on a platter was a condition of the surrender.â€
“That doesn’t give me the right to abandon Jenga at
the first sign
of trouble.â€
“Think of it as saving the world, Tarja. The demon child is
the only
one who can destroy Xaphista. There’s something of a moral
imperative
involved in going to her rescue.â€
“She might already be dead.â€
It pained him to admit it. With Brak watching over her and with the
power she commanded, she could achieve anything. R’shiel had
been so
determined that Tarja was certain nothing short of death could have
stood in her way.
“Somehow, I doubt it. The gods have gone to a lot of trouble
to get
her this far. I don’t think they’d stand by and let her
be destroyed
out of hand. She hasn’t done what she was destined for
yet.â€
The reminder did little to ease Tarja’s worry. Being assured
that
R’shiel lived so that she could eventually confront a god was
hardly a
comforting thought.
“I wish there was some way of being certain.â€
“Ask Dace, he should know.â€
“I recall having this discussion with you once before. You
said he
wouldn’t come if I called him.â€
“And he probably wouldn’t,†Damin agreed.
“But you don’t need to
call him, he’s here. I saw him hanging around with that Karien
boy the
other day.â€
“What’s he doing here?†Tarja asked
suspiciously. He mistrusted
these creatures that the pagans called gods.
“The God of Thieves, by his very nature, is bound to be up
to no
good, but that doesn’t necessarily mean he’s doing your
cause any
harm.†Damin laughed suddenly. “I wonder how that
fanatical child of
the Overlord is coping with the idea that his new friend is a pagan
god?â€
Tarja smiled in spite of himself.
“Tell you what, Tarja, let’s go back to the camp.
You round up your
little Karien friend and ask him where Dace is, and I’ll speak
to
Adrina. I promise I’ll only take her with me if she wants to
come. I
haven’t the time to waste dragging her to Hythria by force, at
any
rate. After that we’ll talk to Jenga. Who knows, if you can
prove
R’shiel still lives, he may even sanction your heroic dash to
her
rescue. I’m sure he’d like to know what really happened
at the
Gathering and it may stay his hand on the surrender for a time.â€
“Make sure that’s all you do when you see Adrina. Speak
to
her.â€
“You show a disturbing lack of trust in me,
Captain,†Damin turned
his stallion toward the camp and managed to look quite offended.
Tarja shook his head and followed him. “I thought we were
going to
check on the border troops?â€
“They’ll keep. Besides, if Jenga surrenders, it
doesn’t really make
much difference how they’re placed, does it?â€
Tarja could not deny the Hythrun’s logic and in truth, he
would much
rather find Dace and learn of R’shiel’s fate than
conduct an
inspection. He stared at the border thoughtfully, then kicked his horse
into a canter and headed back to the camp with the Hythrun Warlord.
CHAPTER 50
Brak watched the scene between Joyhinia and
R’shiel unfold with growing frustration.
R’shiel’s recovery from her suffering at the hands
of Joyhinia and
Loclon was too fragile to be tested so soon. He could almost taste her
fear. To face Loclon in the body of her foster mother was testing her
to the limit. One she feared; the other she loathed. It was like a
nightmare come to life. It could push her over the edge. His futile
efforts to reach out to her, to contact her, to somehow let her know
that he was with her, brought a frown to the War God’s stern
face.
“I have already explained to you, Brakandaran. She cannot
see you.
She cannot hear you.â€
“I have to go to her.â€
“And you shall,†Zegarnald promised. “In
time.â€
Brak turned on the god impatiently. “Why are you doing this?
They’ll
kill her!â€
Zegarnald did not answer for a moment. He waited as the First Sister
left the room and Lord Terbolt explained his plans to R’shiel,
then
nodded slowly.
“The Karien human speaks the truth, Brakandaran. Xaphista
wants the
demon child for himself. Her ability to destroy a god is quite
indiscriminate. She could destroy me just as easily as
Xaphista.â€
“Oh, I see,†Brak retorted, his voice laden
with sarcasm.
“That’s a good plan. Hand over the only person who can
destroy you to
your enemy. Now why didn’t I think of that?â€
“Your disrespect wears on my nerves, Brakandaran.â€
“Not half as much as your scheming is wearing on mine,
Zegarnald.â€
“I agreed to humour you, Brakandaran, by allowing you to
assure
yourself that the demon child lives. I did not agree to listen to your
whining.â€
Brak watched helplessly as the Karien duke left the bedchamber where
R’shiel was being held. As soon as she was alone,
R’shiel threw herself
on the bed and stared at the ceiling, cursing softly. After a while,
she gave up that futile pastime and began pacing the room. She checked
the door first, but it was firmly locked. Then she went to the window
and threw it open, looking down with despair at the six-storey drop to
the courtyard below. Finding no joy in that escape route she sat on the
edge of the bed and tentatively reached for her power, drawing back
hastily as the silver collar she wore began to burn.
“Let me out of here, Zegarnald. I have to help her.†Here was a hard place to define. The War God had him
trapped between the world R’shiel inhabited and the world the
gods
called home. He was powerless here — at Zegarnald’s
mercy. He could
move around freely, but he could not be seen, nor could he affect
anything that happened in the ordinary world of humans.
He could have kicked himself for walking into Zegarnald’s
trap so
blindly. He should have known the War God’s sudden appearance
in the
alley beside the Temple of the Gods meant trouble. Zegarnald probably
hadn’t walked the halls of the Citadel for two centuries. Brak
knew the
gods well enough. He should have suspected something. And he
should never have accepted Zegarnald’s uncharacteristic
offer
of a handshake. Touching the god had been his undoing. Once Zegarnald
had a hold of him, he was powerless to resist being drawn into this
grey limbo.
“She must help herself.â€
“How? She can’t even touch her power. That collar is
as bad as those
damned staffs Xaphista’s priests lug around.â€
“She can touch it. But the pain will be intolerable. If she
wants to
escape badly enough, she will find a way to bear it.â€
“This is another of your tests, I suppose? Another part of
the
‘tempering’ you’re so fond of? What happens if
she doesn’t want to play
your game, Zegarnald? Suppose she throws her lot in with
Xaphista?â€
“Then I will release you and you will destroy her.â€
Brak glanced at the god warily. “You trust me to do
that?â€
“If the demon child joins with Xaphista, what is left of the
Harshini will be destroyed. I have no need to trust you. I trust your
determination to remove a threat to your people.â€
The worst of it was that the War God was right. Should
R’shiel give
in to Xaphista he would not hesitate to kill her. He turned back to
watching her, feeling like a voyeur.
“You’re taking a big risk, Zegarnald.â€
“Perhaps. If the demon child is too weak to face down
Xaphista, if
she is willing to become his disciple, I would rather find out now than
wait until she has matured.â€
“The finding out could kill her.â€
“Xaphista will try to win her over. He’ll not resort
to force unless
he has to. He wants the demon child to believe in him, Brakandaran. She
is no good to him if she despises him.â€
“I can’t imagine she’ll be too thrilled by your
efforts,†he
pointed out. “If you ask me you’re playing right into
his hands.â€
“I do not recall asking you.â€
Angrily, Brak drew on his power and tore uselessly at the restraints
that bound him to this place. Zegarnald didn’t budge. His
efforts were
trivial in the face of the god’s implacable will.
“Control yourself, Brakandaran. Such undisciplined behaviour
ill
becomes a member of your race.â€
“I’m half human, Zegarnald. I’m doing my
human ancestors proud.â€
“Stop fighting me. You will harm no one but
yourself.â€
“Then let me out of here.â€
“In time.â€
Brak cursed and let go of the power. Fighting a god was a fruitless
effort. Fighting Zegarnald was a complete waste of time. He
thrived on it. Brak’s efforts were only making him stronger.
The
realisation brought another thought to mind and he decided to change
his tactics. If he couldn’t force Zegarnald into releasing him,
then he
had to make him want to do it.
“Medalon has surrendered.â€
“So it would seem,†the god agreed, a little wary at
Brak’s sudden
change of heart.
“You’re taking it pretty well.â€
“What do you mean?â€
“The war is over. That’s going to seriously affect
your standing
among the other gods, isn’t it? I mean, now that the Kariens
and the
Medalonians aren’t fighting any more, things are going to get
very
cosy. Before long they’ll be shaking hands, then
they’ll start making
friends. Before long they’ll be falling in
love . . .
Kalianah’s going to be very happy. And considerably stronger,
unless
I’m mistaken.â€
Zegarnald frowned. “The Defenders will not
surrender.â€
“You think so? You haven’t been keeping up to date,
Divine One. The
Defenders are the most disciplined army in the world. If they were
ordered to dress up like chickens and run around clucking,
they’d do it
without blinking. They won’t ignore an order to
surrender.â€
“Then I will have to content myself with the Fardohnyan
invasion of
Hythria,†the War God told him smugly.
Brak bit back another curse. He hadn’t known about that.
Zegarnald
needed wars to keep him strong, but he didn’t really care where
they
happened. A conflict between those who worshipped him would serve him
just as well as one between those who didn’t.
“I suppose you’re right. Of course, you’re
assuming that Kalianah
won’t interfere.â€
“There is nothing she can do to prevent a war.â€
“Don’t be so sure. All she has to do is make the
right people fall
in love and your war is done for.†Brak wondered if Zegarnald
knew how
desperate he was. He was certain he sounded desperate.
“If you know something of her plans, then you should tell
me,
Brakandaran.â€
He shrugged. “I merely speculate, Divine One. If
Kalianah’s got
something up her sleeve, you’ll have to ask her about
it.â€
Zegarnald’s dark eyes narrowed suspiciously. Trust was not a
commodity the gods owned in any great quantity and they tended to take
things rather literally. They were jealous creatures and were more
conscious of rank than the most snobbish Karien nobleman. It dawned on
Brak then that Zegarnald was afraid of R’shiel. He was afraid
of what
they had created. That’s why he was determined to prove that
she could
be trusted, before her ability developed beyond the point where the
gods could take action.
Brak looked at R’shiel with new respect. It took a lot to
frighten a
god.
The knowledge did little to help him out of his current predicament,
however. Perhaps divine jealousy would work where reason had failed.
Brak had no idea if Kalianah even cared that there was a war going on.
For all he knew, she was off making a hive of bees happy, somewhere.
But he was certain she would not approve of Zegarnald’s plans
to test
the demon child’s fortitude by throwing her to
Xaphista’s priests. If
he could taunt Zegarnald into seeking her out, he might be able to
prevail upon the Goddess of Love to release him. Kalianah was a
happy-ever-after sort of god. She didn’t like her plans being
disrupted
and she had gone to a fair bit of trouble to keep R’shiel and
Tarja
together. He was clutching at straws, but at this point anything was
worth a try.
“Of course, if Kalianah was up to something while
you’re at the
Citadel making certain the demon child has a spine, you’re not
going to
know about it until she’s standing over you, smiling that
annoying
little smile, asking you if you love her.â€
“Kalianah would not dare interfere. She knows what is at
stake.â€
“She made R’shiel and Tarja fall in love.
That’s interference where
I come from. If Kalianah gets the better of you, R’shiel
won’t be tempered,
she’ll be mooning about like a lovesick cow.â€
One of the advantages of trying to manipulate a god was their total
inability to comprehend anything other than their own natures.
Zegarnald knew what love was in a theoretical sort of way, he even
tolerated it, but he didn’t understand it.
Brak’s prediction
sounded quite plausible to him.
“I will put a stop to her interference at once!â€
“You do that, Divine One. In the meantime, let me out of
here and
I’ll make certain R’shiel doesn’t fall for
Xaphista’s devious —â€
“Don’t push me, Brakandaran. You will stay here
until I have dealt
with Kalianah. And don’t bother to call any of my brothers or
sisters.
They will not hear you unless I will it.â€
The War God vanished, leaving Brak alone in the half-world between
reality and dreams. He looked down on R’shiel and found her
sitting on
the bed, her knees drawn up and her head resting on them, her whole
posture radiating abject misery. He tried reaching out to her again,
but he knew it was useless. Until Zegarnald released him there was
nothing he could do to help her.
The demon child was on her own.
CHAPTER 51
Loclon stood before the full-length mirror in the
First Sister’s apartments and studied Joyhinia’s naked
body curiously.
It was a pity she was so old, he mused, although he supposed the body
was quite well preserved for a woman approaching late middle age. The
once full breasts sagged disappointingly. The hips and thighs were
thickened by age, and her skin was showing signs of decay.
There was little joy to be had from this body in any case. Pleasures
that normally had him stiff with anticipation seemed like far-away
memories. He recalled the desire but did not really feel it. The
woman’s body he inhabited seemed to dampen his maleness. It was
as if
such thoughts could not thrive in this female form.
But if sexual pleasure was denied him, there were other
compensations. The power he wielded as First Sister left him
breathless. Of course, there was a limit to what he could achieve at
the moment. Lord Terbolt and his priests hovered around him like
vultures over a fresh corpse, but that would end soon. He would toe the
line for now, but once the Kariens left the Citadel, he would
be in control. Loclon smiled coldly. If they thought the old Joyhinia
had been a tyrant, the citizens of Medalon would lack the words to
describe the new one.
He had a long list of victims who would suffer at the First
Sister’s
hands once he had a free rein. Men who had slighted him; women who had
scorned him; all of them would pay.
He would start with Tarja Tenragan.
Fortunately, this coincided with the Kariens’plans and the
order
would be issued today, under the First Sister’s seal. A courier
would
take it to Lord Jenga in the north as soon as the ink was dry. It would
demand that Tarja Tenragan be arrested immediately and handed over to
the Kariens to stand trial for the murders of Lord Pieter and the
priest Elfron. Loclon would have preferred to take a more personal hand
in Tarja’s demise, but the Kariens were planning to burn him
alive. It
was a very satisfying thought; his pleasure diminished only slightly by
being unable to witness the event.
There were others too, who would feel his wrath, but they could
wait. With Tarja accounted for, he must take care of R’shiel.
Unfortunately, his chance at her had a deadline.
When Terbolt left the Citadel, R’shiel would go with him,
willingly
or not. He felt betrayed by the Kariens’plans for
R’shiel. They had
promised him revenge and then denied him. R’shiel was a
prisoner,
granted, but she was hardly suffering. She was fed regularly and well,
and treated with cautious respect by Terbolt and his priests. The
collar that circled her neck caused her pain only if she tried to touch
her Harshini power, and she appeared to have learnt that lesson very
quickly. All in all, her incarceration was remarkably comfortable and
not at all what Loclon had in mind. If he was going to do something
about the bitch, he would have to do it soon.
Conveniently, the Kariens were creatures of habit. Xaphista was a
demanding god, and every day at sunset, when the mysterious Dimming
began in the Citadel, they would gather in the apartments Lord Terbolt
had seconded and pray for at least an hour. For that hour,
R’shiel was
guarded by only two Defenders and as First Sister, he could order them
about with impunity. He sighed contentedly. It was almost sundown. By
the time he was dressed Terbolt, Garanus and their companions would be
on their knees at their devotions. He knew the folly of killing
R’shiel, but for an hour at least, he could take the revenge he
felt he
so richly deserved.
She was standing by the window when he arrived,
her exquisite profile limned by the sunset. Her glorious dark red hair
was loose. It hung past her waist and had obviously been brushed until
it shone — she had little else to fill her days. She wore dark,
supple
leathers that hugged her lithe body. Had he still been a man, the very
sight of her would have aroused him. That had always been his mistake
in the past. He had let his lust for this woman rule his head. But not
this time. This time he inhabited a woman’s body and the desire
that
had betrayed him in the past was nothing more than a shallow echo.
R’shiel turned at the sound of the door and stiffened at the
sight
of him.
“What do you want?†She sounded annoyed rather than
fearful. That
would have to change.
“I’ve come to ask you some questions,†he
said, placing the large
covered birdcage he carried on the floor beside him.
“Ask them from there,†she said, crossing her arms
defensively.
“You’re hardly in a position to be giving me orders,
R’shiel.â€
“And you’re hardly in a position to defy your Karien
masters. Does
Terbolt know that you’re here? No, of course he
doesn’t. He’s at
prayer, isn’t he? You’re too craven to dare anything if
you thought he
might catch you at it.â€
Loclon bit back his fury at her scorn. “I’ve no care
for what
Terbolt thinks.â€
“You should have. Have you been to check on your body
Loclon? Are
you sure it’s well? Are they feeding it? Turning it frequently
so you
don’t get bedsores? Do you really trust them that much?â€
“Stop it!â€
She smiled, which was a big mistake. Loclon did not take well to
being laughed at. But he would have his fun. Instead of responding to
her taunts he pulled the cover from the cage.
R’shiel gasped in horror. The little demon cowered in the
centre of
the cage, crouched into a tangle of arms and legs, her large black eyes
filled with terror.
Loclon saw R’shiel’s expression and knew he had
found the perfect
way to torment her.
“Funny little creature, isn’t it?â€
“Let her go.â€
“You know I can’t do that. Aren’t you going
to ask how we caught it?â€
“I know how you caught it. How are you keeping her
there?â€
Loclon shrugged. “I’ve no idea. The priests tied the
top of one of
those staffs to the top of the cage, here . . . you
see . . . and it does something to the bars. Did you
want to see?â€
“No.â€
“Oh, but you must,†he insisted with a malicious
smile.
He poked the creature and it jerked away from him instinctively, but
the cage was too small and the movement pushed it back against the
metal bars. The creature cried out with pain and jerked back from the
bars, only to come up against the bars on the other side, where the
agony was waiting for it. The high-pitched screams were most
gratifying. It took the creature two or three attempts to curl back up
into the ball that kept it away from the bars. When it finally settled
down, it was trembling uncontrollably with tears spilling silently from
its liquid black eyes.
“Want to see it again?†he asked.
“Stop it!†She crossed the room in a few paces and
grabbed him by
the hair, forcing him to his knees. Loclon did not cry out, or even
struggle against her.
He simply reached out with his foot and kicked the cage, which set
the demon off again.
R’shiel let him go and ran to the cage, but she could no
more touch
the enchanted bars than the demon could. The priests’ magic
worked best
on those who could channel the power of the gods. R’shiel had
no hope
of freeing the terrified creature. All she could do was kneel on the
floor and watch it suffer.
Loclon climbed to his feet, laughing. Her attempts to open the cage
were useless, even touching the latch was agony. She heard him move and
turned to look up at him. The pain in her eyes was all he could have
hoped for.
“Go ahead, let it go. If you can.â€
R’shiel glanced back at the cage which had fallen on its
side. The
demon was screaming in agony. There was nothing she could do to help
it. She couldn’t even right the cage to save the demon from the
pain of
contacting the bars.
As if she had realised the same thing, she climbed slowly to her
feet.
“Giving up so soon?†he taunted.
Without warning, she turned and kicked the cage with all the force
she could muster, lifting it clear off the floor. The cage clattered
against the wall and landed with a thud. As it did, the base of the
cage popped open and the demon gratefully scrambled clear of the trap.
“Be gone!†she cried urgently, as Loclon grabbed her.
The demon winked out of existence with a startled squeal.
Loclon punched her then pushed her onto the floor and held her there
with his knee while he looked around the room for something to hurt her
with. There was nothing handy. Terbolt had stripped the room of
anything remotely resembling a potential weapon. He wished for his male
body. R’shiel was physically stronger than Joyhinia. Fighting
her with
his bare hands was not an option. Lacking anything more substantial
than his fists, he wrapped his hand tighter through her hair and
slammed her forehead into the floor, over and over, until she was
almost senseless.
He stopped himself just in time. He would be in enough trouble for
letting the creature escape. Killing R’shiel could easily cost
him his
life.
“Get up!â€
She did not respond.
“I said, get up!†He kicked her in the stomach and
she grunted
involuntarily, confirming his suspicion that she was faking
unconsciousness. “Get up, you inhuman slut!â€
R’shiel rolled over slowly and stared at him with defiant
eyes, a
little dazed.
“Get up, I said!â€
She pushed herself up onto her hands and knees. The wound on her
forehead had opened and the blood flowed freely, obscuring her vision.
Impatient with her slow response, he kicked her again, throwing her
backwards against the wall. He laughed. This was what he wanted. What
he needed.
R’shiel collapsed against the wall and for a moment she lay
still,
but when she looked up there was no submission in her eyes. Instead
there was an expression of such hatred that he took a step back from
her. Her eyes began to darken ominously. As she drew on her power the
collar around her neck began to glow in response. She pushed herself up
as her eyes turned black. The collar grew so bright it was almost
painful to look on it.
Truly fearful of what he might have provoked, Loclon backed away
from her. The sickening stench of burning flesh reached him as
R’shiel
gathered her power to her and the collar punished her for her efforts.
She grabbed the windowsill and pulled herself to her feet, her eyes as
black as night, the collar like a thousand candles burning under her
chin.
With a visible effort she steadied herself and prepared to hurl her
fury at him. The stench of burning flesh grew stronger. Loclon
marvelled at her tolerance for the pain she must be in, but his own
fear prevented him from taking any pleasure in it. If she broke through
the constraint of the collar, he would not leave this room alive.
“Die!†she hissed.
Loclon expected his life to end at that moment, but the collar
flared as she tried to unleash her power. She screamed and dropped to
the floor, tearing uselessly at the burning necklet. Loclon let her
drop, shaking with relief as she collapsed.
The screams stopped only when she finally passed out. He waited for
a long, long time to be certain she really was unconscious this time.
When Loclon finally stopped shaking he was
appalled to discover his bladder had let go and for the first time was
grateful for Joyhinia’s long skirts. R’shiel lay under
the window, her
breathing shallow. He approached her cautiously, half expecting her to
be faking again. As he neared her, he realised it was unlikely. Her
magnificent long hair tumbled over her face, obscuring the worst of the
damage, but blood streamed from her forehead and he could see savage
blisters marring her neck above and below the now quiescent collar.
He prodded her experimentally with the toe of Joyhinia’s
boot, but
received no response. A harder kick got the same reaction. He kicked
her again, this time for sheer pleasure rather than any attempt to
determine her state of consciousness. The kick following that one was
just for the hell of it.
He tired of that game soon enough. Bruises and broken ribs would
heal in time. Even her scars would probably fade — she was
Harshini,
not human. He wanted to leave her with a reminder. He stood back and
studied her for a while, wondering. Then it came to him. He crossed the
room to the door and opened it a fraction.
“Bring me scissors,†he ordered.
The guard looked a little startled by the order but hurried to
comply. Joyhinia taped her foot impatiently as she waited for him to
return. When he hurried back to his post clutching the scissors, she
snatched them from his hand and locked the door again.
Loclon dragged R’shiel to the bed, annoyed by
Joyhinia’s weakness.
If he had his own body, it would have been nothing to scoop her up and
throw her onto the bed. As it was, he grunted and struggled to get his
hands under her arms and move her across the room. Lifting her was
almost beyond him, but he managed it somehow. When he finally got her
on the bed, he laid R’shiel out with almost tender care,
crossing her
hands demurely across her breast. He combed out her glorious mane with
his fingers until it spread like a fiery halo around her head then
stepped back to admire his handiwork.
If one was prepared to ignore the blood and the burns, she looked
quite stunning. He smiled, thinking he had never seen her quite this
way — so peaceful, so . . . vulnerable.
Loclon sighed and picked up the scissors. He moved to the bed and
planted a lingering kiss on her slightly parted lips.
Then he took the scissors and cut her hair as close to the skull as
he could get. He hummed tunelessly as he worked, stopping only once to
stare suspiciously over his shoulder.
He could not avoid the feeling that someone was watching him.
CHAPTER 52
When Tarja questioned first Hadly, then Sergeant
Monthay regarding the whereabouts of the Karien boy, neither of them
could provide a satisfactory answer. Hadly was too busy, and Monthay
sounded genuinely perturbed. He could recall giving the boy the
afternoon off, but not why.
Tarja thanked him for his assistance and went looking for the child
himself. He didn’t blame the sergeant. If the God of Thieves
had taken
it into his head to lead Mikel astray, there was little Monthay could
have done about it.
He leaned forward and patted Shadow, wondering where a small Karien
boy and a mischief-making god could be hiding in the vast camp. Nowhere
there was work to be done, that was certain. They were unlikely to have
gone north toward the border. Not only was it dangerous, there was no
entertainment in that direction. The Keep was just as unlikely, as was
the Hythrun camp, where Mikel’s brother was, or the neat
Defender’s
camp, where surely somebody would question their right to be there. He
glanced south at the follower’s camp thinking there was plenty
of
trouble to be found there. He turned Shadow and let her pick her own
pace, hoping he was heading in the right direction.
There would be a town here soon if the war dragged on much longer,
he thought as he rode through the vast camp. Already some enterprising
merchants had set up rickety wooden frames to house their commercial
endeavours between tents that ranged from the ramshackle to the truly
spectacular. The larger tents belonged to the Court’esa’s
Guild. They had moved in within days of the Defenders. All these lonely
men out here in the middle of nowhere was an opportunity too good to be
missed. Half the court’esa here could probably retire
in luxury
by now and those that couldn’t would not have long to wait.
Tarja debated stopping by the largest tent to speak to Mistress
Miffany. If Jenga surrendered, the court’esa were in
real
danger. Miffany was a generous, rotund little woman who had worked in
the Citadel as a court’esa when Tarja was a cadet. She
had
inherited the business from Mistress Lyndah, when the sour old bitch
had finally died — making everyone in the Citadel who knew her
breathe
a sigh of relief — and had set about making life pleasant for
as many
Defenders as possible since then — at a reasonable price, of
course.
Tarja liked her and had no desire to see her, or her girls, stoned by
the invading Kariens.
On impulse, he turned toward her gaily-striped tent. If he could do
nothing to stop the surrender, he could at least save a few lives. That
Jenga would surrender was a very real possibility. The Lord
Defender had stretched his loyalty about as far as it was likely to go.
From the moment he had defied Joyhinia in Testra, he had been fighting
a losing battle with his conscience. The order to surrender, while
unpalatable, was probably easier to live with than treason.
A grubby child ran forward to hold his mount when he arrived. He
dismounted and threw the child a copper rivet, before pushing back the
flap, bending over to enter the tent. Inside, a number of women looked
up hopefully at his captain’s insignia, smiling at him with
open
invitation. Tarja smiled back, but otherwise ignored them. Miffany
hurried forward as soon as she recognised him, obviously happy to see
him.
“Tarja!â€
“Hello Miff,†he said, kissing her cheek.
“You’ve lost weight.â€
Miffany laughed delightedly. She was almost as wide as she was tall.
“You tease! I look like a pudding, and you know it, but it
was nice
of you to say so. Did you want a girl?†Miffany was never one
to beat
around the bush.
“No, I wanted a word with you. In private.â€
Curious, but unconcerned, she turned to her girls.
“I’m going to
take a turn of the camp with the captain, here. Becca, you’re
in charge
until I get back.â€
Miffany slipped her arm though his and led him outside.
They headed south between the tents down what could only very
loosely be described as a street. The tents had been placed with little
thought to the traffic in the camp and they were forced to step over
tent pegs and dodge muddy puddles as they walked. Miffany clung to his
arm with a smug grin that broadened to an outright smirk as they passed
by the tent of one of her competitors.
“There’ll be tongues a-wagging in there, soon
enough,†she predicted.
Tarja smiled. “We could stop outside on the way back while I
declare
I’ve never had better.â€
“You are such a sweetheart,†she laughed, squeezing
his arm.
“Have you done well since you’ve been here,
Miff?â€
“I’ll say! I’m rich enough to buy myself one
of those posh little
villas on the riverfront in Brodenvale. War is good for a business like
mine.â€
“Then perhaps you should think about retiring.â€
She looked up at him suspiciously. “You’re taking a
sudden interest
in my welfare.â€
“I care about you.â€
“You’re sweet Tarja, I’ve always thought
that, but you’re a captain.
One of Jenga’s closest officers. You didn’t come all
this way to
suggest I retire without a damn good reason.â€
“Isn’t caring for you enough?†he asked with
a hopeful smile.
“Much as I’d like to kid myself that is the case,
Tarja, I’m not a
fool. What’s really going on?â€
“I can’t say, Miff. All I can do is suggest that you
quit while
you’re ahead.â€
The chubby court’esa thought for a moment and then
nodded.
“How long do we have?â€
He could have hugged her for being so astute. “A few days. A
week at
most. Your profession won’t be looked upon kindly after
that.â€
“I owe you for this, Tarja.â€
“You don’t owe me anything, Miff. Consider it a debt
repaid.â€
“What debt?â€
“I was fourteen the first time I came to Mistress
Lyndah’s. You
didn’t laugh at me.â€
She chuckled at the memory. “I was a lot thinner in those
days. You
were a sweet boy then, Tarja, and you still are, in my book. Tell me,
do you plan to act on your own advice, or stay here and let them kill
you?â€
Her blunt question startled him. “I haven’t decided
yet, but I don’t
plan on letting anybody kill me.â€
“Well, that’s something, I suppose. You know,
I’ll need some guards
when I leave. I’ve quite a haul in the chest under my bed. Not
looking
for a job, are you?â€
He shook his head. “Sorry, but I’ve got other things
demanding my
attention.â€
“Ah well, it was worth a try. I’ll ask young Dace.
He seems to know
everybody in the whole damned camp.â€
Tarja stopped dead, almost jerking Miffany off her feet.
“Dace? A
fair-haired lad about so high? Wears the worst collection of cast-off
clothing you’ve ever seen?â€
“That’s our Dace,†Miff agreed. “How
do you know him?â€
“I came here looking for him.â€
“I thought it was too much to hope that you came here just
to see
me,†she sighed.
“Where can I find him?â€
She shrugged. “Who knows? He’s a sweet boy too, but
every time he
appears, something goes missing. He hangs around with a Karien boy.
They turn up every now and then, looking for a meal.â€
“And you feed them, of course.â€
“Of course.â€
“Do you have any idea where I can find him? It’s
really important.â€
Miffany thought for a moment and then nodded. “Try old
Draginya, the
herb woman. She lives over by Will Barley’s tavern tent.
She’s a weird
old buzzard, always praying to the Primal gods and muttering to
herself, but I’ve seen Dace with her now and then. She might
know where
he is.â€
Tarja bent down and kissed Miffany’s plump cheek.
“You are the best.â€
“Then how come you’re leaving?†she called
after him.
Tarja would have found Draginya’s tent
simply by
following the smell, even if Miffany had not described its location.
The tent was crammed with dried herbs and a smoking brazier that gave
off an aroma unlike anything he had smelled before. The old woman was
wrapped in several tattered shawls against the cold and she looked up
with rheumy eyes as Tarja bent almost double to get through the tent
flap. He straightened up once he was inside, his head brushing the roof
of the tent.
“Captain Tarja Tenragan,†the old woman said, as if
she expected him.
“How do you know who I am?†The tent was gloomy and
he had to squint
to make her out.
“You are the demon child’s appointed lover. Kalianah
has made it so.
She told me about you.â€
Tarja was still atheist enough not to want to know what she meant.
“I seek Dacendaran.â€
“The God of Thieves? An odd companion for a man like
you.â€
“Do you know where he is?â€
“The gods are everywhere, Captain.â€
“I was hoping you could be a bit more specific.â€
The old woman smiled revealing toothless pink gums.
“Dacendaran said
you were unusual for a Defender. I see what he means.â€
“I need to speak with him,†Tarja insisted.
“The gods listen to all our prayers, Captain.â€
“I don’t want to pray to him, dammit, I need to ask
him something!â€
“Well, there’s no need to yell, Tarja. I’m
not deaf.†He spun around
to find the God of Thieves standing behind him. The boy looked
unchanged from the last time he had seen him in Testra, but that was
hardly surprising. Dace pushed past him and knelt down beside the old
woman. “Is he bullying you, Draginya? Shall I turn him into
something
with six legs that likes to live under a rock?â€
“He is young, Divine One, and at the mercy of
Kalianah’s geas.â€
Dace stood up and turned to Tarja. “Well, it seems you get
to stay
in one piece. What did you want?â€
“Where’s R’shiel?â€
“At the Citadel, I suppose,†Dace shrugged.
“Something’s happened to her.â€
“I’d know if she were dead. You humans worry far too
much.â€
Tarja glared at the boy. “Jenga has been ordered to
surrender.â€
That news gave the god pause. His grin faded.
“That’s probably not a
good sign.â€
“Dace, the only way that order could have been issued is if
R’shiel
failed. Something has happened to her.â€
“Well, if it has, it’s her own fault. I offered to
go with them, but
did they want my help? No. They wanted to do it all on their
own. The Harshini are like that you know. They always think
—â€
“Dace!â€
“What? Oh, I’m sorry. What did you want me to
do?â€
“Find out . . . what
happened . . . to
R’shiel,†Tarja explained very slowly and carefully.
“Oh. I suppose that’s not a bad idea. If
something’s happened to
her, we’ll have to start this whole demon child thing all over
again.
Now that would be a bore.â€
“How long will it take?â€
Dace shrugged. “I don’t know.â€
Tarja clenched his fists at his side, rather than grab Dace around
the throat and shake him soundly, which was what he really wanted to
do. “When will you leave?â€
“You are so impatient.â€
“She could be in danger, Dace.â€
“She might just be sunning herself beside a pool somewhere,
too,â€
the god retorted. “On the other hand, it is winter and
R’shiel never
was the sort to relax, although it wouldn’t do her any
harm . . . Oh, stop looking at me like that!
I’ll go and
see what’s happening, but I won’t cross Zegarnald if
he’s got a hand in
this. He’s as strong as he’s ever been with this war
going on.â€
“You do whatever you have to, Divine One,†Tarja
agreed.
Dace grinned. “Divine One? Does this mean
you’re finally
coming to believe in us, Tarja?â€
“I believe in you Dace, I just don’t happen to want
to worship you.â€
“Ah, well,†the god sighed. “Just so long as
you never tell Kalianah
you love her.â€
“That’s not very likely.â€
“Glad to hear it. Will you see that Draginya gets away
safely?â€
Tarja nodded. The boy turned to the old woman and kissed her cheek.
“See, Tarja will take care of you. I’d better go see
what’s happened to
the demon child.â€
Dace vanished without warning, leaving Tarja frowning and old
Draginya smiling toothlessly.
CHAPTER 53
Mikel was chattering away to Dace about the eggs
they had stolen when he suddenly realised that his friend was no longer
with him. He looked around the crowded camp, puzzled. Dace was nowhere
to be seen.
Mikel sighed, used to Dace’s odd disappearances by now. He
did that
sort of thing a lot. One minute he was there and the next he was gone.
Still, it wasn’t that important. Mikel knew the way to the old
herb
woman’s place where the eggs were safely nestled in an old
shawl in the
corner of her tent. He was far more interested in them, anyway. The
chicks should hatch any day now and he was as excited as any expectant
father.
He turned into the street beside Will Barley’s tavern tent
and
stopped dead as a familiar figure emerged from the old woman’s
tent.
Mikel bit back a startled cry and slipped back between the tavern tent
and the tent beside it. What was Tarja doing in the old
woman’s
tent? Had he discovered the eggs?
Even Mikel knew that stealing a clutch of swallow’s eggs
would not
warrant the attention of a Defender. Perhaps he was sickening for
something and had gone to see Draginya for a cure? Then something
truly dreadful occurred to him. Perhaps Tarja had discovered that Mikel
spent most of his afternoons with Dace and had come looking for him.
The only reason Tarja would seek him out was to punish him, Mikel was
certain. What would he do? Would Jaymes lose a finger because of
his brother’s folly? That he had disowned his brother as a
traitor
was momentarily forgotten.
He waited anxiously, filled with trepidation as Tarja moved off
between the tents. When he was sure the Defender would not turn back,
he hurried to the old woman’s tent and slipped inside.
“Did he hurt you?†Mikel demanded as soon as the
flap closed behind
him.
Draginya sat in her chair by the smoking brazier from where she
hardly ever seemed to move; at least in Mikel’s company.
“Did who hurt me, child?†She sounded surprised by
his question.
“Tarja.â€
Her face creased into a wrinkled frown. “You speak with too
much
hatred for a child.â€
“That’s because he’s a monster!â€
“Your ignorance blinds you, boy. Tarja is the appointed
lover of the
demon child. He is destined for great things.â€
Mikel stared at her. “Says who?â€
“The gods, of course. Hasn’t your god
explained these
things?â€
“The Overlord doesn’t speak to the likes of me. He
only speaks to
the priests and stuff.â€
Draginya nodded sadly. “That is a great shame.â€
“Anyway,†Mikel added, rather put out by the old
woman’s pitying
tone. “Tarja’s a Medalonian. That makes him an atheist.
Even if I
believed what you say about the other gods, he
wouldn’t.â€
“Tarja knows the gods exist, Mikel. He simply choses not to
worship
them. The Primal gods like to have believers, but they don’t
need them.
You honoured Dacendaran when you stole those eggs. Whether you believe
in him or not doesn’t enter into it.â€
“We never stole anything!â€
“You removed those eggs from their rightful owner without
permission. That defines theft, don’t you think?â€
“But we wanted to save the chicks,†he protested.
“If you kill one man to save another, it is still killing,
Mikel.
Good intentions don’t alter the nature of an event.â€
“Then I betrayed the Overlord,†he concluded,
sinking down to the
floor beside Draginya’s stool. “I’m
doomed.â€
“You’re exaggerating,†the old woman
scolded. “You are a child,
Mikel, and far too young to concern yourself with visions of doom and
eternal damnation. Live life to the full and follow the god of your
heart, not the tired litanies of grown-ups whose desire for power has a
lot more to do with their faith than what their god might want.â€
“That’s blasphemy.â€
“No, it’s wisdom. When you’re as old as I
am, you get to call
everything wisdom. Now go check on your eggs and be off with you.
I’m
tired and I have to start packing.â€
“You’re leaving? Why?†Mikel was
much less concerned about
the old woman travelling in winter than he was about his eggs. If she
left, what would he do with them?
“Because your people will be here soon. They’ll take
one look at me
and burn me for a witch, I’m certain.â€
“You mean there’ll be another battle? One that
Prince Cratyn will
win?â€
She shook her head and placed a withered hand on his shoulder.
“The
battle has been fought and lost far from this place, child. The
Defenders have been ordered to surrender.â€
All thought of eggs fled Mikel’s mind as the news sunk in. The
Defenders were going to surrender! Jaymes would be released and brought
back into the arms of the Overlord.
And best of all, he thought happily, Princess Adrina would not have
to pretend to hate Prince Cratyn any more.
Mikel hurried back through the camp, his heart
lighter than it had been for months. Any day now, Prince Cratyn would
cross the border in triumph. Karien had won. Tarja would be hung for
the criminal he was. The Overlord had made the Medalonians surrender
with hardly a drop of blood spilt. (He conveniently forgot the massacre
resulting from the only serious Karien incursion into Medalon.) It
didn’t matter what happened now. It didn’t matter what
they did to him.
The Overlord was truly omnipotent, just like the priests said.
He skirted the edge of the camp and wound his way back through the
corrals, taking the route closest to the Hythrun stables. He always
took the same route. Dace claimed it was in the hope of catching sight
of his brother — a charge Mikel vehemently denied. It was
simply the
easiest way back, he insisted, ignoring Dace’s knowing smirk.
This time, however, he actively searched for his brother. He had to
give him the news, quite certain that as soon as Jaymes learnt his own
people would soon be here, he would see the error of his ways. Mikel
was thrilled by the prospect and burning to share it with someone.
Jaymes was nowhere to be found, but as he stuck his head cautiously
around the corner of the first stable block, he spied someone who
deserved to hear the news even more.
Adrina was alone, brushing down a gorgeous golden mare, talking to
the beast softly as she worked. There was nobody else around, not even
a guard. Mikel chose to think of that as a sign from the Overlord,
rather than the more obvious conclusion — that she
wasn’t guarded
because they didn’t consider her in need of one.
“Your Highness!†he hissed loudly.
Adrina turned and frowned when she caught sight of him.
“Mikel? What are you doing hiding over there?â€
He slipped into the stable and ran to her, dropping to one knee as
he had seen the Fardohnyan lanceman do after the battle. The gesture
had struck him as being terribly noble.
“Your Highness, I have the most wonderful news!â€
“Have you now? Do tell.â€
“Medalon has surrendered, your Highness. Prince Cratyn will
be here
any day. We are to be rescued!â€
Mikel looked up, expecting to see relief and happiness radiating
from her in equal measure. He was disappointed to find her taking the
news quite calmly.
“And where did you hear this startling piece of
intelligence?†she
asked.
“From the old herb woman in the camp. She’s already
packing to leave
for fear of the Overlord’s wrath.â€
Adrina smiled. “Mikel, don’t you think if Medalon
had surrendered,
their troops might be told before some old herb woman? I’m sure
she’s
mistaken.â€
“But she seemed so certain, your Highness. Even Tarja went
to visit
her.â€
“Now that’s interesting,†Adrina agreed.
“Do you know why?â€
“The old woman said it was to talk to the God of Thieves,
but I
don’t believe her. There is only the Overlord, isn’t
there?â€
“Yes, of course,†she agreed absently.
“Aren’t you happy, your Highness?â€
“I’m delirious with happiness,†she assured
him. “It’s just not
seemly that a woman in my position display extremes of emotion.â€
He smiled with relief. He had forgotten how well mannered she was,
how careful she was not to shame herself. It must have been so hard on
her, having to pretend to be nice to everyone, while inside she was
missing Prince Cratyn so badly.
“It will be alright, your Highness. Prince Cratyn will be
here soon.â€
“I can’t tell you what a comfort that is,â€
she said.
Mikel stood up beaming. To have been able to deliver such wonderful
news to his lady was more than he could have hoped for in this dreadful
place.
Adrina smiled down at him. “I thank you, Mikel, but
shouldn’t you be
getting along? The Defenders haven’t surrendered yet, and
I’d hate for
you to wear a beating on my account.â€
“It won’t be long now, your Highness,†Mikel
promised with an
encouraging smile. He turned and ran from the stable, almost colliding
with Lord Wolfblade. He yelped with astonishment and fled past the
Warlord, praying he hadn’t been recognised.
A few paces from the stable, Mikel stopped and looked back over his
shoulder. The Warlord had vanished inside. The princess was in there.
Alone. It just wasn’t proper. He wavered with indecision for a
moment
and then headed back to the stable.
Mikel slipped back into the building silently,
grateful for Dace’s instruction on how to sneak around without
being
noticed, and hid in the first empty stall he came to. It was close
enough to hear what the Warlord said to the princess. The boy smiled
expectantly. Now that she knew she was to be rescued soon, he fully
expected Adrina to give him a piece of her mind.
“You don’t have to do that, you know.â€
Adrina looked over her shoulder. “When I was a child, the
only thing
we were ever allowed to do for ourselves, was groom our horses. Hablet
thought it would teach us a responsibility.â€
“And did it?â€
She smiled. “Actually, I think it taught us more about the
value of
bribes. It was more fun trying to avoid the task than doing it.â€
Damin walked up behind Adrina and placed his hand over hers as she
brushed the animal with long slow strokes. He stood so close behind her
that their bodies were touching. The princess didn’t scream.
She didn’t
even flinch. Damin bent his head and touched his lips to her neck, just
below her right ear. She arched her back and leaned into him.
“Stop that.â€
“Why?â€
“There’s no future in this, Damin. You know that as
well as I.â€
He slipped his arms around her waist and pulled her closer.
“Ah,
that’s right, we hate each other, don’t we?â€
She turned in his arms and touched her forehead to his.
“You’re
confusing lust with genuine feeling, my Lord.â€
As if to give lie to her words, she kissed him. There was no
mistaking it for anything else; she was definitely kissing him,
not the other way around. Mikel almost bit through his bottom lip to
prevent himself from crying out his outrage.
“If that’s your idea of trying to make me stop, then
the court’esa
who trained you needs to be horsewhipped,†Damin laughed softly
when
they finally came up for air.
Adrina smiled. It was the same sort of intimate smile
R’shiel saved
for Tarja. The sort of smile Adrina had never bestowed on his prince.
“That’s all this is, you know. A simple case of two
well trained and
rather bored people amusing themselves far from home.â€
“I grant you that we’re both well trained,â€
Damin agreed, unwrapping
her arms from around his neck. He held her hands for a moment and then
turned them over, kissing the palms. “And I’ve no doubt
you’re bored.
But this is far from simple, Adrina.â€
She sighed. “I know. So what are we going to do?â€
“Well, I don’t know about you, but I’m
heading home while I still
can.â€
“How noble of you. What happens to me?â€
“That’s up to you. You have two choices. Stay and
face Cratyn, or
come with me.â€
Adrina’s eyes widened. “Follow you to Hythria?
You’re pretty damn
certain of yourself, aren’t you?â€
“I wish I could say my offer was entirely motivated by the
knowledge
that you’d rather die than live without me, but the fact is,
neither
you nor I want a Karien heir to your father’s throne. The whole
world
will be safer with you in my bed, rather than Cratyn’s.â€
“You are the most arrogant pig I have ever met.â€
“Probably. Will you come with me, or not?â€
“Is sharing your bed a condition of the deal?â€
“No. If you want, I’ll never touch you again.
I’ll escort you to
Hythria and kill any man who tries to lay a hand on you against your
will. Myself included.â€
“You’d throw yourself on your sword for me? Somehow,
I doubt that,
Damin.â€
“It sounded rather noble, though, don’t you
think?â€
Adrina kissed him again. Mikel couldn’t tell how long it
lasted. He
was too busy wiping away tears of anger and disappointment. Adrina knew
that Cratyn was on his way to rescue her. The only reason she was doing
this was the one he had refused to contemplate until now.
“I have conditions,†she said, when they finally
broke apart.
“Somehow, that doesn’t surprise me.†Damin
gathered up the mare’s
lead rope and led her to an empty stall next to the one where Mikel was
hiding. He held his breath.
“I’m a princess of royal blood, Damin, not some
whore you picked up
in the followers’ camp. I expect to be treated as such.â€
“My men shall treat you with the utmost respect, your
Highness, or
I’ll whip them myself.†He closed the gate on the stall
and walked back
to her. The sun had almost set and it was getting hard to see them in
the gloom.
“I wasn’t referring to your men, I was talking about
you.â€
“I’ll ignore that. What else?â€
“The remainder of my Guard, those men the Defenders are
holding
prisoner, are to be released.â€
“I think I can arrange that.â€
“And I’m not your damned prisoner, either. If I go
with you, I go of
my own free will. I’ll be free to leave anytime I want.â€
“Was that all?â€
“No. I want it clearly understood where we stand with each
other.â€
“And where is that, exactly?â€
“I don’t love you, Damin, and I’m damned
sure you don’t love me.
I’ll admit that there is a certain . . .
physical
attraction . . . between us, but that’s all it
is. I get
a thrill out of flirting with danger and you are about the most
dangerous thing around. I don’t want you mistaking this affair
for
something it’s not.â€
Damin didn’t answer her for a long moment. Then he smiled.
“You’re a
consummate liar, Adrina.â€
“I assure you, sir, I meant every word.â€
“That’s what makes you so believable. Very well, I
agree to your
conditions. I’m planning to break camp the day after tomorrow.
Be
prepared for some hard riding. If your husband should happen to
discover where you are, we’ll have every Karien on the border
chasing
us all the way to Hythria.â€
“Then you’d better hope your Medalonian friends
don’t tell him. I
wasn’t planning to leave him a note, you know.â€
“Now there’s a thought,†he laughed. He
picked up her cloak from
where she had thrown it over the railing and held it out for her.
Adrina turned and allowed him to drape it over her shoulders.
“Let me
see, how would it go? Dear Cratyn —â€
“Cretin,†she corrected. “I always called
him Cretin. The Kariens
thought it was my accent.â€
“Very subtle . . . Dear Cretin, sorry I
can’t be here
to meet you dear, but I’ve run off to Hythria with a dashing
warlord —â€
“Dashing?â€
“Handsome sounded a bit arrogant, I
thought . . .
Anyway, where was I? I’ve run off to Hythria with a dashing
warlord
with whom I’ve been making wild, passionate love every night
for . . . how long has it been?â€
“One week and two days . . .â€
“Are you counting?â€
“Only out of curiosity.†She turned to face him, her
expression
suddenly serious. “We shouldn’t joke about this, Damin.
He’ll kill us
both.â€
Damin kissed her forehead. “It will take more than —
what did you
call him? Prince Cretin the Cringing — to kill me. And I swear
I’ll
kill you myself before I hand you back to him.â€
“Well, that makes me feel so much better.â€
Mikel shrank down as they walked past his stall exchanging that odd
mixture of intimate secrets and insulting banter that seemed to
characterise their conversations, tears of bitter disappointment
sliding down his cheeks.
The truth burned in his stomach like a bad meal. He waited in the
darkness surrounded by the moist smell of the horses for a long, long
time after they were gone. His heart was breaking; his childish
illusions well and truly shattered.
By the time he forced himself to move, his fingers were numb with
cold. But he had made a decision. When the Karien army crossed the
border, Mikel would find a way to gain an audience with the prince.
He was going to have to explain to Cratyn that his beautiful, noble
princess was nothing more than a traitorous slut.
PART 4
CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER 54
The walls of the Citadel defined Brak’s
prison. He
had discovered this annoying detail quite by accident as he had tried
to follow Lord Terbolt to a meeting with another Karien agent in the
small village of Kordale, west of the city. He had met an invisible
wall as solid and impenetrable as the wall that cut him off from his
power. Brak had tested its limits right around the Citadel, but could
find no weak point. He wondered if it was entirely Zegarnald’s
doing or
if the Citadel itself was aiding the War God, although he could think
of no reason why the Citadel would ever cooperate with Zegarnald.
He spent his days watching and worrying over R’shiel. His
frustration was a palpable thing and his worry enough to make him
physically sick. He had watched Loclon tormenting her and the demon,
helpless to intervene. He had watched him punish her then cut off her
hair, tearing uselessly at the invisible barrier that separated him
from the ordinary world. But worse, he watched as every day
R’shiel
sank a little lower into despair; a little closer to giving in; a
little closer to the day he might have to kill her.
Brak had an odd relationship with R’shiel. Part guardian,
part
teacher, he had been sent to find the demon child and bring her home to
Sanctuary. His first impressions of her had not been good — she
was
spoilt, manipulative and rebellious. She bore long grudges and tended
to be rather single-minded when it came to getting even. Brak had not
liked her much in the beginning. It had taken a long time for him to
discover how much of R’shiel’s behaviour was a result
of her upbringing
as much as her true nature. She carried a lot of hurt inside and those
who hurt her would suffer for it. He was also cynical enough to realise
that the very qualities that made him distrust her were just the sort
of characteristics one needed if one was destined to destroy a god.
When he had first set out to find the demon child, he had vague
visions of a noble young man with a pure heart, who would take on his
appointed task with a solemn vow and then . . . well,
he’d never really got to that bit. He had not expected
R’shiel; not
expected to find a complicated, troubled young woman, who had been
raised by the most ruthless and unloving mother that the Sisterhood had
ever spawned.
It wasn’t until he learnt how much of her suffering had been
sanctioned by the gods, that he truly began to sympathise with her.
Zegarnald’s “tempering†had been a cruel and
rocky road for R’shiel and
she was a long way from the end.
If he stood back from it, he understood the logic. Xaphista was a
master of seduction, in his own way. He had seduced millions of Kariens
into believing him. One half-breed Harshini would hardly be a threat,
unless that half-breed was inured to his enticements. R’shiel
had to be
so determined to destroy him that nothing would stop her. She had to be
ruthless enough to stand back and watch everything and everyone she
held dear threatened with extinction, and not waver from her purpose.
She had survived being raised by Joyhinia, raped by Loclon, imprisoned
by the Sisterhood, a near-fatal wound, and the discovery that she was a
member of a race that she had been raised to despise. The experience
had left her battered and bruised, but it had not even come close to
breaking her. Brak was beginning to wonder if her current situation
would succeed where everything else had failed.
When she regained consciousness after Loclon left her room, it had
taken her a little while to get her bearings. Her face was a mess
— her
forehead puffy and bruised and covered in dried blood. She lay for a
time, staring at the canopy over the bed, as if trying to recall how
she came to be there. Then she sat up and ran her fingers through her
hair. She stiffened with shock, then looked behind her at the carefully
laid-out halo of dark red hair that was left behind on the pillow.
For a moment she did nothing but stare at it in bewilderment, then
she leapt off the bed and ran to the mirror hanging over the dresser.
Brak winced as she looked at her reflection. Vanity was not a quality
he associated with R’shiel — she had always seemed
rather unconscious
of her beauty — but even the plainest woman would have gasped
at the
reflection staring back at her. Loclon had hacked off her hair with
little care. It stood up in clumps in places; elsewhere it had been cut
so close to the scalp that the skin showed through. Her eyes were
blackening, the cut on her forehead a red slash across a purple
landscape of bruises. Her long neck was livid; white blisters already
visible above and below the thin silver collar. Several had burst when
she began to move, leaving weeping patches of raw flesh to rub against
the metal.
R’shiel stared at her reflection for a long, long time, then
she
sank down onto the floor and sobbed like a brokenhearted child.
Brak could feel her anguish but could do nothing to relieve it.
He could not imagine what it must be like for her to cope with
Loclon in Joyhinia’s body. Added to that, she had failed in her
attempt
to coerce the Sisterhood. Mahina was imprisoned. Affiana and Lord Draco
were both dead. Garet Warner had changed sides and the Kariens
effectively had control of the Citadel. If that wasn’t enough,
when the
order to surrender arrived at the border, Tarja’s life would be
forfeit. He had no way of knowing, but Brak suspected
R’shiel’s tears
were as much from failure, as they were from pain.
But while her reactions up to that point had been typical, since
that day R’shiel seemed sunk so far in misery, that she no
longer cared
what happened.
Terbolt had been quite appalled at the state she was in when he
returned from his prayers and livid over the loss of the demon. He had
chastised Loclon severely, but the Karien still needed a cooperative
Joyhinia, so he had done little more than make his displeasure known.
He had ordered the priests to treat her wounds and Garanus, in a rare
show of compassion, trimmed her hair until it was, if not quite styled,
then at least tidy. Once the bruises faded, she wouldn’t look
too bad,
Brak thought. She had that sort of bone structure.
But R’shiel cared no more for how she looked than she did
about
anything else, at present. She ate only if the priests stood over her,
and then it was mechanically, as if she didn’t taste a bite.
She said
nothing unless directly addressed and then answered in a monotone. She
washed when they told her, ate when they ordered her, and when she was
alone she simply sat where they left her, staring blindly into the
distance.
Two days after Loclon’s attack some of the blisters under
the collar
began to fester. She did not even flinch when the priests held back her
head, lanced the sores and poured saltwater onto the open cuts. They
did not remove the collar, simply worked around it, but even that rough
handling got no reaction from her. He remembered how vague she had been
after he rescued her from the Grimfield, the night she had tried to
kill Loclon. She had been animated then, compared to her present state.
And there was not a damned thing he could do about it.
Two weeks after R’shiel’s capture
at the
Gathering, Lord Terbolt finally announced his intention to leave the
Citadel and return to Karien. Brak had been certain he was waiting for
something, but could not work out what it was. The arrival of a tall,
dour-looking Karien who introduced himself as Squire Mathen was
apparently what the duke had been expecting. The two of them remained
closeted for hours. When they emerged, Terbolt announced his plans to
leave.
Loclon had been fairly panting in anticipation for that moment, and
his chance at unfettered power as First Sister. Brak had wondered if
Terbolt would be so foolish as to leave Loclon in charge. The Karien
Duke was not stupid and Loclon’s loss of the demon and his
attack on
R’shiel had done nothing to foster any trust between them. Brak
thought
it would be better for everyone if he simply slit the throat of
Loclon’s senseless body and let his soul wither and die.
They kept Loclon’s body in a room in the First
Sister’s apartments.
The priests tended it with businesslike efficiency. Transferring the
mind of one person into the body of another was not such a difficult
feat to arrange, by Harshini standards. It was just one of those things
that was only done if there was a good reason for it — and that
was
rare. Had they thought about it, they could have done the same to
Joyhinia themselves, although considering the way things had turned
out, it probably would not have made a difference, given that Zegarnald
actually wanted to push R’shiel to breaking point.
There were risks, though. If the host body died, then the mind
automatically returned to its own body with little more than a nasty
shock. But if the vacant body died, the soul had nowhere to go. It
would survive a day or two, no longer, before joining its physical
counterpart in death. Loclon’s transfer was nothing like the
subtle
removal of wit that Dacendaran had performed on Joyhinia. This was the
working of a clutch of Karien priests who lacked the finesse of a god.
They had simply taken Loclon’s mind — lock, stock and
barrel — and
dumped it into Joyhinia’s unresisting body.
Squire Mathen would remain behind to “assist†the
First Sister.
Loclon was furious, and could do nothing but agree. Two priests would
remain behind also, Terbolt declared, then made a great show of handing
Mathen the key to the room where Loclon’s body lay. The message
was
clear, even to Loclon.
Terbolt’s announcement of their imminent departure drew no
visible
reaction from R’shiel. She barely even glanced at him. Loclon
waited
outside the door, fidgeting with Joyhinia’s long skirts. As
soon as
Terbolt emerged, he began demanding to know exactly who Squire Mathen
was. Brak made to follow them, until he spied Garet Warner entering the
apartment. He said something to guards on R’shiel’s
door that Brak
didn’t catch then went inside. On impulse, Brak followed Garet.
The commandant seemed shocked at R’shiel’s
condition, but she was as
unresponsive to his arrival as she had been to anything else in the
past week. Garet knelt down beside her chair and gently shook her
shoulder.
“R’shiel?â€
She ignored him, or perhaps she was so far inside herself, she
really didn’t know he was there.
“R’shiel?â€
Finally she turned to him, her eyes blank. “What?â€
“You’re leaving today. With Lord Terbolt.â€
“I know.â€
“They’ve ordered the troops on the border to
surrender.â€
“I know.â€
Garet muttered something under his breath that sounded like a curse.
“Do you understand me, R’shiel? Do you even know who
I am?â€
“I know you,†she replied tonelessly. “You
betrayed me.â€
He nodded, satisfied with her answer for some reason. “I
didn’t
betray you, R’shiel. I just can’t help anyone from a
prison cell. Do
you understand? Do you know why I did what I did?â€
She turned to him, showing some real interest for the first time.
“You did what you said you would do. Brak called you an honest
man.â€
“Not a description I’d use myself, but I think I
know what he
means.†He reached into his boot-top and withdrew a thin
sheathed
blade. “Can you hide this somewhere?â€
She stared at the knife incomprehensibly. “What for?â€
“To escape, maybe? Or do you want to go to Karien?â€
“I have to face the Overlord. He wants me to join
him.â€
Garet sighed and pushed the knife into the top of her boot.
“You do
what you have to, R’shiel. The only thing I’m concerned
about is
Medalon. I’ve done all I can for you.â€
The commandant left after that and the guards came in to escort
R’shiel downstairs. She let them drape a plain woollen cloak
over her
shoulders and lead her away without resistance. Brak followed her and
the Karien party as they descended the stairs, wanting to scream with
frustration. Once they left the Citadel, she would be entirely out of
reach.
Garanus handed her into the carriage and then climbed in beside her.
As soon as the door snicked shut the carriage moved off toward the Main
Gate where Terbolt and nearly a thousand Defenders awaited the order to
move out. Brak had never felt more helpless in his entire life.
“Zegarnald!â€
The grey limbo in which he was trapped seemed to quiver with the
strength of his cry.
“Zegarnald! Let me out of here!â€
The silence he received in reply was absolute.
CHAPTER 55
Adrina had just finished packing, if throwing her
few meagre possessions into a sack could be called that, when the door
flew open and Tarja appeared.
“If you’re leaving, your Highness, you’d
better do it now,†he
warned. “The Kariens are on their way.â€
“How can that be? Damin said Jenga had agreed not to
surrender until
we’d gone.â€
“I don’t know. Perhaps they know about the order
from the Citadel.
They may even have had a hand in it somehow. All I know is that
there’s
a whole troop of knights riding this way under a flag of truce.â€
Adrina cursed in a most unladylike fashion. “Tam, go and
find . . . no, on second thoughts, you’d better
stay
with me. Someone might recognise you. Are you certain they’re
heading
this way?â€
“Yes.â€
“How long do we have?â€
“Not long at all, I’m afraid.â€
“We’d best get moving then.†Adrina snatched
up her sack and slung
it over her shoulder. Tarja led them onto the landing. The guards were
gone now. Lord Jenga had dismissed them days ago, when it became
apparent she was no longer using the quarters over the main hall often
enough to warrant placing a guard on them.
She followed Tarja cautiously, Tam close on her heels. They were
halfway down the stairs when he stopped suddenly and held his arm out
to bar her progress. The Hall doors rattled as they were pushed open.
“Back! Now!†Tarja hissed.
Adrina did not need to be told twice. She raced back up the stairs,
pushing Tam ahead of her. When they reached the landing, Tarja motioned
them down. By the time they were stretched out on their bellies,
looking down over the Hall, the first of the Kariens were clattering
through the door.
Adrina recognised Lord Roache and Lord Laetho as they raised their
faceplates. The other knights she did not know; they were more than
likely an escort. The Dukes made their way to the end of the hall as
Lord Jenga entered with Cratyn at his side. Following them were a dozen
or more Defenders. None of the Medalonians looked very happy.
Adrina studied Cratyn for a moment. He removed his helmet and ran
his fingers through his hair as he looked around the Hall. His eyes
skimmed over the darkened balcony. He could not see her, she knew, but
she held her breath in any case. Jenga ordered wine served and turned
to face Cratyn. The two opposing sides had unconsciously arranged
themselves on either side of the long wooden table near the fireplace.
“You requested a parley, your Highness, and I have honoured
your
flag of truce. What do you want?â€
Cratyn seemed a little taken aback by Jenga’s blunt manner.
“I’m
certain you know exactly what I want, my Lord. I want your
surrender.â€
Several Defenders, those officers who did not know of the order from
the Citadel, gasped in surprise. Jenga silenced them with a look and
turned back to the young prince.
“What makes you think I’m planning to
surrender?â€
Cratyn looked at Roache uncertainly. “I was led to believe,
my Lord,
that you had received an order to that effect some time ago.â€
“Then you were misinformed, your Highness.â€
Adrina was quite astounded to hear the Lord Defender lie so
blatantly. Isn’t truth supposed to be a virtue of the
Defenders? She
glanced at Tarja, but he was engrossed in the scene below and his
expression was impossible to read in the gloom.
“He’s lying, your Highness,†Roache assured
the prince confidently.
Jenga turned on Roache. “You impugn my honour, sir?â€
Before Roache could reply the doors flew open and Damin burst in,
followed by Almodavar and a score of Raiders. Adrina smiled at
Damin’s
theatrical flair — every man with him must have been picked for
his
size, she thought. They were conspicuously armed and arrayed themselves
across the doorway, blocking the exit.
Tarja groaned softly. “Founders, what’s he up to
now?â€
“My apologies for being late,†Damin announced as he
strode into the
Hall. He walked straight up to Lord Roache and bowed extravagantly.
“You must be Prince Cratyn.â€
“I am Cratyn,†the prince announced in annoyance.
Damin had walked
straight past him. It was no accident, Adrina was certain. Roache was
old enough to be his grandfather and Damin knew well how old Cratyn was.
“You?†Damin asked in feigned surprise.
“Gods! You’re just a
child. Ah, but you’re not a child, are you? I hear
you’re married now.
How is your lovely wife, by the way?â€
Adrina cringed at the question. What the hell was he playing at?
Cratyn glared at him, quite appalled by the Warlord.
“Who are you, sir?†Roache demanded angrily.
“I’m sorry, did I forget to introduce myself? I am
Damin Wolfblade,
Warlord of Krakandar, Crown Prince of Hythria, Prince of the Northern
Marshes, and there’s another title or two that I can’t
quite recall.
And you would be . . .?â€
“This is Lord Roache and Lord Laetho, my advisers,â€
Cratyn said, not
having the wits to announce their full titles.
“Lord Laetho?†Damin asked. “Now you
I’ve heard of. What
happened to that brat we sent back, by the way?â€
“We are here to discuss surrender!†Cratyn declared,
sounding more
like a petulant child than a statesman.
As she watched Cratyn try to impose his will on the gathering, she
could not help but compare her husband to her lover. Apart from the
physical differences between the men — even the most objective
observer
would agree that Cratyn fared a poor second — there was no
comparison.
Damin commanded authority without even trying. Cratyn had to demand
it — loudly.
“Surrender?†Damin cried, as if it was the
first time he had
heard the word. “Surely you’re not going to quit after
one measly
little battle, Cratyn? I came here for a good fight and you want to
surrender already? Have some balls, man!â€
Even Jenga bit back a smile at Damin’s deliberate
misunderstanding.
“Not me, you fool!†Cratyn snapped. Normally
surrounded by men who
treated him like rare porcelain, he was floundering in the face of
Damin’s disrespect. “Medalon is surrendering to
us!â€
“You are?†Damin asked Jenga. “Since
when?â€
“No decision has been made as yet, Lord Wolfblade.â€
“You claimed you knew nothing about this,†Cratyn
accused.
“An unverified message has been received, your Highness. I
do not
consider that an order when dealing with an issue of such
importance.â€
“You require verification, my Lord?†Roache asked.
“Naturally. Would you surrender a strategically superior
position
without some sort of confirmation?â€
Roache nodded solemnly. “Of course not. How long will this
verification take?â€
“I suppose that depends on whether or not the order is
genuine,â€
Jenga shrugged. “I imagine the confirmation should arrive
within the
week, if it is.â€
“And if the order is proved genuine?â€
“Then I have no choice, your Grace,†Jenga conceded.
Roache appeared satisfied with the Lord Defender’s answer.
He was
the most experienced of Cratyn’s dukes. He understood the Lord
Defender’s position, even admired his stance.
“Perhaps then, in anticipation of the verification you
require, we
could discuss the details of your surrender?â€
“That is somewhat premature, is it not?†Jenga
ventured.
“Not at all, my Lord. Given that we have also been advised
of your
imminent surrender, one could safely assume that the order is genuine.
Given that neither of us wishes unnecessary misunderstanding, such an
agreement would seem prudent, don’t you think?â€
Cratyn had become superfluous in the face of the experience of the
Lord Defender and the canny Lord Roache. Even Laetho seemed at a loss
for words. But Damin wasn’t finished. Not yet.
“Well, I’m sorry, but if you’re going to
surrender, I can’t condone
it,†he declared. “I have a reputation to
uphold.â€
“The surrender includes all forces currently allied with
Medalon,â€
Cratyn pointed out stiffly.
“Then consider our alliance at an end,†Damin
announced. “I’m not
going to surrender to this whelp.†He turned on Cratyn shaking
his
head. “Did you really marry one of Hablet’s daughters?
Gods! I can’t imagine
how you manage to keep her satisfied.â€
Adrina would have thrown something at Damin, had she had a missile
handy, but Cratyn did blush an interesting shade of red.
Damin turned to Jenga. “My Lord, I cannot countenance this
farce any
longer. I shall be leaving immediately. Kindly have my court’esa
delivered to my tent at once.â€
The Warlord tossed his head dramatically and marched from the Hall,
his savage looking Raiders in his wake. Jenga purposely kept his eyes
downcast.
“Aren’t you going to stop him?†Lord Laetho
demanded.
“Lord Wolfblade is an ally, my Lord. I do not command him.
Short of
a pitched battle, I don’t see how I can stop him
leaving.â€
“The Hythrun is of no importance,†Roache agreed.
“There is only one
place he can go, and he might find more waiting for him when he gets
there than he bargained for.â€
“There is also the matter of Captain Tenragan,â€
Cratyn added,
annoyed that the discussion was slipping from his control.
“Your Highness?â€
“Don’t play the innocent, Lord Jenga. Tarja Tenragan
murdered Lord
Pieter and the priest Elfron. He is to be handed over to us for
trial.â€
“There was nothing mentioned about this, even in the
unverified
order.â€
“I can assure you, verification is on its way. You must
agree to
hold him, pending your surrender.â€
Adrina glanced at Tarja. He was torn between stepping forward and
bolting, she thought. Duty warring with survival. She placed a hand on
his arm and shook her head.
“Don’t do anything stupid, Tarja,†she said
softly. “There’s nothing
you can achieve by going down there.â€
Tarja looked at her for a moment. He nodded slowly, acknowledging
her advice, then turned back to watching the Kariens.
“Should such an order be received, then of course I will
honour it,â€
Jenga assured Cratyn.
“I should think so,†Cratyn replied, rather lamely.
He really wasn’t
handling this very well.
“In that case, gentlemen, I believe this discussion is at an
end. I
shall have Captain Alcarnen escort you to the border. Should
verification arrive, I will send a message, advising my
position.â€
“Your cooperation in this matter is much appreciated, my
Lord,â€
Roache agreed, before Cratyn could add anything further.
“Captain!â€
Nheal Alcarnen stepped forward and saluted sharply.
“Would you be so kind as to escort our guests back to the
border?â€
“Sir!â€
There was little else Cratyn and his party could do but follow the
captain.
As soon as the Kariens had left the Hall, pandemonium broke loose,
as the officers demanded an explanation. Tarja waited until Jenga had
quieted his men and ordered them about their business. The last man was
leaving as they descended the stairs. Jenga looked up at their
approach. His face was haggard.
“You’d better get out of here, and soon.â€
Adrina nodded. “I thank you for not betraying my presence,
my Lord.â€
Jenga shrugged. “A small victory over the Kariens, your
Highness,
even if there is nobody to share it with. I wish you a safe journey,
although I suspect your future is as doubtful as mine.†He
turned to
Tarja. “I want you to go with them, Captain.â€
“I won’t desert you, Jenga. Not this time.â€
The Lord Defender shook his head. “I want your resignation
then. I’m
damned if I’m going to hand any man of mine over to the Kariens
for
some sort of farcical trial with a noose waiting at the end of it.
Particularly for a crime he didn’t commit.â€
Adrina looked at Tarja curiously. If Tarja hadn’t killed
Lord
Pieter, then who had?
“I won’t run away, Jenga.â€
“Now is not the time to be noble, Tarja. I lied to the
Kariens. A
courier delivered the orders from the Citadel this morning, signed by
Joyhinia. Accompanying the orders was a warrant for your
arrest.â€
“Then you will surrender?â€
“I have no choice.â€
Tarja didn’t answer.
“Go,†Jenga ordered. There was more emotion in that
one word than
Adrina could ever recall seeing the Lord Defender betray previously.
Tarja hesitated for a moment then saluted smartly. “My
Lord!â€
He turned away, his expression determined and even a little
disappointed. Adrina impulsively leaned forward and kissed
Jenga’s
weathered cheek before she and Tam hurried after him.
“Captain!â€
They stopped and looked back. Adrina could have sworn there were
tears in the old man’s eyes.
“Take as many men with you as you can. Just be quiet about
it.â€
Tarja nodded in understanding. “As you wish.â€
“You’re the only one I can ask this of, you
understand that, don’t
you? No other man in my command has experience of this type of
warfare.â€
The comment puzzled Adrina. “War is war, isn’t it?
Besides, you said
you would surrender.â€
“I’m surrendering my forces, your Highness. I have
no say over what
former officers do once they have resigned from the corps.â€
“You’ll accept my resignation then, my Lord?â€
The Lord Defender nodded.
“Make the bastards pay, Tarja,†he added.
“Make them pay for every
league of Medalon soil they claim.â€
What could one man and a handful of renegade soldiers do, she
wondered, to halt an army the size of the Kariens? Then she glanced at
the captain and saw the look of quiet determination in Tarja’s
eyes.
Cratyn was going to find taking Medalon a lot harder than he
imagined.
CHAPTER 56
There was no denying the rumours once the Kariens
arrived under a flag of truce, and Lord Jenga did not bother trying. On
the morning following the meeting with Prince Cratyn word was passed
through the camp that Medalon would surrender. The following day a
messenger was sent north through a miserable squall to request another
meeting with the Kariens — this one to negotiate the details.
Mikel
heard the news with mixed feelings. The welcome thought that he would
soon be back among his own people was soured by the knowledge he
carried.
The Hythrun camp was dismantled with remarkable speed. Rather than
move out as one large force, Lord Wolfblade dispatched his men in
waves, a Century at a time. He was concerned that his fleeing force
might prove too tempting to the Kariens. Cratyn would not be able to
resist pursuing a thousand Hythrun across Medalon, but it was unlikely
he would bother hunting down countless scattered bands of them.
Mikel overheard Monthay discussing the strategic merits of the
Warlord’s decision with another sergeant. He seemed to admire
it. The
Raiders left in platoons of one hundred, which would break into smaller
groups once they were clear of the battlefield. They had been ordered
to make their way home anyway they could. Some would ride straight for
the Glass River, others would stay on this side until they almost
reached Bordertown. It would be well nigh impossible to round them all
up.
The Hythrun weren’t the only ones departing in haste. The
followers’
camp was a frenzy of activity as some hastened to leave and others dug
in, hoping for even more business once the countless Kariens arrived.
Mistress Miffany’s brightly striped tent was gone even before
the
Kariens had paid Lord Jenga a visit, as was old Draginya’s
tent. Mikel
had no idea what happened to his eggs but he cared little for them now.
He had more important things to worry about. More adult things. He had
not seen Dace or Kali for days and assumed his new friends had left too.
The last of the Hythrun to leave was Lord Wolfblade’s party,
and the
size of it puzzled him. He was certain nearly all of the Hythrun
Raiders had left already, yet there seemed far too many men gathered on
the edge of the camp waiting for the order to move out. Then Mikel
realised that over half the men riding with the Warlord were mounted on
sturdy Medalonian horses, not the magnificent golden horses of the
Hythrun. There were even men mounted on the captured Fardohnyan steeds.
His suspicions were confirmed when Damin appeared with Tarja at his
side. The soldiers wore nondescript civilian clothing, but they were
Defenders, sure as Xaphista was the Overlord. Tarja was abandoning the
field and taking hundreds of his men with him, including the captured
Fardohnyans.
Mikel watched from the top rail of the corral nearest the Hythrun
stables. He could not see the princess, but she was there somewhere, he
was certain. Nor could he spot Jaymes in the milling crowd. He had
anxiously studied every troop leaving the field and was sure that his
brother was still in the camp. Perhaps Jaymes had seen the light; or
perhaps the Hythrun had abandoned him once they knew they were heading
home.
It was just on dawn when Tarja gave the order to move out. He and
Damin waited off to the side, their heads close together as they
discussed something of import, as the men moved off. Several other
riders waited behind then, but from this distance, Mikel could not
identify them.
“Mikel!â€
Jaymes broke away from the host and cantered toward him. He was
mounted on a Medalonian horse — he was too raw to be trusted
with a
valuable Hythrun mount, but his saddlebags were full, his bed roll tied
to the saddle.
“Have you come to see me off?†His brother’s
eyes glittered with the
excitement of his adventure. He sat his horse as proud as any Defender.
Mikel glared at him reproachfully. “Traitor.â€
Jaymes’expression hardened. “You’re a child,
Mikel. You don’t
understand.â€
“I understand plenty. You’re betraying your country,
your lord and
your prince. Just like her.â€
“Just like who?â€
“It doesn’t matter.†He was not going to
share his knowledge with
Jaymes. He didn’t deserve to know the truth.
His brother sighed. “I have to go, Mikel. Will you give
mother and
father my love?â€
The audacity of the request made Mikel’s blood boil.
“I’ll do no
such thing! I’ll tell them you’re dead. Better they
think that than
know the truth!â€
He jumped off the rail and ran back toward the Keep, ignoring
Jaymes’ frantic calls for him to return.
When he finally stopped and looked back Jaymes was gone.
The next time Prince Cratyn arrived, a long and
frustrating day after the Hythrun had departed, it was with a much
larger party and there was no white flag in evidence. The Prince knew
he had won and was in no mood to mind the tender feelings of his
vanquished foe. He marched into the Keep, his dukes at his heels, with
all the assurance of one who knew he had nothing to fear.
Mikel hung around the yard, trying to be inconspicuous. It proved to
be a relatively simply task. Neither the Defenders on guard nor the
Karien escort spared him a glance. They were too busy eyeing each other
warily to be concerned with one small boy.
Mikel had no idea how he was going to get near the prince. He knew
none of the knights waiting outside with the horses, and he was fairly
sure that he looked like nothing more than a Medalonian urchin. They
would not spare him a copper if he was starving, let alone take him to
see the prince. The meeting dragged on for hours as the cold sun
climbed high in the sky. Mikel missed lunch and his stomach growled in
complaint as the sky darkened toward dusk.
His chance came just as he was on the verge of giving up. Sir Andony
emerged from the hall to speak to the knights waiting outside. Mikel
swallowed his apprehension and hurried forward.
“Sir Andony?â€
The young knight glanced at him, his eyes widening in shock.
“Mikel? What in Xaphista’s name are you doing
here?â€
“I have to see the prince, Sir Andony.â€
“Don’t be absurd! What could you possibly need to
see the prince
for?â€
“It’s about Princess Adrina.â€
Andony was not renowned for his intelligence, but even he understood
the implications. He nodded slowly.
“Wait here.â€
Mikel fidgeted impatiently under the scrutiny of the Karien knights
as Andony disappeared inside. In a surprisingly short time, Lord Roache
appeared. He grabbed Mikel by the collar and dragged him aside, out of
the hearing of the knights and the Defenders alike.
“What do you know of the princess?†he demanded
without preamble.
“She was here, my Lord.â€
Roache’s expression betrayed nothing of what he was
thinking. “Are
you certain?â€
He nodded. “I fled Karien with the princess and her servant.
The
Hythrun captured us the morning after we left. The princess has been
here ever since.â€
“And where is her Highness now?â€
“I’m not sure. I think she left with Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“I see.â€
“My Lord? There . . . there is something else
you
should know.â€
“What?†Lord Roache sounded impatient, as if his
mind was already on
other things.
“The princess and Lord Wolfblade . . .
they’re . . . well . . .â€
“Out with it, boy!â€
“She was kissing him, my Lord,†Mikel blurted out.
Roache’s eyes narrowed. “Who else knows of
this?â€
“Nobody, my Lord! I —â€
“Come with me,†Roache demanded, not in the least
interested in what
else Mikel had to say. He pulled Mikel along in his wake and thrust him
at Andony.
“Take the boy back to our camp. Now!†Roache
ordered. “You are to
stop for no one. Nor must you allow anybody to speak to the child. He
is to be held in my tent until I return.â€
Andony nodded, too well conditioned to question his orders. Before
he truly understood what was happening Mikel was sitting in front of
Andony on his big warhorse, riding away from the Medalonian camp and
heading for home.
It was close to midnight before Roache returned
and when he did, he had Prince Cratyn with him. Mikel’s
determination
to reveal the true depth of Adrina’s treachery wavered in the
Prince’s
serious presence.
“Tell his Highness what you told me,†Roache
ordered, waking Mikel
from a light doze. The boy jumped to his feet and brushed his fingers
through his sleep-tousled hair.
“The Princess is with Lord Wolfblade,†Mikel told
Cratyn. The young
prince’s expression was shadowed in the light from the smoking
brazier.
“Then she fled to Medalon, not back to Yarnarrow as we
thought.â€
“She told me she was going to Fardohnya, your Highness. To
seek aid
from her father.†Mikel thought it important that he establish
his own
innocence as soon as possible. “I thought I was following your
orders,
Sire.â€
“Lying bitch,†Cratyn muttered. “What
else?â€
Mikel glanced at Lord Roache uncertainly.
“Tell him the rest of it, boy.â€
“I saw them kissing, your Highness.â€
“You mean Wolfblade was forcing himself on her?â€
Mikel shook his head sadly. “No, your Highness. She
was . . . well, she didn’t seem to mind at all.
She
called you . . .â€
“What? What did she call me?â€
Mikel stared at his boots with determination. “Prince Cretin
the
Cringing.â€
“I see. And what else did she say?â€
Mikel looked to Lord Roache desperately for help. He did not want to
repeat what he had heard, despite his promises to himself.
“The prince must know the truth, boy,†Roach said,
almost
sympathetically. “Tell him.â€
Mikel nodded and told him everything he had heard. He told him of
the meeting on top of the tower. He told him of what he had seen and
heard in the stables. He told him everything he knew, although it broke
his heart to be the bearer of such dreadful news.
Cratyn swore under his breath and then turned to Roache.
“This is
intolerable! I will send a party out to hunt her down. By Xaphista, I
will see the bitch burn!â€
“We’ll hunt her down,†Roache agreed.
“But do you really want it
made public that the wife you could not satisfy turned to a Hythrun for
comfort?â€
Cratyn paced the tent angrily. “She can’t be allowed
to get away
with this!â€
“Nor shall she, but there are other things to
consider.â€
“What other things? She has publicly humiliated me!â€
“And she will humiliate you even more, should the truth get
out. You
do not want to put her on trial, Cratyn.â€
The Prince glared at Lord Roache. Mikel seemed all but forgotten.
“You’re surely not suggesting that I take her
back?â€
“Of course not! I am suggesting that you do everything in
your power
to rescue your wife from the clutches of the barbarian warlord who has
kidnapped and raped her. It will be unfortunate, but she will be killed
in the attempt.â€
“We’ll have no chance at an heir if she’s
killed.â€
“She has been sullied by another man. No heir could come
from your
union in any case.â€
Cratyn nodded, savagely pleased with the duke’s suggestion.
“I will lead the rescue party, myself.â€
“That would be most heroic of you, your Highness. Your
grief, on the
discovery of your wife’s fate, will be inconsolable, of course.
But I’m
sure you will recover. In time.â€
Cratyn smiled coldly. “I’m sure I will. And what of
the boy?â€
Lord Roache glanced at Mikel for a moment before turning back to the
prince.
“Perhaps he should accompany you, your Highness. He can,
after all,
give testament to your wife’s . . .
indiscretions.â€
The prince nodded. “It would be most unfortunate if
something were
to happen to him.â€
“Most unfortunate,†Lord Roache agreed.
Mikel studied the prince and the duke, not at all certain he
understood.
CHAPTER 57
The darkness into which R’shiel retreated
was
comforting at first. The memories of the Gathering and everything that
had happened since that awful night could gain no toehold here. There
was no pain, no unbearable guilt, and no despair. Just blessed
emptiness. A nothing place where nobody could hurt her.
She had been here before. She first discovered it on the road to the
Grimfield, when Loclon had chosen her as his instrument of revenge on
Tarja. It welcomed her the night she had confronted Loclon and almost
succeeded in killing him. For a time, on waking to find herself in
Sanctuary amid the Harshini, she had fled there again, until
Korandellan’s magic had suppressed her emotions and made it
bearable to
face reality. It was a tantalising, alluring place, and each time she
retreated there, it became a little harder to leave.
A part of R’shiel still existed in the real world. A part of
her
responded when someone spoke to her, ate the meals she was served, and
rode in the carriage each day staring blindly at the winter-browned
plains as they wound their way north. But it was a small part only.
Just enough to pretend she was alive.
Within herself, R’shiel knew that she could not stay here
indefinitely. Comforting it might be, but it was her Harshini side that
fled from the violence and the pain. Her human side hankered to return,
to wreak havoc on those who had caused her suffering.
It was her human side to whom Xaphista spoke.
R’shiel did not recognise his voice at first. The sensuous,
soothing
tones seemed like a distant echo that she hardly noticed. It took a
long time to recognise it for what it was. It took even longer before
she bothered to respond. You run from the pain, demon child. Let me ease it for you.
Calling her the demon child finally evoked a response. She had never
liked that name. Don’t call me that. What would you have me call you? Don’t bother calling me anything. Just leave me alone.
The voice did not reply and R’shiel did not particularly
care.
Later, she had no way of judging time in this place, the voice
returned. It was stronger, as if by acknowledging it the first time,
she had given it strength. I can help you, R’shiel. How do you know my name? All the gods know the name of the demon child. Are you a god? I am the only god. At least I will be, with your help.
She laughed sourly. With my help? Why would I want to
help you? Because I can ease your pain, R’shiel. I can take away
the hurt. Can you turn back time? Of course not. Then you can do nothing for me. Go away.
The voice did as she bid, leaving her alone with her thoughts.
The living part of R’shiel vaguely noted the changing
scenery as the
days grew shorter; saw the silver ribbon of the Glass River draw
nearer. For some reason, the sight of the broad waterway sparked a
brief reaction in her, as if the thought of crossing it would take her
beyond redemption. You fear crossing the river? the voice asked curiously. I fear what it represents. It brings you closer to me. I can destroy you, Xaphista. Shouldn’t you be the one
who fears
my approach? You need not destroy me, R’shiel. Together we would be
invincible. Together? You would be my High Priestess. We could rule the world. Suppose I don’t want to rule the world? You are half human. That doesn’t mean I crave an empire. What do you crave, R’shiel? Sanity.
Xaphista had no answer to that and it was a long time before he
spoke to her again.
They crossed the river in a blustery, cold wind that chopped the
mirror-like surface of the water into millions of glittering shards.
The sun was high in a pale, cloudless sky, offering no warmth.
R’shiel
stood by the rail on the barge, oblivious to the cold spray that misted
over her as the sailors hauled on the thick rope, pulling the barge
across the river with grim determination. The current fought them at
every turn. Although they professed to be atheists, the ferrymen
muttered among themselves about the wrath of Maera, the River Goddess.
They had never known a crossing like it. It was as though the Glass
River was alive and determined to prevent them landing on the other
side.
They made it eventually. R’shiel let Terbolt lead her onto
dry
ground and waited patiently for the rest of their party to disembark.
The barge would be busy for two days or more, ferrying the remainder of
the troops across. Aware of this, Terbolt commandeered the Heart and
Hearth and settled in to wait. R’shiel paid no more attention
to her
surroundings at the inn than she had when they camped by the road each
night on the journey here.
Garanus came to her at dinnertime and stood over her while she ate.
When her meal was finished he sent the tray away and sat beside her. He
did the same thing every night. He would talk to her as if she was
listening, describing the power of the Overlord, preaching in a
rasping, but impassioned voice that R’shiel found more
irritating than
comforting. He pleads my case most eloquently. He’s a nuisance. If you truly want to ease my pain,
getting rid
of Garanus would be a good start. As you wish. Without warning, Garanus broke off
mid-sentence and left the room. I would give you anything you asked
for, R’shiel. So long as I promise not to kill you, she added wryly. That would be a reasonable expectation, don’t you think? You can’t give me what I want, Xaphista. I can give you anything. You have but to ask. Free me, then. Take this collar from me. Let me feel the power
again. Ah! I’m not certain I trust you that much, demon child. Then what do I need you for? You are the reason for my pain. Not I, R’shiel. It is the Primal gods who want you to
suffer. The Primal gods created me. And they live in fear of their creation. Who do you think
allowed this to happen? It is your followers who hold me prisoner. For your protection, nothing more. The Primal gods have
interfered in your life enough. What are you talking about? Can you be so blind, child? They wish to destroy me. Why do you
think you were raised in the Citadel? No child raised by the Harshini
could contemplate killing, even with human blood. Brak seems to manage. He is as much a creature of the Primal gods as you are. Are you telling me the Primal gods made Joyhinia adopt me? That’s exactly what I’m telling you. They
picked the most
ruthless, cold-hearted bitch they could find to raise you. How else
could they ensure you had the skills to commit murder? They engineered
your suffering, R’shiel. They have manipulated you since you
were born. You’re delusional, Xaphista, as well as power hungry. It is you who are deluded. Do you think your love for Tarja is
an accident? Or his for you? Of course not! Kalianah made it happen. Why? Just to make you suffer. Think what it has cost you. Loclon
raped you because Tarja loves you. The last time I looked, Loclon was on your side. He
misjudged her badly if he thought that was going to persuade her to his
cause. You will see the truth eventually, demon child. I pray that it
will not be too late.
He left her then, leaving R’shiel with a puzzling thought.
Xaphista
was a god. To whom did he pray?
They left Cauthside and continued their journey
north the third day after the river crossing. Outwardly,
R’shiel showed
no more interest on this side of the river than she had on the other.
Garanus no longer came to her each night to aid her conversion, but
little else changed. She woke, she ate, she rode in the carriage, then
ate and slept where she was told. The routine never varied; it was
unlikely she would have noticed if it had.
Her retreat was no longer peaceful, though. Her silent haven had
been disturbed by Xaphista’s poisonous logic.
Was she really just a pawn, manipulated since birth to become a
weapon the Primal gods could use against their enemy? Was
Tarja’s love
for her simply imposed on him? Had the Primal gods sat back and let
Loclon do what he had done to her, hoping it would toughen her up? The
idea seemed ludicrous at first, but the longer she thought about it,
the more credibility it gained.
And what of Xaphista? Was he really so evil? And who was she to
judge what was evil anyway? Xaphista had hurt her, there was no denying
that; her current predicament was entirely attributable to him, but he
was fighting for his survival. Were his actions any worse than those of
the Primal gods?
For the first time since retreating into herself, R’shiel
began to
hunger for release. It was no longer peaceful here. Memories she had no
wish to confront began to plague her. Thoughts she had no wish to
contemplate refused to go away. You see? Everything you hold dear is a lie, Xaphista told
her seductively. Tarja’s love is no more real than this
place. The
Harshini secretly despise you, else why would they let you leave
Sanctuary? Even the Primal gods fear you. You are a weapon,
R’shiel, to
be aimed and pointed by whoever holds your heart in his hands.
Don’t
let them use you. You would use me just as soon as the Primal gods. I offer you something in return. I can ease your pain. I can
help you. How? By suppressing my emotions like the Harshini did? That was
simply an illusion and it hurt tenfold when they released it.
I’ve no
wish to experience it again. I can do better than that, demon child. I can take away the
memories that pain you. Those memories make me who I am. Then perhaps you should think about who you would rather be. I won’t be your pawn, Xaphista. I offer you a partnership, R’shiel, not bondage. Perhaps, she thought once he was gone. But when it
comes to thegods, who can tell the difference?
CHAPTER 58
Tarja set a gruelling pace as they fled the
border. Jenga had promised to stall the Kariens as long as he was able,
but even in Tarja’s most optimistic estimate that gave them a
start of
only a day or two. Adrina kept up and did not complain, despite the
fact that her backside felt bruised to the bone and her inner thighs
were rubbed raw. They ate cold rations when they stopped each night,
and collapsed into their bedrolls under an open sky.
As a child Adrina had been entranced by the bards who sang long,
romantic ballads about lovers on the run who spent all day galloping
toward freedom and all night making love. What utter nonsense, she
thought, dismounting gingerly in the small grove of trees Tarja had
chosen for their camp that night. Damin proved to be more human than
heroic. He looked tired and haggard and even he walked a bit stiffly,
despite a lifetime spent in the saddle. For some reason his discomfort
made her feel a little better.
Their numbers had thinned considerably since they left the border.
Following Damin’s lead, Tarja had broken his men into much
smaller
groups and dispatched them south with orders to muster at an abandoned
vineyard south of Testra, where he seemed to think they would be safe
until he could join them. There were barely a hundred men left, and
less than half of those were Damin’s Raiders. The rest were
Defenders
and the remainder of her Guard. When they crossed the Glass River at
Cauthside, they would split up once more. Tarja and his men would head
for the Citadel, while Damin continued south for Hythria.
Adrina knew the reason for Tarja’s mission, although he
rarely spoke
of it.
Something had happened to R’shiel.
Adrina prayed it was nothing serious. Tarja would not rest until he
discovered the demon child’s fate. It was a pity she would
never meet
her. Although she was careful not to broach the subject,
R’shiel
fascinated Adrina. Damin spoke of her in such glowing terms that she
might have been jealous, but for two very good reasons. The first was
Tarja. He was so completely besotted with the girl, that if he thought
Damin’s motives were anything but honourable, he’d have
killed the
Warlord long ago. The second was Damin. Jealousy would imply she had
some feeling for the man, and of course she didn’t, so there
was
nothing to be jealous about.
Adrina unsaddled her mount and dumped her gear near the small fire
that one of the Defenders had started. Tarja had ordered at least one
night with a fire and a hot meal. If he was feeling the strain of the
pace he set, then he knew some of the others would be at the point of
exhaustion. Adrina had tried not to look too happy when she heard the
news, but poor Tam’s expression had been pathetically grateful.
The
slave wasn’t accustomed to long hours in the saddle, and Adrina
looked
a picture of health compared to her faithful companion.
“Can I take your horse, my Lady?â€
Adrina turned and smiled wearily at Damin’s captain.
Almodavar was a
fearsome-looking brute, but he was quite the gentleman underneath all
that leather and chainmail.
“Thank you, Captain, but it’s every man for himself
on this journey.
I can take care of my horse. You have other things to do.â€
“Aye, your Highness, but I have a few young studs with more
energy
than sense. I’ll see she’s cared for. You take the
chance to rest while
you can.â€
Adrina was too tired to argue. “Thank you.â€
Almodavar led the mare toward the picket line. He had sent someone
for Tam’s horse too. She turned to find Tamylan by the fire,
warming
her hands and swaying on her feet.
“Sit down before you fall down, Tam.â€
“I’ll stand, if you don’t mind. In fact if I
never sit down again,
it will be fine by me.â€
By the time darkness fell completely, Adrina was feeling a little
better. A hot meal and a warm fire eased her aching muscles. Damin and
Tarja did not join them until long after they had eaten. Tam had
already fallen asleep and Adrina’s eyes were drooping. The only
reason
she was still awake was her inability to find a comfortable position.
“Come on, sleepy. Time for some exercise.â€
“Don’t be absurd. I can barely keep my eyes
open.â€
“I know, but trust me. If you stretch your legs now
you’ll be much
better for it in the morning.â€
Damin reached down and grabbed her hand, hauling her to her feet.
“Leave me alone!â€
“Stop complaining. You sound like a spoilt princess.â€
“I am a spoilt princess,†she retorted.
“Who am I to argue with royalty? Are you coming,
Tarja?â€
“No. I have to check on the sentries. Enjoy your walk, your
Highness.†She couldn’t see his face clearly in the
darkness, but she
could hear his amusement.
“I’ll bet he doesn’t laugh at
R’shiel,†she grumbled as Damin pulled
her along beside him. It was bitterly cold and the uneven ground made
her muscles cry out in protest.
“Would you laugh at someone who could fry you with a
look?â€
“How can you possibly be in such a good mood?â€
“I’ve still got my head on my shoulders. In this
business that’s
daily cause for celebration. Take longer strides. The idea is to
stretch your legs out, not mince along like you’re at
court.â€
“I do not mince, thank you.â€
“I do beg your pardon, your Highness.â€
“Don’t patronise me either.â€
“You’re in a right temper tonight. I thought
you’d be happy to be
free.â€
“I’m cold and I’m tired, Damin. I feel like
someone’s tied me in a
sack and beaten me with a pole for an hour or two. I don’t have
the
energy to be happy about anything.â€
He slowed his pace a little and put his arm around her shoulder.
“I’m tired too. And I’m cheerful because
I’m a Warlord and nothing is
supposed to bother me.â€
“I’m not one of your hired hands, you know.
You’re not morally
obliged to keep my spirits up.â€
He laughed softly, but did not answer. They kept walking through the
darkness away from the fires, although they stayed within the ring of
sentries posted around the camp. Adrina could make out the silhouette
of a guard every fifty paces or so, their eyes fixed on the open ground
beyond the trees.
It was much warmer with his arm around her and after a time her legs
seemed to loosen up a little. The respite was temporary, though.
Tomorrow they would resume their killing pace.
“How long till we reach the river?†she asked after
a long period of
companionable silence.
“Seven or eight days, I guess. Tarja could tell you
exactly.â€
“Are we going to keep this pace up for another eight
days?â€
“No. The horses couldn’t take it, even if we could.
We’ll ease up in
a day or so.â€
“You think Cratyn will come after us, don’t
you?â€
He nodded, all trace of his previous good humour gone.
“Jenga won’t
tell him where you are, but there are plenty of people who know you
were in the camp. We have to assume he’ll hear about it, sooner
rather
than later.â€
“What if he catches us?â€
“He won’t. We’ve got too big a head start
and we’re not stopping for
anything. Once we’ve crossed the Glass River, he’ll
have no chance of
finding us.†He stopped and pulled her to him, kissing her
forehead
lightly. “Stop worrying about it.â€
She lay her head on his shoulder and stood in the circle of his
arms, surprised at how comforting it was. It was a real pity he was a
Hythrun. She could easily grow accustomed to this. To feel so secure,
so . . .
“Hey, don’t fall asleep on me,†he chided.
“I’ll be damned if I’m
going to carry you all the way back.â€
She drew back from him, annoyed that he had disturbed her pleasant,
if rather unrealistic, daydreams. “You are so rude sometimes!
I’m sure
you do it just to aggravate me.â€
“Rude I might be, but I’m still not going to carry
you,†he said
with a grin.
“A true nobleman would.â€
“That’s because most true nobleman are inbred morons
with more brawn
than brains. I could cite your husband as a prime example.â€
“I didn’t choose him, you know.â€
“Which says something for your good taste, I suppose. Come
on, we’d
best get back before Tarja sends out a search party.â€
Stifling a yawn, Adrina took his hand and they walked back towards
the fire and the welcome prospect of a good night’s sleep. She
glanced
at him as they walked back through the darkened trees and reminded
herself sternly that Damin Wolfblade might be very disarming when he
wanted, but he was, first and foremost, her enemy. His desire to keep
her from Cratyn was nothing more than political, and she had better not
forget it.
They were on the move by first light the next day.
Poor Tam was on the verge of tears as she struggled to mount her horse,
but Adrina found she was much better than she expected. Although she
would have preferred to ride with Damin or Tarja, she took her usual
place in the very centre of the column surrounded by Raiders, Defenders
and Fardohnyans who had orders to die before any harm was allowed to
befall her.
They kept to the road that wound south towards Cauthside, in part
because it was the fastest route, and in part to disguise the size of
their group. They had left the border in significant numbers and there
was no need for any pursuing force to think that had changed. Scouts
ranged ahead and behind them, scouring the countryside for signs of
pursuit, or unexpected danger. Now that Medalon had surrendered, any
Defenders they met heading north would be enemies and both Tarja and
Damin agreed that in this case running was more prudent than fighting.
She had heard them discussing their plans late into the night as she
lay by the fire, her head resting in Damin’s lap and he
unconsciously
stroked her hair. She drifted into sleep listening to Tarja explain his
plans for the men who waited for him in Testra.
She understood now why Jenga had wanted Tarja to resign from the
corps, why he wanted him to escape the border while he still could. It
had little to do with the Lord Defender’s affection for him.
Tarja was
an expert guerilla fighter and Jenga wanted him to do to the Kariens
what he had done to the Defenders when he led the heathen rebellion. He
didn’t have the men to take on the Karien invaders directly but
he
would make life very difficult for them.
Adrina fell asleep and dreamt of ambushes, and sabotage, and
hit-and-run raids on places she had never heard of.
They stopped just after midday at a small brook that tumbled over
moss-covered rocks beside the road. The water was icy, but the horses
seemed grateful. Adrina stood by her mare as she drank her fill,
munching on a wedge of hard cheese, when one of the forward scouts came
thundering through their midst. He skidded to a halt in front of Damin
and Tarja, turning his mount sharply to avoid barrelling them over.
“Defenders!†he panted. “A thousand at
least. Headed this way.â€
“How far?†Tarja demanded.
“Five leagues. They’re not moving very fast, but if
we stay on the
road, we’ll ride straight into them.â€
Tarja grabbed his mount and swung into the saddle. “Show
me.â€
The scout turned his mount and galloped off with Tarja on his heels.
“Almodavar!â€
“My Lord?â€
“Get everyone off the road. Make camp in that stand of trees
we
passed a league or so back. No fires, no noise. You know what to
do.â€
Damin was mounted and racing down the road after Tarja before
Almodavar had a chance to acknowledge the order.
Adrina patted her mare with a weary sigh then climbed back into the
saddle. Almodavar got them organised in a very short time, the urgency
of their situation not lost on a single man. They rode back along the
road at a canter, until Almodavar called a halt when they neared the
trees.
The copse was a fair way back, separated from the road by a broad
stretch of long brown grass. The captain studied the tree line for a
while then stood in his stirrups to look over the surrounding
countryside. Then he turned and cantered back in the direction they had
come from.
“What’s the matter?†Adrina asked the guard
on her left.
“If we ride through that grass, your Highness, we might as
well put
up a sign telling them where we are. The captain’s looking for
a way to
reach the trees without leaving any tracks.â€
Adrina nodded, rather impressed by the Hythrun eye for detail. They
waited for another few minutes before Almodavar returned.
“There’s a gully back that way that leads toward the
trees,†the
captain announced in Medalonian, for the benefit of the Defenders among
them. “But we’ll have to lead the horses, it’s
too treacherous to ride
through. Once we clear it, we’ll have a bit of open ground to
cover, so
we’ll cross it in single file.â€
He did not ask for questions, or expect any. Adrina followed her
guards and picked her way through the gully after the young man who had
told her of Almodavar’s intentions. A bubbling stream coursed
through
the centre, perhaps a tributary of the brook where they had stopped
earlier. The rocks were slick and the icy water splashed over her
boots. She was dressed in trousers and a warm jacket, as was Tam
—
there was no point in advertising their presence by dressing like
ladies — but her feet were starting to numb by the time she led
her
mare out of the gully and mounted for the ride to the trees.
There was no respite when she reached them, either. Almodavar
ordered no fires to betray their presence so she settled down for a
long cold wait until Damin and Tarja returned.
Adrina was sitting with her back to a tall poplar, Tam’s
sleeping
head resting on her shoulder, when the sound of galloping horses woke
her from a light doze. Expecting to find Damin and Tarja returning, she
gently moved Tam’s head onto the cloak they were using as a rug
and
struggled to her feet. She found Almodavar waiting at the edge of the
trees as a Defender and a Raider galloped toward them through the
grass, making a mockery of his effort to conceal their hiding place.
“That’s not Damin and Tarja,†she pointed
out as the horsemen drew
nearer.
“The Raider is Jocim, one of the rear scouts,â€
Almodavar agreed. “I
don’t know the Defender.â€
They waited until the men had almost reached the trees before waving
them down. Jocim stayed in his saddle, but the Defender jumped down,
almost collapsing with exhaustion as he hit the ground. Almodavar
reached out an arm to steady him, but he waved it away.
“Where’s Captain Tenragan?â€
“He’s not here.â€
“Who’s the ranking Defender officer then?â€
Almodavar looked a little annoyed at the man’s insistence on
following Defender protocol.
“If you have news man, out with it.â€
The Defender looked as if he was going to argue the point, but
weariness won out over procedure.
“I have a message from the Lord Defender,†he said.
“The Kariens
crossed the border two days after you left. The Defenders were ordered
to throw down their arms. The Kariens have control of the Keep.â€
Almodavar nodded, unsurprised by the news. “Jenga ordered
you to
founder a horse just to tell us that?â€
He shook his head. “No. He sent me to tell you that two
hundred
Kariens were dispatched south at the same time. He thinks they know
about the princess. Cratyn is leading them himself.â€
Adrina’s heart skipped a beat. Surely they had enough lead
on them
to escape? The Kariens could not travel as fast as their troop and they
were making excellent time.
Almodavar nodded and glanced at Adrina. Her expression must have
betrayed her thoughts. “They’ll not catch us, your
Highness.â€
“Not if we keep moving,†she agreed.
Adrina left the rest of it unsaid. Almodavar knew, as well as she,
that a force of a thousand Defenders was blocking the way south.
CHAPTER 59
From a distance, the northern plains looked as
flat and featureless as a tabletop. The view was deceptive, though. In
reality the plains were a series of low rolling folds that concealed as
much as they revealed. Tarja, Damin and the Hythrun scout, whose name
was Colsy, dismounted some distance from the Defenders. They led their
horses off the road for quite a way, before leaving them to fend for
themselves as they scrambled up a low hillside, dropping on their
bellies as they neared the summit.
“Gods!†Damin muttered as they reached the top.
Tarja studied the scene below, forcing down a wave of despair. The
column of Defenders was stretched out along the road in a snaking line
that stretched for half a league or more. At its head, rode a Karien
knight, displaying a coat of arms on his shield that he could not make
out from this distance.
“Do you have your looking-glass?â€
Damin nodded and handed Tarja the instrument from the pouch he
carried on his belt. Tarja aimed it at the knight’s shield. As
the
three silver pike on a red field slowly resolved into focus he swore
softly, then handed it back to Damin.
“Well, at least that answers the question about the
whereabouts of
the Duke of Setenton.â€
Damin took the looking-glass and followed Tarja’s pointing
finger.
“And where the order for the surrender came from,â€
Damin agreed.
“What’s he doing leading half the damned Defender Corps
north?â€
Half was a gross exaggeration, but that near a thousand Defenders
marched under the command of a Karien knight was cause enough for
concern.
“If he was waiting at the Citadel when R’shiel
arrived . . .†Tarja did not finish the
sentence. He was
afraid to put his thought into words.
“I wonder who’s in the carriage,†Colsy
added, pointing at the
elaborate vehicle drawn by six matched horses, which trundled along
behind the Kariens.
“That’s the First Sister’s carriage.â€
“That’s all we need,†Damin groaned.
“Joyhinia Tenragan, in all her
vicious glory. I thought you destroyed her wit after Dacendaran stole
it?â€
“So did I.â€
Damin returned the looking-glass to its case and rolled onto his
back. He put his hands behind his head and stared at the pale sky for a
moment then looked at Tarja.
“They’ll be on us by nightfall.â€
“Or so close it won’t matter.â€
“I’ve always fancied myself a brilliant warrior,
Tarja, but odds of
ten to one are a bit much, even for me.â€
Tarja nodded. “There’s nothing to be achieved by
engaging them.â€
“So what do we do? Hide until they ride by? Head
overland?â€
“If we turn off the road, it’ll take a lot longer to
reach the river
and even more time to find a place where we can cross. Cauthside is the
only place with a decent barge this side of Testra.†He
didn’t add that
going overland meant turning west. Damin knew it without having it
spelled out for him.
“Then it seems we have no choice. We hide until they pass
by.â€
“That may not be as simple as you think. Terbolt might be in
command, but the Defenders won’t let that interfere with their
normal
routine. They’ll have scouts out, you can be certain.â€
“I didn’t see any,†Colsy objected.
“That doesn’t mean they aren’t out
there,†Tarja warned.
Damin nodded in agreement. “The reputation of the Defenders
is well
earned. All the more reason not to take them on.â€
“If we’re careful, we should be able to avoid
them,†Tarja suggested.
The Warlord smiled wistfully. “Remember the good old days,
Tarja?
When you and I knew exactly who our enemies were? I miss them.â€
“I remember them well. You were the enemy, as I
recall.â€
“And you were always one step ahead of me. I always meant to
ask you
how you managed that.â€
“I probably shouldn’t disillusion you, but it was
luck as much as
anything.â€
Damin grinned. “I don’t believe you. Nobody could be
that lucky.â€
“Alright, if it makes you happy, it was my sheer tactical
brilliance.â€
“Just as I always suspected,†Damin agreed. He
rolled over and
stared down at the advancing Defenders. “I have to tell you.
The sight
of those Defenders has completely ruined my day, you know that,
don’t
you?â€
“You’ll get over it.â€
“Eventually,†Damin sighed. “Let’s
get back to the others.â€
“Aren’t we going to do anything?â€
Colsy asked, obviously
disappointed.
“We are going to hide, young man.â€
“Hiding is for women.â€
“And very smart men,†the Warlord retorted.
It was late afternoon before they located
Almodavar and the rest of their band. The Hythrun captain had done an
excellent job of concealing their presence. But for some scattered
tracks heading toward the tree-line, there was nothing to indicate that
more than a hundred men were concealed among the trees. Tarja looked
around the camp with approval. The Hythrun seemed to lack discipline,
but when it really counted, they did exactly as they were ordered.
Adrina hurried forward as they rode into the camp. The change in her
was quite remarkable, Tarja thought. She seemed to have shed her spoilt
outer shell. She had ridden without complaint, as though she was trying
to prove she was worthy of the danger they had placed themselves in by
offering her protection. Her face brightened at Damin’s
approach,
revealing far more than she meant to.
Tarja was wary of Damin’s relationship with Adrina. It was
fraught
with danger and long-term ramifications that did not bear thinking
about. Despite the insistence of both Damin and Adrina that the
relationship meant nothing, Tarja could see the danger signs. Adrina
never strayed far from Damin and he was prepared to risk his life to
keep her by his side. Tarja understood what it was like to be willing
to lay down your life for someone you loved. He wondered how long it
would be before the Hythrun Warlord and the Fardohnyan Princess worked
it out for themselves.
“Cratyn’s coming!†Adrina cried as Damin
dismounted.
Damin looked over her shoulder at Almodavar who approached them at a
much more dignified pace.
“She speaks the truth, my Lord. Jenga sent a messenger to
warn us.â€
Tarja dismounted and let Shadow be led away by one of his own men
who had clustered around them, anxious for news.
“How far behind us?â€
“A day or two, three at the outside.â€
“This could make things interesting,†Damin remarked
laconically.
Adrina punched his arm impatiently. “Interesting?
Don’t you
realise the danger we’re in?â€
Tarja understood Adrina’s annoyance. Damin had a bad habit
of
treating everything as if it was some sort of elaborate game. His
refusal to take anything seriously could be frustrating at times. In
this case it was downright dangerous.
“She has a point, Damin.â€
“What’s the problem?†he shrugged.
“We’ve already agreed that it
would be insane to take the Defenders on. We can’t go overland
— it
will slow us down too much — so we hide. The Defenders will
ride by us,
none the wiser.â€
“And run straight into Cratyn,†Tarja reminded him.
“What do you
think will happen then?â€
“If we’re lucky, they’ll wipe each other
out,†the Warlord chuckled.
“Be serious!â€
Damin had the decency to look contrite. “You’re
right. If Cratyn
knows when we left, and we haven’t been seen by the Defenders,
even he
should be able to figure out that we’re around here
somewhere.â€
“Can’t we slip past the Defenders?†Adrina
asked hopefully. There
was an edge of desperation in her voice.
Tarja shook his head. “Not a chance.â€
“Then we go overland,†Damin said, no happier with
the idea than
Tarja. But at least this way they would have a chance of avoiding the
two forces that were inexorably closing in on them. But it took him
away from the Citadel. Away from R’shiel.
“If we start moving now, we can put a few leagues between us
and the
Defenders by nightfall.â€
The Warlord nodded and ordered Almodavar to get everyone moving.
Tarja’s stomach rumbled in complaint, reminding him that he had
missed
lunch as Damin led Adrina away, his arm around her shoulder.
As he watched the retreating couple he frowned. He should have put a
stop to it. That he would have had more chance of stopping the sun
rising tomorrow did little to ease his concern. Were it not for Adrina,
Cratyn would more than likely have ignored the Hythrun refusal to
surrender. What were a thousand Hythrun to a man who could muster a
hundred thousand men? If Cratyn was simply chasing down his errant
wife, then it was bad enough. If anyone suspected that she and Damin
were lovers, and shared their suspicions with the prince, Cratyn would
not rest until every last person who knew of the liaison was dead. He
was the Karien Crown Prince and his religion demanded the most terrible
vengeance he could wreak. Adrina’s infidelity could not be
forgiven —
it could only be washed away in blood.
It was slow going as they picked their way cross
country. The terrain was hard on the horses. One minute they were
climbing, the next descending, and although the slopes were not steep,
the horses had been ridden hard for days now. By the time darkness
fell, and with it the temperature, even some of the magnificent Hythrun
horses, renowned for their stamina, were stumbling. Tarja called a halt
and ordered them to make camp, but refused to allow any fires. The
chance of being spotted by a Defender scout was too real to be ignored.
Tarja hobbled his mount and finally got around to eating something
long after dark, although hard cheese and jerky barely counted as a
meal. He had been spoilt, he decided, living on the border. There was a
time when he didn’t mind trail rations. Had he been tougher
then — or
just less discerning, he wondered?
“Tarja?â€
He turned, a little surprised to find Adrina weaving her way among
the picketed horses toward him. Her breath frosted in the moonlight and
she held her borrowed jacket tightly closed against the cold.
“I thought you’d be asleep by now.â€
“Sleep?†she laughed humourlessly.
“That’s a joke. Who can sleep
with a thousand Defenders over the next hill and the Kariens riding us
down?â€
“You need to rest, then, even if you can’t sleep.
The last few days
are going to seem like a picnic compared to what lies ahead.â€
She reached up and patted Shadow’s forelock. The mare
nuzzled her
hopefully for a moment then returned to her feedbag when she decided
the princess had nothing better to offer.
“Can I ask you something, Tarja?â€
“I suppose.â€
“If I wasn’t here, you wouldn’t be doing
this, would you?â€
She knew the answer as well as he did. He wondered what was really
behind the question.
“Cratyn probably wouldn’t be on our tail, but
we’d still be hiding
from the Defenders. You can’t blame yourself for that.â€
She smiled. “Actually, I’m a little surprised at
myself. Taking the
blame for things is not my style. I’ve never been known for my
selflessness.â€
Tarja found that very easy to believe.
“I keep thinking I should just go back to Cratyn and be
damned.â€
“What good would that do?†He hoped he
hadn’t let his astonishment
show. Such an offer from Adrina verged on the miraculous.
“R’shiel is missing, Tarja. You should be helping
her, not saving me
from my own stupidity.†She smiled self-consciously, as if she
was
startled to have made such an admission. “I have a feeling that
the
demon child is more important in the general scheme of things than one
disgruntled princess.â€
“She’s right, Tarja.â€
Brak appeared out of nowhere a pace behind Adrina. The princess spun
around, startled by the unexpected voice. A thousand questions leapt to
Tarja’s mind at the sight of him, but one question overrode
every
other, even his astonishment at Brak’s sudden return:
“Where is R’shiel?â€
“Closer than you think,†Brak replied, then he bowed
to Adrina. “You
must be Hablet’s girl. Adrina, isn’t it? The one who
married Cratyn?â€
“Who are you?†she demanded. “Tarja? Who is
he?â€
“Brakandaran,†Tarja told her, fighting to keep an
even temper. What
in the name of the Founders had happened to R’shiel? How did
Brak get
here? “He’s Harshini. He was supposed to be
looking after R’shiel.â€
“You can’t blame Brak, Tarja, it wasn’t his
fault.â€
Tarja started at the new voice and turned to find Dace standing
behind him. The God of Thieves was grinning broadly, rather pleased
with the effect of his dramatic entrance.
“What are you doing here?â€
“You know, most people would prostrate themselves when
confronted
with a god,†Dace pointed out, a little miffed at
Tarja’s
less-than-enthusiastic reception.
“I’m not ‘most people’. What
happened to R’shiel?â€
“That’s a god?†Adrina asked. She
looked awestruck, but
then, she was a pagan. Being confronted with one of her gods probably
meant a great deal more to her than it meant to him.
“Unfortunately, yes. This is Dacendaran. He’s
supposed to be the God
of Thieves, I think. Personally, I think he’s the God of
Unreliable
Fools.â€
“Don’t be absurd, Tarja, there’s no such
entity. If you’re going to
be like that, then I won’t help you.â€
“That’s an empty threat under the
circumstances,†Brak remarked.
“But he can’t be a god,†Adrina scoffed.
“I’ve seen him in the
Defenders’ camp. He was hanging around with Mikel.â€
“My newest and most fervent . . . no
actually, he’s
more like a reluctant disciple.â€
“Brak, what the hell is going on?â€
He held up his hand wearily to stay Tarja’s avalanche of
questions.
“Look, I know I have a lot of explaining to do, and I will, I
promise.
But let’s find Damin first. I don’t want to have to go
over this more
than once.â€
CHAPTER 60
“Before I tell you where R’shiel
is,†Brak began,
looking at each one of them in turn, “I have to explain a few
things.â€
They had gathered around a brightly burning fire, safe in the
knowledge that Brak’s magic concealed them from prying eyes.
Tarja was
sceptical when he promised they would not be seen, and his men were
decidedly edgy, but even Almodavar seemed satisfied with the
Harshini’s
assurance that he was protecting them. The fire warmed them more than
it should have, and he wondered if Brak’s magic was responsible
for
that too. The half-Harshini’s eyes were completely black, a
sure sign
he was drawing on his power. It reminded Tarja sharply how alien the
Harshini really were.
“You’d better tell them the rules, too,â€
Dace added.
“What rules?†Tarja asked warily.
“I’ll get to that. There are other things you must
understand first.â€
Tarja shifted restlessly. He knew from experience how futile it was
to demand answers from Brak when he wasn’t ready to give them.
Damin
sat on his left, with Adrina curled up beside him. On the other side of
the fire sat Almodavar, Ghari and Dace, who seemed quite content to let
Brak do the talking.
“As you’ve probably figured out by now,â€
Brak continued, “the
Kariens were waiting for us when we reached the Citadel.â€
“I tried to warn you,†Dace interjected.
“You knew they were waiting for you? Why in the name
of the
Founders didn’t you turn back?â€
“Dace warned us Xaphista had believers in the Citadel,
Tarja. Even
he didn’t know Terbolt and his priests were there.â€
“So much for the infallibility of the gods.â€
Dace glared at him, but let the comment pass.
“It wouldn’t have mattered if Dace had given us the
disposition of
every Karien on the continent, there were forces at work that would
have seen to it that we did not succeed.â€
“How could you fail with the gods on your side?â€
Adrina scoffed.
“That’s just the point. The only side the gods care
about is their
own.â€
Dace snorted with disgust at the comment, but he seemed unusually
reticent tonight and offered no other sign of his displeasure.
“Anyway, we reached the Citadel and everything went
according to
plan until Joyhinia appeared at the Gathering. The real Joyhinia that
is, as lucid as she ever was.â€
“How? I destroyed her wit. Her mind was gone.â€
“The Karien priests found her another mind and transferred
it into
her body. Once Joyhinia appeared things fell apart fairly rapidly. The
demon meld collapsed and R’shiel couldn’t hold the
coercion. She was
discovered within minutes of Terbolt’s appearance. Mahina was
arrested.
Draco’s dead, by the way. So is Affiana.â€
“And just what were you doing while R’shiel
was being
arrested?†Tarja asked, his voice dangerous. The news that that
man who
fathered him was dead meant little to him. He was more concerned about
Mahina. He was sick with worry about R’shiel.
“I was also being detained — by Zegarnald.â€
Damin sat bolt upright and stared at the Harshini in astonishment.
“The God of War prevented you from going to the demon
child’s aid? That
makes no sense. He delivered her to me for safekeeping. Why would he
allow her to fall into the hands of his enemies?â€
“The Kariens are your enemies, Damin, not
Zegarnald’s.
Xaphista is his adversary and that’s all he’s
interested in.â€
“I don’t understand,†Adrina said, giving
voice to Tarja’s own
confusion.
“The only reason the gods allowed R’shiel to be
created was their
need to destroy Xaphista. They’re not interested in anything
else. The
demon child has a job to do and they want to be damned sure
she’s
capable of doing it.â€
“You mean they want to know if she can kill?â€
“She can do that readily enough,†Ghari warned her.
“Ask anyone who
knew her in the rebellion.â€
Brak nodded. “That’s not what concerns them.
They’re more worried
that Xaphista will win her over to his cause. She can kill a god. Which
god she destroys is entirely up to her.â€
“So they let the Kariens capture her? Isn’t that
rather
counter-productive?†Damin asked.
“Zegarnald’s theory is that if she is going to
succumb to Xaphista,
he’d rather know now, before she fully realises what she is
capable of.â€
“He wants to find out while there’s still a chance
she be can
killed,†Tarja translated for the benefit of the others.
“That’s your
job, isn’t it, Brak?â€
The Harshini dropped his eyes.
Adrina looked at Tarja in confusion before turning back to Brak.
“But what happened to R’shiel?â€
“She was taken prisoner.â€
“And then what?†Damin asked. He knew Brak, too;
knew they had yet
to hear the worst of it.
“You recall I said the Kariens transferred another mind into
Joyhinia’s body? Well it wasn’t just any mind.â€
Brak looked straight at
Tarja. “It was Loclon’s mind.â€
Tarja experienced a moment of such blind, mindless rage that he
thought he might explode from it. He didn’t say a word. He just
sat
there, trembling, clenching his fists in helpless fury. The others
looked at him curiously, sensing his mood but unaware of the reason for
it. Nobody but Brak, Dace and Tarja knew of what Loclon had done to
R’shiel in the past. They did not understand.
“I gather from the look on Tarja’s face that this
Loclon is not a
very nice person?†Damin asked flippantly. Tarja turned on him
with
such fury that the Warlord leaned back, out of his reach.
“Sorry . . . Just trying to lighten the mood.
I’ll shut
up.â€
“That would be a very good idea,†Adrina agreed
sternly.
Brak resumed his narrative, looking almost as annoyed at Damin as
Adrina was. “If you need details, I’ll let Tarja fill
you in if he
wants to. Suffice to say that Loclon has harmed R’shiel in the
past.
Enough that he’s probably the only thing in this world she
truly fears.
R’shiel’s feelings for Joyhinia aren’t much
better. Being confronted by
both of them in the one body was more than she could take.â€
“Did he kill her?†Tarja asked. His voice was colder
than the night.
Brak shook his head. “He roughed her up a bit, but he
couldn’t risk
killing her. But for a few cuts and bruises, physically she’s
fine.â€
“Physically?â€
“You remember the night we escaped the Grimfield?â€
“I’m not likely to forget it.â€
“Then you recall what happened to R’shiel after she
tried to kill
Loclon? How she retreated into herself?â€
Tarja nodded. “She was like it for days.â€
“Well that’s basically what’s happened to
her now. She’s alive, she
speaks, she eats; but R’shiel is not there.â€
“You mean she’s in some sort of coma?â€
Adrina asked.
“Not exactly. Tarja knows what I mean. He’s seen her
like this
before.â€
“Then how do we wake her?â€
“We can’t. She has to come back of her own
accord.â€
“If she wants to come back,†Dace reminded Brak.
“What do you mean?â€
Brak sighed. “Wherever she is, it’s more than likely
Xaphista is
there too.â€
“Then only the gods can reach her? Why don’t you do
something,
Dacendaran?â€
“I’m not allowed to, Damin,†the young god
replied. “Zeggie says she
has to turn away from Xaphista of her own accord, or when it comes time
to face him she’ll simply give in.†He looked around
the fire-lit
circle of faces, begging for understanding. “Look, I’m
going to be in
enough trouble for freeing Brak. I’d help if I could, but with
all
these wars going on, Zegarnald is as strong as he’s ever been.
Unless
you can start some sort of worldwide crime wave, I haven’t the
strength
to defy him.â€
“Then how can Xaphista get to her?†Tarja asked. He
didn’t have the
benefit of a pagan education. He was floundering with all this talk of
gods.
“Xaphista gains his strength from his believers and
he’s got
millions of them. That’s why the Primal gods fear him.â€
“But she’s half-Harshini, isn’t
she?†Damin pointed out. “Why didn’t
she just call on her power and escape herself?â€
“The priests have blocked her power. They’re using
some sort of
collar I’ve never seen before. If she tries to touch the source
of her
power it burns. If she manages to get past that, the pain is
intolerable. Not even the demons can reach her.â€
Tarja watched Brak, wondering how much of what he told them was
conjecture and how much he knew to be fact.
“So what is Xaphista doing to her?†Adrina wondered
aloud.
“I doubt if he’s hurting her,†Brak
shrugged. “If anything he’ll be
trying to coax her to follow him. He doesn’t need to kill
R’shiel to
remove the threat. He just needs her on his side.â€
“So if she defies him, he’ll kill her and if she
doesn’t, you’ll
kill her anyway,†Tarja concluded bleakly.
Brak didn’t answer; he didn’t have to.
“Where is she, Brak?â€
“With the Defenders camped less than two leagues from here.
Terbolt
is escorting her back to Karien.â€
The stunned silence lasted only a moment.
“We have to rescue her,†Almodavar announced.
“How?†Tarja demanded.
“We’ll think of something,†Damin said, with
a nod to his captain.
“You’re surely not suggesting that we leave her
there?â€
“Why not? She’s as safe there as anywhere.
I’m not going to risk the
life of every man here, just so that the moment we get her back Brak
can kill her.â€
The Harshini stared at him with unreadable black eyes.
“Brakandaran would never . . .†Damin
began, then saw
the look on the Harshini’s face. “Gods! You
can’t be serious!â€
Adrina glanced around at the men angrily. “This is insane!
You can’t
leave her there. You can’t let them take her back to Karien.
They would
destroy her, and trust me, I know what I’m talking about! You
have to
rescue her!â€
“It won’t be easy,†Ghari warned.
“And if she has turned to
Xaphista, she may not want to be rescued.â€
“Bollocks!†the Fardohnyan princess spat angrily.
“You don’t know
what’s happened to her. You have to give her a chance.â€
Tarja nodded in agreement. “Nobody wants to get her back
more than
I, Adrina, but she’s being held in the middle of a thousand
Defenders.â€
“But we have the Harshini on our side,†Damin
pointed out. “We could
be in and out before anyone knew about it. That’s assuming
you’ll help
us, Brak.â€
“I’ll help you as much as I can, but you must
understand that I
can’t do anything for R’shiel. She has to make her own
decisions.†He
turned to Dace. “I’m allowed to do that much
aren’t I, Divine One?â€
Dace nodded miserably. “I suppose.â€
“And once we have rescued the demon child?†Ghari
asked. “You forget
the Karien force approaching from the north. Unless Lord Brakandaran
can magically transport us away from here, we’ll have little
hope of
escape. Cratyn is angry enough to hunt down his wife. I imagine losing
the demon child will do nothing to improve his temper.â€
“We need something to distract him,†Damin agreed.
“That’s easy,†Adrina said.
“I’ll surrender.â€
“No!†Damin cried.
“What else will turn him back, Damin? He seeks his wife. He
doesn’t
know that the Defenders approach, or that they have the demon child. If
you can get R’shiel out of the Defenders’ camp, Terbolt
will be furious
certainly, but the Defenders will not pursue you with the same
dedication that Cratyn will. With Brak’s help you can get
clear. If
Cratyn joins the hunt, nothing will deter him.â€
Tarja could see the logic in her plan, but remained silent, as did
the others. This was something they needed to decide between
themselves. He wondered if Damin was beginning to realise just how hard
he would find it to let Adrina go.
“I can’t let you do it, Adrina. If Cratyn suspects
for a minute —â€
“I’m prepared to take that risk, Damin.â€
“Well, I’m not. You’re not going back to him
and that’s final. We
haven’t come this far to quit now.†He turned to Tarja,
his face
chiselled in determination. “We’ll get R’shiel
back, Tarja, then we’ll
run like hell. We’ll split our forces and scatter them so wide,
Cratyn
and Terbolt won’t even begin to know where to look. Brak can
conceal us
and —â€
“And his priests will think I’ve lit a beacon for
them,†Brak warned.
“But you’re shielding us now. Can’t they
feel it?â€
“I’m helping,†Dace admitted.
“Then you can help us when we flee.â€
The God of Thieves shook his head. “That would be
interfering. If
you take R’shiel and try to stop what’s happening to
her, and Zegarnald
catches me helping you . . .†Dace left the
sentence
hanging ominously.
The gods could not destroy each other, Tarja knew that much, but he
wondered what one god could do to another that would cause Dacendaran
such concern. He had a feeling he didn’t really want to know.
Damin thought for a moment then shrugged. “What the hell. I
wasn’t
planning to live forever anyway. What say we go and rescue the demon
child anyway, and to hell with the risk?â€
“You’re mad!†Adrina declared, but she
didn’t offer any further
protest, or repeat her offer to return to her husband.
One by one the others nodded their agreement, including Brak, until
Damin turned to Tarja questioningly.
“Well?â€
Tarja looked up and met Brak’s unwavering, alien eyes. He
wanted to
rescue R’shiel more than he wanted to keep breathing, but he
could not
shake the feeling that saving her from her current predicament might be
placing her in even more danger.
“Let’s do it,†he agreed, sounding far more
certain than he felt.
It was too late by the time they finished their
discussion to take any action that night, so they planned their rescue
attempt for the following evening. The delay made Tarja nervous. The
Kariens were already too close for comfort and the wait served only to
bring them closer.
The Defenders had stopped for the night so Damin sent out scouts to
spy out the lay of their camp as it was more than likely the camp would
be set up in the same way each evening. Two Hythrun Raiders and two
Defenders, hand-picked by Tarja for both their experience and their
common sense, were despatched to learn as much as they could before
sunrise — specifically, where the occupants of the coach were
camped.
Tarja didn’t need a spy to tell him they would be in the centre
of the
camp, but it would simplify things considerably if he knew exactly
which tent and the disposition of the guards.
He spent the rest of the night organising the Defenders. Although
they travelled in civilian clothing, every man had his uniform safely
tucked away in his saddlebags. Sneaking into the Defender camp would be
impossible, so Tarja planned to march through it openly. With luck, he
could simply walk up to R’shiel’s tent, order her
brought out, and then
escort her away without a question being asked. If she was alone. If the guards on the tent did not recognise him. If the guards hadn’t been given any orders to the
contrary. If she was guarded by Defenders, rather than Karien priests.
He forced himself to stop thinking about the ifs. There were too
many of them for comfort.
Damin agreed with his plan, but was rather disappointed that he was
not to be included in the rescue party. He consoled himself with the
prospect of some useful sabotage. A small party of his Raiders would
sneak into the camp and disable the coach, while the rest would attempt
to scatter the horses. Pursuit was certain, once R’shiel was
discovered
missing, but they planned to make it as difficult as possible.
That left only Adrina, her slave and the thirty men left of her
Guard. The question of what to do with them was rather hotly debated,
mostly between Damin and the princess. She did not want to be left
behind to wait, and Damin was understandably reluctant to lead her into
the middle of the Defenders’ camp. In they end they
compromised. Adrina
would stay with the horses on the edge of the camp, ready for a quick
getaway. The Fardohnyans were more easily dealt with. With Damin as his
interpreter, Tarja told the Fardohnyans they were free to go. He gave
them maps to find their way home and enough supplies to see them to the
Glass River. The young Lanceman accepted their release with quiet
gratitude, following an assurance that the princess would be safe. The
men would leave at dawn — one more scattered group in a
landscape that
would soon be crowded with them.
Their plans made, they settled down to rest until daylight. They
would need to travel north tomorrow, shadowing the Defenders until they
stopped again for the evening. Tarja hoped that Cratyn was far enough
back that his troop would not run into the approaching Defenders. They
had no real idea how far behind he was. Their estimates were based
almost entirely on the assumption that Cratyn and his knights were
probably armoured, and therefore unable to maintain any sort of
sustained speed. The chances were good that the Karien force would not
meet up with the Defenders until the day after tomorrow. Tarja needed
to be well away by then.
Sleep eluded him, and he finally gave up pretending that he was
getting any rest, just as the first of the stars winked out of
existence with the onset of daylight. He walked to the edge of the
camp, climbing a small hill to look out over their route for the next
day. The sound of following footsteps alerted him to the fact that he
was not alone, but he did not turn. He had a feeling he knew who it was.
“Can’t sleep?â€
“Nor can you, I’d guess.â€
Brak stepped up beside him and followed Tarja’s gaze.
“I don’t need sleep the way you do. One of the
advantages of being
half Harshini.â€
They were silent for a time, each alone with his thoughts.
“How bad was it?†Tarja asked eventually.
“Bad enough,†Brak admitted. “You might get
a shock when you find
her. He cut her hair.†Her glorious, dark-red hair. Tarja felt his ire rising, but
forced it down. It would serve no purpose here.
“Tell me the rest of it.â€
“There’s not much to tell. It took a while before I
finally
convinced Dace to release me — it was a good thing you sent
him, by the
way. Zegarnald was quite happy to let me rot. Anyway, Terbolt had
already left the Citadel by then. Joyhinia, or rather Loclon, is still
nominally in charge of the Sisterhood, but he’s taking his
orders from
a Karien called Squire Mathen. I don’t know who he is, but
he’s working
to his own agenda. Loclon doesn’t have much freedom of
action.â€
“For as long as I live, I will regret not killing him when I
had the
chance.â€
“Accept it, Tarja. Being consumed by your regrets is a bad
way to
live.â€
Tarja was surprised by the bitterness in his voice. “You
speak from
experience?â€
“Oh yes,†the Harshini replied with feeling.
Tarja glanced at him curiously. Brak’s eyes had returned to
their
normal faded blue, but they were full of pain.
“I killed R’shiel’s father, Tarja. In doing
so, not only did I
destroy a good friend and my king, I saved her mother and allowed
R’shiel to be born. Trust me, I have regrets that you
couldn’t begin to
understand.â€
Tarja did understand though, more than Brak realised. “If
R’shiel
turns to Xaphista and the other gods want you to kill her,
you’ll have
destroyed your king for nothing.â€
Brak nodded. “Nobody in this world wants her to succeed more
than I
do, Tarja.†Then he added with a sour smile, “and
nobody has as much to
lose if she does.â€
“Will she succeed?â€
“I wish I knew.â€
CHAPTER 61
The Crown Prince of Karien was pious, noble and
dedicated, but he was not stupid. He knew the Hythrun were better
horseman, knew that they could travel much farther and faster than he
could. So he broke with tradition and travelled without armour. He left
his dukes behind and took only his good friend Drendyn, the Earl of
Tiler’s Pass, and young Jannis, the Earl of Menthall. They were
the
only two men in his council he knew to be loyal to him, rather
than to his father. The remainder of his force was made up of young
knights who wanted to curry favour with the heir to the throne. Jasnoff
would not reign forever, nor would the elder dukes. If he succeeded,
these men would form the core of his personal support when he became
king.
If he failed, none of them was so important or well connected that
they would be missed.
Mikel learnt of all this the night before they left in pursuit of
the princess. Cratyn was reluctant to let him out of his sight, so he
lay in the corner of the prince’s tent pretending sleep,
listening to
Cratyn make his plans. The prince seemed consumed by a cold
determination that would brook no interference. Their force would
travel light: no armour, no lances, no lackeys, he declared. They would
travel from before sunrise until after sunset. They would eat on the
run and each man would lead a spare horse so that they could change
mounts frequently. They would catch the Hythrun before they reached the
Glass River.
Mikel admired Cratyn’s determination, but a small part of
him was
beginning to wonder what he had done. The prince was justifiably angry
with Adrina. She had betrayed him most foully, but Mikel hadn’t
really
thought about what Cratyn would actually do when he learnt of her
treachery.
He had expected him to be angry, certainly, but he didn’t
think the
prince would decide to hunt her down personally. His own anger at
Adrina’s betrayal had faded somewhat. He wanted her punished,
but he
wasn’t sure he wanted to witness her murder, and there was no
question
about it — that was exactly what Cratyn had in mind.
The journey south proved a nightmare. Mikel clung to his saddle
through long days of endless hard riding, cold rations and freezing
nights. Cratyn made no allowance for his age or inexperience, and
worse, when they did finally stop each night, he treated Mikel as his
page and expected him to unsaddle his horse and fetch and carry for
him, just as if they were back in Karien. Mikel’s admiration
was slowly
turning into burning resentment.
On their fourth day out they finally stumbled across proof that they
were on the right road. While looking for a campsite for the night, one
of knights discovered a small grove of trees with the remains of
several fires scattered among the bare trunks. The ashes appeared to be
quite fresh. Drendyn, the most experienced hunter among them, estimated
that the Hythrun were only a day and a half ahead. The news invigorated
Cratyn and the next day the pace he set was even harder. But, towards
the evening of their fifth day on the road, they made a discovery that
changed the whole nature of their mission.
Night had fallen, but the moon was bright. Cratyn judged it safe to
continue, although he did slacken the pace a little and sent two
knights out to ride in the van, a precaution he did not normally bother
with. Mikel rode behind him, swaying in the saddle as fatigue
threatened to unseat him. They had found no further sign of the
Hythrun, but Cratyn’s determination was becoming an obsession.
He would
ride all night if he thought the horses could take it.
The sound of galloping hooves jerked Mikel fully awake. One of the
knights sent to ride point was thundering toward them. Cratyn called a
halt and waited for the man to reach them. Mikel leaned forward
anxiously, hoping to hear what was being said. Had they found the
Hythrun?
“Sire! Lord Terbolt approaches!â€
“Terbolt?†Cratyn repeated, sounding rather puzzled.
“But he is
supposed to be at the Citadel. My father dispatched him there at the
same time we left for the border.â€
“There’s nearly a thousand Defenders with him, your
Highness. They
are camped not more than two or three leagues from here.â€
Cratyn nodded, but his brow was furrowed. “You saw no sign
of the
Hythrun?â€
“No, sire.â€
“Then we may have ridden past them. We’ll have to
turn back.â€
“But Cratyn, what about Terbolt?†Drendyn asked. The
young earl rode
at Cratyn’s side and was probably the only man in camp who
dared
address him by name. “Shouldn’t we at least pay our
respects?â€
“I’ve no time to stand on protocol,†Cratyn
snapped impatiently.
“Perhaps, but a thousand pairs of eyes are better than two
hundred.â€
The prince thought about it for a moment then nodded. “Very
well, we
shall join Lord Terbolt. And then we’ll look under every rock
and every
blade of grass between the border and the Glass River until we unearth
the traitors.â€
There was a time when Cratyn’s words would have thrilled
Mikel, but
now they simply left him cold.
Cratyn and Mikel rode ahead of the troop and into
the Defenders’ camp amid curious looks and sullen stares.
Drendyn had
been left in charge with orders to wait until Cratyn returned. Mikel
was disillusioned enough to realise that his place beside Cratyn was
earnt through distrust, not honour.
As they moved past countless small fires surrounded by red-coated
troopers, Mikel wondered what the Defenders thought about surrendering
to Karien. In his experience, they were proud men — proud of
both their
reputation and their Corps. To be under the command of a Karien Duke
must be galling. He was old enough to understand that it was only their
discipline that kept them in line. The Hythrun had fled and Mikel
suspected that the Kariens would have behaved no better, were the
situation reversed. It seemed a tragedy that the very discipline that
made the Defenders famous now placed them at the mercy of their enemies.
Lord Terbolt met them in the centre of the camp, a little surprised
to find his prince so far from the border. Cratyn dismounted but to
Mikel’s relief one of Lord Terbolt’s men led his horse
away. Mikel
jumped to the ground wearily, somewhat pleased to find his own mount
being catered for in a similar manner. Cratyn waved him forward and he
followed the prince into Lord Terbolt’s tent, wondering if the
Duke
would think to feed them as well.
“I must say, I didn’t expect to find you out here,
your Highness,â€
Terbolt said as he poured two cups of wine. As an afterthought, he
glanced at Mikel and jerked his head in the direction of a barrel in
the corner of the tent. “There’s water over there.
Drink if you wish.â€
Mikel bowed and hurried over to the barrel, dipping the ladle into
the chill water gratefully as Cratyn settled into Terbolt’s
only
comfortable chair.
“I did not expect to find you either, my Lord.â€
“My work was done at the Citadel. I’ve left Mathen
overseeing
things.â€
Cratyn frowned. “A commoner?â€
“He may be a commoner, your Highness, but he’s about
the smartest
man I’ve ever met. And the most ruthless. I trust him
completely. I
believe you’ll find him eminently qualified for the
position.â€
“And the demon child?â€
“She is here. I’ll have her brought to you if you
wish, although if
she truly is destined for great things, I can’t see it in her
myself.
But who are we to question our God, eh?â€
“Send for her.â€
Terbolt nodded and went to the entrance. He pushed back the tent
flap and issued the order then returned to his wine.
“You’ve not told me what brings you out here, your
Highness.â€
“Adrina has been kidnapped by the Hythrun. They left the
border just
before Jenga surrendered.â€
Terbolt looked genuinely horrified. “Gods! How did they get
across
the border? Wasn’t she guarded?â€
“I believe my wife may have . . .
contributed . . . to her own capture,†Cratyn
said
cautiously. He did not want to admit to Lord Terbolt that she had run
away.
The duke frowned. “I was never happy with this arrangement,
Cratyn.
You know that. I would far rather you had married my daughter.â€
“And I would much rather have married Chastity, my
Lord.â€
“There’s not much we can do about it now, I
suppose,†Terbolt said
with a sigh.
“Not much.†Cratyn sipped his wine and studied the
duke over the rim
of his cup. “Unless of course, something were to happen to my
wife.â€
“Your Highness?â€
“She has been kidnapped by the Hythrun, after all.
You know
what barbarians they are. They might do anything. For that matter, they
may even kill her.†He had heard Cratyn express the same
sentiment to
Drendyn, but never so coldly, so calmly.
“That would be a great shame,†Terbolt agreed, with
the same, bland
expression. If Mikel had not heard it for himself, he would not have
believed the duke could agree to such a thing so easily. “Are
you sure
they came this way? We’ve seen no sign of them.â€
Before Cratyn could answer the tent flap was thrown open and a
Defender stepped inside. He saluted sharply before speaking.
“R’shiel is not in her tent, my Lord. If you would
tell me where she
has been moved, I will have her brought here immediately.â€
“What do you mean she’s not in her tent?â€
“She was moved a short time ago, sir. The captain who
collected her
said that it was at your request. I thought perhaps —â€
“I gave no such orders! Who was the captain?â€
“I don’t know, sir. The troopers on duty
didn’t recognise him.â€
Cratyn leapt to his feet, knocking over the chair in his haste.
“It
was Tarja Tenragan! I’d stake my life on it!â€
“I don’t see how —â€
“He was with them! Don’t you see? That’s why
we’ve found no sign of
the Hythrun. They’ve been hiding, waiting for their chance to
rescue
the demon child. Who else could it be?â€
Terbolt thought about it for less then a minute. “How long
ago did
they take her, Captain?â€
“A quarter of an hour, perhaps, my Lord, no more.â€
“Then they’ll still be in the camp somewhere. Rouse
your men,
Captain! We have intruders among us. R’shiel must not be
allowed to
escape. And I want Tarja Tenragan. I don’t particularly care
whether
he’s dead or alive.â€
The Defender saluted sharply enough, but it was clear, even to
Mikel, that he did not care for his orders. Cratyn was pacing the tent
impatiently. As soon as the Medalonian had left, he turned to Terbolt.
“If Tarja is here, then Wolfblade is out there somewhere
too. And
that means Adrina is with them.â€
Terbolt nodded and reached for his sword. “Then the hunting
should
be good tonight. Tarja Tenragan’s head will make an excellent
trophy.â€
“You can mount it over the gates of Yarnarrow
Castle,†Cratyn agreed
with bloodthirsty enthusiasm. “Right next to that bitch
Adrina’s.â€
CHAPTER 62
As R’shiel’s days blurred into
each other, she
knew they were getting closer and closer to Karien. Every day took her
nearer to the decision she realised she would soon have to make. The
decision that might cost her her life.
Xaphista spoke to her often, coaxing one minute, taunting the next.
As they neared the border his attempts to win her over developed an
edge of desperation which R’shiel found inexplicable. They were
nearing
the place where he was strongest. If anything, she thought he might
have begun to relax.
She was led to her tent once the camp was set up, and went inside
without complaint. The priests left her alone now. Even Terbolt showed
no interest in her. She was simply the package that he was escorting
north. He had no interest in social intercourse, even assuming that
R’shiel would have responded to it. Loneliness can destroy the soul, R’shiel. How can I be lonely with you filling my head, day and night? I would be a good friend, demon child. I would never allow you
to be lonely. You need to study humans a bit more, Xaphista. Promising that
you’ll never leave me alone is hardly a pleasant thought. Is it pleasure you seek? I can give you more pleasure than you
could possibly imagine. You don’t understand pleasure. Then you shall teach me to understand. Tell me what you want
and I will learn. Why are you so desperate? Why are you so stubborn?
When R’shiel refused to answer, he went away.
Later that evening, after her barely touched meal had been removed
by a silent priest, she lay on her pallet and pondered her fate
consciously for the first time since her capture.
Her chances of rescue were remote. Brak would have come to her
already if he could. The demons were linked to her power and she could
not call them without invoking the pain of the collar. Tarja was on the
border, probably already in the custody of the Kariens and awaiting
execution. Damin Wolfblade was either a prisoner of the Kariens himself
or fleeing for Hythria. The Harshini would not bestir themselves from
Sanctuary with so many Karien priests abroad and the Primal
gods . . . well, if Xaphista were to be believed, it was
their fault she was in this mess in the first place.
As she ran through the list of those who might come to her aid, she
realised that she was truly on her own. If she was to be saved
— if she
wanted to be saved — she was going to have to do
something about
it herself.
The Harshini power that made her what she was lurked tantalisingly
out of reach. She knew it was there; could feel it beckoning, but the
pain that barred her way was stronger than any wall. The only way to
access it was to get rid of the collar, and Xaphista would not allow
that to happen until he was certain that she was completely and utterly
his. There was no point in pretending. He was a god. He could see into
her soul. If he willingly removed the collar, it would be because he
knew that she was no longer a threat to him.
Escape that way was no escape at all.
Or perhaps it was. Perhaps he was right. Why should she do the
bidding of the Primal gods who had been responsible for so much of her
suffering? Why shouldn’t she join with Xaphista? A lifetime of
comfort
lay down that path. As the High Priestess of the Overlord, she would
know unlimited power. She could have anything she wanted. Xaphista
would destroy Loclon if she asked. He could spare Tarja if she demanded
it. Anything you want.
The idea was very, very tempting. Come to me, demon child. Now!
R’shiel did not answer immediately. Besides the weighty
nature of
the decision she faced, there were voices outside that sounded vaguely
familiar. She sat up, straining to hear the exchange. Then the tent
flap opened and Tarja stepped through.
He stared at her wordlessly for a moment. The guttering candle by
the pallet only served to highlight his shock at her appearance. Her
bruises had faded, and her hair had grown out enough so that at least
she didn’t have bald patches any more, but she knew she looked
terrible. She was thin and wasted and so deep into herself that she
found herself unable to return.
“R’shiel?†Do I look so bad that he doesn’t recognise me? Turn away from him, demon child. He cannot offer you the
succour that I can. Come to me now, child. Everything you ever wanted
rests with me.
But Xaphista was wrong. Everything she ever wanted stood before her,
with a look of shock and despair on his face.
His presence seemed to give her an anchor. She clung to it, like a
climber pulling himself hand over hand up a long rope, out of a hole so
deep the top was merely a speck of light in the distance.
“R’shiel? Do you know who I am?â€
She nodded. It was the best she could do.
A small relieved smile flickered over his lips then he stepped
closer and gently took her hand.
“I’m taking you out of here,†he explained,
as if he knew how hard
she was trying to comprehend. “We have to walk away like
nothing’s
wrong.†You will never know peace if you turn from me now!
She nodded again, not capable of speaking. Tarja held open the flap
and she walked forward, her footsteps taking all her concentration. He doesn’t even love you! Not really. Kalianah forced
it on
him. Only I can love you like you want to be loved.
R’shiel fell in with the guard brought to escort her from
the tent.
Tarja walked by her side. He was so tense she could feel it radiating
off him like light from the sun. You will not defeat me, demon child.
She ignored him, understanding now that her responses gave him power
over her. Acknowledging his presence was only a step away from
worshipping him and it was worship that gave this elevated demon his
strength. You will find that all you believe in is a lie. Then, when you
come to face me, I will not be so understanding. You will suffer for
this.
Then the collar started to burn.
CHAPTER 63
Adrina waited in the darkness with Tamylan,
holding the six horses that would take Damin, her and Tamylan,
Almodavar and the two other Raiders Damin had chosen to accompany them
to freedom. The entire band would split into similar small groups and
scatter in every direction. The plan was to give the Defenders so many
targets that they would not know which was the one they sought. She
wasn’t even sure which direction they would head, but it would
be
opposite to the one Tarja and Brak took with R’shiel. There was
no
point in making things any easier for their adversaries than it already
was.
They had said their goodbyes earlier and Tarja had surprised her by
seeking her out. As he had always maintained a distance between them,
the spectre of her brother’s death prevented them ever becoming
close,
she found his gesture quite out of character. He had led her away a
short distance from the others as they were preparing to depart.
“If we succeed, we may never meet again, your
Highness.â€
“I respect you, Tarja, but not enough to hope we fail on the
off-chance we might become friends.â€
“Then can a would-be friend give you some parting
advice?â€
“If you think it will do any good. Listening to advice
isn’t one of
my strong suits either.â€
He smiled for a moment, then his expression grew serious.
“Decide
what you plan to do about Damin, and sooner rather than later.â€
“What’s to decide? I know he’s your friend,
Tarja, but don’t mistake
his actions for anything noble. He doesn’t want a Karien heir
to my
father’s throne. It’s really that simple.â€
Tarja shook his head. “Kid yourself all you want, Adrina.
He’s in
love with you. Probably almost as much as you are with him.†He
held up
his hand to forestall her protest. “Don’t bother to
deny it. The only
two people in Medalon who can’t see what’s going on are
you and Damin.â€
“You’re imagining things!†she scoffed.
“Am I?†he asked. “In that case, it
doesn’t matter where you go,
simply that you stay free of Cratyn. I’ll go and tell Damin
you’ve
decided to come with R’shiel and me instead, shall I? That way
he’s
free to head back to Hythria and you can —â€
“No!†Her panic at his suggestion had surprised her.
He smiled. “See? It’s not really that simple at all,
is it?â€
Adrina was not willing to concede the unthinkable.
“You’re jumping
to conclusions, Tarja. If I go with Damin, I’ll be closer to
home. The
gods alone know where you and R’shiel are liable to wind
up.â€
Tarja shook his head and smiled knowingly. “Have it your
way, your
Highness. But don’t say I didn’t warn you.â€
He leaned forward and kissed her cheek, then led her back to the
others. Have it your way. Adrina stamped her feet against the cold
and replayed the conversation in her mind. It was her own fault, she
knew. These Medalonians simply didn’t understand. She’d
had scores of
lovers . . . well, that was an exaggeration, but
she’d
had several. They were fun for a while and then they left. Of course,
they had all been court’esa, and in the employ of her
father,
but that didn’t make them any less
intimate . . .
well . . . maybe it did. A court’esa’s
livelihood depended on their ability to satisfy and entertain their
employer. She was the king’s daughter so she had only ever been
provided with the very best.
Damin was her first — her only — lover who did not
need her approval
or her patronage. He did not need her wealth. He did not need her
position to advance himself. He could not even marry her as she was
already married to someone else. On the contrary, he courted danger by
courting her.
Perhaps that was the attraction for him. It certainly wasn’t
love.
The heir to the Hythrun throne did not fall in love with the
King of Fardohnya’s eldest daughter. That, along with lovers
who rode
all day and made love all night, belonged in a bard’s tale. It
was the
sort of plot one could expect to find in a badly acted tragedy by a
band of travelling minstrels. It simply didn’t happen in real
life.
She would not allow it to happen.
One of the horses snorted irritably. Adrina patted the
gelding’s
neck, whispering soothing nothings to him, hoping nobody could hear
them. What in the name of the gods is taking them so long?
Adrina peered into the darkness, wishing she knew how long they had
been waiting. It seemed to be forever, but she was not good at judging
time. Others who took care of such mundane things had always regulated
her life. She glanced at Tamylan who was standing by the other horses.
The day’s rest had done her good, but she was still stiff and
sore. She
held the reins, standing close to the horses for warmth, her whole body
listening for danger. Perhaps I should ask Tam what she thinks?
Adrina knew that if asked for, Tamylan’s opinion would be as
honest
as it was tactless. I should do something for her when we get home. Free her,
maybe, and gift her with some property. Enough that she need never work
again. She really has been a tower of strength through all of this. I
wonder what I ever did to deserve such loyalty?
Not much, that Adrina could recall. How did I ever come to this? she wondered. I am
standing here in the dead of the night, freezing to death, a bare fifty
paces from a camp full of Defenders, in the middle of nowhere and the
only people I can count as my friends are a slave, a man wanted for
murder and an enemy warlord.
Which brought her back to wondering about Damin.
She was determined not to believe what Tarja told her, but when they
had sneaked away into the darkness Damin had slipped back to kiss her
goodbye. It was, short, hard and passionate. Not the kiss of a lover,
but the kiss of a daredevil stealing a moment of pleasure in the midst
of danger.
He wasn’t in love with anyone but himself.
All thoughts of Damin Wolfblade’s failings were suddenly
forgotten
as a high-pitched, agonised scream split the night. The horses reared
at the sound, almost jerking Adrina’s arm out of its socket.
She and
Tamylan struggled to keep the beasts under control as all hell broke
loose in the Defenders’ camp.
Torches flared brightly as the camp was roused, the sound of
shouting, of orders issued then countermanded, overlaid the screams
that tore into Adrina’s soul.
The screams were female. Whoever it was, she sounded like she was
dying.
“Mount up, Tam!†she whispered urgently. When Damin
and the others
made it out of the camp, every second would count. The shouting grew
closer and the torches were so near that she could see the flames
clearly, although the fold of the land still concealed their bearers.
Tam scrambled into the saddle of the nearest horse, but dropped the
reins of the other two. With a curse, Adrina kicked her mount forward
and leaned down to reach for the reins of the nearest beast.
“Go! Get out of here! Now!â€
She turned toward the shout and discovered Damin, Almodavar and one
of the Raiders barrelling down the small slope behind them. On their
heels were so many Defenders she could not begin to count them. She
froze for a moment, torn between escape and assuring herself that Damin
would win free of his pursuers.
“Run!†Damin screamed, seeing her hesitation.
The slope was swarming with Defenders now. Torches dotted their
ranks, lighting their red coats in scattered patches along the ridge
like drops of hot blood. Tam gave up trying to catch the other horse
and looked to her mistress desperately.
“Adrina! Let’s go!â€
She wavered for another instant. Long enough to see first Almodavar
and then the Raider, overcome by the Defenders. But Damin still ran
free.
Turning her horse savagely, she galloped toward him. Tam’s
desperate
cry of protest was drowned out by the shouts of the Defenders and the
tortured screams that tore relentlessly through the darkness. The gap
between them narrowed as the distance between Damin and the Defenders
closed even faster.
The arrow, when it hit her in the shoulder, took her completely by
surprise. She toppled from the saddle just as Damin reached her and
that was only seconds before the Defenders overcame them both.
She had time to notice that the screams had stopped, just before she
fainted.
When Adrina came to she was in a tent, which was
bare of anything but the centre pole supporting the roof. She realised
there was another body that lay groaning softly on the other side of
the tent. She rolled over and cried out in pain. Her shoulder ached
abominably and her fingers came away sticky with blood when she gently
probed the source of her agony.
She tried to recall what had happened, but the details were sketchy.
She remembered trying to help Damin. And the screams. Gods, she would
never forget the screams. Something had hit her and she had fallen. Had
Damin won free? She seemed to recall seeing his face, his eyes full of
anger. Why had he been angry? Because she had tried to come to his
rescue? Typical. And what in the name of the gods had happened to Tam? Her
last sight of the slave was her desperately calling Adrina back. Had
she been captured too?Why wasn’t she here? The
fate of a
female slave in a Fardohnyan war camp was a foregone conclusion, but
the Defenders were better disciplined. The Sisterhood who ruled them
would not countenance such behaviour. Tamylan’s absence meant
she had
escaped — or she was dead. Adrina prayed it was the former. She
feared
it was the latter.
The body groaned again and Adrina stopped thinking of her own
troubles long enough to wonder who it was. She sat up carefully and
moved across the small gap separating them on her knees. Her companion
was a young woman with short-cropped red hair wearing dark,
close-fitting leathers and a silver collar smeared with dried blood.
“R’shiel?â€
It couldn’t really be anyone else, but she was hardly what
Adrina
had envisioned. The girl was younger than she expected, and in her
present condition she was far from the matchless beauty Damin had
described. What did one say to the fabled Harshini demon child?
“I’m Adrina,†she said, unable to think of
anything else.
R’shiel stared at her uncomprehendingly.
“We have a mutual friend,†she added inanely.
“Tarja Tenragan.†I sound like Lady Chastity.
The demon child blinked at the mention of Tarja’s name, but
that was
the only reaction Adrina could get from her.
“R’shiel?â€
She shook her shoulder, gently at first, and then quite roughly when
that had no effect. Although R’shiel’s eyes were open,
there was no
light of comprehension in them. Adrina shrugged and immediately
regretted it. Her shoulder was pounding and there was no point speaking
to someone who was so obviously not listening. Brak had said something
about that. Something about R’shiel retreating so far into
herself that
she was almost comatose.
“Well, I hope you don’t stay away for too much
longer,†she told
R’shiel irritably. “Right now the only thing
that’s going to save
either of us is a bloody miracle, so if you don’t mind, get
over
whatever it is that’s upsetting you girl, and come to your
senses.
There are people here who need you.â€
Her reprimand delivered, Adrina sat back on her heels and waited for
them to come for her.
CHAPTER 64
There are people here who need you.
The words filtered down through R’shiel’s pain. She
did not know who
had voiced them, but they echoed through the emptiness like a reproach. I warned you, demon child. If you will not come to me through
love, you will come to me through fear. The end result is the same.
The memory of the pain was too fresh for R’shiel to deny
Xaphista’s
claim. But if she could not face him, she could run from him. There are people here who need you.
R’shiel clung to the thought, clawing her way back to sanity
with
every scrap of her remaining strength.
She blinked suddenly and looked around. Canvas walls surrounded her
and the ground where she lay was cold and hard. She turned her head,
ignoring the pain the movement caused as the square of bright light
intruded. It was blocked a moment later by the figure of a man stepping
through, followed by several others. They were Defenders, but that
meant nothing. The Defenders were her enemies now.
Someone pulled her to her feet, along with another prisoner.
R’shiel
did not have time to wonder who she was before they were both hustled
out of the tent and led through the camp to Lord Terbolt’s tent.
Waiting inside was Lord Terbolt, a young man with brown hair and
angry eyes, and in the corner, the young Karien boy who had been a
prisoner in the Defenders’ camp. She could not imagine how he
came to
be here.
“Your Highness,†Terbolt said with a short bow.
R’shiel was a little surprised to hear her fellow prisoner
being
addressed so formally. It hurt too much to move her head so she tried
to study her out of the corner of her eye.
She was shorter than R’shiel, but even her rough clothing
and her
dishevelled appearance could not conceal her innate beauty. She was
foreign; her skin was dusky and her hair much darker than
R’shiel’s,
and she had startling green eyes. Perhaps she was Fardohnyan. She
certainly wasn’t from Medalon and Karien never produced such
exotic
looks.
“And this is supposed to be the demon child?†the
young man asked
sceptically. “She doesn’t look much, does she?â€
“I recall thinking the same thing when I met you,
Cretin,†the woman
snapped with a surprising amount of venom.
The young man leapt to his feet angrily. “You will only
speak when
spoken to, whore!â€
R’shiel fought to stay conscious, the argument between the
angry
young Karien and the beautiful Fardohnyan woman giving her something to
focus on. She didn’t know either of them, but their conflict
kept the
nothingness at bay. It kept away Xaphista’s persistent attempts
to coax
her back down into the hole. If she went back now, she would never
escape. She knew that with a certainty.
“Don’t you dare speak to me in such a tone!â€
the Fardohnyan
declared. “When my father hears about this —â€
“When he hears about what, Adrina? Your treachery or your
Hythrun
lover?†Adrina. Damin’s floozy in the see-through dress.
Hysterical
laughter bubbled up inside her but she fought it down. The sobering
process was helped considerably by the realisation that this young man
was probably Prince Cratyn. And the Hythrun lover? Even in her
semi-conscious state, R’shiel could easily guess who that was.
“What lover?†Adrina scoffed. “Is this some
pathetic story you’ve
invented to provide an excuse to have me stoned? No one will believe
you, Cretin. I am a loyal and dutiful wife. It is you who could never
get the job done.â€
Cratyn smiled coldly. “I have a witness, Adrina.â€
R’shiel’s eyes fixed on the Karien boy, who looked
as if he would
rather be any place but in this tent. He was so guilty he was trembling
with it.
Adrina glanced at the boy also, then laughed. “Mikel
is your
witness? A boy who’s spent as much time with the enemy as he
has with
you? He’s not even a disciple of the Overlord. He follows
Dacendaran,
the God of Thieves, and I have that from the god
himself.â€
“There are no other gods,†Cratyn retorted. Good, then you don’t need me, R’shiel said
to herself.
Terbolt turned to the boy who cowered under his gaze.
“Is this true, boy? Do you follow a false god?â€
“No!†he cried. “I follow the
Overlord.â€
“That’s not what Dace says,†Adrina said
smugly.
“Dace?†The boy looked utterly confused.
“But he’s just a thief.â€
“Then you do know him?†Terbolt asked.
“Well, yes, but —â€
Cratyn grabbed the boy and shook him savagely. “Is this
true? You
are an agent of the God of Thieves?â€
“Pick on someone your own size, Cretin.â€
He threw the boy down and turned on the princess, slapping her with
a vicious backhanded blow. “Shut up!â€
Adrina stumbled backward but when she looked back at him, once she
regained her balance and wiped the blood from the corner of her mouth,
her eyes were full of defiance.
“It’s not going to work, is it, Cretin. What was
your plan? Hunt me
down and kill me and claim the Hythrun did it? Only the Defenders found
me first, so you had to fall back on your other plan, didn’t
you?
Accuse me of adultery and have me stoned. But your star witness
can’t
testify for you, can he? He isn’t just a disciple of
Dacendaran, he
counts him as a friend! Now what are you going to do?†Cratyn
hit her
again. Adrina staggered backwards, then turned on R’shiel.
“Hey! Demon
child! If you’re thinking of doing anything useful, now would
be a
pretty good time!â€
Cratyn struck her again. His anger had slipped beyond reason.
“Leave the princess alone!†Mikel cried in protest
but Lord Terbolt
held him back. Come to me, R’shiel. Through love or fear, the end
result is
the same.
The boy struggled against Terbolt as Adrina launched herself at
Cratyn. She hit him with a clenched fist, almost knocking him off his
feet. Princess she might be, but she fought like an alley cat, although
she cried out as fresh blood seeped from the wound in her shoulder. But
neither the pain nor the fact that Cratyn was bigger and stronger than
she was seemed to deter her. There are people here who need you. It was Adrina who had spoken those words, R’shiel
realised
with a start.
Cratyn managed to push Adrina off him and draw his sword. At the
sight of the blade, Adrina knew she was done for, R’shiel could
tell by
the look in her eyes. Mikel was sobbing as he realised what Cratyn
intended.
But not Adrina. She was defiant to the last.
“Go on, Cretin. Kill me. But before you do, I want you to
know that
I did take a lover. And do you know what? It was wonderful!
He was strong and passionate and I made love to him every chance I
could, anywhere I could. But the best part . . . the best
part . . . was that he made me forget you and your evil,
insidious Overlord.†If you’re planning to do anything useful, now would be
a pretty
good time. Your evil, insidious Overlord.
Cratyn raised his sword at the same time that R’shiel
reached into
her boot and drew the small dagger that Garet Warner had given her. Her
aim was unerring. It took Cratyn in the chest with a solid thunk.
The young prince looked down in astonishment at the blade that was
buried up to the hilt in his tabard, before his eyes rolled back in his
head and he dropped to the floor.
Adrina stared at R’shiel for a moment then smiled.
“I’ll give you
one thing, demon child, your timing is impeccable.â€
She had no chance to reply. Terbolt threw the boy aside and opened
his mouth to call the guards. R’shiel’s eyes darkened
as she drew on
her power. The burning seared through her but she ignored it.
She understood now. The collar worked on fear as much as pain.
Xaphista had told her that himself. Come to me, R’shiel.
Through
love or fear, the end result is the same. Fear, not pain. It was
her fear of the pain the blocked her power, not the pain itself. If
Adrina could stand fearlessly in the face of death, R’shiel
could cope
with a little burning agony.
She raised her arm and pointed at Terbolt. The duke dropped to the
ground before he could utter a word, dead or unconscious — even
R’shiel
didn’t know for certain. She turned her attention inward then
and
focused on the collar. It disintegrated with a thought, falling away
from her neck like sparkles thrown at a children’s party. With
it went
the pain. In the back of her mind she caught the echo of an anguished
cry. Xaphista realising she was lost to him.
For the first time in weeks, R’shiel felt whole again. The
power
coursing through her eased her pain and healed the burns. The feeling
was the closest thing to pure ecstasy she had ever experienced.
R’shiel turned her black eyes on Adrina. She liked this
fearless
Fardohnyan princess. She reached out and touched her shoulder, felt the
muscle and skin knit beneath her hand.
Adrina stared in wonder for a moment, flexing her healed shoulder,
then she frowned at R’shiel. “Thank you. Now, are you
just going to
stand there looking majestic, or are we going to help the
others?â€
“Where are they?â€
“How should I know? Mikel!â€
The boy edged his way past the bodies of Lord Terbolt and Prince
Cratyn. Adrina caught his sleeve as he neared the entrance and pulled
him to her, squatting down so that she was eye to eye with the
terrified child.
“Do you know where they’re holding the others,
Mikel?â€
He nodded dumbly.
“Good. Then we shall go and rescue them. You needn’t
be afraid.
R’shiel is Harshini and she’ll protect us with her
magic.†The boy
began to cry. Adrina rolled her eyes, but she put her arms around him
and hugged him gently. “There, there, Mikel. Don’t let
it upset you.â€
“But I’ve betrayed the Overlord. And my
prince.â€
“Yes, well, I wouldn’t lose too much sleep over
that, child. You
have Dacendaran to pray to now and Cratyn isn’t worth crying
over. Now,
are you going to help us or not?â€
Mikel wiped his eyes and nodded.
“Good boy. Shall we go then?†She looked up at
R’shiel questioningly.
“This could get messy,†she warned. “The
priests can feel me now and
I’m really not very good at this.â€
Adrina looked around the tent and shrugged. “You seem to be
doing
just fine to me.â€
They stepped out of the tent and into chaos. The priests rushed
toward Terbolt’s tent clutching their magic-killing staffs,
shouting
conflicting orders to the Defenders. As R’shiel emerged into
the
sunlight with Adrina and Mikel, the priests halted their headlong rush.
They stood before her cautiously, their lips moving silently as they
prayed to their god.
Garanus stepped forward, holding his staff before him. The
Defenders, for whom religion was a quaint foreign custom, stood back to
give him room. They were curious, not alarmed. Two women and a child
hardly warranted their attention and they had no idea what lay inside
the Karien lord’s tent. The priests’ antics were more
entertaining than
threatening and they were reluctant allies at best.
“I call on the Overlord to strike you down, demon
child!†Garanus
chanted as he approached. He knew she was drawing on her power, his
staff would have warned him, even if her eyes did not. “I call
on
Xaphista to vanquish your evil!â€
“Vanquish?†Adrina muttered behind her.
“Where do they come
up with this nonsense? Do something about him R’shiel. We
haven’t got
time for this.â€
Brave she might be, but Adrina certainly wasn’t blessed with
patience in any great quantity.
Garanus was chanting loudly, in unison with the other priests. Her
skin tingled as the magic they tried to raise washed over her. It was
stronger than it should have been. Xaphista was lending them a hand.
Without warning a bolt of bright light exploded from the tip of
Garanus’ staff. R’shiel raised her arm deflected the
bolt with a
thought. It landed with crash amidst the tents a few paces away,
sending Defenders scurrying for safety. Another bolt followed it and
then another. Xaphista wanted to destroy her. There was no question
about that now. She had chosen sides and in His mind, chosen the wrong
one. I am the demon child, she told herself, and Xaphista has
only a smattering of believers here. This battle, at least, I can
win.
R’shiel deflected another blinding bolt of lightning and
then
pointed at the staff Garanus carried. It exploded in a burst of
shattered gems, sending the few Defenders left standing diving for
cover. The staffs of the other three priests behind him exploded almost
immediately after.
She looked past them and discovered Brak, his eyes as black as hers,
standing behind the priests. He nodded as she caught his eye, but made
no move to aid her. R’shiel smiled briefly, then focused her
disconcerting eyes on the Kariens.
“If you leave now, I will let you live. If you choose to
stay, you
will meet Xaphista a lot sooner than you expected.â€
To his credit, Garanus hesitated. Without his staff he had no more
power than any other mortal. He debated the issue for a moment or two
then glanced over his shoulder at Brak. He might be brave enough to
tackle one simple girl, but two Harshini filled with a power he was
helpless to combat, was enough to sway him. He conceded defeat with ill
grace.
“This is a temporary victory only, demon child. You cannot
defeat
the Overlord.â€
“We’ll find that out some other day. Now go, before
I change my
mind.â€
The priests fled as the Defenders emerged from their cover. Their
faces ranged from confused to completely stunned. Others hurried to put
out the scattered fires that she had started as she deflected the
lightning. For weeks they had ridden under the command of Terbolt and
his priests. R’shiel’s dismissal of them left them
speechless. Brak
walked toward her and treated her to a rare smile of approval.
“Where have you been?â€
“I could ask you the same thing,†he replied.
Not all the Defenders were at a loss for words, however. A captain
stepped forward, blocking their path, his sword drawn. R’shiel
recognised him as Denjon, one of Tarja’s classmates when they
were
cadets.
“Where is Lord Terbolt, R’shiel?â€
“In the tent with Cratyn,†Adrina answered for her,
rather more
cheerfully than the situation warranted. “You might want to
take
command now, Captain. Lord Terbolt is indisposed and it seems
I’m a
widow.â€
The captain stared at them for a moment, then allowed himself a thin
smile. “That’s tragic news, your Highness. You have my
condolences.â€
“Thank you, Captain, but don’t worry, I’m
sure I’ll be able to deal
with my grief.â€
“Where are Tarja and the others, Denjon?â€
“The Hythrun and the Defenders who tried to free you are
being held
down near the picket line. Tarja’s in the Infirmary
tent.â€
R’shiel’s heart skipped a beat. “Where? What
happened?â€
“What do you think happened, R’shiel? He
doesn’t believe in giving
in gracefully. He took a sword in the belly trying to get you out of
here.â€
There was a reprimand in his words that startled R’shiel.
“You sound
as if you think this is all my fault.â€
“Isn’t it?†Denjon asked. He met her alien
eyes for a moment then
looked away. “Sergeant! Find Captain Dorak and tell him to go
to Lord
Terbolt’s tent. And then go down to the picket line
and . . . . who’s in charge of the
Hythrun?â€
“Lord Wolfblade,†Adrina told him.
“The Lord Wolfblade?†He had obviously not
been aware of the
importance of his prisoner. Adrina nodded, rather amused by his
expression. Denjon turned back to the sergeant. “Bring Lord
Wolfblade
to me. And do it tactfully, Sergeant. The last I heard he was supposed
to be on our side.â€
“Sir!†The man saluted and turned to go, but Denjon
called him back
before he had taken more than two steps.
“Send someone to fetch Captain Kilton and Captain Linst,
too. I’ll
be in the Infirmary.â€
The sergeant left to carry out his orders and Denjon turned back to
R’shiel.
“I have to warn you, he’s in a bad way.â€
“Just take me to him, Denjon.â€
“As you wish.â€
The captain turned and led the way through the camp followed by
R’shiel, Brak, Adrina, Mikel and the curious eyes of a thousand
Defenders who sensed that something very significant had just occurred.
Just how significant it was would not be known until the officers
had decided what to do now that they were effectively free of Karien
control. They had two choices, R’shiel knew: obey their orders
and
continue on to the border, or defy them and choose a much more
dangerous path.
She was certain the latter was what they wanted to do, but she was
not at all certain that they would act on it. The Defenders took their
duty very seriously. Of all the men she knew in the corps, only Tarja
and Jenga had ever had the strength to defy their oath when faced with
something they found they could not stomach.
As Denjon pushed back the flap to the large Infirmary tent and the
sickening smell of blood and death washed over her, she could only hope
that Tarja’s brother captains, when it came to the crunch, were
made of
the same stuff.
CHAPTER 65
The first thing that R’shiel noticed in
the long
tent was the absence of any physics. An occupation almost entirely
restricted to Sisters of the Blade, it did not seem possible that the
Defenders would undertake such a journey without some of them in
attendance. When she questioned Denjon about them, he shrugged.
“It was Lord Terbolt’s decision. There are no
sisters in the camp at
all. I don’t think he trusts them. Besides,†he added.
“We were simply
escorting him to the border. We weren’t expecting any
trouble.â€
“Why would Terbolt want a thousand-man escort? That seems a
bit
excessive, even for a Karien.â€
“Because when the Fardohnyans cross the southern border, the
Defenders will send for reinforcements,†Damin remarked,
pushing
through the tent flap behind them. “If the troops are in the
north,
even if the Sisterhood wanted to, they couldn’t send help. What
the
Kariens don’t know is that Hablet is playing his own game.
He’s not
coming to help the Kariens, he’s heading for Hythria.â€
Adrina spun around at the sound of his voice and flew at him. Damin
caught her in a brief hug then held her at arm’s length.
“Are you
alright?â€
“I’m fine. R’shiel came through in the nick
of time.â€
At the mention of her name, he looked up, unable to hide his shock.
With her hair cut close and her eyes black with the power she refused
to relinquish, she must look nothing like the girl he remembered.
“Where’s Tarja?†he asked.
The sergeant must have told him what was happening, or what little
he knew, at any rate.
R’shiel glanced at Denjon, who pointed to the narrow pallet
at the
far end of the tent. Only a few of the beds were occupied, and the men
in them all looked seriously injured. The Defenders had a fairly
generous definition of “walking woundedâ€. If a man
could stand, he
wasn’t sick enough to be confined to bed. These men were simply
the
worst of the night’s casualties. There would be many more out
in the
camp suffering the effects of Tarja’s abortive rescue attempt.
Afraid of what she would find, she pushed past Denjon and the medic
in attendance and approached him cautiously. Her throat constricted as
she neared him. He was paler than death and barely breathing.
“If you’ve anything important to say to him, make it
quick,†the
medic suggested with cold practicality. “He’s going
fast. Lost so much
blood it’s a wonder he’s still got anything for his
heart to do.â€
R’shiel stared at the man in horror then sought Brak out
among those
crowded into the tent. He had released his hold on the power and his
faded eyes were clouded with doubt.
He knew what she wanted. She did not have to ask.
“I don’t know, R’shiel.â€
Adrina still clung to Damin but she looked at them both with wide
eyes, confused by their doubt.
“What do you mean, you don’t know? You’re
Harshini. You can heal
him, can’t you? R’shiel fixed me up with just a
touch.â€
R’shiel knelt beside the bed and placed her hand on
Tarja’s
forehead. His skin was cold and clammy. He was deeply unconscious, a
step away from death and heading in the wrong direction. The power
seemed to both sharpen and deaden her senses at the same time. She
could feel the life slipping away from him, but she was insulated from
the grief somehow. Perhaps it would hit her later, once she let the
power go.
“Get out,†she ordered softly. When no one seemed
inclined to heed
her, she looked up, her eyes blazing. “Out! All of you!â€
Startled by her tone, they did not argue. As they filed from the
tent, she turned back to Tarja, wishing she knew where to start.
Healing Adrina’s fresh, uncomplicated arrow wound was one
thing.
Bringing someone back from the brink of death was quite another.
R’shiel waited until she knew she was alone, except for the
one
person she was certain would not leave her while she was drawing on
this much power. She didn’t know if it was loyalty or distrust
that
kept him there. Nor did she care.
“I can’t do this, Brak. I don’t know enough
about healing.â€
“I’ll not be much help to you, R’shiel. Like
yours, my talent lies
in the other direction.â€
She looked up sharply, wondering how he could be so callous.
“I have to try.â€
“Have you considered the possibility that this was meant to
be?â€
“What do you mean?†He could not meet her eye.
“Brak! What do you
mean?â€
“Death decides when one’s time is up,
R’shiel, not you, or me, or
anyone else for that matter.â€
“You’re telling me Tarja’s time is
up?â€
“I’m telling you Death doesn’t
negotiate.â€
She pushed the hair from Tarja’s forehead gently.
“What if I speak
to Death? Can’t I ask him not to take Tarja?â€
“Not without offering a life of equal value in
return.â€
“How do you know that?â€
“Because that’s what happened when the Harshini
healed you, R’shiel.
Death demanded a life in return.â€
“Whose life? Who could make that kind of decision?â€
When he did not answer she looked up, her face drained of colour.
“It was you, wasn’t it?†R’shiel looked
down at Tarja for a moment then
slowly climbed to her feet. “Was it Tarja, Brak? Is that why
you want
me to let him die? So you can fulfil your bargain with death?â€
“R’shiel —â€
“Tell me, Brak!†she cried, turning on him angrily.
“Who is going to
die? Whose life did you trade for mine? You bastard! How could you do
such a thing?â€
“I couldn’t let you die, R’shiel.â€
“You think I want to live knowing some poor sod carries a
death
sentence so I can keep breathing? Who, Brak? Who did you condemn to
death? It was Tarja, wasn’t it? Tarja has to die, so I can
live. A soul
of equal value, you said . . .â€
Brak grabbed her by the shoulders and shook her. Hard. She stopped
her tirade and threw her arms around him, sobbing.
“It wasn’t Tarja,†he told her gently as he
held her.
She pulled away from him and wiped her eyes. “Who was it,
Brak?â€
“You don’t need to know.â€
“Yes I do.â€
“No, you don’t. And I’m not going to tell
you, at any rate. See to
Tarja. Perhaps he’s destined to die, perhaps he isn’t.
I don’t know.â€
“I don’t believe in destiny.â€
“Which accounts for most of the trouble you’ve found
yourself in
lately.†He led her back to the pallet and knelt beside her,
studying
Tarja’s unconscious form with a much more experienced eye.
“He’s close
to death, R’shiel. Even Cheltaran would find it hard to bring
him back.â€
“I have the power to flatten mountains, Brak, you said that
yourself. If you could just show me . . .†She
stroked
Tarja’s clammy forehead, her desperation almost severing her
hold on
the power. “Can’t you do what Glenanaran did for me?
Stop time?â€
“And hold him on the edge of death to what purpose,
R’shiel? The
problem isn’t the wound, it’s the blood he’s
lost. You can knit bones
and flesh easily enough, but not even the gods can manufacture blood
out of thin air.â€
“But I can feel him dying!â€
“I know.â€
“Then tell me what to do!†she cried.
“Should I call Cheltaran? He’s
the God of Healing. He should —â€
“He won’t come, R’shiel,†Dacendaran
told her miserably, as he
appeared at the foot of the bed. “Zegarnald won’t let
him.â€
Anger surged through R’shiel, its edge honed by the power
she held. How
dare Zegarnald deny Tarja his only chance at life? ‘What do
you
mean? He won’t let him come?â€
The young god shrugged uncomfortably. “He said something
about you
taking the easy way too often.â€
“You mean Tarja is dying as some sort of test?â€
she gasped
furiously. “What sort of sick breed are you, Dace?
That’s inhuman!â€
“Now you finally begin to understand,†Brak
said.
Dace tugged on a loose thread on his motley shirt, avoiding
R’shiel’s accusing eyes. “It’s not my
fault. I’m not even supposed to
be here. But Kali likes Tarja, so she’s keeping Zegarnald
busy.â€
“What did Kalianah say, Dace?â€
R’shiel looked at Brak, wondering at the question.
“She said to tell R’shiel that love will
prevail.â€
“Oh, well that’s a big help,â€
R’shiel scoffed.
“Don’t be like that. I’m just the messenger.
She said to tell you
that you have guardians that protect you and that protection will
embrace all who love you truly. That’s why she did what she
did, I
think. She knows things sometimes . . . †Dace
trailed
off with a sigh. “I’m sorry, R’shiel. I have to
go. I wish you’d been a
thief. I could have helped you a lot more.â€
R’shiel felt the god leave, but she was too concerned about
Tarja to
care much. She was terrified that he would slip away before she could
intervene, and afraid of what would happen if she did. Living without
him would be hard enough; contributing to his death would be
intolerable.
“You should never ignore a message from the gods,
R’shiel,†Brak
warned. “Particularly one as powerful as Kalianah.â€
“Love will prevail,†she repeated
caustically, in a fair
imitation of Dace.
“She also said you have guardians that protect you, and that
protection will embrace all who love you truly.â€
“What guardians?â€
Brak did not answer. He merely waited for the answer to come to her.
When it did, she could have cried, but whether from anger at her own
stupidity, or sheer relief, she could not tell.
“The demons!â€
She had barely framed the thought when Dranymire popped into
existence at the foot of the bed. His appearance was followed by a
high-pitched squeal, as the little demon who had grown so fond of
sleeping in their bed scrambled thoughtlessly across Tarja and jumped
into her arms. The little demon appeared to have recovered from her
ordeal in the Citadel. She hugged the creature and turned to Dranymire.
“We were wondering when you would remember us,†the
demon said in
his unnaturally deep voice.
“I’m sorry, Dranymire. But after the
Gathering . . .
so much has happened . . .â€
The demon shrugged. “You have nothing to apologise for,
except
perhaps for not thinking of us sooner. What grieves you, demon
child?â€
“Can you show me how to heal Tarja?â€
“Did you learn nothing at Sanctuary?â€
“But he’s lost so much blood!â€
“Don’t human bodies make their own blood?â€
Dranymire asked
curiously. “They certainly spill enough of it to make one think
it was
readily replaced.â€
“He’ll die before his body can replace what
he’s lost,†Brak
explained.
“Then you need blood to keep him alive, long enough for his
own body
to repair itself.†He looked at R’shiel with his
too-big eyes. They
were filled with compassion. “This human’s death would
cause you much
pain, I suspect.â€
“More than anything I have ever suffered.â€
Dranymire nodded solemnly. “We could do nothing to protect
you from
pain the gods imposed on you, but we can do something to prevent
this.â€
“What can you do? I don’t understand.â€
“We shall be his blood.â€
“What?†R’shiel began to wonder if
she had slipped back into
the realms of her living nightmare.
“We shall meld and become the blood that he
requires.â€
“You can do that?†She looked at Brak for
confirmation. The
idea was too bizarre to comprehend.
Brak nodded. “Wounded Harshini have been saved by their
bonded
demons entering their bodies until they could reach help. It’s
not
unheard of.â€
“It is where I come from.â€
He smiled faintly. “You still have so much to learn,
don’t you?â€
“Will this really work?â€
Brak glanced at Dranymire who shrugged. “Humans and Harshini
are not
so different.â€
“Then let’s do it,†she announced, reaching
for the thin blanket
that covered Tarja.
Brak laid a restraining hand on hers. “A word of caution,
R’shiel.
This will mean that until he’s recovered enough to survive on
his own,
Tarja will be literally possessed by demons. Not even Dranymire knows
what that will do to him if he survives. Are you prepared for
that?â€
She thought for a moment before replying.
“One problem at a time. I’ll deal with the
consequences later.â€
He shook his head. “Just so long as you understand that you
could be
making a big mistake.â€
R’shiel did not reply. Rather she pulled the blanket down,
revealing
the blood-soaked bandages that bound Tarja’s midriff.
“I mean it, R’shiel.â€
She looked up at him and shrugged. “I don’t make
mistakes, Brak.
Everything I’ve ever done in my life seemed like the right idea
at the
time.â€
CHAPTER 66
Denjon led Adrina and the others away from the
Infirmary tent, obviously glad to be gone from such blatant proof of
the continuing existence of the Harshini. R’shiel had obviously
been
acquainted with the captain and he seemed to know Tarja quite well,
too. It was more than likely the reason he had not struck them down
when they emerged from Terbolt’s tent. On the other hand, if
Jenga’s
reaction had been anything to go by, surrender was an alien concept to
these men. Perhaps R’shiel had merely provided them with the
excuse
their training and their oath denied them.
Whatever the reason for their cautious cooperation, three other
captains awaited them outside Terbolt’s tent. Denjon introduced
them as
Dorak, Kilton, and Linst. The men all wore that same serious, wary
expression that she had come to associate with the Defenders. Between
that and their identical uniforms, she found it hard to tell them apart.
“The Karien Prince is dead,†Dorak told Denjon,
casting a wary eye
over Adrina and Damin as they approached. “He was stabbed.
Terbolt’s
dead too, although there’s not a mark on him. It could have
been
poison.â€
“It wasn’t poison,†Denjon replied.
“Are they still in there?â€
Dorak nodded.
“Let’s talk in the mess tent. I’d rather
this wasn’t overheard.†He
glanced at Mikel meaningfully.
The child followed Adrina like a faithful shadow, afraid to let her
out of his sight.
“Mikel, why don’t you go down and join Captain
Almodavar and the
others. I’m sure he’ll look after you until we finish
here.â€
“Am I a prisoner now?â€
“No. Just go down and tell him everything will be sorted out
soon,â€
Damin added, with surprising gentleness. “Your
brother’s down there
somewhere too. I’m sure he’ll be happy to see
you.â€
He nodded doubtfully. “Is he all right?â€
“Why don’t you go and find out?â€
With one last cautious look, the boy turned and ran towards the
picket lines.
The captains led the way to another long tent. The only difference
between this one and the infirmary was the interior. The mess tent was
lined with collapsible tables and benches rather than beds. The smell
was marginally better, too. Once inside, Denjon dismissed the cooks and
waited until he was certain they were gone before he turned to the
others.
“We have a decision to make, gentlemen.â€
“Then perhaps you’d like to tell us what’s
going on?†one of the
captains said. It was Linst or the other one. Adrina really
couldn’t
remember which one was which.
“I would if I knew. Perhaps you could enlighten us, your
Highness?â€
After so long among the Kariens, who considered the input of a woman
no input at all, Adrina wasn’t really expecting to be included
in the
conversation. But these men served the Sisterhood. They suffered no
illusions about the ability of women. She glanced at Damin who squeezed
her hand in encouragement.
“I want to know what happened to my slave, first.â€
“What slave?†Denjon asked.
“The young woman who was with me when we were
captured.â€
The captains glanced at each other and shrugged. “There were
no
other women captured, your Highness. She probably escaped in the
confusion.â€
“Could you send some men out to find her, Captain?
She’s alone in a
foreign country and not equipped to survive on her wits. Not in the
wilderness, at least.†Denjon nodded to Linst, who left the
tent to
issue the order. That worrying detail taken care of, Adrina felt a lot
more secure about her future among these men. “Thank you. Now
what did
you want to know?â€
“Let’s start with what you’re doing
here,†Denjon suggested.
“I fled Karien. The Defenders offered me their protection
and when
the order for the surrender came from the Citadel, I decided to leave,
rather than return to my husband. Lord Wolfblade kindly offered to
escort me.â€
“Did you kill Cratyn?†Kilton asked curiously.
“No. R’shiel did.â€
“No offence, ma’am, but I can’t say
I’m sorry. He was an obnoxious
little bastard.â€
Adrina immediately warmed to the captain. Cratyn must have made
quite an impact in the short time he was in the Defender’s camp.
“No need to apologise, Captain. You merely demonstrate that
you are
an excellent judge of character.â€
“Where are the rest of the Hythrun?†Denjon asked
Damin, anxious to
stick to the business at hand, although he did allow himself a small
smile at Adrina’s comment. None of these men seemed the least
bit
bothered by Cratyn’s demise. “Rumours in the Citadel
had it that you
had near a thousand men on the border.â€
“I don’t share the Lord Defender’s
enthusiasm for following orders,
Captain. The bulk of my men left as soon as I realised Jenga intended
to surrender. We were the last to leave.â€
“And Tarja?â€
Damin smiled at the Captain’s expression. “He was
following Jenga’s
orders. I believe the plan was to make life as difficult as possible
for your new masters. The Defenders he took with him were all he
thought he could sneak out without the Kariens noticing.â€
Denjon nodded, looking rather relieved. “Following the Lord
Defender’s orders, you say? Well that makes our decision
somewhat
easier.â€
“Making life difficult for the Kariens does seem a rather
noble
cause,†Kilton agreed with a grin.
Linst returned from arranging Tamylan’s rescue party and
looked at
his brother captains with a shake of his head. “You
can’t seriously be
considering joining him?â€
“I doubt Tarja will live long enough to join
anything,†Dorak added.
“But if the Lord Defender ordered him to undertake a special
mission,
aren’t we duty-bound to pick up where he left off?â€
“There’s a thousand men in this camp! How many of
them do you think
will want to follow you on such a damned fool mission?â€
“Most of them, I imagine,†Kilton shrugged.
“Bring me one man in the
camp, from the lowliest kitchenhand to the highest ranked officer, who
was pleased to be marching anywhere under Karien command.â€
Linst nodded in agreement, albeit reluctantly. “Aye. But if
we
follow the Lord Defender’s orders, aren’t we disobeying
the Sisterhood?â€
“Ah, but there are no Sisters of the Blade here. In the
absence of
orders to the contrary, we have no choice but to follow the orders of
the Lord Defender.â€
Adrina smiled at Kilton’s rather liberal interpretation of
the law.
“That seems fairly cut and dried,†Denjon agreed.
“And what about
you, Lord Wolfblade? Are you still allied with Medalon?â€
“You’re holding my men prisoner, Captain.â€
“Then you should consider your answer most carefully, my
Lord.â€
Damin smiled faintly. “Much as I hate to turn down a good
fight, I’m
afraid I must return to Hythria. The Fardohnyans will be standing at my
border come spring. I plan to discourage them from crossing.â€
“Pity,†Kilton sighed. “Your Raiders are
quite good in a fight.â€
Judging by the surprised look on Damin’s face, such an
admission was
high praise indeed.
“You and your men are free to go, Lord Wolfblade. If you
stay clear
of the Citadel, you should be able to make it home by spring,â€
Denjon
told him. “You were right when you said the bulk of our forces
are in
the north. By the way, I heard that the Warlord of Elasapine withdrew
from Bordertown as soon as he heard of the surrender.â€
“Narvell’s no better at following orders than I
am,†Damin said.
“It’s a pity, though. He’ll be too far into
Hythria to call him back,
by the time I get there.â€
“Then we have to stop my father attacking Hythria,â€
Adrina said.
“How?â€
“By offering him an alliance.â€
“He’s already allied with Karien.â€
“The alliance was dependent on my marriage to Cratyn. As
that is no
longer the case, the treaty can reasonably be assumed to be null and
void.â€
If Kilton could twist the law to suit the outcome he desired, there
was no reason Adrina couldn’t do the same thing.
“I doubt if Hablet will see things quite so
clearly,†Damin warned.
“Then we’ll have to make him see.â€
“Marry her, Damin, then he won’t have a
choice.†The demon child’s
unexpected entrance gave Adrina a chance to recover from the shock of
her suggestion. R’shiel had finally shed the power she had used
to
destroy Terbolt and intimidate the Karien priests, and her eyes had
returned to normal. They were an unusual shade of violet, wide set and
clear. She was very tall — almost as tall as Damin —
and she carried
herself with an unconscious aura of power. The comatose, uncertain
child who had been led into Terbolt’s tent had emerged a woman,
sure of
her power and certain of her purpose.
“Is Tarja . . .?†Denjon ventured
cautiously.
“Dead? No. He’ll live. Brak is with him.
He’s not to be moved, nor
is anyone to approach him until I say so. Is that clear?â€
Denjon and the others nodded their agreement. Adrina doubted anyone
would deny her when she used that tone. She then turned to Damin and
smiled. It was obvious R’shiel was fond of the Warlord and the
thought
sent an unexpected spear of jealousy through her.
“I wasn’t kidding, Damin. If you marry Adrina, and
Hablet still
wants to attack Hythria, he’ll have to go over the Sunrise
Mountains.
Fardohnyan law demands a peace treaty between both Houses in the
marriage. It may not keep him out of the rest of Hythria, but at least
he won’t be able to take the easy road. He’ll be unable
to set foot in
Krakandar Province until he figures a way around the marriage
contract.â€
Damin nodded thoughtfully. He seemed to accept the suggestion with
remarkable composure. “It would delay him, I suppose, assuming
I was
willing to go along with such a ludicrous plan. But he could just as
easily deny the marriage had taken place and carry on
regardless.â€
“I’ll have Jelanna perform the ceremony herself, if
that’s what it
takes.â€
Adrina gasped. Somehow the idea that this girl could command the
Goddess of Fertility, the goddess her father worshipped with almost
fanatical intensity, was more terrifying than anything else she had
done this morning.
But things were moving a bit too fast and R’shiel had not
even asked
her what she thought about this rather hasty decision.
“Do I get a say in this?â€
“Why?†R’shiel asked. “Were you
planning to object?â€
“That’s not the point. But as a matter of fact, I
was planning to
object. I’ve had all the arranged marriages I want, thank you.
Besides,
I’ve been a widow for just over an hour. It’s
indecent.â€
“Don’t be such a hypocrite,†R’shiel
said bluntly. “You’ve been
sleeping with Damin for ages and he obviously loves you, or he would
never have been so stupid as to try to keep you from returning to
Karien.â€
Adrina felt herself blushing, something she had not done since she
was sixteen and was introduced to her first court’esa.
She
glanced at Damin who actually looked embarrassed. The captains were
fighting to maintain straight faces.
R’shiel did not seem to notice, or care, about their
feelings.
“Denjon, if you truly mean to undermine the Karien
occupation of
Medalon, then the first useful thing you can do is give me a few
experienced men and enough supplies to reach the Citadel.â€
“I’d have thought the Citadel was the last place
you’d want to go.â€
“There is something that I have to take care of. Or rather,
someone.
I had it pointed out to me very recently that I take the easy way out,
too often. That’s about to change.â€
“I’ll see to it,†Denjon agreed.
“Unless you want to wait until
Tarja . . .â€
“No. This can’t wait and I’ve done all I can
for him. Brak will
watch over him until he regains consciousness. In the meantime,
you’d
better do something about those priests I let loose. You don’t
want
them reaching the border and warning the Kariens about what’s
happened
here.â€
“There’s the rest of Cratyn’s troop out
there, too,†Damin reminded
them. “You’d be well advised to do something about them
before the day
is out.â€
“We can take care of a few hundred Kariens,†Denjon
assured him.
“As for you two,†R’shiel said, turning on
Damin and Adrina. “Get
one of the captains to marry you; they can perform the ceremony at a
pinch under Medalonian law. Once Tarja has recovered, Brak can go to
Talabar to deliver the news to King Hablet. If one of the fabled
Harshini walking his palace halls doesn’t convince him, nothing
will.â€
Damin was no more able to argue with her than Adrina was. This was
not R’shiel speaking, this was the demon child finally come
into her
power. She had no intention of marrying Damin Wolfblade and was quite
sure he did not want to marry her; but she would wait until
R’shiel
left for the Citadel before she announced it. Adrina was not foolish
enough to defy R’shiel in her current mood.
“There’s a vineyard just south of Testra, that we
used as a
headquarters during the rebellion,†she continued, addressing
the
captains once more. “My guess is that Tarja sent his troops
there.
You’ll need to get a message to them. Once I’ve taken
care of what I
have to do at the Citadel, I’ll join you.â€
“And then what, R’shiel?†Damin asked
cautiously.
She hesitated for a moment, as if some weighty decision hung in the
balance.
“And then I’m going to put a stop to this insanity,
Damin. I am
going to kick the Kariens out of Medalon and make damned sure they
never stick their noses over our border again.â€
“I don’t know how you think you can manage
that,†Dorak scoffed.
“It’s quite simple, Captain,†the demon
child replied. “I am going
to bow to the inevitable and fulfil my destiny. I am going to destroy
Xaphista.â€
CHAPTER 67
R’shiel rode far from the
Defenders’ camp under a
leaden sky, her face flushed and tingling from the cold. She had told
nobody the reason for her journey, just that she needed to be alone.
She had especially avoided Brak. He may have guessed what she was
planning and she did not want to give him the opportunity to object.
The Hythrun mare stretched her legs as the camp dwindled behind
them. She had no particular destination in mind and in truth, for a
good while she simply enjoyed the ride and the speed of the magnificent
sorcerer-bred horse. It was the first time in a very long while she had
done anything for the sheer joy of it, and she was reluctant to end it
too soon.
Eventually, she came to a small rise on the undulating plain and
looked back to discover the Defenders’ camp was completely
obscured by
the fold of the land. She dismounted and stroked the lathered
mare’s
neck, urging her to seek out what feed she could on the sparse winter
plain. With a nicker of understanding the mare wandered off. When
R’shiel was certain the horse was a safe distance from the
knoll, she
turned and looked up at the sky.
“Zegarnald!â€
She received no answer other than the soughing wind rustling through
the dried grass like a satin skirt brushing against a taffeta petticoat.
“Zegarnald!â€
“Demon child.â€
She spun to find the War God standing on the knoll behind her. He
was dressed in golden armour that glittered in the dull afternoon
light. He was enormous. The battles that were tearing this world apart
had made him as strong as he had ever been.
“You defied Xaphista, I see.â€
“No thanks to you.â€
“Brakandaran seems to have taught you disrespect, along with
survival.â€
“Brak didn’t teach me survival, and I don’t
need any lessons in
being disrespectful from anyone,†she retorted.
“Then why did you call me, demon child?â€
“My name is R’shiel.â€
“You are the demon child.â€
“I am R’shiel!†she insisted. “The
demon child is a creature you
invented. It’s not who I am!â€
“Then you refuse your destiny?†The god sounded
puzzled. Such fine
distinctions were beyond his ability to comprehend.
“I’m not refusing it, Zegarnald. I’m
accepting it. I will do as you
ask. I will restore the balance and destroy the gods who have skewed
things by becoming too strong.â€
“Gods? Surely you mean only one god?â€
R’shiel smiled ingenuously. “You surely
don’t think I can just
remove Xaphista without affecting any other gods, do you?â€
Zegarnald pondered the problem for a moment and then nodded slowly.
“Yes, I see. I had not considered that.â€
“Then you will leave me to do fulfil my destiny as I see
fit?â€
The War God frowned. “You will go to Slarn and destroy
Xaphista.
What else is to be done?â€
“Xaphista’s power is drawn from his believers in
Karien. I can’t
destroy him without destroying that too.â€
He thought on that and then nodded slowly. “Yes, I can see
that.â€
“Then you’ll leave me be? No more tests? No
more tempering?â€
“But . . .â€
“Zegarnald, you have to trust me. I’m the only one
who can do this.
You have to let me do it my way. I’m half human. I know how
humans
think. I need you to promise that you will not interfere unless I ask
you to.â€
“You ask a great deal of me, demon child.â€
“You’re asking a great deal of me,†she
pointed out.
The God of War thought over the problem for a while before he nodded
his agreement.
“Very well. I will do as you ask.â€
“Give me your oath.â€
“You doubt me?†He swelled at the implied insult.
“No. That’s why I want your oath.â€
“Very well, I give you my solemn promise I will not
interfere in
your handling of this affair unless you ask it.â€
“No matter what happens?â€
“No matter what happens,†he agreed unhappily.
R’shiel smiled at him. “Thank you, Divine One. Now,
just to prove
that I will need your help from time to time, I have a job for
you.â€
“A job?â€
“Yes. I want you to find Damin’s brother, Narvell,
the Warlord of
Elasapine and get him to turn back. Tell him he has to protect
Krakandar from a Fardohnyan invasion.â€
“I AM NOT YOUR MESSENGER!†the god boomed,
making the ground
shake with his indignation.
“As you wish,†she shrugged, turning away from him.
“If Hablet
crosses the Hythrun border too easily, there won’t be a battle.
On the
other hand, if Narvell turns back, there should be a nice little
bloodbath. But, if you’d rather
not . . .â€
“Perhaps I could consent to do this one favour for
you,†the god
conceded with ill grace. “ButI am not your messenger,
demon child. Do not presume to use me in such a manner again.â€
“I wouldn’t dream of it, Divine One.â€
It was nearly dark when R’shiel returned
to the
camp and she rode straight to the infirmary tent to check on Tarja.
Outwardly, his condition had not changed. He still lay as pale as
death and barely breathing, but the fact that he still lived at all was
a good sign. As she knelt beside the pallet, she was shocked to see his
hands and feet bound to the bed with sturdy ropes.
Angrily, she turned on the medic who was changing the bandages of a
man on the other side of the tent.
“Who did this?†she demanded.
“That man who came with you,†the medic shrugged.
“Jack, or Brak, or
whatever his name is. He said things might get a bit rough and that
tying him down was for his own protection.â€
R’shiel was horrified and fully intended to confront Brak
about such
a barbarous practice, but she was not so sure of herself that she
untied the ropes. She sat with Tarja for a time, stroking his pallid
forehead, trying to will him to live, before she left the Infirmary to
seek Brak out.
It was fully dark when she emerged from the Infirmary and she looked
about with a frown, realising she had no idea where Brak would be. She
was still pondering the problem when faint voices raised in anger
reached her. One of the voices was unmistakably female and
R’shiel
could easily guess who it was.
Curiously, she followed the sound to a tent not far from the one
where she and Adrina had been held prisoner. She could see
Adrina’s
silhouette through the canvas wall as she paced in front of the lamp.
They could probably hear her in Talabar.
“In case you’re interested, the whole camp can hear
you screeching,â€
she announced as she pushed the flap back.
Adrina spun around angrily. Damin was sitting on a small campstool
on the other side of the small table that held the flickering lamp
looking thoroughly miserable. A glowing brazier in the corner warmed
the tent, almost as much as Adrina’s anger.
“I DO NOT . . .†she began,
then took a deep
breath. “I do not screech.â€
“You do,†R’shiel said. “I take it
this . . .
argument has to do with my declaration that you two should get married?
So who’s the dissenting party?â€
“R’shiel, perhaps it’s not such a good
idea . . .â€
Damin began.
“Not a good idea! It’s downright insane!â€
Adrina retorted. “Hablet
will have a fit when he hears about it, and the first thing the Hythrun
Warlords will do is hire an assassin to have me killed.â€
“You’ve both lived with the threat of assassins all
your life — what
difference will another make? As for Hablet, we’ll just have to
convince him there’s a profit in it.â€
“And what about how I feel?†Adrina asked,
unable to deny
the truth of R’shiel’s words. Anything that was
profitable was fine by
her father.
“How do you feel, then?â€
“Used!†she snapped without hesitation.
“I need Hythria and Fardohnya at peace, Adrina. I
can’t face
Xaphista any other way.â€
Adrina turned to Damin for support. “Even if this marriage
stays my
father’s hand for a time, the Hythrun Warlords will never
accept me as
their High Princess.â€
“She has a point, R’shiel.â€
“The High Arrion will support you — she’s
your sister isn’t she?
There are already Harshini in Greenharbour. With the Sorcerers’
Collective backing you and once it’s known that the demon child
has
sanctioned your union . . .â€
“The demon child is still a legend in Hythria,â€
Damin reminded her.
“The only way this will work is if you return to Hythria with
us. If
you want to stop a civil war and want the other Warlords to believe in
the demon child, then you’re going to have to show them
the
demon child.â€
“I can’t go to Hythria, Damin. I have to take care
of something at
the Citadel. Tarja will need my help when he’s recovered and I
still
have to figure out how I’m going to deal with the
Kariens.â€
“None of which you will be able to give your full attention
to,
until Fardohnya and Hythria are at peace,†Damin pointed out,
turning
her own argument back on her. “What’s the hurry,
anyway? It’ll take
months before Tarja and the other captains can get the Defenders under
their command organised enough to mount an effective resistance. The
Citadel is under the control of the Kariens and you’re not
going to be
able to do anything about that until you’ve destroyed
Xaphista.
The war in Medalon is over for now.â€
“I have to return to the Citadel. You don’t
understand . . .â€
“No, you’re the one who doesn’t
understand,†Adrina cut in. “You
want to change the whole world to suit your liking, then run off on
some personal vendetta while the rest of us get killed trying to carry
out your orders. Nobody wants to see the Kariens brought to their knees
more than I, R’shiel, but Damin is right. If you want us to do
this,
then you’re going to have to do it with us. Your mission to the
Citadel
will have to wait.â€
R’shiel glanced at the two of them and sighed. They were
both such
stubborn, strong-willed personalities and she needed this marriage to
take place. She would have called on Kalianah to intervene, but Damin
was one of Zegarnald’s favourites. The War God would know she
was up to
something if another god interfered with Damin.
Frustration welling in her, she was forced to concede that they were
right. Sending Damin back to Hythria with Adrina as his bride without
proof of the demon child’s existence would be akin to a death
sentence.
“Very well, I’ll come. But only long enough to
convince the
Warlords. After that, it’s up to you two.â€
Damin glanced at Adrina, who nodded in agreement, although her scowl
made it clear that she was less than enthusiastic about the whole idea.
“So, I’m to be the High Princess of Hythria.â€
“First a princess of Fardohnya, then Karien and now
Hythria,†Damin
remarked. “You do get around, Adrina.â€
She turned on him angrily and R’shiel left the tent to
continue her
search for Brak, before she became even more embroiled in their
argument. Damn them, she though as she strode through the camp. Damn
them for being so obstinate. Damn them for being right.
Brak had told her once that destiny had a way of catching up with
you. Well, maybe it had. But just because it had caught her,
didn’t
mean she couldn’t make things happen her way. She would bring
peace to
the south, even if it meant delaying her inevitable confrontation with
Loclon. That she would have to face him before this was over was as
certain as her destiny was to destroy a god. Any god . . . or all of them. It didn’t
really
matter which . . .
The trick, R’shiel decided, as she moved through the firelit
Defenders’ camp, would be to manage affairs in such a way that
nobody
realised what was happening until it was too late to stop it.
GLOSSARY
Medalon
AFFIANA—Innkeeper
in Testra. Brak’s great-great grand niece.
B’THRIM SNOWBUILDER—Villager from Haven. Elder
sister
of J’nel.
BASEL—Sergeant
of
the Defenders stationed on the southern border.
BEK—Prisoner
at
the Grimfield. Sentenced to five years for arson.
BELDA—Sister
of
the Blade at the Grimfield.
BERETH—Former
Sister of the Blade. Now a pagan.
CRISABELLE CORTANEN—Wife of Wilem Cortanen,
Commandant of
the Defenders.
DAVYDD TAILORSON—Lieutenant of the Defenders
attached
to the Intelligence Corps.
DAYAN JENGA—Quartermaster of the Defenders
stationed
in Bordertown. Younger brother of the Lord Defender.
DENJON—Captain
of
the Defenders.
DRACO—First
Spear
of the Sister and ceremonial bodyguard.
FOHLI—Corporal
of
the Defenders in the Grimfield.
FRANCIL ASHAREN—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Longest standing member. Mistress of the Citadel.
GARET WARNER—Commandant of the Defenders.
Head of
Defender Intelligence and second most senior officer in the Defenders.
GAWN—Captain
of
the Defenders posted to the southern border.
GEORJ DRAKE—Captain of the Defenders.
Tarja’s best
friend.
GHARI RODAK—Rebel Lieutenant. Brother of
Mandah.
GWENELL—Physic.
Sister of the Blade in charge of the Sisterhood’s Infirmary at
the
Citadel.
HARITH NORTARN—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Mistress of Sisterhood.
HEANER—Mistress
of the most notorious brothel in the Citadel.
HELLA—Joyhinia’s
maid at the Citadel.
HERVE RODAK—A Rebel from Testra. Mandah and
Ghari’s
cousin.
J’NEL SNOWBUILDER—Died in Haven from
complications of
childbirth without naming the father of her child.
JACOMINA LAROSSE—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Mistress of Enlightenment.
JOYHINIA TENRAGAN—First Sister of the Sisters of
the
Blade following Mahina’s impeachment.
JUNEE RIVERSON—Probate at the Citadel.
KHIRA—Pagan
Rebel
and Physic in the Grimfield.
KILENE—Probate
at
the Citadel.
KORGAN—Deceased.
Former Lord Defender. Rumoured to be Tarja’s father.
LENK—Corporal
of
the Defenders at the Grimfield.
L’RIN—Innkeeper
of the Inn of the Hopeless in the Grimfield.
LOCLON—Wain
Loclon. Lieutenant of the Defenders and Champion of the Arena. Promoted
to Captain following the Purge.
LOUHINA FARCRON—Sister
of the Blade. Appointed to the Quorum following Joyhinia’s
elevation to
First Sister.
LYCREN—Sergeant
of the Defenders in the Grimfield.
MAHINA CORTANEN—First Sister. Mother of Wilem.
MANDAH RODAK—Formerly a novice and now a pagan
rebel
from Medalon. Elder sister of Ghari.
MARIELLE—Prisoner
at the Grimfield, sentenced with R’shiel.
MARTA—Probate
at
the Citadel.
MYSEKIS—Captain
of the Defenders stationed in the Grimfield.
NHEAL ALCARNEN—Captain of the Defenders.
PADRIC—Pagan
rebel.
PALIN JENGA—Lord Defender. Commander in Chief
of the
Defenders. Brother of Dayan Jenga and rumoured to be
R’shiel’s father.
PENY—Court’esa
working for Mistress Heaner.
PROZLAN—Sister
of
the Blade stationed at the Grimfield, responsible for discipline among
the female prisoners.
R’SHIEL—Probate.
Daughter of the First Sister.
SUELAN—Sister
of
the Blade. The First Sister’s Secretary and Harith’s
niece.
SUNNY—Sunflower
Hopechild. Court’esa from the Citadel who befriends
R’shiel on
their journey to the Grimfield.
TARJA—Tarjanian
Tenragan. Son of the First Sister, Joyhinia. Captain of the Defenders.
TEGGERT—Former
convict. Works as a cook in the Commandant’s household in the
Grimfield.
UNWIN—Sister
of
the Blade at the Grimfield in charge of the Grimfield’s
Kitchens.
VERKIN—Kriath
Verkin. Commandant of Bordetown.
WANDEAR—Probate
at the Citadel.
WILEM—Commandant
of the Grimfield. Son of Mahina and married to Crisabelle.
WYLBIR—A
rebel.
Former sergeant of the Defenders.
ALMODAVAR—Hythrun
Raider. Captain of Damin Wolfblade’s Raiders.
CYRUS EAGLESPIKE—Hythrun. Warlord of Dregian
Province. Damin Wolfblade’s distant cousin.
DAMIN WOLFBLADE—Warlord of Krakandar and heir
to the
High Prince’s throne. Son of Princess Marla and nephew of
Lernen
Wolfblade, High Prince of Hythria.
KALAN—High
Arrion
of the Sorcerers’ Collective in Hythria. Damin
Wolfblade’s half sister,
also known as Kalan of Elasapine. She has a twin brother, Narvell
Hawksword.
LERNEN WOLFBLADE—High Prince of Hythria.
Damin’s
uncle. A known pervert with no desire to produce an heir and rather
exotic sexual appetites.
MARLA WOLFBLADE—Princess of Hythria. Sister
of Lernen
Wolfblade and mother of Damin. Married 5 times she is also the mother
of Kalan and Narvell Hawksword of Elasapine.
RORIN—Seneschal
to the High Arrion of the Sorcerers’ Collective.
SOOTHAN—Captain
of a Hythrun fishing boat.
Karien
ARINGARD—Queen
of
Karien. Married to Jasnoff and mother of Cratyn.
CHARITY—Karien
noblewoman. Granddaughter of Baron Lodnan.
CHASTITY—Daughter
of Terbolt. Adrina’s Lady-In-Waiting. Formerly betrothed to
Cratyn.
CRATYN—Crown
Prince of Karien. Son of Jasnoff and Aringard.
DRENDYN—Karien.
Earl of Tiler’s Pass. Cratyn’s cousin and nephew of
King Jasnoff.
ELFRON—Karien
priest sent to the Citadel with Lord Pieter to denounce the
Sisterhood’s handling of the pagans.
GARANUS—Karien
Priest sent to the Citadel with Terbolt, the Duke of Setenton.
HOPE—Adrina’s
Lady-In-Waiting.
JASNOFF—King
of
Karien. Married to Aringard. Father of Cratyn and uncle to Drendyn.
JAYMES OF KIRKLAND—Karien page attached to Lord
Laetho’s
retinue. Son of Lord Laetho’s Third Steward, he cannot by
knighted due
to his common birth.
LORD PIETER—Karien Envoy to Medalon.
MIKEL OF KIRKLAND—Karien page attached to Lord
Laetho’s
retinue. Jaymes’ younger brother. Appointed as Adrina’s
page following
his escape from Medalon.
OVERLORD—See
Xaphista.
PACIFICA—Adrina’s
Lady-In-Waiting.
TERBOLT—Karien.
Duke of Setenton and father of Chastity.
VONULUS—Karien
Priest appointed as Confessor to Adrina.
XAPHISTA—The
Overlord. God of the Kariens.
Fardohnya
ADRINA—Princess
of Fardohnya. Eldest legitimate child of King Hablet and his first
wife. Adrina’s mother was beheaded for trying to assassinate
her
husband’s mistress and her illegitimate son Tristan.
CASSANDRA—Princess
of Fardohnya. Adrina’s younger sister and second legitimate
child of
Hablet.
HABLET—King
of
the Fardohnyans. Has 14 illegitimate sons and thirteen legitimate
daughters. He refuses to name his heir hoping one of his wives will
give him a legitimate son.
JAPINEL—Fardohnyan
tailor, alchemist and con-man.
LECTER TURON—Chamberlain of the Fardohnyan
Court.
Lector is a eunuch who makes his fortune collecting bribes.
RAVEN—Head
of the
Assassins’ Guild that operates in Hythria and Fardohnya
TERIAHNA—The
Raven. Head of the Assassins’ Guild.
TAMYLAN—Fardohnyan
slave raised to serve Adrina. Lover of Tristan on Adrina’s
orders.
TRISTAN—Bastard
son of King Hablet of Fardohnya. Adrina’s half-brother and
Captain of
her Guard sent to Karien.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jennifer Fallon was born in Melbourne, Australia,
and at the age of 11 moved to the nation’s capital, Canberra,
when her
father, a senior public servant in the Defence Department, was
transferred. She lived in and around Canberra for about eight years.
She is the ninth child in a family of 13 girls.
Jennifer has lived in the ‘Top End’ of Australia,
the Northern
Territory, since 1980, although at present she is based in Melbourne
for work commitments. She has two daughters and a son. Over the years,
Jennifer has also had 32 foster children. Friends refer to her home as
‘the ashram’ due to the large number of stray teenagers
that still
inhabit her house at irregular intervals.
Jennifer has worked in a wide variety of occupations and at present
is a director of Business Innovations Group Pty Ltd, and the main
creative force behind Mr Big, the Web Wizard. She is an accredited
workplace trainer and also a partner in the US company CISDesigns. She
currently works as a consultant in e-commerce and VoIP and travels
around Australia for her work. She is a member of the Business &
Professional Women’s Association, the Phenomenal Women of the
Web
Association and is often in demand as a guest speaker.
Like many other aspiring writers, in 1981 Jennifer wrote a Mills
& Boon that dutifully got rejected. (She later burned the
manuscript.) She changed to fantasy in 1990 when she decided she would
be better writing something for herself, rather than trying to please
everyone else. In 1995, Jennifer decided to either get published by the
year 2000 or give up writing and get a real job. Her first series, The
Demon Child Trilogy, was released in August 2000 and hit the bestseller
list the first week it was released.
Her first e-book, Medalon, Book One of The Demon Child
Trilogy, was released globally as an e-book by PerfectBound in May 2001.
Visit her website at http://www.jenniferfallon.com
Shananara
flung herself into one of the chairs opposite the window. “The
Demon
Child? That unreliable, spoilt, half-human atheist brat? If
that’s who
you’re relying on to save us, brother, we are doomed.â€
Medalon has surrendered to
Karien and Tarja is once more an outlaw. The Defenders are scattered
and their only hope for aid is Damin Wolfblade and the vast army of
Hythria. But Damin has his own problems to solve first, including false
claimants to the throne, civil war . . . and, of course,
Adrina.
R’shiel has finally accepted her destiny,
and is
searching for answers. But time is running out. She must defeat
Xaphista soon, for the Harshini king cannot hide Sanctuary for much
longer. But how can she defeat a God?
Medalon and Treason Keep, Books
One & Two of The Demon Child Trilogy, were instant bestsellers.
This, the final book in the trilogy, is as unpredictable and glorious
as its characters.
“Jennifer Fallon
is a
writer to watch . . .â€
Peter McNamara, 5EBI FM
“Jennifer Fallon captures the reader from
the
opening paragraph and you can only break from her grasp when you reach
the final page.â€
1. Discuss the different role of women in Medalon, Karien and
Fardohnya.
2. Dacendaren devotes a great deal of time trying to get Mikel to
steal something, even though the Karien boy consistently denies the
existence of any other gods. Discuss the reason for this and why it is
so important to the God of Thieves.
3. R’shiel has a long conversation with Xaphista, in which
he tries
to seduce her into joining him. Why does he fail?
4. Is the Princess Adrina a product of her environment or simply a
spoilt brat?
5. The God of War demands that R’shiel leave Sanctuary
because he
fears the Harshini will weaken her resolve. What affect would living in
Santuary have on R’shiel, both long term and short term?
6. The demons meld to save Tarja at the end of Treason Keep. What
effect could being possessed by a demon have on Tarja when (or if) he
recovers?
7. Adrina tells Cratyn that her slaves are better off in slavery
than as his free serfs. Discuss the differences between being a slave
living in luxury, or a peasant living in abject poverty. Which would
you prefer?
8. Brak explains the dangers of coercion to R’shiel at some
length.
Discuss the reasons for his concerns and why R’shiel feels she
has no
choice.
9. Many of the characters are confronted with evidence that the
Primal Gods exist, yet refuse to acknowledge their existence. Discuss
why these characters refuse to accept the evidence of their own eyes.
10. How would their lives have been changed if Adrina and Damin had
met in Greenharbour several years earlier?
CREDITS
Cover and illustrations by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Cover and text design by Darian Causby,
HarperCollins Design Studio, Australia
This e-book provides links and pointers to
Internet websites, which are contained and maintained by third parties.
These links are provided as a convenience, and do not constitute an
endorsement of content, policies or practices of the websites linked or
referred to.
Treason
TREASON KEEP
THE DEMON CHILD TRILOGY BOOK 02
Jennifer Fallon
Also
by Jennifer Fallon
Medalon
Harshini
A DF Books
NERDs Release
This is a
work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the
products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Any
resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons,
living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of
either the author or the publisher.
Jennifer Fallon
asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
Print edition first
published in February 2001 by Voyager, an imprint of HarperCollins
Publishers Pty Limited.
http://www.voyageronline.com.au
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Additional
e-book features
Map
PART 1
POLITICS AND POWER GAMES
Chapter
1
Chapter
2
Chapter
3
Chapter
4
Chapter
5
Chapter
6
Chapter
7
Chapter
8
Chapter
9
Chapter
10
Chapter
11
Chapter
12
Chapter
13
Chapter
14
Chapter
15
Chapter
16
Chapter
17
Chapter
18
Chapter
19
Chapter
20
PART 2
BATTLE LINES
Chapter
21
Chapter
22
Chapter
23
Chapter
24
Chapter
25
Chapter
26
Chapter
27
Chapter
28
Chapter
29
Chapter
30
Chapter
31
Chapter
32
Chapter
33
Chapter
34
Chapter
35
PART 3
THE POLITICS OF SEDUCTION
Chapter
36
Chapter
37
Chapter
38
Chapter
39
Chapter
40
Chapter
41
Chapter
42
Chapter
43
Chapter
44
Chapter
45
Chapter
46
Chapter
47
Chapter
48
Chapter
49
Chapter
50
Chapter
51
Chapter
52
Chapter
53
PART 4
CONSEQUENCES
Chapter
54
Chapter
55
Chapter
56
Chapter
57
Chapter
58
Chapter
59
Chapter
60
Chapter
61
Chapter
62
Chapter
63
Chapter
64
Chapter
65
Chapter
66
Chapter
67
Glossary
About
the Author
About
Book Three, Harshini
Excerpt
from Book Three, Harshini
Illustrations
by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Reading
Notes
Credits
About
Voyager
About
the Publisher
For Dace Mikel O’Brien,
the original God of Thieves,
and as always, Adele Robinson
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My life is many things, but boring isn’t
one of
them. Despite a wedding, a birth, a book launch, two house moves, a new
business and a few other rather traumatic incidents that I would rather
not relive, this book was written in considerably less time than Medalon.
As always, there are the usual suspects who deserve my thanks for
their unswerving faith and their high tolerance levels in putting up
with me during the creation of this work. In particular, I would like
to thank my children, Amanda, TJ and David for their support and for
filling my life with so many distractions that I have, though sheer
necessity, mastered the art of focussing on writing to the exclusion of
all else. They will readily attest to this fact, although they may be
surprised how often I’ve heard them lament to each other
“don’t bother
asking her anything, she’s writingâ€.
I would like to thank Stephanie Smith, Darian Causby and Midge
McCall, and all the other people at HarperCollins who I have never met
but who have contributed to this series, along with Lyn Tranter and
Cathy Perkins at Australian Literary Management and also Sarah
Endacott. Stephanie Pui-Mun Law has once again created an awesome cover
and I remain one of her most ardent fans.
With my dying breath, I will be thanking Harshini Bhoola for her
never-ending enthusiasm and her constant re-reading of the manuscripts,
and it still won’t repay her. Thanks also to my good friend
Peter
Jackson for encouraging me to take a step into the unknown and my
favourite sycophants, Toni-Maree and John Elferink MLA for helping me
keep my feet on the ground while my head was in the clouds.
“Her Most Serene Highness took the news
well?â€
Lecter inquired cautiously of the King as he slipped through the door.
Hablet glared at the eunuch. “Of course she didn’t
take it well.
She’s livid.â€
“In time she will adjust to the idea.â€
“She’d better,†the King grumbled. He pushed
himself to his feet and
walked to the window. The gardens below were a riot of colour and the
faint sounds of children’s laughter drifted up from the
fountain in the
centre court. The sound soothed him. He wondered what it was about his
children that meant he only seemed to like them before they reached
puberty. Once they grew up, they were no fun at all. They learnt to
manipulate and grew greedy and caused him no end of trouble. But the
little ones — ah, now they were his true joy in life. He had
adored
Adrina when she was ten. Now he was almost frightened of her.
“Might I suggest you place a guard on the princess? She
could decide
to defy you.â€
“She won’t defy me,†Hablet assured him.
“It will occur to her soon
enough that she’ll be the Karien Queen one day. Adrina
isn’t stupid,
Lecter. She’ll do what I want, but not because it pleases me.
She’ll do
it because it pleases her.â€
“I hope your trust in her is not misplaced, your
Majesty.â€
“Trust has nothing to do with it. She’s been dying
to escape the
palace, and I’ve just given her a crown.â€
“A crown she could turn on you one day?†Lecter
suggested
tentatively.
“Hah! Adrina? And that simpering, Karien Prince? I
don’t think so!
Adrina might have it in her to commit such treachery, but Cratyn is as
spineless as a jellyfish. Did you see what they’ve agreed to?
How much
timber they’re willing to part with, just to get access to
Solanndy Bay
and the Gulf? They’re idiots!â€
“You control the only access to their holiest shrine, your
Majesty,
not to mention any chance they have of sea-going trade. You
didn’t
really leave them much choice.â€
“They want the secret of my cannon,†Hablet added.
“They want that
even more than they want trade or access to that miserable Isle of
Slarn. What sort of god chooses a lump of rock like Slarn to make his
home, anyway?â€
“The same sort of god who will demand your daughter convert
to his
worship. Your grandchildren will be followers of Xaphista.â€
“Adrina pointed out the same thing,†the King mused,
walking back to
his desk. “Odd to hear you two in agreement on any point.
Still,
Laryssa is due to whelp any day now. She’ll give me a son and
it won’t
matter how many Karien bastards Adrina has.â€
“Of course, your Majesty.†It was clear Lecter was
as doubtful of
the possibility as everyone else was. But surely Jelanna would not deny
him again. Laryssa, the eighth woman he had taken to wife, had proved
her fertility. She’d already given him two healthy bastard
sons. Hablet
had decided he would not marry any woman who could not produce sons and
it was perfectly reasonable to assume that she would not let him down
this time. The thought warmed him, almost making him forget his anger
at Adrina. A legitimate son. Nothing would make him happier.
It wasn’t that Hablet didn’t love his baseborn sons.
On the
contrary, he adored them. But naming one his heir would cause problems.
The throne needed a clear line of succession, and the law was clear,
although not well known: either he sired a son himself, or the crown
would go to Hythria, thanks to an almost forgotten twelve
hundred-year-old agreement that Hablet had been trying to find a way
around for thirty years. As he would rather fall on a rusty blade than
see that happen, the only solution, if he did not have a legitimate son
of his own, was to name one of his bastards heir. But he could not do
that until he had removed the threat of any Hythrun heirs to his
throne, a situation he planned to see to personally once he was across
the border into Hythria. Then, if Laryssa failed to whelp a boy, he
could legitimise one of his baseborn sons, probably Tristan, and not
just because he was the eldest. Tristan was the brightest, the most
personable, and the least likely to allow Adrina to control him.
Although, given last night’s disastrous escapade, Hablet was
beginning
to wonder about that. Perhaps it wasn’t a good idea to send him
north
with Adrina . . .
Hablet sighed. It was a moot point. Laryssa would give him a
son. Adrina would be off his hands, out of sight and out of mind in
Karien. Let her play Queen of the Realm in the north. He had their
timber, their gold and their iron. In return they were getting his most
troublesome daughter and a promise he had no intention of keeping.
All in all, Hablet decided, looking down at the pile of debts Adrina
had accumulated last night, it was a good bargain.
“So how are our Karien guests this morning?†he
asked, pushing the
pile to one side of the gilded desk. “Have they calmed
down?â€
“The prince was somewhat mollified by your generous
offer.â€
“So he damned well should be!â€
“I noted,†Lecter continued, mopping his brow,
“that the Kariens
showed an unnatural interest in your offer to send a regiment with
Adrina as her personal guard.â€
“I trust Adrina to keep them out of harm’s way. She
was right about
one thing. I’d never have risked sending them with
Cassandra.â€
“If I may be so bold as to offer my opinion, your Majesty,
one
wonders if it is a good idea to send any troops north at all.â€
“What do you mean? If I don’t send her to Karien in
a manner
befitting her station, they’ll know something is going
on.â€
“I agree, your Majesty, but I have received more than one
report
that the Harshini have returned. There have been sightings in
Greenharbour, at the Sorcerer’s Collective, and even as far
away as
Testra, in Medalon.â€
“So? What has that got to do with us?â€
“The Kariens are dedicated to the destruction of the
Harshini, your
Majesty. Marrying your daughter to their Crown Prince, and sending her
north with your soldiers might be . . .
misconstrued.â€
“You mean I might offend the Harshini?†Hablet
scratched his beard
as he sank down into his chair. “If the Harshini have returned,
Lecter,
and I seriously doubt they have, then why are they not here? I am the
King of Fardohnya! If they were back the first thing they would
do is send an Emissary to my court. Instead, all you can offer me are
unfounded rumours about Harshini in Hythria. I have served the gods
faithfully. Why would they send their people to that degenerate in
Greenharbour, when they could come here?â€
“High Prince Lernen has always supported the
Sorcerer’s Collective
and the temples most generously.â€
“Lernen doesn’t support anyone but himself,â€
Hablet scoffed. “If the
Harshini had returned, I would know about it. They are dead and gone,
Lecter, so we will just have to stumble on without them as we have done
for the past two hundred years.â€
“Of course, your Majesty.â€
Lecter mopped his brow again, looking rather uncomfortable. On days
like this he annoyed Hablet. His grovelling manner was intolerable at
times, but he had a sharp political mind and no scruples at all, that
Hablet could discern. It made him an excellent chamberlain, if a
tiresome one.
“What else, Lecter? I can tell there’s something
bothering you.â€
“It’s a small matter, your Majesty. One that hardly
needs your
attention.â€
“Out with it, Lecter! I don’t have time for your
games this morning.
Cratyn will be here at any moment.â€
“There have been other rumours, Sire, particularly in
Medalon. About
the demon child.â€
“Lorandranek’s legendary half-human child? Those
rumours have been
around ever since the Harshini disappeared. Surely you don’t
believe
them?â€
“I don’t believe anything, your Majesty, until I
have proof.
However, I feel they might be worthy of investigation. I could
send . . .â€
“No,†Hablet declared bluntly. “I’ll
not have you wasting time and
money chasing fairytales. The Harshini are extinct and there is no
fabled demon child. I would much rather you spent your time fruitfully.
Like finding out why the High Prince of Hythria sent his nephew to
Medalon to fight with the Defenders.â€
“My sources tell me Lernen has little or no control over his
nephew.
I doubt he sent him anywhere.â€
“Then find out why young Wolfblade went north. I want a free
path
into Hythria, Lecter. I don’t want a battalion of Defenders on
my back,
and Wolfblade needs to die.â€
“The Kariens will keep the Defenders off your back, Sire,
and I am
sure they can be prevailed upon to dispose of the Hythrun Prince. Why
else would we support their coming war with Medalon?â€
“I hope you’re right, Lecter, because I’ll
be very put out if this
doesn’t work.â€
Before Lecter could offer another obsequious reply, the doors opened
and the Karien Prince strode in, accompanied by his retinue. Hablet
greeted them expansively and ordered the guards to bring chairs for the
new arrivals.
Lecter bowed low, mopped his brow and backed out of the room,
leaving the King to his guests.
CHAPTER 4
Everyone’s eyes were on Adrina as she
strode down
the long hall. As if to mock her, at the end of the hall, the
princeling in question was heading toward her, with his gaggle of
priests in tow.
Except for the ball held in his honour the day of his arrival a week
ago, Adrina had not seen the young Prince, and counted herself lucky.
He had spent the entire ball blushing an interesting shade of pink
every time he caught sight of a Fardohnyan woman’s bare
midriff. As
every one of the two hundred or so women present had been dressed in a
similar fashion, he was damned near apoplectic by the end of the
evening. For a fleeting moment, she debated doing something truly
outrageous, right here in the Hall, which would ensure the Kariens
would reject her as a potential bride. But she had caught the expectant
look on Lecter Turon’s smug, fat face as he slipped through the
door to
attend the King, and thought better of it. He would keep.
She stopped and waited as the young prince approached. Tall, serious
and boring did not particularly appeal to Adrina, but he was civilised
enough, she supposed. He was a little taller than her, with
unremarkable brown hair, and eyes the colour of dried mud. At least he
knew how to chew with his mouth closed.
“Prince Cretin,†she said, offering him her hand.
The older man on
Cratyn’s right looked a little put out that she had greeted his
prince
as an equal, but Cratyn did not appear to notice. He was too busy
staring at the pearl in her navel. “My father has just informed
me that
we are to be married.â€
Cratyn dropped her hand, jerked his head up and met her eye. He
looked at her black eye curiously for a moment, but made no comment
about it. Instead, he nodded — rather miserably, she noted with
interest.
“Karien welcomes Fardohnya’s favourite daughter,
your Serene
Highness,†he said in his clipped Karien. “We look
forward to a new era
of prosperity and friendship between our two great nations.â€
Someone sniggered in the background at the idea. Adrina looked at
Cratyn curiously, wondering if he was really as naive as he sounded.
“I look forward to serving Fardohnya and Karien,
your
Highness,†she replied graciously, in heavily accented Karien.
Two
could play this game, and Adrina could mouth meaningless platitudes in
any number of languages, when the mood took her. “Now, if you
will
excuse me, I have arrangements to make for my journey.â€
Cratyn stepped aside for her, forcing the rest of his party to do
the same.
Adrina continued regally on through the hall. Until she came up with
a way to escape her father’s decree, she had no choice but to
play
along with it.
At least the meeting with the young Karien Prince had not gone too
badly. She had made it clear to the Kariens that she held a rank equal
to their prince, and Cratyn had been rather overawed by her, she
decided with satisfaction. But he wasn’t very happy with the
idea of an
arranged marriage. That much was obvious. It could simply be his
distaste for a foreign bride — or perhaps he was smarter than
he
looked, and had some idea of how treacherous and unreliable her father
was. She was almost back to her rooms, and still trying to puzzle it
out, when a rather shamefaced Tristan caught up with her.
“The last I heard, you were running away like a cur with its
tail
between its legs,†she snapped as he fell into step beside her.
Tristan was younger than Adrina by two days, and until an hour ago,
she had considered him her best friend. Tristan’s mother was a
Hythrun court’esa,
one of Hablet’s favourites, who still lived in the palace
harem, even
though she no longer took the King’s fancy. She had been a
beautiful
woman in her youth and Tristan had inherited most of her charm, as well
as her fair hair and golden eyes. He turned all of that charm on his
half-sister now, to absolutely no effect.
“Would I desert you in your hour of need?â€
“I didn’t happen to notice you helping me when I
needed you, just
now.â€
“I was busy,†he shrugged, with an apologetic smile.
“Do you know what he’s done?†There was no
need to elaborate on who he
was.
“Married you off to the Karien Prince and ordered me north
with the
regiment?â€
She turned on him furiously. “You knew!â€
“My orders were waiting for me at the South Gate. The ink
wasn’t
even dry. You really pushed him too far this time, Adrina.â€
“You were there, too! I only tried docking the damned boat
because
you dared me . . .â€
“It’s a ship, not a boat,†he corrected.
“Anyway, this might be fun.â€
“Fun? I have to marry that snivelling, pious little
cretin.â€
“And one day that snivelling, pious little cretin will be
the Karien
King. That’s more than you’ll ever get here, Adrina.
You might be the
eldest legitimate child, but Hablet will turn atheist before he lets a
woman inherit the Fardohnyan crown. You’ve always known
he’d sell you
to the highest bidder. At least, this way, you get to be a
queen.â€
Adrina listened to her brother thoughtfully, as she considered
possibilities that had not had time to register.
“And what about you?†she asked.
“He’s banished you north as well.â€
Tristan shrugged. “I’ve got fourteen half-brothers,
Adrina. When
Hablet tires of trying to get a legitimate son on one of his wives,
there’ll be a rather spirited competition for our
father’s favour.
That’s a bloodbath I’ll be more than happy to
miss.â€
“This does present some interesting opportunities,
doesn’t it?†she
agreed.
Tristan laughed. “You know, sometimes, you’re so
like Hablet it’s
scary.â€
Adrina stopped and looked up at him. “The regiment
that’s going
north, what’s its function?â€
“They’ll be the Princess’s Guard,â€
Tristan told her. “Under your
command, to use as you see fit.â€
“And you are the Captain of the Guard?â€
“Naturally,†he said with a smug grin.
“Is Father sending any cannon with you?â€
Tristan’s grin vanished. He glanced up and down the hall
before
answering in a low voice. “No, and I’m not certain the
Kariens will
ever see any artillery.â€
“But he’s promised them!â€
“You know as well as I do how much Father’s promises
are worth.
He’ll take their gold and their timber and happily send his
daughter to
Karien as a bride to prove his good intentions, but he really
doesn’t
want to hand the Kariens anything as dangerous as a cannon.
He’s had
every man in Talabar who even thinks he knows how to make gunpowder
taken into custody.â€
“He could be doing that just to drive up the price.â€
“I suppose.â€
“So the regiment going north are just light cavalry then?
Tristan nodded warily. “For the most part. What are you up
to,
Adrina?â€
“Nothing,†she replied. “Not yet, anyway.
Can you get me that list?
Before we sail? And I want to know who Hablet arrested, too.â€
“Why?â€
She ignored the question. “And I want you to do something
else for
me. Find out why Cratyn is so unhappy about this marriage.â€
“He’s probably heard about you,â€
Tristan suggested.
Adrina frowned at him, but did not rise to the bait. “Maybe,
but
I’ve got a feeling there’s more to it than that. I want
to know what it
is.â€
“As you command, your Serene Highness,†Tristan said
with a mocking
bow.
“One other thing,†she added as she turned to walk
away. “Do any of
the regiment speak Karien?â€
“Most of them, as far I as know,†Tristan said.
“Then the first order you are to give them is to conceal
that
knowledge,†Adrina told him. “The men are to act dumb.
I want the
Kariens to think they don’t understand any orders but mine.
Including
you. If I have to go through with this, I’ll do it on my
terms.â€
Tristan was as good as his word, and by early
afternoon Adrina had the names of every man in her regiment, and every
man and woman rounded up by Hablet prior to the arrival of the Karien
Prince, to prevent the secret of gunpowder falling into the wrong
hands. She studied both lists carefully. The names on the first list,
for the most part, meant nothing to her. She was not permitted to
socialise with Tristan’s fellow officers, although a few of the
names
she had heard spoken in court. The second list was much more
interesting. She studied it carefully, delighted when one name appeared
that she knew — by reputation at least.
Adrina spent the rest of the day driving her slaves mad as she made
them drag the entire contents of her wardrobe out, so that she could
decide what she should take with her on her journey north. By the end
of the afternoon, the floor of her chamber was littered with discarded
outfits. At that point, Adrina loudly announced that she simply had
nothing to wear, and certainly nothing suitable for a future queen. She
threw a rather impressive tantrum that had the entire palace scurrying
out of her way. Just on dusk, Hablet sent word that she could send for
the tailor of her choice and order whatever she liked.
The following morning Mhergon, the palace tailor, arrived, nervously
clutching a bundle of cloth swatches. Adrina refused to see him and
demanded to see Japinel instead. He was the only tailor in Talabar
worthy of such a task, she declared. Nobody else would do. She threw
another tantrum, just to make her point, and then sat back and waited.
She did not have to wait long. Less than an hour after Mhergon had
fled her chambers, Lecter Turon arrived. Adrina, draped over the chaise
in her morning room, graciously granted him an audience.
“Where is Japinel?â€
“He is unavailable, your Highness. Your father, his Majesty
the King
—â€
“I know who my father is, Turon. Get to the point.â€
“Mhergon is eminently qualified as a master tailor, your
Highness.â€
“Mhergon couldn’t make a sack out of
homespun,†Adrina scoffed. “My
father said the tailor of my choice. I want Japinel.â€
“Japinel dabbles, your Highness, in tailoring as he does in
everything else. The last I heard he was calling himself an alchemist.
I cannot see why —â€
“You don’t have to, Turon. Get me Japinel or I will
come to dinner
tonight naked. We’ll see what his Royal Highness, the Crown
Prince of
Karien thinks of that!â€
Lecter Turon waddled off in a foul mood, but Adrina knew she had
won. Just on sunset a very pale and confused-looking Japinel was
ushered into her chambers. He seemed stunned that the Princess Adrina
had even heard of him, let alone wanted him to design her trousseau.
Adrina ordered her slaves out and waited until they were alone, before
she allowed him to speak.
“Your Serene Highness!†Japinel cried as he
prostrated himself at
her feet.
“Oh, do get up! I don’t have time for that!â€
Japinel was a weedy little man with eyes set too close together. He
scrambled to his feet, managing to bow at least half a dozen times on
the way up.
“I am honoured, your Highness. I will design you a trousseau
that
the gods will envy. I will create —â€
“Shut up, fool! I wouldn’t wear something designed
by you if my life
depended on it.â€
“But your Highness! Chamberlain Turon said —â€
“I have gowns enough to sink my father’s
flagship,†she told him. It
was a poor analogy under the circumstances. “I want something
else from
you, Japinel. If you do as I say, you’ll be rewarded as if you
really
did create my trousseau. If you don’t, I’ll make sure
you never see the
light of day again.â€
Japinel might have been a scoundrel, but he wasn’t stupid.
His eyes
narrowed greedily.
“What is it you want, your Highness?â€
“I want to know how to make gunpowder,â€
Japinel’s eyes widened. “But I’m a tailor,
your Highness. What would
I know about such things?â€
“My father is currently holding you in custody because you
claimed
you did know.â€
Japinel wrung his hands and shrugged helplessly. “A mistake,
your
Highness. I had thought to try a different career . . .
I boasted unwisely . . .â€
Adrina could have strangled the little worm. “Where are they
holding
you and the others?â€
“In the slave quarters, your Highness.â€
“Then that’s where you will return. I will see you
again tomorrow. I
suggest you get the formula from one of your cell mates. I leave
Talabar in three days, Japinel. If I don’t have what I want by
then, I
will have you sent to the salt mines in Parkinoor and you won’t
see
Talabar until your grandsons are old men.â€
After he left, Adrina cursed for a full ten minutes. She was still
cursing when Tamylan arrived to help her dress for dinner.
CHAPTER 5
Captain Wain Loclon was forced to wait for almost
an hour outside the Lord Defender’s office before Garet Warner
arrived.
In that hour he had rehearsed, over and over again, what he planned to
say. It sounded reasonable and logical and he was certain of success
—
right up until the moment the commandant appeared.
The commandant glanced at him briefly as he opened the door, his
expression more put-upon than welcoming. Loclon followed him into the
office, taking a deep breath. Although of lesser rank than the Lord
Defender, Loclon wished it were Jenga, not Garet Warner, that he was
forced to confront. The Lord Defender was predictable, and much easier
to read than the enigmatic commander of Defender Intelligence.
“I see you’ve recovered,†Garet remarked as
Loclon closed the door
behind them.
Garet lit the lantern on the Lord Defender’s desk and
studied the
younger man in the flickering light for a moment, before seating
himself in the padded leather chair behind the heavy wooden desk.
“I was released from the infirmary this morning,â€
Loclon confirmed.
Garet nodded. “And you are ready to return to your
duties?â€
“Yes, sir.â€
“Good. Report to Commandant Arkin. He’ll find you
something useful
to do. Sergeant Jocan will arrange for you to be accommodated in the
Officers’ Barracks, unless you prefer to make your own
arrangements.â€
“I have rooms near the main gate, sir. I was planning to
return
there.â€
“As you wish. Was there anything else?â€
Loclon swallowed before answering. “Actually, I was hoping I
could
request an assignment, sir.â€
Garet looked up curiously. “Request away, Captain, although
I’ve no
guarantee you’ll get what you ask for.â€
“I want to be part of the detail assigned to hunting down
Tarja
Tenragan.â€
Garet Warner smiled briefly. “Is that so?â€
“Yes, sir.â€
“Well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news, Captain, but
there are
no details hunting Tarja down. The First Sister has pardoned
him.â€
“Sir?†Loclon thought he was hearing things. He had
been out of
touch for the past few months as he recovered from the wounds inflicted
on him by R’shiel and Tarja, but he could not imagine any
circumstance
that could have arisen in that time that would give the First Sister
reason to pardon her wayward son.
“You heard correctly, Captain. Tarja has been pardoned and
restored
to the Defenders.â€
“But after all that he’s
done . . .â€
“All of which has been forgiven. Was there anything
else?â€
“Sir, I cannot believe that the First Sister would simply
pardon
him! What of the Defenders he killed? The heathen rebellion he led?
What of his desertion? And what of his sister?â€
“R’shiel? She has also been the recipient of the
First Sister’s
mercy.â€
“I don’t believe it.â€
“Believe what you will, Captain. The fact is they have been
pardoned. While I can understand your distress, considering the
circumstances, there is nothing you or I can do about it.â€
Loclon refused to accept Garet Warner’s calm assurances.
“Sir, I
believe I have the right to insist that charges be pressed. After what
they did to me . . .â€
“Ah, yes, I read your report. You allege R’shiel
used heathen magic
on you.â€
“I do not allege, sir, I know she did. It was she
who gave
me this.†Loclon pulled down the collar of his high-necked red
Defender’s jacket to reveal a savage pink scar that ran from
one side
of his throat to the other. It made an interesting counterpoint to the
puckered scar that ran from the corner of his left eye to his mouth.
His misshapen nose was the final touch on his ruined — but once
handsome — face.
“Quite an impressive collection of scars,†Garet
noted. “But hardly
proof that R’shiel is a heathen.â€
“I know what I saw, sir,†he insisted. They
can’t do this to me,
not now. Not when he was finally ready to seek revenge.
“Just exactly what were you doing when R’shiel
revealed this
unexpected talent for wielding heathen magic, Captain? Your report was
rather vague on that point.â€
Loclon hesitated as images filled his mind of R’shiel, naked
to the
waist, her pale breasts stark in the jagged lightning, her eyes
glittering and totally black, filled with forbidden heathen power. He
could still taste her lips and the raindrops on her skin. He could
still feel the blade she had used to cut his throat. Hatred burned
through his veins like acid.
“She was attempting to escape, sir.â€
“And succeeded, as I understand it,†Garet pointed
out. “This entire
episode is something of a blemish on your record, Captain. I would have
thought you’d be anxious to let the matter drop.â€
“She is dangerous, sir, and so is Tarja. They must be
punished.â€
Garet shook his head. “Unfortunately, the First Sister does
not
agree with you. Report to Commandant Arkin for reassignment and let the
matter drop.â€
“May I ask where they are now?†It took all he had
to ask the
question calmly.
“Tarja is with the Lord Defender and the First Sister is on
the
northern border. As for R’shiel, I assume she is with them,
although I
cannot say for certain. I’m leaving for the northern border in
the
morning. I’ll give Tarja your regards, shall I?â€
Garet Warner was mocking him, but there was nothing he could do
about it. “Permission to accompany you, Commandant!â€
“Denied. Arkin will be in charge until the Lord Defender or
I
return. You are dismissed.â€
“But sir —â€
“I said you are dismissed, Captain.â€
Loclon saluted sharply, rage burning in the depths of his blue eyes,
the scar on his face a livid reflection of his mood. He slammed the
door behind him, thinking that if Garet Warner thought that he would so
easily forget the pair who had tried to destroy him, then he was sadly
mistaken.
Later that evening, after he had reclaimed his
rooms in Mistress Longeaves’ Boarding House, Loclon made his
way
through the torchlit streets of the Citadel to the eastern side of the
city. An earlier shower of rain made the cobbles glisten and the
footing treacherous as he neared the seedier part of town. Passers-by
became more rare, then stopped completely, as he walked through the
darkened warehouse district. Only the sudden harsh bark of an alert
watchdog and the scurrying feet of rats disturbed the night. He had not
been here in almost a year, but the route was familiar enough that he
walked with assurance; unafraid of anything he might meet, as the
streets narrowed into shadowed pockets of darkness. The cutpurses of
the Citadel would be plying their trade along Tavern Street, where the
pickings were more fruitful.
When he reached his destination, he knocked on the dilapidated door
that was squeezed into a laneway between two warehouses. When he
received no response to his summons, he pounded louder and was rewarded
by a metallic screech, as the spy-hole in the door was forced open. A
pair of suspicious dark eyes glared at him, taking in his red uniform
with a frown.
“What d’ya want?â€
“I want to come in. Mistress Heaner knows me.â€
“Yeah? What’s her cat’s name then?â€
“Fluffy,†he replied, hoping the scabby creature had
not died in the
past year. Mistress Heaner was fond of her cat and it amused her to use
his name as a password.
“Hang on.â€
Loclon tapped his foot impatiently as the locks were drawn back. The
door opened just enough for him to squeeze through. He waited as the
man pushed the door shut and bolted it after them. The narrow alley was
littered with garbage, and Loclon covered his nose against the smell as
the hunched little man led him forward toward a square of light at the
end of the lane. When they reached it, the man stepped back to let
Loclon enter, then turned and disappeared into the darkness, presumably
back to his post by the door.
The main room was sumptuous and belied the paltriness of the
exterior. Cut crystal lanterns lit the soft draperies, and carpet thick
enough to hide in stretched the full length of the room. Comfortable
sofas were scattered through the room, each in its own private alcove,
separated by diaphanous curtains that revealed as much as they
concealed. Mistress Heaner’s House was exclusive; known only to
a few
and only those who could afford the unique entertainments she provided.
A captain’s pay was not usually enough to allow one the funds
to
patronise Mistress Heaner’s, but Loclon had just received
several
months’ backpay and he intended to treat himself, this one
night at
least. Back in the days when he had been the champion of the Arena, his
winnings had assured him a place here any time he wanted it.
“Captain.â€
Mistress Heaner glided toward him with a smile. Her gown was simple,
black and plainly cut, although the material was expensive and the
emerald necklace that circled her wrinkled throat was worth more than
he could earn in a lifetime as an officer.
“Mistress,†Loclon replied, with a low bow. She
insisted on
courtesy. One could do whatever they wished to the young men and women
she employed, but the slightest hint of bad manners would see one
banned for life.
“We’ve not had the pleasure of your company for some
time, sir.â€
“I’ve been away.â€
“Then you must be looking for some . . .
special . . . entertainment?†she suggested,
with an
elegantly raised brow. “I’ve several new girls that
might interest you.
Even a young man or two that might tempt a jaded palate.â€
“I’ve no interest in your fancy boys, Mistress. I
want a woman. A
redhead.â€
“Not an easy request, Captain.†Mistress Heaner
appeared to think
for a moment, as if she did not know the physical characteristics of
every soul in her employ. “Red is an unusual colour. Is there
anything
else that might tempt you?â€
“No. She must be a redhead. And tall. Preferably
slim.â€
“Such specific requirements can be expensive,
Captain.â€
“How much?â€
“Fifty rivets.â€
Loclon almost baulked at that point. Fifty rivets would leave him
almost penniless until his next pay. It would mean eating in the
barracks and avoiding his landlady.
“Fifty rivets, then.â€
Mistress Heaner watched carefully as he counted out the coins into
her arthritic hand.
“You may use the Blue Room,†she said, as her
claw-like fingers
closed over the money. “I will send Peny to you.â€
Loclon nodded and pushed his way past a flimsy curtain hanging over
a couch, where a middle-aged man was fondling the breast of a girl
young enough to be his granddaughter. He stepped into the hall and
walked the short distance to the Blue Room, named for the colour of its
door. The Red Room beside it was reserved for those whose tastes ran to
multiple partners and boasted a bed large enough for six. The Green
Room further down the hall, housed a bath the size of a large pool. The
Yellow Room at the end was the domain of those who got pleasure from
their own pain, and was better equipped than the cell where the
Defenders carried out their more “persuasiveâ€
interrogations. The Blue
Room was reserved for less exotic pleasures, and Loclon was not
surprised to find it unchanged since his last visit.
The room was lavishly furnished, with a carved four-poster, whose
woodwork glowed softly in the lamplight. White sheets peeked out from
under the blue quilt on the bed, and a pitcher of chilled wine with two
glasses waited on the side table. Satisfied with the room, Loclon
turned as the door opened and a woman stepped through. She was older
than he would have liked, thirty-five perhaps — or maybe the
life she
led had aged her faster than normal. Her hair was carrot-red, obviously
died, and her body was too full under the thin shift she wore.
Disappointed, Loclon ignored her welcoming smile and turned to the wine
pitcher. He poured himself a good measure and swallowed it in a gulp.
“My name is Peny,†she said.
Loclon turned to her, his eyes cold. “No. Tonight your name
is
R’shiel.â€
The woman shrugged. “If you wish.â€
“Come here.â€
She complied willingly enough, and began to unlace her shift as she
approached.
“No. Leave it.â€
“What would you like me to do, then?†she asked.
“Beg for mercy,†he replied and then he hit her. She
cried out, but
nobody would come to her rescue. Fifty rivets bought silence along with
Mistress Heaner’s whores. He hit her again, in the face this
time,
throwing her back against the carved bedpost. She cracked her head and
slumped on the expensive blue quilt, too stunned to protect herself
from his blows.
“Beg for mercy, R’shiel! â€
If she replied he didn’t notice. His rage consumed him as he
took
out his frustration on the hapless court’esa. The
desire to
beat her into submission left no room for any other thought.
CHAPTER 6
Damin Wolfblade was drunk. He knew he was drunk
because the walls of the tent were starting to spin, and he could no
longer feel his toes. Tarja Tenragan was even drunker. He had been at
this longer, and was drinking to drown his sorrows. Damin, on the other
hand, was simply drinking to be sociable.
“A toast,†he declared, as Tarja uncorked another
bottle. The floor
of the tent was littered with empty flagons — an impressive
testament
to the amount of alcohol they had consumed.
“To . . . to
your horse. What’s his name?â€
“Her name is Shadow,†Tarja corrected. He
wasn’t even
slurring his words. Damin was impressed. The man must have a stomach
lined with lead.
“To Shadow, then,†Damin declared, raising his cup.
“May she carry
you safely into battle.â€
“I’d be happier if she carried me safely out
of it,†Tarja
remarked, taking a long swig from the newly uncorked flagon.
Damin laughed and downed the contents of his cup in a swallow. He
held out his cup and Tarja refilled it with a surprisingly steady hand.
“I’ll drink to that, too! May she see you safely
home again.â€
“You’ll drink to anything. I’m surprised you
haven’t started
toasting the gods.â€
“The night is young, my friend,†Damin laughed,
relieved to see that
Tarja appeared to be coming out of the deep melancholy that had
possessed him all day. The Medalonian captain had good days and bad
days. Today had been particularly bad. “And when we run out of
gods, we
can always start on my brothers and sisters.â€
“Thanks, but I’d rather we stuck to the
gods,†Tarja said, taking
another mouthful. “You’ve enough of them to keep us
going for days.â€
“True, true,†Damin agreed, silently cursing himself
for bringing up
the topic of brothers and sisters. Tarja’s grief was centred on
the
woman he once believed was his sister. Reminding him of that was the
last thing Damin wanted at this point. “To the gods,
then!â€
He downed his cup and glanced at Tarja in concern. The man had not
touched the flagon, but was staring at him thoughtfully.
“What?â€
“Your gods. They’d know if she’s still
alive, wouldn’t they?â€
Damin shrugged uncomfortably. “I suppose.â€
“How do we ask them?†Tarja demanded.
He shook his head. “It’s not so simple, my friend.
The gods do not
speak directly to the likes of you and me. Perhaps, if Brak were
here . . .â€
“Well, he’s not here!â€
Brak had vanished only days after the Hythrun had ridden into
Testra, some five months ago. Nobody had seen or heard of him since.
“Hey, isn’t Dace a god? He spoke to us. Hell, he travelled
with us. Can’t we contact him?â€
“If you have a reliable way of contacting the gods, then
enlighten
me, Tarja. Dacendaran appears when the mood takes him, as does any
other god. I doubt if putting the mind of a non-believer at ease about
whether the demon child lives or dies is enough to warrant even the
fleeting attention of the God of Thieves.†He placed his cup on
the
small table next to the guttering candle. “If R’shiel
is still alive,
she’ll be back some day. If not, do your grieving and be done
with it.
Either way, you can’t spend the rest of your life moping about
the
girl.â€
“When I need sanctimonious advice from you, I’ll let
you know. In
the meantime, mind your own damned business.â€
“It is my business,†Damin replied, “when
your misery affects the
decisions you make. Particularly when it concerns the safety of my
Raiders.â€
“Your Raiders?†Damin could see the anger,
the pain in the
other man’s eyes. “Your damned Raiders are nothing but
a bunch of
cutthroat mercenaries. And I’ve done nothing to endanger
anybody.â€
“That’s for certain,†Damin retorted,
deliberately goading him.
“You’ve done nothing at all but sit here on the border
and lament your
great and tragic loss. Well, I have news for you, Captain.
There’s a
Karien army heading this way and they don’t give a pinch of
pig-shit
about your tender sensibilities. Dead or alive, R’shiel is
gone, and
you can’t afford to sit here wallowing in self-pity.â€
The punch came out of nowhere as Tarja threw himself across the
table, sending Damin backward off his stool. He rolled to the side as
Tarja lunged for him, tangling himself in the tent as their brawl
spilled outside. The candle fell from the overturned table and landed
in a puddle of spilled wine, where it quickly caught and began lapping
at the canvas tent walls. By the time they staggered to their feet in
the clearing, the blazing tent provided a ruddy backdrop to their fight.
They were both drunk, so the blows they traded lacked the strength
or accuracy of sobriety, but Damin was still surprised at the force
behind Tarja’s fist. Damin had time to wonder if it was guilt,
even
more than grief, which was eating up Tarja, before the Medalonian
charged him with a wordless cry.
By now their altercation had drawn the attention of the other men
occupying the surrounding tents, who quickly formed a cheering circle
of red-coated Defenders, brown-shirted rebels, and leather-clad Hythrun
Raiders, cheering on their officers as they brawled liked a couple of
drunken sailors.
Damin didn’t know who was getting the better of the fight.
Tarja was
a professional soldier, but he was operating on instinct as much as
anything. Damin knew his own battle-trained reflexes were the only
thing saving him from serious injury. His mind was too wine-muddled to
think anything through, other than trading hit and miss blows with his
equally inebriated adversary. He felt his bottom lip split as
Tarja’s
fist connected with his face, snapping his head back, but he blocked
the next blow with his left arm and slammed his fist into
Tarja’s gut.
The other man grunted in pain, but kept his feet and came at him again,
a feral grin on his face that looked all the more evil for being
blood-streaked and illuminated by the blazing firelight from the tent.
He ducked another blow and landed a glancing hit on Tarja’s
jaw, as the
breathtaking shock of icy water brought the conflict to an abrupt halt.
Damin staggered backwards, shaking the water from his drenched fair
hair, as Tarja did the same, looking about for the source of the
interruption. Mahina Cortanen stood not two paces from them, empty
bucket in hand, her expression thunderous. Lord Jenga stood just behind
her, and a pace or so behind Jenga stood the suddenly quiet spectators,
their faces ruddy in the flickering light of the burning tent.
“Is this something you gentlemen need to discuss
privately?†she
asked, with a voice that was colder than the water she had thrown on
them.
Damin glanced at Tarja, whose grin was now rather more sheepish than
feral. Both of his eyes were beginning to blacken, and blood streamed
from his nose and the corner of his mouth. His normally immaculate
uniform was torn and muddied. Damin had no doubt that he looked just as
bad.
“We were discussing . . . the differences in
Medalonian and Hythrun . . . hand-to-hand combat, my
Lady,†Damin explained, as he gasped for air, with a quick grin
in
Tarja’s direction. “We had just
moved . . . from a
theoretical discussion to a more . . . practical
demonstration of the techniques involved. A . . . most
useful exercise, I must say.†With the back of his tender hand,
he
wiped the blood from his mouth, and smiled ingenuously at Mahina. The
spectators, Defender, rebel and Hythrun alike, nodded their agreement.
Mahina glared at him then turned on Tarja. “And what do you
have to
say for yourself?â€
Tarja hesitated for a moment, his chest heaving, before he
straightened up and smiled through his split lip at the former First
Sister. “I’d say . . . both techniques
were useful,
given . . . the right circumstances, however
—â€
“Oh, spare me!†Mahina cried. “Perhaps now
that you’ve finished your
discussion, you might attend me and the Lord Defender in the
Keep? A matter of some urgency has arisen that requires your attention,
gentlemen. If you can find the time, of course.â€
Damin rubbed his tender jaw and glanced at Tarja, who seemed the
better for their fight, despite his physical condition. Damin made a
mental note to make certain that the next time Tarja felt the need to
hit something, he arranged for somebody else to be the target.
“I believe we can accommodate you, my Lady,†Damin
said, as if
accepting a dinner invitation. “Shall we, Captain?â€
“Certainly.†He looked around at the gathered
spectators, suddenly
noticing them for the first time. “Did you men want something
to do?â€
Several Defenders had taken it upon themselves to douse the blazing
tent. The rest of the Defenders and rebels faded into the darkness with
impressive speed. One look in the direction of his Raiders was enough
to have the same effect on them. Looking idle was a thing to be avoided
at all costs; every soldier in the camp knew that. Lord Jenga stood
behind Mahina, a rare smile on his contour-map face as he watched the
troops vanish back into their tents. Mahina glanced over her shoulder
at him. He quickly wiped the smile off his face.
“Something amuses you, my Lord?â€
“Youthful high spirits always amuse me, my Lady,†he
replied evenly.
“Is that what you call it? I can think of a better
description.†She
turned back to the two combatants with a frown. “Clean
yourselves up,
then meet me in the Keep.†She turned on her heel, still
clutching the
wooden bucket, and stormed off into the darkness.
“Has something happened?†Damin asked the Lord
Defender. Mahina was
fairly even tempered as a rule. Anger seemed strange in a woman who
looked like somebody’s grandmother.
“We have a visitor from the Citadel,†Jenga told
them.
“Who?†Tarja asked. The shock from Mahina’s
bucket of water seemed
to have sobered him. Damin wished he could recover so quickly.
“Garet Warner.â€
Damin turned to him, trying to think of an intelligent question. It
was quite depressing to be drunk under the table by a Medalonian. He
had to give at least give the impression that he could think straight.
“Is he on our side, this Garet Warner?â€
Tarja shrugged. “That remains to be seen.â€
Garet Warner proved to be a nondescript-looking
man of average height, who wore the red jacket of a Defender and the
rank insignia of a commandant. He had a balding head, a deceptively
quiet voice and a piercing mind. The Warlord studied him by the
torchlight of the hastily reconstructed great hall of Treason Keep.
Damin was unsure where the name had come from. It certainly
wasn’t
officially named that, and one referred to the ruin as “Treason
Keepâ€
in the Lord Defender’s hearing at their peril. It seemed
fitting,
though. The Defenders were here to protect their nation from invasion,
but they had broken any number of oaths to get here.
The ruin was deserted when they arrived some months ago, and a much
sturdier and strategically more useful keep, closer to the northern
border, would soon replace it. In the interim, Treason Keep was the
closest thing to a permanent structure on the open, grassy plains of
northern Medalon.
The commandant’s expression gave away nothing as Tarja and
Damin
entered the hall. Garet Warner stood in front of the huge fireplace,
his hands clasped behind his back as they walked toward him. Mahina sat
in a chair on his right; Jenga in another chair opposite the former
First Sister.
Tarja nodded warily to Garet when they reached the hearth.
“Garet.â€
“Tarja,†Garet acknowledged. “You’ve
a knack for keeping your head
on your shoulders, I’ll grant you that.â€
Tarja smiled faintly, which made Damin rest a little easier. There
was something about this visitor that marked him as dangerous, although
Damin wasn’t thinking clearly enough to define the feeling
exactly. He
hoped this man was on their side. He would be a bad enemy.
“I can’t help being hard to kill. Commandant Warner,
this is the
Warlord of Krakandar, Damin Wolfblade.â€
“Our new and somewhat unexpected ally. My Lord.â€
“Commandant,†Damin greeted him. “You come
from the Citadel, I hear.
Do you have news?â€
“Questions, more than news,†Garet replied, his
glance taking in all
of them. “The Quorum is understandably suspicious about the
First
Sister’s extended absence from the Citadel. The orders arriving
at the
Citadel, under her seal, seem rather at odds with
her . . . previous decisions.â€
“The First Sister has had a change of heart in recent
months,†Tarja
said.
“Is she still alive?â€
“Of course, she’s alive,†Jenga declared.
“Do you think I would be a
party to murder?â€
“I’m not here to give my opinion, my Lord,â€
Garet told him with a
shrug. “I am here to investigate the issues raised by the
Quorum. And
there is plenty of reason to be suspicious. You left the Citadel with
an army to capture and execute an escaped convict. Six months later,
here you are, sitting on the northern border with that same escaped
convict pardoned and a member of your staff, a foreign warlord, as your
ally, preparing to fight a nation we very recently considered our
friend. All with the approval of the First Sister, who, it is widely
acknowledged, was in complete disagreement with you on all of those
matters. The remarkable thing about all this is that they
haven’t sent
someone to investigate sooner.â€
“There’s a perfectly logical explanation,â€
Damin offered helpfully.
“And I look forward to hearing it,†Garet told him.
“It will be
fascinating, I’m sure. But first, I must insist on seeing
Sister
Joyhinia.â€
“You doubt my word, Garet?†Jenga asked.
“Not at all, my Lord. But I have my orders.â€
“Very well,†Jenga agreed, with some reluctance.
“You shall see her.
Perhaps once you have, things will make a little more sense.â€
“I hope so, my Lord.â€
“Sister Mahina? Would you be so kind as escort Commandant
Warner to
the First Sister’s quarters?â€
Mahina frowned. “I don’t like to disturb her this
late at night.â€
“It cannot be avoided, I fear. I doubt the commandant wants
to wait
until morning.â€
“Very well,†Mahina agreed. She stood up and pointed
toward the
narrow staircase that led to the upper level. “If you will
follow me,
Commandant.â€
Damin and Tarja stood back to let them pass, watching the old woman
and the Defender until they vanished into the gloom. Once he was
certain they were out of earshot, Tarja turned to Jenga with concern.
“This could be awkward,†Tarja said, leaning on the
long table for
support. The movement heartened Damin. Tarja was not nearly as sober as
he pretended.
“Awkward? This is bloody impossible! I have never been happy
with
this subterfuge! Something like this was bound to happen, sooner or
later.â€
“Do you have a better alternative?â€
“But to send orders to the Citadel? Under Joyhinia’s
seal? Orders
that anybody in their right mind would know did not come from
her?â€
Damin found himself stepping between the two men, and between an
argument that had been unresolved for months. “With all due
respect, my
Lord, the orders have come from Joyhinia. She has signed and
sealed everyone of them.â€
“She has the mind of a child,†Jenga retorted.
“You could place an
order for her own hanging in front of her and she’d sign it
with a
giggle. I’m not as adept as you and Tarja at twisting the truth
to
placate my honour, Lord Wolfblade. What we have done is tantamount to
treason.â€
“Refusing to slaughter three hundred innocent men was
treason,
Jenga,†Tarja pointed out. “Everything flowing from
that action is
merely consequences. The treason is done and past. Our duty now is to
protect Medalon.â€
“And the end justifies the means?†Jenga asked
bitterly. “I wish I
had your ability to see the world so . . .
conveniently.â€
“I wish I had your ability to argue the same point
endlessly,†Damin
added impatiently. “You Medalonians have a bad habit of not
knowing
when it’s time to let a matter rest. What I want to know is who
this
Garet Warner is, and why you’re all so afraid of him?â€
Both Tarja and Jenga looked at him in surprise.
“Afraid of him?†Jenga asked.
“Afraid is not the right word, but it pays to be wary of
him,†Tarja
said. “Garet Warner is the head of Defender Intelligence. And a
loyal
officer.â€
“Loyal to whom, exactly?â€
“We’ll find that out soon enough,†Jenga
predicted grimly.
CHAPTER 7
Consciousness was a long time coming to
R’shiel,
but it pulled at her relentlessly, forcing her to acknowledge her
existence. She did not want to awaken. She was perfectly content where
she was, lost in a warm nothingness where no pain, no misery, no fear
could intrude. The silence was complete, the darkness total. Were it
not for the annoying, insistent voice calling her name, she could
happily have stayed here forever. She had no sense of time in this
place, no way to judge how long she had been here. All she knew was
that she had no great desire to leave.
Yet the voice called to her and she was unable to resist it.
“Welcome back.â€
She stared at the man who spoke for a long time before she
remembered who he was. His faded blue eyes were full of concern. And
something else. Suspicion, perhaps?
“Brak.â€
“No, don’t try to sit up. You’ve been
unconscious for quite a while.
It’ll take a little time to get your strength back.â€
R’shiel let her head flop back onto the pillow, and
contented
herself with simply moving her head to study her surroundings. The room
was large and lit by streaming sunlight; the air was heavy with the
scent of wildflowers.
“Where am I?â€
“Sanctuary.â€
She turned her head to look at him. “How did I get here? I
don’t
remember anything. We were in Testra, I
think . . .â€
“Don’t worry, it’ll come back to you, and
sooner than you want.
You’ve been very sick, R’shiel. Cheltaran himself had
to heal you.â€
“Who’s Cheltaran?â€
“The God of Healing. You should feel honoured. He
doesn’t often
interfere directly with anyone, human or Harshini.â€
She closed her eyes for a moment, wondering why the knowledge did
not surprise or frighten her. They seemed to be emotions that for the
moment were out of reach.
“Tarja . . .?â€
“He’s fine. He’s up north, on the
border.â€
Even that news failed to ignite much more than a small sense of
relief in her. She wondered if she should feel something more. Perhaps
she was simply too lethargic to care. Later, when she gained her
strength, she could worry about such things.
“What are you doing here?â€
“This is my home, R’shiel. It’s your home
too.â€
“Is it?â€
Brak smiled, as if her vagueness amused him. “Go back to
sleep,
R’shiel. When you wake up the Harshini will attend you. They
are a
gentle people, so mind your manners. And try not to scream when you see
their eyes. I didn’t bring you all this way so you could
embarrass me.â€
R’shiel smiled vacantly. “I’ll be a good
girl.â€
He nodded and moved away from the bed.
“Brak.â€
“What?â€
“I owe you my life, don’t I?â€
“In ways you can’t imagine,†he replied.
“How long has she been like this?â€
Garet asked.
They had settled in around the fire in the crumbling great hall,
Garet in the chair that had been occupied by Mahina the previous
evening. Tarja sat on the edge of the hearth near Jenga, who had taken
the only other chair.
“Since Testra,†Jenga told him, staring into the
flames, not meeting
the eye of the other officer.
Damin stood leaning against the mantle, stoking the inadequate fire
with an iron poker. Fuel was a major problem on this treeless plain,
and a sizeable number of their force had been occupied gathering enough
wood to see them through the coming winter. Were it not for the vast
number of horses here, many of the camp’s fires would be sorry
affairs
indeed. It was a small extravagance to burn the wood, but Damin was
grateful to be spared the sting of burning dung in the Hall.
“How did it happen?â€
“I’m not certain.â€
Damin laughed softly at the Lord Defender’s discomfort.
“Dacendaran,
the God of Thieves, stole her intellect, Commandant. The Lord Defender
has some difficulty dealing with the concept.â€
“A difficulty I share, my Lord. We do not believe in your
gods.â€
“Believe in them or not,†Damin shrugged.
“It’s the truth. Ask
Tarja.â€
Garet turned his gaze on the younger man. “Tarja?â€
“Somebody told me once that he believed in the gods, he just
didn’t
know if they were worthy of adoration. That sums it up fairly well, I
think. The gods exist, Garet, and they took a hand in our conflict, as
Joyhinia’s condition proves.â€
“And you’ve been issuing orders in her name ever
since?†It was
impossible to tell what the man was thinking. He was a master in the
art of inscrutability, Damin decided. He would have made a brilliant
Fardohnyan merchant.
“Once the Karien Envoy was murdered on Medalon soil, the
threat of a
Karien invasion moved from a theory to a certainty,†Tarja
explained.
“Had Jenga returned to the Citadel with Joyhinia, the Quorum
would still
be in session, arguing about what to do next. At least this way
preparations could be made.â€
“Did you kill him?†he asked.
“No, but I led the raid. I suppose I’m
responsible.â€
Garet shook his head wearily and turned his attention back to Jenga.
“I’ve known you a long time, Jenga. I’m trying
to imagine what finally
pushed you into this. By any definition, this is treason.â€
The Lord Defender nodded heavily. “We discussed this once,
you and
I. I asked you what you would do if faced with an order you found
morally reprehensible. I recall you said you would refuse it, and the
consequences be damned. I find myself in that position now.â€
Garet leaned back in his seat and studied the three men before him.
“Knowing Joyhinia, I find that easy enough to believe, but how
long do
you think you can get away with this? The First Sister’s
absence from
the Citadel is causing a great deal of unrest. And the orders
she’s
sending are too strange to be accepted without question. You’ve
pardoned Tarja. You’ve ordered an end to the Purge and freed
half the
prisoners in the Grimfield. You’ve ordered troops north.
You’re
spending money like the treasury is a bottomless pit and you’ve
signed
a treaty with a Hythrun Warlord. Joyhinia would never be a willing
party to any of these actions.â€
“The next Gathering is only months away,†Tarja
pointed out.
“Joyhinia will send a letter to the Quorum announcing her
retirement
and nominating Mahina in her place. With her vote, and the votes of
Jacomina and Louhina, who will automatically vote for anything Joyhinia
suggests, we should be safe.â€
Garet shook his head. “It will never work, Tarja.â€
“It has to work,†he insisted. “The
alternative is a civil war, and
that would leave us wide open to a Karien invasion.â€
“We’re not trying to bring down the Sisterhood,
Garet,†Jenga added,
a little defensively. “Merely bring some sanity to it.â€
“Sanity? That’s a strange word coming from men who
think they can
fool the world into believing that Joyhinia Tenragan is alive and well,
when in fact she’s a babbling idiot.â€
Damin listened to the discussion with interest. He was a Warlord and
therefore absolute ruler of his province. He never had to justify
anything he did to anybody, and it fascinated him, watching the
Medalonians trying to convince themselves and each other that their
actions were either honourable or necessary, or both.
“The fact is, my friends, you can argue the rights and
wrongs of
this until you’re old men,†he interjected.
“What I’d really like to
know is what you are planning to do about it,
Commandant?â€
Garet Warner looked up at him. “I have two choices that I
can see. I
can go along with this farce, or I can return to the Citadel and tell
the Quorum what’s really going on up here.â€
“No, you have one choice, Commandant. You can go along with
this
farce, or I’ll kill you.â€
“Damin!â€
“Be realistic, Tarja. If you let him go, he’ll be
back here in a
month with a full force of Defenders, and you’ll have the very
civil
war you’re trying so hard to avoid. Killing one Defender now
may save
you from having to kill a damn sight more of them later on.
I’ll do it,
if it bothers you.â€
Garet stared at the Warlord for a moment. “A pragmatist, I
see. Not
a quality I expected to find in a heathen who believes in the Primal
gods.â€
“Then you sorely underestimate me, Commandant,â€
Damin warned.
“I fear I’ve sorely underestimated a lot of things
in my life, but I
manage to get by.†He turned back to Tarja, giving no
indication that
Damin’s threat bothered him. “The Quorum will not
accept Joyhinia’s
resignation without seeing her. How, in the name of the Founders, do
you expect to pull this off?â€
“I have no idea, Garet,†Tarja admitted.
“But we have to. Somehow.â€
“Who else knows of her true condition?â€
“The three of us,†Jenga told him. “Draco,
of course. Mahina and
Affiana know for certain. The Defenders and the heathens who were in
Testra when it happened don’t fully comprehend the full extent
of
her . . . condition, and we’ve kept up the
illusion that
she is in command, so far.â€
“Who is this Affiana?â€
“A friend,†Tarja said. “She takes care of
Joyhinia most of the
time.â€
“I see,†Garet said. He steepled his fingers under
his chin and
stared into the fire for a long moment. Damin wondered what he was
thinking, his hand resting on the hilt of his dagger. Garet Warner
would not leave this room alive if Damin doubted him for a moment.
“Let’s put aside the issue of Joyhinia, for the moment.
What of the
rumours that the Harshini have returned? You’ve made no mention
of
them.â€
“They, at least, are true. We’ve seen a few of
them,†Tarja told
him. “But not for months. I’ve no idea what
they’re planning, or where
they are. Believe me, if I could find them, I would have.â€
“To what purpose?†Garet asked.
“You’ve acquired enough strange
allies as it is,†he added, looking pointedly at Damin.
“They have R’shiel,†Tarja explained, his
voice remarkably
unemotional under the circumstances. “The Harshini believe she
is the
demon child.â€
Even Garet Warner could not hide his surprise at the news.
“R’shiel?
The demon child? Why in the name of the Founders would they think
that?â€
“They don’t think she’s the demon
child, Commandant, they know
she is. If she is still alive, the Harshini have her and I imagine they
won’t let her go until she has performed the task for which she
was
created.â€
“What task?â€
“They want her to destroy Xaphista,†Tarja said.
“The Karien god?†Garet shook his head in disbelief.
“If this is
some sort of joke, then you have me, Tarja. I’m afraid I
—â€
“My Lords?†the urgent voice rang out from the
shadows near the
door. “I seek Lord Wolfblade.â€
“Come in, Almodavar,†Damin called, recognising the
voice of his
captain. “What is it?â€
“You’d better come see, my Lord,†Almodavar
said in Hythrun, as he
materialised out of the shadows. “The western patrol is
bringing in two
spies they captured.â€
There had been a number of forays across the border by the
half-a-thousand knights camped north of the border for most of the
summer, although rarely did a knight sully his hands with anything so
demeaning as reconnaissance. It was always some hapless page or squire,
attempting to breach the border. It was an ambitious undertaking,
particularly for city-bred youths who thought Xaphista’s
blessing was
all the protection they needed on their journey. It had taken Damin
quite some time to accept that the forays were genuine, not merely a
feint to disguise a more effective attack. He had trouble believing
that anybody could be that stupid.
“Can’t you deal with it, Captain?†he asked
in Hythrun. It was an
advantage, sometimes, speaking a language his allies did not
understand. Tarja was attempting to learn Hythrun, be he could not
follow such a rapid exchange yet.
“They have news, my Lord.â€
Damin frowned and turned to the Defenders. “I’d
better see to this,â€
he told them. “I’ll be back in a while.†He
followed Almodavar out of
the Hall and into the night, to the curious stares of his companions.
The two spies proved to be boys, frightened and
defiant. Both had mousy brown hair and freckled skin, and they were
enough alike to be brothers. The older of the two wore a sullen
expression and the evidence of a beating. The younger was more defiant,
angry and belligerent. He wore a pendant with the five-pointed star and
lightning bolt of Xaphista, and leapt to his feet when Damin entered
the tent. The older brother did not rise from the floor. Perhaps he
could not. Almodavar was not renowned for his tender interrogation
techniques.
“Hythrun dog!†the younger boy cried,
spitting on the ground
in front of Damin. Almodavar stepped forward and slapped the boy down
with the back of his gauntleted hand. The lad fell backwards, landing
on his backside.
“That’s Lord Hythrun Dog, to you
boy,†Damin told him,
placing his hands on his hips and glaring at the youth. The boy cowered
under his gaze.
“They are Jaymes and Mikel of Kirkland,†Almodavar
told him. “From
Lord Laetho’s duchy in Northern Karien.â€
Duke Laetho’s banner had been identified months ago. He was
a rich
man with a large retinue, but rumour had it he was more bluster than
bravery, a fact borne out by the presence of these two boys. Who but a
fool would send children to do his reconnaissance for him?
“Almodavar says you have interesting news, boy. Tell me now,
and I
might let you live.â€
“We would give our lives for the Overlord,†the
older brother
snarled from the floor. “Tell him nothing, Mikel.â€
“No, I’ll tell him, Jaymes. I want to see the
Hythrun quivering in
their boots when they learn what is coming.â€
“Then out with it, boy,†Damin said. “It
would be most unfortunate
if I have you put to death for the glory of the Overlord before you get
the chance to see me quivering, won’t it?â€
“Your day of reckoning is coming. Even now, the Karien
knights
advance on you.â€
“They’ve been doing that for months. I’m
scared witless at the mere
thought.â€
“You should be,†Mikel spat. “When our
Fardohnyan allies join with
us to overrun this pitiful nation of atheists, we will descend on
Hythria and you will be knee-deep in pagan blood.â€
Damin glanced at Almodavar questioningly before turning his
attention back to the boy. “Fardohnyan allies?â€
“Prince Cratyn is to marry Princess Cassandra of
Fardohnya,†Mikel
announced triumphantly. “You cannot defeat the might of two
such great
nations.â€
“You’re lying. You’re a frightened child
making up wild stories.
Kill them, Almodavar — just don’t leave the corpses
where I can smell
them.†He turned his back on the youths and pushed back the
flap of the
tent.
“I do not lie!†the boy yelled after him.
“Our father is the Duke
Laetho’s Third Steward in Yarnarrow, and he was there when the
King
received the offer from King Hablet.â€
That had the ring of truth to it, Damin decided, although he did not
stop or turn back. Once they were clear of the tent, he turned to his
captain, his face reflecting concern and firelight in almost equal
measure.
“You think he speaks the truth?â€
“Aye, he’s too scared to think up a convincing
lie.â€
“This changes the rules of engagement somewhat,†he
said
thoughtfully. “Perhaps our visitor from the Citadel can shed
some light
on the news. He’s supposed to be in Intelligence, after
all.â€
“And the boys? Did you really want me to kill them?â€
“Of course not. They’re children. Put them to work
some place they
can’t cause any trouble. I believe the Kariens think hard work
is good
for the soul.â€
The captain smiled wickedly. “And deny them a chance to die
as
martyrs for the Overlord? You’re a cruel man, my Lord.â€
CHAPTER 9
Adrina’s departure from Talabar was an
occasion of
some note, and Hablet was determined to see his daughter off in style.
The hastily repaired wharf was lined with soldiers in their white dress
uniforms, a band played merry tunes to keep the spectators entertained,
and even Bhren, the God of Storms, was smiling on Fardohnya this day.
The weather was perfect — a flawless sky, a calm sea. The
sprawling
city of Talabar glowed pink in the warm sunlight; the flat-roofed
houses closest to the docks were lined with curious Fardohnyans come to
see the last of their princess.
Hablet stepped down from his litter and looked around with
satisfaction, waving to his people and accepting their cheers with a
wave of his bear-like arms. He had just about everything he wanted from
this treaty and was feeling unusually magnanimous. He had secured
enough of the tall, straight Karien lumber to build the ships he
wanted, enough gold to pay for their construction and, in a few months,
with the Kariens and the Defenders embroiled in a war in the north, he
would have a clear run across the southern plains of Medalon into
Hythria. Best of all, he would finally destroy Lernen Wolfblade, the
Hythrun High Prince — and his heirs — for an insult
over thirty years
old that very few people even remembered.
Hablet never forgot an insult.
He had conceded surprisingly little to the Kariens in return. True,
he had agreed to allow Karien ships unhindered access to Solanndy Bay,
where the Ironbrook River met the ocean, but they would pay dearly for
the privilege. He had granted the Kariens sovereignty over the Isle of
Slarn too, but that measly lump of rock perched in the Gulf was hardly
a prime piece of real estate and it had no value to anyone but the
Kariens. Of course, the casual observer would never have guessed how
little the island meant to him. But he had the Kariens believing it was
as dear to him as one of his limbs, and had made them pay accordingly.
As for the secret of gunpowder, he had promised that, too, but had
wisely proposed sending an expert in the science to Karien to suggest
an appropriate location for a mill, before divulging the formula. When
Hablet finally got around to sending someone, it was a foregone
conclusion that the search for such a location would take years. A lot
could happen in that time.
But the unexpected bonus was that he had finally found a way to get
rid of Adrina.
He loved his eldest child, it was true. In fact he had often
lamented the twist of fate that had seen her born a girl. She would
have made a fine son. Unfortunately, that fiery spirit, that biting
wit, that piercing intelligence, was positively dangerous in a woman.
Adrina was, to put it bluntly, a troublesome, spoilt little bitch.
Hablet was quite certain he would find it much easier to dote on his
daughter from a distance.
His previous efforts to find Adrina a husband had all failed
miserably. The last potential suitor, Lord Dundrake, had even suggested
that he would rather face a century of Hythrun Raiders, alone and
unarmed, than spend one night with Her Most Serene Highness. He claimed
he would have a better chance of survival. Adrina had despised the man
on sight, declaring she would never marry a man who couldn’t
tell the
difference between a dinner fork and his fingers. Dundrake was a little
rough around the edges, certainly. Hablet had hoped his provincial
charm would entice her. It had proved an idle hope. Adrina was
attracted to power, and there was no way that Hablet would allow her to
wed a powerful man. She needed a husband who would hold her back. There
were other men who would have married her gladly, and she them
— not
for love, but the power they brought each other. Hablet had refused all
such offers out of hand.
The Karien Prince had turned out to be the perfect solution. He was
a meek boy, so constrained by the edicts of his religion that Adrina
would never be able to cajole him into anything. He was so inhibited by
his religious distaste of all matters sexual, that even her legendary
powers of seduction would be wasted. He believed in his God and little
else. Poor Adrina. She would be the Karien Queen one day; she had
agreed to go north for no other reason than the power it might
eventually bring her. She was going to be very disappointed.
The band finished their tune and struck up a dour Karien number,
heralding the arrival of Prince Cratyn and his party. The brightly
painted Karien brigantine was tied up at the end of the wharf, awaiting
her prince. Hablet frowned at the ship and decided he probably had no
one but himself to blame for its hideous design. Fardohnyan ship
builders were the best in the world, but their secrets were guarded
more closely than his treasury. The Kariens built poor copies that were
vastly inferior to their Fardohnyan originals. The irony was, Fardohnya
had little in the way of timber for shipbuilding. It all had to be
imported from Karien. What the Kariens did not have, besides
generations of skilled craftsman, was the Fardohnyan secret of
hardening and waterproofing the timber.
The King turned his attention back to the ceremony, smiling
expansively at the young prince. For a moment, as Hablet studied his
solemn face, he felt sorry for the boy. He was stuck with Adrina for
life. The sorry fool was not even able to take a lover to console him.
Ah well, that was the price one paid for being a Karien Prince. Cratyn
bowed politely to the King and began a rather long-winded speech,
thanking the King for his generosity, his kindness, his hospitality,
and so on — in the Karien language, as the prince did not speak
Fardohnyan. Hablet only half listened to the young man, thinking that
he looked a little inbred. They were always marrying their cousins up
north. The Karien Royal Family would benefit from a bit of fresh blood.
“Her Most Serene Highness, Princess Adrina!â€
The fanfare that accompanied Adrina’s arrival was not on the
program
that Hablet had approved. He smiled at her audacity, and she was handed
down from her open litter by a handsome young slave wearing nothing but
a white loin cloth and a great deal of oil on his well-formed muscles.
She was planning to make her departure memorable, it seemed.
A number of white-robed young girls hurried to assemble in front of
the princess and proceeded to scatter petals on the ground before her,
so that her feet would not have to touch the grubby docks. Hablet
considered that the ultimate irony, considering a week ago she thought
she could sail a damned warship. He glanced at Cratyn’s
disapproving
frown and forcibly swallowed his laughter. The boy was only just
beginning to discover what he was marrying.
Adrina trod the flower-strewn path regally until she reached her
father and curtsied gracefully. She was a beautiful woman, and in her
prime. Although she was not particularly tall, and lacked
Cassandra’s
delicate perfection, she had outgrown her sister’s awkwardness
of youth
and had blossomed into a stunning creature. Her eyes were her best
feature: emerald green and wide set. Her body was voluptuous and
well-toned, rather than the slender gawkiness of a teenager. Cratyn
would be a lucky young man if he had the sense to appreciate what he
was getting. Provided Adrina kept her mouth shut.
Lecter Turon waddled forward and presented Hablet with a slender
blade wrapped in a jewelled sheath. He took the dagger and held it out
to Adrina.
“This is the Bride’s Blade your mother
carried.â€
“I hope it brings me better luck,†Adrina replied,
accepting the
gift. Adrina’s mother was not a topic discussed at court.
“It breaks my heart to lose you, my petal,†he
declared, almost, but
not quite believing it.
Adrina’s eyes glittered dangerously. “It’s
not too late to change
your mind, Father.â€
He knew that look. She had learnt it at his knee.
“Oh yes it is, my petal.â€
“Then you will just have to live with the consequences,
won’t you?â€
Hablet smiled. Only Adrina would dare threaten him. He swept her up
into a bear hug and the crowd cheered at this obvious display of
affection between the King and the princess.
“If you cross me, I’ll personally see to it that you
spend the rest
of your life suffering in the coldest, most miserable place I can
imagine,†he whispered affectionately as he held her.
“Think up a better threat, Daddy,†she whispered
back. “You’ve
already done that.â€
He let her go and held her at arm’s length for a moment. She
met his
gaze evenly. Her mother had been like that. Fearless and ambitious. It
was such a pity her ambition had run away with her. Had she learnt to
control it, she might not have lost her head . . . But
Adrina was everything her mother was and more. He felt overcome with
love for his child. Hopefully, the feeling would soon pass.
He took her hand and ceremoniously placed it in Cratyn’s
hand. The
crowd went wild. Hablet suspected it had more to do with the idea of
Adrina finally getting married than any affection for the Karien groom.
“May the gods bless this great union!†Hablet
boomed. “May Fardohnya
and Karien, from this day forward, live in peace!â€
The crowd cheered, although most of them knew Hablet’s
declaration
had little to do with his own feelings. By law, no Fardohnyan could
declare war on the house of a family united by marriage. That law
included the King. The Kariens knew about it too, which was no doubt
why they had put aside their prejudice and accepted a foreign bride. A
Fardohnyan queen was a small price to pay for the guarantee that Hablet
was unable to make war on them.
Cratyn squirmed a little as he stood there holding Adrina’s
hand.
His daughter smiled and waved to the people. They liked the princess.
She was an astute politician and had made a point of being generous to
those lesser creatures outside the palace. She was a tyrant around
anyone else, but the people remembered her small kindnesses and were
probably genuinely sorry to see her go.
The guard snapped to attention as the Karien Prince and Adrina
walked down the dock towards the ship. Hablet watched them leaving with
some relief. As they boarded the gangway, he waved his hand to the
Captain of the Guard. Tristan dismissed his men and came to stand
before his father.
“You can come back next winter,†he told the young
man brusquely. “I
should have forgiven you by then.â€
Tristan grinned. “You are too kind, Sire.â€
“Don’t take that tone with me, boy. You’re
lucky I didn’t send you
to the eastern passes.â€
“To be honest, Father, I would have preferred that you did.
I’d
rather fight Hythrun bandits than play toy soldiers in Karien.â€
“I need you to look after Adrina.â€
“Adrina doesn’t need looking after.â€
“Well, keep an eye on her, then. And don’t get mixed
up in her
schemes. I want you back in year, boy. I expect you to stay out of
trouble.†He hugged his eldest bastard with genuine affection.
“I’ll
have a legitimate son by then.â€
Tristan shook his head wryly. “Father, don’t you
worry sometimes
that one of us might want the throne for himself?â€
“There’s none of you strong enough to challenge me,
Tristan.â€
“But if you were to die before you name your
heir . . .â€
Hablet laughed. “Then you’ll have Adrina to contend
with, my boy,
and I’m damned certain none of you are strong enough to
challenge her.â€
CHAPTER 10
“Knights. About five hundred of
them.â€
Damin handed Tarja the small hollow tube he was using to examine the
golden plain below. It had taken them most of the morning to climb up
to this vantage on the side of the mountain that overlooked the border.
Although rocky, the ledge was comfortably wide and he, Garet and Damin
were stretched out on their bellies as they watched the tents of the
enemy below, occasionally brushing away curious insects come to
investigate the intruders.
Tarja put the tube to his eye and was enthralled to see the distant
figures of the knights, their white circular tents and impressive
entourage, grow larger through the lens. Damin called it a looking
glass.
The knights camped on the Karien side of the border did not bother
Tarja nearly so much as the infantry Jasnoff could throw against them.
The knights were impressive, but they would be a minority in the final
battle. More worrisome were the countless foot soldiers that the
Kariens could muster. They had yet to arrive at the front. The knights
below were as much an intimidating show of force as a serious vanguard
of any incursion over the border. With a sigh, he moved the looking
glass around to examine the fortifications on their side of the border.
The Defenders only hope to keep the conflict manageable was to force
the Kariens to attack down a path chosen by the Medalonians. Trenches
filled with sharpened stakes scored the plain like sword cuts in the
red earth. The ground was pockmarked with holes dug to hamper the
movement of the heavy Karien destriers. Mangonels, protected by earth
mounds, stood silently out of Karien bow range, waiting for the coming
battle like giant insects. But they had a vast front to cover and their
defences looked woefully inadequate from this height.
“I thought there’d be more of them,†Garet
remarked as he took the
looking glass from Tarja to study the Kariens.
“Ah, now that’s the problem with a feudal
government,†Damin
remarked sagely. “You have to waste an awful lot of time
getting your
army together. You have to call in favours, bribe people, marry off
your children, and convince your Dukes that there’s a profit in
your
war. Monumental waste of time and money, if you ask me. Standing armies
are much more efficient.†The fair-haired Hythrun frowned at
Garet’s
surprised expression. It was obvious that Damin neither liked nor
trusted Garet Warner. “I’m not a complete barbarian,
you know,
Commandant. Even Warlords need an education. What were you expecting my
tactical assessment to be? Me Warlord. Me kill Kariens.â€
Garet smiled thinly. “Not exactly.â€
Damin grinned suddenly and pushed himself backward along the ledge.
He sat against the cliff, leaning comfortably in the shade, with his
long legs stretched out in front. He crossed his booted feet at the
ankles as he took a long swig from his waterskin.
“You underestimate me again, Commandant,†he said,
offering Tarja
the waterskin as Garet turned to face him. “But, for your
information,
I was educated by the finest tutors in Hythria. And I’m right.
The
Kariens don’t keep a standing army, for all that they can field
a huge
one, once they finally get organised. It’s a fatal flaw.
Jasnoff’s
vassals owe him sixty days each a year, which means that by the time
they get here, it will almost be time to go home again, but
they’re
stuck here while the Church supports the war. Even fighting for the
glory of the Overlord starts to pale when it’s costing you
money and
there’s no plunder in sight.†He swatted idly at an
annoying insect.
“You Medalonians have the right idea. Toss the nobility,
promote on
merit and keep a standing army.â€
“Toss the nobility? If Hythria adopted that policy,
you’d be out of
a job.â€
Tarja wondered if he should warn Garet about the inadvisability of
getting into a discussion about the merits of various systems of
government with this man.
“Worse, Commandant, I’d be the first in line to be
beheaded. My
uncle is the High Prince of Hythria. I’m his heir,
unfortunately.â€
“Unfortunately?†Tarja asked.
“Taking the Hythrun throne isn’t going to be easy,
and keeping it
will be even harder. The other Warlords think I’m a
bit . . . precocious. There may come a time when I call
on Medalon for assistance. Assuming the Kariens and their Fardohnyan
allies don’t come pouring over your border to wipe us all
out.â€
Tarja had wondered what the price of Damin’s assistance
would be.
“I’m sure Medalon will remember your aid when the time
comes.â€
“You’re very free with your promises,
Tarja,†Garet remarked.
“You’re not the Lord Defender yet.â€
Tarja glanced at the commandant, but did not answer him.
“Well, for the time being, I think we’re safe
enough,†Damin said.
“Jasnoff can order his knights to the border with little
ceremony, but
we’ve time yet before the bulk of his army arrives. Although if
they
don’t get here soon, winter will be on us.â€
“That would be too much to hope for,†Tarja
remarked. “The Kariens
must know how hard a winter campaign will be.â€
“Lord Setenton is Jasnoff’s
Commander-in-Chief,†Damin agreed. “He’s
too experienced to try campaigning in the snow.â€
“You need to train your men to deal with armoured knights,
too,â€
Garet added. “A man encased in armour can be hard to kill, and
neither
the Defenders nor the Hythrun have much experience fighting
them.â€
“But he’s easy enough to disable. Just knock him of
his horse and
jump up and down on him for a while. That’ll knock the fight
out him.â€
Tarja smiled. “I’ll let you inform the troops of
that sage piece of
tactical advice.â€
Damin shrugged. “It sounds silly, but it works. Have you any
idea
how hard it is to get up wearing a suit of armour? Hell, they
can’t
even mount their horses without a block and tackle rig. Knock them on
their backs and thrust your sword through the eye slit. Works like a
treat. But the knights aren’t our problem. The true problem
lies with
Hablet and the Fardohnyans if he puts his artillery at
Jasnoff’s
disposal.â€
“Cannon, you mean?â€
Damin nodded. “I’ve never seen one myself, but
I’ve spoken to a few
who have. The only thing in our favour is that Hablet guards the secret
of what makes them work as if it’s more precious to him than
all his
children put together. I suspect he’ll find it a lot easier to
give
away his daughter than his precious cannon.â€
“I’d heard rumours of an alliance,†Garet
added, taking the
waterskin from Tarja. “But nothing substantial. I’ve
also heard rumours
that the reason Hablet guards the secret so closely is because his
cannon are notoriously unreliable, inaccurate, and just as likely to
kill the cannoneers as they are the enemy. Hablet’s weapon is
his
enemies’ fear of the cannon, not the cannon themselves.â€
“Even if that’s true, I don’t want to face
cannon fire with swords
and arrows.â€
“Even without cannon, if there is an alliance, Fardohnya
could
attack from the south,†Garet pointed out. “We
can’t afford to split
our forces.â€
He said our forces, not your forces. Tarja wondered
if the slip was accidental, or if it meant Garet had finally chosen
which side he was on.
“We’ll need time,†Tarja agreed with a
frown. “Until we gain control
of the Citadel, the Defenders we can put in the field are barely half
the number we need.â€
Damin nodded in agreement. “I can spare another three
centuries of
Raiders, but any more than that and Krakandar Province will begin to
look a little bit too inviting to my neighbours. I can always send to
Elasapine, if worst comes to worst. Narvell would send me five
centuries of his Raiders if I asked him nicely. I imagine that many
Hythrun troops garrisoned in Bordertown would make Hablet think twice
about sailing up the Glass River.â€
“Narvell?†Tarja asked.
“Narvell Hawksword, the Warlord of Elasapine,†Damin
explained.
“He’s my half-brother. My mother’s second
husband was his father.â€
“How many husbands has your mother had?†Tarja asked.
“Five, the last time I counted,†Garet remarked,
obviously
surprising Damin with his knowledge. He looked at the Warlord and
shrugged. “I run the Defender Intelligence Corps, my Lord.
I’m supposed
to know these things.â€
“Then you should know she might have married again, by now.
She had
her eye on a very rich Greenharbour gem merchant when I saw her
last.â€
Tarja shook his head in amazement. It was rare for Sisters of the
Blade to marry or have more than one or two children. Only the farmers
of Medalon, for whom children were a convenient source of cheap labour,
tended towards large families.
“But even with a thousand Hythrun raiders, we still need the
Defenders in full force,†Tarja pointed out with a frown,
getting back
to the problem at hand. “At the moment, we’ve got your
seven hundred
Raiders and about six thousand Defenders here, and that’s less
than
half.â€
“How many longbowmen do you have?â€
“Five hundred. The rest are still at the Citadel.
Why?â€
“I’ve been watching them train. I doubt if I could
draw one of those
damned bows.â€
“We train them from boyhood,†Tarja told him.
“They’re selected from
the cadets and they grow up with their bows. As they get stronger, the
bows get longer, until they can draw a full-sized weapon.
They’re very
good, I’ll grant you, but they’re irreplaceable. You
can’t just hand
the bow along to the next man in line when a longbowman falls. And even
with the others still at the Citadel, they number less than fifteen
hundred.â€
“We can use them to our advantage. Assuming Hablet
doesn’t arm the
Kariens with cannon, your longbows out-range any weapon they can bring
to bear against you. Kariens consider the bow and arrow a peasant
weapon. They have archers, but nothing of the calibre of your longbows.
If we concentrate on protecting them, you could cut down any
advance like a farmer mowing hay with a scythe.â€
“And your mounted archers?†Garet asked.
“We’re hit-and-run specialists,†Damin
shrugged. “Any man of mine
can fire three arrows into a target the size of an apple at a gallop in
under a minute, but our bows are short-range weapons. There are too
many Kariens for that sort of tactic.â€
“What about the rebels?â€
Tarja shrugged. “Another thousand at the most. Most of them
have
never held a weapon. Jasnoff can field an army of over a hundred
thousand with the Church supporting him. With the Fardohnyans as
allies . . . I’m not sure I can count that high.
I
suppose they could pray for us.â€
“Never underestimate the power of prayer,†Damin
warned. “If
Zegarnald, the God of War, takes our side, we should do well. And
we’ve
yet to hear from the Harshini.â€
Tarja did not argue the point. He had no faith in Damin’s
gods.
“I thought the Harshini were incapable of killing?â€
Garet asked
“There’s plenty of ways to frustrate the enemy
without killing him.â€
“I suppose,†Tarja agreed, a little doubtfully.
“Maybe they could
bring their demons and scare the Kariens to death.â€
“If the Kariens bring their priests with them, we will need
the
protection of the Harshini and their magic,†Damin warned.
“When Lord
Brakandaran returns, we will know more.â€
Tarja frowned at the mention of Brak. “He’s been
gone more than five
months. What makes you think he’s planning to return at
all?â€
“He’ll be back,†Damin assured him.
“I wish I shared your confidence.â€
The fact was he wanted to see the Harshini rebel very badly
— and
not simply because he needed to know what help the Harshini could offer
in the coming battle. Brak would know if R’shiel lived. Months
had
passed since she had vanished, quite literally, but he had seen enough
wounds in his time to know that hers was fatal. Yet the Harshini were
magical creatures and R’shiel was half-Harshini. A small spark
of hope
still burned in him that she had somehow survived Joyhinia’s
sword
thrust, but as the days, weeks and then months passed with no word from
her, his hope was fading.
“Is something wrong?â€
Tarja shook his head. “I was just thinking of someone,
that’s all.â€
“The demon child.â€
“I wasn’t thinking of her in those terms,â€
Tarja said wryly. “But I
was thinking of R’shiel, yes.â€
“Her fate is in the hands of the gods, my friend,â€
Damin reminded
him. “There is nothing you can do about her. On the other hand,
there
is something we can do about those damned knights.â€
“What did you have in mind?†Garet asked, a little
suspiciously.
“They’re looking a bit too comfortable for my
liking. I think we
should wake them up.â€
“What does that mean exactly?â€
Damin laughed. “It means putting aside your damnable
Defender’s
honour for a time and learning to be sneaky.†He climbed to his
feet
and dusted off his trousers. “We need to do something about
their
supply lines, for one thing. What about it, Commandant? Are you with
us?â€
Tarja glanced at Garet curiously, knowing there was much more to
Damin’s simple question than whether or not he wanted to attack
the
Karien camp. The older man studied them both in silence for a moment.
“I’ll not be a party to anything thing that reeks of
stupidity,†he
warned, climbing to his feet and handing the looking glass back to
Damin. “That also includes your ludicrous scheme for replacing
Joyhinia, Tarja. Come up with something workable, and I’ll back
you to
the hilt. But what you are planning is insane. And I plan to die in my
bed a very old man.â€
“That’s the most uncommitted excuse for an agreement
I’ve ever
heard.â€
“Be satisfied with it. It’s the best you’re
likely to get until you
show me something devised by brains, not wishful thinking.â€
Damin glanced at the two of them and shook his head.
“Let’s just
push him off the cliff and be done with it, Tarja,†he
suggested.
“I hear you have a reputation as a cunning warrior, Lord
Wolfblade.
I can’t for the life of me imagine how you came about
it.†He pushed
past Damin on the ledge and began to climb down to the narrow trail
where their horses were tethered below.
“If this man was not your friend,
Tarja . . .†Damin
began.
“He’s just testing you. We need him.â€
“No, you need him. I’d just as soon see him
dead. And I warn
you, every moment I spend in his company, the idea becomes more
attractive.â€
Damin slammed the delicate looking glass back into its leather case
and began to follow the path that Garet had taken.
Tarja shook his head. The last thing they needed was Damin Wolfblade
threatening to kill Garet Warner. With Garet’s assistance, it
would be
far easier to fool the Quorum into believing all was well with the
First Sister and his help was essential if they were to eventually
replace her. And if the Kariens really had allied with
Fardohnya, their only hope of preventing a southern incursion was
Damin’s Hythrun Raiders.
Not for the first time since Joyhinia had won the First
Sister’s
mantle, Tarja wished he had let her hang him. He would never have
become involved in the rebellion. He would never have led the raid to
rescue R’shiel that resulted in the death of the Karien Envoy,
and they
would not be facing an invasion. But what hurt most, when he let
himself think on it, was R’shiel. If not for him, she would be
alive
and probably in blissful ignorance of what she really was.
But then again, maybe nothing would be different, even if he had
died. The Harshini had known all along what R’shiel was and had
sent
Brak to find her. Garet and he had identified the Karien threat long
before any of these other events took shape. Whichever way he looked at
it, he was caught in circumstances that seemed to be constantly
spiralling out of control. He remembered thinking, more than a year
ago, when he was riding toward capture in Testra at the hands of Lord
Draco, the man who turned out to be his father, that life was no longer
certain.
He was starting to wryly think of those times as the good old days.
The ride back to the Defender’s camp was
tense.
Damin was angry and Garet silent. Tarja wished he could think of
something to say that would bring some sanity to the situation. He had
always liked and respected Garet Warner, yet he had found a rare
friendship with Damin Wolfblade — ironically, a man he had
spent four
years on the southern border trying to kill.
It was late afternoon when Treason Keep appeared on the horizon.
Although the engineers had done their best, it was unlikely the Keep
would ever be useful as anything but a temporary headquarters. Tarja
wondered what had happened to Bereth and her orphans. There was no sign
of them at the Keep. Had they survived? Or had Bereth found a safer
place for her brood? Tarja wished he had the time to discover their
fate.
The tents of their army covered a vast area surrounding the old
ruin. The Hythrun were camped on the western side of the plain, and as
they neared the sea of tents, Damin reined in his mount and studied the
camp thoughtfully. Tarja stopped beside him. Garet rode on, not
interested in the view.
The Defender’s tents were laid out in precise lines, each
housing
four men, with spears and pikes stacked in neat piles between them.
Their camp was as neat and orderly as Defender discipline demanded. The
much smaller Hythrun camp looked like a motley collection of warriors
out on a hunting expedition. No two tents were alike, and they had been
erected anywhere the Raiders felt like making camp. A pall of smoke
hung over the camp from the cook fires and the huge open-air forge
built against the southern wall of the Keep. Even from this distance,
Tarja could faintly hear the rhythmic ringing of the smiths’
hammers as
they pounded the metal into shape. The need for additional swords,
pikes and arrowheads was urgent. Jenga had decided that making them on
site was preferable to shipping them from the Citadel, although the
lack of fuel for the hungry fires almost outweighed the advantages of
being able to make and repair their weapons at the front.
North of the camp lay the training grounds, marked by a vast expanse
of scuffed ground and lines of tall hay bales, to which rough outlines
of man-shapes had been secured to give the trainees something to aim
at. Mounted, red-coated sentries patrolled the camp perimeter in pairs.
The Hythrun sentries were out of sight, hidden by the long grass.
To the south was the sprawling tent city that housed the rebels, the
camp followers and anyone else in Medalon who thought there was a quick
fortune to be made in a war. Jenga had given up trying to make them
leave.
“The Fardohnyans have me worried,†Damin admitted
eventually, once
Garet was out of their hearing. “Karien knights are fools. They
expect
everyone to play by the same rules as they do, and are therefore
predictable.â€
“And the Fardohnyans?†Tarja had never fought them.
In his
experience they preferred trade to conflict. But an enemy that caused
the Hythrun Warlord concern was an enemy to fear.
“Hablet keeps a huge standing army. His troops are well
trained and
they think on the run,†Damin warned. “They
won’t play by the same
rules as the Kariens. It’s one of the reasons Hythria has
avoided an
open conflict with Fardohnya. And then there’s Hablet’s
cannon . . .â€
“What do you suggest?â€
Damin shrugged. “I think we need help.â€
“Point me at it,†Tarja said wearily.
Damin glanced at him and then laughed. “I think it’s
time I spoke to
my god. I am, after all, His most worthy subject. Zegarnald owes me a
favour or two.â€
“I thought you said you didn’t know how to contact
the gods?â€
“I believe I said I didn’t know how to contact the
God of Thieves.
The God of War is a different matter entirely. He speaks to me
often.â€
“What does he say?†Tarja asked curiously.
“Ah, now that is between me and my god. You return to the
Keep and
try to keep things under control. I will see what I can do about some
divine assistance.â€
“Damin!†Tarja called uselessly, as the Warlord
spurred his
magnificent stallion forward. Damin ignored him and galloped toward the
camp.
Tarja watched him go, wondering about the wisdom of allying himself
with someone who thought the fickle Primal gods could help them against
the might of the Karien army, allied with the almost uncountable
Fardohnyans.
Garet was right, he thought heavily as he spurred Shadow on towards
the camp. He was trying to win a war with wishful thinking.
Find the answer within yourself.
R’shiel didn’t even try. She liked the Harshini
— it was impossible
to dislike them — but she had no desire to become embroiled in
some
divine conflict. She accepted that there were gods. She had even met a
few of them since coming here, but they did not impress her, and she
certainly felt no desire to worship them. If the gods didn’t
like one
of their underlings getting above his station, then they should have
thought about that before creating the problem in the first place.
She did not share her opinion with Korandellan. He was willing to
answer any question she asked and teach her anything she wanted to
know, but his aversion to violence made the subject of Xaphista an
awkward one. That suited R’shiel just fine — she had no
desire to
discuss the matter anyway.
Time was a fluid quantity in Sanctuary, so
R’shiel
had no way of gauging how long she had been here. It seemed as if
everyday she learnt something new, but if each day was a new one, or
simply the same day repeated over and over, she could not tell. She
regained her strength and then grew even stronger, exploring the vast
network of halls that made up the Harshini settlement.
There were rooms here that were so like the Citadel she sometimes
had to remind herself where she was. The artwork that was so
determinedly concealed in the Citadel was exposed here, in all its
glory. Although the walls were generally white, there wasn’t a
flat
surface in the place that was not adorned with some type of artwork,
large or small. It seemed every Harshini was an artist of some
description. There were delicately painted friezes lining the halls and
crystal statues in every corner. There were galleries full of paintings
depicting everything from broad sweeping landscapes to tiny,
exquisitely detailed paintings of insects and birds. The Harshini
studied life and then captured its essence in their art.
Curiously, the one thing she expected did not happen here. The walls
did not glow with the coming of each new day and fade with the onset of
night. The Brightening and Dimming that characterised the Citadel was
missing. The Harshini used candles and lanterns like any normal human,
although admittedly they could light them with a thought and extinguish
them just as easily.
The valley floor, which looked so wild and untended from the
balconies, proved to be a complex series of connecting gardens and the
source for much of the Harshini food in the settlement. At least it
should have been, Korandellan had explained, with a slight frown. The
abundant gardens were trapped in time, as was the whole settlement. The
vines never wilted, the flowers never faded. Bees buzzed between the
bushes, crickets chirruped happily, worms wiggled their way through the
fertile soil — but a picked berry was gone forever. Like the
Harshini,
and every animal in Sanctuary, they could not reproduce. The issue of
food was becoming critical, so much so, that Korandellan had allowed a
number of Harshini to leave the settlement. Some of them went openly,
like Glenanaran, who had returned to Hythria to teach at the
Sorcerers’
Collective. Others went out into the human world, disguised and
cautious, to barter or trade for some badly needed supplies. Although
he never said it aloud, R’shiel guessed it was fear of Xaphista
and the
Karien priests that kept them hidden.
They were performers, too, R’shiel discovered soon after she
was
allowed the freedom of Sanctuary. In the amphitheatre in the hollow
centre of the gardens, against the permanent rainbow that hovered over
the tinkling cascade, they held concerts in the twilight as the sun
settled behind the mountains. The first time R’shiel had heard
the
Harshini sing she had cried. Nothing had prepared her for the beauty of
their voices or their skill with instruments she had never seen in the
human world.
Sometimes the concerts were impromptu affairs, where members of the
audience would step forward, either alone or in groups, to perform for
their friends. Other times the concerts were as well organised as any
Founder’s Day Parade, and then the massed choir of the Harshini
would
transport R’shiel to a place she had never even glimpsed
before. “The
Song of Gimlorieâ€, the Harshini called it. The gift of the God
of
Music. A prayer in its own right, it had the power to devour
one’s
soul. The cadence of the song, the subtle harmonies, and the pure,
crystalline voices of the Harshini, combined to create images in the
mind that could be as euphoric as they were dangerous. The demons would
appear in the amphitheatre whenever they sang for Gimlorie, their eyes
wide, their bodies uncharacteristically still as they listened to the
music with rapt expressions. R’shiel understood their
fascination with
the music and lamented its loss to the human world.
It was following the last concert she attended that R’shiel
came to
an important decision. Tarja was a pleasant, fading memory. Joyhinia
and Loclon were so far buried in the back of her mind that she barely
even acknowledged their existence. Xaphista was the gods’
problem, not
hers. There was supposed to be a war going on, but it did not intrude
on the serenity of this other-worldly realm. Sanctuary was peaceful,
and the troubles of the outside world could not touch her in this
magical place. She was half-Harshini after all, and welcome here.
R’shiel decided that she didn’t really care if she
never returned to
the outside world at all.
CHAPTER 13
Karien was a vast country, full of tall
evergreens, rugged valleys and steep, but distant, snow-capped
mountains to the east. With autumn approaching the weather grew colder
as they sailed north. Adrina found herself shivering each morning when
she took her daily exercise on deck.
The Ironbrook was a heavily populated waterway. They sailed past
numerous villages, some large and prosperous, some mean and depressing,
some barely deserving of the name at all. They seemed dirty and crowded
to a princess raised in the spacious, pink-walled cities of Fardohnya.
In fact, Karien seemed a nation lacking in colour. The villages were
drab, the people even more so, and the frequently overcast weather
leeched the remaining pigment from the world. She was not looking
forward to spending her life among these people, not even as their
queen.
Adrina was easily bored and the seemingly endless journey up the
Ironbrook River toward Yarnarrow offered little in the way of
entertainment. She had exhausted most of the opportunities for
distraction available to her. She had admired all the scenery she could
bear and waved at so many ragged peasants lining the riverbank that her
arm felt ready to drop off. When she wasn’t being hounded by
Madren
regarding the proper way to behave in a Karien court, Vonulus dogged
her heels with his instruction in the unbelievably demanding laws of
the Karien Church. Adrina was beginning to think the reason so many
people sinned was because it wasn’t humanly possible to
remember
everything that would lead one into temptation.
The only other activity Adrina had to while away the long days on
the river was socialising with her ladies-in-waiting. She was not
certain what a lady-in-waiting was supposed to do. They hovered around
her like flies around a corpse, and seemed anxious to perform small,
meaningless tasks for her, but they were offended if she treated them
as servants and too sheltered to serve as entertaining companions.
Adrina was unusually cautious in dealing with them. It would not do
for these young women (virgins one and all) to learn that for her
sixteenth birthday her father had given her a handsome young court’esa.
Nor would it do to disillusion the Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and
Chastity regarding her virtue. As far as Adrina could tell, every one
of them had been raised in finest Karien tradition, which meant they
could read (barely), sing (acceptably), play a musical instrument
(tolerably well) and discuss such riveting topics as needlework,
banquet menus and the convoluted family bloodlines of the Karien
nobility. All of these topics left Adrina cold, so she listened and
smiled and pretended she didn’t understand them when the
conversation
became unbearable.
Today was proving particularly trying. Tall, dour, Pacifica had
taken it upon herself to enlighten Adrina regarding the long and
incredibly dull history of her family, the Gullwings of Mount Pike. She
had only got as far as Lord Gullwing the Pious, who lived three
centuries past, when Vonulus disturbed them. Adrina welcomed him into
the crowded cabin. Even a lesson in the complex duties of a woman
according to the Church of Xaphista was preferable to another three
hundred years of Dullwings.
“Vonulus! Have you come to instruct me?†she asked.
“Or perhaps
another discussion about the definition of sin?â€
“You would do well to heed both, your Highness,â€
Pacifica advised, a
little put out at Adrina’s shift in attention.
“We may discuss whatever you wish, your Highness.â€
Adrina glanced at Pacifica and her companions thoughtfully.
“Sin
shall be the topic today, I think. I am interested in your definition
of adultery.â€
Predictably, the Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and Chastity gasped at
the suggestion. Vonulus, however, was not so easily rattled.
“Certainly, your Highness. What were you planning?â€
Adrina’s eyes widened innocently. “Planning? Why
nothing, sir. I
simply seek to avoid pitfalls. I have no wish to do or say something
that in my country would be considered perfectly normal, but in yours
would see me stoned.â€
“A reasonable precaution,†he noted with a look that
said he didn’t
believe her for a minute. “What exactly did you want to
know?â€
“Define adultery. The Karien definition.â€
“It is not the Karien definition, your Highness. It is the
Overlord’s definition, and therefore, the only acceptable
definition.â€
Adrina chose not to pursue that particular argument. “As you
wish,
define it for me.â€
“Adultery, according to the Overlord, is any thought or deed
that
causes a man to lust after another man’s wife, or a woman to
lust after
another woman’s husband.â€
Adrina’s brow furrowed. “So, let me see if I
understand you. If I
lust after an unmarried man, then I have not committed adultery, but if
I lust after a married man, I have? Is that right?â€
“I think you take my meaning too literally, your
Highness,†Vonulus
began with a shake of his head, but Adrina did not allow him time to
continue.
“So that would work the other way, too, I suppose?â€
she asked. “If
my husband . . . well, for argument’s sake,
let’s
pretend Cretin falls madly in love with one of my
ladies . . .†she glanced around at the four
rather
appalled young women, before fixing her eyes on Chastity.
“Say . . . the Lady Chastity
here . . .â€
“Your Highness!†Chastity cried in horror.
Adrina smiled sweetly. “Oh never mind, Chastity, I only use
you to
demonstrate my point. With a name like yours, how could you be anything
but pure? Anyway, let’s pretend that Cretin and
Chastity . . . indulge in a bit of . . .
sin . . . then by your definition, Cretin would get off
free as a bird, because Chastity is unmarried, yet my poor Lady would
be stoned, because Cretin is married to me. Is that right?â€
Vonulus did not look pleased. “That could be regarded as the
strictest definition, I suppose, however —â€
“I see,†Adrina cut in. “And I can sin
merely by thinking
something lustful?†Gods! Am I in trouble! “How
would you know
what I’m thinking?â€
“I don’t need to know, your Highness. Xaphista sees
all. The
Overlord would know.â€
“He must be a very busy god, then,†she remarked
irreverently.
“It is by resisting such thoughts, that we spare our god the
need to
constantly watch over us,†Vonulus replied.
“And do you ladies resist temptation?â€
The young women nodded quickly in agreement. Too quickly,
she thought, with a private little smirk.
“The Overlord teaches us that to resist temptation is to
ensure a
place at His table in the next life,†Pacifica said.
“You mean if you’re a good little girl in this life,
you won’t come
back as a cockroach in the next?â€
Vonulus sighed heavily. “Your Highness, I believe we
discussed the
matter of reincarnation several days ago. There is no such thing. We
are given one life. When we die, our spirit ascends to the
Overlord’s
table if we have lived according to his rules.â€
“And you drown in the Sea of Despair for eternity, if you
don’t,â€
Adrina replied with a nod. “I remember our discussion. That
would mean,
that by your definition, every soul who ever lived, who didn’t
worship
Xaphista, is splashing about in the Sea of Despair, wondering where
they went wrong. It must be pretty crowded down there.â€
“Your irreverence will lead you into trouble, your
Highness,â€
Vonulus warned. “Have a care when you reach Yarnarrow. Such
comments
will not sit well at court.â€
Adrina met the priest’s gaze evenly. “Can’t
your religion stand a
bit of scrutiny, Vonulus? You wish me to believe in your god, yet you
resent me questioning anything I do not understand. My gods may be
numerous, but at least they have a sense of humour.â€
“Your Highness, a sense of humour will be of little help to
you,
should you be out of grace when you die. The Primal gods you worship
are nothing more than natural events to which the unenlightened have
attached divinity. You should be thankful that by marrying Prince
Cratyn, you have an opportunity to embrace the one true god.â€
Adrina smiled apologetically, realising that she had pushed the
priest far enough for one day. It did not particularly matter to her
that they expected her to worship their god. She wasn’t a fool
and had
every intention of acting as if she had converted. But her own beliefs
ran too deep to be overturned by a priest, no matter how clever or
articulate.
“I appreciate your advice, sir,†she demurred.
“I hope the Overlord
will forgive my pagan ignorance.â€
Vonulus looked a little suspicious, but he nodded. “The
Overlord can
see into your heart, your Highness. He will judge you
accordingly.â€
“Well, I don’t have anything to worry about then, do
I?†she asked
brightly.
“I’m sure you don’t,†Vonulus agreed
warily.
Tarja returned to the camp late in the day,
letting Shadow set her own pace, still brooding over his last argument
with Jenga. The Lord Defender was trying to hold together a disparate
force, Tarja knew that, and the knowledge that he was doing it through
deception weighed heavily on him. But it didn’t excuse his
intransigence over the matter of attacking the Kariens. The Lord
Defender was willing to defend his border, but he refused to make the
first move. He wanted to wait until the Kariens invaded. Tarja
disagreed. The Karien camp had grown considerably from the five hundred
knights that had been camped there all through summer. They should be
taking the fight to the enemy and they should do it now, before the
Karien force grew so large that they would simply be overrun.
Jenga was furious when he heard that Tarja had crossed the border.
Using the same Hythrun tactics that were so effective in the south, on
their numerous cattle raids into Medalon, he had taken a handful of men
into Karien under cover of darkness and stampeded the enemy’s
horses
through their camp. The ensuing destruction had been extremely
gratifying — it had probably set back their war effort by
weeks. He’d
only lost three men to injury, and had considered the entire affair a
small, if significant, victory.
Jenga did not see it that way. He had exploded with fury when he
learnt of the attack, accusing Damin of being a reckless barbarian for
suggesting the idea, and Tarja of being an undisciplined fool for
listening to him.
Following his desertion two years ago, Tarja had often longed for
the chance to return to the security and brotherhood of the Corps. But
now that he was back, he discovered it was not the easy ride he had
hoped. He had liked being in command of the rebels, he realised
now. He had been raised to command, and knew, without vanity, that he
was good at it. Tarja respected Jenga, but had grown accustomed to
making his own decisions. Jenga was a good soldier but he’d
been Lord
Defender for more than twenty years, and that meant he had more
practice with politics than war. Tarja had spent the best part of his
adult life at war with the Hythrun, the Defenders and now the Kariens.
Jenga had not raised his sword in anger in decades.
They still had only six thousand of the twelve thousand Defenders
they could count on, and a thousand Hythrun Raiders from Krakandar. As
he thought of the Hythrun, he wondered, as he had already done
countless times, where Damin Wolfblade was.
Nobody had seen the Warlord for nearly a month — not since
the
argument with Jenga after the raid, when he announced that he was going
to speak with his god. If Almodavar knew where he was, he
wasn’t
saying. The grizzled Hythrun captain seemed unconcerned by his
Lord’s
absence. If Damin wished to speak with the God of War, to seek his
blessing, then his troops were not about to object. They fervently
believed Zegarnald would help them. They were counting on it, in fact.
When he reached the camp, on impulse Tarja turned toward the
scattered Hythrun tents. Perhaps Almodavar had heard something. It was
becoming increasingly difficult to reassure Jenga that Damin had not
simply deserted them.
He rode through the camp, acknowledging the occasional wave from the
Hythrun troops. The Raiders were much less respectful of rank than the
Defenders. Among the Raiders, one earnt respect through battle, not
promotion or pretty insignia. But some of these men had faced Tarja on
the southern border. They knew him for a warrior and found nothing
strange in their Warlord’s alliance with his former enemy.
The Defenders had been far less accommodating. They resented the
presence of the Hythrun and made no secret of it. Tarja thought that
much of the impressive discipline the Defenders displayed was designed
to show the Hythrun how things were done in a “properâ€
army. The
Defenders despised mercenaries, and most of Damin’s Raiders
were just
that. Tarja was a little more tolerant. Had the rebellion not
intervened, he would likely be a mercenary himself, by now. But
feelings ran strong between the two camps and fights broke out
frequently. In the beginning, Tarja and Damin had organised training
bouts between the two armies, ostensibly to foster some sort of
cohesion between the two forces. Three fatalities put paid to that
laudable sentiment, and Jenga had ordered them stopped. Now the
training was strictly segregated.
He reached the centre of the Hythrun camp and discovered a large
number of the Raiders in a cheering circle, obviously wagering on some
sort of contest. As he neared the group a cheer went up, almost
drowning out an unmistakable cry of pain. Tarja dismounted curiously,
threw the reins over Shadow’s neck and pushed his way through
the crowd.
The source of the Hythrun entertainment proved to be two boys, both
bloodied and wounded. The brawl must have been going on for quite some
time, by the look of the two combatants. The older of the two was a
well-muscled, fair-haired Hythrun lad of about sixteen, an apprentice
blacksmith that Tarja had seen once or twice around the forge. The
younger boy could not have been more than ten or eleven and was
unmistakably Karien, but despite the difference in their sizes, he
appeared to be giving a good account of himself, although he was
clearly on the brink of collapse. His freckled face was almost totally
obscured by blood, his clothes torn, his eyes burning with hatred. He
was staggering to his feet as Tarja pushed through to the front of the
crowd.
Tarja winced sympathetically as the older boy ran at the disoriented
Karien lad and delivered a kick to the boy’s chin that snapped
his neck
back almost hard enough to break it. With a pain-filled grunt, the
Karien boy dropped to the ground. Breathing heavily, the apprentice
laughed, triumphantly standing over his vanquished foe. He reached down
and snatched the pendant from around the boy’s neck and held it
up high
to the cheers of the spectators. The five-pointed star and lightning
bolt of the Overlord glittered dully in the afternoon light. Someone
started up a cry of “Finish him!†which was quickly
taken up by the
rest of the spectators. The apprentice grinned at the chant and pulled
his dagger from his belt. Tarja glanced around the Hythrun and
realised, with horror, that they were serious.
“Enough!†he shouted, stepping into the clearing,
his red jacket
stark against the motley browns and black chain mail of the Hythrun.
Silence descended on the circle of Raiders. Only then did Tarja
wonder about the advisability of walking into the centre of thirty-odd
Hythrun Raiders crying for blood. The Raiders stared at him, their
stillness more threatening than their chanting. He covered the distance
to the startled apprentice and snatched the dagger from his hand.
“Get back to work, boy,†he ordered in a tone that
brooked no
argument.
The Hythrun boy glared at him, but stepped away from the fallen
Karien. A discontented mutter rippled through the men, until one of
them, a slender man, with a puckered scar across his throat that looked
as if he had survived having it cut, stepped forward.
“You’ve no authority here, Defender,†he
said. “Go back to your
pretty-boys and leave us to deal with the Karien scum as we
wish.â€
Tarja could feel the animosity from the Hythrun mercenaries
surrounding him. He was far from his own troops, and Damin’s
restraining influence had weakened in his absence. With a jolt, Tarja
realised he may not get out of this alive. The mercenary stepped closer
and Tarja did the only thing he could think of, under the
circumstances. He brought his elbow up sharply into the
Hythrun’s face
and then kicked the stunned mercenary’s legs from under him.
The
Hythrun hit the ground before the others could react. Tarja slammed his
boot down across the man’s scarred throat and then looked up at
the
startled Raiders.
“Anyone else?†he asked with an equanimity he did
not feel. The man
beneath his boot squirmed desperately, gasping for air, lack of oxygen
draining his strength to escape the pressure of Tarja’s boot.
“I think you’ve made your point, Captain.â€
Tarja had to consciously stop himself from sagging with relief as
Almodavar appeared in the circle. The Hythrun captain barked a harsh
order at his men in their own language and the circle dissolved. Tarja
took his boot off the throat of his challenger and the man scrambled to
his feet and ran off without looking back, clutching at his neck.
Almodavar smiled grimly.
“I never thought you had a death wish, Captain,†the
Hythrun
remarked with a shake of his head. “You should know better than
to
interfere with Raiders when their blood is up.â€
“Your Raiders should know better than to encourage
cold-blooded
murder,†Tarja retorted, turning to the prone form of the
Karien boy.
He knelt down beside the lad and was relieved to see his eyes
fluttering open blankly.
The Hythrun captain looked down at the boy and shrugged.
“Don’t
blame my Raiders too quickly, Captain. That one asks for it daily. He
wants to die for his Overlord.â€
Tarja pulled the boy to his feet. Far from being grateful, the boy
seemed disappointed that Tarja had saved him. He shook himself free and
staggered a little before drawing himself up to his full height.
“I need no help from an atheist!†he spat defiantly
in broken
Hythrun. He had obviously been in the camp long enough to pick up some
of the language. He would never have learnt a heathen language in
Karien.
Tarja glanced at Almodavar and then back at the boy.
“Ungrateful
little whelp, isn’t he?†he said in Karien, so the boy
would understand
him.
Almodavar, for all that he looked like an illiterate pirate, spoke
Karien almost as well as he spoke Medalonian and Fardohnyan. Damin held
that understanding an enemy’s language, was the first step to
understanding an enemy. He had been surprised to learn that most of
Damin’s Raiders spoke several languages. His Defenders, the
officers at
least, could speak Medalonian and Karien. It had been considered polite
to converse with one’s allies in their own language, but few
bothered
to learn the languages of the south. It was a lesson Tarja had taken to
heart, although trying to convince Jenga that the Defenders should
learn to speak Hythrun was proving something of a chore.
“Aye,†Almodavar agreed, easily falling into the
language of their
enemy. “This isn’t the first time, and I’ll
wager it won’t be the last,
that he’s caused trouble. He and his brother were the ones who
brought
the news of the alliance. His brother isn’t much trouble, but
you’d
think this one planned to defeat us single handed.â€
Tarja studied the boy curiously for a moment. “This
is the
Karien spy?â€
The boy bristled at Tarja’s amusement. “Atheist pig!
The Overlord
will see you drown in the Sea of Despair!â€
“I’m starting to regret saving your neck,
boy,†Tarja warned. “Have
a care with that mouth of yours.â€
“The Overlord will protect me!â€
“I didn’t see him around just now,â€
Almodavar chuckled, and then he
changed back to speaking Medalonian without missing a beat.
“You
wouldn’t consider taking him back with you, I suppose?â€
he asked. “I
doubt he’ll last much longer around here with that
attitude.â€
Tarja frowned. The last thing he needed was an uncontrollable
ten-year-old reeking havoc in their camp in the name of the Overlord.
But Almodavar was correct in his assertion that he would not last long
among the Hythrun. He pondered the problem for a moment then turned to
the captain.
“Very well, I’ll take him back with me,†he
agreed, speaking Karien
so the boy could follow the conversation. “You keep his brother
here.
If the boy gives me any trouble, I’ll send word. You can send
back a
finger from his brother’s hand each time you hear from me. When
we run
out of fingers, start on his toes. Perhaps the prospect of seeing his
brother dismembered bit by bit will teach him a little self-control.
It’s obviously not a virtue the Overlord encourages.â€
The boy’s blood-streaked face paled, tears of fear and
horror
welling up in his eyes. “You are a vicious, evil, barbarian
bastard!â€
he cried.
“A fact you would do well to remember, boy,†Tarja
warned. He dare
not look at Almodavar. The Hythrun captain made a noise that sounded
like a cough, but which Tarja suspected was a futile attempt to stifle
a laugh. “Go and fetch your belongings. If you’re not
back here in five
minutes, you’ll find out what your brother looks like without
his left
ear.â€
The boy fled as Almodavar burst out laughing. “Captain, I
swear
you’re turning into a Hythrun.â€
“What did you expect from a vicious, evil, barbarian
bastard?â€
“Truly,†Almodavar agreed. “You’ve
had a busy day. First you take on
my Raiders, and then you subdue a Karien fanatic with a few words.
What’s next?â€
“I was hoping you could tell me,†Tarja said.
“You’ve no word from
Lord Wolfblade?â€
“None. Don’t let it concern you, Captain.
He’ll be back.â€
Tarja sighed, not really expecting any other answer.
He’ll be
back. But before or after the war is over? he wondered.
CHAPTER 15
Yarnarrow was a huge city, rivalling Talabar in
size, although it lacked the southern capital’s grace and
aesthetic
beauty. Steep pitched roofs of grey slate covered the more substantial
buildings; while the poorer districts were simply hovels thrown
together with whatever material their pitiful inhabitants could
scrounge. The vast Yarnarrow Castle loomed over the city like a
shadowed hand, and was even more forbidding than the city, which had
grown up around its slanted walls. Adrina longed for the flat-roofed
pink stone villas of Talabar, the broad balconies, the flower-laden
trellises and the heavy scent of their perfume on the still air. She
missed the wide, tree-lined streets and the gaily-dressed citizens.
Everything was grey here — the city, the sky, even the people.
Yarnarrow was depressing and dirty, and the most pervasive odour was
stale wood-smoke that hung like a pall over the city as if it were
constantly wrapped in fog.
She despaired at the thought of spending her life here.
The wedding took place with almost indecent haste, the day after
Adrina arrived. Vonulus had instructed her in the Karien wedding vows,
and Madren had ensured that she knew exactly what was expected of her.
They had barely landed in Yarnarrow when she was whisked away to her
large and rather draughty apartments to prepare herself for the
ceremony the following day. She was not even accorded the honour of an
introduction to King Jasnoff or Queen Aringard, a slight against her
that had her fuming.
Tamylan, the only slave she had been allowed to keep, helped her
dress on the morning of the wedding. Her ladies-in-waiting had other
duties to attend to, it seemed, which did not bother Adrina at all. She
defiantly ignored the stiff, grey silk dress that Madren had informed
her was her wedding gown, and dressed instead in the traditional
Fardohnyan bridal outfit she had brought with her. It had been made for
Cassandra originally, but they were about the same size, so Adrina had
appropriated the gown from her younger sister, rather than explain why
Japinel had not designed a new one. It was a little tight, and she knew
it would cause a commotion, but she was still smarting over
Cratyn’s
obvious distaste for his Fardohnyan bride.
Among the more interesting things she had learnt during her short
stay at Setenton Castle was that prior to the treaty with her father,
Cratyn had previously been betrothed to Chastity, and that he had
broken the engagement to marry Adrina. It accounted for
Cratyn’s
reluctance, and Chastity’s pitiful demeanour whenever the
prince was in
the room. The girl was obviously hopelessly in love with him and Adrina
suspected he reciprocated the young woman’s feelings. She had
every
intention of making him forget the silly cow ever lived, and if
anything was going to advertise her matchless beauty, it was the
traditional gown of a Fardohnyan bride.
The gown was in two pieces. The bodice was made of deep blue lace,
threaded with diamonds, with long narrow sleeves and a low neckline
that offered a tantalising view of her ample bosom and left her midriff
bare. The skirt sat snugly on her hips, the same glorious blue as the
bodice, made up of layer upon layer of transparent silk that flowed
like a waterfall against her legs. The skirt was belted with a layer of
silver mesh. In the mesh was sheathed the small jewelled dagger that
had once belonged to her mother. Centuries ago, Fardohnyan brides had
carried a sword, but it was tradition, rather than necessity, that
required the Bride’s Blade these days, and the blade was more
ornamental than practical. It was sharp, though. She had cut her finger
testing its edge after Hablet had presented it to her the day she left
Talabar.
The Fardohnyan bridal jewels completed her outfit. In her navel
nested a blue diamond of immeasurable value, matched by the sapphire
and diamond choker that encased her long neck. She wore her hair down,
and it hung past her waist in an ebony fall of silken waves, as was the
tradition for all Fardohnyan brides. Over it all, she wore a shimmering
blue veil that covered her head and the lower half of her face. The
veil trailed ten paces behind her, floating on the slight current of
air created by her passage as she took the long walk down the aisle of
the vast Temple of Xaphista to the shocked gasps of the gathered Karien
nobility.
As she traversed the length of the vast temple, Adrina was quite
overwhelmed by the opulence of the building. Having seen the bleak,
austere monastery on the Isle of Slarn, the Temple of Xaphista seemed
almost garish by comparison. Tall, fluted columns of gold-flecked
marble were spaced evenly down the centre of the cathedral, supporting
a vaulted ceiling that led to a dome over the altar. The dome was lined
with thousands of tiny mother-of-pearl tiles, which reflected the sun
onto the worshippers in a spray of rainbow light.
The temple was filled to capacity with every nobleman and noblewoman
in Karien who had managed to get themselves invited to the royal
wedding. Adrina heard their shocked whispers. There was no sign of
warmth among the gathering. No familiar faces or encouraging smiles.
Tristan had not been allowed to attend, nor had any of her Guard. They
waited outside, not permitted to sully the sacred temple with their
pagan presence. The only familiar face she saw during her interminable
walk down the aisle was Vonulus, standing with the other priests at the
front of the temple, dressed in his elaborate ceremonial robes and
clutching his precious staff. The priest shook his head faintly as she
caught his eye, as if scolding her for her defiance.
She turned her attention back to the altar and the somewhat aghast
figure of Prince Cratyn. He wore black, from head to toe, the severity
of his outfit relieved only by a thin golden coronet on his head and a
gold and silver pendant in the shape of the star and lightning bolt of
the Overlord. His expression was as close to anger as she had ever seen
it, in her limited acquaintance with him. To the Seven Hells with
him, she decided. To the Seven Hells with all of them.
The ceremony was blessedly short, requiring little more from her
than her agreement to obey Cratyn in all things and be a good and
upstanding Defender of the Faith. Almost before she knew it, she was
married. The High Priest, who had spent the entire ceremony trying not
to see the considerable amount of bare flesh she was displaying,
declared them man and wife and then prostrated himself on the floor of
the altar. Carefully instructed by Vonulus, Adrina knew this was
coming, and with Cratyn at her side, followed suit. Biting back a gasp
as her bare skin touched the icy marble floor of the temple, Adrina
momentarily regretted her impulse to wear her own gown. She had
forgotten about this part of the ceremony. Every person present was
required to prostrate themselves before their god and by the sound of
the muffled grunts and groans behind them, some were finding the task
easier than others.
They lay prone on the floor of the temple for a full ten minutes,
the entire temple hushed, as each member of the congregation examined
their conscience and contemplated their service to the Overlord. Adrina
spent the time wishing she could get up. That floor was freezing.
Finally, the High Priest climbed awkwardly to his feet, and the
congregation followed. Adrina turned to Cratyn and smiled, deciding to
be gracious, at least in public. He took her hand uncertainly and led
her through the temple to the muted, and rather unenthusiastic applause
of the wedding guests.
When they reached the entrance, she was relieved to find Tristan and
her Guard, once again in their glorious dress whites, waiting to escort
them back to the castle. He smiled at her encouragingly, his men
holding back the crowd, as Cratyn handed her up into the open carriage
for the ride through the streets.
She sat down and smoothed her skirts before glancing at her new
husband. He was not looking at her, but back at the temple where a
sobbing Chastity had just emerged into the rare sunlight. Adrina
frowned. How did one compete with such an insipid rival?
“You could smile, you know, husband. Getting married
is
supposed to be a joyous occasion. At least in Fardohnya, it is.â€
“We are not in Fardohnya now,†Cratyn pointed out,
as they moved off
with a jerk. “You would do well to remember that.â€
Startled by his icy tone, Adrina retorted without thinking.
“You
would do well to remember who you married. Chastity will just
have to stay that way, I’m afraid.â€
Cratyn glared at her, but did not reply. Despite the unusually warm
day and the waving crowds, the ride back to Yarnarrow Castle was
thoroughly unpleasant.
Had she been married in Fardohnya, the rest of the
week would have been spent feasting and dancing to celebrate the
occasion of her marriage. In Karien such revelry was considered
wasteful and unseemly. On reaching Yarnarrow Castle, Adrina was
escorted to the royal apartments to meet the Karien King — not
to
celebrate her marriage, but to formalise the treaty between Fardohnya
and Karien.
Jasnoff proved to be a more rotund version of his son, with the same
brown eyes and hair, although his was flecked with grey. He also wore
the same shocked expression when he saw what she was wearing. He made
no comment about it, however, and simply rose from his small throne and
accepted her curtsy as was his due.
“You will sign here,†Jasnoff ordered, as soon as
the pleasantries
were taken care of. He pointed to a parchment scroll waiting on the
small, slanted desk, a tonsured scribe holding out an inked quill
expectantly.
“Certainly, your Majesty. What exactly is it that
I’m signing?â€
“It is a letter to your father,†Cratyn explained
behind her. “It
informs him that you are married in accordance with Karien law, and
that we have kept our side of the bargain. On receipt of this letter,
he will send your dowry and begin preparations for the invasion of
Medalon.â€
“My dowry? Ah, you mean he will sign over sovereignty of the
Isle of
Slarn, don’t you?â€
Adrina took the quill from the scribe. There was something vaguely
degrading about being traded for a lump of rock. She signed the letter
with a flourish and handed the quill back to the scribe.
Jasnoff nodded with satisfaction and turned to his son.
“Your mother
and I will look forward to seeing you at dinner. And your wife, of
course,†he added as an afterthought.
Cratyn bowed to his father and Adrina dropped into another low
curtsy as the King and his scribe strode from the room, leaving them
alone. Adrina turned to Cratyn questioningly. Vonulus and Madren had
spent a great deal of time instructing her on the Karien wedding
ceremony, but had barely mentioned what was supposed to happen
afterwards.
“So what now, Cretin?†she asked. She waited for him
to blush. This
was the first time they had ever been alone, and she had no doubt the
poor boy was probably dreading his marital duty. That, or he’d
rather
be doing it with Chastity.
The slap, when it came, took her completely by surprise. Her head
snapped back and his signet cut her cheek, leaving a thin smear of
blood on the back of his hand.
Cratyn was not blushing, he was furious.
“Fardohnyan whore!†He slapped her again, this time
even harder, and
she staggered under the blow. “You will never disgrace
me or
the Royal House again by such a wanton public display!â€
Adrina quickly decided to forgo trading blows with him. Cratyn might
be a fool, but he was stronger than she was. Such rare common sense was
the last rational thought she had as her own anger exploded.
“You will never lay a hand on me again, you
gutless
little turd! How dare you hit me!â€
“I dare what I please, your Highness,†he told her,
his voice a
quiet rage. “I am your husband!â€
“That remains to be seen! I seriously doubt your manhood is
going to
be up to the task. Perhaps if I simper and pout and let you call me
Chastity, it will be easier for you?â€
Cratyn raised his hand to strike her again, but this time she was
ready for him. She had her delicate and wickedly sharp Bride’s
Blade at
his throat, faster than he could credit. With eyes wide, he slowly
lowered his arm.
“That’s better,†she said, holding the thin
blade to his neck with
her outstretched hand. “Husband you may be, Cretin, but if you ever
lay a hand on me again, I will slit your miserable throat. Do we
understand each other?â€
Cratyn nodded slowly and she lowered the knife. He rubbed his neck
where she had jabbed him, fingering the small bead of blood that came
away on his finger. He stared at her, but his expression was far from
apologetic.
“I should not have hit you,†he conceded.
“It was unworthy of me.
But don’t play me for a fool, Adrina, or think your threats and
a table
dagger have me cowed.†He moved to the side table and poured
himself a
generous cup of wine before he turned back to her, his anger replaced
with quiet certitude. “Did you really believe that we knew
nothing of
your reputation? Of your lovers? I have known since we first met what
you are. Your sister’s wanton behaviour in Talabar merely
played into
our hands.â€
The admission stunned her. “What are you saying? You
actually wanted
to marry me?â€
“I married Hablet’s eldest legitimate
child,†Cratyn corrected
coldly. “Any issue of yours will be heir to the Fardohnyan
throne.â€
“Not if my father has a legitimate son. And I have fifteen
bastard
half-brothers. Father could legitimise one of them any time he wanted
to.â€
“If he does, they will die. The Overlord has willed it.
Fardohnya
will become the Overlord’s through the ascension of a Karien
king to
the throne.â€
“You are out of your mind if you think I will aid you in
this!â€
“You are my wife, Adrina,†he insisted stubbornly,
as if there was
nothing further to be discussed on the matter. Then he added, almost as
an afterthought, “Another thing, I will require you to order
your Guard
to place themselves under my command. I will be taking them to the
front with me.â€
“Oh no you won’t! My father never gave you leave to
use my Guard in
battle. They are under my command.â€
“Then you will command them according to my wishes.â€
“The Seven Hells I will! My Guard isn’t going
anywhere
without me, least of all to some soggy battlefield to fight your wars
for you.â€
“As you wish, Adrina,†Cratyn shrugged. “If
you insist, you will
accompany your Guard, but they will fight.â€
“How in the name of the gods do you plan to make me order
them into
battle? I’ll die before I give such an order.â€
Cratyn placed the cup down carefully and crossed his arms as he
studied her. “You swear by the Primal gods. That is an offence
punishable by death. You are my wife and have sworn to obey me in the
eyes of my God and every nobleman in Yarnarrow. To defy me is
punishable by death. If that does not convince you, I am sure it will
only take your bastard half-brother and his pagans a few days to break
some church law punishable by death.â€
“You hypocritical son-of-a-bitch! You have the gall to
preach piety
to me yet you would calmly murder my brother in the name of your
pitiful god!â€
“Be careful, Adrina,†Cratyn warned.
“Insulting the Overlord is
punishable —â€
“By death,†she finished impatiently. “I get
the idea, your
Highness.â€
“Then you will do as I command?â€
Adrina could barely credit the change in him. He seemed so sure of
himself, here in Yarnarrow. The blushing princeling who had almost
fainted at the sight of the barely dressed Fardohnyan women was still
there, underneath the confident exterior, but this was his God
speaking. His faith ran so deep it was impossible to shake his belief
that everything would turn out as Xaphista willed it. As the
realisation came to her, Adrina forced her anger down. She could not
fight this by having a tantrum. She needed to have her wits about her
to find a way out of this terrible bargain.
“I have conditions,†she said.
“I have no need to grant you anything, Adrina.â€
“No, you don’t,†she agreed. “But
you want my cooperation, and
believe me, I am much more tractable when I have my own way.â€
He nodded slightly. “As you wish, what are your
conditions?â€
Adrina’s mind was racing ahead, trying to think what she
could ask
for that would not raise suspicion. “If I am to accompany you
to the
Medalon border, I wish to do so in a manner befitting my station as
your wife. I want my full retinue, including my
ladies-in-waiting.†There!
Let’s see how your precious Chastity likes roughing it on the
front
with a few thousand smelly soldiers, she thought.
“I believe that can be arranged,†he conceded.
“Was that all?â€
“No. I want to be included in your war council. I will not
allow you
to waste Fardohnyan lives without being fully informed as to your
plans.â€
“Absolutely not! A council of war is no place for a
woman.â€
“Suit yourself,†she shrugged. “If you
refuse me, then I will stand
up at dinner tonight and scream at the top of my voice that Xaphista is
a lying, hypocritical bastard. Somewhat like you, I imagine. Such an
act would be punishable by death, would it not? If I die,
you’ll have
no heir to the Fardohnyan throne and no troops to throw at the
Medalonians. If you think I’m bluffing, then by all means,
refuse me.â€
He thought for a moment, weighing up, no doubt, the advisability of
calling her bluff, against the reaction of his Dukes to a woman in
their war council.
Finally he nodded, albeit reluctantly. “Very well.â€
“And one other thing,†she added as an afterthought.
“I want every
Fardohnyan under my command given special exemption by the Church. As
you pointed out, they are bound to break some unknown Church law,
sooner or later. It will be a lot easier for both of us if you
don’t
whittle away at their numbers by hanging every transgressor for some
slight, real or imagined, against your precious god.â€
Although he bristled at her tone, he was not so foolish as to deny
the logic of her request. He nodded.
“That’s it then,†she said. “I will
do as you ask.†For now,
she amended silently.
“I have some conditions of my own,†Cratyn told her
as she turned
away.
“Such as?â€
“You will never dress in such a provocative manner again.
You will
behave in a manner befitting a Karien Princess, or, Fardohnyan heir or
not, I will see you stoned.â€
“Of course, your Highness,†she agreed, her voiced
laced with
sarcasm. “Perhaps a hair shirt would be more suitable?â€
He ignored the jibe. “And you will not speak to your
half-brother,
or any of your Guard unless Vonulus is present. I will not have you
making your own plans behind my back.†Now that could prove awkward, she thought in annoyance, but
she did not see a way around it. “You show a disturbing lack of
trust
in me, your Highness.â€
“A warranted lack of trust,†he retorted.
“Do you agree?â€
She nodded slowly. “I agree.â€
“Good. In that case, you may return to your rooms and dress
in
something more . . . appropriate . . .
for dinner. Tomorrow, I will have the nuns sent to you, to discuss the
most opportune time in your cycle to consummate our marriage. I do not
intend to spend one moment longer in your bed than I have to.â€
Of all that had been said in the past hour, that shocked her the
most. It even hurt! How dare he!
“Just be sure that when you do deign to come to my bed, you
have
some idea of what you’re supposed to do,†she retorted
coldly. “As you
apparently know, I have been taught the art of lovemaking by
professionals. It would be most unfortunate if your much-needed heir to
the Fardohnyan and Karien thrones fails to be consummated because I
couldn’t stop laughing.â€
The insult hit the mark as she intended, but she swept up her skirts
and strode from the room before he had a chance to answer her.
CHAPTER 16
For longer than human memory, Sanctuary had
remained hidden in the mountains named for it. It had weathered
nature’s inevitable passage of time, untouched by anything but
the
magical peace and serenity that seeped through its very walls. The vast
white-spired complex had watched ages come and go, kingdoms rise and
fall, mortals live and die. The gods roamed its halls at will and the
Harshini who lived there sought nothing more than wisdom and knowledge
and safety from the foibles of humanity.
Nothing had ever disturbed it.
Until now.
Until the demon child.
Brakandaran heard the laughter as he approached
Korandellan’s
chambers and winced. It wasn’t that nobody laughed in
Sanctuary, on the
contrary, the Harshini were happy by nature. But this was not the
polite, considerate laugh of an amused Harshini. This laugh was loud
and heartfelt and unmistakably female. The laughter echoed through the
halls with startling clarity, turning the heads of the white robed
Harshini who glided silently past him in the hall. Their black eyes
were either curious or indulgent, depending on whether or not they had
any knowledge of its source.
Brak hurried on, almost afraid to discover the reason for the demon
child’s mirth. Korandellan was a tolerant king — he had
ruled the
Harshini through some of its most turbulent history — but he
was
ill-equipped to handle R’shiel. She had a knack for saying the
wrong
thing at the wrong time, asking awkward and frequently unanswerable
questions, and she was totally unimpressed by the pivotal role she was
expected to play in the conflict of the gods. Nor was the Harshini King
easily able to deal with the fact that she was an instrument of
destruction. It was hard for him to accept that the demon
child’s
purpose was to destroy. Harder yet for him to teach her what she needed
to know to enable her to complete the task. Lorandranek,
R’shiel’s
father, had been driven insane by the knowledge.
Brak opened the door to Korandellan’s chambers with a
thought. The
King leapt to his feet with a relieved smile at the sight of him. He
and R’shiel were on the balcony, overlooking the hollow valley
that
Sanctuary encompassed, a crystal pitcher of chilled wine between them.
Both the King and the demon child were dressed in the light linen robes
that were all the protection one needed in the atmosphere-controlled
vicinity of the Citadel. His black leathers seemed out of place. Brak
crossed the white tiled floor and bowed to his king, who seemed
inordinately glad to see him.
“Brakandaran!†Korandellan cried.
“You’re back!â€
“So it would seem.â€
“R’shiel and I were just discussing her childhood at
the Citadel,â€
the King explained. “She has had a most interesting
life.†Interesting is something of an understatement, Brak
thought, but it did not explain R’shiel’s laughter.
“The King asked me if I missed my mother,†she
explained, as if she
understood his confusion. “It struck me as rather
funny.â€
“Our worthy monarch has no concept of a personality like the
First
Sister’s,†Brak agreed wryly. “But it’s
good to hear you laughing.
You’re looking much better.â€
Another understatement. He had never seen her look better.
Cheltaran, the God of Healing, had done more than heal the near-fatal
wound she received in Testra. It was as if he had healed her soul as
well. Or maybe it was because Death had forsaken any claim on her until
the life Brak had offered in return for hers was forfeited. Her violet
eyes were shining, and her skin was golden rather than sallow. She had
put on weight, too, now that she was eating a diet more suited to her
Harshini metabolism. He realised they would not be able to keep her
here much longer, and wondered if Korandellan realised it too. They
would have taught her much about her Harshini heritage and the power
she had at her command, but this girl was destined to destroy a god.
She would not, could not, learn all she needed within
Sanctuary’s peace-filled walls.
“What news have you, Brakandaran?†the King asked.
He waved his arm
and a chair appeared at the table for him. Korandellan took his own
seat and poured him a cup of wine with his own hand. Brak wanted to
tell him it wasn’t necessary, but it would have been useless.
For more
than twenty years, Korandellan had been trying to prove to him that he
did not hold him responsible for Lorandranek’s death. Every
small
gesture meant something to the King. Brak took the offered seat and
accepted the wine.
“Not good news, I fear,†he said, glancing at
R’shiel. He wondered
what her reaction would be to the news he carried. Much of her current
serenity was a direct result of Sanctuary’s magical atmosphere.
And, he
privately suspected, a deliberate glamour laid on her, to take the edge
off her more extreme human emotions while her body and mind recovered.
That glamour would not hold if she ever realised it was there. She was
easily powerful enough to break through it. Ignorance of the spell was
the only thing protecting the gentle Harshini from her violent human
side.
“Are the Kariens still planning to invade Medalon?â€
Korandellan
asked with concern. The mere thought of a war made him pale. It
wasn’t
cowardice; it was simply part of being a Harshini. A part that neither
Brak nor R’shiel, being half-human, were susceptible to.
“It’s worse than that,†Brak told him.
“They have allied with the
Fardohnyans.â€
Korandellan shook his head, tears glistening in his totally black
eyes. “Foolish humans. Don’t they realise what such a
war will cost?â€
“They realise,†Brak said. “They just
don’t care.â€
R’shiel frowned. “Even if the Fardohnyans
don’t join in the conflict
in the north, they could still send troops up the Glass River in the
south. The Defenders can’t fight a war on two fronts. They
barely have
the numbers to fight on one, even with Hythrun allies.â€
Brak wondered who had told her about the Hythrun. Probably the
demons. They could gossip like old women when something caught their
fancy. Korandellan said nothing, just shook his head. He was no more
able to discuss tactics than he was able to contemplate murder.
“It’s liable to escalate beyond Medalon,â€
Brak agreed. “If the
Fardohnyans enter Medalon from the south then they can cross into
Hythria without having to go over the Sunrise Mountains. Hablet has no
interest in Medalon, but he’d love to get his grubby little
hands on
Hythria.â€
“We must do something!†Korandellan exclaimed.
“We cannot allow the
entire world to be plunged into war. Perhaps if I ask the
gods . . .â€
“Well, I don’t suggest you mention it to
Zegarnald,†Brak suggested.
“A global conflict would rather please the God of War. In fact,
I
wouldn’t mind betting that he’s been giving it a bit of
a nudge. It
must get pretty boring looking down on all those measly little border
skirmishes. We haven’t had a decent war in centuries.â€
“Your disrespect will prove fatal one day,
Brakandaran.â€
Brak started at the voice as the overwhelming presence of the God of
War suddenly filled the chamber. Brak should have known better than to
even mention His name. Here in Sanctuary, more than any other place, to
name a god was to call him. He turned in his chair but did not rise,
although R’shiel and Korandellan did. Zegarnald took shape
before them,
so tall his golden helmet brushed the ceiling, dressed in a simple dark
robe that covered him from head to toe, out of respect for Korandellan,
no doubt. The Harshini were uncomfortable with weapons and Zegarnald
carried at least one of every weapon his worshippers had devised, from
a dagger to a longbow. Brak would have bet money he had the odd
catapult stashed about his person somewhere.
“Divine One, you honour us with your presence,â€
Korandellan greeted
him sombrely.
The War God smiled, if such a grimace could be called a smile.
“Well, some seem more honoured than others. I would think,
Brakandaran,
that you of all the Harshini would be pleased to see me. I do not
offend your sensibilities, as I do your king’s, yet he can find
it in
himself to be gracious.â€
“I’m half-human,†Brak shrugged.
“What can I say?â€
“You could start by not saying anything,†Zegarnald
retorted.
“Particularly about matters you know nothing of.â€
Korandellan laid a restraining hand on Brak’s shoulder
— a silent
plea not to argue with the god. “Brakandaran means no
disrespect,
Divine One.â€
“On the contrary, Korandellan, that’s exactly what
he intends.
However, in this case, he is correct. I have been giving this war a nudge,
as he so elegantly puts it.â€
“Why?†R’shiel asked curiously. She had come
to accept the sudden
appearance of the gods, along with a lot of other things that Brak
suspected she would not be nearly so accepting of, were she outside
Sanctuary’s magical walls.
Zegarnald turned his gaze on the demon child, as if noticing her for
the first time. “When you understand that, demon child, you
will be
ready to face Xaphista.â€
“I really think your faith in me is misplaced. I
wouldn’t know the
first thing about killing a god.â€
Surprisingly, Zegarnald nodded in agreement. “Unfortunately,
you
speak the truth. Korandellan would have more chance of defeating him
than you at present, a situation I have decided to remedy.â€
Brak looked at Zegarnald suspiciously. “How?â€
“The demon child must leave Sanctuary and return to the
humans,†the
god decreed. “You have helped her, Korandellan, but your
peaceful
ministrations and Sanctuary’s magic are destroying the
instincts she
will need to survive Xaphista.â€
Korandellan did not appear pleased by the order. “No
Harshini will
be turned out of Sanctuary, Divine One, not even when decreed by a god.
The demon child may leave if she wishes, but I will not send her
away.â€
“As you wish,†Zegarnald agreed, then he turned to
R’shiel. “What
say you, child? Do you wish to return to your human friends?â€
R’shiel barely hesitated. “No. I want to stay
here.â€
Zegarnald seemed almost as surprised as Brak by her words. The god
studied her closely for a moment then nodded. “I see. You are
more
devious than I suspected, Korandellan, but the glamour that holds back
her emotions cannot last forever. Brakandaran, I suggest you take the
demon child into the mountains for a day. Let her breathe the air
outside of Sanctuary for a time and then ask her the same question. Her
answer will differ a great deal, I suspect.â€
“What do you mean? I feel fine.â€
“And happy, and calm, and contented,†Zegarnald
agreed. “But can you
feel pain? Or anger? Or grief? I think you will discover such emotions
beyond you while you live within these walls.â€
R’shiel looked puzzled, uncertain. Korandellan looked
decidedly
unhappy.
“Is this true?†she asked the Harshini king.
“Have you done
something to me that stops me feeling those things?â€
“It was necessary, child,†Korandellan told her, as
incapable of
lying as he was of causing pain.
“But it can’t be,†she insisted. “I
have no holes in my memory. I
remember everything. And everyone.â€
“And yet you feel nothing?†the god asked.
“You feel no loss for
your friends, no anger at being betrayed, no fear for their safety?
Take my advice, leave these walls for a time and see if you feel the
same. When you wish to return to your friends, call me. I will see you
delivered safely to them.â€
The god was gone an instant later, leaving a very confused young
woman behind. Brak glanced at the King and shook his head. “You
cannot
fight the inevitable, Korandellan.â€
The King sighed. “I’m Harshini, Brakandaran. I
cannot fight
anything.â€
CHAPTER 17
Adrina intended to make Cratyn pay for striking
her, and pay dearly. Such an act was beyond unforgivable. In the finest
traditions of mort’eda — the ancient Fardohnyan
art of revenge
— she quite coldly and deliberately planned to make him rue the
day he
ever laid eyes on her.
Her first step was acquiescing to his demands. Overnight, Adrina
became the perfect Karien Princess — so perfect that it brought
suspicious stares from Madren and Vonulus, both of whom viewed her
transformation with suspicion. Lacking proof to the contrary, however,
there was little they could do, given Adrina’s exemplary
behaviour.
Cratyn did not seem surprised. He no doubt considered it a direct
result of his ultimatum, and Adrina was happy to let him think that way
until she was ready to teach him otherwise.
Adrina dressed according to Karien custom, wore her hair in a snood,
as was proper for married Karien Ladies, and followed Cratyn the
required three paces behind him whenever they appeared in public
together. She converted to the Overlord with remarkable conviction and
even attended morning prayers in the chilly Temple with Queen Aringard
each morning at dawn. She embroidered with her ladies and planned menus
with commendable frugality. She gave alms to the poor on Fifthdays and
met with the nobles of her husband’s court with eyes lowered
demurely.
She wore no cosmetics and trimmed her long nails to the short blunt
shape the Kariens preferred. In short, she gave nobody a single excuse
to fault her behaviour.
Of course, there were any number of ways to get at Cratyn, the
easiest target being the hapless Lady Chastity.
Adrina suddenly decided that she preferred the Lady
Chastity’s
company to others’. She began to foster a friendship with the
girl that
culminated some three weeks after her wedding in a long session of
“girl-talkâ€, which centred mostly on Cratyn. A single
afternoon was all
it took to reduce the poor girl to tears as Adrina waxed lyrically
about the prince, about how many children they would have, about how
handsome he was and how lucky she was that some other woman
hadn’t
snatched him up before now. When Chastity had all she could stomach she
excused herself hastily. Adrina could hear her sobbing from down the
hall.
Teasing Chastity was poor sport, though, and it put Cratyn in a foul
mood. He burst into her rooms as she bent over her needlework and
ordered Tamylan out, his pale face flushed with rage.
“What did you do?â€
“I wasn’t aware that I had done anything, your
Highness. Could you
be a little more specific?â€
“The Lady Chastity is distraught! What did you say to
her?â€
“We were merely discussing married life. I was endeavouring
to
enlighten her about the joys of conjugal bliss.†She smiled at
him
sweetly and added, “Such that it is.â€
“You are not to discuss such things with her!â€
“Why ever not?†There was nothing she had said or
done that he could
fault her for without crossing into dangerous moral territory, and they
both knew it. “Could it be that the Lady Chastity still
harbours some
affection for you, my dear? Now that would be awkward wouldn’t
it, you
being married to me . . .â€
She let the rest of the sentence hang. The young prince stormed out
of the room, muttering to himself about foreign whores.
Adrina was getting very tired of being referred to as a foreign
whore.
But there were other ways to punish him. Her first real chance came
when they began their preparations for their trip to the border. Adrina
held Cratyn strictly to his promise to see her accommodated in a manner
befitting her station, and by the time they left Yarnarrow, her
entourage was almost as large as the force of knights and foot soldiers
accompanying them. She would happily have beggared him, given half a
chance, and it was only Jasnoff’s intervention that prevented
her from
doing just that. As soon as the King complained, Adrina ceased her
outrageous demands, but by then the damage had been done. Adrina and
her ladies were going off to war in style.
Adrina’s most subtle, and by far her most effective revenge
she
aimed at Cratyn’s manhood. The nuns had dutifully visited
Adrina the
day after her wedding to discuss her cycle in rather unpleasant detail,
and they determined the most opportune time to conceive was eight days
after the wedding. Adrina’s bed remained empty until that time.
When
the designated night finally arrived, Adrina excused herself early and
spent a considerable amount of time preparing for Cratyn’s
visit,
including preparing a small quantity of the mixture that would ensure
that in the unlikely event that Cratyn actually desired her, his body
would not respond.
Getting Cratyn to accept the laced wine had been easy. She had a
feeling he could only bring himself to touch her if he wasn’t
entirely
sober. She then waited, with an expectant look, for Cratyn to make the
first move. His fumbling and ultimately futile attempts to consummate
their union left her weak with ridiculing laughter. Cratyn fled the
chamber in embarrassment and she did not lay eyes on him for two whole
days afterwards. Altogether an entirely satisfactory outcome, she
decided.
But Adrina was determined that no child would ever come from this
union, so she set about making certain it never did. She knew enough
herb lore to ensure she would not suffer an unwanted pregnancy
— it was
a necessity for any woman in a society where court’esa
were the
norm. But the easiest way to prevent a pregnancy was simply not to let
Cratyn into her bed on the days designated by the nuns as suitable.
There was also the added bonus that if the marriage remained
unconsummated for a year and a day, under Karien law she would be free
of Cratyn entirely.
One of the lesser-known advantages of being instructed in the arts
of love by a court’esa was learning how to cool a
man’s ardour
as easily as arousing it. It was a skill every court’esa owned
— even professional lovers needed a night off occasionally
— but it was
a skill rarely passed on to their masters or mistresses. If
one’s
paramour knew what one was up to, it was impossible to guarantee
success. It only worked on an inexperienced lover, and that description
fitted Cratyn better than his custom-made armour. There were drugs too,
one could use, although they were a closely guarded secret among the court’esa.
Adrina had extracted those secrets from Lynel, a dark-eyed court’esa
from Mission Rock in southern Fardohnya, for the promise of a minor
title. So grateful had she been to learn the arts and acquire the
drugs, that she even kept her promise, and as far as she knew, Lynel
was still happily ensconced in his own small manor near Kalinpoor on
the Jalanar plains. In the days and weeks that followed her marriage to
Cratyn, she often had cause to silently thank the man.
But her revenge did not stop there. While it was intensely
satisfying to her to watch Cratyn crumble with mortification every time
she glanced at him, the real fun came from making it known that the
Crown Prince of Karien was impotent.
Her first step was to cry, quite convincingly, on Madren’s
shoulder
about her inability to arouse her husband. Madren, of all her retinue,
was the most suspicious and the most watchful. Adrina blamed herself,
of course and almost choked when Madren delivered her stiff and rather
unimaginative suggestions on how to deal with the situation. As she had
made certain that the servants would overhear her heartbroken
confession, within a day the news was all through the castle. Tamylan
reported that the kitchens were abuzz with rumours and that even the
stableboys had heard. By the time their vast caravan left Yarnarrow
there was not a man or woman in the castle, serf or noble, who had not
heard the rumour that Cratyn’s manhood was in doubt.
The effect such rumours had on Chastity was predictable. The girl
was torn between horror that her love might be impotent and delight
that he had not slept with Adrina. That the pale skinned blonde lusted
after Cratyn was so obvious, Adrina wondered that she hadn’t
been
hauled off and stoned for her adulterous thoughts. On the other hand,
there was many a duke who would have preferred a Karien queen, and
Adrina wondered if she would survive the birth of a son, should she be
so foolish as to conceive. A claimant to the Fardohnyan throne did not
need a Fardohnyan mother to raise him, and everybody knew how perilous
childbirth could be.
Adrina refused to give any of these fanatics an opportunity to
rearrange the world to their liking. She would suffer the humiliation
of Cratyn only coming to her rooms when she was likely to conceive; she
would tolerate Madren’s hawk-like scrutiny and Vonulus’
pious
instruction. She would bear King Jasnoff’s obvious distaste and
Queen
Aringard’s sour disapproval. She would even put up with the
miserable
Karien weather.
Until she found a way out of this mess, Adrina didn’t really
have
much choice.
Tristan was predicably unhappy about being ordered to the border,
but as she had promised Cratyn she would not speak to him alone, she
had not had the chance to explain it to him before they left Yarnarrow.
In fact, getting a message to Tristan became more and more important as
they drew closer to the border. She was afraid he would do something
reckless. He knew the terms of the agreement under which he and his
soldiers were in Karien, and knew that she was flying in the face of
Hablet’s express wishes by ordering her Guard to the front.
Hablet wanted the Hythrun so involved in the Medalon conflict that
they would not notice the direction his army was heading when then
crossed the southern border of Medalon. Loaning her Guard to Cratyn to
ensure a quick victory in the north was not liable to help her
father’s
cause, and she was far more concerned about his reaction than anything
Cratyn might threaten her with. Hablet was not a man who took
disruption of his plans well. The problem kept her awake night after
night, until one morning, as she sat on a small stool in her sumptuous
travelling tent, while Tamylan brushed out her long hair before she
dressed for the day’s travel. She studied the former slave in
the
mirror thoughtfully. She really was quite a pretty young woman.
“Tam, do you like Tristan?â€
The question startled her. “Tristan?â€
“Yes. You know, Tristan. Tall. Fair. Golden eyes. Good
looking and
entirely too aware of the fact?â€
Tamylan smiled. “Do I like him? I suppose.â€
“Good,†Adrina announced with satisfaction.
“I want you to become
his lover.â€
The brush halted mid-stroke as Tam stared at her in the mirror.
“You
want me to be Tristan’s lover?â€
“Don’t act so thick, Tam. You heard me.
You’re both Fardohnyan, far
from home. Nobody would look twice.â€
“Your Highness, I appreciate your . . .
thoughtfulness . . . but somehow, I don’t think
your
brother is interested in the likes of me.â€
“Don’t be so hard on yourself, Tam,†Adrina
told her cheerily.
“You’re very pretty and there isn’t a court’esa
for a thousand
leagues, so Tristan can hardly afford to be choosy now, can
he?†She
laughed at the young woman’s expression. “Oh Tam,
don’t look so
horrified. Don’t you see? I can’t speak to Tristan
without that vulture
Vonulus around. If everyone thinks you and Tristan are lovers, they
won’t question you visiting him.â€
“If they think Tristan and I are lovers, I’m likely
to get stoned.â€
“No you won’t. The Fardohnyans have been given a
special exemption
by the Church. You’ll be safe enough. Far safer than me, in
fact.â€
Tamylan scowled unhappily. “I don’t like this place,
your Highness.
I’d rather you figured out a way to get us home.â€
“I’m working on it, Tam,†Adrina assured
her. “Believe me, I’m
working on it.â€
There was one bright spot in her miserable existence, and it came
from the most unexpected source. The day after her wedding, Drendyn,
Cratyn’s cheerful cousin, had paid her a visit carrying a large
wicker
basket, which he placed gently on the rug in front of the hearth before
turning to her with a beaming smile.
“I have brought you a wedding gift,†he announced.
“And it’s a beautiful basket, too,†she
agreed graciously.
“Basket? Oh! No! It’s what’s inside!â€
Curiously Adrina lifted the lid and peered inside. A wet nose thrust
itself at her and a long sloppy tongue slapped her face. Laughing
delightedly, she threw back the lid and lifted the puppy out. He was
tan in colour, his shaggy coat thick and soft. The pup was enormous,
even at such a young age, and she struggled to lift him.
“He’s beautiful!†she cried. “What
is he?â€
“He’s a dog,†Drendyn explained, a little
confused.
“I know he’s a dog, silly, but what sort of
dog? We have
nothing this big in Fardohnya. If he gets much bigger I’ll be
able to
saddle him!â€
“He’s a Karien hunting dog,†the young Earl
told her. “You said you
liked hunting, so I thought you could train him now. We breed the best
hounds in Karien in Tiler’s Pass. Do you like him?â€
She pushed away the sloppy kisses of her new friend and laughed.
“Oh
Drendyn, I love him. Thank you so much.â€
The Earl looked very pleased with himself. “Nothing is too
good for
our future queen. You will have to think of a name for him.â€
“I shall call him . . . Tiler! In honour of
your
home.â€
Tiler had not left her side since. The dog grew at an alarming rate,
and consumed enough to keep a peasant family well fed. He was, besides
Tamylan and Tristan, the only soul in Karien who seemed to love her
unreservedly. Adrina found it strange that she, having been raised in
excessive luxury with anything she wanted there for the asking, should
find such joy in such a shaggy, clumsy beast.
CHAPTER 18
Brak could have followed R’shiel’s
path through
the mountains with little difficulty, even had a demon not appeared to
show him the way. The little grey creature was young and it could
barely speak, but it tittered with concern and kept looking over its
small grey shoulder to ensure Brak was still following, as it led the
way through a forest carpeted in the fiery shades of autumn.
When he finally reached her he hesitated. She was sitting on the
edge of a precipice, dressed in dark riding leathers, her feet dangling
over a long sheer drop that disappeared into mist.
“I’m not suicidal, if that’s what
you’re worried about,†she said
without looking at him. The little demon scrambled up the rest of the
path and climbed into her lap.
“Did you bring him here? Traitor.â€
She turned to face Brak. Her eyes were red and swollen, her cheeks
tear stained. “Did they send you to find me?â€
“It’s a curse. All I seem to do these days is chase
after you.†When
he reached the ledge he sat down beside her and admired the view
silently for a moment. The steep mountains were still snow capped, even
at this time of year, and the air was pleasantly cool. He could see
Sanctuary’s tall spires in the distance, but only because he
knew they
were there. To mere human eyes, the spires looked like any other steep
peaks in this vast range full of them. “Korandellan was worried
about
you.â€
“He did this to me. It serves him right.â€
“Nobody meant to hurt you, R’shiel. They did it to
protect you.â€
“Did they know how much it would hurt when it wore
off?â€
“Probably not. Harshini don’t really understand
human emotions. But
when you came here, you were dying. They did what they had to.â€
She wiped her eyes impatiently. “I know that. That’s
what makes it
so infuriating. You have no idea how hard it is to stay angry at these
people.â€
“I do know,†he assured her. “Better than
you, girl. I’ve lived
between two worlds for centuries.â€
She glanced at him curiously. “Will I live as long as
you?â€
Brak shrugged. “I don’t know. I suppose you will.
Most half-humans
seem to inherit Harshini longevity. You might fall off this precipice
at any moment too, so don’t tie yourself into knots trying to
predict
the future.â€
“Is that how you get by?â€
“That and large quantities of mead,†he replied with
a thin smile.
She looked at him sharply then smiled when she realised he was
joking. “You don’t really fit in here, do you
Brak?â€
“No more than I fit in a human world. But don’t let
my inability to
find my niche in the world deter you from trying to find yours.â€
“I was under the impression my niche was already carved in
stone,â€
she pointed out sourly. “I am the demon child, am I
not?â€
“R’shiel, nobody is going to make you face Xaphista
until you’re
ready. Stop worrying about it. If you really are meant to tackle
Xaphista, there will come a time when you won’t need to be
asked.
You’ll want to do it.â€
“I can’t see that happening anytime soon.â€
“As I said, don’t tie yourself into knots trying to
predict the
future.â€
R’shiel did not answer him for a while. She stared out over
the
mountains, idly scratching the young demon behind its large wrinkled
ear. Finally she turned to him, the tears under control for the time
being.
“Does Tarja think I’m dead?â€
The question surprised him a little. He had not expected her to be
able to think things through so rationally yet. The first time he had
broken through a glamour designed to suppress his emotions,
he’d been
incoherent for days.
“I suppose so. Nobody has told him otherwise that
I’m aware of.â€
“He’s done his grieving then,†she sighed.
“And I will live to see
him whither and die an old man. I’m not sure I can deal with
that.â€
“The way Tarja finds trouble, it’ll be a bloody miracle
if
he lives to be an old man, so I wouldn’t let that stand in your
way.â€
She frowned at his poor attempt at humour. “You’re
pretty tactless,
for a Harshini, aren’t you?â€
“I’m the bane of their existence,†he
agreed. “At least I was until
you came along and relieved me of the title. However, it seems I am
doomed to serve your cause, whether I like it or not.â€
“There’s no need to be so gallant about it.â€
She turned back to the
glorious view and was silent for a time before she spoke. “I
wish I
knew what to do, Brak.â€
“What do you want to do?â€
“I want to go home. But there’s a small problem. I
don’t seem to have
a home any longer. Sanctuary isn’t where I belong, I know that
now, and
I can hardly go back to the Citadel.â€
“No, that’s probably not a good idea,†he
agreed with a faint smile.
“What happened to Joyhinia?†she asked abruptly.
“Did Tarja kill
her?â€
“Dacendaran stole her intellect. Then Tarja destroyed it.
She lives,
but she’s as innocent and harmless as a child, now. I suppose
she’s on
the border with the Defenders. We’d have heard if she returned
to the
Citadel in that condition.â€
“And this Hythrun who is helping Tarja, what’s he
like?â€
“Damin Wolfblade? You’d like him. He’s
almost as good at finding
trouble as Tarja. I sometimes think it was a mistake bringing those two
together. I’m not sure the world is ready for either of
them.â€
“And Lord Draco?â€
Brak sighed heavily. “R’shiel, if you’re so
anxious to see how they
are, go to them. Zegarnald has already offered to take you. You
can’t stay here forever and you don’t want to, anyway.
Follow your
instincts. Destiny has a habit of catching up with you, no matter how
hard you try to outrun it. Believe me, I speak from experience.â€
“Were you destined to kill my father?â€
Brak stared at her, aghast at the question. It took him a moment to
recover himself enough to answer her. “I don’t know,
R’shiel. Perhaps I
was. One of the advantages of being destined to do things, is
that it can take the place of a conscience for a while.â€
“Korandellan says you’ve been trying to outrun your
destiny your
whole life.â€
“Does Korandellan often discuss my failings with
you?â€
“He uses you to illustrate the pitfalls of being
half-human.â€
Brak scowled at her but offered no comment.
“You think I should go back, don’t you?†she
sighed.
“It doesn’t matter what I think. It’s what
you think that counts.â€
“I’m afraid,†she admitted.
“Of what?†he asked curiously.
“Tarja?â€
She nodded. “I’m afraid he’s accepted that
I’m dead. Suppose he’s
moved on? Suppose he’s found someone else?â€
Brak snorted impatiently. “Suppose you stop being such an
idiot!
Gods, R’shiel! Zegarnald was right. You’re turning into
a mouse. Have a
bit of faith, girl! The man loves you. Six months wondering if
you’re
dead isn’t going to change that. If it has, then he never loved
you in
the first place, so you might as well be rid of him. Either way, put us
all out of our misery and go find out for yourself instead of sitting
here on the top of a mountain bemoaning your lot in life.†He
did not
add that Kalianah had made certain Tarja would never love another. She
did not need to know that.
R’shiel glared at him, startled at his outburst. Months of
the
eternally accommodating Harshini had left her unprepared for a little
human aggravation.
“Don’t tell me what to do!â€
“Why not? That’s what you’ve been asking me.
You want me to tell you
what you should do, so that if it doesn’t work out you
won’t have to
blame yourself. Well, thanks, R’shiel, but I have enough of my
own
burdens to lug around without taking on yours as well.â€
He watched the anger flare in her violet eyes with relief. Her
spirit was still there, underneath the shock from the glamour and the
effects of her time spent in the smothering peace of Sanctuary. It was
rare that he agreed with the War God, but in this case, Zegarnald was
right. R’shiel would wither if she stayed here much longer.
This girl
had faced down three hundred angry rebels, she had been raped,
imprisoned, and mortally wounded by the woman she grew up thinking was
her mother. None of it had been able to break her. But much longer
within Sanctuary’s calming walls and the human shell that had
protected
her inner strength would be dissolved.
Pushing the demon from her lap, she scrambled to her feet and
brushed down the leathers before turning on him. “I
don’t need you to
tell me what I want to do. I’ll go where I want, when I want,
and you
can go to the lowest of the Seven Hells, for all I care!â€
She stormed off down the path, the little demon tumbling in her
wake. Brak watched her go with a faint smile.
“Deftly handled, Lord Brakandaran.â€
Brak turned towards the deep voice, unsurprised to find the old
demon Dranymire behind him. “I thought you’d be around
somewhere. You
could have helped, you know.â€
The little demon sat down beside Brak with a smug expression.
“If
she had fallen off this cliff, I would have been there in an instant.
But some things are best left to one’s own kind.â€
“It’s not my responsibility to protect her.
That’s supposed to be
your job.â€
Dranymire nodded sagely. “And protect her I will,
Brakandaran,†he
said. “But I can only save her from outside danger. I cannot
save her
from herself.â€
CHAPTER 19
Mikel of Kirkland found it hard to be brave in the
Defender Camp. Among the Hythrun it had been easy. There he had Jaymes
to support him. Jaymes was always brave. Jaymes hadn’t blabbed
about
the Fardohnyan alliance trying to make himself sound important. Jaymes
had been quiet and sullen and strong.
The Hythrun were quick to anger and easy to provoke, and Mikel felt
it was his solemn duty to do what he could to sabotage their war
effort. He had honoured the Overlord countless times in the weeks he
spent among them, cursing the soldiers, spitting in their stew whenever
he got the chance, and making a general nuisance of himself. It had
been easier once the Warlord left. The big blonde Hythrun had
frightened the boy more than he was willing to admit, but once he was
gone, Mikel found his courage increased. The fight with the
blacksmith’s apprentice had been the last in a long line of
skirmishes
with his captors.
The Defenders were different, however. They did not listen to his
insults or his curses, or if they heard them, they simply laughed
indulgently at him. Even more humiliating was the fact that the captain
who had saved him from the apprentice and taken him to the other camp
had placed him in the care of a woman! Her name was Mahina and he was
supposed to call her Sister, even though she wasn’t a nun and
didn’t
deserve the title. Worse, when the little old lady, who reminded him of
his own Nana, had gotten hold of him, she took one whiff of his ragged
tunic and ordered him to bathe. She then stood over him while the deed
was done, to ensure he was properly clean. Everybody knew that taking
off all your clothes was a sin against the Overlord and it was a
well-known fact that total immersion in water was bad for you and gave
rise to unhealthy vapours. But she had stood there like a slave-master
on a Fardohnyan galley and made him wash every part of his body. She
then added insult to injury by trimming his hair and making him wear a
pair of cast-off Defender’s trousers and a pleated linen shirt
several
sizes too big for him. His tunic and hose she rather ceremoniously
burned on the hearth, holding her nose as she did so.
As praying to the Overlord had always evoked a reaction from the
Hythrun, he was startled when his prayers drew nothing from Mahina and
the Defenders but bored looks and, in some cases, stifled yawns. The
Defenders did not seem offended by his prayers. They just
didn’t care!
His devotions meant nothing to them. They were atheists who considered
worshipping the gods a quaint and rather laughable custom. That hurt
almost as much as the thought that his misbehaviour might cost Jaymes a
finger.
The Defenders were frighteningly well disciplined, a fact which
surprised the boy. They were under the command of a tall, hard-looking
man called Lord Jenga, but it was the captain who had brought him here
who scared him most. His name was Tarja Tenragan, and every night, when
Mikel said his prayers to the Overlord, he prayed his god would strike
the man down.
Mikel burned with hatred for the tall Medalonian who had so calmly
ordered Jaymes dismembered if Mikel misbehaved. Although he was only a
captain, everybody seemed to listen to him, even Lord Jenga, and he had
faced down the Hythrun Raiders without blinking. Mikel was sure there
was nothing on this world that could scare him — and that
scared Mikel,
because he knew that in battle, the Medalonians would not run in the
face of the first concerted charge, as he had often heard Duke Laetho
boast.
In fact, much of what Mikel had heard in the Karien camp was proving
to be incorrect. The Hythrun did not eat human babies for breakfast and
the red-coated Defenders weren’t weaklings dressed up in fancy
uniforms
and playing at being soldiers. They were hard men and well trained.
Much better trained than the Kariens, Mikel suspected. Where the Karien
camp spent time boasting of past victories on the jousting field or
anticipating future glories, these soldiers were on the training field
in Medalon.
They were much better supplied too, Mikel discovered. Unlike the
Kariens, the Medalonians and their Hythrun allies had a constant supply
line from the Glass River, and they lived like kings compared to his
own people. He had eaten more since being a captive than he had since
arriving on the front as Lord Laetho’s page some four months
ago. He
began to wonder if it was a sin to eat so well, but when he refused to
eat, Mahina had threatened to have him force fed. When that threat had
not worked, Mahina called Tarja in. The captain had looked at him
coldly and simply asked one question.
“Left hand or right hand?â€
Mikel had not missed a meal since and never again brought up the
topic of sinning by eating too well.
Mahina had set him to performing chores around the camp, which in
truth did not vary much from what had been asked of him as Lord
Laetho’s page. He waited tables and filled wine jugs and ran
errands
for the old woman, all the while keeping his eyes and ears open. Mikel
was certain he would eventually be rescued. If not, there was always a
chance he could escape — except that if he did, Tarja was
likely to
kill Jaymes, so he tried not to think about it too much. But if the
chance ever arose, he wanted to take back as much intelligence as
possible to Lord Laetho. Perhaps even Prince Cratyn or King Jasnoff
would want to hear his information. Mikel managed to spend a good deal
of time in idle dreams of his triumphant return to the Karien camp,
bearing the one vital piece of information that would ensure a Karien
victory.
In the meantime, he performed his chores doggedly, determined to
give Tarja no reason to harm his older brother. Mahina was often
distracted, but she was not unkind and it was hard to hate her. In
fact, it was hard to hate many of the Medalonians, although his
loathing of Tarja Tenragan never wavered. Most of them treated him
well, if not out of kindness, exactly. Mikel suspected it was because
they did not consider him a threat. He had grandiose, if rather vague
plans to disabuse them of that notion some day and he prayed to the
Overlord every night before he slept that his god would show him the
way.
The Defenders’ camp spread out across the plain in neat
lines of
identical tents, radiating from the old keep in the centre, which
served as the temporary command post for the Medalonian forces. The
Defenders called it Treason Keep, which Mikel thought the strangest
name. It was here that Mikel did his chores for Mahina. It was here
that Lord Jenga, Tarja Tenragan and another dangerous looking man
called Garet Warner met with the savage Captain Almodavar and a
passionate young man called Ghari, to make their plans. Mikel had not
worked out exactly what Ghari’s position was in the Medalon
forces, but
he was often called in to discuss matters of import, although he had
little to offer in the way of tactical advice. He seemed to be in
charge of all sorts of other things — tasks that were vital to
the war
effort but not directly involved in the fighting.
Mikel was amazed at how little time the Medalonians spent discussing
actual battle plans. They spent a lot more time worrying about supplies
and ammunition and feed for the horses and securing enough fuel to see
them through the winter. He supposed it was because they did not have
the Overlord to protect them. Such mundane matters were rarely
discussed in the Karien camp. The Overlord would provide.
Mikel had a natural ear for languages, and it was not long before he
could make sense of what they were saying. Astonishingly, once Mahina
realised he could understand what was being said, far from discouraging
him, she took time out to give him lessons and even boasted to Tarja at
how quickly he was picking up the language. Tarja had actually smiled!
Of all things in the Defenders’ camp that confused or
surprised
Mikel, the strangest by far was the Crazy Lady. She had rooms in the
restored upper level of Treason Keep, heavily guarded by Defenders and
a sad looking man called Lord Draco who said little and kept to himself
in the chambers above the great hall. Lord Draco frightened Mikel, and
not simply because of his physical resemblance to Tarja. The man had an
air about him that spoke of emotions Mikel was too young to define. The
only redeeming features that Mikel could see were his devotion to the
Crazy Lady and the fact that any time Lord Draco and Tarja were in the
same room you could almost see the hatred between them like streaks of
jagged lightning. He did not know why Tarja hated Lord Draco and was
too afraid to ask anyone the reason, but it made him feel a little
better to know that all was not as perfect as it seemed in the
Medalonian camp.
The Crazy Lady never left her room. Mikel had seen her once, when
Mahina had sent him to her chamber with a document she had to sign. The
guards had opened the door for him and Affiana, the tall, no-nonsense
woman who seemed to be the Crazy Lady’s nurse, had met him
inside.
Affiana had relieved him of the scroll and bustled him out the door,
but not before he caught a glimpse of the Crazy Lady sitting on the
floor in the centre of the chamber, clutching a ragged doll and humming
tunelessly. The guards outside had shooed him away, leaving him burning
with curiosity regarding the Crazy Lady’s identity.
The third week into Mikel’s internment in the Defender camp,
Mahina
sent him to find Tarja. A messenger had arrived from the front with
news, and she wanted to see him. It must be something important, he
knew, but he was sent away before he could learn what it was.
While Mikel dreaded the thought of seeking Tarja out, he was looking
forward to the opportunity to visit the training ground legitimately.
He hurried through the camp, ignored by Defenders who considered him
not worth noticing. The day was quite cold and still. Swirls of dust
floated through the camp like smoke eddies. Mikel all but ran, knowing
the quicker he got there, the more time he could spend watching the
Defenders before he had to approach Tarja.
The training ground covered a vast area north of Treason Keep. It
was dusty and noisy, the long grass scuffed bare by the boots of
thousands of men training for war. He slowed as he reached the field,
weaving his way cautiously between groups of men charging with pikes at
targets nailed to posts buried deep in the ground. A little further on
another troop bearing red-painted shields was practising a set of
striking sword blows. The sergeant in charge bellowed impatient
instructions about turning hands, and standing side-on, and told one
hapless young man that if he continued to use his shield as a
counter-balance instead of protection he would undoubtedly have the
honour of being the first trooper to die in defence of Medalon.
A little further on Mikel watched in awe as a troop of Hythrun
Raiders practised, mounted on their beautiful golden steeds. They were
shooting into melons mounted on short poles, which exploded in a ruddy
mess as wave after wave of them galloped towards the targets; they
loosed their arrows side-on, reloaded and fired at the next target
without missing a beat. The Raiders steered their horses with their
knees and rode as if nothing could unseat them. Karien knights picked
their horses for their ability to carry the weight of an armoured man.
Agility and speed were secondary concerns. Mikel thought of Lord
Laetho’s huge and very expensive warhorse, which looked clumsy
and
cumbersome compared to the sleek Hythrun mounts, and wondered how he
would fare in a battle.
He moved on in the direction Mahina had told him Tarja would be,
watching the Hythrun horsemen over his shoulder as he hurried forward.
He stopped again for a moment to watch another group attacking a number
of armoured targets, practising slowly and deliberately as they aimed
for the vulnerable places in the armour with deadly precision. Mikel
frowned as he watched them. Although every man here was training for
war, these men were specifically training to kill or disable the
knights who would lead the charge. He shuddered at the thought. The
Medalonians seemed to be taking this war a lot more seriously that his
own people. But then they had to, he reminded himself. They
were outnumbered and they did not have the Overlord on their side.
“Here, lad, what are you doing hanging about the
field?â€
Mikel jumped guiltily and turned to the man who had challenged him.
It was Ghari, he discovered with relief. Ghari did not frighten him
nearly as much as the Defenders.
“Sister Mahina sent me to find Captain Tenragan.â€
Ghari placed his hand on Mikel’s shoulder with a friendly
smile.
“Let’s go find him then, shall we? I’m looking
for him too.â€
Mikel nodded a little uncertainly and let Ghari lead the way. He
watched the man out of the corner of his eye, expecting to see some
sign that Ghari’s friendliness was feigned, but the young man
simply
glanced down at him and smiled again. Mikel could not understand these
people at all.
Tarja was on the far side of the training ground, stripped down to
trousers and boots and sweating in the cold sunlight. He was training
with another man, a little older than he, and both men were breathing
hard, dust clinging to their sweaty skin as they traded blows. Both had
the musculature of men who spent hours with a sword, but Mikel was
astounded to see Tarja’s back scarred with the unmistakable
mark of the
lash. He was savagely pleased to think that someone had lashed Tarja.
He would like to meet the man and thank him.
The sound of metal against metal rang loudly as Tarja and his
opponent moved back and forth, neither man trying to gain the
advantage, simply working muscles to the point of fatigue and beyond to
strengthen them. Mikel had heard one of the Medalonians say that it was
the training you did after you reached the point of exhaustion that
really counted. Everything you did up to that point was just warming up.
Tarja saw them approaching and held up his hand to halt the fight.
His opponent lowered his sword and glanced at Mikel and Ghari.
Realising that their appearance heralded the end of their bout, he
raised his blade in salute to Tarja with a weary smile.
“You’re getting slow, Tarja. I can still stand
up.â€
“I’m getting slow,†Tarja laughed as
he returned the salute.
“More likely some Karien knight is going to make a trophy of
your hide.â€
The older man chuckled. “Perhaps, but he’ll have
trampled you
getting to me.†Captain Alcarnen picked up his shirt off the
ground and
wiped his forehead with it, then threw it over his shoulder.
“Ghari,â€
he said with a nod as he walked past the young man.
“Captain,†Ghari replied, with a surprising amount
of angst. Mikel
looked at him curiously. He didn’t like Nheal at all, that much
was
obvious.
“You didn’t come looking for me for the pleasure of
my company, I
suppose?†Tarja asked. He slipped his shirt over his head but
did not
bother to tuck it in to his trousers.
“No,†Ghari agreed. “There’s a bit
of trouble brewing in the
followers’ camp. I thought maybe you could do
something.â€
The captain did not seem pleased. “What is it this
time?â€
“Some of our people tried to set up a temple to Zegarnald.
The
Defenders tore it down.â€
“Heathen worship is against the law, Ghari. You know that
and so do
they.â€
Ghari placed his hands on his hips and glared at Tarja.
“Damn it,
Tarja, we followed you here to save Medalon from the Kariens. You told
us things would change, that we’d be free to worship our gods
—â€
“All right, I’ll speak to Jenga,†Tarja
promised, obviously not
pleased by the prospect then he turned his gaze on Mikel, who shivered
with apprehension.
“And what of you, boy?†he asked abruptly.
“What are you doing here?â€
“Sister Mahina . . . she sent me
to . . . a messenger came . . . from the
front . . . she said . . .†Mikel
could
have cried as he stuttered under the scrutiny of the captain.
“I gather that means Sister Mahina has received a messenger
from the
front and she wants to see me?†he translated condescendingly.
Mikel’s
hatred surged through his veins like lava. I will kill this man one
day, he swore silently. Tarja seemed oblivious to his animosity.
“This could mean things are about to get interesting.â€
“You think the rest of the Kariens have arrived?â€
Ghari asked.
“Either that, or they’ve packed up and gone home,
which would be too
much to hope for,†he said, sheathing his blade. “Has
anyone told —â€
Tarja’s words were cut off by an ear-shattering whoop as the
Hythrun
Raiders suddenly thundered past them at a gallop, leaving them coated
in a cloud of fine dust. Tarja glared at the troop angrily, spitting
grit as he watched them vanish into the dust. “What in the name
of the
Founders are they up to?â€
Ghari wiped his eyes. “Something’s caught their
attention.â€
Tarja shook his head in annoyance and followed the path of the
Raiders. He strode ahead of Ghari and Mikel, who had to run to catch
up. The Raiders had not gone far. They were milling about, shouting
incomprehensibly a mere fifty paces from the edge of the camp, kicking
up a cloud of dust as thick as a winter fog in Yarnarrow. Mikel watched
the Raiders curiously, coughing as the dust tickled the back of his
throat. He glanced over his shoulder and discovered most of the men on
the training ground had stopped what they were doing and had turned to
see what the commotion was about.
Tarja strode on, then suddenly stopped, frozen to the spot, as three
figures began to materialise out of the dust. All three were on foot,
and Mikel immediately recognised the figure in the centre, leading his
lathered golden stallion, as the Hythrun Warlord who had been missing
these past weeks. The man on his left Mikel had never seen before, but
he was tall and lean with dark hair and walked with long, easy strides.
Damin Wolfblade was grinning like a fool, obviously enormously pleased
with himself. The tall man beside him simply looked satisfied. The
figure to the right of the Warlord made Mikel gasp. It was a woman, he
realised, wearing close-fitting dark leathers that showed every line of
her statuesque body in startling detail, an outfit that would have seen
her stoned had she dared wear it in Karien. As she neared them, the
Warlord and the other man stopped and waited, letting her walk on
alone. She was very tall and had long, dark red hair that fell in a
thick braid to her waist. She was the most beautiful woman Mikel had
ever seen, even when he was at court; prettier even than the Lady
Chastity, who was supposed to be the most beautiful woman in all of
Karien.
He glanced up at Tarja, whose expression had changed from anger to
awe. As the woman walked towards him, Mikel thought he could have
killed Tarja, had he a knife, and the captain would not have noticed,
so enthralled did he seem at the sight of the pretty lady.
“By the gods!†Ghari breathed softly behind him.
“She’s alive!â€
Ghari apparently knew who the pretty lady was, but his words seemed
to break the spell that held Tarja motionless. The captain walked out
to meet her, and as soon as she saw him, the pretty lady broke into a
run. She collided with Tarja, who swept her off the ground and spun her
around in a full circle with an inarticulate cry. He was kissing her
before her feet touched the ground, a deed that had the gathered army
cheering and Mikel blushing with embarrassment at such a wanton public
display.
“Who is she?†Mikel asked Ghari. He looked up at the
young man and
was startled to see his eyes misted with tears.
“R’shiel,†Ghari explained, although the
name meant nothing to him.
Ghari glanced down at him and ruffled his cropped hair with a grin.
“She’s the demon child. She’s come back to
us!â€
That description meant as little to Mikel as the lady’s
name, but it
seemed fitting that a man as evil as Tarja would be attracted to a
demon. The crowd flowed past him as the soldiers all converged on the
returning Warlord and his companions. He quickly lost sight of Tarja
and R’shiel as the crowd swallowed them.
Mikel turned away, his heart heavy. It was bad enough that these
Medalonians seemed so organised and battle ready, but it was patently
unfair that Tarja Tenragan was allowed to be happy, or that they had
demons on their side. He impatiently brushed away tears of anger and
said a silent prayer to Xaphista. Help me, he prayed. The demon child has returned to
help our enemies.
Mikel had no way of knowing if Xaphista had heard him or not.
He would have been astonished and delighted to know that he had.
CHAPTER 20
The Karien war camp proved to be as uncomfortable
as Adrina had feared. Cratyn’s army was slow in gathering and
many of
his knights had been here far longer than they ever intended. The sixty
days they owed their king was long past. What kept them at the border
now was the hope of recovering some of the cost of their expedition
once they reached Medalon, and the exhortations of the priesthood that
this was a holy war. When one feared eternal damnation, it was easier
to stay and fight. Food was scarce and so was fuel; winter was fast
approaching. Nobody had expected the Defenders to be waiting on the
border when the knights arrived.
The original force of five hundred had been deemed sufficient to cow
the unprepared Medalonians and punish them for their temerity. Instead
they were met by a large force of Defenders with Hythrun allies and
defences that left the knights gasping. There was nothing hurried or
hastily thought-out about their earthworks. Even to the inexperienced
eye it was obvious that the Defenders planned to force the battle along
a path of their choosing. Although Adrina heard some of the knights
boast that the first sight of an armoured charge would send the
Defenders scurrying, she knew better. Whoever had planned the defence
of the Medalon border had planned this long ago — and planned
it well.
Taking Medalon was not going to be easy, despite the Kariens’
numerical
superiority and the much-talked-about blessing of the Overlord.
Not surprisingly, Adrina’s first appearance at the war
council
caused a stir, even more than Tristan’s inclusion. Tristan was
a man,
after all, and a warrior, for all that he was foreign. It was not
considered seemly for a woman to involve herself in such manly pursuits
as war, even in the unlikely event that she would have anything
constructive to offer. Adrina bore the insults stoically, letting
Cratyn defend his decision to his vassals. If he was going to lead
these men, he needed the practice, anyway.
The war council was made up of the eight Dukes of Karien. The
loudest was a heavy-set man with a thick neck and an even thicker
intellect — Laetho, the Duke of Kirkland. Adrina marked him as
a
dangerous fool. He had apparently lost two of his servants a few months
back, having sent the children over the border to spy on the
Medalonians. It was safely assumed they were both dead. Only an idiot
would, quite literally, send boys out to do a man’s job.
The man next to Laetho was as tall, but only half his girth. Lord
Roache, the Duke of Morrus. He said little and gave the impression that
he wasn’t listening, more often than not, but when he did
comment, it
was obvious he had not missed a word of the discussion. Adrina regarded
him with caution.
Next to Roache, she was delighted to discover Cratyn’s
cousin
Drendyn, the Earl of Tiler’s Pass. His father was too infirm to
make
the journey to the border and had sent his son in his place. Drendyn
was young and enthusiastic, but dangerously inexperienced. He had never
faced a man in battle, never had his life seriously threatened. Adrina
thought it likely he would die, sooner rather than later, no doubt
doing something exceptionally foolish, which he considered
exceptionally brave. It was a pity really, because she quite liked the
young Earl.
The fourth member of the council was even younger and more
inexperienced than Drendyn. Jannis, the Earl of Menthall, was also here
in the place of his father, although Tam had heard it rumoured that the
reason the old Duke was absent had something to do with the
“wages of
sinâ€. Adrina wondered if it meant he’d caught the pox,
but it was
hardly a question she could put to any of her Karien companions, and
the reason hardly mattered anyway. Dark and slender, Jannis was barely
more than a child and agreed with everyone, even when they disagreed
with each other.
On the other side of the long trestle table set up in the large
command tent was Palen, the Duke of Lake Isony. He was a lot smarter
than he looked. He had the ruddy face of a peasant and the mind of a
general, Adrina decided. If Cratyn listened to his advice, he might
even win this war. On Palen’s right sat Ervin, the Duke of
Windhaven.
His purpose seemed entirely decorative. He was dressed in blue velvet
with snowy lace collar and cuffs, and spent more time fiddling with his
moustaches than he did taking part in the conversation. When he did
speak up it was usually on a point that had been passed over ten
minutes before.
Next to Ervin was a stout, middle-aged man with a patch over one
eye. The Duke of Nerlin, Wherland had the unfortunate nickname of
Whirlin’ Nerlin, but he was an experienced fighter, having
spent time
in the gulf fighting Fardohnyan pirates. His advice was always preceded
with the comment, “When I was in the navy . . .
â€. But
he wasn’t a fool, and when he finally figured out how to fight
on dry
land, he would be a dangerous opponent.
The last of the Dukes should have been Chastity’s father
Terbolt,
the Duke of Setenton; however, he had sent his brother, Lord Ciril, in
his place. A heavier version of his older brother, Ciril did not look
surprised at her inclusion. He had already suffered through her
unwelcome presence when she visited his brother’s castle on the
way to
Yarnarrow. Adrina wondered why Terbolt had stayed at home, hoping there
was nothing sinister in his unexplained absence. As for Ciril, she
marked him as a stolid, if unimaginative knight, who would advise
caution, but would see any battle plan through to the bitter end.
She said nothing during the first meeting of the council and had,
via Tamylan, advised Tristan to do the same. If they asked him a direct
question, she translated it for him and then dutifully repeated his
answers to the Dukes. To his credit, Tristan gave no sign that he
understood a word of the discussion going on around him, even when the
Kariens suggested things that, under normal circumstances, would have
made him laugh out loud. By the time the meeting broke up, nothing had
been decided, and there were eight dukes with eight different ideas as
to how the battle should be engaged, well, seven in reality —
Jannis
agreed with everyone — and one very confused young prince.
When the tent finally emptied, leaving Cratyn and Adrina alone, she
turned to him with a hopeful smile.
“It is the right time in my cycle, your Highness. Can I
expect you
tonight?â€
“I’ll see. I have a lot to do.â€
“Of course, however, it’s been several months now
and we still
haven’t consummated our union. Perhaps here, on the
battlefield, you
might find the . . . fortitude . . . to
get the job done.â€
Cratyn glared at her, his expression a mixture of hatred and
despair. “Don’t push me, Adrina.â€
“Push you, husband? I doubt pushing you would achieve any
more than
pulling your limp sword has so far.â€
“You taunt me at your peril, Adrina.â€
She laughed. “Peril? What peril? What are you going to do,
Cretin?
Hit me again?â€
“I’m warning you . . .â€
“Does your sword get hard when you think of Chastity, my
dear?â€
Cratyn flew out his chair and turned to face her. He was red faced
with shame and shaking with fury. “Don’t you even mention
her
name, you pagan whore! I’m not fooled by this act you are
putting on!
If I cannot lay with you, it is because the Overlord does not wish me
to sully myself in your filth!â€
Adrina took a step backwards, her hand on Tiler’s collar.
The dog
took exception to Cratyn’s tone and he was growling softly,
warningly.
“Perhaps you’re right, Cretin. Perhaps you are
cast in the
image of your god. He’s undoubtedly an emasculated idiot,
too.â€
Cratyn snatched up a map from the table and made a show of studying
it. His hands were shaking with suppressed rage. “Return to
your tent,
Adrina, and take that damned beast with you. I will come to you when
the Overlord assures me the time is right, not to satisfy your crude
heathen lust.â€
“Lust? Now there’s a word I never thought to
associate with
you. Are you sure you know what it means?â€
“Get out.â€
“Get out, your Highness,†she corrected.
He slammed the map onto the table. “Get out! Go back to your
tent
and stay there! I will not tolerate your pagan disrespect a moment
longer!â€
His shout had Tiler lunging against her hold. He bared his teeth at
the prince defiantly.
“Don’t you dare take that tone with me, you impotent
fool! I am a
Princess of Fardohnya!â€
“You are a heathen slut,†he cried angrily.
She could not hold Tiler any longer. He slipped her hold and lunged
for the prince. Cratyn threw his hand up to protect his face as the dog
flew at him. His cry brought the guards running from outside the tent.
It almost happened too quickly for Adrina to see. Tiler had Cratyn
pinned against the table. The guards saw nothing but their prince under
attack. Adrina saw the blade in the hand of the guard and screamed as
she realised what they intended. She threw herself at the dog, but the
guards were quicker. Tiler squealed with agony as the guard ran him
through.
“No!†she sobbed as the dog slid to the ground.
“Sire? Are you all right?†the guard asked with
concern as he helped
Cratyn up. Tiler had savaged his arm, but he had managed to fend off
the worst of the attack.
“You killed my dog!†Adrina accused, unaware of the
tears coursing
down her face. “I want him punished, Cretin! He killed my
dog!â€
“Your damned dog was trying to kill me!†Cratyn
gasped, still
shaking from fear and shock. “I’m more inclined to
knight him.â€
Adrina brushed away her tears and gently kissed Tiler’s limp
head
before climbing to her feet.
“You’ll pay for this,†she warned, then she
turned and walked out of
the tent with all the regal bearing her breeding and ancestry allowed.
When she reached her own tent she dismissed her ladies-in-waiting
impatiently and called for Tam. When her maid found her, she was
tearing at the laces of her bodice impatiently, sobbing inconsolably.
“Here, let me do that,†Tam offered, as she saw
Adrina struggling.
The princess knocked the offered hand away.
“No! I can do it myself! I want you to go and see Tristan.
We’re
getting out of here.â€
The young woman studied her closely. “Out of here?
How?â€
“I haven’t the faintest idea. But we’re
leaving and I don’t care
what it does to the alliance, to the war, or to my father. I’ve
had
enough!â€
“We’re a thousand leagues from home in the middle of
a battlefield
on the border of an enemy nation,†Tamylan pointed out.
“Where are you
planning to go, your Highness?â€
Adrina glared at her in annoyance then sagged onto her bed. It was a
large four-poster that had taken a full team of oxen to bring it to the
front. One of the trappings of her station designed to inconvenience
Cratyn.
“I don’t know,†she sniffed, wiping her
eyes. “Oh, Tam, they killed
Tiler!â€
The slave opened her arms and she sobbed against Tamylan’s
shoulder
hopelessly. Grief was a new emotion for Adrina. She had never before
lost a living soul she had loved.
“There, there, I know it hurts, but it will pass in
time,†Tam
advised.
Adrina wiped her eyes and sat up determinedly. “I
can’t do this any
more, Tamylan. I don’t care if there’s a crown at the
end of it. I
cannot bear these people. It’s like a prison.â€
“I understand, your Highness, but think it through before
you act
too hastily. This might be a prison, but it’s a sight more
comfortable
than the one awaiting you on the other side of the border, or worse, if
you were caught by the Kariens trying to run away.â€
Adrina looked up at the slave who had been by her side for as long
as she could remember. “You always did say more than was proper
for a
slave.â€
“That’s because I’ve always been your friend
first, Adrina.â€
Adrina smiled wanly. “Even though you were my slave?â€
“Slavery is a state of mind, your Highness,†she
shrugged. “You’re a
princess, yet you’ve less freedom than I have. I never minded
being a
slave. It just meant that I knew where I stood.â€
After Tamylan left, Adrina lay on the bed and thought on what the
slave had said. She was right. Even being a princess didn’t
stop you
from being used by other people for their own ends, or save you from
being hurt. If anything, it made you more vulnerable. Well, enough was
enough. She would find a way out of this and she would never, as long
as she lived, ever allow a man to hurt her again.
And by the gods, she vowed, she would make Cratyn pay.
PART 2
BATTLE LINES
CHAPTER 21
Loclon may have been responsible for letting
Medalon’s most notorious criminal escape, but his expertise
with a
blade was widely acknowledged. Commandant Arkin assigned him to the
cadets. His days were spent in the Arena teaching future Defenders the
finer points of swordplay.
Following his initial annoyance at not being assigned to active
duty, he found he enjoyed the job. He had regained his fitness quickly.
The cadets were in awe of both his skill and his fearsome scars, and
the rumour that he had killed a man in the Arena enhanced his
reputation considerably.
The work gave Loclon a rare feeling of omnipotence. While they were
in his charge, he had the power of life and death over these young men,
and he wielded it liberally. Demerits were earnt easily in his classes
and, almost without exception, the cadets treated him with gratifying
obsequiousness to avoid incurring his wrath. Of course, there was the
odd dissenter. Occasionally, a cadet would fancy himself a cut above
the rest of his classmates. There was one such foolhardy soul in the
Infirmary now. His temerity had cost him his right eye. Commandant
Geendel, the officer in charge of the cadets, had demanded an
explanation, of course, but the word of an officer was always taken
over the word of a mere cadet.
Loclon smiled to himself as he rode through the Citadel toward his
lodgings, thinking of the expressions on the cadets’ faces when
he had
appeared in the Arena this morning. No doubt they had all been hoping
Geendel would relieve him of his duty. Well, they had learnt a valuable
lesson today. In the Defenders, the officers would always close ranks
around their own. Loclon had learnt that lesson the hard way, too.
On impulse, Loclon turned down Tavern Street, deciding he owed
himself a drink to celebrate his victory over the cadets. He reined in
outside the Blue Bull Tavern, handed his mount over to a waiting
stableboy and walked inside, his boots echoing hollowly on the wooden
verandah. Business was slow this early, but he spied a familiar figure
hugging his ale near the fireplace. He ordered ale from the barkeep and
crossed the room to join his friend.
“Gawn.â€
The captain looked up. “Loclon. Finished for the
day?â€
Loclon nodded and took the seat opposite. Although Gawn had been a
year or two ahead of Loclon when they were cadets, their friendship was
a recent one. They had discovered they shared a loathing of Tarja
Tenragan that few in the Defenders understood. Gawn had spent time on
the southern border with Tarja and blamed him for just about everything
that happened to him while he was there, starting with an arrow he took
during a Hythrun raid, to the tavern keeper’s daughter he had
impregnated and been forced to marry.
Loclon had met the girl once, a slovenly, lazy slut who spoke with a
thick southern accent. To make matters worse, the child had been
stillborn and Gawn was left with a wife he loathed, who would hold back
his career just as surely as Tarja and R’shiel’s escape
from the
Grimfield would hold back Loclon’s.
“I heard there was some trouble with a cadet.â€
Loclon shrugged. “Nothing I can’t handle. What are
you doing here so
early?â€
“Parenor was called to a meeting with Commandant
Arkin.†Captain
Parenor was the Citadel’s Quartermaster. Gawn had been assigned
as his
adjutant on his return to the Citadel. It was an administrative
position and a grave insult to a battle-experienced officer.
“They are
asking for even more supplies on the border.â€
Nobody in the Citadel was exactly sure what was really happening on
the northern border. Near half the Defenders in the Citadel had been
sent north, supposedly to push back an attack by the Kariens. The
reason the Kariens were attacking varied, according to which rumours
one believed. Loclon believed the one that fitted with his own view of
the world — that the Kariens were invading to avenge the death
of their
Envoy at Tarja’s hand. But it did not explain Tarja’s
reinstatement to
the Defenders, or the sudden alliance with the Warlord of Krakandar, or
the First Sister’s change of heart. Even Gawn, who knew the
southern
border well, was at a loss to explain how near a thousand Hythrun
Raiders could cross into Medalon without being noticed.
“I heard something else today that might interest
you.â€
“What’s that?â€
“The Warlord of Elasapine crossed into Medalon with five
hundred
Raiders and placed himself at the disposal of Commandant Verkin in
Bordertown, supposedly to help fight off an expected attack by the
Fardohnyans.â€
“I though we were fighting the Kariens?â€
“Apparently, the Fardohnyan king married one of his
daughters to
Prince Cratyn. Parenor is furious because now Verkin is sending in
supply requisitions that he can’t fill, and the local merchants
have
got wind of the fact. The price of grain has doubled in the past
month.â€
Loclon could not have cared less about the price of grain, but it
irked him that he was sitting here in the Citadel while there was a war
going on.
“If we have to fight on two fronts, they’ll need
every officer they
can get their hands on. You and I might finally get a chance to do what
we were trained for, my friend.â€
“Instead of me pushing parchment around and you nursemaiding
a bunch
of homesick cadets? I’ll drink to that!†Gawn swallowed
his ale in a
gulp. Loclon signalled the barkeep for another but the captain shook
his head. “Better not, Loclon. If I don’t get home soon
she’ll be after
me with a carving knife. Founders, how I loathe that bitch!â€
Loclon smiled sympathetically. “Why go home at all?â€
“I’ve not the money for any other sort of
entertainment. She takes
every rivet I earn. Speaking of which, could you fix up the tavern
keeper for me? I’m afraid I’ve overspent,
somewhat.â€
“Very well,†he agreed, thinking of what Gawn
already owed him. The
amount did not bother him. He had no problem with cash these days, but
it was time Gawn did something to earn such generosity. “On one
condition. You come with me to Mistress Heaner’s
tonight.â€
Gawn pulled a face. “If I can’t afford to pay my
tavern bill, how do
you expect me to afford that sort of place?â€
Loclon smiled. “The same way I do, my friend.â€
In the months that had passed since then, Loclon
never wanted for anything. His rent was paid on time by an anonymous
donor. He often arrived home to find a small purse sitting on his side
table, filled with gold rivets. He was welcomed at Mistress
Heaner’s
and was never asked for payment, although he had been careful not to
kill another court’esa. In fact, the urge had
dissipated
somewhat, now that the promise of a chance at R’shiel was in
the
offing. He no longer considered his actions treasonous. He had been
offered a chance for revenge, a chance that the Defenders had refused
him. That justified everything.
But teaching cadets meant there was a limit to the information
Loclon was privy to, and Mistress Heaner was growing impatient with
him. Gawn, on the other hand, was far better placed to provide the
intelligence she demanded. By bringing Gawn into the fold, his position
would be secured and his chance at R’shiel would be certain.
Of course, he needed to find something to convince Gawn to join
them, and as he settled his companion’s account with the
barkeep, it
came to him. In return for his service to the Overlord, Loclon would
relieve Gawn of his most onerous possession.
He would kill his wife for him.
Mikel emptied the bucket of water from the well in
the corner of the old Keep’s yard into another bucket,
grumbling as the
icy water splashed his trousers. Today was not going well at all.
First, Tarja had so rudely awakened him to find Lord Brakandaran,
and then Mahina had snapped at him for being late with her tea. And
then the soldiers on the Keep gate had teasingly refused to let him
pass when she sent him with a message for Lord Jenga. And then Lord
Jenga had yelled at him when he almost got himself trampled by the
horses milling about in one of the vast corrals south of the camp.
No, today was not going well at all.
To add to his misery, the atmosphere in the Defenders’ camp
had
changed noticeably following the return of the Hythrun Warlord and his
two unexpected companions. For one thing, Tarja was smiling a lot these
days, which made him a little less fearsome but did not alter
Mikel’s
loathing for him. If anything, it increased it. How dare he
look so smug! As for the pair who had returned with Damin Wolfblade,
Mikel had been horrified to hear someone say they were Harshini.
Mikel found that hard to swallow. Did they think him a child to
believe such wild stories? Everybody knew that the Harshini were
monsters with wart-covered skin, sharp pointed teeth and drooling
mouths who ate wicked Karien children, particularly if they wavered in
their devotion to the Overlord. Lord Brakandaran looked just like any
other man and the pretty lady was more beautiful than Lady Chastity, so
she couldn’t possibly be a Harshini monster. Mahina had
introduced her
as Lady R’shiel and warned him to treat her with respect, or
suffer the
consequences. The Lady had smiled at him pleasantly, but otherwise paid
him little attention. Had it not been for her obvious attachment to
Tarja, he could have almost allowed himself to like her.
Mikel hefted the bucket and turned towards the hall, muttering
miserably to himself, but he had only taken a few steps when a
scratching sound behind the well caught his attention. Glancing around
to ensure he was unobserved, he put down the bucket and walked
cautiously around the stone lip of the well. A heap of rubble from the
crumbled outer wall was piled up on the other side. He heard the sound
again and moved toward the source, wondering if it was a cat, or
perhaps a fox who had inadvertently wandered into the Keep. He hoped it
was a cat. He liked cats. Perhaps he could catch it and keep it for a
pet . . .
The area near the well was one of the warmest in the Keep, with the
forge on the other side of the wall. It would be a good place to hide.
Mikel listened hard, trying to hear over the rhythmic clanging coming
from the smiths on the other side. The scratching sound came again,
louder this time, from a dark hole formed by the fallen masonry. With a
careful hand, Mikel reached into the darkness.
Whatever it was, it bit him with a force that made him cry out in
pain. He scrambled backwards around the well, tripped over the bucket
and landed on his backside in a puddle of icy mud. His hand was
bleeding profusely and throbbing, and tears of fright and pain and
humiliation were streaming down his face. Laughter wafted down from the
guards on the wall-walk who had looked down at the commotion. A grey
streak emerged from the rubble with a screech and bolted past him
towards the Keep. He watched it race past and into the arms of the Lady
R’shiel.
She caught the creature with a smile and turned to Mikel.
“Don’t
worry, I think you frightened her as much as she frightened
you.â€
Mikel stared at the little monster with wide eyes. He didn’t
know
what it was, but it was clinging to R’shiel, chattering
unintelligibly
in a screeching voice and pointing at him with huge black accusing eyes.
“Oh look, you’re hurt.â€
She shooed the creature away and it literally vanished into thin
air. Mikel traced the star of the Overlord on his forehead to ward off
evil as the Lady walked over to him and squatted down, smiling
reassuringly.
“Here, let me look at it,†she said. He held out his
throbbing hand
wordlessly, too afraid to do anything else. She took his hand in her
own and almost instantly the pain vanished. He snatched his hand back
in astonishment. The bite was gone, the skin as smooth as if it had
never been broken.
Mikel screamed.
R’shiel waved back a curious guard come to see what all the
fuss was
about. She sat back on her heels until he ran out of breath then smiled.
“Feeling better?â€
“Wha— what did you do to me?†he demanded.
Had she used magic on
him? Would he be condemned to drown in the Sea of Despair for eternity
because she had infected him with evil spirits? Mikel was weak with
fear at the prospect. “You used the power of the pagan gods on
me!â€
“Never fear, little one, it’s the same power as that
of the
Overlord, so it shouldn’t do you any lasting harm.â€
Mikel shrank away from her. She did not look like a monster, but she
could use magic — and the little creature, who was obviously
some sort
of evil-spawned monster, had run to her for comfort. Perhaps she was
Harshini. Maybe under those close-fitting leathers was warty skin that
peeled when you touched it and gave you diseases that had no cure and
made you do nasty things to people and turned you into —
“I said, your name is Mikel, isn’t it?â€
Mikel forced away the terrifying images that filled his head. He
nodded, afraid that if he did not answer her, she would turn him into a
beetle.
“And your brother? Where is he?â€
Mikel’s eyes narrowed at the question. Why does she want
to know
that?
“The Hythrun have him,†he told her sullenly.
“It must be pretty scary for you, Mikel. You’re a
long way from home
and surrounded by strangers. I know how that feels.â€
Try as he did to despise her, he knew she meant what she said. She
really did understand how he felt. The thought frightened him.
Had she used more magic on him? There is only the Overlord, he
reminded himself. He was relieved when the prayer came so easily.
Xaphista was still with him.
“Nothing scares me,†he declared defiantly.
She laughed. “Maybe nothing does, at that. Are you all right
now?â€
He nodded and suffered her assistance as he climbed to his feet. As
soon as she let him go, he snatched up his empty bucket and ran back to
the hall as if all the demons of the Harshini were on his heels.
Several days later the Medalonians held their most
important meeting since Mikel had been in the Defender’s camp.
Everyone
was in attendance. Tarja and Lord Jenga, Sister Mahina and Garet
Warner, Ghari, Lord Wolfblade and the mean-looking Captain Almodavar,
and Lord Brakandaran. The only one missing was the Lady
R’shiel. Mikel
did not know where she was. Perhaps even the Medalonians were afraid to
share their battle plans with a Harshini magician. They obviously did
not share the same feeling for the small Karien boy who served them.
Mikel moved among the adults, filling wine cups and collecting empty
platters left over from their meal. Nobody seemed to notice him. The
hall was cold — it was not possible to seal all the cracks in
the
draughty old ruin — and torches sputtered fitfully, flaring
occasionally as an errant draught fanned them into brightness. The fire
did little to relieve the chill. If anything, it made the gathered
people look more sinister, but if it was the cold or fear that made
Mikel shiver, he could not say.
“This may sound like a stupid question,†Lord
Brakandaran was saying
as Mikel silently filled his cup. “But has anyone thought to
offer the
Kariens a settlement?â€
“What? You mean offer them peace?â€
the Hythrun
Warlord gasped with mock horror. “Bite your tongue,
man!â€
“Perhaps not so stupid,†Sister Mahina mused.
“They must have
realised by now that even if they win, it will be an expensive victory.
Perhaps they would consider a peaceful settlement.â€
Tarja shook his head. “I doubt it, but I suppose
it’s worth a try.â€
“At the very least, it might delay them for a
while,†Jenga agreed.
“That would take us well into winter before the first attack.
Those big
warhorses, weighted down with armour, will be a liability rather than
an asset if it snows. Even a decent rainstorm will turn the battlefield
into a quagmire.â€
“I’ll be very disappointed if they agree,â€
Damin said. “And
surprised. They’ve too much at stake to withdraw at this
point.â€
“You’re right,†Garet Warner said in his
soft, dangerous voice,
which seemed to startle the Warlord. Damin Wolfblade didn’t
seem to
like the commandant much. “The banner flying over their command
tent is
Cratyn’s, not Jasnoff’s. He’s young and he
needs to prove himself.
Agreeing to a settlement would imply weakness. He won’t back
down.â€
“And what of the Fardohnyans?†Mahina asked.
“Perhaps they might
persuade him?â€
Garet shook his head. “Again, I doubt it. They were sent to
Karien
as the Princess’ Guard, and the first thing Adrina did was
bring them
to the border to aid her husband. They obviously share a common
purpose.â€
“Adrina?†Damin Wolfblade asked in surprise.
“I thought he married
Cassandra?â€
“He married Adrina,†Brak confirmed. “She
left Talabar with Cratyn
several months ago. Her progress up the Ironbrook was something of an
event, I hear.â€
“Gods!†Damin muttered. He looked concerned.
“Is that a problem?†Lord Jenga asked.
“It could be,†Brak answered. “Adrina is
Hablet’s eldest legitimate
child. Adrina’s son could claim the Fardohnyan throne.â€
“Who cares?†Mahina asked. “Our problem is
here and now, not whether
or not there is a Karien heir to Fardohnya.â€
“Our problem could be Adrina herself,†Damin warned
them. “If she’s
half as bad as her reputation suggests, then she’s the one to
look out
for, not Cratyn.†The Warlord glanced at his captain who nodded
in
agreement.
“Do you know her?†Tarja asked Damin curiously.
“No, thank the gods! She was in Greenharbour a couple of
years ago
for my uncle’s birthday.†Suddenly he grinned.
“Despite my uncle’s
wishes, and a number of dangerously close calls, I managed to avoid an
encounter with Her Serene Highness.â€
“How bad can the woman be?â€
“Bad,†Damin assured him. “She’s got
the body of a goddess and the
heart of a hyena. Hablet offered a dowry for her that was beyond the
dreams of avarice — and he still couldn’t marry her
off. Adrina married
to the Karien Crown Prince is not a happy prospect. I wonder how poor
Cratyn is coping.â€
“He can’t be doing too badly,†Garet said.
“She’s followed him to
the front with her troops. Maybe she’s found her soul
mate.â€
“If she has, then I’m packing up and going home
now,†the Warlord
announced, although Mikel didn’t think he was serious.
“I’d like to meet the woman that makes you turn tail
and run,
Damin,†Tarja chuckled.
“Does it really matter?†Mahina asked, obviously
annoyed by the
banter between Tarja and the Warlord. “We were discussing the
advisability of sending an emissary to the Kariens, I believe?â€
“Assuming we do, who would we send?†Jenga asked.
“I’m in no mood to
give them a hostage, should they not honour our flag of truce.â€
Mikel
was quite offended at the idea that his prince would do any such thing.
How dare they impugn Cratyn’s honour!
“What about the boy?†Lord Brakandaran suggested.
All eyes turned to
Mikel curiously. He quivered under their unrelenting gaze.
“Are you crazy?†Tarja said.
“It’s no crazier than some ideas I’ve heard
lately.†He turned back
to the others to explain. “His return could be considered a
gesture of
good faith. The child has been here for months and he will tell the
Kariens everything he’s seen. It might give them pause, even if
your
offer of peace falls on deaf ears.â€
“But he’s a child,†Jenga objected.
“All the more reason to send him home.â€
All eyes turned at the sound of the imperious voice and Mikel was
suddenly forgotten. The Crazy Lady descended the stairs regally,
dressed in a long, high-necked white gown. She had icy blue eyes and a
haughty expression and surveyed the room as if everyone in it was
beneath contempt.
“You will bow in the presence of the First Sister!â€
she snapped.
Instinctively, the stunned Medalonians almost did as she demanded.
Lord Wolfblade’s jaw was hanging slackly in astonishment and
Tarja wore
an expression of such hatred that it made Mikel take a step backwards.
Only Lord Brakandaran did not seem startled by her appearance.
“Impressive, Lord Dranymire,†he said.
Suddenly the Crazy Lady seemed to wobble and her expression changed
from contempt to amusement.
“Spoilsport!†R’shiel accused, stepping out
of the shadows on the
staircase. She looked at the others who still sat frozen in various
poses ranging from amazement to outright shock, and laughed.
“You
should see your faces!â€
“Humans are far too easy to impress,†the Crazy Lady
remarked, in a
male voice much deeper than the one she had spoken with a moment ago.
Mikel was certain he had been swallowed up whole and sucked into
some sort of pagan hell. The Crazy Lady wobbled again and Mikel watched
in horror as she literally fell apart. Then the room was swarming with
little grey creatures like the one that had bitten him by the well. The
creatures fell about laughing in high twittering voices, as if they
were privy to some marvellous prank. It was more than Mikel could cope
with. He screamed in terror as the creatures neared him.
His scream brought the others out of their torpor. They all began
talking at once and Mikel could make no sense of what they were saying.
He did not try. He could hear someone crying and it took a little while
to realise it was he. R’shiel walked toward him, pushing the
monsters
out of her way impatiently. He shied away from her in fear.
“I’m sorry, Mikel. I didn’t mean to frighten
you. They’re demons,
that’s all. They won’t hurt you.†She turned
impatiently. “You’re
scaring the poor child to death. Be gone!â€
The demons vanished almost instantly, shocking the grown-ups almost
as much as Mikel. “The Overlord will protect me. The
Overlord will
protect me. The Overlord will protect me,†he chanted
softly as the
tears streamed down his face.
“Let the boy take the message to the Kariens, Lord
Jenga,†she
pleaded. “Send him home. He doesn’t belong
here.â€
Jenga looked at Brak uncertainly. “You said he would tell
his people
what he’s seen here. Do you really want him to report what
he’s seen
here tonight?â€
Brak shrugged. “The Karien priests will know we are here
soon
enough. It might even give them pause.â€
“Or they won’t believe him,†Garet pointed
out. “I certainly don’t
believe what I just saw.â€
A meaningful glance passed between the adults before Jenga turned on
him. “Boy! Go get your gear packed. You’re leaving
first thing in the
morning. You will take our offer of peace back to Prince Cratyn, is
that clear?â€
Mikel nodded. Tears of joy, as opposed to fright, threatened to
unman him. “And . . . my brother?†he
ventured
cautiously.
“He stays,†the Hythrun Warlord announced, before
anybody else could
answer. “He will be a hostage to your good behaviour. If your
prince
accepts our offer, we’ll send him home.â€
It would have been too much to hope for any other answer, although
he wondered if he’d waited and asked the Lady R’shiel
when she was
alone, the result might have been different. But it was too late now.
Mikel nodded and the Lady R’shiel smiled at him
reassuringly. He was
going home. The Overlord had finally answered his prayers —
some of
them, at least. By tomorrow evening, he would be standing before his
prince and his priests and he could finally tell them of the evil that
resided south of the border in the camp of the Defenders.
CHAPTER 24
They sent him back to the Karien camp mounted on a
nondescript dun gelding. Tarja Tenragan and Damin Wolfblade escorted
Mikel as far as the earthworks that were constructed along the front.
It was the first close look Mikel had got of the Medalonian defences.
He tried to remember every detail to tell Prince Cratyn, but it
wasn’t
easy with Damin on one side of him on a huge golden stallion, and Tarja
on the other on a sleek black mare. As if they knew the reason for his
swivelling head and wide eyes, they began to point out various features
of the defences to each other over the top of his head, describing in
rather graphic and gory detail the affect they would have on any
attacking Karien force.
The earthworks gave cover for a vast number of bowmen, Tarja
explained cheerfully to the Warlord, which would decimate the vanguard
of any Karien attack. Even if the knights were armoured, their horses
would founder under the rain of arrows. Each archer carried around
fifty arrows, and if they took their time, they could keep up the
deadly hail for an hour or more. Being trapped under a dead warhorse
while it rained arrows was not a happy prospect, Damin agreed with
relish. And, he added, if they were so foolish as to send unarmoured
men to lead the attack, it would be a massacre. Mikel tried very hard
not to listen to them. They were teasing him, he knew, and his courage
was growing stronger the closer he came to the border. The Overlord was
with him and he was on his way home. There was nothing they could do to
him that would quell his growing excitement.
“This is as far as we go, boy,†Damin said
eventually, reining his
horse in as they reached the edge of the field that the Medalonians
ominously referred to as the “killing groundâ€. He
looked down at Mikel
and grinned. “Just head north, boy. You’ll reach Karien
sooner or
later.â€
“And carry this,†Tarja added, thrusting a broken
spear into his
hand, to which had been tied a scrap of white linen.
“My people won’t harm me!†Mikel said, quite
offended by the flag of
truce. “I am going home!â€
“You’re going home wearing a Defender’s
uniform,†Tarja pointed out.
“I’m sure they won’t kill you if they know who
you are, but you’re not
going to get close enough to tell them, dressed like that. Take
it.†He
looked across at Damin and added with a grin, “Mind you,
they’d never
believe a Defender could be so short.â€
Reluctantly, Mikel accepted the flag.
“You have the message?†Damin asked.
He nodded glumly and patted the bulge under he jacket where the
sealed letter from Lord Jenga was securely tucked, as the two men he
hated most in this world talked to him like a small child. They would
ask if he’d washed behind his ears next!
“Then scat!†the Warlord said, slapping the flank of
the gelding.
The horse surged forward and Mikel nearly lost his seat as he galloped
headlong toward the border.
Not an experienced rider, Mikel clung grimly to the pommel until he
remembered to use the reins. The slightest touch and the well-trained
cavalry mount slowed his headlong rush to a more manageable pace. With
a sigh of relief, Mikel remembered the flag, and propped it up against
his thigh as he rode through the waist-high grass of the
no-man’s land
between the two camps. Although he did not know the exact location of
the border, he knew that he would soon be in bow range of the Kariens,
and he would be hard pressed to deliver his intelligence about the
Medalonians with an arrow through his chest.
It annoyed him intensely that it had been Tarja who pointed that out.
He was still half a league or more from the camp when the Karien
sentries found him. The sight of Lord Laetho’s purple pennant,
with its
three tall pines worked in red, brought tears of relief to his eyes,
which he hastily brushed away as the knights approached. The Overlord
was truly with him, he knew now. Not only had he been released, but he
had sent his own people to meet him. Mikel was giddy with relief as the
tall knight in the lead lifted his faceplate. It was Sir Andony,
Laetho’s nephew, newly knighted last summer and enormously
proud of the
fact. Andony studied him for a moment, waving away the drawn swords of
his three companions.
“Sir Andony!†he cried, urging his horse forward.
“Mikel?†he asked in astonishment. “We
thought you long dead, lad!â€
“They sent me back. I have a message for the prince.â€
Andony frowned. “You seem remarkably well fed for someone
kept
prisoner these past months, boy. And you wear the uniform of the
enemy.â€
Mikel glanced down at his rolled up Defender’s trousers and
the
too-big, warm red jacket they had given him in the Medalonian camp.
“They took my clothes and burned them. You must take me to the
prince!
I’ve seen so much, Sir! I have to tell him!â€
Andony nodded, not entirely convinced. “Well, we’ll
see if Lord
Laetho wants you to speak with his Highness. Come!â€
Andony wheeled his big horse around and fell in beside Mikel. One of
the other knights took station on his left and the other two fell in
behind. Mikel rode into the Karien camp, not in triumph as he had
dreamt, but a barely disguised prisoner.
“They offer peace,†Prince Cratyn
announced,
throwing the parchment Mikel had delivered onto the long table in the
command tent. Smoking torches threw tall shadows on the canvas walls,
which made Mikel’s eyes water. The braziers did little to warm
the big
tent.
“They offer nothing!†Lord Laetho corrected,
pointing at the
document with scorn. “They ask us to pack up and go home! They
offer no
compensation! They do not even apologise for murdering Lord
Pieter!â€
Mikel could not read, but even if he had been able, he had not been
given an opportunity to examine the contents of the sealed document he
had delivered. He wondered at Lord Laetho’s interpretation of
the
offer. Sister Mahina had been quite hopeful that a peaceful solution
might be reached.
“I would not go quite that far,†Lord Roache
corrected. “But you are
right, in that it is somewhat arrogant in its tone. The Medalonians
appear to think they might prevail.â€
The full war council had convened upon hearing of the letter from
the Defenders, even though it was the middle of the night. Mikel had
spent the day being questioned by Lord Laetho and now stood just inside
the flap of the command tent, chewing his bottom lip nervously. In his
dreams, when he faced the war council, he had not been nervous, or
cold, or afraid. Mikel glanced around, rubbing his eyes and trying not
to yawn. The movement caught the eye of the tall Fardohnyan captain who
stood opposite him on the other side of the tent, near the Princess
Adrina. The man winked at him solemnly. The small gesture gave Mikel a
much needed morale boost.
Princess Adrina had obviously dressed in a hurry. Her long dark hair
was tied back with a plain blue ribbon and she wore a simple dress of
fine grey wool, covered with a warm fur cloak. Mikel watched her,
thinking that she was just as pretty as the Lady R’shiel, which
was
only proper, since she was married to Prince Cratyn. But she did not
look at Cratyn the same way Lady R’shiel looked at Tarja. There
was no
warmth in her eyes at all, except when she addressed the fair-haired
Fardohnyan captain. And Prince Cratyn’s gaze did not linger on
Adrina,
the way Tarja’s lingered on R’shiel.
No, he decided, his prince and princess knew how to behave in
public. Nobody would ever come upon them kissing where anybody
could see them. The princess was far too well bred to lean back
suggestively against her husband, while she talked of war to her
council, or dress in skin-tight leathers, or ride astride like a man.
It was comforting to be back among people who acted with decorum and
restraint.
“It is a sign of their weakness,†Earl Drendyn
announced, leaning
back in his chair. “They have seen the force we have gathered
and are
afraid!â€
“Even the lowest creature can fight savagely when
it’s frightened,â€
Duke Wherland reminded them. His eye-patch looked decidedly ominous in
the sputtering light. “I learnt that in the navy.â€
“It may be a ruse,†Duke Palen agreed, scratching at
his greying
beard thoughtfully. “A delaying tactic, perhaps?†He
turned in his
seat, his gaze falling on Mikel, who gulped nervously. “What
say you,
boy? Laetho tells me you were there when they decided to make this
offer.â€
Mikel swallowed again, his mouth suddenly dry.
“The boy knows nothing useful,†Duke Ervin scoffed,
pulling on the
ends of his waxed moustaches. “I don’t know why you
bothered to bring
him here.â€
“My Lords,†the princess intruded cautiously, her
eyes lowered
demurely. She was such a perfect lady. “Children, like women,
are
frequently overlooked in a war camp. You may find he knows more than
the Medalonians realise.â€
Prince Cratyn looked up sharply as the Princess spoke, but it was
Lord Ciril who answered her. “Her Highness shows remarkable
insight for
a woman. Come forward, boy!â€
Mikel stepped forward hastily, although his throat was so dry it
felt as if somebody had sandpapered it.
“My . . . My
Lord?â€
“You were there when they composed this message?â€
Duke Roache asked.
Mikel shook his head. “No, my Lord. But I heard them
discussing it.â€
“Well? What did they say, boy?†Duke Ervin demanded
impatiently.
“Sister Mahina, she said we could
win . . .â€
“There! What did I tell you!†Drendyn laughed. He
took a long swig
from his wine cup. He looked very pleased with himself. “They
know we
will defeat them!â€
“Shut up, fool!†Palen snorted, before turning his
ruddy peasant’s
face to Mikel. “Carry on, boy.â€
“But she said it would be an expensive victory,†he
finished,
gaining a little confidence in the face of the elder Duke’s
support.
“Lord Jenga . . . he said it
might . . .
give you pause. He said an attack in winter . . . in the
mud or the snow . . . would be hard for armoured
knights.â€
“Any fool knows that,†Roache muttered
The Fardohnyan captain said something Mikel could not understand,
and the others turned to the princess expectantly. “My captain
asks if
the child heard what the Hythrun Warlord had to say.â€
Eleven heads turned to look at him expectantly. Mikel suddenly
remembered all the horrible things Damin Wolfblade had said about the
lovely princess and paled. He could not repeat that!
“He said . . . he said that if you accepted
the peace
offering he would be very disappointed. He said you have too much at
stake to withdraw now.†The princess smiled at him before she
translated the answer for her captain and his heart fluttered. This was
how a true lady should look and behave. Decorous, elegant and modest.
And Damin Wolfblade said she had the heart of a hyena! How dare he!
“The Medalonians don’t appear to be suffering under
too many false
illusions,†Lord Wherland remarked, “if what the boy
says is true.â€
“Aye,†Lord Palen agreed, “and they are
correct about the snow. It
would seriously hamper the knights.â€
“Then we need to attack before it snows, gentlemen,â€
Prince Cratyn
announced. Mikel’s heart swelled with pride as he watched the
young
prince. He was so noble and serious. He did not joke about death or
make lewd comments about women. He was renowned for his piety. And he
would crush the Defenders, Mikel thought fiercely. The Overlord
was with him and he had the most beautiful, well-mannered princess in
the whole world by his side. Nothing could defeat them.
“Aye,†Palen agreed. “We’ve sat on
our backsides too long. It is
time to teach these atheists a lesson. Only a fool would wait until
winter to attack. Do you have anything else to tell us, boy?â€
Mikel faced a moment of indecision. Should he mention the Harshini?
Should he say he had seen a demon? Lots of demons? If he did, would
they believe him? Or would they send him to the priests for Absolution
Through Pain for lying? Should he tell them that Jaymes would only be
released if they agreed to the peace offering? It had all seemed so
clear when he was a prisoner among the Defenders. But now, faced with
the war council and their stern expressions, his courage deserted him.
“My Lords, the child is exhausted,†Princess Adrina
said, saving him
from having to answer. “It is the middle of the night and he is
almost
falling over with fatigue, as am I. Perhaps I could take the child and
see him settled for the night while you make your plans? After all, a
war council is no place for a lady,†she added, bringing nods
of
agreement from the men. Mikel thought she was beyond perfect. She was
the embodiment of Karien femininity. “Once he’s rested,
I am sure he
will remember more. In fact, I would be happy to take it upon myself to
interview the child, thus freeing my Lords for more important business.
It would be my small contribution to your war effort.†The
gathered
Dukes nodded, as impressed by her words as Mikel was. “Do I
have your
leave to depart, your Highness?â€
Prince Cratyn waved his agreement with a furrowed brow, as if
something concerned him, but he was probably just worried about the
princess. She should not have been dragged from a warm bed at this hour
of the night.
“Then I bid you goodnight, my Lords,†she said,
rising gracefully
from her seat. “May the Overlord be with you as you make your
plans, so
that your victory is quick and decisive. Come, child.â€
She held out her hand and Mikel took it in wonder. He did not notice
the cold as they walked from the tent. He barely even noticed the tall
Fardohnyan following them outside. The princess said something in her
own language to the captain, who nodded and disappeared into the
darkness, then she turned and looked down at him.
“You must be the bravest young man in all of
Karien,†she said with
obvious admiration. “To have spent all that time in the heart
of the
enemy and remain so true to your faith. I want to hear about every
single moment of the time you spent with those nasty Defenders.â€
“I’ll try to remember everything, your
Highness,†he promised her.
For the Princess Adrina he would walk to the Sea of Despair and back.
They rode back in silence, Dranymire sitting atop
the pommel of R’shiel’s saddle until they neared the
camp. He vanished
as the vast followers’ camp came into view. R’shiel
glanced at Brak,
but his expression was still as sour as it had been when they rode out
this morning.
“Stop fretting.â€
“I’ll stop fretting when you start demonstrating
some sense.â€
“We have to do this, Brak. Have you seen the size of the
Karien
army? We need every Defender on the border. We need Mahina in
charge.â€
He shook his head, but did not answer her.
When they reached the corrals on the southern side of the camp, they
dismounted and walked their horses forward. The smell was pungent, with
so many animals so close, and she could feel Wind Dancer’s
thoughts as
the mare sensed the nearness of her kin. Two Hythrun hurried forward as
they neared the coral where the sorcerer-bred mounts were kept, a
little way from the more ordinary Medalonian cavalry horses.
R’shiel
waved them away, preferring to unsaddle the beast herself.
Wind Dancer’s thoughts lingered wistfully on fresh hay.
R’shiel
enjoyed the touch of her equine mind. Everything was so simple. So
uncluttered. Brak moved on a little further, apparently preferring
solitude to her company.
“We have men aplenty to tend your horse, Divine One.â€
R’shiel hefted the saddle clear of Wind Dancer and turned
toward the
voice in the gathering darkness. “Please don’t call me
that, Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“A compromise, then. You call me Damin, and I’ll
call you R’shiel.â€
“Done!†She lifted the saddle over the rail and
turned to him.
“Damin.â€
“Did you enjoy your ride?â€
“Very much. She’s a beautiful horse.â€
“Then she is yours. A gift.â€
“I couldn’t accept anything so valuable,
Lord . . .
Damin.â€
“Why not?†He moved closer, stroking Wind
Dancer’s golden withers as
she removed the bridle. “I’ve already told Tarja I
planned to make you
a gift of her. He didn’t seem to mind.â€
“I don’t need Tarja’s permission to accept a
gift,†she said,
ducking under Wind Dancer’s head, which put the bulk of the
beast
between them. She began rubbing the horse down with more force than was
absolutely necessary. “I’m just afraid you’ll
read more into my
acceptance than is warranted.â€
“I see. You think I’m planning to use my association
with the demon
child for my own political ends, is that it?â€
“Aren’t you?â€
He laughed. “You and my sister would make a great pair.
Kalan thinks
as you do. I offer this gift because I like you, R’shiel. If it
helps
my cause some day, then fine, but I would make the offer even knowing
it might harm my cause.â€
She stopped brushing Wind Dancer and stared at him. “Why are
you
here, Damin?â€
“Lord Brakandaran asked me to come.â€
“So you dropped everything and left your own province
vulnerable to
attack, to help an enemy? Just because Brak asked you? I find that hard
to believe.â€
“You were raised by the Sisterhood, R’shiel. Perhaps
if you’d been
raised among people who place their gods above all else, you’d
understand.â€
“Perhaps,†she muttered, unconvinced. Damin
Wolfblade seemed too
sure of his own place in the world to care much about the gods. But it
was to him that Zegarnald had delivered Brak and her. The War God had a
high opinion of this human Warlord. Maybe that was why she did not
entirely trust him.
“R’shiel, I will be the first to admit that my
association with you
will give the other Warlords pause. If I can call the demon child my
friend, my position will be almost unassailable. I might even find out
what it feels like not to fear an assassin’s blade. But
that’s not the
reason I came. The Karien army has to be stopped before it reaches
Hythria. If not, my people face a war on a scale you cannot imagine.
Hythria is a large nation, but the Defenders are a much more coherent
force than any my people can muster. They are trained to act as one
army. My nation has seven Warlords with seven different ideas as to how
a battle should be fought, even if you could get them to agree to fight
on the same side.â€
“You sound so plausible, I almost believe you.â€
“I do, don’t I? I’ve been working on that
little speech for a while,
although I hadn’t planned to use it on you. I wrote it in a
letter to
my brother Narvell.â€
“Your brother?â€
“He’s the Warlord of Elasapine. I hoped to appeal to
his better
nature and use his forces to block any Fardohnyan incursion into
southern Medalon.â€
“Did he listen to you?â€
“Oh yes, he did as I asked. I also hinted in my letter that
I would
deny him my permission to marry the girl he’s been lusting
after since
he was fifteen, if he didn’t.â€
The darkness had fallen swiftly as they spoke, and the night was lit
by cold starlight; their breath frosted as if their words were things
of substance. R’shiel opened the corral gate and Wind Dancer
trotted
through happily to join her companions. She gathered up her bridle as
Damin lifted the saddle from the rail and together they headed toward
the tent where the tack was stored.
“I think I would rather have you as a friend than an enemy,
Damin.â€
“I could say the same about you.â€
“You’ve nothing to fear from me, I
—†R’shiel stopped in her tracks
as a prickle of magic washed over her. It was faint, but unmistakable.
The feeling was unpleasant, as if someone was channelling magic through
a filter of slime and filth.
“What’s the matter?â€
Brak reached them at a run. “Call your men out, Damin. The
Kariens
are getting ready to attack.â€
Damin looked puzzled, R’shiel even more so. “Is that
what I can
feel?â€
Brak nodded. “The priests are calling on Xaphista. What you
feel is
them working a coercion, R’shiel.â€
She shuddered, thinking this was what she had planned for the
Gathering. She hadn’t known it would feel so unclean.
“When will they attack?†Damin demanded.
“Not for a while yet. But they’d only be doing this
if they planned
to move soon.â€
Damin did not need to be told twice. He dumped the saddle at
R’shiel’s feet and ran toward the Keep.
“Can’t we do something, Brak?â€
“If you want to reveal your presence to Xaphista, by all
means, stop
his priests from calling him.â€
She glared at him before picking up the saddle, lugging it toward
the tent. “What’s the use of having all this power if
you can’t do
anything with it?â€
Brak held back the tent flap for her as she shouldered her way in.
She dumped the saddle and bridle on the racks and then pushed past him
as she stepped outside, looking toward the crumbling old fort. Distant
shouts reached them on the cold air as Damin raised the alarm.
“You can do anything you want, R’shiel,â€
Brak said, following her
gaze. “The trick is knowing when it’s going to cause
more harm than
good.â€
“Like coercing the Gathering?â€
He nodded. “You think what you can feel now is unpleasant.
Wait
until you’re channelling it yourself. The Harshini prohibition
on
coercion isn’t some altruistic principle. It’s
dangerous, R’shiel, and
you are still a babe in arms when it comes to magic.â€
R’shiel glanced at him, but he wasn’t looking at
her. His gaze was
fixed on the rousing army.
“Then what should I do?â€
He turned to her finally and shook his head. “If I knew that
R’shiel, I’d have told you.â€
CHAPTER 27
Brak’s timely warning proved its worth and
the
Defenders were in position long before the Karien army advanced the
following morning. As dawn lightened the sky, Tarja rode behind the
lines to Lord Jenga’s position on a small knoll overlooking the
battlefield, frost crackling under Shadow’s hooves.
Ditches filled with sharpened stakes would force the battle down a
v-shaped corridor, pushing the Kariens into an ever-narrowing field of
fire. The Jagged Mountains to the east, and the Sanctuary Mountains to
the west, formed a natural barricade to any flanking manoeuvres. The
mountains were both a blessing and a curse. The Kariens could not get
past them, but neither could the Defenders. The only way to flank the
enemy was to wait until they had crossed the border and were well into
Medalonian territory.
Damin’s mounted archers had been split into two companies:
one under
the command of the Warlord and one under the command of Captain
Almodavar. They were positioned on the arms of the V-shape and would
harry the enemy flanks as the Kariens advanced. Their mobility and
their astounding accuracy with their short bows meant they would remain
relatively safe from counter-attack, as the Kariens would have to break
ranks and cross the stake-filled ditches to pursue them.
At the apex of the v-shape waited the longbowmen. They were the only
hope of halting the Karien advance. The longbow could out range any
weapon the Kariens could bring to bear on the Defenders, and their
defence lay in the rain of arrows that should decimate the Kariens
before they got close enough to use their own weapons. Behind them
stood the infantry, ready to advance if the Kariens got so close that
the archers were endangered.
Tarja commanded one of the units of light cavalry. His job was to
come at the enemy from behind, once the Kariens were committed to the
battle. The deadly trenches had been carefully measured and dug to
ensure a cavalry mount could clear them, as it was a safe assumption
that a Karien warhorse, weighted down by the knight he carried, would
have no hope of achieving the same feat. What worried Tarja was the
Fardohnyan cavalry. They had dug the trenches before they learnt they
would be facing Fardohnyans as well.
The killing ground was pockmarked with treacherous holes, dug to
trap the charging destriers of the mounted knights. Tarja wondered if
it was a measure of his character that he felt more sympathy for the
horses that would die this day than the men.
He reached the command position and dismounted, as a trooper hurried
forward to hold his mount. Jenga waited under the shelter of a wide
pavilion, talking to Damin and Nheal Alcarnen, who had command of the
reserves. To his surprise, R’shiel and Brak waited with him.
R’shiel looked pale in the dim light. Brak’s
expression revealed
nothing of what he was thinking.
“It’s stopped,†she told him as he entered
the tent, pulling off his
leather gauntlets.
“What’s stopped?†Jenga asked, glancing over
his shoulder.
“The magic. Whatever the Karien priests were doing,
they’re not
doing it any more.â€
“Is that a good sign?â€
Brak shrugged. “Depends on how you look at it. At the very
least, it
means you won’t have long to wait.â€
Jenga frowned, uncomfortable with this talk of magic. Tarja warmed
his hands over the brazier for a moment before turning to Brak and
R’shiel.
“Just exactly what were they doing?â€
“Coercing their troops, Brak thinks,â€
R’shiel told him.
“What does that mean?’
“It could mean they won’t stop attacking, regardless
of what you
throw at them,†Brak warned. “A coercion makes men act
against their
natural instincts. Don’t count on them breaking, even if faced
with
impossible odds. They’ll just keep on coming until it wears
off. That
could be hours or days.â€
Damin looked across the tent at them and nodded. “We have
legends of
battles fought by men under a coercion. They didn’t stop
attacking
until every last man was dead.â€
Jenga listened to the discussion with growing alarm. “This
is
madness! Isn’t there something you can do?â€
“Zegarnald will be with us,†Damin said.
Jenga turned on him impatiently. “Bah! Your gods! I need
practical
solutions, not flights of fancy.â€
“Actually, Zegarnald might be more help than you imagine, my
Lord,â€
Brak said. “Coercing men in a battle is sort of breaking the
rules. It
might be worth appealing to him.â€
Before Jenga could answer the faint sound of a horn reached them. The
Kariens signalling their advance. Jenga turned toward the sound and
frowned.
“You speak to your damned gods, Lord Brakandaran. I have a
battle to
fight.†He strode from the pavilion with Nheal close on his
heels.
Damin pulled on his gauntlets and turned to them with a grin.
“I’ll
see you later, my friends. Try not to get yourselves killed.â€
“Be careful, Damin,†R’shiel called after
him as he strode out of
the tent to his waiting mount, held by a black mailed Raider. Raising
his hand in salute, he swung into the saddle and rode at a canter
towards the coming battle.
Tarja looked at R’shiel curiously. “You and the
Warlord seem to be
getting on well.â€
“Jealous?â€
“Should I be?â€
“Oh for god’s sake!†Brak muttered
impatiently.
Tarja smiled, realising how foolish he sounded. “I have to
go. You
take care of her, Brak. I don’t want her anywhere near the
battle.â€
“I can take care of myself, thank you, Captain,†she
declared. “But
I know what you’re like, Tarja, so just remember this
is a
battle, not a border skirmish. You stay where you’re supposed
to be and
don’t go getting heroic on me, or you’ll wish the
Kariens had
killed you by the time I get through with you.â€
She knew him better than he realised. Tarja had never fought in a
battle on this scale; nobody had in living memory. He would far rather
be in the thick of the fighting than standing back, issuing orders
while his troops died at his command. Even harder, it was Jenga
directing the battle. Tarja respected the Lord Defender, but he had
grown used to being the one in command. In this battle he had his
orders and no leave to do anything more.
With R’shiel’s warning ringing in his ears, Tarja
walked out to his
horse. He could feel the ground trembling faintly as the Kariens
advanced. Calm settled over him like a warm cloak. It always did before
a fight. Before the bloodlust stirred in him. He glanced over his
shoulder and saw her watching him, her expression grim and her arms
crossed, and wondered if he would ever see her again.
Inexplicably, the Kariens sent their infantry to
lead the attack. Rank on rank of motley peasants marched across the
border, armed with short swords and rough wooden shields, which were
painted a riot of colours to declare the province of each man. They
moved erratically, not disciplined enough to march in unison. Tarja
grimaced as he watched them, wondering if they had been given even
basic training. He glanced down the line at the wall of Defender
infantry — men who held their shields steady with their pikes
upright,
like a forest of thin bare trees. The cavalry reserves waited behind,
near two thousand men, ready to move forward at the first sign of a
breach.
But it was the longbowmen who would fight this battle. Each one was
surrounded by a wall of steel that would protect him until the last man
had fallen. Buckets of arrows sat behind each man, and beside him, a
young man, drawn from the ranks of the rebels, whose job it was to
ensure the buckets never emptied.
Tarja could feel the tension building around him as the Kariens
approached, but Jenga held off giving the order to attack. Markers had
been set up on the killing field, and the Defenders waited, discipline
overriding their apprehension as the attackers neared. The Lord
Defender did not intend to waste a single arrow. Every man knew and
understood that. The war cries of the Kariens reached them long before
they passed the markers, and still they did not move.
Jenga waited until nearly half of the Kariens were past the markers
before he finally gave the signal. The air hissed as five hundred
bowmen let their arrows fly. The raw troops advancing on them were
either too inexperienced or too blinded by the coercion laid on them by
their priests to react. More than half of them made no attempt to raise
their shields against the deadly rain. Another hiss and the sky
blackened as the next volley was loosed. More Kariens fell. More arrows
found their target. The archers kept loosing their arrows, almost at a
leisurely pace. There was no need to aim. In the confined area of the
killing field, every arrow hit something. Tarja wanted to scream at the
hapless Karien horde to do something, anything, to defend
themselves. But they simply marched on, stepping over the bodies of
their fallen comrades, walking into the arms of death as if it was
calling to them.
“Founders!†Nheal swore as he rode up beside Tarja.
“Are they brave
— or just plain stupid?â€
“You heard what Brak said about them being coerced.â€
“I’m almost at the point of believing him,â€
Nheal admitted with a
frown. Like Jenga, he had trouble dealing with the concept of magic.
“Jenga wants you to move your men to the eastern flank. He
fears the
Kariens will try to break through there.â€
Tarja nodded and turned his attention back to the battlefield as the
sound of drums reached them. The infantry were almost completely
decimated, but on their heels Karien pikemen marched — five
thousand or
more men, pikes held before them, moving forward like an implacable
spiny hedge. Tarja swore softly. These men were even less well armoured
than the first wave had been. Where were the knights? And the
Fardohnyans?
“This is going to be ugly,†Nheal remarked as he
watched them.
“I can’t understand what they hope to
achieve,†Tarja agreed. “We’ve
not lost a man, yet still they come. This is insane. Who in the
Founders’ name is in charge of the Kariens?â€
“Whoever he is, he appears to be on our side.â€
It was a poor joke, but Nheal was called away before Tarja could
tell him so. He turned back to watching the Karien pikemen as they
passed the markers and met the shower of death sent by his archers.
They kept moving forward. Nothing could stop them, short of death.
He glanced up at the sky and realised with a start that the battle
had been going on for less than an hour, if one could call it a battle.
It was more like systematic extermination. He watched as wounded
Kariens fell atop the dead and was sickened by the sight. No bloodlust
surged through him to take the edge off his sensibilities. No battle
frenzy stole away his conscience. As he turned his horse toward his
troops to move them into position he was left with nothing but a hollow
feeling of disgust.
And still they kept coming.
Tarja was waiting on the eastern flank with his
cavalry when the Fardohnyans finally joined the battle. Although Damin
had spoken of their prowess, he saw little sign of it as they charged
forward, no more careful of the hail of arrows they rode into than the
foot soldiers had been.
The sun had climbed high in the sky but shed little warmth over the
battlefield. The Fardohnyans neared the treacherous, pot-holed field
almost at the same time as the arrows hit them. Tarja had never seen
their soldiers in battle and their speed and discipline impressed him,
although their tactical stupidity left him speechless. There were half
a thousand of them perhaps, keeping to a tight formation as they rode
toward the killing ground. Tarja watched them advancing with a frown.
They wore boiled leather breastplates and metal helms, but other than
that, were unarmoured. Their raised swords caught the rising sun like
flashes of starlight in the dim morning. Their captain rode in the van,
although Tarja could make nothing of his features, except that he had
fair hair and rode well enough to be a Hythrun. They thundered forward
past the markers, but Tarja held off a moment longer, watching their
advance closely. He did not wish to risk his own mounts on that
dangerous terrain. The fair-haired Fardohnyan captain rode through the
hail as if protected by an invisible shield, and his men, those that
were still ahorse, followed him blindly. The air was filled with the
sickening squeals of wounded horses and the cries of dying men.
Damin’s
Raiders were picking off their flanks with the same careless ease they
demonstrated on the practice field shooting at melons.
“Enough of this! Charge!â€
Tarja spurred Shadow forward at a gallop and cleared the trench with
ease, coming up behind the Fardohnyans. His men followed and ploughed
into their rear with swords flashing. The Fardohnyans realised too late
that they were being taken from behind. With thrust and parry, Tarja
sliced his way though the Fardohnyans, their glazed eyes registering
little more that vague surprise as he cut them down.
It took only minutes to slash his way through to their captain. The
man turned at Tarja’s cry, his expression confused. He looked
as if he
wasn’t certain how he came to find himself in the middle of
this
battle. But he was better trained than most, and instinct took over. He
parried Tarja’s attack with unconscious ease, although he
seemed not to
have the wits about him to press home his advantage.
Tarja found himself fighting a real opponent for the first time
since entering the fray. He countered the Fardohnyan’s strike
and let
the man counter-attack, turning the blow with a flick of his wrist so
that his adversary was forced to over-correct to maintain his balance.
Tarja rammed his blade into the man’s side, through the gap in
his
leather armour as soon as he saw the opening, jerking the sword free as
the Fardohnyan cried out in agony.
The young captain let his sword slip from his hand, clutching his
side, blood spilling over his fingers as he toppled from his saddle.
Glancing around, Tarja was surprised to discover that most of the
Fardohnyans were down. Then the sound of a horn reached him: three
long, mournful notes calling the Karien retreat. They had given up, he
realised, although the decision puzzled him. They had won nothing, lost
thousands of men, and had not even tried to throw their knights into
the battle.
“Sir!â€
Tarja turned at the voice and discovered it was the Fardohnyan
captain calling to him. He dismounted and knelt down beside the man.
His wound was fatal, as Tarja knew it would be, but there was a light
of intelligence in his eyes that had been missing before. Perhaps the
shock of impending death had broken through whatever spell the priests
had laid on him.
“Captain.â€
“A . . . message,†he panted through
the pain,
speaking in heavily accented Medalonian. He was already pale from loss
of blood. He would not last much longer.
“To . . . my
sister . . .â€
“Of course,†Tarja agreed, although he had no way of
knowing who
this man was, let alone how to get a message to his sister in
Fardohnya. But the man was dying. It would not hurt to let him die
thinking his last words meant something.
“Treachery . . .†he gasped.
“Priests . . . tricked
us . . .â€
“I’ll tell her,†Tarja promised as he made
to stand up.
The man grabbed his arm with a final burst of desperate strength.
“You must . . . warn
her . . .â€
“I will,†he said soothingly. “I’ll
see if I can get a letter to
her.â€
The young captain shook his head. “No . . . warn
her . . .â€
“Warn her,†Tarja agreed. “What’s
her name?â€
The Fardohnyan closed his eyes and for a moment, Tarja thought he
was dead, but then his chest heaved and he coughed a stream of bright
blood, as his sword-pierced lung tried to cling to life. He muttered
something, a name Tarja could barely make out. He leaned closed as the
young man tried to speak with the last breath left in him.
“Adrina.â€
The name took all his remaining strength and with a gasp, the light
went out of his unusual golden eyes.
CHAPTER 28
Adrina woke to the sounds of battle. Or perhaps it
was more accurate to say the silence woke her. The Karien camp, which
was, even at its quietest, a bustling and noisy place, was ominously
still. She lay in bed for a time, listening to the silence, wondering
what it meant. As sleep gave way to wakefulness, she sat up with a
start and pushed back the heavy embroidered curtains around the bed.
“Your Highness?â€
Mikel looked up sleepily from his pallet near the brazier when he
heard her moving about. The boy had been a permanent fixture since she
had rescued him from the war council. Laetho had long replaced him as a
page, so Adrina had considerately taken him on. He adored her, although
he was obviously suffering under the misconception that she was some
sort of living saint. It suited her to let him think that. He was a
veritable fountain of information about the Medalonians and she figured
she knew more about them than any other person in the Karien camp.
The child had given her some remarkable intelligence, which she fed
the war council piecemeal to ensure her continuing presence. Sooner or
later, Cratyn was bound to give into the Dukes’ pressure to
exclude
her, agreement or no agreement. Adrina was not one for relying on
others when she could do the job better herself. If all it took to
ensure Mikel’s continuing trust was letting him think she was
the
walking embodiment of Karien holiness, then she would bestow her
blessing on him cheerfully. Besides, he reminded her of her youngest
half-brother, Kander. Sometimes it was nice to have somebody around who
loved you, just because you were you. She had actually grown quite fond
of the boy. Tamylan, with her usual lack of tact, had rudely accused
her of using him as a replacement for her lost dog.
“Mikel, go ask the guard why it’s so quiet,â€
she ordered, rubbing
the sleep from her eyes.
The boy scrambled from his pallet, pulled on his boots and
disappeared outside with a hasty bow. Adrina stretched luxuriously,
rather glad she had insisted on the huge feather bed being dragged to
the front. She could have done without the heavily embroidered star and
lightning bolt on the curtains, she thought sourly, but they did keep
out the cold. Perhaps the Overlord was looking after her. In a
roundabout, materialistic sort of way.
“They’re fighting!†Mikel burst out, running
through the tent flap,
his eyes burning with excitement. “We attacked at dawn!â€
Adrina frowned. She had been invited to no war council last night.
Nobody had mentioned attacking the Medalonians this morning.
“Fetch
Tamylan and then find us some breakfast. I want to get dressed.â€
Mikel bobbed his head and raced outside again. He obviously
considered war a grand pursuit. She wondered if he would be quite so
enthusiastic once the casualties started coming in.
Tam was quick to respond, although when she entered the tent, her
expression was grim. But she had obviously been up and about for a
while.
“They left before dawn,†Tam explained, before
Adrina could frame
the question. “Tristan and his men went with them.â€
Adrina was stunned. “Tristan? How? He’s my
captain! Cratyn
can’t order him anywhere.â€
“Vonulus came for him,†Tam told her as she helped
Adrina pull her
gown over her undershift. “I didn’t hear what he said
to Tristan, but
it was enough to get him moving. He told me to tell you he’d
report to
you tonight.â€
“What in the Seven Hells could Vonulus say to him that would
make
him follow Cratyn?†she wondered aloud.
“He didn’t say,†Tam shrugged. “With
Vonulus just outside the tent,
I don’t think he wanted to give away my presence, but all the
troops
were gathered to pray to the Overlord for hours before the
battle.â€
Adrina looked at Tam curiously. “He didn’t want to
betray you to
Vonulus? That’s remarkably considerate of him,†she
said. Tamylan
actually blushed. “Oh Tam, please tell me you’re not
falling in love
with him!â€
“Don’t be absurd!†Tam scoffed, turning
Adrina around with more
force than was absolutely necessary to lace her gown. “You
ordered me
to become his lover. I simply do as I’m told. Slaves have a
tendency to
act that way.â€
Adrina looked over her shoulder. “A duty you have carried
out with
great attention to detail, I see.â€
Tam pulled on the laces so hard, Adrina grunted. “I am your
loyal
servant, your Highness.â€
“You know my father is likely to legitimise him if he fails
to get
an heir, don’t you?†she asked. News had reached them
in Yarnarrow that
Hablet’s eighth wife had delivered another tiresome girl child.
“He’s
always been one of Hablet’s favourites and the more trouble he
gets
into, the more Father likes him. Tristan could never marry you, of
course, but you could have a very rosy future as a favoured court’esa,
if you play your hand right. Quite a step up for a slave girl.â€
“You are reading far too much into this. Tristan and
I . . . we are simply doing your bidding.â€
“Of course,†Adrina agreed with a smile.
For some reason the idea of Tristan and Tamylan falling in love made
her very happy. She loved Tam, as much as one could love a slave, and
Tristan was perhaps the only person in the world she loved
unreservedly, with no thought for what he could do for her, or she for
him. It was the curse of her birthright.
Adrina knew she was always going to be a stepping stone for others.
Every suitor Hablet had ever proposed had been a grasping fortune
hunter, although some had disguised it better than others. Cratyn had
been the first suitor who matched her for title or position, but even
he had plans to use her.
As a child, Adrina had prayed to Kalianah, the Goddess of Love, for
a man who would fall madly in love with her, not her position,
or the wealth she could bring him. She had realised the futility of her
prayers soon enough, once she understood that as Hablet’s
eldest
legitimate child, she had no equal in Fardohnya. No equal in the world
perhaps, with the exception of the younger Prince Cratyn in Karien and
the heir to the throne in far away Hythria, who was undoubtedly as
corrupt and perverted as his uncle, the High Prince Lernen. No, her
prince would never come for her, she knew. Instead, it was a grubby
line of lordlings each dreaming of the prestige attached to making her
his wife. He’d be dreaming of the wealth, the land and the
titles that
Hablet would bestow on him for taking her off his hands.
She had adroitly avoided such a fate by being a harridan.
Considering how greedy some of her would-be suitors had been it had
taken quite an effort on Adrina’s part for them to finally
decide that
no amount of money or titles could compensate them for having to live
with her. Eventually, the offers had dried up. Hablet had plenty of
other daughters who were much more amenable than the dreaded Adrina.
Until Cratyn.
Until, through her own recklessness, she had left herself vulnerable.
She sighed, pleased that at least Tam had found love. Being a
bastard gave Tristan more freedom than she had ever had. And being a
man. That annoyed her even more than the fact that every man who had
ever expressed an interest in her was looking over her shoulder at the
wealth and power that came with her hand.
“Well, I suppose I’ll just have to wait until they
get back,†she
said, taking the small stool so Tam could fix her hair. “Cratyn
has
obviously gone out of his way to prevent me being involved in this.
Would you like to make a small wager on the reaction of the guards if I
ask for my horse, so I can watch the battle?â€
“No need,†Tam replied. “They told me on the
way in that you would
be keeping to your tent today.â€
“He’ll pay for this,†she muttered. Her list
of things Cratyn was
going to pay for was growing so long that she would need to remain
married to him for a lifetime, just to make certain he suffered
sufficiently.
Mikel arrived back before Tam could offer a reply, brimming with
news at how well the battle was going. Adrina paid him little
attention. There was no way the child could know for certain. It was
his loyalty to Karien speaking, but she let him prattle on as they ate
breakfast. His mindless chatter filled the silence and kept her mind
off other things.
The day dragged on interminably. Mid-morning the Ladies Hope,
Pacifica, Grace and Chastity arrived, suggesting that they pray to the
Overlord to protect their men in battle. Adrina agreed absently. On her
knees praying to the Overlord was actually preferable to trying to
engage her ladies-in-waiting in intelligent conversation. Mikel gave
her a look that bordered on worship as she knelt. Poor child. If only
he knew she was silently asking Zegarnald to protect Tristan. And
inflict a festering wound on Cratyn, while he was at it. Preferably a
horribly disfiguring wound that offered a lingering, pain-filled
death . . .
After an hour of kneeling, conversation didn’t seem such a
bad idea
after all. She glanced around at the small circle of young women, at
their pious faces, and inwardly groaned. Gods, these girls are
pathetic!
“Ladies, perhaps we should cease our prayers for the
moment,†she
suggested. “The Overlord has a battle to watch over. I am sure
he has
heard our pleas for victory this day. I think we presume much to
distract him so.â€
The Ladies Hope, Pacifica, Grace and Chastity agreed with her wise
words and climbed stiffly to their feet. Adrina ordered refreshments,
and as the cold sun climbed higher and higher she listened to their
boring talk of inconsequential things — while a battle raged a
few
leagues away. She could not understand how they did it.
It was late afternoon before they learnt anything useful, and the
news was not good. When the guard on the tent was changed, the
newcomers spoke of a dreadful battle, of casualties too numerous to
count. Adrina frowned, but she was unsurprised by the news. Mikel had
told her of the hours the Defenders spent training, of the extensive
earthworks the Kariens would have to breach. Defending a position was
always easier than attacking. All the Medalonians had to do was sit and
wait for the Karien forces to throw themselves over the border and pick
off the attackers at their leisure. She hoped Tristan had the sense to
stay clear of the battle. It was unlikely Cratyn would try to use her
men in battle, she reasoned. He wanted the glory of this victory for
Karien and the Overlord. It just would not do to have a bunch of
heathens do the work for him.
Just on sunset, Adrina discovered how wrong she had been. Second
Lanceman Filip, a young man assigned to her Guard, arrived at the
entrance to her tent seeking an audience. He was bloodied and
exhausted, his eyes hollow, his expression bleak. He fell to one knee,
from exhaustion as much as respect when he saw Adrina. Her heart
lurched at the sight of him. Tristan must have taken vast casualties to
send a Second Lanceman to report.
“What happened?†Fear clutched at her stomach and
her throat was dry.
“It was . . . we were slaughtered, your
Highness,†he
told her, his voice rasping with shock and fatigue. “The
Medalonians
had archers. Thousands of them. The arrows didn’t stop falling
for
hours. When they did, the rocks started falling out of the sky like
hail. The priests . . . they did something to us. It was
as if . . . we just couldn’t stop, your
Highness. It was
like . . . we’d lost our wits. We’d lost
most of the
force before we even saw a red coat, and then they took us from the
rear.â€
Adrina nodded, calling on all her reserves of strength to maintain
her regal posture. The man needed to see her strength. In truth, she
wanted to scream. “How many of the Guard were lost?â€
“There’s barely thirty of us left, your
Highness.â€
Adrina staggered. Barely thirty left! There were five
hundred men in her Guard this morning. Cold anger overwhelmed her
grief. “What exactly did the priests do, Lanceman?â€
“I couldn’t say, your Highness. We gathered on the
field . . . they prayed over us, I think. After that, it
gets a bit hazy . . . The next thing I remember for
certain was the horns sounding the retreat.â€
“Thank you, Lanceman. Go now and find some rest. I will
commend your
report to your captain.â€
The young man looked up at her with eyes full of grief.
“Captain
Tristan is dead, your Highness. He died bravely,
though . . . fighting a Medalonian.
I’m . . . I’m sorry.â€
For a moment, Adrina was numb. She felt nothing. Saw nothing. Did
nothing. But slowly, grief crept over her like a sheath of ice that
clutched at her fingers and toes and worked its way through her body
until it settled around her heart. In the background, faintly, she
heard Tam sobbing. She even had time to notice Mikel standing near the
entrance, his eyes wide with shock.
“Has Prince Cratyn returned from the battlefield?â€
she asked. Her
voice was ice wrapped in anger.
“I . . . I believe so, your Highness.â€
“You are dismissed, Lanceman. Tell the other Guards that I
will
address them later. And tell them I honour their sacrifice and share
their grief.â€
Filip rose wearily to his feet, bowed and backed out of the tent.
“Fetch my cloak, Mikel,†she said calmly. The boy
nodded and hurried
to do her bidding. Adrina did not move. Her anger was like a solid,
tangible thing. Had it been a sword, she could have killed with it.
“Your Highness?†Mikel ventured, holding out her
cloak. She took it
from him and swept it over her shoulders.
“See to it that Tam gets some hot tea, Mikel. She was very
fond of
the captain.â€
At the sound of her name, Tam looked up. She wiped her eyes and
looked at Adrina suspiciously. “Where are you going?â€
“Nowhere you need to concern yourself with.â€
“Adrina!â€
Tam’s anxious cry followed her as she strode through the
camp to the
command tent. Her grief was so overwhelming that she could not breathe,
could not think. She pushed her way into the tent, ignoring the
startled looks of Lord Roache and Lord Palen. The ice shattered as her
rage flared. She marched straight up to Cratyn, pulled him out of his
chair and delivered a stinging backhanded slap across his face.
“You unbelievable, despicable bastard!†she
screamed as he
picked himself up from the table, gingerly fingering a small trickle of
blood from the corner of his mouth. “What did you do to my
Guard? What
evil-spawned spell did your perverted priests cast on my men? You knew
what would happen to them! You and your pathetic, craven knights sat
back and waited in their damned tin suits while my brother and his men
were slaughtered like cattle!â€
Cratyn barely managed not to cower under her rage. He glanced at the
two shocked dukes, taking a step back from her before he spoke.
“The princess is distraught at the news of her
captain’s death,†he
explained warily.
Adrina’s anger turned white hot. “I’m
distraught? You
disgusting, impotent, little moron, don’t you realise what
you’ve done?â€
“In war, hard decisions are necessary, your
Highness,†Lord Roache
said. “When you’ve had time to
consider . . .â€
“Forget your stupid war! You’ve killed one of
Hablet’s sons! He was
planning to legitimise his eldest baseborn son and name him heir. You
just murdered the heir to the Fardohnyan throne!â€
Oddly, her news seemed to strengthen, rather than frighten Cratyn.
“Then it is as the Overlord wills. The heir to the Fardohnyan
throne
will be of Karien blood. A true believer.â€
“Heir! What heir? That limp dick of yours
hasn’t got
the lead to produce an heir, has it, Cretin? Is that why you want to go
to war so badly? Because a banner is the only thing you’re
capable of
raising?â€
They must have heard the rumours, but both Roache and Palen looked
startled by the news. Cratyn, she was viciously pleased to note, was
mortified that she had exposed his impotence so brutally. She would
have severed his useless organ and marched through the camp with it
mounted on a pike at that moment, had someone given her a knife.
“Your Highness! This is not an appropriate place to
discuss . . .â€
“Your precious prince’s manhood? Or rather, his lack
of it.
Don’t worry, Lord Palen, the prince’s impotence is no
longer an issue
because I am going home to Fardohnya, where I plan to inform my father
that his son was murdered by a boy prince who defied every law
the gods hold sacred by coercing his men in battle. You can forget this
damned alliance. There will be no aid, no cannon, no invasion of
southern Medalon. You’ll be lucky if Hablet doesn’t
invade Karien!â€
“Attempting to return to Fardohnya would be extremely
foolish, your
Highness,†Roache told her, his voice dangerous.
“Don’t you dare think you can threaten me, Lord
Roache,†she warned.
“I will do as I please. I will escort my brother’s body
home where he
will be laid to rest on Fardohnyan soil and my father can mourn his
loss.â€
“Guards!†Roache called. Cratyn looked afraid to
take his eyes from
her. She could not tell if her threats scared him. Did not care.
“Escort her Highness to her tent,†the Duke ordered
as soon as the
guards appeared. “She is beside herself with grief and not
aware of
what she is saying. She is not to leave her quarters unless Prince
Cratyn or I expressly order it. Is that clear?â€
The guard saluted smartly and waited for Adrina. A small worm of
sanity tunnelled through her grief reminding her of where she was. It
was only then that she realised the enormity of her error. Roache was a
very dangerous man. She had forgotten that in her anger.
“Have a care, your Highness,†he advised.
“It would be most
unfortunate if we had to advise your father that he had lost a
daughter, as well as a son.â€
CHAPTER 29
As she was escorted back to her tent, Adrina
cursed her temper. With a few careless words she had destroyed months
of hard work convincing the Kariens she had converted to their cause.
Roache’s threat was very real. Would they tell her father she
had died
of grief for her lost brother? Killed herself in despair? Blame a
disease caught in the camp?
Whatever the reason, Adrina knew she had to leave this place, and
the only hope of escape was across the border into Medalon and the
waiting army of Defenders.
Adrina stopped before she entered her tent and took a deep breath.
She wanted nothing more than to throw herself down and sob
uncontrollably for the loss of her brother. The tragedy of his death
staggered her. That such a bright light could be extinguished so easily
for the sake of Karien ambition was more than she could bear. But there
would be time to grieve for Tristan later. Now was a time for clear
thinking. She took another deep breath and entered the tent, a plan
half-formulated over the last few weeks slowly taking on a firmer shape
in her mind.
Tam and Mikel both leapt to their feet as she stepped inside.
Tam’s
eyes were red and swollen. Mikel looked very uncomfortable. He did not
know how to deal with grieving grown-ups. For a moment, Adrina wondered
if he knew how lucky he was that his brother was still a prisoner with
the Hythrun. He would not grieve tonight as she would.
“Your Highness?†he said expectantly.
Adrina looked over her shoulder rather dramatically and waved the
two of them closer. “I have just met with Prince
Cratyn,†she said in a
low, conspiratorial voice. “I have grave news.â€
“About the battle?â€
“Worse! There is a spy in the camp.â€
Tam looked at Adrina suspiciously, but Mikel’s young face
was a
portrait of shock.
“A spy!â€
“Sshh!†Adrina urged. “No one must
know!†She moved further into the
tent, to ensure they were out of hearing of the guards outside.
“It is
the reason for the massacre today. The Medalonians knew we were
coming!†As she watched Mikel lap up every word she uttered,
she had
time to think that the Medalonians would need to be blind, deaf and
completely witless not to notice an army the size of the Karien
advancing on them. “Prince Cratyn needs my help. Our
help.â€
Mikel straightened his shoulders manfully. “What does he
want us to
do, your Highness?â€
She glanced up at Tam, who was looking at her doubtfully. There
would be time to explain things later. “I have to deliver a
message to
my father, the King of Fardohnya. Prince Cratyn needs my
father’s
cannon to help him defeat the Medalonians.â€
Mikel took her at her word. “But how?â€
“We must go to Fardohnya,†she explained in a
whisper. “We must
leave tonight, while both sides are still in confusion after the
battle. We will cross into Medalon and make for the Glass River. We
should be able to secure a Fardohnyan trader to see us safely back to
Talabar from there.â€
“Shall I tell the guards to fetch your horse, your
Highness?â€
“No! Nobody must know about this, Mikel. As I said, there is
a spy
in the camp. If they learn of this mission, our lives would be in
danger!â€
“Would be in danger?†Tam asked with a short,
bitter laugh.
“I’d say they’ll be in danger anyway, traipsing
through Medalon in the
middle of a war.â€
Adrina rolled her eyes. She would never convince Mikel if Tam did
not support her. “I do this for my prince,†she
declared. “I know there
is danger, but who else can convince my father to send the cannon?
Cratyn needs my help. How can I refuse my husband?â€
Mikel laid a comforting hand on hers. “You are so brave,
your
Highness. But the Overlord will be with us.â€
“That gives me such strength,†she agreed sincerely.
“Now you must
listen to me carefully, Mikel. Prince Cratyn and I have worked out a
plan to see us safely over the border, but it needs your assistance.
Will you help me?â€
“Of course!â€
“And you must guard this secret with your life,†she
warned. “We do
not want the spy to learn of Prince Cratyn’s plans.â€
“I cannot believe that any Karien would betray his
countrymen,â€
Mikel protested.
“You have been among the enemy, Mikel. You have seen how
they can
eat away at a man’s faith. Not all the Overlord’s
subjects are as loyal
as you.†She ruffled the child’s head fondly.
“Now listen carefully.
Prince Cratyn pretended to place me under guard, so that the spy will
not note my absence. I need you to seek out a Fardohnyan Lanceman named
Filip and give him a note from me. He will see that we have horses. The
battlefield will be a busy place tonight, with both sides looking for
wounded and the camp followers picking over the dead. We should be able
to slip through unnoticed. Once we are past the battlefield, Tam and I
will pose as Hythrun court’esa returning home. Nobody
will
question us if we are careful.â€
“What’s a court’esa, your
Highness?â€
“An entertainer,†Adrina told him blandly.
“They are very popular in
Hythria and Fardohnya, so nobody should think it odd.â€
“I will protect you, anyway,†Mikel assured her.
“I’ll not let any
harm come to you, your Highness.â€
“I know, Mikel. That’s why I insisted Prince Cratyn
allow you to
accompany me. You have been in the enemy camp and you speak their
language. I cannot think of a better protector.†No need to
disillusion
the child and tell him she spoke Medalonian fluently.
Mikel swelled with pride. “The Overlord will protect us
all!â€
“I certainly hope so,†she agreed. “Now go
and find some warm
clothes. It will be cold tonight. I will write the message for Filip.
We must leave as soon as it’s dark.â€
As soon as the boy had left the tent, Tam turned on Adrina.
“Are you
mad!â€
“Probably, but it’s preferable to the alternative.
Did you pack any
of my clothes from home?â€
“I packed every stitch you own,†she grumbled
unhappily.
“Good. Find us something to wear that would pass as a court’esa’s
costume. The more bare flesh the better. Once we reach the border,
we’ll need to look the part if we are stopped by the
Hythrun.â€
“And if the Defenders stop us?â€
“Then we shall distract them with our feminine
wiles,†she said
impatiently. “Men are men, Tam. Oh! Make sure you pack my
jewellery,
too. I’m not leaving it so Cretin can sell it to finance his
damned
war.â€
“How do you intend to get out of here?â€
“I’ll wear your clothes and leave the tent on an
urgent errand for
the princess before the guard changes,†she said. “Once
the new guards
are on duty, you do the same, making sure they have instructions not to
disturb me. We’ll meet Filip and Mikel on the edge of the
camp.â€
“Do we have to take the boy?â€
“I need him to get a message to Filip and he’s been
in the
Defenders’ camp. We can leave him once we find a boat on the
Glass
River.â€
Tam still looked miserable, but Adrina thought her grief was still
too raw for her to object much. She wanted out of here as much as
Adrina did.
“We’ll never pass as court’esa, your
Highness. Even if you
could act humble enough to convince anybody you weren’t a
princess born
and bred. We have no collars. The Defenders might accept the ruse, but
no Hythrun would.â€
“We have collars,†she said. “Fetch my
jewellery box.â€
Tam did as she asked and watched curiously as Adrina unlocked the
small, beautifully carved chest. She lifted out the top tray, ignoring
the wealth that lay scattered on its velvet surface and reached into
the bottom. She lifted out two exquisitely worked necklets, one silver,
the other gold. Both were in the shape of snarling wolves, with
emerald-set eyes and a fiery line of rubies tracing their twisted
spines.
“Where did you get these?†Tam breathed in
astonishment.
“In Hythria. You remember when I visited Greenharbour? High
Prince
Lernen attended a slave auction while we were there and invited me
along for the sport. It was an awful day. He spent the whole time
complaining about the poor quality of Hythrun slaves these days, not
even bidding on them, when two of the most beautiful young men I have
ever seen were brought to the block. They were identical twins, not
more than fifteen, I suppose. Lernen took one look at them and just had
to own them. He paid a fortune for them — said he wanted to
make a gift
of them to someone, probably his nephew.
“But I knew he planned to taste the fruit before he shared
it
around. Gods, but the Wolfblades are a degenerate lot.
“Anyway, Lernen insisted they ride back to the palace with
us in his
carriage. He couldn’t take his eyes off them. As we were
climbing out
of the carriage back at the palace, one of the boys grabbed my sleeve
and begged me for help. They looked innocent enough, but they knew what
was in store for them.†Adrina hesitated for a moment, not at
all
certain she wanted to relate the rest of the tale.
“What did you do?†Tam asked.
“I gave him my knife.â€
“Gods! Did Lernen find out?â€
Adrina shook her head. “I saw them later that night at
dinner, all
powdered and primped and ripe for the plucking. They were wearing these
collars — and not much else — and Lernen was crowing
over them like a
child with a couple of new dolls to play with. The next morning they
found the boys dead in Lernen’s bed. They slit their wrists and
bled to
death beside him while he slept.â€
“That’s dreadful! Adrina, why didn’t you
tell me about this before?
If the Hythrun realised it was your knife the boys took to
Lernen’s
bed, you could have been hanged.â€
“I thought of that. I claimed I lost it before
dinner.â€
“But how did you get the collars?â€
“Lernen gave them to me. Once he’d stopped screaming
and they’d
cleaned the blood off him, he sent for me. I found him sitting in his
private courtyard just staring at the collars. They were laying there
on the edge of the fountain, still stained with the blood of the boys.
Lernen asked me to get rid of them. Told me he never wanted to see them
again. I’m not sure why I’ve kept them. Maybe to remind
me why I agree
with father when he says Hythria should be invaded and the Wolfblade
line destroyed.â€
“What about his nephew? What was his reaction?â€
“I’ve no idea,†she shrugged, fingering the
gold collar idly. “I
never met him. He probably wasn’t sober enough in the entire
month I
was there to present himself to me. I was never so glad to leave a
place as I was when I left Greenharbour. Until now. Leaving here is
going to feel even better.â€
Tam picked up the open silver collar and studied it thoughtfully.
“Where are the keys?â€
“I don’t have them. Once we put them on
they’ll have to stay there
until we get home and can have them cut off. If I can put up with it,
so can you, Tam. I’d happily cross Medalon in chains if it
means I
never have to lay eyes on Cretin again.â€
As if to prove her point she slipped the collar around her neck and
heard it faintly snick closed, as the wolf swallowed its tail. The gold
was cold against her skin, the sensation odd. She had never wondered if
court’esa objected to being collared. They were always
such
beautiful works of art. The more elaborate and expensive the collar,
the more the court’esa was worth. Tam had been born and
bred a
slave and her reluctance seemed a little strange. Perhaps being
nominally free since arriving in Karien had sparked a little rebellion
in her. “Put it on, Tam. We’re running out of
time.â€
By the time Mikel returned, Adrina had written a short note to Filip
and packed everything she planned to take with her. Considering the
style to which she was accustomed to travelling, it was a pitiful
bundle, but it contained her riding habit, her jewels and the small,
sharp Bride’s Blade. She sent the boy on his way with the note
and
changed into the costume Tam had selected. It had a thin silver bodice
and a split emerald green skirt. It left her midriff bare and pimpled
with gooseflesh in the chilly air. Over that she pulled on
Tamylan’s
high-necked grey woollen tunic, and then Tam’s serviceable
woollen
cloak. The rest of her belongings she wrapped in the linen bag Tam used
to take her laundry to the camp washerwomen. Tam was still dressing
when she left the tent with the hood of her cloak pulled up to shadow
her face. She hurried past the guards, who barely glanced at her. They
had orders to stop the Princess Adrina leaving. Nobody had mentioned a
servant hurrying off with her mistress’ laundry.
It was dark by the time she worked her way through
the camp to rendezvous with Filip. It had been the most nerve-racking
hour of her life as she stumbled over the uneven ground, around groups
of soldiers, too bloodied and exhausted to challenge her right to be
there. By the time she slipped away from the edge of the camp into the
small copse of trees where Filip should be waiting, she was afraid she
was going to be sick. Fear was not an emotion Adrina had much
experience with, and she prayed fervently to whatever god might be
listening that she would not experience it again for a long, long time.
“Your Highness?†Filip’s voice was a
questioning whisper. She
followed the sound and was relived to find Mikel waiting with the young
Lanceman, his eyes burning with the excitement of his adventure.
“You’ve done well, Lanceman,†she said as
she made out the three
dark shadows picking at the sparse dry grass between the trees.
“Mikel,
go and keep an eye out for Tam.†The boy dutifully scurried off
and
left her alone with Filip.
“You are leaving, your Highness?†Filip asked as he
led the horses
forward. It was hard to tell from his tone whether he approved of the
idea or not.
“I’ll not be a party to this monstrous slaughter any
longer,†she
told him. “Fardohnya has shed enough blood to satisfy the
Kariens.â€
“And what of the Guard, your Highness? When the Kariens
discover you
are missing . . .†He did not need to finish the
sentence. She knew their fate as well as he did.
“I want you to cross the border tonight. Take every
Fardohnyan in
the camp with you who is still breathing. If they can’t ride,
tie them
to their saddles. When you reach Medalon, surrender to the
Defenders.â€
“Surrender?†Filip sounded horrified, but it
was hard to make
out his expression in the darkness.
“The Defenders will keep you prisoner for a time, but I
doubt
they’ll harm you. And you’ll eat far better there as a
prisoner than as
a free man on this side of the border. Tell them your religious beliefs
prevent you from taking part in any further fighting. The Defenders
have little experience with the gods. They should believe you.â€
“And what if it is the Hythrun who find us first?â€
“Then tell them Zegarnald ordered you to surrender,â€
she told him
impatiently.
“The War God would never —â€
“It doesn’t matter, Filip,†she snapped.
“Just get your men away. I
would rather have you alive and in the custody of the enemy than put to
death by Cretin because I ran away. Do this for me and I will see every
one of you rewarded when we get back to Fardohnya.â€
“As you command, your Highness.†He sounded
reluctant, but there was
little more she could do. If they chose to disobey her, that was their
decision.
She turned sharply at the sound of scuffing feet and was relieved to
find Mikel returning with Tam. As the Karien boy watched in amazement,
she shed the cloak and tunic to reveal the Fardohnyan costume
underneath. Shivering so hard her teeth were chattering, she pulled out
the fur-lined cloak and wrapped herself in it with relief. Tam shed her
own woollen tunic to reveal a costume almost as decorative and just as
flimsy as Adrina’s.
They were court’esa now, and the collar felt cold
against
her skin as she swung into the saddle and turned her mount south toward
Medalon.
CHAPTER 30
Adrina’s escape from the Karien camp
proved
surprisingly easy. The troops were either too stunned or too tired to
challenge them, and it was doubtful Cratyn had even thought to post
sentries. They rode across the no-man’s land between the camp
and the
border without incident, chilly starlight illuminating their path.
From a distance, the battlefield looked like a surreal, alien
landscape. Dark humps littered the ground as far as the eye could see,
as if mad sappers had tunnelled the field, leaving countless mounds of
black earth in their wake. It was only as they drew nearer that Adrina
realised they were bodies, thousands of them, scattered across the
landscape like discarded, broken dolls.
The smell hit them even before they reached the fallen soldiers. The
heavy stench of blood and excrement hung in the still air, making her
gag. Shadowy figures moved among the corpses. Men looking for fallen
companions, camp followers looking for loot, women searching out
missing loved ones, grim-faced Defenders seeking dying horses, ending
their suffering with a quick sword thrust. Others searched for living
bodies, friend and foe alike, for the life they might save or the
hostage they might take. Huge bonfires on the far side of the
battlefield threw a pall of black smoke over the whole nightmarish
vista.
“We’ll have to lead the horses,†Adrina said
as they reached they
first of the fallen Kariens. “We can’t ride through
this.â€
Tamylan and Mikel complied silently and they began to pick their way
forward, holding cloaks across their faces against the smell. The
ground was treacherous, pockmarked with deep holes, dead soldiers and
broken horses. There was not a red coat among them. The Defenders had
either taken few casualties or their wounded had already been removed.
The battlefield covered a vast area. As they doggedly trudged on,
hour after hour, Adrina began to wonder if it would never end. She
stumbled along and tried not to think about the death surrounding her,
or the grief that she had damned up inside for a time when she would
have the luxury of giving it voice. Instead she pressed on, thinking
only of placing one foot in front of the other, ignoring the soldiers
who reached out to her, crying for help, or the lifeless eyes that
stared accusingly at her as she passed by. This was not her war. It was
not her fault.
The night went on forever and the smoke grew thicker as they neared
the bonfires. Mikel was yawning, wiping streaming eyes, when Tamylan
suddenly gasped. Adrina looked back and discovered the slave had
stopped walking. She was staring at the fires, her expression horrified.
“What’s wrong?â€
“They’re burning the dead!â€
She had heard of the barbaric Medalonian practice of cremation, but
had never seen it practised. The sight disgusted her. But she needed to
be strong. Their survival depended on it.
“There are too many men to bury, Tam. Anyway, what do you
care if
they cremate a few Karien corpses?â€
“It’s not right!â€
“No, but neither is it our concern. Now keep moving.â€
Adrina tugged her horse forward and did not look back to see if
Tamylan was following.
Sometime later, they reached the first Fardohnyan corpse. It was a
young man with vaguely familiar features, although Adrina could not put
a name to him. He lay on his back, his foot still trapped in the
stirrup of his dead horse who had fallen beside him. A long, red
fletched arrow was embedded in his boiled-leather breastplate. His eyes
were wide open and he stared at the sky, as if engrossed in the strange
constellations of the northern sky.
“Oh, gods!†Tamylan breathed as she drew level with
Adrina. “Lien
Korvo.â€
“Was that his name? I didn’t know. I hardly knew any
of them.â€
“And yet they died for you.â€
Adrina looked up sharply. “They didn’t die for me,
Tam. They died
for Cratyn. A debt I intend to make him pay.â€
Tamylan looked around with a shake of her head. “If we
survive this.â€
“We’ll survive.â€
“The Overlord will watch over us,†Mikel added.
Adrina resisted the temptation to turn on the boy. If this was the
Overlord’s work, she wanted no part of it. But she needed the
child.
They still had to get past the Defender’s camp, and he knew its
layout.
“I’m sure he is, Mikel. Come on. We have to keep
on.â€
The closer they came to the edge of the field, the more Fardohnyan
bodies they encountered. Adrina did not look at them, afraid of what
she would see, afraid of who she would find. Tristan was here, lying
dead on this foreign plain, killed by a godless Defender. Her anger
increased with each step, divided equally between the Kariens, who had
condemned her brother to death, and the Medalonians, who had carried
out the sentence. She would have vengeance for this slaughter, although
how or when she did not know. But one day, she vowed, Karien, Medalon
and even Hythria, would pay for the life of her brother and those of
her Guard.
“Here! What are you after?â€
Adrina stopped and turned her head toward the voice. It was a
red-coated Defender although, as she knew nothing of their insignia,
she did not know if he was a private or a commandant.
“We were just looking for loot,†she said, in her
best Medalonian.
“A girl has to look out for herself, y’know!â€
“Who are you? What are your names?†the man
demanded. He peered at
them suspiciously.
“We’re court’esa. From Hythria. I am
Adrina, and this is
Tamylan. The boy is our servant.â€
“Aye, I’ve heard of your kind. Fancy whores is all
you are,†he
said, sounding a little disgusted. The man stared at the jewelled
collar. “I’d have thought that trinket ’round
your neck would be enough
for you, without you needing to loot the dead, as well.â€
“Don’t you touch her!†Mikel cried as the
Defender reached out to
touch the collar. Adrina could have slapped the child. Now was not the
time for bravado.
The Defender laughed sourly but made no move to come any closer.
“Quite a bodyguard you ladies have. Now clear off! Lord Jenga
has
ordered all the looters off the field.â€
“Don’t worry, sir, that’s exactly what we
planned to do.â€
The Defender nodded and watched them as they pulled their mounts
forward. Mikel glared at the man defiantly, but held his tongue.
Adrina’s heart was pounding as they walked away, expecting him
to call
them back. She risked a glance over her shoulder and discovered the man
had moved away towards another group of looters. She let out a breath
she had not realised she was holding and glanced down at Mikel.
“That was very noble and very foolish. In future, try to
curb your
enthusiasm for protecting me.â€
“But your Highness, I —â€
“Don’t call me that!†she hissed.
“You must call me Adrina. At least
until we are away from here. We are trying to be inconspicuous!â€
“I’m sorry, your . . .
Adrina.â€
“That’s all right. Just be on your guard.â€
“Seems a bit rough,†Tamylan said, as she trudged
along beside
Adrina.
“What do you mean?â€
“You just told an enemy officer your real name, yet you
chastise the
boy for trying to protect you.â€
Adrina stared at the slave for a moment, not sure what surprised her
most — Tam’s blatant criticism or the fact that she
could have been so
stupid.
“I never thought . . .â€
“Not thinking is what got us into this mess,†Tam
pointed out
grumpily. “First you don’t think if you can sail a
ship. Then you don’t
think about threatening the Karien Crown Prince. Then you drag us
across a battlefield in the dead of night —â€
“That will be enough, Tamylan. You forget yourself.â€
“Not as often as you do,†the slave muttered under
her breath, but
loud enough that Adrina could hear her.
It was almost dawn by the time they passed the
last of the bodies, but Adrina’s relief was short lived. At
least the
men on the battlefield had been mostly dead. Now they would have to get
through the Defenders and the Hythrun who were alive and on their guard.
They swung into their saddles and moved off toward the scattered
crowd heading away from the field. With luck, they could mingle with
the other camp followers and go unobserved. A few people glanced at
them enviously. They were mounted on Fardohnyan horses, but Adrina had
decided she would claim they had rescued the beasts from the
battlefield if they were challenged.
Daylight finally turned the sky the colour of pewter as Adrina and
her companions left the battleground behind. They rode at a shambling
pace amidst the looters and the walking wounded, tired, hungry, thirsty
and emotionally drained. The war camp and the tent city lay before
them, and beyond that, another two or more weeks to the Glass River.
Perhaps there, with luck, a Fardohnyan trader would be waiting, making
the most of the profits of this war, before Hablet joined the fray and
turned them into enemies.
Nobody challenged them, or even cared about them, it seemed. The
only time anything caught the interest of the people around them was
when a man and a woman galloped past on glorious golden horses. Both
were tall in the saddle and rode with the ease of those born to ride.
The young woman wore dark leathers, much as the old tapestries depicted
the Harshini. She had a thick long braid of dark red hair, and both she
and her companion wore grim expressions. At their passing, several
civilians fell to their knees, but the pair did not notice.
She looked at Mikel, who was on the verge of falling asleep in his
saddle.
“Mikel, do you know who they are?â€
“Who, your . . . Adrina?â€
“That man and woman who just rode by.â€
Mikel looked in the direction of the rapidly dwindling figures of
the horses and shook his head. “I’m sorry,
your . . .
Adrina. I didn’t see.â€
“No matter.â€
Adrina put the pair out of her mind and allowed herself one glance
over her shoulder before fixing her eyes forward. She did not need to
be reminded of the past hours. The images of the battlefield would stay
with her forever.
CHAPTER 31
In the cold morning light, Damin Wolfblade
surveyed with disgust the carnage that was the remnants of their first
serious engagement with the Kariens. It was not what he expected at
all. The air stank of smoke and death. Even the sky was grey with low,
sullen clouds that gazed with disapproval over the battlefield. Like
Tarja, he had never faced a battle on such a scale, and the aftermath
left him strangely unsettled. Although he could not fault the tactics
of the Defenders, this had not been a real battle. It was like killing
cattle in a corral. There had been no opportunity for personal glory,
no chance to fight for the honour of the War God. He had lost one man
to injury and that through a fall. The Defenders had lost a dozen men
and perhaps fifty were injured. It had been a thoroughly unsatisfying
affair.
Lord Jenga was well pleased, though. He had faced down a numerically
superior enemy and not just prevailed, he had triumphed. The Defenders
were in a buoyant mood. The Kariens were decimated, the Fardohnyan
contingent destroyed. Of course, the Kariens still had countless men to
throw at them, but they might think twice before launching such a
suicidal frontal assault again.
Damin suspected the reason for the victory lay as much with the
coercion laid on the enemy by their own priests, as with the brilliance
of the Medalonian defence. Even when the odds were hopeless, the
Kariens did not have the wits about them to retreat. All they could do
was keep moving forward into the arms of certain death.
“My Lord.â€
Damin turned to his captain wearily. He had not slept in two days
and it was starting to tell on him. “What is it,
Almodavar?â€
“Lord Jenga wishes to see you. There’s some
disagreement over your
orders regarding the Fardohnyans.â€
Damin nodded, not surprised by the news. He turned his mount and
rode toward the command pavilion at a canter. The sooner this was
sorted out, the better.
“Lord Wolfblade, is it true you ordered the Fardohnyans
buried?â€
Jenga demanded as soon as he appeared in the entrance. The tent was
crowded with Defenders, most of them congratulating themselves over
their victory.
“I did. They are pagans, my Lord. It is sacrilege for them
to be
cremated. You may do as you wish with the Kariens, but the Fardohnyans
deserve better.â€
“They fought with the Kariens,†Jenga retorted.
“They deserve
nothing. In any case, I’ve not the men or the time to spare
burying
anyone. I’ll have an epidemic on my hands if that field
isn’t cleared
soon.â€
“Then my men will bury them, my Lord. And I’ve no
doubt there are
plenty of pagans in your camp who would aid us.â€
Jenga snorted something unintelligible and turned to an officer
seeking his signature. He signed the document before turning back to
Damin.
“Very well, bury them if you must. I’ve broken
enough laws lately
for another to mean little. But do it away from here. And don’t
use my
Defenders. Not that there are many who would countenance such a
barbaric practice.â€
“Your respect for our religious customs is touching, my
Lord.â€
Jenga frowned but did not reply. Annoyed, Damin strode from the
tent. His men had fought as long and hard as the Defenders. They would
not be pleased with an order to bury nearly five hundred Fardohnyans in
this cold, hard ground.
“Damin!â€
He stopped and waited as R’shiel caught up to him, surprised
to find
her here. He had expected her and Brak to be long gone. “I
heard what
you said to Lord Jenga. You did the right thing.â€
“Then perhaps you could persuade him to lend me some
assistance.â€
“I doubt it. Burial is outlawed in Medalon, Damin.
You’re lucky he
agreed at all.â€
“I know. But sometimes I wonder about this alliance. I have
more in
common with the Fardohnyans and the Kariens than I do with these
people. Were it not for the gods . . .â€
“Were it not for the gods, none of us would be in this
mess,†she
finished with a frown.
Not sure what she meant, Damin shrugged. “You would know
better than
I, demon child.â€
“Please don’t call me that.â€
“I’m sorry. Although I’m a little surprised
to see you here. I
understood you were leaving for the Citadel.â€
“I’m looking for Tarja to say goodbye. Brak and I
are leaving this
morning.â€
“With Garet Warner?â€
She nodded. “You don’t like him much, do
you?â€
“Not in the least. Nor do I trust him. Be careful,
R’shiel.â€
She slipped her arm through his companionably and walked with him.
Damin found her easy familiarity disconcerting. This girl was a living
legend; the embodiment of a myth he had grown up with. He had never
expected to find himself counted among the demon child’s
friends. When
they reached his horse R’shiel let go of his arm and patted the
stallion fondly.
“What’s he thinking?†Damin asked curiously.
“He’s thinking it’s too cold to be standing
around gossiping. He
wants his breakfast.â€
“So do I.â€
She looked at him with a shake of her head. “How can you
even think
of food, at a time like this?â€
“Armies fight on their stomachs, R’shiel. Starving
myself won’t
bring anybody back to life.â€
“I feel sick just thinking about it.â€
Before he could answer her a Defender lieutenant approached them,
saluting Damin smartly before turning to R’shiel. His uniform
was
grubby and soot-stained from a night collecting and burning the dead.
“Captain Tenragan said to ask you to wait for him, my Lady.
He’ll be
along once he’s taken care of the last of the looters.â€
“He’s wasting his time,†Damin remarked.
“Looters and war go
together like sand and sea.â€
The young lieutenant drew himself up and glared at him. “I
understand it’s a common practice in Hythria, my Lord. Even
your court’esa
aren’t above it. In Medalon, however, such a practice is
considered to
be barbaric and disrespectful.â€
“This from a man who burns his dead,†Damin
muttered, then he
glanced at the young man curiously. “What makes you say my court’esa
aren’t above it? There are no court’esa
here.â€
“Perhaps they belong to one of your men, sir, but I stopped
two of
them last night. Laden down with bundles of loot they were. All dressed
up too, with those jewelled collars and dresses that left nothing to
the imagination.â€
“No man of mine could afford court’esa like
that. Are you
certain?â€
“Aye. I spent time on the southern border. I’ve seen
them before.
There was no mistaking them.â€
R’shiel looked at him expectantly as he pondered the news.
“What’s
the matter?â€
“Probably nothing. Did you get their names, Lieutenant?
Where they
were from?â€
The man thought for a moment. “One was called Tam-something,
I
think. The other one said her name was Madina, or something like that.
I didn’t really take much notice of them once they moved
on . . .â€
“Which way were they headed?â€
“South, with everyone else, I suppose.â€
“Of course. Thank you, Lieutenant.â€
He saluted again and headed toward the command pavilion.
“What’s bothering you, Damin?â€
R’shiel asked with a faint smile.
“That there were Hythrun court’esa looting the
battlefield, or
that you don’t own them?â€
“I just seems a bit strange, that’s all. Court’esa
as
valuable as that don’t roam battlefields unescorted.â€
“What’s all this about court’esa?â€
Tarja remarked as he
walked up beside R’shiel. His eyes were bloodshot, no doubt
from
supervising the funeral pyres through the night, and his shoulders were
slumped with fatigue. Damin wondered for a moment if he looked as
haggard.
“One of your men stopped two court’esa
looting the
battlefield last night. Hythrun court’esa, complete
with court
collars, he claims.â€
“You didn’t bring any court’esa to
the front, did you?â€
Tarja asked.
“No.†He shrugged. “It’s probably
just your men confusing some
whores from the followers’ camp. Besides,†he added
with a laugh. “What
self-respecting court’esa would call herself Madina?
They
usually give themselves far more exotic names.â€
“Assuming he got the name right,†R’shiel
added. “She could have
said her name was Adrina, for all we know.â€
Tarja’s eyes narrowed.
“Adrina . . . . Damn!â€
“What?â€
“The Fardohnyan captain I faced yesterday. He begged me with
his
dying breath to warn his sister that they’d been betrayed. In
the heat
of battle, it never occurred to me . . .â€
“What are you talking about?†R’shiel asked
impatiently.
“Let me guess,†Damin said. “His
sister’s name was Adrina?â€
Tarja nodded. R’shiel looked first at Tarja and then Damin
with
growing annoyance. “So?â€
“Hablet’s bastards are usually sent to serve in the
army as officers
once they’re old enough,†Damin explained.
“So Tarja killed one of Hablet’s bastards?â€
she said, throwing her
hands up. “What of it? This is war.â€
“He wanted me to warn Adrina that they’d been
betrayed,†Tarja
reminded her.
Damin glanced at R’shiel then turned to Tarja with a frown.
“And
suddenly there are two court’esa crossing the
battlefield from
Karien? Something bothers me about this. I think we should look into
it.â€
Tarja nodded thoughtfully. “Perhaps we should, at that. If
Adrina is
attempting to send a message back to her father, and she thinks the
Kariens have betrayed her, she couldn’t risk sending the
message by
normal means.â€
“Well, that’s nice!†R’shiel
declared. “You ask me to wait around so
you can say goodbye, then as soon as my back is turned, you’re
off
chasing a couple of floozies in see-through dresses on the off-chance
they’re Fardohnyan spies.â€
With a tired smile, Tarja put his arm around her and pulled her
close. “I’m only going along to keep Damin out of
trouble.â€
“I think you need someone to keep you both out of
trouble!†she
complained unhappily. “You look terrible, by the way. Both of
you.â€
“Speaking of trouble, here comes your watchdog,â€
Damin warned, as
Brak strode across the field toward them.
R’shiel glanced at the approaching figure and then turned to
Tarja.
“I have to go. Promise me you’ll take care.â€
“I’ll take about as much care as you will,
R’shiel,†he said, so
softly Damin could barely make out the words. Damin turned away, to
give them at least the illusion of privacy.
“It’s time we were gone, R’shiel,â€
Brak said when he reached them.
R’shiel drew away from Tarja with some reluctance.
“I know.â€
“Keep her safe, Brak, or you’ll have me to answer
to.â€
The Harshini laughed sourly. “You, Tarja? There’s
more than a few
gods who I’d have at me, if I let anything happen to the demon
child.
You’d have to line up for a chance at what was left of me,
I’m afraid.â€
R’shiel frowned. “I wish you would all stop treating
me like a
fragile doll. I can take care of myself, you know.â€
“He’s knows that, R’shiel. Go and save us
all from the Sisterhood,
while we stay here and skewer Kariens like fish in a barrel, and when
you get back we can all tell each other what heroes we’ve
been.â€
She smiled at Damin and leaned forward, kissing his cheek lightly.
“You are just as bad as he is. You take care of yourself, too.
And
don’t go leading him astray when you find your court’esa.
The
captain is already spoken for.â€
“What court’esa?â€
“Don’t ask, Brak. Let’s just get out of here
before Garet decides to
leave without us.â€
With a final kiss for Tarja and a wave for Damin, R’shiel
followed
Brak to the horses he had waiting for them. He glanced at Tarja.
“Don’t worry. She is the demon child. She has forces
watching over
her that you cannot imagine.â€
Tarja nodded and seemed to force himself to shrug off his
apprehension.
“I’m not worried. Anyway, I thought we were going to
investigate
some floozy in a see-through dress?â€
Damin nodded and swung into his saddle. “Meet me by the
fletchers’
tent. I have to see about burying some Fardohnyans first, then
we’ll
find out what two very expensive court’esa were doing
looting a
battlefield full of dead Kariens in the middle of the night.â€
CHAPTER 32
“What time is it, Tam?â€
The slave looked up at the heavy, overcast sky and shrugged.
“Breakfast time.â€
Adrina’s tummy rumbled in agreement. She was rather
disgusted that
she had not thought to ask Filip to pack any food. Adrina had never had
to worry about where her next meal was coming from. It had not occurred
to her to think of such mundane things when she planned her desperate
flight from Karien. Perhaps when they reached the tents of the camp
followers, there would be a stall or a tavern where they could purchase
a meal. And supplies for the journey south. As she rode, Adrina tried
to calculate what they might need and what it would cost, but she
really had no idea. She had never had to buy her own food, either.
They had made little progress since leaving the battlefield, hemmed
in as they were by the other travellers on the makeshift road. Adrina
fretted at the delay, but knew the crowd was her best protection. Among
these peasants she was just another looter returning home from a long
night robbing the dead. Once they reached the followers’ camp
and had
equipped themselves for their journey, they could make up for lost time.
She wondered if Cratyn had discovered her missing yet. Even if he
had, she realised with some relief that she was safe from him now. He
could not follow her into Medalon, and would not suspect it had been
her destination, in any case. More likely he would send troops
searching the road back toward Yarnarrow. By the time he realised where
she was, she would be in Cauthside, perhaps even on a boat, sailing the
Glass River south for home. The knowledge invigorated her and some of
her exhaustion fell away.
She was free of Karien. Nothing would ever entice her to go back.
Adrina glanced at Tamylan and smiled encouragingly. Mikel slept in
her arms and Adrina led his riderless horse. The poor child was
exhausted and Tamylan had offered to hold him while he slept, for fear
he would fall from his saddle.
Adrina was not certain what to do with the child. He was a sweet
boy, but he was so fanatically devoted to his damned Overlord, he was
liable to do anything. She felt a twinge of guilt over her plans to
abandon him. Perhaps she could find some Medalonian peasant who would
take him in. She could pay for his keep — she had enough
jewellery on
her to buy him a commission in the Defenders, for that matter.
The thunder of hooves brought her out of her musing and she glanced
over her shoulder as a dozen Hythrun Raiders rode by them with a
red-coated Defender in the lead. Probably off to celebrate their victory, she thought sourly.
A little further on the riders slowed and then wheeled their mounts
around, heading back the way they came. With a stab of apprehension,
Adrina stared steadfastly forward, as if by refusing to look at them
they would not notice her.
At a sharp command the Raiders reined in beside her, expertly
cutting her and Tamylan out of the crowd. With no choice but to do as
they indicated, she turned her mount off the road to confront the
Defender and a grubby, unshaven Raider who wore nothing to indicate his
rank.
“Ladies,†the Hythrun said as they approached.
“What a pleasure to
find members of your profession out here.â€
Adrina glared at him with all the withering scorn she could muster,
which was considerable. “Don’t even presume to
think I would
entertain the likes of you!â€
The man seemed more amused than offended by her answer. “Why
not? We
have plenty of money. And that is what you’re doing out
here,
isn’t it? Looking for financial advancement? There’s a
dozen of us
here, and at, say ten rivets a turn, you could make quite a tidy
sum.â€
Adrina flushed angrily, not certain what insulted her most —
that
this barbarian would dare proposition her, or that he would offer a
measly ten rivets for the privilege.
“How dare you!â€
“Adrina,†Tamylan hissed beside her,
warningly. Mikel stirred
sleepily.
“My deepest apologies, madam. Fifteen rivets, then, although
for
that price, you’d better be good.†The dark-haired
Defender who rode at
the Hythrun’s side seemed to find the exchange highly
entertaining.
Adrina forced her temper down. She had to talk her way out of this.
Adopting an air of extreme disdain, she looked down her nose at the
Hythrun and the Defender, both of whom would have benefited
considerably from a bath.
“Fifteen, or fifty rivets, it makes no difference, sir. I am
a bound
court’esa. I am not at liberty to accommodate you. As
you can
see, I wear a collar.â€
“So you do,†the Hythrun said, as if noticing it for
the first time.
“A wolf collar, at that. Am I to understand that you are the
property
of House Wolfblade?â€
“Naturally,†Adrina agreed, with a bad feeling it
was a mistake to
admit such a thing. These mercenaries worked for House Wolfblade. They
might take such an admission as proof that they were entitled to her
services.
“I don’t recall Lord Wolfblade bringing any court’esa
to the
front, do you, Captain?â€
“I’m sure I would have noticed,†the
Defender agreed laconically.
“Perhaps we should take them to him?â€
Adrina blanched at the thought. She did not want anything to do with
Lernen Wolfblade’s degenerate nephew. “No thank you. We
can find our
own way.â€
Mikel woke and wiggled around in Tamylan’s arms to stare
open-mouthed at the Hythrun surrounding them. Adrina threw him a
warning glance, hoping the child would have the sense to remain silent.
“But we insist,†the Hythrun said, with a dangerous
smile. “Lord
Wolfblade will be most anxious to see you. He’s been a long
time out
here in the field and these Medalonian women are all dogs.â€
“My Lady . . .†Mikel whispered
urgently. She ignored
him.
“Thank you, but no. Now get away with you! I’m sure
Lord Wolfblade
didn’t send you out here to harass innocent people going about
their
business. I will be speaking to him about this, I can assure
you!â€
“Your Highness!†Mikel’s whisper was
verging on
panic-stricken.
“You know his lordship then?†the captain asked.
“Of course, you fool! Now get out of my way or Lord
Wolfblade will
have you whipped!†Adrina did not know if that was the case,
but it
seemed a fair assumption, based on what she knew of the family.
“Your Highness! That is Lord Wolfblade!â€
Mikel cried.
Adrina suddenly felt faint.
Her mouth went dry as Damin Wolfblade rode up beside her, so close
his stirrup touched hers. He was nothing like the powdered courtier she
imagined. He was big and dirty and unshaven and looked meaner than King
Jasnoff’s most vicious hunting hound.
For a fleeting moment, she wished she had never left Karien.
Damin Wolfblade looked at her closely. He did not look surprised to
discover her identity. She realised with despair that they had
suspected all along who she was. That nonsense about ten rivets a turn
was obviously his misguided idea of a joke.
“Your Highness.†He bowed with surprising grace, but
it was the
short bow of an equal, not a mere Warlord greeting a royal princess.
“Lord Wolfblade.†Adrina marvelled at how steady she
sounded.
“Tarja, allow me to introduce Her Serene Highness, Princess
Adrina
of Fardohnya, or is it Her Royal Highness, Princess Adrina of Karien,
these days? It’s so hard to keep track of these things.â€
“Move away from me, sir,†she said in a voice that
was colder than
the Fourth Hell.
Wolfblade smiled. “What do you think, Tarja? Will we get
more by
selling her back to the Kariens or her father?â€
“I’ll kill you if you touch her!†Mikel
screamed.
“You!†The Defender glared at the child and
Mikel cowered
under his scrutiny. “Founders, how did you get here, boy? I
thought
we’d seen the last of you!â€
“You coward! How dare you pick on a helpless child! As for
you,†she
added witheringly to the Warlord, “I refuse to be your
hostage!â€
“You refuse to be my hostage? I don’t recall
asking your
permission, your Highness.â€
“Don’t take that tone with me, sir. I am a
Fardohnyan princess of
royal blood!â€
“Quite a step up from a court’esa,â€
the Defender remarked,
not in the least impressed by her declaration.
This was not going well at all. She could not afford to be a
hostage. The first thing they would do was send a message to Cratyn
demanding the gods alone knew what in return for her release. At that
moment, Adrina did not care if the war raged on for another hundred
years.
She was not going back to Karien.
“I refuse to be your hostage, my Lord, because I am seeking
asylum,â€
she announced, the plan formulating in her mind as she spoke.
The Warlord made no effort to hide his astonishment, or his
disbelief. “Asylum?â€
“But, your Highness . . .â€
Mikel began with a
horrified gasp.
“Be quiet, child!â€
“You expect me to believe you are running away?â€
“I am not running away, my Lord, I am altering the
terms of
the Karien-Fardohnyan Treaty. The Kariens have not kept their side of
the bargain, therefore I do not feel compelled to keep mine.â€
“I’d call that running away,†Tarja chuckled.
Damin Wolfblade shook his head, clearly not believing a word she
said. “And what is it you want in return for asylum, your
Highness?â€
“Safe passage to Fardohnya in a manner befitting my
station.â€
“Is that all?†Tarja asked with a sceptical
laugh.
“Safe passage to Fardohnya? So you can get together with
your father
and stir up even more trouble? I don’t think so, your Highness.
Do we
look that foolish?â€
“You question my word, sir? How dare you! I am a
princess!â€
“You’re Hablet’s daughter,†he
corrected. “That makes every word you
utter suspect.â€
She was going to have to put this man in his place, sooner rather
than later. “I will not sit here and be insulted by a
barbarian! I
insist you take me to the Lord Defender this minute, so that I may
present my case to someone with a better understanding of protocol than
a savage, such as yourself!â€
Damin Wolfblade laughed at her. Adrina loftily ignored him and
turned to Tarja Tenragan.
“The boy is under my protection and so is my slave. They
will remain
with me, so that I may have some basic level of service. You will agree
to consult me regarding any offer of ransom made on my behalf. And
under no circumstances, will I agree to return to Karien. Is that quite
clear?â€
Her list of demands seemed to startle him. Wolfblade exchanged a
glance with the Medalonian before turning to her. “You may keep
your
slave, your Highness. As for the boy, his fate will be up to Captain
Tenragan.â€
“And the rest of my demands?â€
The Warlord laughed. “Demands? You are our prisoner,
your
Highness. You’re not at liberty to make demands. But
I’ll promise you
one thing. Give us any trouble at all, and I will see that you learn
what it is to wear the collar of a bound court’esa. Is that
quite clear?†He turned his horse away from her before she
could frame
a suitable retort. “Put the boy on his own horse. He’s
old enough to
ride without a nursemaid.â€
A Raider rode forward and snatched Mikel from Tamylan’s
arms. Other
hands took the reins of her mount, leaving her nothing to do but cling
to the pommel as, surrounded by the Hythrun, she rode toward a
crumbling ruin that must be their command post.
Adrina chewed on her bottom lip and wondered if she’d done
the right
thing, admitting she was trying to get home. Damin Wolfblade clearly
did not believe her, but Tarja Tenragan was hard to read. Perhaps he
would champion her cause? Surely the Medalonians would see the benefit
in letting her go? Her arrival in Talabar was bound to destroy the
treaty.
On the other hand, returning her to Karien would be almost as
effective. They could demand any number of concessions from Cratyn. She
stared at the backs of the two men in whose hands her fate now rested,
and realised her only protection lay in making them want to
shield her from Cratyn’s wrath.
Adrina realised that she was going to have to change her tune.
She was going to have to be nice.
She wondered, for a moment, if she remembered how.
CHAPTER 33
“What in the name of the Founders are we
supposed
to do with her?â€
Jenga paced the hall, hands clasped behind his back, his brow
furrowed with concern. He had hoped for sleep on his return to the
Keep. He had not planned on the discovery that Tarja and Damin had
captured a court’esa who turned out to be the Crown
Princess of
Karien.
“My suggestion is that whatever you do, you do it quickly.
You don’t
want her around causing trouble, my Lord, and believe me, she will
cause trouble.†Damin spoke from the heart, never more certain
of
anything.
“She’s well guarded,†Tarja pointed out.
Damin laughed sceptically. “Then make sure you change them
often. In
a week, she’ll have every man she comes in contact with eating
out of
her hand. A week after that they’ll be helping her escape.
It’s a good
thing we searched her saddlebags. There’s enough here to buy
more than
a few men’s souls.†He glanced at the fortune in
jewellery scattered on
the rough wooden table. The blue diamond alone would feed a small
village for a year.
“You claimed she was a shrew,†Jenga said, stopping
his pacing for a
moment to glance at the gems. The torches painted dark shadows over his
lined face.
“She is,†Damin agreed. “But she’s
also as sharp as a new sword. Now
we’ve deprived her of her purchasing power, she’ll
resort to more
direct methods. She’s court’esa trained. That
may not mean much
here in Medalon, but trust me, it makes her more dangerous than you can
possibly imagine.â€
“What do you mean, court’esa
trained?†Tarja asked. “She’s a
princess.â€
“Your definition of a court’esa and ours is
very different,
Tarja. What you call court’esa in Medalon are merely
common
whores. In Fardohnya and Hythria, they are highly trained specialists,
worth a small fortune to those who can afford them. Adrina was probably
given her first one around the age of sixteen. He would have been a
skilled musician, an artist maybe or a linguist. But first and
foremost, his job would have been to make Adrina more valuable as a
wife by teaching her the art of giving pleasure in the marriage
bed.â€
“So our princess is a whore?†Tarja asked with a
grin.
Damin shook his head impatiently. “You’re missing
the point. She’s
Hablet’s daughter. She’s been trained by the very best
and if she
thinks it will help her cause, she’ll use every skill at her
disposal
to get her own way. And in case you hadn’t noticed,
she’s not exactly
hard to look at. If you don’t believe me, go up there now and
spend an
hour in her company.â€
“No thanks, I’ve seen all of Her Serene Highness I
want to.â€
“You two can argue the lady’s finer points some
other time,†Jenga
snapped. “Right now, I have to decide what to do with
her.â€
“We could ransom her back to Cratyn,†Tarja
suggested. “Surely he
will sue for peace if it means the return of his wife.â€
“I’m not so sure,†Damin said with a shake
of his head. “She seemed
very determined not to go back to Karien. And if that Fardohnyan you
killed was to be believed, then the Kariens have betrayed them.â€
“But Adrina never got the message. There has to be another
reason
she left.â€
“What of Hablet?†Jenga asked. “Perhaps
knowing his daughter is our
hostage will stay his hand?â€
Damin shrugged. “He’s a treacherous bastard. He
could just as easily
abandon her to her fate as try to get her back.†He smiled
sourly.
“We’ve more chance of trading the jewellery, I
fear.â€
“Maybe we should consult her Highness on the
matter?†Tarja
suggested. “She did, after all, demand to be informed of any
negotiations regarding her ransom.â€
“You jest, surely,†Jenga said.
“If only he was joking,†Damin sighed.
“Well, I’ll leave it up to you, Lord Wolfblade. You
captured her, so
I’m making her your responsibility. You may use whatever men
you need
to keep her guarded, but I don’t have time for this
distraction. Give
me your recommendation when you’ve decided what to do. And put
those
gems somewhere safe. Now, if you gentlemen will excuse me, I’m
going to
bed.â€
Damin watched the Lord Defender leave with an unfamiliar feeling of
despair. He turned to Tarja, who seemed more amused than concerned. The
captain wrapped the jewels in their velvet cover and tucked them into
his belt.
“You’ve a fortune there, you know.†Damin
finished his wine with a
grimace and then glared at Tarja. “Don’t look at me
like that, you have
no idea what she’s like.â€
“Oh, I got an inkling today. You’re welcome to
her.â€
Damin rose from his seat by the fireplace and poured himself another
cup of wine. He drank it in a gulp.
“She tried to kill my uncle, you know.â€
“Adrina?â€
Damin nodded. “Hablet sent her to Greenharbour for
Lernen’s birthday
a couple of years ago — the same year you were recalled to the
Citadel,
as I remember. Adrina had obviously been well briefed about my
uncle’s
various weaknesses before she arrived and she pandered to them very
effectively. She dragged him along to the slave auction and coaxed him
into buying a pair of twin boys. The cunning little bitch even made the
boys ride back to the palace in his carriage, no doubt hoping to whet
his appetite. That night they slit their wrists in my uncle’s
bed and
bled to death while he slept. The blade they used was Adrina’s
table
knife. She must have slipped it to them in the carriage. I wonder how
she sleeps knowing they killed themselves rather than do as she
demanded.â€
“I’m surprised you didn’t go to war with
Fardohnya over an attempt
on the High Prince’s life.â€
Damin shrugged and poured another cup of wine. “Nothing
definite
could be proved. I was out hunting that day, and didn’t return
until
late, but I was told Adrina claimed at dinner that she had lost her
knife. We could never connect the boys to her afterwards, and we tried
every avenue of investigation. In the end, we had no choice but to let
the matter drop.†He swallowed the wine and thumped the cup
down on the
table. “You know what really irks me?â€
“What?â€
“That bitch and her slave are wearing the collars Lernen
gave those
two dead boys. I’d recognise them anywhere. Lernen and I had
quite an
argument over their cost. It’s how my mother met her gem
merchant,
incidentally. Adrina no doubt kept them as a souvenir.â€
Tarja frowned, as if he could not conceive of anything so callous.
“So take them back.â€
“No, I think I’ll leave them right where they are
for now. Another
thing you may not understand about Fardohnyans and Hythrun, Tarja, is
that for a noblewoman to be collared like a slave is the worst kind of
insult. Her Serene Highness could well do with a little humiliation.
Anyway, she thinks I need a key to open them. I can keep her collared
for quite some time, while I’m waiting for the keys to arrive
from
Hythria.â€
“Have you sent for them?â€
“No need. There’s a concealed clasp. But the idea
that her good
behaviour will earn her release might keep her tractable for a
time.â€
“I could always offer to dismember her slave,†Tarja
suggested with
a grin. “It worked on the Karien boy.â€
“Adrina would probably tell you to go right ahead and then
ask if
she could watch,†he predicted sourly. “Speaking of the
boy, he is your
responsibility. I don’t want him anywhere near her.
He’d probably run
one of us through if she asked him.â€
Tarja nodded, his expression suddenly glum. “I miss
R’shiel already.
She seemed to be able to get through to the child. And I’d be
happier
if Mahina were here to deal with Adrina.â€
“So would I,†Damin agreed. He poured a cup of wine
then poured
another for Tarja and pushed it across the table to him. “Here.
If I’m
going to get drunk, then you’d better join me. It has been a
thoroughly
unsatisfactory day. That battle was as glorious as a cattle
cull.â€
Tarja took the wine and sipped it as Damin downed his in a gulp.
They were silent for a while, only the crackling fire and the hissing
torches disturbing the silence. Damin filled his cup again.
Tarja glanced at him curiously. “You said it was common
practice
among Hythrun and Fardohnyan nobility to have their sons and daughters
trained by court’esa. Does that mean you were?â€
“Absolutely!†Damin could feel the wine making his
head spin. It was
a rough blend, too young to be drunk with such determination. He drank
it anyway. “Her name was Reyna. I was fifteen when she came to
Krakandar.â€
“It beats fumbling around in the stables with a nervous
Probate, I
suppose.â€
“Having never fumbled around in a stable with a nervous
Probate, I’m
not in a position to comment on the comparison, but I imagine
you’re
correct. Drink up, Captain. I’m getting very drunk here and you
haven’t
finished your first cup.â€
“Perhaps you should get some sleep, Damin. It’s been
a long day.â€
“Yes, mother.â€
“I only meant —â€
“I know what you meant.†He studied the bottom of
his cup for a
moment. “You know, we call rough wine like this
‘Fardohnyan courage’ in
Hythria.â€
Tarja smiled. “We call it Hythrun courage.â€
“I shall ignore such a heinous insult, Captain, because I
like you.â€
Suddenly, he hurled the cup at the fireplace where it shattered into
thousands of clay shards. “Dammit! Why couldn’t she
stay on her own
side of the border?â€
“You really should get to bed, Damin. You’re drunk
and you’re not
thinking straight.â€
“I’ll grant you that I’m drunk,
Tarja,†he conceded. “But as for
thinking straight, I’ve never been surer. Shall we pay her
Highness a
visit?â€
“It’s the middle of the night.â€
“All the more reason to wake her up. Her Royal Sereneness
tried to
kill my uncle and she allied herself with the Kariens. She sent her men
to be slaughtered and then fled the scene of her crime like a cur in
the night. I intend to rattle that bitch until her teeth come
loose.â€
Ignoring Tarja’s pleas for reason, Damin took the crumbling
stairs
to the chambers so recently vacated by Joyhinia, two at a time. Voices
filtered up to him, as someone entered the hall at a run. Damin ignored
them, his eyes focused, (as much as they could focus in his present
state), on the door at the end of the landing, guarded by two
red-coated Defenders. He had no clear idea what he would say to Her
Serene Highness, but he was going to say something, by the gods!
“Damin!â€
Tarja’s voice held an edge of urgency that made him pause
just
before he reached the door. He leaned over the balustrade and looked
down into the torchlit hall.
“Forget the princess! The Fardohnyans have
surrendered!â€
Sobriety returned quickly as the cold night air
caught Damin unawares. The camp surrounding the Keep was surprisingly
busy, considering the lateness of the hour. Men normally well abed by
now were sitting in small groups discussing the battle, dissecting its
every nuance with varying degrees of expertise, depending on how much
ale they had consumed. Morale in the camp was high. Nobody had expected
to weather the first attack with so few casualties. Laughter and the
off-tune baritone of men singing victory songs filled the air. Fires
blazed with little thought to the fuel they were consuming. Thunder
rattled in the distance and a light rain had fallen while he was in the
Keep, dampening the dusty ground. Soon enough, these men would be
forced to take shelter. There would be no frost tonight with this cloud
cover, but if it got much colder it would snow, which should slow the
Kariens down somewhat.
This morning’s battle had been a desperate attempt to break
the
Medalonian defences before winter set in. Damin was rather proud of
himself for working that out. Maybe he wasn’t as drunk as he
thought.
The young man in command of the Fardohnyans was a Second Lanceman
named Filip. He wore an expression of defeat along with his
battle-stained uniform. His eyes were dull, and his exhaustion seemed
to be warring with an emotion that it took Damin a little time to
identify: self-loathing. The thirty or so Fardohnyans stood in a loose
group, surrounded by Defenders, their torches hissing as the occasional
tardy raindrop vanished into the flames.
“Lord Wolfblade.†The Fardohnyan bowed low,
obviously relieved to
see someone who might speak his language. The Defenders who had taken
their surrender had disarmed the men behind him. A few were wounded and
four lay on the wet ground, too seriously injured to stand. Tarja, who
always seemed much better organised when it came to these things,
ordered the wounded removed to the Infirmary Tent and the sleek
Fardohnyan steeds moved to the corrals, leaving Damin to deal with the
prisoners.
“I’ve seen many a strange sight in my time,
Lanceman,†he said in
the young man’s native tongue, “but Fardohnyans
surrendering is not
among them.â€
The lad’s expression clouded. Surrender did not sit well
with him.
“We were ordered to surrender, my Lord.â€
“What did he say?†Tarja asked, coming to stand
beside him.
“He says they were ordered to surrender.â€
“By whom?â€
“Who ordered you to surrender?†he asked in
Fardohnyan.
Filip hesitated, glancing over his shoulder at the men behind him
before answering, rather reluctantly. “Princess Adrina, my
Lord.â€
Tarja did not need that translated. “Ask him why.â€
Damin turned to Tarja impatiently. “You don’t think
I might have
thought to ask that by myself?â€
“Sorry.â€
“Did her Highness give a reason?â€
The Fardohnyan shrugged. “She was beside herself with grief,
my
Lord. She said she did not want any more Fardohnyan blood shed for
Karien.â€
“Pity she didn’t decide that before she sent
her men to be
slaughtered,†he muttered as he turned to Tarja and translated
the
young soldier’s words.
“Grief for whom?†Tarja asked, his sobriety allowing
more clarity of
thought than Damin was capable of.
“Captain Tristan, my Lord,†Filip replied when Damin
translated the
question. “The captain was the princess’s half-brother.
They were very
close.â€
“And where is her Highness now?†He was curious to
discover if this
surrender was part of a plan, or if the young soldier was an innocent
pawn in some devious game that Adrina was playing. Damin desperately
wished his head was clearer.
“With her husband, of course!†Damin would have
known he was lying,
even if Adrina was not currently being held in the Keep behind them.
“I see.†He turned to Tarja questioningly.
“What do you want to do
with them?â€
“That’ll be up to Jenga. For now, I suggest we find
some place to
hold them until morning.†Thunder rumbled louder as another
storm
rolled in. Tarja glanced up at the sky with a frown. “Put them
in the
Keep. They’ll be out of the rain, at least. We can make more
permanent
arrangements tomorrow.â€
Tarja began issuing orders to his men. Damin watched them being
herded toward the Keep, wondering about Adrina’s paradoxical
behaviour.
The woman had cold-bloodedly plotted the murder of the Hythrun High
Prince, yet she’d ordered the remainder of her troops to
surrender,
rather than see them come to harm. Suddenly he was very glad that he
had not made it to the princess’s door.
He had a feeling the only way to face Her Serene Highness, Adrina of
Fardohnya, and survive, was stone cold sober.
CHAPTER 34
Although discovery by the Medalonians had been a
risk, Adrina had not really expected it, and was therefore unprepared
for her sudden change of circumstances.
For two days, she paced her prison cell impatiently, waiting for
something to happen. Meals were delivered regularly by silent,
grim-looking Defenders, but they refused to answer her questions. A
wan, desperate smile — the precursor to establishing a rapport
with her
guards — was a wasted effort. Each shift was made up of
different men
entirely, and once they had left she never saw them again. Nor was
Tamylan allowed to leave the chamber, although the slave did not seem
nearly as bothered by captivity as her mistress. The waiting began to
wear on Adrina’s nerves, and she found herself reassessing the
intelligence of her captors. They were smarter than she had given them
credit for.
The only advantage her isolation provided was the chance to
consolidate her plans to deal with the Medalonians. Her first problem,
she acknowledged readily, was Damin Wolfblade. She had always imagined
him to be something of a dandy, powdered and spoilt, as used to having
his every whim indulged as his uncle was. She had known he was a
Warlord, of course, but she had pictured him as a figurehead. A
gloriously armoured fop who sat astride his decorative stallion while
others did the work for him. That assessment had been wildly
inaccurate. He was a damn sight more ambitious than his uncle, and all
together too certain of his place in the world. But he was still a man,
she reminded herself, and a Wolfblade at that. The family was too
inherently degenerate for the differences to be more than skin deep.
Tarja Tenragan, on the other hand, had been a pleasant surprise.
Dark-haired, handsome and remarkably well mannered, his worst fault,
she decided, was his attitude to poor Mikel. He obviously commanded a
great deal of respect in the camp, and his opinion would carry a lot of
weight with the Lord Defender when it came time to decide her fate. If
she could engineer a meeting with him alone, she was certain she could
entice him to see things her way. She might even enjoy it.
There were good reasons for avoiding such a dangerous game with
Damin Wolfblade. He was a prince of Hythria, for one thing, and while
it was perfectly acceptable to entertain oneself with the lower
classes, frivolous liaisons between members of the nobility were
frowned upon. Such a complication between the heir to the Hythrun
throne and the Fardohnyan King’s eldest daughter did not bear
thinking
about. The most compelling reason, however, was that while Tarja might
be seduced by her court’esa-trained skills, Damin would
more
than likely see straight through them. He probably had a court’esa
as a nursemaid.
No, she would not play that game. She would pick the easier target.
If only someone would please put the target where she could reach
it . . .
Adrina plotted and planned and rehearsed her story a thousand times,
but day after day she was left alone with nothing but Tamylan and her
own anxiety for company.
By the time they finally came for her, Adrina was
seething. Nothing was going according to plan. She had been locked up,
her possessions stolen, her demands ignored and her imagination had had
time to devise all sorts of dreadful fates in store for her. When
finally a sergeant opened the door, without knocking, to escort her
downstairs, she turned on him, fully prepared to give him a piece of
her mind.
“I demand to see someone in authority!â€
“Certainly, your Highness,†the man replied calmly,
although he did
not bow. Hardly surprising. These Medalonian peasants had no experience
with royalty. “I’m here to take you to Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“I want to see the Lord Defender!â€
“That will be up to Lord Wolfblade, your Highness.
You’d better wear
this. It’s raining and you’ll ruin that fur.â€
Adrina snatched the plain, but serviceable woollen cloak from the
man and threw it over her shoulders. She still wore the flimsy court’esa
costume and it was ill suited to the bitterly cold chamber. The fur
cloak she had brought with her from Karien was the only thing that had
kept her from freezing to death.
“If Lord Wolfblade had any manners he would come to
me!â€
The man smiled, as if her posturing amused him and led the way down
into the main hall. Two more Defenders fell in behind as they crossed
the hall and stepped outside into a torrential downpour. Even wrapped
in the Defender’s cloak, Adrina was drenched in seconds.
She stumbled along beside the Defenders as they walked through the
camp, her sodden skirts hampering her steps. The slave collar was cold
against her skin and her hair was plastered to her head, the braid
slapping wetly against her back with every step. The hem of her skirt
was splattered with mud and she was shivering uncontrollably by the
time they reached the edge of the neatly laid out Defender’s
tents and
crossed the open ground between the two camps. She squinted through the
rain, trying to pick out any tent that looked as if it belonged to a
prince, but there were no banners flying, no obvious declarations of
rank. When they finally reached their destination, it proved to be a
plain tent, larger than those surrounding it, but bearing nothing to
indicate its occupant was of noble blood.
“Wait here,†the Defender ordered as he stepped
inside, leaving
Adrina standing in the rain.
Adrina fumed, but did as she was told, certain this little
expedition was nothing more than an attempt to humiliate her. For the
first time in months Adrina found there was someone she hated more than
Cratyn.
“Your Highness.†The sergeant reappeared and held
back the tent flap
for her. Adrina stepped through, glaring at the man to make certain he
was aware of her displeasure. The man smiled in return and left her
alone with the Warlord.
Damin Wolfblade sat at a small desk, writing something that seemed
to take all his concentration. Adrina waited, dripping onto the thick
carpet that covered the floor of the tent and looked around. An
inviting brazier stood in the centre of the tent and she itched to step
closer, but refused to give him the satisfaction. A thick tapestry, of
exquisite Hythrun geometrical design, divided the tent in two,
concealing the sleeping quarters. Besides the writing desk there was a
large table covered in maps against the far wall, and near the brazier,
a pile of thick cushions surrounding a small, low table. The Hythrun
were fond of sitting on the floor.
She turned her attention to the Warlord then and tried to study him
without being obvious. He was a typical Hythrun: tall, blond and well
muscled from hours spent in the saddle. But that was the limit of her
favourable impressions. He had the distinctive Wolfblade profile and an
air about him that reeked of arrogance.
He looked up finally and frowned. He apparently had as low an
opinion of her, as she had of him. “Your Highness.â€
“My Lord.â€
He put down his quill and stood up. “I’m sorry. Is
it raining?
Please, give me that cloak. You must be freezing.†Is it raining? She could barely hear herself think over the
downpour pounding on the taut, oiled canopy. She shed the cloak,
dropping it on the floor behind her, hoping it ruined his damned
carpet, and stepped closer to the brazier. Adrina found herself looking
up at him. That was disconcerting. She had been able to look Cratyn in
the eye.
“Don’t take me for a fool, my Lord. You probably
waited until it was
pouring before you sent for me! You might find such mindless games
amusing, but I merely find them a sign of your inability to grasp the
finer points of courtesy regarding the treatment of prisoners of
rank.â€
Damin looked her up and down, making her very aware of the flimsy,
sodden outfit, then shrugged. “I suppose it won’t serve
my purpose if
you catch pneumonia and die.†He pushed back the tapestry
dividing the
tent and pulled a woollen shirt and trousers from a trunk. “Get
out of
that ridiculous costume. It ill suits a woman of your rank, in any
case. You can get changed in there.â€
Adrina snatched the clothes from him and walked behind the tapestry.
She peeled off her wet skirts, deliberately dropping them on the centre
of the bed before emerging into the main part of the tent. Her
shivering stopped once she was wrapped in the warm shirt, and although
it was clean, the faint smell of him lingered on it. The golden collar
was icy around her throat.
“Please, sit down.â€
Adrina did as he suggested, taking the cushion closest to the fire.
Steam rose off her hair as the brazier warmed her. Damin offered her a
cup of mulled wine, which she stared at warily.
“It’s not poisoned. We’ve already
established that it won’t serve my
cause for you to die.â€
She took the cup and sipped the wine, the welcome warmth flooding
through her. “Your gallantry is overwhelming, sir.â€
“Don’t flatter yourself, Adrina. I’m being
practical, not gallant.â€
“You will address me in a manner befitting my station, my
Lord. I
did not give you leave to address me so informally.â€
Damin lowered himself onto the cushions opposite with surprising
grace for one so tall. “I’ll address you any way I
please, madam.
You’ll find few in this camp who care about your station. Your
only
value at present is your worth as a hostage. That requires that I keep
you alive. It does not require me to bow and scrape and cater to your
every idiotic whim.â€
“In Fardohnya, good manners are not considered an
‘idiotic whim’,â€
she pointed out frostily.
“I’ll bear that in mind when I next visit Fardohnya.
In the
meantime, I suggest your curb your tendency to think every person you
meet is beneath you. The Medalonians have little patience with
nobility. They judge people by their actions, not an accident of
birth.â€
“Ah! And that’s what you’re doing here, I
suppose? You so impressed
these atheist peasants with your heroic actions that they could not
wait to welcome you into the fold?â€
“What I’m doing here is not the issue. The question
is, what are you
doing here, your Highness.â€
“I was going home.â€
“You were betraying the Kariens?â€
“Don’t be absurd. It is simply
that . . . there are a
number of conditions of the Karien–Fardohnyan Treaty that have
not been
met to my satisfaction.â€
“Call it what you like, your Highness, I imagine Cratyn will
consider it treason.†Damin drank his wine thoughtfully.
“That’s what
they call this place you know — Treason Keep. Rather
appropriate, don’t
you think?†Nice, Adrina reminded herself. I have to be nice.
He’ll
send me back to Karien in a heartbeat unless I can convince him to
protect me.
“I . . . I cannot return to Karien, my
Lord.†She
lowered her eyes as she spoke and made sure she added a touching catch
to her voice.
“Why not?â€
“My life there was intolerable.â€
“So you fled to Medalon dressed as a court’esa,
accompanied
by nothing more than a slave and a child?â€
“I just wanted to escape. I didn’t really stop to
think.†Now that
was the truest thing she’d ever said. If she’d stopped
to think, she
wouldn’t be in this predicament.
He obviously didn’t believe a word she said. “There
are those who
think this alliance is merely a ruse, that your father is simply aiding
the Kariens so he can cross into Medalon and then turn south into
Hythria.â€
“Well, if he is, it’s news to me.†Adrina
sipped her wine to hide
her alarm. Was Hablet’s treacherous nature so famous that a
Hythrun
could read him so easily? She composed her features before
continuing. “The Defenders don’t have the troops to
fight a war on two
fronts. If you release me immediately, when I reach Talabar, I will
speak to my father. I should be able to stay his hand.â€
“Perhaps,†Damin said doubtfully.
Adrina wasn’t sure what else she could do to convince him.
“I’ve no
love for Karien, my Lord. I just want to go home.â€
“Does Cratyn know you were planning to leave him?â€
“No. After I discovered what had happened to my troops I
made some
rather foolish threats. It was then that I decided I should
leave.â€
“Are you with child?â€
“Of course not! What a stupid question!â€
“Oh? If you were with child, and Cratyn has his eye on your
father’s
throne, you might simply be taking the shortest route home, to ensure
the child is born on Fardohnyan soil.†Damn him!Where had he gotten that idea? How could some
ill-bred warlord from a thousand leagues away see things so clearly?
“Cratyn had some . . .
difficulty . . . in fulfilling his conjugal
duties.â€
To her surprise, he laughed with genuine humour. “Poor
Cratyn. An
inexperienced Karien princeling is no match for a court’esa-trained
Fardohnyan princess.â€
“No match at all, I fear.â€
For a fraction of a second, they were not enemies, but conspirators,
sharing laughter at the expense of a hated adversary. The moment lasted
just long enough for an uncomfortable silence to descend between them.
“I don’t trust you, Adrina. You’re trying to
play both ends against
the middle. You claim to be running home, yet a week ago you were
standing at Cratyn’s side, throwing your troops into battle for
him.
You are allied in marriage with Karien on one hand, while offering to
hold back your father’s troops with the other. You expect me to
believe
Cratyn doesn’t know where you are. I know he’s
inexperienced, but
nobody is that stupid. Your story is so full of holes I could use it as
a fishing net.â€
“Perhaps the intricacies of politics are beyond you, my
Lord,†she
suggested with saccharine sweetness, forcibly hiding her annoyance. Her
tale had sounded quite reasonable when she’d tried it out on
Tamylan.
She never expected a Hythrun to have even a basic grasp of politics.
“I understand you better than you think. You’re
Hablet’s daughter.
Treachery has been bred into you.â€
“Don’t make the mistake of judging me by my
father.â€
“I’m not likely to. I have a feeling you are far
more dangerous.â€
For some contrary reason, his comment pleased her. “You
can’t keep
me here forever, my Lord. Eventually you will have to release
me.â€
“Not until I’m good and ready, your Highness. And
not until I can
see a profit in it.â€
“I do not intend to sit here and wait upon your mercenary
pleasures,
my Lord,†she retorted, silently cursing her temper. Be nice.
“I suggest you rethink your position, your Highness. Right
now, you
can wait on my mercenary pleasures, or you can go back to your husband.
Neither prospect bothers me unduly.â€
Adrina did not answer. She sipped her wine to hide her expression,
afraid that Damin Wolfblade meant exactly what he said. Nice, she said silently. I have to be nice to him.
“I have asked for your protection, my Lord,†she
said with a demure
smile. “Is that too much to ask?â€
“The Kariens are prepared to go to war over the death of an
Envoy,
your Highness. I hate to think what they’ll do over their crown
princess.â€
“But you could protect me,†she suggested with
wide-eyed admiration.
In her experience, there were few men who could resist a woman who
believed in him so ardently.
Damin Wolfblade was apparently one of them.
“Protect you? And while we’re protecting you
from the wrath
of the Kariens, your Highness, who’s going to protect us from
you?â€
CHAPTER 35
Mounted on sorcerer-bred Hythrun horses,
R’shiel
and her companions reached the small village of Lilyvale in time for
dinner on the first day. Joyhinia, Mahina and Affiana rode in a covered
wagon, one Garet suggested they replace with something more auspicious
as they neared the Citadel. Although the wagon slowed them a little,
Joyhinia was incapable of sitting a horse safely, so they sacrificed
speed for the assurance that the First Sister would reach the Citadel
in one piece.
R’shiel rode with Brak for most of the way, letting the
horse set
its own pace as she listened to him explain the dangers of drawing on
her power to bend others to her will. If he was trying to scare her, he
succeeded, but he said nothing to change her mind. There simply
wasn’t
enough time to reach the Citadel and convince the Quorum to accept
Joyhinia’s resignation and Mahina’s appointment any
other way.
Garet Warner rode with them for a time. He had, somewhat reluctantly
R’shiel thought, agreed with her plan, despite Tarja’s
objections. The
discussion regarding this trip to the Citadel, held hastily and
heatedly as the Medalonians prepared for the coming battle, had been
strained. R’shiel was fairly certain that if she had waited
until after
the battle, Jenga and Mahina would have objected, and certainly Tarja,
with Brak’s assistance, would have found any number of ways to
prevent
it. As it was, everyone was so distracted by the knowledge that the
Kariens were on the move that her desperate plan was spared close
scrutiny.
“The gods’ power is the power of all things
natural,†Brak was
saying, sounding just like Korandellan. “It’s at its
most effective
when used to enhance a natural occurrence.â€
“A convenient way of getting around the facts,â€
Garet said.
“The gods are a natural force, Commandant.â€
“So anything can happen, and you blame a god for your
misfortune.
Don’t you people have free will?â€
Brak appeared to be enjoying the conversation with the atheist
Defender. He seemed to forget about R’shiel. “Kalianah
can make two
people fall in love, but not against their will. Dacendaran can
encourage a thief to steal, but he could not easily make a thief of an
honest man.â€
“You truly are adept at seeing miracles in the
mist,†Garet remarked.
R’shiel listened to the men and realised Brak had not
forgotten
about her at all. He was trying to remind her of the dangers of what
she was planning to do. The gods could amplify a yearning or bring
about an event that might occur eventually without their help, but to
use their power to force an unnatural event was akin to swimming
upstream against the river of magic. In doing so, all the slime and
filth that had sunk to the bottom of the river was stirred up and
brought to the surface. That was why she had been nauseous when she
felt the Karien priests working their coercion. She noticed
Garet’s
sceptical expression and turned to him.
“You don’t believe any of this, do you
Commandant?â€
“I believe that you believe every word. I never
cease to be
astonished at the facility of humans to rationalise perfectly natural
events and award them divinity.â€
“You’ve seen demons, yet you refuse to believe in
them,†Brak
pointed out. “Isn’t that your way of rationalising away
something you
don’t understand?â€
“I’ve seen creatures I cannot explain and illusions
that are
masterful, but that is hardly enough to turn me into a pagan. Watch
even a moderately talented illusionist in the markets of the Citadel
and you will be convinced that a woman can be cut in two and then put
together again. Believing a thing doesn’t make it real.â€
“Yet you’re going to help us,â€
R’shiel said. “If you think this is
just trickery, why bother?â€
“My decision is based on logic, not faith, R’shiel.
Medalon is
facing an enemy that the Sisterhood is not in a position to deal with.
I support Lord Jenga because we are more likely to survive with him in
charge than a committee of selfish women grasping for their own
political survival.â€
R’shiel frowned, but Brak seemed more than satisfied with
the
commandant’s answer. “Assuming we succeed, how soon can
the rest of the
Defenders be mobilised?â€
“Fairly quickly,†Garet assured him.
“I’ll get things moving in
anticipation of your success at the Gathering. If you achieve your
goal, I can have the first of them under way in a matter of
hours.â€
“And if we fail?†R’shiel asked.
“Then I will turn those same men on you and claim I
was
simply playing along with you to gain your confidence and learn your
plans,†he replied calmly.
“No wonder Joyhinia always thought you were
dangerous.â€
“Dangerous?†he shrugged. “I doubt that,
R’shiel. But I am a
survivor, and all the heathen trickery in the world cannot alter
that.â€
Garet kicked his horse forward to the head of their small column,
leaving R’shiel to stare after him thoughtfully.
“Now there’s a rare creature,†Brak remarked.
“What do you mean?â€
“I think Garet Warner is the only truly honest human I have
ever
met.â€
It was mid afternoon some days later when
Dacendaran appeared. They were traversing the open plain, on a road
that slowly wound its way south towards Cauthside, and the ferry that
would take them across the Glass River. The day was overcast and
chilly, with the sharp smell of impending rain hanging in the still
air. R’shiel, with Brak and Garet on her heels, had ridden
ahead of the
wagon. The weather was making Wind Dancer nervous and she wanted to
give the mare a chance to stretch her legs.
She found Dace waiting by the side of the road, sitting cross-legged
atop a large grey boulder. He waved as she neared him, his fair hair
tousled, his motley clothing as mismatched and ill-fitting as
R’shiel
had ever seen it.
The God of Thieves had not been much in evidence while
R’shiel was
at Sanctuary. There was little amusement in those peaceful, hallowed
halls for a god who thrived on larceny. Dacendaran preferred the
company of humans. Although she knew he was a god — could sense
it now
that she knew what to look for — she found it hard to think of
him as
anything but the impudent lad who had befriended her in the Grimfield.
She smiled as she reached the boulder, genuinely pleased to see him.
“Dace! What are you doing here?â€
“I came to see how you were faring out in the big wide
world. Hello,
Brakandaran.†Brak reined beside her followed by Garet who
glared at
the boy suspiciously. The wagon and its attendant guards were still
some way back.
“Dacendaran.â€
“Who’s that?†Dace asked, pointing at Garet.
“Commandant Garet Warner, meet Dacendaran, the God of
Thieves,â€
R’shiel said, smiling at Garet’s expression.
“This is one of your gods?â€
Dace clapped his hands delightedly. “He’s an
atheist!â€
“And you shouldn’t be here,†Brak scolded.
“Go away, Dace.â€
“But I want to help! There are noble deeds afoot and I want
to be a
part of them!â€
“If you really want to do something noble, go steal a few of
Xaphista’s believers,†Brak suggested. “You are
not going
anywhere near the Citadel with us.â€
Dace frowned. “Brakandaran, at some point in the past few
centuries,
someone must have mentioned that mortals do not dictate to the
gods. I will go where I please!â€
“Will someone please explain who this child really
is?†Garet
demanded.
“Ah, how I do like a non-believer!â€
“Dace, listen to Brak, please,†R’shiel
pleaded. “Do something to
annoy Xaphista if you must help, but there is nothing you can do
here.â€
The god sighed melodramatically. “I suppose. I’m obviously
not wanted here.â€
“Stop being such a baby,†R’shiel said.
The god grinned. “I make a poor substitute for the God of
Guilt,
don’t I?â€
“The God of what?†Garet asked incredulously.
Even Brak smiled. “Commandant. I suggest you either ignore
this
entire exchange or start believing in the Primal gods.â€
“I think I’ll ignore it,†he said with a
frown. He turned his mount
and rode back toward the wagon.
“Did I upset him?†Dace asked innocently.
“No more than you usually upset people,†Brak said.
“Why did you let
him see you?â€
“All humans should have the opportunity to look upon a god
every now
and then. It’s an honour.â€
“Not when they don’t believe you exist,â€
R’shiel pointed out.
“Well, now that he’s seen me, he’ll have to
believe in me, won’t he?â€
“Don’t count on it,†Brak warned.
“You always look on the dark side of things, Brakandaran. I
was
going to give you some news, but now I’m not so sure.
You’re bound to
think the worst.â€
“What news?â€
“I’m really not certain that I
should . . .â€
“Dace,†R’shiel cut in impatiently.
“Stop teasing. If you have
something important to tell us, then out with it!â€
The god pouted. “You have been spending far too much time
with
Brakandaran, R’shiel. You’re beginning to sound just
like him.â€
“Come on, R’shiel,†Brak said, gathering up
his reins as he glanced
over his shoulder at the approaching wagon. “He obviously has
nothing
important to tell us, and the others will be here any moment. Goodbye,
Divine One.â€
“Xaphista has believers in the Citadel!†the god
blurted out.
R’shiel stared at Dace with concern. “Believers?
Who?â€
“I don’t know,†Dace shrugged. “All
I know is that the Citadel can
feel them and he doesn’t like it one bit!â€
Confused, R’shiel turned to Brak for an explanation.
“What does he
mean? He speaks as though the Citadel is alive.â€
“It is, sort of,†Brak answered before turning to
Dace. “Has
anything happened yet?â€
“No. You know what he’s like. It takes him a century
just to
remember his own name. But he can feel Xaphista’s taint and
he’s not
happy about it.â€
Brak nodded slowly. R’shiel had absolutely no idea what they
were
talking about.
“Brak, has this got something to do with the power in the
Citadel
that Dranymire spoke of?â€
Before he could answer, the wagon creaked to a stop behind them.
Garet rode forward and frowned at Dace.
“I see your god is still with us. Are you two planning to
sit here
in the middle of the road blocking the way, or can we proceed? In case
you hadn’t noticed, it’s going to rain soon.
I’d like to reach Malacky
before then.â€
“These atheists really are an impatient lot, aren’t
they?â€
Dacendaran remarked loftily. With that, he vanished, leaving Garet wide
eyed.
R’shiel looked at Garet and wondered how the commandant
would
explain Dace’s sudden disappearance to himself, but after a
moment’s
stunned silence, he waved his men and the wagon forward as if
absolutely nothing untoward had happened.
PART 3
THE POLITICS OF SEDUCTION
CHAPTER 36
Mikel was separated from the princess and placed
in the custody of the Defenders’ Master of Horse, a small,
slender man
with dark hair and an affection for the creatures in his charge which
bordered on obsession. Captain Hadly had endless patience with his
horses and none at all for defiant Karien boys. When one of Lord
Wolfblade’s Raiders delivered him into Hadly’s care, he
had glanced at
the note Tarja had hastily scribbled then looked disdainfully at Mikel.
“Captain Tenragan says you are to be placed in my care. He
says that
if you try to escape, or give me any bother at all, I am to inform him
immediately. He also says to remind you about your brother. Do you know
what he means?â€
Mikel nodded sullenly. He had hoped Tarja might forget about Jaymes.
“Good, because I’ve no time to waste on infants.
I’ve damned near
two thousand horses here, boy, and now there’s the Fardohnyan
mounts to
take care of. Go find Sergeant Monthay. He’ll find something
useful for
you to do.â€
With little choice in the matter, he did as he was told.
Besides being sick with worry over the princess,
Mikel was desperate to discover his brother’s fate, but there
seemed
little chance here among the horses. The Hythrun mounts were corralled
away from the Medalonian horses — something to do with the
purity of
the Hythrun breed that Mikel didn’t really understand —
so there was no
chance to question anyone about the Karien boy they held prisoner.
Sergeant Monthay set him to distributing hay, an endless task with so
vast a herd. He spent all day lugging haybales from the cart into the
corrals, then running to catch up as Monthay moved the wagon on to the
next enclosure. It was backbreaking work, but it kept him from thinking
too much, and at night he collapsed into the bedroll Monthay had found
for him in the tack tent, asleep almost before his head hit the saddle
he used for a pillow.
On the fourth day of his captivity, the rain cleared and the weather
grew even colder. The sharp smell of snow lingered on the wind and
Hadly fretted at the lack of protection for his horses. He had
commandeered a large force of workers from the followers’ camp
and had
them erecting canvas covered shelters in the corrals in anticipation of
the coming inclement weather.
Mikel shivered as he went about his chores. Monthay was anxious to
finish for the day and get back to the warmth of his tent. It was
almost midday when they reached the corral where the workers were tying
canvas over another sapling framework. The cold sun did nothing to warm
the day. There was a small fire burning just outside the corral, and
several women were doling out hot soup as the workers took a break from
their labour. Monthay glanced at Mikel, ordered him to keep working,
and went to join them.
He lugged another bale from the cart and dragged it along the ground
toward the corral, cursing Medalonians in general, and Monthay in
particular. He muttered a prayer to the Overlord, asking his god to
strike down the men enjoying the hot soup with dysentery. It seemed
only fitting.
“Xaphista’s far too busy to answer, you
know.â€
Mikel looked up and discovered a boy of about fifteen sitting on the
top rail of the corral. He was dressed in an odd collection of clothes
that looked like cast-offs from some bygone era. Mikel was not aware
that he had spoken aloud.
“You should not speak the name of Xaphista. You’re
an unbeliever.â€
“Not at all! I know Xaphista personally! Can’t say
that I speak to
him much myself, mind you, but he does exist.â€
Mikel straightened and stared at the youth, a little surprised to
hear such an admission from an atheist. He supposed the boy was one of
the workers erecting the shelters.
“What do you want?â€
“Nothing.â€
“Then leave me alone.†He grabbed the twine holding
the bale
together and grunted with the effort of dragging it over the rough
ground towards the corral.
“What are you doing?â€
“What does it look like I’m doing?â€
The fair-haired youth laughed. “That bale is near as big as
you are!â€
“Then why don’t you help me?â€
“Ah, now that would mean work. I don’t do
work.â€
Mikel let go of the bale and glared at him. “What do
you do,
then?â€
“I’m a thief.â€
The news did not surprise Mikel. The lad looked dishonest.
“Thievery
is a sin.â€
“Don’t be absurd! Who told you that? Ah! Xaphista
did, I suppose.
Cheeky sod.â€
“You shouldn’t blaspheme! That’s a sin
too!â€
“There is no such thing as sin . . .
what’s your
name?â€
“Mikel.â€
“Well, Mikel, let me put your mind at ease. There is no such
thing
as sin. A thief is not doing something wrong, he is honouring
Dacendaran, the God of Thieves.â€
“There is only one true god!†Mikel insisted.
The boy frowned and jumped off the rail. “You really believe
that,
don’t you? Are all Kariens like you?â€
“Yes! Now go away and leave me alone!†Mikel made to
reach for the
bale, but the youth sat himself down on it and looked at him closely.
“Mikel, the only reason Xaphista invented the concept of sin
was to
stop his believers honouring the other gods.â€
“There are no other gods!â€
“I can see I’m going to have to educate you, young
man.†The youth
sighed heavily, then suddenly brightened. “I know, I shall
become your
new best friend and lead you to the truth about the Primal
gods!â€
“I already know the truth. Xaphista is the Overlord.â€
“Xaphista is a pompous old windbag, actually, and I shall
delight in
stealing you from him.â€
“Come on, boy! We’ll still be here at midnight at
this rate! Get a
move on!â€
Mikel started as Monthay yelled at him. He turned back to the boy
sitting on the bale and was even more startled to discover he was gone.
“Don’t just stand there talking to yourself like a
fool,†Monthay
scolded as he drew near. “Go get some soup, but be quick about
it.â€
Mikel ran towards the fire and the enticing smell of the hot soup,
wondering where the youth had gone so abruptly. Then he remembered his
rash prayer and hoped that the Overlord had not heard his request about
the dysentery.
Mid-afternoon, two Defenders appeared in the
corrals and told Monthay that Captain Tenragan wanted to see the Karien
boy. Monthay muttered a curse and surrendered him reluctantly, glancing
at the hay still to be distributed. The two Defenders took Mikel into
custody and walked him back toward the Keep. They said nothing, even to
each other, leaving Mikel plenty of time to imagine the worst.
When they reached the old keep, they took him into the main hall
where Tarja was waiting near the huge fireplace. Damin Wolfblade was
sitting at the table, stabbing the tabletop with his dagger as if
something vexed him. Captain Almodavar stood near Tarja and next to
him, to Mikel’s astonishment, was his brother.
“Jaymes!â€
Mikel ran the length of the hall, skidding to a halt a few steps
from his brother, taking a quick inventory to check he had all his
fingers. Jaymes grinned and crossed the small distance between them,
hugging his younger brother warmly.
“They told me you were back, but I wanted to see for
myself!â€
“Oh Jaymes! I’ve been so worried about you! Are you
well? Have they
harmed you?â€
“Of course not!†Jaymes laughed.
“I’m the one who’s been worrying
about you! What happened when you went back to Lord Laetho?â€
Mikel glanced at the men and then back at Jaymes. His brother was
taller, as if he had grown from a boy into a young man while in
captivity. He looked well; much too well for a prisoner.
“I’ll tell you
later.â€
“There won’t be a later, lad,†Almodavar
warned. “Jaymes has work to
do.â€
“He’s right. I have to get back. My training keeps
me pretty busy.
But I’ll try to see you now and then, if I can get
away.â€
“Training?â€
“I’m learning to be a soldier.â€
Mikel took a step backwards. “With the Hythrun?â€
“Of course, with the Hythrun.â€
“You’re a traitor?â€
“I warned you,†Damin muttered to no one in
particular, stabbing the
table to punctuate his words.
Jaymes sighed. “It’s not like that,
Mikel . . .â€
“Have you turned from the Overlord, too? Do you worship the
Primal
gods now? How could you?â€
“The Overlord? What do I care about the Overlord! I want to
be a
soldier, Mikel! I can’t ever be a knight in Karien. I’m
a commoner.
Good for nothing but a pikeman. But the Hythrun don’t care
about that.
They judge men by their ability, not who their father is.â€
“Our father is the Duke of Kirkland’s Third
Steward!â€
“Which is worth shit, and you know it!â€
Tears of anger and betrayal clouded Mikel’s vision. He could
not
believe what he was hearing.
“What have you done to him?†he demanded of Tarja,
although the
Medalonian had not had charge of his brother. Tarja had, however, been
responsible for most of his woes these past few months so it seemed
reasonable to blame him for this, too.
“Your brother made his own choice, boy.â€
“You’ve done something to him! Jaymes would never
betray Karien! He
would never renounce the Overlord!â€
“Grow up, Mikel,†Jaymes sighed. “The
Overlord doesn’t care about
the likes of you and me. He’s the God of Lords and Princes. All
he ever
did for us was make us work for them. You believe in his
generosity if you must, but I plan to follow those who can teach me
what I want to learn.†Jaymes turned to the Warlord and bowed.
“May I
be excused, now, my Lord?â€
“You can go.â€
Jaymes glanced at Mikel and shook his head. “I’m
sorry, little
brother . . .â€
Mikel refused to look at him. “I have no brother.â€
“Maybe when you’re older, Mikel, you’ll
understand.â€
He turned his back as Jaymes and the Hythrun captain walked the
length of the hall. When he heard the door shut, he wiped his eyes and
looked up at Tarja.
“Can I go, too?â€
“No, you may not. You’re going to tell us about the
princess.â€
Jaymes’ betrayal was suddenly forgotten. He glared at Tarja,
drawing
himself up to his full height. “If you have harmed one hair on
her
head . . .â€
“Oh for the god’s sake, child, settle down!â€
Damin snapped. “Your
precious princess is fine.â€
“I shall not betray my Lady!â€
“Nobody is asking you to,†Tarja pointed out
reasonably. “We just
want to know how you came to be in her company.â€
“I was appointed her page. By Prince Cratyn himself!â€
“I see. That’s quite a position of trust.â€
“Prince Cratyn trusts me.â€
“He must trust you a great deal, to ask you to escort her
Highness
through Medalon when your nation is at war with us.â€
Mikel was still young enough that flattery, even from a man he
despised, made his heart swell proudly. “Prince Cratyn knew
that I
would not betray him. No spy . . .â€
“Spy?†Damin asked, glancing up from the tabletop.
“What spy?â€
Mikel took a step backwards, frowning warily. “I said
nothing about
a spy.â€
Damin looked at Tarja and shrugged. “Send him back to the
horses,
Tarja. Adrina has already told us everything we want to know. She was
trying to escape to Fardohnya to get away from Cratyn and stop her
father joining in the war.â€
“That’s a lie!†Mikel shouted, horrified
that they would think such
a thing of the noble princess. “You’re making that
up!â€
“Not at all,†Tarja told him. “Adrina told
us everything.â€
“You must have tortured her!â€
“If you call mulled wine and a warm fire torture,â€
Damin said with a
faint smile, “Quite the opportunist, your princess, Mikel. She
changes
sides more often than most people change their clothes.â€
“Princess Adrina is the most noble, pious, beautiful woman
in the
whole world! She’s brave, too!â€
“Brave?†Tarja scoffed. “She was running
away.â€
“She was not! She was going to see her father to get him to
send the
cannon! So that you would all die!â€
Tarja and Damin glanced at each other as Mikel realised what he had
blurted out. He wanted to cry. He wished the cold flagstones would open
up and swallow him whole. First Jaymes had betrayed him.
Now he had betrayed Adrina.
CHAPTER 37
“Who do you believe? The boy or the
princess?â€
Jenga paced the hearth, rubbing his chin thoughtfully. Gray daylight
flooded the hall but the air was crisp, even this close to the fire.
Damin shrugged. “She’s lying. She’s heading
for Talabar to bring her
father’s cannon into the war. She’s not running
away.â€
Tarja nodded his agreement. “I believe the boy is telling
the truth,
but it’s the truth your princess fed him. She could hardly announce
her intention to run away.†He was sitting in front of the
inadequate
blaze, warming the soles of his boots, obviously pleased that the
decision about what to do with Adrina was not his to make.
“Will you stop calling her my princess!â€
Tarja grinned. “We’ll she’s your problem.
And you’re always telling
me how much better you understand the Fardohnyan nobility than us poor
peasants here in Medalon . . .â€
“Very funny.â€
“I was merely trying to point out that —â€
“Enough, Tarja,†Jenga cut in wearily. “Lord
Wolfblade, would it be
fair to say that you really have no idea what she is doing
here?â€
Damin nodded. “That would be fair.â€
“And we’ve had no emissaries from the Kariens
seeking her out.â€
“I’d be surprised if we did,†Tarja said.
“If she’s on the run, the
last place Cratyn would look for her is Medalon.â€
“And if she’s telling the truth, then he needs to
pretend that
nothing is amiss,†Jenga agreed.
“You know, we’d get a lot more out of Her Serene
Highness if she
thought we believed her.â€
“The rack and a red hot poker would do me just as
well,†Damin
muttered. Jenga threw him an annoyed look before turning to Tarja.
“Explain.â€
“Perhaps, if her status was one of honoured guest rather
than
prisoner, she might let something slip.â€
“She won’t let anything slip. She’s too
smart for that.†Damin
glared at Tarja, not liking the direction this conversation was heading.
“Maybe,†Jenga mused. “What are you
suggesting exactly?â€
“Release her. Give her the freedom of the camp. We should
ask for
something to prove her story, of course. Some piece of intelligence we
can easily verify, as a gesture of good will. And we’d have to
put a
guard on her — there’s no telling what she’d
get up to on her own, but
we can claim it’s for her protection. We can’t let her
get her hands on
her jewels, either, but there is no reason why she shouldn’t
think we
believe her.â€
“If we believed her, we’d send her back to
Fardohnya,†Damin pointed
out. “She won’t fall for it.â€
“Oh, yes, she will. Because you, my Lord, are going to start
acting
as if she’s an ally, not your sworn enemy.â€
“The hell I will!â€
“I’m afraid you’ve lost me, Tarja?â€
Jenga said. “How would that
help?â€
Tarja sighed patiently. “As Damin keeps reminding us,
she’s a very
smart girl. But she never got the message from her brother and she
knows nothing of the Hythrun Raiders stationed in Bordertown. If we
release her, at least conditionally, and our Warlord here can keep a
civil tongue in his head, she’ll come to believe we need her
help in
holding back her father’s troops. I’m not saying
she’ll believe us
right away, but if we act as if we think she’s on our side,
even if
she’s lying, she has to play along with it.â€
“So you think she may end up betraying herself, simply to
maintain
the illusion of cooperation?â€
“Relax your vigilance for more than a heartbeat, and
she’ll slip a
knife between your ribs,†Damin warned.
“Ah, but she’s your princess,
remember?†Tarja said with a
grin. “I don’t plan on getting that close.â€
Damin glared at Tarja. “Nice plan, my friend, but in case
you hadn’t
noticed there’s a war going on out there. I have too much to do
to
waste time playing games of intrigue with a Fardohnyan princess. The
Kariens could attack again at any moment.â€
Jenga shook his head confidently. “Not likely.
They’ve still not
recovered from the last battle and it will snow any day.â€
“Besides, your troops seem to get along very nicely without
you,â€
Tarja added, taking far too much pleasure in Damin’s misery.
“Almodavar
coped quite well while you were off consulting your god for nearly a
month.â€
Damin considered that an entirely unfair argument.
“It’s not the
same thing. My men knew I was gone to consult with the gods.
They’re
not likely to be nearly as understanding if they think I’m
neglecting
them for a woman.â€
“I disagree,†Jenga remarked with a rare smile.
“From what I’ve seen
of your men, Damin, they’d give that just as much
credence.â€
Damin chose to ignore that one. “It won’t
work.â€
“Of course it’ll work,†Tarja assured him.
“Just pray to one of your
gods.â€
Damin gave the captain a withering glare. “We don’t
actually have a
god of Bloody Stupid Ideas, Tarja.â€
Damin did not bother knocking. He ordered the
guards to open the door to Adrina’s chamber and marched in
unannounced.
He was a little disappointed to discover Adrina and her slave sitting
on the pallet that served as a bed, apparently engaged in nothing more
sinister than idle chatter, their legs covered by a blanket to ward off
the cold. Adrina still wore the shirt he had given her in his tent, and
someone had given the slave something warmer to wear as well. The women
looked up as he entered.
“Out!†he ordered the slave. She responded to the
authority in his
voice without thinking and scurried from the room, leaving them alone.
Adrina did not move. He was quite impressed with the way she managed to
look down on him, even though she was sitting and he was standing.
“You have the manners of a barbarian.â€
“You seem to bring out the worst in me, your
Highness.â€
Surprisingly, Adrina smiled. “I have a feeling I’ve
not seen
anything closely resembling your worst, Lord Wolfblade. What do you
have there?â€
She pointed at the sack he carried which he placed on the bed beside
her.
“Jenga ordered your things returned to you. He thought you
might be
more comfortable in your own clothes.â€
“That was considerate of him,†she remarked as she
felt around
inside the bag. “However, my jewellery seems to be
missing.â€
“The Lord Defender was concerned about such valuable
property laying
about unguarded. He will keep your jewels for now. For safe keeping, of
course.â€
“Of course,†she echoed sceptically. “Am I
to assume this sudden
desire to see to my welfare means you have come to a decision about
me?â€
“In a manner of speaking. Although I, for one, don’t
believe a word
of your unlikely tale.†It wouldn’t do to completely
change his tune.
She would see through that in an instant. “The Medalonians,
unfortunately, are much more naive. Jenga believes your story and has
ordered that you be treated as an honoured guest from now on.â€
“Then I am to be released?†Damin could detect the
glimmer of hope
in her voice.
“I said they were naive, your Highness, not stupid. The Lord
Defender wants proof. Once he is convinced, then he will endeavour to
have you returned to Fardohnya. In return for an assurance from King
Hablet that he won’t step foot outside his own borders,
naturally.â€
“And if my father refuses such an assurance?â€
“Then you’d best learn to like Medalonian cooking,
your Highness,
because you won’t be going anywhere without it.â€
Adrina thought for a moment, but Damin could not tell what was going
on behind that lovely face. She was like some exotic piece of coral
that grew on the reefs south of Greenharbour — glorious to look
at,
deadly to touch.
“What sort of proof does he require?†she asked
eventually.
“Information. Something he can corroborate from another
source.â€
Adrina nodded. “I’m not certain I know anything of
strategic value,
my Lord, but I will try to think of something.â€
“Just let the guards outside know, when you think of it.
They’ll see
the message gets to the Lord Defender.â€
He gave her a short bow, out of politeness rather than respect, and
turned to leave, a little surprised that he had managed to remain so
calm.
“My Lord?â€
He turned back. “Was there something else?â€
“May I leave this chamber, now that I’m a guest,
as opposed
to a prisoner?â€
“Only under escort, I’m afraid. You are in the
middle of a war camp,
your Highness. The Lord Defender would not wish any harm to come to
you.â€
“You wouldn’t mind a bit, though, would
you?†She met his eye
evenly, her gaze a blatant challenge. Damin almost let his desire to
strangle this woman get the better of him, before he swallowed his
annoyance and forced himself to smile.
“I am also a guest here, Adrina, and I’m compelled
to abide by the
wishes of my hosts. The Lord Defender wishes to see you treated well,
and I will see that you are. But don’t mistake my cooperation
for
weakness. If I can prove you are lying, I will cheerfully slit your
throat myself.â€
If his declaration frightened her, she gave no sign. Her gaze never
wavered; her expression did not change. “I find your honesty a
refreshing change in a Wolfblade, my Lord. Perhaps there is hope for
your family yet.â€
“Unlike the Fardohnyan Royal Family, we Wolfblades strive
for
quality, not quantity.†Damin almost enjoyed her refusal to
cower in
the face of his unveiled threat.
Adrina’s eyes glittered; they were quite a remarkable shade
of
green. “Ah, quality. Is that what you call it? One can only
hope your
striving for quality has been more successful in your case than
it has been in your uncle’s.â€
Damin was far too aware of his uncle’s peculiarities for her
barb to
have much impact, but he admired her courage. You did not trade insults
with a Hythrun Warlord, or impugn the character of the High Prince,
unless you were very, very sure of yourself. Then she unconsciously
touched her hand to the glittering wolf collar, reminding him sharply
of her true nature. His momentary admiration withered and died in an
instant.
“Perhaps, if you live long enough you’ll find out,
your Highness.â€
He turned from her again, unsure how much longer he could keep his
temper.
“I’d like to get out of here. Out of this keep. I
want to go riding.â€
Damin stopped with his hand on the latch. “I’ll see
what I can
arrange.â€
“And I want this collar off.â€
He shrugged. “It will take time, your Highness. I
don’t make a habit
of carrying court collars and their keys to war.â€
“Not even for your own court’esa?â€
“I don’t make a habit of bringing court’esa
to war, either.â€
She smiled maliciously. “I suppose you hardly need them,
with all
these big handsome soldiers around.â€
He was across the room, his hands around her throat, before he
realised what he was doing. The collar was warm to the touch, and
ironically, was the only thing stopping him from squeezing the life out
of her, there and then.
“Don’t push me too far, Adrina! I could kill
you for even
having possession of this collar!â€
“Get . . . your . . .
hands . . . off . . . me!†Her
voice was
fury coated in ice.
He let her go with a shove and strode from the room, shaking with
anger, slamming the door behind him.
Tarja was waiting for him at the bottom of the stairs. “How
did it
go?â€
“Wonderful!†he growled as he walked past without
stopping.
“So you didn’t try to kill her, then?†Tarja
called after him with a
laugh.
“Only once.â€
It took Tarja a few moments to realise he wasn’t joking.
CHAPTER 38
The next time Mikel met Dace, he had a little girl
with him. She was a pretty little thing and looked to be about five or
six. She had bare feet and wore nothing but a flimsy, sleeveless shift,
despite the cold, although she hardly seemed to notice the weather. The
child examined him with a slight frown then looked up at the older boy.
“He’s so sad!â€
“What do you expect?â€
Mikel glared at the pair, annoyed that they spoke as if he
wasn’t
there. “What are you doing here? Have you come to steal
something?â€
Dace grinned. “In a manner of speaking. This is Kali.
She’s my
sister.â€
The little girl smiled up at him. “Do you love me?â€
“I don’t even know you!†Mikel retorted, a
little taken aback by the
odd question.
She sighed. “Oh well, once you get to know me,
you’ll love me then.
Everybody does.â€
Mikel frowned and wondered what sort of home this odd brother and
sister came from, that Dace would proudly claim to be a thief and Kali
would expect everyone to love her on sight. He glanced around,
expecting Monthay to yell at him, but the sergeant was talking to
another Defender and seemed oblivious to the fact that Mikel had
stopped to talk to the children.
Dace noticed the direction of his gaze and grinned.
“Don’t worry
about him.â€
“Easy enough for you to say,†Mikel grumbled.
“Did you want to come and play with us?†Kali asked.
“I can’t. I’m a prisoner.â€
“What did you do?â€
“I didn’t do anything. I’m a prisoner of
war.â€
“But you’re just a little boy!†Kali sounded
quite upset. She turned
to Dace and tugged on his sleeve. “Go and make that man in the
red coat
let him go. For the afternoon at least. Then we can have some
fun.â€
Dace pulled a face at her. “I don’t do that sort of
stuff.â€
She let out an exasperated sigh. “Think of it as stealing
him away, Dace.â€
“Oh, well if you put it like that,†the older boy
said with a grin.
“That’s easy.â€
Almost as soon as he spoke, Monthay suddenly turned to Mikel.
“Hey! Boy! Take the afternoon off. I don’t want to
see you until
dinner time!â€
Startled, Mikel looked at the children with wide eyes. “How
did you
do that?â€
“Magic,†Dace replied. “Come on!â€
The boy began to walk away, his
sister at his side. “What shall we do, Kali?â€
Mikel hesitated for a moment, then ran to catch up.
“I don’t know. Did you want to visit with your
friends?â€
“I have no friends here,†Mikel told her glumly as
he fell into step
beside them.
“What about your brother?†Dace asked.
“Isn’t he with the Hythrun,
or something?â€
“How did you know . . .†he began,
then he remembered
what Jaymes had become and shook his head. “I have no
brother.â€
Kali looked up at him curiously. “Why are you lying?â€
“I’m not lying.â€
“Yes, you are!†she insisted. “We should
have brought Jakerlon,†she
added to her brother.
“Well, if I’d known he was a liar, I would
have,†Dace replied.
“Who is Jakerlon?â€
“The God of Liars,†Kali explained, giving him an
odd look. “He
doesn’t know much, does he?â€
“That’s Xaphista for you,†Dace shrugged.
“He pretends the rest of
us don’t even exist.â€
“What do you know about Xaphista?â€
“We know lots about Xaphista,†Kali announced
stiffly. “We know he’s
a bully.â€
“And arrogant.â€
“And rude! You wouldn’t believe how rude he can
be!â€
“Stop it! You mustn’t say such things! The Overlord
will strike you
down!â€
“Not likely,†Dace laughed. Then he glanced at Mikel
and noticed his
distress. “I’m sorry. You don’t have to get so
upset, you know. He
really isn’t listening to us. He’s got far too many
problems to care
what we’re saying about him.â€
“Serves him right,†Kali said. “If he
wasn’t so busy trying to rule
the world he’d have time to listen to his believers instead of
ignoring
them.â€
Mikel stopped walking, unable to tolerate their blasphemy any
longer. “Stop it! You have no idea what you’re talking
about! The
Overlord loves us. He listens to every prayer!â€
“Ah, but does he answer them?†Dace asked.
“Of course, He does!â€
“Very well, prove it,†Kali said.
“How?
The little girl thought for a moment. “I’ve a better
idea. I’ll
prove he doesn’t listen. Did you pray to the Overlord to watch
over you
during the war?â€
“Yes.â€
“Then what are you doing here?â€
Mikel couldn’t immediately think of an answer to that one.
Kali laughed at his hesitation. “There! What did I tell
you?â€
“The Overlord works in mysterious ways,†he
retorted, falling back
on a favourite saying of the priests. “He has a reason for
everything
He does!â€
“Nonsense!†Dace scoffed. “You’re
here because Xaphista hasn’t the
time to spare for one insignificant little boy. Your brother has the
right of it, although he shows a distinct lack of sense by choosing to
follow Zegarnald. Still, Zeggie never was that discerning — any
soul
who wants to pick up a sword will usually do for him.â€
“Jaymes is now a follower of Zegarnald?†Mikel asked
in horror.
Kali looked at him with narrowed eyes. “I thought you
didn’t have a
brother?â€
“Leave him alone, Kali. Come on, we were going to find
something to
do. Did you want to learn how to be a thief?â€
“No!â€
“Why don’t we pay Tarja a visit?†Kali
suggested. “He’s your friend,
Dace, and he owes me a big favour, although he doesn’t know it
yet.â€
“I hate Tarja,†Mikel muttered. Kali and Dace both
turned to stare
at him.
“But why?†Kali asked. “He’s really
nice. Well, for a non-believer,
at any rate, even though he knows the gods exist. I think he just
hasn’t decided who he should worship yet.â€
“Well, it won’t be you,†Dace said.
“Not when he finds out what you
did.â€
“Oh? And I suppose you think he’ll follow
you? Just because
you met him first?â€
Mikel looked from brother to sister in complete confusion.
“What are
you talking about?â€
They abruptly stopped arguing and smiled at him guilelessly.
“Nothing,†Dace shrugged.
“I know, let’s go visit Adrina!†Kali
suggested brightly. “You like
her don’t you, Mikel?â€
“Of course I like her! She’s the most noble princess
in the whole
world!†The prospect of seeing the princess raised
Mikel’s spirits
considerably, although he could not imagine how these two could arrange
to get anywhere near the closely guarded keep. “And besides,
she’s a
true believer,†he added, just to remind these pagans who had
the most
worthy god.
“Adrina? Believe in the Overlord? What rubbish!â€
Kali laughed
delightedly at the very idea. “She follows Kalianah, the
Goddess of
Love. She used to pray to the Goddess all the time.â€
“Used to,†Mikel pointed out triumphantly.
“Now she prays to
Xaphista.â€
“No,†Kali said with a sorrowful sigh. “I
think she just gave up.
It’s hard to find love when your father is so powerful. I
always meant
to find someone nice for her when she was old enough, but then she
stopped asking. I wonder why?â€
“What do you mean, you were going to find someone
for her?â€
Mikel asked. “The princess is married! She’s in love
with Prince
Cratyn!â€
“Don’t be silly! Of course she’s not in love
with him.â€
“How do you know?â€
Kali pouted. “I just do, that’s all.â€
“Why don’t you just ask her?†Dace said,
pointing towards the
corrals.
Their walk had taken them past the Medalonian corrals and closer to
the enclosures where the beautiful Hythrun horses were mustered. Unlike
the Medalonians, each Hythrun was responsible for his own mount and
every morning the Raiders would come to the corrals to feed their
mounts, groom them and talk to them as if the horses could understand
every word. There were no ramshackle canvas-covered shelters here. The
Hythrun had actually built stables, which were almost completed, on the
other side of the field. Mikel had heard Hadly complaining about the
waste of precious timber, while staring wistfully in the direction of
the sturdy Hythrun stalls.
Mikel followed Dace’s pointing finger and spied Adrina,
mounted on a
Hythrun steed, in the company of the Warlord. Damin Wolfblade was
talking to the foreman in charge of the construction team, and Adrina
sat patiently beside him, waiting for him to finish. She was dressed in
her dark blue riding habit, her long fur cloak draped over her
shoulders. She sat astride her horse, rather than sidesaddle, as was
proper for a lady. She looked remarkably well, and when the Warlord
turned and spoke to her, she nodded and replied with a faint smile. The
foreman bowed to the princess and returned to his duties. Adrina and
Damin wheeled their mounts around and headed south at a canter.
“He’d better not hurt her,†Mikel muttered,
to himself as much as
his companions.
“He won’t,†Kali assured him. “Pity
he’s one of Zeggie’s
favourites . . .â€
“Don’t even think about it Kali,†Dace
warned. “He’d be so mad at
you if you did anything.â€
“I know. But they do make a nice couple.â€
“Kali . . .â€
“Oh, don’t worry Dace, I’m not that
silly.†She turned to Mikel and
smiled brightly. “Your princess seems to be enjoying herself.
You’d
think she’d be a prisoner too, if she believed in the
Overlord.â€
Mikel had been thinking the same thing. He watched the riders as
they dwindled into the distance, saw them pick up the pace until they
were galloping across the plain. The faint sound of Adrina’s
laughter
lingered on the breeze. His heart constricted as he watched her. She
was his princess. She was married to Prince Cratyn. She
shouldn’t be
out riding alone with a man like Damin Wolfblade.
And she damned well shouldn’t act like she was enjoying it,
either.
Her plans for Tarja having met an unexpected
hitch, Adrina turned her attention, somewhat reluctantly, to Damin
Wolfblade. The more she saw of him, the more she realised she had
misjudged him badly, a fact she found worrying.
He was not a younger version of his uncle. Nor was he a spoilt,
figurehead Warlord. He was intelligent, surprisingly well educated, far
too astute for her liking, and obviously enjoyed the respect of his men
and the Defenders in equal measure. Not a man to underestimate. She
needed to learn as much as she could about the Hythrun prince. She
needed to discover what he liked, what he loathed, whom he admired and
whom he despised, and, more importantly, why he was angry with her.
That she had done something to enrage him was obvious. The day he
came to her room to announce she was to be given the freedom of the
camp, he had come close to killing her. Her snide remarks had not been
enough to provoke such a reaction. She had seen enough of him since
that day to know that he was generally even-tempered, at least around
everybody else. But nothing she had done since her capture warranted
the anger she felt simmering in him, even when he was making an effort
to be civil. It puzzled her. Until she discovered its source, she had
no hope of escaping this place.
They rode far south of the camp, toward a distant line of trees. She
wondered what would happen if she turned her horse and tried to make a
break for it, then glanced at Damin. He would run her down in a
heartbeat and the fragile trust she had fostered among her captors
would be destroyed. She sighed and let her mare follow Damin’s
stallion.
They slowed to a walk as they entered the small copse of thin
poplars. There were stumps littered about, the crude result of the
Defenders’ need for shelter for their horses. The thick carpet
of
fallen leaves muffled their horses’ hooves and the sound of
running
water was the only thing that disturbed the silence. Adrina rode up
beside Damin, assuming an air of nonchalance. It was time to start
working out what made this man who he was, and she was never going to
do that arguing with him. Be nice, she reminded herself.
“It must be hard for you, being Lernen’s
Heir.â€
He shrugged. “It can be a little trying.â€
“You’re not much like him.â€
He turned and looked at her. “Gods! Was that a
compliment?â€
She smiled. “Actually, I think it was. I must be
slipping.â€
Damin laughed. The first genuine laugh she had heard from him since
their embarrassing conversation about Tarja. “Don’t
worry Adrina, we’re
alone. I won’t tell if you don’t.â€
His laugh was infectious. She began to understand what others saw in
him. He was very hard to dislike in this mood. It made him doubly
dangerous.
“Do you miss your family? So far from home?â€
“Sometimes,†he admitted, which surprised her a
little. “Medalon can
be . . . trying at times, too.â€
“I miss my family.†Perhaps empathy would work where
sarcasm had
failed.
“From what I hear, there’s quite a lot of them to
miss.â€
“My father is prolific, if nothing else. Do you have
brothers and
sisters?â€
“In abundance. Although not quite as many as you can claim.
You met
my half-sister in Greenharbour, I believe.â€
“Did I?â€
“She’s the High Arrion.â€
“Kalan is your sister?†She wondered why that nosy
little toad,
Lecter Turon, had never mentioned that the leader of the powerful
Hythrun Sorcerers’ Collective was the High Prince’s
niece. “I didn’t
know.â€
“She’s a couple of years younger than me. My father
was killed in a
border raid when I was only a year old, and my mother remarried with
something close to indecent haste. Even more indecent when you count
the months from the wedding date until Kalan’s and
Narvell’s arrival,â€
he added with a grin.
“Narvell?â€
“Kalan and Narvell are twins.â€
“You mean your mother had a lover while she was married to
your
father?†The idea did not shock her — many noblewomen
took lovers — but
she was a little surprised that Damin seemed so complacent.
“She probably had several. It was an arranged marriage
— Lernen’s
idea — and there was little affection between them.â€
“My father made an offer for the Princess Marla
once.â€
“I know. I think that’s why he married her to my
father, just to
annoy Hablet.â€
“My father still hasn’t forgiven Lernen for
that,†Adrina remarked.
“And you wonder why I don’t trust you?â€
She was sorry she ever brought the subject up. Now was not the time
to remind Damin of the conflict between their monarchs. She ignored the
remark and smiled brightly. “You were telling me about your
sister.â€
Damin looked at her oddly for a moment then continued his tale.
“Kalan’s father was the Warlord of Elasapine’s
son. He and mother
returned to Elasapine after they married, leaving Kalan, Narvell and me
in Krakandar. He died a couple of years later. But Marla kept finding
husbands — and losing them. Every few years she would breeze
in,
introduce us to our latest stepbrother or stepsister, then vanish again
for years at a time. I think Almodavar raised us more than Marla
did.â€
“That’s dreadful!â€
“On the contrary, I had a wonderful childhood. We had a
whole palace
to play in, no parents to interfere and a staff that we chose ourselves
for the most part.â€
“You chose the staff? The children?â€
“It was more a process of elimination,†he laughed.
“If we didn’t
like somebody we had ways of getting rid of them. Half a dozen children
can be very inventive when the need arises.â€
With a twinge of envy, Adrina recalled her own closely guarded
childhood in the nursery of Hablet’s court in Talabar. Such
freedom was
almost beyond her ability to comprehend.
“Did your mother not fear for you? Alone like that?â€
“We weren’t alone. Almodavar was my father’s
closest friend and some
of the people in Krakandar have been there since my
grandfather’s time.â€
“You’re lucky. At least you knew your mother. Hablet
had my mother
beheaded.â€
It was Damin’s turn to look startled. “Why?â€
“My mother was his first wife; a princess from Lanipoor,
from a very
ancient and noble line. He never loved her — he only married
her for
the prestige she brought him — and her very large dowry. He
loved a court’esa,
a Hythrun actually, named Welenara. She and my mother fell pregnant
within days of each other. It was bad enough that my mother had to
endure Welenara so blatantly carrying Hablet’s child, but then,
to add
insult to injury, it was Welenara who produced a son, while the best my
mother could do was a daughter. She was rather put out, by all
accounts. When Tristan was only a week old, she hired an assassin to
poison him and his mother. The assassin failed, my father learnt of the
attempt and had her beheaded.†Adrina shut her mouth abruptly,
stunned
that she had told him so much. She was supposed to be trying to draw
him out, not regale him with her life story. She never
discussed her mother with anyone. It was a forbidden subject around
Hablet.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t know.â€
“Pity is the last thing I need from you, my Lord.â€
Her sudden change of mood had him shaking his head, but he said
nothing. He rode on a little further and then dismounted beside a
leaf-strewn pool. There was steam rising off the still water and the
air tasted faintly of sulphur. Adrina dismounted beside him and looked
around in surprise.
“The water’s hot!â€
“Almost too hot to swim in,†he agreed.
“It’s a thermal spring. The
timber cutters discovered it. I hear Lord Jenga has already had an
approach from some enterprising soul who wants to build a tavern here.
For medicinal purposes, of course.â€
“Of course,†Adrina agreed. She knelt down, peeled
off her riding
glove and dipped her hand into the pool, snatching it out quickly as
the water seared her cold fingers.
“Your brother Tristan was killed in battle, wasn’t
he?†Damin asked
behind her.
Adrina stilled warily. How had he known that?
“Yes.â€
“And that’s the reason you ran away?â€
She stood up and turned to face him. “One of them.â€
“I see,†he said thoughtfully. He was standing by
his horse, a good
five paces from her, but she still felt as if he was crowding her.
“So
the Karien boy was lying. You weren’t trying to sneak through
Medalon
to ask your father for his cannon.â€
Mikel was lucky he was nowhere in reach at that moment. Adrina could
have cheerfully strangled the little brat. “He’s a
child. I told him
that to keep him quiet. He would have run straight to Cratyn if he
thought I was leaving for any other reason.â€
Damin gathered up his reins and swung into his saddle.
“I’m curious.
Why did you order your troops to surrender?â€
“Cratyn would have executed them when he discovered
I’d left. I
couldn’t think of anything else.â€
He nodded, as if she had confirmed something he already knew.
“A
noble gesture, your Highness. Not something I would have expected from
someone like you.â€
Adrina remounted, glaring at him. “What’s that
supposed to mean?â€
But he didn’t answer her. He nudged his horse forward
leaving her to
ponder his words. She had a feeling that if she could figure out what
he meant, she would understand the reason he despised her so much.
Still, she had made progress. It was the first conversation of
substance they had ever had that hadn’t ended with him
threatening to
send her back to Karien. Or to kill her.
CHAPTER 40
Adrina woke with a start, aware that something was
different, although she could not pinpoint exactly what it was. She was
sweating, her palms moist, her heart pounding. She had dreamt again,
the same nightmare that had plagued her since she had left Karien
—
that Cratyn had found her, dragged her back across the border and
forced her to dine with him on a meal that frequently turned out to be
her dead dog. With a shudder, she pushed the memory away. It was a
stupid dream. She refused to be cowed by an over-active imagination.
The chamber was filled with grey light — and silence. It
reminded
her of waking in the Karien camp the morning of the battle. The air had
that same eerie quality, the same stillness, the same feeling of
anticipation. Cautiously, she climbed out of bed. Shivering in the icy
chamber, Adrina snatched up her cloak from the bed where it served as
an extra blanket and threw it over her shoulders. She walked to the
arrow-slit window and looked out, but as far as she could make out, the
world had turned white. It took her a moment to realise what she was
seeing.
When it hit her, she gasped, and hurriedly dressed in her riding
habit, ignoring Tam’s sleepy question from the other pallet in
the
corner of the room. She pulled on her boots and was out the door,
startling the guards with her sudden appearance. Running past them,
down the stairs and through the deserted hall, she jerked open the
heavy door to the Keep and stepped out into a wonderland.
There were a number of mounted Defenders in the yard and the men on
the wall-walk stamped their feet against the cold, but Adrina took no
notice of them. She hurried to the gate and looked out over the
snow-covered camp in astonishment. The landscape had completely
changed. Where there had been the panoply of war yesterday was now a
silent, white vista as far as the eye could see. It was barely dawn and
the soldiers were only just beginning to rouse. Thin smoke rose from
the cookfires. The vast plain had been transformed from a war camp into
a thing of beauty.
“You’ve not seen snow before, have you?â€
Adrina turned at the voice to find Tarja riding up behind her with a
sergeant and a number of troopers in tow. He dismounted, amused by the
expression on her face.
“It’s . . . glorious!â€
“Well, it is for now. Give it a few hours and most of this
will have
turned into slush,†he warned with a wave of his arm.
“It’s too warm
for it to last long and too early in the year for a decent
fall.â€
“Oh,†she said in disappointment.
Tarja seemed to take pity on her. “Would you like to take a
good
look while it’s still in all it’s pristine
glory?â€
“Don’t you have something better to do?â€
“I’ve got plenty to do, but nothing that
can’t wait. Besides, It’s
Founder’s Day. It’s supposed to be a holiday.â€
The red-coated Defender
hurried forward. “Sergeant! Her Highness would like to borrow
your
horse. Tell Hadly I’ve been delayed then go find some
breakfast. I’ll
be back in an hour or so.â€
The man saluted and retrieved his mount for Adrina, holding it for
her while she mounted. Tarja swung into his saddle and walked his horse
forward.
“Ready?â€
“This is very noble of you, Captain.â€
They moved off at a slow walk, letting the horses pick their own way
through the camp.
“Being noble is vastly preferable to discussing the riveting
topic
of horse feed with Hadly, your Highness.â€
She smiled at him, wondering if Damin had lied to her about Tarja.
He seemed anxious for her company. Maybe he was feeling the loss of the
absent demon child. A lonely man was a vulnerable one.
“Well, I still think you’re being noble, Captain.
You have rare good
manners.â€
“For a Medalonian?†he teased.
“That wasn’t what I meant. I just meant that
compared to some people
around here . . .â€
Tarja laughed. “Ah! You speak of our Warlord. I thought you
two were
starting to get along quite well.â€
Adrina frowned and reminded herself that this man was
Damin’s
friend. It would be inadvisable to tell him what she really thought of
the Hythrun.
“Lord Wolfblade can be tolerable, when he’s not
trying to be
abrasive.â€
He looked at her oddly. “Well, you can’t really
blame him, can you?
Not after what you did.â€
“What did I do?â€
He refused to answer her question. Instead, he kicked his horse into
a canter.
“Captain!†she called as she raced after him.
“I believe that
statement demands an explanation!â€
“The sun will be fully up soon,†he remarked as she
caught up with
him, admiring the scenery with determination. “Most of the snow
will be
melted by midday.†They had ridden past the northern edge of
the camp
and crossed into the deserted training grounds.
“Don’t ignore my question! What did you mean by,
‘not after what I
did’?â€
He glanced at her and shrugged. “I’m sorry, I
shouldn’t have said
that. It’s none of my business. You and Damin should sort out
things
between yourselves.â€
“I’d be happy to,†she snapped. “If
I had any idea what you were
talking about!â€
“You really don’t know?â€
“I wouldn’t be asking if I did!â€
Tarja reined in his mount and turned to face her. “He claims
you
tried to kill the High Prince of Hythria.â€
“That’s ridiculous!â€
Tarja shrugged. “I’m just telling you what he told
me. He said you
hired some boys to do the job, but they killed themselves rather than
carry out your orders.â€
Adrina felt her fury rising like a volcano. All her plans to be nice
evaporated in the face of such a terrible accusation. “That
arrogant,
lying . . .â€
“I take it you have a somewhat different opinion?â€
“How dare that . . .
that . . .
degenerate . . . even think such a thing! Let me tell
you about your pet Warlord, Captain! He’s a savage, unfeeling
monster
who doesn’t deserve to breathe! I never tried to kill his
damned uncle,
although I wish I had! I gave those boys my knife to spare them from
the twisted lust of a depraved old man.â€
Tarja was taken aback by her fury, but seemed determined to believe
his friend’s version rather than hers. “Yet you kept
the collars as a
souvenir. Why?â€
“To remind myself why his whole damned family should be
destroyed!â€
He frowned, then suddenly wheeled his horse around. “Come
on,
there’s something I want to show you.â€
He led her north toward the battlefield. Adrina urged her horse to
follow, wishing for a sorcerer-bred mount, rather than this sturdy, but
uninspiring beast. She no longer felt the cold. Her anger warmed her
better than any cloak, better than any fire. As they neared the
snow-covered mangonels, he veered right, away from the field. The
soldiers manning the front paid them little attention as they rode by,
their attention focused on what lay north of the border. This was the
closest she had come to the border since escaping from Karien and she
allowed herself a moment to wonder what Cratyn was doing. He and that
damned Hythrun would have made quite a pair.
Tarja led her east, away from the field until they reached a low
stone wall that encircled a large snow covered mound. Adrina looked
about in puzzlement.
“You brought me here to show me this?â€
“It’s a grave.â€
“Whose grave?â€
“Your Fardohnyans. The men who died on the
battlefield.â€
Adrina swallowed an uncomfortable lump in her throat. It was so big.
Had there been so many? She wiped away bitter tears that suddenly
stung her eyes.
“I thought Medalonians cremated their dead?â€
“We do. Burial is illegal in Medalon but Damin refused to
allow the
Fardohnyans to be cremated. He had his own men dig the grave. He buried
them with their weapons, to honour your War God. Your captain was
buried separately because he was of royal blood.â€
“Tristan! Where? Where did they bury him?â€
Tarja pointed to a small rock cairn on the southern side of the
mound. Adrina flew from the saddle and ran to it, no longer caring if
Tarja saw her crying. Tristan! Oh, Tristan!
Tarja dismounted and followed her slowly, leading her mount with
his. He waited patiently as she knelt by the cairn, not caring that her
knees were being soaked by the snow, her face in her hands, as she let
go of the grief she had so tightly controlled until now. She sobbed
until her throat was raw. She sobbed until she had no more tears to
shed.
Finally, she had no idea how long, she sat back on her heels and
wiped her eyes, the scabbed over wound of her grief lanced and washed
clean by her tears. It was then that she noticed the position of the
cairn in relation to the mound. It was facing southwest. Toward
Fardohnya.
“They buried him facing home.â€
“That’s your savage, unfeeling monster for
you.â€
She turned and looked at him sharply. “Don’t try to
tell me this
proves anything! Cratyn is the most devout man that ever lived, but it
doesn’t stop him from being a bastard!†She sniffed
inelegantly and
climbed to her feet. “I’ll grant you I’m
surprised, but it hardly makes
Wolfblade a saint.â€
“Perhaps not,†he conceded. “But I think you
do him an injustice.â€
“I’m the one falsely accused of attempted
murder.â€
“Then take it up with Damin, your Highness,†Tarja
said wearily. “We
should be getting back. Hadly’s waiting for me.â€
He handed her the reins of her borrowed horse before swinging into
his own saddle. Adrina stared at the mound for a moment, marking the
place in her memory, before mounting the dun gelding.
“How did my brother die?â€
Tarja hesitated for a moment before he answered. “He died in
battle,
your Highness. Isn’t that all you need to know?â€
“I want to know who killed him.â€
“To what purpose?â€
Tarja’s reluctance to give her a straight answer made her
suspicious. “It was Wolfblade, wasn’t it?
That’s why you’re looking so
uncomfortable. Damin Wolfblade killed my brother then buried him here
as some sort of barbaric boast, so he could come and gloat over his
grave.â€
“No,†Tarja replied, looking even more discomforted.
“Damin didn’t
kill your brother.â€
“How can you be certain?†she demanded. “You
said yourself, he died
in battle. How do you know this burial mound isn’t some sick
Hythrun
ritual to mock the dead? How do you —â€
“He died by my hand, Adrina.â€
His admission stunned her into silence. He met her accusing eyes
with genuine regret.
“I’m sorry, Adrina. But this is war and he was
trying to kill me at the time. If it’s any comfort, his last
thoughts
were of you.â€
Tarja gathered up his reins and turned his mount toward the camp.
She stared at his retreating back wishing she could somehow take
vengeance on this man who had robbed her of her beloved brother. But
she had not expected this. Not his confession, nor the pain it had cost
him to make it. Confused and troubled, Adrina followed Tarja back to
the camp in silence, not even seeing the glorious snow-covered plain.
When they reached Treason Keep Tarja helped her dismount without a
word and turned to lead her horse away.
“Tarja?â€
He looked at her over his shoulder.
“Why did you tell me? Why not let me think someone else had
killed
him?â€
“A Defender is honour-bound to speak the truth, your
Highness.â€
“You could have said nothing.â€
“I could have,†he agreed. “But you are
determined to think the
worst of Lord Wolfblade. We could have sued for peace weeks ago. Were
it up to me or the Lord Defender, you would have been ransomed back to
your husband the day we found you. Damin is the only thing standing
between you and the husband you seem so determined to desert. It
didn’t
seem right to let you blame him for that too.â€
Tarja led the horses away and left her standing there. She wondered
for a moment why she felt no burning urge to avenge Tristan. The man
who killed him was right here, within reach.
Then the reason came to her. It was not Tarja who was responsible
for Tristan’s death. He may have wielded the blade, but it was
Cratyn
who had killed him. Cratyn and his sick priests.
Cratyn was the one who would pay.
CHAPTER 41
The news that the First Sister was on her way home
caused a flurry of activity in the Citadel. Everyone seemed intent on
sprucing up their own little patch of the city and even the Defenders
were not immune. Loclon found himself facing an empty arena day after
day, as the cadets were called away to other duties. Learning
swordcraft was all very well, but the First Sister was due and she was
bound to insist on an inspection. One had to get one’s
priorities right.
Left to his own devices, Loclon sought amusement in the Blue Bull,
but even that worthy establishment was suffering the effects of the
First Sister’s impending return. There was nobody drinking in
the
tavern and the benches were stacked on the tabletops as fresh rushes
were laid out. Loclon slammed the door in annoyance and headed back to
his rooms.
When he arrived back at Mistress Longreaves’ Boarding House
he
discovered a note pinned to his door. He looked around before opening
it, but at this time of day, the hall was deserted. I want to see
you, the note said. It was unsigned, but he needed no name to know
who had sent it. He went into his room, threw the note on the fire, and
exchanged his red jacket for a nondescript brown one. It would not do
to be seen entering Mistress Heaner’s in broad daylight in his
uniform.
Lork opened the door for him and stood back to let him enter. He
pointed wordlessly to the hall. Loclon frowned. He did not like meeting
Mistress Heaner in the basement; did not like to be reminded that he
was serving the Overlord.
When he reached the bottom of the stairs, he discovered Mistress
Heaner was not alone. The narrow altar was ablaze, the symbol of
Xaphista glittering malignantly in the candlelight. The old woman was
on her knees, chanting softly. Beside her was a man wearing a brown
cassock, his tonsured head so polished it reflected the candles. How
in the name of the Founders had a Karien priest managed to get into the
city? He waited as they finished their prayers and the priest
helped the old woman to her feet before retrieving his jewelled staff
from the altar. Mistress Heaner studied him with predatory eyes and
turned to her companion.
“This is the man I spoke of. Captain Loclon, this is
Garanus.â€
Loclon nodded warily in the direction of the priest, then looked at
Mistress Heaner. “You said you wanted to see me. I can come
back later
when you’re not busy.â€
“It was I who sent for you,†the priest said. His
voice was accented
and oddly rasping, as if his throat had been burned. He laid the staff
gently on Loclon’s shoulder, waiting for a moment before
withdrawing it
with a faint nod of satisfaction. “Mistress Heaner tells me you
have
something of a history with the demon child.â€
At the mention of R’shiel, Loclon’s doubts vanished.
“Do you know
where she is?â€
The priest nodded. “She will be here within a day. She
accompanies
the First Sister.â€
Loclon burned with the heat of his need. “Then I will kill
her as
soon as she arrives.†Kill her, yes, but slowly and oh-
so-painfully — and only after she begs for mercy.
“You will do no such thing!†the priest snapped.
“Isn’t she destined to destroy your god? I’d
have thought killing
her would be the first thing you’d want.â€
“She was created to destroy him, Captain.
That’s not the
same thing as destiny. The demon child lacks commitment. She has not
accepted the task, or she would be heading for Karien, not the
Citadel.â€
“So . . . what . . . you think
you can
turn her to your cause?â€
“Xaphista is the one true god,†Mistress Heaner
reminded him. “The
demon child will become his ally and destroy the Primal gods. He has
decreed that it will be so.â€
Loclon thought it unwise to point out the flaw in her argument. If
Xaphista really was the only god, then who had created the demon child?
And if the Primal gods did not exist, as the Overlord claimed, what
need for someone to destroy them?
“Your task will be to bring her to us,†Garanus
explained. Then he
added with a slight frown, “Whole and unharmed,
Captain.â€
“I was promised vengeance.â€
“And vengeance you shall have,†the priest assured
him. “Once the
demon child has embraced the Overlord, she will turn on our enemies,
and yours, and destroy them.â€
That wasn’t quite what Loclon had in mind. “What did
you want me to
do?â€
“You will be taking part in the Founder’s Day
Parade, yes?â€
He nodded. Nobody got out of that duty.
“The First Sister will arrive towards the end of the parade.
She has
no doubt timed the event to maximise the impact of her return.â€
“The First Sister is fond of making an entrance,â€
Mistress Heaner
added scornfully.
“You will assign yourself to her party and stay close to
her.â€
“Assign myself? You don’t know much about the
Defenders, Priest. One
doesn’t assign oneself to anything.â€
“If you are nearby when she arrives, and volunteer for the
duty, I
am sure you can manage something.â€
“And what about R’shiel?â€
“It is likely you will not recognise her. She may be using a
glamour
to conceal her identity. But that is not your concern. There is a man
with her. A Harshini half-breed named Brakandaran. You must kill
him.â€
He shrugged. “And then what?â€
“Once you have brought proof that Brakandaran is dead, we
will
discuss the best way to handle R’shiel.â€
Loclon was not very happy with the arrangement. “Are you
sure you
know who you’re dealing with? There is no best way to
handle
R’shiel. She’s a murderous bitch.â€
“The demon child can be controlled, Captain. Her strength is
also
her weakness.†He reached inside his cassock and withdrew a
thin silver
choker with a jewelled clasp in the shape of the star and lightning
bolt of the Overlord. “This will ensure her
cooperation.â€
“You think she’s going to change sides for that
little trinket?†he
scoffed.
“With this ‘little trinket’, as you call
it,†the priest informed
him with a malicious smile, “the demon child will do anything
you want
of her. The more she tries to use her power to fight it, the worse it
will be for her.â€
Loclon took the choker and examined it thoughtfully.
“She’ll do anything, you say?â€
The priest nodded. “Anything.â€
Founder’s Day dawned overcast and dull,
with low
clouds threatening rain and a cold, blustery wind that groped through
any gap in clothing with chill fingers. The crowd was thick around
Francil’s Hall as the citizens gathered for a glimpse of the
returning
First Sister, but their mood was subdued. It was too cold to stand
around waiting and as the parade passed by; many thoughts were turned
to the bonfires and the warm food waiting in the Amphitheatre. If she
did not arrive soon, hunger was likely to win out over curiosity.
Loclon had volunteered for crowd duty, rather than riding in the
parade. He had managed to get himself placed in command of the guards
around the Hall and was well positioned on the steps, just below Sister
Harith and the remainder of the Quorum. Thunder rumbled overhead and
the clouds seemed low enough to touch. Loclon fretted at the time it
was taking the noisy floats to move down the street. There was no sign
of the First Sister.
The last float was rounding the corner of the Administration Hall
when the skies opened. The Quorum hurriedly moved back under the
shelter of the entrance to the Hall while the crowd dived for whatever
cover they could find. Many simply turned and fled, running with cloaks
held over their heads to escape the downpour. Loclon stayed at his
post, drenched by the icy rain, barely even noticing it in his
impatience. Where is she?
There was a moment of anticipation as the crowd waited, but the rain
was a significant deterrent. If the First Sister’s carriage did
not
arrive soon, there would be nobody left to greet her. Loclon watched
the crowd thin with dismay. He had hoped to get to the half-breed in
the crush, but soon there would be nobody left but him. He glanced at
his men who looked desperate to find shelter, warning them with a look,
of the consequences should anybody presume to break ranks. Sister
Harith and the Quorum were conferring under the meagre eaves of the
Hall. With another glance down the street in the direction of the Main
Gate, they vanished inside.
The departure of the Quorum signalled the end of the festivities as
far as the rest of the citizens were concerned. Within minutes the
street was all but deserted and Loclon no longer had an excuse to keep
his men standing in the rain. He muttered a curse and turned to dismiss
them as the First Sister’s retinue arrived.
His men hastily stood to attention as the outriders appeared,
followed by a closed carriage with the shutters pulled tight against
the downpour. Loclon could feel his heart beating faster as the
carriage drew to a halt, waiting to catch sight of her. His hand
caressed the hilt of his knife, ready to draw it in an instant to kill
the half-breed. He had no fear of the consequences. Once a dead
Harshini lay at the First Sister’s feet, he would be a hero.
“Loclon! What in the name of the Founders are you doing out
in this!
Get those men out of here!â€
He started at the anger in Garet Warner’s voice.
“We were waiting for the First Sister, sir! To see if we
could be of
any assistance!â€
The commandant was as sodden as Loclon as he dismounted, but he
didn’t seem bothered by it. “Don’t be absurd!
The First Sister has her
own men. Dismiss your men, Captain.â€
“But sir . . .â€
“I said, dismiss your men!â€
Loclon did as he was ordered and watched helplessly as
Joyhinia’s
guard gathered around the carriage to help the First Sister down. One
of them held a cloak over her head, to shield her from the rain as
another sister disembarked. Although the deluge obscured his vision,
Loclon could have sworn it was Mahina Cortanen. He waited for a moment
longer, but a dark-haired woman and Lord Draco seemed to be the only
other passengers.
He looked about desperately, but there was no sign of
R’shiel, or
the half-breed he was supposed to kill. The First Sister was hurried
inside and the remainder of the Defenders headed gratefully for the
stables with the carriage and the horses.
Loclon stood in the rain, cursing softly. Where is she?
CHAPTER 42
Brak and R’shiel waited in the shelter of
the
gatehouse for the better part of an hour before following the First
Sister into the Citadel. Brak had drawn a glamour over them and their
horses, so that the guards sheltering from the rain did not notice
their presence. It did not make them invisible, but the
guards’attention slid off them like water off an oiled cape.
R’shiel
braided and unbraided her reins nervously as the rain hammered down and
they waited on Bhren, the God of Storms, to finish the task
R’shiel had
asked of him.
Brak had never had much luck communicating with the Storm God. Bhren
was a solitary spirit with cares on a global scale. The insignificant
problems of humans seldom touched him. But he had come when Lorandranek
had called him and had responded just as promptly when his daughter had
asked his help. Brak glanced at the water sheeting down from the low
clouds, then looked at R’shiel with concern.
“You did tell him we just wanted a storm, didn’t
you, not a global
catastrophe?â€
“It’ll stop soon,†she assured him, although
she did not sound
convinced.
The rain had been Lord Draco’s idea, conceived five nights
ago in
Cauthside while they waited on the ferry to take them across the Glass
River. Their method of gaining entrance into the Citadel, without
Joyhinia being immediately overwhelmed by the long list of people who
required an audience with her, had been a matter for hot debate.
Garet Warner insisted that if Joyhinia was thought to be sneaking
back into the Citadel, suspicions would be immediately aroused. She had
to enter in a manner befitting her station. It was expected. But they
could not risk someone speaking to Joyhinia. Her response was likely to
be a childish giggle. And they certainly could not risk her in front of
a crowd.
R’shiel had wanted to use the demon meld, but even Dranymire
had
baulked at that suggestion. The demons had been practising their meld,
but it took a lot out of them and the Gathering was still to be faced.
Brak had suggested a glamour, but that did not solve the problem of
Joyhinia being seen publicly. A glamour would conceal her and that
brought them back to the problem of sneaking into the Citadel.
It was Draco who had remarked that it was a pity they
couldn’t
arrange for it to be raining. No matter how important the personage,
nobody would hang about, cold and wet, for a glimpse of the First
Sister — and neither would they expect the First Sister to
stand about
waving to them. R’shiel had glanced at Brak with that dangerous
light
her in eyes that he was coming to associate with the demon child having
an idea he knew he wouldn’t like.
“You could ask Bhren.â€
“The Storm God is not like Dacendaran, R’shiel. He
spends little
time worrying about the Harshini, and even less time thinking about
humans. The only Harshini I knew who could get any sense out of him was
Lorandranek.†He regretted saying it the moment he uttered the
words.
“Maybe I could ask him?â€
“Ask who, what?†Garet demanded.
“Ask the God of Storms to make it rain the day we arrive at
the
Citadel.â€
Garet stared at her for a moment then shook his head. “I
don’t want
to know about this.†He rose from the table in the Heart and
Hearth
tavern and took the stairs to his room two at a time.
Draco watched him go and then turned back to Brak and
R’shiel. “He
is uncomfortable with your gods.â€
“And you’re not?†R’shiel shot back.
She did not like Draco. Tarja’s
father had been Joyhinia’s creature for thirty years. He had
ordered
the murder of R’shiel’s family and the village where
she was born, and
he had been quite prepared to put his own son, R’shiel, and
three
hundred rebels to the sword at Joyhinia’s command. But the man
reeked
of regret. In many ways he was like Lord Jenga — honourable to
the
point of foolishness. One mistake had set him on a path so far from his
original destination that he was almost completely lost. The man was
trying to claw his way back, to somehow make amends, but neither Tarja
nor R’shiel was ready to forgive him. Brak trusted him more
than Garet
Warner. Garet had his own agenda. All Draco wanted was redemption.
“I’ve seen enough to believe your gods exist,
R’shiel, although I do
not worship them.â€
“You’re more adept at turning on your own kind, you
mean,†R’shiel
snarled. Brak laid a restraining hand on her arm.
“Stop trying to pick a fight, R’shiel.â€
Surprisingly, she did as he asked. Deliberately excluding Draco she
turned to him questioningly. “How do I speak to Bhren?â€
“Very carefully,†Brak had replied, only half
jokingly.
“See, I told you it would stop!â€
Brak forced his attention back to the present to discover the rain
had eased to a light drizzle. “Thank you, Divine One,â€
he said under
his breath, although it was unlikely that Bhren was listening.
“We should get moving,†R’shiel advised,
glancing warily at the
guards. Brak nodded and followed her into the street, still holding the
glamour tightly around them.
It was nearly two hundred years since Brak had been in the Citadel,
and the changes wrought in that time depressed him. Once this had been
his home, before the Sisterhood had snatched it from the Harshini. As a
child, he had played with demons among the vast gardens that were now
replaced by cluttered housing. He had gone exploring in the ancient
woods surrounding the Citadel that had long been cleared to meet the
voracious human appetite for firewood and lumber. Humans had
obliterated all the beauty of the Citadel, all the elegant hallmarks of
Harshini architecture. Only the temples and the Halls of Residence
remained of the original city, but they too had been corrupted, their
artwork painted over, their graceful lines distorted by later additions
to their structures. Brak was glad the Harshini could not see the
Citadel now. It would bruise their souls to see what had been done to
their home.
“I can feel it,†R’shiel breathed in wonder.
“I can feel the
Citadel.â€
“He’s reacting to your presence.â€
She frowned, trying to reach out with senses not yet mature enough
to identify what she was experiencing. The Citadel was welcoming her
home, just as it had watched over her for most of her life. Until now,
she had not been aware of the power that enabled her to feel his
presence.
“I thought only gods could tell what I am?â€
“The spirit of the Citadel is a god,†Brak
explained. “An Incidental
god, not a Primal god, but a god nonetheless.â€
“You mean he’s like Xaphista? He’s a demon
that grew powerful enough
to call himself a god?â€
“No, the Citadel is unique. He came into being as the
complex was
built. He is the essence of the place. Its soul if you like.â€
R’shiel digested the information silently as they approached
the
Temple of the Gods. Brak did not know what the humans called it now,
but once it had been the centre of Harshini life — the place
where any
god, no matter how powerful or insignificant, could be called into
being. He had played with gods and demons in that Temple, back in a
time when life held a great deal of promise. Back in the days before he
understood what it was to be half-human. Back in the days before he had
killed Lorandranek.
“What did Dranymire mean about the Harshini needing access
to the
Citadel to protect themselves?â€
“You can’t kill a Harshini here, R’shiel.
The Citadel won’t permit
it.â€
She looked at him, her violet eyes wide with astonishment.
“You’re
kidding?â€
“No. But don’t get too exited. That protection
doesn’t extend to
half-bloods. You and I are just as mortal as anybody else,
here.â€
“So if the Harshini could come back to the Citadel, they
would be
safe from the Kariens? Even if they cross the border?â€
“It’s the only protection they have, other than
remaining hidden.
Their inability to kill is painfully real, R’shiel.
There’s a story I
heard once about the First Purge. A mob of humans attacked a Harshini
family trying to flee the carnage. They raped the women, butchered the
children and then handed the last Harshini standing a sword. They knelt
in front of him and offered him their exposed throats, taunting him to
kill them. He dropped the sword and threw himself on the ground, hoping
they would take his life too. He couldn’t ask them to do it,
the
prohibition against violence includes suicide.†He did not
realise how
cold his voice had become until R’shiel looked at him with
genuine
concern.
“It’s not just a story, is it, Brak?†she
asked softly.
“No.â€
“What happened?â€
“We arrived too late to save him. But the humans who
attacked them
never lived long enough to gloat about their deeds.â€
“You killed them? How, if the Harshini can’t
kill?â€
“There were a lot more half-bloods in those days. Before the
Sisterhood, mixed marriages were not that uncommon. We were young and
hot-headed and didn’t take the Purge lying down.â€
R’shiel thought about that for a moment. “Where are
the other
half-bloods now?â€
“One half-blood was more dangerous to the Sisterhood than a
dozen
pure Harshini. They made a special effort to eradicate us.â€
They had
ridden past the Hall of the Gods without stopping. Brak was very sorry
he had ever mentioned the First Purge. Although centuries old, the
memories still burned like acid.
“You’re the only one left.â€
“Until you came along.â€
R’shiel did not ask anything further on the subject, for
which Brak
was grateful. He glanced at the low, grey sky and realised that
R’shiel
had been correct in her assertion that rain would force the Gathering
indoors and that the Hall was the only other possible venue.
She was still insisting they coerce the Gathering into accepting
Joyhinia, but Brak had held off showing her how to do it, until the
last possible moment, hoping she would change her mind. He lacked the
power himself, to coerce a large group of people, but he knew the
technique, although working it left him sick to his stomach. Since her
stay at Sanctuary, under the careful guidance of Korandellan and her
Harshini tutors, R’shiel had learnt much about her ability. But
she was
still a babe-in-arms by Harshini standards. A babe who was acquiring
knowledge she lacked the judgment to use wisely, at a frightening rate.
So frightening that Brak found himself being very careful about what he
did in her presence.
She had come a long way since Shananara had tried to teach her
simply how to touch her power. That day by the Glass River, more than a
year ago, seemed to be part of a much more distant past.
If the Citadel’s desecration had cut him
to the
core, then Tavern Street was like rubbing salt into the wound. The
whole cluttered street, which had once been a wide, tree-lined avenue,
wore an aura of shoddy greed. With the rain, the feast in the
Amphitheatre had been washed out and the tables laden with food had
been moved to the verandahs outside the taverns. The street was packed
with people venturing out into the fading drizzle to avail themselves
of the Sisterhood’s generosity. Red coats mingled with
grey-robed
Probates, green-robed Novices and the more varied colours worn by
ordinary people. There were only a few blue Sisters in sight. Most of
them had chosen to stay indoors, rather than fight the crush in the
rain. Of the white-robed Sisters of the Quorum, there was no sign at
all.
“Isn’t there somewhere else we can go?†Brak
asked, eyeing the crowd
uneasily. They had planned to take rooms in a tavern close to the Hall
of the Gods and stay out of sight until the Gathering at sundown.
“But we were supposed to meet Affiana here.â€
“She’ll wait for us.â€
R’shiel thought for a moment then nodded. “The
Amphitheatre will be
deserted with the food moved down here. The caverns should be quiet
enough.â€
R’shiel turned her horse and led the way, although Brak
could have
found his way blindfolded. The caverns had been stables once, built to
house the ancestors of the Hythrun sorcerer-bred horses. They rode into
the torch-lit tunnel and dismounted, leading their horses deep into the
caverns where they were unlikely to be disturbed. Brak looked around
the empty, hollow rooms with a sharp sense of loss.
He shook off the feeling and turned to R’shiel. “Are
you sure you
want to do this?â€
“There’s no other way, Brak.†The darkness
hid her expression, but
it could not hide her excitement. Since returning to the world of
humans, the differences between the demon child and mere mortals were
more evident each day. Those differences were beginning to make her
feel a little too superior for Brak’s comfort. He could
remember
feeling the same way, when he was her age, and he discovered how much
his power set him apart. But that kind of arrogance was dangerous to
R’shiel and everyone around her. She needed to be brought down
a peg or
two, as he had been, and soon.
“What you want to do is wrong, you understand that,
don’t you?â€
“It is necessary.â€
“Are you prepared for the consequences?â€
“What consequences?†For the first time, she
didn’t sound quite so
certain.
“Coercing humans is easy, R’shiel,†he
explained. “People do it to
each other all the time. They don’t use the same sort of power
as we
do, but they have other methods which work just as well.â€
“I don’t understand what you’re getting
at.â€
“You remember when you were fighting with the rebellion? I
saw you
coerce those young hot-heads any number of times and you didn’t
know
anything about the Harshini power you had access to. Tarja convinced
three hundred rebels to attack a full Company of Defenders in Testra
with nothing more than rhetoric. Every mother who cajoles her child
into eating stewed turnips is using coercion.â€
“What’s your point, Brak?â€
“The point is that you could bully the heathens into
fighting
because, deep down, they wanted to. Every rebel who attacked Testra at
Tarja’s behest secretly dreamt of victory. Even the child who
eventually succumbs to the stewed turnips has hunger giving him a push.
Coercing people to act against their will, is an entirely different
matter. You have to get past their natural inclinations and then force
them to move in a different direction. You are robbing them of any
vestige of free will, and free will is something that runs so deep in
the human soul it’s like trying to get the Glass River to flow
backwards.â€
“You think I don’t have the power to do it?â€
she asked, sounding
rather alarmed. “The Karien priests can do it.â€
“R’shiel, you could level a mountain if the mood
took you. Your
power is not the issue. As for the Kariens priests, their ability is an
abomination. Remember that Xaphista was a demon once. During their
initiation ceremony they drink his blood. And it’s not some
slaughtered
animal’s blood they’re drinking either, it really is
Xaphista’s. The
blood links them to their god in the same way we’re linked to
our
demons. Through that link they can call on his strength to weave the
coercion.â€
“But the link must be pretty tenuous,†she said.
“Where did they get
the power to coerce a whole army?â€
“Individually they’re weak, but as a group they can
be devastating.â€
“You’re not worried I’ll start worshipping
the Overlord, are you?â€
she asked with a grin.
Brak could have slapped her for being so flippant. She
wasn’t
listening at all. “It’s what will happen to these
people afterwards,
that worries me. If you coerce them into believing Joyhinia wishes to
retire in favour of Mahina, then that’s exactly what
they’ll do. But
tomorrow, or the week after, or a year from now, when you’re
not around
to suppress their natural feelings, they will begin to wonder why.
They’ll know they’ve been tricked. Mahina’s
reign is likely to be even
shorter than the last time. One dissenting voice will turn into two,
which will turn into ten which will turn into an avalanche.â€
“I’ve already told you, we’ll send the most
likely dissenters
away . . .â€
He shook his head in exasperation. “It won’t matter.
You have no way
of knowing who is susceptible and who isn’t. The ones you think
most
likely to object may take to the coercion like it was mother’s
milk.
But there will be others, people you don’t even suspect, for
whom the
coercion will last less than a day. There will be nearly a thousand
Sisters in that Hall, R’shiel. You can’t watch them
all.â€
“Then we’ll do something to keep them quiet. It only
has to last
long enough for Mahina to issue the orders sending the rest of the
Defenders to the front. She can resign after that and they can hold
another election —â€
“Do what?†Brak cut in.
“I don’t know,†she snapped. “Maybe
if they all got sick, or
something . . .â€
“You mean you’d create an epidemic just to keep the
Sisters
occupied?â€
“I suppose. Nothing serious, just something that keeps them
close to
the garderobes for a few days.â€
“I see. And when this epidemic spreads to the general
population, as
it will, what of the young, too weak to fight it? The old, too frail to
withstand it? Are you ready to kill innocent people to keep your
coercion from falling apart?â€
“Then what do you suggest we do? We have to get the rest of
the
Defenders to the border!â€
“Fine. Have Joyhinia issue the order. Have her resign, too,
if you
must, but the more complex the coercion, the more chance there is of it
blowing up in your face.â€
“But we need Mahina in charge.â€
“Then put her in charge, but let her take control herself.
If you
impose an artificial control, the results could be catastrophic. Trust
her to know what she’s doing. She got caught out once. I
don’t think
she’ll be so foolish this time.â€
“What are you suggesting? That we get through the Gathering
and then
walk away?â€
“Actually, I was thinking of running, not walking. One of
the
hallmarks of maturity for a Harshini is knowing when not to use
your power, R’shiel.â€
“I’m not Harshini. Not completely.â€
“You’re not completely human, either, but
that’s no excuse for
acting like an idiot. Consequences, R’shiel. I ask you again.
Are you
prepared for the consequences?â€
She was silent for a moment, considering her answer carefully.
“The consequences of not acting are liable to be
worse,†she said
finally.
“You don’t know that for certain.â€
“No,†she agreed, then she sighed. “Alright,
I’ll grant you that
letting Mahina establish control in her own right is probably safer
than imposing it artificially. But I will have to coerce them into
accepting her appointment at the Gathering.â€
“And then we leave?â€
“I suppose.â€
“Good. I’ll be waiting outside the Hall with our
horses. It’s too
damned dangerous for you here R’shiel.â€
“Dangerous? Compared to what? The border, where
there’s a war going
on?†She smiled wearily at him. “Show me how
it’s done, Brak. We’re
running out of time.â€
Brak silently admitted defeat. He had done all he could to deter
her, short of refusing her the knowledge outright. But she had felt it
once before, the night before the battle. If he did not instruct her
properly, he knew that she would simply try to copy what the Kariens
priests had done, and the result might be disastrous.
The irony was, using simple human tactics, she was coercing him into
showing her something he thought far too dangerous for her to learn. At
least she had agreed to leave, once the deed was done. Brak
couldn’t
put his finger on it, but he had a feeling of impending danger and it
had been growing steadily stronger ever since he had entered the
Citadel.
He wished the Citadel was easier to read, easier to understand. He
could feel its anxiety and it was making him very nervous.
CHAPTER 43
Loclon waited until almost sundown before finally
accepting that R’shiel and her half-breed companion were not
going to
appear. Cold, wet and thoroughly disgusted, he made his way to the Blue
Bull tavern to meet with Garanus and report his lack of success.
Loclon had thought the tavern an odd choice for a meeting place. It
was far too public for his liking, and a Karien priest would stand out
like a red-coated Defender in a snowstorm. Garanus had shrugged off his
concerns. He had private rooms available, he said, and had paid the
tavern keeper well to ensure her silence. Besides, it was
Founder’s Day
and the Citadel was full of strangers. A few more would barely rate a
mention.
The rain had dwindled to a light drizzle about an hour after the
First Sister arrived and had completely stopped an hour or so after
that. Not wishing to be seen defying Garet Warner’s orders, he
had paid
an urchin to watch Francil’s Hall, and another to keep an eye
on the
Main Gate. It had proved a waste of good coin. Nobody even remotely
fitting R’shiel’s description had entered the Citadel
since the parade.
She had either arrived early, or the priest was wrong.
Tavern Street was still crowded when he arrived, the revellers
determined to get full value from the public holiday, particularly now
the rain had stopped, although the air was bitterly cold and many of
the party-goers stood hugging the small fires that lined the street. He
pushed through them impatiently into the crowded taproom of the Blue
Bull, where he spied Lork standing guard outside the door to one of the
private dining rooms. The big man wore an expression that turned away
the curious, simply by its ferocity. When he reached the door, Lork
barred his way with a low snarl.
“I’m expected,†he said. Lork glared at him
for a moment before
dropping his thick arm. Loclon opened the door and pushed past him.
He froze in shock as the door snicked shut behind him. He was
expecting Mistress Heaner and Garanus to be waiting for him, not five
more Karien priests and a tall man with hooded eyes, who by his bearing
just had to be a Karien nobleman, despite his unremarkable clothing.
“Ah, Captain,†Garanus said, looking up at the sound
of the door
closing. “You bring us good news, I trust?â€
For a fleeting moment, Loclon wanted to run. This was getting out of
hand. His desire to see R’shiel suffer had not included
treason. He had
been able to convince himself for months that his association with
Mistress Heaner was simply a ploy. He had made himself believe that
information he passed on was not critical, that he was using them
rather than the other way around. Confronted with incontrovertible
proof of Karien involvement at the highest level, what was left of his
conscience gave a dying cry of protest. He ignored it.
“Your information was wrong. R’shiel was not with
the First Sister.â€
The Karien Lord glanced at Garanus, frowning. “You claimed
you could
feel her.â€
“I could,†Garanus assured him. He glanced at the
other priests, who
nodded in agreement. Their tonsured heads and pale skin made it hard to
tell one from the other. “We all could. Our captain here may
have
missed them, but the glamour the demon child and her lackey wove to
conceal themselves is like a beacon to those of us who are close to the
Overlord. Trust me, Lord Terbolt, she is here.â€
Loclon studied Terbolt guardedly. The name meant nothing to him, he
had little interest in Karien politics, but he was bound to be a
personage of some note. A man whose good will he needed to foster if he
was to continue on this path.
“They must have arrived earlier, before the parade.â€
Garanus shrugged. “When they arrived is not important. The
fact that
they are here is all that counts.â€
“So what now? I can hardly kill this half-breed if I
can’t find him.â€
Lord Terbolt nodded in agreement. “Nor can we expose this
ungodly
Harshini alliance with the Sisterhood, with either of them on the
loose. Can’t you use your . . . powers, or
whatever it
is that you do, Garanus, to track them down?â€
“What Harshini alliance?†Loclon asked, before the
priest had a
chance to answer.
Lord Terbolt turned to him. “The Sisterhood has been
secretly allied
with the Harshini for years, Captain. The demon child was raised under
their protection. Now they have openly allied with the Hythrun, and the
Harshini, whom the Sisterhood claims have been extinct for more than a
century, begin to reveal themselves once more. We already have reports
of Harshini appearing again in Greenharbour. Before long, they will
overrun the entire continent with their insidious heathen gods. We are
here to put a stop to it.â€
Loclon wasn’t sure that he believed the Karien, but it made
sense.
Until she had run away with Tarja, R’shiel had been training
for the
Sisterhood. Her mother was the First Sister. The thought that his
career had been destroyed by a Harshini bitch who was secretly working
to destroy Medalon burned like acid in his gullet.
“What do you want me to do?â€
“I think we should pay a visit to the First Sister,â€
Terbolt said.
The Sister’s Hall was all but deserted.
Every Blue
Sister in the Citadel was heading for the Gathering. Getting past the
guards was easy. Loclon knew the effect a barked order had on men
conditioned to follow their officers without question. He and Gawn had
led Lord Terbolt, his priests, and the silent Lork to the main
residential wing of the Sister’s Hall quite openly. With their
heads
covered by hooded cloaks, and their staffs hidden in their folds, the
Kariens looked as ordinary as any other visitors to the Citadel.
Gawn’s inclusion was not part of Loclon’s original
plan. The captain
had appeared on the verandah of the Blue Bull as they were leaving,
looking for some entertainment with a willing Probate. Now that he was
a widower, he spent a great deal of his off duty hours entertaining
willing Probates. They were safer than tavern-keepers’
daughters. As a
rule, if you impregnated one, you were not required to marry her.
Gawn’s eyes had widened at the sight of Loclon’s
companions, but he
was even further along the road of treason than Loclon, these days. He
acted as if he really did believe all that nonsense about the Overlord.
A thing made easier, no doubt, by the fact that the Overlord had
answered his prayers and his slut of a wife lay buried these past few
weeks, dead from a fatal dose of heckleweed that she unfortunately
mistook for seasoning. Loclon had grabbed his arm and dragged him
along, explaining the situation in a low voice as they made their way
towards the Sister’s Hall. Gawn had fallen in with them
willingly.
The guards at the entrance were easily dealt with. One did not
question a captain without very good cause. The men on the upper levels
were just as efficiently disposed of. Loclon ordered them downstairs,
accusing them of hiding inside the building to escape the cold. The men
saluted sharply and hurried outside.
The guards in the hall outside the First Sister’s apartments
were a
different matter. These were Garet Warner’s men. Loclon could
order
them about until he turned green without any noticeable effect. He
stopped just out of sight on the landing of the broad, carpeted
staircase and motioned the Kariens to silence.
“What do you think, Gawn?â€
“I think we’re going to have to fight,†the
captain replied softly.
“There is no need to fight,†Terbolt informed them
in a low voice.
“Lork, take care of it.â€
Before Loclon could protest, the big man stepped into the hall and
walked towards the two Defenders standing either side of the First
Sister’s door. The men looked up at his approach, hands on the
hilts of
their swords as they challenged him. Lork did not answer them. He just
kept walking. As soon as he was in reach of the Defenders, who, by this
time, had begun to draw their weapons, he grabbed a man with each of
his plate-sized hands and smashed their heads together so hard Loclon
could hear their skulls cracking. He hurried forward as the men
collapsed at Lork’s feet.
“You fool! You’ve killed them!†he hissed.
“They were agents of evil,†Garanus announced as he
came up behind
them with Lord Terbolt and the other priests. “Their deaths
will please
the Overlord.â€
“Well, they won’t please anyone around here! We have
to get the
bodies out of sight!â€
“We can move them inside,†Terbolt said, turning to
face the
bronze-sheathed door. “Should we knock?â€
Gawn muttered something as the Karien pounded on the door. It was
opened a few moments later by Lord Draco, who took in the fallen guards
and the tonsured priests with a glance, reaching for his sword with a
speed that belied his age. Lord Setenton was prepared, however. He
plunged his dagger into Draco’s breast while the older
man’s blade was
still in its scabbard. The Duke of Setenton shoved him backward into
the room. Draco slid off the blade and collapsed on the expensive
patterned rug, his red jacket darkening with blood. He cried out an
unintelligible warning but there was nobody around to heed it.
Loclon stood frozen in shock, as Lork dragged the bodies of the
guards into the room and locked the door behind him. They had killed
two Defenders. They had killed the Spear of the First Sister.
He was damned whichever way he looked at it.
“Find the First Sister,†Terbolt ordered. The
priests spread out,
checking the numerous doors that led off the main hall of the First
Sister’s apartments. Loclon stared at Draco who lay groaning
softly,
hand clutched uselessly over his punctured chest.
“Finish him, Captain,†Terbolt ordered brusquely.
“His moaning
offends me.â€
“But he’s . . .†Loclon began
uncertainly.
“I’ll do it,†Gawn offered, drawing his
sword. He walked to where
Draco lay dying and barely even hesitated as he plunged the blade into
him, over and over again. Draco was long dead before he stopped.
Loclon watched Gawn mutilating Lord Draco and discovered, somewhat
to his embarrassment, that rather than repulse him, the smell of the
blood was arousing him. He turned away to hide the evidence of his
excitement.
“Can’t bear to watch, eh?â€
Loclon composed himself before turning back, trying to sound
nonchalant. “A bit excessive, don’t you think?â€
Gawn shrugged. “I thought you’d be pleased.â€
“Pleased? To watch you hack an old man to death?â€
“He’s not just an old man, Loclon. I thought you
knew. Lord Draco is
Tarja Tenragan’s father.â€
Before that startling news had time to register, one of the priests
cried out from a room up the hall. They hurried to the door and pushed
their way through.
Across the threshold lay the body of a statuesque middle-aged woman,
blood pooling beneath the knife wound in her chest. Her dark hair
partially covered her face, but could not hide the startled look in her
dead eyes. Loclon stepped over the body and stared, open-mouthed at the
sight before him.
They had found the First Sister.
She was sitting on the floor, dressed in a simple grey tunic, her
long, grey streaked hair undone and hanging limply over her shoulders.
In her hands was a tattered rag doll with one eye missing. She was
rocking back and forth, humming tunelessly.
Joyhinia Tenragan, the most ruthless First Sister in living memory,
the woman who had ordered a Purge that had killed thousands of
Medalonians, looked up as they crowded in her room and smiled at them.
“Do you want to play with dolly?†she said.
CHAPTER 44
Since befriending Dace, Mikel rarely spent a full
day among the horses. Whenever Dace appeared, Sergeant Monthay would
suddenly turn to Mikel and dismiss him, along with the warning that he
did not expect to see him again until dinnertime. Mikel had no idea why
Dace had that effect on the Medalonian and finally decided to stop
questioning his good fortune. Perhaps it was the Overlord’s way
of
sparing him a life of forced labour.
Sometimes, Kali would join her brother on their daily jaunts. Every
time he saw the barefooted little girl, she would stare at him closely
and demand, ‘Do you love me?â€
Mikel thought it the strangest question, and it seemed to annoy Dace
too, but he had begun answering yes, simply because Kali would sulk if
he answered any other way. An answer in the affirmative left her
beaming for the rest of the day. She would hold his hand, and smile at
him a lot, and not say blasphemous things about the Overlord, which
Mikel found something of a relief.
Dace pouted a lot when Kali was with them, and he argued with her
all the time. But he seemed incapable of refusing her anything. If Kali
had been his sister, Mikel thought, he would have ordered her
to stay at home and expected her to comply. These Medalonians really
did lack the proper understanding of the place of a female.
When Dace and Mikel were alone, they spent hours exploring the
Medalonian camp. They were never challenged by the Defenders, never
asked what they were doing, never in trouble. The followers’
camp was
even more interesting. Dace had a knack for smiling at people so
charmingly that they never thought to question his right to be there.
Mikel had no success trying to emulate his companion’s winning
smile.
The one time he had tried it on a Defender, hoping to sneak into the
Keep to find out how the princess was faring, the Defenders on guard
had sent him packing with a blistering reprimand.
Of course, one had to be on their guard around Dace. He was always
trying to coax Mikel into stealing things. He did not seem to care what
Mikel stole, just that he stole something. Its value was
irrelevant, it was the act that mattered. But Mikel had been true to
his faith and had not fallen to the dangerous charms of his new friend.
If anything, he felt he was a positive influence on the young thief and
was certain that he had saved the youth from sinning on more than one
occasion.
Today however, Dace had finally suggested they steal something that
even Mikel could not resist.
There was, according to Dace, a blue swallow’s nest in the
tower of
the old keep. The mother swallow must have gotten her seasons mixed up
because it was almost winter, and the chicks would die if they hatched
at this time of year. Dace’s noble plan was to steal the eggs
from the
nest and take them somewhere warmer, where they could incubate safely.
Once hatched, they could dig up worms for the chicks and nurse them
through the bitter weather. By spring, they would be ready to make it
on their own and the boys could release them.
Try as he might, Mikel could find no fault with Dace’s plan.
Saving
the chicks from a freezing death was a good deed, and brave too, when
one considered where the nest was located. Although Dace insisted on
calling their rescue mission “stealing†he joined in
the escapade
willingly. His enthusiasm pleased the young thief enormously. He acted
almost as happy as his sister Kali, the first time that he had agreed
he really did love her.
Strange people, these Medalonians.
“How are we going to get into the Keep?†Mikel
demanded as he
hurried alongside Dace toward the old fort. Dace had been disturbingly
vague on that point. The ground was slushy underfoot from a light
snowfall the night before which had turned to mud almost as soon as the
sun touched it. Mikel hated this Medalonian weather. He fervently
wished it would snow properly, like it did in Yarnarrow or Kirkland,
not this half-hearted mucky stuff that fell from the skies every few
days with no other purpose than to make everything muddy and damp.
“They change the guard just before sundown,†Dace
explained. “We’ll
sneak in then.â€
Mikel had not been inside Treason Keep since the day he had been
interrogated by Tarja and Lord Wolfblade. He tried hard not to think of
that day. The memories still hurt too much for him to be able to recall
them willingly. Even the Keep’s unofficial name seemed to taunt
him.
“But aren’t there guards on the tower?â€
“Lord Jenga says it’s too dangerous up there and not
worth
repairing. The guards stay on the wall-walk. Once we get inside,
we’ll
be fine.†Mikel could hardly question such a confident
assurance, so he
trudged alongside the thief and prayed to the Overlord that Dace was
right. “Besides,†Dace added cheerily,
“It’s Founder’s Day. Lord Jenga
declared a holiday. There won’t be many guards on duty.â€
“What’s Founder’s Day?â€
“It’s when the Medalonians celebrate the day they
stole Medalon from
the Harshini.†Dace suddenly stopped walking and grinned at
Mikel. “Now
that was an interesting time, let me tell you! The others were steaming
mad. Of course, a theft on that scale made me stronger than Zegarnald
for a time, but then the Sisterhood launched their purge and the
fighting started and I went back to being just plain old me. It was fun
for a while, though.â€
“Dace, what are you talking about?â€
The thief shrugged. “Nothing. Come on, we’d better
hurry. It’s
almost sundown and we won’t be able see the nest in the
dark.â€
Shaking his head, Mikel hurried after Dace. The boy had a habit of
wandering off like that. It was very disconcerting.
As Dace predicted, they were not challenged as they passed through
the gate into the Keep. The Defenders barely even glanced at them.
Mikel followed as he walked boldly across the muddy yard to the
dangerously crumbling steps that led to the tower. As they carefully
climbed the broken stairs, Mikel understood why Lord Jenga had
condemned the tower. The masonry wobbled under even his slight weight.
The sun appeared to be resting on the steep peaks of the Sanctuary
Mountains as they reached the top of the tower. It was a blocky, square
structure but the merlons had crumbled and in one corner there was
nothing but a pile of fallen rubble, almost as tall as Mikel. It was to
the pile that Dace led him, squeezing in through the narrow opening
between the rubble and the wall. It smelled musty in the tiny cave
formed by the ruined masonry, but the mother swallow had picked her
location well. The nest was protected from the wind and from the eye of
any roving hawk looking for an easy meal.
“See! Five eggs!†Dace declared.
“I can’t see a thing!†he complained. It was
so dark inside the
little cavern he could only make out Dace from his glittering eyes.
“Look, it’s over . . .â€
“Sshhh!†Mikel froze as the sound of footsteps
reached him. He
turned slightly, so he could see outside.
It was Princess Adrina. He bit back a cry of surprise as a man
joined her on the tower. The Hythrun Warlord’s profile was
sharp
against the setting sun.
“I trust you have a reason for this perilous
expedition?†the
princess demanded as she turned to stare out over the plain.
“I thought you might enjoy the view, your Highness.â€
Damin Wolfblade really should learn to speak to the princess with
more respect.
“It’s lovely. Can we go now?â€
“Tell me what you see.â€
“I see nothing, and I’m freezing. Is this really
necessary?â€
“You see nothing,†Damin repeated thoughtfully.
“Interesting, don’t
you think?â€
“You find nothing interesting? Well, that’s
hardly
surprising for a man of your limited intellect.â€
Mikel grinned in the darkness of his hidey-hole. That’s
telling
him!
“Adrina, a few leagues from here, your husband’s
army sits and
waits. They do nothing. They don’t attack. They don’t
train. They don’t
even run away. They just sit there, waiting for something. I want to
know what they’re waiting for.â€
Adrina turned north, her expression puzzled. Rather than the biting
retort Mikel was expecting, she shrugged. “I have no
idea.â€
“Were they planning something, before you left? Something
that would
account for their willingness to hold an army of that size immobile for
so long?â€
“I’d tell you if I knew. Their war council did
little more than
argue, and you’ve already seen their idea of battle. The Dukes
of
Karien are not renowned for their tactical genius. When you have
countless troops to throw into battle it isn’t really
necessary.â€
Mikel wasn’t sure he believed what he was hearing. They
sounded
so . . . friendly.
“Could one of the Dukes have advised him to wait?â€
“Lord Roache may have,†Adrina shrugged.
“What did the Duke of Setenton advise?â€
“Lord Terbolt? He’s not there. He sent his brother
Ciril in his
place.â€
The warlord frowned. “Terbolt isn’t there?
He’s Jasnoff’s most
trusted commander. Where is he?â€
“I don’t know. Cratyn didn’t seem surprised
by his absence, though.
Perhaps Jasnoff had other plans for him.â€
“What other plans?†Damin asked, the concern in his
voice obvious
even to Mikel.
“I was permitted to join their war council rather
begrudgingly, my
Lord. They weren’t in the habit of discussing anything of
import while
I was present.â€
Damin laughed softly. “Not an unwise precaution, in light of
recent
events.â€
Adrina turned on the Warlord. “That remark was uncalled for,
my
Lord.â€
Damin sighed. “That’s right, I forgot. You
aren’t committing
treason, you just want to be free.â€
“Free! Get this damned collar off my neck, then I might
remember
what the word means!â€
As Damin moved closer to her, Mikel wanted to leap to the defence of
his princess, but Dace held him back.
“No!†the thief whispered.
Burning with frustration and not at all certain why he remained
hidden, Mikel turned back to watch, thinking the Warlord was much too
close to the princess to be proper.
Damin was fingering the golden collar Adrina wore with surprisingly
gentle fingers. It reflected the setting sun, making the wolf’s
ruby
eyes glitter malignantly. Adrina’s rigid posture betrayed more
than she
imagined.
“What would you give to be free, Adrina?†he asked
softly.
“Unhand me, sir!â€
Damin dropped his hand. “I can see why your marriage was
never
consummated, your Highness.â€
Mikel swallowed a horrified gasp. He knew what
“consummated†meant.
Adrina laughed. She sounded genuinely amused. “You
don’t like me
much, do you? Is that why you take so much pleasure from tormenting
me?â€
“Ah, now there’s the tragedy, your Highness. If you
weren’t such a
treacherous, conniving little bitch, I’d probably be quite
taken with
you.â€
Adrina turned away from him, to study the red streaked clouds. The
sun was almost completely set. “You presume to know an awful
lot about
me, considering the short time of our acquaintance, Damin Wolfblade.
How much is your own opinion, and how much is hearsay, I
wonder?â€
“I make my own judgments. I’ve no need to listen to
hearsay.â€
“I beg to differ, my Lord,†she retorted, turning to
face him. “You
told Captain Tenragan I tried to kill the High Prince. You
weren’t
there. How could you possibly know what happened, unless you listened
to hearsay?â€
“He told you that, did he?â€
“Yes, and it’s a damned lie! I did no such thing!
Your uncle is a
perverted monster, and if those boys would rather die than let him
touch them, I don’t blame them!â€
“So you did give them the knife?â€
“Yes!â€
Damin was silent for a moment. “Why did you take the
collars?â€
“I didn’t take them. Lernen gave them to me. I kept
them as a
remembrance of two children destroyed by a debauched old man. Somebody
owed them that much.â€
He took a step back from her. “It’s cold, your
Highness, and I know
how anxious you are to return indoors. Shall we go?â€
Adrina planted her hands on her hips angrily.
“That’s it? No
apology? No admission that you were wrong? How dare you, sir!â€
The Warlord shrugged. “For all I know, you’re lying
about that, just
as you lie about everything else.â€
“I am not lying!â€
Damin closed the gap between them with frightening speed.
“Then
prove it, Adrina. Tell me the truth! Why did you leave Karien?â€
Although he was looming over her, Adrina held her ground. Mikel watched
helplessly, wanting to kill Damin Wolfblade almost as much as he wanted
to stay hidden and watch this strange scene unfold.
“I’ve told you a thousand times! I left because
Cratyn is a
miserable, cowardly, little cretin! The day we were married he hit me
and called me a Fardohnyan whore and told me all he wanted was a Karien
heir to my father’s throne. It went downhill from
there.â€
Tears misted Mikel’s eyes to hear such words coming from his
princess. She is lying to protect herself, he reasoned
anxiously.
She walked to the other side of the small tower and leaned against
the crumbling merlons, turning her back to the Warlord. The darkness
was settling rapidly, making her features hard to distinguish.
“Was it that bad?†Damin asked, in a surprisingly
sympathetic voice.
“Worse than you could possibly imagine. The bastards even
killed my
dog.†She’s making it up, Mikel told himself, over and
over. She’s
making it up.
“Does your father know what it was like?â€
“Even if he did, he wouldn’t care. Hablet has his
own plans.â€
“To invade Hythria, no doubt.†Adrina looked around
sharply, but
Damin smiled. “Don’t worry, Adrina. I won’t
overtax your ability to
admit the truth any further, this night. Your father’s worst
fault is
his predicability. His plans are easy enough to fathom. It’s
the
Kariens who have me worried at the moment.â€
“I told you, I don’t know what they have
planned.â€
“And oddly enough, I believe you. Come on. The sun has set.
If we
stay up here much longer they’ll be able to decorate their
damned
Founder’s Day banquet with a couple of ice statues.â€
He held out his hand to help her down and, to Mikel’s
disgust, she
accepted it. But she halted at the top of the steps and leaned toward
him in a most unladylike manner. “Tarja showed me the graves,
Damin.
That was a noble thing to do for an enemy.â€
“Careful, your Highness, you might actually get me believing
there’s
a heart hidden beneath that rather impressive bosom.â€
She snatched her hand from his angrily. “You are an
intolerable
bastard! I was trying to be gracious!â€
“Gracious?†he laughed softly. “That
wide-eyed look? Those slightly
parted lips? That eloquent sigh? What’s next? ‘Oh
Damin, won’t you please
let me go’? Gods Adrina! I’ve been around court’esa-trained
noblewomen all my life. You’ll have to do better than
that.â€
“You flatter yourself, my Lord,†Adrina said, her
voice colder than
the rapidly darkening night. “In the unlikely event I ever turn
my
skills on you, you won’t even know what hit you, until
you lay
whimpering at my feet, begging for more!â€
“Don’t try playing that game with me, Adrina. You
might find the
rules a little different this far from Fardohnya.â€
“Rules?†she laughed softly, savagely. “In
this game, my Lord, there
are no rules.â€
Adrina vanished from Mikel’s sight as she descended the
stairs,
followed closely by Damin. Mikel’s breath came out in a rush
and he
discovered he was trembling. He wished he could make sense of even half
of what he had seen and heard. The princess must be very upset to lie
about Prince Cratyn like that. What were they doing to her?
“Psst!â€
Mikel glanced in the direction of the thief who sat squashed in the
dark cavern.
“What?â€
“You have to steal the eggs!â€
Annoyed, Mikel reached in and snatched the fragile speckled eggs
from the nest.
“There! Satisfied?â€
Dace nodded, grinning broadly. “You have honoured the God of
Thieves.â€
“If you say so,†he agreed distractedly. It was a
measure of his
distress that he did not bother to correct the youth. Normally such a
statement received a sharp denial of the existence of any other god.
“Your soul belongs to me now, Mikel,†Dace said,
sounding enormously
satisfied with himself.
“My soul belongs to the Overlord,†he replied
mechanically.
“That’s what you think,†the God of Thieves
smirked.
CHAPTER 45
The Medalonians celebrated Founder’s Day
with a
degree of abandonment that Adrina considered rather inappropriate for
men in the middle of a war. Admittedly, there wasn’t much of a
war
going on at present, so they might as well take this opportunity to
enjoy themselves. Even the Hythrun Raiders joined in as if it were a
festival of the gods. They didn’t care much for
Founder’s Day, she
suspected, but they weren’t going to ignore an excuse for a
party.
There was precious little else to do. One senseless battle and now
Cratyn was sitting on the other side of the border with his vast army
doing precisely nothing.
The hall was filled with people, as Jenga had declared an open house
and many of the officers whose wives and lovers were in the
followers’
camp had brought their women to the party. Someone had managed to find
a quantity of blue linen and had made a hopeful attempt to decorate the
crumbling walls, but there had not been enough to go around. The
decorations had a forlorn, unfinished look. The only source of heat was
the abundant torches and the huge fireplace near the far end, but the
heat of so many bodies pressed together seemed to take the chill off
the air.
There were quite a few court’esa present as well,
although
Adrina thought the term a rather misguided one, when applied to these
ill-bred, uneducated whores, whose only feature in common with real
court’esa was their willingness to trade sexual favours
for coin.
A small band of musicians was playing in the corner, enlisted men
mostly, whose skill with an instrument had got them invited to the
officers’ party. They weren’t bad either, considering
their first
calling was killing people and musicianship was merely a secondary
talent.
With his hand on her elbow, Damin guided Adrina through the crush
towards Lord Jenga, who stood by the stairs that led up to her
quarters, talking to Tarja Tenragan.
Adrina studied him curiously. She had never been able to crack that
calm certitude, even when he admitted to killing her brother. And it
was not for lack of trying. The captain showed no interest in her
— or
any other woman present, she noted, slightly mollified. Perhaps Damin
was right. Perhaps there was nothing any woman here could offer him
that compared with what he already had.
“I’m so glad you could join us, your
Highness,†Lord Jenga said as
they approached.
“I wasn’t aware that I was given a choice in the
matter, my Lord.
Good evening, Captain.â€
“Your Highness. Damin.â€
“I thought you’d be taking part in the festivities,
Captain. I’m
sure there are any number of young ladies here who would be delighted
to keep you company.â€
Tarja shook his head with a faint smile. “I’m sure
there are, your
Highness, if I was willing to spend the coin and didn’t mind
what
diseases I caught. May I get you some wine?â€
“Thank you,†Adrina replied, a little startled by
his blunt answer.
Damin caught her look and leaned forward to whisper in her ear.
“You
deserved that.â€
She glared at him for a moment then turned to Lord Jenga.
“So what
is this party in honour of, my Lord?â€
“Founder’s Day, your Highness. It’s the day
we celebrate the
foundation of the Sisterhood’s rule over Medalon.â€
“And you find that worthy of celebration?â€
“It’s tradition, your Highness,†Jenga
replied. “I’m sure you have
many such traditions in Fardohnya.â€
“Of course, my Lord. I apologise if you took
offence.â€
“Don’t listen to her, Jenga,†Damin warned.
“She’s not in the least
bit sorry.†He ignored the look Adrina gave him, and gave her
no chance
to defend herself. “Her Serene Highness did tell me something
though,
that she’s conveniently neglected to mention until now. The
Duke of
Setenton isn’t with Cratyn.â€
Jenga’s weathered brow furrowed. “That would explain
their tactical
stupidity. Is he out of favour with Jasnoff?â€
“Not that I’m aware of,†Adrina told him.
“Why did you wait until now to tell us?â€
“I didn’t realise you would consider it so
important, my Lord.â€
“Tell us what?†Tarja asked, returning with a cup of
wine for both
Damin and Adrina. She took the tankard and swallowed the wine with a
gulp. How was she supposed to know Lord Terbolt’s absence was
such a
big issue?
“The Duke of Setenton isn’t in the Karien war
camp.â€
“Then where is he?â€
“That’s a question I’d like
answered,†Damin replied, looking
pointedly at Adrina.
“I told you! I don’t where he is.â€
“You’ve told us a great deal, your Highness, half of
which is
probably outright lies, and the rest of which is doubtful.â€
“If we were in Fardohnya, sir, you would be put to death for
insulting me so.â€
“If we were in Hythria, your Highness, you’d
have been
flogged for being —â€
“Damin!†Tarja warned.
Fortunately, the Warlord didn’t finish the threat. Adrina
smiled at
Tarja gratefully, but it was time to escape the company of such an
intolerable man.
“Do you dance, Captain?â€
“Only when I can’t avoid it,†Tarja replied
with a grimace.
“Consider this one of those times. I feel the need for some
entertainment and I find the company in this part of the hall quite
dull.â€
Much to her annoyance, Damin laughed aloud at her comment. She
thrust her wine cup at Lord Jenga and all but dragged Tarja to the
centre of the Hall where a lively jig was in progress. She had no idea
of the steps involved, and did not particularly care. She took her
place in the line and followed the steps of the girl beside her, a
young thing of about sixteen with a pretty face that was ruined by a
missing tooth she displayed when she smiled. The dance was fairly
simple and repetitive so it didn’t take long before she got the
hang of
it. She glanced across the hall and saw Damin watching her. She quite
deliberately turned her head away and smiled winningly at Tarja.
“You don’t have to keep looking at him,â€
Tarja told her when the
dance brought them together for a turn.
“Looking at whom?†she asked, feigning innocence.
“You know who I mean. Are you trying to make him
jealous?â€
“Don’t be absurd! That would imply I care what he
thinks.â€
“And you don’t, of course.â€
“Of course not.â€
They parted then and broke into two lines, men on the right, women
on the left. The steps changed and Adrina found herself having to
follow the toothless peasant girl for a time. When she looked up, she
couldn’t see the Warlord, but she could feel his eyes on her.
The dance
took her back to her partner and she found herself confronting
Tarja’s
infuriatingly calm expression.
Was he really immune to her charms, she wondered? Is
R’shiel so
enticing that even when she is hundreds of leagues away, he can resist
what is right under his nose?
The lines of dancers moved together. When Tarja took her in his arms
for the next part she leaned into him and smiled, meeting his eyes with
an open invitation. There weren’t many men who could deny her
when she
chose to be irresistible. Cratyn and Damin Wolfblade being rather
notable exceptions, she recalled sourly.
Tarja’s reaction was not at all what she expected. His
expression
grew serious. “Damin wasn’t kidding when he said you
were dangerous,
was he?â€
“Do you think I’m dangerous?†she
teased.
“I think you’re a spoilt brat, actually,†he
replied pleasantly. “I
think that’s why you really left your husband. You’re
so used to
getting your own way that you ran away, rather than be denied.â€
“And what would you know about it?â€
“I’m something of an expert on spoilt brats, your
Highness. R’shiel
is fairly famous for it in some circles.â€
Adrina’s anger evaporated in the face of such a startling
admission.
She had never heard Tarja speak of R’shiel before. She was more
curious
about the demon child than she cared to admit.
“Is she very beautiful?â€
“Very.â€
“More beautiful than me?â€
Tarja laughed. “I’m afraid I’ll have to say
yes, but I’m hardly what
you’d call objective. Damin could probably give you a more
accurate
answer.â€
“Thank you, but I’d rather not ask him anything.
Tell me more about
R’shiel. Is she truly the demon child?â€
“So the Harshini claim.â€
“Don’t you believe them?â€
“I’m an atheist. I’m supposed to devote my
life to eradicating the
Harshini.â€
“Yet you have a Harshini lover? A curious way of carrying
out your
orders, Captain.â€
“I have a talent for complicating my life far more than is
necessary, your Highness. And you are a complication I don’t
want or
need, so quit rubbing up against me like that, or I’ll end up
doing
something we’ll both regret, and when R’shiel gets back
she’ll turn you
into a toad and me into something that looks like a smudge on the
road.â€
Adrina smiled. “I like you, Captain. I’ve even
forgiven you. Is the
demon child really so fearsome?â€
“No, just very certain about her territorial
boundaries.â€
“And I’m crossing them?â€
“You’re getting close.â€
Adrina stepped back a little, her ego somewhat appeased. She had
been beginning to wonder if she was losing her touch. The dance ended
with a round of applause and Tarja led her back to the stairs. The Lord
Defender had moved on and was talking to the officer who had charge of
the horses. The musicians struck up another tune and the hall echoed to
the stamping feet of the dancers. Damin was sitting on the stairs
sipping his wine. He did not bother to rise as she approached. His
manners were appalling.
“I see her Highness dances with the same flair she spins
fanciful
stories,†Damin remarked. “You survived, Tarja.
I’m proud of you.â€
“Only just,†Tarja admitted with a smile.
“Your Highness, it’s been
a pleasure, but I have duties to attend to. I’m sure Lord
Wolfblade
would be delighted to keep you entertained.†He bowed and
walked away,
leaving her standing there. His abrupt departure left her speechless.
“Don’t worry Adrina, you didn’t drive him
off. He’s waiting for a
bird from the Citadel. Tonight is more important to the Medalonians
than you know.â€
She turned to Damin curiously. “What do you mean?â€
“Tonight is their annual Gathering at the Citadel.
R’shiel is
planning to make some changes in the Sisterhood and Tarja’s
very
nervous about it. Here, have a seat and drink up. I’m sure
you’ll find
me much more agreeable company if you’re drunk.â€
Adrina accepted the cup and sat beside him on the stairs, drinking
her wine thoughtfully. It was a surprisingly strong blend. “He
told me
about R’shiel.â€
“I’m not surprised. You weren’t being very
subtle, you know. I was
half expecting you to start tearing his jacket off, right there on the
dance floor.â€
“Do you always have to be so crude?â€
“I’m being suitable to the occasion, your Highness.
If you act like
a whore, you shouldn’t be surprised when you get treated like
one.â€
Adrina had taken just about all she intended to from this barbarian.
He had done nothing but taunt her and torment her. It was time to put
him in his place. Time to wipe that superior smirk off his face.
“You’re jealous.â€
“Of you? Don’t flatter yourself.â€
“Of course, you are,†she laughed.
“I’ve misjudged you badly, my
Lord. All this time I thought you were a degenerate pervert like your
uncle, when in fact, you fancy yourself Kalianah’s gift to
women. You
don’t even like me, yet you can’t bear the thought that
I might find
Tarja attractive. How pathetic!â€
“Your attempts to sleep your way to freedom are far more
pathetic
than anything I can come up with, Adrina.â€
“If I’d been trying to ‘sleep my way to
freedom’, as you so crudely
put it, I would have been out of here weeks ago,†she assured
him
confidently.
“You’re that good, are you?â€
She finished the wine in a swallow, surprised at how potent it was.
She had heard that the drier the climate the stronger the wine, but she
hadn’t realised until now the difference between the sweet
blends of
Fardohnya and the hardy Medalonian vintages.
“Well, that’s something you’re never
likely to find out, is
it?â€
Damin refilled her cup from a jug he had on the step by his feet.
“Ah, now that would imply that I would want to find out,
Adrina. Thank
you, but I prefer to sleep with women who aren’t likely to try
slipping
a knife between my ribs.â€
“I imagine that’s all you can do, Damin. Sleep
with
women.†She downed the wine recklessly. She was enjoying this.
To the
Seven Hells with being nice.
“This from the woman who couldn’t even coax a virgin
boy into her
bed,†he said. “I wonder what Cratyn’s doing at
the moment? Praying to
the Overlord for the return of his beloved wife, or thanking him for
getting rid of her?â€
“You’re a pig, Damin Wolfblade!†She stood
up — far too quickly, she
discovered with alarm — and gripped the rough stone wall.
“I’m not
going to sit here and listen to your drunken insults any
longer.â€
“Giving in so easily, your Highness? You disappoint me. I
thought
you’d be good for another hour at least.â€
“You’re drunk!†she accused, turning to
climb the stairs to her
room. She misjudged them and stumbled, but Damin caught her before she
fell.
“Actually, I’m disappointingly sober,†he
corrected. “You, on the
other hand, are well and truly under the weather. How much did you
have?â€
“Let me go!†she demanded, shaking free of him.
“I am not drunk. I
had two cups, that’s all.â€
“They weren’t cups, they were tankards, and the wine
you’re used to
is like mother’s milk compared to this Medalonian stuff. Come
on, let’s
get you upstairs before you really do something to embarrass
yourself.â€
“Take your hands off me!†she hissed. Gripping the
wall, Adrina took
the steps carefully, grateful, but not willing to admit it, that Damin
was behind her. Her head was starting to spin alarmingly.
By the time they reached the door to her room, Adrina felt a little
better. She took a deep breath and turned to Damin, feeling almost
gracious enough to thank him for his assistance. Until she saw the
smirk on his face.
“You’re insufferable! How dare you laugh at
me!â€
“You really should learn not to take yourself so seriously.
You’d be
much more bearable, if you did.â€
“I’ve no interest in making myself bearable to suit
you.â€
“I doubt you could even if you tried, Adrina.â€
A small part of Adrina — that part that was still reasonably
sober —
warned her to let the comment go. But for some reason, she felt
compelled to rise to the challenge. She was sick to death of this man.
“I’ve told you before. In the unlikely event I ever
decide to
entertain myself with you, Damin Wolfblade, you won’t know
what’s hit
you.â€
“So you keep telling me. You’re not quite game to
put it to the
test, though, are you?â€
“You think I couldn’t?â€
“I think you’re afraid of me.â€
“I’m not afraid of anyone, least of all you!â€
“Brave words from a cheap drunk. Go to bed, Adrina.â€
She laughed softly. “You’re afraid of me,
that’s the truth
of it. You even warned Tarja that I’m dangerous.â€
“He told you that?â€
“Yes.â€
“He really does have a bad habit of repeating the most
inconvenient
things, doesn’t he?†He reached across and opened the
door to her
chamber. “Goodnight, Adrina.â€
“I’m right, aren’t I? You’re afraid
of me.†Adrina wasn’t sure why
she was being so insistent. It just seemed that the world would be a
much better place if Damin Wolfblade admitted that he feared her. Even
a little bit.
“Terrified,†he agreed, as if he were speaking to a
small child.
“Now go to bed.â€
“You’re just saying that to get rid of me.â€
“You noticed? Maybe you’re not as drunk as I
thought.â€
“I know why you’re afraid.â€
“Why?â€
“Because of this,†she said, and then she kissed him.
Adrina had intended to bestow one blazing, breathtaking kiss on him
and leave him gasping for more. He would never get any more, of course,
but that was the whole point. Let him have a taste of the forbidden
fruit and then deny him the sweetness forever more.
But she didn’t count on Damin’s reaction. She
didn’t count on him
kissing her back. Didn’t count on finding herself pushed
against the
wall with strong arms holding hers pinned against her body while her
pulse pounded in her ears, blocking out all other sensations. Adrina
had kissed plenty of men before, but no court’esa in
her
service would have dared such unbridled lust. Her grand plan evaporated
in a heartbeat. For a fleeting, dangerous moment, she gave herself up
to the sheer, unexpected pleasure of it.
“Your Highness?â€
Tamylan’s startled greeting brought her back to her senses
and she
pushed Damin away with a shove, gasping for air. Her slave stood in the
open doorway to her chamber, her expression a mixture of astonishment
and horror.
“Are you alright, my Lady?†she asked with concern,
glaring at Damin.
“I’m fine Tam. Go back to bed. I’ll be in
shortly.â€
The slave nodded warily and moved away from the door. Only then did
Adrina feel composed enough to meet Damin’s eye.
“I think I’ve proved my point, don’t
you?â€
Damin’s expression was far too smug. “You think
so?â€
“I hope you enjoyed it, my Lord. You’ll never
receive another. From
now on, you’ll just have to dream about what you’re
missing.â€
Adrina still had enough of her wits about her not to wait for his
answer. She turned on her heel and slammed the door behind her with a
resounding, and most satisfactory, thump.
“What are you playing at, Adrina?†Tamylan demanded
as soon as the
door banged shut. “Have you completely lost your mind?â€
“You forget your place, Tamylan.â€
“So have you, your Highness,†the slave retorted.
“Have you
forgotten where we are? Who he is? What he is?â€
“Be silent!â€
Tamylan shook her head in disgust and left the rest of it unsaid.
CHAPTER 46
For the second time in her life, R’shiel
entered
the Great Hall to attend the annual Gathering of the Sisters of the
Blade, although on this occasion she did not have to scale the outside
of the building in the rain.
This time she walked through the main doors quite brazenly,
concealed by a glamour that made her unnoticeable. She broke from the
crowd at the entrance and made her way to the narrow stairs leading to
the gallery. Once she had climbed the stairs, she walked along the
gallery to almost the exact spot from which she had watched the
Gathering two years ago with Davydd Tailorson. It was odd, and a little
disconcerting that she could barely remember his face. Davydd had died
trying to help her and Tarja escape the Citadel. He deserved to be
remembered more clearly.
R’shiel watched the Hall filling with blue-robed sisters,
fidgeting
nervously. She wanted to call Dranymire, to ensure the demon knew what
was expected of him and his brethren, but she could not risk them being
noticed before she took control of the Gathering. She wanted to know
where Mahina was. She wanted to get a message to Affiana, concerned
that the woman had not been at the pre-arranged meeting place. It could
simply be that she had not waited around. R’shiel and Brak had
been
late arriving at the tavern. R’shiel was worried. Affiana had
not even
left a message for them.
She leaned on the balustrade, watching the growing crowd. Garet
Warner, the ranking officer in the Citadel, stood off to the left of
the dais with two other officers, where Lord Jenga and Tarja had stood
the night Joyhinia had been appointed First Sister. She wished she
could tell what he was thinking. Wished she knew how far he could be
trusted.
R’shiel also wished Brak had come with her, but he had
insisted he
wait outside with the horses, ready for a quick departure. He wanted
her away from this place with a determination that bordered on
obsession. Brak was a hard man to read. The only thing R’shiel
was
certain of was that he would stay by her, regardless of how he felt
about what she was doing. She wasn’t even sure that Brak liked
her very
much, but he took his responsibilities seriously. He had killed the
Harshini King to ensure her survival. To desert her now would make that
act meaningless.
The doors closing with a hollow boom signalled the start of the
meeting and every eye turned forward as the white-robed members of the
Quorum filed on to the dais from the door at the back of the Hall.
Traditionally, the First Sister entered last, a custom R’shiel
was
extremely grateful for. She sent out a mental call for Dranymire. The
demon responded instantly, popping into existence beside her, his
too-large eyes glittering in the gloom. Are you ready? May the gods be with us, Dranymire responded before he
disappeared again.
“Be careful,†she whispered to the vanished demon.
She turned her attention to the dais, as Francil began reciting the
ritual thanksgiving to the Founding Sisters. On the edge of her
awareness, she could feel the demons forming the meld that would be
Joyhinia. She pushed aside the distraction and reached inside herself,
feeling the glow of the Harshini magic that nestled in her mind. She
drew on the power carefully, as Brak had shown her, and formed the
thoughts she wanted to impose on the Gathering although she held back
releasing them. Her eyes darkened until they turned completely black,
the whites of her eyes consumed by the power she gathered to her. As
Francil’s dry voice finished the litany, the door leading from
the
small anteroom opened and the demon meld stepped onto the dais.
Dranymire and his brethren had done an impressive job. The Joyhinia
they had formed was a little too tall perhaps, and her eyes had never
been quite that shade of blue, but one would be hard pressed to tell
her from the genuine article. Joyhinia stepped up to take her place
with a commanding air, nodding in acknowledgment to the Quorum before
turning to face the Gathering. It was against protocol, R’shiel
knew,
but she did not want to risk the meld for a moment longer than she had
to. Joyhinia would stand up, make her announcement and then leave.
R’shiel could not pick out Mahina among the sea of blue-robed
sisters,
but she trusted the old woman to be in place.
She held back the coercion with difficulty. The power, once tapped,
did not like to be restrained. Sweat beaded her forehead and her eyes
burned as she gripped the balustrade. Unconsciously, R’shiel
mouthed
the words of Joyhinia’s rehearsed speech, as the demon meld
addressed
the crowd.
“Sisters! It is good to be back among you, in these trying
times.â€
The voice was too low, almost masculine, but it was so long since any
of the sisters had heard Joyhinia speak, R’shiel doubted
anybody would
notice. “I have been on our northern border, supervising our
efforts to
repel the insolent Karien invasion of our sovereign nation.â€
The
Gathering was silent as they listened to the First Sister, more curious
than concerned. “Medalon will be safe in the hands of the
Defenders and
we must press all our efforts in that direction.â€
“From what I hear, it was a Defender who got us into this
mess!†a
voice called from the back of the Hall.
R’shiel grimaced. She had not coached Dranymire to trade
taunts with
hecklers. The coercion laboured to be released. Her knuckles were white
with the effort of holding it in. Dranymire ignored the comment and
carried on, oddly enough, making the meld seem more like Joyhinia than
ever.
“The single most important issue facing Medalon is our
survival.
Everything else is insignificant in comparison to this. Personal
ambition, feelings and prejudices must be put aside.†That
actually
drew a spattering of applause. There were many Sisters who were more
concerned with their duties than their careers. Having grown up in
Joyhinia’s shadow, R’shiel had to occasionally remind
herself of that.
Joyhinia waited a moment before she continued. R’shiel
fervently
hoped it was Dranymire pausing for dramatic effect, not fighting for
control over the meld.
“To this end, I plan to step down from the position of First
Sister
and nominate the woman who I believe is the only one among us strong
enough to see us through this: Mahina Cortanen.â€
Pandemonium erupted in the Hall at Joyhinia’s announcement.
R’shiel
let go of the coercion, almost gagging as it descended on the Hall,
forcing down the opposition like a wet blanket thrown on a fire.
R’shiel had known it would be uncomfortable, she remembered
the
feeling on the border when the Karien priests had coerced their troops,
but she was not prepared for the wave of debilitating nausea that
washed over her. Her knees buckled as she forced the women below to
accept what they could not accept, to believe the unbelievable. She
gritted her teeth, waiting for Mahina to step forward to accept the
mantle of First Sister. The crowd settled as their thoughts were turned
from rebellion to compliance, but there was no sign of the old woman.
Joyhinia looked up toward the gallery uncertainly.
“I call forth Mahina Cortanen!†Where is she? R’shiel forcibly held back the
suspicions of
the crowd, fighting the sickening feeling with all her strength. A
movement at the back of the crowd caught her attention and she spied
Mahina moving towards the dais with relief. It would be over soon. It
was almost done.
Mahina finally stepped up to the platform and turned to face the
Gathering. R’shiel could not imagine what she was thinking. As
First
Sister she was sworn to destroy all vestiges of Harshini magic, yet her
appointment this night could not happen without it. She faced the
Gathering with an unreadable expression as R’shiel forced the
thousand
or more Sisters present to accept her reinstatement.
“Do you accept my nomination?†Joyhinia asked.
“Yes!†came the unanimous, if somewhat muted reply.
R’shiel needed
them to agree. She did not have the skill to inspire them with
enthusiasm.
“Then I declare Mahina Cortanen First Sister!â€
There was no accompanying cheer, barely a murmur, in fact. Mahina
did not wait for the customary accolades, in any case. The demon meld
wobbled for an instant and R’shiel knew they could not hold it
together
much longer.
“Commandant, as the ranking officer of the Defenders in the
Citadel,
will you take the oath on behalf of the Lord Defender?â€
“I will, your Grace,†Garet replied, stepping
forward into the small
clearing at the foot of the dais.
R’shiel fought off the crippling nausea as Garet drew his
sword and
laid it at the feet of the new First Sister. Not much longer,
she told herself, understanding now why Brak had insisted she work the
coercion and then leave immediately. She wanted to vomit and she
wasn’t
sure how much longer she could stay on her feet.
Garet knelt on one knee and began the oath in a voice that rang
clearly through the Hall. A commotion at the edge of the crowd
distracted R’shiel for a moment, but she ignored it. It was
almost
over. The demon meld shimmered but Dranymire managed to hold his
brethren together. As soon as the Defenders were sworn to Mahina,
Joyhinia could leave. It didn’t matter if the meld
disintegrated the
moment they were out of sight. The important thing was to prevent it
falling into a puddle of little grey demons in full sight of the
Gathering. R’shiel was coercing the Sisters into accepting
Mahina’s
appointment. If she were forced to cover for the demons, she would have
to let that thought go. Even if she had the skill to perform such a
task, she doubted she had the strength left.
R’shiel’s black eyes watered with the effort of
forcing down the
natural opposition of the Sisters in the Hall to this blatant breach of
protocol. It was like trying to hold a surging ocean back with nothing
more than a fishing net. As Brak had warned, for some the coercion
settled on them with barely a flicker of protest, while other minds
rebelled against the thoughts she imposed on them. That opposition
surged up like a stormy sea. No sooner had she quieted one mind than
another screamed in protest. The mental strength it took surprised her.
Physically, she was on the point of exhaustion.
It seemed to take Garet forever to complete the oath. Time slowed as
her vision narrowed to a pinpoint, fixed on the dais. It was all she
could see, all she cared about. As the power consumed her, every sense
not immediately involved in holding the coercion together seemed to
shut down. She could no longer feel her fingers gripping the
balustrade. She could no longer hear anything. The odour of damp wool
cloaks that had permeated the Hall faded into nothing. She was isolated
in a bubble of total concentration that allowed no room for any
distraction.
“Stop this abomination! You are being deceived!â€
The voice rang out from the back of the Hall, a male voice that
startled the Sisters with its harsh Karien accent. R’shiel felt
the
Sisters’resistance to the coercion surge in response to the
sudden cry
and it slipped from her grasp. At almost the same instant, Dranymire
lost control of the meld.
Screams filled the Hall as Joyhinia fell apart, leaving nothing but
a writhing mass of wrinkled grey gnomes who blinked out of existence as
soon as they realised they were exposed. All except one. The little
demon who had attached herself to R’shiel in Sanctuary who
sought
warmth in her bed cowered behind the lectern on the podium, unseen by
the humans surrounding her, trembling with fear.
R’shiel did not see the demon. She had no idea what was
happening.
She collapsed against the balustrade and brought up everything she had
eaten for the past week. Her eyes watered so hard she could not see,
could not find the source of the pounding feet on the narrow stairs
that led to the gallery. She wiped her mouth and glanced up, barely had
time to notice the tonsured man standing over her as a jewelled staff
landed on her shoulder, tearing a scream of unbearable agony from her.
She quivered on the gallery floor as rough hands held her down and
something cold and hard was snapped around her neck. As soon as the
clasp snicked shut, R’shiel felt the last remnants of the
Harshini
power vanish, as if a door had been slammed shut on it.
Dazed and barely able to walk, she was dragged to her feet, pushed
down the winding stairs, then half pulled, half carried to the front of
the Hall. The men holding her threw her to the floor. Simply letting
her go would have had the same effect. Her head cracked against the
bottom step, but she barely noticed the pain or the blood that spurted
from her forehead. She pushed herself up onto her elbows and wiped her
eyes.
More screams filled the hall as the little demon spied
R’shiel and
flew at her, chitterring in terror. She wrapped her arms around
R’shiel’s neck. As soon as the demon came in contact
with the collar,
she squealed with pain and fell to the floor, quivering, temporarily
robbed of every vestige of power, too stunned to disappear and save
herself. R’shiel tried to catch the creature but she was pushed
away
roughly. One of the priests pinned the demon to the floor with his
staff.
R’shiel cried out in protest as the little demon squealed in
agony.
Someone knocked her down. By the time she had pushed herself up again,
the demon was being hurried from the hall by two of the Karien priests.
She looked up then and caught sight of the First Sister.
Joyhinia looked down at her. The real Joyhinia. Savage intelligence
burned in eyes that should have been filled with childish innocence.
She smiled with malicious glee, then held her arms wide to address the
Gathering.
“What has happened here is sorcery, my Sisters! Only with
the help
of Lord Terbolt and the Karien priests have I been able to expose this
treachery. I have not resigned. I do not surrender my position to any
woman.†She spared Mahina a glance, then turned to Garet
Warner.
“Arrest the usurper!â€
Garet did not even hesitate. Mahina was being led away before she
could protest — before anyone could protest. The Commandant had
changed
sides without a whimper. Angrily, R’shiel forced herself to
concentrate
and reach for her power, but all she got in return for her trouble was
a vicious burning sensation around her neck that wrenched an agonised
cry from her lips.
Joyhinia glanced down at R’shiel. She was gloating. Her eyes
were
filled with vengeance waiting to be sated. The aura that surrounded her
was black streaked and tantalisingly familiar. She held her arms wide
again and addressed the Gathering.
“Behold, Sisters! Let me present the author of this
treasonous plot.
I give you the reason for the Purge. I give you the result of relaxing
our vigilance. I give you a Harshini sorcerer! I give you the fabled
demon child!â€
CHAPTER 47
Consciousness returned slowly. It crept up on her
like a thief in the night, so slowly that it took time for her to
realise she was awake. It took even longer for her to realise where she
was.
R’shiel lay on the floor, her head throbbing from the
shallow cut
she received when she had hit the marble steps leading to the dais.
Cold morning light from the highset windows chequered the expensive rug
where she lay. Her neck ached as if it had been burned; the icy collar
that circled her throat a grim reminder of the foolishness of trying to
reach for her power. Her mouth tasted like the floor of a pigsty. Her
hands were tied behind her back, the ropes so tight that her fingers
were numb. She was in a bedchamber, rather than a cell, but she could
not recall how she got there. Her last clear memory was Joyhinia
staring at her with savage, lucid eyes as she destroyed everything
R’shiel had been working toward.
“You’re awake, I see.â€
R’shiel turned her head in the direction of the voice. The
man who
spoke was a Karien.
“Can I have some water?†she croaked.
The Karien nodded and R’shiel felt other hands pulling her
up into a
sitting position. A cool tankard touched her lips and she swallowed the
water gratefully. The man who held her head was Karien too, with the
tonsured head and fanatical expression of a priest. Fear stabbed at her
like a knife. She had been the victim of a Karien priest before. It was
not an experience she wished to repeat.
“You failed in your attempt to subvert the Sisterhood. You
realise
that, don’t you?â€
“Who are you?â€
“I am Lord Terbolt, the Duke of Setenton, Personal Envoy of
King
Jasnoff III and the anointed representative of Xaphista the
Overlord.â€
“Is that supposed to impress me?†she said, pushing
away the
tankard. Too late now to wonder if it had been drugged.
The Karien frowned. “You would do well to show some respect,
demon
child. I can have you put to death with a word.â€
R’shiel stared at him, trying to gather her wits. She
ignored the
pain with an effort. Now was not the time to give into something so
distracting. “I’d be dead already if you were planning
to kill me.â€
Lord Setenton nodded slowly, as if reluctant to admit the truth of
her statement. “You live because the Overlord wishes it, demon
child.
He is liable to change his mind quite rapidly, should you fail to do as
you are told.â€
“Then kill me now,†she suggested.
“I’d rather die than do anything
Xaphista demanded of me.â€
The Karien frowned at her blasphemy. The priest actually gasped.
“No, Garanus!†Terbolt ordered. He was standing
behind her, so
R’shiel could not see what the priest intended.
“She blasphemes, my Lord!â€
“She doesn’t know any better.â€
“But, my Lord . . .â€
“No Garanus, his Majesty was quite specific. She is not to
be
harmed. The Overlord has plans for the demon child.â€
R’shiel struggled to sit up and glared at the Karien.
“Look, I don’t
know where you got the idea that I’m the demon child, but
you’re
gloating over the wrong catch. The Harshini are extinct. I am
human.â€
“You are a liar,†Garanus countered.
“Let her be, Garanus. Her denials are meaningless. Go find
Gawn and
see if there is any word on the half-breed.â€
So they hadn’t caught Brak. The news gave her hope. The
priest
followed the Duke’s orders with some reluctance, closing the
door
behind him. As soon as he was gone, Lord Terbolt rose from his chair
and crossed the room. He untied the ropes holding her then helped her
to her feet. R’shiel winced as the blood returned to her numb
fingers.
“Thank you.â€
“I am not a vicious man, R’shiel. I have no wish to
see you harmed.
I have orders to deliver you to King Jasnoff in one piece. I would
appreciate it if you gave Garanus and his ilk no reason to harm
you.â€
“You mean, if I cooperate, I’ll be safe until you
hand me over to
Xaphista so he can kill me himself? What a tempting offer.â€
“As I understand it, the Overlord wants your cooperation,
not your
death, demon child. I believe he seeks an alliance, not your
destruction.â€
“An alliance? With me? Now I really have heard
everything.â€
Before Terbolt could answer, the door opened and R’shiel
felt the
room sway momentarily as Joyhinia stepped into the room. It was
impossible, she knew, for Joyhinia to have regained her wits.
Dacendaran had stolen them and Tarja had destroyed them. How could she
be standing there? So sure of herself? So obviously aware?
“Did you want something, Captain?†the Duke asked,
addressing the
First Sister with ill-disguised impatience.
R’shiel stared at him in confusion. Captain?
“Garanus wishes to speak with you, my Lord. In private.â€
Joyhinia turned her frighteningly lucid eyes on R’shiel and
smiled
unpleasantly. “I’ll watch the prisoner for you.â€
“She is not to be harmed,†the Duke warned.
“As you wish.â€
Joyhinia closed the door behind the Duke then leaned against it,
studying R’shiel with contempt.
“Your sorcerer’s tricks didn’t help you much
this time, did they?â€
“I don’t know what you’re talking
about.â€
“Oh yes you do! You may have fooled everyone else, but these
Kariens
know what you are. And I’ve seen your evil first hand. Only
this time
Tarja’s not around to save you, is he?â€
It slowly dawned on R’shiel that this was not Joyhinia. The
body was
hers, certainly, but the words were not. She knew the aura surrounding
Joyhinia, and this did not belong to her foster-mother. Neither did the
memories. Joyhinia had never seen her use anything remotely resembling
magic. Nobody in Medalon had, with the exception of her friends still
on the northern border and the Fardohnyan crew of the Maera’s
Daughter. The only other person was . . .
“Loclon!â€
The name evoked a flood of memories she had thought long forgotten.
Nightmares she hoped she would never revisit suddenly threatened to
overwhelm her. R’shiel’s mouth went dry and she took an
involuntary
step backwards, wishing Korandellan had never removed the block on her
emotions. For a brief, sickening moment the pain, the humiliation she
had suffered in this man’s hands tried to swamp her. She fought
a wave
of nausea as bad as the one that had almost crippled her when she tried
to coerce the Gathering.
“In the flesh,†Joyhinia agreed. “Well, in
the First Sister’s flesh
actually. Ironic, don’t you think?â€
“How?†she managed to ask, her head reeling from the
implications of
such a dreadful combination.
Joyhinia shrugged. “I’m not sure how. The priests
did it. They
called on their Overlord, or something. I wasn’t too thrilled
to begin
with, until it occurred to me what I could do as First Sister. By the
look on your face, I’d say it’s occurred to you,
too.â€
Actually, R’shiel was still struggling to come to grips with
the
dreadful spectre of the man she loathed and feared most in this world
controlling the body of the woman she hated almost as much. Her mind
had not had time to deal with the wider implications of all that
sadistic megalomania trapped inside the woman who ruled Medalon.
“You won’t get away with this, Loclon. You
can’t make people believe
you’re the First Sister.â€
“That’s where you’re wrong, demon child. I am
the First
Sister.â€
“Where’s Mahina?â€
“The usurper? Safely under lock and key. She’ll be
tried and hanged
for treason, along with the Lord Defender and Tarja, when I get my
hands on them. I may even keep you alive long enough to watch them
swing.â€
“You’ve no say over what happens to me, you deluded
fool. You’re a
Karien puppet. You’re dancing to their tune.â€
“Only while it suits me.â€
“Don’t kid yourself,†she warned.
“They’ll only keep you alive long
enough to do what they want. And you won’t be able to deny
them.
Where’s your own body, Loclon? Somewhere safe? Being tended by
Karien
priests? Did they promise to watch over you while your mind inhabits
Joyhinia’s body? How long do you think you’ll last if
they slit your
unresisting throat?†R’shiel had no idea if her
prediction was
accurate, but Loclon didn’t know that.
Joyhinia’s face paled a little, small satisfaction though it
was. It
was obvious the Kariens had not explained much about the mechanics of
transferring his mind into Joyhinia’s body. That could work in
her
favour. Loclon was many things, but first and foremost, he was a coward.
“You console yourself anyway you want,
R’shiel,†the First Sister
retorted. “Just remember, I’m the one in control
now.â€
R’shiel had to keep reminding herself that this was Loclon,
not
Joyhinia, and that she needed to deal with him, not her.
“You’re not in control of anything, Loclon, least of
all me. I don’t
care whose face you wear, you’re still nothing but a craven,
petty,
insignificant, little man. The only difference is that now
you’re
wearing a skirt.â€
Loclon took a step toward her, reacting as he always did to her
taunts. R’shiel tentatively reached inside herself and tried to
touch
her power, but even that delicate probe caused the collar to burn. She
understood why the Duke had untied her, why Loclon did not fear her.
They had cut her off from the source of the Harshini magic.
“I intend to make you suffer until you beg for
mercy!†Joyhinia’s
voice hissed, but it was Loclon’s vengeful mind that supplied
the words.
“You’ll be doing nothing of the sort,†the
Duke of Setenton
corrected.
Joyhinia spun around in annoyance to find the Karien standing by the
open door wearing a look of intense displeasure.
“R’shiel is a wanted criminal, my Lord. She belongs
to Medalon.â€
“She belongs to the Overlord, Captain, and if I see any
evidence
that you intend to interfere with the Overlord’s wishes, you
may find
the penalty life-threatening. Your usefulness is limited. There are
other, more cooperative minds who could serve our needs just as
easily.â€
Loclon’s eyes burned with anger in Joyhinia’s face.
She strode from
the room, pushing past Setenton. The duke watched her leave and then
turned to R’shiel.
“You will be confined here until we leave. There are a
number of
things that need to be taken care of first. But we should be able to
leave in a few days. If all goes well, we should be in Karien by the
end of the month.â€
“Then you plan to travel overland? A bit risky,
don’t you think, in
the middle of a war?â€
Lord Setenton smiled coldly. “War? What war? Of course, you
left the
Gathering early, didn’t you? Your nation is no longer at war
with
Karien, my dear. The First Sister has already dispatched the order to
your forces on the border. Medalon has surrendered.â€
CHAPTER 48
“Surrender?†Damin leapt forward
and snatched the
note from Tarja’s hand. “The hell we will! This is a
trick!â€
Tarja looked haggard, as if he hadn’t slept for days.
“The note
carries the correct authentication seal from the Citadel. It’s
genuine.â€
“Who sent it?â€
“The First Sister,†Jenga told him grimly.
“But which First Sister?â€
“Mahina would not betray us,†the Lord Defender
objected.
“Well, somebody did! Probably your precious Garet Warner. I
told you
he wasn’t to be trusted.â€
Tarja sagged against the edge of the long table near the hearth.
“You’re both missing the point here. This message means
that R’shiel
failed. Their demon meld didn’t work.â€
Damin glanced at the Medalonian captain sympathetically.
“I’m sure
she’s fine, Tarja. Perhaps they didn’t arrive in
time.â€
“If they hadn’t arrived in time, then things would
have simply gone
on as they have for months. Something went wrong.†He stood up
and
squared his shoulders determinedly. “I’m going to the
Citadel.â€
“No you’re not, Captain. I need you here.â€
“R’shiel needs me.â€
“There is nothing you can do for her, Tarja,†Jenga
reminded him
with cold practicality. “It would take you weeks to reach the
Citadel
and for all you know she’s already dead.â€
Tarja’s eyes blazed defiantly, but he could not deny
Jenga’s logic.
“That’s it then? We just roll over and die? Shall we
send an emissary
to the Kariens with our surrender, or were you planning to do the
honours yourself, my Lord?â€
“I don’t think we should do anything just
yet,†Damin advised. “Who
else knows about this?â€
“Just the three of us at present.â€
“Then let’s keep it that way for a little bit
longer. I want to have
a word with Her Serene Highness, first.â€
“What can she tell you that we don’t already
know?†Jenga asked. He
did not baulk at holding off carrying out his orders, Damin noticed
with relief.
“I’m not sure. I just have a funny feeling about
this. I’ll tell you
after I’ve spoken with her. Can you have her brought to my
tent?â€
“She’s right up those stairs, Damin,†Tarja
pointed out. “Why not
just go up and ask her now?â€
“I want this discussion to take place on my territory, not
hers.â€
It was a measure of his distress that Tarja didn’t even
smile.
An hour or so later, two Defenders arrived in the
Hythrun camp escorting Adrina. Damin had spent the intervening time
mentally rehearsing what he was going to say.
He had not quite recovered from their last encounter. Adrina had
caught him unawares, and that irked him no end. What really annoyed him
was that he had been expecting her to try something like that ever
since he first laid eyes on her and had steeled himself against it. He
knew her background too well. Knew that if she couldn’t get her
own way
by demanding it, she would eventually resort to using her body. But she
took him by surprise and he’d reacted exactly as she’d
wanted him to.
His only comfort was that she seemed to have been as unnerved by the
incident as he was.
When she arrived, Adrina was dressed for warmth, rather than effect,
wrapped in the woollen shirt he had given her and a warm
Defender’s
cloak. Her skin was flushed from the walk, her dark hair piled loosely
on top of her head. Gods, she was stunning. He wondered why
he’d never
noticed how green her eyes were. Dark lashes almost too long to be real
framed eyes the colour of cut emeralds. Damin mentally berated himself
for a fool as she shook off the cloak and stepped up to the brazier to
warm her outstretched hands.
“You wanted to see me, my Lord?â€
“I thought we might continue our discussion from the other
night.â€
“Which one?†she asked calmly. “The one
about Cratyn’s intentions,
or the one about us?â€
“There is no us, your Highness, so I guess that
leaves
Cratyn.â€
“I’ve told you everything I know.â€
“Then tell me again.â€
“I don’t see the point.â€
“You don’t have to.â€
Adrina’s eyes narrowed cannily. “Something’s
happened, hasn’t it?â€
“I’m sorry, I’m being very remiss as a host.
Can I offer you some
wine?†He turned his back, reaching for the jug on his writing
desk.
“Don’t avoid the question, Damin. What’s
happened?â€
He poured the wine and turned back to her. “The Medalonians
have
been ordered to surrender.â€
Now why had he told her that?
Her face was a portrait of shock. He doubted even Adrina could fake
such a genuine reaction. “In the name of Zegarnald, why?
They’re winning!â€
“I don’t know if I’d go so far as to call
this stalemate winning,â€
he said as he handed her the wine. “But they certainly
aren’t in danger
of imminent defeat.â€
“I don’t understand it.â€
“Neither do I. That’s what I wanted to see you
about. Could this
have anything to do with Setenton’s absence from the
front?â€
“It might,†she nodded thoughtfully. “I
thought it a little odd that
Jasnoff sent Cratyn to the border without Terbolt. But the Kariens are
very big on honour and distinguishing themselves in battle. I always
supposed he wanted to give Cratyn a chance to prove himself to the
Dukes.â€
“If he’s behind this sudden turnabout, that would
explain it. What
about the treaty with your father?â€
Adrina hesitated for a moment, then sighed. “What I told you
before
was the truth, or most of it. Father agreed to invade Medalon from the
south come summer, and to supply the Kariens with cannon.â€
“Cannon? Are they really as devastating as they
claim?â€
She nodded grimly. “The truth? They’re proving more
trouble than
they’re worth. They blow up when you least expect it, only work
sometimes and we still haven’t found the right sort of alloy
that won’t
split after a few shots and kill the men manning the guns. My
father’s
cannon are as much the result of clever rumours as they are
fact.â€
“I see. And what does Hablet get in return for all
this?â€
“Gold and timber. Lots and lots of it.â€
“I know your father’s greedy, Adrina, but there has
to be more to it
than that.â€
“The prize is Hythria, Damin,†she said softly.
“I thought you’d
already worked that out for yourself.â€
He stared at her for a moment, wondering why she had chosen this
moment to reveal Hablet’s plans. “Hablet
doesn’t need the Kariens to
invade Hythria.â€
“No, but he needs the Defenders occupied. You know as well
as I do
how futile it’s been, trying to attack Hythria over the Sunrise
Mountains. There are only a few navigable passes and they can be
defended by a handful of men against the entire Fardohnyan army. A
naval invasion would be just as futile. Your ports are too well
defended. Hythria’s only vulnerable point is the border with
Medalon.
If the Medalonians had territorial ambitions, you’d have been
overrun a
century ago.â€
“So Hablet plans to turn south, once he reaches
Medalon.â€
“And you’ve made the job even easier for him. Your
province borders
Medalon. You’re supposed to be Hythria’s first line of
defence.â€
Damin really didn’t need Adrina pointing out his tactical
error at
that point. He was more than capable of punishing himself for being so
arrogant.
“Did your father know anything about the Karien plans for
Medalon?â€
“If you mean, was he expecting them to surrender, of course
not. His
entire strategy is based on the Kariens keeping the Defenders off his
back. Hablet doubts the Defenders would care if he invaded Hythria, one
way or the other, but they’re likely to take a very dim view of
him
marching through Medalon to do it, particularly since they allied
themselves with you, Damin.â€
That was the second time today she had called him by name. He
wondered if she realised that she was doing it.
“And if Medalon surrenders?â€
“Jasnoff will have time to wonder what my father is up to.
The
Kariens are religious fanatics. It’s bad enough the entire
southern
half of the continent is devoted to pagan worship. They certainly
don’t
want it united under one crown. Hablet will invade Hythria and Karien
will follow to stop him. Either way, Hythria will lose. Your only hope
is to keep me safe from the Kariens.â€
Damin smiled. It was amazing the way she could twist any situation
to her advantage. “Exactly how would that make a
difference?â€
“Any child of mine by Cratyn would have a claim on
Hablet’s throne.
With Medalon defeated, if Hablet ruled Fardohnya and Hythria, the
Kariens would own the entire continent on his death.â€
“A death that would be sooner, rather than later, knowing
the
Kariens.†Damin shook his head at the vast scope of the Karien
plans
for world dominance. Or perhaps they were Xaphista’s plans.
And the demon child, the only one who could stop him, was probably
dead.
“An heir and a spare — and I too become surplus to
requirements,â€
she reminded him grimly.
He studied her for a moment, wondering if he was seeing the real
Adrina for the first time. The woman whose life depended on staying one
step ahead of the men who controlled her. Her father. Her husband. Even
him. Every one of them was trying to use her to further their own
ambitions.
“Is there anything else you haven’t told me,
Adrina?â€
She sipped her wine, looking at him over the rim of her cup.
“Haven’t I told you enough?â€
“That depends on what critical piece of information
you’re holding
back.â€
She lowered the cup and smiled. “You’re the most
suspicious man I’ve
ever met.â€
“With just cause, around you.â€
“Well, I hate to disappoint you, Damin, but you know just
about
everything I do.â€
“It’s the ‘just about’ that concerns
me.â€
“I’ve nothing to gain by lying to you. If Medalon
surrenders, I will
be returned to Karien. I would rather die.â€
Oddly, he believed her. If what she had told him was true, the
Kariens would allow her to live long enough to produce the requisite
heir — and not a moment longer. She had already betrayed them
once.
They wouldn’t be so lax in their vigilance a second time.
Then something else occurred to him, which changed his opinion of
her rather radically.
“Cratyn’s impotence was all your fault,
wasn’t it? You didn’t want
to give him an heir to your father’s throne.â€
The question startled her at first, then she smiled smugly.
“As you
pointed out the first time we spoke, my Lord, an inexperienced Karien
princeling is no match for a court’esa-trained
Fardohnyan
princess.â€
“It seems I’ve misjudged you, your Highness.â€
“Something else I warned you about.â€
He refused to acknowledge her reprimand. “More wine?â€
“Thank you, no. I’ve learnt the folly of consuming
too much
Medalonian wine on an empty stomach.†She held out her empty
cup. “I
should be going. Was there anything else you wanted?â€
He took the cup from her outstretched hand. “Untie your
shirt.â€
“What?â€
Damin smiled. “Untie your shirt.â€
“You have got to kidding.â€
“I’ve never been more serious. Untie your shirt, or
I’ll do it for
you.â€
She glared at him, but to her credit, she didn’t back away.
“You lay
one finger on me and I’ll —â€
“What? Scream?†he finished with a laugh.
“You’re in the middle of
my camp, Adrina. Who’s going to come to your rescue?â€
“I’ll gouge your eyes out if you touch me.â€
He shrugged and turned his back on her, replacing the empty cups on
the desk. “As you wish. I was under the impression you wanted
that
slave collar off. I must have been mistaken.â€
He waited with his back to her. She was silent for a very long time.
“You could have said that’s what you were
planning.â€
“And miss seeing you squirm like that?†he asked
with a grin as he
turned back to her. “I don’t think so. So, shall we
start again? Untie
your shirt. I can’t get to the thing with you bundled up like
that.â€
“Just give me the keys and I’ll do it
myself.â€
“No. And for being so uncooperative now you’re going
to have to say
please.â€
“You are the most unbelievable bastard.â€
“I know.â€
She stepped around the brazier and the cushions, unlacing the shirt
as she went. By the time she reached him the shirt was open far enough
to expose the collar and a tantalising glimpse of pale throat —
and not
a thing more.
“There! Just take the damned thing off!â€
“Say please.â€
“Please!†Her eyes burned with fury.
Getting that much out of her was something of an achievement, so
Damin decided not to push his luck. She might still try to gouge his
eyes out, just on principal.
He took her hand and pulled her closer, then slid his fingers under
the collar. Lernen had only shown him once how the catch worked, and he
wasn’t at all certain he could find it. The jeweller who had
designed
the collars was a craftsman and they were manufactured to prevent a
clever slave finding the means for their emancipation. Adrina closed
her eyes rather than meet his. It was very distracting, holding her so
close. He could feel her hot breath on his face, smell the faint
perfume of the soap she used to wash her hair.
He found the catch and heard it open with a faint snick. Adrina
heard it too. She opened her eyes, a little surprised to find herself
so close to him. She looked up, met his eyes.
Later, Damin couldn’t say who moved first. One moment she
was
staring at him with those impressive green eyes. The next he was
kissing her and she was kissing him back. The collar tumbled forgotten
to the floor. It was almost as if she wanted to devour him. He cursed
the layers of winter clothing they both wore as she tore at the lacing
on his shirt. There was no logic to this, no rational thought.
“This is insane,†Adrina gasped between kisses, as
she fumbled with
the buckle on his sword belt. “I hate you.â€
The sword belt dropped to the floor with a clatter. “I hate
you too.â€
“We shouldn’t be doing this,†she added as
she pulled the shirt over
his head.
“We’ll talk about it later,†he promised as
her shirt fell away,
exposing her glorious pale breasts. They fell onto the scattered
cushions beside the brazier. Adrina landed astride him. Her hair had
come loose and it fell about them in an ebony wave that cut off the
rest of the tent so that it was only Adrina that he could see. It was
only Adrina that he wanted to see, in any case.
“Damin?â€
He pulled her down and kissed her, but she pulled back impatiently.
“Damin!â€
“You’re not going to ask me to be gentle, are
you?â€
She smiled wickedly. “No. I only want one thing from you, my
Lord.â€
“Name it, your Highness.â€
Her smile faded, replaced with a look of unexpected savagery.
“Make
me forget Cratyn.â€
The request did not surprise him nearly as much as her vehemence.
But he understood it. “Say please.â€
“Go to hell.â€
He laughed softly and drew her down again. Before long it was
doubtful if either of them could recall their own names, let alone the
name of Adrina’s husband.
CHAPTER 49
“You did what?â€
Tarja wondered if he’d mis-heard the warlord. He glanced
across at
Damin and feared he hadn’t.
They were supposed to be riding out to inspect the border troops,
but Tarja realised now that Damin’s suggestion had merely been
a ruse.
He wanted to break the news to Tarja out of the hearing of the rest of
the camp. The Hythrun was looking rather shamefaced with all of the
things that had gone wrong in the past few days, this was one
complication they could have done without.
“You heard me.â€
“Founders, Damin, she’s the wife of the Karien Crown
Prince!â€
“I’m aware of that.â€
“I thought you couldn’t stand her?â€
“I can’t. Look, it’s . . .
complicated. It’s hard to
explain.â€
“Well you’d better think of something,â€
Tarja warned. “I imagine
Jenga’s going to want a fairly detailed explanation when she
complains
that you raped her.â€
“I never raped her!†Damin declared, offended by the
very
suggestion. “Her Serene Highness was a very willing
participant, I can
assure you.â€
Tarja shook his head doubtfully. “Even so, when
she’s had time to
think about it, she might change her mind. Just because you
didn’t
throw her on the ground and tear her clothes off, doesn’t mean
she
won’t claim you did.â€
“Perhaps I should get in first,†Damin suggested
with a grin. “She
was the one tearing at my clothes, after all.â€
“Be serious!â€
The Warlord sighed and reined his stallion in. He studied the snow
dotted plain for a moment before turning to Tarja. Their breath frosted
in the early morning light. The sun had risen over the rim of the
Jagged Mountains, but the day was overcast, threatening more snow.
“Is Jenga planning to surrender?â€
Tarja shrugged. “I wish I knew. He’s torn between
duty and reason at
present.â€
“I have to leave, Tarja.â€
“I expected as much,†he agreed without rancour.
“It’s the Defenders
who are being ordered to surrender, not the Hythrun.â€
“I’d have to go in any case,†Damin told
him. “Hablet’s planning to
invade Hythria. I need to be in Krakandar.â€
“Adrina told you that?â€
He nodded. “She confirmed it, but I’ve suspected
that was his
ultimate goal ever since I first heard of the Karien–Fardohnyan
Treaty.
If the Defenders surrender to Karien, there’ll be nothing
stopping him.â€
“Did Adrina tell you this before or after she tore your
clothes off?â€
Damin looked at him and smiled sourly. “I deserved that, I
suppose.
But I’m the Hythrun Heir, Tarja. I can’t sit here
minding your border
while the Fardohnyans pour over mine.â€
“I understand, and so will Jenga.â€
“I didn’t doubt that, Tarja, but are you going to be
so
understanding when I tell you Adrina is coming with me?â€
In light of the Warlord’s recent admission, the news did not
surprise him. However, that didn’t make it any more palatable.
“Don’t be ridiculous, Damin. If we surrender to
Karien, the first
thing they’ll do is demand her return. And if we don’t
surrender,
she’ll make a very useful hostage.â€
“I won’t allow you to return her to Karien,
Tarja.â€
“You slept with her once, Damin. I hardly think that
warrants
throwing her over your saddle and riding off into the sunset with
her.â€
Damin grinned. “Poetic as it may seem, Tarja, my reasons are
far
more pragmatic. Should Adrina and Cratyn have a child, it would have a
claim on both the Karien and Fardohnyan thrones. I don’t intend
to let
that happen.â€
“As opposed to a child with a claim on both the Fardohnyan
and Hythrun
thrones,†he pointed out. “Or had that minor detail
escaped you?â€
Damin looked so surprised that Tarja realised that he probably
hadn’t considered that possibility.
“It’s not the same thing.â€
“It’s exactly the same thing, Damin. A child
who can unite
Karien and Fardohnya is a threat, I’ll grant you that, but a
child who
could bring Hythria and Fardohnya together is even worse. The Kariens
will hunt you down like a criminal. I can’t even begin to guess
what
the other Hythrun Warlords will do when they discover you’ve
run off
with Hablet’s daughter.â€
“I’m not running off with her,†he objected.
“I’m averting a
potential catastrophe.â€
“You’re creating a potential catastrophe.
Founders, man,
think about this! How do you think the Kariens are going to react when
they find out? Taking a lover might not be cause for concern in Hythria
or Medalon, or even Fardohnya, for that matter, but it’s a sin
in Karien and they take their sin very seriously.â€
“I’m not her lover!â€
“If you didn’t take her by force, then what else do
you call it? I’m
sure the Kariens will see it that way. They tend to be very black and
white in their thinking.â€
“All the more reason not to send her back to Karien.
She’d be stoned
if they found out.â€
“A few weeks ago, that prospect wouldn’t have
bothered you one whit.â€
Damin didn’t look pleased at the reminder. “All
right, I’ll concede
that my opinion of her has . . .
softened . . . somewhat.â€
“Softened? That’s one way of putting it, I
suppose.â€
“I won’t send her back, Tarja. Even if what you say
is true, the
fact is we know the Overlord wants a Karien heir to the
Fardohnyan throne. The rest of it is just speculation. I’ll
deal with
the known threat and face the rest of it if and when it
happens.â€
“Jenga’s not going to like this.â€
“I wasn’t planning to ask his permission.
I’m an ally, not a
subordinate.â€
“Have you told Adrina?â€
“Not yet.â€
“What if she objects? She might prefer to go back.â€
“She’d kill herself before she agreed to return to
Karien.â€
“She doesn’t strike me as the suicidal type.â€
“Ask her about Cratyn sometime.â€
Tarja reached forward to pat Shadow’s neck. The mare was
restless,
no doubt picking up his apprehension. “When are you planning to
leave?â€
“The sooner the better. Jenga will have to act on that order
soon,
one way or the other. If he surrenders, this plain will be crawling
with Kariens any day, and if he refuses the order you’ll be
fighting
Karien on one side and your own people on the other. I don’t
want to
get caught in the middle of it. Besides,†he added with a
frown, “when
we crossed into Medalon we had Brak’s help. We’re going
to have to make
our way home by more ordinary means. If I don’t leave now,
Hablet will
be in Krakandar before me.â€
At the mention of Brak, Tarja’s brow furrowed with concern.
Brak was
supposed to be looking after R’shiel. But the Sisterhood had
betrayed
them. R’shiel would never have let that happen willingly.
“If you’re so damned worried about R’shiel,
do something about it,â€
Damin said, guessing the direction of his thoughts.
“That would mean deserting my post.â€
“Well, you’ve done that before,†the Warlord
pointed out rather
tactlessly, “so it should be easier the next time round.
Anyway, if
Jenga surrenders, how long do you think your head is going to stay
attached to your neck, my friend? You’re responsible for the
death of
the Karien Envoy, remember? I’ll bet you any sum you care to
name that
your head on a platter was a condition of the surrender.â€
“That doesn’t give me the right to abandon Jenga at
the first sign
of trouble.â€
“Think of it as saving the world, Tarja. The demon child is
the only
one who can destroy Xaphista. There’s something of a moral
imperative
involved in going to her rescue.â€
“She might already be dead.â€
It pained him to admit it. With Brak watching over her and with the
power she commanded, she could achieve anything. R’shiel had
been so
determined that Tarja was certain nothing short of death could have
stood in her way.
“Somehow, I doubt it. The gods have gone to a lot of trouble
to get
her this far. I don’t think they’d stand by and let her
be destroyed
out of hand. She hasn’t done what she was destined for
yet.â€
The reminder did little to ease Tarja’s worry. Being assured
that
R’shiel lived so that she could eventually confront a god was
hardly a
comforting thought.
“I wish there was some way of being certain.â€
“Ask Dace, he should know.â€
“I recall having this discussion with you once before. You
said he
wouldn’t come if I called him.â€
“And he probably wouldn’t,†Damin agreed.
“But you don’t need to
call him, he’s here. I saw him hanging around with that Karien
boy the
other day.â€
“What’s he doing here?†Tarja asked
suspiciously. He mistrusted
these creatures that the pagans called gods.
“The God of Thieves, by his very nature, is bound to be up
to no
good, but that doesn’t necessarily mean he’s doing your
cause any
harm.†Damin laughed suddenly. “I wonder how that
fanatical child of
the Overlord is coping with the idea that his new friend is a pagan
god?â€
Tarja smiled in spite of himself.
“Tell you what, Tarja, let’s go back to the camp.
You round up your
little Karien friend and ask him where Dace is, and I’ll speak
to
Adrina. I promise I’ll only take her with me if she wants to
come. I
haven’t the time to waste dragging her to Hythria by force, at
any
rate. After that we’ll talk to Jenga. Who knows, if you can
prove
R’shiel still lives, he may even sanction your heroic dash to
her
rescue. I’m sure he’d like to know what really happened
at the
Gathering and it may stay his hand on the surrender for a time.â€
“Make sure that’s all you do when you see Adrina. Speak
to
her.â€
“You show a disturbing lack of trust in me,
Captain,†Damin turned
his stallion toward the camp and managed to look quite offended.
Tarja shook his head and followed him. “I thought we were
going to
check on the border troops?â€
“They’ll keep. Besides, if Jenga surrenders, it
doesn’t really make
much difference how they’re placed, does it?â€
Tarja could not deny the Hythrun’s logic and in truth, he
would much
rather find Dace and learn of R’shiel’s fate than
conduct an
inspection. He stared at the border thoughtfully, then kicked his horse
into a canter and headed back to the camp with the Hythrun Warlord.
CHAPTER 50
Brak watched the scene between Joyhinia and
R’shiel unfold with growing frustration.
R’shiel’s recovery from her suffering at the hands
of Joyhinia and
Loclon was too fragile to be tested so soon. He could almost taste her
fear. To face Loclon in the body of her foster mother was testing her
to the limit. One she feared; the other she loathed. It was like a
nightmare come to life. It could push her over the edge. His futile
efforts to reach out to her, to contact her, to somehow let her know
that he was with her, brought a frown to the War God’s stern
face.
“I have already explained to you, Brakandaran. She cannot
see you.
She cannot hear you.â€
“I have to go to her.â€
“And you shall,†Zegarnald promised. “In
time.â€
Brak turned on the god impatiently. “Why are you doing this?
They’ll
kill her!â€
Zegarnald did not answer for a moment. He waited as the First Sister
left the room and Lord Terbolt explained his plans to R’shiel,
then
nodded slowly.
“The Karien human speaks the truth, Brakandaran. Xaphista
wants the
demon child for himself. Her ability to destroy a god is quite
indiscriminate. She could destroy me just as easily as
Xaphista.â€
“Oh, I see,†Brak retorted, his voice laden
with sarcasm.
“That’s a good plan. Hand over the only person who can
destroy you to
your enemy. Now why didn’t I think of that?â€
“Your disrespect wears on my nerves, Brakandaran.â€
“Not half as much as your scheming is wearing on mine,
Zegarnald.â€
“I agreed to humour you, Brakandaran, by allowing you to
assure
yourself that the demon child lives. I did not agree to listen to your
whining.â€
Brak watched helplessly as the Karien duke left the bedchamber where
R’shiel was being held. As soon as she was alone,
R’shiel threw herself
on the bed and stared at the ceiling, cursing softly. After a while,
she gave up that futile pastime and began pacing the room. She checked
the door first, but it was firmly locked. Then she went to the window
and threw it open, looking down with despair at the six-storey drop to
the courtyard below. Finding no joy in that escape route she sat on the
edge of the bed and tentatively reached for her power, drawing back
hastily as the silver collar she wore began to burn.
“Let me out of here, Zegarnald. I have to help her.†Here was a hard place to define. The War God had him
trapped between the world R’shiel inhabited and the world the
gods
called home. He was powerless here — at Zegarnald’s
mercy. He could
move around freely, but he could not be seen, nor could he affect
anything that happened in the ordinary world of humans.
He could have kicked himself for walking into Zegarnald’s
trap so
blindly. He should have known the War God’s sudden appearance
in the
alley beside the Temple of the Gods meant trouble. Zegarnald probably
hadn’t walked the halls of the Citadel for two centuries. Brak
knew the
gods well enough. He should have suspected something. And he
should never have accepted Zegarnald’s uncharacteristic
offer
of a handshake. Touching the god had been his undoing. Once Zegarnald
had a hold of him, he was powerless to resist being drawn into this
grey limbo.
“She must help herself.â€
“How? She can’t even touch her power. That collar is
as bad as those
damned staffs Xaphista’s priests lug around.â€
“She can touch it. But the pain will be intolerable. If she
wants to
escape badly enough, she will find a way to bear it.â€
“This is another of your tests, I suppose? Another part of
the
‘tempering’ you’re so fond of? What happens if
she doesn’t want to play
your game, Zegarnald? Suppose she throws her lot in with
Xaphista?â€
“Then I will release you and you will destroy her.â€
Brak glanced at the god warily. “You trust me to do
that?â€
“If the demon child joins with Xaphista, what is left of the
Harshini will be destroyed. I have no need to trust you. I trust your
determination to remove a threat to your people.â€
The worst of it was that the War God was right. Should
R’shiel give
in to Xaphista he would not hesitate to kill her. He turned back to
watching her, feeling like a voyeur.
“You’re taking a big risk, Zegarnald.â€
“Perhaps. If the demon child is too weak to face down
Xaphista, if
she is willing to become his disciple, I would rather find out now than
wait until she has matured.â€
“The finding out could kill her.â€
“Xaphista will try to win her over. He’ll not resort
to force unless
he has to. He wants the demon child to believe in him, Brakandaran. She
is no good to him if she despises him.â€
“I can’t imagine she’ll be too thrilled by your
efforts,†he
pointed out. “If you ask me you’re playing right into
his hands.â€
“I do not recall asking you.â€
Angrily, Brak drew on his power and tore uselessly at the restraints
that bound him to this place. Zegarnald didn’t budge. His
efforts were
trivial in the face of the god’s implacable will.
“Control yourself, Brakandaran. Such undisciplined behaviour
ill
becomes a member of your race.â€
“I’m half human, Zegarnald. I’m doing my
human ancestors proud.â€
“Stop fighting me. You will harm no one but
yourself.â€
“Then let me out of here.â€
“In time.â€
Brak cursed and let go of the power. Fighting a god was a fruitless
effort. Fighting Zegarnald was a complete waste of time. He
thrived on it. Brak’s efforts were only making him stronger.
The
realisation brought another thought to mind and he decided to change
his tactics. If he couldn’t force Zegarnald into releasing him,
then he
had to make him want to do it.
“Medalon has surrendered.â€
“So it would seem,†the god agreed, a little wary at
Brak’s sudden
change of heart.
“You’re taking it pretty well.â€
“What do you mean?â€
“The war is over. That’s going to seriously affect
your standing
among the other gods, isn’t it? I mean, now that the Kariens
and the
Medalonians aren’t fighting any more, things are going to get
very
cosy. Before long they’ll be shaking hands, then
they’ll start making
friends. Before long they’ll be falling in
love . . .
Kalianah’s going to be very happy. And considerably stronger,
unless
I’m mistaken.â€
Zegarnald frowned. “The Defenders will not
surrender.â€
“You think so? You haven’t been keeping up to date,
Divine One. The
Defenders are the most disciplined army in the world. If they were
ordered to dress up like chickens and run around clucking,
they’d do it
without blinking. They won’t ignore an order to
surrender.â€
“Then I will have to content myself with the Fardohnyan
invasion of
Hythria,†the War God told him smugly.
Brak bit back another curse. He hadn’t known about that.
Zegarnald
needed wars to keep him strong, but he didn’t really care where
they
happened. A conflict between those who worshipped him would serve him
just as well as one between those who didn’t.
“I suppose you’re right. Of course, you’re
assuming that Kalianah
won’t interfere.â€
“There is nothing she can do to prevent a war.â€
“Don’t be so sure. All she has to do is make the
right people fall
in love and your war is done for.†Brak wondered if Zegarnald
knew how
desperate he was. He was certain he sounded desperate.
“If you know something of her plans, then you should tell
me,
Brakandaran.â€
He shrugged. “I merely speculate, Divine One. If
Kalianah’s got
something up her sleeve, you’ll have to ask her about
it.â€
Zegarnald’s dark eyes narrowed suspiciously. Trust was not a
commodity the gods owned in any great quantity and they tended to take
things rather literally. They were jealous creatures and were more
conscious of rank than the most snobbish Karien nobleman. It dawned on
Brak then that Zegarnald was afraid of R’shiel. He was afraid
of what
they had created. That’s why he was determined to prove that
she could
be trusted, before her ability developed beyond the point where the
gods could take action.
Brak looked at R’shiel with new respect. It took a lot to
frighten a
god.
The knowledge did little to help him out of his current predicament,
however. Perhaps divine jealousy would work where reason had failed.
Brak had no idea if Kalianah even cared that there was a war going on.
For all he knew, she was off making a hive of bees happy, somewhere.
But he was certain she would not approve of Zegarnald’s plans
to test
the demon child’s fortitude by throwing her to
Xaphista’s priests. If
he could taunt Zegarnald into seeking her out, he might be able to
prevail upon the Goddess of Love to release him. Kalianah was a
happy-ever-after sort of god. She didn’t like her plans being
disrupted
and she had gone to a fair bit of trouble to keep R’shiel and
Tarja
together. He was clutching at straws, but at this point anything was
worth a try.
“Of course, if Kalianah was up to something while
you’re at the
Citadel making certain the demon child has a spine, you’re not
going to
know about it until she’s standing over you, smiling that
annoying
little smile, asking you if you love her.â€
“Kalianah would not dare interfere. She knows what is at
stake.â€
“She made R’shiel and Tarja fall in love.
That’s interference where
I come from. If Kalianah gets the better of you, R’shiel
won’t be tempered,
she’ll be mooning about like a lovesick cow.â€
One of the advantages of trying to manipulate a god was their total
inability to comprehend anything other than their own natures.
Zegarnald knew what love was in a theoretical sort of way, he even
tolerated it, but he didn’t understand it.
Brak’s prediction
sounded quite plausible to him.
“I will put a stop to her interference at once!â€
“You do that, Divine One. In the meantime, let me out of
here and
I’ll make certain R’shiel doesn’t fall for
Xaphista’s devious —â€
“Don’t push me, Brakandaran. You will stay here
until I have dealt
with Kalianah. And don’t bother to call any of my brothers or
sisters.
They will not hear you unless I will it.â€
The War God vanished, leaving Brak alone in the half-world between
reality and dreams. He looked down on R’shiel and found her
sitting on
the bed, her knees drawn up and her head resting on them, her whole
posture radiating abject misery. He tried reaching out to her again,
but he knew it was useless. Until Zegarnald released him there was
nothing he could do to help her.
The demon child was on her own.
CHAPTER 51
Loclon stood before the full-length mirror in the
First Sister’s apartments and studied Joyhinia’s naked
body curiously.
It was a pity she was so old, he mused, although he supposed the body
was quite well preserved for a woman approaching late middle age. The
once full breasts sagged disappointingly. The hips and thighs were
thickened by age, and her skin was showing signs of decay.
There was little joy to be had from this body in any case. Pleasures
that normally had him stiff with anticipation seemed like far-away
memories. He recalled the desire but did not really feel it. The
woman’s body he inhabited seemed to dampen his maleness. It was
as if
such thoughts could not thrive in this female form.
But if sexual pleasure was denied him, there were other
compensations. The power he wielded as First Sister left him
breathless. Of course, there was a limit to what he could achieve at
the moment. Lord Terbolt and his priests hovered around him like
vultures over a fresh corpse, but that would end soon. He would toe the
line for now, but once the Kariens left the Citadel, he would
be in control. Loclon smiled coldly. If they thought the old Joyhinia
had been a tyrant, the citizens of Medalon would lack the words to
describe the new one.
He had a long list of victims who would suffer at the First
Sister’s
hands once he had a free rein. Men who had slighted him; women who had
scorned him; all of them would pay.
He would start with Tarja Tenragan.
Fortunately, this coincided with the Kariens’plans and the
order
would be issued today, under the First Sister’s seal. A courier
would
take it to Lord Jenga in the north as soon as the ink was dry. It would
demand that Tarja Tenragan be arrested immediately and handed over to
the Kariens to stand trial for the murders of Lord Pieter and the
priest Elfron. Loclon would have preferred to take a more personal hand
in Tarja’s demise, but the Kariens were planning to burn him
alive. It
was a very satisfying thought; his pleasure diminished only slightly by
being unable to witness the event.
There were others too, who would feel his wrath, but they could
wait. With Tarja accounted for, he must take care of R’shiel.
Unfortunately, his chance at her had a deadline.
When Terbolt left the Citadel, R’shiel would go with him,
willingly
or not. He felt betrayed by the Kariens’plans for
R’shiel. They had
promised him revenge and then denied him. R’shiel was a
prisoner,
granted, but she was hardly suffering. She was fed regularly and well,
and treated with cautious respect by Terbolt and his priests. The
collar that circled her neck caused her pain only if she tried to touch
her Harshini power, and she appeared to have learnt that lesson very
quickly. All in all, her incarceration was remarkably comfortable and
not at all what Loclon had in mind. If he was going to do something
about the bitch, he would have to do it soon.
Conveniently, the Kariens were creatures of habit. Xaphista was a
demanding god, and every day at sunset, when the mysterious Dimming
began in the Citadel, they would gather in the apartments Lord Terbolt
had seconded and pray for at least an hour. For that hour,
R’shiel was
guarded by only two Defenders and as First Sister, he could order them
about with impunity. He sighed contentedly. It was almost sundown. By
the time he was dressed Terbolt, Garanus and their companions would be
on their knees at their devotions. He knew the folly of killing
R’shiel, but for an hour at least, he could take the revenge he
felt he
so richly deserved.
She was standing by the window when he arrived,
her exquisite profile limned by the sunset. Her glorious dark red hair
was loose. It hung past her waist and had obviously been brushed until
it shone — she had little else to fill her days. She wore dark,
supple
leathers that hugged her lithe body. Had he still been a man, the very
sight of her would have aroused him. That had always been his mistake
in the past. He had let his lust for this woman rule his head. But not
this time. This time he inhabited a woman’s body and the desire
that
had betrayed him in the past was nothing more than a shallow echo.
R’shiel turned at the sound of the door and stiffened at the
sight
of him.
“What do you want?†She sounded annoyed rather than
fearful. That
would have to change.
“I’ve come to ask you some questions,†he
said, placing the large
covered birdcage he carried on the floor beside him.
“Ask them from there,†she said, crossing her arms
defensively.
“You’re hardly in a position to be giving me orders,
R’shiel.â€
“And you’re hardly in a position to defy your Karien
masters. Does
Terbolt know that you’re here? No, of course he
doesn’t. He’s at
prayer, isn’t he? You’re too craven to dare anything if
you thought he
might catch you at it.â€
Loclon bit back his fury at her scorn. “I’ve no care
for what
Terbolt thinks.â€
“You should have. Have you been to check on your body
Loclon? Are
you sure it’s well? Are they feeding it? Turning it frequently
so you
don’t get bedsores? Do you really trust them that much?â€
“Stop it!â€
She smiled, which was a big mistake. Loclon did not take well to
being laughed at. But he would have his fun. Instead of responding to
her taunts he pulled the cover from the cage.
R’shiel gasped in horror. The little demon cowered in the
centre of
the cage, crouched into a tangle of arms and legs, her large black eyes
filled with terror.
Loclon saw R’shiel’s expression and knew he had
found the perfect
way to torment her.
“Funny little creature, isn’t it?â€
“Let her go.â€
“You know I can’t do that. Aren’t you going
to ask how we caught it?â€
“I know how you caught it. How are you keeping her
there?â€
Loclon shrugged. “I’ve no idea. The priests tied the
top of one of
those staffs to the top of the cage, here . . . you
see . . . and it does something to the bars. Did you
want to see?â€
“No.â€
“Oh, but you must,†he insisted with a malicious
smile.
He poked the creature and it jerked away from him instinctively, but
the cage was too small and the movement pushed it back against the
metal bars. The creature cried out with pain and jerked back from the
bars, only to come up against the bars on the other side, where the
agony was waiting for it. The high-pitched screams were most
gratifying. It took the creature two or three attempts to curl back up
into the ball that kept it away from the bars. When it finally settled
down, it was trembling uncontrollably with tears spilling silently from
its liquid black eyes.
“Want to see it again?†he asked.
“Stop it!†She crossed the room in a few paces and
grabbed him by
the hair, forcing him to his knees. Loclon did not cry out, or even
struggle against her.
He simply reached out with his foot and kicked the cage, which set
the demon off again.
R’shiel let him go and ran to the cage, but she could no
more touch
the enchanted bars than the demon could. The priests’ magic
worked best
on those who could channel the power of the gods. R’shiel had
no hope
of freeing the terrified creature. All she could do was kneel on the
floor and watch it suffer.
Loclon climbed to his feet, laughing. Her attempts to open the cage
were useless, even touching the latch was agony. She heard him move and
turned to look up at him. The pain in her eyes was all he could have
hoped for.
“Go ahead, let it go. If you can.â€
R’shiel glanced back at the cage which had fallen on its
side. The
demon was screaming in agony. There was nothing she could do to help
it. She couldn’t even right the cage to save the demon from the
pain of
contacting the bars.
As if she had realised the same thing, she climbed slowly to her
feet.
“Giving up so soon?†he taunted.
Without warning, she turned and kicked the cage with all the force
she could muster, lifting it clear off the floor. The cage clattered
against the wall and landed with a thud. As it did, the base of the
cage popped open and the demon gratefully scrambled clear of the trap.
“Be gone!†she cried urgently, as Loclon grabbed her.
The demon winked out of existence with a startled squeal.
Loclon punched her then pushed her onto the floor and held her there
with his knee while he looked around the room for something to hurt her
with. There was nothing handy. Terbolt had stripped the room of
anything remotely resembling a potential weapon. He wished for his male
body. R’shiel was physically stronger than Joyhinia. Fighting
her with
his bare hands was not an option. Lacking anything more substantial
than his fists, he wrapped his hand tighter through her hair and
slammed her forehead into the floor, over and over, until she was
almost senseless.
He stopped himself just in time. He would be in enough trouble for
letting the creature escape. Killing R’shiel could easily cost
him his
life.
“Get up!â€
She did not respond.
“I said, get up!†He kicked her in the stomach and
she grunted
involuntarily, confirming his suspicion that she was faking
unconsciousness. “Get up, you inhuman slut!â€
R’shiel rolled over slowly and stared at him with defiant
eyes, a
little dazed.
“Get up, I said!â€
She pushed herself up onto her hands and knees. The wound on her
forehead had opened and the blood flowed freely, obscuring her vision.
Impatient with her slow response, he kicked her again, throwing her
backwards against the wall. He laughed. This was what he wanted. What
he needed.
R’shiel collapsed against the wall and for a moment she lay
still,
but when she looked up there was no submission in her eyes. Instead
there was an expression of such hatred that he took a step back from
her. Her eyes began to darken ominously. As she drew on her power the
collar around her neck began to glow in response. She pushed herself up
as her eyes turned black. The collar grew so bright it was almost
painful to look on it.
Truly fearful of what he might have provoked, Loclon backed away
from her. The sickening stench of burning flesh reached him as
R’shiel
gathered her power to her and the collar punished her for her efforts.
She grabbed the windowsill and pulled herself to her feet, her eyes as
black as night, the collar like a thousand candles burning under her
chin.
With a visible effort she steadied herself and prepared to hurl her
fury at him. The stench of burning flesh grew stronger. Loclon
marvelled at her tolerance for the pain she must be in, but his own
fear prevented him from taking any pleasure in it. If she broke through
the constraint of the collar, he would not leave this room alive.
“Die!†she hissed.
Loclon expected his life to end at that moment, but the collar
flared as she tried to unleash her power. She screamed and dropped to
the floor, tearing uselessly at the burning necklet. Loclon let her
drop, shaking with relief as she collapsed.
The screams stopped only when she finally passed out. He waited for
a long, long time to be certain she really was unconscious this time.
When Loclon finally stopped shaking he was
appalled to discover his bladder had let go and for the first time was
grateful for Joyhinia’s long skirts. R’shiel lay under
the window, her
breathing shallow. He approached her cautiously, half expecting her to
be faking again. As he neared her, he realised it was unlikely. Her
magnificent long hair tumbled over her face, obscuring the worst of the
damage, but blood streamed from her forehead and he could see savage
blisters marring her neck above and below the now quiescent collar.
He prodded her experimentally with the toe of Joyhinia’s
boot, but
received no response. A harder kick got the same reaction. He kicked
her again, this time for sheer pleasure rather than any attempt to
determine her state of consciousness. The kick following that one was
just for the hell of it.
He tired of that game soon enough. Bruises and broken ribs would
heal in time. Even her scars would probably fade — she was
Harshini,
not human. He wanted to leave her with a reminder. He stood back and
studied her for a while, wondering. Then it came to him. He crossed the
room to the door and opened it a fraction.
“Bring me scissors,†he ordered.
The guard looked a little startled by the order but hurried to
comply. Joyhinia taped her foot impatiently as she waited for him to
return. When he hurried back to his post clutching the scissors, she
snatched them from his hand and locked the door again.
Loclon dragged R’shiel to the bed, annoyed by
Joyhinia’s weakness.
If he had his own body, it would have been nothing to scoop her up and
throw her onto the bed. As it was, he grunted and struggled to get his
hands under her arms and move her across the room. Lifting her was
almost beyond him, but he managed it somehow. When he finally got her
on the bed, he laid R’shiel out with almost tender care,
crossing her
hands demurely across her breast. He combed out her glorious mane with
his fingers until it spread like a fiery halo around her head then
stepped back to admire his handiwork.
If one was prepared to ignore the blood and the burns, she looked
quite stunning. He smiled, thinking he had never seen her quite this
way — so peaceful, so . . . vulnerable.
Loclon sighed and picked up the scissors. He moved to the bed and
planted a lingering kiss on her slightly parted lips.
Then he took the scissors and cut her hair as close to the skull as
he could get. He hummed tunelessly as he worked, stopping only once to
stare suspiciously over his shoulder.
He could not avoid the feeling that someone was watching him.
CHAPTER 52
When Tarja questioned first Hadly, then Sergeant
Monthay regarding the whereabouts of the Karien boy, neither of them
could provide a satisfactory answer. Hadly was too busy, and Monthay
sounded genuinely perturbed. He could recall giving the boy the
afternoon off, but not why.
Tarja thanked him for his assistance and went looking for the child
himself. He didn’t blame the sergeant. If the God of Thieves
had taken
it into his head to lead Mikel astray, there was little Monthay could
have done about it.
He leaned forward and patted Shadow, wondering where a small Karien
boy and a mischief-making god could be hiding in the vast camp. Nowhere
there was work to be done, that was certain. They were unlikely to have
gone north toward the border. Not only was it dangerous, there was no
entertainment in that direction. The Keep was just as unlikely, as was
the Hythrun camp, where Mikel’s brother was, or the neat
Defender’s
camp, where surely somebody would question their right to be there. He
glanced south at the follower’s camp thinking there was plenty
of
trouble to be found there. He turned Shadow and let her pick her own
pace, hoping he was heading in the right direction.
There would be a town here soon if the war dragged on much longer,
he thought as he rode through the vast camp. Already some enterprising
merchants had set up rickety wooden frames to house their commercial
endeavours between tents that ranged from the ramshackle to the truly
spectacular. The larger tents belonged to the Court’esa’s
Guild. They had moved in within days of the Defenders. All these lonely
men out here in the middle of nowhere was an opportunity too good to be
missed. Half the court’esa here could probably retire
in luxury
by now and those that couldn’t would not have long to wait.
Tarja debated stopping by the largest tent to speak to Mistress
Miffany. If Jenga surrendered, the court’esa were in
real
danger. Miffany was a generous, rotund little woman who had worked in
the Citadel as a court’esa when Tarja was a cadet. She
had
inherited the business from Mistress Lyndah, when the sour old bitch
had finally died — making everyone in the Citadel who knew her
breathe
a sigh of relief — and had set about making life pleasant for
as many
Defenders as possible since then — at a reasonable price, of
course.
Tarja liked her and had no desire to see her, or her girls, stoned by
the invading Kariens.
On impulse, he turned toward her gaily-striped tent. If he could do
nothing to stop the surrender, he could at least save a few lives. That
Jenga would surrender was a very real possibility. The Lord
Defender had stretched his loyalty about as far as it was likely to go.
From the moment he had defied Joyhinia in Testra, he had been fighting
a losing battle with his conscience. The order to surrender, while
unpalatable, was probably easier to live with than treason.
A grubby child ran forward to hold his mount when he arrived. He
dismounted and threw the child a copper rivet, before pushing back the
flap, bending over to enter the tent. Inside, a number of women looked
up hopefully at his captain’s insignia, smiling at him with
open
invitation. Tarja smiled back, but otherwise ignored them. Miffany
hurried forward as soon as she recognised him, obviously happy to see
him.
“Tarja!â€
“Hello Miff,†he said, kissing her cheek.
“You’ve lost weight.â€
Miffany laughed delightedly. She was almost as wide as she was tall.
“You tease! I look like a pudding, and you know it, but it
was nice
of you to say so. Did you want a girl?†Miffany was never one
to beat
around the bush.
“No, I wanted a word with you. In private.â€
Curious, but unconcerned, she turned to her girls.
“I’m going to
take a turn of the camp with the captain, here. Becca, you’re
in charge
until I get back.â€
Miffany slipped her arm though his and led him outside.
They headed south between the tents down what could only very
loosely be described as a street. The tents had been placed with little
thought to the traffic in the camp and they were forced to step over
tent pegs and dodge muddy puddles as they walked. Miffany clung to his
arm with a smug grin that broadened to an outright smirk as they passed
by the tent of one of her competitors.
“There’ll be tongues a-wagging in there, soon
enough,†she predicted.
Tarja smiled. “We could stop outside on the way back while I
declare
I’ve never had better.â€
“You are such a sweetheart,†she laughed, squeezing
his arm.
“Have you done well since you’ve been here,
Miff?â€
“I’ll say! I’m rich enough to buy myself one
of those posh little
villas on the riverfront in Brodenvale. War is good for a business like
mine.â€
“Then perhaps you should think about retiring.â€
She looked up at him suspiciously. “You’re taking a
sudden interest
in my welfare.â€
“I care about you.â€
“You’re sweet Tarja, I’ve always thought
that, but you’re a captain.
One of Jenga’s closest officers. You didn’t come all
this way to
suggest I retire without a damn good reason.â€
“Isn’t caring for you enough?†he asked with
a hopeful smile.
“Much as I’d like to kid myself that is the case,
Tarja, I’m not a
fool. What’s really going on?â€
“I can’t say, Miff. All I can do is suggest that you
quit while
you’re ahead.â€
The chubby court’esa thought for a moment and then
nodded.
“How long do we have?â€
He could have hugged her for being so astute. “A few days. A
week at
most. Your profession won’t be looked upon kindly after
that.â€
“I owe you for this, Tarja.â€
“You don’t owe me anything, Miff. Consider it a debt
repaid.â€
“What debt?â€
“I was fourteen the first time I came to Mistress
Lyndah’s. You
didn’t laugh at me.â€
She chuckled at the memory. “I was a lot thinner in those
days. You
were a sweet boy then, Tarja, and you still are, in my book. Tell me,
do you plan to act on your own advice, or stay here and let them kill
you?â€
Her blunt question startled him. “I haven’t decided
yet, but I don’t
plan on letting anybody kill me.â€
“Well, that’s something, I suppose. You know,
I’ll need some guards
when I leave. I’ve quite a haul in the chest under my bed. Not
looking
for a job, are you?â€
He shook his head. “Sorry, but I’ve got other things
demanding my
attention.â€
“Ah well, it was worth a try. I’ll ask young Dace.
He seems to know
everybody in the whole damned camp.â€
Tarja stopped dead, almost jerking Miffany off her feet.
“Dace? A
fair-haired lad about so high? Wears the worst collection of cast-off
clothing you’ve ever seen?â€
“That’s our Dace,†Miff agreed. “How
do you know him?â€
“I came here looking for him.â€
“I thought it was too much to hope that you came here just
to see
me,†she sighed.
“Where can I find him?â€
She shrugged. “Who knows? He’s a sweet boy too, but
every time he
appears, something goes missing. He hangs around with a Karien boy.
They turn up every now and then, looking for a meal.â€
“And you feed them, of course.â€
“Of course.â€
“Do you have any idea where I can find him? It’s
really important.â€
Miffany thought for a moment and then nodded. “Try old
Draginya, the
herb woman. She lives over by Will Barley’s tavern tent.
She’s a weird
old buzzard, always praying to the Primal gods and muttering to
herself, but I’ve seen Dace with her now and then. She might
know where
he is.â€
Tarja bent down and kissed Miffany’s plump cheek.
“You are the best.â€
“Then how come you’re leaving?†she called
after him.
Tarja would have found Draginya’s tent
simply by
following the smell, even if Miffany had not described its location.
The tent was crammed with dried herbs and a smoking brazier that gave
off an aroma unlike anything he had smelled before. The old woman was
wrapped in several tattered shawls against the cold and she looked up
with rheumy eyes as Tarja bent almost double to get through the tent
flap. He straightened up once he was inside, his head brushing the roof
of the tent.
“Captain Tarja Tenragan,†the old woman said, as if
she expected him.
“How do you know who I am?†The tent was gloomy and
he had to squint
to make her out.
“You are the demon child’s appointed lover. Kalianah
has made it so.
She told me about you.â€
Tarja was still atheist enough not to want to know what she meant.
“I seek Dacendaran.â€
“The God of Thieves? An odd companion for a man like
you.â€
“Do you know where he is?â€
“The gods are everywhere, Captain.â€
“I was hoping you could be a bit more specific.â€
The old woman smiled revealing toothless pink gums.
“Dacendaran said
you were unusual for a Defender. I see what he means.â€
“I need to speak with him,†Tarja insisted.
“The gods listen to all our prayers, Captain.â€
“I don’t want to pray to him, dammit, I need to ask
him something!â€
“Well, there’s no need to yell, Tarja. I’m
not deaf.†He spun around
to find the God of Thieves standing behind him. The boy looked
unchanged from the last time he had seen him in Testra, but that was
hardly surprising. Dace pushed past him and knelt down beside the old
woman. “Is he bullying you, Draginya? Shall I turn him into
something
with six legs that likes to live under a rock?â€
“He is young, Divine One, and at the mercy of
Kalianah’s geas.â€
Dace stood up and turned to Tarja. “Well, it seems you get
to stay
in one piece. What did you want?â€
“Where’s R’shiel?â€
“At the Citadel, I suppose,†Dace shrugged.
“Something’s happened to her.â€
“I’d know if she were dead. You humans worry far too
much.â€
Tarja glared at the boy. “Jenga has been ordered to
surrender.â€
That news gave the god pause. His grin faded.
“That’s probably not a
good sign.â€
“Dace, the only way that order could have been issued is if
R’shiel
failed. Something has happened to her.â€
“Well, if it has, it’s her own fault. I offered to
go with them, but
did they want my help? No. They wanted to do it all on their
own. The Harshini are like that you know. They always think
—â€
“Dace!â€
“What? Oh, I’m sorry. What did you want me to
do?â€
“Find out . . . what
happened . . . to
R’shiel,†Tarja explained very slowly and carefully.
“Oh. I suppose that’s not a bad idea. If
something’s happened to
her, we’ll have to start this whole demon child thing all over
again.
Now that would be a bore.â€
“How long will it take?â€
Dace shrugged. “I don’t know.â€
Tarja clenched his fists at his side, rather than grab Dace around
the throat and shake him soundly, which was what he really wanted to
do. “When will you leave?â€
“You are so impatient.â€
“She could be in danger, Dace.â€
“She might just be sunning herself beside a pool somewhere,
too,â€
the god retorted. “On the other hand, it is winter and
R’shiel never
was the sort to relax, although it wouldn’t do her any
harm . . . Oh, stop looking at me like that!
I’ll go and
see what’s happening, but I won’t cross Zegarnald if
he’s got a hand in
this. He’s as strong as he’s ever been with this war
going on.â€
“You do whatever you have to, Divine One,†Tarja
agreed.
Dace grinned. “Divine One? Does this mean
you’re finally
coming to believe in us, Tarja?â€
“I believe in you Dace, I just don’t happen to want
to worship you.â€
“Ah, well,†the god sighed. “Just so long as
you never tell Kalianah
you love her.â€
“That’s not very likely.â€
“Glad to hear it. Will you see that Draginya gets away
safely?â€
Tarja nodded. The boy turned to the old woman and kissed her cheek.
“See, Tarja will take care of you. I’d better go see
what’s happened to
the demon child.â€
Dace vanished without warning, leaving Tarja frowning and old
Draginya smiling toothlessly.
CHAPTER 53
Mikel was chattering away to Dace about the eggs
they had stolen when he suddenly realised that his friend was no longer
with him. He looked around the crowded camp, puzzled. Dace was nowhere
to be seen.
Mikel sighed, used to Dace’s odd disappearances by now. He
did that
sort of thing a lot. One minute he was there and the next he was gone.
Still, it wasn’t that important. Mikel knew the way to the old
herb
woman’s place where the eggs were safely nestled in an old
shawl in the
corner of her tent. He was far more interested in them, anyway. The
chicks should hatch any day now and he was as excited as any expectant
father.
He turned into the street beside Will Barley’s tavern tent
and
stopped dead as a familiar figure emerged from the old woman’s
tent.
Mikel bit back a startled cry and slipped back between the tavern tent
and the tent beside it. What was Tarja doing in the old
woman’s
tent? Had he discovered the eggs?
Even Mikel knew that stealing a clutch of swallow’s eggs
would not
warrant the attention of a Defender. Perhaps he was sickening for
something and had gone to see Draginya for a cure? Then something
truly dreadful occurred to him. Perhaps Tarja had discovered that Mikel
spent most of his afternoons with Dace and had come looking for him.
The only reason Tarja would seek him out was to punish him, Mikel was
certain. What would he do? Would Jaymes lose a finger because of
his brother’s folly? That he had disowned his brother as a
traitor
was momentarily forgotten.
He waited anxiously, filled with trepidation as Tarja moved off
between the tents. When he was sure the Defender would not turn back,
he hurried to the old woman’s tent and slipped inside.
“Did he hurt you?†Mikel demanded as soon as the
flap closed behind
him.
Draginya sat in her chair by the smoking brazier from where she
hardly ever seemed to move; at least in Mikel’s company.
“Did who hurt me, child?†She sounded surprised by
his question.
“Tarja.â€
Her face creased into a wrinkled frown. “You speak with too
much
hatred for a child.â€
“That’s because he’s a monster!â€
“Your ignorance blinds you, boy. Tarja is the appointed
lover of the
demon child. He is destined for great things.â€
Mikel stared at her. “Says who?â€
“The gods, of course. Hasn’t your god
explained these
things?â€
“The Overlord doesn’t speak to the likes of me. He
only speaks to
the priests and stuff.â€
Draginya nodded sadly. “That is a great shame.â€
“Anyway,†Mikel added, rather put out by the old
woman’s pitying
tone. “Tarja’s a Medalonian. That makes him an atheist.
Even if I
believed what you say about the other gods, he
wouldn’t.â€
“Tarja knows the gods exist, Mikel. He simply choses not to
worship
them. The Primal gods like to have believers, but they don’t
need them.
You honoured Dacendaran when you stole those eggs. Whether you believe
in him or not doesn’t enter into it.â€
“We never stole anything!â€
“You removed those eggs from their rightful owner without
permission. That defines theft, don’t you think?â€
“But we wanted to save the chicks,†he protested.
“If you kill one man to save another, it is still killing,
Mikel.
Good intentions don’t alter the nature of an event.â€
“Then I betrayed the Overlord,†he concluded,
sinking down to the
floor beside Draginya’s stool. “I’m
doomed.â€
“You’re exaggerating,†the old woman
scolded. “You are a child,
Mikel, and far too young to concern yourself with visions of doom and
eternal damnation. Live life to the full and follow the god of your
heart, not the tired litanies of grown-ups whose desire for power has a
lot more to do with their faith than what their god might want.â€
“That’s blasphemy.â€
“No, it’s wisdom. When you’re as old as I
am, you get to call
everything wisdom. Now go check on your eggs and be off with you.
I’m
tired and I have to start packing.â€
“You’re leaving? Why?†Mikel was
much less concerned about
the old woman travelling in winter than he was about his eggs. If she
left, what would he do with them?
“Because your people will be here soon. They’ll take
one look at me
and burn me for a witch, I’m certain.â€
“You mean there’ll be another battle? One that
Prince Cratyn will
win?â€
She shook her head and placed a withered hand on his shoulder.
“The
battle has been fought and lost far from this place, child. The
Defenders have been ordered to surrender.â€
All thought of eggs fled Mikel’s mind as the news sunk in. The
Defenders were going to surrender! Jaymes would be released and brought
back into the arms of the Overlord.
And best of all, he thought happily, Princess Adrina would not have
to pretend to hate Prince Cratyn any more.
Mikel hurried back through the camp, his heart
lighter than it had been for months. Any day now, Prince Cratyn would
cross the border in triumph. Karien had won. Tarja would be hung for
the criminal he was. The Overlord had made the Medalonians surrender
with hardly a drop of blood spilt. (He conveniently forgot the massacre
resulting from the only serious Karien incursion into Medalon.) It
didn’t matter what happened now. It didn’t matter what
they did to him.
The Overlord was truly omnipotent, just like the priests said.
He skirted the edge of the camp and wound his way back through the
corrals, taking the route closest to the Hythrun stables. He always
took the same route. Dace claimed it was in the hope of catching sight
of his brother — a charge Mikel vehemently denied. It was
simply the
easiest way back, he insisted, ignoring Dace’s knowing smirk.
This time, however, he actively searched for his brother. He had to
give him the news, quite certain that as soon as Jaymes learnt his own
people would soon be here, he would see the error of his ways. Mikel
was thrilled by the prospect and burning to share it with someone.
Jaymes was nowhere to be found, but as he stuck his head cautiously
around the corner of the first stable block, he spied someone who
deserved to hear the news even more.
Adrina was alone, brushing down a gorgeous golden mare, talking to
the beast softly as she worked. There was nobody else around, not even
a guard. Mikel chose to think of that as a sign from the Overlord,
rather than the more obvious conclusion — that she
wasn’t guarded
because they didn’t consider her in need of one.
“Your Highness!†he hissed loudly.
Adrina turned and frowned when she caught sight of him.
“Mikel? What are you doing hiding over there?â€
He slipped into the stable and ran to her, dropping to one knee as
he had seen the Fardohnyan lanceman do after the battle. The gesture
had struck him as being terribly noble.
“Your Highness, I have the most wonderful news!â€
“Have you now? Do tell.â€
“Medalon has surrendered, your Highness. Prince Cratyn will
be here
any day. We are to be rescued!â€
Mikel looked up, expecting to see relief and happiness radiating
from her in equal measure. He was disappointed to find her taking the
news quite calmly.
“And where did you hear this startling piece of
intelligence?†she
asked.
“From the old herb woman in the camp. She’s already
packing to leave
for fear of the Overlord’s wrath.â€
Adrina smiled. “Mikel, don’t you think if Medalon
had surrendered,
their troops might be told before some old herb woman? I’m sure
she’s
mistaken.â€
“But she seemed so certain, your Highness. Even Tarja went
to visit
her.â€
“Now that’s interesting,†Adrina agreed.
“Do you know why?â€
“The old woman said it was to talk to the God of Thieves,
but I
don’t believe her. There is only the Overlord, isn’t
there?â€
“Yes, of course,†she agreed absently.
“Aren’t you happy, your Highness?â€
“I’m delirious with happiness,†she assured
him. “It’s just not
seemly that a woman in my position display extremes of emotion.â€
He smiled with relief. He had forgotten how well mannered she was,
how careful she was not to shame herself. It must have been so hard on
her, having to pretend to be nice to everyone, while inside she was
missing Prince Cratyn so badly.
“It will be alright, your Highness. Prince Cratyn will be
here soon.â€
“I can’t tell you what a comfort that is,â€
she said.
Mikel stood up beaming. To have been able to deliver such wonderful
news to his lady was more than he could have hoped for in this dreadful
place.
Adrina smiled down at him. “I thank you, Mikel, but
shouldn’t you be
getting along? The Defenders haven’t surrendered yet, and
I’d hate for
you to wear a beating on my account.â€
“It won’t be long now, your Highness,†Mikel
promised with an
encouraging smile. He turned and ran from the stable, almost colliding
with Lord Wolfblade. He yelped with astonishment and fled past the
Warlord, praying he hadn’t been recognised.
A few paces from the stable, Mikel stopped and looked back over his
shoulder. The Warlord had vanished inside. The princess was in there.
Alone. It just wasn’t proper. He wavered with indecision for a
moment
and then headed back to the stable.
Mikel slipped back into the building silently,
grateful for Dace’s instruction on how to sneak around without
being
noticed, and hid in the first empty stall he came to. It was close
enough to hear what the Warlord said to the princess. The boy smiled
expectantly. Now that she knew she was to be rescued soon, he fully
expected Adrina to give him a piece of her mind.
“You don’t have to do that, you know.â€
Adrina looked over her shoulder. “When I was a child, the
only thing
we were ever allowed to do for ourselves, was groom our horses. Hablet
thought it would teach us a responsibility.â€
“And did it?â€
She smiled. “Actually, I think it taught us more about the
value of
bribes. It was more fun trying to avoid the task than doing it.â€
Damin walked up behind Adrina and placed his hand over hers as she
brushed the animal with long slow strokes. He stood so close behind her
that their bodies were touching. The princess didn’t scream.
She didn’t
even flinch. Damin bent his head and touched his lips to her neck, just
below her right ear. She arched her back and leaned into him.
“Stop that.â€
“Why?â€
“There’s no future in this, Damin. You know that as
well as I.â€
He slipped his arms around her waist and pulled her closer.
“Ah,
that’s right, we hate each other, don’t we?â€
She turned in his arms and touched her forehead to his.
“You’re
confusing lust with genuine feeling, my Lord.â€
As if to give lie to her words, she kissed him. There was no
mistaking it for anything else; she was definitely kissing him,
not the other way around. Mikel almost bit through his bottom lip to
prevent himself from crying out his outrage.
“If that’s your idea of trying to make me stop, then
the court’esa
who trained you needs to be horsewhipped,†Damin laughed softly
when
they finally came up for air.
Adrina smiled. It was the same sort of intimate smile
R’shiel saved
for Tarja. The sort of smile Adrina had never bestowed on his prince.
“That’s all this is, you know. A simple case of two
well trained and
rather bored people amusing themselves far from home.â€
“I grant you that we’re both well trained,â€
Damin agreed, unwrapping
her arms from around his neck. He held her hands for a moment and then
turned them over, kissing the palms. “And I’ve no doubt
you’re bored.
But this is far from simple, Adrina.â€
She sighed. “I know. So what are we going to do?â€
“Well, I don’t know about you, but I’m
heading home while I still
can.â€
“How noble of you. What happens to me?â€
“That’s up to you. You have two choices. Stay and
face Cratyn, or
come with me.â€
Adrina’s eyes widened. “Follow you to Hythria?
You’re pretty damn
certain of yourself, aren’t you?â€
“I wish I could say my offer was entirely motivated by the
knowledge
that you’d rather die than live without me, but the fact is,
neither
you nor I want a Karien heir to your father’s throne. The whole
world
will be safer with you in my bed, rather than Cratyn’s.â€
“You are the most arrogant pig I have ever met.â€
“Probably. Will you come with me, or not?â€
“Is sharing your bed a condition of the deal?â€
“No. If you want, I’ll never touch you again.
I’ll escort you to
Hythria and kill any man who tries to lay a hand on you against your
will. Myself included.â€
“You’d throw yourself on your sword for me? Somehow,
I doubt that,
Damin.â€
“It sounded rather noble, though, don’t you
think?â€
Adrina kissed him again. Mikel couldn’t tell how long it
lasted. He
was too busy wiping away tears of anger and disappointment. Adrina knew
that Cratyn was on his way to rescue her. The only reason she was doing
this was the one he had refused to contemplate until now.
“I have conditions,†she said, when they finally
broke apart.
“Somehow, that doesn’t surprise me.†Damin
gathered up the mare’s
lead rope and led her to an empty stall next to the one where Mikel was
hiding. He held his breath.
“I’m a princess of royal blood, Damin, not some
whore you picked up
in the followers’ camp. I expect to be treated as such.â€
“My men shall treat you with the utmost respect, your
Highness, or
I’ll whip them myself.†He closed the gate on the stall
and walked back
to her. The sun had almost set and it was getting hard to see them in
the gloom.
“I wasn’t referring to your men, I was talking about
you.â€
“I’ll ignore that. What else?â€
“The remainder of my Guard, those men the Defenders are
holding
prisoner, are to be released.â€
“I think I can arrange that.â€
“And I’m not your damned prisoner, either. If I go
with you, I go of
my own free will. I’ll be free to leave anytime I want.â€
“Was that all?â€
“No. I want it clearly understood where we stand with each
other.â€
“And where is that, exactly?â€
“I don’t love you, Damin, and I’m damned
sure you don’t love me.
I’ll admit that there is a certain . . .
physical
attraction . . . between us, but that’s all it
is. I get
a thrill out of flirting with danger and you are about the most
dangerous thing around. I don’t want you mistaking this affair
for
something it’s not.â€
Damin didn’t answer her for a long moment. Then he smiled.
“You’re a
consummate liar, Adrina.â€
“I assure you, sir, I meant every word.â€
“That’s what makes you so believable. Very well, I
agree to your
conditions. I’m planning to break camp the day after tomorrow.
Be
prepared for some hard riding. If your husband should happen to
discover where you are, we’ll have every Karien on the border
chasing
us all the way to Hythria.â€
“Then you’d better hope your Medalonian friends
don’t tell him. I
wasn’t planning to leave him a note, you know.â€
“Now there’s a thought,†he laughed. He
picked up her cloak from
where she had thrown it over the railing and held it out for her.
Adrina turned and allowed him to drape it over her shoulders.
“Let me
see, how would it go? Dear Cratyn —â€
“Cretin,†she corrected. “I always called
him Cretin. The Kariens
thought it was my accent.â€
“Very subtle . . . Dear Cretin, sorry I
can’t be here
to meet you dear, but I’ve run off to Hythria with a dashing
warlord —â€
“Dashing?â€
“Handsome sounded a bit arrogant, I
thought . . .
Anyway, where was I? I’ve run off to Hythria with a dashing
warlord
with whom I’ve been making wild, passionate love every night
for . . . how long has it been?â€
“One week and two days . . .â€
“Are you counting?â€
“Only out of curiosity.†She turned to face him, her
expression
suddenly serious. “We shouldn’t joke about this, Damin.
He’ll kill us
both.â€
Damin kissed her forehead. “It will take more than —
what did you
call him? Prince Cretin the Cringing — to kill me. And I swear
I’ll
kill you myself before I hand you back to him.â€
“Well, that makes me feel so much better.â€
Mikel shrank down as they walked past his stall exchanging that odd
mixture of intimate secrets and insulting banter that seemed to
characterise their conversations, tears of bitter disappointment
sliding down his cheeks.
The truth burned in his stomach like a bad meal. He waited in the
darkness surrounded by the moist smell of the horses for a long, long
time after they were gone. His heart was breaking; his childish
illusions well and truly shattered.
By the time he forced himself to move, his fingers were numb with
cold. But he had made a decision. When the Karien army crossed the
border, Mikel would find a way to gain an audience with the prince.
He was going to have to explain to Cratyn that his beautiful, noble
princess was nothing more than a traitorous slut.
PART 4
CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER 54
The walls of the Citadel defined Brak’s
prison. He
had discovered this annoying detail quite by accident as he had tried
to follow Lord Terbolt to a meeting with another Karien agent in the
small village of Kordale, west of the city. He had met an invisible
wall as solid and impenetrable as the wall that cut him off from his
power. Brak had tested its limits right around the Citadel, but could
find no weak point. He wondered if it was entirely Zegarnald’s
doing or
if the Citadel itself was aiding the War God, although he could think
of no reason why the Citadel would ever cooperate with Zegarnald.
He spent his days watching and worrying over R’shiel. His
frustration was a palpable thing and his worry enough to make him
physically sick. He had watched Loclon tormenting her and the demon,
helpless to intervene. He had watched him punish her then cut off her
hair, tearing uselessly at the invisible barrier that separated him
from the ordinary world. But worse, he watched as every day
R’shiel
sank a little lower into despair; a little closer to giving in; a
little closer to the day he might have to kill her.
Brak had an odd relationship with R’shiel. Part guardian,
part
teacher, he had been sent to find the demon child and bring her home to
Sanctuary. His first impressions of her had not been good — she
was
spoilt, manipulative and rebellious. She bore long grudges and tended
to be rather single-minded when it came to getting even. Brak had not
liked her much in the beginning. It had taken a long time for him to
discover how much of R’shiel’s behaviour was a result
of her upbringing
as much as her true nature. She carried a lot of hurt inside and those
who hurt her would suffer for it. He was also cynical enough to realise
that the very qualities that made him distrust her were just the sort
of characteristics one needed if one was destined to destroy a god.
When he had first set out to find the demon child, he had vague
visions of a noble young man with a pure heart, who would take on his
appointed task with a solemn vow and then . . . well,
he’d never really got to that bit. He had not expected
R’shiel; not
expected to find a complicated, troubled young woman, who had been
raised by the most ruthless and unloving mother that the Sisterhood had
ever spawned.
It wasn’t until he learnt how much of her suffering had been
sanctioned by the gods, that he truly began to sympathise with her.
Zegarnald’s “tempering†had been a cruel and
rocky road for R’shiel and
she was a long way from the end.
If he stood back from it, he understood the logic. Xaphista was a
master of seduction, in his own way. He had seduced millions of Kariens
into believing him. One half-breed Harshini would hardly be a threat,
unless that half-breed was inured to his enticements. R’shiel
had to be
so determined to destroy him that nothing would stop her. She had to be
ruthless enough to stand back and watch everything and everyone she
held dear threatened with extinction, and not waver from her purpose.
She had survived being raised by Joyhinia, raped by Loclon, imprisoned
by the Sisterhood, a near-fatal wound, and the discovery that she was a
member of a race that she had been raised to despise. The experience
had left her battered and bruised, but it had not even come close to
breaking her. Brak was beginning to wonder if her current situation
would succeed where everything else had failed.
When she regained consciousness after Loclon left her room, it had
taken her a little while to get her bearings. Her face was a mess
— her
forehead puffy and bruised and covered in dried blood. She lay for a
time, staring at the canopy over the bed, as if trying to recall how
she came to be there. Then she sat up and ran her fingers through her
hair. She stiffened with shock, then looked behind her at the carefully
laid-out halo of dark red hair that was left behind on the pillow.
For a moment she did nothing but stare at it in bewilderment, then
she leapt off the bed and ran to the mirror hanging over the dresser.
Brak winced as she looked at her reflection. Vanity was not a quality
he associated with R’shiel — she had always seemed
rather unconscious
of her beauty — but even the plainest woman would have gasped
at the
reflection staring back at her. Loclon had hacked off her hair with
little care. It stood up in clumps in places; elsewhere it had been cut
so close to the scalp that the skin showed through. Her eyes were
blackening, the cut on her forehead a red slash across a purple
landscape of bruises. Her long neck was livid; white blisters already
visible above and below the thin silver collar. Several had burst when
she began to move, leaving weeping patches of raw flesh to rub against
the metal.
R’shiel stared at her reflection for a long, long time, then
she
sank down onto the floor and sobbed like a brokenhearted child.
Brak could feel her anguish but could do nothing to relieve it.
He could not imagine what it must be like for her to cope with
Loclon in Joyhinia’s body. Added to that, she had failed in her
attempt
to coerce the Sisterhood. Mahina was imprisoned. Affiana and Lord Draco
were both dead. Garet Warner had changed sides and the Kariens
effectively had control of the Citadel. If that wasn’t enough,
when the
order to surrender arrived at the border, Tarja’s life would be
forfeit. He had no way of knowing, but Brak suspected
R’shiel’s tears
were as much from failure, as they were from pain.
But while her reactions up to that point had been typical, since
that day R’shiel seemed sunk so far in misery, that she no
longer cared
what happened.
Terbolt had been quite appalled at the state she was in when he
returned from his prayers and livid over the loss of the demon. He had
chastised Loclon severely, but the Karien still needed a cooperative
Joyhinia, so he had done little more than make his displeasure known.
He had ordered the priests to treat her wounds and Garanus, in a rare
show of compassion, trimmed her hair until it was, if not quite styled,
then at least tidy. Once the bruises faded, she wouldn’t look
too bad,
Brak thought. She had that sort of bone structure.
But R’shiel cared no more for how she looked than she did
about
anything else, at present. She ate only if the priests stood over her,
and then it was mechanically, as if she didn’t taste a bite.
She said
nothing unless directly addressed and then answered in a monotone. She
washed when they told her, ate when they ordered her, and when she was
alone she simply sat where they left her, staring blindly into the
distance.
Two days after Loclon’s attack some of the blisters under
the collar
began to fester. She did not even flinch when the priests held back her
head, lanced the sores and poured saltwater onto the open cuts. They
did not remove the collar, simply worked around it, but even that rough
handling got no reaction from her. He remembered how vague she had been
after he rescued her from the Grimfield, the night she had tried to
kill Loclon. She had been animated then, compared to her present state.
And there was not a damned thing he could do about it.
Two weeks after R’shiel’s capture
at the
Gathering, Lord Terbolt finally announced his intention to leave the
Citadel and return to Karien. Brak had been certain he was waiting for
something, but could not work out what it was. The arrival of a tall,
dour-looking Karien who introduced himself as Squire Mathen was
apparently what the duke had been expecting. The two of them remained
closeted for hours. When they emerged, Terbolt announced his plans to
leave.
Loclon had been fairly panting in anticipation for that moment, and
his chance at unfettered power as First Sister. Brak had wondered if
Terbolt would be so foolish as to leave Loclon in charge. The Karien
Duke was not stupid and Loclon’s loss of the demon and his
attack on
R’shiel had done nothing to foster any trust between them. Brak
thought
it would be better for everyone if he simply slit the throat of
Loclon’s senseless body and let his soul wither and die.
They kept Loclon’s body in a room in the First
Sister’s apartments.
The priests tended it with businesslike efficiency. Transferring the
mind of one person into the body of another was not such a difficult
feat to arrange, by Harshini standards. It was just one of those things
that was only done if there was a good reason for it — and that
was
rare. Had they thought about it, they could have done the same to
Joyhinia themselves, although considering the way things had turned
out, it probably would not have made a difference, given that Zegarnald
actually wanted to push R’shiel to breaking point.
There were risks, though. If the host body died, then the mind
automatically returned to its own body with little more than a nasty
shock. But if the vacant body died, the soul had nowhere to go. It
would survive a day or two, no longer, before joining its physical
counterpart in death. Loclon’s transfer was nothing like the
subtle
removal of wit that Dacendaran had performed on Joyhinia. This was the
working of a clutch of Karien priests who lacked the finesse of a god.
They had simply taken Loclon’s mind — lock, stock and
barrel — and
dumped it into Joyhinia’s unresisting body.
Squire Mathen would remain behind to “assist†the
First Sister.
Loclon was furious, and could do nothing but agree. Two priests would
remain behind also, Terbolt declared, then made a great show of handing
Mathen the key to the room where Loclon’s body lay. The message
was
clear, even to Loclon.
Terbolt’s announcement of their imminent departure drew no
visible
reaction from R’shiel. She barely even glanced at him. Loclon
waited
outside the door, fidgeting with Joyhinia’s long skirts. As
soon as
Terbolt emerged, he began demanding to know exactly who Squire Mathen
was. Brak made to follow them, until he spied Garet Warner entering the
apartment. He said something to guards on R’shiel’s
door that Brak
didn’t catch then went inside. On impulse, Brak followed Garet.
The commandant seemed shocked at R’shiel’s
condition, but she was as
unresponsive to his arrival as she had been to anything else in the
past week. Garet knelt down beside her chair and gently shook her
shoulder.
“R’shiel?â€
She ignored him, or perhaps she was so far inside herself, she
really didn’t know he was there.
“R’shiel?â€
Finally she turned to him, her eyes blank. “What?â€
“You’re leaving today. With Lord Terbolt.â€
“I know.â€
“They’ve ordered the troops on the border to
surrender.â€
“I know.â€
Garet muttered something under his breath that sounded like a curse.
“Do you understand me, R’shiel? Do you even know who
I am?â€
“I know you,†she replied tonelessly. “You
betrayed me.â€
He nodded, satisfied with her answer for some reason. “I
didn’t
betray you, R’shiel. I just can’t help anyone from a
prison cell. Do
you understand? Do you know why I did what I did?â€
She turned to him, showing some real interest for the first time.
“You did what you said you would do. Brak called you an honest
man.â€
“Not a description I’d use myself, but I think I
know what he
means.†He reached into his boot-top and withdrew a thin
sheathed
blade. “Can you hide this somewhere?â€
She stared at the knife incomprehensibly. “What for?â€
“To escape, maybe? Or do you want to go to Karien?â€
“I have to face the Overlord. He wants me to join
him.â€
Garet sighed and pushed the knife into the top of her boot.
“You do
what you have to, R’shiel. The only thing I’m concerned
about is
Medalon. I’ve done all I can for you.â€
The commandant left after that and the guards came in to escort
R’shiel downstairs. She let them drape a plain woollen cloak
over her
shoulders and lead her away without resistance. Brak followed her and
the Karien party as they descended the stairs, wanting to scream with
frustration. Once they left the Citadel, she would be entirely out of
reach.
Garanus handed her into the carriage and then climbed in beside her.
As soon as the door snicked shut the carriage moved off toward the Main
Gate where Terbolt and nearly a thousand Defenders awaited the order to
move out. Brak had never felt more helpless in his entire life.
“Zegarnald!â€
The grey limbo in which he was trapped seemed to quiver with the
strength of his cry.
“Zegarnald! Let me out of here!â€
The silence he received in reply was absolute.
CHAPTER 55
Adrina had just finished packing, if throwing her
few meagre possessions into a sack could be called that, when the door
flew open and Tarja appeared.
“If you’re leaving, your Highness, you’d
better do it now,†he
warned. “The Kariens are on their way.â€
“How can that be? Damin said Jenga had agreed not to
surrender until
we’d gone.â€
“I don’t know. Perhaps they know about the order
from the Citadel.
They may even have had a hand in it somehow. All I know is that
there’s
a whole troop of knights riding this way under a flag of truce.â€
Adrina cursed in a most unladylike fashion. “Tam, go and
find . . . no, on second thoughts, you’d better
stay
with me. Someone might recognise you. Are you certain they’re
heading
this way?â€
“Yes.â€
“How long do we have?â€
“Not long at all, I’m afraid.â€
“We’d best get moving then.†Adrina snatched
up her sack and slung
it over her shoulder. Tarja led them onto the landing. The guards were
gone now. Lord Jenga had dismissed them days ago, when it became
apparent she was no longer using the quarters over the main hall often
enough to warrant placing a guard on them.
She followed Tarja cautiously, Tam close on her heels. They were
halfway down the stairs when he stopped suddenly and held his arm out
to bar her progress. The Hall doors rattled as they were pushed open.
“Back! Now!†Tarja hissed.
Adrina did not need to be told twice. She raced back up the stairs,
pushing Tam ahead of her. When they reached the landing, Tarja motioned
them down. By the time they were stretched out on their bellies,
looking down over the Hall, the first of the Kariens were clattering
through the door.
Adrina recognised Lord Roache and Lord Laetho as they raised their
faceplates. The other knights she did not know; they were more than
likely an escort. The Dukes made their way to the end of the hall as
Lord Jenga entered with Cratyn at his side. Following them were a dozen
or more Defenders. None of the Medalonians looked very happy.
Adrina studied Cratyn for a moment. He removed his helmet and ran
his fingers through his hair as he looked around the Hall. His eyes
skimmed over the darkened balcony. He could not see her, she knew, but
she held her breath in any case. Jenga ordered wine served and turned
to face Cratyn. The two opposing sides had unconsciously arranged
themselves on either side of the long wooden table near the fireplace.
“You requested a parley, your Highness, and I have honoured
your
flag of truce. What do you want?â€
Cratyn seemed a little taken aback by Jenga’s blunt manner.
“I’m
certain you know exactly what I want, my Lord. I want your
surrender.â€
Several Defenders, those officers who did not know of the order from
the Citadel, gasped in surprise. Jenga silenced them with a look and
turned back to the young prince.
“What makes you think I’m planning to
surrender?â€
Cratyn looked at Roache uncertainly. “I was led to believe,
my Lord,
that you had received an order to that effect some time ago.â€
“Then you were misinformed, your Highness.â€
Adrina was quite astounded to hear the Lord Defender lie so
blatantly. Isn’t truth supposed to be a virtue of the
Defenders? She
glanced at Tarja, but he was engrossed in the scene below and his
expression was impossible to read in the gloom.
“He’s lying, your Highness,†Roache assured
the prince confidently.
Jenga turned on Roache. “You impugn my honour, sir?â€
Before Roache could reply the doors flew open and Damin burst in,
followed by Almodavar and a score of Raiders. Adrina smiled at
Damin’s
theatrical flair — every man with him must have been picked for
his
size, she thought. They were conspicuously armed and arrayed themselves
across the doorway, blocking the exit.
Tarja groaned softly. “Founders, what’s he up to
now?â€
“My apologies for being late,†Damin announced as he
strode into the
Hall. He walked straight up to Lord Roache and bowed extravagantly.
“You must be Prince Cratyn.â€
“I am Cratyn,†the prince announced in annoyance.
Damin had walked
straight past him. It was no accident, Adrina was certain. Roache was
old enough to be his grandfather and Damin knew well how old Cratyn was.
“You?†Damin asked in feigned surprise.
“Gods! You’re just a
child. Ah, but you’re not a child, are you? I hear
you’re married now.
How is your lovely wife, by the way?â€
Adrina cringed at the question. What the hell was he playing at?
Cratyn glared at him, quite appalled by the Warlord.
“Who are you, sir?†Roache demanded angrily.
“I’m sorry, did I forget to introduce myself? I am
Damin Wolfblade,
Warlord of Krakandar, Crown Prince of Hythria, Prince of the Northern
Marshes, and there’s another title or two that I can’t
quite recall.
And you would be . . .?â€
“This is Lord Roache and Lord Laetho, my advisers,â€
Cratyn said, not
having the wits to announce their full titles.
“Lord Laetho?†Damin asked. “Now you
I’ve heard of. What
happened to that brat we sent back, by the way?â€
“We are here to discuss surrender!†Cratyn declared,
sounding more
like a petulant child than a statesman.
As she watched Cratyn try to impose his will on the gathering, she
could not help but compare her husband to her lover. Apart from the
physical differences between the men — even the most objective
observer
would agree that Cratyn fared a poor second — there was no
comparison.
Damin commanded authority without even trying. Cratyn had to demand
it — loudly.
“Surrender?†Damin cried, as if it was the
first time he had
heard the word. “Surely you’re not going to quit after
one measly
little battle, Cratyn? I came here for a good fight and you want to
surrender already? Have some balls, man!â€
Even Jenga bit back a smile at Damin’s deliberate
misunderstanding.
“Not me, you fool!†Cratyn snapped. Normally
surrounded by men who
treated him like rare porcelain, he was floundering in the face of
Damin’s disrespect. “Medalon is surrendering to
us!â€
“You are?†Damin asked Jenga. “Since
when?â€
“No decision has been made as yet, Lord Wolfblade.â€
“You claimed you knew nothing about this,†Cratyn
accused.
“An unverified message has been received, your Highness. I
do not
consider that an order when dealing with an issue of such
importance.â€
“You require verification, my Lord?†Roache asked.
“Naturally. Would you surrender a strategically superior
position
without some sort of confirmation?â€
Roache nodded solemnly. “Of course not. How long will this
verification take?â€
“I suppose that depends on whether or not the order is
genuine,â€
Jenga shrugged. “I imagine the confirmation should arrive
within the
week, if it is.â€
“And if the order is proved genuine?â€
“Then I have no choice, your Grace,†Jenga conceded.
Roache appeared satisfied with the Lord Defender’s answer.
He was
the most experienced of Cratyn’s dukes. He understood the Lord
Defender’s position, even admired his stance.
“Perhaps then, in anticipation of the verification you
require, we
could discuss the details of your surrender?â€
“That is somewhat premature, is it not?†Jenga
ventured.
“Not at all, my Lord. Given that we have also been advised
of your
imminent surrender, one could safely assume that the order is genuine.
Given that neither of us wishes unnecessary misunderstanding, such an
agreement would seem prudent, don’t you think?â€
Cratyn had become superfluous in the face of the experience of the
Lord Defender and the canny Lord Roache. Even Laetho seemed at a loss
for words. But Damin wasn’t finished. Not yet.
“Well, I’m sorry, but if you’re going to
surrender, I can’t condone
it,†he declared. “I have a reputation to
uphold.â€
“The surrender includes all forces currently allied with
Medalon,â€
Cratyn pointed out stiffly.
“Then consider our alliance at an end,†Damin
announced. “I’m not
going to surrender to this whelp.†He turned on Cratyn shaking
his
head. “Did you really marry one of Hablet’s daughters?
Gods! I can’t imagine
how you manage to keep her satisfied.â€
Adrina would have thrown something at Damin, had she had a missile
handy, but Cratyn did blush an interesting shade of red.
Damin turned to Jenga. “My Lord, I cannot countenance this
farce any
longer. I shall be leaving immediately. Kindly have my court’esa
delivered to my tent at once.â€
The Warlord tossed his head dramatically and marched from the Hall,
his savage looking Raiders in his wake. Jenga purposely kept his eyes
downcast.
“Aren’t you going to stop him?†Lord Laetho
demanded.
“Lord Wolfblade is an ally, my Lord. I do not command him.
Short of
a pitched battle, I don’t see how I can stop him
leaving.â€
“The Hythrun is of no importance,†Roache agreed.
“There is only one
place he can go, and he might find more waiting for him when he gets
there than he bargained for.â€
“There is also the matter of Captain Tenragan,â€
Cratyn added,
annoyed that the discussion was slipping from his control.
“Your Highness?â€
“Don’t play the innocent, Lord Jenga. Tarja Tenragan
murdered Lord
Pieter and the priest Elfron. He is to be handed over to us for
trial.â€
“There was nothing mentioned about this, even in the
unverified
order.â€
“I can assure you, verification is on its way. You must
agree to
hold him, pending your surrender.â€
Adrina glanced at Tarja. He was torn between stepping forward and
bolting, she thought. Duty warring with survival. She placed a hand on
his arm and shook her head.
“Don’t do anything stupid, Tarja,†she said
softly. “There’s nothing
you can achieve by going down there.â€
Tarja looked at her for a moment. He nodded slowly, acknowledging
her advice, then turned back to watching the Kariens.
“Should such an order be received, then of course I will
honour it,â€
Jenga assured Cratyn.
“I should think so,†Cratyn replied, rather lamely.
He really wasn’t
handling this very well.
“In that case, gentlemen, I believe this discussion is at an
end. I
shall have Captain Alcarnen escort you to the border. Should
verification arrive, I will send a message, advising my
position.â€
“Your cooperation in this matter is much appreciated, my
Lord,â€
Roache agreed, before Cratyn could add anything further.
“Captain!â€
Nheal Alcarnen stepped forward and saluted sharply.
“Would you be so kind as to escort our guests back to the
border?â€
“Sir!â€
There was little else Cratyn and his party could do but follow the
captain.
As soon as the Kariens had left the Hall, pandemonium broke loose,
as the officers demanded an explanation. Tarja waited until Jenga had
quieted his men and ordered them about their business. The last man was
leaving as they descended the stairs. Jenga looked up at their
approach. His face was haggard.
“You’d better get out of here, and soon.â€
Adrina nodded. “I thank you for not betraying my presence,
my Lord.â€
Jenga shrugged. “A small victory over the Kariens, your
Highness,
even if there is nobody to share it with. I wish you a safe journey,
although I suspect your future is as doubtful as mine.†He
turned to
Tarja. “I want you to go with them, Captain.â€
“I won’t desert you, Jenga. Not this time.â€
The Lord Defender shook his head. “I want your resignation
then. I’m
damned if I’m going to hand any man of mine over to the Kariens
for
some sort of farcical trial with a noose waiting at the end of it.
Particularly for a crime he didn’t commit.â€
Adrina looked at Tarja curiously. If Tarja hadn’t killed
Lord
Pieter, then who had?
“I won’t run away, Jenga.â€
“Now is not the time to be noble, Tarja. I lied to the
Kariens. A
courier delivered the orders from the Citadel this morning, signed by
Joyhinia. Accompanying the orders was a warrant for your
arrest.â€
“Then you will surrender?â€
“I have no choice.â€
Tarja didn’t answer.
“Go,†Jenga ordered. There was more emotion in that
one word than
Adrina could ever recall seeing the Lord Defender betray previously.
Tarja hesitated for a moment then saluted smartly. “My
Lord!â€
He turned away, his expression determined and even a little
disappointed. Adrina impulsively leaned forward and kissed
Jenga’s
weathered cheek before she and Tam hurried after him.
“Captain!â€
They stopped and looked back. Adrina could have sworn there were
tears in the old man’s eyes.
“Take as many men with you as you can. Just be quiet about
it.â€
Tarja nodded in understanding. “As you wish.â€
“You’re the only one I can ask this of, you
understand that, don’t
you? No other man in my command has experience of this type of
warfare.â€
The comment puzzled Adrina. “War is war, isn’t it?
Besides, you said
you would surrender.â€
“I’m surrendering my forces, your Highness. I have
no say over what
former officers do once they have resigned from the corps.â€
“You’ll accept my resignation then, my Lord?â€
The Lord Defender nodded.
“Make the bastards pay, Tarja,†he added.
“Make them pay for every
league of Medalon soil they claim.â€
What could one man and a handful of renegade soldiers do, she
wondered, to halt an army the size of the Kariens? Then she glanced at
the captain and saw the look of quiet determination in Tarja’s
eyes.
Cratyn was going to find taking Medalon a lot harder than he
imagined.
CHAPTER 56
There was no denying the rumours once the Kariens
arrived under a flag of truce, and Lord Jenga did not bother trying. On
the morning following the meeting with Prince Cratyn word was passed
through the camp that Medalon would surrender. The following day a
messenger was sent north through a miserable squall to request another
meeting with the Kariens — this one to negotiate the details.
Mikel
heard the news with mixed feelings. The welcome thought that he would
soon be back among his own people was soured by the knowledge he
carried.
The Hythrun camp was dismantled with remarkable speed. Rather than
move out as one large force, Lord Wolfblade dispatched his men in
waves, a Century at a time. He was concerned that his fleeing force
might prove too tempting to the Kariens. Cratyn would not be able to
resist pursuing a thousand Hythrun across Medalon, but it was unlikely
he would bother hunting down countless scattered bands of them.
Mikel overheard Monthay discussing the strategic merits of the
Warlord’s decision with another sergeant. He seemed to admire
it. The
Raiders left in platoons of one hundred, which would break into smaller
groups once they were clear of the battlefield. They had been ordered
to make their way home anyway they could. Some would ride straight for
the Glass River, others would stay on this side until they almost
reached Bordertown. It would be well nigh impossible to round them all
up.
The Hythrun weren’t the only ones departing in haste. The
followers’
camp was a frenzy of activity as some hastened to leave and others dug
in, hoping for even more business once the countless Kariens arrived.
Mistress Miffany’s brightly striped tent was gone even before
the
Kariens had paid Lord Jenga a visit, as was old Draginya’s
tent. Mikel
had no idea what happened to his eggs but he cared little for them now.
He had more important things to worry about. More adult things. He had
not seen Dace or Kali for days and assumed his new friends had left too.
The last of the Hythrun to leave was Lord Wolfblade’s party,
and the
size of it puzzled him. He was certain nearly all of the Hythrun
Raiders had left already, yet there seemed far too many men gathered on
the edge of the camp waiting for the order to move out. Then Mikel
realised that over half the men riding with the Warlord were mounted on
sturdy Medalonian horses, not the magnificent golden horses of the
Hythrun. There were even men mounted on the captured Fardohnyan steeds.
His suspicions were confirmed when Damin appeared with Tarja at his
side. The soldiers wore nondescript civilian clothing, but they were
Defenders, sure as Xaphista was the Overlord. Tarja was abandoning the
field and taking hundreds of his men with him, including the captured
Fardohnyans.
Mikel watched from the top rail of the corral nearest the Hythrun
stables. He could not see the princess, but she was there somewhere, he
was certain. Nor could he spot Jaymes in the milling crowd. He had
anxiously studied every troop leaving the field and was sure that his
brother was still in the camp. Perhaps Jaymes had seen the light; or
perhaps the Hythrun had abandoned him once they knew they were heading
home.
It was just on dawn when Tarja gave the order to move out. He and
Damin waited off to the side, their heads close together as they
discussed something of import, as the men moved off. Several other
riders waited behind then, but from this distance, Mikel could not
identify them.
“Mikel!â€
Jaymes broke away from the host and cantered toward him. He was
mounted on a Medalonian horse — he was too raw to be trusted
with a
valuable Hythrun mount, but his saddlebags were full, his bed roll tied
to the saddle.
“Have you come to see me off?†His brother’s
eyes glittered with the
excitement of his adventure. He sat his horse as proud as any Defender.
Mikel glared at him reproachfully. “Traitor.â€
Jaymes’expression hardened. “You’re a child,
Mikel. You don’t
understand.â€
“I understand plenty. You’re betraying your country,
your lord and
your prince. Just like her.â€
“Just like who?â€
“It doesn’t matter.†He was not going to
share his knowledge with
Jaymes. He didn’t deserve to know the truth.
His brother sighed. “I have to go, Mikel. Will you give
mother and
father my love?â€
The audacity of the request made Mikel’s blood boil.
“I’ll do no
such thing! I’ll tell them you’re dead. Better they
think that than
know the truth!â€
He jumped off the rail and ran back toward the Keep, ignoring
Jaymes’ frantic calls for him to return.
When he finally stopped and looked back Jaymes was gone.
The next time Prince Cratyn arrived, a long and
frustrating day after the Hythrun had departed, it was with a much
larger party and there was no white flag in evidence. The Prince knew
he had won and was in no mood to mind the tender feelings of his
vanquished foe. He marched into the Keep, his dukes at his heels, with
all the assurance of one who knew he had nothing to fear.
Mikel hung around the yard, trying to be inconspicuous. It proved to
be a relatively simply task. Neither the Defenders on guard nor the
Karien escort spared him a glance. They were too busy eyeing each other
warily to be concerned with one small boy.
Mikel had no idea how he was going to get near the prince. He knew
none of the knights waiting outside with the horses, and he was fairly
sure that he looked like nothing more than a Medalonian urchin. They
would not spare him a copper if he was starving, let alone take him to
see the prince. The meeting dragged on for hours as the cold sun
climbed high in the sky. Mikel missed lunch and his stomach growled in
complaint as the sky darkened toward dusk.
His chance came just as he was on the verge of giving up. Sir Andony
emerged from the hall to speak to the knights waiting outside. Mikel
swallowed his apprehension and hurried forward.
“Sir Andony?â€
The young knight glanced at him, his eyes widening in shock.
“Mikel? What in Xaphista’s name are you doing
here?â€
“I have to see the prince, Sir Andony.â€
“Don’t be absurd! What could you possibly need to
see the prince
for?â€
“It’s about Princess Adrina.â€
Andony was not renowned for his intelligence, but even he understood
the implications. He nodded slowly.
“Wait here.â€
Mikel fidgeted impatiently under the scrutiny of the Karien knights
as Andony disappeared inside. In a surprisingly short time, Lord Roache
appeared. He grabbed Mikel by the collar and dragged him aside, out of
the hearing of the knights and the Defenders alike.
“What do you know of the princess?†he demanded
without preamble.
“She was here, my Lord.â€
Roache’s expression betrayed nothing of what he was
thinking. “Are
you certain?â€
He nodded. “I fled Karien with the princess and her servant.
The
Hythrun captured us the morning after we left. The princess has been
here ever since.â€
“And where is her Highness now?â€
“I’m not sure. I think she left with Lord
Wolfblade.â€
“I see.â€
“My Lord? There . . . there is something else
you
should know.â€
“What?†Lord Roache sounded impatient, as if his
mind was already on
other things.
“The princess and Lord Wolfblade . . .
they’re . . . well . . .â€
“Out with it, boy!â€
“She was kissing him, my Lord,†Mikel blurted out.
Roache’s eyes narrowed. “Who else knows of
this?â€
“Nobody, my Lord! I —â€
“Come with me,†Roache demanded, not in the least
interested in what
else Mikel had to say. He pulled Mikel along in his wake and thrust him
at Andony.
“Take the boy back to our camp. Now!†Roache
ordered. “You are to
stop for no one. Nor must you allow anybody to speak to the child. He
is to be held in my tent until I return.â€
Andony nodded, too well conditioned to question his orders. Before
he truly understood what was happening Mikel was sitting in front of
Andony on his big warhorse, riding away from the Medalonian camp and
heading for home.
It was close to midnight before Roache returned
and when he did, he had Prince Cratyn with him. Mikel’s
determination
to reveal the true depth of Adrina’s treachery wavered in the
Prince’s
serious presence.
“Tell his Highness what you told me,†Roache
ordered, waking Mikel
from a light doze. The boy jumped to his feet and brushed his fingers
through his sleep-tousled hair.
“The Princess is with Lord Wolfblade,†Mikel told
Cratyn. The young
prince’s expression was shadowed in the light from the smoking
brazier.
“Then she fled to Medalon, not back to Yarnarrow as we
thought.â€
“She told me she was going to Fardohnya, your Highness. To
seek aid
from her father.†Mikel thought it important that he establish
his own
innocence as soon as possible. “I thought I was following your
orders,
Sire.â€
“Lying bitch,†Cratyn muttered. “What
else?â€
Mikel glanced at Lord Roache uncertainly.
“Tell him the rest of it, boy.â€
“I saw them kissing, your Highness.â€
“You mean Wolfblade was forcing himself on her?â€
Mikel shook his head sadly. “No, your Highness. She
was . . . well, she didn’t seem to mind at all.
She
called you . . .â€
“What? What did she call me?â€
Mikel stared at his boots with determination. “Prince Cretin
the
Cringing.â€
“I see. And what else did she say?â€
Mikel looked to Lord Roache desperately for help. He did not want to
repeat what he had heard, despite his promises to himself.
“The prince must know the truth, boy,†Roach said,
almost
sympathetically. “Tell him.â€
Mikel nodded and told him everything he had heard. He told him of
the meeting on top of the tower. He told him of what he had seen and
heard in the stables. He told him everything he knew, although it broke
his heart to be the bearer of such dreadful news.
Cratyn swore under his breath and then turned to Roache.
“This is
intolerable! I will send a party out to hunt her down. By Xaphista, I
will see the bitch burn!â€
“We’ll hunt her down,†Roache agreed.
“But do you really want it
made public that the wife you could not satisfy turned to a Hythrun for
comfort?â€
Cratyn paced the tent angrily. “She can’t be allowed
to get away
with this!â€
“Nor shall she, but there are other things to
consider.â€
“What other things? She has publicly humiliated me!â€
“And she will humiliate you even more, should the truth get
out. You
do not want to put her on trial, Cratyn.â€
The Prince glared at Lord Roache. Mikel seemed all but forgotten.
“You’re surely not suggesting that I take her
back?â€
“Of course not! I am suggesting that you do everything in
your power
to rescue your wife from the clutches of the barbarian warlord who has
kidnapped and raped her. It will be unfortunate, but she will be killed
in the attempt.â€
“We’ll have no chance at an heir if she’s
killed.â€
“She has been sullied by another man. No heir could come
from your
union in any case.â€
Cratyn nodded, savagely pleased with the duke’s suggestion.
“I will lead the rescue party, myself.â€
“That would be most heroic of you, your Highness. Your
grief, on the
discovery of your wife’s fate, will be inconsolable, of course.
But I’m
sure you will recover. In time.â€
Cratyn smiled coldly. “I’m sure I will. And what of
the boy?â€
Lord Roache glanced at Mikel for a moment before turning back to the
prince.
“Perhaps he should accompany you, your Highness. He can,
after all,
give testament to your wife’s . . .
indiscretions.â€
The prince nodded. “It would be most unfortunate if
something were
to happen to him.â€
“Most unfortunate,†Lord Roache agreed.
Mikel studied the prince and the duke, not at all certain he
understood.
CHAPTER 57
The darkness into which R’shiel retreated
was
comforting at first. The memories of the Gathering and everything that
had happened since that awful night could gain no toehold here. There
was no pain, no unbearable guilt, and no despair. Just blessed
emptiness. A nothing place where nobody could hurt her.
She had been here before. She first discovered it on the road to the
Grimfield, when Loclon had chosen her as his instrument of revenge on
Tarja. It welcomed her the night she had confronted Loclon and almost
succeeded in killing him. For a time, on waking to find herself in
Sanctuary amid the Harshini, she had fled there again, until
Korandellan’s magic had suppressed her emotions and made it
bearable to
face reality. It was a tantalising, alluring place, and each time she
retreated there, it became a little harder to leave.
A part of R’shiel still existed in the real world. A part of
her
responded when someone spoke to her, ate the meals she was served, and
rode in the carriage each day staring blindly at the winter-browned
plains as they wound their way north. But it was a small part only.
Just enough to pretend she was alive.
Within herself, R’shiel knew that she could not stay here
indefinitely. Comforting it might be, but it was her Harshini side that
fled from the violence and the pain. Her human side hankered to return,
to wreak havoc on those who had caused her suffering.
It was her human side to whom Xaphista spoke.
R’shiel did not recognise his voice at first. The sensuous,
soothing
tones seemed like a distant echo that she hardly noticed. It took a
long time to recognise it for what it was. It took even longer before
she bothered to respond. You run from the pain, demon child. Let me ease it for you.
Calling her the demon child finally evoked a response. She had never
liked that name. Don’t call me that. What would you have me call you? Don’t bother calling me anything. Just leave me alone.
The voice did not reply and R’shiel did not particularly
care.
Later, she had no way of judging time in this place, the voice
returned. It was stronger, as if by acknowledging it the first time,
she had given it strength. I can help you, R’shiel. How do you know my name? All the gods know the name of the demon child. Are you a god? I am the only god. At least I will be, with your help.
She laughed sourly. With my help? Why would I want to
help you? Because I can ease your pain, R’shiel. I can take away
the hurt. Can you turn back time? Of course not. Then you can do nothing for me. Go away.
The voice did as she bid, leaving her alone with her thoughts.
The living part of R’shiel vaguely noted the changing
scenery as the
days grew shorter; saw the silver ribbon of the Glass River draw
nearer. For some reason, the sight of the broad waterway sparked a
brief reaction in her, as if the thought of crossing it would take her
beyond redemption. You fear crossing the river? the voice asked curiously. I fear what it represents. It brings you closer to me. I can destroy you, Xaphista. Shouldn’t you be the one
who fears
my approach? You need not destroy me, R’shiel. Together we would be
invincible. Together? You would be my High Priestess. We could rule the world. Suppose I don’t want to rule the world? You are half human. That doesn’t mean I crave an empire. What do you crave, R’shiel? Sanity.
Xaphista had no answer to that and it was a long time before he
spoke to her again.
They crossed the river in a blustery, cold wind that chopped the
mirror-like surface of the water into millions of glittering shards.
The sun was high in a pale, cloudless sky, offering no warmth.
R’shiel
stood by the rail on the barge, oblivious to the cold spray that misted
over her as the sailors hauled on the thick rope, pulling the barge
across the river with grim determination. The current fought them at
every turn. Although they professed to be atheists, the ferrymen
muttered among themselves about the wrath of Maera, the River Goddess.
They had never known a crossing like it. It was as though the Glass
River was alive and determined to prevent them landing on the other
side.
They made it eventually. R’shiel let Terbolt lead her onto
dry
ground and waited patiently for the rest of their party to disembark.
The barge would be busy for two days or more, ferrying the remainder of
the troops across. Aware of this, Terbolt commandeered the Heart and
Hearth and settled in to wait. R’shiel paid no more attention
to her
surroundings at the inn than she had when they camped by the road each
night on the journey here.
Garanus came to her at dinnertime and stood over her while she ate.
When her meal was finished he sent the tray away and sat beside her. He
did the same thing every night. He would talk to her as if she was
listening, describing the power of the Overlord, preaching in a
rasping, but impassioned voice that R’shiel found more
irritating than
comforting. He pleads my case most eloquently. He’s a nuisance. If you truly want to ease my pain,
getting rid
of Garanus would be a good start. As you wish. Without warning, Garanus broke off
mid-sentence and left the room. I would give you anything you asked
for, R’shiel. So long as I promise not to kill you, she added wryly. That would be a reasonable expectation, don’t you think? You can’t give me what I want, Xaphista. I can give you anything. You have but to ask. Free me, then. Take this collar from me. Let me feel the power
again. Ah! I’m not certain I trust you that much, demon child. Then what do I need you for? You are the reason for my pain. Not I, R’shiel. It is the Primal gods who want you to
suffer. The Primal gods created me. And they live in fear of their creation. Who do you think
allowed this to happen? It is your followers who hold me prisoner. For your protection, nothing more. The Primal gods have
interfered in your life enough. What are you talking about? Can you be so blind, child? They wish to destroy me. Why do you
think you were raised in the Citadel? No child raised by the Harshini
could contemplate killing, even with human blood. Brak seems to manage. He is as much a creature of the Primal gods as you are. Are you telling me the Primal gods made Joyhinia adopt me? That’s exactly what I’m telling you. They
picked the most
ruthless, cold-hearted bitch they could find to raise you. How else
could they ensure you had the skills to commit murder? They engineered
your suffering, R’shiel. They have manipulated you since you
were born. You’re delusional, Xaphista, as well as power hungry. It is you who are deluded. Do you think your love for Tarja is
an accident? Or his for you? Of course not! Kalianah made it happen. Why? Just to make you suffer. Think what it has cost you. Loclon
raped you because Tarja loves you. The last time I looked, Loclon was on your side. He
misjudged her badly if he thought that was going to persuade her to his
cause. You will see the truth eventually, demon child. I pray that it
will not be too late.
He left her then, leaving R’shiel with a puzzling thought.
Xaphista
was a god. To whom did he pray?
They left Cauthside and continued their journey
north the third day after the river crossing. Outwardly,
R’shiel showed
no more interest on this side of the river than she had on the other.
Garanus no longer came to her each night to aid her conversion, but
little else changed. She woke, she ate, she rode in the carriage, then
ate and slept where she was told. The routine never varied; it was
unlikely she would have noticed if it had.
Her retreat was no longer peaceful, though. Her silent haven had
been disturbed by Xaphista’s poisonous logic.
Was she really just a pawn, manipulated since birth to become a
weapon the Primal gods could use against their enemy? Was
Tarja’s love
for her simply imposed on him? Had the Primal gods sat back and let
Loclon do what he had done to her, hoping it would toughen her up? The
idea seemed ludicrous at first, but the longer she thought about it,
the more credibility it gained.
And what of Xaphista? Was he really so evil? And who was she to
judge what was evil anyway? Xaphista had hurt her, there was no denying
that; her current predicament was entirely attributable to him, but he
was fighting for his survival. Were his actions any worse than those of
the Primal gods?
For the first time since retreating into herself, R’shiel
began to
hunger for release. It was no longer peaceful here. Memories she had no
wish to confront began to plague her. Thoughts she had no wish to
contemplate refused to go away. You see? Everything you hold dear is a lie, Xaphista told
her seductively. Tarja’s love is no more real than this
place. The
Harshini secretly despise you, else why would they let you leave
Sanctuary? Even the Primal gods fear you. You are a weapon,
R’shiel, to
be aimed and pointed by whoever holds your heart in his hands.
Don’t
let them use you. You would use me just as soon as the Primal gods. I offer you something in return. I can ease your pain. I can
help you. How? By suppressing my emotions like the Harshini did? That was
simply an illusion and it hurt tenfold when they released it.
I’ve no
wish to experience it again. I can do better than that, demon child. I can take away the
memories that pain you. Those memories make me who I am. Then perhaps you should think about who you would rather be. I won’t be your pawn, Xaphista. I offer you a partnership, R’shiel, not bondage. Perhaps, she thought once he was gone. But when it
comes to thegods, who can tell the difference?
CHAPTER 58
Tarja set a gruelling pace as they fled the
border. Jenga had promised to stall the Kariens as long as he was able,
but even in Tarja’s most optimistic estimate that gave them a
start of
only a day or two. Adrina kept up and did not complain, despite the
fact that her backside felt bruised to the bone and her inner thighs
were rubbed raw. They ate cold rations when they stopped each night,
and collapsed into their bedrolls under an open sky.
As a child Adrina had been entranced by the bards who sang long,
romantic ballads about lovers on the run who spent all day galloping
toward freedom and all night making love. What utter nonsense, she
thought, dismounting gingerly in the small grove of trees Tarja had
chosen for their camp that night. Damin proved to be more human than
heroic. He looked tired and haggard and even he walked a bit stiffly,
despite a lifetime spent in the saddle. For some reason his discomfort
made her feel a little better.
Their numbers had thinned considerably since they left the border.
Following Damin’s lead, Tarja had broken his men into much
smaller
groups and dispatched them south with orders to muster at an abandoned
vineyard south of Testra, where he seemed to think they would be safe
until he could join them. There were barely a hundred men left, and
less than half of those were Damin’s Raiders. The rest were
Defenders
and the remainder of her Guard. When they crossed the Glass River at
Cauthside, they would split up once more. Tarja and his men would head
for the Citadel, while Damin continued south for Hythria.
Adrina knew the reason for Tarja’s mission, although he
rarely spoke
of it.
Something had happened to R’shiel.
Adrina prayed it was nothing serious. Tarja would not rest until he
discovered the demon child’s fate. It was a pity she would
never meet
her. Although she was careful not to broach the subject,
R’shiel
fascinated Adrina. Damin spoke of her in such glowing terms that she
might have been jealous, but for two very good reasons. The first was
Tarja. He was so completely besotted with the girl, that if he thought
Damin’s motives were anything but honourable, he’d have
killed the
Warlord long ago. The second was Damin. Jealousy would imply she had
some feeling for the man, and of course she didn’t, so there
was
nothing to be jealous about.
Adrina unsaddled her mount and dumped her gear near the small fire
that one of the Defenders had started. Tarja had ordered at least one
night with a fire and a hot meal. If he was feeling the strain of the
pace he set, then he knew some of the others would be at the point of
exhaustion. Adrina had tried not to look too happy when she heard the
news, but poor Tam’s expression had been pathetically grateful.
The
slave wasn’t accustomed to long hours in the saddle, and Adrina
looked
a picture of health compared to her faithful companion.
“Can I take your horse, my Lady?â€
Adrina turned and smiled wearily at Damin’s captain.
Almodavar was a
fearsome-looking brute, but he was quite the gentleman underneath all
that leather and chainmail.
“Thank you, Captain, but it’s every man for himself
on this journey.
I can take care of my horse. You have other things to do.â€
“Aye, your Highness, but I have a few young studs with more
energy
than sense. I’ll see she’s cared for. You take the
chance to rest while
you can.â€
Adrina was too tired to argue. “Thank you.â€
Almodavar led the mare toward the picket line. He had sent someone
for Tam’s horse too. She turned to find Tamylan by the fire,
warming
her hands and swaying on her feet.
“Sit down before you fall down, Tam.â€
“I’ll stand, if you don’t mind. In fact if I
never sit down again,
it will be fine by me.â€
By the time darkness fell completely, Adrina was feeling a little
better. A hot meal and a warm fire eased her aching muscles. Damin and
Tarja did not join them until long after they had eaten. Tam had
already fallen asleep and Adrina’s eyes were drooping. The only
reason
she was still awake was her inability to find a comfortable position.
“Come on, sleepy. Time for some exercise.â€
“Don’t be absurd. I can barely keep my eyes
open.â€
“I know, but trust me. If you stretch your legs now
you’ll be much
better for it in the morning.â€
Damin reached down and grabbed her hand, hauling her to her feet.
“Leave me alone!â€
“Stop complaining. You sound like a spoilt princess.â€
“I am a spoilt princess,†she retorted.
“Who am I to argue with royalty? Are you coming,
Tarja?â€
“No. I have to check on the sentries. Enjoy your walk, your
Highness.†She couldn’t see his face clearly in the
darkness, but she
could hear his amusement.
“I’ll bet he doesn’t laugh at
R’shiel,†she grumbled as Damin pulled
her along beside him. It was bitterly cold and the uneven ground made
her muscles cry out in protest.
“Would you laugh at someone who could fry you with a
look?â€
“How can you possibly be in such a good mood?â€
“I’ve still got my head on my shoulders. In this
business that’s
daily cause for celebration. Take longer strides. The idea is to
stretch your legs out, not mince along like you’re at
court.â€
“I do not mince, thank you.â€
“I do beg your pardon, your Highness.â€
“Don’t patronise me either.â€
“You’re in a right temper tonight. I thought
you’d be happy to be
free.â€
“I’m cold and I’m tired, Damin. I feel like
someone’s tied me in a
sack and beaten me with a pole for an hour or two. I don’t have
the
energy to be happy about anything.â€
He slowed his pace a little and put his arm around her shoulder.
“I’m tired too. And I’m cheerful because
I’m a Warlord and nothing is
supposed to bother me.â€
“I’m not one of your hired hands, you know.
You’re not morally
obliged to keep my spirits up.â€
He laughed softly, but did not answer. They kept walking through the
darkness away from the fires, although they stayed within the ring of
sentries posted around the camp. Adrina could make out the silhouette
of a guard every fifty paces or so, their eyes fixed on the open ground
beyond the trees.
It was much warmer with his arm around her and after a time her legs
seemed to loosen up a little. The respite was temporary, though.
Tomorrow they would resume their killing pace.
“How long till we reach the river?†she asked after
a long period of
companionable silence.
“Seven or eight days, I guess. Tarja could tell you
exactly.â€
“Are we going to keep this pace up for another eight
days?â€
“No. The horses couldn’t take it, even if we could.
We’ll ease up in
a day or so.â€
“You think Cratyn will come after us, don’t
you?â€
He nodded, all trace of his previous good humour gone.
“Jenga won’t
tell him where you are, but there are plenty of people who know you
were in the camp. We have to assume he’ll hear about it, sooner
rather
than later.â€
“What if he catches us?â€
“He won’t. We’ve got too big a head start
and we’re not stopping for
anything. Once we’ve crossed the Glass River, he’ll
have no chance of
finding us.†He stopped and pulled her to him, kissing her
forehead
lightly. “Stop worrying about it.â€
She lay her head on his shoulder and stood in the circle of his
arms, surprised at how comforting it was. It was a real pity he was a
Hythrun. She could easily grow accustomed to this. To feel so secure,
so . . .
“Hey, don’t fall asleep on me,†he chided.
“I’ll be damned if I’m
going to carry you all the way back.â€
She drew back from him, annoyed that he had disturbed her pleasant,
if rather unrealistic, daydreams. “You are so rude sometimes!
I’m sure
you do it just to aggravate me.â€
“Rude I might be, but I’m still not going to carry
you,†he said
with a grin.
“A true nobleman would.â€
“That’s because most true nobleman are inbred morons
with more brawn
than brains. I could cite your husband as a prime example.â€
“I didn’t choose him, you know.â€
“Which says something for your good taste, I suppose. Come
on, we’d
best get back before Tarja sends out a search party.â€
Stifling a yawn, Adrina took his hand and they walked back towards
the fire and the welcome prospect of a good night’s sleep. She
glanced
at him as they walked back through the darkened trees and reminded
herself sternly that Damin Wolfblade might be very disarming when he
wanted, but he was, first and foremost, her enemy. His desire to keep
her from Cratyn was nothing more than political, and she had better not
forget it.
They were on the move by first light the next day.
Poor Tam was on the verge of tears as she struggled to mount her horse,
but Adrina found she was much better than she expected. Although she
would have preferred to ride with Damin or Tarja, she took her usual
place in the very centre of the column surrounded by Raiders, Defenders
and Fardohnyans who had orders to die before any harm was allowed to
befall her.
They kept to the road that wound south towards Cauthside, in part
because it was the fastest route, and in part to disguise the size of
their group. They had left the border in significant numbers and there
was no need for any pursuing force to think that had changed. Scouts
ranged ahead and behind them, scouring the countryside for signs of
pursuit, or unexpected danger. Now that Medalon had surrendered, any
Defenders they met heading north would be enemies and both Tarja and
Damin agreed that in this case running was more prudent than fighting.
She had heard them discussing their plans late into the night as she
lay by the fire, her head resting in Damin’s lap and he
unconsciously
stroked her hair. She drifted into sleep listening to Tarja explain his
plans for the men who waited for him in Testra.
She understood now why Jenga had wanted Tarja to resign from the
corps, why he wanted him to escape the border while he still could. It
had little to do with the Lord Defender’s affection for him.
Tarja was
an expert guerilla fighter and Jenga wanted him to do to the Kariens
what he had done to the Defenders when he led the heathen rebellion. He
didn’t have the men to take on the Karien invaders directly but
he
would make life very difficult for them.
Adrina fell asleep and dreamt of ambushes, and sabotage, and
hit-and-run raids on places she had never heard of.
They stopped just after midday at a small brook that tumbled over
moss-covered rocks beside the road. The water was icy, but the horses
seemed grateful. Adrina stood by her mare as she drank her fill,
munching on a wedge of hard cheese, when one of the forward scouts came
thundering through their midst. He skidded to a halt in front of Damin
and Tarja, turning his mount sharply to avoid barrelling them over.
“Defenders!†he panted. “A thousand at
least. Headed this way.â€
“How far?†Tarja demanded.
“Five leagues. They’re not moving very fast, but if
we stay on the
road, we’ll ride straight into them.â€
Tarja grabbed his mount and swung into the saddle. “Show
me.â€
The scout turned his mount and galloped off with Tarja on his heels.
“Almodavar!â€
“My Lord?â€
“Get everyone off the road. Make camp in that stand of trees
we
passed a league or so back. No fires, no noise. You know what to
do.â€
Damin was mounted and racing down the road after Tarja before
Almodavar had a chance to acknowledge the order.
Adrina patted her mare with a weary sigh then climbed back into the
saddle. Almodavar got them organised in a very short time, the urgency
of their situation not lost on a single man. They rode back along the
road at a canter, until Almodavar called a halt when they neared the
trees.
The copse was a fair way back, separated from the road by a broad
stretch of long brown grass. The captain studied the tree line for a
while then stood in his stirrups to look over the surrounding
countryside. Then he turned and cantered back in the direction they had
come from.
“What’s the matter?†Adrina asked the guard
on her left.
“If we ride through that grass, your Highness, we might as
well put
up a sign telling them where we are. The captain’s looking for
a way to
reach the trees without leaving any tracks.â€
Adrina nodded, rather impressed by the Hythrun eye for detail. They
waited for another few minutes before Almodavar returned.
“There’s a gully back that way that leads toward the
trees,†the
captain announced in Medalonian, for the benefit of the Defenders among
them. “But we’ll have to lead the horses, it’s
too treacherous to ride
through. Once we clear it, we’ll have a bit of open ground to
cover, so
we’ll cross it in single file.â€
He did not ask for questions, or expect any. Adrina followed her
guards and picked her way through the gully after the young man who had
told her of Almodavar’s intentions. A bubbling stream coursed
through
the centre, perhaps a tributary of the brook where they had stopped
earlier. The rocks were slick and the icy water splashed over her
boots. She was dressed in trousers and a warm jacket, as was Tam
—
there was no point in advertising their presence by dressing like
ladies — but her feet were starting to numb by the time she led
her
mare out of the gully and mounted for the ride to the trees.
There was no respite when she reached them, either. Almodavar
ordered no fires to betray their presence so she settled down for a
long cold wait until Damin and Tarja returned.
Adrina was sitting with her back to a tall poplar, Tam’s
sleeping
head resting on her shoulder, when the sound of galloping horses woke
her from a light doze. Expecting to find Damin and Tarja returning, she
gently moved Tam’s head onto the cloak they were using as a rug
and
struggled to her feet. She found Almodavar waiting at the edge of the
trees as a Defender and a Raider galloped toward them through the
grass, making a mockery of his effort to conceal their hiding place.
“That’s not Damin and Tarja,†she pointed
out as the horsemen drew
nearer.
“The Raider is Jocim, one of the rear scouts,â€
Almodavar agreed. “I
don’t know the Defender.â€
They waited until the men had almost reached the trees before waving
them down. Jocim stayed in his saddle, but the Defender jumped down,
almost collapsing with exhaustion as he hit the ground. Almodavar
reached out an arm to steady him, but he waved it away.
“Where’s Captain Tenragan?â€
“He’s not here.â€
“Who’s the ranking Defender officer then?â€
Almodavar looked a little annoyed at the man’s insistence on
following Defender protocol.
“If you have news man, out with it.â€
The Defender looked as if he was going to argue the point, but
weariness won out over procedure.
“I have a message from the Lord Defender,†he said.
“The Kariens
crossed the border two days after you left. The Defenders were ordered
to throw down their arms. The Kariens have control of the Keep.â€
Almodavar nodded, unsurprised by the news. “Jenga ordered
you to
founder a horse just to tell us that?â€
He shook his head. “No. He sent me to tell you that two
hundred
Kariens were dispatched south at the same time. He thinks they know
about the princess. Cratyn is leading them himself.â€
Adrina’s heart skipped a beat. Surely they had enough lead
on them
to escape? The Kariens could not travel as fast as their troop and they
were making excellent time.
Almodavar nodded and glanced at Adrina. Her expression must have
betrayed her thoughts. “They’ll not catch us, your
Highness.â€
“Not if we keep moving,†she agreed.
Adrina left the rest of it unsaid. Almodavar knew, as well as she,
that a force of a thousand Defenders was blocking the way south.
CHAPTER 59
From a distance, the northern plains looked as
flat and featureless as a tabletop. The view was deceptive, though. In
reality the plains were a series of low rolling folds that concealed as
much as they revealed. Tarja, Damin and the Hythrun scout, whose name
was Colsy, dismounted some distance from the Defenders. They led their
horses off the road for quite a way, before leaving them to fend for
themselves as they scrambled up a low hillside, dropping on their
bellies as they neared the summit.
“Gods!†Damin muttered as they reached the top.
Tarja studied the scene below, forcing down a wave of despair. The
column of Defenders was stretched out along the road in a snaking line
that stretched for half a league or more. At its head, rode a Karien
knight, displaying a coat of arms on his shield that he could not make
out from this distance.
“Do you have your looking-glass?â€
Damin nodded and handed Tarja the instrument from the pouch he
carried on his belt. Tarja aimed it at the knight’s shield. As
the
three silver pike on a red field slowly resolved into focus he swore
softly, then handed it back to Damin.
“Well, at least that answers the question about the
whereabouts of
the Duke of Setenton.â€
Damin took the looking-glass and followed Tarja’s pointing
finger.
“And where the order for the surrender came from,â€
Damin agreed.
“What’s he doing leading half the damned Defender Corps
north?â€
Half was a gross exaggeration, but that near a thousand Defenders
marched under the command of a Karien knight was cause enough for
concern.
“If he was waiting at the Citadel when R’shiel
arrived . . .†Tarja did not finish the
sentence. He was
afraid to put his thought into words.
“I wonder who’s in the carriage,†Colsy
added, pointing at the
elaborate vehicle drawn by six matched horses, which trundled along
behind the Kariens.
“That’s the First Sister’s carriage.â€
“That’s all we need,†Damin groaned.
“Joyhinia Tenragan, in all her
vicious glory. I thought you destroyed her wit after Dacendaran stole
it?â€
“So did I.â€
Damin returned the looking-glass to its case and rolled onto his
back. He put his hands behind his head and stared at the pale sky for a
moment then looked at Tarja.
“They’ll be on us by nightfall.â€
“Or so close it won’t matter.â€
“I’ve always fancied myself a brilliant warrior,
Tarja, but odds of
ten to one are a bit much, even for me.â€
Tarja nodded. “There’s nothing to be achieved by
engaging them.â€
“So what do we do? Hide until they ride by? Head
overland?â€
“If we turn off the road, it’ll take a lot longer to
reach the river
and even more time to find a place where we can cross. Cauthside is the
only place with a decent barge this side of Testra.†He
didn’t add that
going overland meant turning west. Damin knew it without having it
spelled out for him.
“Then it seems we have no choice. We hide until they pass
by.â€
“That may not be as simple as you think. Terbolt might be in
command, but the Defenders won’t let that interfere with their
normal
routine. They’ll have scouts out, you can be certain.â€
“I didn’t see any,†Colsy objected.
“That doesn’t mean they aren’t out
there,†Tarja warned.
Damin nodded in agreement. “The reputation of the Defenders
is well
earned. All the more reason not to take them on.â€
“If we’re careful, we should be able to avoid
them,†Tarja suggested.
The Warlord smiled wistfully. “Remember the good old days,
Tarja?
When you and I knew exactly who our enemies were? I miss them.â€
“I remember them well. You were the enemy, as I
recall.â€
“And you were always one step ahead of me. I always meant to
ask you
how you managed that.â€
“I probably shouldn’t disillusion you, but it was
luck as much as
anything.â€
Damin grinned. “I don’t believe you. Nobody could be
that lucky.â€
“Alright, if it makes you happy, it was my sheer tactical
brilliance.â€
“Just as I always suspected,†Damin agreed. He
rolled over and
stared down at the advancing Defenders. “I have to tell you.
The sight
of those Defenders has completely ruined my day, you know that,
don’t
you?â€
“You’ll get over it.â€
“Eventually,†Damin sighed. “Let’s
get back to the others.â€
“Aren’t we going to do anything?â€
Colsy asked, obviously
disappointed.
“We are going to hide, young man.â€
“Hiding is for women.â€
“And very smart men,†the Warlord retorted.
It was late afternoon before they located
Almodavar and the rest of their band. The Hythrun captain had done an
excellent job of concealing their presence. But for some scattered
tracks heading toward the tree-line, there was nothing to indicate that
more than a hundred men were concealed among the trees. Tarja looked
around the camp with approval. The Hythrun seemed to lack discipline,
but when it really counted, they did exactly as they were ordered.
Adrina hurried forward as they rode into the camp. The change in her
was quite remarkable, Tarja thought. She seemed to have shed her spoilt
outer shell. She had ridden without complaint, as though she was trying
to prove she was worthy of the danger they had placed themselves in by
offering her protection. Her face brightened at Damin’s
approach,
revealing far more than she meant to.
Tarja was wary of Damin’s relationship with Adrina. It was
fraught
with danger and long-term ramifications that did not bear thinking
about. Despite the insistence of both Damin and Adrina that the
relationship meant nothing, Tarja could see the danger signs. Adrina
never strayed far from Damin and he was prepared to risk his life to
keep her by his side. Tarja understood what it was like to be willing
to lay down your life for someone you loved. He wondered how long it
would be before the Hythrun Warlord and the Fardohnyan Princess worked
it out for themselves.
“Cratyn’s coming!†Adrina cried as Damin
dismounted.
Damin looked over her shoulder at Almodavar who approached them at a
much more dignified pace.
“She speaks the truth, my Lord. Jenga sent a messenger to
warn us.â€
Tarja dismounted and let Shadow be led away by one of his own men
who had clustered around them, anxious for news.
“How far behind us?â€
“A day or two, three at the outside.â€
“This could make things interesting,†Damin remarked
laconically.
Adrina punched his arm impatiently. “Interesting?
Don’t you
realise the danger we’re in?â€
Tarja understood Adrina’s annoyance. Damin had a bad habit
of
treating everything as if it was some sort of elaborate game. His
refusal to take anything seriously could be frustrating at times. In
this case it was downright dangerous.
“She has a point, Damin.â€
“What’s the problem?†he shrugged.
“We’ve already agreed that it
would be insane to take the Defenders on. We can’t go overland
— it
will slow us down too much — so we hide. The Defenders will
ride by us,
none the wiser.â€
“And run straight into Cratyn,†Tarja reminded him.
“What do you
think will happen then?â€
“If we’re lucky, they’ll wipe each other
out,†the Warlord chuckled.
“Be serious!â€
Damin had the decency to look contrite. “You’re
right. If Cratyn
knows when we left, and we haven’t been seen by the Defenders,
even he
should be able to figure out that we’re around here
somewhere.â€
“Can’t we slip past the Defenders?†Adrina
asked hopefully. There
was an edge of desperation in her voice.
Tarja shook his head. “Not a chance.â€
“Then we go overland,†Damin said, no happier with
the idea than
Tarja. But at least this way they would have a chance of avoiding the
two forces that were inexorably closing in on them. But it took him
away from the Citadel. Away from R’shiel.
“If we start moving now, we can put a few leagues between us
and the
Defenders by nightfall.â€
The Warlord nodded and ordered Almodavar to get everyone moving.
Tarja’s stomach rumbled in complaint, reminding him that he had
missed
lunch as Damin led Adrina away, his arm around her shoulder.
As he watched the retreating couple he frowned. He should have put a
stop to it. That he would have had more chance of stopping the sun
rising tomorrow did little to ease his concern. Were it not for Adrina,
Cratyn would more than likely have ignored the Hythrun refusal to
surrender. What were a thousand Hythrun to a man who could muster a
hundred thousand men? If Cratyn was simply chasing down his errant
wife, then it was bad enough. If anyone suspected that she and Damin
were lovers, and shared their suspicions with the prince, Cratyn would
not rest until every last person who knew of the liaison was dead. He
was the Karien Crown Prince and his religion demanded the most terrible
vengeance he could wreak. Adrina’s infidelity could not be
forgiven —
it could only be washed away in blood.
It was slow going as they picked their way cross
country. The terrain was hard on the horses. One minute they were
climbing, the next descending, and although the slopes were not steep,
the horses had been ridden hard for days now. By the time darkness
fell, and with it the temperature, even some of the magnificent Hythrun
horses, renowned for their stamina, were stumbling. Tarja called a halt
and ordered them to make camp, but refused to allow any fires. The
chance of being spotted by a Defender scout was too real to be ignored.
Tarja hobbled his mount and finally got around to eating something
long after dark, although hard cheese and jerky barely counted as a
meal. He had been spoilt, he decided, living on the border. There was a
time when he didn’t mind trail rations. Had he been tougher
then — or
just less discerning, he wondered?
“Tarja?â€
He turned, a little surprised to find Adrina weaving her way among
the picketed horses toward him. Her breath frosted in the moonlight and
she held her borrowed jacket tightly closed against the cold.
“I thought you’d be asleep by now.â€
“Sleep?†she laughed humourlessly.
“That’s a joke. Who can sleep
with a thousand Defenders over the next hill and the Kariens riding us
down?â€
“You need to rest, then, even if you can’t sleep.
The last few days
are going to seem like a picnic compared to what lies ahead.â€
She reached up and patted Shadow’s forelock. The mare
nuzzled her
hopefully for a moment then returned to her feedbag when she decided
the princess had nothing better to offer.
“Can I ask you something, Tarja?â€
“I suppose.â€
“If I wasn’t here, you wouldn’t be doing
this, would you?â€
She knew the answer as well as he did. He wondered what was really
behind the question.
“Cratyn probably wouldn’t be on our tail, but
we’d still be hiding
from the Defenders. You can’t blame yourself for that.â€
She smiled. “Actually, I’m a little surprised at
myself. Taking the
blame for things is not my style. I’ve never been known for my
selflessness.â€
Tarja found that very easy to believe.
“I keep thinking I should just go back to Cratyn and be
damned.â€
“What good would that do?†He hoped he
hadn’t let his astonishment
show. Such an offer from Adrina verged on the miraculous.
“R’shiel is missing, Tarja. You should be helping
her, not saving me
from my own stupidity.†She smiled self-consciously, as if she
was
startled to have made such an admission. “I have a feeling that
the
demon child is more important in the general scheme of things than one
disgruntled princess.â€
“She’s right, Tarja.â€
Brak appeared out of nowhere a pace behind Adrina. The princess spun
around, startled by the unexpected voice. A thousand questions leapt to
Tarja’s mind at the sight of him, but one question overrode
every
other, even his astonishment at Brak’s sudden return:
“Where is R’shiel?â€
“Closer than you think,†Brak replied, then he bowed
to Adrina. “You
must be Hablet’s girl. Adrina, isn’t it? The one who
married Cratyn?â€
“Who are you?†she demanded. “Tarja? Who is
he?â€
“Brakandaran,†Tarja told her, fighting to keep an
even temper. What
in the name of the Founders had happened to R’shiel? How did
Brak get
here? “He’s Harshini. He was supposed to be
looking after R’shiel.â€
“You can’t blame Brak, Tarja, it wasn’t his
fault.â€
Tarja started at the new voice and turned to find Dace standing
behind him. The God of Thieves was grinning broadly, rather pleased
with the effect of his dramatic entrance.
“What are you doing here?â€
“You know, most people would prostrate themselves when
confronted
with a god,†Dace pointed out, a little miffed at
Tarja’s
less-than-enthusiastic reception.
“I’m not ‘most people’. What
happened to R’shiel?â€
“That’s a god?†Adrina asked. She
looked awestruck, but
then, she was a pagan. Being confronted with one of her gods probably
meant a great deal more to her than it meant to him.
“Unfortunately, yes. This is Dacendaran. He’s
supposed to be the God
of Thieves, I think. Personally, I think he’s the God of
Unreliable
Fools.â€
“Don’t be absurd, Tarja, there’s no such
entity. If you’re going to
be like that, then I won’t help you.â€
“That’s an empty threat under the
circumstances,†Brak remarked.
“But he can’t be a god,†Adrina scoffed.
“I’ve seen him in the
Defenders’ camp. He was hanging around with Mikel.â€
“My newest and most fervent . . . no
actually, he’s
more like a reluctant disciple.â€
“Brak, what the hell is going on?â€
He held up his hand wearily to stay Tarja’s avalanche of
questions.
“Look, I know I have a lot of explaining to do, and I will, I
promise.
But let’s find Damin first. I don’t want to have to go
over this more
than once.â€
CHAPTER 60
“Before I tell you where R’shiel
is,†Brak began,
looking at each one of them in turn, “I have to explain a few
things.â€
They had gathered around a brightly burning fire, safe in the
knowledge that Brak’s magic concealed them from prying eyes.
Tarja was
sceptical when he promised they would not be seen, and his men were
decidedly edgy, but even Almodavar seemed satisfied with the
Harshini’s
assurance that he was protecting them. The fire warmed them more than
it should have, and he wondered if Brak’s magic was responsible
for
that too. The half-Harshini’s eyes were completely black, a
sure sign
he was drawing on his power. It reminded Tarja sharply how alien the
Harshini really were.
“You’d better tell them the rules, too,â€
Dace added.
“What rules?†Tarja asked warily.
“I’ll get to that. There are other things you must
understand first.â€
Tarja shifted restlessly. He knew from experience how futile it was
to demand answers from Brak when he wasn’t ready to give them.
Damin
sat on his left, with Adrina curled up beside him. On the other side of
the fire sat Almodavar, Ghari and Dace, who seemed quite content to let
Brak do the talking.
“As you’ve probably figured out by now,â€
Brak continued, “the
Kariens were waiting for us when we reached the Citadel.â€
“I tried to warn you,†Dace interjected.
“You knew they were waiting for you? Why in the name
of the
Founders didn’t you turn back?â€
“Dace warned us Xaphista had believers in the Citadel,
Tarja. Even
he didn’t know Terbolt and his priests were there.â€
“So much for the infallibility of the gods.â€
Dace glared at him, but let the comment pass.
“It wouldn’t have mattered if Dace had given us the
disposition of
every Karien on the continent, there were forces at work that would
have seen to it that we did not succeed.â€
“How could you fail with the gods on your side?â€
Adrina scoffed.
“That’s just the point. The only side the gods care
about is their
own.â€
Dace snorted with disgust at the comment, but he seemed unusually
reticent tonight and offered no other sign of his displeasure.
“Anyway, we reached the Citadel and everything went
according to
plan until Joyhinia appeared at the Gathering. The real Joyhinia that
is, as lucid as she ever was.â€
“How? I destroyed her wit. Her mind was gone.â€
“The Karien priests found her another mind and transferred
it into
her body. Once Joyhinia appeared things fell apart fairly rapidly. The
demon meld collapsed and R’shiel couldn’t hold the
coercion. She was
discovered within minutes of Terbolt’s appearance. Mahina was
arrested.
Draco’s dead, by the way. So is Affiana.â€
“And just what were you doing while R’shiel
was being
arrested?†Tarja asked, his voice dangerous. The news that that
man who
fathered him was dead meant little to him. He was more concerned about
Mahina. He was sick with worry about R’shiel.
“I was also being detained — by Zegarnald.â€
Damin sat bolt upright and stared at the Harshini in astonishment.
“The God of War prevented you from going to the demon
child’s aid? That
makes no sense. He delivered her to me for safekeeping. Why would he
allow her to fall into the hands of his enemies?â€
“The Kariens are your enemies, Damin, not
Zegarnald’s.
Xaphista is his adversary and that’s all he’s
interested in.â€
“I don’t understand,†Adrina said, giving
voice to Tarja’s own
confusion.
“The only reason the gods allowed R’shiel to be
created was their
need to destroy Xaphista. They’re not interested in anything
else. The
demon child has a job to do and they want to be damned sure
she’s
capable of doing it.â€
“You mean they want to know if she can kill?â€
“She can do that readily enough,†Ghari warned her.
“Ask anyone who
knew her in the rebellion.â€
Brak nodded. “That’s not what concerns them.
They’re more worried
that Xaphista will win her over to his cause. She can kill a god. Which
god she destroys is entirely up to her.â€
“So they let the Kariens capture her? Isn’t that
rather
counter-productive?†Damin asked.
“Zegarnald’s theory is that if she is going to
succumb to Xaphista,
he’d rather know now, before she fully realises what she is
capable of.â€
“He wants to find out while there’s still a chance
she be can
killed,†Tarja translated for the benefit of the others.
“That’s your
job, isn’t it, Brak?â€
The Harshini dropped his eyes.
Adrina looked at Tarja in confusion before turning back to Brak.
“But what happened to R’shiel?â€
“She was taken prisoner.â€
“And then what?†Damin asked. He knew Brak, too;
knew they had yet
to hear the worst of it.
“You recall I said the Kariens transferred another mind into
Joyhinia’s body? Well it wasn’t just any mind.â€
Brak looked straight at
Tarja. “It was Loclon’s mind.â€
Tarja experienced a moment of such blind, mindless rage that he
thought he might explode from it. He didn’t say a word. He just
sat
there, trembling, clenching his fists in helpless fury. The others
looked at him curiously, sensing his mood but unaware of the reason for
it. Nobody but Brak, Dace and Tarja knew of what Loclon had done to
R’shiel in the past. They did not understand.
“I gather from the look on Tarja’s face that this
Loclon is not a
very nice person?†Damin asked flippantly. Tarja turned on him
with
such fury that the Warlord leaned back, out of his reach.
“Sorry . . . Just trying to lighten the mood.
I’ll shut
up.â€
“That would be a very good idea,†Adrina agreed
sternly.
Brak resumed his narrative, looking almost as annoyed at Damin as
Adrina was. “If you need details, I’ll let Tarja fill
you in if he
wants to. Suffice to say that Loclon has harmed R’shiel in the
past.
Enough that he’s probably the only thing in this world she
truly fears.
R’shiel’s feelings for Joyhinia aren’t much
better. Being confronted by
both of them in the one body was more than she could take.â€
“Did he kill her?†Tarja asked. His voice was colder
than the night.
Brak shook his head. “He roughed her up a bit, but he
couldn’t risk
killing her. But for a few cuts and bruises, physically she’s
fine.â€
“Physically?â€
“You remember the night we escaped the Grimfield?â€
“I’m not likely to forget it.â€
“Then you recall what happened to R’shiel after she
tried to kill
Loclon? How she retreated into herself?â€
Tarja nodded. “She was like it for days.â€
“Well that’s basically what’s happened to
her now. She’s alive, she
speaks, she eats; but R’shiel is not there.â€
“You mean she’s in some sort of coma?â€
Adrina asked.
“Not exactly. Tarja knows what I mean. He’s seen her
like this
before.â€
“Then how do we wake her?â€
“We can’t. She has to come back of her own
accord.â€
“If she wants to come back,†Dace reminded Brak.
“What do you mean?â€
Brak sighed. “Wherever she is, it’s more than likely
Xaphista is
there too.â€
“Then only the gods can reach her? Why don’t you do
something,
Dacendaran?â€
“I’m not allowed to, Damin,†the young god
replied. “Zeggie says she
has to turn away from Xaphista of her own accord, or when it comes time
to face him she’ll simply give in.†He looked around
the fire-lit
circle of faces, begging for understanding. “Look, I’m
going to be in
enough trouble for freeing Brak. I’d help if I could, but with
all
these wars going on, Zegarnald is as strong as he’s ever been.
Unless
you can start some sort of worldwide crime wave, I haven’t the
strength
to defy him.â€
“Then how can Xaphista get to her?†Tarja asked. He
didn’t have the
benefit of a pagan education. He was floundering with all this talk of
gods.
“Xaphista gains his strength from his believers and
he’s got
millions of them. That’s why the Primal gods fear him.â€
“But she’s half-Harshini, isn’t
she?†Damin pointed out. “Why didn’t
she just call on her power and escape herself?â€
“The priests have blocked her power. They’re using
some sort of
collar I’ve never seen before. If she tries to touch the source
of her
power it burns. If she manages to get past that, the pain is
intolerable. Not even the demons can reach her.â€
Tarja watched Brak, wondering how much of what he told them was
conjecture and how much he knew to be fact.
“So what is Xaphista doing to her?†Adrina wondered
aloud.
“I doubt if he’s hurting her,†Brak
shrugged. “If anything he’ll be
trying to coax her to follow him. He doesn’t need to kill
R’shiel to
remove the threat. He just needs her on his side.â€
“So if she defies him, he’ll kill her and if she
doesn’t, you’ll
kill her anyway,†Tarja concluded bleakly.
Brak didn’t answer; he didn’t have to.
“Where is she, Brak?â€
“With the Defenders camped less than two leagues from here.
Terbolt
is escorting her back to Karien.â€
The stunned silence lasted only a moment.
“We have to rescue her,†Almodavar announced.
“How?†Tarja demanded.
“We’ll think of something,†Damin said, with
a nod to his captain.
“You’re surely not suggesting that we leave her
there?â€
“Why not? She’s as safe there as anywhere.
I’m not going to risk the
life of every man here, just so that the moment we get her back Brak
can kill her.â€
The Harshini stared at him with unreadable black eyes.
“Brakandaran would never . . .†Damin
began, then saw
the look on the Harshini’s face. “Gods! You
can’t be serious!â€
Adrina glanced around at the men angrily. “This is insane!
You can’t
leave her there. You can’t let them take her back to Karien.
They would
destroy her, and trust me, I know what I’m talking about! You
have to
rescue her!â€
“It won’t be easy,†Ghari warned.
“And if she has turned to
Xaphista, she may not want to be rescued.â€
“Bollocks!†the Fardohnyan princess spat angrily.
“You don’t know
what’s happened to her. You have to give her a chance.â€
Tarja nodded in agreement. “Nobody wants to get her back
more than
I, Adrina, but she’s being held in the middle of a thousand
Defenders.â€
“But we have the Harshini on our side,†Damin
pointed out. “We could
be in and out before anyone knew about it. That’s assuming
you’ll help
us, Brak.â€
“I’ll help you as much as I can, but you must
understand that I
can’t do anything for R’shiel. She has to make her own
decisions.†He
turned to Dace. “I’m allowed to do that much
aren’t I, Divine One?â€
Dace nodded miserably. “I suppose.â€
“And once we have rescued the demon child?†Ghari
asked. “You forget
the Karien force approaching from the north. Unless Lord Brakandaran
can magically transport us away from here, we’ll have little
hope of
escape. Cratyn is angry enough to hunt down his wife. I imagine losing
the demon child will do nothing to improve his temper.â€
“We need something to distract him,†Damin agreed.
“That’s easy,†Adrina said.
“I’ll surrender.â€
“No!†Damin cried.
“What else will turn him back, Damin? He seeks his wife. He
doesn’t
know that the Defenders approach, or that they have the demon child. If
you can get R’shiel out of the Defenders’ camp, Terbolt
will be furious
certainly, but the Defenders will not pursue you with the same
dedication that Cratyn will. With Brak’s help you can get
clear. If
Cratyn joins the hunt, nothing will deter him.â€
Tarja could see the logic in her plan, but remained silent, as did
the others. This was something they needed to decide between
themselves. He wondered if Damin was beginning to realise just how hard
he would find it to let Adrina go.
“I can’t let you do it, Adrina. If Cratyn suspects
for a minute —â€
“I’m prepared to take that risk, Damin.â€
“Well, I’m not. You’re not going back to him
and that’s final. We
haven’t come this far to quit now.†He turned to Tarja,
his face
chiselled in determination. “We’ll get R’shiel
back, Tarja, then we’ll
run like hell. We’ll split our forces and scatter them so wide,
Cratyn
and Terbolt won’t even begin to know where to look. Brak can
conceal us
and —â€
“And his priests will think I’ve lit a beacon for
them,†Brak warned.
“But you’re shielding us now. Can’t they
feel it?â€
“I’m helping,†Dace admitted.
“Then you can help us when we flee.â€
The God of Thieves shook his head. “That would be
interfering. If
you take R’shiel and try to stop what’s happening to
her, and Zegarnald
catches me helping you . . .†Dace left the
sentence
hanging ominously.
The gods could not destroy each other, Tarja knew that much, but he
wondered what one god could do to another that would cause Dacendaran
such concern. He had a feeling he didn’t really want to know.
Damin thought for a moment then shrugged. “What the hell. I
wasn’t
planning to live forever anyway. What say we go and rescue the demon
child anyway, and to hell with the risk?â€
“You’re mad!†Adrina declared, but she
didn’t offer any further
protest, or repeat her offer to return to her husband.
One by one the others nodded their agreement, including Brak, until
Damin turned to Tarja questioningly.
“Well?â€
Tarja looked up and met Brak’s unwavering, alien eyes. He
wanted to
rescue R’shiel more than he wanted to keep breathing, but he
could not
shake the feeling that saving her from her current predicament might be
placing her in even more danger.
“Let’s do it,†he agreed, sounding far more
certain than he felt.
It was too late by the time they finished their
discussion to take any action that night, so they planned their rescue
attempt for the following evening. The delay made Tarja nervous. The
Kariens were already too close for comfort and the wait served only to
bring them closer.
The Defenders had stopped for the night so Damin sent out scouts to
spy out the lay of their camp as it was more than likely the camp would
be set up in the same way each evening. Two Hythrun Raiders and two
Defenders, hand-picked by Tarja for both their experience and their
common sense, were despatched to learn as much as they could before
sunrise — specifically, where the occupants of the coach were
camped.
Tarja didn’t need a spy to tell him they would be in the centre
of the
camp, but it would simplify things considerably if he knew exactly
which tent and the disposition of the guards.
He spent the rest of the night organising the Defenders. Although
they travelled in civilian clothing, every man had his uniform safely
tucked away in his saddlebags. Sneaking into the Defender camp would be
impossible, so Tarja planned to march through it openly. With luck, he
could simply walk up to R’shiel’s tent, order her
brought out, and then
escort her away without a question being asked. If she was alone. If the guards on the tent did not recognise him. If the guards hadn’t been given any orders to the
contrary. If she was guarded by Defenders, rather than Karien priests.
He forced himself to stop thinking about the ifs. There were too
many of them for comfort.
Damin agreed with his plan, but was rather disappointed that he was
not to be included in the rescue party. He consoled himself with the
prospect of some useful sabotage. A small party of his Raiders would
sneak into the camp and disable the coach, while the rest would attempt
to scatter the horses. Pursuit was certain, once R’shiel was
discovered
missing, but they planned to make it as difficult as possible.
That left only Adrina, her slave and the thirty men left of her
Guard. The question of what to do with them was rather hotly debated,
mostly between Damin and the princess. She did not want to be left
behind to wait, and Damin was understandably reluctant to lead her into
the middle of the Defenders’ camp. In they end they
compromised. Adrina
would stay with the horses on the edge of the camp, ready for a quick
getaway. The Fardohnyans were more easily dealt with. With Damin as his
interpreter, Tarja told the Fardohnyans they were free to go. He gave
them maps to find their way home and enough supplies to see them to the
Glass River. The young Lanceman accepted their release with quiet
gratitude, following an assurance that the princess would be safe. The
men would leave at dawn — one more scattered group in a
landscape that
would soon be crowded with them.
Their plans made, they settled down to rest until daylight. They
would need to travel north tomorrow, shadowing the Defenders until they
stopped again for the evening. Tarja hoped that Cratyn was far enough
back that his troop would not run into the approaching Defenders. They
had no real idea how far behind he was. Their estimates were based
almost entirely on the assumption that Cratyn and his knights were
probably armoured, and therefore unable to maintain any sort of
sustained speed. The chances were good that the Karien force would not
meet up with the Defenders until the day after tomorrow. Tarja needed
to be well away by then.
Sleep eluded him, and he finally gave up pretending that he was
getting any rest, just as the first of the stars winked out of
existence with the onset of daylight. He walked to the edge of the
camp, climbing a small hill to look out over their route for the next
day. The sound of following footsteps alerted him to the fact that he
was not alone, but he did not turn. He had a feeling he knew who it was.
“Can’t sleep?â€
“Nor can you, I’d guess.â€
Brak stepped up beside him and followed Tarja’s gaze.
“I don’t need sleep the way you do. One of the
advantages of being
half Harshini.â€
They were silent for a time, each alone with his thoughts.
“How bad was it?†Tarja asked eventually.
“Bad enough,†Brak admitted. “You might get
a shock when you find
her. He cut her hair.†Her glorious, dark-red hair. Tarja felt his ire rising, but
forced it down. It would serve no purpose here.
“Tell me the rest of it.â€
“There’s not much to tell. It took a while before I
finally
convinced Dace to release me — it was a good thing you sent
him, by the
way. Zegarnald was quite happy to let me rot. Anyway, Terbolt had
already left the Citadel by then. Joyhinia, or rather Loclon, is still
nominally in charge of the Sisterhood, but he’s taking his
orders from
a Karien called Squire Mathen. I don’t know who he is, but
he’s working
to his own agenda. Loclon doesn’t have much freedom of
action.â€
“For as long as I live, I will regret not killing him when I
had the
chance.â€
“Accept it, Tarja. Being consumed by your regrets is a bad
way to
live.â€
Tarja was surprised by the bitterness in his voice. “You
speak from
experience?â€
“Oh yes,†the Harshini replied with feeling.
Tarja glanced at him curiously. Brak’s eyes had returned to
their
normal faded blue, but they were full of pain.
“I killed R’shiel’s father, Tarja. In doing
so, not only did I
destroy a good friend and my king, I saved her mother and allowed
R’shiel to be born. Trust me, I have regrets that you
couldn’t begin to
understand.â€
Tarja did understand though, more than Brak realised. “If
R’shiel
turns to Xaphista and the other gods want you to kill her,
you’ll have
destroyed your king for nothing.â€
Brak nodded. “Nobody in this world wants her to succeed more
than I
do, Tarja.†Then he added with a sour smile, “and
nobody has as much to
lose if she does.â€
“Will she succeed?â€
“I wish I knew.â€
CHAPTER 61
The Crown Prince of Karien was pious, noble and
dedicated, but he was not stupid. He knew the Hythrun were better
horseman, knew that they could travel much farther and faster than he
could. So he broke with tradition and travelled without armour. He left
his dukes behind and took only his good friend Drendyn, the Earl of
Tiler’s Pass, and young Jannis, the Earl of Menthall. They were
the
only two men in his council he knew to be loyal to him, rather
than to his father. The remainder of his force was made up of young
knights who wanted to curry favour with the heir to the throne. Jasnoff
would not reign forever, nor would the elder dukes. If he succeeded,
these men would form the core of his personal support when he became
king.
If he failed, none of them was so important or well connected that
they would be missed.
Mikel learnt of all this the night before they left in pursuit of
the princess. Cratyn was reluctant to let him out of his sight, so he
lay in the corner of the prince’s tent pretending sleep,
listening to
Cratyn make his plans. The prince seemed consumed by a cold
determination that would brook no interference. Their force would
travel light: no armour, no lances, no lackeys, he declared. They would
travel from before sunrise until after sunset. They would eat on the
run and each man would lead a spare horse so that they could change
mounts frequently. They would catch the Hythrun before they reached the
Glass River.
Mikel admired Cratyn’s determination, but a small part of
him was
beginning to wonder what he had done. The prince was justifiably angry
with Adrina. She had betrayed him most foully, but Mikel hadn’t
really
thought about what Cratyn would actually do when he learnt of her
treachery.
He had expected him to be angry, certainly, but he didn’t
think the
prince would decide to hunt her down personally. His own anger at
Adrina’s betrayal had faded somewhat. He wanted her punished,
but he
wasn’t sure he wanted to witness her murder, and there was no
question
about it — that was exactly what Cratyn had in mind.
The journey south proved a nightmare. Mikel clung to his saddle
through long days of endless hard riding, cold rations and freezing
nights. Cratyn made no allowance for his age or inexperience, and
worse, when they did finally stop each night, he treated Mikel as his
page and expected him to unsaddle his horse and fetch and carry for
him, just as if they were back in Karien. Mikel’s admiration
was slowly
turning into burning resentment.
On their fourth day out they finally stumbled across proof that they
were on the right road. While looking for a campsite for the night, one
of knights discovered a small grove of trees with the remains of
several fires scattered among the bare trunks. The ashes appeared to be
quite fresh. Drendyn, the most experienced hunter among them, estimated
that the Hythrun were only a day and a half ahead. The news invigorated
Cratyn and the next day the pace he set was even harder. But, towards
the evening of their fifth day on the road, they made a discovery that
changed the whole nature of their mission.
Night had fallen, but the moon was bright. Cratyn judged it safe to
continue, although he did slacken the pace a little and sent two
knights out to ride in the van, a precaution he did not normally bother
with. Mikel rode behind him, swaying in the saddle as fatigue
threatened to unseat him. They had found no further sign of the
Hythrun, but Cratyn’s determination was becoming an obsession.
He would
ride all night if he thought the horses could take it.
The sound of galloping hooves jerked Mikel fully awake. One of the
knights sent to ride point was thundering toward them. Cratyn called a
halt and waited for the man to reach them. Mikel leaned forward
anxiously, hoping to hear what was being said. Had they found the
Hythrun?
“Sire! Lord Terbolt approaches!â€
“Terbolt?†Cratyn repeated, sounding rather puzzled.
“But he is
supposed to be at the Citadel. My father dispatched him there at the
same time we left for the border.â€
“There’s nearly a thousand Defenders with him, your
Highness. They
are camped not more than two or three leagues from here.â€
Cratyn nodded, but his brow was furrowed. “You saw no sign
of the
Hythrun?â€
“No, sire.â€
“Then we may have ridden past them. We’ll have to
turn back.â€
“But Cratyn, what about Terbolt?†Drendyn asked. The
young earl rode
at Cratyn’s side and was probably the only man in camp who
dared
address him by name. “Shouldn’t we at least pay our
respects?â€
“I’ve no time to stand on protocol,†Cratyn
snapped impatiently.
“Perhaps, but a thousand pairs of eyes are better than two
hundred.â€
The prince thought about it for a moment then nodded. “Very
well, we
shall join Lord Terbolt. And then we’ll look under every rock
and every
blade of grass between the border and the Glass River until we unearth
the traitors.â€
There was a time when Cratyn’s words would have thrilled
Mikel, but
now they simply left him cold.
Cratyn and Mikel rode ahead of the troop and into
the Defenders’ camp amid curious looks and sullen stares.
Drendyn had
been left in charge with orders to wait until Cratyn returned. Mikel
was disillusioned enough to realise that his place beside Cratyn was
earnt through distrust, not honour.
As they moved past countless small fires surrounded by red-coated
troopers, Mikel wondered what the Defenders thought about surrendering
to Karien. In his experience, they were proud men — proud of
both their
reputation and their Corps. To be under the command of a Karien Duke
must be galling. He was old enough to understand that it was only their
discipline that kept them in line. The Hythrun had fled and Mikel
suspected that the Kariens would have behaved no better, were the
situation reversed. It seemed a tragedy that the very discipline that
made the Defenders famous now placed them at the mercy of their enemies.
Lord Terbolt met them in the centre of the camp, a little surprised
to find his prince so far from the border. Cratyn dismounted but to
Mikel’s relief one of Lord Terbolt’s men led his horse
away. Mikel
jumped to the ground wearily, somewhat pleased to find his own mount
being catered for in a similar manner. Cratyn waved him forward and he
followed the prince into Lord Terbolt’s tent, wondering if the
Duke
would think to feed them as well.
“I must say, I didn’t expect to find you out here,
your Highness,â€
Terbolt said as he poured two cups of wine. As an afterthought, he
glanced at Mikel and jerked his head in the direction of a barrel in
the corner of the tent. “There’s water over there.
Drink if you wish.â€
Mikel bowed and hurried over to the barrel, dipping the ladle into
the chill water gratefully as Cratyn settled into Terbolt’s
only
comfortable chair.
“I did not expect to find you either, my Lord.â€
“My work was done at the Citadel. I’ve left Mathen
overseeing
things.â€
Cratyn frowned. “A commoner?â€
“He may be a commoner, your Highness, but he’s about
the smartest
man I’ve ever met. And the most ruthless. I trust him
completely. I
believe you’ll find him eminently qualified for the
position.â€
“And the demon child?â€
“She is here. I’ll have her brought to you if you
wish, although if
she truly is destined for great things, I can’t see it in her
myself.
But who are we to question our God, eh?â€
“Send for her.â€
Terbolt nodded and went to the entrance. He pushed back the tent
flap and issued the order then returned to his wine.
“You’ve not told me what brings you out here, your
Highness.â€
“Adrina has been kidnapped by the Hythrun. They left the
border just
before Jenga surrendered.â€
Terbolt looked genuinely horrified. “Gods! How did they get
across
the border? Wasn’t she guarded?â€
“I believe my wife may have . . .
contributed . . . to her own capture,†Cratyn
said
cautiously. He did not want to admit to Lord Terbolt that she had run
away.
The duke frowned. “I was never happy with this arrangement,
Cratyn.
You know that. I would far rather you had married my daughter.â€
“And I would much rather have married Chastity, my
Lord.â€
“There’s not much we can do about it now, I
suppose,†Terbolt said
with a sigh.
“Not much.†Cratyn sipped his wine and studied the
duke over the rim
of his cup. “Unless of course, something were to happen to my
wife.â€
“Your Highness?â€
“She has been kidnapped by the Hythrun, after all.
You know
what barbarians they are. They might do anything. For that matter, they
may even kill her.†He had heard Cratyn express the same
sentiment to
Drendyn, but never so coldly, so calmly.
“That would be a great shame,†Terbolt agreed, with
the same, bland
expression. If Mikel had not heard it for himself, he would not have
believed the duke could agree to such a thing so easily. “Are
you sure
they came this way? We’ve seen no sign of them.â€
Before Cratyn could answer the tent flap was thrown open and a
Defender stepped inside. He saluted sharply before speaking.
“R’shiel is not in her tent, my Lord. If you would
tell me where she
has been moved, I will have her brought here immediately.â€
“What do you mean she’s not in her tent?â€
“She was moved a short time ago, sir. The captain who
collected her
said that it was at your request. I thought perhaps —â€
“I gave no such orders! Who was the captain?â€
“I don’t know, sir. The troopers on duty
didn’t recognise him.â€
Cratyn leapt to his feet, knocking over the chair in his haste.
“It
was Tarja Tenragan! I’d stake my life on it!â€
“I don’t see how —â€
“He was with them! Don’t you see? That’s why
we’ve found no sign of
the Hythrun. They’ve been hiding, waiting for their chance to
rescue
the demon child. Who else could it be?â€
Terbolt thought about it for less then a minute. “How long
ago did
they take her, Captain?â€
“A quarter of an hour, perhaps, my Lord, no more.â€
“Then they’ll still be in the camp somewhere. Rouse
your men,
Captain! We have intruders among us. R’shiel must not be
allowed to
escape. And I want Tarja Tenragan. I don’t particularly care
whether
he’s dead or alive.â€
The Defender saluted sharply enough, but it was clear, even to
Mikel, that he did not care for his orders. Cratyn was pacing the tent
impatiently. As soon as the Medalonian had left, he turned to Terbolt.
“If Tarja is here, then Wolfblade is out there somewhere
too. And
that means Adrina is with them.â€
Terbolt nodded and reached for his sword. “Then the hunting
should
be good tonight. Tarja Tenragan’s head will make an excellent
trophy.â€
“You can mount it over the gates of Yarnarrow
Castle,†Cratyn agreed
with bloodthirsty enthusiasm. “Right next to that bitch
Adrina’s.â€
CHAPTER 62
As R’shiel’s days blurred into
each other, she
knew they were getting closer and closer to Karien. Every day took her
nearer to the decision she realised she would soon have to make. The
decision that might cost her her life.
Xaphista spoke to her often, coaxing one minute, taunting the next.
As they neared the border his attempts to win her over developed an
edge of desperation which R’shiel found inexplicable. They were
nearing
the place where he was strongest. If anything, she thought he might
have begun to relax.
She was led to her tent once the camp was set up, and went inside
without complaint. The priests left her alone now. Even Terbolt showed
no interest in her. She was simply the package that he was escorting
north. He had no interest in social intercourse, even assuming that
R’shiel would have responded to it. Loneliness can destroy the soul, R’shiel. How can I be lonely with you filling my head, day and night? I would be a good friend, demon child. I would never allow you
to be lonely. You need to study humans a bit more, Xaphista. Promising that
you’ll never leave me alone is hardly a pleasant thought. Is it pleasure you seek? I can give you more pleasure than you
could possibly imagine. You don’t understand pleasure. Then you shall teach me to understand. Tell me what you want
and I will learn. Why are you so desperate? Why are you so stubborn?
When R’shiel refused to answer, he went away.
Later that evening, after her barely touched meal had been removed
by a silent priest, she lay on her pallet and pondered her fate
consciously for the first time since her capture.
Her chances of rescue were remote. Brak would have come to her
already if he could. The demons were linked to her power and she could
not call them without invoking the pain of the collar. Tarja was on the
border, probably already in the custody of the Kariens and awaiting
execution. Damin Wolfblade was either a prisoner of the Kariens himself
or fleeing for Hythria. The Harshini would not bestir themselves from
Sanctuary with so many Karien priests abroad and the Primal
gods . . . well, if Xaphista were to be believed, it was
their fault she was in this mess in the first place.
As she ran through the list of those who might come to her aid, she
realised that she was truly on her own. If she was to be saved
— if she
wanted to be saved — she was going to have to do
something about
it herself.
The Harshini power that made her what she was lurked tantalisingly
out of reach. She knew it was there; could feel it beckoning, but the
pain that barred her way was stronger than any wall. The only way to
access it was to get rid of the collar, and Xaphista would not allow
that to happen until he was certain that she was completely and utterly
his. There was no point in pretending. He was a god. He could see into
her soul. If he willingly removed the collar, it would be because he
knew that she was no longer a threat to him.
Escape that way was no escape at all.
Or perhaps it was. Perhaps he was right. Why should she do the
bidding of the Primal gods who had been responsible for so much of her
suffering? Why shouldn’t she join with Xaphista? A lifetime of
comfort
lay down that path. As the High Priestess of the Overlord, she would
know unlimited power. She could have anything she wanted. Xaphista
would destroy Loclon if she asked. He could spare Tarja if she demanded
it. Anything you want.
The idea was very, very tempting. Come to me, demon child. Now!
R’shiel did not answer immediately. Besides the weighty
nature of
the decision she faced, there were voices outside that sounded vaguely
familiar. She sat up, straining to hear the exchange. Then the tent
flap opened and Tarja stepped through.
He stared at her wordlessly for a moment. The guttering candle by
the pallet only served to highlight his shock at her appearance. Her
bruises had faded, and her hair had grown out enough so that at least
she didn’t have bald patches any more, but she knew she looked
terrible. She was thin and wasted and so deep into herself that she
found herself unable to return.
“R’shiel?†Do I look so bad that he doesn’t recognise me? Turn away from him, demon child. He cannot offer you the
succour that I can. Come to me now, child. Everything you ever wanted
rests with me.
But Xaphista was wrong. Everything she ever wanted stood before her,
with a look of shock and despair on his face.
His presence seemed to give her an anchor. She clung to it, like a
climber pulling himself hand over hand up a long rope, out of a hole so
deep the top was merely a speck of light in the distance.
“R’shiel? Do you know who I am?â€
She nodded. It was the best she could do.
A small relieved smile flickered over his lips then he stepped
closer and gently took her hand.
“I’m taking you out of here,†he explained,
as if he knew how hard
she was trying to comprehend. “We have to walk away like
nothing’s
wrong.†You will never know peace if you turn from me now!
She nodded again, not capable of speaking. Tarja held open the flap
and she walked forward, her footsteps taking all her concentration. He doesn’t even love you! Not really. Kalianah forced
it on
him. Only I can love you like you want to be loved.
R’shiel fell in with the guard brought to escort her from
the tent.
Tarja walked by her side. He was so tense she could feel it radiating
off him like light from the sun. You will not defeat me, demon child.
She ignored him, understanding now that her responses gave him power
over her. Acknowledging his presence was only a step away from
worshipping him and it was worship that gave this elevated demon his
strength. You will find that all you believe in is a lie. Then, when you
come to face me, I will not be so understanding. You will suffer for
this.
Then the collar started to burn.
CHAPTER 63
Adrina waited in the darkness with Tamylan,
holding the six horses that would take Damin, her and Tamylan,
Almodavar and the two other Raiders Damin had chosen to accompany them
to freedom. The entire band would split into similar small groups and
scatter in every direction. The plan was to give the Defenders so many
targets that they would not know which was the one they sought. She
wasn’t even sure which direction they would head, but it would
be
opposite to the one Tarja and Brak took with R’shiel. There was
no
point in making things any easier for their adversaries than it already
was.
They had said their goodbyes earlier and Tarja had surprised her by
seeking her out. As he had always maintained a distance between them,
the spectre of her brother’s death prevented them ever becoming
close,
she found his gesture quite out of character. He had led her away a
short distance from the others as they were preparing to depart.
“If we succeed, we may never meet again, your
Highness.â€
“I respect you, Tarja, but not enough to hope we fail on the
off-chance we might become friends.â€
“Then can a would-be friend give you some parting
advice?â€
“If you think it will do any good. Listening to advice
isn’t one of
my strong suits either.â€
He smiled for a moment, then his expression grew serious.
“Decide
what you plan to do about Damin, and sooner rather than later.â€
“What’s to decide? I know he’s your friend,
Tarja, but don’t mistake
his actions for anything noble. He doesn’t want a Karien heir
to my
father’s throne. It’s really that simple.â€
Tarja shook his head. “Kid yourself all you want, Adrina.
He’s in
love with you. Probably almost as much as you are with him.†He
held up
his hand to forestall her protest. “Don’t bother to
deny it. The only
two people in Medalon who can’t see what’s going on are
you and Damin.â€
“You’re imagining things!†she scoffed.
“Am I?†he asked. “In that case, it
doesn’t matter where you go,
simply that you stay free of Cratyn. I’ll go and tell Damin
you’ve
decided to come with R’shiel and me instead, shall I? That way
he’s
free to head back to Hythria and you can —â€
“No!†Her panic at his suggestion had surprised her.
He smiled. “See? It’s not really that simple at all,
is it?â€
Adrina was not willing to concede the unthinkable.
“You’re jumping
to conclusions, Tarja. If I go with Damin, I’ll be closer to
home. The
gods alone know where you and R’shiel are liable to wind
up.â€
Tarja shook his head and smiled knowingly. “Have it your
way, your
Highness. But don’t say I didn’t warn you.â€
He leaned forward and kissed her cheek, then led her back to the
others. Have it your way. Adrina stamped her feet against the cold
and replayed the conversation in her mind. It was her own fault, she
knew. These Medalonians simply didn’t understand. She’d
had scores of
lovers . . . well, that was an exaggeration, but
she’d
had several. They were fun for a while and then they left. Of course,
they had all been court’esa, and in the employ of her
father,
but that didn’t make them any less
intimate . . .
well . . . maybe it did. A court’esa’s
livelihood depended on their ability to satisfy and entertain their
employer. She was the king’s daughter so she had only ever been
provided with the very best.
Damin was her first — her only — lover who did not
need her approval
or her patronage. He did not need her wealth. He did not need her
position to advance himself. He could not even marry her as she was
already married to someone else. On the contrary, he courted danger by
courting her.
Perhaps that was the attraction for him. It certainly wasn’t
love.
The heir to the Hythrun throne did not fall in love with the
King of Fardohnya’s eldest daughter. That, along with lovers
who rode
all day and made love all night, belonged in a bard’s tale. It
was the
sort of plot one could expect to find in a badly acted tragedy by a
band of travelling minstrels. It simply didn’t happen in real
life.
She would not allow it to happen.
One of the horses snorted irritably. Adrina patted the
gelding’s
neck, whispering soothing nothings to him, hoping nobody could hear
them. What in the name of the gods is taking them so long?
Adrina peered into the darkness, wishing she knew how long they had
been waiting. It seemed to be forever, but she was not good at judging
time. Others who took care of such mundane things had always regulated
her life. She glanced at Tamylan who was standing by the other horses.
The day’s rest had done her good, but she was still stiff and
sore. She
held the reins, standing close to the horses for warmth, her whole body
listening for danger. Perhaps I should ask Tam what she thinks?
Adrina knew that if asked for, Tamylan’s opinion would be as
honest
as it was tactless. I should do something for her when we get home. Free her,
maybe, and gift her with some property. Enough that she need never work
again. She really has been a tower of strength through all of this. I
wonder what I ever did to deserve such loyalty?
Not much, that Adrina could recall. How did I ever come to this? she wondered. I am
standing here in the dead of the night, freezing to death, a bare fifty
paces from a camp full of Defenders, in the middle of nowhere and the
only people I can count as my friends are a slave, a man wanted for
murder and an enemy warlord.
Which brought her back to wondering about Damin.
She was determined not to believe what Tarja told her, but when they
had sneaked away into the darkness Damin had slipped back to kiss her
goodbye. It was, short, hard and passionate. Not the kiss of a lover,
but the kiss of a daredevil stealing a moment of pleasure in the midst
of danger.
He wasn’t in love with anyone but himself.
All thoughts of Damin Wolfblade’s failings were suddenly
forgotten
as a high-pitched, agonised scream split the night. The horses reared
at the sound, almost jerking Adrina’s arm out of its socket.
She and
Tamylan struggled to keep the beasts under control as all hell broke
loose in the Defenders’ camp.
Torches flared brightly as the camp was roused, the sound of
shouting, of orders issued then countermanded, overlaid the screams
that tore into Adrina’s soul.
The screams were female. Whoever it was, she sounded like she was
dying.
“Mount up, Tam!†she whispered urgently. When Damin
and the others
made it out of the camp, every second would count. The shouting grew
closer and the torches were so near that she could see the flames
clearly, although the fold of the land still concealed their bearers.
Tam scrambled into the saddle of the nearest horse, but dropped the
reins of the other two. With a curse, Adrina kicked her mount forward
and leaned down to reach for the reins of the nearest beast.
“Go! Get out of here! Now!â€
She turned toward the shout and discovered Damin, Almodavar and one
of the Raiders barrelling down the small slope behind them. On their
heels were so many Defenders she could not begin to count them. She
froze for a moment, torn between escape and assuring herself that Damin
would win free of his pursuers.
“Run!†Damin screamed, seeing her hesitation.
The slope was swarming with Defenders now. Torches dotted their
ranks, lighting their red coats in scattered patches along the ridge
like drops of hot blood. Tam gave up trying to catch the other horse
and looked to her mistress desperately.
“Adrina! Let’s go!â€
She wavered for another instant. Long enough to see first Almodavar
and then the Raider, overcome by the Defenders. But Damin still ran
free.
Turning her horse savagely, she galloped toward him. Tam’s
desperate
cry of protest was drowned out by the shouts of the Defenders and the
tortured screams that tore relentlessly through the darkness. The gap
between them narrowed as the distance between Damin and the Defenders
closed even faster.
The arrow, when it hit her in the shoulder, took her completely by
surprise. She toppled from the saddle just as Damin reached her and
that was only seconds before the Defenders overcame them both.
She had time to notice that the screams had stopped, just before she
fainted.
When Adrina came to she was in a tent, which was
bare of anything but the centre pole supporting the roof. She realised
there was another body that lay groaning softly on the other side of
the tent. She rolled over and cried out in pain. Her shoulder ached
abominably and her fingers came away sticky with blood when she gently
probed the source of her agony.
She tried to recall what had happened, but the details were sketchy.
She remembered trying to help Damin. And the screams. Gods, she would
never forget the screams. Something had hit her and she had fallen. Had
Damin won free? She seemed to recall seeing his face, his eyes full of
anger. Why had he been angry? Because she had tried to come to his
rescue? Typical. And what in the name of the gods had happened to Tam? Her
last sight of the slave was her desperately calling Adrina back. Had
she been captured too?Why wasn’t she here? The
fate of a
female slave in a Fardohnyan war camp was a foregone conclusion, but
the Defenders were better disciplined. The Sisterhood who ruled them
would not countenance such behaviour. Tamylan’s absence meant
she had
escaped — or she was dead. Adrina prayed it was the former. She
feared
it was the latter.
The body groaned again and Adrina stopped thinking of her own
troubles long enough to wonder who it was. She sat up carefully and
moved across the small gap separating them on her knees. Her companion
was a young woman with short-cropped red hair wearing dark,
close-fitting leathers and a silver collar smeared with dried blood.
“R’shiel?â€
It couldn’t really be anyone else, but she was hardly what
Adrina
had envisioned. The girl was younger than she expected, and in her
present condition she was far from the matchless beauty Damin had
described. What did one say to the fabled Harshini demon child?
“I’m Adrina,†she said, unable to think of
anything else.
R’shiel stared at her uncomprehendingly.
“We have a mutual friend,†she added inanely.
“Tarja Tenragan.†I sound like Lady Chastity.
The demon child blinked at the mention of Tarja’s name, but
that was
the only reaction Adrina could get from her.
“R’shiel?â€
She shook her shoulder, gently at first, and then quite roughly when
that had no effect. Although R’shiel’s eyes were open,
there was no
light of comprehension in them. Adrina shrugged and immediately
regretted it. Her shoulder was pounding and there was no point speaking
to someone who was so obviously not listening. Brak had said something
about that. Something about R’shiel retreating so far into
herself that
she was almost comatose.
“Well, I hope you don’t stay away for too much
longer,†she told
R’shiel irritably. “Right now the only thing
that’s going to save
either of us is a bloody miracle, so if you don’t mind, get
over
whatever it is that’s upsetting you girl, and come to your
senses.
There are people here who need you.â€
Her reprimand delivered, Adrina sat back on her heels and waited for
them to come for her.
CHAPTER 64
There are people here who need you.
The words filtered down through R’shiel’s pain. She
did not know who
had voiced them, but they echoed through the emptiness like a reproach. I warned you, demon child. If you will not come to me through
love, you will come to me through fear. The end result is the same.
The memory of the pain was too fresh for R’shiel to deny
Xaphista’s
claim. But if she could not face him, she could run from him. There are people here who need you.
R’shiel clung to the thought, clawing her way back to sanity
with
every scrap of her remaining strength.
She blinked suddenly and looked around. Canvas walls surrounded her
and the ground where she lay was cold and hard. She turned her head,
ignoring the pain the movement caused as the square of bright light
intruded. It was blocked a moment later by the figure of a man stepping
through, followed by several others. They were Defenders, but that
meant nothing. The Defenders were her enemies now.
Someone pulled her to her feet, along with another prisoner.
R’shiel
did not have time to wonder who she was before they were both hustled
out of the tent and led through the camp to Lord Terbolt’s tent.
Waiting inside was Lord Terbolt, a young man with brown hair and
angry eyes, and in the corner, the young Karien boy who had been a
prisoner in the Defenders’ camp. She could not imagine how he
came to
be here.
“Your Highness,†Terbolt said with a short bow.
R’shiel was a little surprised to hear her fellow prisoner
being
addressed so formally. It hurt too much to move her head so she tried
to study her out of the corner of her eye.
She was shorter than R’shiel, but even her rough clothing
and her
dishevelled appearance could not conceal her innate beauty. She was
foreign; her skin was dusky and her hair much darker than
R’shiel’s,
and she had startling green eyes. Perhaps she was Fardohnyan. She
certainly wasn’t from Medalon and Karien never produced such
exotic
looks.
“And this is supposed to be the demon child?†the
young man asked
sceptically. “She doesn’t look much, does she?â€
“I recall thinking the same thing when I met you,
Cretin,†the woman
snapped with a surprising amount of venom.
The young man leapt to his feet angrily. “You will only
speak when
spoken to, whore!â€
R’shiel fought to stay conscious, the argument between the
angry
young Karien and the beautiful Fardohnyan woman giving her something to
focus on. She didn’t know either of them, but their conflict
kept the
nothingness at bay. It kept away Xaphista’s persistent attempts
to coax
her back down into the hole. If she went back now, she would never
escape. She knew that with a certainty.
“Don’t you dare speak to me in such a tone!â€
the Fardohnyan
declared. “When my father hears about this —â€
“When he hears about what, Adrina? Your treachery or your
Hythrun
lover?†Adrina. Damin’s floozy in the see-through dress.
Hysterical
laughter bubbled up inside her but she fought it down. The sobering
process was helped considerably by the realisation that this young man
was probably Prince Cratyn. And the Hythrun lover? Even in her
semi-conscious state, R’shiel could easily guess who that was.
“What lover?†Adrina scoffed. “Is this some
pathetic story you’ve
invented to provide an excuse to have me stoned? No one will believe
you, Cretin. I am a loyal and dutiful wife. It is you who could never
get the job done.â€
Cratyn smiled coldly. “I have a witness, Adrina.â€
R’shiel’s eyes fixed on the Karien boy, who looked
as if he would
rather be any place but in this tent. He was so guilty he was trembling
with it.
Adrina glanced at the boy also, then laughed. “Mikel
is your
witness? A boy who’s spent as much time with the enemy as he
has with
you? He’s not even a disciple of the Overlord. He follows
Dacendaran,
the God of Thieves, and I have that from the god
himself.â€
“There are no other gods,†Cratyn retorted. Good, then you don’t need me, R’shiel said
to herself.
Terbolt turned to the boy who cowered under his gaze.
“Is this true, boy? Do you follow a false god?â€
“No!†he cried. “I follow the
Overlord.â€
“That’s not what Dace says,†Adrina said
smugly.
“Dace?†The boy looked utterly confused.
“But he’s just a thief.â€
“Then you do know him?†Terbolt asked.
“Well, yes, but —â€
Cratyn grabbed the boy and shook him savagely. “Is this
true? You
are an agent of the God of Thieves?â€
“Pick on someone your own size, Cretin.â€
He threw the boy down and turned on the princess, slapping her with
a vicious backhanded blow. “Shut up!â€
Adrina stumbled backward but when she looked back at him, once she
regained her balance and wiped the blood from the corner of her mouth,
her eyes were full of defiance.
“It’s not going to work, is it, Cretin. What was
your plan? Hunt me
down and kill me and claim the Hythrun did it? Only the Defenders found
me first, so you had to fall back on your other plan, didn’t
you?
Accuse me of adultery and have me stoned. But your star witness
can’t
testify for you, can he? He isn’t just a disciple of
Dacendaran, he
counts him as a friend! Now what are you going to do?†Cratyn
hit her
again. Adrina staggered backwards, then turned on R’shiel.
“Hey! Demon
child! If you’re thinking of doing anything useful, now would
be a
pretty good time!â€
Cratyn struck her again. His anger had slipped beyond reason.
“Leave the princess alone!†Mikel cried in protest
but Lord Terbolt
held him back. Come to me, R’shiel. Through love or fear, the end
result is
the same.
The boy struggled against Terbolt as Adrina launched herself at
Cratyn. She hit him with a clenched fist, almost knocking him off his
feet. Princess she might be, but she fought like an alley cat, although
she cried out as fresh blood seeped from the wound in her shoulder. But
neither the pain nor the fact that Cratyn was bigger and stronger than
she was seemed to deter her. There are people here who need you. It was Adrina who had spoken those words, R’shiel
realised
with a start.
Cratyn managed to push Adrina off him and draw his sword. At the
sight of the blade, Adrina knew she was done for, R’shiel could
tell by
the look in her eyes. Mikel was sobbing as he realised what Cratyn
intended.
But not Adrina. She was defiant to the last.
“Go on, Cretin. Kill me. But before you do, I want you to
know that
I did take a lover. And do you know what? It was wonderful!
He was strong and passionate and I made love to him every chance I
could, anywhere I could. But the best part . . . the best
part . . . was that he made me forget you and your evil,
insidious Overlord.†If you’re planning to do anything useful, now would be
a pretty
good time. Your evil, insidious Overlord.
Cratyn raised his sword at the same time that R’shiel
reached into
her boot and drew the small dagger that Garet Warner had given her. Her
aim was unerring. It took Cratyn in the chest with a solid thunk.
The young prince looked down in astonishment at the blade that was
buried up to the hilt in his tabard, before his eyes rolled back in his
head and he dropped to the floor.
Adrina stared at R’shiel for a moment then smiled.
“I’ll give you
one thing, demon child, your timing is impeccable.â€
She had no chance to reply. Terbolt threw the boy aside and opened
his mouth to call the guards. R’shiel’s eyes darkened
as she drew on
her power. The burning seared through her but she ignored it.
She understood now. The collar worked on fear as much as pain.
Xaphista had told her that himself. Come to me, R’shiel.
Through
love or fear, the end result is the same. Fear, not pain. It was
her fear of the pain the blocked her power, not the pain itself. If
Adrina could stand fearlessly in the face of death, R’shiel
could cope
with a little burning agony.
She raised her arm and pointed at Terbolt. The duke dropped to the
ground before he could utter a word, dead or unconscious — even
R’shiel
didn’t know for certain. She turned her attention inward then
and
focused on the collar. It disintegrated with a thought, falling away
from her neck like sparkles thrown at a children’s party. With
it went
the pain. In the back of her mind she caught the echo of an anguished
cry. Xaphista realising she was lost to him.
For the first time in weeks, R’shiel felt whole again. The
power
coursing through her eased her pain and healed the burns. The feeling
was the closest thing to pure ecstasy she had ever experienced.
R’shiel turned her black eyes on Adrina. She liked this
fearless
Fardohnyan princess. She reached out and touched her shoulder, felt the
muscle and skin knit beneath her hand.
Adrina stared in wonder for a moment, flexing her healed shoulder,
then she frowned at R’shiel. “Thank you. Now, are you
just going to
stand there looking majestic, or are we going to help the
others?â€
“Where are they?â€
“How should I know? Mikel!â€
The boy edged his way past the bodies of Lord Terbolt and Prince
Cratyn. Adrina caught his sleeve as he neared the entrance and pulled
him to her, squatting down so that she was eye to eye with the
terrified child.
“Do you know where they’re holding the others,
Mikel?â€
He nodded dumbly.
“Good. Then we shall go and rescue them. You needn’t
be afraid.
R’shiel is Harshini and she’ll protect us with her
magic.†The boy
began to cry. Adrina rolled her eyes, but she put her arms around him
and hugged him gently. “There, there, Mikel. Don’t let
it upset you.â€
“But I’ve betrayed the Overlord. And my
prince.â€
“Yes, well, I wouldn’t lose too much sleep over
that, child. You
have Dacendaran to pray to now and Cratyn isn’t worth crying
over. Now,
are you going to help us or not?â€
Mikel wiped his eyes and nodded.
“Good boy. Shall we go then?†She looked up at
R’shiel questioningly.
“This could get messy,†she warned. “The
priests can feel me now and
I’m really not very good at this.â€
Adrina looked around the tent and shrugged. “You seem to be
doing
just fine to me.â€
They stepped out of the tent and into chaos. The priests rushed
toward Terbolt’s tent clutching their magic-killing staffs,
shouting
conflicting orders to the Defenders. As R’shiel emerged into
the
sunlight with Adrina and Mikel, the priests halted their headlong rush.
They stood before her cautiously, their lips moving silently as they
prayed to their god.
Garanus stepped forward, holding his staff before him. The
Defenders, for whom religion was a quaint foreign custom, stood back to
give him room. They were curious, not alarmed. Two women and a child
hardly warranted their attention and they had no idea what lay inside
the Karien lord’s tent. The priests’ antics were more
entertaining than
threatening and they were reluctant allies at best.
“I call on the Overlord to strike you down, demon
child!†Garanus
chanted as he approached. He knew she was drawing on her power, his
staff would have warned him, even if her eyes did not. “I call
on
Xaphista to vanquish your evil!â€
“Vanquish?†Adrina muttered behind her.
“Where do they come
up with this nonsense? Do something about him R’shiel. We
haven’t got
time for this.â€
Brave she might be, but Adrina certainly wasn’t blessed with
patience in any great quantity.
Garanus was chanting loudly, in unison with the other priests. Her
skin tingled as the magic they tried to raise washed over her. It was
stronger than it should have been. Xaphista was lending them a hand.
Without warning a bolt of bright light exploded from the tip of
Garanus’ staff. R’shiel raised her arm deflected the
bolt with a
thought. It landed with crash amidst the tents a few paces away,
sending Defenders scurrying for safety. Another bolt followed it and
then another. Xaphista wanted to destroy her. There was no question
about that now. She had chosen sides and in His mind, chosen the wrong
one. I am the demon child, she told herself, and Xaphista has
only a smattering of believers here. This battle, at least, I can
win.
R’shiel deflected another blinding bolt of lightning and
then
pointed at the staff Garanus carried. It exploded in a burst of
shattered gems, sending the few Defenders left standing diving for
cover. The staffs of the other three priests behind him exploded almost
immediately after.
She looked past them and discovered Brak, his eyes as black as hers,
standing behind the priests. He nodded as she caught his eye, but made
no move to aid her. R’shiel smiled briefly, then focused her
disconcerting eyes on the Kariens.
“If you leave now, I will let you live. If you choose to
stay, you
will meet Xaphista a lot sooner than you expected.â€
To his credit, Garanus hesitated. Without his staff he had no more
power than any other mortal. He debated the issue for a moment or two
then glanced over his shoulder at Brak. He might be brave enough to
tackle one simple girl, but two Harshini filled with a power he was
helpless to combat, was enough to sway him. He conceded defeat with ill
grace.
“This is a temporary victory only, demon child. You cannot
defeat
the Overlord.â€
“We’ll find that out some other day. Now go, before
I change my
mind.â€
The priests fled as the Defenders emerged from their cover. Their
faces ranged from confused to completely stunned. Others hurried to put
out the scattered fires that she had started as she deflected the
lightning. For weeks they had ridden under the command of Terbolt and
his priests. R’shiel’s dismissal of them left them
speechless. Brak
walked toward her and treated her to a rare smile of approval.
“Where have you been?â€
“I could ask you the same thing,†he replied.
Not all the Defenders were at a loss for words, however. A captain
stepped forward, blocking their path, his sword drawn. R’shiel
recognised him as Denjon, one of Tarja’s classmates when they
were
cadets.
“Where is Lord Terbolt, R’shiel?â€
“In the tent with Cratyn,†Adrina answered for her,
rather more
cheerfully than the situation warranted. “You might want to
take
command now, Captain. Lord Terbolt is indisposed and it seems
I’m a
widow.â€
The captain stared at them for a moment, then allowed himself a thin
smile. “That’s tragic news, your Highness. You have my
condolences.â€
“Thank you, Captain, but don’t worry, I’m
sure I’ll be able to deal
with my grief.â€
“Where are Tarja and the others, Denjon?â€
“The Hythrun and the Defenders who tried to free you are
being held
down near the picket line. Tarja’s in the Infirmary
tent.â€
R’shiel’s heart skipped a beat. “Where? What
happened?â€
“What do you think happened, R’shiel? He
doesn’t believe in giving
in gracefully. He took a sword in the belly trying to get you out of
here.â€
There was a reprimand in his words that startled R’shiel.
“You sound
as if you think this is all my fault.â€
“Isn’t it?†Denjon asked. He met her alien
eyes for a moment then
looked away. “Sergeant! Find Captain Dorak and tell him to go
to Lord
Terbolt’s tent. And then go down to the picket line
and . . . . who’s in charge of the
Hythrun?â€
“Lord Wolfblade,†Adrina told him.
“The Lord Wolfblade?†He had obviously not
been aware of the
importance of his prisoner. Adrina nodded, rather amused by his
expression. Denjon turned back to the sergeant. “Bring Lord
Wolfblade
to me. And do it tactfully, Sergeant. The last I heard he was supposed
to be on our side.â€
“Sir!†The man saluted and turned to go, but Denjon
called him back
before he had taken more than two steps.
“Send someone to fetch Captain Kilton and Captain Linst,
too. I’ll
be in the Infirmary.â€
The sergeant left to carry out his orders and Denjon turned back to
R’shiel.
“I have to warn you, he’s in a bad way.â€
“Just take me to him, Denjon.â€
“As you wish.â€
The captain turned and led the way through the camp followed by
R’shiel, Brak, Adrina, Mikel and the curious eyes of a thousand
Defenders who sensed that something very significant had just occurred.
Just how significant it was would not be known until the officers
had decided what to do now that they were effectively free of Karien
control. They had two choices, R’shiel knew: obey their orders
and
continue on to the border, or defy them and choose a much more
dangerous path.
She was certain the latter was what they wanted to do, but she was
not at all certain that they would act on it. The Defenders took their
duty very seriously. Of all the men she knew in the corps, only Tarja
and Jenga had ever had the strength to defy their oath when faced with
something they found they could not stomach.
As Denjon pushed back the flap to the large Infirmary tent and the
sickening smell of blood and death washed over her, she could only hope
that Tarja’s brother captains, when it came to the crunch, were
made of
the same stuff.
CHAPTER 65
The first thing that R’shiel noticed in
the long
tent was the absence of any physics. An occupation almost entirely
restricted to Sisters of the Blade, it did not seem possible that the
Defenders would undertake such a journey without some of them in
attendance. When she questioned Denjon about them, he shrugged.
“It was Lord Terbolt’s decision. There are no
sisters in the camp at
all. I don’t think he trusts them. Besides,†he added.
“We were simply
escorting him to the border. We weren’t expecting any
trouble.â€
“Why would Terbolt want a thousand-man escort? That seems a
bit
excessive, even for a Karien.â€
“Because when the Fardohnyans cross the southern border, the
Defenders will send for reinforcements,†Damin remarked,
pushing
through the tent flap behind them. “If the troops are in the
north,
even if the Sisterhood wanted to, they couldn’t send help. What
the
Kariens don’t know is that Hablet is playing his own game.
He’s not
coming to help the Kariens, he’s heading for Hythria.â€
Adrina spun around at the sound of his voice and flew at him. Damin
caught her in a brief hug then held her at arm’s length.
“Are you
alright?â€
“I’m fine. R’shiel came through in the nick
of time.â€
At the mention of her name, he looked up, unable to hide his shock.
With her hair cut close and her eyes black with the power she refused
to relinquish, she must look nothing like the girl he remembered.
“Where’s Tarja?†he asked.
The sergeant must have told him what was happening, or what little
he knew, at any rate.
R’shiel glanced at Denjon, who pointed to the narrow pallet
at the
far end of the tent. Only a few of the beds were occupied, and the men
in them all looked seriously injured. The Defenders had a fairly
generous definition of “walking woundedâ€. If a man
could stand, he
wasn’t sick enough to be confined to bed. These men were simply
the
worst of the night’s casualties. There would be many more out
in the
camp suffering the effects of Tarja’s abortive rescue attempt.
Afraid of what she would find, she pushed past Denjon and the medic
in attendance and approached him cautiously. Her throat constricted as
she neared him. He was paler than death and barely breathing.
“If you’ve anything important to say to him, make it
quick,†the
medic suggested with cold practicality. “He’s going
fast. Lost so much
blood it’s a wonder he’s still got anything for his
heart to do.â€
R’shiel stared at the man in horror then sought Brak out
among those
crowded into the tent. He had released his hold on the power and his
faded eyes were clouded with doubt.
He knew what she wanted. She did not have to ask.
“I don’t know, R’shiel.â€
Adrina still clung to Damin but she looked at them both with wide
eyes, confused by their doubt.
“What do you mean, you don’t know? You’re
Harshini. You can heal
him, can’t you? R’shiel fixed me up with just a
touch.â€
R’shiel knelt beside the bed and placed her hand on
Tarja’s
forehead. His skin was cold and clammy. He was deeply unconscious, a
step away from death and heading in the wrong direction. The power
seemed to both sharpen and deaden her senses at the same time. She
could feel the life slipping away from him, but she was insulated from
the grief somehow. Perhaps it would hit her later, once she let the
power go.
“Get out,†she ordered softly. When no one seemed
inclined to heed
her, she looked up, her eyes blazing. “Out! All of you!â€
Startled by her tone, they did not argue. As they filed from the
tent, she turned back to Tarja, wishing she knew where to start.
Healing Adrina’s fresh, uncomplicated arrow wound was one
thing.
Bringing someone back from the brink of death was quite another.
R’shiel waited until she knew she was alone, except for the
one
person she was certain would not leave her while she was drawing on
this much power. She didn’t know if it was loyalty or distrust
that
kept him there. Nor did she care.
“I can’t do this, Brak. I don’t know enough
about healing.â€
“I’ll not be much help to you, R’shiel. Like
yours, my talent lies
in the other direction.â€
She looked up sharply, wondering how he could be so callous.
“I have to try.â€
“Have you considered the possibility that this was meant to
be?â€
“What do you mean?†He could not meet her eye.
“Brak! What do you
mean?â€
“Death decides when one’s time is up,
R’shiel, not you, or me, or
anyone else for that matter.â€
“You’re telling me Tarja’s time is
up?â€
“I’m telling you Death doesn’t
negotiate.â€
She pushed the hair from Tarja’s forehead gently.
“What if I speak
to Death? Can’t I ask him not to take Tarja?â€
“Not without offering a life of equal value in
return.â€
“How do you know that?â€
“Because that’s what happened when the Harshini
healed you, R’shiel.
Death demanded a life in return.â€
“Whose life? Who could make that kind of decision?â€
When he did not answer she looked up, her face drained of colour.
“It was you, wasn’t it?†R’shiel looked
down at Tarja for a moment then
slowly climbed to her feet. “Was it Tarja, Brak? Is that why
you want
me to let him die? So you can fulfil your bargain with death?â€
“R’shiel —â€
“Tell me, Brak!†she cried, turning on him angrily.
“Who is going to
die? Whose life did you trade for mine? You bastard! How could you do
such a thing?â€
“I couldn’t let you die, R’shiel.â€
“You think I want to live knowing some poor sod carries a
death
sentence so I can keep breathing? Who, Brak? Who did you condemn to
death? It was Tarja, wasn’t it? Tarja has to die, so I can
live. A soul
of equal value, you said . . .â€
Brak grabbed her by the shoulders and shook her. Hard. She stopped
her tirade and threw her arms around him, sobbing.
“It wasn’t Tarja,†he told her gently as he
held her.
She pulled away from him and wiped her eyes. “Who was it,
Brak?â€
“You don’t need to know.â€
“Yes I do.â€
“No, you don’t. And I’m not going to tell
you, at any rate. See to
Tarja. Perhaps he’s destined to die, perhaps he isn’t.
I don’t know.â€
“I don’t believe in destiny.â€
“Which accounts for most of the trouble you’ve found
yourself in
lately.†He led her back to the pallet and knelt beside her,
studying
Tarja’s unconscious form with a much more experienced eye.
“He’s close
to death, R’shiel. Even Cheltaran would find it hard to bring
him back.â€
“I have the power to flatten mountains, Brak, you said that
yourself. If you could just show me . . .†She
stroked
Tarja’s clammy forehead, her desperation almost severing her
hold on
the power. “Can’t you do what Glenanaran did for me?
Stop time?â€
“And hold him on the edge of death to what purpose,
R’shiel? The
problem isn’t the wound, it’s the blood he’s
lost. You can knit bones
and flesh easily enough, but not even the gods can manufacture blood
out of thin air.â€
“But I can feel him dying!â€
“I know.â€
“Then tell me what to do!†she cried.
“Should I call Cheltaran? He’s
the God of Healing. He should —â€
“He won’t come, R’shiel,†Dacendaran
told her miserably, as he
appeared at the foot of the bed. “Zegarnald won’t let
him.â€
Anger surged through R’shiel, its edge honed by the power
she held. How
dare Zegarnald deny Tarja his only chance at life? ‘What do
you
mean? He won’t let him come?â€
The young god shrugged uncomfortably. “He said something
about you
taking the easy way too often.â€
“You mean Tarja is dying as some sort of test?â€
she gasped
furiously. “What sort of sick breed are you, Dace?
That’s inhuman!â€
“Now you finally begin to understand,†Brak
said.
Dace tugged on a loose thread on his motley shirt, avoiding
R’shiel’s accusing eyes. “It’s not my
fault. I’m not even supposed to
be here. But Kali likes Tarja, so she’s keeping Zegarnald
busy.â€
“What did Kalianah say, Dace?â€
R’shiel looked at Brak, wondering at the question.
“She said to tell R’shiel that love will
prevail.â€
“Oh, well that’s a big help,â€
R’shiel scoffed.
“Don’t be like that. I’m just the messenger.
She said to tell you
that you have guardians that protect you and that protection will
embrace all who love you truly. That’s why she did what she
did, I
think. She knows things sometimes . . . †Dace
trailed
off with a sigh. “I’m sorry, R’shiel. I have to
go. I wish you’d been a
thief. I could have helped you a lot more.â€
R’shiel felt the god leave, but she was too concerned about
Tarja to
care much. She was terrified that he would slip away before she could
intervene, and afraid of what would happen if she did. Living without
him would be hard enough; contributing to his death would be
intolerable.
“You should never ignore a message from the gods,
R’shiel,†Brak
warned. “Particularly one as powerful as Kalianah.â€
“Love will prevail,†she repeated
caustically, in a fair
imitation of Dace.
“She also said you have guardians that protect you, and that
protection will embrace all who love you truly.â€
“What guardians?â€
Brak did not answer. He merely waited for the answer to come to her.
When it did, she could have cried, but whether from anger at her own
stupidity, or sheer relief, she could not tell.
“The demons!â€
She had barely framed the thought when Dranymire popped into
existence at the foot of the bed. His appearance was followed by a
high-pitched squeal, as the little demon who had grown so fond of
sleeping in their bed scrambled thoughtlessly across Tarja and jumped
into her arms. The little demon appeared to have recovered from her
ordeal in the Citadel. She hugged the creature and turned to Dranymire.
“We were wondering when you would remember us,†the
demon said in
his unnaturally deep voice.
“I’m sorry, Dranymire. But after the
Gathering . . .
so much has happened . . .â€
The demon shrugged. “You have nothing to apologise for,
except
perhaps for not thinking of us sooner. What grieves you, demon
child?â€
“Can you show me how to heal Tarja?â€
“Did you learn nothing at Sanctuary?â€
“But he’s lost so much blood!â€
“Don’t human bodies make their own blood?â€
Dranymire asked
curiously. “They certainly spill enough of it to make one think
it was
readily replaced.â€
“He’ll die before his body can replace what
he’s lost,†Brak
explained.
“Then you need blood to keep him alive, long enough for his
own body
to repair itself.†He looked at R’shiel with his
too-big eyes. They
were filled with compassion. “This human’s death would
cause you much
pain, I suspect.â€
“More than anything I have ever suffered.â€
Dranymire nodded solemnly. “We could do nothing to protect
you from
pain the gods imposed on you, but we can do something to prevent
this.â€
“What can you do? I don’t understand.â€
“We shall be his blood.â€
“What?†R’shiel began to wonder if
she had slipped back into
the realms of her living nightmare.
“We shall meld and become the blood that he
requires.â€
“You can do that?†She looked at Brak for
confirmation. The
idea was too bizarre to comprehend.
Brak nodded. “Wounded Harshini have been saved by their
bonded
demons entering their bodies until they could reach help. It’s
not
unheard of.â€
“It is where I come from.â€
He smiled faintly. “You still have so much to learn,
don’t you?â€
“Will this really work?â€
Brak glanced at Dranymire who shrugged. “Humans and Harshini
are not
so different.â€
“Then let’s do it,†she announced, reaching
for the thin blanket
that covered Tarja.
Brak laid a restraining hand on hers. “A word of caution,
R’shiel.
This will mean that until he’s recovered enough to survive on
his own,
Tarja will be literally possessed by demons. Not even Dranymire knows
what that will do to him if he survives. Are you prepared for
that?â€
She thought for a moment before replying.
“One problem at a time. I’ll deal with the
consequences later.â€
He shook his head. “Just so long as you understand that you
could be
making a big mistake.â€
R’shiel did not reply. Rather she pulled the blanket down,
revealing
the blood-soaked bandages that bound Tarja’s midriff.
“I mean it, R’shiel.â€
She looked up at him and shrugged. “I don’t make
mistakes, Brak.
Everything I’ve ever done in my life seemed like the right idea
at the
time.â€
CHAPTER 66
Denjon led Adrina and the others away from the
Infirmary tent, obviously glad to be gone from such blatant proof of
the continuing existence of the Harshini. R’shiel had obviously
been
acquainted with the captain and he seemed to know Tarja quite well,
too. It was more than likely the reason he had not struck them down
when they emerged from Terbolt’s tent. On the other hand, if
Jenga’s
reaction had been anything to go by, surrender was an alien concept to
these men. Perhaps R’shiel had merely provided them with the
excuse
their training and their oath denied them.
Whatever the reason for their cautious cooperation, three other
captains awaited them outside Terbolt’s tent. Denjon introduced
them as
Dorak, Kilton, and Linst. The men all wore that same serious, wary
expression that she had come to associate with the Defenders. Between
that and their identical uniforms, she found it hard to tell them apart.
“The Karien Prince is dead,†Dorak told Denjon,
casting a wary eye
over Adrina and Damin as they approached. “He was stabbed.
Terbolt’s
dead too, although there’s not a mark on him. It could have
been
poison.â€
“It wasn’t poison,†Denjon replied.
“Are they still in there?â€
Dorak nodded.
“Let’s talk in the mess tent. I’d rather
this wasn’t overheard.†He
glanced at Mikel meaningfully.
The child followed Adrina like a faithful shadow, afraid to let her
out of his sight.
“Mikel, why don’t you go down and join Captain
Almodavar and the
others. I’m sure he’ll look after you until we finish
here.â€
“Am I a prisoner now?â€
“No. Just go down and tell him everything will be sorted out
soon,â€
Damin added, with surprising gentleness. “Your
brother’s down there
somewhere too. I’m sure he’ll be happy to see
you.â€
He nodded doubtfully. “Is he all right?â€
“Why don’t you go and find out?â€
With one last cautious look, the boy turned and ran towards the
picket lines.
The captains led the way to another long tent. The only difference
between this one and the infirmary was the interior. The mess tent was
lined with collapsible tables and benches rather than beds. The smell
was marginally better, too. Once inside, Denjon dismissed the cooks and
waited until he was certain they were gone before he turned to the
others.
“We have a decision to make, gentlemen.â€
“Then perhaps you’d like to tell us what’s
going on?†one of the
captains said. It was Linst or the other one. Adrina really
couldn’t
remember which one was which.
“I would if I knew. Perhaps you could enlighten us, your
Highness?â€
After so long among the Kariens, who considered the input of a woman
no input at all, Adrina wasn’t really expecting to be included
in the
conversation. But these men served the Sisterhood. They suffered no
illusions about the ability of women. She glanced at Damin who squeezed
her hand in encouragement.
“I want to know what happened to my slave, first.â€
“What slave?†Denjon asked.
“The young woman who was with me when we were
captured.â€
The captains glanced at each other and shrugged. “There were
no
other women captured, your Highness. She probably escaped in the
confusion.â€
“Could you send some men out to find her, Captain?
She’s alone in a
foreign country and not equipped to survive on her wits. Not in the
wilderness, at least.†Denjon nodded to Linst, who left the
tent to
issue the order. That worrying detail taken care of, Adrina felt a lot
more secure about her future among these men. “Thank you. Now
what did
you want to know?â€
“Let’s start with what you’re doing
here,†Denjon suggested.
“I fled Karien. The Defenders offered me their protection
and when
the order for the surrender came from the Citadel, I decided to leave,
rather than return to my husband. Lord Wolfblade kindly offered to
escort me.â€
“Did you kill Cratyn?†Kilton asked curiously.
“No. R’shiel did.â€
“No offence, ma’am, but I can’t say
I’m sorry. He was an obnoxious
little bastard.â€
Adrina immediately warmed to the captain. Cratyn must have made
quite an impact in the short time he was in the Defender’s camp.
“No need to apologise, Captain. You merely demonstrate that
you are
an excellent judge of character.â€
“Where are the rest of the Hythrun?†Denjon asked
Damin, anxious to
stick to the business at hand, although he did allow himself a small
smile at Adrina’s comment. None of these men seemed the least
bit
bothered by Cratyn’s demise. “Rumours in the Citadel
had it that you
had near a thousand men on the border.â€
“I don’t share the Lord Defender’s
enthusiasm for following orders,
Captain. The bulk of my men left as soon as I realised Jenga intended
to surrender. We were the last to leave.â€
“And Tarja?â€
Damin smiled at the Captain’s expression. “He was
following Jenga’s
orders. I believe the plan was to make life as difficult as possible
for your new masters. The Defenders he took with him were all he
thought he could sneak out without the Kariens noticing.â€
Denjon nodded, looking rather relieved. “Following the Lord
Defender’s orders, you say? Well that makes our decision
somewhat
easier.â€
“Making life difficult for the Kariens does seem a rather
noble
cause,†Kilton agreed with a grin.
Linst returned from arranging Tamylan’s rescue party and
looked at
his brother captains with a shake of his head. “You
can’t seriously be
considering joining him?â€
“I doubt Tarja will live long enough to join
anything,†Dorak added.
“But if the Lord Defender ordered him to undertake a special
mission,
aren’t we duty-bound to pick up where he left off?â€
“There’s a thousand men in this camp! How many of
them do you think
will want to follow you on such a damned fool mission?â€
“Most of them, I imagine,†Kilton shrugged.
“Bring me one man in the
camp, from the lowliest kitchenhand to the highest ranked officer, who
was pleased to be marching anywhere under Karien command.â€
Linst nodded in agreement, albeit reluctantly. “Aye. But if
we
follow the Lord Defender’s orders, aren’t we disobeying
the Sisterhood?â€
“Ah, but there are no Sisters of the Blade here. In the
absence of
orders to the contrary, we have no choice but to follow the orders of
the Lord Defender.â€
Adrina smiled at Kilton’s rather liberal interpretation of
the law.
“That seems fairly cut and dried,†Denjon agreed.
“And what about
you, Lord Wolfblade? Are you still allied with Medalon?â€
“You’re holding my men prisoner, Captain.â€
“Then you should consider your answer most carefully, my
Lord.â€
Damin smiled faintly. “Much as I hate to turn down a good
fight, I’m
afraid I must return to Hythria. The Fardohnyans will be standing at my
border come spring. I plan to discourage them from crossing.â€
“Pity,†Kilton sighed. “Your Raiders are
quite good in a fight.â€
Judging by the surprised look on Damin’s face, such an
admission was
high praise indeed.
“You and your men are free to go, Lord Wolfblade. If you
stay clear
of the Citadel, you should be able to make it home by spring,â€
Denjon
told him. “You were right when you said the bulk of our forces
are in
the north. By the way, I heard that the Warlord of Elasapine withdrew
from Bordertown as soon as he heard of the surrender.â€
“Narvell’s no better at following orders than I
am,†Damin said.
“It’s a pity, though. He’ll be too far into
Hythria to call him back,
by the time I get there.â€
“Then we have to stop my father attacking Hythria,â€
Adrina said.
“How?â€
“By offering him an alliance.â€
“He’s already allied with Karien.â€
“The alliance was dependent on my marriage to Cratyn. As
that is no
longer the case, the treaty can reasonably be assumed to be null and
void.â€
If Kilton could twist the law to suit the outcome he desired, there
was no reason Adrina couldn’t do the same thing.
“I doubt if Hablet will see things quite so
clearly,†Damin warned.
“Then we’ll have to make him see.â€
“Marry her, Damin, then he won’t have a
choice.†The demon child’s
unexpected entrance gave Adrina a chance to recover from the shock of
her suggestion. R’shiel had finally shed the power she had used
to
destroy Terbolt and intimidate the Karien priests, and her eyes had
returned to normal. They were an unusual shade of violet, wide set and
clear. She was very tall — almost as tall as Damin —
and she carried
herself with an unconscious aura of power. The comatose, uncertain
child who had been led into Terbolt’s tent had emerged a woman,
sure of
her power and certain of her purpose.
“Is Tarja . . .?†Denjon ventured
cautiously.
“Dead? No. He’ll live. Brak is with him.
He’s not to be moved, nor
is anyone to approach him until I say so. Is that clear?â€
Denjon and the others nodded their agreement. Adrina doubted anyone
would deny her when she used that tone. She then turned to Damin and
smiled. It was obvious R’shiel was fond of the Warlord and the
thought
sent an unexpected spear of jealousy through her.
“I wasn’t kidding, Damin. If you marry Adrina, and
Hablet still
wants to attack Hythria, he’ll have to go over the Sunrise
Mountains.
Fardohnyan law demands a peace treaty between both Houses in the
marriage. It may not keep him out of the rest of Hythria, but at least
he won’t be able to take the easy road. He’ll be unable
to set foot in
Krakandar Province until he figures a way around the marriage
contract.â€
Damin nodded thoughtfully. He seemed to accept the suggestion with
remarkable composure. “It would delay him, I suppose, assuming
I was
willing to go along with such a ludicrous plan. But he could just as
easily deny the marriage had taken place and carry on
regardless.â€
“I’ll have Jelanna perform the ceremony herself, if
that’s what it
takes.â€
Adrina gasped. Somehow the idea that this girl could command the
Goddess of Fertility, the goddess her father worshipped with almost
fanatical intensity, was more terrifying than anything else she had
done this morning.
But things were moving a bit too fast and R’shiel had not
even asked
her what she thought about this rather hasty decision.
“Do I get a say in this?â€
“Why?†R’shiel asked. “Were you
planning to object?â€
“That’s not the point. But as a matter of fact, I
was planning to
object. I’ve had all the arranged marriages I want, thank you.
Besides,
I’ve been a widow for just over an hour. It’s
indecent.â€
“Don’t be such a hypocrite,†R’shiel
said bluntly. “You’ve been
sleeping with Damin for ages and he obviously loves you, or he would
never have been so stupid as to try to keep you from returning to
Karien.â€
Adrina felt herself blushing, something she had not done since she
was sixteen and was introduced to her first court’esa.
She
glanced at Damin who actually looked embarrassed. The captains were
fighting to maintain straight faces.
R’shiel did not seem to notice, or care, about their
feelings.
“Denjon, if you truly mean to undermine the Karien
occupation of
Medalon, then the first useful thing you can do is give me a few
experienced men and enough supplies to reach the Citadel.â€
“I’d have thought the Citadel was the last place
you’d want to go.â€
“There is something that I have to take care of. Or rather,
someone.
I had it pointed out to me very recently that I take the easy way out,
too often. That’s about to change.â€
“I’ll see to it,†Denjon agreed.
“Unless you want to wait until
Tarja . . .â€
“No. This can’t wait and I’ve done all I can
for him. Brak will
watch over him until he regains consciousness. In the meantime,
you’d
better do something about those priests I let loose. You don’t
want
them reaching the border and warning the Kariens about what’s
happened
here.â€
“There’s the rest of Cratyn’s troop out
there, too,†Damin reminded
them. “You’d be well advised to do something about them
before the day
is out.â€
“We can take care of a few hundred Kariens,†Denjon
assured him.
“As for you two,†R’shiel said, turning on
Damin and Adrina. “Get
one of the captains to marry you; they can perform the ceremony at a
pinch under Medalonian law. Once Tarja has recovered, Brak can go to
Talabar to deliver the news to King Hablet. If one of the fabled
Harshini walking his palace halls doesn’t convince him, nothing
will.â€
Damin was no more able to argue with her than Adrina was. This was
not R’shiel speaking, this was the demon child finally come
into her
power. She had no intention of marrying Damin Wolfblade and was quite
sure he did not want to marry her; but she would wait until
R’shiel
left for the Citadel before she announced it. Adrina was not foolish
enough to defy R’shiel in her current mood.
“There’s a vineyard just south of Testra, that we
used as a
headquarters during the rebellion,†she continued, addressing
the
captains once more. “My guess is that Tarja sent his troops
there.
You’ll need to get a message to them. Once I’ve taken
care of what I
have to do at the Citadel, I’ll join you.â€
“And then what, R’shiel?†Damin asked
cautiously.
She hesitated for a moment, as if some weighty decision hung in the
balance.
“And then I’m going to put a stop to this insanity,
Damin. I am
going to kick the Kariens out of Medalon and make damned sure they
never stick their noses over our border again.â€
“I don’t know how you think you can manage
that,†Dorak scoffed.
“It’s quite simple, Captain,†the demon
child replied. “I am going
to bow to the inevitable and fulfil my destiny. I am going to destroy
Xaphista.â€
CHAPTER 67
R’shiel rode far from the
Defenders’ camp under a
leaden sky, her face flushed and tingling from the cold. She had told
nobody the reason for her journey, just that she needed to be alone.
She had especially avoided Brak. He may have guessed what she was
planning and she did not want to give him the opportunity to object.
The Hythrun mare stretched her legs as the camp dwindled behind
them. She had no particular destination in mind and in truth, for a
good while she simply enjoyed the ride and the speed of the magnificent
sorcerer-bred horse. It was the first time in a very long while she had
done anything for the sheer joy of it, and she was reluctant to end it
too soon.
Eventually, she came to a small rise on the undulating plain and
looked back to discover the Defenders’ camp was completely
obscured by
the fold of the land. She dismounted and stroked the lathered
mare’s
neck, urging her to seek out what feed she could on the sparse winter
plain. With a nicker of understanding the mare wandered off. When
R’shiel was certain the horse was a safe distance from the
knoll, she
turned and looked up at the sky.
“Zegarnald!â€
She received no answer other than the soughing wind rustling through
the dried grass like a satin skirt brushing against a taffeta petticoat.
“Zegarnald!â€
“Demon child.â€
She spun to find the War God standing on the knoll behind her. He
was dressed in golden armour that glittered in the dull afternoon
light. He was enormous. The battles that were tearing this world apart
had made him as strong as he had ever been.
“You defied Xaphista, I see.â€
“No thanks to you.â€
“Brakandaran seems to have taught you disrespect, along with
survival.â€
“Brak didn’t teach me survival, and I don’t
need any lessons in
being disrespectful from anyone,†she retorted.
“Then why did you call me, demon child?â€
“My name is R’shiel.â€
“You are the demon child.â€
“I am R’shiel!†she insisted. “The
demon child is a creature you
invented. It’s not who I am!â€
“Then you refuse your destiny?†The god sounded
puzzled. Such fine
distinctions were beyond his ability to comprehend.
“I’m not refusing it, Zegarnald. I’m
accepting it. I will do as you
ask. I will restore the balance and destroy the gods who have skewed
things by becoming too strong.â€
“Gods? Surely you mean only one god?â€
R’shiel smiled ingenuously. “You surely
don’t think I can just
remove Xaphista without affecting any other gods, do you?â€
Zegarnald pondered the problem for a moment and then nodded slowly.
“Yes, I see. I had not considered that.â€
“Then you will leave me to do fulfil my destiny as I see
fit?â€
The War God frowned. “You will go to Slarn and destroy
Xaphista.
What else is to be done?â€
“Xaphista’s power is drawn from his believers in
Karien. I can’t
destroy him without destroying that too.â€
He thought on that and then nodded slowly. “Yes, I can see
that.â€
“Then you’ll leave me be? No more tests? No
more tempering?â€
“But . . .â€
“Zegarnald, you have to trust me. I’m the only one
who can do this.
You have to let me do it my way. I’m half human. I know how
humans
think. I need you to promise that you will not interfere unless I ask
you to.â€
“You ask a great deal of me, demon child.â€
“You’re asking a great deal of me,†she
pointed out.
The God of War thought over the problem for a while before he nodded
his agreement.
“Very well. I will do as you ask.â€
“Give me your oath.â€
“You doubt me?†He swelled at the implied insult.
“No. That’s why I want your oath.â€
“Very well, I give you my solemn promise I will not
interfere in
your handling of this affair unless you ask it.â€
“No matter what happens?â€
“No matter what happens,†he agreed unhappily.
R’shiel smiled at him. “Thank you, Divine One. Now,
just to prove
that I will need your help from time to time, I have a job for
you.â€
“A job?â€
“Yes. I want you to find Damin’s brother, Narvell,
the Warlord of
Elasapine and get him to turn back. Tell him he has to protect
Krakandar from a Fardohnyan invasion.â€
“I AM NOT YOUR MESSENGER!†the god boomed,
making the ground
shake with his indignation.
“As you wish,†she shrugged, turning away from him.
“If Hablet
crosses the Hythrun border too easily, there won’t be a battle.
On the
other hand, if Narvell turns back, there should be a nice little
bloodbath. But, if you’d rather
not . . .â€
“Perhaps I could consent to do this one favour for
you,†the god
conceded with ill grace. “ButI am not your messenger,
demon child. Do not presume to use me in such a manner again.â€
“I wouldn’t dream of it, Divine One.â€
It was nearly dark when R’shiel returned
to the
camp and she rode straight to the infirmary tent to check on Tarja.
Outwardly, his condition had not changed. He still lay as pale as
death and barely breathing, but the fact that he still lived at all was
a good sign. As she knelt beside the pallet, she was shocked to see his
hands and feet bound to the bed with sturdy ropes.
Angrily, she turned on the medic who was changing the bandages of a
man on the other side of the tent.
“Who did this?†she demanded.
“That man who came with you,†the medic shrugged.
“Jack, or Brak, or
whatever his name is. He said things might get a bit rough and that
tying him down was for his own protection.â€
R’shiel was horrified and fully intended to confront Brak
about such
a barbarous practice, but she was not so sure of herself that she
untied the ropes. She sat with Tarja for a time, stroking his pallid
forehead, trying to will him to live, before she left the Infirmary to
seek Brak out.
It was fully dark when she emerged from the Infirmary and she looked
about with a frown, realising she had no idea where Brak would be. She
was still pondering the problem when faint voices raised in anger
reached her. One of the voices was unmistakably female and
R’shiel
could easily guess who it was.
Curiously, she followed the sound to a tent not far from the one
where she and Adrina had been held prisoner. She could see
Adrina’s
silhouette through the canvas wall as she paced in front of the lamp.
They could probably hear her in Talabar.
“In case you’re interested, the whole camp can hear
you screeching,â€
she announced as she pushed the flap back.
Adrina spun around angrily. Damin was sitting on a small campstool
on the other side of the small table that held the flickering lamp
looking thoroughly miserable. A glowing brazier in the corner warmed
the tent, almost as much as Adrina’s anger.
“I DO NOT . . .†she began,
then took a deep
breath. “I do not screech.â€
“You do,†R’shiel said. “I take it
this . . .
argument has to do with my declaration that you two should get married?
So who’s the dissenting party?â€
“R’shiel, perhaps it’s not such a good
idea . . .â€
Damin began.
“Not a good idea! It’s downright insane!â€
Adrina retorted. “Hablet
will have a fit when he hears about it, and the first thing the Hythrun
Warlords will do is hire an assassin to have me killed.â€
“You’ve both lived with the threat of assassins all
your life — what
difference will another make? As for Hablet, we’ll just have to
convince him there’s a profit in it.â€
“And what about how I feel?†Adrina asked,
unable to deny
the truth of R’shiel’s words. Anything that was
profitable was fine by
her father.
“How do you feel, then?â€
“Used!†she snapped without hesitation.
“I need Hythria and Fardohnya at peace, Adrina. I
can’t face
Xaphista any other way.â€
Adrina turned to Damin for support. “Even if this marriage
stays my
father’s hand for a time, the Hythrun Warlords will never
accept me as
their High Princess.â€
“She has a point, R’shiel.â€
“The High Arrion will support you — she’s
your sister isn’t she?
There are already Harshini in Greenharbour. With the Sorcerers’
Collective backing you and once it’s known that the demon child
has
sanctioned your union . . .â€
“The demon child is still a legend in Hythria,â€
Damin reminded her.
“The only way this will work is if you return to Hythria with
us. If
you want to stop a civil war and want the other Warlords to believe in
the demon child, then you’re going to have to show them
the
demon child.â€
“I can’t go to Hythria, Damin. I have to take care
of something at
the Citadel. Tarja will need my help when he’s recovered and I
still
have to figure out how I’m going to deal with the
Kariens.â€
“None of which you will be able to give your full attention
to,
until Fardohnya and Hythria are at peace,†Damin pointed out,
turning
her own argument back on her. “What’s the hurry,
anyway? It’ll take
months before Tarja and the other captains can get the Defenders under
their command organised enough to mount an effective resistance. The
Citadel is under the control of the Kariens and you’re not
going to be
able to do anything about that until you’ve destroyed
Xaphista.
The war in Medalon is over for now.â€
“I have to return to the Citadel. You don’t
understand . . .â€
“No, you’re the one who doesn’t
understand,†Adrina cut in. “You
want to change the whole world to suit your liking, then run off on
some personal vendetta while the rest of us get killed trying to carry
out your orders. Nobody wants to see the Kariens brought to their knees
more than I, R’shiel, but Damin is right. If you want us to do
this,
then you’re going to have to do it with us. Your mission to the
Citadel
will have to wait.â€
R’shiel glanced at the two of them and sighed. They were
both such
stubborn, strong-willed personalities and she needed this marriage to
take place. She would have called on Kalianah to intervene, but Damin
was one of Zegarnald’s favourites. The War God would know she
was up to
something if another god interfered with Damin.
Frustration welling in her, she was forced to concede that they were
right. Sending Damin back to Hythria with Adrina as his bride without
proof of the demon child’s existence would be akin to a death
sentence.
“Very well, I’ll come. But only long enough to
convince the
Warlords. After that, it’s up to you two.â€
Damin glanced at Adrina, who nodded in agreement, although her scowl
made it clear that she was less than enthusiastic about the whole idea.
“So, I’m to be the High Princess of Hythria.â€
“First a princess of Fardohnya, then Karien and now
Hythria,†Damin
remarked. “You do get around, Adrina.â€
She turned on him angrily and R’shiel left the tent to
continue her
search for Brak, before she became even more embroiled in their
argument. Damn them, she though as she strode through the camp. Damn
them for being so obstinate. Damn them for being right.
Brak had told her once that destiny had a way of catching up with
you. Well, maybe it had. But just because it had caught her,
didn’t
mean she couldn’t make things happen her way. She would bring
peace to
the south, even if it meant delaying her inevitable confrontation with
Loclon. That she would have to face him before this was over was as
certain as her destiny was to destroy a god. Any god . . . or all of them. It didn’t
really
matter which . . .
The trick, R’shiel decided, as she moved through the firelit
Defenders’ camp, would be to manage affairs in such a way that
nobody
realised what was happening until it was too late to stop it.
GLOSSARY
Medalon
AFFIANA—Innkeeper
in Testra. Brak’s great-great grand niece.
B’THRIM SNOWBUILDER—Villager from Haven. Elder
sister
of J’nel.
BASEL—Sergeant
of
the Defenders stationed on the southern border.
BEK—Prisoner
at
the Grimfield. Sentenced to five years for arson.
BELDA—Sister
of
the Blade at the Grimfield.
BERETH—Former
Sister of the Blade. Now a pagan.
CRISABELLE CORTANEN—Wife of Wilem Cortanen,
Commandant of
the Defenders.
DAVYDD TAILORSON—Lieutenant of the Defenders
attached
to the Intelligence Corps.
DAYAN JENGA—Quartermaster of the Defenders
stationed
in Bordertown. Younger brother of the Lord Defender.
DENJON—Captain
of
the Defenders.
DRACO—First
Spear
of the Sister and ceremonial bodyguard.
FOHLI—Corporal
of
the Defenders in the Grimfield.
FRANCIL ASHAREN—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Longest standing member. Mistress of the Citadel.
GARET WARNER—Commandant of the Defenders.
Head of
Defender Intelligence and second most senior officer in the Defenders.
GAWN—Captain
of
the Defenders posted to the southern border.
GEORJ DRAKE—Captain of the Defenders.
Tarja’s best
friend.
GHARI RODAK—Rebel Lieutenant. Brother of
Mandah.
GWENELL—Physic.
Sister of the Blade in charge of the Sisterhood’s Infirmary at
the
Citadel.
HARITH NORTARN—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Mistress of Sisterhood.
HEANER—Mistress
of the most notorious brothel in the Citadel.
HELLA—Joyhinia’s
maid at the Citadel.
HERVE RODAK—A Rebel from Testra. Mandah and
Ghari’s
cousin.
J’NEL SNOWBUILDER—Died in Haven from
complications of
childbirth without naming the father of her child.
JACOMINA LAROSSE—Sister of the Blade. Member of
the
Quorum. Mistress of Enlightenment.
JOYHINIA TENRAGAN—First Sister of the Sisters of
the
Blade following Mahina’s impeachment.
JUNEE RIVERSON—Probate at the Citadel.
KHIRA—Pagan
Rebel
and Physic in the Grimfield.
KILENE—Probate
at
the Citadel.
KORGAN—Deceased.
Former Lord Defender. Rumoured to be Tarja’s father.
LENK—Corporal
of
the Defenders at the Grimfield.
L’RIN—Innkeeper
of the Inn of the Hopeless in the Grimfield.
LOCLON—Wain
Loclon. Lieutenant of the Defenders and Champion of the Arena. Promoted
to Captain following the Purge.
LOUHINA FARCRON—Sister
of the Blade. Appointed to the Quorum following Joyhinia’s
elevation to
First Sister.
LYCREN—Sergeant
of the Defenders in the Grimfield.
MAHINA CORTANEN—First Sister. Mother of Wilem.
MANDAH RODAK—Formerly a novice and now a pagan
rebel
from Medalon. Elder sister of Ghari.
MARIELLE—Prisoner
at the Grimfield, sentenced with R’shiel.
MARTA—Probate
at
the Citadel.
MYSEKIS—Captain
of the Defenders stationed in the Grimfield.
NHEAL ALCARNEN—Captain of the Defenders.
PADRIC—Pagan
rebel.
PALIN JENGA—Lord Defender. Commander in Chief
of the
Defenders. Brother of Dayan Jenga and rumoured to be
R’shiel’s father.
PENY—Court’esa
working for Mistress Heaner.
PROZLAN—Sister
of
the Blade stationed at the Grimfield, responsible for discipline among
the female prisoners.
R’SHIEL—Probate.
Daughter of the First Sister.
SUELAN—Sister
of
the Blade. The First Sister’s Secretary and Harith’s
niece.
SUNNY—Sunflower
Hopechild. Court’esa from the Citadel who befriends
R’shiel on
their journey to the Grimfield.
TARJA—Tarjanian
Tenragan. Son of the First Sister, Joyhinia. Captain of the Defenders.
TEGGERT—Former
convict. Works as a cook in the Commandant’s household in the
Grimfield.
UNWIN—Sister
of
the Blade at the Grimfield in charge of the Grimfield’s
Kitchens.
VERKIN—Kriath
Verkin. Commandant of Bordetown.
WANDEAR—Probate
at the Citadel.
WILEM—Commandant
of the Grimfield. Son of Mahina and married to Crisabelle.
WYLBIR—A
rebel.
Former sergeant of the Defenders.
ALMODAVAR—Hythrun
Raider. Captain of Damin Wolfblade’s Raiders.
CYRUS EAGLESPIKE—Hythrun. Warlord of Dregian
Province. Damin Wolfblade’s distant cousin.
DAMIN WOLFBLADE—Warlord of Krakandar and heir
to the
High Prince’s throne. Son of Princess Marla and nephew of
Lernen
Wolfblade, High Prince of Hythria.
KALAN—High
Arrion
of the Sorcerers’ Collective in Hythria. Damin
Wolfblade’s half sister,
also known as Kalan of Elasapine. She has a twin brother, Narvell
Hawksword.
LERNEN WOLFBLADE—High Prince of Hythria.
Damin’s
uncle. A known pervert with no desire to produce an heir and rather
exotic sexual appetites.
MARLA WOLFBLADE—Princess of Hythria. Sister
of Lernen
Wolfblade and mother of Damin. Married 5 times she is also the mother
of Kalan and Narvell Hawksword of Elasapine.
RORIN—Seneschal
to the High Arrion of the Sorcerers’ Collective.
SOOTHAN—Captain
of a Hythrun fishing boat.
Karien
ARINGARD—Queen
of
Karien. Married to Jasnoff and mother of Cratyn.
CHARITY—Karien
noblewoman. Granddaughter of Baron Lodnan.
CHASTITY—Daughter
of Terbolt. Adrina’s Lady-In-Waiting. Formerly betrothed to
Cratyn.
CRATYN—Crown
Prince of Karien. Son of Jasnoff and Aringard.
DRENDYN—Karien.
Earl of Tiler’s Pass. Cratyn’s cousin and nephew of
King Jasnoff.
ELFRON—Karien
priest sent to the Citadel with Lord Pieter to denounce the
Sisterhood’s handling of the pagans.
GARANUS—Karien
Priest sent to the Citadel with Terbolt, the Duke of Setenton.
HOPE—Adrina’s
Lady-In-Waiting.
JASNOFF—King
of
Karien. Married to Aringard. Father of Cratyn and uncle to Drendyn.
JAYMES OF KIRKLAND—Karien page attached to Lord
Laetho’s
retinue. Son of Lord Laetho’s Third Steward, he cannot by
knighted due
to his common birth.
LORD PIETER—Karien Envoy to Medalon.
MIKEL OF KIRKLAND—Karien page attached to Lord
Laetho’s
retinue. Jaymes’ younger brother. Appointed as Adrina’s
page following
his escape from Medalon.
OVERLORD—See
Xaphista.
PACIFICA—Adrina’s
Lady-In-Waiting.
TERBOLT—Karien.
Duke of Setenton and father of Chastity.
VONULUS—Karien
Priest appointed as Confessor to Adrina.
XAPHISTA—The
Overlord. God of the Kariens.
Fardohnya
ADRINA—Princess
of Fardohnya. Eldest legitimate child of King Hablet and his first
wife. Adrina’s mother was beheaded for trying to assassinate
her
husband’s mistress and her illegitimate son Tristan.
CASSANDRA—Princess
of Fardohnya. Adrina’s younger sister and second legitimate
child of
Hablet.
HABLET—King
of
the Fardohnyans. Has 14 illegitimate sons and thirteen legitimate
daughters. He refuses to name his heir hoping one of his wives will
give him a legitimate son.
JAPINEL—Fardohnyan
tailor, alchemist and con-man.
LECTER TURON—Chamberlain of the Fardohnyan
Court.
Lector is a eunuch who makes his fortune collecting bribes.
RAVEN—Head
of the
Assassins’ Guild that operates in Hythria and Fardohnya
TERIAHNA—The
Raven. Head of the Assassins’ Guild.
TAMYLAN—Fardohnyan
slave raised to serve Adrina. Lover of Tristan on Adrina’s
orders.
TRISTAN—Bastard
son of King Hablet of Fardohnya. Adrina’s half-brother and
Captain of
her Guard sent to Karien.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jennifer Fallon was born in Melbourne, Australia,
and at the age of 11 moved to the nation’s capital, Canberra,
when her
father, a senior public servant in the Defence Department, was
transferred. She lived in and around Canberra for about eight years.
She is the ninth child in a family of 13 girls.
Jennifer has lived in the ‘Top End’ of Australia,
the Northern
Territory, since 1980, although at present she is based in Melbourne
for work commitments. She has two daughters and a son. Over the years,
Jennifer has also had 32 foster children. Friends refer to her home as
‘the ashram’ due to the large number of stray teenagers
that still
inhabit her house at irregular intervals.
Jennifer has worked in a wide variety of occupations and at present
is a director of Business Innovations Group Pty Ltd, and the main
creative force behind Mr Big, the Web Wizard. She is an accredited
workplace trainer and also a partner in the US company CISDesigns. She
currently works as a consultant in e-commerce and VoIP and travels
around Australia for her work. She is a member of the Business &
Professional Women’s Association, the Phenomenal Women of the
Web
Association and is often in demand as a guest speaker.
Like many other aspiring writers, in 1981 Jennifer wrote a Mills
& Boon that dutifully got rejected. (She later burned the
manuscript.) She changed to fantasy in 1990 when she decided she would
be better writing something for herself, rather than trying to please
everyone else. In 1995, Jennifer decided to either get published by the
year 2000 or give up writing and get a real job. Her first series, The
Demon Child Trilogy, was released in August 2000 and hit the bestseller
list the first week it was released.
Her first e-book, Medalon, Book One of The Demon Child
Trilogy, was released globally as an e-book by PerfectBound in May 2001.
Visit her website at http://www.jenniferfallon.com
Shananara
flung herself into one of the chairs opposite the window. “The
Demon
Child? That unreliable, spoilt, half-human atheist brat? If
that’s who
you’re relying on to save us, brother, we are doomed.â€
Medalon has surrendered to
Karien and Tarja is once more an outlaw. The Defenders are scattered
and their only hope for aid is Damin Wolfblade and the vast army of
Hythria. But Damin has his own problems to solve first, including false
claimants to the throne, civil war . . . and, of course,
Adrina.
R’shiel has finally accepted her destiny,
and is
searching for answers. But time is running out. She must defeat
Xaphista soon, for the Harshini king cannot hide Sanctuary for much
longer. But how can she defeat a God?
Medalon and Treason Keep, Books
One & Two of The Demon Child Trilogy, were instant bestsellers.
This, the final book in the trilogy, is as unpredictable and glorious
as its characters.
“Jennifer Fallon
is a
writer to watch . . .â€
Peter McNamara, 5EBI FM
“Jennifer Fallon captures the reader from
the
opening paragraph and you can only break from her grasp when you reach
the final page.â€
1. Discuss the different role of women in Medalon, Karien and
Fardohnya.
2. Dacendaren devotes a great deal of time trying to get Mikel to
steal something, even though the Karien boy consistently denies the
existence of any other gods. Discuss the reason for this and why it is
so important to the God of Thieves.
3. R’shiel has a long conversation with Xaphista, in which
he tries
to seduce her into joining him. Why does he fail?
4. Is the Princess Adrina a product of her environment or simply a
spoilt brat?
5. The God of War demands that R’shiel leave Sanctuary
because he
fears the Harshini will weaken her resolve. What affect would living in
Santuary have on R’shiel, both long term and short term?
6. The demons meld to save Tarja at the end of Treason Keep. What
effect could being possessed by a demon have on Tarja when (or if) he
recovers?
7. Adrina tells Cratyn that her slaves are better off in slavery
than as his free serfs. Discuss the differences between being a slave
living in luxury, or a peasant living in abject poverty. Which would
you prefer?
8. Brak explains the dangers of coercion to R’shiel at some
length.
Discuss the reasons for his concerns and why R’shiel feels she
has no
choice.
9. Many of the characters are confronted with evidence that the
Primal Gods exist, yet refuse to acknowledge their existence. Discuss
why these characters refuse to accept the evidence of their own eyes.
10. How would their lives have been changed if Adrina and Damin had
met in Greenharbour several years earlier?
CREDITS
Cover and illustrations by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Cover and text design by Darian Causby,
HarperCollins Design Studio, Australia
This e-book provides links and pointers to
Internet websites, which are contained and maintained by third parties.
These links are provided as a convenience, and do not constitute an
endorsement of content, policies or practices of the websites linked or
referred to.