Harshini
HARSHINI
The Demon Child Trilogy: Book Three
Jennifer Fallon
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Also by Jennifer Fallon:
Medalon (The
Demon Child Trilogy:
Book One)
Treason Keep (The
Demon Child Trilogy:
Book Two)
For Harshini Bhoola
and, as always, Adele Robinson
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Map
PART
1
RETREAT INTO DANGER
Chapters
01 - 10
PART
2
THE MEN WHO WOULD BE KINGS
Chapters
11 - 34
PART
3
HOMECOMING
Chapters
35 - 46
PART
4
DESTINY
Chapters
47 - 64
Glossary
Illustrations
by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Interview
with Jennifer Fallon by Stephanie Smith
Reading
Notes
About
the Author
Acknowledgments
Once again, I have quite a few people I'd like to
thank for their help and support. Lyn Tranter from Australian Literary
Management, Stephanie and everyone at HarperCollins Publishers
Australia, Sarah Endacott from Edit or Die for editing and advice and
patience.
I would also like to thank Debra Rae-Smith and Fiona McLennan, the
whiz-kids of cyberspace at HarperCollins and Voyager Online, who have
given me a great deal of support, and quite a few emailed suggestions,
particularly in relation to Tarja's fate, all of which I happily
ignored . . .
I must again thank the awesomely talented Stephanie Pui-Mun Law for
her wonderful covers, and the remarkable character sketches that she
has provided for this series.
A special thank you, too, must go to Elle, Stephanie, Woody, Alison
and Ryan, the gang from Whitley College, for their input, their
friendship and their all-night proofreading session.
To my children, Amanda, Tracey (TJ) and David, my thanks for their
support, their faith, the inspiration they have provided, and for
making me feel that I haven't completely failed as a mother.
And finally, to my good friend Harshini Bhoola: it's been a long
time coming, but this one's for you.
PART 1
RETREAT INTO
DANGER
CHAPTER 1
Korandellan te Ortyn, the last King of
the
Harshini, waited until the end of the concert before he left the
natural amphitheatre in the centre of Sanctuary to return to his
apartment. But first, he congratulated the performers. He admired the
clever scenery they had devised, which used a mixture of magic and
everyday objects, and graciously thanked them for their efforts. He
moved among them, smiling and waving, as the glimmering twilight, that
was as close to night as it came in this magical place, descended over
the valley. Sanctuary's tall, elegant white spires towered over the
hidden city, touched with silver as evening closed in. The people were
trying so desperately hard to be happy. He did his best to seem happy
for them in return.
There was a brittle edge to the serenity of Sanctuary these days. An
edge that Korandellan, more than any other Harshini, could feel. The
happiness here was fragile; the cheerfulness an illusion. The Harshini
were running out of time. Quite literally. Only Korandellan knew how
close they were to the end.
Perhaps Shananara suspected. She fell in beside him, dressed in the
long loose robes that most of the Harshini favoured, which surprised
him a little. Shananara had been in and out of Sanctuary a great deal
of late, and he was more used to seeing her in Dragon Rider's leathers.
His sister had always been more interested in the comings and goings of
the human population than he. With the demon child abroad, and the
whole world affected by her presence, Shananara was anxious to know
what was happening. Slipping her arm companionably through his, she
walked with him back to his quarters, waiting until the doors swung
silently shut behind them before she spoke.
"Let me help, Koran."
The King sighed, letting his shoulders slump and his
façade of
vitality crumble in her presence. He looked haggard.
"No. You cannot help, Shanan," he told her, lowering his
tall frame
into a delicately carved chair near the open doors that led to the
balcony. The tinkling sound of the waterfall drifted through the open
windows. The evening, as usual, was balmy and clear. "I need your
strength for other matters."
"There won't be any other matters if you falter,"
she
warned. "Let me carry some of the load. Or do you enjoy being a
martyr?"
He smiled at her wearily. She had been out visiting the humans
again. Her manner of speech always reflected her journeys among the
mortals. "No, I do not enjoy being a martyr, sister. But if I fail, our
people will need you to guide them. If you help me now, you will
certainly ease my burden, but it will weaken you at a time when one of
us needs to be strong. Only the demon child can lift the burden from my
shoulders completely."
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."
"You shouldn't speak of her so harshly, my dear. R'shiel will do
what she must."
"She will do what suits her, Koran, and not a damned thing more. I
doubt if even the gods know if it will be what she was destined
for."
"Yet it is on her we must rely."
"Then let me bring her back."
"Here? To Sanctuary? For what purpose?"
"If you won't let me ease your burden, then let R'shiel do
it. The gods know she's strong enough. Let me bring her back, Koran.
Let her carry the load for a time, enough to let you recover, at least.
Then you can take up the burden again and R'shiel can do what she has
to."
The King shook his head. "Events unfold as they should, Shananara.
We cannot interfere."
"What events?" she scoffed. "Where is it written that you
should
destroy yourself holding Sanctuary out of time, while the demon child
sits on her hands trying to decide if she even believes that we exist
or not?"
"You did not speak to R'shiel before she left us. She has learnt
much."
"She doesn't know a fraction of what she needs to know. And who is
there to teach her? Brak?"
"I thought you were fond of him."
"I am, but he's hardly the one I would have chosen as the demon
child's mentor. He doesn't even like her. And he certainly doesn't
trust her."
"She will learn what she needs to know in Hythria."
"But does R'shiel know that? She's just as liable to head in the
other direction."
"You worry too much, Shanan. These things have a way of working
themselves out. R'shiel will come to accept her destiny and will learn
what she needs in due course."
"Before or after the Harshini are destroyed, brother?"
Leaning
forward, she studied him intently, as if she could see through his skin
and into his soul. "Xaphista's minions have control of Medalon. The
Defenders have surrendered to Karien. Hythria is on the brink of civil
war and Fardohnya is arming for invasion. And you are beginning to
weaken. I can see it in your eyes. You tremble constantly and cannot
control it. Your eyes burn. Your aura is streaked with black. A
flicker, a slight wavering in your hold on the spell that holds
Sanctuary out of time, and Xaphista's priests will know where we are.
Once that happens, you will be able to count the days on the fingers of
one hand before the Kariens are standing at our gates."
"R'shiel will deal with Xaphista before that happens," he
assured
her.
"I wish I shared your faith in her. But how long do we have, Koran?
How long can you keep draining yourself?"
"As long as I need to."
She leaned back with a defeated sigh. "Then I can only pray to the
gods that it will be long enough."
"The demon child will do what she must."
Shananara did not look convinced. "You place far too much faith in
that uncontrollable half-breed."
The Harshini King nodded tiredly. "I'm aware of that, Shananara, but
unfortunately that uncontrollable half-breed is our only hope."
CHAPTER 2
The marriage of Damin Wolfblade, Warlord of
Krakandar, to Her Serene Highness, Princess Adrina of Fardohnya, took
place on a small, windswept knoll in the middle of northern Medalon on
a bitterly cold afternoon. It was little more than two weeks since the
bride had unexpectedly become a widow.
The sky was overcast and low, the sullen clouds defying the brisk,
chilly wind by staying determinedly in place. The somewhat
less-than-radiant bride was dressed in a borrowed white shirt and dark
woollen trousers. The groom looked just as uncomfortable in his
battle-worn leathers. The assorted guests appeared either bemused or
amused, depending on their country of origin.
Officiating over the ceremony was a tall, serious looking Defender,
who wore the insignia of a captain and quoted the stiff, practical and
very unromantic Medalonian wedding vows that were carried away by the
wind almost as soon as he uttered the words. This wedding was taking
place because the demon child had demanded it, and a quick ceremony -
enough to make it legal - was all R'shiel cared about. She had
neither
the time nor the patience for any pomp or ceremony.
"This is probably a waste of time, you know," Brak muttered
as he
watched the ceremony with a frown.
"Why?" R'shiel asked softly, not taking her eyes from the
bride and
groom, as if they would somehow manage to escape their fate if she
looked away.
"This marriage will only hold up if you can get the High Arrion to
accept the legality of a Medalonian ceremony as soon as you get to
Greenharbour," he explained.
"The leader of the Sorcerers' Collective?"
"The High Arrion is Damin's half-sister."
"She's not going to be very happy about this, is she?"
"Even if she wasn't concerned about her brother, as the High
Prince's heir, he's doing a very dangerous thing."
"But worth it, Brak. In the end, it will be the best thing that
could have happened. This will force peace between Hythria and
Fardohnya. Nothing else we can do will achieve that."
Brak looked unconvinced. "There's an awful lot that can go wrong,
R'shiel."
"It'll work."
He stared at her.
"Trust me, it'll work!"
"I'm surprised Zegarnald is letting you get away with this."
"I have the God of War's solemn promise that he won't interfere.
Besides, he'll think this is likely to cause a war."
"That's because it is likely to cause a war,
R'shiel," Brak
pointed out.
"Only in the short term."
He shook his head at her folly and turned his attention back to the
ceremony. It was almost over. Denjon was calling on the gods to bless
the union - Kalianah to bless it with love, Jelanna to bless it
with
children. He sounded very uncomfortable, but R'shiel had insisted on
acknowledging the gods, even in some small measure. Personally, she
didn't think it would make much difference, but Damin and Adrina were
both pagans and it was what they believed that counted. One or
both of them might try to wheedle out of it if she left them a loophole.
Denjon declared the union sealed, to the scattered applause of the
gathered Defenders and Hythrun who had come to watch. The newlyweds
turned to face the crowd and smiled with the insincere ease of those
trained from childhood to perform in public. They stepped down from the
knoll and began to walk towards R'shiel and Brak. R'shiel shivered,
although it was not from the cold.
"Just how much power do the Sorcerers' Collective have,
anyway?"
"Politically or magically?"
"Both, I suppose."
"The magic they wield shouldn't bother you. They tap into the same
power we do, but it's the result of years of study, not innate ability.
It's done with incantations and spells and a bit of co-operation from
the gods. Politically, however, they're one of the strongest forces in
Hythria."
"So if the High Arrion publicly sanctions this union, the Warlords
will accept it?"
"They won't openly object, but don't count on acceptance."
"Then we need the Sorcerers' Collective on our side."
"Most definitely."
R'shiel nodded, her mind already working through how to get the High
Arrion on side. And the King of Fardohnya. Brak could deal with him. In
fact, she had a sneaking suspicion he was going to enjoy it. Her mind
churned with possibilities, as she pondered the problem. The scheming
came to her as naturally as breathing - one of the legacies of
being
raised by the Sisters of the Blade.
"Well, it's done now," Damin remarked as he and Adrina
reached them.
"A true romantic, isn't he," Adrina complained. "Do we have
to stand
around here chatting? I'm freezing. Every time I get married, I seem to
be freezing."
"We should head back to the camp. Denjon had the cooks prepare a
wedding feast for you."
"What a culinary experience that's going to be,"
Adrina
grumbled.
"You're not planning to make this easy, are you?" R'shiel
asked.
The Princess conceded the point reluctantly. "Very well, I shall
endeavour to be appreciative of the efforts of my hosts."
"That should be a new experience for you," Damin remarked
blandly.
The Warlord enjoyed living dangerously, R'shiel decided, noticing
the look Adrina gave him. She made her excuses, leaving the bride and
groom with Brak, and slipped away to speak with Denjon.
"Thank you, Captain."
"I'm sure I've broken a score of laws here today, R'shiel. Are you
sure this was necessary?"
"Positive. It'll keep Hythria and Fardohnya off our backs while we
deal with the Kariens."
"I hope you're right. I'm not sure the marriage of a Hythrun Warlord
to a Fardohnyan will help Medalon much. Particularly the Warlord who's
spent most of the past decade trying to steal every head of cattle on
our side on the border."
"This Warlord is on our side now, Denjon."
"I'll have to take your word for that. Although he seems reasonable
enough."
She smiled, wondering what Damin would think of such a backhanded
compliment. "Never fear. Events will strike a balance
eventually."
"I hope you're right, demon child."
R'shiel had no chance to chide the captain for calling her by that
hated name. A commotion ahead of them distracted her as a Defender ran
towards them from the line of tents ahead, calling her name.
"What's wrong?" she demanded as the man pushed through the
wedding
party to reach her.
"It's Tarja," the young man panted. "He's awake."
R'shiel beat everyone else to the infirmary tent.
She pushed her way through the flap and ran to the pallet where Tarja
lay at the far end of the large tent, straining uselessly against the
ropes that held him.
"Tarja?"
He turned at the sound of her voice, but there was no recognition in
his eyes. His colour had improved but he had a wild look, as if a
battle raged inside him. His dark hair was damp and his brow beaded
with sweat. The rough, grey, army-issue blankets that covered him were
a twisted tangle.
"Tarja? It's me, R'shiel . . ."
His only response was to tug even harder at the ropes. Already his
wrists were burned from his efforts. With a cry of dismay, she reached
for them, to ease his suffering.
"R'shiel! No!"
Brak hurried to her side and looked down on Tarja with concern.
Damin and Adrina were close on his heels.
"Look what he's doing to himself, Brak! You can't just leave him
there, tied up like a wild animal."
"If you let him go, he's liable to do a lot worse damage to
himself," Brak warned. "Until the demons leave him, he's better
off
restrained."
"Demons?" Adrina gasped in horror. "You mean he's
possessed?"
"In a manner of speaking," the Harshini shrugged.
"That can't be good for him."
"It's the only thing keeping him alive," R'shiel retorted,
suddenly
in no mood for Adrina's tactlessness. "How much longer, Brak?"
"It shouldn't be long now," he said. "He's awake. That's a
good
sign."
"How will the demons know when to leave?"
"Dranymire should sense when they're no longer needed. With luck,
when the meld dissolves, all the brethren will follow."
"With luck?" Damin repeated dubiously. "You mean
there's no
guarantee they'll all leave?" He stared at Tarja for a moment
then
turned to Adrina. "For future reference, my dear, if I ever take a
fatal wound in battle and the Harshini offer to heal me by having me
possessed by demons, let me die."
"Never fear on that score, Damin. If you ever take a fatal wound in
battle, I'll be more than happy to let you die."
"Stop it!" R'shiel cried impatiently. "I'm sick of you both!
Go
away!"
The pair of them looked quite startled at her outburst. "I'm sorry,
R'shiel . . ."
"Just leave."
Without any further comment the Warlord and his bride beat a hasty
retreat from the infirmary. R'shiel turned her attention back to Tarja,
who seemed to have lapsed into unconsciousness again.
"I have to tell you, R'shiel," Brak remarked as he watched
them
leave, "if the fate of Hythria and Fardohnya rests in the hands of
those two, we're in big trouble."
"They need to grow up," R'shiel agreed impatiently. She had
no time
for the peculiarities of her friends at this point. She was more
concerned about Tarja. "Isn't there anything we can do for him?"
"Not while the demons still substitute for the blood he's
lost,"
Brak told her.
"How much longer?"
"There's no way of knowing. But he's strong. If anyone can survive
this, Tarja can."
She watched for a moment, as Tarja's chest rose and fell in even,
measured breaths. "Every day, I keep hoping . . . We've
already been here too long. We have to leave. I can't keep putting it
off."
"We have a wedding feast to attend first."
"Don't remind me." She pulled the blanket up and smoothed
it, then
looked at Brak. "I just hope those two behave, tonight. If not, I'll
strangle the pair of them."
"Don't worry, they won't dare cross the demon child."
"Are you making fun of me, Brak?"
He smiled. "Just a little bit."
She returned his smile wanly. "Don't you ever get sick of watching
over me?"
"Constantly. But it's a task I'll be doing for some time
yet," he
replied as his smile faded.
"What do you mean?"
"You've chosen which side you're on, demon child. You don't think
Xaphista is just going to stand back and watch while you set about
destroying him, do you?"
"You think he'll send more priests after me?"
"You should be so lucky," he told her. "A priest you can
see. No,
I'm afraid he'll be a bit subtler this time. He'll probably try to turn
someone close to you against you. Someone you trust. Someone who can
get near you."
R'shiel studied Brak for a long moment then glanced down at Tarja.
"You think he'll turn Tarja against me, don't you?"
"Tarja, Damin, Adrina, one of the Defenders, who knows? Any one of
them could become your enemy and you won't know a thing about it until
they're pulling the knife from your back."
R'shiel stroked Tarja's brow gently before she answered. "Tarja
would never betray me."
"Perhaps not. But trust no one, R'shiel."
"Not even you?"
Brak smiled thinly. "Xaphista can't turn me to his cause, or any
Harshini for that matter. He began as a demon and he was never bonded
to my clan or yours. The Harshini you can trust."
"But nobody else?"
"Nobody else."
She stood up, frowning at the idea that everybody she knew was a
potential traitor. "Brak, I really don't like being the demon
child, you know that, don't you?"
Brak shrugged. "We all have a destiny we can't avoid,
R'shiel."
"I don't believe in destiny."
"I know. That's why the Primal Gods are so worried."
That thought actually cheered her a little. "The Primal
Gods are worried?"
"They're worried," he agreed.
"Good," she declared petulantly. "They damned well should
be."
CHAPTER 3
R'shiel escaped the mess tent and the wedding feast
as soon as she could slip away without being rude. She had arranged
this wedding and felt that the least she could do was make some attempt
to be sociable, although Brak's warning about Xaphista worried her more
than she cared to admit. She had found herself studying faces in the
candlelight, wondering who the Overlord would suborn. Which familiar
face was really her enemy? Whose eyes hid treachery and whose were
genuine in their friendship? She escaped the tent with relief, glad
finally to be alone. Brak seemed to sense what bothered her and made no
attempt to follow.
She paced the large Defender camp, too restless to seek her bed.
Since returning from Sanctuary, R'shiel found she didn't need sleep the
way she once had. While a useful trait at times, in the darkest hours
of the night, when the human spirit was at its lowest ebb, she felt the
burden of her destiny keenly. With Brak's caution about potential
enemies ringing in her ears, tonight it seemed harder than usual.
But she was not unhappy. In fact, it was frightening to discover how
much she was enjoying herself. She had told Brak she did not believe in
destiny, but Joyhinia had unwittingly raised her for this. Every lesson
she learnt at Joyhinia's knee was aimed at educating her in the art of
survival in the cutthroat politics of the Sisters of the Blade.
R'shiel had rebelled against it as a child. Now she found it not
only useful, but almost exhilarating. She frequently told Brak that she
hated being the demon child, but there were times when it was
intoxicating to have princes and princesses deferring to her. Even the
Defenders, who had never treated her as much more than the annoying
little sister of one of their officers, now treated her with cautious
awe.
For the first time in her life she understood the attraction of
power, but was still idealistic enough to hope that it would not
corrupt her. R'shiel had not yet reached the point where she was
willing to sacrifice anything to achieve her goals. But she was
prepared to do a great deal. As Brak had said, she had chosen which
side she would be on. All that remained now was for her to do what the
Primal Gods had created her for - a destiny she had absolutely
no idea
how she was going to fulfil.
Her thoughts turned to Hythria, and the reason she had agreed to
accompany Damin and Adrina south. Originally, she agreed to go with
them to aid Damin's cause and to avert potential trouble now that he
was married to the daughter of Hythria's most despised enemy. But in
the past few days R'shiel had realised she had to go south
because that was where the Sorcerers' Collective was located. If
anybody left alive in this world had the knowledge of how to kill a
god, the last human practitioners of magic would. R'shiel had already
tasted Xaphista's lure and although she would never admit it to Brak,
she doubted she could hold out against him a second time. She needed
knowledge that even the Harshini did not possess. They had no idea how
to kill a god. They couldn't even squash a flea.
Several turns around the large camp in the chilly starlight did
nothing to ease her turmoil, so she decided to sit with Tarja for a
time. In the darkness of the infirmary tent, the smell of lye soap
sharp in her nose, she cooled his fevered forehead with a damp rag as
he literally fought the demons that possessed him. Tarja drifted in and
out of consciousness, but he never displayed even a hint of
recognition. He would lie quietly at times, and then jerk against the
bonds that restrained him so hard R'shiel wondered that the pallet did
not break under the pressure. There was nothing she could do for him
but hope. She did not have enough faith in the gods to waste her time
praying.
As she watched him, she wondered if Xaphista would choose Tarja as
the instrument of her destruction. It would be the cruellest jest he
could play on her. She loved him; had loved him since she was a child.
But Kalianah, the Goddess of Love, had imposed Tarja's love for her on
him. Xaphista had told her that and she had no reason to doubt him.
Tarja loved her because the gods willed it. He had been given no say in
the matter, nor was he aware that the choice had not been his.
If Tarja ever learns of the geas, Xaphista will have no need to
seduce him, R'shiel thought unhappily. Tarja's wrath would be
enough. She knew that, as surely as she knew nothing she could do,
nothing she could say would lessen his fury, should he ever discover
what had been done to him.
As dawn slowly lightened the sky over the camp, R'shiel abandoned
her depressing line of thought. No closer to finding a solution to the
troubles that plagued her, she left the tent to find some breakfast and
clean up before her meeting with Denjon and the other captains.
"We have a problem," Denjon announced by
way of
greeting when she entered the mess tent. It had, by default, become
their meeting place over the past two weeks. Brak and Captain Dorak
were already there, sitting at one of the long tables nursing steaming
mugs. The tables had been cleared from last night's party and the tent
was empty other than for Brak and the Defenders. Captain Linst was
sitting at the end of the table, the remains of his breakfast in front
of him. None of the men rose as she entered. She had finally cured them
of that, at least.
"Only one problem? When did things improve?"
Denjon treated her to a weary smile. He was a tall, rangy man, who
had been a classmate of Tarja's when they were cadets. He had dark hair
and the competent manner R'shiel associated with the Defenders. His
proficiency was a credit to Jenga rather than a positive reflection on
the Sisters of the Blade who commanded the Defenders.
"Perhaps I should re-phrase that. We have an urgent problem. The
rest can wait an hour or two."
"Where's Damin?"
"Still enjoying his wedding night, I suppose," Dorak
suggested with
a grin.
"We can't wait for him," Denjon shrugged. "We need to decide
what
we're going to do with the Karien prisoners. We've sat here far too
long and the scouts have just brought news of another troop of Kariens
coming in from the north, no doubt looking for their Prince."
"We have to move out," Linst added. "We can't take the
Karien
prisoners with us and we can hardly leave them here to announce what
we're up to when the search party finds them."
The problem of what to do with the Karien knights who had
accompanied Prince Cratyn on his quest to find Adrina was one R'shiel
had been hoping she would not have to face. When Denjon calmly
announced he could "take care of a couple of hundred Kariens",
she had
callously hoped they would simply die in battle, saving her the problem
of what to do with them afterwards. The Defenders, however, were far
too efficient to indulge in such needless bloodshed. They had rounded
up the Kariens and taken them prisoner with only a handful of Karien
casualties and none at all from their own ranks.
The prisoners had done nothing but drain their resources since that
day. The young knight in command, Drendyn, the Earl of Tyler's Pass,
was a noisy, inexperienced fellow who seemed stunned and heartbroken
when he learnt that Adrina was also in the camp and obviously allied
with his captors. For a fleeting moment, R'shiel wished she could do
what Joyhinia had tried to do to the rebels. Simply put them to the
sword and be done with them.
She had no more chance of getting the Defenders to follow that order
than Joyhinia had in Testra.
"What do you suggest, Denjon?"
"I was hoping you'd have a suggestion," he told her with a
shrug. "You seem to have an answer for everything else these
days."
R'shiel frowned. "You think I can just wave my arm and solve all
your problems for you?"
"That's what the Harshini do, isn't it?"
"That is your prejudice speaking, Captain," Brak warned. "It
does
not help your cause to let it get in the way."
Denjon turned on the Harshini but R'shiel intervened before things
could escalate into a full-blown argument.
"Why can't we just release them?"
"Because they'll be on our trail within hours."
"No, they won't. Their Crown Prince and their Duke are dead. They'll
have to go home to return the bodies to Karien, at least. They may send
out a party to hunt us down later, but it won't be this lot."
Denjon looked thoughtful. "You may be right, R'shiel, but I'm not
sure I want to risk finding out the hard way that you're wrong."
"What if I can guarantee that they'll head home?"
"What are you thinking of doing?" Brak asked suspiciously.
"Coercing
them?"
"No, of course not!"
"Then how do you plan to make nearly four hundred Karien knights
turn on their tails and slink home?" Dorak asked. "And they
have the
three priests with them who were accompanying Lord Setenton. They'll
demand retribution, out of spite if nothing else."
"Don't you see? As soon as the search party realises that Cratyn is
dead, they will turn around and head straight back to Karien for
guidance from the Overlord, dragging Drendyn, his knights and their
priests behind them."
"It's a nice thought, R'shiel," Brak agreed. "But the
captain is
right. You won't dissuade the priests so easily. You'd be better off
just killing them outright."
"How long do we have, Denjon, before the Kariens get here?"
"A day at the most, if we want to be gone before they arrive. Two
days if we plan to make a fight of it. I would advise against that. The
end result will just be more damned Karien prisoners we have to worry
about when the next search party comes looking for them."
She nodded slowly. "Brak, can Tarja be moved?"
The Harshini frowned. "I wouldn't advise it, but it won't threaten
his life, if that's what concerns you."
"I don't think we have much choice in the matter," she
announced,
figuring that if she sounded decisive, nobody would guess how uncertain
she was. "You should leave for Fardohnya, anyway. Can you get there on
your own?"
Brak was watching her closely. If anyone suspected her uncertainty,
it would be him. "Don't worry about me, R'shiel. The demons will see me
safely to Talabar."
"Good. Denjon, you might as well give the order to break camp. Now
that Damin and Adrina are married, we need to get to Hythria."
"And the Kariens?" Denjon asked.
"I'll deal with them." She glanced at Denjon and frowned.
"Do you
have any questions?"
"I have one," Linst replied. "Who put you in charge of the
Defenders?"
R'shiel turned on him impatiently. "What Defenders, Linst? You
ceased being Defenders the moment you stood back and did nothing when I
killed Cratyn. You have defied your orders and taken two hundred
Kariens prisoner. If you want to go back to being a lackey for
Medalon's new masters, there's another couple of hundred heading this
way. Perhaps you'd like to surrender?"
Linst glared at her. "Just remember, R'shiel, we are following the
Lord Defender's orders. He was the one who wanted us to fight the
Kariens. I'll take orders from him, but I'll be damned if I'm going to
sit back and let you order us around for some heathen purpose."
"My heathen purpose is to throw the Kariens out of Medalon,
Captain."
"There's no point arguing among ourselves," Denjon
interceded. "We've no choice, in any case. We have to move on. We can
sort out the
details once Tarja wakes up."
"If he wakes up," Linst added pointedly.
"He will wake up," R'shiel insisted. "And when he
does,
perhaps you'll decide you have a backbone, after all, Linst."
She did not wait to hear his answer. She stormed from the tent, a
part of her simmering with anger; another part of her grateful for the
excuse to leave. On the way out she collided with young Mikel, the boy
who had followed Adrina from Karien. He squealed in fright at her
sudden appearance, landing on his backside in a puddle of icy mud,
dropping the tray he carried. He seemed to do that a lot, she recalled,
but was too preoccupied to do more than mutter an apology as she strode
past the child.
Brak caught up with her near the infirmary.
"Don't you start on me," she warned, before he could say a
word.
"I wasn't going to. I'm on your side, remember?"
R'shiel slowed her pace a little and looked at him. "I'm sorry. They
just make me so angry sometimes."
"I noticed."
"I shouldn't let them get to me like that, should I?"
"Of course not, but you don't need me to tell you that. What I'd
really like to know is what you're planning to do about those
priests."
She shrugged. "I destroyed their staffs. How much trouble can they
be?"
"A lot. They may not be able to threaten you any longer,
but they still hold a great deal of sway over their people."
R'shiel
did not answer him. His faded blue eyes darkened for a moment and he
shook his head. "You're not going to kill them, are you?"
"No. I'll think of something else." She resumed her angry
pace and
continued on towards the infirmary. An icy wind blew across the plain,
stirring dust eddies on the scuffed ground and making her ears ache.
She missed her long hair.
"Well, you'd better come up with something quickly," Brak
called
after her. "It'll take a miracle to turn that lot and time is of the
essence."
Suddenly she stopped and turned. "That's it! Brak, you're a
genius!"
He stared at her in confusion. The solution suddenly clear, she ran
back, kissed his cheek and hugged him briefly. "You're right! It's
going to take a miracle!"
"What are you talking about?"
"I haven't time to explain," she said, relief making her
giddy.
"What are you thinking of doing, R'shiel?" Brak demanded,
grabbing
her arm to prevent her escaping.
"I'm going to work a miracle."
"They won't fall for anything so transparent. Any miracle you
conjure up will be dismissed as Harshini magic. You won't fool anyone,
not even a bunch of knights as inexperienced as Drendyn and his
friends."
"Then I'll find someone they will believe in," she
said,
pulling her arm free of him.
"Who? Adrina?"
"Of course not! I'll use . . . someone else
. . . someone they'll trust . . ."
"Who?" Brak repeated suspiciously.
R'shiel glanced around, more to avoid meeting Brak's suspicious gaze
than in any real hope of finding an answer to her dilemma. Her eyes
alighted on the Karien boy, muttering miserably to himself as he picked
up the shards of broken dishes that had fallen from his tray when
R'shiel bumped into him.
"I'll use him," she declared, pointing at Mikel.
CHAPTER 4
Adrina's first thought on waking the morning after
she married Damin Wolfblade was: Gods, what have I done?
She had thought the same thing on waking in Yarnarrow the morning
after she married the late, unlamented, Crown Prince of Karien, too. There
is a disturbing pattern emerging here, she decided.
"Good morning."
Adrina turned towards the voice. Damin was already up and dressed
and pulling on his high leather boots. She was extremely suspicious of
anybody who could be so alert, so early in the morning.
"What's so good about it?"
Damin grinned. It was one of his more annoying habits. He seemed to
find most of what she said amusing. In Fardohnya, her moods affected
the whole palace. Lords and Ladies tiptoed around her. Even in Karien,
they had trod warily to avoid incurring her wrath.
"Are you always so unpleasant first thing in the morning?"
he
inquired.
She sat up on the pallet, drawing the blankets up to hide her
nakedness. "Why, in the name of the gods, did I marry you?"
Damin stamped his feet into his boots and reached for his
sword-belt. "Because the demon child ordered you to. And you are a
grasping, conniving little bitch," he added pleasantly.
"And your motives are so much more honourable," she
retorted.
"Naturally," he agreed. "I just want to stay alive long
enough to be
High Prince of Hythria, one day."
"Pardon me, Your Highness."
He laughed, which annoyed her even more, and walked to the tent
flap. He stopped and turned before he left. "I sent your little Karien
friend to fetch you some breakfast. He should be back soon."
"Where are you going?"
"I'm supposed to be meeting with R'shiel and the Defenders and I'm
already late."
"Well don't try blaming your tardiness on me."
"I wouldn't dream of it, my dear."
"And stop calling me that! I am not your dear."
His only answer was more laughter as he ducked through the entrance.
Adrina flopped back onto the pallet angrily. When she left Cratyn, she
swore she would never allow herself to be forced into marriage again;
swore she would never allow a man that much control over her. She had
made that promise to herself last autumn.
The winter wasn't even over and she had broken it already.
* * *
When there was still no sign of Mikel or Tamylan
an hour later, Adrina gave up waiting and dressed herself, determined
to give both her slave and her page a piece of her mind. Did they think
that now she was married, that absolved them of their duties?
There was going to have to be a few things cleared up before too
much longer, she decided. Her status, for one thing. She was a Princess
in her own right, more royal than Damin in fact, who was merely the
nephew of a Prince. Her father was a King. Of course, being a
woman was something of a hindrance to her claim to the throne, although
there were many who would be anxious to lay claim to any son that she
might bear.
Except R'shiel. The demon child was impatient and had been raised in
a society where women ruled. She had no time for Adrina to bear a son
and raise him to manhood. She wanted to unite Hythria and Fardohnya and
she wanted to do it now. She did not care about the patriarchal
traditions of Fardohnya, any more than she cared whether or not Adrina
wanted to marry Damin. Their union would force peace on the two
southern nations and that was the only thing the demon child cared
about. It did not seem to concern her that more than likely, when they
reached Greenharbour, the other Warlords would hire assassins to kill
either Adrina, or Damin, or both of them.
Hablet's rage on learning of her marriage did not bear thinking
about.
On the other hand, if the demon child's ambitious plan succeeded,
Adrina would know more power than she had ever imagined. As she thought
about that possibility, Adrina began to wonder if she was going about
this the wrong way. Damin seemed, if not exactly fond of her, then at
least anxious to share her bed. And even Adrina was willing to admit
that after a lifetime of paid court'esa and the pathetic
attempts of her last husband to consummate their marriage, Damin was a
pleasant change. Too pleasant, in fact. Once they reached
Hythria, she would insist on her own quarters and make sure they could
be locked, she decided firmly. If she couldn't keep him out of her bed
by willpower alone, then perhaps a physical barrier would help.
That raised another uncomfortable thought. She had fled Karien with
little more than the clothes on her back. The herbs she kept hidden in
her trunk were still back in Karien and she had fallen into bed with
Damin Wolfblade in a moment of blind and foolish weakness. She had done
nothing since then to prevent conception and in the confusion of their
escape, had lost track of the days since her last moon-time.
She would have to speak to Tamylan. Regardless of what the demon
child wanted, Adrina had no intention of bringing a child into this
world who could be used as a political pawn.
When Adrina finally emerged from her tent it was
to discover the whole camp in turmoil. Everywhere she looked the
Defenders were pulling down tents and hurrying to and fro, shouting
orders and packing up their gear, obviously determined to demolish
their campsite as quickly as possible. The Defenders ignored her in the
confusion as she wandered through the camp, sidestepping men and piled
up equipment. When she finally reached the officers' mess tent, one of
the few not in danger of imminent destruction, she poked her head
inside. The cooks were busy preparing lunch and paid her no attention
until she addressed them directly. Even then, she had to ask twice.
"Where is Lord Wolfblade?"
The closest cook looked up and shrugged. The man beside him jerked
his head in a generally northward direction. "He went off with the
heathens. One of them is leaving, I think."
The heathens, presumably, were Brak and R'shiel. She did not bother
to thank the man, but followed his directions until she reached the
edge of the camp. She spied Damin with Brak, then R'shiel and young
Mikel, of all people, some fifty paces away. She had opened her mouth
to call out to them when a remarkable thing happened.
One minute they were standing there talking, the next they were
surrounded by little grey demons who seemed to pop out of thin air.
There were too many to count and they clustered around Brak, vying for
his attention like small children visiting with a favoured uncle. Mikel
backed away from them warily, but the adults did not seem in the least
concerned. Brak squatted down and spoke to one of the demons, who
listened intently with big, liquid black eyes. The little creature
nodded, then waddled a small distance away. Without any signal that
Adrina could see, the other demons suddenly turned and ran to join the
one Brak had spoken to.
Adrina blinked as the demons clustered around their leader and began
to dissolve. That was the only word Adrina could think of to describe
what was happening. They seemed to become fluid, as one by one they
flowed together until the towering form of a dragon took shape, with
metallic green scales and delicate, silver-tipped wings that glittered
under the sullen sky.
When the dragon was complete, Brak reached up and scratched the bony
ridge over its plate-sized eyes. With a final word to R'shiel he
climbed onto the back of the magnificent beast. With a couple of
powerful beats of its massive wings, the dragon was airborne, banking
slowly to the left as it headed south.
Damin turned then and saw her.
"Brak asked me to say goodbye," he told her when he reached
the
place where she was standing, open-mouthed, as she watched the dragon
dwindle into the distance.
"That was . . . astonishing . . ." she
managed
to say.
"Well, let's hope your father is just as impressed," R'shiel
added
as she and Mikel came up beside them.
"A dragon landing in the courtyard of the Summer Palace should get
his attention," Adrina agreed with a faint smile. Then she
turned to
Mikel. Even the sight of the stunning demon-melded dragon had not made
her forget the boy had been lax in his duties. "Where have you been,
child? Lord Wolfblade sent you to get my breakfast."
"I -" Mikel began, but R'shiel came to his defence.
"I asked him to help me with something," she explained. "You
might
have to find yourself another page for a while, Adrina."
R'shiel took Mikel's hand and walked back towards the camp, leaving
Adrina wide-eyed and more than a little put out.
"Did you have a hand in this?" she demanded of Damin.
He shrugged and looked almost as puzzled as she was. "It's the first
I've heard of it. But it's not a bad idea. I'm going to have enough
trouble explaining away a Fardohnyan bride when we get to Hythria,
without having a Karien page to worry about."
"I can't just abandon the child!" she protested.
"Isn't that what you were planning to do with him when you first
crossed the border?"
She glared at him, annoyed that he was right, even more annoyed that
he had guessed her intentions. "It's not the same thing."
"Of course not," he agreed drily.
"Don't you dare take that tone with me!"
"Then don't treat me like a fool," he retorted. "Are you
still
hungry? You've missed breakfast, but I'm sure we could prevail upon the
cooks for an early lunch."
"I will not be patronised like a small child!"
"Stop looking for a fight, Adrina. Did you want to eat or
not?"
Adrina was about to explode with fury when her stomach rumbled
complainingly. Damin heard it clearly and laughed at her. "I'll take
that as a yes. Come on, you'll fight better on a full stomach."
"This is intolerable! I am not going to spend the rest of my life
having you laugh at me."
Damin's amusement faded and he looked at her closely. "Then drop
this spoiled Princess act. There doesn't seem much point any
more."
"It's not an act!"
"The hell it isn't."
"You don't know the first thing about me."
"Don't I?"
"No!"
"Shall I tell you what I do know about you, Adrina?" he
asked,
suddenly more serious than she had ever seen him. "You were smart
enough to keep the Karien Crown Prince out of your bed so you couldn't
conceive an heir. You ordered your troops to surrender rather than see
them slaughtered. You rode as hard as I ever pushed my own men without
a complaint, because you knew your life depended on it.
"You are not who you pretend to be, Adrina, and it defies logic that
you keep on pretending you are a fool. You're an intelligent woman, yet
you insist on hiding it behind tantrums and childish, idiotic demands.
I don't know why you do it. Perhaps it's because you grew up in a court
where a smart woman was a dangerous one. The truth is, I don't really
care. But if you want to survive as High Princess of Hythria, then
you'd better learn to use that brain of yours for something other than
causing mischief."
His words stunned her into silence. She had no answer, could think
of nothing to say. Never for a moment had she suspected that Damin's
suspicion and mistrust was based on how clever he thought she was.
He waited for a moment, expecting her to retort with some sarcastic
rejoinder. If her silence amused him, he did not let it show.
"Come on," he said finally. "I missed breakfast too."
CHAPTER 5
Mikel had to run to keep up with R'shiel's
long-legged stride. Although she had him by the hand, she paid him no
further attention as they wound through the chaotic camp. With his free
hand he wiped his nose, which was tingling in the brisk wind. He was
still too much in awe of the demon-melded dragon he had just witnessed
to be concerned where R'shiel might be taking him.
The order to break camp had only been issued a few hours ago, but
already most of the tents were packed, only the larger infirmary and
mess tents and those belonging to the senior officers remained
standing. The Defenders were keen to be gone from this place and
anxious to avoid the approaching Kariens. Mikel had seen enough to
understand that it was not fear of the Kariens that prompted the
Medalonians' haste, but that they wanted to avoid the inconvenience of
taking even more prisoners.
Mikel's entire system of beliefs had been stretched beyond credulity
in the past few weeks. First Princess Adrina had betrayed the Prince.
Then Prince Cratyn had proved to be as callous and vicious as any other
man in his desire to murder his wife for her treachery. His own brother
Jaymes had joined the Hythrun and his best friend Dace had turned out
to be the God of Thieves. Then, with hardly any objections, Adrina had
married Lord Wolfblade.
And now the fabled demon child had commandeered his services. This
tall, impatient young woman whom demons followed around like puppies
and whom everyone treated with a great deal of trepidation.
"My Lady?"
"Yes?"
"What did you want me to do?"
R'shiel stopped suddenly and smiled down at him. "I want you to help
me with something, Mikel. Something magic."
"Is it going to get me into trouble?"
The demon child laughed softly. "I have to convince the Kariens they
want to go home, and that means turning even the priests from the
Overlord's path for a time. Are you afraid?"
Mikel frowned. "I don't think so. I've turned from my God. I let you
kill my Prince. I've honoured the God of Thieves. I don't think I'm
much of anything, any more."
R'shiel placed a comforting hand on his shoulder. "Mikel, I think
you'll find that you are far more worthy than you imagine."
Mikel wanted to believe her. She was the demon child, after all.
Perhaps she knew things he did not. But it seemed unlikely.
"If you say so, my Lady."
R'shiel smiled again but did not answer for a time.
When she spoke again, her question took him completely by surprise.
"Mikel, who did the Kariens follow before Xaphista came along?"
"The priests said they worshipped false gods," he told her,
"just as
Hythria and Fardohnya still do."
"Yes, but there must have been one that was predominant. Zegarnald
has a pretty firm grip on Hythria and Jelanna seems to be the most
popular goddess in Fardohnya."
"The only one I ever heard of was Leylanan," Mikel replied
after a
moment's thought.
"What is he the god of?"
"She, not he. Leylanan was the Goddess of the River."
"I thought that was Maera?" R'shiel said.
"Leylanan was the Goddess of the Ironbrook River. Maybe Maera is the
Goddess of the Glass River."
R'shiel was silent for a moment then shook her head. "No, she won't
do. I need someone else."
Mikel wasn't sure he understood, or even if R'shiel was addressing
him. She sounded as if she was simply thinking aloud.
"Do you really think you can turn the priests from the Overlord, my
Lady?"
"I have to."
Mikel had the impression that once set on an idea, R'shiel was
determined to make it happen. He had no idea what she was planning, and
certainly no idea what his role would be.
"Lord Laetho used to say that you've more chance of making a Karien
dance a heathen jig naked in the moonlight than you have of turning him
from his God," he offered helpfully.
"Maybe I should call on the God of Music, then," R'shiel
grumbled,
obviously not pleased that things were not going according to plan.
"Do the Harshini have a God of Music?" he asked
curiously.
"Gimlorie is the God of Music, Mikel, and he is as insubstantial and
ephemeral as music itself. When I was in Sanctuary, the Harshini would
call on him sometimes. His song is the most beautiful thing I have ever
heard. It touches men's souls . . ."
Mikel stared at R'shiel as a slow, devious smile crept over her
face. "Music of any kind is frowned upon in Karien, my Lady. It's a
sin," Mikel added.
R'shiel looked down at him and smiled. "Not any more, it
isn't."
She grabbed his hand suddenly and led him away from the direction of
the infirmary tent, leaving him even more confused.
"My Lady?" he ventured, as he hurried along beside her
through the
organised chaos that was all that was left of the Defenders' camp. It
seemed as if most of it had vanished into the supply wagons while they
were talking.
"You don't have to keep calling me that, Mikel. My name is
R'shiel."
"It wouldn't be proper, my Lady. Where are we going?"
"We're going to summon the God of Music, Mikel."
"Why?"
R'shiel looked down at him and smiled reassuringly. "He's going to
teach you how to sing."
Mikel didn't know whether to be frightened by R'shiel or not. She
had never done him any harm; in fact she had virtually ignored him up
until this morning, when she suddenly decided she needed him for some
yet-to-be-revealed task. She was all but dragging him towards the tents
where the Hythrun Raiders were accommodated.
"Almodavar!"
The savage-looking Hythrun turned at the sound of her voice.
"Divine One?"
"Please don't call me that. Where is Mikel's brother?"
"Young Jaymes? Down with the horses helping Nercher if he knows
what's good for him," the captain replied. "Has he done
something I
should know about?"
"No. But I'd like to see him. Can you send him to me?"
The captain nodded and turned to give the order to fetch Jaymes.
Mikel glanced at R'shiel curiously.
"What do you want with Jaymes, my Lady?"
"You're going to learn a song, Mikel. Jaymes is going to be there to
make sure you don't get lost in it."
"I see," Mikel said, nodding sagely, although in truth he
understood
nothing at all.
CHAPTER 6
By early afternoon, the Defenders were ready to
move out. That morning, the camp had been the size of a small town. Now
there was nothing left but a large area of trampled grass to mark their
passing. He knew they had been setting up and pulling down the camp
each day while they travelled north from the Citadel. The late Lord
Setenton enjoyed his creature comforts and would have it no other way,
but in the two weeks they had spent camped on the plain they had
settled in so comfortably, Damin found it hard to believe they could
dismantle it all with such speed.
His own Raiders took less time to organise, but they were fewer and
had been travelling much more lightly than the Defenders. Almodavar had
had them ready to leave hours ago. What kept them here now were the
Kariens.
His men formed a mounted ring around the captured knights, bows
strung, arrows at the ready, waiting for one of them to break. Damin
didn't know why they were holding the Kariens here while the Defenders
went on ahead, and a part of him was afraid to ask. He knew as well as
anyone the dilemma these prisoners posed. That the Defenders were
leaving them behind did not augur well for their future.
Karien they might be, but Damin held no personal grudge against
them. They all seemed woefully young and inexperienced to him. The
oldest of them could not have been more than twenty. He prayed
fervently that R'shiel did not expect him to slaughter these children
in cold blood.
"What are we waiting for?"
Adrina rode up beside him with her slave close behind. She was
wrapped in a warm cloak against the cold and looked anxious to get
moving. She had been remarkably quiet since their conversation on the
edge of the camp this morning. That worried Damin a little. She was
undoubtedly plotting something and it probably involved him and a lot
of blood. He should have kept his big mouth shut.
"We're waiting for R'shiel, I think. And for the Defenders to move
out."
"Where is the demon child, anyway?"
Damin shrugged. "Nobody's seen her for hours."
Adrina looked at the nervous Kariens. They had been pushed into a
tight cluster, ringed by the Raiders and to a man they wore expressions
of uncertainty. Damin could imagine what was going through their minds.
"What's going to happen to them?"
"I don't know."
"You're not going to . . ."
"Kill them? I wish I knew." He turned in the saddle at the
sound of
hoofs and found Denjon and Linst riding towards them at a canter. The
red-coated Defenders reined in when they reached them.
"We're ready to move out," Denjon informed them.
"How's Tarja?"
"Much the same. He's in one of the wagons with a medic. We'll be
setting a hard pace, I'm afraid, but it can't be avoided."
"How long will it take you to reach the border?"
"About six weeks," the captain replied. "We could get there
sooner
if we dumped the supply wagons, but I'm loath to do that, for obvious
reasons. We'll only resort to that if we're being pursued." The
captain
glanced meaningfully at the Karien prisoners. "I hope this
works."
"You hope what works?" Adrina asked.
"R'shiel's grandiose plan for turning the Kariens back," he
said.
"And what is that, exactly?"
"We don't know and I'm not sure we want to," Linst remarked.
"She
asked that we be gone before she does it, so we can only assume it's
some heathen ritual that she'd rather we didn't witness."
"Heathen ritual or not, I can't say I'll mind missing it,"
Denjon
said. Then he reached forward and offered Damin his hand. "I wish you
luck, Lord Wolfblade."
"You'll need it more than I," Damin said, accepting the
handshake. "With all your troops and the Kariens concentrated in the
north,
weather permitting I'll have a clear run down to Hythria. You're the
ones taking the long road."
"I was thinking more of what happens when you get to
Hythria," Denjon said with a grin.
"I'll worry about that when I get there."
"Then I'll look forward to meeting you again on your side of the
border. For all our sakes I hope it goes well for you, my Lord. And for
you too, Your Highness."
"Thank you, Captain."
Damin glanced at Adrina curiously. Her thanks sounded genuine. There
was no hint of her usual sarcastic tone. Something was seriously wrong
with her.
Denjon and Linst wheeled their mounts around and cantered back
towards the long line of red-coated Defenders. They watched them leave
in silence, watched Denjon ride to the head of the column, and heard
the faint sound of the trumpet signalling their advance as it was
whipped away on the icy wind.
"So what happens now?" Adrina asked after a while.
Damin shrugged. "We wait for the demon child."
When R'shiel arrived more than an hour later, she
was on foot and the two Karien boys were with her. Damin and Adrina
both dismounted when they caught sight of her. She was chatting to
Mikel and Jaymes as they walked across the trampled grass towards them,
the three of them apparently in a fine mood and the best of friends.
When she reached them, she was smiling broadly.
"The Defenders got away all right then?" she asked.
"About an hour ago," Damin informed her. "Where have you
been?"
"Communing with the gods," she told him with a grin. "Let's
do
something about these Kariens, shall we?"
Damin grabbed her arm as she turned towards the prisoners. "What are
you going to do, R'shiel?"
"You'll see."
Without waiting for his reaction she pulled her arm free and taking
Mikel's hand, walked towards the Kariens. Jaymes followed after them.
The lad had filled out since he had been training with the Hythrun. At
fifteen he was the size of a full-grown man. Any animosity that had
existed between the brothers seemed to have been put to rest. That odd
turn of events bothered Damin almost as much as what R'shiel might be
planning.
Almodavar turned and dismounted at R'shiel's approach. Damin and
Adrina threw their reins to Tamylan and hurried after her on foot. The
Kariens, sensing something was about to happen, began to grow restless.
Those who had tired of standing and were sitting on the cold ground
climbed to their feet. The priests pushed to the front of the group,
tracing the star of the Overlord on their foreheads as they regarded
the demon child with intense suspicion.
"Where is Lord Drendyn?" R'shiel called to the Kariens as
she
stopped before them. The knight in question pushed his way through the
crowd and stepped in front of her belligerently. He was sandy haired
and sweating, despite the cold, and looked hardly older than Jaymes.
"I demand you release us immediately and hand over the Crown
Princess Adrina so that she may be returned to Karien."
Damin suspected the young knight's bravado was inspired by fear. His
Raiders, with their loaded bows and fearsome reputation, still ringed
the Kariens. He had only to raise his arm and there would be a massacre.
"As you wish," R'shiel replied. "Lord Wolfblade, be so kind
as to
ask your men to withdraw. Tell them to muster over that way, upwind
from us."
At a nod from Damin, Almodavar gave the order. The Raiders lowered
their weapons, replaced arrows in their quivers and wheeled their
mounts around. Drendyn looked stunned by her sudden capitulation.
"Is this some sort of trick?"
"Not at all, my Lord, you are free to go. There is a party of Karien
knights headed this way. They should be here in a day or two. The
Defenders have confiscated your horses, unfortunately, but they have
left you sufficient food and water to last until you're
rescued."
"And our Princess?"
"Ah, now that's a different matter. She's not actually your Princess
any longer. Adrina is now a Princess of Hythria."
Drendyn's eyes widened in horror. "Your Highness? Is this
true?"
Damin glanced at Adrina, who looked very uncomfortable. "I'm sorry,
Drendyn . . ." Adrina said with a helpless shrug. To
Damin's
surprise, she appeared genuinely upset that she had hurt the young man.
"And you can give your King a message from me, too," he
added,
turning to the distraught young earl. "Any attempt to return the
Princess to Karien will be taken as an act of war."
"But they murdered Prince Cratyn!" Drendyn cried to Adrina
then
turned on Damin furiously, taking a step towards him, ready to fight
for his Princess' honour. "What have you done to her?"
"That's far enough, my Lord," Almodavar cut in, his sword
pressing
into the young earl's tabard. Drendyn halted abruptly, looked down at
the blade aimed squarely at his heart and wisely took a step backward.
"Hythria will pay for the life of my Prince. And my
Princess!" he
shouted, albeit from a safer distance.
"Perhaps," Damin agreed. "But not today, my young
friend."
"Enough of this," R'shiel declared impatiently. "Damin, I
suggest
you move back. I have something I wish to do before we leave."
"Something you don't want us to see?"
"Not at all. You can watch if you like, but I'd rather you didn't
hear it."
"The Overlord will protect us from your evil, demon child,"
the
priest Garanus warned.
Captivity had not been kind to the priest. His shaven head was
covered in black stubble and his cassock was rumpled and dusty. The
priests who stood behind him had fared no better. Damin considered his
threat rather hollow. Without their staves the priests were simply
ordinary men.
"The Overlord has abandoned you, Garanus. Why else would he let you
fall prisoner?"
"We will not listen to your blasphemy!"
"Suit yourself," R'shiel said with a shrug. "Damin, you
should leave
now."
"What about Mikel and Jaymes?" Adrina asked, almost as wary
as Damin
about what the demon child was planning.
"They'll be fine with me."
Damin still had no idea what she was up to. With some reluctance, he
did as she asked. Taking Adrina's hand he headed back to where Tamylan
was waiting with the horses. Almodavar mounted and followed them at a
walk. Damin swung into the saddle and turned to watch as R'shiel stood
facing the Kariens.
"What is she going to do?" Adrina asked as she settled into
her
saddle and gathered up her reins.
"You know as much as I do."
"Drendyn was the only person in Karien who treated me like a human
being," she added, staring at the gathering with concern.
That explained her apology to the young knight.
"If she was planning to kill them, she would have done it by
now."
It was a hollow reassurance at best. For all he knew that was exactly
what R'shiel was planning.
"Or she would wait until there were no witnesses," Almodavar
pointed
out.
"She said something about not listening," Adrina said. "What
could
she possibly say to them -"
As if in answer to her question a voice reached them. It was high,
pure and perfect and the song it sang touched the very core of Damin's
soul. It took him a moment to realise that it was Mikel singing. He
could not hear the words; the wind tore them away before he could make
them out, but he sat there, rigid, as the lilting notes washed over him
in haunting snatches. The song was both enticing and entrancing. It
slithered into his brain like sweet wine being poured into an empty
cup. It warmed and chilled him at the same time. Visions of a land he
did not know filled his mind and he found himself yearning for it with
a passion that took him by surprise. The song made him want to laugh
and cry simultaneously. He wanted to hear more. It was fear and comfort
on the same breath. Love and hatred intermingled. He never wanted it to
end.
"Damin! We have to move! Now!"
It was Adrina who jerked him back to reality. He glanced at the
prisoners and realised that whatever remarkable effect the song had on
him, the effect it was having on the Kariens was a hundred times more
powerful. As he turned his mount and urged him into a gallop, wisps of
the song followed him with tantalising fingers.
Then the tenor of the music changed and no longer did he wish to
drown in the beauty of the song. Now it was much more strident, its
beauty marred by dark, shadowy images that chased him until they were
far enough away that the music no longer reached them.
Once they were safely out of range, they turned and looked back at
the Kariens. R'shiel stood before the captive knights, but they could
not make out her expression from this distance. Mikel stood beside her,
singing to the Kariens in that glorious, unnatural voice that seduced
and tormented at once.
Jaymes seemed unaffected, his hand resting on his brother's
shoulder, as if he was holding him down against the wind, but the rest
of the Kariens were transfixed. Some men were weeping, some were frozen
to the spot. The priest Garanus was on his knees, his hands over his
ears. The young knight Drendyn was staring at the boy as if he was
experiencing some sort of religious ecstasy. All around him, his men
seemed to be in the throes of either torment or rapture.
"What was that? What is she doing?" Damin asked.
"The Song of Gimlorie," Adrina told him, her eyes fixed on
the
Kariens, her voice filled with awe.
"That's simply a legend," Almodavar scoffed.
"No. It's real enough. My father tried to get some of the
priestesses to perform it in Talabar once. He thought it would
guarantee him a legitimate son. None of the temples would even consider
the idea, and he offered them a fortune in gold to do it. They all
claimed it was too dangerous."
"So how did Mikel learn it?"
"R'shiel obviously had a hand in that." Adrina turned to him
then,
her expression thoughtful. "You know, if the legends are correct, he
who sings the Song of Gimlorie is a channel for the gods."
"I can well believe it," Damin agreed, thinking of the
effect that
even catching part of the song had on him.
They waited in silence after that, until R'shiel ordered Mikel to
stop singing. Mikel sagged, as if the song had drained him completely.
His brother gently gathered the unconscious child up in his arms and
together with R'shiel walked back across the plain towards them.
CHAPTER 7
Despite Adrina's confident assurance that landing
in the main courtyard of the Summer Palace was bound to get Hablet's
attention, Brak chose to make a less dramatic entrance into Talabar. He
landed his demon-melded dragon some distance north of the capital on a
warm, muggy afternoon three days after he left Medalon, and set out for
the city on foot.
He was not well prepared for the journey, though he wasn't worried
about his lack of resources. Once he shed his winter layers of
clothing, he turned onto the road and began heading south towards the
sprawling pink metropolis, secure in the knowledge that several hundred
years of living on his wits left him well equipped to handle anything a
Fardohnyan could throw at him.
Brak had eschewed his Harshini heritage for many years, but he was
not averse to using a little magic when it was for a good cause. As his
only cause these days seemed to be aiding the demon child, he
felt justified in taking a few liberties with his power that would have
horrified his full-blooded cousins.
Since he had no local currency and was not looking forward to
walking all the way to Talabar, he prevailed upon the Lady Elanymire to
meld herself into a large uncut ruby. He then traded the ruby to a
merchant from a passing caravan, whose eyes lit up with greed when Brak
offered him the gem for a horse, a saddle, some basic supplies, and a
small bag of coin.
Any guilt Brak may have felt over the transaction vanished when he
saw the state of the merchant's slaves. They were underfed and
miserable, their bare feet blistered from trudging the gravelled road
in the heat. Even the richly dressed court'esa who sat on the
seat of the gaily-covered lead wagon wore a look of abject misery.
Brak rode away on his newly purchased horse content that the
merchant deserved everything that was coming to him. The following
morning, Lady Elanymire popped into existence on the pommel of his
saddle, laughing delightedly at the expression on the avaricious
merchant's face when he discovered his prized ruby had vanished.
Fardohnya had a timeless quality about it. The people were still
dusky, smiling, dark-haired souls who seemed, if not content, then
accepting of their lot in life. It always struck him as odd that the
Fardohnyans were so cheerful. Perhaps it was because their King, while
grasping, devious and deceitful, at least understood that a happy
population was a quiet one. Hablet wisely confined his more outrageous
excesses to his court and Fardohnya's neighbours.
Slaves waved to him as he passed them in fields of rich black loam
as they planted carefully tended green shoots of altaer and filganar
before the onset of the spring rains. The grains were native to
Fardohnya and the staple diet of much of the population. In Brak's
experience, they would grow anywhere there was enough heat and water.
Famine was unheard of in Fardohnya; another reason the people didn't
seem to mind what their King was up to. It is easy to be forgiving with
a full belly.
Talabar came into sight the third day after Brak had traded his
demon-melded ruby. Built from the pale pink stone of the neighbouring
cliffs, it glittered in the afternoon sun, hugging the harbour like a
woman curled into the back of her sleeping lover. Flat-roofed houses
terraced the hills surrounding the bay, interspersed with palm-shaded
emerald green parks and the tall edifices of the many temples that
dotted the city. It was a beautiful city, not so stark and white as
Greenharbour, or so grey and depressing as Yarnarrow. Only the Citadel
in its heyday could rival its splendour.
It had been many years since Brak had been here. The last time he'd
travelled incognito, another faceless soul in a vast city that thought
his race extinct. The time before that was when Hablet's
great-grandfather was King. He had been known as Lord Brakandaran in
those days - feared and respected by kings and slaves alike. He
hadn't
much liked being known as Brakandaran the Half-Breed, but it was a
useful persona at times and, he hoped, in certain circles at least, it
had not been forgotten.
Brak rode through the gates of the city without
being questioned. The guards were more interested in those bringing
wagons, which the soldiers searched with varying degrees of enthusiasm,
depending on the wealth of the merchant and the size of the bribe they
would collect to turn a blind eye. Corruption was something of an
institution in Fardohnya. No self-respecting merchant expected to do
business without paying somebody something.
He rode through the crowded streets and let the feel of the city
wash over him. One could learn much from the atmosphere of a crowded
market place, a boisterous tavern or a bustling smithy. He picked his
way past the glassworks, where furnaces glowed red in the dark,
cavernous workshops; past the noisy meatworks where the butchers sang
their thanks to the Goddess of Plenty before slashing the throats of
their hapless victims with an expert flick of their wickedly sharp
knives.
Talabar felt much the same as it always had. He could detect nothing
out of the ordinary.
His horse shied from the smell of fresh blood that drained from the
slaughterhouses into Talabar's complex underground drains. From there
it ran into the sea to feed vast schools of fish, who gorged themselves
on the unexpected bounty, only to head lazily back out to sea where the
fishermen waited with their long hemp nets.
The streets widened as he entered the clothing district, although
the traffic did not thin noticeably. The clackety-clack of the looms in
the busy workhouses filled the air like a pulse. A few streets later he
was forced to dismount. He smiled as he led his gelding past a heated
argument between a merchant, whose wagonload of baled wool had
overturned and spilled across the street, and a very large, irate
seamstress who was denouncing the poor fellow and his drunken habits
loud enough to be heard back in Medalon.
Brak swung back into the saddle and soon entered a relatively quiet
residential area. The streets were paved and the houses, although built
close together, were those of prosperous merchants. They were not quite
wealthy enough to own estates close to the harbour, and preferred to
live near their places of business in any case. Their houses were in
good repair, and many of them had slaves sweeping the pavement in front
of the houses, or beating rugs from wide balconies that looked out over
the street, and were shaded by potted palms and climbing bougainvillea.
By mid-morning he reached the most salubrious part of Talabar,
closest to the harbour and the Summer Palace. A hundred generations of
Fardohnyan kings, anxious to curry favour with the gods, had dedicated
themselves to building ever more impressive temples in this city.
Jelanna was Hablet's personal favourite, so her temple had received the
bulk of the King's largesse. It had been faced with marble since Brak
saw it last and an impressive pair of fluted columns now supported an
elaborate portico carved with cavorting demons at the entrance. It had
done him little good, Brak knew. Despite almost thirty years of trying,
he had yet to produce a legitimate son, although he had sired enough
bastards to fill a small town.
Finally, Brak turned into a discreet, single-storey inn that
sheltered almost directly under the high pink wall surrounding the
Summer Palace. A slave hurried forward to take his mount in the shaded
courtyard and he tipped the lad generously. There were slaves that
owned more wealth than their masters in Fardohnya, and one could, if
one chose to, purchase one's freedom. Many did not. There was a degree
of job security in being a slave that was hard to beat in the uncertain
world of the free man.
The interior of the inn was dim and cool, the entrance separated by
a whitewashed trellis from the low hum of conversation emanating from
the taproom. The owner hurried forward, took in Brak's travel-stained
appearance, noticed the jingling purse tucked in his belt, did a quick
mental calculation, then bowed obsequiously.
"My Lord."
Brak was quite certain he looked nothing like a nobleman in his
current state, but the innkeeper was covering himself against the
possibility that this new arrival was a gentleman of means.
"I require rooms," he announced.
"Certainly, my Lord. I have a vacancy in the north wing. It is
closest to the palace walls. One can hear the joyous laughter of the
princesses at play, if one listens closely."
Brak thought that highly unlikely. "I also need to contact someone
from the Assassins' Guild."
"Did you want anyone in particular?"
"I need to speak with the Raven."
The little man's eyes narrowed. "The head of the Assassins' Guild
does not meet with just anybody, my Lord."
"He'll meet with me," Brak assured him confidently.
"You know him then?"
"That's none of your business." Actually, Brak had no idea
who now
held the post, and did not particularly care. The Assassins' Guild was
simply the best source of intelligence in Fardohnya.
"Of course not, my Lord!" he gushed, wringing his hands.
Only the
wealthiest of noblemen could afford to deal with the Assassins' Guild.
Brak had just gone up considerably in the innkeeper's estimation.
"Forgive me for being so forward. I will show you to your rooms at
once. If there is anything I can do . . ."
"You could be quiet, for a start," Brak remarked coldly,
already
annoyed by the man.
"Of course, my Lord! What was I thinking? Be quiet . . .
Oh . . ." The innkeeper clamped his lips together
when he
noticed the look on Brak's face.
"That's better. Now, if you could show me the room? I want a bath
too. And some lunch."
The man nodded, wisely saying nothing further. With a snap of his
fingers another slave hurried forward to show Brak to his rooms.
Much to Brak's surprise, the contact from the
Assassins' Guild was a woman. Fardohnya was notoriously patriarchal and
it was rare for a woman to hold any position of note. He was not even
aware that they had changed the rules to admit women to the Guild. She
was small and slender, the long, pale-green robe she wore concealing
what Brak was certain would be a body in superb physical condition. It
was hard to judge her age; she might have been twenty, or perhaps
forty. Brak suspected the latter. Her eyes were too knowing, too
cautious and too world-weary for her to be in the first bloom of youth.
She came to his rooms after dinner, knocking softly on the
whitewashed door. He opened it cautiously and looked her up and down.
On the middle finger of her left hand she wore the small gold raven
ring of the Guild. While he privately considered it the height of
arrogant stupidity to announce one's profession so openly, particularly
for an assassin, that he recognised the ring and admitted her without
question went a long way to establishing his credentials. He'd had a
discussion once, with a previous Raven, about the foolishness of
wearing something so obvious, but humans liked their symbols and
apparently the custom was as strong as ever. Foolish humans.
"What do you want with the Raven?" the woman asked, without
preamble, looking around the room.
"I wish to speak to him."
"The Raven doesn't speak to anyone."
"He'll speak to me."
She finished her inspection of the room and turned to look at him.
"So Gernard said."
"Gernard?"
"The innkeeper."
"Ah . . . can I offer you some wine?"
"No."
She walked across the room and threw open the doors that led to the
gardens, taking a deep breath of the fragrant air from the riot of
flowering greenery. Brak was sure she was more interested in making
certain they were not overheard, than she was in botany.
"So, tell me," she demanded, turning back to him as she
stepped away
from the open doorway, "what is so special about you that the Raven
would grant you an audience?"
"I am Brakandaran."
She studied him for a moment in the twilight then laughed.
"Brakandaran the Half-Breed? I doubt that."
"You require proof?"
"Oh, I'm certain you have proof," she chuckled. "Some
mirrors and
wires rigged to convince me of your magical powers. You have, however,
neglected one minor point."
"And what is that?"
"Brakandaran, if he was still alive, would be in his dotage now.
It's been what . . . fifty years since he was here last? You
can't be more than thirty-five. Forty at the most."
"I'm half-Harshini," he pointed out. "I don't age like a
human."
She smiled. "Very good! You even have an answer for that one. I
still don't believe you, but I do appreciate attention to
detail."
Brak found himself warming to the woman. She was sharp and not at
all unattractive. But he was going to have to convince her, and
probably the hard way.
"Very well, then," he shrugged. "You name the proof.
Something I
cannot possibly have anticipated. We can even go somewhere else, so
that you can be assured I'm not using - what did you call them -
mirrors and wires?"
"I really don't see why I should bother."
"Can you afford to be wrong?"
She thought on that for a moment, then shook her head. She turned
away from him, as if in thought, reaching into her robe. "Proof, you
say? Something unexpected?" She spun around, raising her arm.
"Try
this!"
The quarrel from the small crossbow took Brak by surprise. He had
guessed she was up to something, but had no time to react. Elanymire
saved him. She popped into existence in front of him and snatched the
missile from the air, chittering angrily at the woman.
The assassin dropped the weapon in surprise at the appearance of the
little demon. "How . . . ?"
"The demons live to protect the Harshini," he pointed out
with a
shrug. He bent down and picked the demon up, stroking her leathery
skin, trying to calm her. She took a very dim view of anyone trying to
hurt a member of her clan and was all for vaporising the woman where
she stood.
The assassin stared at him for a moment, as he stood there soothing
the angry demon and then dropped to one knee. "Divine One."
Brak rolled his eyes. "Oh, get up! I am not divine. But I do
want to see the Raven. Now that we've established who I am, do you
think we could arrange it?"
She stood up and met his eyes.
"See her," she corrected. "The Raven is a woman. Her
name is
Teriahna."
"Fine," Brak agreed impatiently. "Let's go see her,
then."
"You have seen her already, my Lord. I am Teriahna. I am the
Raven."
CHAPTER 8
The first thing Tarja remembered on waking was that
R'shiel was in danger. The thought hit him like a body blow and he
jerked upright, only to discover he was tied to the wagon bed on which
he lay. He could not understand how he came to be there. Nor did it
make any sense that he was obviously moving. The wagon jolted beneath
him, hitting a bump in the road and he cried out as his head slammed
into the wagon bed.
"I think he's awake."
Tarja was confronted by the odd spectre of a strange bearded face he
did not recognise, which stared at him from the wagon seat. He
struggled to sit up, but the ropes hampered his movement. The wagon
halted and the man swung his legs around and squatted down beside
Tarja, staring at him with concern.
"Captain? Sir? Do you know where you are?"
"Of course I don't know where I am," Tarja croaked. All he
could see
was a leaden sky, the sides of the wagon and the face of the Defender
bending over him. His voice was hoarse and he was thirsty enough to
drink a well dry. "Water. Get me water."
The trooper hurried to fetch a water skin. Tarja coughed as cold
water spilled down his parched throat.
"Am I a prisoner?" he asked.
"Not that they've told me, sir."
"Then why the ropes?"
"Oh! Them? That was to stop you hurting yourself, sir. Soon as Cap'n
Denjon gets here, we can untie you."
"Denjon? Denjon is here?"
"Yes, he's here." Tarja turned to the new voice and peered
at the
familiar face studying him over the side of the wagon. Denjon grinned
at him. "Welcome back."
"What's happened? Where are we? Where's -"
"Slow down, Tarja," Denjon cut in. "Untie him,
Corporal."
The trooper did as he was ordered and quickly released the ropes
that bound him. Tarja tried to sit up, appalled at the effort it took.
He glanced around and was astonished to discover himself in the midst
of a Defender column that snaked in front and behind the wagon as far
as he could see. He did not recognise the countryside around him. They
were no longer on the undulating grasslands of the north, but advancing
through the lightly wooded plateau of central Medalon. The Sanctuary
Mountains loomed too close to the west. Tarja shook his head in
confusion.
"How are you feeling?"
"Weak as a kitten," Tarja confessed. "And completely lost.
What's
happened?"
"I'll explain what I can, but one thing at a time. We're about to
make camp for the night. I'll fill you in over dinner."
"Where's R'shiel?"
Denjon shrugged. "On her way to Hythria, as are we, my friend. Which
reminds me. She gave me this before she left." He reached into
his red
jacket and withdrew a sealed letter. "She said I should give it to you
when you woke up. It might explain a few things."
He handed the letter to Tarja and remounted his horse, shouting an
order to make camp as he cantered off. Tarja broke the seal on the
letter anxiously, hoping the contents would throw some light on the
confusion that was threatening to overwhelm him. He vaguely remembered
a battle. He must have dreamt he had taken a sword in the belly, but
nothing explained what he was doing tied to a wagon under an open sky,
surrounded by Defenders.
The letter was written in R'shiel's impatient scrawl.
Tarja, it began without preamble. If you are reading
this, it means you survived. You were wounded trying to help me, and I
tried to save your life. The Harshini part of me helped heal your
wound, and the demons should do the rest. Brak says they'll leave you
when you're well.
He read the paragraph twice. Most of what she had written made no
sense. He had been wounded, it seemed, and she had used her magic to
heal him. He could not understand the part about the demons, though.
Shaking his head, he read on.
I have gone on ahead to Hythria with Damin and Adrina. I want
their marriage to bring peace to the south, but I must support Damin in
Hythria. I might learn about my destiny there, too. I'll explain why
it's so important when I see you. Founders, how I hate being the demon
child! I wish I could have stayed with you . . .
I sent Brak to Fardohnya to tell King Hablet that his daughter
is now the future High Princess of Hythria. That might stop him
invading Hythria through Medalon come spring.
Tarja smiled. Damin and Adrina were married. He wondered what
R'shiel had threatened them with to make that happen.
You must know by now that I killed the Karien Prince and Lord
Terbolt the morning after you tried to rescue me, so the Kariens will
probably want my head even more now.
We've arranged to meet you all in Krakandar. From Damin's side
of the border you'll be able to plan retaking Medalon. The thousand men
you have now is too few to do anything but annoy the Kariens, but with
Hythrun help, we'll make those Karien bastards pay for invading Medalon.
Denjon is on our side, but be careful of Linst.
R'shiel
R'shiel had killed the Karien Crown Prince? Had she learnt nothing
since their days in the rebellion? He read the letter again, wishing he
could recall something - anything - of the past weeks.
But Tarja's
memories stopped abruptly at the point where he had fallen in battle
and there was nothing in the intervening period but a black,
featureless abyss.
Sitting around a small fire later that evening,
Tarja got the rest of the story from Denjon and Linst. His head was
reeling by the time they finished telling him of R'shiel's
confrontation with the Karien priests, of her abrupt decision to accept
the legacy of her Harshini blood and everything else that had happened
since then.
They told him of the wound that almost killed him but could not
explain either the absence of any evidence of the wound, or why he had
lain unconscious for so long, other than they had instructions from
R'shiel to restrain him for his own protection. Denjon spoke with awe
of the demon-melded dragon that had taken Brak south, and of his
uneasiness over the unknown fate of the Karien prisoners they had left
behind.
"So that's about all there is to tell," Denjon concluded
with a
shrug. "When Lord Wolfblade told us that Lord Jenga had ordered you to
mount a resistance against the Kariens, and with Lord Terbolt and the
Karien Prince dead, it seemed prudent to follow the Lord Defender's
orders."
Tarja studied Denjon in the firelight. "I'm not sure he planned for
us to flee to Hythria."
"We're risking our necks for you, Tarja. A bit of gratitude wouldn't
go astray," Linst grumbled.
"You don't sound very happy about this, Linst."
"Happy? Of course I'm not happy about it. But I'm
even less happy about taking orders from those Karien bastards, so here
I am, ready to fight alongside a thousand other deserters. You know,
Tarja, until you came along, nobody even thought of breaking their
Defenders' oath. Now it's a bloody epidemic." He threw the
remains of
his stew onto the fire and stood up. "I have to check the sentries,
although why we cling to Defender discipline is beyond me. It's not as
if we're ever likely to be welcomed back into the Corps, is it?"
He stalked off into the darkness, leaving Tarja and Denjon staring
after him.
"He always was a stickler for the rules," Denjon remarked in
the
uncomfortable silence that followed.
"How many of the others feel like him?"
"Quite a few," Denjon replied. "He's right about one thing,
though.
It isn't easy for a Defender to walk away from his oath."
"I never asked you to follow me, Denjon."
The captain laughed humourlessly. "No, you didn't. But
R'shiel set half the camp on fire just by waving her arm around, then
turned on us, bursting with Harshini power and asked us what we were
planning to do. Taking your side seemed the prudent thing to do at the
time."
He frowned. Something else bothered him about R'shiel, some feeling
or emotion he could not place. A vague uneasiness that lingered on the
edge of his mind, just out of reach.
"So, how far are we from Testra? That is where you're planning to
cross the river, isn't it?"
Denjon nodded. "Less than a week. Now you're up and about, we can
make better time. Do you think you can sit on a horse?"
"I'm damned if I'm going to spend any more time in that wagon. I can
ride."
"Good. We've picked up quite a few of the Defenders you left the
border with along the way. We number close to thirteen hundred
now."
"Thirteen hundred against the Karien host isn't many."
"I know," Denjon agreed. "But that's where your Hythrun
friends come
in. With their help, we might have a chance."
Sleep eluded Tarja for a long time that night. Waking from weeks of
unconsciousness to find everything so radically changed was extremely
disconcerting. He tossed and turned on the cold ground as the stars
dwindled into dawn, trying to pin down the uneasiness that niggled at
him like a tiny burr. Everything Denjon had told him, he reviewed over
and over in his mind. But what bothered him came from another source.
Something else was wrong . . . or different. Something that
he could not define.
All he knew for certain was that it centred on R'shiel.
After a full day in the saddle, Tarja realised how
weak he was, but he was consumed by a restless energy that made it
impossible for him to take the rest he needed. He could not understand
the reason for his restive mood and the blank, dark hole in his memory
unsettled him more than he was willing to admit.
All he could think of was getting to Hythria. His mind raced, making
plans and rejecting them as he tried to figure the best way to hamper
the Karien occupation force. The fact that he had no idea what sort of
assistance they would receive from the Hythrun once they crossed the
border made his task almost impossible. Damin might only be able to
spare him a few centuries of Raiders, or he might be able to bring the
full weight of the massive Hythrun war machine to his aid. There was
simply no way to tell.
He drove Denjon mad when the other captain gave the order to make
camp each evening, insisting they had at least another hour of
daylight. Denjon was amused the first night, patient the second, and
told him bluntly to mind his own business the third.
But Tarja's recovery seemed to bolster the morale of the men. He had
been a popular officer once, known as a promising officer, a fair man
and tipped to be the next Lord Defender. To see him back among them,
wearing his red jacket and brimming with nervous energy, revived the
spirits of men who up until then had had little more to do than
contemplate their new status as outlaws.
Five days after Tarja woke, they were within sight
of Testra. Tarja suggested sending an advance party forward to
reconnoitre in the town, while the bulk of their force waited out of
sight to avoid drawing attention to their number, although Denjon
seemed certain that news of their desertion could not have reached this
far south yet.
"We can't risk riding into Testra in force," Tarja insisted.
"Yesterday you were all for riding through the night to get here.
Now you want to add another day to the trip while you go
sightseeing,"
Linst complained.
"I don't want to wait," Tarja corrected. "I just
think it
would be stupid to reveal ourselves until we know we're in the clear.
Besides, there's still a garrison in Testra. If they've heard of the
surrender, they might want to join us."
"Reluctant as I am to spend another day on this side of the
river,"
Denjon said, "I'm afraid I agree with Tarja."
Linst glared at both of them for a moment then shrugged. "As you
wish."
When he left them, Denjon turned to Tarja. "Do you think he's having
second thoughts?"
"You can count on it," Tarja agreed. "Who's in command in
Testra?"
"Antwon, I think."
"I know him. He won't like the idea of surrender."
"Not liking the idea of surrender is not the same as being willing
to desert," Denjon pointed out.
"Still, it's worth sounding him out. Every Defender we get out of
Medalon now is another man we can put into the field later on."
"Aye. And you'd best get some rest. You look ready to drop."
"I'm fine."
The practised lie came easily to him now. It was much simpler than
trying to explain that he couldn't sleep, couldn't stop his mind from
running around in circles, or prevent the confused images that flashed
in front of his eyes, catching him unawares.
Something had happened to him. Something to do with R'shiel and her
damned Harshini healing. But whenever he thought of R'shiel, a myriad
conflicting and seemingly impossible memories surfaced. Some of them
were real memories, he was certain of that. Others were like a
nightmare. They were the ones where he imagined R'shiel in his arms.
The ones where he loved her - not like the sister he had grown
up
believing her to be - but as her lover.
The absolute certainty that he would never feel that way towards his
sister was the only thing that kept him sane.
CHAPTER 9
"The main wharf looks new."
Teriahna chuckled softly at Brak's comment. They were walking along
the waterfront of Talabar amidst the morning bustle of the busy port,
for no better reason than the privacy such a public place offered. The
sun beat down on them and the wharves were crowded with
frazzled-looking merchants and bare-chested, sweat-sheened sailors
shouting boisterously at each other as they unloaded their cargoes.
"Ah, now there's a story behind that," she told him as they
sidestepped a gilded litter carried by four muscular slaves. "The
Princess Adrina tried her hand at sailing Hablet's flagship, the Wave
Warrior, so the story goes, and ended up ramming the dock. If you
believe the rumours that's why Hablet packed her off to Karien."
"And if you don't believe the rumours?"
"Then he married her to Cratyn because Adrina, more than any of his
children, is cast in the same mould as her father. If he was up to
something nasty and needed an ally in Karien, Adrina would be the one
for the job."
Brak did not offer any further comment on Adrina. He had not told
Teriahna the news he carried from Medalon. As far as anyone in
Fardohnya knew, Adrina was still in the north. That Cratyn was dead,
Adrina now married to Lord Wolfblade and that Hablet's eldest baseborn
son was a casualty of the Karien€“ Medalonian war, was news he
would
prefer not to break until Adrina was safely across the border into
Hythria, where Damin could protect her from her father's wrath.
"So, what do you know to be fact about Hablet's treaty with
Karien?"
"Not much more than anyone else, I'm afraid," she admitted.
"He gave
them the Isle of Slarn, we know that for certain, and there's been no
shortage of timber for shipbuilding since the Princess left. According
to the treaty, he's supposed to attack Medalon from the south come the
northern spring, and he's certainly mustering his army for an
invasion."
"But?" Brak asked, sensing there was more she had not told
him.
"But he's got his officers studying Hythria, not Medalon."
"You think he seriously intends to invade Hythria?"
"He's never likely to have a better chance. He can't go over the
Sunrise Mountains - Tejay Lionsclaw makes certain of that. The
Hythrun
defend their ports too well to risk a naval invasion, and until the
Kariens declared war on their neighbour, Medalon had the Defenders to
deter him from taking that route. But with the Defenders tied up on
their northern border, and the Warlord of Krakandar up there with them,
Hythria is wide open."
Brak nodded. Adrina had said almost the same thing.
"Why is Hablet so determined to invade Hythria?" Brak asked.
"It
can't just be greed. He's richer than any man alive."
Teriahna seemed amused by the question. "Don't you know? It isn't
wealth that drives Hablet, it's fear."
"Of what?"
"He doesn't have a legitimate heir."
"That's not a reason to invade Hythria."
"It is if you're afraid that your next heir is likely to be
Hythrun."
Brak stopped and stared at her, afraid she had already heard about
Damin and Adrina, but then he realised that even if she had, Hablet had
been planning this invasion long before the two of them met. "How could
that be?"
"Hythria and Fardohnya have not always been separate nations, Brak.
You should know that."
"Fardohnya split from Hythria before I was born," Brak
pointed out. "And believe me, I was born a very long time ago."
"They formally became separate nations during the reign of Greneth
the Older Twin," she reminded him. "That was about twelve
hundred years
ago."
Brak nodded. "Greneth was the twin brother of Doranda Wolfblade, as
I recall."
"Ah, you do know your history then. Well, the split was quite
amicable by all accounts. Greater Fardohnya, as it was known then, was
a huge country; much too vast to govern effectively. Hythria was the
largest province, governed by the Wolfblade family. Greneth married his
sister Doranda to Jaycon Wolfblade, gave them Hythria to rule as the
High Prince and Princess."
Brak found himself impressed by Teriahna's knowledge, but no closer
to the knowledge he sought. "I still don't see . . ."
"Then let me finish," she chided. "As part of the agreement
to
separate the two nations, Greneth signed a pledge that in the absence
of a male heir to the Fardohnyan throne, the eldest living Wolfblade
would automatically inherit the crown. The agreement has never been
revoked."
"I've never heard of it before."
"Well, until now, there's been no need to worry about it. Hablet is
the first Fardohnyan King in twelve hundred years who's failed to get a
son."
"How many others know about it?"
"Enough that Hablet is worried. When your King keeps producing
daughters, people start going through the archives. We only stumbled
across it recently ourselves. Like you, we were curious about Hablet's
obvious obsession with Hythria."
"I'm still not certain I understand what he hopes to achieve by
invading Hythria."
"He needs to destroy the Wolfblade line. If there is no living
Wolfblade, there is no heir. If there is no heir he can legitimise one
of his bastards."
"Wouldn't it be simpler, not to mention cheaper, to hire one of your
assassins?"
"Are you kidding? Do you have any idea what we charge for
assassinating a High Prince? Trust me, an invasion, even a prolonged
one, would be cheaper."
Brak smiled, not entirely certain she was joking.
"Anyway," Teriahna continued, "he tried that, and we
refused. Call
it professional ethics, but we draw the line at kings and princes. The
death of a ruling monarch tends to create unrest and draws unnecessary
attention to the Guild and that's bad for business. We are strictly
apolitical."
"What a comforting thought," he remarked wryly.
She smiled. "I forget you are Harshini, sometimes, my Lord. Does all
this talk of killing distress you?"
"Not as much as it should," he admitted. "So how long has
Hablet
known about this forgotten law?"
"A long time, I think. He made Lernen Wolfblade an offer for his
sister Princess Marla when he first took the throne. You can imagine
Lernen's reaction. He refused the offer then married Marla to some
rustic Warlord from the north of Hythria, just to add to the insult.
Hablet has never forgiven him for that either."
"So, for the sake of a forgotten law and a thirty-five-year-old
insult, Hablet is going to invade Hythria?"
"That's about the strength of it," she agreed. "If Damin
Wolfblade
and Narvell Hawksword are killed protecting Hythria, which is a real
possibility, and Lernen dies, which is also likely to happen sooner
rather than later, according to my sources, there are no more male
Wolfblades and Greneth's pledge is void."
"Marla has other sons."
"Stepsons," Teriahna corrected. "She has only two
natural-born sons
and neither of them has an heir. If they die, the Wolfblade line is at
an end."
"And if her daughters have sons?"
"Then they'd have as much claim as Hablet's daughters, no more. The
pledge specifies a Wolfblade male and even Narvell's claim is tenuous,
because he took his father's name when he became the Warlord of
Elasapine."
"You seem remarkably well informed on the matter of Hythrun
bloodlines."
"It's my job. Besides, I've been looking into the matter lately. The
Guild might be apolitical, but we are hardly politically naive. The
machinations of kings and princes affect us closely. We have a vested
interest in keeping things stable."
"Hence your reluctance to assassinate them."
"I see you understand our position."
Brak nodded, wondering how much he should tell Teriahna. For that
matter, it would not be long before she learnt of it anyway. Once Damin
reached Hythria, the news would spread like a grass fire.
They had reached the end of the wharf and took the carved stone
steps up to the paved road that circled the harbour. Brak glanced over
his shoulder, surprised at the distance they had covered. He had been
so engrossed in the conversation he had not noticed.
"Are you hungry? There's a tavern not far from here that serves the
best oysters in Fardohnya."
Brak nodded his agreement distractedly. The Raven led the way a
little further up the road to a small tavern with an arched entrance,
over which was carved the words "The Pearl of Talabar". The
tavern was
cramped, but clean and cool and Teriahna was obviously well known. The
owner hurried forward to greet them and showed them to a private booth
in the back that gave them a clear view of the rest of the room.
"Now," she said decisively, once they were seated. "I have
answered
your questions. I think it's time you answered a few of mine."
"If I can."
"What are you doing in Talabar?"
"I don't suppose you'd believe me if I said I was
sightseeing?" he
asked with a faint smile.
"No, I don't suppose I would. Nor do I think you sought out the
Guild to kill someone for you. So there has to be another
reason."
"There is."
She let out an exasperated sigh. "Well? Do I have to drag it from
you?"
He smiled. "I've come from Medalon."
"Medalon? That's an odd place for a Harshini to be."
"Not really. The Harshini who survived the Sisterhood's purges still
live in Medalon."
"Everyone believes the Harshini are extinct. Except you, of course.
You are thought to be the last. And we all thought you long
dead."
"The Harshini are not dead."
"So where are they?"
"I like you, Teriahna, but I don't trust you that much."
She nodded, her eyes glittering mischievously in the gloom. "I
didn't seriously think you'd tell me, but it was worth a try."
The conversation stopped as the tavern keeper arrived with two
platters of chilled oysters. Teriahna tucked into her meal with gusto,
slurping the oysters from their shells with obvious relish. The tavern
keeper left with a small, indulgent smile at the Raven. She caught his
look and smiled.
"I grew up around here. Mornt is an old friend," she
explained,
wiping her chin.
Brak picked up a shell and tipped the juicy contents down his
throat. Teriahna was right. Seasoned with something he could not
identify, it was delicious.
"Rumour has it the taste is the result of the oyster beds being in a
direct line of Talabar's sewage outlet."
Brak almost choked on the oyster as she burst out laughing.
"I'm kidding, Brak. Mornt has a secret recipe that he guards with
his life. We've been offered a small fortune to torture the information
out of him. We refused, naturally, and let Mornt learn of our refusal.
Now we eat here for free."
"A small price to pay for your life. I never realised the tavern
business was so cutthroat."
"You'd be surprised what we get asked to do."
"No doubt."
She swallowed another oyster. "So, you come from Medalon and the
first thing you do is seek out the Assassins' Guild. Why?"
"You're the best source of intelligence in Talabar."
"Flattery is not an answer. Just where were you in Medalon
exactly?"
"The northern border."
"So how goes the war? Are the Defenders winning? They ought to. They
deserve their reputation, by all accounts."
"Medalon has surrendered, Teriahna."
She made no attempt to hide her shock. "What? Why would they
surrender?"
"It's a long story, and one I have no intention of trying to
explain. But the fact is, Medalon has surrendered and is now in the
hands of the Kariens."
"Gods!" she muttered with concern. "I knew I should have
kept some
people in the north. Hablet's not going to be happy when he learns of
this. He was hoping the Kariens would keep the Defenders occupied for
years."
"I've other news that's going to please him even less. Tristan is
dead. He was killed in the only major confrontation between the two
armies."
She shook her head. "Now that's bad news. He would have made a good
King if Hablet could have found a way to legitimise him."
"It's not the worst of it," he warned.
"You mean there's more? I can't think of anything that would upset
Hablet more."
"Prince Cratyn is dead too."
"I doubt he'll lose much sleep over that news." Then
she
frowned. "So Adrina is a widow now?"
"Not exactly."
"Gods, Brak! Getting anything out of you is like pulling teeth! What
do you mean, not exactly?"
"She's remarried," he said, keeping his voice deliberately
emotionless. "To Damin Wolfblade."
Teriahna laughed. "Is this your idea of getting even for that
comment about the sewage pipes?"
He did not answer. The silence was heavy as Teriahna realised that
he was serious.
"Dear gods! How did that come about?"
"The demon child ordered it."
"The demon child? Now I know you're joking."
Once again, he let the silence speak for him. The Raven studied him
closely for a moment, then pushed her platter away. "This is no joke,
is it? There really is a demon child? Who is he?"
"She. Her name is R'shiel."
"That's a Medalonian name."
"That's right."
"The demon child is Medalonian? Gods! That's a strange turn
of events - an atheist who's descended from the gods. So, what
gives
the demon child the right to interfere in something that is likely to
destabilise every nation on the continent?"
"She's on a mission from the gods - quite literally. I
believe her
eventual plan is to bring peace to every nation on the continent, not
destabilise them."
"Then she has an odd way of going about it."
"You think so? If what you've told me is true, it seems the perfect
solution. Hablet has no son, which makes a Wolfblade his heir. That
heir is now married to his eldest daughter."
"Oh, I agree, it's a solution none of us would have imagined, but
how do you think Hablet is going to take the news? He wants to
obliterate the Wolfblade line, not welcome their favourite son into his
family."
"Well, he's going to have to get used to the idea. Can you get me
into the palace to see him?"
"Probably, although I don't suggest you use your real name. Hablet
is no more likely to believe Brakandaran the Half-Breed still lives
than I did." Her expression grew serious as she leaned forward
and
lowered her voice. "You have to understand, Brak: it suits a lot of
people to believe the Harshini are gone. They represented a way of life
that is long past, and while kings publicly lament their passing,
privately they are rather pleased the Harshini aren't around to act as
their conscience any more. Especially kings like Hablet."
"Then perhaps," Brak suggested ominously as he finished the
last of
his oysters, "it's time Hablet acquired a conscience."
CHAPTER 10
The storm was loud outside, battering against the
walls of the tavern where Mikel and Jaymes were staying with R'shiel.
Although the low-ceilinged taproom was warm, the fire smoked badly.
Their new Medalonian mistress did not seem to notice the choking haze,
the bad food, or the watery ale. She was deep in conversation with
another young woman she had arranged to meet here, who she had
introduced earlier as Mandah. The two of them had their heads close
together as they talked, although Mikel sensed there was little
friendship between the women. Mandah was a year or two older than
R'shiel, with long blonde hair, pretty eyes and an air of calm serenity
about her that Mikel had never encountered before.
They had been on the road for weeks now, pushing hard to cross the
Hythrun border before word of their flight reached the Citadel - or
worse, the Kariens. This night, in a run-down tavern in the small, poor
village of Roan Vale, was the first break in their relentless journey.
R'shiel had come here to meet with Mandah, to organise the remainder of
the pagan rebels to join them in Krakandar. At least, that's what he'd
heard her telling Lord Wolfblade. The rest of their party was camped
several leagues from the town, sheltering around an isolated farmhouse
they had commandeered.
"My Lady?"
R'shiel looked up from the mug of ale she was nursing. "Yes,
Jaymes?"
"The innkeeper says your rooms are ready. Shall I take your
saddlebags up?"
"If you like."
Jaymes glanced across at Mikel, then picked up R'shiel's bags and
headed for the staircase at the back of the room. Mikel ate the
strange-looking stew the inn provided, and listened as one of Mandah's
men came in to report.
"The road to Bordertown is blocked by a rockslide," the man
said. "You can either winter here in Roan Vale, or attempt to go
further
east, through Lodanville, and cross the border there."
"Winter here? I don't think so. How long will it take if we go
through Lodanville?" R'shiel asked with a frown.
"It will add at least a week, my Lady."
"It can't be helped, I suppose. I'll have to speak with Lord
Wolfblade, but I think we'll have no choice but to turn east in the
morning."
The rebel bowed and crossed to a table on the other side of the
room, where he joined his companions and gave them the news. They did
not look happy. One of them complained that the demon child was going
to lead them through every village in Medalon before they reached the
border. But it was a half-hearted complaint. They knew as well as
anyone that the weather was to blame for their delay.
Mikel swallowed the last of his stew and moved around to the other
side of the hearth, where the smoke seemed less suffocating, wondering
why these rebels seemed so ambivalent. He always imagined that the
Medalonians were like the Kariens - united under one purpose.
In
reality, there were more factions than he could count. There were the
Defenders, and the Sisterhood, and the pacifist pagans, and the pagan
rebels . . . and somewhere in amongst all that was the rest
of the population, caught in the middle of the power struggle.
"Psst!"
Mikel jumped at the sound and looked behind him. In the darkness
beside the hearth, under the woodpile, two large, liquid black eyes
stared out at him.
"What are you doing here?" he hissed. "Go away!"
The demon blinked, but did not move.
"Begone!" Mikel commanded in a firm whisper. That was what
R'shiel
said when she wanted the demons to leave. It must have something to do
with her being Harshini. It had absolutely no effect when Mikel tried
it. The demon simply cocked its head to one side with a look of blank
incomprehension on its leathery face.
Mikel looked around nervously. Although the tavern was full of pagan
rebels, Mikel did not know them well enough to trust their reaction if
they spied the creature. "You have to leave!" he insisted, this
time
speaking Medalonian, hoping the demon might understand that language.
"Go back to R'shiel!"
At the mention of R'shiel, the demon began to chitter excitedly.
"Be quiet!"
"Who are you talking to, Mikel?"
Mikel spun around guiltily. "No one, my Lady. I - I thought
I heard
something in the woodpile."
"Probably rats," R'shiel murmured. "Have you eaten?"
"Yes, my Lady."
"Then go and get some sleep, Mikel. We're leaving at first
light."
He climbed to his feet without looking back at the woodpile and
crossed the room until he was standing before R'shiel. "Do you mind if
I check the horses first, my Lady?"
R'shiel smiled at him distractedly. "If you like."
Mikel let himself out into the battering rain and ran the short
distance to the stables. Lightning streaked the sky as the rain
hammered down. He was shivering and soaked to the skin by the time he
pushed the large wooden stable door shut behind him.
"It's a sour night to be out and about, lad."
Mikel started at the voice and spun around, squinting in the
darkness. The voice belonged to an old man sitting on a haybale. He was
wrapped in a tattered dark cloak, smoking a long pipe that gave off a
sweet-smelling and vaguely familiar scent. Mikel studied him
suspiciously. He looked like some sort of vagabond who had taken
shelter from the storm, too poor to afford the inn.
"Who are you?"
"A friend."
"I don't know you."
"Oh, yes, you know me, Mikel."
"How do you know my name?"
The old man smiled and rose to his feet with a grace that belied his
age. He stepped closer to Mikel, his long white hair flowing over his
shoulders like a silken waterfall. His eyes were piercingly bright in
the gloomy stable.
"No matter, lad. I merely wanted to see that you are well."
"Why would you care?"
"I care about all my people," the old man said with a smile.
Despite his suspicions, Mikel found himself drawn to the man. There
was something about him, some seductive quality he could not define,
which made him want to throw himself into the old man's arms and lose
himself to the security and warmth of his presence.
"What do you want?"
"Nothing," the old man shrugged. "A moment of your time
perhaps. A
chance to talk. You travel with the demon child, I see."
"Who told you that?" Mikel demanded.
He smiled. "Nobody told me, Mikel. I can feel her presence. You are
very privileged to be counted among her friends."
Mikel's chest swelled a little at the compliment. "R'shiel trusts
me."
"I'm sure she does. It is a rare honour indeed. But don't you worry
that she is leading you into danger?"
"R'shiel is just trying to . . ." His voice
trailed off,
as he realised that he actually had no idea what R'shiel was trying to
do.
Smiling, the old man sucked on his pipe for a moment.
"She's helping her people," Mikel said with determination.
"She is trying to destroy your God."
"Which god?"
The old man sighed. "It is a sad world indeed if you have to ask
that question, Mikel. R'shiel is trying to destroy the Overlord. She
was created for that purpose."
"Why would she want to do that?"
"That is not important," the old man shrugged. "Merely that
you are
aiding her. Don't you worry for your eternal soul?"
"But the other gods said -"
"Ah, yes. The other gods. Well, who am I to deny what the other gods
have said? All I can do is warn you, I suppose."
"Warn me about what?"
"You are aiding the demon child. When the time for retribution
comes, your God will remember that you turned on him."
Mikel opened his mouth to object, but the words would not come. He had
turned on his God. He had honoured Dacendaran, the God of Thieves, and
was personally acquainted with Kalianah, the Goddess of Love. And
Gimlorie, the God of Music, had taught him how to sing.
"I didn't mean to," Mikel said in a small voice that was
almost
drowned out by the storm.
The old man smiled and opened his arms wide. "Xaphista forgives you,
my son."
Mikel ran to him, sobbing. Wrapped in the warm embrace of the old
man, he felt such an overwhelming love for his God that everything he
had done in the past seemed insignificant. The Overlord was the one
true God - the only God. He could not understand how he had
ever lost
sight of that fact.
After a long while, his tears ran out and he looked up into the eyes
of the old man.
"What must I do?" he asked.
Mikel returned to the tavern in a state of
elation. His whole being was filled with love for his God, his mind
focused only on the task before him. The rain had eased as he let
himself into the smoky taproom, and his small hand clutched his dagger.
He was filled with purpose and the secure knowledge that this was right.
R'shiel still sat at the table talking with Mandah, although they
had been joined by another man. He could hear what they were saying,
but the voices were muffled as if he was listening through a waterfall.
"The Defenders are planning to cross the Glass River at
Testra,"
R'shiel was telling them. "If you meet them on this side at Vanahiem,
you can tell them which way we went. Hopefully, by the time they cross
the river, the roads will be clear and they can get straight through to
Hythria."
The innkeeper must have overheard them. He hurried forward, pushed
Mikel out of the way and bowed to R'shiel, his expression horrified.
"Forgive me, my Lady, if I misunderstood you, but surely you're not
planning to bring these men through here?"
"Why not?"
"But the Kariens will be pursuing them! We'll be slaughtered if they
think we were harbouring traitors."
Mandah looked up at the overwrought tavern keeper with a smile.
"Woran, you've been harbouring rebels here since before I was
born."
"That's not true! This is a respectable establishment."
"This is a flea-ridden, rat-infested hovel," the man at the
table
laughed.
"But if the Karien priests should hear of it . . . And
what of the other people here in Roan Vale? Can't you send the
Defenders by another route?"
"It will be all right, Woran," Mandah assured him.
Mikel moved closer to the table. The dagger felt warm and comforting
in his hand. Mandah spied him and frowned. "Look at you, child, you're
drenched!"
R'shiel looked up at him with a shake of her head. "Go stand by the
fire, Mikel. You'll catch your death if you sleep in those wet
clothes."
Mikel did not answer. He stared at the demon child, seeing nothing
but the woman who was destined to destroy his God.
"Mikel? What happened to you?"
He turned slightly to find Jaymes standing behind him. His brother
seemed a stranger. Everyone in the room seemed to be a stranger.
"Come on," Jaymes said. "Let's go dry you out."
Mikel let Jaymes lead him to the fire without resisting. He looked
over his shoulder at R'shiel, but she had resumed her conversation with
Mandah and the other rebel. The dagger burned with unfulfilled longing
in his grasp.
"What were you thinking?" Jaymes asked as he peeled Mikel's
sodden
cloak from his shoulder. "Look at you! You're blue with cold and stiff
as a board."
The demon who had been hiding in the woodpile chittered at him in
concern as Jaymes shook out his dripping cloak. Mikel stared at the
creature for a moment in confusion. Its appearance made him lose his
train of thought and he suddenly began to notice how cold and wet he
was. He moved closer to the fire and glanced across the room at
R'shiel. She caught sight of him out of the corner of her eye and
smiled.
He smiled back with the odd feeling that he had meant to do
something important, but could not for the life of him remember what it
was. He realised then that his hand was still clutched around the hilt
of his dagger, his grip so tight that his fingers were cramping.
Mikel let it go, wondering why he was holding it.
PART 2
THE MEN WHO
WOULD BE KINGS
CHAPTER 11
Krakandar turned out to be nothing like Adrina
imagined. She had somehow developed the impression that Damin's home
was some sort of isolated, rustic abode with minimal amenities and
barely literate servants, all scurrying about in rat-infested,
thatch-covered huts. Well, perhaps that was an exaggeration,
but she was unprepared for the large, walled city that confronted her
some six weeks after she fled the border with Damin and Tarja.
Krakandar's population numbered close to twenty thousand. The city
had been carefully planned and was laid out in a series of concentric
rings. Not only that, but it was, even to the untrained eye,
impregnable. There were three rings, each one protected by
progressively more complex defences. The inner ring housed the palace
and most of the government buildings, including a huge store, which was
filled as insurance against a siege each year at harvest time. Just
prior to the harvest, the past year's grain was distributed to the
poor, and come harvest, Damin explained, the warehouses were filled
again for the following year. The central ring was mostly housing, the
residences progressively more imposing the closer one got to the inner
ring. The vast outer ring was the home to the markets and industries of
the city.
Built on a small hill, the palace commanded a view of the entire
city, which sprawled across the surrounding slopes with geometric
precision. The city was well maintained and constructed of the local
dark-red granite, which they quarried not far from the city and formed
one of Krakandar's major exports.
Damin told her this as they rode towards the city, the pride in his
voice taking her by surprise. He obviously loved his home, and as they
rode under the massive portcullis that protected the main gate, it was
apparent the citizens of Krakandar loved their Warlord in return.
Almodavar had sent word ahead that they were coming and for entirely
selfish reasons, Adrina was looking forward to finally reaching their
destination. More than a month in the saddle, living off trail rations
and what meat they had been able to hunt along the way, had left her
tanned and fit - but desperate for the trappings of
civilisation. She
had even managed to put on a bit of weight, she thought with despair.
When Krakandar came into view, all she could think of was a hot bath,
clean hair and the smell of something else besides leather and horses.
As word spread through the city that the Warlord had returned the
citizens of Krakandar lined the streets to catch a glimpse of him. It
was only a few at first but as the news ran ahead of them, the crowd
grew larger. The people stopped working and pushed forward to see him,
waving and calling out to Damin, who returned their greetings with a
grin, obviously delighted by the warmth of this welcome. Adrina rode
behind him, with R'shiel at her side, unaccountably put out by his
popularity. The demon child was looking about her with wide-eyed
wonder. She could be utterly ruthless when the need arose, but she
still showed traces of the young girl underneath when it was least
expected.
"Well, the peasants seem fond of him," Adrina remarked
sourly.
R'shiel laughed. "You really are determined to make this as
difficult as possible, aren't you?"
"I'm making things difficult? Don't try blaming me, R'shiel.
This was your idea, not mine."
"He adores you, you know."
Adrina looked at Damin's back and scowled. He was waving to the
people, calling out a greeting to a familiar face in the crowd. "Damin
loves himself, R'shiel," she retorted. "And his horse. He would
probably be upset if anything happened to Almodavar, but that's about
as far as it goes. He likes you because you are the demon child and
your friendship will help him claim his throne. His only interest in me
is political."
R'shiel raised her brow with a quizzical expression. "Is that what
those noises coming from your tent were? Political
negotiations?"
Adrina frowned, trying to think of some cutting rejoinder. Then the
silliness of the conversation struck her and she smiled reluctantly.
"All right, I admit I've been . . . negotiating
. . . more than is wise, but there wasn't much else to do for
entertainment, was there?"
"I'm sure you could have found something a little less dangerous if
you wanted to, Your Highness. Honestly, you're as bad as Damin. I
should wave my arm and do something Harshini to make you both see
sense."
"Why don't you?" she said aloud, but she had wondered before
why the
demon child had not simply called on her power to bend them to her will.
"Just between you and me, I don't know how."
"But you're the demon child! Doesn't that make you
omnipotent?"
"Omnipotent, maybe, but it doesn't mean I know very much about my
powers. Brak says I lack finesse."
"R'shiel, can I give you some advice?"
"If you think it will do any good."
"When you've turned someone's life upside-down, killed their
husband, ordered them to marry an enemy Prince and told them to risk
their life by announcing the fact to the entire world, please don't
tell them you don't know what you're doing. It's very
unsettling."
R'shiel smiled, but did not answer as they rode under the portcullis
of the second ring.
The ride through the central ring took even
longer. The crowd had grown so large that troops had been sent out from
the palace to hold the crowd back so that Damin's party could have a
clear path. The palace guards surprised Adrina. Unlike the Raiders
Damin had with him on the border, these men were uniformed in dark-red
leather breastplates embossed with a large hawk.
"Captain?" she asked, looking back over her shoulder at
Almodavar. "Why is the palace guard wearing a hawk? I thought Damin's
emblem was a
wolf?"
"It is, Your Highness. The hawk is the emblem of Elasapine. They are
Lord Hawksword's men."
R'shiel laughed aloud when she heard. "I don't believe it! Zegarnald
actually did what I told him!"
"You told the God of War what to do?"
R'shiel nodded, looking inordinately pleased with herself. "I wasn't
really sure that he would. I asked him to turn Damin's brother back, in
case we didn't make it here before your father tried invading
Hythria."
"His brother? Dear gods, you mean there's more of them?"
"It's his half-brother. Don't worry, Adrina. If Damin dies, I won't
make you marry him."
"I'll hold you to that," Adrina promised.
As they rode on towards the inner wall, Adrina looked around,
surprised at the affluence of the city and the people. Even the beggars
in the streets of the outer ring had looked quite healthy under their
rags and their professional air of misery. Here in the residential
district, mothers held up their babies for Damin's blessing, plump
slaves fanned their masters and mistresses as they leaned over their
balconies, and more than a few young ladies, noblewomen, peasants and court'esa
alike, called out quite preposterous proposals, which Damin
acknowledged with a laugh. One woman standing on the balcony of a very
elegant, red-brick house, bared her breast and called out a suggestion
that made even Adrina blush. Somewhat to her chagrin, Damin actually
responded with a promise to take her up on her offer some other time.
"The man has no morals," she muttered.
"That's a bit rich, coming from you," R'shiel remarked with
a grin.
"You'd never catch me making a public spectacle of myself like
that."
"Of course not. You prefer to negotiate, don't you."
Adrina was feeling sufficiently put out that she did not deign to
answer as they rode through the massive iron-reinforced gates into the
inner city.
The noise of the crowd behind them faded as they rode forward, the
clatter of the horses' hoofs loud on the cobbled pavement. The road
opened out into a vast courtyard, surrounded on three sides by
impressive buildings. To the left and right of the square were the
government buildings, three storeys high, gracefully symmetrical and
uniform. In front of them lay the sweeping steps of the palace itself,
lined with troops wearing the silver tabard-and-diamond symbol of the
Sorcerers' Collective.
Damin slowed his horse and glanced around, taking in the troops
lining the steps and then looking up at the walls, which were lined
with as many men wearing the hawk emblem of Elasapine as there were the
wolf of Krakandar.
"R'shiel."
The demon child rode up beside him. "Is something wrong?"
"I don't know. Are you ready to be the demon child? I have a feeling
I might need her."
"No, but don't let that stop you."
He treated her to a faint smile then turned to Adrina. "How about
you? Are you ready to face the High Arrion?"
"The High Arrion!"
"Her guard wouldn't be here without her," Damin pointed out.
"If
we're going to do this, we might as well make it look
plausible."
Adrina opened her mouth to make some sarcastic comment, then
suddenly thought better of it. Damin considered her intelligent.
Perhaps his sister, arguably the most powerful woman in Hythria, would
think the same thing. It would be a nice change.
"I'm ready."
She urged her horse forward until she rode on his left. R'shiel
unconsciously sat a little taller in the saddle on Damin's right, as if
the girl who had gaped at the sights of Krakandar a short while ago had
been put aside, and the demon child had taken over. It was interesting,
Adrina thought, and more than a little disturbing, the way she did that.
Three figures appeared at the top of the palace steps as they
approached. Adrina knew the woman on the left. They had met before, on
her only other visit to Hythria. Dressed in black, the diamond-shaped
symbol of her office winking in the sunlight, Adrina recognised her as
Kalan, High Arrion of the Sorcerers' Collective, Damin's half-sister.
The man on the left looked sufficiently like Kalan to be her twin, so
she guessed this was Narvell Hawksword, the Warlord of Elasapine,
although his gold-chased breastplate, with its swooping hawk, would
have given away his identity.
She did not recognise the woman in the middle. She was shorter than
the man and woman who flanked her, but carried herself as if the world
lay at her feet, waiting for her command. Adrina envied her poise,
while wondering who she was. Her fair hair was flecked with silver but
her skin was unlined. She studied Damin and the two women who rode
beside him with dark, watchful eyes.
Damin dismounted at the foot of the steps and, without waiting for
Adrina or R'shiel, took them two at a time until he reached the top. He
swept the older woman up and hugged her.
"Mother!"
Adrina hesitated and glanced at R'shiel, but the demon child had
obviously not heard of the fearsome reputation of Princess Marla of
Hythria.
"Put me down, Damin! You smell like a horse!"
Damin laughed and turned to Kalan, who took a step backward. "Don't
you dare touch me! I agree with mother, I can smell you from
here!"
"Fine greeting I get! Months away from home and all you can do is
complain about how I smell."
"Don't worry, brother. Within a day they'll have you drowned in
perfume and then it'll be your men complaining about the
stench,"
Narvell chuckled.
Damin embraced his half-brother warmly then held him at arm's length
for a moment. "It's good to see you, Narvell. I don't know what you're
doing here, but you're a welcome sight. I damned near fell off my horse
when I saw your troops marching out of the palace gates to hold back
the crowd. Did you get greedy while I was gone and invade me?"
"We can discuss what he's doing here later," Princess Marla
announced abruptly, then turned her piercing gaze on Adrina and
R'shiel. "In the meantime, you can introduce me to your
companions."
Damin knew better than to argue with her. He turned and beckoned
R'shiel forward. "Princess Marla, Lady Kalan, Lord Hawksword, may I
introduce Her Royal Highness, Princess R'shiel te
Ortyn."
Adrina wasn't sure who was more surprised at the declaration of her
full title, R'shiel or the trio on the steps. Kalan's jaw dropped.
Narvell looked puzzled. Marla stared at her openly then arched her brow
elegantly. "te Ortyn, did you say? I only know of one te Ortyn family."
"Then you understand the importance of our guest," Damin
replied
meaningfully with a glance at the troops who lined the steps and could
hear every word they said.
Marla's eyes narrowed. She understood exactly. "Of course. Forgive
me. You are most welcome, Your Highness."
"Thank you," R'shiel replied, looking rather uncomfortable.
Damin
would receive a tongue-lashing later, Adrina suspected. R'shiel was not
fond of her status as the demon child - and was even less keen
to be
reminded that her father had been a Harshini King. A few months among
the Harshini had not completely eradicated a lifetime of prejudice
instilled in her by the Sisters of the Blade.
"And this," Damin announced, holding his hand out to Adrina,
"is my
wife."
"Your wife?" Kalan gasped. It was plain she
recognised
Adrina.
She accepted his hand and stepped up beside him. "Adrina, I'd like
you to meet my mother, Princess Marla; my brother, Narvell; and I
believe you already know my sister, Kalan."
"Adrina?" Marla remarked, looking Adrina over coldly.
"That's a
Fardohnyan name and I only know of one Fardohnyan Adrina. Please tell
me this is not the one I've heard of?"
"Perhaps we could continue this discussion in private?"
Damin
suggested, before his mother could get too worked up. Adrina was a
little taken aback by her reaction. She was hardly expecting a warm
welcome, but Princess Marla seemed quite appalled. She wisely remained
silent, letting Damin deal with his mother.
"I think we'd better," Narvell agreed. He waved his arm and
men
rushed forward to take their horses. Almodavar dismissed his men and
they were led inside to the marble-floored foyer of the palace. Tamylan
and the two Karien boys looked a little lost until Almodavar took them
under his command and ushered them away.
Marla led the way into the palace, her slippers silent on the highly
polished floor. Eventually they reached a pair of ornately carved doors
at the far end of the main hall. She threw them open and marched
inside, turning as soon as Narvell closed the doors behind them.
"So, you are Adrina of Fardohnya?" she accused without
preamble.
"Yes, Your Highness, I -"
"I thought you were married to Cratyn of Karien?"
"I was, but -"
"How in the name of the gods did you happen to marry my son?"
"I -"
"Mother!"
"Have you lost your mind, Damin!" Marla demanded, turning on
him. "Whatever she did to trap you into this marriage, it must be
undone
immediately! I will not jeopardise everything we have worked for, just
because you were taken in by some Fardohnyan whore!"
"If you would let me explain . . ."
"Explain? You think you can offer any explanation that will
satisfy me? And while you're at it, you might like to think of what
you're planning to tell your uncle and the Warlords! Lernen will have a
fit when he hears of this. I can't begin to think of what the Warlords
are going to say!"
"Mother -"
"All my life I have done nothing but try to secure your throne. It
was bad enough your abandoning your province to go chasing off to
Medalon. Your unauthorised and ill-timed treaty with the Defenders had
the Warlords howling for your blood. And now, after I spend months
trying to win them over on your behalf, you throw it all away for the
sake of a woman. And a foreigner at that!" She turned suddenly
and
glared at Adrina. "No, not just any foreigner! You had to go and marry
the most notorious harlot on the whole continent!"
Adrina looked to Damin for support. He sat on the edge of the
gold-inlaid desk, listening to his mother's rage with barely concealed
amusement. It annoyed her intensely that instead of defending her he
thought it was funny.
"Are you finished yet?" R'shiel asked quietly, from the back
of the
room. She had been studying the books in the bookcases that lined the
walls of the study, but now she turned to them, the command in her
voice impossible to deny.
Marla glared at her. She was not used to having her authority
challenged.
"And who are you to tell me what to do?"
"I am R'shiel te Ortyn."
"So you claim!" the Princess scoffed. "You're no Harshini!
What
right do you have to use the name of the Harshini royal family?"
"Lorandranek was my father."
"That's absurd!" Kalan declared. "You're human. If
Lorandranek was
your father, that would make you the . . ." Her
voiced
trailed off as she realised what she was about to say.
"Yes?" R'shiel prompted.
"It's not possible!"
"You of all people, should know that it is
possible," Damin
pointed out.
"What are you talking about, Damin?" Narvell asked.
"Tell him, Kalan."
Kalan glanced at her twin and shrugged. "If this young woman is
really who she claims to be, then she is . . . the demon
child."
Narvell looked impressed by the news, but Marla was not so easily
persuaded. "This girl? The demon child? Damin, they must have
fed you something in the north that affected your reason. You surely
don't believe it, do you?"
"R'shiel is the demon child, mother. She was placed in my
care by Zegarnald himself."
Kalan stared at him with astonishment. "You spoke to the God of
War?"
"In the flesh."
"He spoke to me, too," Narvell admitted. "It's why I turned
back."
"This is unprecedented."
"Everything about me is unprecedented," R'shiel remarked.
"So, if
we're through with the histrionics, perhaps we can start again.
Princess Marla, I think you owe your daughter-in-law an apology. She's
really not that bad. As for you, High Arrion, you and I need to have a
talk. Damin, can you do something about rooms for us? Your mother was
right about that much at least - we all stink like horses.
Perhaps once
everyone has had a chance to clean up and calm down, we can sort this
out like rational human beings."
Princess Marla stared at R'shiel with undisguised horror, although
whether it was because she found herself face-to-face with a legend, or
simply R'shiel's high-handed manner, Adrina could not tell.
CHAPTER 12
Damin knocked on the door of the rooms adjacent to
his that his Chief Steward had allocated to Adrina and opened it
without waiting for an answer, a little surprised to find it unlocked.
The room had been his mother's once, on the rare occasions she had
lived at Krakandar when he was a child. It was furnished in her
impeccable taste: the rooms airy and light; the rugs imported from
Karien; the crystal made in Fardohnya; the red granite floors polished
to perfection. Not a piece of the whitewood furniture was out of place;
not a vase or lamp did not belong here.
He followed the sound of voices through the sitting room and into
the dressing room beyond. Adrina was standing before the full-length
mirror, examining herself critically. She was dressed in a long,
sleeveless robe that fell softly to the floor in a cascade of emerald
silk. Her slave was moving about in the next room, tidying up after her
mistress' bath. She turned sharply as she caught sight of her husband
in the mirror.
"Damin!"
"I didn't mean to startle you."
"Don't you know how to knock?"
"I did knock."
"Oh . . ." She straightened her gown and studied
him for a
moment. "There's something different about you . . . I know
what it is. I've never seen you so clean. You almost look
civilised."
Damin had not given much thought to what he wore. A white silk
shirt, trousers and polished boots hardly seemed to warrant such
admiration. But compliments, even backhanded ones, were a rare thing
from Adrina, so he chose not to make an issue of it.
"Do you have everything you need?"
"Yes, thank you. Your sister sent along the dress. I don't know who
it belonged to before me, but it's an adequate fit."
"Well, if you need anything, just ask Orleon, my Chief Steward.
He'll see that you get it."
"Thank you."
"I'll have a seamstress sent to you tomorrow. You're going to need a
suitable wardrobe."
An uncomfortable silence settled on them as Damin wondered how to
broach the subject he'd come here to speak about. Adrina was a volatile
and unpredictable woman. He had no way of knowing how she would react
to what he had to say.
"I'm sorry about my mother. She shouldn't have spoken the way she
did."
"We both knew this wasn't going to be easy, Damin. Her reaction was
nothing less than I expected." She smiled suddenly, her eyes
glinting. "I will console myself with the thought of my father's
reaction when he
hears about it. I imagine your mother will seem quite reasonable by
comparison."
"That's true," he agreed, relieved things were going so
well. "But,
I do have a favour to ask."
"A favour?"
"We caught Marla off-guard today. You may not have heard the worst
of it. It would be . . . easier . . ."
"If I bite my tongue and let her insult me?" Adrina finished
for him.
"Something like that."
He expected her to explode at that point, but to his astonishment,
she nodded her agreement. "Don't worry, I'll behave."
"You will?"
"Don't sound so surprised. I plan to survive this farcical
arrangement, Damin, and to do that, I'll need your mother on my side.
You'd be surprised how charming I can be when the mood takes
me."
Actually, Damin wouldn't have been surprised at all. She could be
very disarming when she wanted something. "Well, if you can win Marla
over, you'll have the whole of Hythria at your feet."
"That's the plan," she agreed. "And in the meantime?"
"In the meantime, you should be safe enough here in the palace. I'll
have Almodavar hand-pick your bodyguards. You have to promise you won't
try leaving the palace without them."
Adrina scowled, but nodded. "I suppose."
"I've already arranged for a message to go to the Assassins'
Guild,"
he added. "I plan to hire them before someone else thinks of it. They
are very loyal employees."
"You mean they stay bought."
"It's the same thing in the end."
She sighed, as if the realisation that life would be difficult for
some time to come had just dawned on her. Damin could not fathom her
mood.
"Well, if you've everything you need, I'll see you at dinner. I'll
have Orleon send someone to show you the way."
"Damin," she called as he turned to leave. "Why are your
mother and
the High Arrion here in Krakandar? I know R'shiel arranged for
Zegarnald to turn Narvell back, but that doesn't explain the other
two."
"I don't know," he admitted, a little surprised that she'd
asked. He
reminded himself, yet again, not to underestimate his wife.
"Well, I suggest you find out. I may not be an expert on Hythrun
politics, but I do know the High Arrion doesn't do anything without a
good reason, and I suspect your mother hasn't made an impulsive move in
her entire life."
It was a remarkably accurate assessment, considering her short
acquaintance with his family. Damin wished for a moment that he could
trust her. She would make a daunting High Princess - if she
didn't try
to murder him first.
"We'll find out what's behind their presence soon enough. Once Marla
has gotten over the news about you."
"Well, if she doesn't like the idea, tell her to take it up with the
demon child," she told him, picking up a silver-backed
hairbrush. She
turned her back to him and began brushing out her long dark hair.
He had been dismissed.
* * *
Damin let himself out of Adrina's rooms, thinking
on what she had said about his mother and sister. She wasn't far off
the mark. Marla did nothing without thinking it through. As for Kalan,
Adrina was right about her too. The High Arrion would not leave
Greenharbour without a very good reason. His unease at finding his
palace steps lined with silver-uniformed soldiers from the Sorcerers'
Collective still lingered.
"My Lord?"
Damin turned to find Orleon coming towards him at his usual,
unhurried pace. The old man was as much a part of Krakandar Palace as
the stones in the walls. He never aged noticeably that Damin could see.
He still seemed the same, grey-haired, eagle-eyed watchdog that he'd
been when Damin was a child.
"Yes, Orleon?"
"You have a visitor, my Lord."
From the slight tone of reproach, Damin could guess who it was.
"Where is he?"
"In the Morning Room, my Lord. I suggest you go there now, while we
still have the silverware."
Damin grinned at Orleon's expression and changed the direction he
was headed. The Morning Room was on the ground floor, and he took the
broad marble steps two at a time, anxious to see his visitor. When he
threw open the door, the man in question was holding up a small statue
to the light, examining it with the critical eye of an expert.
"It's not worth your attention," Damin told him, as he
closed the
door behind him. "You'd get more for the candelabra."
The fair-haired man slowly replaced the statue on the mantle before
he turned to Damin.
"Perhaps. But that's inscribed with the Krakenshield crest. Too easy
to trace it back to its source."
"When has that ever bothered you?"
The man smiled and crossed the room, catching Damin in a crushing
bear hug, before holding him at arm's length to look at him closely.
Older by two years, but of a much slighter build, his clothes were
expertly cut of expensive silk and he wore them with the cavalier air
of a nobleman. His blue eyes were bright with intelligence and a level
of animal cunning that Damin had often envied as a child. He looked
prosperous and happy. Business must be good, Damin thought, not
altogether pleased by the thought.
"Welcome home, Damin. It's good to see you."
"It's good to see you too, Starros. How's business?"
"It'll be better now that you're home."
Damin moved to the sidetable, shaking his head. "I'm sure you mean
it as a compliment, old friend, but telling me that my return is going
to favour Krakandar's criminal element, really doesn't thrill
me."
He pulled the stopper from the decanter and poured two cups of wine,
handing one to Starros with a smile. The thief frowned as he accepted
the wine.
"You know what I mean, Damin. All these troops from the Sorcerers'
Collective and Elasapine filling up our streets is no good for my
people."
"Maybe I should invite them to stay."
"Maybe you should invite them to leave," Starros corrected.
Damin looked at him curiously. "Perhaps you'd better fill me
in."
They settled into the heavily padded chairs on either side of the
hearth. The fire burned low - more glowing coals than flame - but it
gave off enough heat to take the chill out of the air. Damin carried
the decanter with him, certain he would need another drink before
Starros was through.
"The Collective troops arrived about a month ago. Kalan made quite
an impressive entrance, and then declared the city under the
Collective's protection. Your mother arrived before her by a few days,
and Narvell and his henchmen got here last week."
"Why did Kalan place the city under the Collective's protection?
That only happens when a Warlord dies without an heir."
"You'll have to ask Kalan, I'm afraid. I tried to get in to see her,
but she doesn't entertain the likes of me since she became High
Arrion."
Damin frowned, wondering what was really going on. He'd had no
chance to speak to Kalan alone since he arrived, and she had not sought
him out. Even more worrying was Kalan's refusal to see Starros. The
leader of the Thieves' Guild was - so rumour claimed -
Almodavar's
bastard son. He had grown up here in the palace with them and was
counted among their closest friends. Even if she could not acknowledge
her friendship with Starros openly, she had never refused to see him
before.
"What else has been happening since I left?"
"Not much. Things were pretty quiet until your mother got here. But
then things always get sticky once she turns up."
Damin smiled in fond remembrance. "You remember that time she
arrived from Elasapine and we'd gone fishing in the woods?"
"The time she found me beating the stuffing out of you in that
bog?"
Starros laughed. "I remember. Gods, we must have looked a sight. All
mud and blood and black eyes."
"You were not beating me," Damin corrected. "I was
letting
you win."
"You were bawling your eyes out like a baby!"
"I was not!"
"You were so! And I'll never let you forget it, either. It was the
only time I ever beat you in a fair fight, Damin Wolfblade."
Starros
finished his wine and held out his cup for a refill. Damin shook his
head and smiled. It wasn't really worth arguing about. He leaned over
and filled the cup without getting out of his chair. Starros sipped the
wine appreciatively. "So, I hear you've taken a bride."
"That's right."
"A Fardohnyan?"
"That's right."
"Well, you always did like to live dangerously. Is she
pretty?"
"Very."
"Worth the trouble?"
Damin grinned. "I haven't decided yet."
Starros chuckled softly. "And the rumour that you have brought the
demon child to Hythria? Is that true?"
Damin lowered the cup from his lips and stared at Starros. "Where
did you hear that?"
"I have my sources," the thief told him smugly.
"I'm serious, Starros. How did you hear about it so soon?"
"Soon? Hell, we've known about it for weeks!" He looked at
Damin,
his smile fading.
"Who told you?"
"It's really bothering you, isn't it? Nobody told me, not in the way
you're thinking. It was a bit odd, actually. About six or seven weeks
ago, an old man appeared in the city. Didn't bother anyone at first,
just roamed the streets trying to convince the working court'esa
that their eternal souls were in danger if they didn't renounce their
way of life. He stood on a few street corners and gave speeches that
nobody listened to. You know the type. We average about one prophet a
month in a good year, so we paid him little attention."
"But -" Damin prompted, certain there was more to
the story.
"Do you remember Limik the Leopard?" Starros asked.
"Tall fellow? Scarred hands?"
Starros nodded. "He burned them as a child."
"Didn't I have him flogged once for beating his wife?"
"That's the one. Hard case through and through."
"I remember him," Damin said. "What's he got to do with the
old man?"
"I'm getting to that. I sent Limik out on a job . . . oh,
about three weeks ago, I think. A certain merchant in Felt Street had a
bad habit of leaving his wife's jewellery laying about the house. In
our profession, that sort of carelessness can't be allowed to go
unpunished."
"Of course not," Damin agreed wryly.
"Anyway, Limik's an old hand at that sort of thing, so I sent him
out to teach our merchant friend a lesson. He did the job and was on
his way back to the Guild when he bumped into the old man."
"What happened?"
"Limik went back to the house, confessed his crime to the merchant -
who didn't even realise he'd been robbed - and from that day
on, he
followed the old man around like a puppy, telling anyone who'd listen
that he'd denounced Dacendaran, and was now a follower of another
god."
"Which other god?"
"He didn't say. But he used the word 'sin' a lot."
Damin frowned. "That sounds like Xaphista."
"Not even Limik, in the throes of religious ecstasy, is stupid
enough to use that name out loud in the streets of Krakandar,"
Starros
said. "But after that day, the old man changed his tune. He started
talking about you. Said you'd allied yourself with the godless ones - I
guess he meant the Medalonians - and that you were consorting
with the
demon child. Next thing you know, Kalan turns up with her troops and
places the city under the Collective's protection."
"Where is this old man now?"
"Gone," Starros shrugged. "As soon as I got word you were on
your
way home, I sent my people out to find him. He's dropped out of sight.
Vanished as if he was never here."
"And Limik?"
"The day after the old man vanished, Limik robbed three houses and a
tavern. He claims he can't remember a thing. Threatened to knife me for
even suggesting he'd ever confess to any crime, let alone turn away
from Dacendaran."
Damin stared into his wine for a moment. "So, what's your
theory?"
"I don't have one, Damin. Strange old men and inexplicable religious
experiences are not my line of business. That's what we have a High
Arrion for."
Damin nodded, more than a little concerned. "I'll mention it to
Kalan."
"You might want to mention it to the demon child, too."
"Why?"
"Because along with reforming thieves and prostitutes, the old man
was trying to find someone willing to kill her."
CHAPTER 13
"Damin!"
Still brooding over Starros' disturbing news, Damin was startled out
of his reverie by R'shiel. He turned as she ran the length of the broad
hall, skidding on the polished floor as she neared him.
"What's wrong?"
"Nothing. I need to see Kalan, and Orleon told me she's in the
Solar. As I have no idea what a Solar is or how to find it in this
rabbit warren you call a palace, I was hoping you could show me the
way."
"Of course," he said, offering his arm. She took it lightly
and fell
into step beside him. Her hair was damp from her bath, but she still
wore the Harshini leathers she favoured so much. At least he thought
they were made of leather. They never seemed to get dirty the way
other, ordinary clothes did.
"So, have you spoken to Adrina?"
"Yes. She's being remarkably cooperative. It has me worried."
R'shiel laughed. "Enjoy it while it lasts, Damin."
"You know, the annoying thing is, she's actually very smart
underneath that obnoxious attitude of hers. But I still don't trust
her."
"You should. She does love you, you know."
"Adrina? Don't be absurd. She loves flirting with danger. And power.
And herself."
"She said much the same thing about you."
Damin looked at R'shiel, shaking his head. "Stop trying to create
romance where there is none, R'shiel. You wanted us to marry and we
did, but don't think you can ease your own guilt by inventing some
relationship between us that doesn't exist."
She studied him thoughtfully for a moment then shrugged. "As you
wish."
They walked in silence after that, through the long, wide halls of
the palace, each of them certain that the other was wrong.
Kalan greeted them as they stepped into the Solar.
"Demon child; Damin."
"My name is R'shiel."
"It would be improper of me to address you so informally, Divine
One."
R'shiel sighed. "Whatever."
The room had been added to the palace by Damin's paternal
grandmother and was roofed in clear glass tiles. The far wall was also
glassed, and opened out into the palace gardens, which were looking
rather forlorn, Damin noted with a frown. The furniture here had been
cleverly wrought from iron, brightly coloured cushions relieving its
convoluted lines. Damin never used the room much. As children they had
avoided it. It was too easy for some passing palace courtier to see
inside and discover what mischief they were up to.
"There are a few things I need to ask you," R'shiel
explained.
"Then I'll leave you two in private," Damin said. Getting
caught
between the High Arrion and the demon child was not something he
relished.
"I think you should stay, Damin," Kalan suggested. "I
imagine this
concerns you as much as anyone."
"I don't think . . ."
"Stay, Damin," R'shiel ordered. "There's nothing I need to
ask the
High Arrion that you don't already know about."
"Before I answer your questions, Divine One, perhaps you'd like to
start by telling me what absurd Harshini plot you've cooked up that
required my brother to betray his country by marrying that Fardohnyan
harlot."
"While we're all so busy with explanations, you can tell me what you're
doing here with an occupation force," he retorted. For some
reason,
Kalan's insistence on referring to Adrina as "that Fardohnyan
harlot"
was starting to aggravate him.
"Damin, calm down," R'shiel advised then turned to the High
Arrion. "Don't judge Adrina too harshly, Kalan. She has a good head on
her
shoulders and your brother loves her."
"Not that I noticed."
"Then you're not as observant as I thought," R'shiel
shrugged. "Please sit down. This could take a while so we might as well
be
comfortable."
"If you're planning to convince me this is a good idea, then we
could be here all night," Kalan remarked as she sat down on the
chaise
near the fireplace. The clouds moving in front of the sun shadowed the
room. It made her expression hard to read.
"There was a time when the Hythrun did not question the
Harshini."
"That time is long past, demon child. The Harshini abandoned us and
we learnt to survive on our own. Nothing personal, mind you -
the
Harshini presence in Greenharbour has been most welcome these past few
months - but why should we submit to your people again?"
"Because without the Harshini all Hythria will continue to be is a
pack of squabbling Warlords, each trying to kill the others to gain
more territory," Damin said. "Hythria is better than
that."
"That's very noble of you, Damin. You hope to appeal to my
patriotism in lieu of my political instincts, is that it?"
Kalan
smiled, as if the very idea was laughable.
"No, it's your political instincts we're relying on."
Kalan turned to R'shiel. "What do you mean?"
"I have to destroy Xaphista, Kalan. I'm hoping you can tell me
how."
"You think the Sorcerers' Collective is privy to such
secrets?"
"It's hardly something I can ask the Harshini."
Kalan smiled faintly. "I suppose not, but don't get your hopes up,
Divine One. There may be something in the archives that I'm not aware
of, but even in ancient times, the gods weren't renowned for
documenting the instructions for their own demise and leaving them
lying about where a mortal could find them. And even if we have the
knowledge you seek, with Hythria on the brink of civil war, I've
neither the time nor the inclination to aid you in such an
undertaking."
"On the brink of civil war?" Damin scoffed. "Aren't you
exaggerating
just a little, Kalan?"
"You don't know the half of it, brother," she scowled. "You
wanted
to know what I was doing here? Well, I'll tell you. I'm here because
the Warlord of Dregian Province tried to have you declared dead and
your province gifted to his younger brother. Krakandar is currently
under the protection of the Sorcerers' Collective. I occupied your city
because without me, you wouldn't have a city."
"Cyrus tried to have me removed?" The idea was laughable.
"It's worse than that. He's publicly calling you a traitor."
"Let him! Who would believe him anyhow?"
"A lot of people. You left Krakandar all but unguarded, and even the
lowliest beggar in the street has heard the rumours that Fardohnya is
planning to invade us. You made a treaty with Medalon without
consulting anyone. You sent Narvell to Bordertown to help the
Defenders. It might have been different if you'd sent him to guard your
border, but you didn't. You sent him into Medalon. And now you return
home like nothing is wrong, bringing with you the daughter of our worst
enemy as your bride. The wonder is not that Cyrus has accused you,
Damin. It's that nobody has acted on it until now."
"I have to get to Greenharbour," he said, thinking of
several rather
painful and exotic things that he would like to do to the Warlord of
Dregian Province. "I'll put that obnoxious little upstart in his place.
What's Lernen been doing while all this is going on?"
"Fretting," Kalan told him. "He's not been well lately and
Cyrus has
his ear. He knows what Lernen likes and, more importantly, what he
fears. You've no idea the damage he's done in your absence."
R'shiel was looking at him with concern. He did not realise how
dangerous his expression was until he caught a glimpse of himself in
the glass.
"Don't do anything hasty, Damin."
"What I plan to do to Cyrus will be very, very slow,
R'shiel."
"I don't have time for you to start a war, Damin."
He smiled coldly. "Don't worry. It'll be a nasty little war, but a
short one."
"How long ago did all this happen?" R'shiel asked Kalan,
sparing
Damin an exasperated look.
"Over a month ago. I've been here since the Feast of Jonadalup.
Mother came here as soon as she realised Krakandar was under threat.
Narvell arrived six days ago."
"But now that he's back, you can release Krakandar and return to
Greenharbour, right?"
"No. We'll have to go back to Greenharbour so Damin can petition the
Convocation of Warlords for the return of his province."
"Petition the Warlords!" Damin exploded angrily. "The hell I
will!"
R'shiel shrugged philosophically. "Then we'll go to
Greenharbour."
"R'shiel -"
"Damin, we have to get this sorted out quickly. Medalon is under
Karien control and I can't do anything about it until I've found out
how to deal with Xaphista. If that means sorting out your damned
Warlords, then that's what we'll do."
"What's the hurry?" Kalan asked suspiciously. "Xaphista has
been the
dominant power in the north for centuries. A few more months one way or
the other won't make much difference."
"It's not just the Overlord. I promised to help the Defenders retake
Medalon. There's a thousand Defenders headed this way," Damin
told her.
"You're bringing Defenders onto Hythrun soil? Damin, how could
you?" she cried in horror.
"They come as allies," R'shiel reminded her.
"There is no such thing, as far as the Warlords are concerned. If
those Defenders step one foot into Hythria before this is resolved,
there will be nothing I can do to save you, Damin. You will lose
Krakandar, the High Prince's throne and probably your life."
The High
Arrion turned to R'shiel, her eyes burning with anger. "You are
responsible for this too, I suppose?"
"Sort of," R'shiel admitted.
"And how does this fit into your grand plan to destroy
Xaphista?"
"If we don't turn the Kariens back from Medalon, Hythria is next,
Kalan. I can hardly destroy him if he's getting stronger, rather than
weaker. We need the Defenders and every man the Hythrun can muster.
Only then can we restore the Primal Gods to millions of people who now
worship Xaphista."
"What do you mean, you're going to weaken Xaphista by restoring the
Primal Gods to Karien?"
"What did you think I was going to do? Hunt Xaphista down and then
throw fireballs and lightning bolts at him? Unless you've got some
handy little scroll with precise instructions on how to do that tucked
away in your archives, the only way I can seriously threaten the
Overlord is to shake the faith of his believers. And I can't do that
while he's rampaging through the continent, conquering everything in
sight. The Defenders must be helped. Medalon must be freed."
"And how do you plan to restore the Primal Gods?"
"That's where you come in."
Kalan stared at her, wide-eyed. "I fail to see
. . ."
"The Sorcerers' Collective is the closest thing to an organised
religion that I have to work with," R'shiel explained, a little
impatiently. "The Kariens are used to being organised. It's how
Xaphista maintains control. I can't just destroy his Church. I have to replace
it."
"Since the withdrawal of the Harshini our power has been eroded
considerably."
"I know. But Brak told me that the Sorcerers' Collective once sent
out their emissaries to every corner of the continent. He said they
could travel through a war zone with impunity."
Kalan nodded. "They were protected by their black robes, their
diamond-shaped pendant and the deep respect the people had for our
fellowship."
"Those days are long past," Damin warned. "Anyone caught
wearing the
diamond pendant in Fardohnya these days is imprisoned as a Hythrun spy.
In Medalon they're liable for deportation. In Karien, they're burned at
the stake."
"I can change that. We can change it. But I need your help,
Kalan. I need access to your archives. I need Hythria united and at
peace with Fardohnya, and we need Hythrun help to push the Kariens
back. And I need the Collective. Only then can I face the Overlord with
a chance."
Kalan nodded as the ramifications dawned on her. "Assuming we can
save Damin's province and bring our troops to aid Medalon, how do you
propose to convert the Kariens?"
"I don't wish to tip my hand by revealing that."
Damin glanced at her askance, wondering if her reticence was
deliberate or she simply didn't have a clue.
Kalan's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Yet you demand my
cooperation?"
"I'm asking for it, Kalan. If I wanted to demand it, I would
ask one of the gods to appear and make it a divine edict."
"Then let me see if I understand you. You want me to return to
Greenharbour and announce that the Collective sanctions the marriage of
the Hythrun heir to Hablet's daughter. You then, I assume, want me to
issue some sort of dire threat to the Warlords who oppose this union,
to make them toe the line. And while you're scrabbling through my
archives looking for something that probably doesn't exist, you want me
to get them to release Krakandar back to Damin and convince them that a
thousand or more Defenders pouring over our border is an act of
friendship, not war."
"That would help," R'shiel agreed.
"And you? Having dragged half the world to the brink of war, what
will you do, exactly?"
"Hand you and your Collective more power than they've known for
centuries," the demon child told her.
Kalan sat, silent and thoughtful for a moment. "You make a powerful
and tempting offer, demon child."
"You're not likely to get another like it."
Kalan looked down at her hands again before meeting R'shiel's eye.
"You may, of course, have access to our archives. They are as much the
property of the Harshini as they are ours. As for the rest of it
. . . I cannot give you an answer now. I must think on this.
What you ask is unprecedented. And I wish to speak with my
mother." She
glanced up at Damin. "You are aware of this plan, I assume?"
He nodded. "So is Adrina."
"Well that explains this absurd marriage, at any rate."
Kalan rose to her feet and brushed an imaginary speck of dust from
her long black robe. Her fair hair fell forward and when she looked up
for a moment she appeared much younger and more innocent than she truly
was.
"I will give you my answer when I have come to a decision. Damin;
demon child." She bowed politely and left the Solar.
Damin turned to R'shiel, shaking his head. She met his look, puzzled
by his expression. "What?"
"I was just thinking how well you manipulate people,
R'shiel."
"You sound like you don't approve."
"I never said I didn't approve. I just can't handle never knowing
what you're going to do next."
"You might find it's better that way," she suggested with
the ghost
of a smile.
Damin doubted that, but decided against pursuing the matter.
"R'shiel, do you see Dacendaran much?"
"I haven't seen him since we left the Karien border."
"Can you speak to him?"
"I suppose."
"Can you ask him if anyone has been interfering in his
followers?"
"If you want. Why?"
"I'm not sure. I just heard something that bothers me a bit, that's
all."
"I'll ask him if you think it's important."
"That's just it," he admitted. "I don't really know if it
is, or
not."
CHAPTER 14
R'shiel would have liked to explore Krakandar, but
her status as the demon child was a significant obstacle. She had
naively hoped that her identity could be kept secret until they reached
Greenharbour. She'd had a vague notion that she would confront the
Council of Warlords, tell them to behave because she, the demon child,
commanded it, find the secret to destroying Xaphista in the
Collective's archives, then return to Medalon with a Hythrun army at
her back. The chances of that happening now seemed remote. It had not
occurred to her just how much the legend of the demon child meant to
these pagans, or how much Damin planned to exploit it. The news had
spread and a crowd had gathered outside the gates of the inner city,
hoping to catch a glimpse of her.
Although raised as the daughter of a Quorum Member, R'shiel had
never been the subject of public speculation before and she found it
extremely disconcerting. Her status as a Novice, and later a Probate in
the Sisterhood, had meant she had led a fairly normal life, such that
it was, until circumstances and her own rebellion had conspired to
forever change its course. She was not trained to deal with being a
public figure, at least not on this scale.
It was Adrina who came to her rescue. Born and bred to be in the
public eye, she seemed to know what to do without thinking about it. In
fact, she seemed quite determined to teach R'shiel everything she could
- as if it gave her a purpose in life, other than avoiding her
mother-in-law.
Thinking of Adrina made R'shiel think of Damin. Now that she had met
his mother and sister, she understood what fascinated Damin about
Adrina. He had grown up surrounded by intelligent, powerful women, and
Adrina was everything he admired. Of course, he was too dense to
realise it, just as Adrina was too stubborn to admit how she felt about
Damin. The pair of them made R'shiel want to scream with frustration.
But at least they were doing what was required of them, and if they
were too pig-headed to work out how they felt about each other, that
was their problem, not hers.
A knock at the door was a welcome diversion from her woes. She
called out a command to enter and was startled to find that her visitor
was Princess Marla. R'shiel leapt out of her chair as the Princess
swept into the room.
"You are comfortable here?" Marla asked, glancing around the
room to
ensure that everything was as it should be.
"Very comfortable, thank you, Your Highness."
"We must talk, demon child. I have many questions for you."
R'shiel nodded, unsurprised. She'd been expecting this ever since
she had spoken to Kalan.
"Of course. Won't you have a seat? I can order some refreshments if
you wish. Mikel!"
The boy appeared from the next room at her command. "My
Lady?"
"Fetch us some wine, Mikel."
The boy bowed awkwardly and hurried from the room. R'shiel turned
back to the Princess who was staring at her suspiciously.
"I won't be drinking wine with you, my girl," she announced.
"I plan
to keep my wits about me."
"Water, then?"
"That will do."
Marla seated herself beside the fire as R'shiel poured water from a
silver pitcher into a matching cup for the Princess.
Winter in Krakandar was much milder than in Medalon, so the fire was
banked low, more for the convenience of not having to light it later
than from any real need for warmth. She handed the cup to Marla and
took the chair opposite.
"So, what is it you wanted to ask me?"
"You are very blunt."
"I was raised to speak my mind."
"By the Sisterhood, Damin informs me."
"That's correct."
Marla did not look pleased to have her information confirmed. "So
it's true then that you are Joyhinia Tenragan's daughter?"
"She fostered me. My real mother died giving birth to me."
"I cannot understand how the Harshini allowed Lorandranek's child to
be raised by their mortal enemies."
"The Harshini didn't know of my existence until recently. When they
did learn of it, they sent Brak to find me. I can see you're concerned,
Your Highness, but imagine how I feel. I was raised to despise the
Harshini. Nobody was more shocked than I was to discover the
truth."
"Yet you appear to have adapted well."
"Out of necessity. Not by choice, I can assure you."
Marla took another sip of water, studying R'shiel over the rim of
her cup. "And so, having accepted who you are, you have decided to
meddle in the internal affairs of every nation on the
continent."
"There's no point in being half-hearted about this," R'shiel
pointed
out with a faint smile. "I'm supposed to destroy Xaphista. I can't do
that without affecting anyone else."
"And this marriage? How did you get Damin to agree to it? Did you
ensorcel him? Did that Fardohnyan woman?"
"Damin might be under Adrina's spell, Your Highness, but it has
nothing to do with magic."
"It's obvious he's under some sort of spell!" Marla snapped.
"He is
beyond reason where she is concerned. I have never seen him so
intransigent over a woman. He insists that she will one day be the High
Princess of Hythria."
"And so she shall."
"The Warlords will never accept a Fardohnyan."
"They will, in time."
"We may not have time," Marla told her. "My brother
is
dying, demon child. It is only a matter of time before he succumbs to
the diseases that consume him. One cannot indulge in the type of
activities in which he finds pleasure without eventually paying the
price. We do not have years, or even months, for the Warlords to grow
accustomed to the idea of a Fardohnyan High Princess. We may only have
weeks, and that is simply not enough time."
"Then you will have to use your considerable powers of persuasion,
won't you?"
Marla scowled. "You haven't persuaded me yet."
"I don't need to. It is done."
"I will have it annulled."
"I will have it ratified by the Harshini. I will have the gods put
in an appearance if necessary. You can't fight me on this, Your
Highness. I have considerably more resources than you when it comes to
divine intervention."
The Princess did not look pleased. "Even if I agreed to this absurd
arrangement, one cannot trust a Fardohnyan, particularly one of
Hablet's brood."
"You don't think Adrina wants peace?"
"I think that young woman wants her father's throne, and that's the
only reason she married my son. Have you any idea of the power you have
handed her?"
"I'm quite sure Adrina knows a son of hers is likely to be
King."
"I'm not talking of that!" Marla said impatiently. "This has
nothing
to do with any child she might bear. Hablet has no legitimate sons.
Under ancient law, that makes Damin his heir. My son would have had the
Fardohnyan throne in any case, and now you have interfered and that
grasping little harlot will become Queen. Just how long do you think my
son will survive after that?"
R'shiel leaned back in her chair, stunned by the news. "I didn't
know."
"Of course you didn't know. But you can bet Adrina knows. Why else
would she marry Damin with barely a word of protest?"
"Has it occurred to you that she might love him?"
"Don't be ridiculous! She wouldn't know the meaning of the
word."
"I think you're wrong, Your Highness. I don't think Adrina knows
anything about Damin being the heir to her father's throne."
"Then you are as blind as my son."
R'shiel thought back over her conversations with Adrina. Nothing she
had done or said would seem to indicate that she knew of any law that
would make Damin the heir to the Fardohnyan throne. Even Kalan had
given no hint that she knew of such a law. But that did raise another
interesting question.
"Does Damin know about this law?"
"He does now! It's a tragedy he didn't learn of it sooner."
"Why didn't you tell him sooner?"
"I only learnt of it recently, myself. My youngest stepson is a
member of the Assassins' Guild. The Guild was approached by one of
Hablet's lackeys to murder my sons, Damin and Narvell. They refused the
contract, but decided to look into the reasons behind Hablet's
obsession with the destruction of the Wolfblade line."
"Then I don't see the problem. Damin is still heir to the Hythrun
and Fardohnyan thrones. With Adrina at his side, won't that just make
his claim to the Fardohnyan throne that much stronger?"
"Of course it does, that's my point. There will be no stopping
Adrina now. With Damin at her side, she can claim her father's throne.
Once she's done that, all she needs to do is dispose of my son and she
will rule Fardohnya and Hythria. If the child she is carrying
turns out to be Cratyn's, then she can lay claim to the Karien throne
as well!"
"Child? What child?"
Marla shook her head in despair. "You don't know? By the gods, it's
as plain as the nose on her face. Adrina is with child, R'shiel. Surely
you noticed! I for one would be very interested to learn whose child it
is."
R'shiel really had no idea. She wondered if Adrina knew, or even
suspected. It was possible, of course. She and Damin had been lovers
for several months. The child could only be his. If she had been
pregnant when she left Karien, her condition would have been patently
obvious before now.
"If what you say is true, then the child is Damin's. I can promise
you that."
"Bah! Who knows with a woman like that? It could be Almodavar's, if
she was bored enough. I just pray Damin doesn't learn of her condition
before I can prove the truth of the child's parentage."
"You've not told him about it, then?"
"And have him lose what little sense he has left regarding that
woman? I don't think so. And I would appreciate it if you said nothing
to him either. At least until I can find the evidence I need to
convince him how foolish he's being."
"I'll not say anything about Adrina's condition," she
agreed, in an
effort to appear cooperative, "but only because I think you're on a
fool's errand. The only thing you are likely to prove is that Damin is
the child's father."
"My son? Get a child on that Fardohnyan whore? Never!"
Marla's blind prejudice where Adrina was concerned was beginning to
wear on R'shiel. "Your Highness, I really think you should reconsider
your attitude towards Adrina. She is married to your son and if you're
right about her condition, she carries your grandchild. Don't you think
life would be a lot easier if you made an effort to get along with
her?"
"I don't trust her," Marla replied stubbornly.
"You've hardly given her a chance."
"I see no reason why I should."
"You should, because I say you should," R'shiel declared.
"I'm not going to be ordered around by a slip of a girl who thinks
she can bend the world to her will . . ."
Marla's voice tapered off as R'shiel reached for her power. She
didn't do anything with it, she simply let it fill her until her eyes
darkened and turned completely black. She stared at Marla unblinkingly,
her black eyes like orbs of burning onyx, her silence a threat in
itself. There wasn't much point in being the demon child if you
couldn't lay down the law every now and then, especially when being
reasonable wasn't getting her anywhere.
Marla fell to her knees. "I am sorry, Divine One. I did not mean to
doubt you."
"Then you will do as I say," R'shiel commanded, borrowing
just
enough power to fill her voice with an irresistible compulsion. It was
not a coercion, but it was enough to scare the wits out of the
Princess. "You will treat Adrina in a manner befitting her status as
your daughter-in-law and you will give this marriage your full support.
If not, you will answer to the gods."
"It shall be as you command, Divine One."
"Then be gone from my presence," she added dramatically,
"while I am
still in the mood to indulge you. And do not speak to me of this
again."
Marla scrambled to her feet rather inelegantly and was gone from the
room in a matter of moments. R'shiel let go of the power and laughed.
The look on Marla's face alone had been worth it. All she could do now
was hope that she had frightened the Princess sufficiently for her to
toe the line.
"Was that Marla I just saw running out of here?"
R'shiel looked up as Adrina slipped into the room. She studied the
Princess closely, but if her belly was swollen, it was impossible to
tell in the long loose gown she was wearing.
"It was. I'm afraid I indulged in what Brak would call a 'tasteless
and theatrical display of power' to get my point across."
Adrina frowned. "Well, I hoped it worked. That woman really doesn't
like me."
"I think you'll find her a little more cooperative from now on. How
are you feeling?"
"Fine," Adrina replied with a puzzled look. "Why do you
ask?"
"Are you pregnant, Adrina?"
The Princess paled and took the seat so recently vacated by her
mother-in-law. "What do you mean?"
"I mean, are you pregnant? It's a simple enough
question."
"I'm not sure."
"How can you not be sure?"
"Very well, I have my suspicions, but as I don't want to be
pregnant, I've done nothing to confirm them."
R'shiel smiled. "You mean you hoped it would go away if you didn't
think about it?"
Adrina glared at her for a moment, then shrugged. "It's stupid, I
know."
"Marla thinks you are."
"Wonderful! That's all I need."
"Does Damin have any idea?"
"Of course not! He's a man. They never notice that sort of thing.
And it doesn't really show yet."
"Don't you think you should break the news to him before someone
else does?"
"And give him the idea he has some sort of claim over me? I don't
think so!"
"Adrina, it's his child too. And you are married to
him."
"That's beside the point."
"That is the point."
"R'shiel, don't you understand what will happen when I tell him? The
first thing he's going to do is surround me with so many bodyguards
I'll be lucky if I can see daylight through them. Then he's going to
lock me away somewhere 'for my safety' so that the child will
be
protected. Then he'll strut around crowing like a rooster because he's
proved his manhood."
R'shiel laughed. "So what are you going to do, Adrina? Carry on as
if nothing is amiss while your belly swells to the size of a large
melon?"
"I don't know what I'm going to do, I . . ." She
stopped
mid-sentence, interrupted as Mikel slipped through the door.
"What is it, Mikel?" R'shiel asked, puzzled by the
expression on the
child's face.
"The High Prince requests your presence in the Great Hall, my Lady.
You too, Your Highness."
"The High Prince?" Adrina asked curiously. "You mean
Prince
Lernen is here?"
"No, Your Highness, it's Lord Wolfblade. He requests you attend him.
The news has just come from Greenharbour. High Prince Lernen is
dead."
Adrina turned to R'shiel, her eyes wide with shock.
"Long live the High Prince Damin," R'shiel murmured softly.
CHAPTER 15
"We have to move from here and the roads are still
blocked," Tarja announced, leaning over the map that Denjon had
spread
out on the table in the cold, dank cellar of the tavern in Roan Vale.
"Move? We only just got here," Linst pointed out testily,
shifting
the lantern on the table so he could study the map more easily. The
ventilation was poor in the crowded cellar and the lantern smoked
badly. Tarja squinted through the stinging haze and scowled at the
other captain.
"Take a look outside, Linst. Between your men, those who joined us
in Testra and the men I got away from the border, there's close on two
thousand men out there now. We're too big a target. We can march some
of the men across the border, the rest we have to break into smaller
groups - less than twenty men to a squad. Each squad can
operate
independently, their only orders to get to Hythria. We can muster them
at Krakandar. Damin may even appreciate the fact that we didn't march
over his border like an invading army. And we have to do something
about stopping the Kariens crossing the river."
"Let them loose in squads? How do you expect to maintain
discipline?" Denjon asked.
"I don't. We're going to have to rely on their training."
"What about provisions?"
"We'll split up what we have here, after that they'll be on their
own. You'd be surprised how helpful a sympathetic population can
be."
"Is that how you survived in the rebellion?" Linst asked.
There was
an edge of reproval in his tone that Tarja didn't much care for.
Tarja nodded. "It's the reason you could never really break us. Each
squad operated on its own. It didn't know where the rest of the squads
were, what they're planning, or who was in them. It's like a serpent
with a hundred heads. Cut off one and the others will continue to
function. If they're captured, they can't betray anyone but their own
small group."
"No Defender would betray his comrades," Linst objected.
"Any man can break under torture. The trick is minimising what each
man knows, to protect the rest of the force."
"I still say we should fight them head on. This sneaking around,
running away to Hythria, it reeks of dishonour."
"Fight them head on? Our pitiful force of two thousand men? Do odds
of five hundred to one appeal to your honour that much?"
"I would rather die an honourable death."
"Well, I wouldn't," Denjon laughed, trying to ease the
tension. "I'd
rather live, if it's all right with you."
Tarja smiled briefly then turned to Linst. "You need to make up your
mind, Linst. You can't have it both ways. Either you're with us, or
you're against us."
"Us? Don't you mean you, Tarja? Isn't that what all this is
really about? You've gone pagan, haven't you? And you expect us to
fight to save the damned Harshini from the Kariens."
Tarja straightened and turned to Linst. "Who said anything about the
Harshini?"
"Who said anything? Your damned sister, or whatever she is
these days, is one of them! Don't think me a fool. How long have you
known they were in hiding? How long have you been protecting
them?"
"You have no idea what you're talking about."
"Then enlighten me, Captain. Tell me how you came to be in the
company of two Harshini, one of whom we always considered your sister.
Tell me how you survived a wound that would have killed any other man.
Tell me why we are risking our necks. Is it really to save Medalon? Or
is it because you know the Kariens will ensure the Harshini are
eradicated completely this time?"
Tarja fought down the urge to throttle Linst where he stood. He was
not the only Defender who felt that way. He was merely giving voice to
a sentiment that was rapidly spreading through their forces, a
situation not helped by the pagan rebels who had flocked to their
banner. Tarja swallowed his annoyance and took a deep breath. This
problem had to be dealt with, and the sooner the better.
"What I think about the Harshini is irrelevant, Linst. So is what
the Kariens plan for them. My only concern at the moment is to get
across the border so we can mount a counter-attack. There are no
Harshini here and I'm not expecting any. But there is a Karien
army marching on the Citadel, and a First Sister who is issuing their
orders. We can decide what to do about the Harshini when we've gotten
rid of the Kariens. Until then, I don't intend to waste my time arguing
with you about it."
Before Linst could answer, the cellar door opened and Mandah
entered, followed by a civilian dressed in rough farmer's clothing. The
man looked at the Defenders with barely disguised suspicion then turned
to Tarja.
"Good to see you again, Cap'n," he said, revealing a mouth
full of
broken teeth.
"You too, Seth. What news do you have?"
Seth had been a rebel long before Tarja had joined their cause.
Tarja knew him for a reliable and steady man, not prone to flights of
fancy the way the younger men were.
"The Kariens moved south from the border 'bout two weeks
ago.
They're headin' straight for the Citadel by the looks of
things."
"And the Citadel? Any news from there?"
"Aye. There's been a stack of new laws issued. Not bad ones, mind
you, but odd, if you know what I mean."
"Odd, how?" Denjon asked.
Seth glared at the officer, but did not answer.
"You can trust him, Seth," Tarja assured the rebel.
Seth hesitated for a moment longer before he spoke. "There's a
Karien advising the First Sister. Squire Mathen, they call him. Word
has it he's the one issuing the laws. The First Sister is just a
puppet."
"More than you know," Tarja murmured, thinking of what Brak
had told
him about the spell cast by the Karien priests and whose mind now
occupied Joyhinia's body. "What sort of laws is he issuing?"
"He's started a program to 'redeem' the court'esa and
made
it an offence for any man or woman with children to spend their wages
in the 'houses of exploitation' as he calls 'em."
"He's outlawed the court'esa?" Denjon asked in
surprise. "The Sisterhood legalised them two centuries ago."
"Not outlawed 'em exactly. The First Sister now reckons
there are
too many children going hungry 'cause their parents spend all
their
money on 'pleasures of the flesh', rather than food for their
kin. The
law was passed with barely a murmur of protest."
"Why issue a law like that?" Linst asked.
"It's the first step to outlawing prostitution completely,"
Tarja
said. "In Karien it's an offence punishable by stoning. Our people
wouldn't accept the Church of Xaphista being imposed on them, but if
they make new laws that sound reasonable enough, before you know it,
they'll be building churches in every damned village in
Medalon."
"Aye, you're right, Cap'n. All the laws seem good on the surface,
but they're only a step away from worshippin' the Overlord."
"That's the danger of them," Tarja agreed. "Is there any
other news?"
Seth nodded grimly. "They're gonna hang Sister Mahina."
"When?" Tarja asked.
"Restday next, I think."
"Then we still have time to rescue her!" Denjon declared.
"Don't be an idiot," Linst said. "That's exactly what
they'll be
expecting. Even if you could get to the Citadel in time, which is
unlikely, Garet Warner will have the city locked up so tight, you won't
be able to sneak a table knife through the main gate, let alone a squad
of armed men."
"Tarja? What do you think? Mahina was a friend of yours, as well as
the only decent First Sister we've had in a century."
Tarja did not answer for a moment. "Linst is right, Denjon. We'd be
walking into a trap."
"So you're just going to let them hang her?"
"We have two thousand men here that we need to disperse and the
Karien army moving through Medalon. Mahina knew the risk she was taking
when she returned to the Citadel, and she'd be the first to tell us not
to throw everything away trying to be heroic. I'm sorry, Denjon. Nobody
wants to save her more than I do, but we simply can't risk it."
Denjon shook his head, but he could not deny Tarja's cold
practicality.
"Then we shall have to settle for avenging her death
instead."
"And avenge it we will," Tarja promised. "Every damned day
until the
Kariens are gone from Medalon."
Tarja looked down at the map, rubbing his eyes,
which felt as if they'd had handfuls of sand thrown in them. Denjon and
Linst were gone and he was alone in the smoky cellar, going over the
plans they had made, looking for faults and finding none. It was a
useless exercise, but it was better than trying to sleep.
"Tarja?"
He looked up as Mandah entered the cellar carrying a tray. She
hadn't changed much in the year since he'd last seen her. She was still
as calm as her brother Ghari was fierce, still as thoughtful, and still
as infuriatingly devout in her belief that the gods would take care of
everything. Her fair hair was tied back in a loose braid and she was
wearing an apron over her homespun trousers. She had been waiting for
them, here in Roan Vale, and had appointed herself housekeeper to the
senior officers and none of them had objected. Mandah was the sort of
woman who could make herself indispensable with remarkable ease. Denjon
was quite taken with her.
"You didn't eat at dinner, so I brought you something."
"Thanks. Just put it there on the table. I'll eat it later."
She put down the tray but made no move to leave. Tarja looked up at
her. "Was there something else?"
"I thought you might like to talk."
"Some other time, Mandah. I'm busy."
"You're always busy. You don't eat. You don't sleep. What's
wrong?"
He laughed humourlessly. "What's wrong? Have you looked
outside lately?"
"That's not what's bothering you, Tarja. You could organise those
men out there in your sleep. If you ever did sleep, that is. Is it
Mahina?"
He had forgotten she was there when they spoke with Seth. "That's a
part of it."
"And what about the rest of it?"
"I don't want to talk about it, Mandah."
"You'll have to get it off your chest sooner or later, Tarja. It's
eating you up." She hesitated for a moment and then added in a
small
voice, "Is it R'shiel?"
He looked up sharply. "Why do you ask?"
"Because you haven't mentioned her once."
"Is that such a surprise? I've had quite a bit to do lately, in case
you hadn't noticed. Besides, what do you care? You never liked her,
anyway." He didn't mean to sound so harsh, but she had cut too
close to
the truth for comfort.
"It doesn't matter if I like her, Tarja. She is the demon
child."
"So everyone keeps telling me."
Mandah walked around the table to stand beside him. She placed a
tentative hand on his shoulder. "Do you want to talk about it?"
"No," he said bluntly, shaking off her arm.
"You'll have to eventually, Tarja." Her eyes were full of
pain at
his rejection. "You can't keep on like this. You're on the brink of
exhaustion. How much use will you be to any of us if you can't think
straight?"
He pushed aside his annoyance and made an effort to be civil. His
mood was hardly Mandah's fault. "Look, I appreciate your concern,
Mandah, but there is really nothing to tell. Thanks for the food, and I
promise I'll eat it later."
He smiled at her, hoping it didn't look nearly as false as it felt,
and turned back to the map. Mandah did not move. Tarja studied the
terrain with great concentration, wondering what it would take to get
her to leave.
"Ghari told me you and R'shiel were lovers," she said after
a long
moment of strained silence.
Tarja slammed his palms down onto the table so hard, the tray
jumped. Mandah leaned away from him, her eyes suddenly fearful.
"Ghari had no reason to lie, Tarja."
"Damn it, Mandah, it's none of your business!"
"Is that what's bothering you?"
He took a deep, calming breath before he turned to her. "You
wouldn't understand."
"Then explain it to me."
Tarja looked at her for a moment then shrugged. She was not going to
be put off easily. "How much did he tell you?"
"Enough."
"Then I don't need to explain anything."
"Tarja, if you really love her . . ."
"Ah, now that's the problem, you see. I remember loving R'shiel as
if there were no other woman in the world. But it's like the memories
belong to someone else. I don't feel like that now, and I can't ever
imagine feeling like that, yet I can remember it, clear as day."
"Can you remember when you first felt that you loved her?"
"Almost to the instant," he told her. "It happened at the
vineyard
near Testra. One moment I wanted to strangle her, the next moment I was
kissing her."
"And do you remember when you stopped feeling that way about
her?"
"I only remember waking up in a wagon with a head full of memories I
thought were simply nightmares, at first."
"It sounds like a geas," she said thoughtfully.
"A what?"
"A geas. A spell, if you like."
"Magic? Oh, well that's just bloody wonderful!" he snarled.
"Look, I'm no expert, but it seems the only logical
explanation."
"Mandah, where I come from you don't use the words magic and
logic in the same sentence."
"The two are not mutually exclusive, Tarja."
"I'm sorry, Mandah, but I don't hold with your belief in the powers
of the gods. You'll have to come up with a better explanation if you're
trying to make me feel better."
"I would have thought you'd seen enough to believe in their power by
now, Tarja. Your determination to ignore what you've witnessed with
your own eyes is just as illogical as you pretend my faith in the gods
is."
Tarja had a bad feeling he was stepping onto dangerous ground
discussing theology with Mandah. "Look, even if I conceded that such a
thing was possible, why would they bother? And why, if they did put a
. . . what did you call it . . . a geas, on me,
would they take it off again?"
Mandah thought for a moment before answering. "Do you know how
R'shiel healed you, Tarja?"
"She used her Harshini magic."
"That's true. The same magic you claim you don't believe in. But you
may not know the whole of it. You were possessed by demons. They melded
to form the blood you lost while you recovered."
"Demons? Founders! I had a demon-meld inside me? How do you
know that?"
"R'shiel told me. She wasn't sure what it would do to you. I think
it destroyed the geas."
He shook his head and stared back at the map. This was too
incredible, too fantastic to be real.
"That's what it sounds like to me," Mandah persisted. "The
gods
sometimes put a geas on a person, to make them act the way they want.
The demon-meld might have broken it, which is why you woke up thinking
you could never have felt that way about R'shiel. And why you never
questioned how you felt about her while the geas was on you."
"Why would anybody, god or man, put a spell on me to make me love
R'shiel?"
Mandah shrugged. "Who can guess the mind of a god? But think about
what has happened since then. Would you have rescued her from the
Grimfield? Or from the Kariens? Would you have done half of what you
did, if you were not driven to keep her by your side? Perhaps it was
the gods' way of protecting R'shiel."
"I am getting pretty bloody sick of your gods, Mandah."
She smiled. "You have served them remarkably well for an
atheist."
"I wasn't planning to serve them at all."
"One cannot avoid one's destiny, Tarja, and like it or not, you are
tied to the demon child." She smiled comfortingly. "Try not to
let it
bother you. If it was a geas, then you're not responsible for how you
felt about her. You shouldn't feel guilty for feeling that way, or that
you don't feel that way any longer." She placed a hand on his
shoulder. "Let it go, Tarja. And get some sleep."
"Later," he promised, turning back to the map.
Mandah hesitated for a moment, perhaps hoping he would confide in
her further, but he had already said more than he intended. After a
while he heard the door snick shut behind her as she let herself out of
the cellar.
Once she was gone, Tarja swore softly under his breath for a time,
cursing every pagan god he could name.
CHAPTER 16
In the days that followed the news of the death of
High Prince Lernen, all of Krakandar seemed to be in turmoil. The
streets were draped with black and the gongs in the temples rang almost
constantly, tolling the death of the High Prince. At night the city was
a blaze of light as the citizens placed candles and lanterns at their
doors to show Lernen's soul the way to the underworld, should he
stumble into their street on his journey there. After three houses
caught fire in the Beggars' Quarter, Damin declared the official
mourning period at an end. He understood his subjects' need to follow
tradition, but he didn't want his city burned to the ground for the
sake of a man that very few genuinely lamented.
Rogan Bearbow, the Warlord of Izcomdar, had delivered the news. His
province bordered Damin's to the south and although the two had never
been close, he was politically astute enough to ride north to Krakandar
to see if Damin was in residence, before choosing which side he would
take. That he would eventually have to choose a side, Damin was
certain. Along with the news that Lernen had been dead for close on a
month came the news that Cyrus Eaglespike, the Warlord of Dregian
Province, had laid claim to the High Prince's crown. Apparently his
ambitions had grown from merely removing Damin from Krakandar.
Marla was livid when she heard the news, but Narvell was
unsurprised. Cyrus was a distant cousin and had often remarked in the
past that should anything happen to Damin or Narvell, he was next in
line for the throne. It seemed now that he hadn't been joking. Damin
was less worried than he might have been otherwise, knowing that
regardless of Cyrus' tenuous claim to the High Prince's mantle, he
had the demon child on his side.
Just how useful an ally she was became evident the first time she
met Rogan Bearbow. Older by several years than Damin, he was a tall,
aloof man, who ran his province with harsh efficiency and kept the
other Warlords at bay by lining his highways with the crucified bodies
of any enemy Raiders foolish enough to cross his borders.
R'shiel had entered the Great Hall with Adrina at her side. Amidst
the courtiers crowded into the hall standing in small clusters
discussing the implications of the High Prince's death, her skin-tight
leathers looked out of place. R'shiel did not seem to care. She strode
purposefully towards Damin, leaving Adrina to follow at a more
dignified pace.
"Is it true?" she asked, interrupting his conversation with
Rogan.
Damin nodded. "Rogan had a messenger bird from Greenharbour nearly
ten days ago."
R'shiel turned on the Warlord. "Why did you take so long to send
word?"
"Excuse me, young woman, but who are you to question me?"
"I'm sorry, Rogan, I forget my manners," Damin said
distractedly. He
was watching Adrina out of the corner of his eye as she approached
them, terrified she might do or say something that would embarrass, or
worse, endanger them all. "Rogan Bearbow, Warlord of Izcomdar, allow me
to introduce Her Royal Highness, R'shiel te Ortyn, the
demon child."
"The demon child? This is some sort of jest, yes?"
"This is some sort of jest, no," R'shiel retorted. "What's
happening, Damin?"
Before he could answer, Adrina reached them. To his astonishment,
she curtsied solemnly before him. "My condolences on the loss of your
uncle, Your Highness, and my congratulations on your elevation."
Damin stared at her in surprise. There was not a trace of sarcasm in
her tone, nor a hint of irony. She stood up and met his gaze, her
expression grave.
"And who is this delightful creature?" Rogan asked, quite
impressed
by her regal bearing.
"This, Lord Bearbow, is my wife, the Princess Adrina."
Adrina smiled demurely at the Warlord and offered him her hand. He
bowed and kissed her palm in the traditional manner, studying her
closely.
"You are not Hythrun, I judge, Your Highness."
"And you are very astute, my Lord. I am not Hythrun, I am
Fardohnyan."
Rogan looked at Damin frowning. "You have taken a Fardohnyan
bride?"
"I -" Damin began, but R'shiel cut in before he
could answer.
"He has taken the bride I chose for him, Lord Bearbow. If you wish
to object, I can arrange for you to discuss the matter with the gods.
Did you have a particular favourite, or will any one of them
do?"
Rogan stared at her, his eyes wide, as it dawned on him that she
truly was the demon child. R'shiel's impatient bearing, her
entire dismissive attitude that discounted titles and bloodlines, was a
sharp reminder that she was not an ordinary mortal. The fact that her
bearing had more to do with being raised among the Sisters of the Blade
than with her status as the living embodiment of a pagan legend was
something that Damin found rather ironic.
Rogan dropped to one knee in front of R'shiel. "Divine One."
R'shiel rolled her eyes, but fortunately, Rogan's head was bowed and
he did not see it. When she spoke, her voice betrayed nothing about how
she truly felt.
"Arise, Lord Bearbow. I have no need of your worship."
"We may have need of your sword, though," Damin remarked as
the
Warlord climbed to his feet.
"Is there trouble?" Adrina asked.
"My cousin, Cyrus Eaglespike, has claimed the throne."
"Then we must make all possible haste to Greenharbour and take it
from him, Your Highness."
Rogan smiled grimly at her words. "This Fardohnyan wench has teeth,
I see."
Damin grimaced as Adrina looked him up and down, her green eyes
cold. "I am not a 'wench', my Lord, I am a Fardohnyan Princess
of the
Blood Royal. Your loyalty to your High Prince does not entitle you to
insult me."
"I'm sorry, Your Highness," Rogan mumbled, quite taken back
by her
reprimand. "I meant no offence."
"Then I shall forgive you on this occasion, my Lord. My husband has
need of loyal Hythrun such as you. I would not weaken his hand by
insisting you be put to death for something so trivial. Not this
time."
Damin held his breath, waiting for Rogan to explode. Did she have any
idea of what she was doing? Damin knew he could count on Narvell, and
probably Tejay Lionsclaw from Sunrise Province bordering Fardohnya, but
Rogan could go either way. Threatening to hang him for insulting his
wife was hardly the way to win him over. But the expected explosion did
not eventuate. If anything, Rogan looked shamefaced.
"I thank you for your forbearance, Your Highness," he
replied with a
bow. "And now, if you will excuse me, I must pay my respects to
Princess Marla and offer her my condolences."
They stood back to let him leave. As soon as he was out of earshot,
Damin turned on his wife.
"What in the name of the gods are you doing?" he
hissed.
Adrina seemed unfazed by his anger. "Securing your throne."
"By threatening him?"
"Rogan's a barbarian," she said with a shrug. "He
understands open
threats. Subtlety would be wasted on him."
"And you worked that out after how long?"
"Not here, Damin," R'shiel warned, glancing around the hall.
"Besides, I think Adrina's right. Rogan appreciates strength. She may
have done you a favour."
Damin realised at that moment that he was in serious trouble. Adrina
was bad enough. R'shiel, when the mood took her, was even worse.
Together, they were impossible.
Princess Marla set the whole palace in motion to
prepare for the journey south to Greenharbour. Kalan left Krakandar the
day after Rogan arrived, anxious to return to the capital and gain a
measure of control over the situation. No High Prince could be crowned
without her approval.
She was furious that Cyrus Eaglespike would attempt to claim a
throne he knew well was not his while she was out of the city. He was a
cousin, certainly, but the kinship was distant. Kalan considered him
less a threat than an ambitious fool.
Damin was not so sure. Cyrus would not have claimed the title unless
he thought he could hold it, which meant the Warlords of Pentamor and
Greenharbour were probably supporting him. With Narvell and Rogan both
here in Krakandar, that only left Tejay Lionsclaw, who might not even
be aware of the death of the High Prince. Damin had dispatched several
birds and two human messengers to inform her, hoping that her constant
battles with the Fardohnyan bandits in the Sunrise Mountains did not
mean she was out of touch. He needed her in Greenharbour.
Damin was almost as certain of her support as he was of Narvell's.
He had sided with Tejay when her husband died and left her with four
small sons, a province to rule and an heir that was only five years
old. She was Warlord of Sunrise Province because, against all the
objections of the other Warlords, Damin had prevailed upon Lernen to
grant her the title, rather than hand it to some ambitious young stud
who had little thought for the strategic importance of the province.
That had been ten years ago, and the first time he had challenged the
Convocation of Warlords. Although tactically sound, his interference
had proved politically unwise. He had tipped his hand too early and
warned the Warlords what sort of man was heir to the throne. He'd been
dodging assassins since he was a small child, but after that day the
only place he'd felt truly safe was here in Krakandar. And Medalon,
oddly enough.
"Damin?"
He turned from the window as Adrina entered the study, almost
welcoming the distraction. Adrina had been in an odd mood lately,
although he could not fault her behaviour. Rogan was quite enchanted by
her, which Damin found amazing. Adrina was a much better judge of
character than he had given her credit for. It would have been so much
easier if he could trust her.
"Adrina."
"Your mother seems determined to pack the entire palace."
"You're not fighting with her again, are you?"
"No. We just avoid each other. It's easier that way."
"Is there anything you need?"
She crossed the room and came to stand beside him, looking out over
the winter-browned gardens. "We need to talk."
"Then unlock your door tonight."
She had locked it every night since they had been in Krakandar,
offering no reason for her sudden desire to sleep alone. It disturbed
him to discover how much that bothered him.
"I'm not going to talk to you in bed, Damin. I want to see your face
in the cold light of day."
"This sounds serious."
"It is, and for once in your life, I need you to be
serious."
He nodded, careful to keep his expression solemn. "Very well. What
did you want to talk about?"
"I want to know how long you've known that if my father has no
legitimate male heir, his throne falls to you."
"Ah," he said uncomfortably. "You've been talking to
R'shiel."
"How long, Damin?"
"I could ask you the same question."
"I asked first."
"The truth? I learnt of it the day after we arrived in Krakandar.
Marla told me."
"You didn't know before then?"
"I swear I had no idea."
She searched his face for some hint that he was lying. "I believe
you, I suppose."
"You're too kind, Your Highness."
Adrina scowled at him. "Don't start, Damin."
"I'm sorry. Was that all you wanted? I really should be meeting with
Almodavar and Narvell. It's not that I doubt Brak, but I'm not
convinced your father won't attack come spring and I have to make
arrangements for the arrival of the Defenders, assuming they get here.
It won't do our alliance any good if my people start loosing arrows at
them the moment they cross the border."
"No, that's not all. I have something to tell you."
"Let me guess. You want a divorce?" he asked with a grin.
Her eyes blazed dangerously. "By the gods, I wish I'd never agreed
to this marriage. You are a child, Damin Wolfblade, in the guise of a
man. You are incapable of taking anything seriously! How in the gods'
name you expect to rule Hythria, I have no idea!"
He was surprised by her vehemence, and a little guilty. It wasn't
often that she spoke to him like this. It was foolish to deny her the
opportunity now.
"I'm sorry, Adrina. That was uncalled for. You've been keeping up
your end of the bargain, and I do appreciate it. You've got Rogan
wrapped around your little finger and Narvell would probably throw
himself on his sword if you asked him. Even Kalan was forced to admit
that once they meet you, the other Warlords might eventually come
around."
"You didn't mention your mother."
He shrugged. "The best you're ever likely to get from Marla is
begrudging acceptance."
"I could live with that if I thought you trusted me."
The comment puzzled him. "Trust you?"
"You treat every word I utter with suspicion. You have done since
the day we first met."
"Not without just cause," he pointed out. "You lied to me
then. For
all I know you're lying to me now. How long have you been aware
of the law that made me heir to Hablet's crown?"
"What are suggesting?"
"For all I know, you could have been planning this for years. You
managed to manipulate Cratyn into taking you to the border. You
betrayed him, fled to Medalon and gave your real name to the first
Defender you met, almost guaranteeing I would come after you. All you
had to do was get rid of Cratyn, marry me, wait till your father dies
and I take his throne, then have me killed. You'd rule Hythria and
Fardohnya."
"That's preposterous! I didn't kill Cratyn."
"No, that was the demon child. The same demon child who decided we
should be married."
"You think R'shiel is part of some twisted plan I have to
rule the world? You're insane!"
She turned away angrily and began to walk towards the door, but he
caught her arm and pulled her back. He couldn't hide his grin.
"You can be so gullible sometimes, Adrina."
She punched his chest angrily. "Dammit, Damin! Can't you ever stop
fooling around? Have you any idea what's going on around you? You're
about to ride into Greenharbour to claim your crown from a usurper.
You're likely to have assassins dogging your heels and a civil war on
your hands and all you can do is play stupid, childish games!"
"I know what's going on, Adrina," he assured her, suddenly
serious. "I've had assassins dogging my heels since I was born. I was
twelve
years old before it was judged safe enough to let me sleep without an
armed guard at the foot of my bed and that was only because Almodavar
was convinced I was skilled enough to kill a full grown man. But I can
live with the threat of assassination and the gods know I can deal with
war well enough, but I'll tell you something that might surprise you. I
wish I could trust you. I wish I knew what you were really
after. I wish there was some simple way I could be sure about
you."
"You've never given me a chance, Damin," she accused.
He was still holding her arm and when he pulled her to him, she did
not object. She looked so open, so honest, so ingenuous, he almost
believed her, and he truly wanted to believe her. But if he was wrong,
it might cost him his life, although at that moment, holding her so
near, her lips so close he could feel her breath on his, the prospect
didn't bother him nearly as much as it should have.
"Sire, Lord Hawksword asks that when you . . . Oh, I do
beg your pardon, Your Highness!" Almodavar stood at the door,
clearly
embarrassed to find them in such an intimate embrace.
Adrina stepped away from him with a fleeting look of regret, then
turned to the captain. "It's all right, Almodavar. I was just leaving.
I'll speak to you later, Damin. When you have more time."
"Adrina?"
She hesitated at the door. "Yes?"
"What did you want to tell me?"
"It's not important. Some other time perhaps."
"I'll see you later, then?"
She nodded. "If you wish."
When she was gone, Damin turned his attention back to the
organisation of Krakandar's defences, unable to shake the feeling that
Adrina had left something very important unsaid.
CHAPTER 17
Teriahna was waiting for Brak in his room when he
returned from his evening meal. He was quite partial to the spicy fare
of Fardohnya, and had lingered over his dinner, enjoying the feeling of
repletion that comes with a good meal accompanied by an excellent wine.
For a fleeting moment he regretted his indulgence, but even had she
searched his room, there was nothing for her to find here.
He did not bother to ask how she had got past the locks. Those
skills were taught to apprentice assassins. Besides, he was expecting
her. She had promised to arrange to get him into the palace in the
guise of a visiting lord from southern Fardohnya, come to court to find
a royal bride. Brak had been surprised by her choice of disguise, but
she had assured him that with so many daughters to dispose of, Hablet
would see any man willing to take one of them off his hands,
particularly if he was an insignificant, powerless lord who lived far,
far from Talabar.
"Any luck?" he asked as he closed the door behind him. She
was
sitting near the window, staring out over the gardens. The heady scent
of frangipani filled the room, as it did every night once the sun went
down. The room was shrouded in shadows and she did not turn when he
spoke.
"Lernen Wolfblade is dead." She looked at him then, her eyes
curious
in the gloom. "Does this alter your plans?"
"I'm not sure. What happened?" He lit the lantern on the
table and
dragged the only other chair in the room to the window beside her.
"He died of the pox, by all accounts. But that is neither unexpected
nor surprising. What is interesting is that it happened nearly
a month ago."
"And you've only just heard of it? Who kept it quiet? The Sorcerers'
Collective should have been tolling the bells of every temple in
Hythria from the moment they heard the news."
"The High Arrion isn't in Greenharbour. She's in Krakandar. There
was a great deal of unrest because of Damin Wolfblade's alliance with
Medalon. She went north after Princess Marla to sort it out."
"So Marla was out of the capital when it happened, too? That's not
good."
"Not good for Damin Wolfblade, perhaps, but it proved a stroke of
good fortune for Cyrus Eaglespike. He's named himself High
Prince."
"Without the sanction of the High Arrion? How long does he think
that can last?"
"He's got the Warlords of Greenharbour and Pentamor on his side.
It's a foregone conclusion that Narvell Hawksword will support Damin's
claim, but there is still Rogan Bearbow and Tejay Lionsclaw to
consider."
Brak nodded thoughtfully. He had been away from the politics of the
southern nations too long. There was a time when he didn't need the
Assassins' Guild to provide his intelligence.
"Why has it taken the news so long to reach you? I would have
thought you'd have heard about this within a day of it
happening."
"Normally, I would expect to," she agreed. "However, in this
case,
someone went to a great deal of trouble to stop the news getting
out."
"Cyrus Eaglespike?"
"Or his cronies. This isn't the act of an opportunistic man. This
has been very well thought out. I'd say they've been planning it for
some time."
"Perhaps. Has King Jasnoff heard about Cratyn's death yet?"
"I don't think so. It's possible the news hasn't even reached
Yarnarrow yet. It's winter in Karien, and travel will be
difficult."
"They could have sent a bird."
"Even carrier pigeons fall prone to bad weather, Brak."
"And your spies in Krakandar? What do they tell you?"
She smiled innocently. "What makes you think I have spies in
Krakandar?"
"If you don't, it would be the only place in the south that you have
none."
"You know far too much about us for an outsider, my Lord."
"And you seem to be avoiding the question."
Teriahna shrugged. "I don't mean to. In truth, there's not much to
tell. Damin Wolfblade arrived in Krakandar, he stayed a week or more,
learnt his uncle was dead and left for Greenharbour a few days later.
Adrina is with him, certainly, and so is your demon child. The news of her
presence set the city talking, I'm told, so much so that it somewhat
overshadowed the news that Damin had taken a bride. Between the demon
child and the death of the High Prince, she's managed to keep a fairly
low profile. The news is out, but it's a poor third to the other
rumours currently on offer. Oh, there was one thing I neglected to
mention. Damin Wolfblade contacted the Guild in Hythria."
"Who does he want them to kill?"
"Nobody. He sent a message saying that whatever price we were
offered to kill either him or Adrina, he would double it if we refused
the job."
"I always thought he was a smart lad. Can you get me in to see
Hablet? This is becoming urgent."
"If he's finished mourning."
"Hablet is mourning Lernen Wolfblade?" Brak asked
sceptically.
The Raven laughed. "In public. He's probably locked himself in his
rooms and is throwing a party. But he is a King, and one has to be seen
to do the right thing."
Brak fell silent, wondering how the death of the Hythrun High Prince
would affect R'shiel's plans. It was a singular waste of time, as he
actually had no real idea of R'shiel's ultimate plans. He was here on
trust, and that was not an emotion that came easily when dealing with
the demon child.
"May I offer you some advice before your audience with our esteemed
monarch, Brak?"
"Of course."
"Hablet is a very devout man in his own way, but he despises the
Harshini. He has no wish to learn they still exist and no desire to
welcome them back into his court. He finds he gets along very nicely
without them."
"Glenanaran and the others have been in Greenharbour for months.
It's no longer a secret that the Harshini survive."
"True, but neither is it common knowledge. Oh, people have heard the
rumours, and some even believe them, but their belief is based on faith
not fact. You won't get a very warm reception when Hablet realises who
you are. He'll see your presence as the thin edge of the wedge. When
you deliver your news about his daughter, he'll take it as a sign that
the Harshini are already interfering in Fardohnya. Be very
careful."
"I can take care of myself."
"I've no doubt of that," she said. "But it is better to be
warned."
"I appreciate your concern, my Lady."
Teriahna leaned forward, studied him closely for a moment, then
smiled. "Do you, Brak?"
There was something in the way she spoke; something in the shift of
her body that set warning bells ringing in Brak's head. She placed her
hand gently on his thigh. Then she abruptly shed any pretence of
subtlety and the invitation in her eyes was so blatant she might as
well have cried it aloud.
"Do you really appreciate me, Brak?" she asked softly.
Brak smiled ruefully and lifted her hand from his thigh, placing it
quite deliberately on the arm of her chair.
"Yes, I really do appreciate the help you've given me,
Teriahna," he
said.
"I see," the Raven replied, nodding her head thoughtfully.
"There's
someone else, isn't there?"
"What do you mean?"
She laughed softly. "Do you know how I came to join the Assassins'
Guild, Brak? I was a court'esa, and a damned good one, too. I
was recruited by the Guild for a very special job. The rest, as they
say, is history. But just because I've changed careers, it doesn't mean
I've lost the skills I started out with.
"There is someone else. I can see it in your face, plain as
day. Who is it? Some impossibly perfect Harshini back in Sanctuary?
Some lucky farm girl in Medalon?"
Her assumption took Brak completely by surprise. He had taken no
lovers since L'rin in the Grimfield, back when R'shiel was a prisoner
there. Since then he had been so consumed by his task of protecting the
demon child, he'd had no time to think of his own pleasure.
"There's no one else, Teriahna."
"Perhaps you're not even aware of it yourself," she shrugged.
Brak laughed at the very idea. "You think that after several hundred
years I wouldn't notice if I'd fallen in love?"
"I think after several hundred years, you're so used to not
being loved, you wouldn't know what it felt like if it ran up to you
and hit you on the head."
"You think so?"
"Yes, I do," she chuckled. "But don't let it bother you. I'm
sure it
will work itself out. As for me? Well, I like to try new things.
Sometimes I succeed, other times I don't."
"New things?"
"I'm sorry. I've offended you, haven't I?"
"No. I just don't find myself referred to as a thing too
often."
Teriahna's smiled faded. "You should try a stint as a court'esa
some time, Brak. Then you'd truly know the meaning of the
word." She
looked away, suddenly uncomfortable that she had spoken so freely.
Rising hastily to her feet, she pushed the chair back along the
polished floor with a scrape of wood against wood. "I really should be
going. I've spent far too much time away from my other duties. I'll
bring your audience clothes around in the morning."
Brak remained seated, guessing that she would prefer it that way.
Teriahna walked to the door, stopping with her hand on the latch.
"There was one other thing I meant to tell you," she said,
turning
back to look at him. Her manner had reverted to its usual professional
mien. "I had a message from Starros, the head of the Thieves' Guild in
Krakandar. He said there was an old man there who was stirring up the
population against the demon child. I don't know if it's important, but
I thought you'd like to know."
"Why would Starros send you a message about some old man in
Krakandar?"
"He thought it might have been one of our people on a contracted
hit. It's not inconceivable that someone might want the demon child
eliminated and that they would be prepared to pay handsomely for the
job. And it wasn't a message so much as a reprimand. He was rather put
out that I might have sent someone into his city without advising him
first out of professional courtesy."
"Did he say anything else?"
"No. Just that the old man had been preaching on street corners,
subverting his people and making a general nuisance of himself. Starros
thought our plan was to incite a riot of some sort and for the demon
child to be killed in the ensuing chaos."
"That doesn't sound like your style."
"It's not. Crowds are much too hard to control. Particularly when
you've worked them up into a brainless mob. Whoever the old man was, he
certainly isn't one of ours."
"It's probably nothing to be concerned about."
"I agree, but I thought I should let you be the judge. I'll see you
later, then?" She turned her back to him and opened the door.
"Teriahna? Just out of curiosity, if someone did contract you to
kill the demon child, would you take the job?"
She closed the door again and turned to him with a sly smile. "That
would depend on how much they offered me."
"What price would you set on the demon child's life, my Lady
Raven?"
"What would you pay for it?" she retorted.
He laughed humourlessly. "The ultimate price."
"You'd pay with your life?"
"I already have."
She nodded thoughtfully. "Then I have the answer to my question,
Brak. There is someone else. It is the demon child."
CHAPTER 18
Tarja knew exactly how he planned to strike his
first blow against Medalon's new masters, a plan as simple as it was
fraught with danger. He also knew it would meet considerable
opposition, so he kept silent until they were ready to leave Roan Vale,
hugging his idea to himself as he pulled his cloak against the chill
wind.
They waited in the small village for the remainder of their troops
and the rest of the rebels to catch up with them. His meeting in Testra
had gone well, and although Antwon could not bring himself to desert,
he gave any Defender under his command who wished to flee the advancing
Kariens leave to follow Tarja. Consequently, the force Tarja now had
gathered to cross the border into Hythria numbered over two thousand.
It still wasn't enough to take on the Kariens, but it was a start.
"We should be ready to move at first light," Denjon reported
that
evening, as Tarja stood poring over the map in the cellar. It was a
singular waste of time. He had studied the map so often these past few
days that every line and contour was burned into his brain.
"Now if only this damnable rain would stop, so we could get through
to Hythria."
"Aye. My scouts tell me there's not a navigable road for miles.
They're either flooded or so boggy we're going to have to walk most of
the way."
"And every day the Kariens are getting closer to the
Citadel."
"Well, look on the bright side," Denjon shrugged. "The Glass
River's
so full they'll not be able to cross it for a while."
"I'd prefer it if they couldn't cross it at all," Tarja said.
Denjon's eyes narrowed. "That sounds suspiciously like a
suggestion."
"Actually, it was. Where are the others?"
"Linst is organising the supply wagons. Dorak is trying to beat some
sense into your rebel friends. They're not being very
cooperative."
"That's because they don't like taking anything from the
Defenders,"
Mandah explained as she closed the cellar door behind her. "Least of
all orders."
Tarja nodded, satisfied that they would not be disturbed for some
time. He stabbed his finger at the map and looked at Denjon and Mandah.
"We have to stop the Kariens crossing the Glass River."
"You said that already," Denjon said, folding his arms
across his
chest.
"There's only three ways they can cross," Tarja continued.
"They can
build rafts and float themselves across, which is far too time
consuming and dangerous. They can commandeer what trading vessels and
river boats they can find, or they can use the ferries at Testra and
Cauthside."
"They won't find many river boats," Mandah said. "Most of
them have
sailed south for the Gulf. They know what's coming."
"Then that just leaves the ferries," Denjon agreed. "How do
you plan
to stop the Kariens using them? We don't have enough men to fight them
off."
"We're going to have to sink them."
Mandah gasped. "Sink the ferries? But that would cut Medalon in
half."
"I'm aware of that," Tarja replied evenly.
"It would stop the Kariens in their tracks, though," Denjon
mused.
Tarja nodded. "With the ferries gone, the worst they can do is turn
south-west and attack Testra. The heart of Medalon is the Citadel, and
until they occupy that, theirs will be a hollow victory indeed."
"It won't be easy, Tarja," Denjon warned. "Even if the
Kariens don't
try to stop you, our own people will. You'll destroy their livelihood
along with those ferries."
"I know, which is why I'm only taking a few men. We'll backtrack to
Vanahiem, cross over to Testra, and then make our way overland to
Cauthside. Hopefully we can take out the Cauthside Ferry before the
Kariens reach it."
"Then take the Testra Ferry out on your way back?" Mandah
asked.
Tarja nodded and glanced at Denjon.
"That will take you weeks," the captain said with a shake of
his
head. "The Kariens will be in Cauthside long before you."
"The logistics of moving an army the size of the Karien host are
considerable," Tarja reminded him. "They can only move a few
leagues a
day, or be forced to break their army up into smaller units. The latter
is unlikely. They'll stay together, thinking their impressive size will
cow the Medalonians into submission."
"That's a bit optimistic," Mandah remarked with a thin
smile. "The
vast majority of Medalonians live south of the Glass River."
"You'll be cutting it fine," Denjon said with a frown.
"I'll hand-pick the men who accompany me. We've some good men out
there and none of them come from the river towns or have family whose
livelihood depends directly on trade across the river. It'll ruin the
merchants and families who depend on it for their wages and I don't
want any second thoughts when it comes to the crunch."
"And the Hythrun? What do you want me to tell them?"
"I'll leave that to you," Tarja shrugged. "Once you get to
Hythria,
you and Damin can start planning the conquest of Medalon. There's not
much we can do until we find out how many men he can spare us, at any
rate. I'll join you as soon as I can. In the meantime, you can send out
some other squads with orders to do whatever they must -
cajole,
threaten or destroy - to stop the river boats from docking on
the
western bank. I want every boat on the river - even those
moored on
this side too - safely out of reach of the Kariens."
"You know, given enough time, the Kariens will find a way across.
They've engineers and boat builders aplenty and there's more than
enough timber on the other side of the river to build rafts to move
their troops across."
"I'm counting on the change of seasons. By the time the Kariens have
constructed their own transport, the Glass River will be even more
swollen than it is now with the spring melt from the Jagged Mountains.
It'll be far too dangerous to attempt a crossing until the flood waters
have subsided."
"I'll come with you," Mandah announced abruptly.
"Don't be stupid," Tarja retorted without thinking.
"But I was a Novice once," she explained. "I know how to
behave like
a Sister of the Blade. Disguised as a Sister I can commandeer the ferry
and once aboard you can take it out into the middle of the river, set
fire to it, then swim ashore once it's well and truly ablaze."
"That may even work," Denjon said thoughtfully.
"It's too dangerous."
Mandah laughed softly. "Dangerous? Tarja, I was fighting in the
rebellion long before you came along and nothing much has changed that
I can see. Why is it too dangerous for me and not for you?"
Tarja was unable to answer her. He could hardly admit his bravery
had more to do with his desire to escape his own thoughts than it did
from any innate sense of honour. Turning back to face the Kariens meant
not having to continue south. It meant not having to face R'shiel for a
little while longer. He was afraid to admit how much that thought
relieved him.
"She has a point, Tarja. You'll raise less suspicion travelling with
a Sister than you would if you travel alone."
"Then it's settled. I'm going with you," Mandah declared.
"Are you really so anxious to throw your life away?" he
asked her
with a frown.
"I don't plan to throw my life away, Tarja, and I wasn't aware that
this was a suicide mission." Her eyes challenged him to deny
her
accusation.
Tarja looked away first. "No, I'm not planning a suicide mission.
You can come if you wish. We'll be riding hard though. It won't be
easy."
"If I'd wanted 'easy', Tarja, I would have stayed with the
Sisterhood."
Later that evening, Tarja sat in the taproom of
the Roan Vale tavern finishing his meal, wondering why Mandah had
accused him of planning a suicide mission. He didn't feel suicidal. But
neither did the prospect of dying unduly concern him. As he pondered
the matter, he realised that the only thing he felt about death, when
he consciously thought about it at all, was apathy. He did not hunger
for death. He did not particularly hunger for life. He simply didn't
care.
"Do you mind if I join you?"
Tarja looked up at the old man who had spoken and glanced around the
room. The taproom was filled to capacity and the only spare seat was
the empty bench opposite him. He wondered for a moment if the others
were avoiding him.
"Suit yourself," he replied with a shrug.
The man sat down with his foaming tankard and smiled at Tarja. He
had long white hair and a disturbingly familiar air about him that
Tarja couldn't quite place.
"You look troubled, my son."
"These are troubling times."
"And you bear a heavier burden than most, I suspect."
Tarja shrugged but did not offer a reply. He had no wish to fall
into conversation with this old man, whoever he was.
"I hear you flee Medalon to join the demon child?"
Tarja looked up sharply. "Where did you hear that?"
"The rumours are everywhere," the old man told him. "There's
not a
Defender here who isn't whispering the news to his comrades."
That's true enough, he thought. Too many of these men
were there when R'shiel revealed her power. It's long past the point of
being a secret.
"Well," the old man continued, taking a sip of his ale, "one
can
hardly blame you for being worried."
"Who says I'm worried?"
"Every line on your face proclaims it, Captain."
"Thanks for your concern, but you needn't be worried on my behalf.
We have everything under control."
"I'm sure you do," the old man agreed solemnly. "But nothing
will
ever be certain while the demon child lives."
Tarja studied the old man suspiciously. He was not so full of his
own troubles that he did not recognise a threat to R'shiel when he
heard it.
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"I mean nothing," he shrugged. "It just seems to me that the
Kariens
would be much more amenable if they weren't facing the threat of the
demon child. Isn't she supposed to destroy their God? How would you
feel if you thought someone was trying to destroy everything that you
held dear? One doesn't have to be on their side to understand what
drives them. I just think it odd that the Defenders are going to such
pains to protect the very one whose presence caused this conflict in
the first place."
"R'shiel didn't start this war."
"Didn't she? Isn't her existence what prompted the Kariens to act?
You killed their Envoy because he was trying to take R'shiel to Karien,
didn't you? Why do you defend her? If Medalon means so much to you, why
not simply hand her over and be done with it? She's your greatest
bargaining chip, yet you refuse to play it. Is she so important to you
that you are willing to risk your entire nation to protect her?"
"You don't know what you're talking about, old man," Tarja
scoffed,
unwilling to admit that his logic made frightening sense. Could it
really be that simple? Could they end this conflict now by trading
R'shiel to the Kariens? Would their enemy withdraw for something so
easily arranged? Tarja shook his head, unable to believe that he could
even consider betraying her.
The old man looked at him closely, as if he could read Tarja's
internal conflict. Then he smiled and shrugged and took another swallow
of his ale.
"You must forgive me, Captain. I let my mouth run away with me at
times. I'm just an old man who sees things a little differently from
younger men. What would I know? I wish you luck in your quest."
"Luck has nothing to do with it," Tarja replied, pushing
away the
remains of his stew. For some reason he had lost his appetite.
"I just hope the demon child appreciates the sacrifice you have made
for her, Captain."
The old man downed the rest of his ale and climbed to his feet.
Tarja watched him as he threaded his way through the crowd to the door,
disturbed to discover how easily the seeds of doubt and treachery
planted by the old man had found fertile ground inside his troubled
mind.
CHAPTER 19
Slaves lined the walls of the Main Hall of the
Summer Palace, moving the languid air about with large rattan fans,
although at this time of year the temperature was quite bearable. It
was an impressive chamber, crowded with courtiers and supplicants
awaiting the chance for an audience with their King. The potted palms
provided the perfect backdrop for the clusters of schemers and
sycophants who always seemed to find their way into any royal court,
regardless of where it was or who was in power. Hablet held open court
here each morning when he was in residence, and made a point of putting
in an appearance, even if he never actually heard a petition.
Brak moved among the jewelled and pampered crowd, dressed in the
garish yellow silk trousers and embroidered vest Teriahna had provided
for him. She had claimed, with a perfectly straight face, that it gave
him an air of "rustic nobility". He assumed she meant he looked
like
the provincial lord he was pretending to be. He privately suspected he
looked like an idiot.
Eventually he spied the man he was searching for and pushed his way
through the courtiers to confront him. Hablet had yet to arrive and his
Chamberlain, Lecter Turon, was busy openly collecting the bribes that
would ensure one a place at the head of the queue. Brak had no
intention of parting with a single coin to see Hablet. He had far
better currency to deal with.
"My Lord Chamberlain?"
The eunuch turned to Brak and looked him over with a practised eye,
taking in his air of "rustic nobility" and dismissing him as
inconsequential with a single glance.
"Can I be of assistance, my Lord?" he asked rather
impatiently.
"I wish to see the King."
"As does every other man here," the eunuch sighed.
"I was told you could arrange it."
"Ah, now that can be difficult. The King is a very busy man."
"I could make it worth your while."
Lecter's eyes narrowed greedily. "Such a consideration would be
expensive, my Lord."
"Then the Raven was mistaken when she said you could help
me."
Lecter paled, his bald head shining with sweat. "The Raven?"
"Did I forget to mention that she recommended you? The Raven seems
to know quite a lot about you, actually, Chamberlain Turon. I wonder
why that is?"
The Chamberlain looked decidedly uncomfortable with the notion that
the head of the Assassins' Guild was taking a personal interest in him.
"I will do what I can, my Lord, but as you may have heard, the King is
in mourning for his cousin, the High Prince of Hythria."
"I'm sure he's devastated," Brak agreed wryly. "But I won't
need
more than a moment of his time."
"May I inquire as to the nature of your business with the
King?"
"I have news for him that would be best delivered in
private."
"Please wait here, my Lord. I will see what I can do."
It was not long before Turon returned and beckoned Brak forward.
Brak followed him through the curious and envious stares to the
delicately carved doors at the end of the hall. He knocked once and
entered without waiting for an answer.
"Your Majesty! Allow me to introduce Lord . . . what was
your name?"
"Brakandaran."
"Lord Brakandaran! From . . ." Lecter looked at
him
questioningly.
"I come from Sanctuary," Brak said.
Up until that point, the King had been sitting behind his elaborate
gilt desk, reading from a parchment scroll in front of him, utterly
uninterested in his guest. At the mention of Sanctuary his head jerked
up and he stared at Brak with bright, birdlike eyes.
"Where did you say?"
"Sanctuary."
"Which one?"
"There is only one, Your Majesty."
"Lecter! Leave us!"
Hablet's tone left no room for argument. The Chamberlain hurried to
do as he was bid. As the door closed, Brak stepped further into the
room and looked around with interest. The doors to the balcony were
open and he could hear faint childish voices from the lush gardens
below. The King's private chamber had barely changed since he last
stood here confronting Hablet's great-grandfather.
"You look human," Hablet accused as soon as they were alone.
His
voice was anything but friendly, but at least he made no pretence of
not understanding who Brak was.
"I'm only half Harshini. It's an advantage at times."
"Brakandaran, did you say your name was? Not Brakandaran the
Half-Breed, surely? I thought you'd be long dead by now."
"As you can see, I'm not dead."
"What do you want? If you're here to petition my court for a place
for one of your damned sorcerers, you're wasting your time. I'll not
have the Harshini spying on my every move for that degenerate in
Hythria."
"That degenerate in Hythria is dead," Brak pointed out. "I
was led
to believe you were mourning him."
"Ha! Dancing on his grave, more like it. Is that why you're here?
Now that Lernen is dead, you've decided to come to me for protection?
You should have come here first, in any case. It was a grave insult to
Fardohnya, the Harshini King sending his people to Lernen's court
without coming here first."
"You just said you didn't want any Harshini in your court."
"That's not the point. You should have offered. I have served the
gods faithfully. I deserve it."
Brak knew it was hopeless trying to argue with such a man. "Your
Majesty, the decision to allow the Harshini to return to the Sorcerers'
Collective was not mine to make. I might point out, however, that if
you hadn't rounded up every member of the Sorcerers' Collective and had
them thrown in gaol when you assumed the throne, my King might
have considered sending someone to Fardohnya. As it is, you've a lot of
explaining to do."
Hablet tugged on his beard unhappily. "They were Hythrun
spies."
"And the others you killed when you inherited the crown? What was
their crime?"
"You've been around long enough to know what happens in Fardohnya
when a new King takes the throne. Why quibble about it now?"
"Your barbaric practices don't concern me, Hablet. Interesting
though, that they were never practised when there were Harshini in the
Fardohnyan court."
"That's because the Harshini are so damned squeamish. Now, did you
want something in particular, or are you just going to stand there and
chide me for things I did thirty years ago?"
Brak's eyes darkened and he waved his arm, drawing a chair from the
side of the room across the polished floor with an uncomfortable
screech. When the chair magically arrived at his side, he sat down and
leaned back, smiling at the Fardohnyan King.
"Thank you, Your Majesty. I will have a seat."
Hablet's eyes widened. He had never been confronted with true
Harshini power before. His day-to-day dealings with the gods involved
bribing the temples and praying for a legitimate son.
"What do you want?"
"You and I need to have a talk about your heir."
"I'll name my heir when I'm good and ready," Hablet
declared. "And
no black-eyed bastard from Sanctuary is going to make me appoint
someone I don't want."
"I wouldn't dream of it, Your Majesty, however circumstances have
arisen of which you are not aware, and they will radically affect your
choice."
Hablet squinted at him "What circumstances? Ah! I have it! You've
discovered that stupid law about leaving my crown to a Wolfblade,
haven't you? Well you can go back to Sanctuary and tell Lorandranek, or
whoever the hell sent you here, that Talabar harbour will freeze in
high summer before I let a Wolfblade set foot in Fardohnya, let alone
sit on my throne."
"I wasn't sent by Lorandranek, Your Majesty. He's been dead for over
twenty years. Korandellan is the King of the Harshini now."
"I don't care if the damned First Sister of Medalon is King!"
"I was sent here by the demon child."
"The demon child? Are you drunk? The demon child is a legend made up
to frighten children. Lorandranek never sired a half-human
child."
"Perhaps if you hadn't been so hasty throwing the Sorcerers'
Collective out of Fardohnya, you might know that he did."
"Who is he then? Where is he?"
"Her name is R'shiel."
"A girl?" Hablet laughed with genuine amusement. "Why would
the gods
invest such power in a female?"
"Perhaps they don't share your prejudice."
"Perhaps they're not as smart as they think they are," the
King
scoffed.
"I don't suggest you say that in Jelanna's hearing," Brak
warned. "Maybe that's why the Goddess of Fertility has denied you a
legitimate
son. She must know what you think of women."
"Don't you threaten me with my beliefs," the King warned. "I
am a
faithful servant of the Goddess."
"So I've heard," Brak agreed with a wry smile.
"So, this demon child . . . this girl
. . . sent you here to tell me who to name as my
heir?"
Hablet laughed scornfully. "I don't know what's funnier - that
she
thinks she can dictate to me, or that you actually thought I would
listen to you."
"You'd better listen to me, Hablet," Brak warned. "There
will be no
legitimate son for you. Your heir will be as the law decrees -
it will
be Damin Wolfblade."
"Over my dead body!"
"Exactly," Brak pointed out simply.
"I'd rather give my crown to that simpering Karien idiot Adrina
married than name that Hythrun barbarian my heir."
"That might prove difficult," Brak murmured, but Hablet
wasn't
listening to him.
"Anyway, you're mad if you think the people of Fardohnya would ever
accept a Hythrun King!"
"They would accept a Fardohnyan Queen."
"Oh! So now you want him to marry one of my daughters, I
suppose!"
"No need," Brak said, with a smug smile. "The demon child
has
already taken care of that minor detail."
Hablet stilled warily. "What do you mean by that?"
"Ah, now those would be the circumstances I spoke of," Brak
said,
brushing a fleck of dust from his yellow silk trousers as he
deliberately drew out the silence.
"What circumstances?" Hablet demanded.
"Cratyn is dead, Your Majesty. Your daughter has remarried."
"Remarried? Who?"
"Perhaps you'd like to hazard a guess?" he suggested. He was
rather
enjoying Hablet's discomfort.
"No!" the King cried, leaping to his feet, his face
almost as
crimson as the silk-panelled walls. "I'll not tolerate this! I'll
disown her! Damn it, I'll invade Hythria and bring her back!"
"Your House is now united with the House of Wolfblade. You will
honour the peace between your Houses and do no such thing. As the
Wolfblade House is the ruling House in Hythria, it is now beyond your
reach. You can't invade them and you can't make war on them."
"This is intolerable!"
Brak smiled serenely. "I'm sure you'll learn to live with
it."
"Get out! Get out of my palace! Get out of my country, for that
matter! Take your damned Harshini manipulations and your demon child
and get the hell out of Fardohnya!"
Brak drew on enough power to blacken his eyes again, rose to his
feet and loomed over the Fardohnyan King.
"You will abide by the law. You will name Damin
Wolfblade your heir and you will give your blessing to his
marriage to Adrina."
"Never!"
"Then be prepared for the consequences, Your Majesty," Brak
warned. "You defy the demon child at your peril."
CHAPTER 20
It was obvious that Cyrus Eaglespike and his
cronies were in control of Greenharbour. The streets, while not exactly
deserted, were unnaturally free of the normal bustle of commerce that
one would expect in the greatest trading port in the south. There were
no soldiers from the Sorcerers' Collective in evidence and no sign of
the Palace Guard either. Although the guards made no move to prevent
Damin and his force entering the sparkling white city, their
breastplates were embossed with a soaring eagle.
R'shiel looked around with interest. She rode at Damin's side at the
head of a column made up of three centuries of Krakandar Raiders.
Narvell Hawksword followed Damin's men with three hundred Elasapine
Raiders, while further back, Rogan Bearbow rode at the head of his own
entourage. Between them they had brought close to a thousand men south
to claim the High Prince's throne. Adrina was riding in the coach a
little further back in the column with Princess Marla. She had refused
to ride since Krakandar, although she declined to give a reason. Damin
was convinced it was simply to make things more difficult for him.
R'shiel knew the reason but figured it wasn't her place to say.
Besides, she had promised Marla she would say nothing yet. No doubt
Adrina was being subjected to her mother-in-law's intense scrutiny as
they travelled together. R'shiel wondered with a faint smile just who
would emerge the victor from that small, but important, skirmish.
"This doesn't look promising," Damin murmured.
"Who normally guards the city?" R'shiel asked with a glance
over her
shoulder at the wary guards who fingered their sheathed blades with
itching fingers as they passed through the city gates.
"The Collective."
The further they rode into the city, the more deserted the streets
became. News of the arrival of the Warlords of Krakandar, Elasapine and
Izcomdar ran before them like flame on a line of lamp oil and the
citizens of Greenharbour wisely kept to their homes, out of the way of
a confrontation that was likely to get very ugly.
"Damin, I may not be a tactical genius, but is this a good idea?
Riding openly through Greenharbour when you know your cousin has
claimed the throne?"
He shrugged. "Greenharbour is neutral territory."
"Nine hundred Raiders isn't very many."
"That's all I'm permitted to bring into the city. Three centuries
for every Warlord, no more. It's the law."
"The law didn't stop your cousin claiming the throne. What makes you
think it's going to stop him breaking the rules about the number of
troops he can muster in the city?"
"I can't risk marching into Greenharbour openly flaunting the law.
It would be playing right into Cyrus' hands. Besides, you won't let
anything happen to me."
"You're relying on my power to save you? Adrina was right,
you do enjoy living dangerously, don't you?"
"Adrina said that, did she?"
"Yes."
"What else did she say?"
R'shiel rolled her eyes impatiently. "Why don't you ask her?"
"I'm asking you."
"You're a damned fool, Damin Wolfblade."
He did not answer her; did not have a chance to. She stilled
suddenly, her whole body tensing as the familiar prickle of magic ran
over her skin like a million tiny ants wearing hobnailed boots.
"What's wrong?" Damin asked, watching her curiously.
"Someone is drawing power. A lot of it." Her face was a mask
of
concentration as she tried to pinpoint the source. Finally she stood in
her stirrups, looking out over the white, flat-roofed houses and then
pointed towards the harbour. "It's coming from that direction."
"The harbour?"
"No. I don't think so. But close to it."
"Then it's probably the Sorcerers' Collective you sense. Perhaps
it's some of the sorcerers -"
"No!" she declared emphatically. "What I can feel isn't
someone
chanting spells. This is Harshini."
Damin shrugged. "That would mean it was one of the Harshini who
returned to the Collective last winter. I doubt it's anything to be
concerned about. If it's Harshini magic you can sense, then they're
bound to be on our side."
She sat down again and looked at him. "How do you figure
that?"
"You are the demon child. You ride with me."
"You don't understand, Damin. This isn't one Harshini drawing their
power that I can feel. It's several of them and they are drawing every
drop they can handle."
"Then it could mean trouble."
"Founders, Damin! Do you practise being so dense?"
He grinned sheepishly. "I'm sorry. Explain it to me."
"I think the Harshini are under attack. It's the only
explanation."
Damin reined in his stallion and brought the column to a halt. His
grin faded and was replaced by a look of consternation. "Someone is attacking
the Harshini? That's inconceivable. This is Hythria, not Medalon or
Karien. We honour the . . . R'shiel!"
She wasn't listening to him. Instead she spurred her horse forward
to the end of the paved street where the rise of the land enabled her
to look out over the rest of the city. What she saw made her gasp with
astonishment.
Greenharbour lay before her, a sea of whitewashed buildings glaring
under a sky of sapphire silk.
The city curved around the crescent-shaped bay. To the left was the
forest of tall masts that marked the vast wharves of the city. To her
right was a magnificent white palace, its domed spires gilded and
almost too bright to look upon. Above the palace was a glittering dome
of radiant, shimmering light enveloping the temples and palaces that
R'shiel thought must be the Sorcerers' Collective. She could just make
out the outlines of the buildings inside the dome as it waxed and waned
with the fading strength of the Harshini who held it in place.
Legend held that two centuries ago, the Harshini who defended the
Citadel from the Sisters of the Blade had done the same thing. But if
several hundred Harshini had not been able to hold a protective dome in
place long enough to save the Citadel, there was little chance the few
Harshini in Greenharbour could hold this one longer than a few more
minutes.
"What in the name of the gods is that?" Damin gasped
as he
reined in beside her.
"The Harshini trying to protect themselves," she explained.
"Look
down there."
Damin looked in the direction of her pointing finger. The streets
surrounding the dome of light were crowded with soldiers. Although they
were too far away to make out their individual escutcheons, R'shiel
could easily guess whose troops they were. They were massing in the
main avenues leading to the Collective, simply waiting for the strength
of the Harshini who protected it to fade. She glanced over her shoulder
at the men Damin, Narvell and Rogan had brought into the city. They
were easily outnumbered three to one. The other two Warlords were
riding up the street towards the head of the column. R'shiel left Damin
to deal with them and turned her attention back to the dome of light.
Even in the short time she had been watching it had faded somewhat.
"What's going on?" she heard Rogan Bearbow demand of Damin
behind
her. She did not wait to hear his answer. Spurring her horse forward,
she headed for the harbour at a canter. Whatever politics were involved
in the battle for the High Prince's throne, the Hythrun had no right to
endanger the peaceful Harshini.
R'shiel had no plan in mind. Her only thought was that the dome was
fading and the Harshini trapped inside were in danger. She could not
reach the Harshini through the impenetrable barrier, but when it
collapsed the soldiers massed in the streets surrounding the Collective
would overrun them. She smiled grimly to herself as she rode, wondering
how life could change so drastically in such a short time. Two years
ago, had she heard there were Harshini under attack, she would have
applauded the forces ranged against her despised enemies. Now she was
riding to their rescue, heedless of any danger she might be placing
herself in.
That thought had a sobering effect, and she slowed her horse to a
walk. What am I doing? I can't just ride up to the gates of the
Collective and demand the enemy disperse.
R'shiel looked around and discovered she had ridden into an area of
the city that was filled with government buildings. At least she
guessed that's what they were. They had an aura of bureaucracy that
R'shiel knew well. The buildings were several storeys high and a number
had impressive entrances flanked by fluted marble columns. They
surrounded a broad circular plaza dominated by a fountain that spewed
forth its cascade from the mouth of a beautifully sculpted water
dragon. R'shiel studied the creature curiously for a moment. She had
heard of the remarkable beasts that populated the warm waters of the
Dregian Ocean, but she had never seen anything like the creature in the
fountain. It had a large dorsal fin, wide-set eyes and a long, elegant
tail that ended in a broad, flipper-like paddle.
She had little time to admire the artistry of the fountain, however,
as the sound of horses moving towards her caught her attention. At the
far end of the paved plaza a number of mounted Raiders appeared, a
tall, middle-aged man riding at their head. His blond beard was neatly
trimmed, his leather armour gilded. The soaring eagle of his House was
picked out in precious stones that glinted in the sunlight falling
across the plaza.
Behind her, R'shiel could hear Damin and his party forming up. She
sat alone and exposed astride her horse in the centre of the plaza as
the opposing forces arrayed themselves on either side. An unnatural
silence descended, only the splashing of the fountain and the creaking
of leather harness disturbing the morning.
"Cousin!" Cyrus Eaglespike called loudly, moving forward at
a walk. "I never thought to see you alive again!"
"That's pretty bloody obvious!" Damin called back as he rode
out to
meet the pretender flanked by Narvell and Rogan.
R'shiel watched them approaching with a frown. She didn't have time
for this. The dome of light flickered in the distance.
"It warms my heart to see that the reports of your death were
. . . overstated, cousin," Cyrus declared with vast
insincerity as he neared the fountain.
Damin, Narvell and Rogan reined in on the other side of the
fountain. "I'm sure it does, cousin. That would explain what you're
doing here with so many troops."
"We acted to contain the potential civil unrest brought on by the
news of our uncle's death."
"Lernen was my uncle, not yours, Cyrus. Your relationship to the
Wolfblade family is so tenuous it barely exists."
"Actually, it's not as tenuous as you might think, cousin. Once
Kalan ratifies my claim . . ."
"The High Arrion? Ratify you?" Rogan Bearbow
declared hotly.
The mere thought obviously offended him.
"Is that why you're attacking the Harshini?" R'shiel
demanded.
Cyrus seemed to notice R'shiel for the first time. He smiled
patronisingly. "Who is this, Damin? Some piece of Medalonian
entertainment you picked up north of the border? Or is this the wife
that we've been hearing about?"
R'shiel's eyes darkened with anger as she drew on her power. Cyrus'
eyes passed over her contemptuously for a moment, then suddenly locked
on her face as he saw her eyes blacken.
"Mother of the gods!" he cried. His horse reared, the
gelding
reacting to the proximity of a Harshini drawing on her power. Even the
mounts that Damin, Rogan and Narvell rode began to toss their heads
nervously, although they knew her scent well enough not to fear the
unfamiliar but instinctive urge they felt to respond. Her own horse was
not concerned, having been with her long enough now to recognise and
welcome the touch of the magic that it had been born to serve. R'shiel
suddenly understood why the majority of the troops surrounding the
Collective were infantry. With the Harshini inside the Collective
drawing so much power, the Hythrun sorcerer-bred cavalry mounts would
be uncontrollable.
"Cyrus, call off your troops. Now."
Damin spoke with quiet assurance, as if he had no doubt as to the
outcome, should the Warlord refuse.
"Who are you?" Cyrus demanded of R'shiel.
"I'm the last thing you will ever lay eyes on if you don't
withdraw," she informed the startled Warlord. The power filled
her,
hungering for release. Cyrus' mount was becoming increasingly restive
and he was fighting to maintain his dignity and his seat at the same
time.
The pretender turned on Damin angrily. "What sort of trickery is
this?"
"This isn't trickery, my Lord, this is the demon child. I suggest
you do as she says. She's not noted for her patience."
If Cyrus had heard that Damin was married, then he certainly must
have heard that the demon child rode with him. The Warlord debated the
issue for a long, tension-filled moment, then angrily waved his arm. A
rider broke from the ranks at the entrance to the plaza and cantered
forward.
"Take a message to Lord Foxtalon and Lord Falconlance,"
Cyrus
ordered through clenched teeth. "Tell them to order the troops to
withdraw."
"Sir?"
"You heard me!"
With a puzzled look, the captain nodded and wheeled his mount
around. Cyrus turned back to R'shiel, his expression a mixture of
contempt and fear.
"Satisfied?"
"For now," R'shiel agreed, although she did not let go of
the power.
The dome was fading fast, its light failing as fatigue consumed the
Harshini holding it in place. Now she was drawing on her own power, she
was even more aware of the drain on the Harshini inside. A few more
minutes and they would have to let it go completely. She bit her bottom
lip in frustration, wishing she knew how to lend them her strength.
Brak and her tutors at Sanctuary had never taught her how. Perhaps they
had not thought she would ever need a reason to link her power to
another Harshini. Or maybe she couldn't link with a Harshini unless
they were a te Ortyn like her . . . Maybe it was
too
dangerous . . . She shook her head to clear it of the useless
thoughts and turned her attention back to the matter at hand. What she
could and couldn't do with her power was a problem for some other time.
Right now it was enough that Cyrus believed she knew what she was
doing. "Aren't you supposed to have some sort of election to confirm
the new High Prince?"
"The Convocation would already be under way, but for the
interference of the Harshini, who prevented us entering the Sorcerers'
Palace."
"You can't hold a Convocation without all seven Warlords,"
Damin
pointed out.
"Actually, cousin, I merely need a majority."
"Which you don't have," Narvell reminded him.
"A situation that will be remedied as soon as Tejay Lionsclaw
arrives." Cyrus looked to Rogan with a frown. "I see you have
chosen
whose bed to lie in, Lord Bearbow. I'll remember your choice when I'm
High Prince."
"That's an empty threat, Lord Eaglespike. You don't have the
numbers."
Cyrus smiled with oily contempt. "You might be surprised, my
Lord."
The two men glared at each other like lions facing each other over a
recent kill. R'shiel sighed impatiently.
"Founders! I've had enough of this! Damin, how soon can we hold this
Convocation?"
Damin didn't answer her. He was glaring at Cyrus with such venom
that R'shiel was afraid he was going to call his cousin out, right here
in the plaza. Despite how satisfying it would be to witness him beat
the arrogance out of Cyrus, she knew this had to be resolved legally.
Damin could vent his anger later, once he was High Prince.
"Damin!"
"What?"
"I said, how soon can we hold this Convocation?"
"As soon as Lady Lionsclaw arrives."
"Fine. Send someone to fetch her. In the meantime, I want every
Raider off the streets. The Collective can go back to guarding the
city. I assume you all have sufficient control over your men that you
can keep them out of trouble until this is sorted out?"
Cyrus opened his mouth to object then decided against it as R'shiel
turned her black-eyed gaze on him.
"Very well, we have a truce until the Convocation," he
agreed
reluctantly. "But don't think this has changed anything!"
"Damin?"
"A truce," he agreed, almost as reluctantly as Cyrus.
"Fine, that's settled then. Now get rid of these soldiers!"
"This is not finished, demon child!" Cyrus hauled his reins
around
sharply, taking his anger out on his horse as he rode at a brisk canter
back to his men. Behind him, the dome of light wavered and shimmered
brightly for a moment, as if sprinkled with a billion tiny stars, then
it faded away to nothing as the Harshini finally succumbed to
exhaustion.
"That was close," Narvell muttered.
"We'll sort him out soon enough, brother," Damin promised
savagely.
"Aye," Rogan agreed. "And the more painfully the
better."
R'shiel glared at them impatiently. "You're all as bad as each
other," she snapped, then turned her horse and continued
towards the
Sorcerers' Collective - and hopefully the answers she sought.
CHAPTER 21
The weather was bitterly cold as Tarja and his
squad rode north as hard as they could push their horses without them
foundering. The small band of saboteurs made good time retracing their
journey of a few weeks ago, staying close to the Glass River, camping
at night under whatever meagre shelter they could find. Their good
fortune lasted until a day south of Cauthside, when a savage
thunderstorm forced them to take shelter in an abandoned boathouse next
to the remains of a small dock jutting precariously into the swift
flowing water.
When they arrived, Tarja found a surprise for which he was
completely unprepared. The boathouse was already occupied by a score or
more Fardohnyans; the remnants of Adrina's Guard who had fled the
border with them. Damin had given them supplies and maps, and ordered
the Guard to make for Fardohnya weeks ago. What they were doing here,
this far north, when they should have been almost home by now,
completely baffled Tarja. Getting the story out of them proved
something of a trial too, as none of the Fardohnyans spoke Medalonian,
and nobody in his troop had more than a passing acquaintance with their
native language. In the end, they conversed in Karien, as it proved the
only language they had in common.
Second Lanceman Filip, the young man who had surrendered the Guard
to Damin on the northern border, told the story. They had taken Damin's
advice and headed for Cauthside and the ferry there, only to discover
the town crammed with refugees. Not only could they not converse with
anyone in the town, their mere presence had caused no end of trouble,
some people mistaking them for Kariens. Explaining they were
Fardohnyan, not Karien, had done little to help their cause. The
townsfolk had turned on them. They'd been forced to fight their way
clear of the town rather than risk the remainder of their small band in
a civil riot. Filip and his men were now hiding in the boathouse while
they waited for their wounded to recover sufficiently so they could
continue south to Testra and attempt to cross the river there. They had
lost three men getting out of Cauthside.
Tarja allowed the men to light a fire with what dry fuel they could
find, satisfied that the weather offered them adequate protection from
accidental discovery. The fire cheered the troop considerably. Even the
Fardohnyans seemed a little more spirited. They sat around the small
blaze, his own men discussing tactics and speculating on what their
captain had in mind, the Fardohnyans talking softly among themselves.
Tarja stood by the small window looking out over the dark water,
uncaring of the rain that splattered his face. He could hear the low
murmur of conversation over the storm outside and knew he would have to
decide quickly what to do with the Fardohnyans. It was also time to
tell his troop what he was planning.
Mandah was still the only person in his small squad who knew exactly
what he had in mind. She was right when she claimed that she knew how
to behave with the careless arrogance of a Sister of the Blade.
Disguised as a Blue Sister she had commandeered the ferry in Vanahiem
with remarkable ease. He hoped she could do the same in Cauthside with
as little effort.
Before he acquired an additional twenty-four Fardohnyans, the plan
had been to burn the ferry then swim to safety. If the rain kept up
like this, they would have no chance of burning anything. Nor would
they be able to risk swimming the river.
"Tarja?"
He turned as Mandah walked up beside him, hugging a borrowed
Defender's cloak around her against the cold. She reeked of damp wool,
her fair hair hanging limp and wet against her head, yet her eyes were
bright with the excitement of the adventure.
"You should stay near the fire and dry off," he told her.
"I'll be all right. I've been checking the Fardohnyan wounded. The
one in the corner with the belly wound, I'll be surprised if he makes
it through the night. The others should be fine to travel when we leave
tomorrow."
"So you think we should bring them with us?"
"They've a better chance of getting home eventually if we
do."
He shook his head but did not answer, thinking she would have said
the same if they were stray cats.
"Is something wrong?"
"No. I was just thinking about tomorrow. It won't be easy if this
weather keeps up."
"Is there anything I can do to help?"
"Can you stop it raining?"
"I could pray to Brehn, the God of Storms, but I'm not sure he would
listen to me. You need the demon child if you wish to speak directly to
the gods."
"Well the demon child isn't here, is she?"
"Is that such a bad thing?"
He looked at her for a moment then shrugged. "No, it's not such a
bad thing, I suppose."
Mandah laid a gloved hand on his arm and smiled encouragingly.
"You're far too hard on yourself, Tarja. Come to the fire and get warm.
You won't stop the rain by staring at it."
She was trying so hard to cheer him. He did not have the heart to
deny her. Mandah could not bear to see any creature in pain, human or
beast. He thought of R'shiel: of her temper, her anger and her
willingness to manipulate others to get her own way. There was no
comparing the two women and it hardened his suspicion that the memories
that haunted him could not possibly be real. The old man in the tavern
had summed it up neatly. They were doing this for R'shiel. He was still
trying hard to convince himself she was worth it.
"Pity I can't stop the rain by staring at it," he
replied,
making an attempt to sound light-hearted. Then he glanced over his
shoulder at the men around the fire. "It's time I told the men what our
mission is, anyway."
Mandah took his arm as they approached the fire. The others moved
aside a little to make room for them. The Fardohnyans withdrew to the
corner of the boathouse, sensing that this did not involve them. Tarja
squatted down and glanced around the circle, satisfied he had picked
the right men. There were few Defenders in his squad. Those he had left
to Denjon and Linst. The men he had chosen were rebels for the most
part, men he had fought with before; men who understood how to
frustrate a numerically superior enemy without confronting them head on.
"We're going to burn the Cauthside Ferry," he announced as
they
looked at him expectantly. "If we're not back in Testra within a month,
the commander of the Testra garrison will destroy that ferry, too. If
all goes well here, we'll destroy it ourselves, once we've completed
our mission and are back on the other side of the river."
"You think that will stop the Kariens getting to the
Citadel?" Ghari
asked.
"No. But it will delay them for a time."
The rebels looked anxiously at each other. Ulran, a small, dark-eyed
man from Bordertown, and the best knife-fighter Tarja had ever met
glanced around the gathering, gauging the mood of his companions before
he spoke.
"That's going to hurt more than the Kariens, Tarja. There's a lot of
people who depend on those ferries."
"How much trade do you think there's going to be once the Kariens
get across the river?" Torlin asked. The same age as Mandah's
brother
Ghari, he was one of the rebels captured in Testra who had followed
Tarja to the northern border. Slender and surprisingly quick-witted, he
would have made a good Defender.
"Torlin's right," Rylan agreed. He was one of the few
Defenders in
the squad - solid and dependable. "The Kariens are foraging
their way
south. They'll strip Medalon clean. There won't be anything left
to trade by the time they've passed through."
Ulran nodded his reluctant agreement. "I suppose. It just seems a
pity to destroy a perfectly good ferry, that's all."
"Well, if you're feeling so noble, Ulran, you can come back and
build them a new one after the war," Harben suggested with a
grin.
Harben worried Tarja a little. His enthusiasm for destruction was
matched only by his refusal to take anything seriously. He reminded
Tarja a little of Damin Wolfblade.
"I've a feeling we'll all be in our dotage before that day
comes,"
Ulran retorted, then turned back to Tarja. "So, we burn the ferry.
How?"
As if in answer to his question, the night was lit by jagged
lightning, accompanied by the rattle of thunder. The rain began to fall
even more heavily, pounding on the battered shingles of the boathouse
so hard that Tarja could barely hear himself think. He looked up, shook
his head and looked back at his men.
"I was hoping one of you would have a bright idea."
The wounded Fardohnyan that Mandah was so
concerned for died not long after midnight. By dawn the following day
the rain had not let up, but Tarja could not afford to delay, so they
hastily buried the dead soldier in the soft ground, packed up their
makeshift camp and rode on. After a lengthy conversation with Filip in
Karien, it was decided that the Guard would wait on the south side of
the town while Tarja and his men sank the ferry. The Fardohnyans would
offer cover in case of pursuit and together they would head back to
Testra and the ferry there once the job was done. Tarja's men had
shaved and now wore Defender uniforms and Mandah sat astride her mare
in Sisterhood blue. They were stiff with the cold and soaked to the
skin by the time they split from the Fardohnyans and turned towards the
northern river town.
Cauthside was normally a quiet town, but now it was filled with
refugees fleeing the advancing Kariens. When Tarja had last seen it
over two years ago, he was with the late Lord Pieter and his entourage.
That fateful journey had led to most of the trouble he now found
himself in, he thought sourly. The town had been preparing for the
Founders' Day Parade. Streets he remembered decked out with blue
bunting were now crowded with lost souls, waiting a chance at the ferry
to get to relative safety on the other side of the river.
"Tarja, what will happen to these people?" Mandah asked as
they
dismounted and led their horses towards the landing through the press
of bodies. "They'll be stranded once we've . . . you
know."
"It can't be helped," he told her. "Better a few stranded
souls on
this side than the Kariens in control of the Citadel."
"There's more than a few people here, Tarja. There must be thousands
of them."
Tarja nodded, but found himself rather unsympathetic to their
plight. These were the camp followers who had ridden on the heels of
the Defenders hoping for a profit from the war. He did not intend to
feel guilty because things had not turned out as they planned.
"You can't help them, Mandah."
She nodded reluctantly as a child of about eight or nine with large,
sad grey eyes ran up alongside them, tugging hopefully on Mandah's blue
sleeve. She was clutching a bedraggled, tan-coloured puppy to her chest
and both of them were shivering.
"Are you here to save us, Sister?"
Mandah looked down and shook her head. "I'm sorry, child. I'll -"
Tarja grabbed her arm and pulled her away before she could say
anything else, or offer to adopt the puppy, which was the sort of thing
Mandah was liable to do when left to her own devices.
"You're supposed to be a Sister of the Blade."
"That doesn't mean I have no compassion."
"No, but it does mean you keep your damned head down," he
reminded
her. "We've a job to do, Mandah. You've already adopted a score of lost
Fardohnyans. You'll have to save orphans and stray dogs some other
time."
"But -" she protested indignantly.
"That's an order," he told her harshly as he shouldered his
way
through the crowd. "Now do as I say. Keep your head down and don't make
eye contact with anyone . . . or anything."
"You're a heartless fiend, Tarja," she hissed as she
followed the
path he cut through the throng. "How can you just stand by and watch -"
"Mandah!" Ghari warned from behind, saving Tarja the need to
scold
her further. He glanced back at his men to make sure they were still
behind him. The young woman glared at him but said nothing, obviously
offended. They pushed on through the crowded streets and into the small
town square, which had the look of a refugee camp. There were hundreds
of tents set up, crowded close together, their pegs driven into the
gaps in the cobblestones.
"This is madness," he muttered, mostly to himself, as he
surveyed
the square. A drizzling rain had begun to fall again and the air was
biting, even through his Defenders' cloak. He glanced over his shoulder
and beckoned Ghari forward. The young rebel threw his reins to the man
beside him and pushed his way between the horses to Tarja's side.
"What's wrong?"
"I don't know yet. You and the others stay here. Mandah and I will
make our way down to the river and see what's happening. We'll never
lead the horses through this."
Ghari nodded and took their reins. Tarja took Mandah's arm and led
her through the chaos, stepping over guy ropes, small children, washing
lines and smoking cook fires that hissed defiantly at the rain that
threatened to extinguish them. The landing was not far, but the closer
they got, the thicker the crowd grew, until they reached a wall of
densely packed bodies that no amount of pushing and shoving could
penetrate.
Being taller than average, Tarja could see over the heads of the
crowd. What he saw did not please him. The ferry was halfway across the
river, loaded almost beyond capacity with passengers, sluggishly making
its way against the current to the other side.
"What do you see?" Mandah asked, her view blocked by a solid
wall of
bodies.
"The ferry is making a crossing. It'll be hours before it returns
and even then we'll have no hope of getting near it."
"What are we going to do?"
"We'll have to fall back on my other plan."
"What's your other plan?"
"I'll tell you as soon as I think of it," he said with a
frown.
By mid-afternoon the ferry had returned to
Cauthside. Tarja waited with growing impatience as the barge made its
way laboriously across the rain-swollen river under a sky as dark as
tarnished silver. The crowd grew restless as it neared the bank,
surging forward as the refugees tried to push to the front of the line.
Short of taking to the crowd with swords and cutting their way through
(and even then he wasn't certain that would work), there was no way
they could get near the landing.
More frustrated than angry, Tarja pushed his way through the mob and
walked back to where Mandah and the others waited under the eaves of
the local inn. His expression told them what they wanted to know, even
before he got close enough to speak.
"So, how do we get near the ferry?" Ghari asked.
"We don't. We'll have to think of something else."
"If we had a ballista, we could set it alight with burning
pitch,"
Rylan suggested.
"A ballista?" Harben asked. "And to think I had one
in my
pocket and left it behind because I didn't think we'd need it!"
Tarja frowned at the young man's flippancy. "If you can't offer
anything useful, Harben, be quiet."
Harben had the sense to look contrite. Tarja called the men to him
and they huddled together under the thin shelter of the inn, suggesting
and rejecting ideas as they tried to think of a way to get close enough
to the landing and the ferry. In the end it was Harben who suggested
the solution, and he acted on it before Tarja could stop him. The young
rebel pushed his way into the crowd in his red Defenders uniform and
began shouting.
"They're coming! They're coming! The Kariens are here! Flee! Run for
your lives! The Kariens are here! The Kariens are here!"
It was not long before the mob took up his cry. The effect was
instantaneous and disastrous. Those at the back of the crowd broke away
and began to run from the landing back towards the square. Those
closest to the landing lunged forward, pushing the front ranks into the
icy river. Everyone was shouting, pushing, shoving to get clear.
"Stop him, Tarja!" Mandah gasped. "Someone will be
killed!"
But it was too late to stop the panic Harben's reckless cries had
triggered. Instinct quickly replaced common sense. Fear replaced
reason. The crowd became a heedless mob. Tarja was pushed back against
the wall of the inn as the crowd spilled into the square, trampling
tents, cook fires and anything else that got in their way. Their cries
echoed through the town, panicked and desperate.
"The Kariens are coming! The Kariens are coming!"
"The Kariens!" Mandah shouted, echoing the hysterical cries
of the
mob. Tarja grunted as a sharp elbow jabbed him in the ribs and he
turned to chide her for contributing to the chaos. But she wasn't
looking at him. Her eyes were fixed on the entrance to the square. "Oh
gods, Tarja, they're here!"
Tarja turned to look in the direction of Mandah's pointing finger.
At the entrance to the square a column of armoured knights was
ploughing into the chaos, their pennons flapping wetly in the damp air.
Whether the knights had intended to run down the people before them, or
simply had not had time to stop their heavy warhorses, Tarja couldn't
tell. In any case, the effect was the same. Harben's cries of impending
doom had proved horribly prophetic.
"Back this way!" he yelled, as he pulled Mandah along the
wall to
the corner of the inn. The narrow lane behind the tavern was cluttered
with debris and fleeing refugees. Tarja pushed his way through, using
his size and height to shove less motivated souls out of his way.
"I was right!" Harben chortled gleefully as he leapt over a
pile of
garbage and raced ahead. "The Kariens are here!"
"Get to the horses!" Tarja shouted after him. Harben waved
to
indicate he had heard the order and ran on. Tarja glanced over his
shoulder to assure himself the others were following. Mandah stumbled
beside him, her long skirts hampering her steps. Once past the inn he
dragged Mandah into a small lane between the Heart and Hearth inn, and
the livery next door.
"Get rid of the jackets," he ordered as the others followed
them
into the lane. He tore off his own distinctive red jacket and stuffed
it behind a barrel full of rainwater placed to catch the run-off from
the roof of the inn. The air was icy, but it was vastly preferable to
being identified as a member of the defeated Medalonian army.
"We'll never get past them," Ghari predicted as he shoved
his jacket
down beside Tarja's.
"We're not going to try. But sinking that ferry just changed from a
good idea to an imperative." The others nodded their agreement.
With
the Kariens quite literally on their heels, all objections were
forgotten. "Mandah, you and Ghari follow Harben and get the horses
ready. Borus, you and Torlin scout the north side of town. Find out if
this is just an advance party, or if we really do have the Karien host
just over the next hill. Paval, you ride back and warn the Fardohnyans
that when we leave here, we'll be running and we might have half the
damned Karien army on our heels."
The men nodded and slipped away. Mandah looked as if she might
object, but Ghari gave her no chance. He grabbed her arm and headed
back out into the lane behind the inn in the direction Harben had gone.
"And the rest of us?" Rylan asked.
"We're going back to the ferry. Kariens or not, it still has to
dock. If we're ever going to have a chance at it, it will be in the
next few minutes, before the Kariens take control of the town. We need
to sink that ferry and get out of Cauthside before the Kariens arrive
in force, or it's going to be a very long war."
They retraced their steps back to the square and turned towards the
landing, pushing against the flow of the crowd, which had thinned
considerably since the appearance of the Karien knights. The square was
a shambles of flattened tents, distraught mothers and screaming men
trampled by the fleeing mob. Then there were the dozen or so knights
who had ridden through them, milling about in the centre of the square,
almost as confused about what had happened as the refugees.
The ferrymen waited a little offshore, afraid to land, yet unable to
hold for long against the current. They pulled on a rope as thick as a
man's thigh that stretched from one side of the river to the other,
clinging to it grimly to hold the boat steady. Tarja judged the
distance between the ferry and the riverbank and realised it was too
far to jump. He glanced up as a crack of thunder rumbled over the
river. The sky was so low he felt he could almost touch it. Back in the
square the Kariens were still too disorganised to even notice the
ferry, let alone realise its strategic importance.
"They can't hold the ferry in that current much longer,"
Cyril noted.
"It's going to rain again any moment," Tarja added. "At
least we'll
have that small measure for cover."
"Aye," Cyril agreed as thunder shook the ground. Jagged
lightning
brightened the dull afternoon for an instant. "Those knights will rust
if they don't get indoors."
Tarja glanced at the older man, wondering if he was trying to be
humorous, but his expression was grim. "If we can't destroy the ferry,
we may have to settle for cutting it adrift."
The rope that secured the ferry on this side of the river was tied
to a massive pylon sunk deep into the ground about ten paces from the
landing. To cut through it would be time consuming and dangerous. The
rope was wet and they had only their swords, which, although
razor-sharp, were not designed for such a task. Even if they could
attempt it unnoticed, it would take several long, exposed minutes to
sever the rope, and the ferrymen who waited anxiously to haul the barge
ashore were unlikely to let them attempt such a feat without objection.
Surrender or not, the river was their livelihood. Crouched by the edge
of a small warehouse, Tarja debated the issue for a moment then turned
to his squad.
"Lavyn, take Byl and Seffin and go pick a fight with the ferrymen. I
want them too busy to notice what we're up to. Cyril, you stay here
with the others and keep an eye on those knights. If they pay us no
attention, stay out of their way. If they look like going anywhere near
that ferry, call them out. Insult their mothers, if you have to.
Whatever it takes to keep them off our backs.
"And remember," Ulran added with a grin, "if you truly want
to
insult a Karien, make sure you mention his god, his mother and at least
one dog."
Tarja shook his head at the knife-fighter, but allowed himself a
small smile. "Ulran, you're with me."
The small man grinned and produced a wicked, serrated dagger from
the side of his boot. The blade was nearly as long as his forearm. "You
think this might do the trick?"
Tarja nodded, more relieved than surprised to find Ulran carrying
such a vicious weapon. His sword would have been as blunt as a butter
knife after hacking through so much wet hemp.
"Let's move!" he ordered. The men slipped away to their
assigned
positions and Tarja followed Ulran down the slight slope towards the
landing. The three men he sent to distract the ferrymen were ahead of
them, shouting aggressively at the unsuspecting river-folk as they
approached. Their words were drowned out by another bellow of thunder
as Tarja drew his sword and turned his back to Ulran to protect him
while he cut through the massive line.
Lightning split the clouds for a moment and then icy rain began
sheeting down, blurring Tarja's vision and soaking him in seconds. He
glanced over his shoulder at Ulran, who was sawing the rope, wiping the
rain from his eyes as he worked. A strand unravelled and then another
as he hacked at the rope, the weight of the ferry pulling it as taut as
a harp string one moment, slackening the next, as the ferry rocked
against the current. Somewhere over the rain he could hear angry
shouting, but if it was the men on the ferry, the boatmen Tarja had
sent the others to distract, or the Karien knights, he could not tell.
He couldn't see more than a few paces in front of him. All he could do
was stand on the balls of his feet, his sword at the ready, hoping that
if they were attacked, he would see it coming.
Ulran sawed frantically at the rope as time slowed to a crawl. Tarja
risked another look over his shoulder. Half the rope was severed now,
but it was taking much too long.
"Hurry, Ulran!"
"You think you can do this any faster?" the rebel shouted
over the
downpour as another strand unravelled. He was panting heavily with the
effort of sawing through the wet hemp, his muscles bunched under his
wet shirt, his lips blue with the cold.
The shouting seemed closer and Tarja turned back in time to see a
Karien knight riding down on them. Cyril had fallen near the edge of
the square, the puddle he lay in red with blood. He could not make out
the rest of his men through the sheeting rain, but the spectre of a
massive Karien warhorse loomed over him as one of the knights, suddenly
realising what they were attempting, rode straight at them.
"Out of the way!" Tarja shouted.
Ulran slipped and fell as he scrambled to get clear. Tarja swung his
sword like an axe and struck the taut rope with every ounce of strength
he could muster. The Karien was almost on him, the sound of hoofs on
the cobbles almost louder than the rain. He swung again, wincing as the
blow jarred his arms to the shoulder. The Karien was only a heartbeat
away and still the rope held. Tarja swung one last time and the rope
finally gave way under the strain of the ferry pulling against it. Rain
swallowed the shouts of the panicked ferrymen as it whipped free; the
barge suddenly swinging into the current, at the mercy of the hungry
river.
Tarja barely had time to turn as the Karien rode him down. He had no
time to recover his fighting stance or bring his sword around. He saw
the blow coming, saw the flat of the Karien's blade aimed at his head
and knew there was nothing he could do to stop it.
Pain blinded him.
Then there was blackness as unconsciousness swallowed him whole.
CHAPTER 22
There had been some dissension over whether or not
Damin should be allowed to take up residence in the High Prince's
Palace, his opponents fearing that his possession of it might imply
their tacit agreement to his claim. Marla had put an end to the
argument by pointing out that the palace actually belonged to the
Wolfblade family, therefore she had a perfect right to be there and
invite whoever she wished to guest with her.
That had been yesterday. Cyrus Eaglespike was evicted as the
Wolfblades reclaimed their palace. Adrina had been shown to her
apartments, the same quarters she had used when she visited
Greenharbour for Lernen's birthday almost three years ago, and seen
nobody since.
She paced the sumptuous rooms impatiently, striding past tall,
diamond-paned doors that opened out onto a balcony overlooking the
harbour. They allowed what little cooling breeze there was to sigh
through the room, gently billowing the sheer curtains that screened the
windows against insects. The screeching gulls circling the fishing
boats grated on her nerves. The air was humid, worse even than Talabar.
Adrina hated not knowing what was going on. She knew there had been
some sort of confrontation with Cyrus Eaglespike, and that R'shiel had
somehow temporarily defused the situation, but other than that she was
completely in the dark.
The door opened and Tamylan slipped into the room, bearing a tray
with a silver jug beaded with condensation. She placed the tray on the
gilded table by the door, then turned to her mistress.
"You should be resting, Your Highness. You look exhausted and there
is more than yourself to consider now."
"I can't rest," she declared, stifling a yawn. "What
news?"
"Not much, I fear. The city seems quiet. R'shiel has gone to the
Sorcerers' Collective to meet with the High Arrion and the
Harshini."
"Where's Damin?"
"With Lord Bearbow and Lord Hawksword. I believe Princess Marla is
with them also."
"So I'm to be excluded from their council, am I? Where are they
meeting?"
"Adrina, I really don't think you should -"
"I don't recall asking what you thought, Tam. Where are they
meeting?"
"Downstairs in the throne room."
"Then I think I shall join them," she announced. Squaring
her
shoulders, she marched to the door and flung it open, only to have her
way blocked by two heavily armed Raiders wearing Damin's wolf's head
crest. "Out of my way!"
"I'm sorry, Your Highness," the taller guard said. "Lord
Wolfblade
said you weren't to leave this chamber."
"Don't be absurd! I'm his wife, not a prisoner! Stand aside!"
"Lord Wolfblade was very specific in his orders, Your
Highness."
"Actually, I told them to tie you down, if necessary."
Adrina turned to find Damin coming towards her, his boots clicking
on the mosaic floor. He was unshaved and still dressed in the same
clothes she had seen him wearing yesterday. He had probably been up all
night. Damin looked almost as tired as she felt. She quashed a
momentary pang of sympathy for him, preferring anger to compassion.
"How dare you treat me like a prisoner!"
"It's for your own protection, Adrina. Until I'm certain the palace
is secure, I don't want you wandering around."
"You don't want me to know what's going on, more like it."
The guards stood back to let Damin enter, tactfully closing the door
behind him. Tamylan curtsied to him and he nodded absently in
acknowledgment.
"Can I get you anything, my Lord?"
"Something to eat, Tam," Damin replied wearily. "And
something cold
to drink. Have it sent up here."
Tamylan curtsied again and let herself out of the room before Adrina
could countermand the order.
"You seem to be getting very familiar with my slave."
"I believe Tamylan has finally decided that I may not be an ogre,
after all."
"You haven't convinced me yet."
He smiled tiredly. "Are you all right?"
"What harm can come to me here, locked away like a bird in a cage?
Of course, I might die from boredom, but don't let that bother
you."
She resumed her pacing as Damin flopped onto the chaise near the open
balcony doors.
"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to give the impression you were a
prisoner."
"Ah . . . now let me think . . . I'm stuck in
this room. There are guards on the door. I'm not allowed to leave. How
silly of me to think all that meant I was a prisoner."
"My uncle has been dead for nearly two months now, Adrina. That's
two months that Cyrus Eaglespike has had access to this palace. We've
already discovered at least three rooms that were rigged with
assassination devices."
She stopped pacing and turned to him. "But you said the Assassins'
Guild was on our side."
"They are. That's how we found the devices. Cyrus hasn't got access
to the Guild, but there are some gifted amateurs out there. This is a
big palace. It will take days before we're certain they've found every
nasty little surprise Lord Eaglespike has left for us."
Adrina found herself regretting her outburst. Perhaps he really was
concerned for her welfare. On the other hand, he may simply be using it
as an excuse to exclude her.
"You didn't invite me to your council," she accused with a
bad
feeling she sounded like a petulant child.
"That was Marla's idea, not mine."
"You're a Warlord and a High Prince. Don't you think it's time you
stopped listening to your mother?"
"If I listened to my mother, Adrina, you would be a
prisoner."
She did not doubt he spoke the truth. "What's going on, Damin? I've
a right to know."
He nodded. "That you have. How much have you heard?"
"Only that you confronted your cousin and that R'shiel did something
to him."
"Actually, it was more the threat of what she could do that
encouraged Cyrus to see reason. When Kalan returned to Greenharbour
ahead of us, Cyrus tried to get her to ratify his claim to the throne
and sanction the Convocation, even though he had only three Warlords to
attend. Kalan refused naturally, so he tried to storm the Sorcerers'
Palace. He didn't count on the Harshini. They threw up some sort of
protective dome that he couldn't penetrate. They'd been under siege for
days. R'shiel says we arrived just in time."
"And what is the demon child doing now?"
"I don't know for certain. As soon as we took possession of the
palace, she left for the Sorcerers' Collective. I haven't seen her
since."
"Has something happened?"
Damin shrugged. "Who knows? R'shiel has all of us dancing on strings
like puppets in a show that only she can see."
"Yet we all dance willingly enough," Adrina said with a
frown. "So
what happens now?"
"We wait for Tejay Lionsclaw. Until she arrives, we can't hold the
Convocation."
"Is she on her way?"
"She should be."
"You sound uncertain. Isn't she on your side?"
"I would have said yes a few days ago, but that was before I learnt
that Cyrus Eaglespike married his daughter Bayla to Tejay's eldest son
last spring, while I was in Medalon."
"So the person who holds the casting vote is tied to your opponent
by marriage. That's not a very comfortable position to be in."
"Decidedly uncomfortable," Damin agreed.
"How are you going to ensure that she remains in your camp?"
"I haven't worked that out yet. Any suggestions?"
The question took Adrina by surprise. That Damin actually wanted her
opinion was flattering. In fact, that he had bothered to come here at
all, to acquaint her with the situation and ask her advice was the last
thing she expected.
"You need to discover the quality Tejay Lionsclaw admires most in a
leader and make sure you have more of it than your cousin," she
advised. "That, or give her something she wants. Something that nobody
else can give her."
He laughed sourly. "That's easy! All I have to do is give her the
secret of the explosive powders your damned Fardohnyan bandits use
against her in the Sunrise Mountains. If I could do that, she'd swear
the allegiance of her House to mine for an eternity."
"My father guards that secret more closely than his
treasury."
"I know. We've tried everything we could think of for years to
discover it."
Adrina hesitated before she spoke again, aware that her next words
would mean she was taking an irrevocable step in a direction she had
not planned to go. But she was tired, mentally and physically. Her
surrender seemed inevitable and the energy it took to sustain her
defiance was needed elsewhere.
"You haven't tried asking me."
Damin looked up at her in astonishment. "What?"
"I said, you haven't tried asking me."
"I heard what you said, Adrina," he told her, rising to his
feet. He
stood too close. She wished he had stayed seated. She didn't like
looking up at him. "Are you telling me that you know the secret of the
explosives?"
She could not tell if he was angry or just surprised.
"That's exactly what I'm telling you."
"Why didn't you tell me this before?"
She took a step back from him. "You didn't ask."
He turned away from her and walked to the open doors. The set of his
shoulders was stiff and angry. He was silent for a time then he turned
back to her.
"Why tell me now? Why the sudden change of heart?"
"You always suspect me of having an ulterior motive, don't
you?"
"That's because you usually do have an ulterior motive,
Adrina."
She was honest enough to not deny the charge. "Our fates are bound,
Damin, whether we like it or not. I cannot go on fighting you
forever."
"You seem to be doing just fine, so far."
The door opened and Tamylan returned before Adrina could respond to
the charge. Her slave did not seem to notice the tension in the room.
She curtsied hurriedly then turned to Damin. "My Lord, Princess Marla
requires your presence urgently. She has news of Lady
Lionsclaw."
Damin nodded then turned to Adrina. "We'll finish this discussion
later."
He strode from the room, angry and annoyed, before she had a chance
to answer.
Tamylan closed the door behind Damin and leaned against it, staring
at Adrina suspiciously. "Did you tell him?"
"No."
"Adrina . . ."
"I keep planning to, Tam, but the timing never seems right."
"You can't keep it a secret much longer."
"I know," she sighed.
Tamylan crossed the room and took her arm gently, leading her to the
chaise.
"Well, I suppose there's no point in worrying about it now. Why
don't you lie down? You need your rest and he said he'd be back. You
can tell him then."
Adrina nodded, aware that she was almost swaying on her feet with
fatigue.
"He's mad at me again."
"He'll get over it."
"I told him about the gunpowder."
"Was that wise?"
"I thought . . . oh, hell! I don't know what I thought. He
makes me so angry!"
"No angrier than you make him," Tamylan pointed out with a
shrug. "Now stop fretting and come and lie down."
Adrina sighed wearily. "What would I do without you Tam?"
"I'm sure I don't know, Your Highness."
Adrina smiled and lay back on the couch. She would tell Damin when
he returned - about the gunpowder and the child.
"Tam, did Marla say what the news was? About Lady Lionsclaw?"
"No, but she seemed excited rather than upset, so I suppose the news
is good."
Adrina closed her eyes for a moment then opened them again, looking
at Tamylan with concern. "If I go to sleep, you'll wake me when he
comes, won't you?"
"Of course."
"You seem to like him now. You used to think he was a
barbarian."
"I still do," the slave told her. "But I've decided the
demon child
is right about one thing. I think he really cares about you, Adrina.
That rather improves my opinion of him."
Adrina closed her eyes again. The humidity and the strain of the
past few weeks caught up with her in a wave of fatigue. "Do you think
he'll be happy when he learns I'm with child?"
"He'd better be," Tam replied sternly.
"You're going to make a wonderful nurse, Tam."
"Rest, Your Highness."
Adrina didn't answer. By the time Tamylan had gently closed the door
behind her, she had let the torpor overtake her and drifted off to
sleep.
CHAPTER 23
When Adrina woke, it was dark. She experienced a
sharp pang of bitter disappointment when she realised Damin had not
come back. Well, what did you expect? she asked herself
grumpily. It's not as if he actually wants to spend time in
your company. Tam had not lit the candles yet and the room was
full of dancing shadows. Moonlight reflecting off the still waters of
the harbour painted flickering patterns on the ceiling. She lay still
for a moment, wondering what had woken her, then heard the noise again
in the corridor outside her room.
Curiously, she climbed to her feet and crossed to the door, placing
her ear against the warm wood. The noise grew louder, the unmistakable
sound of shouting and the clang of metal on metal. She stepped away
from the door in puzzlement. It sounded like a fight. Was the palace
under attack?
The door burst open suddenly and the light from the passage outside
momentarily blinded her. She screamed as the room filled with armed
men. Arms grabbed at her and a mailed hand was clamped over her mouth,
stifling her cries. She struggled against the man who held her then
suddenly relaxed as she remembered the child she carried. If she
struggled too hard she might cause it harm.
"Are you sure that's her?" one of them asked.
"Aye."
"Then let's get out of here. Make certain they're all dead out
there," he added, jerking his head towards the corridor.
A Raider slipped through the door, his sword drawn. Adrina cringed
as a high-pitched and unmistakably female scream followed a few seconds
later. She twisted her head around and caught sight of a blue skirt
puddled on the tiles near the door, the familiar slippers stained with
the blood that pooled around them.
Tamylan!
"Get her to the balcony," the man in charge ordered. "The
boat is
waiting."
Adrina struggled as they dragged her across the room, her heart
beating so hard she thought it might burst through her chest. She
turned her head, trying to keep Tam in her line of sight, willing the
feet to move, to give some indication that she was still alive. The man
sent out to finish off the guards slipped back into the room and closed
the door behind him, cutting off her view. Adrina sobbed into the
mailed hand still covering her mouth.
Tamylan!
They dragged her through the open door and out onto the balcony. A
Raider was lowering a rope over the edge, down to the dark waters of
the harbour below. His leather breastplate was embossed with a soaring
eagle. The Raider who seemed to be giving the orders checked the rope
was secure then turned to Adrina.
"Sorry about this, Your Highness."
The man holding her suddenly released his hand from her mouth, but
before she could scream a mailed fist hit her in the jaw. The pain
blinded her for a moment and she struggled to stay upright.
The second blow was more effective. By the time she realised she had
been struck again she was unconscious.
The next thing Adrina knew, she was tied hand and
foot, lying in a puddle of icy water in the bottom of a small boat. The
sea churned beneath them, and the motion of the boat made her ill, but
she was determined not to vomit. She held down the contents of her
heaving stomach by sheer force of will. Spitting out a mouthful of sour
blood and stale salty water, she lifted her head to see where she was.
In the darkness she could make out little but the bare feet of the
sailors who pulled on the oars, and the booted feet of the Raiders who
had kidnapped her.
One of them looked down and noticed she was conscious. He bent over
and pulled her into a sitting position, squinting at her in the
moonlight.
"Awake, then, are you?"
"You have a gift for stating the blindingly obvious, my man."
"I ain't your man, missy," the Raider replied. "I'm one of
Lord
Eaglespike's men."
"Again, you state the obvious," she remarked, glancing at
his
breastplate, proudly embossed with the soaring eagle of Dregian
Province. "Where are you taking me?"
"Somewhere safe."
"That's a rather relative term under the circumstances. Untie me at
once!"
"Can't do that, Your Highness."
"Why not? Are you afraid I'll escape? With all these big, nasty
sailors surrounding me? I'm flattered."
"Lord Eaglespike said . . ."
"Ah! Lord Eaglespike! Did he give orders that I was to be treated
like some galley slave you snatched for a bit of sport? Untie me this
instant!"
Her tone almost had him convinced. He was reaching for the ropes
when another man stopped him, looking down at her with contempt.
"Leave her be, Avrid," the other man ordered. "Don't let her
trick
you."
Avrid lowered his hands, almost apologetically. Adrina glared at the
Raider with all the regal scorn she could muster while sitting in such
an inelegant position.
"I promise I will personally see to it that you all die a very slow
and painful death. I will supervise your torture and execution myself.
I enjoy watching my enemies suffer long, excruciating punishments. I'm
Fardohnyan, you know. We have ways of making a man live in agony for
weeks without killing him."
"Shut up!" the Raider ordered, noticing the looks on the
faces of
the men who could hear her.
Adrina smiled coldly. "Then, there's always a chance I won't get to
do a thing to you myself. Once the demon child hears of this, your days
left in this world will be so few even you could count them. Did I
mention that the demon child is a friend of mine?"
"I told you to shut up!" The Raider's voice had an edge of
panic to
it. "Don't say another word!"
"Am I scaring you?" she asked cheerfully.
The Raider punched her in the face rather than answer her question.
Just before dawn, they reached their destination,
a small stone jetty that jutted out into a small churning bay in the
shadow of a massive white tower that seemed to grow out of the
cliff-face. Adrina was hauled from the boat by another pair of Dregian
Raiders and dragged along the slimy dock to a narrow staircase that
wound upwards towards a square of yellow light. Shivering in her damp
clothes, she shook off the man who was holding her and climbed the
steps without assistance, despite the effort it cost her. She was cold
and stiff and aching in places she didn't know existed until now. Her
head ached, her stomach was queasy and her face felt as if it had
swollen to three times its normal size.
At the top of the stairs was a small guardroom where more Raiders
waited for her with another man dressed in gold-chased armour. He
studied Adrina with concern then turned to the Raider who had hit her
in the boat.
"Lord Eaglespike said not to harm her, you fool!"
"She's not hurt bad," the man replied defensively.
"Nothing's
broken. But she's got a mouth on her."
The young lord turned to Adrina apologetically. "I'm sorry, Your
Highness. You were not meant to be injured."
"That's a fairly hollow apology, don't you think?"
"We've brought you here for . . . political
reasons," the
young man explained uncomfortably.
"Is that what you call it? Where I come from, we don't usually start
our political negotiations with criminal acts."
"If you'd stayed where you belong and Damin Wolfblade had heeded our
warnings, we wouldn't need to commit criminal acts, Your
Highness," he
shrugged. "I am Serrin Eaglespike, Lord Cyrus' brother."
"Bully for you," Adrina replied, unimpressed.
"Lord Eaglespike will be here later. He may wish to speak with you
then, or he may wait until Wolfblade has met his demands. In the
meantime, you may consider yourself . . . our guest."
He stood back as Adrina was pushed forward from the small guardroom
to a long, narrow corridor. The walls were made of rusted iron bars,
each one revealing a damp cell beyond. Most of them were empty, and the
occupants of the few that weren't looked up disinterestedly as she
passed.
About halfway up the corridor, her escort stopped and unlocked the
cell on her left. They pushed her through the door with little ceremony
and locked it behind her.
Serrin followed the guards and stood outside the bars, watching her
as she took in the small high window, the damp, salt-pitted floor and
the mouldy straw that served as a bed. A guard untied the ropes that
bound her wrists and she rubbed at the raw skin absently as she looked
around.
"Not exactly what you're used to, I imagine?"
"If you want to use your imagination for something
fruitful," she
suggested frostily, "use it to imagine what I'm going to do to you when
I get out of here. Have you any idea how long we Fardohnyans can hold a
grudge? Do you have any concept of the lengths we are prepared to go to
for revenge? Perhaps you've heard of the ancient Fardohnyan tradition
of mort'eda?"
Rather than looking fearful, Serrin actually smiled. "You don't
think the threats of a woman frighten me, do you?"
"Then what does frighten you, my Lord? You'll go to war over this,
you know that, don't you?"
"Know it? We're counting on it! Damin Wolfblade will gather up the
thousand men he has in Greenharbour and come storming over our border
as soon as he hears you are missing."
"Then why aren't you out there getting ready to face him?"
"We are ready to face him, Your Highness. We have ten
thousand men waiting. He'll fly right into our trap like a fox on the
scent of fresh chicken blood. If there's one thing you can always count
on, it's Damin Wolfblade's reaction to anything that he perceives as a
threat to something he loves. He'd rather fight than eat."
Adrina burst out laughing, despite how much it hurt her split lip.
"This is your grand plan? There's a fatal flaw in your logic, I'm
afraid."
"What flaw?"
"You're assuming Damin loves me."
"Well, doesn't he?" Serrin asked, a little confused.
"I hate to disappoint you, Serrin," she said, holding her
sides
against the bitter laughter that shook her. "But you've not provoked
Damin, you've played right into his hands. He won't care if you send me
back to him in little pieces. You've kidnapped the one thing he wants
to be rid of!"
Serrin glared at her in disbelief. "You're just saying that."
Adrina's laughter had almost reached the point of hysteria. She
could not believe they had actually kidnapped her for such a mistaken
reason.
"You poor, misguided fools!" she cried, sobbing with mirth.
"Love
me? Dear gods, he despises me!"
Serrin turned away and left her alone, his footsteps echoing angrily
along the passage. Still crying with laughter, Adrina sank down onto
the floor of her cell and hugged her knees. Her mirth abated slowly but
the tears did not as the harsh truth of her predicament hit her with
full force.
Damin would not risk a civil war for her. She knew that. Even if he
wanted to, Marla would prevent him from taking action, or worse, she
would convince him to go to war, but not until after her despised
daughter-in-law had been conveniently disposed of. There was a chance
that R'shiel might come to her rescue, but with everything else that
was going on, saving Adrina was probably far down on her list of
priorities and the demon child could be as ruthless as Marla when the
mood took her.
The worst of her predicament was the dreadful realisation that at
that moment, she wanted nothing more than to be warm and dry and safe
in Damin's arms somewhere far from this place.
And Tamylan - dear, sweet, loyal Tamylan - had died
for her.
She cried anew for her slave, realising now, when it was too late to
do anything about it, that Tam had been her one true friend. The
loneliness that settled on her seemed worse than her small cell, worse
than her bruised and battered face, worse even than the bitter
knowledge that she had fallen for Damin Wolfblade and she would
probably never get the chance to tell him.
Damin would not come for her. She was certain of that.
He didn't even know that she carried his child.
CHAPTER 24
The Seeing Stone in the Temple of the Gods loomed
over R'shiel, a solid lump of crystal as tall as a man, mounted on a
black marble base. Candles set in solid silver sconces lit the altar,
reflecting off the Stone with flickering rainbow light. She studied it
for some time, hoping to learn its secret.
"It concerns me that the demon child knows so little of the ways of
the Harshini."
R'shiel turned. Kalan was striding towards her down the centre of
the echoing temple. Kalan had ordered it cleared whenever R'shiel
wished to use it - apparently she thought the demon child
needed
solitude during her worship.
R'shiel did not correct the High Arrion's assumptions. It was
convenient that the Sorcerers' Collective thought of her as Harshini.
It wouldn't do at all to remind them she was a Medalonian half-breed
raised to despise the gods and everything they represented.
"Concerns you? It scares the hell out of me."
Kalan frowned. "I wish you were joking."
"So do I."
The High Arrion climbed the steps to the altar and stopped beside
her, studying the crystal for a moment. "You sent for me?"
"I need to contact Sanctuary."
"And you want to know how to use the Stone?"
R'shiel nodded. "Glenanaran and the others are still unconscious.
I'm not sure how to help."
"We owe them a great deal," Kalan agreed.
"So, what's the trick with this thing?"
Kalan shook her head in despair. "This thing? Divine One,
you have a bad habit of blaspheming every time you open your mouth. I
hope the gods are forgiving."
"I'd settle for them just minding their own business."
Kalan sighed eloquently but made no further comment. She stepped up
to the Stone and laid her hand on it, as if she drew strength from its
solid presence, then turned to R'shiel.
"In the old days, before the Sisterhood conquered Medalon, the
Seeing Stone was our main link with the Harshini. In those days we had
scores of Harshini roaming through Hythria and Fardohnya. Medalon was
their home but their teachers were spread out even as far as Karien,
before the Overlord came to power. There were five Seeing Stones back
then."
"Five? What happened to them? Where are they now?"
"The Stone in Yarnarrow was taken to the Isle of Slarn, when
Xaphista came to power in Karien. The Sisterhood somehow disposed of
the Stone at the Citadel. The Stone in Talabar is gone too, but nobody
is certain where."
"And the fifth Stone is in Sanctuary."
Kalan nodded. "This Stone was silent for almost two hundred years,
after the Harshini left us. Then Korandellan appeared about three years
ago, seeking Lord Brakandaran."
"He sent him to look for me."
"And now here you are, seeking to use the Stone to speak with
Korandellan. Strange how things turn out."
R'shiel wasn't sure how to answer that. Kalan had been in a strange
mood since they arrived in Greenharbour. Perhaps it was because of the
attack on the Collective.
"Can you use the Stone?"
Kalan nodded. "In theory, although I've never tried. We lost a great
deal of knowledge when the Harshini departed. We have the texts that
describe the skills, but without Harshini tutors to explain the nuances
of the techniques, many things proved impossible. I cannot use the
Stone as you can. All you need do is place your hands upon it, draw on
your power and think of whoever you wish to contact."
"That's all?"
"So I'm led to believe."
"But you don't know for certain?"
"I am not Harshini, Divine One. I do not have access to the power
that you control."
Control might be a bit optimistic, R'shiel thought
irreverently, although she did not voice her uncertainty. It was better
that the High Arrion thought her omnipotent. She stepped closer to the
Stone.
"The staffs that Xaphista's priests use. They have crystals in them
too. Are they like the Seeing Stones?"
Kalan looked thoughtful. "I don't really know. The Overlord uses
them to link with the priests, so I suppose they work on the same
principle. I've never seen one up close." She smiled faintly.
"As you
can imagine, there is little communication between the Collective and
the Overlord's minions."
"The shaft is black," R'shiel told her, her voice hardening
in
remembrance, "and made of metal. The head of the staff is gold, shaped
like a five-pointed star, intersected by a lightning bolt crafted of
silver. Each point of the star is set with crystal and in the centre of
the star, is a larger gem of the same stone."
"You speak as if you've seen one."
"I've had the dubious pleasure of being on the receiving
end," she
explained.
"That raises some interesting possibilities," Kalan said
thoughtfully.
"What do you mean?"
"I wonder if the crystals you describe are pieces of the missing
Stones? I don't know how they could be, but it's possible, I
suppose."
"If they are, could I use them too?"
The High Arrion shrugged, but she did not dismiss the idea out of
hand. "For what?"
"I don't know, exactly. I'm just curious, I guess."
"Even if the crystals really are pieces of Seeing Stone, you
couldn't really do anything with a staff unless you could get past the
pain."
"Yes, well that does present something of a problem," she
agreed,
pushing away the painful memory of Xaphista and the pain his staff
could inflict. She had beaten the collar though, and that had been
worse than the staff. Perhaps, if she had to, she could do it again.
But not easily; and certainly not by choice.
"I suppose you could get around having to touch the staff itself by
using another Seeing Stone," Kalan added thoughtfully.
"Why another Seeing Stone?"
"The Seeing Stones are channels, Divine One. They focus the power of
the gods and allow it to be used in a specific manner. The size of the
Stone determines its power. Legend has it that the Stone at the Citadel
was three times the size of this one."
"So, what are you saying? That even if the staffs contain pieces of
Seeing Stone, they're too small to do anything with?"
"I'm saying they couldn't be used like this one. You couldn't use
them to talk to the priests. They would convey nothing more than
. . . I don't know, really . . . emotions, maybe
. . . vague impressions, at best. And that's assuming you can
access a Stone capable of communicating with the chips of crystal in
the staffs."
"What about this Seeing Stone? Or the one at Sanctuary?"
She shook her head. "The Stone in here is only good for contacting
Sanctuary - the Harshini made sure of that before they
withdrew, and
you can't use the Stone in Sanctuary, because for something requiring
that much power, Korandellan would have to bring Sanctuary back into
real time. If they are chips from the missing Stones then the Stone
that controls those jewels is probably the one on Slarn."
R'shiel frowned. "I'm not sure I want to risk Malik's Curse just to
satisfy my curiosity." She'd seen a man with the wasting
disease once,
on his way from the Citadel to the colony on Slarn. It still gave her
nightmares.
"The disease would be the least of your problems," Kalan
pointed
out. "Just getting there would be trouble enough. You couldn't use the
demons. The priests would sense you coming from the other side of the
Fardohnyan Gulf."
"Pity the Seeing Stone at the Citadel is lost," she sighed,
glancing
at the lump of crystal behind her. "Do you think the Sisterhood
destroyed it?"
"No human possesses the power to destroy a Seeing Stone, Divine One.
It's missing, certainly, but I doubt it was destroyed."
"Then it might be still in the Citadel? Hidden somewhere?"
The High Arrion did not seem to share her optimism. "I suppose,
although where you would hide something as large as a Seeing Stone is
beyond me."
"I wonder if there are any records in the Citadel's library? The
Founding Sisters documented everything. There are even reports on the
number of sacks of grain they confiscated when they took over the
Citadel."
"It's worth a try, I suppose, and if it is still there, it
would be a lot safer than trying to get near the one on Slarn. But the
Citadel is under Karien control. How are you going to get inside? And,
more importantly, what does it have to do with your quest to destroy
Xaphista? Do you have the time to waste answering questions that have
no relevance to the task at hand?"
"I suppose not." She glanced up at the Stone again with a
sigh. For
a moment, it had seemed like such a good idea, too.
R'shiel had the librarians scouring the archives of the Collective
looking for something, anything, to help her cause, but so far
they had come up with nothing. Dikorian, the Collective's Chief
Librarian, was not hopeful either. He knew his archives like he knew
his own reflection and had never heard of anything in them that gave
even a hint about how to destroy a god. Maybe, with a bit more time
. . . she shook her head impatiently, reminding herself of
why she had come here this evening. Time was something she didn't have
to waste at the moment. "Right now I have to help Glenaranan and his
friends. Will you see that I am not disturbed?"
Kalan nodded. "Of course."
The High Arrion stepped down from the altar and began the long walk
through the temple across the gorgeously mosaic-tiled floor. Every
building R'shiel had entered in Greenharbour had floors like it, their
intricate geometrical patterns sometimes so complex they made her dizzy.
She waited until Kalan was lost in the shadows before turning back
to the Stone. Pushing away stray thoughts of Seeing Stones and chips of
crystal, R'shiel swallowed a lump of apprehension and reached out,
placing her palms upon it, then opened herself to the power. She felt
her eyes darken, felt the familiar, intoxicatingly sweet energy surge
through every cell in her body, and then thought of Korandellan.
Demon child.
R'shiel jumped in fright. It seemed hours since she had laid her
hands on the Stone. The power filled her and she opened her eyes, which
now burned black. Korandellan's image appeared in the crystal against a
milky backdrop. He looked haggard.
"Korandellan!"
You should not sound so surprised, demon child. You are the one
who called for me.
"I . . . I know . . . I just wasn't sure if it
would work."
You should not doubt yourself, R'shiel. You are capable of so
much more than you realise.
"I'm glad you think so."
The King smiled indulgently. How can I help you, child?
"Glenanaran, Farandelan and Joranara are unconscious. The Collective
was attacked and they built a dome of light to protect it. They
collapsed just before I got here and we can't wake them. They don't
seem injured at all - they just won't wake up."
His face clouded with concern. It was unwise of them to draw on
so much power. The gods always exact a price for such excess.
"The gods? You mean they're like this as some sort of
punishment?"
She could feel her ire rising and fought it down. Linked mentally with
Korandellan, it would distress him greatly to be exposed to her anger.
"So what can I do?"
You must appeal to Cheltaran directly, I fear.
"The God of Healing? I don't know him."
But he knows you, demon child. I'm certain he will heed your
summons.
The image flickered for a moment and R'shiel realised that
Korandellan was weakening. The idea alarmed her. Korandellan was as
strong in the power as she, and certainly far more skilled. The effort
it took to link through the Stone was minimal. It should not be having
that effect on him. "Are you all right?"
I am tired, that is all.
"How can you be tired? You're the King of the
Harshini."
Your faith in me is encouraging, R'shiel. Korandellan
could not lie, but he could avoid giving her a direct answer.
"What's wrong?"
He sighed, obviously reluctant to share his burden. The strain
of holding Sanctuary out of time is telling on me.
"Why don't you just let it go? Nobody knows where Sanctuary
is."
Xaphista's priests would find us easily, if we were back in
normal time. I cannot risk it.
"But if your hold weakens, they'll find it anyway."
Then I must rely on you to remove the threat of the Kariens,
and trust you are able to achieve it before I falter.
Korandellan was not trying to pressure her - it was not in
his
nature to do anything so blatantly human, but R'shiel felt it,
nonetheless. It simply wasn't fair. She never asked to be the demon
child. She certainly did not want to feel responsible for the survival
of the Harshini.
The King smiled. I fear I have made the burden of your destiny
heavier. Do not concern yourself, R'shiel. Things will turn out as the
gods will them.
Which isn't saying much, she thought irreverently. "Is there
anything I can do?"
If you are following a path that leads to breaking the power of
the Overlord, you are doing all you can, my dear.
"Well, I'll try to do it a bit faster," she offered with a
wan smile.
Korandellan nodded wearily. You will prevail.
The strain of maintaining the link was telling visibly on the King's
face. She took her hands from the Stone and it cleared almost
instantly, the milky backdrop returning to the crystalline clarity that
characterised the magical talisman. R'shiel sank down onto the floor,
sitting with her back to the marble base, her knees drawn up to her
chin. She let the power go with some reluctance.
So, I have to call Cheltaran, she told herself. That would
take care of the wounded Harshini. Then, if Dikorian can't help me
. . . maybe the answers I need are at the Citadel. But I'm
running out of time.
That the Harshini might be imperilled had never occurred to her
until now. In fact, she had never really felt that she was working to a
timetable. She knew that at some distant point in the future she would
finally have to confront Xaphista, but she had always thought the one
thing on her side was time. Perhaps she could sneak away after this
damned election. Damin was a smart boy, Adrina even smarter. Surely,
between the two of them, they can figure out how to secure his throne
without my help?
She climbed to her feet and glanced around the temple. What
makes it holy? she wondered idly. The gods - or
the
people who worship them?
"Cheltaran!" Her voice echoed through the cavernous chamber,
but no
divine being answered her call.
"Cheltaran!" Was there some sort of ritual she should
perform to
summon him? Zegarnald came when she called, as did Gimlorie. Dacendaran
and Kalianah seemed to come and go as they pleased. She had never tried
summoning another god.
"Hey! Cheltaran! I need you!"
"Never have I been summoned quite so . . . eloquently,
demon child."
She started at the voice and spun around to find the god standing
behind her, leaning against the Seeing Stone, his arms folded across
his chest. They did that a lot, she noticed. You called them and they
popped up where you least expected them.
"Cheltaran?"
He smiled serenely. In solid form he looked like an older version of
Dace, but without the motley clothes or cheeky grin. He wore a long
white robe, similar to those worn by the healers of Hythria, but she
had expected someone older. A fairly ridiculous expectation in
hindsight - these beings were immortal. If they appeared old,
it was
simply because they wished to.
"Is there some reason you called me? You appear quite well."
"There are Harshini here who need you."
"Ah yes. The Harshini who overextended themselves."
"You know about them?"
"Naturally. I am the God of Healing. All sickness and injury is
known to me."
"Then why haven't you done something about it?" she demanded
impatiently.
"Healing is part of every living being, just as, sometimes, allowing
nature to take its course is also a part of life. Things happen as they
must, R'shiel. I do not interfere without good cause."
"Well you have a good cause now. I need them up and about."
"You need them? Am I to interrupt the natural order of things
at your whim, demon child?"
R'shiel thought about that for a moment, then decided she didn't
have time to argue. She nodded. "That's about the strength of
it."
"I have interfered more since you came along than I have in the past
millennium," the god told her with a frown.
"Then a bit more won't make much difference, will it?"
Cheltaran sighed. "Very well, demon child. I will do as you ask. But
be warned. There will be a reckoning. Nature requires a certain
balance. Each time you call on us to disturb that balance, the day of
reckoning draws nearer."
There was something vaguely threatening in his tone that worried
R'shiel.
"I don't mean to."
"I know you don't. But you are the demon child. You are a force of
nature in your own right."
Cheltaran vanished abruptly, before R'shiel could say anything more.
She was puzzled by his sudden disappearance, but the reason became
clear a moment later, when the doors to the temple flew open and the
sound of booted feet pounding on the tiles echoed through the place.
She turned as the interlopers emerged into the light. It was Almodavar,
Damin's captain, and a squad of his Raiders.
"My Lady! Lord Wolfblade demands you return to the palace at
once!"
"He demands, does he?" she asked with faint
annoyance as she
descended the steps from the altar. "What's the matter now?"
"The palace was attacked. They've taken Adrina."
R'shiel swore under her breath.
By the time she reached Almodavar, she was running.
CHAPTER 25
R'shiel was shocked by the devastation when she
reached the palace. There was blood on the white marble steps and
smeared across the tiled floor of the main hall. The diamond-paned
windows that led out onto the balcony and overlooked the harbour were
shattered into a carpet of glittering shards that crunched underfoot as
she followed Almodavar at a run. There were several bodies lined up
near the doors, with shrouds thrown hastily over them. How many had
died, she wondered? And for what?
Almodavar led her to a small passage off the main hall that ended in
a door inlaid in gold with the crest of the Wolfblade family. Someone
had driven a dagger through the eye of the wolf and it remained
embedded in the wood like a silent warning. Almodavar opened the door
without glancing at the knife and stood back to let R'shiel enter. The
Raiders who had escorted them from the Collective stayed on guard
outside.
"What happened?"
Damin looked up at the sound of her voice, obviously relieved to see
her. But his eyes were hard and she could read the tension in the set
of his shoulders. The other men in the room, whom she guessed were
Damin and Narvell's lieutenants, wore expressions of concern -
and
perhaps a little excitement - at the prospect of seeing some
action.
The only woman present was Marla, who paced the floor impatiently as
her sons plotted their revenge. There were maps scattered across the
large oval table, anchored at their corners by anything heavy enough to
act as a paperweight.
"We received a message that Tejay Lionsclaw had arrived and wanted
to meet with us before she entered the city," Damin told her.
"As it
turns out, it was false. The palace was attacked while we were gone.
We're still counting the dead."
"And Adrina?"
"We think they took her by boat," Narvell added. "We found a
rope
tied to the balcony in her apartments."
"She could have simply used the confusion to run away,"
Marla
suggested tartly. "I've never trusted that woman."
Damin glared at his mother. "I've no time for your bitching, Marla.
Adrina did not run away."
R'shiel silently applauded Damin. It was about time someone put Her
Royal Highness in her place. She glanced around the room that Damin had
turned into his command post to avoid meeting Marla's eye. It must have
been Lernen's private sanctuary. The walls were rather distractingly
painted with explicit murals that depicted a variety of sexual
positions, some of which R'shiel was certain were physically
impossible. It seemed odd, this bustling war council being held amidst
such decadent artwork.
"Where would they take her?"
"Dregian Castle lies along the coast here," Damin said,
pointing to
the map laid out on the table before him. "It's a few hours away by
boat, but easily navigated."
"They'll have her there before we can mount a
counter-attack,"
Narvell added.
"So what are you going to do?"
"Get her back," Damin announced matter-of-factly. His
outward air of
control worried R'shiel a little. The Damin she knew should have been
raging like a wounded bull. It was not like him to be so level headed.
He glanced at Narvell, not waiting for R'shiel's reaction. "Have you
heard from Rogan yet?"
"No."
"Damn! I'll need his troops."
"You're going to attack Cyrus?"
Damin turned to her impatiently. "Of course I'm going to attack
him!"
"You're an idiot."
The whole room stilled as Damin slowly straightened. His eyes were
terrible, his whole being radiating fury. This was the Damin she knew.
The rage, the grief, the debilitating fear for Adrina was perilously
close to the surface. R'shiel realised she had about a heartbeat to
explain herself before Damin lost control completely.
"Don't you see? That's why they took Adrina. They want you
to attack. Or to be more specific, they want your troops - and
Narvell's and Rogan's - out of the city."
Damin's shoulders relaxed a little. R'shiel breathed a sigh of
relief. He was quietly murderous, but not beyond reason.
"You don't know that for certain."
"No, but they've been rather obvious about it, don't you think? I
mean, leaving the rope hanging from her balcony where you can find it?
They might as well have hung out a sign. It's a trap, Damin. Cyrus
wants you out of the city. Worse than that, he wants you on his
territory."
"Then I plan to see that he gets what he wants," Damin
growled.
R'shiel sighed with frustration, wishing she could make him see what
was so obvious to her. "Even if you took every man you have here in
Greenharbour, and Narvell's and Rogan's with them, you've got less than
a thousand men. How many has Cyrus got waiting for you?"
"It won't matter."
"The hell it won't!" she scoffed. "I don't mean to dent your
precious male pride, Damin, but even you can be outnumbered. I
don't care how good you think you are."
"If you don't plan to help me, R'shiel, then get out of my
way."
"I'll help you to rescue Adrina, Damin. I'm not going to help you
commit suicide."
"What are you talking about?"
"If you attack Dregian Province, you will be invading Cyrus'
province, whatever the provocation. Cyrus will defeat you, and hang
your head on his walls and he'll have the full force of the law
on his side, if I'm not mistaken. I imagine Adrina will live long
enough to see your head fall off the block, before she joins
you."
Damin sank down in the chair behind him as the logic of what she was
saying finally began to sink in.
Marla looked at R'shiel in surprise. "You have an excellent grasp of
politics, demon child."
"I had very good teachers, Your Highness."
"The benefit of an education by the Sisterhood," Damin
remarked
sourly. "You see treachery where others think only of honour. So, demon
child, what do you suggest? That I leave Adrina to the mercy of my
enemies?"
"Certainly not! We'll go and get her back. But we won't do it with
an army at our heels."
Damin met her eye for a moment and then nodded in understanding.
"I'll organise a ship. It'll take three days by land to reach Dregian
Province, and the gods know what he'll have done to her by
then."
"Then we won't go by land, or by sea, for that matter. But don't
worry about Adrina being hurt. Cyrus won't harm her and she's worth
nothing to him dead." She turned to Marla. "Your Highness, can
you keep
up the illusion that Damin is in the palace?"
"To what purpose?"
"Cyrus undoubtedly has spies everywhere. They'll be waiting for him
to move. Narvell, I suggest you and Rogan continue to muster your
troops, but take your time about it. While Cyrus thinks Damin is still
in Greenharbour preparing to fight, he won't be on his guard."
"How many men should we take?" Damin asked.
"Two. You and me."
"You can't attack Dregian Castle single-handed," Narvell
declared,
aghast at her suggestion.
"I'm not going to. We shall retrieve Adrina, by stealth rather than
force, before Cyrus Eaglespike knows anything about it. We shall then
wait for Tejay Lionsclaw to arrive and hold the Convocation as
planned."
"And when Cyrus tries to play his hand, he will find it has slipped
through his fingers," Marla added, with undisguised admiration.
"Damin,
you should have married this one."
Damin frowned at his mother but did not bother to answer her.
Instead he turned to R'shiel. "How do we get out of the palace without
being seen?"
"You leave that to me."
"You worry me when you say things like that."
She shrugged. "When shall we leave?"
Damin smiled savagely, his mood improving noticeably with the
prospect of doing something useful. "Now is as good a time as any.
Unless you have something better to do." He jumped to his feet,
wearing
the same stupid grin he always wore when he was about to fight. It was
a male thing, R'shiel reasoned. Tarja did the same thing. "Narvell,
keep an eye on things while I'm gone. And don't let mother bully
you."
Marla looked as if she might protest, but Damin and R'shiel did not
wait around to find out.
CHAPTER 26
"Can we get to the roof?" R'shiel asked as
she
stepped into the hall. Damin closed the door behind them and looked at
the dagger embedded in the door. He jerked the blade free and hurled it
to the floor angrily.
"Why do you want to go up on the roof?"
"Because we want to sneak out of the palace Damin, and it might be a
little bit obvious if I summon a dragon in the middle of the main
courtyard."
"A dragon? You are going to summon a dragon?"
"If Dranymire agrees to it."
"I don't know about the roof in this part of the palace, but there
is a roof garden attached to the guest quarters in the west wing. Will
that do?"
"I suppose."
She followed Damin as he hurried through the debris of the attack.
They were still clearing out the bodies of the guards who had died
defending the palace. As they climbed the sweeping marble staircase
that led to the guest apartments, they met two Raiders carrying a
stretcher between them, coming down the stairs. A sheet covered the
body on the stretcher, but it did not conceal the blue skirts and
bloodstained slippers underneath.
"Damin!"
He glanced at the stretcher and ordered the men to halt. With some
trepidation, he peeled back the cover. R'shiel let out a small cry of
anguish as she saw who lay beneath it.
"Gods," Damin muttered. "Tamylan never deserved such a
fate."
"Tam was Adrina's best friend."
"She was just a slave, R'shiel," Damin corrected, gently
replacing
the sheet and waving the men on.
"She was still Adrina's best friend."
Damin nodded grimly. "Come. We have another reason now to deal with
Lord Eaglespike."
When they reached the second landing, R'shiel discovered Mikel
sitting on the stairs, tears streaming down his face. R'shiel knelt
down beside him, ignoring Damin's impatient sigh.
"Mikel? Are you hurt?"
He shook his head. "I'm sorry, my Lady . . ."
"Sorry? For what? This wasn't your fault."
"We heard them . . . me and Tamylan . . . we
were bringing the Princess her dinner. We saw the men in the hall and
Tamylan ran at them. She told me to hide. So I did."
"Then you've nothing to be ashamed of, Mikel."
"But Tamylan's dead and all I did was hide!" he wailed. "Now
all
these people are dead . . . and I don't where Jaymes is
. . ."
R'shiel glanced up at Damin helplessly. She had no idea what to say
to the child.
Although she could tell Damin was consumed with impatience, he
squatted down beside the boy. "Mikel! Look at me!"
Unable to ignore Damin's commanding tone, Mikel wiped his eyes and
turned to the Warlord. "Every man under my command knows how to follow
orders, even when they don't like them. I don't expect to find them
sitting about crying over it afterwards, either."
"No, sir," Mikel replied weakly.
"As for your brother, he's alive and well. He was with the party I
took to meet Lady Lionsclaw."
Mikel brightened considerably at the news. "He was?"
"Yes, he was. Now, pull yourself together, lad, and get your arse
down to Captain Almodavar and tell him I said to find you something
useful to do. We need every man we've got at the moment and I don't
have time for you to sit here bawling like a baby."
"No, sir." Mikel squared his shoulders and smiled
tentatively at
Damin. "Are you going to rescue the Princess, my Lord?"
"If I don't keep getting distracted," he agreed, with an
impatient
glance at R'shiel.
She smiled at Mikel, then on impulse she summoned the little demon
who seemed so fond of getting Mikel into trouble. He started as the
creature popped into existence beside him.
"The demon will stay with you, Mikel, until we get back. But you
mustn't tell anybody that we've gone."
Mikel stared at it for a moment then turned to R'shiel. The demon
chittered at him unhappily, sensing the child's misery. "What's his
name?"
"She doesn't have a name yet. Maybe you can help her think of
one."
He nodded and sniffed back the last of his tears.
"Off you go, boy," Damin ordered. He was chafing at the
delay.
Mikel fled without another word, the little grey demon tumbling down
the stairs in his wake. R'shiel watched them go and then turned to
Damin with a smile.
"You handled him very well."
"You gave him a pet demon."
She shrugged. "It'll keep him company."
He stared at her for a moment and then shook his head. "Come on. And
I don't care what we find on the next landing, we're not
stopping."
The roof garden was a riot of greenery,
intricately laid out paths and fountains that filled the night with
their musical splashing. Damin led her to the paved clearing in the
centre of the garden and glanced up at the starlit sky.
"Another few weeks and the rains will start."
"A pity they aren't here now. We could do with a bit of cloud
cover."
"Can't you make us invisible?"
"I'm not even sure how to ride a dragon, Damin."
"But you said -"
"I know what I said. I wish Brak were here."
Damin glanced at her for a moment then shook his head. "You really
are a bit of a fraud, aren't you?"
"I'm the biggest fraud in the whole world. I have no idea what I'm
doing and only the vaguest idea of what I'm supposed to be
doing. I just have to hope that if I keep pretending long enough, I'll
figure out what's going on." She frowned then, turning to look
at him. "I have to leave soon, Damin. You don't need me to take your
throne for
you. You have Adrina. She's actually a lot better at politics than I
am."
"You seem to get by," he noted with a faint grin.
"I've Joyhinia to thank for that."
Damin wasn't sure how to answer that, so he turned and looked up at
the sky again. "Summon your demons, demon child. I'm sure the gods will
watch over us."
She frowned, wondering if she should mention that his assurance gave
her little comfort. Then another thought occurred to her -
something
that should have been dealt with, long before this.
"Damin, there's something you should probably know. About
Adrina."
"What about her?"
"She's pregnant."
"I know."
"You know? Who told you? Marla?"
He smiled smugly. "I am neither blind nor stupid R'shiel. And I can
count."
"Why didn't you say something?"
"It was more fun watching Adrina trying to work up the courage to
tell me herself."
"You can be a real bastard, Damin Wolfblade. You don't deserve
her."
He sighed, suddenly serious. "No, I think we actually deserve each
other."
"Then you admit you feel something for her?"
"When I heard she'd been kidnapped, I thought I would die,
R'shiel,"
he admitted, albeit with some reluctance. "I've never felt that way
about anyone before."
"Not even your horse?" she asked.
"My horse?"
"It's something Adrina said once. That the only thing you truly
cared about was your horse."
Damin thought for a moment and then smiled. "No, I think I actually
care about her more."
"Well make sure you tell her when we get her back. I'm sick to death
of you two. Everyone's life would be considerably easier if you devoted
all that effort to making peace instead of war."
Dranymire responded almost instantly to her
summons, although he seemed unimpressed when she explained what she
wanted of him.
"Riding a dragon is a skill that takes a great deal of time to
learn, R'shiel," he warned in his deep voice. "You can't just
hop on
and hope for the best."
"But we need to get to Dregian Castle. Tonight. It's three days by
road and they'll see us coming from leagues away if we take a
ship."
"Getting there late is better than not getting there at all."
"Please, Dranymire."
The little demon cast his liquid eyes over Damin and frowned. "I
suppose you want us to carry him, too?"
"Yes."
"When next you are at Sanctuary, Your Highness, you and I need to
have a long discussion regarding the nature of the relationship between
demons and the Harshini. Specifically, the wanton use of demon
melds."
"And I promise I'll listen to every word. But right now, I need a
dragon."
"You need some discipline," the demon corrected loftily.
"However, I
am in the mood to indulge you, and there are a number of my brethren
who will benefit from the experience."
"Thank you," she said with relief, bending down to kiss his
wrinkled
grey forehead. "I won't forget this."
"Neither will I," the demon promised, somewhat ominously.
They stepped back as more demons began to materialise and gather
around Dranymire. R'shiel quickly lost count of them. The demons bonded
to the te Ortyn family were among the oldest and most
numerous of all
the brethren, which accounted for the size and stature of the dragon
they could form. She watched in fascination as the meld began, demons
flowing into each other almost too fast for the eye to take in.
The dragon grew before her until its wings blocked out the stars.
"Climb on, Your Highness, and try not to fall off."
R'shiel used the dragon's leg as a step and pulled herself up,
surprised at how warm the metallic scales felt under her hands. Damin
clambered up and settled himself behind her, his arms around her waist.
R'shiel tried to find something to hold onto, but there was nothing.
"You must grip with your thighs," Dranymire informed her.
"Riding a
dragon is simply a question of balance."
"Balance," she repeated dubiously, seriously doubting her
wisdom in
deciding to use a dragon to rescue Adrina. She glanced over her
shoulder at Damin. "You ready?"
"I suppose."
Dranymire must have heard him. A gust of warm wind rushed over them
as the dragon beat its powerful wings and lifted them into the darkness.
CHAPTER 27
Dregian Castle grew out of a promontory that jutted
into the ocean like an upright sword buried hilt-down in the white
chalk cliffs. It was a tall, narrow structure, more tower than keep,
its white stone pitted and yellowed by years of being assaulted by the
corrosive sea air. Unlike Krakandar, the main city of Dregian Province
was some distance away from the castle, crowded around a small bay
eight leagues to the east of the keep.
Dranymire landed near the woods that ringed a vast open field of
cleared ground surrounding the fortress, just as dawn was feeling its
way over the horizon.
R'shiel climbed down stiffly from the dragon, her thighs aching from
the effort of keeping her seat. Damin appeared to have fared no better
than she as he stumbled to the ground. The two of them hobbled about
for a few moments, trying to work out the knots in their muscles.
Dranymire seemed highly amused by their plight.
"As I said, Your Highness, riding a dragon is a skill that takes
years to acquire."
"I didn't fall off. Give me some credit."
The dragon lowered its head and studied her with his plate-sized
eyes. "Yes. You managed that much. Did you want me to wait for
you?"
"For me, yes. Damin's probably going to have to return to
Greenharbour by more conventional means once we've found
Adrina."
"I shall await your summons, Your Highness."
Looking rather relieved that he would not have to repeat the
journey, Damin caught up with R'shiel as she stumbled down the small
slope to the open ground below.
"What are you doing?"
"I'm off to rescue your wife."
"What are you going to do? March up to the drawbridge and
knock?"
"Pretty much."
"R'shiel!"
She stopped and turned back to him. "What?"
"You can't do that!"
"Why not?" She smiled at his expression. "Stop thinking with
your
sword, Damin. We can't storm the place, so we have to get them to let
us in. Once we're inside, I can deal with any opposition."
"You're not even armed."
"There you go, thinking with your sword again." She resumed
walking,
pleased to discover the exercise was beginning to loosen the stiffness
from her thighs. Damin ran to catch up with her.
"So what are you planning to do?" he demanded,
falling into
step beside her.
"Two people walking across a field are no threat to the castle. Even
if you're recognised, they'll be so surprised you came alone, that they
won't do anything straight away. At worst they'll send for
Cyrus."
"And what do you think he's going to do?"
"Nothing. By the time we're inside, it won't make a
difference."
"You're going to use magic then?" he asked, rather
sceptically.
"Of course."
"But you don't know what you're doing. You admitted as much before
we left Greenharbour. You might accidentally harm Adrina."
"I did learn something at Sanctuary, Damin."
"Not nearly enough, from what I've seen so far."
"Trust me."
"I hate people who say that."
She grinned at him. "Stop worrying about me and start thinking about
how you're going to apologise to Adrina."
"Apologise? Why should I apologise?"
"Because she deserves one. And besides, an apology is always a good
way to make a woman listen to you."
"And when did you become such an expert on affairs of the heart?
You're a child. And a spoiled one, at that."
"I'm the demon child. I'm omnipotent."
"I hope you never actually begin to believe that, R'shiel."
She glanced at him, her grin fading. "So do I."
The castle was just beginning to waken as they
reached it. With an ear-piercing squeal, the gates swung open and they
hastily stepped back to let a troop of Raiders thunder past them,
heavily armed and armoured. They were too intent on their own business
to notice the couple standing in the shadow of the castle wall. Damin
watched them leave, his brow furrowed.
"They're getting ready to fight."
"What did I tell you? Cyrus has probably got his borders lined five
deep in Raiders, waiting for you to attack."
"I hate people who say, 'I told you so', almost as much as
people
who say 'trust me'."
She smiled. "Come on. Let's get inside before they close the gates
again."
R'shiel carefully opened herself up to the power as they entered the
cool dimness of the short tunnel that led to the iron-studded gates.
She had seen Brak attempt this once and hoped she remembered how it was
done. She wove the glamour clumsily as they moved forward, but somewhat
to her astonishment, the guards on duty paid them no attention as they
walked boldly into the small yard that surrounded the tall white tower.
Damin glanced at her in surprise when they were not challenged, nodding
in understanding when he noticed her black eyes.
"So we're inside," he whispered. "What now?"
"There's no need for whispering, Damin. They cannot see us or hear
us."
"Are you sure?"
"Almost."
Unconvinced, Damin glanced up at the tower. "She'll be in there, I
suppose."
"Great deductive reasoning, Lord Wolfblade. Where else would she
be?" R'shiel ignored the look he gave her and looked up with a
frown. "How much do you want to bet she's right at the top and we're
going to
have to climb about a million steps to get there?"
They let themselves into the tower through the main hall, which was
littered with the remnants of the previous evening's festivities. The
slaves were starting to stir from their places near the cooking
hearths, rubbing bleary eyes as they yawned themselves into
wakefulness. A few of the more alert slaves were already up and about,
righting overturned stools and clearing away dishes stained with
congealed fat and limp vegetable remains.
"Looks like it was quite a party," R'shiel remarked.
"Cyrus would have feasted his troops before he sent them
out."
She glanced around the hall, at the low, vaulted ceiling and the
rough stone floor. "This place is pretty old, isn't it?"
"It's one of the oldest structures in Hythria," he agreed.
"It
predates Greenharbour, I think."
"Then it probably has dungeons."
"I suppose."
"Then we'll check them first."
"Cyrus wouldn't dare throw Adrina in a dungeon."
"No, you wouldn't dare. Cyrus doesn't care about Adrina, one
way or the other. Besides, I've spent all night clinging to a dragon
with my thighs. My legs are killing me. I really don't want to climb
all the way to the top of this place, just to find out she's a few
steps below us. We check the dungeons first."
Damin nodded his agreement, probably just as sore and stiff as she
was. He pointed to a door that led off the hall by the second hearth.
R'shiel followed him, stepping over a number of sleeping bodies along
the way. She looked about her, unable to entirely believe that the
glamour she had drawn around them was actually working.
They made their way down a narrow corridor that curved around the
tower and led to another door at the end, this one reinforced with
bands of iron. Damin pushed it open slowly, wincing as the hinges
squealed in protest.
"They might not hear us," Damin hissed. "But they're
bound
to hear that."
"Keep going. If they come to investigate, they'll just think the
door hadn't been latched properly."
Damin obviously did not share her confidence, but he led the way
forward, down a set of damp, narrow steps that reached into the
darkness. R'shiel kept her hand on the wall, making her way by feel
more than sight. The stone was slimy under her fingers, and in the
distance she could hear the faint rush of the ocean as it pounded
against the castle's foundations.
She bumped into Damin when he stopped abruptly, pointing to a spill
of yellow light coming from the bottom of the stairs. She nodded
silently, falling victim to Damin's desire for stealth, even though,
protected by the glamour, there was no need for it. They reached the
bottom and stepped into another narrow passage, this one lined by
barred cells and lit by fitfully sputtering torches. There were guards
at the other end of the passage, squatting on the floor, engrossed in
their game. The air was surprisingly fresh, heavy with the smell of the
ocean and the waves crashing against the cliffs seemed even louder. A
faint breeze whispered past them and R'shiel realised that there must
be an opening down here that led to the sea. If they had brought Adrina
here by boat, then there was a good chance this was the way she had
come. With luck, they hadn't bothered to take her any further.
"You check the cells on the left," Damin told her. "I'll
take the
right."
R'shiel nodded and moved to the first cell, which proved empty. The
next housed a sleeping man wearing a shirt tattered by the lash. The
third cell she checked also contained a sleeping prisoner, but whether
male or female, R'shiel could not tell from the rags piled on the damp
floor.
"Adrina!"
Damin's cry made her jump, and she looked at the guards nervously,
reminding herself that they could not hear him. She hurried to his
side. Adrina was sitting on the floor of the fourth cell on the right,
her knees drawn up under her chin, rocking backward and forward on the
damp, cold floor, as tears streamed silently down her face. There was a
nasty bruise on her jaw and her lip was puffy and split. Her silken
gown was muddied and torn, her hair in disarray. Her wounds appeared
superficial, though, and the tears were more likely to be for Tamylan
than herself. Adrina was not the self-pitying type. But R'shiel had
never seen anyone looking quite so miserable.
"Adrina!" Damin called again, grabbing at the bars in
anguish.
"She can't hear you, Damin."
"Where are the keys?"
"The guards have them, I imagine."
"I'll get them," he announced, reaching for his sword.
"No, you stay here. I'll get them."
She walked to the end of the passage and watched the guards for a
moment as they wagered on the fall of two crudely carved die. There
were three men, all of them lacking the spit and polish of fighting
troops. The guard nearest the wall carried a bunch of keys on his belt.
She frowned. They may not be able to see her, but they would notice the
keys detaching themselves and floating up the hall.
R'shiel did not want to kill the guards. Doing so would alert Cyrus
to their presence. It was possible that the Lord of Dregian Province
would have no need to check on Adrina until he thought Damin was ready
to attack. With luck, Adrina's escape might go unnoticed for the rest
of the day, even longer, if the guards paid little attention to their
charges. But whatever she did, she would have to let go of the glamour.
Strong she might be, but she was not accomplished enough to do two
things at once.
"R'shiel! Hurry!"
She ignored Damin's impatient plea and stepped into the shadows.
With infinite care she let the glamour that made them invisible slip
from her grasp. As it left her, she concentrated on the gaming
soldiers, willing them to sleep. They fell so quickly, she was afraid
she had killed them.
Not sure how long unconsciousness would hold the men, she hurriedly
removed the keys from the belt of the snoring guard. She ran back to
Damin and began trying the keys in the lock.
Adrina glanced up at the sound, able to see them now the glamour was
gone, although it took a moment for her to realise who was standing at
the door to her cell.
"Damin?"
"Adrina!" he cried anxiously, then turned to R'shiel. "Hurry
up!"
"I am hurrying," she snapped as the lock turned on the
fourth key
she tried. Damin pushed roughly past her into the cell as soon as the
lock snicked open. Adrina flew into his arms, sobbing. He held her so
tightly, he lifted her clear off the ground. Then he was kissing her
forehead, her neck, her eyes, anywhere he could reach. When he kissed
her mouth she cried out in pain and pushed him away.
"Founders, Damin! She's been punched in the mouth." R'shiel
glared
at him as he let Adrina go. She examined the wound for a moment,
deciding it could wait before she healed it. That way, Damin might show
a little self-control. "Any other injuries we can't see?"
Adrina shook her head, wiping her eyes.
"What about the baby?" Adrina's eyes widened and she stared
at Damin
in horror. "Don't worry about him. He knows. Is the baby all
right?"
The Princess nodded mutely.
"Fine, then let's get out of here."
R'shiel led the way from the cell then turned impatiently to find
they weren't following her. Instead, they stood in the centre of the
dim dungeon, locked in an embrace that was as touching as it was
inconvenient.
"We don't have time for this!" R'shiel warned as one of the
guards
began to stir.
Damin reluctantly let Adrina go. R'shiel let out an exasperated
curse and turned towards the stairs. The sound of footsteps changed her
mind and she hurriedly turned the other way, pushing Damin and Adrina
ahead of her, past the sleeping guards. An archway on the far side of
the guardroom proved to be the source of the chill ocean breeze.
R'shiel pointed to it urgently.
"Down there! I'll follow in a minute."
They needed no further urging. R'shiel ran back to Adrina's empty
cell and locked the door, then returned the keys to the belt of the
sleeping guard, smiling to herself. Let them figure that one out.
The footsteps drew closer on the stairs and the guard stirred again
as she stepped away from him. She glanced around, satisfied that there
was no other evidence of their passage and disappeared into the
darkness of the archway.
Adrina and Damin were waiting for her. As she suspected, the stairs
finished at a small dock, carved into the living rock at the base of
the castle. Unfortunately, the dock was empty.
"Now what?" Damin asked, holding Adrina close.
"We need a boat."
"Great deductive reasoning, demon child."
She loftily ignored the jibe and turned her attention to the
thrashing sea. Even if they had a boat, she didn't like their chances
of navigating their way clear of the rocks.
"What's the name of the God of the Oceans?"
"Kaelarn," Damin told her. "Why?"
"I think we're going to need his help."
"You are going to summon a god and you don't even know his
name?"
"Got any better ideas?" When neither of them answered her
she turned
back to face the thrashing ocean. "Kaelarn!"
The ocean surged below them. Cold spray showered them as the waves
swelled. Out of the steely depths a figure appeared, vaguely human in
form, but shaped from the sea itself. It rose out of the surf until it
loomed over them. R'shiel had to strain her neck to look up at him.
"So the demon child has need of me," Kaelarn boomed wetly.
He had
the most unpleasant voice R'shiel had ever heard. It was like someone
talking through a bucket of water. She fervently hoped nobody else
could hear him.
"We need to get away from this place. We need a boat."
"A boat? You have demons to meld boats for you, demon child."
R'shiel glanced over her shoulder as shouts drifted down from the
guardroom. The sleeping guards had been discovered. It was only a
matter of time before Adrina's absence was noted.
"A meld will take too long."
"You wish to aid these humans, I presume?" he asked,
pointing a
watery arm at Damin and Adrina.
"Yes."
"Is this part of your task to defeat Xaphista, or merely a
whim?"
"It is most definitely part of my task."
"Then I shall aid you, demon child. However, I cannot conjure up a
boat. Perhaps this will suffice."
With a tremendous splash, Kaelarn returned to the ocean. The sea
churned and boiled as the god vanished. R'shiel looked about her in
frustration. Kaelarn had disappeared and the sea was still facing them,
churning savagely as it ate at the rock beneath the castle.
"Well, he was a big help," she muttered in annoyance.
"R'shiel! Look!" Adrina suddenly cried in delight.
Out of the foaming waves, three red-grey creatures approached, their
large dorsal fins slicing through the water. Just like the creature in
the fountain in Greenharbour, they had long, elegant tails ending in
broad, flipper-like paddles. Their wide-set intelligent eyes looked
straight at them as they surfed towards the dock. R'shiel had grown up
in landlocked Medalon. She had never seen anything like them before.
"What are they?"
"Water dragons!"
"Are they dangerous?"
Damin laughed at her expression. "No. They're called the
'fisherman's friends'. We can ride them."
"Ride them?"
The water dragons edged their way to the dock as the shouting in the
guardroom grew louder. Without hesitating, Damin and Adrina slipped
into the water and climbed aboard the creatures, grabbing hold of their
dorsal fins.
"I can't swim, Damin."
"Come on! You don't baulk at riding dragons."
With another glance over her shoulder at the stairs to the
guardroom, R'shiel decided she didn't have time to be squeamish. She
slipped into the water, gasping as the chill salty ocean filled her
mouth. She began to panic as the waves crashed over her, then a warm,
solid body pushed her clear of the foam. She grabbed for the beast's
fin and pulled herself upright as it plunged through the waves in the
wake of the creatures carrying Adrina and Damin.
R'shiel clung to the beast in terror as the castle dwindled in the
distance, determined never, as long as she lived, to ask another god
for his help again.
CHAPTER 28
Just on sunset, at R'shiel's insistence, the water
dragons left them on a small beach not far from Greenharbour. It was
partly because she wanted to give Adrina a chance to recover from her
ordeal, and partly because she wanted to get out of the water and back
on dry land where she felt she had some control over things. Damin had
built a small fire and dried out their clothes and had gone in search
of fresh water.
R'shiel healed Adrina's split lip with a touch and watched the
bruise on her jaw fade before placing her hand on Adrina's stomach. She
could feel the life there, strong and resilient.
"Can you tell if it's a boy or a girl?" Adrina asked
hopefully.
"I'm the demon child, Adrina, not a prophet."
"With my luck it will be a girl."
R'shiel looked at her curiously, as she let go of her power. "What's
so bad about that?"
"You have to be born Fardohnyan to understand."
"Your child will be the heir to Hythria, Adrina. They don't suffer
the same prejudice against women."
"Maybe not, but it irks me to think I was never worthy of my
father's throne, simply because I had the misfortune to be born a
girl."
"Is that why you're so annoyed that the throne will fall to
Damin?"
She smiled wanly. "No. That just annoys me on principle."
"He was ready to go to war over you, Adrina. In fact, he may still
have to."
Adrina sighed forlornly. "I didn't really think he'd come for me,
you know. Or if he did, he'd come charging over Cyrus' borders like
some avenging god and play right into his enemies' hands. I suppose I
have you to thank for the fact that he didn't."
R'shiel sat back on her heels, but she did not confirm or deny
Adrina's suspicions.
"You told him about the baby, didn't you? That explains why he came
for me."
"He already knew about it, Adrina. And I don't think it made the
slightest bit of difference. Damin would have come for you, no matter
what."
The Princess shook her head, as if she didn't believe it was
possible. R'shiel felt like slapping her.
"There's a spring not far from here," Damin called, striding
across
the white sand towards them. "I'm afraid I've nothing to carry the
water in, though."
R'shiel glared at him. "Use Adrina's head. It's hollow
enough!"
Damin stared at her in shock. "What?"
Adrina climbed to her feet, brushing the sand from her tattered
skirts. "R'shiel is angry with me. And you too, I think. That's just
her way of expressing it."
"What did I do?" Damin asked, full of wounded innocence.
R'shiel
felt like screaming.
"Nothing!" she snapped. "Nothing at all! That's the whole
point."
"Look, if I did something to make you angry, don't take it out on
Adrina."
"I don't need you to stand up for me, Damin Wolfblade,"
Adrina
interjected. "I can take care of myself, thank you."
"Why shouldn't I take it out on Adrina?" R'shiel asked,
ignoring the
Princess as if she wasn't there. "It's not as if you
care."
"What are you talking about? You know damned well I care what
happens to her! What's the matter with you?"
"Since when did you give a damn about me?" Adrina demanded,
turning
on Damin.
"Since when did you give a damn about me?" Damin
retorted,
forgetting R'shiel momentarily.
"How can you say that?" Adrina cried angrily. "I've done
everything
you asked of me and more!"
"What have you ever done besides flaunt your royal
superiority?"
"What have you ever done for me? You held me
prisoner! You accused me of trying to murder your uncle. You kept me
collared like a slave just for the sheer hell of it! And then you took
advantage of me!"
R'shiel knew of Adrina's impressive temper, but it was the first
time she had seen it in full flight since the morning Cratyn had tried
to kill her. She stepped back from the couple with a faint smile and
sat down on the cool white sand to watch the show. They had forgotten
she existed.
"I took advantage of you?" Damin gasped in
disbelief. "You devious little bitch. You came over the border dressed
as a court'esa
and spent the whole time acting like one! Ask Tarja if you don't
believe me. You were all over him like a wet blanket any time he got
within five paces of you."
R'shiel hadn't known about that, but she found herself more amused
than jealous at the idea. Poor Tarja. Fancy having to fight off
Adrina when she was determined to seduce him.
"At least he treated me like a Princess! You treated me like a court'esa!
You kept me collared and bound as if I was bought and paid for."
"Oh, I've paid for you, Adrina," Damin said with feeling.
"You think so? I've suffered the insults of your wretched mother.
I've entertained your brutish Warlords. I've been kidnapped and beaten
and locked in a dungeon. Even my slave was killed because of your
damned throne. I've given up my whole life for you, you ungrateful
bastard!"
"You manage to act in a civilised manner at a few dinner parties and
that's supposed to justify the fact that I'm facing a damned civil war
because of you?"
"I didn't cause your measly little war! The miracle is that you
haven't gone and gotten yourself killed before now!"
"Well, maybe you'll get lucky again, Adrina, and I will be killed.
Then you can go and find some other poor unsuspecting sod to marry you
and give you a crown."
The crack as Adrina slapped Damin's face echoed along the deserted
beach with startling clarity. The argument stopped abruptly as Damin
stared at her in shock. Even Adrina looked stunned that she had hit him.
For a long moment they stared at each other, not saying a word
"I'm sorry," the Princess said finally, drawing herself up
with
regal poise. "I shouldn't have done that."
Damin hesitated for a moment then shrugged, rubbing the handprint
that stood out against his tan in the twilight. "No. You don't owe me
an apology, Adrina. I shouldn't have said what I did."
"I still shouldn't have hit you," she insisted.
"It could have been worse," Damin replied, with a hint of a
grin. "You might have been armed."
Adrina's eyes blazed dangerously for a few seconds, then she took a
deep breath, visibly bringing her anger under control. "You're lucky I
wasn't," she agreed. Then, with a tentative smile, she added,
"I really
don't want to be a widow again so soon."
"No?"
"No."
They said nothing for a time, the silence loaded with unspoken
tension. R'shiel waited expectantly, then rolled her eyes. "Oh, for
Founders' sake!"
They both turned to stare at her in horror.
"Do you mind?" Adrina asked, quite put out that she had
witnessed
their altercation. "This is private."
"Actually, they could probably hear you back in Greenharbour. But
don't let me interrupt you. You appear to be enjoying yourselves
immensely."
"R'shiel, do you think you could maybe . . . go away for a
while?" Damin asked, a little more cautiously.
"Are you going to stop shouting at each other? I might as well stay
here if I can still hear you anywhere in a five-league radius."
Adrina looked at Damin searchingly then turned to R'shiel. "I think
I've done all the shouting I need to for the time being. Would you
mind, R'shiel? I think we have a few things to sort out."
"That's something of an understatement," she agreed.
"Why don't we go and find that spring?" Damin suggested. "I
could do
with something to drink."
"You go on ahead," R'shiel told them. "I'll see you
later."
Damin offered Adrina his hand and she took it willingly. With barely
a backward glance they walked away, hand in hand.
"They make such a nice couple, don't they?"
R'shiel jumped at the unexpected voice and turned to find Kalianah
sitting on the sand beside her.
"I wish you wouldn't just appear like that! Can't you warn me
first?"
"What would you prefer? A fanfare?" The Goddess of Love was
in her
favourite form: a little girl. The slight breeze stirred her fair hair
and she was smiling wistfully as she watched Damin and Adrina walk
along the shoreline.
"Did you have anything to do with that?" R'shiel asked
suspiciously.
"Much as I would like to have interfered, demon child, Damin
Wolfblade belongs to Zegarnald. He takes a very dim view of other gods
meddling with his followers. They did that all on their own. I'm afraid
I can't claim any credit at all."
Her words reminded R'shiel of something that she had forgotten until
now. "Kali, have you seen Dace lately?"
"No. He's sulking, I think."
"Why?"
"I don't know. Why do you ask? You're not thinking of becoming one
of his followers, are you?"
R'shiel laughed at the mere suggestion that she would ever worship
any of the creatures that the Harshini called gods. "Hardly. It's just
something Damin mentioned a while back. He wanted to know if anyone had
been stealing his followers."
"With Dacendaran, it's usually the other way around,"
Kalianah
chuckled. "I can ask him if you like. Is it important?"
"I don't really know. Who would want to steal his people
anyway?"
"All of us," the goddess told her. "It's sort of a game,
really.
Particularly for gods like Dacendaran and Zegarnald."
"What do you mean?"
Kalianah looked surprised that she had to explain it. "Life can't
exist without love, which is why the others tolerate me more than most.
But you can be human and not be a thief or a warrior. So gods like Dace
and Zeggi have to work a bit harder to keep their people."
"What would happen if nobody believed in the gods any more?"
"I don't know. I guess we'd fade away into the background. You can't
kill a Primal God. To kill me, you would have to stop love. While ever
there's a fox trying to steal eggs from a nest, or two rams willing to
fight over a ewe, Dacendaran and Zegarnald will survive. But the
Incidental Gods need humans. They need someone to acknowledge their
existence, or they cease to exist."
"So all I have to do to defeat Xaphista is make a few million
Kariens deny his existence?"
"Basically," Kalianah agreed. "How are you going to do
that?"
"I have no idea," the demon child admitted with a shrug.
CHAPTER 29
Once Damin and Adrina were out of sight, Kalianah
lost interest in them and vanished without warning. With an impatient
sigh, R'shiel scrambled up the sandy bank behind her and made her way
through the trees, following her instincts rather than any set path.
The night was bright, but even without the moonlight she would have
found what she was looking for. Before long she came to a large
clearing where Dranymire and the demon-meld rested, still in dragon
form. He opened his eyes at her approach and studied her quizzically.
"You said you would call for me."
"Things got a bit out of hand. I had to call on Kaelarn."
The dragon shook its massive head. "That is beginning to develop
into a dangerous habit, Your Highness."
"Don't worry, after being dragged through the ocean on the back of a
water dragon, I'll think twice before I call on the gods
again," she
assured him.
"Your mission was successful, then?"
"Very. Now I need your help again."
"I live to serve, Your Highness."
R'shiel frowned at the dragon, certain he was mocking her.
"Can you get a message back to Greenharbour? To Kalan?"
"The High Arrion? Not directly. But we can speak to Glenanaran, and
he can pass on your message."
"Tell her where Damin and Adrina are. Ask her to send a carriage.
Preferably one that's closed, so that they can return to the city
without being seen."
"And you?"
"I don't think the answers I need are here in Hythria, so I want to
get back to Medalon, and the only way I can do that is make sure
Damin's throne is secure. I'm going to find the elusive Tejay
Lionsclaw."
The dragon closed its enormous eyes for a moment, then opened them
again. "Your message is being delivered as we speak, Your Highness. If
you would like to climb on, we can be on our way."
"How can you have sent the message already?"
"Not all the te Ortyn demons are part of the dragon
meld. I have
sent Polanymire to Greenharbour on my behalf. Did you expect me to
deliver your message personally?"
"No, it's just . . . I thought . . ."
"You thought what?"
"Nothing . . . I just haven't worked out this demon-meld
thing yet, I think. Do you suppose Brak has had any luck with Hablet in
Fardohnya?"
"The demons say not."
"Damn," she muttered impatiently. "This is what I get for
thinking
everything was starting to go according to plan."
"You actually have a plan then?" the dragon asked.
He was definitely mocking her now. "As a matter of fact, I do. But
first I need Damin confirmed as High Prince. And I need to make sure
Hythria is allied with Fardohnya. After we've tracked down the Warlord
of Sunrise Province, I suppose we'll have to go to Fardohnya. Anyway,
I've a feeling I'll need Brak's help once I get to the Citadel."
"Then that is what we shall do."
"But what about Damin and Adrina?"
"Staying with them now will serve no purpose if they do not get the
aid they need, Your Highness."
She nodded, aware that he was right, but feeling a little guilty for
abandoning them, nonetheless.
"Can you send a demon to check on them? To see if they're all
right?"
"They are in no danger here. But I suppose we can ascertain that
they haven't killed each other."
"That's very big of you, Dranymire."
The demon did not appreciate her tone. "I could just as easily not
send one of the brethren to check on them, demon child."
"I'm sorry."
"As you should be. Now, unless you plan to spend the night in this
insect-infested swamp, I suggest you climb aboard and we shall find
your lost Warlord."
With some misgiving, R'shiel pulled herself up and settled herself
between the dragon's massive wings. As Dranymire and the meld lifted
into the sky, she wondered if she should have told Damin and Adrina
that she was leaving. She decided it wouldn't matter. Help was on the
way, and Dranymire's demon would keep an eye on them until it arrived.
Besides, they probably wouldn't even notice she was missing.
She found Tejay Lionsclaw just on dawn. From her
vantage on the dragon's back, R'shiel could make out the dying fires of
her campsite. Her column was camped for the night on a plain some
thirty leagues from Greenharbour. Dranymire saw them and swooped
downward so swiftly that R'shiel almost lost her seat.
The dragon landed in the middle of the camp, scattering cook fires
and startled Raiders with equal contempt. Tejay Lionsclaw emerged from
her tent, clutching a sword that R'shiel doubted she could even lift.
Tall and well muscled, with thick blonde hair, the Warlord of Sunrise
Province was a handsome woman. Behind her emerged a boy of about
fifteen, clutching the hand of an even younger girl, who was rubbing
her eyes sleepily.
"Who are you?" Tejay demanded belligerently.
"I am R'shiel te Ortyn. I am the demon child."
Tejay studied her for a moment then held up her hand to halt the
suddenly nervous troops who were advancing on them.
"The demon child? That's a legend we tell to frighten
children."
"It works pretty well on grown men, too," R'shiel noted,
glancing
around at the men who were staring with undisguised terror at the
dragon.
Tejay planted the sword on the ground in front of her and stared at
R'shiel for a moment before glancing up at the dragon. "I suppose I
must believe you, considering you arrived on the back of a
dragon."
"I thought it might save a lot of explanations."
"Then you are sadly mistaken, demon child. Nobody lands in my camp
in such a fashion without providing an explanation."
"I come on behalf of Damin Wolfblade. Cyrus Eaglespike has laid
claim to the High Prince's throne."
"That doesn't surprise me, somehow. I've had a great deal of
correspondence from him lately." Suddenly the Warlord smiled
and
sheathed her sword. "I've so many of his damned pigeons in my roosts
that I was tempted to throw them into the cooking pot. Come, let's talk
inside."
She led the way to her tent, where the boy and girl stood wide-eyed
at the entrance, staring at R'shiel's dragon. Dranymire was quite
enjoying the effect he was having, R'shiel decided, although she wasn't
sure if his smug expression was real, or if she was simply imagining it.
"Divine One, this is my son Valorian and his wife Bayla."
R'shiel thought the pair too young to be out alone at night, let
alone married. She looked at Bayla curiously, but could see nothing of
her father, Cyrus Eaglespike, in her. The youngsters bowed hastily as
she passed them, following Tejay into the tent.
"Can I offer you refreshment, Divine One?" the Warlord
asked,
indicating with a wave of her arm that R'shiel should sit. She sank
down onto the scattered silk cushions gratefully, her thighs still
quivering from riding the dragon.
"Thank you. And you don't have to call me Divine One, my Lady. My
name is R'shiel."
"Very well, R'shiel. You may call me Tejay. Bayla!"
Her daughter-in-law's face appeared meekly through the embroidered
hangings on the tent. "My Lady?"
"Make yourself useful for once and fetch us some breakfast."
When
Bayla disappeared behind the curtain, Tejay sat down opposite R'shiel
with a sigh. "If there is one thing I cannot abide, it is simpering
females. And that girl has it down to a fine art."
"Then why did you let her marry your son?"
"Because she came with a dowry that not even I could ignore. In
hindsight, I suppose it had more to do with Cyrus Eaglespike's plans
for the throne, than any great love for his daughter."
"He expects you to support him."
"Then he has badly misjudged me. I am not so easily bought. I owe
Damin Wolfblade for my province and for saving me from the necessity of
marrying a man I did not love. That means more to me than a large dowry
and an insipid daughter-in-law."
R'shiel smiled. Perhaps things were still going according to
plan.
"Does Cyrus know how you feel?"
"I'm not given to artfulness, R'shiel. I have made no secret of
where my loyalties lie."
"Then you need to be aware of what has happened over the past few
days. Cyrus used your name to lure Damin out of Greenharbour, then
kidnapped his wife."
"The Fardohnyan?"
"Princess Adrina."
"It was unwise of him to take a Fardohnyan wife," the
Warlord said
with a frown. "It gave me pause for a time. In fact it came close to
costing Damin my loyalty. Fardohnyans killed my husband and I cannot
count the people I have lost to them since."
"His marriage to Adrina will bring peace."
"Then the peace had better be accompanied by substantial
reparation," Tejay warned. "So, where do things stand now? Is
Damin
preparing to attack Cyrus?"
"No. We managed to retrieve his wife by . . . other means.
They'll be back in Greenharbour by now."
"And what of Lords Foxtalon, Bearbow and Falconlance? I've no doubt
Narvell Hawksword stands with his half-brother."
"Rogan Bearbow is on Damin's side. Foxtalon and Falconlance are
still allied with Cyrus."
"Then with my vote, Damin has a majority. Foxtalon will change sides
as soon as he realises he's backed a loser, but Eaglespike and
Falconlance will not give up so easily. And they have the advantage.
Their provinces make up most of the south. We outnumber them in theory,
but it will be months before we can muster an army sufficient to defeat
them. Our troops are spread out all over Hythria."
"Cyrus is already prepared for war."
"You can bet Falconlance is too. The city of Greenharbour might be
neutral territory, but it is surrounded by Greenharbour Province - and that
is owned, lock, stock and barrel, by Conin Falconlance."
"Then Greenharbour is likely to fall under siege?"
"You can wager on it."
R'shiel thought for a moment, trying to think of a way to get the
scattered armies of Krakandar, Sunrise, Elasapine, Izcomdar and
Pentamor (assuming Tejay was right about Lord Foxtalon) mustered. With
a sigh, R'shiel decided Tejay was correct in her assessment. It would
take far too long.
Damn it! I don't have time for this! R'shiel fought back
the feeling that this entire trip to Hythria had been a waste of time.
She was no closer to finding a way to defeat Xaphista, and was certain
now of only one thing: if the solution she sought wasn't at Sanctuary,
and the Sorcerers' Collective in Greenharbour was unable to help her,
that left the Citadel. It had been the heart of Harshini power and was
the only place left she could think to look for an answer. She was also
sure that the Sisters of the Blade would have kept every book, every
scroll, every scrap of parchment they had taken when they overran the
Citadel. They might despise the Harshini and do whatever they could to
obliterate all traces of their existence, but they were too methodical,
too pragmatic, and far too sensible to destroy the only documents that
might hold the key to the destruction of their enemies. But with Damin
likely to encounter an invading force, and Fardohnya poised to attack
. . .
R'shiel heartily wished she had kept her nose out of the whole messy
situation. And she wished she had never conceived the absurd idea that
Damin should marry Adrina to force the ruling Houses of Hythria and
Fardohnya into a truce. It had seemed like such a good idea at the time
. . . If she was honest with herself, she was willing to
admit that her plans had as much to do with annoying the God of War as
they did with her ultimate desire to defeat Xaphista. Two nations that
had been fighting each other sporadically for two centuries suddenly
united would be a serious blow to Zegarnald's mammoth ego. Perhaps she
was drunk on her own power. Whatever the reason, it didn't help her at
present. Her desire to bring peace had actually caused another war.
Brak had warned her that it would. She should have listened to him.
Now she had to do something to end it, preferably before it got started.
"What if you had another ally? One who could be in Greenharbour in a
matter of weeks with an army that outnumbers your enemies?"
suggested
R'shiel.
"Who are you thinking of?"
"Fardohnya."
Tejay laughed contemptuously. "You think Hablet would send his
troops into Hythria for a reason other than conquest?"
"He would if the demon child told him to."
"I hope your abilities match your confidence, my dear. Besides, the
Fardohnyans are even further from Greenharbour than our own
troops."
"But they can sail from Talabar and be in Greenharbour faster than
you can get your armies together overland."
The Warlord nodded, but she was decidedly unhappy about the idea.
And sceptical. "So, you plan to ride your dragon into Talabar and make
Hablet send his troops to our rescue."
"If necessary."
"I will believe it when I see it."
They were interrupted by Bayla, who backed into the tent carrying a
platter of bread and freshly roasted meat. R'shiel realised how hungry
she was as the smell reached her. She had not eaten since before she
spoke to Korandellan, and that had been two days ago. Bayla placed the
tray on the small table in front of them and managed to bow half a
dozen times on the way out. Tejay watched her leave with a look of
exasperation.
"The gods alone know what it will take to get some spirit into that
girl."
"She's very young."
"Which is a blessing. Valorian is quite smitten with her
helplessness at present, but it won't last. The novelty will wear off
soon enough and then they'll both be unhappy."
"If it's strong women you admire, Tejay, then you and the Princess
Adrina should become fast friends."
"Me? Befriend a Fardohnyan? I find that prospect even more unlikely
than the idea that Hablet would help us for a reason other than
territorial gain."
"You might be surprised, Tejay."
The Warlord helped herself to a shank of meat and smiled at R'shiel.
"My dear, if I find myself friends with a Fardohnyan Princess, and one
of Hablet's brood at that, 'surprised' won't even begin to
describe it."
CHAPTER 30
From Tejay's camp, R'shiel flew northward towards
Fardohnya. Now that she was assured of the Warlord's support and it
seemed that Damin and Adrina were finally fighting on the same side,
she figured she could leave the rest of it up to them. Tejay was
confident that Cyrus Eaglespike and Conin Falconlance would not attack
until after the Convocation, on the slim chance she would support them
and give Cyrus the majority he needed to claim the High Prince's throne.
With Tejay's promise to stall things as long as possible, R'shiel
calculated that she had a couple of weeks at most before Greenharbour
fell under siege. Two weeks in which she must get to Fardohnya and
convince King Hablet to gather his fleet and send his army to rescue
his daughter and her husband, as their ally, not their conqueror.
All this when I want to be in the Citadel, she silently
lamented.
But it wasn't just the situation in Hythria that lent her mission
urgency. Time was running out on more than one front. Korandellan was
weakening and she was worried sick about Tarja. She had received no
word of him since crossing into Hythria, and she had no idea of how
things stood in Medalon.
Dranymire sensed her urgency and did not complain when she told him
their destination. He suggested warning Brak of their imminent arrival,
and R'shiel gladly agreed. She was surprised how much she missed Brak,
or at least his counsel, and was hopeful he would be able to ease her
mind about Tarja. He might even know what was happening in Medalon. And
she was certain that she would need his help in getting to the Citadel.
The journey north took four days, and by the time the pink walls of
Talabar appeared in the distance, R'shiel felt almost confident that
she had mastered the skill of dragon riding. She still ached for hours
when she climbed off the beast, but she no longer clung with grim
determination to the dragon's back for fear of plunging to her death.
As Dranymire had explained, it was simply a question of balance.
Besides, after riding a water dragon through the foaming waves of the
Dregian Ocean, R'shiel decided that airborne dragons were a vastly
preferable method of transport. At least you could talk to them. They
didn't just smile at you with stupid, fixed grins, then drag you down
under several tons of cold water, just for the sheer joy of it.
Dranymire began to lose altitude while they were still several
leagues from the harbour. He headed for a clearing that appeared in the
vast canopy of trees passing beneath them in a green blur east of the
city. Brak had arranged to meet them here, and her heart quickened a
little at the thought of seeing him again. The reason was quite simple
and more than a little disturbing. Brak was the only person, Harshini
or demon, god or human, who she trusted implicitly. Including, she
realised with a frown, both Tarja and Damin.
Her reason for distrusting Damin was fairly straightforward. He had
a bad habit of acting first and worrying about the consequences later.
If he let her down, it would not be lack of honour, but lack of
forethought, that betrayed her. Tarja was a little more complicated.
His love for her was imposed on him. It might vanish as abruptly as it
had appeared and his anger when he realised how he'd been manipulated
could easily turn that love to hatred. She wished she knew where he
was, and that he was safe. She desperately wanted to know what he was
thinking.
Brak was waiting for them in the clearing when they landed. The
humid jungle was alive with the sounds of insects and other creatures
she could not see, and the trees shook as the unseen beasts leapt from
tree to tree. Whatever they were, they seemed unafraid of the dragons
and not too bothered by the presence of the Harshini.
R'shiel slithered off the dragon's back, and collapsed inelegantly
as she hit the ground. Brak smiled and stepped forward to help her up.
"Not as easy as it looks, is it?"
"I'm getting the hang of the riding. It's the walking around
afterwards I'm still having trouble with." She looked up at him
smiling
as she climbed unsteadily to her feet. "I'm so glad to see you, Brak.
Do you think we could just sit for a moment?"
"I think you'd better," he agreed, helping her across the
clearing
to a fallen log that was slowly being consumed by the jungle around it.
She sat down gratefully as Brak turned and bowed respectfully to the
dragon.
"Lord Dranymire."
"Lord Brakandaran."
"I thank you for delivering the demon child safely."
"Luck and a modicum of natural ability is the only reason she
survives, my Lord. I can claim no credit."
Brak smiled. "I thank you all the same, my Lord."
"Will you be long discussing your plans? We have been in this meld
for days now, and I wish to allow my brethren an opportunity to
rest."
"Dissolve the meld, my Lord. We shall call on you later, should your
services be required."
The dragon bowed its huge head towards Brak. "You may wish to take
this opportunity to teach the demon child some manners regarding the
brethren, Lord Brakandaran. She is sorely in need of education."
As soon as he finished speaking, the meld began to dissolve and the
dragon disintegrated into a writhing mass of little grey demons that
vanished almost as soon as they were free of the meld. Within moments
Brak and R'shiel were alone in the clearing.
"What did you do to upset Dranymire?"
"Who knows? As he said, I'm sadly lacking in demon
etiquette." She
flexed her knees stiffly and looked up at him. "You seem pretty good at
it."
"I've had several hundred years of practice."
"Are you really that old?"
"Don't I look it?"
"Actually, you don't look a day over thirty-five."
"My family always did carry their age well," he agreed with
a grin,
then he sat beside her, his smile fading. "What are you doing here,
R'shiel? I thought you were wreaking havoc in Hythria?"
"I was."
Brak laughed.
"I don't mean that the way it sounds, Brak! Everything was going
along fine until High Prince Lernen up and died on me. Then Damin's
cousin claimed the throne and then when we got to Greenharbour,
Glenanaran and the others were half dead from trying to protect the
Sorcerers' Collective. And then Adrina was kidnapped -
she's
pregnant, by the way - so I had to go and rescue her, and stop
Damin
launching a suicidal attack on his cousin to defend her honour. If that
isn't enough, Korandellan's about to fall over from exhaustion because
he's been holding Sanctuary out of time for too long." She took
a deep
breath and looked at him expectantly.
"You've been busy. When did you speak to Korandellan?"
"A few days ago. I used the Seeing Stone."
"My, we have come a long way, haven't we?"
"Don't patronise me, Brak."
"I didn't mean to. But the news about Sanctuary concerns me."
"I know. And there's nothing I can do about it until I sort out
Hythria and Fardohnya."
"Why? Does it really make that much difference? Why not leave them
to their bickering and do something about Xaphista? Do something about
the situation in Medalon?"
"I am doing something about Xaphista! At least, I thought I
was. That's why I went to Hythria in the first place. As for Medalon,
that's where I'm headed next. Tarja will need my help and -"
"Tarja's been captured, R'shiel."
She swallowed hard as her heart relocated itself in her throat.
"When? How?"
"It happened about a month ago. He sank the ferry at Cauthside but
didn't get away quickly enough. The Kariens have been waiting for the
flood waters to subside, but they've not been idle. They'll be ready to
cross the Glass River any day now. Tarja is being taken to the Citadel
for trial."
"I'm surprised they didn't kill him," she remarked
tonelessly.
"He's too important. Publicly hanging Tarja in the Citadel will be
the Kariens' final and unequivocal declaration of mastery over Medalon.
His death will tear the heart out of the resistance."
"It'll tear the heart out of more than the resistance," she
said
softly, then buried her face in her hands, wishing the whole world
would just stop for a while and let her catch her breath.
"I'm sorry, R'shiel."
"I almost wish you hadn't told me." She straightened
suddenly,
looking at him curiously. "How do you know all this, anyway?"
"I have a new friend. She keeps me informed."
"She?"
"The head of the Assassins' Guild is a woman."
"How nice for you, Brak."
"Now who's being patronising? And you still haven't answered my
question. What are you doing in Fardohnya?"
"Trying to undo the damage I caused. Once the Convocation is held,
and Cyrus loses the election, Greenharbour will be under siege within a
matter of hours. Damin doesn't have the troops to hold out for long,
even with the other Warlords on his side. Their armies are scattered
all over Hythria."
"I hope you don't expect Hablet to help. He's being very
uncooperative. He ordered me out of Fardohnya, actually."
"Did you try reasoning with him?"
"One doesn't use the words 'reason' and 'Hablet' in
the same breath.
Not when it comes to the Harshini. Or the delicate matter of his heir.
Which reminds me, did you know that if he doesn't get a legitimate son,
the Fardohnyan throne falls to Damin?"
She nodded. "Princess Marla told me."
"How did Adrina take the news?"
"As you'd expect."
Brak frowned. "And you left them alone in Hythria?"
"That was the one good thing to come out of all this. Damin and
Adrina have finally worked out what everyone else has known for months.
Sometimes humans don't know what they've got until they've almost lost
it."
He smiled. "That sounds very Harshini, R'shiel."
She rolled her eyes but did not deny the accusation.
"So, what do you want to do about Hablet?"
"Well, if reason won't work, perhaps a show of force will."
"I don't like the sound of this."
"Brak, I need Hablet's army to set sail for Greenharbour within the
week. And I need them to go to Damin's aid, not use it as an excuse to
invade Hythria. If Hablet won't listen to reason, then I'll scare him
into it, but either way, I have to stop the civil war in Hythria before
it gets out of hand."
"Why?"
She did not answer immediately.
"R'shiel? Your silence is scaring me. Just exactly what are you
cooking up in that devious little mind of yours?"
She fidgeted uncomfortably under his scrutiny. "I don't intend to
let Zegarnald - or any other god - profit from my
mistakes."
Brak was silent for a moment. "Zegarnald wants you to destroy
Xaphista, R'shiel. Aren't you overstepping yourself just a tad?"
"Zegarnald wanted me 'tempered', remember?" she
reminded him
bitterly. "Well, he's only got himself to blame if he forged a
two-edged sword."
Shaking his head, Brak stood up and held out his hand to her. "One
day, when we get the time, along with respect for the demons, I think I
need to teach you the concept of leaving well enough alone."
R'shiel and Brak made no attempt to conceal their
presence as they flew towards Talabar. Brak rode his metallic green
dragon, which Lady Elanymire and her brethren had formed at his
request, while R'shiel rode beside him on Dranymire's golden meld. They
made an impressive sight swooping down over the city - two
creatures
from legend and their Harshini dragon riders flying out of the sun to
land in the courtyard of the Summer Palace. By the time they had
scattered the startled palace guards and the dragons settled to the
ground, the city was in an uproar.
R'shiel climbed down from Dranymire, pleased to discover the short
ride had left her capable of walking. "I hope Hablet is in. We're going
to look pretty damned foolish making such an impressive entrance if
he's not home."
"He's home," Brak assured her, pointing to flags flying
proudly over
the main entrance to the palace. A tubby, bald-headed man in gloriously
expensive silks hurried towards them. His expression was caught
somewhere between shock and outrage.
"What is the meaning of this?" he screeched, panting heavily
as he
tried to block their path. "You can't enter the palace like this! Who
are you? What do you want?"
"Who is this, Brak?" she asked. Both were drawing on their
power and
their eyes burned black. Although the courtyard was full of guards, the
dragons kept any potential trouble at bay, simply by being dragons.
"Lector Turon, Your Highness, King Hablet's Chamberlain,"
Brak
replied in a superior tone.
Brak was quite an actor when the occasion called for it, R'shiel
thought. She bit back a grin at his manner and turned her ebony eyes on
the eunuch. "You will take me to the King."
"The King cannot be disturbed!"
"Come, Lord Brakandaran," she declared dramatically. "This
underling
is of no use to us. We shall find the King ourselves."
She pushed Lector Turon out of the way and began walking across the
paved courtyard with Brak at her side. Lector scurried past them,
yelling at the top of his voice.
"Bar the doors! Shut them! Quickly! Protect your King!"
The guards were quick to respond. The doors boomed shut before
R'shiel and Brak reached the steps and shook as the locking bar was
dropped into place.
"He's an annoying little toad, isn't he?"
"Immensely," Brak agreed. "What are you going to do about
the doors?"
"What doors?"
She kept walking as the massive, bronze-plated doors blew outward
off their hinges. Everyone but Brak and R'shiel dived for cover.
"Impressive."
"Actually, I wasn't sure that would work," she admitted, in
a voice
meant only for Brak. "Shall we go and find the King?"
"You're enjoying this, aren't you?"
"Aren't you?"
He allowed a small smile to flicker over his lips, before he turned
back to stare at what was left of the entrance to Hablet's Summer
Palace. "I hate to admit it, but yes, I am enjoying it."
"Good. I like to see people happy in their work."
He followed her up the steps to the entrance, stepping over the
debris from the explosion. The dazed guards made no attempt to stop
them as they strode past.
R'shiel glanced around, wondering where Hablet would be hiding - if
he was hiding. He might just have the spine to confront her. He
was Adrina's father, after all, and she certainly never shied from
anything.
Courtiers, slaves and guards stepped out of their path as they
strode through the palace. When they reached the throne room, R'shiel
resisted the temptation to blast those doors off their hinges, too. She
settled for blowing them open, instead. The long narrow hall was
crowded with people clinging to each other fearfully, their silks and
jewels quivering as they stared aghast at the sight of two black-eyed
and obviously annoyed Harshini striding through their midst.
They stopped several paces from the foot of the raised dais where
Hablet sat, clutching the gilt arms of his throne with white-knuckled
terror. It was the only outward sign of his fear. His expression was
one of carefully contrived contempt, rather than dread.
"Who are you?"
"I am the demon child."
"Well, I don't care who you are, young lady, you'll pay for the
damage to my palace." He turned his royal gaze on Brak with a
frown. "I
thought I told you to leave Fardohnya?"
"I answer to a higher power than you, Your Majesty."
"Well, I don't!" the King declared petulantly. He reminded
R'shiel
of Adrina when she was in high dudgeon.
"You will answer to the gods, Hablet," R'shiel warned,
sincerely
hoping she would not have to involve them. She wasn't entirely sure
they would back her in this.
"The gods will not betray me!"
"Perhaps, Your Majesty, but they will do what I ask of
them."
Hablet stared at her for a moment, weighing up the advisability of
defying someone who spoke directly to the gods. He sagged visibly and
turned to the Captain of the Guard.
"Clear the hall."
"Sire?"
"Clear the hall! Everybody out! Now!"
The captain hurried to do as his King ordered. Within minutes they
were alone, the doors slamming shut behind the fearful courtiers as
they scurried from the throne room.
"What do you want?" Hablet asked once he was certain they
were alone.
"I want you to set sail for Hythria, Your Majesty."
"Hythria? Your friend here was warning me to stay out of Hythria a
few weeks ago, and now you want me to invade it."
"You're not going to invade Hythria, Hablet. You're going to relieve
the siege at Greenharbour."
"What siege?"
"Your daughter is now the High Princess of Hythria, and her capital
is under siege, or at least it will be, by the time you get
there."
"Adrina? That traitorous little ingrate? Why should I do anything to
aid her? She betrayed me and married my worst enemy!"
"She married the heir to your throne."
"I'll die before I let Damin Wolfblade inherit my crown!"
"That's the whole idea, isn't it?"
Hablet glared at her. "What do I get out of it?"
"You leave this room alive, for a start," R'shiel warned him
in a
voice so dangerous that even Brak looked at her askance.
"You can't kill me," he scoffed. "You're Harshini."
"I am the demon child, Hablet. I'm only half-Harshini, and believe
me, the human part of me has no qualms about removing people who stand
in my way."
Hablet rubbed his beard thoughtfully then his eyes narrowed. "If I
send my fleet to relieve this siege of Adrina's, I want something in
return."
"You're hardly in a position to negotiate, Your Majesty."
"You think so? Try getting my fleet to move past the end of the
docks without my help."
Reluctantly, R'shiel had to concede that he had a point. "What do
you want?"
"I want a son. I want a legitimate son."
"I can't grant you that."
"Oh, so there are limits to what you can do? Well, in that case,
Adrina and her damned barbarian can rot in Greenharbour and you can
kill me now. It won't make much difference either way. If I'm dead,
Wolfblade gets my throne, but he won't be in a position to claim it,
will he?" Hablet chuckled nastily, daring her to do her worst.
R'shiel considered the matter. If she acceded to his demand -
assuming Jelanna agreed to cooperate - then she would lose her
ability
to unite Fardohnya and Hythria on Hablet's death. On the other hand,
all she really wanted to do was get to the Citadel. It didn't really
matter who ruled Fardohnya, just so long as they weren't at war with
Damin. He couldn't spare any troops to aid Tarja in ridding Medalon of
the Kariens if he was embroiled in a war with either his cousin or his
father-in-law. Time was of the essence and she didn't have any spare to
waste arguing with Hablet.
"Very well. I will speak to Jelanna. That's the best I can do. But
the first hint that you are exceeding your mandate, Your Majesty, and I
will personally see to it that your son withers and dies in the
womb."
Hablet nodded. If he believed her threat, he did not appear bothered
by it. All he wanted was finally getting the heir he craved. He beamed
at her happily. "I find myself suddenly warming to you, demon child. I
shall issue the orders today and we shall set sail for Greenharbour by
week's end. I shall place Gaffen in command. He was always fond of
Adrina."
"Gaffen?"
"The second eldest of my baseborn sons. He and Tristan were always
finding trouble with Adrina. Speaking of which, you've not mentioned
him. I cannot believe he stood idly by while Adrina ran off with a
Hythrun Warlord."
R'shiel glanced at Brak warily before she answered the King.
"Tristan is dead, Your Majesty, as is most of the Guard you sent
north with Adrina. They were killed fighting the Medalonians."
The King paled. His voice was like ice when he finally spoke. "What
were they doing fighting the Medalonians?"
"I believe it was on Prince Cratyn's orders. It was following their
death that Adrina fled Karien."
Hablet was silent for a long time. His anger was a palpable thing.
"Once the situation in Hythria is resolved, you will be confronting the
Kariens, yes?"
"They need to be pushed out of Medalon, certainly."
"Then you have found yourself an ally, demon child. No child of
mine, baseborn or otherwise, dies in such a manner without a
reckoning."
CHAPTER 31
The Convocation of the Warlords to elect the High
Prince of Hythria finally took place four days after Damin and Adrina
returned to Greenharbour. Tejay Lionsclaw had arrived, bearing news
that she had met the demon child, and that when last heard of, R'shiel
was heading for Fardohnya to speak with King Hablet.
The news did little to ease Damin's mind. It was bad enough that she
had vanished without warning, but to learn that she was heading for
Fardohnya made things even worse. He knew as well as anyone what was
likely to happen should he win the election. Inviting Hablet to come to
his rescue, the man who had spent the past thirty years trying to
figure out how to invade his country, the man who had tried to hire
assassins to have him killed, did not strike Damin as a particularly
prudent move.
"You look very . . ."
"What?" he snapped as Adrina walked into his dressing room.
"Foolish?"
"I was going to say dashing, but foolish will do, if you
prefer."
Actually, he felt like an idiot. One of the reasons he had spent as
little time at court as possible was his dislike of dressing in such
cumbersome finery. He wore white, the traditional colour reserved for
the High Prince, from his knee-high calf leather boots to his
gloriously embroidered jacket and short cape that was heavy and
uncomfortable and totally unsuited to Greenharbour's humid climate. The
gold coronet around his forehead was uncomfortably tight and the
ceremonial sword he wore owed more of its weight to its gem-encrusted
scabbard than it did to its blade. In a fight it would be as useful as
a knitting needle. It was Adrina who insisted he dress the part of High
Prince for the Convocation, and she had found a surprising ally in
Princess Marla.
She smiled and stepped forward to adjust the coronet, which eased
the pressure a little, then she smoothed his fair hair down. "You look
every bit the High Prince."
"Looking the part won't win me the title."
"You'd be surprised."
"Gods, how I hate all this pomp and ceremony!"
"Well, you'd better get used to it, my love."
The endearment caught him by surprise. "My love?"
"Well, I can't go on calling you the Evil Barbarian Bastard forever,
can I?"
He laughed. "No. I suppose not."
Adrina sat down on the small settee and curled her legs up under her
to watch him finish dressing. Since their return from Dregian Castle,
and their argument on the beach, she had been a different person. Or
perhaps he was seeing a side of her that she had never shown him
before. The change in her scared him, not because of what she had
become, but because he was afraid it wouldn't last. The new Adrina was
everything he could have wished for in a consort. She was intelligent,
charming and determined to secure his throne, whatever the cost. How
much of that was because she cared for him, and how much was simply her
desire to see Cyrus Eaglespike brought down, he did not dare ask.
"Explain something to me, Damin. Why do you have an election for the
High Prince? Isn't it a hereditary title?"
"Yes, but there's frequently been more than one contender. Twins are
fairly common in my family, and the first born is not always the most
suitable for the job."
"Twins? Gods, you're not telling me I'm likely to have twins, are
you?"
He smiled at her alarmed expression. "Kalan and Narvell are twins.
Even Lernen was a twin, although his brother died in infancy."
"But didn't Lernen name you as his heir? Surely, in that case, there
would be no need for an election?"
"The Convocation is a formality, more often than not," he
agreed. "It makes the Warlords feel they have a say in things. In this
case,
however, there are two contenders."
"How can Cyrus seriously think he's a contender if Lernen named you
his heir? I can understand him jumping in when he thought you'd
vanished into Medalon, but now that you're back, you'd think he'd just
bow out gracefully."
"Cyrus doesn't do anything gracefully, least of all admitting he was
wrong. No, he will fight this to the bitter end. He's come too far to
give up now."
"I wish I could come with you. There are a few things I'd like to
say to Lord Eaglespike."
"Which is why it's a good thing you're not coming with
me."
She smiled. The old Adrina probably would have thrown something at
him. "Just be careful what you say, Damin."
"I won't let him get to me."
"I don't care if he gets to you. Just don't let him win."
He reached for her and pulled her gently to her feet. She did not
resist. He drew her close and kissed her, still amazed how good it felt
to be able to do that without fear of having her slide a knife between
his ribs. She laid her head on his chest and he held her for a moment.
"You'd better come back in one piece," she warned, looking
up at
him. Her emerald eyes were glistening with unshed tears.
"I'll do my best, Your Highness." He kissed her again and
put his
arm around her shoulder as they walked back out into the main chamber
of his apartments. Or rather their apartments now -
Adrina had
moved in the day they arrived back in Greenharbour. Almodavar was
waiting for them, dressed in full battle gear. Adrina frowned when she
saw him.
"Almodavar! Aren't you ready yet?"
"He's not coming with me," Damin explained. "I'm leaving him
here to
protect the palace."
"But you need a Guard of Honour!"
"And I have one. But if things don't go his way, Cyrus may make his
move before we leave the Sorcerers' Collective. I don't intend to make
the same mistake I made the last time. Almodavar is staying here to
ensure your safety."
"You need him more than I do," she insisted.
"The matter isn't open for negotiation, Adrina." He kissed
the top
of her head and let her go. "I'll see you later. When it's all
over."
She nodded but did not answer him. Almodavar opened the door for him
and he stepped into the hall without looking back.
"Damin!"
He stopped and turned to her. "Yes?"
She hesitated for a moment, opened her mouth to say something,
closed it again, then shrugged helplessly. "Be careful."
He wondered what she had really wanted to say. Whatever it was, she
had obviously changed her mind. He smiled mockingly and bowed to her
with all the flair of a court dandy. "As her Highness commands."
She frowned at him then turned to his captain. "Get him out of here,
Almodavar. That coronet is obviously stopping the blood flow to his
brain."
Even Almodavar grinned, which had the unfortunate effect of making
him look fiercer than normal. "This way, my Lord."
Damin straightened up and met her eye. She smiled at him. It was a
genuine smile, without guile or artifice. Suddenly it didn't seem to
matter what else the day might bring.
* * *
The Hall of Convocation in the Sorcerers' Palace
was a room used for the election of the High Prince and the
confirmation of Warlords. It was a windowless, nine-sided room, not
particularly large, but lavishly decorated. Seven of the wall panels
depicted the crests of the Warlords of Hythria in mosaic tiles of gold,
silver and semiprecious stones. The doors broke the eighth panel, but
when closed, they formed the diamond symbol of the Sorcerers'
Collective. The panel opposite the door was fashioned from a sheet of
solid gold and was embossed with the snarling wolf's head of the
Wolfblade House. A massive candelabra suspended from the ceiling, which
took two acolytes almost an hour to light, provided the only
illumination.
In the centre of the room was a nine-sided table, with nine gilt
stools arranged around it. Like the walls, the table was split into
panels that were inlaid with the colours of the seven provinces, the
Royal House and the Collective. Marla had brought him here for the
first time on his tenth birthday to impress upon him the importance of
his heritage.
Damin took his seat - not under the Wolfblade crest, but
under
Krakandar Province, represented by the rampant kraken of his late
father, Laran Krakenshield. Although he had never known his father,
Damin still mourned his loss at times. By all accounts Laran had been a
strong and ruthless man. He could do with such an ally today. He
realised that he would need to find a suitable replacement for himself
in Krakandar. If he secured the title of High Prince, the province
would need a new Warlord.
The other Warlords took their places, all dressed in finery to rival
Damin's. In fact, next to Toren Foxtalon's gem-encrusted armour, Damin
felt quite ordinary. Cyrus, who was also dressed in white, avoided
meeting his eye, as did Conin Falconlance. Rogan simply nodded in his
direction. Tejay smiled at him and Narvell didn't look at him at all,
too busy scanning the faces of the other Warlords with a threatening
scowl. Damin felt a rush of affection for his younger half-brother. It
was odd to think that Narvell was feeling protective of him, rather
than the other way around.
Kalan was the last to arrive. She was dressed in a simple black
robe, her only adornment the diamond-shaped pendant of her office. As
soon as she entered, the doors swung shut behind her without any
visible effort on her part. Wordlessly, the Warlords took their places.
The High Arrion placed her hands on the table in front of her and
closed her eyes.
"We meet to elect a new High Prince. May the gods grant us
wisdom."
"May the gods grant us wisdom," the Warlords echoed with
varying
degrees of enthusiasm.
Kalan opened her eyes and sat down, then studied the gathering for a
moment before continuing. "According to the will of the late High
Prince, Damin Wolfblade is his legal heir, by right of blood. Are there
any other candidates?"
Although the statement was one of tradition, all eyes turned
expectantly to Cyrus. He nodded slowly and rose to his feet.
"Lord Eaglespike?"
"I offer myself as a candidate, my Lady."
"On what grounds?"
"By right of blood."
"Your great-great-grandmother was a Wolfblade, Lord Eaglespike. By
right of blood, Lord Wolfblade has the stronger claim."
"I merely mention my blood tie to validate my claim, my Lady. My
reason for offering my candidacy however, is because I believe Lord
Wolfblade has committed treason."
Terse silence met Cyrus' startling claim.
"That is a serious accusation, my Lord."
"No more serious than the actions of Lord Wolfblade."
"Can you substantiate your claims?" Narvell demanded,
leaping to his
feet "If not, I suggest you sit down before I decide to -"
"Narvell, shut up," Kalan snapped, for a moment addressing
her twin,
rather than the High Arrion addressing a Warlord.
"Kalan!" he objected. She was the older twin by a mere
twenty
minutes, but she had always been the dominant one.
"Sit down, Hawksword," Rogan added. "Cyrus will dig his own
grave
without any help from you."
Narvell reluctantly sat as Cyrus turned to Rogan. "Are you
threatening me, my Lord?"
"No, Eaglespike, I'm not threatening you. You'll know about it if I
do."
"As I was saying, before I was interrupted," Cyrus
continued,
looking pointedly at Narvell, "Damin Wolfblade has committed treason.
He cannot, therefore, be allowed to take the throne, regardless of the
will of the late High Prince."
"Would you care to elaborate, my Lord?"
"He made an unauthorised alliance with a foreign power and then he
married a Fardohnyan."
"At least he married," Tejay remarked with a chuckle. "Which
is more
than you can say for poor old Lernen."
Cyrus did not appreciate her levity. "This is a serious matter, my
Lady. You would do well to treat it as such."
"I'm trying to take this seriously, Cyrus, and I would, if
this wasn't such a joke." She turned to Damin. "What say you,
Lord
Wolfblade? Is Cyrus right? Did you make an unauthorised alliance with a
foreign power? I think we all know by now that you married a
Fardohnyan."
"Guilty on both counts," Damin replied calmly.
Cyrus stared at him, making no attempt to hide his surprise. "You
admit to your crimes?"
"I don't know that I'd call them 'crimes', cousin, but I
certainly
did make an alliance with Medalon and I believe you've already met my
wife." Cyrus still had enough honour left in him to squirm a
little
under Damin's scrutiny. Damin wondered if he had figured out yet how
she had escaped. "I plead mitigating circumstances."
"What mitigating circumstances?" Conin Falconlance scoffed.
"What
could possibly justify such actions?"
"I was asked to aid Medalon. I was ordered to marry Adrina."
"By whom?"
"In the former case, Lord Brakandaran of the Harshini asked for my
aid. In the latter it was the demon child. As she had been placed in my
care by Zegarnald himself, I could hardly refuse, could I?"
Cyrus laughed sceptically. "You expect us to believe the God of War
singled you out and asked you to aid the demon child?"
"Yes."
"That's preposterous! What proof have you?"
"Call Glenanaran, if my word isn't good enough. You'll take the word
of a Harshini, won't you? He was with us when we crossed into Medalon
and I'm sure he wouldn't mind calling up the God of War so you can
cross-examine him."
Only Kalan and Narvell knew that he had spoken with Zegarnald. With
the exception of Cyrus, the other Warlords seemed quite overawed by the
revelation. Lord Eaglespike glanced around the table, shaking his head.
"Am I the only one here who finds this fantastic tale
unbelievable?"
"No, you're the only one here with a vested interest in having us
deny it," Tejay pointed out. "I believe Damin, and when it
comes down
to it, I'd rather have a High Prince who speaks to the gods than one
who uses my name to perpetrate mischief."
Cyrus was looking decidedly uncomfortable. He obviously had not
expected Tejay to learn of his deception, just as he expected to come
to this meeting with Adrina as a hostage.
"Well, Lord Eaglespike?" Kalan asked. "Shall I call on the
Harshini
to bear witness to Lord Wolfblade's defence?"
Cyrus shook his head. "That won't be necessary, my Lady. Lord
Wolfblade is a man of honour."
"An honourable traitor? You flatter me, my Lord."
The Warlord ignored the comment and remained standing. "There is
still the issue of his marriage to that Fardohnyan. He may have married
her on the orders of the demon child, but that doesn't make the
situation any less intolerable."
"What's your objection, Cyrus?" Tejay asked cheerfully.
"That she's
Fardohnyan, or that you can't seem to keep her in your dungeons for
more than a few hours without losing her?"
Cyrus kept his temper with admirable restraint. "Anything I have
done, my Lady, I have done for the good of Hythria."
"Then we are of one purpose, my Lord," Damin replied. "I,
too, have
only the interests of Hythria at heart."
"If you only care about Hythria, how can you possibly expect us to
tolerate that woman? She is a viper! When she was here in Greenharbour
the last time, you claimed she tried to kill Lernen!"
"I was wrong."
"Wrong? Or simply thinking with your balls?" He glanced
around at
the others with a knowing smirk. "I hear she's
court'esa
trained."
Damin called on every ounce of self-control he owned to stop him
leaping over the table and taking Cyrus Eaglespike by the throat.
"You will speak with respect when referring to your High
Princess,"
he managed to say, despite the effort it cost him to remain outwardly
calm.
"She is
not my High Princess, and will never be!"
"Whether or not Princess Adrina is the High Princess is yet to be
decided," Kalan reminded them, raising her voice slightly.
"Lord
Eaglespike, do you have a specific objection to the Princess, or is it
simply her nationality that disturbs you?"
"I'd settle for just
one good reason why we should accept
that foreign whore," Conin Falconlance interjected.
Damin gripped the side of his stool until his knuckles were white,
but gave no other indication of his anger. "One reason?
Gunpowder."
That got their attention.
"Gunpowder?" Tejay gasped. "Gods, Damin, if you took
all
of
his daughters off his hands, Hablet still wouldn't part with that
secret."
"I'm aware of that and so is Adrina. When Hablet signed the treaty
with the Kariens, which included sharing the secret of gunpowder, it
was sealed by her marriage to Cratyn. She knew he was never likely to
live up to his end of the bargain. She was understandably fearful that
his refusal might result in the Kariens taking reprisals and the most
obvious target would have been her. So she made a point of learning the
secret before she left Fardohnya."
"And she told the Kariens the secret?" Toren Foxtalon asked.
It was
the first time he had spoken. He had been sitting so quietly Damin
thought him asleep, but this news had seemingly woken him from his
torpor.
"No. The only person she has shared it with is me."
"What makes
you so special?" Cyrus laughed
disparagingly.
Damin turned to him and smiled with languid smugness. "I, too, am
court'esa
trained, my Lord."
Tejay clapped her hands and laughed delightedly. "Ha! You deserved
that, Cyrus! I say let's finish with this pointless argument. We all
know how we plan to vote and I doubt that anything said here today has
changed any of our opinions. It certainly hasn't changed mine. Order
the vote, Kalan!"
Cyrus glanced around the table, calculating his position. He had
lost Tejay - that was obvious - and Foxtalon was quite
taken with the
idea of learning the secret of gunpowder. Narvell had never been in his
camp and it was clear where Rogan's loyalties lay. He threw his hands
up and sat down heavily.
"Have your damned vote then. This is a farce!"
"Then I will take your votes, my Lords," Kalan agreed with a
frown
at Cyrus for disparaging the validity of the Convocation. "Lord
Bearbow, how does Izcomdar vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lady Lionsclaw? How does Sunrise vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lord Falconlance? How does Greenharbour vote?"
"Eaglespike."
"Lord Hawksword? How does Elasapine vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lord Foxtalon? How does Pentamor vote?"
Toren fidgeted uncomfortably, staring determinedly at the table in
front of him. "Wolfblade."
Damin breathed a sigh of relief. With five of the seven Warlords on
his side he had more than he could have hoped for a few days ago.
"Lord Eaglespike? How does Dregian vote?"
"Eaglespike," he snapped angrily. "For all the good it
does."
"Lord Wolfblade? How does Krakandar vote?"
"Wolfblade." He didn't need to say anything else.
"Then I declare Damin Wolfblade is the High Prince of Hythria. Long
live High Prince Damin!"
"Long live High Prince Damin!" the others echoed, with the
notable
exception of Cyrus and Conin.
Cyrus pushed his stool back and rose to his feet. "This is a sad day
for Hythria, my Lords. You have just handed our nation over to a man
who is under the thrall of a Fardohnyan whore. You will live to regret
this decision. Come, Conin, let us together commiserate on the death of
our nation's independence."
Lord Falconlance stood and followed Cyrus wordlessly. The doors
swung open as they approached, and swung shut behind them when they
left the room. The tension flowed out of the room with the departure of
the Warlords.
"Anyone care to wager that Cyrus' idea of commiseration involves a
civil war?" Rogan asked of no one in particular.
"I don't think I care for the odds, Rogan," Tejay said.
"Kalan, as High Prince, I want command of the troops belonging to
the Sorcerers' Collective."
The High Arrion did not even hesitate. "They are yours, Damin, along
with anything else you need."
Rogan smiled. "You see, there's an advantage to keeping things all
in the family. How long do we have, do you think?"
"Until sunrise, is my guess," Damin replied. "I suspect
they'll be
waiting for us when we open the city gates in the morning."
"Then we won't be opening the city gates," Narvell predicted
grimly.
"What about the harbour?" Tejay asked. "Cyrus and Conin have
enough
ships to blockade it."
"I issued a warning to the fishing fleet this morning before I left
the palace. Any boats that want to leave will be gone by now. As for
the rest, if the demon child is to be believed, help is on the way. We
won't have to hold out for much longer than a couple of weeks."
"Help? What help?" Foxtalon asked suspiciously.
"The Fardohnyans."
"The Fardohnyans! You can't trust them!"
"And I don't," Damin told him. "But I do trust the demon
child."
"I hope your trust is warranted, Wolfblade," Rogan warned.
"We are
placing a lot of faith in that slip of a girl."
He smiled at the description. "That 'slip of a girl' has the
power
to destroy a god, Rogan."
"She also has the power to destroy us," Kalan reminded him
ominously.
CHAPTER 32
The siege did not bother the citizens of
Greenharbour at first. If anything, they considered it something of a
novelty, a variation from the normal humdrum of their everyday lives.
Crowds gathered at the walls each day, hoping for a chance to climb up
to the ramparts and see the armies of Greenharbour and Dregian massed
below. A few enterprising souls even began charging admission, after
doing a deal with the guards on the walls, and they did a roaring trade
until Damin got wind of it and had the entrepreneurs thrown in gaol.
By the second week the shortages began, and then the novelty quickly
wore off. There was fresh water aplenty, but Greenharbour was a large
city and it wasn't possible to store enough to keep the population fed
for long. The city housed almost fifty thousand people, and relied on
the bounty of the sea, as well as the numerous farms outside the city,
for produce. With the harbour blockaded, there was no daily catch, and
with the gates closed against the armies of Lord Eaglespike and Lord
Falconlance there was no produce getting through. Damin heard reports
of a loaf of bread costing a hundred times its normal value.
They fared no better in the palace though, because Damin had
distributed most of the palace stores quite publicly on the seventh day
of the siege, in the hopes of avoiding a hungry population storming the
palace in the belief that food inside was being hoarded for the High
Prince and his family.
Cyrus and Conin were carrying out typical siege tactics, he knew.
They made no effort to attack the city. They didn't have to. It wasn't
the threat outside the walls that would undo them, but the
internal unrest. Damin had stationed troops to defend the walls of the
city, but the bulk of his forces were employed simply keeping the
peace. As the siege dragged on, he grew less and less tolerant of the
opportunists and malcontents. He had begun by throwing them in gaol.
This morning he had ordered three men beheaded for hoarding grain and
then selling it at inflated prices. He did not regret their passing. As
their heads dropped into the baskets beneath the executioner's block
his only thought was, That's three less mouths to feed.
He had fifteen hundred Raiders in the city, comprising the three
hundred men each Warlord was permitted. The Guards of the Sorcerers'
Collective, although competent, had no combat experience to speak of.
He had placed the Raiders on the walls and kept the Collective Guards
for civil matters. They were well suited to the task. They knew the
city and the people knew them. In total, he had two and a half thousand
men, but no idea when, or if, help would arrive. There were close to
ten thousand camped outside his walls.
A knock at the door disturbed him, and he looked up in annoyance.
The elegantly carved desk in front of him was littered with parchment.
Lernen never seemed to have to deal with this much work. He was
beginning to wonder how his uncle had found time to indulge his wide
variety of perversions. Damin had barely found time to eat or sleep
since becoming High Prince.
"What?" he called angrily.
The door opened a fraction and Adrina's head appeared. "Do you have
a moment, Damin?"
"No," he replied unhappily.
She opened the door all the way and entered the study with the
Harshini, Glenanaran, at her side.
Damin rose to his feet with a frown. "What is it now, Adrina? Are
the peasants storming the Sorcerers' Collective?"
Glenanaran smiled, which was the usual Harshini reaction to anything
one said in their presence. He was very tall and slender, with long,
fair hair held back by a simple leather band. His height was emphasised
by the long white robe he wore. His totally black eyes were wide with
an innocence and hopefulness that no human could ever hope to emulate.
"No, Your Highness. But it grieves me to see you so
overwrought."
"The administration of a city under siege is proving to be worse
than I could possibly have imagined, Divine One. Being overwrought
seems the only appropriate reaction."
"Don't listen to him, Glenanaran. Damin enjoys feeling sorry for
himself." Adrina smiled at him. She was looking suspiciously
pleased.
"What are you up to, Adrina?"
"We have an idea."
"Actually, the idea belongs to the High Princess, Your Highness. I
am merely the instrument of her desire."
"Aren't we all," Damin muttered as he sat down. "All right.
Tell me
this grand idea of yours, Adrina. The day can't get much worse."
"You have to order the fishing boats to put to sea."
"In case you haven't noticed, Adrina, the harbour is
blockaded."
"I know. The boats can't get past the blockade, but the fish
can."
"What are you talking about?"
"Fish, Damin. You know, those little silver wiggly things that
people eat?"
He smiled, in spite of himself.
"What the High Princess means is that we can call the fish into the
harbour and your fishing boats can net them without trying to get past
the blockade."
Damin leaned back in his chair and studied Adrina in amazement.
"That is the most brilliant idea I've ever heard."
"I thought so."
"And you can do this, Divine One? Doesn't it conflict with your
aversion to killing? Those fish will go straight into the cooking pots
of Greenharbour."
"We cannot abide violence, Your Highness, but we understand the laws
of nature. Death is an inevitable part of life. All creatures serve to
nourish and feed other creatures. Even humans, when they return to the
soil, feed the creatures of the earth, who in turn feed other animals.
I cannot say it will make me happy, but neither can I stand idly by
while the people of Greenharbour starve."
"Then I'll order the boats to sea immediately. And get some troops
down to the harbour to avoid a riot when the catch comes in. I cannot
thank you enough, Glenanaran. This may mean the difference between life
and death."
The Harshini bowed solemnly. "I am aware of that, Your Highness. And
now, if I may be excused, I will return to the Collective to speak with
Farandelan and Joranara. I will need their help for this task."
"Of course," Damin agreed. "And again, I thank you."
As soon as he was gone, Adrina walked around the desk and pushed a
stack of rolled parchment out of the way, so she could sit on it. Her
expression was insufferably smug.
"So, how do you like my first official act as High Princess?"
"Not bad."
"Not bad! It was a stroke of genius!"
"Yes, it was. But you already know that. I'm not going to inflate
that ego of yours any more than it already is by admitting it,
though."
Adrina laughed. Despite the siege, despite Tamylan's death and
everything else that had happened to her recently, Damin had never seen
her happier. She was finally in her element, he realised. She had power
and respect and the ability to use that awesome intellect for something
other than causing trouble. Hablet had been a fool not to recognise
what he had in his daughter. Then again, he might have actually seen
her potential and banished her to Karien where he thought she could not
threaten him.
Her laughter faded after a while and she became serious. "It's only
a temporary measure, Damin. We can't ask the Harshini to call fish into
the harbour indefinitely."
"I know. But every day we hold out is a day closer to help
arriving."
"You still believe R'shiel will be able to convince my father to
send help?"
"If anybody can, R'shiel can. It's simply a question of how long it
takes. She knows the urgency of the situation."
"Personally, I don't see why she couldn't just stay here and throw a
few fireballs around like she did in the Defender's camp in Medalon.
That would have softened Eaglespike's spine quick enough."
"She wants peace, Adrina," he reminded her. "Besides,
throwing
fireballs around might cow Cyrus into submission, but it would more
than likely burn my city to the ground."
"And you think a running battle through the streets of Greenharbour
is going to be any less damaging?"
"No. But I've some control over the way a battle goes. R'shiel has no
control over where her magic lands."
"Do you think she'll ever be ready to face Xaphista?" she
asked.
"I hope so."
"If she fails," Adrina warned, "we'll spend the rest of our
lives at
war. I've lived with the Kariens, Damin. I've heard what they preach.
Xaphista won't be content until the whole world is on its knees before
him."
Following the Harshini summons, the fish netted in
the harbour kept the city fed for another few days, but that problem
was quickly replaced by another, more urgent dilemma, one that even
outweighed the threat of imminent starvation. To make matters worse, it
was an enemy Damin had no idea how to fight: garbage.
Normally, an army of slaves was employed to remove the refuse of the
city and dump it outside in a vast old quarry several leagues away that
had been disused for decades. But the garbage wagons were full and
there was nowhere to go. Damin refused to let them dump it in the
harbour and had ordered the rubbish burned instead. That would have
worked if the refuse was dry, but in the humidity of Greenharbour,
nothing ever dried completely and the burning could not keep pace. So
the garbage piled higher in the streets and ten days after the siege
began, Kalan came to him with the first reports of disease spreading
through the poorer quarters of the city.
He ordered the affected areas quarantined, but it only served to
slow the spread of the disease, not stop it. The Harshini, who were
naturally immune to human ailments, worked tirelessly healing the sick,
but there were only three of them - not enough to keep pace
with the
plague. Sorcerers from the Collective worked beside them until they
either dropped from exhaustion or succumbed to disease themselves. He
had seen Kalan only twice since the outbreak, and both times she had
been haggard with fatigue.
He'd had a blazing row with Adrina when she decided that she should
go out and help, claiming it would enhance his position as High Prince
no end if his wife were seen to be caring for the sick. Her pregnancy
was just beginning to show and even if he hadn't been terrified at the
thought of her catching something, he was not going to let her endanger
their unborn child. She had reluctantly given in, and only then when he
reminded her of the danger to their baby. The atmosphere had not been
pleasant since. Adrina was like a caged leopard, prowling around the
palace, feeling useless and frustrated. But he did not resent her mood
- he felt exactly the same way.
On the fifteenth day of the siege, Cyrus sent a
message under a flag of truce. The messenger was let in through the
postern gate, and proved to be Serrin Eaglespike, the Warlord of
Dregian's younger brother. He was escorted to the palace followed by
the curious stares of a population weary of the siege and hopeful that
the young lord's presence heralded the end of their ordeal.
"My brother offers leniency, my Lords," Serrin informed them
as he
stood before Damin, Narvell, Rogan, Tejay, Toren, Adrina and Princess
Marla in the main hall. He handed Damin a parchment sealed with the
Eaglespike crest - Cyrus' formal terms for surrender. Damin
didn't even
bother to open it.
"In return for what?" Rogan demanded.
"Lord Wolfblade must surrender the city, abdicate the throne, and
agree to exile in the country of his choice. You, my Lords," he
added,
addressing the other Warlords, "may retain your provinces, provided you
agree to swear allegiance to Lord Eaglespike immediately."
"Cyrus must think we're bored," Tejay remarked. "He
obviously sent
Serrin here for a bit of light entertainment."
"This is not a jest, my Lady."
"It is from where I'm standing," Tejay laughed. "Send him
back to
his big brother, Damin. Preferably a piece at a time."
"Tempting though the idea is, Lady Lionsclaw, he's here under a flag
of truce," Damin reminded her. "If you want to cut him into
little
pieces, you'll just have to wait until he comes over the wall."
Serrin glared at them in disbelief. "Don't any of you take this
seriously? You are surrounded and starving and yet you make jokes! You
cannot hope to hold out for much longer."
"What we hope for is not your concern," Damin told the young
man.
"And that is your answer to our terms?"
"This is your answer." Damin tore the unread document to
shreds and
threw the scraps at Serrin. "Go back and tell your treacherous brother
and his allies that we do not deal with traitors. Instead of wasting
his time figuring out the terms of my surrender, he'd be more gainfully
employed putting his own affairs in order. I hear that's the wisest
thing to do when one knows that their death is imminent."
"You will regret this, Wolfblade," Serrin warned.
"Not nearly as much as Cyrus will," Damin predicted.
The following day, the bombardment began.
Greenharbour's walls were more decorative than
defensive, and the only thing that had kept the enemy at bay thus far
was Cyrus' willingness to wait. Once the war engines were rolled into
place, however, Damin knew it was simply a matter of time before the
walls were breached and the armies of Dregian and Greenharbour poured
into the city.
But Cyrus did not attack the walls immediately. The boulders and
burning pitch he lobbed into the city landed at random, killing any
soul unfortunate enough to be in their destructive path. At first,
Damin thought they were merely testing their range, but after two days
he realised it was a deliberate attempt to further demoralise the
people. The bombardment went on relentlessly, day and night, and the
death toll mounted.
They had their own catapults mounted on the walls, but they were
much smaller than the weapons Cyrus could bring to bear, and he kept
his forces well clear of their range. By the end of the second day
under the gruelling attack, the gates were stormed - not by
Cyrus, but
by a riotous mob desperate to flee a city that was rapidly becoming a
death trap. The Raiders were forced to beat back their own people. A
dozen or more died in the fracas; some trampled, others killed by the
Raiders defending the gates from the mob. Damin ordered a curfew and
threatened execution for anyone caught out on the streets without good
cause.
It was later that night that he returned to his rooms, hoping to
snatch a few hours' sleep before dawn and the next crop of crises
emerged. Adrina was asleep when he arrived, and he stood in the moonlit
chamber watching her through the flimsy curtain draped over the bed
against insects. He'd not seen much of her lately and was a little
surprised at how much he missed her. Pregnancy agreed with her, he
thought. It was as if the budding life inside her had imbued her with
some indefinable inner peace. She had always been beautiful, but now
she was stunning. With a faint smile, he thought of the constant stream
of potential brides that Marla had paraded before him over the years,
glad now that he had held out for something truly worth fighting for.
Although he had made no sound, some instinct of self-preservation
must have warned Adrina that she was not alone. Her eyes opened and she
started a little, only relaxing when she realised who it was that stood
in the doorway.
"I didn't mean to wake you."
"I wasn't really asleep," she replied, stretching languidly.
"What
time is it?"
"Late. Very late."
"Then you should get some sleep. We'll still be under siege come
morning."
"I knew I could rely on you to cheer me up."
She pulled back the curtain so she could see him more clearly. "You
look tired."
"Really? I only feel exhausted."
"Was it that bad today?"
He nodded wearily as he crossed the room and sat on the edge of the
bed. Part of him wondered if it was worth taking his boots off. In a
few hours the sun would be up and he'd only have to put them on again.
Another part of him was trying not to recall the trampled bodies he had
seen at the gate.
"I'm beginning to wonder if I should have accepted Cyrus'
offer."
"Surrender? Damin, you can't mean that!"
"I could save a lot of lives."
"You'd be ending ours."
"Cyrus offered us exile."
"And you believe him?"
He saw the look of fierce determination in her eyes and smiled
wearily. "No, I don't believe him. And don't worry, I haven't given up
yet."
"And if you do, it won't be Cyrus you have to fear," she
declared. "I'll run you through myself!"
He didn't doubt that she meant it. With a yawn he lay down beside
her, fully clothed, as she moved across the bed to make room for him.
As soon as his head hit the pillow, he felt fatigue wash over him. He
closed his eyes with relief.
"Damin, if you're coming to bed, you could at least take your boots
off."
"I haven't got time to sleep," he murmured. "I'm just going
to rest
my eyes for a moment."
She moved into the circle of his arms and laid her head on his
chest. He could smell the fresh scent of her hair and feel the slight
bulge of her belly against his hip.
It was the last thing he remembered until Almodavar burst into the
bedchamber next morning to inform him that Cyrus was breaking down the
walls.
CHAPTER 33
Cracks appeared with the first hits. The walls were
made of fragile chalkstone and had never been designed to withstand a
serious attack. When Damin heard the news, he rode out to see the
damage for himself. He was no engineer, but even he could tell that
they would not last long.
"Call up the Collective Guards," he ordered Almodavar. "Have
them
reinforce the troops on the walls."
"You want me to take them off riot duty?"
"Riots are going to be the least of our problems shortly,"
he said,
as the crash of a boulder striking the wall made their horses rear in
fright. The crack he had been examining widened alarmingly. A few more
direct hits and it would be large enough for a man to walk through.
He turned his horse and cantered back through the streets to the
palace, distressed by the devastation the bombardment had caused. There
were blackened buildings everywhere he looked; others had crumpled
under the weight of the boulders dropped from the sky. He avoided
looking at the people. It was too hard to confront the fear in their
eyes, the agony of their grief. Cursing himself for a fool, he wondered
if he should have attacked sooner - tried to break out of the
city and
take the battle to Cyrus on open ground, where he at least would have
had some freedom of movement.
He should never have put so much faith in R'shiel.
Another boom sounded, and his horse reared again, but this was a
different sound to the solid cracking of stone against stone. The noise
came again and he looked at Almodavar with a puzzled expression.
"That didn't come from the walls."
"It sounded as if it came from the harbour."
Another boom rolled over them as Damin spurred his horse forward.
The sounds became more frequent, like a constant wave of thunder. As he
neared the palace, the faint smell of smoke was drifting on the still
air. But it wasn't ordinary smoke. It had a flavour he did not
recognise. He flew from the saddle and ran up the steps into the palace
and through the main hall to the balcony overlooking the harbour,
gripping the balustrade in astonishment.
The sight that greeted him left him speechless. Three of the ships
that had been blocking the harbour entrance were in flames. Behind them
were a dozen or more warships. Fardohnyan warships. The booming
sounded again as flames shot out from the nearest ship, and another of
the blockaders fell victim to the Fardohnyan cannon. The ship in the
lead headed for the gap in the sinking blockade line and sailed
majestically through, her oars dipping and rising in a flawless rhythm.
"The Fardohnyans," Almodavar remarked unnecessarily.
"They believe in cutting things a bit fine," Damin agreed,
finally
finding his voice. The relief he felt was so intense he felt faint with
it. "Where's Adrina?"
"I'm here, Damin," she said, stepping out onto the balcony.
She was
smiling fondly as she pointed to the ship in the lead. "That's the Wave
Warrior."
"Your father's flagship?"
"R'shiel has outdone herself."
"Does that mean Hablet has come?" Almodavar asked.
"Gods, I hope not," Adrina muttered, stepping up to the
balustrade. "Do you have a looking glass?"
Almodavar produced one from a pouch on his belt and handed it to
her. She placed the tube to her eye and trained it on the ship. Then
she laughed and lowered the glass.
"What?" Damin asked impatiently. "Is it your father?"
"No. It's better than that. He's sent my half-brother,
Gaffen."
Damin refrained from telling her how relieved he was that he would
not have to confront her father. They watched the ship sail forward,
heading for the dock below the palace. As it neared the wharf the oars
banked sharply, turning the ship into the dock.
"Come on. Let's go and greet our new allies. We've about an hour
before Cyrus breaks through the walls."
"That'll make Gaffen happy. He'd be dreadfully disappointed to come
all this way and not have someone to fight."
* * *
By the time they reached the dock, the ship was
secured and a long gangplank was being shoved out from the tall deck of
the Fardohnyan warship. The first man off the ship was a tall, blond
fellow who strode purposefully up the dock and swept Adrina up in a
massive bear hug. She squealed as her feet left the ground. He put her
down then held her at arm's length for a moment.
"You're getting fat," was the first thing he said.
"I'm having a baby, Gaffen. I'm allowed to get fat."
Gaffen looked startled at the news. He turned to Damin and eyed him
up and down. "You'd be Wolfblade, I'm guessing. Where's the
fight?"
"You guessed correctly. And the fight is just about to start, my
Lord. They are breaking down the walls as we speak."
"Then what are we standing around here for?" The Fardohnyan
spun on
his heel and marched back towards his ship, yelling orders for his
troops to disembark as he went. Damin turned to Adrina, looking rather
bemused.
She smiled. "Don't worry. He likes you."
"How can you tell?"
"He didn't try to kill you. That's always a good start with
Gaffen."
Before he could answer, a messenger came running down the dock
towards them, calling for him. The man skidded to a halt and bowed
hastily before delivering his news.
"Lady Lionsclaw said to tell you they've broken through, Your
Highness."
"Where?"
"On the north wall. Near the weaving district."
"Tell her I said to hold on. I'll be there with reinforcements
shortly."
The courier glanced at the Fardohnyans pouring off the Wave
Warrior and saluted sharply, suddenly grinning from ear to ear. He
ran back the way he came, whooping with delight.
"Seems your brother's arrival has somebody happy today,"
Damin
murmured as he watched the young man's departure. Then he turned to
Adrina. "I want you to go back to the palace and stay there."
"Yes, dear."
"I mean it, Adrina. You're not to stick your nose outside the palace
until this is over. With your brother's troops, we could have Cyrus on
the run soon enough, but I don't intend to spend the next few hours
worrying about what you're getting up to."
"Don't pussyfoot around, man!" Gaffen declared, coming up
behind
them. "Tell her to stay put, or you'll beat her senseless. It's the
only thing that works with Adrina."
"Gaffen, shut up!"
He grinned at his sister then turned to Damin. "Come on, Wolfblade!
Let's go slaughter your enemies. Adrina, get back to the palace now, or
I'll throw you over my shoulder and carry you screaming all the way
back, and lock you up."
Adrina glared at her brother, but to Damin's astonishment she turned
and strode haughtily back towards the palace without another word.
Gaffen noticed Damin's expression and laughed.
"I can see you and I need to have a talk about Adrina when this
business is done with, Your Highness."
"If I had threatened her with that, she would have killed
me."
"Probably," Gaffen agreed cheerfully. "Can you organise
someone to
get the rest of my ships docked? I've a feeling we'll need every man
before the day is out."
"How many did you bring?" he asked.
"Three thousand. Do you think that will be enough?"
He'd been hoping for twice that many. Cyrus had ten thousand men
outside the walls. Between Gaffen's reinforcements and the troops he
had in the city they were still outnumbered, but at least the odds were
a little better
"It's going to have to be enough," Damin said, trying not to
sound
disappointed.
The breach in the wall near the weaving district
was contained easily enough, but it was followed by more reports of
breaks in the walls from all over the city. By mid-morning, Cyrus had
broken through and Damin gave up trying to plug the gaps. He pulled his
troops back from the walls and the battle for Greenharbour was well and
truly under way.
They fought for the city, street by street, falling back when they
had to, surging forward to repel the invaders when they could, but
slowly, a street at the time, they were pushed back towards the
harbour. The Fardohnyan forces were still not completely disembarked.
There simply weren't enough berths to get them all ashore quickly
enough.
Gaffen ranted at his commanders to unload the troops faster, but
there was little he could do to speed up the process. All they could do
was hold out as long as possible, throwing Gaffen's fresh troops into
the fray wherever the lines weakened. But they were coming off the
ships at irregular intervals. A few of the Fardohnyans had gone
charging into the battle without waiting for orders, bolstering lines
that didn't need them, while Cyrus' men broke through in other places
that were desperate for reinforcements. Another troop had ploughed into
the fray and accidentally turned on Rogan Bearbow's men, not realising
that they were not the enemy.
By mid-afternoon, Damin was seriously considering evacuating the
palace. Cyrus had pushed so far into the city he was almost ready to
admit they were losing the battle. Gaffen's troops were disembarked,
but they were too little, too late. If he'd had them earlier, before
Cyrus first breached the walls, he might have had a chance. As it was,
they only filled the gaps. He didn't have the men to take the battle to
Cyrus.
Rubbing his temples wearily, he glanced across the room at Adrina's
brother, who wore a look of wounded pride as much as anything. Gaffen
wasn't used to defeat.
"Perhaps if we turn my ships broadside to the city, we could turn
the cannon on them," he suggested hopefully.
Damin shook his head. "You'll kill as many of our people as you will
theirs."
"Then we fire the city."
Damin nodded reluctantly. He had been hoping to avoid it, despite
the fact that he'd had Almodavar quietly distributing barrels of pitch
throughout the city for days prior to the battle. Setting fire to
Greenharbour would stop Cyrus surely enough, but it was likely to
destroy much of the city in the process.
"I was hoping to use that as a last resort."
"Aye," Gaffen agreed heavily. "But that moment is
approaching
rapidly."
The battle continued without pause as the day wore
on. The reports kept coming in, each progressively worse than the last.
The sun was resting on the horizon when Damin's stomach rumbled, and he
realised the day was almost over. He'd been too busy directing the
fighting to eat. Damin hated combat like this. He was a warrior at
heart, not a tactician. He would much rather be in the thick of battle,
not directing others to do his fighting for him. Tarja was good at that
sort of thing. Damin spared his friend a thought for a moment,
wondering what had become of him. Was he waiting in Krakandar for aid
that would never come? Or had he done something stupid and got himself
killed by the Kariens?
Damin doubted he would ever learn the truth. Cyrus was all but
knocking on the doors of the palace. It was little more than three
hours after Gaffen suggested it that he was forced to concede that they
had no other option but to fire the city in the hope of driving the
enemy off.
"Gaffen, I want you to take Adrina and whoever else you can find in
the palace and get them out of here."
The Fardohnyan looked at him for a moment and then nodded in
understanding. "And what of you, Your Highness?"
"I can't order anybody else to do this. If Greenharbour burns, then
it will be by my hand."
Gaffen hesitated for a moment, then called in one of his captains
and began giving the orders to evacuate the palace. When he was done,
he snatched up his sword from the table where he had been using it to
hold down a map of the city.
"Let's go, then!"
"What are you doing?"
"You don't think I'm going to run away with the women and the
children, do you?"
"This isn't your fight any longer, Gaffen. I'm not going out to do
anything particularly heroic. I'm going to set fire to the
city."
"Well, someone has to watch your back. Besides, you're married to my
sister. That makes you family."
Damin took one look at the expression on Gaffen's face and decided
not to argue. In truth, he didn't mind the idea of the big Fardohnyan
watching his back for him. Gaffen was the sort of man who looked as if
he could stop an avalanche if he stood in front of it.
"Let's do it, then," Damin said, pushing away all thoughts
of the
consequences of what he was about to do. He strode from the command
post with an air of grim determination and ordered the horses brought
out. He didn't know how far he could get, but the further from the
harbour he set the fires, the more people might have a chance to escape.
The sounds of the battle could be clearly heard as he and Gaffen
rode out. The streets this close to the harbour were already clogged
with people fleeing the advancing horde. They pushed through the crowds
for several streets until they broke through into a reasonably deserted
street. The fighting had not yet reached this part of the city and it
looked oddly peaceful, like a calm oasis in the middle of a raging
sandstorm.
That's when he heard the trumpets.
"What was that?" Gaffen asked curiously, his head cocked at
the
unusual sound.
"I don't know."
The trumpets came again, drifting on the early evening breeze. Damin
listened with a feeling of total bewilderment until he recognised the
sound. He last heard it on the northern plains of Medalon and had
never, in his wildest imaginings, expected to hear it in Greenharbour.
"Well, I'll be damned."
He flew from his saddle and headed for the tallest building in
sight, which was a gracious, four-storey residence belonging to some
prosperous merchant. Gaffen followed him at a run. Damin kicked in the
door, ignoring the screams from the merchant and his family sheltering
within. He took the stairs two at a time with Gaffen on his heels, and
finally burst onto the roof. He ran to the northern edge of the
building and looked out over the devastated city.
The sound of the trumpets reached him again, clearly this time.
Panting beside him, Gaffen stared at the scene before him with a
puzzled look.
"What is that?"
Wordlessly, Damin pointed north, at the perfectly formed ranks of
red coats preparing to march on the city, too stunned and relieved to
speak.
There were two thousand of them at least.
Two thousand fresh, disciplined and well-trained Medalonian
Defenders.
CHAPTER 34
The battle for Greenharbour was ugly, but blessedly
short once the Defenders joined the fray. Cyrus' army broke and ran
just after sundown. Conin Falconlance and Serrin Eaglespike died during
the battle, but Cyrus survived and fled back to Dregian Province with
the remainder of his scattered forces to make a last stand.
Damin sent Narvell after him, with Gaffen and a force of
Fardohnyans. It wasn't that he thought Narvell needed the help so much
as his desire to separate Adrina's half-brother and Tejay Lionsclaw,
who would rather have perished in battle than accept help from her
despised enemies. She made no secret of her distrust of their new
allies, so Damin thought it prudent to put as much distance between
Gaffen and Tejay as possible until things calmed down a bit. Gaining
entrance to the castle by the same hidden passage that he, Adrina and
R'shiel had escaped through, Narvell and Gaffen took Dregian Keep with
barely a man lost in the fight.
Conveniently, Cyrus threw himself on his sword rather than face the
consequences of his actions. Damin was privately glad that he had. It
was always messy, following a civil war, to decide what to do with the
miscreants. If he had executed Cyrus, there would always be a small
core of resentment among the people that could be fanned into life in
the future. If he left him alive, he left him free to plan further
mischief. It was better this way. Cyrus' widow and three-year-old son
were back in Greenharbour as prisoners, but Damin was inclined to be
generous towards them. It was hardly their fault that Cyrus had let his
ambitions run away with him, and anyway, he doubted he could bring
himself to order the execution of a child, no matter how sound the
logic behind the decision.
There were other issues to be resolved, too. Dregian, Greenharbour
and Krakandar now needed Warlords, and everyone from Tejay Lionsclaw to
the palace gardeners had an opinion on who should be awarded the
positions. Although there were numerous candidates among the nobility,
it was not uncommon for a Warlord to be appointed from the lower
classes. Talent still counted more than bloodlines in Hythria, and
Damin was seriously considering looking further afield for the new
Warlords. He'd had enough of bored noblemen with delusions of grandeur.
A few young bucks who were more interested in holding onto their own
provinces than eyeing off his throne would let him rest much easier at
night.
Then there was the problem of the Defenders.
Tarja was not with his men, which worried Damin a great deal. Denjon
had told him what Tarja had planned to do, but the fact that he had not
returned from his mission to sink the ferries on the Glass River was a
bad sign. Damin felt he owed the Defenders an enormous debt. With Tarja
missing, and with an administrative and political nightmare ahead of
him, he was tempted to drop everything, gather up his forces, head for
Medalon and leave Adrina to sort out the details here at home. He
smiled grimly at the idea. Trusting Adrina was still very new to him.
He could not bring himself to tempt fate by handing her that much power.
It was five days since the battle and his hope that things would
improve had proved optimistic in the extreme. Although gradually being
brought under control, disease still raged throughout the city. There
were thousands of homeless, as many wounded, and another five thousand
Fardohnyans and Medalonians to feed.
Cyrus had stripped the countryside of what food there was close to
the city. Damin had a vast number of his men out scouring the land for
grain to tide them over until supplies could be brought in from the
outlying provinces. The fishing fleet had put to sea again, which
prevented the situation from becoming desperate, but he was so heartily
sick of fish for every meal, that he was certain he would never be able
to face it again once this crisis was over.
The door to his study suddenly flew open and slammed against the
wall. Adrina stormed into the room. The candles wavered in the breeze
caused by her anger. She was shaking with fury.
"Do you know what she's done?"
"Tell me who 'she' is, and I might be able to answer
you," he
replied calmly. Adrina's tantrum was a welcome distraction.
"R'shiel!"
"She sent your brother and three thousand men to save our
necks?" he
suggested.
Adrina actually stamped her foot at him. He fought very hard not to
smile.
"Don't be so bloody obtuse, Damin! She promised Hablet a
son!"
"I know. Gaffen told me."
"You knew about this? Why didn't you tell me?"
"I have been rather busy lately."
"Then what are you doing about it?"
"Nothing."
"You can't do nothing! She has just cost you the throne of
Fardohnya!"
"Well, as I never actually wanted the damned thing in the first
place, it hardly seems worth getting upset over the fact that I've lost
it."
"How could you not want it?" she asked, genuinely puzzled by
his
lack of ambition.
"Not everybody shares your desire to wear a crown, Adrina,"
he told
her. "Anyway, you were furious at me for being the heir to the throne.
Now you're angry because I'm not. Make up your mind."
She glared at him for a moment then flopped inelegantly into the
chair on the other side of the desk. "I'm in no mood to be reasonable,
Damin. Fight with me."
"I will," he promised, "when the occasion warrants it. But
in this
case, it's not worth it. I've got my hands full holding onto to
Hythria. I don't need your father's kingdom as well. The whole idea of
splitting Fardohnya and Hythria in the first place was because they
were impossible to govern as one nation."
"We could have done it," she grumbled.
"We? Ah, so that's what this is all about. If I don't become
the King of Fardohnya, you don't get to be Queen. I'm sorry, but you'll
just have to settle for being the High Princess of Hythria."
She smiled faintly, as if she understood how childishly she was
behaving. "You have no idea how good it would have felt to return to
Fardohnya as her Queen. My father sold me like a side of beef to the
Kariens because that's all I was worth to him. And for no better reason
than I was born a girl. It didn't matter how clever, or well educated,
or politically astute I was."
"Personally, I think your political acumen had a lot to do with
it,"
he suggested. "You are far too clever for a disinherited Princess. If I
was in your father's position, I'd have shipped you off to a temple
somewhere when you were five."
"I think he wishes he had," she agreed. "But there's more to
this
than me losing my chance to revenge myself on my father, Damin. Do you
know what's going to happen once this child is born?"
He shrugged. "You mean other than a very big party?"
"Once my father has an heir, he will remove any threat to the
child's claim on the throne."
"But there are no other claimants to the throne."
"I have thirteen living baseborn brothers, Damin. Hablet was quite
prepared to legitimise one of them if he couldn't get a son. Each of
them is a potential threat."
Damin looked at her aghast. "Are you telling me he'll kill his own
children?"
"He'll kill them and not lose a moment's sleep over it. This may be
hard for you to understand - Hablet loves every one of his
bastards -
but they know as well as he does what fate will befall them should he
produce a legitimate heir."
"You're right. I don't understand."
"It's tradition. When Hablet was born, his father had seventeen
baseborn children and his three unmarried daughters put to death. When my
father took the throne, every pregnant concubine and court'esa
in the harem was executed. His own sister committed suicide as proof of
her love for him. She was hailed as a heroine."
"And you call me a barbarian."
She shrugged, helpless to make him understand. "It's the Fardohnyan
way."
"Then I'm glad I won't ever have to sit on a throne that is soaked
in so much innocent blood."
"Don't you see the irony? You would never have countenanced such
slaughter. I think that irks me more than anything else does. We could
have put an end to that dreadful custom." She rose to her feet
and
smiled at him sadly. "I'm sorry to burden you with this, now. I know
you have a lot to do. Is Gaffen back yet?"
Damin nodded. "He arrived back with Narvell this morning."
"Then I'll go find him and leave you in peace. As soon as I've
slapped him around a few times for being such a pig to me when he
arrived, I shall endeavour to make the most of what little time we have
left together."
Adrina walked to the door, leaving Damin staring at her back. It
wasn't learning of the fate awaiting her siblings that disturbed him as
much as her quiet acceptance of its inevitability.
"Adrina, wait!"
She turned and looked at him questioningly.
"If you can't be Queen, would you settle for Regent?"
"Regent of Fardohnya? How?"
"Your father's how old? Sixty? Sixty-five?" he asked,
suddenly
excited as the idea formed in his mind. "He'll live another ten years,
perhaps, less if we're lucky. His son won't be old enough to take the
throne when he dies."
"He would never appoint me Regent."
"He will if we make him an offer he can't refuse."
"Like what?" she asked suspiciously.
"I'll renounce the Wolfblade claim on the Fardohnyan throne. I'll
remove forever the threat of Fardohnya having a Hythrun King."
She nodded thoughtfully. "And in return, he appoints me Regent? You
know, that may actually work. But what of your plans for unity between
Fardohnya and Hythria?"
"That will be up to you. This child will be as much your brother as
Gaffen is. If you manage to get along with him half as well as you do
with your bastard siblings, there'll be no danger of war between us.
For that matter, he'll only be a few months younger than our child. If
we're smart about this, they'll grow up the best of friends."
"And you'd do this? You'd renounce a throne for me?" She
appeared to
be putting a rather romantic slant on something he considered a coldly
rational and practical course of action. But he didn't correct her.
"Yes. I'd renounce a throne for you, Adrina."
With a sob, she ran to him, threw her arms around his neck and
buried her head in his shoulder. He could feel the slight swell of her
belly pressing against him.
"Gods, you're not crying, are you?"
Adrina sniffed and looked up at him with glistening eyes.
"No."
He gently wiped a tear from her cheek. "If I'd known this was going
to reduce you to tears, I wouldn't have suggested it."
"Nobody ever loved me enough to renounce a throne for me,
Damin."
"That probably has more to do with lack of opportunity, rather than
you being unloved," he told her with a smile.
"Can't you be serious? Even when I'm trying to be nice to
you?"
"I'm sorry. You bring out the worst in me."
She kissed him then leaned back in his arms with a sigh. "I don't
like admitting it, but I suppose I must feel something for you, Damin
Wolfblade."
"Well, I won't tell if you don't," Damin promised with a
smile.
PART 3
HOMECOMING
CHAPTER 35
The high plains of Medalon were a riot of colour,
caught in the burgeoning grip of spring. R'shiel reined in her horse
and studied the scattered clouds that dotted the pale blue sky.
Wildflowers carpeted the plains, and the day was so mild she had shed
her cloak some leagues back. As the tall white towers of the Citadel
appeared in the distance an odd feeling came over her and she found
herself strangely reluctant to go on.
"What's the matter?"
She shrugged and leaned forward to pat the neck of her gelding. He
was a sturdy, deep-chested grey they had purchased in Vanahiem. R'shiel
missed the magnificent speed and stamina of the Hythrun horses she had
grown accustomed to riding, but he had been a reliable mount, if more
stolid than spirited.
"I'm scared, I think," she admitted, thoughtfully. "I wasn't
expecting that."
"You're only half-Harshini, R'shiel," Brak reminded her.
"You'll
find your human emotions have a nasty habit of jumping out and biting
you at the most inopportune moments. What were you expecting to
feel?"
"I'm not sure. Some overpowering sense of righteousness, I
suppose."
Brak laughed sourly. "You have a lot to learn, demon child."
"I wish you'd stop calling me that. You know how much I hate
it."
"I thought you were growing quite enamoured of the title. You
certainly threw it around enough in Fardohnya."
"In Fardohnya I wasn't likely to be hanged for it."
He nodded silently. They both knew the risk they ran by returning so
openly to Medalon. In fact, even more than the mediocrity of their
mounts, it was the need to travel through Medalon by conventional means
that had taken them so long to reach their destination. Had they been
willing to risk using their power, R'shiel and Brak could have been at
the Citadel weeks ago, but they were too deep into Karien-occupied
territory to tempt fate by openly using demons.
Hablet had provided them with a ship, which had delivered them to
Bordertown. Then they had taken passage on a river boat as far as
Vanahiem. With news that the Testa ferry had been destroyed and the
river boat captains understandably nervous about approaching the
Citadel, it proved quicker and easier to complete their journey on
horseback.
R'shiel turned in her saddle at the sound of other horses
approaching. Brak followed her gaze and muttered a curse. The road they
travelled from Brodenvale was almost deserted this late in the
afternoon. Earlier, it had been crowded with refugees fleeing the
Citadel and the occasional Karien patrol.
"We'd best get off the road."
"Founders! They're everywhere!"
Brak urged his horse into the long grass on the shoulder of the
road. R'shiel followed him as the approaching patrol drew closer. She
gripped the reins until her knuckles turned white as she watched them.
The troop of Kariens passed by without sparing them a glance, pennons
snapping from the tips of their lances, the armoured knights claiming
the road with the arrogant assurance of conquerors who have nothing to
fear from their vanquished foes. It was the third Karien troop they had
seen in the last few hours. Southern Medalon was still relatively free
of them, but the closer they got to the Citadel the more they saw.
"There are no priests with them."
"They'll be at the Citadel. Mathen probably doesn't want to scare
the population into thinking they're going to be forced to worship the
Overlord," Brak speculated.
"But isn't that exactly what they're planning?"
"Undoubtedly, but Squire Mathen is too smart to do it
openly."
"Squire Mathen?"
"Don't you remember him? Terbolt left him in charge of the
Citadel."
"I don't remember much of anything from the last time I was at the
Citadel," she admitted with a frown. "Except Loclon."
"Mathen's not a nobleman," Brak told her as the Kariens
moved slowly
past them. Behind the knights trundled several wagons carrying loot
from some outlying village that had been the victim of their foray out
of the Citadel. "That in itself is a bit odd for the Kariens. But he
appears to be a very astute politician."
"I think I'd prefer a good old fashioned noble-born moron,"
she
said, noticing the grain-filled wagons, but she decided against saying
or doing anything that would bring them to the attention of the
knights. She had learnt that much restraint over the past few months.
"One has to work with what one is given, I'm afraid. Still, we won't
have to worry about him too much."
"Why not?"
"As I said, Mathen's not a nobleman. Terbolt placed him in charge,
but I can't see Lord Roache and his ilk tolerating a commoner calling
the shots for very long, and unless he's advocating mass conversion,
the priesthood won't like him much either. They have no care for
Medalonian sensibilities."
The last of the wagons rumbled by. They waited until the Kariens
were some way up the road before they urged their horses back onto the
road and followed them at a walk.
"Speaking of the priests," Brak added. "You remember what I
told
you?"
"About them being able to detect us if we call on our power? Yes,
Brak, I remember."
"I mean it, R'shiel," he warned. "Don't underestimate
them."
"I dealt with those priests in the Defenders' camp."
"You faced three of them and caught them by surprise," he
reminded
her. "Once we get to the Citadel, there will be scores of them, and
they know the demon child is abroad. I wouldn't be surprised if they
have a Watching Coven posted, just waiting for you to slip up."
"What's a Watching Coven?"
"A group of priests who link through their staves, sometimes up to
twenty or thirty of them. A Coven's power could give either of us a run
for our money."
"How can they be so strong? They don't have access to Harshini
power."
"No, they have access to a god who doesn't mind bending the
rules."
"The gods!" she muttered in annoyance. "It always comes back
to
them, doesn't it?"
"In the end, yes."
She smiled grimly. "Don't worry, Brak. I'll watch myself. Squire
Mathen isn't the only one who can get what he wants by subtle
means."
"Oh? You have a plan then?" There was an edge of scepticism
in his
voice that she didn't much care for.
"I'm going to take a leaf out of your book, actually. I'm going to
go straight to the best source of intelligence in Medalon."
"Garet Warner?" he asked with amusement. "I thought the
first thing
you'd want to do when you saw him again would be to run a blade through
him."
"No. Garet helped me as much as he could, I think. I'm not going to
kill him. Unless he doesn't want to help us."
Brak didn't answer her and she could not tell if he approved or
condemned her intentions.
* * *
They reached the Citadel just on sundown, halting
on the slight rise in the road to stare at the scene before them in
horrified awe. A blanket of humanity covered the plains surrounding the
Citadel: the Karien army camped about the fortress of their newest
subject nation. R'shiel could not begin to guess their number, but as
far as she could see, the grasslands were thick with tents and men and
the panoply of war. Both sides of the shallow Saran River were crowded
with them. The bridges curved gracefully out of the plain, the only
part of it not swarming with the enemy. A pall of smoke from the
countless cooking fires lay over the whole scene, touched with ruddy
light by the dying sun, making it look like a painting of some
nightmarish vision of a pagan hell.
"Founders!" she swore softly. "I didn't think there'd be so
many of
them."
"Having second thoughts?"
She glanced at him, then smiled. "No. I figure between you and me,
we have them outnumbered, Brak."
He returned her smile briefly. "I think I preferred it when you were
scared."
They urged their horses on and rode down through the Karien host
that was camped right up to the edge of the road. For the most part,
the soldiers ignored them, too engrossed in their own business to care
about two unarmed travellers on the main thoroughfare into the Citadel.
She avoided meeting their eyes while despair threatened to overwhelm
her.
As they crossed the bridge over the Saran River she looked up at the
high white walls. Bile rose in her throat. There was a head, or the
remains of one, mounted on a pike over the gateway. It had been there
for some time. The eyes were empty sockets picked clean by the ravens
and the skin of its face hung in strips of desiccated flesh. The hair,
or what was left of it, was grey and straggling, but long enough to
identify the hapless skull as once having been a woman. With sickening
dread, R'shiel wondered who it had been, afraid that she knew. Unless
the Kariens had murdered Joyhinia, there was only one woman in Medalon
likely to incur such wrath and she had never deserved such a fate.
"Brak," she said softly.
He followed the direction of her gaze then shook his head sadly.
"Gods!"
"I think it's Mahina."
He studied it more closely then shrugged. "There's no way to tell,
R'shiel."
"Loclon is going to die very, very slowly," she said with
frightening intensity.
R'shiel had feared the Defenders on the gate might
recognise her, but she need not have worried. There were no Defenders
guarding the Citadel. There was, however, a large contingent of Kariens
and they were interrogating anybody seeking entrance to the city.
"Let me handle this," Brak said.
"What are you going to do?" she asked suspiciously.
"Cause a fuss," he told her as he kicked his horse forward.
"Hey
you! Do you speak Medalonian?"
R'shiel cringed as he called out to the guards, wondering what in
the name of the Founders he was up to. This was hardly her idea of
sneaking into the Citadel.
"Halt!" a Karien trooper called out in Medalonian -
probably the
only word he knew.
"Halt yourself!" Brak retorted. "I demand to see whoever is
in
charge!"
The guard looked at him blankly.
"Where is your superior, young man? I demand to see him at
once!"
"Halt!" the guard repeated.
"What's the problem?" The man who spoke was a Defender. He
emerged
from the gatehouse with another Karien, this one wearing knight's
armour. He was very young, just out of the Cadets, R'shiel guessed. She
did not recognise him and that hopefully meant he would not recognise
her.
"Ah! Someone who understands me!" Brak declared. "Young man,
I
demand to be taken to whoever is in charge of this . . .
invasion, or whatever you call it, at once!"
The Defender translated Brak's words for the benefit of the Kariens,
which explained his posting on the gate. His Karien was quite fluent
but he wore a sullen expression. She could imagine how this duty must
irk him. The Karien knight said something to the Defender, who then
turned back to Brak.
"Why do you want to see Lord Roache?"
"Lord Roache? Is that who's in charge?"
"Yes."
"What happened to the First Sister?"
"The First Sister is assisting Lord Roache and Squire
Mathen," the young Defender informed him in a voice loaded with
scorn.
"Well then, I wish to see this Lord Roache, young man, to lodge a
formal complaint against the behaviour of these . . . these
. . . hooligans who have invaded our country. Do you know
what they've done? Do you?"
"I can guess," the Defender muttered. "What have they
done?"
"What have they done? My shop is in ruins! My wife and I are
homeless! My servants have all fled in fear and I am on the verge of
destitution! I intend to see this Karien fellow and demand
compensation."
The Defender appeared genuinely amused at the idea. "Good luck, my
friend, but I don't like your chances."
"Well!" Brak declared indignantly. "We shall have to see
about that!
Come, Gerterina! Let us go find this Lord Roache person and set him
straight on a few things!"
Brak urged his horse through the gate, with R'shiel following close
behind. The Defender and the Kariens stood back to let them pass. As
the young man explained what they were doing in the Citadel the Kariens
roared with laughter, which followed them down the street.
"Gerterina?"
He shrugged apologetically. "It was all I could think of."
"And that was your plan? Make such a fuss at the gate that
they'll never forget us?"
"Sometimes it's easier to hide out in the open, R'shiel. People
trying to sneak into the Citadel don't start by demanding to see
whoever is in charge. We were barely questioned and they didn't even
look at you twice."
She had to admit he was right. "Brak, why is it that when you do
things like that, you're being clever, but when I do them, I'm being
reckless?"
"Because I'm older than you. A lot older."
"Well, Old One, what are we going to do now?"
They rode at a walk down the cobbled main road that led past the
Great Hall to the amphitheatre. The tension in the air was almost solid
enough to touch. R'shiel realised that the awful spectre nailed over
the main gate was more than just a gloating gesture of barbaric
triumph. It was a warning, and one the citizens of the Citadel appeared
to have taken to heart. The streets appeared almost as deserted as
Greenharbour had been, when she arrived with Damin.
"We need to find an inn and a meal and perhaps some company for the
evening."
"Company?"
"We need to find out what's happening here. The next best source of
information in any city, after the assassins and the thieves, are the
prostitutes."
"That's the best excuse I've heard for a long time," she
said with a
scowl.
"We all have our own methods, R'shiel."
"Funny how all your methods involve consorting with
criminals."
He glanced at her and then smiled. "Considering you are probably the
most wanted criminal in all of Karien and Medalon, I find your attitude
rather strange."
She ignored the jibe. "I still think Garet is the better
option."
"And I agree, but I want to know that when we confront him he's
telling us the truth, not what he thinks we want to hear."
"You're not a very trusting person, are you?"
"I don't happen to like the idea of having my head decorating the
main gate next to poor old Mahina's. If you plan to live long enough to
fulfil your destiny, R'shiel, you would be wise to adopt the same
outlook."
After that they rode without speaking through streets that were
slowly darkening with the coming night. Squares of yellow light
appeared in the windows of the houses that lined the streets, but the
silence was heavy and R'shiel could not feel the welcoming touch of the
Citadel as she had when she arrived the last time.
It was as if the massive spirit of the Citadel had shrivelled and
died - or perhaps he had simply retreated into hiding in the
face of
the Karien blight that swarmed through him like flies over a dying
carcass.
CHAPTER 36
Garet Warner opened the door to the Lord Defender's
office and was greeted by a blast of warm air. Someone must have
thought to light the fire, he thought, although he was a little
surprised. With the Lord Defender in "protective confinement"
as the
Kariens euphemistically referred to his incarceration, Garet used the
office rarely, and he had told nobody of his intention to come here
this morning.
He pushed the door shut and glanced around, but other than the
blazing fire in the small hearth, the room was unchanged since his last
visit. The heavy carved desk took up a great deal of space, and the
comfortable chair behind it smelled faintly of the saddle soap used to
keep the leather supple. The array of Fardohnyan and Hythrun weapons
Jenga had collected over the years still hung over the mantle. The aura
of the man permeated the room. It was as if he had just stepped out a
moment ago and was due back any minute.
But perhaps it was not completely unchanged; the pile of unattended
paperwork had grown considerably. Garet groaned as he looked at it. He
had his own work to do. He did not need the added responsibility of the
Lord Defender's administrative tasks.
Most of the papers would be fairly straightforward. Requests for
transfers, for leave, for permission to marry, for a score of other
mundane, everyday matters that required the Lord Defender's approval.
But there would be the odd report that needed investigation,
disciplinary matters that could not be settled with a mere stroke of a
pen - most of them a direct result of the conflicts that arose
frequently between the Defenders and the Karien invaders.
There would be orders from the First Sister, too.
Garet was well aware that even though signed by Joyhinia Tenragan,
the orders were no more from her than they had been when she was on the
northern border, a babbling idiot who would sign anything put in front
of her. These orders came from Squire Mathen, and if he couched them in
a manner easily digestible to the Medalonians, they were no less the
orders of his Karien masters.
He moved towards the desk and then froze as the feeling he was no
longer alone in the room suddenly overwhelmed him.
"Garet."
He started and turned at the voice. R'shiel stood close behind him.
She looked much better than when he'd last seen her. He was glad to see
her hair had grown out a little and now framed her face in dark red
curls. But there was something else different about her: a confidence
that he had not seen before. He wondered how she had escaped the
Kariens, and why, having managed that remarkable feat, she had so
foolishly returned to the Citadel. Standing behind her, wearing an air
of lethal calm, was the Harshini half-breed, Brakandaran.
"R'shiel! Brak! How did the two of you . . . ? Never mind,
I'd rather not know."
He composed himself and walked around Lord Jenga's desk before he
looked at them again. They were wearing the close fitting and supple
Harshini leathers, which outlined their statuesque bodies, giving a
hint of the natural grace and athletic ability that was part of their
alien heritage.
"What are you doing here?"
"We have come to put things right," R'shiel told him.
"And how do you plan to do that?"
"With your help."
Her declaration did not surprise him. "I suppose you think I owe you
something, for not supporting you at the Gathering?"
"You don't owe me anything, Garet. But as you said when you slipped
me your knife, you can't help Medalon from a prison cell."
"I'm not in a prison cell."
"I used your knife to kill the Karien Crown Prince. I imagine a
prison cell will be the least of your worries if the Kariens learn
that."
Garet was too experienced to let his apprehension show. "You
killed the Karien Crown Prince? Founders, R'shiel, when you set out to
cause trouble, you don't mess about, do you?"
A small smile flickered over her lips. "Wait until you hear the rest
of it."
He shook his head. "Thanks, but I'd rather not
. . ."
"No!" she cut in. "That is not an option any longer, Garet.
You must
decide. You are with us or against us. There is no more sitting on the
fence."
Garet sank down into the Lord Defender's chair - more to
give
himself time to think than through any real need to take the weight off
his feet. He knew about R'shiel. Knew of her Harshini parentage and her
status as their long awaited demon child, but until this moment it had
never truly occurred to him that she might actually be as powerful as
the pagans believed.
"And if I choose not to follow you?" he asked, wondering how
determined she was.
"Then I will remove you from the equation."
"You'd kill me?"
"I killed a Karien Prince. You don't think a mere Defender is going
to cause me any grief?"
He placed his hands palm down on the desk and looked at her closely.
Her whole being radiated a kind of leashed power, straining to be set
free.
"So that's it? Join you or die?"
"Pretty much," she agreed with a shrug.
"You leave me little choice."
"Then your answer is yes?"
He nodded cautiously.
In two steps she was across the room. She slammed her hands down
over his on the desk and glared at him. "Then swear it!"
Garet opened his mouth to say what she wanted to hear, but the words
would not come. She was doing something to him, something that would
not permit him to lie. With a sudden and terrifying flash of clarity,
he knew that if he took this oath he would belong to her, body and
soul, until he died, and perhaps even after, if one believed the pagans.
"Swear it, Garet," she whispered. Her face was close to his,
her
eyes boring through him as though she could read every dark, unsavoury
secret he kept hidden in the furthermost recesses of his mind. She
wasn't using magic on him, her eyes had not turned black, but whatever
it was, he found her impossible to deny.
"I'm yours, R'shiel."
She studied him for a moment and then stood back. As soon as she
released him, Garet slumped back in his chair, light-headed. He closed
his eyes for a moment, hoping that when he opened them again, the room
would have stopped spinning.
"Sorry, Garet, but I had to be sure."
He looked up at her, wondering what he had done. It took a moment
for him to recover enough to speak.
"So, now what?"
"First, we have to stop the Kariens from hanging Tarja,"
Brak
remarked, as if it was no more trouble than squashing a flea.
"You know they're blaming him for killing Cratyn, don't you?"
"Well, they can hardly admit the demon child did it. When is his
trial?"
"Trial? What trial? The Kariens aren't big on the natural course of
justice, Brak. Tarja's scheduled to be hanged next Restday. In the
amphitheatre so everyone can come and watch."
"Then we have to put a stop to it," R'shiel declared.
"Where's
Jenga? Have they killed him too?"
"Not yet. Actually, they haven't interfered too much with the
Defenders. Most of their people don't speak a word of Medalonian so
they need us. There'd be a mutiny if they tried to kill the Lord
Defender and they know it. He's under arrest. They're holding him in
the cells behind the Headquarters Building, and it's the Kariens who
are guarding him, not our people."
"Then we have to release him, too."
"How? Your last attempt at breaking somebody out of the Citadel was
spectacularly unsuccessful, as I recall."
R'shiel frowned at the reminder. "I intend to plan this a little
better. If we're going to do something about the Kariens, the first
thing we have to do is get rid of Joyhinia, and replace her with a
First Sister who is on Medalon's side, rather than her own, then
. . ."
"Who are you planning to put in power? Mahina's dead."
"I know. I saw the head over the gate."
"Whose idea was that?" Brak asked.
"The First Sister's."
"Somehow that doesn't surprise me." R'shiel's eyes hardened
as she
spoke, something he did not think was possible. Then she shook off
whatever it was that caused such hatred to flare in her and shrugged.
"I was thinking of Harith."
Garet shrugged. Harith was not popular. But she was, of all the
Quorum members, perhaps the one who cared most about Medalon.
"Assuming you manage that, then what?"
"I need to find the Harshini archives. And I'm going to kill
Loclon."
"Loclon? What's he got to do with this? Besides, he's listed as a
deserter. Nobody has seen him since the night of the last
Gathering."
R'shiel pulled the wooden chair on the other side of the desk across
the rug and sat down facing him. "Joyhinia didn't recover, Garet. The
Karien priests simply borrowed another mind and put it in her body.
That's not Joyhinia issuing the Kariens orders. It's Loclon."
The whole idea was too bizarre for Garet to take in. "That's absurd
. . . it's not possible . . ."
"Of course it's possible," Brak said. "You're dealing with
powers
you refuse to acknowledge, Commandant, but that doesn't make them any
less real. Or powerful."
"Perhaps she simply recovered . . ."
"Tarja destroyed her wit. There is no way Joyhinia could have
returned."
"But Loclon? How did he . . . ?"
"It doesn't matter," R'shiel insisted. "All that matters is
that we
do something about it, about everything - Loclon, the Kariens,
all of
it. I can't do anything about finding the answers I need until they've
been taken care of."
"Did you ride in here with your eyes shut, R'shiel?"
"I never said I thought it was going to be easy, Garet," she
said. "But it is necessary."
The commandant nodded slowly. "Very well. But if you want me to
cooperate, then I ask . . . no I demand . . . two
things."
"You're not in a position to demand anything, Garet."
"Nevertheless, I will demand them. If you don't wish to heed me,
then I'll just throw myself on my sword now, and save the Kariens the
trouble of hanging me."
R'shiel obviously meant to object, but Brak cut in before she could
say anything. "What do you want, Commandant?"
"First, I want your promise that you will listen to me. I haven't
been sitting here idly while the Kariens overrun Medalon. I have the
men we need in the places we need them and the authority to mobilise
them. But if we're to do this successfully, then timing is critical. I
don't want anyone - specifically you, R'shiel - going
off on a tangent
because of some noble pagan purpose I don't give a damn about and
ruining it for the rest of us. I don't care about your destiny, the
Harshini or the rebels. I don't even want to know what you're looking
for in the archives. Is that clear?"
"I think that's fair. And the second thing?" Brak asked
before
R'shiel could get a word in.
"I want to disband the Sisterhood."
They both stared at him.
"Disband the Sisterhood? Why?"
"I'm surprised you of all people have to ask, R'shiel. It's a
corrupt and destructive form of government. They may have started out
with the right intentions, but what drives them now is nothing more
than the quest for personal power. The Sisters of the Blade that led us
into this mess. When we take the Citadel, we take the power out of the
hands of the Sisterhood and place it with the Defenders."
"So you want to replace one form of oppressive rule with
another?"
Brak asked wryly.
"No. Eventually, we'll hold elections. The people of Medalon should
be allowed to vote for who they want to lead them, not leave the choice
to a handful of women who are trained from childhood to believe they
are better than everybody else. We'll put Jenga in charge until we've
cleared out the Kariens and we can organise a vote. He has enough
honour to see that it's done properly."
R'shiel gazed at him suspiciously. "How long have you been planning
this, Garet?"
"The destruction of the Sisterhood? Since the day I learnt of the
burning of a small village in the Sanctuary Mountains called
Haven," he
told her.
For a moment she said nothing.
"You come from Haven." It was more a statement of fact than
a
question; a sudden acceptance of his motives, an understanding of what
drove him. He felt as if, on some unconscious level, she had forgiven
him.
"Your real family was killed in that raid, R'shiel. So were
mine."
"I never knew you were Mountain Folk."
"Why should you? I've been a Defender for as long as you've known
me."
"Then you've known all along who I really was?"
He shook his head. "You were born long after I left Haven. But I
knew your mother, J'nel. And B'thrim, her sister."
"What were they like?"
He smiled, partly in remembrance, and partly because of the
expression on R'shiel's face. For all her deeds, for all her awesome
power, there was still a part of the child she had been lurking deep
inside her, desperate for reassurance.
"B'thrim I remember as being a rather large, over-protective woman
who would chase us with a skinning knife if ever she caught us robbing
her traps in the woods. J'nel was the complete opposite. She was small
and fragile and wild. We used to call her the Snow Child. She was never
happier than when she was lost in the woods. As a boy, I was part of
more than one search party sent to find her. She was the sort of person
who could coax wild rabbits to sit on her lap. I never knew anyone like
her. It doesn't surprise me in the least that she caught the eye of a
Harshini King."
R'shiel closed her eyes for a moment and he exchanged a look with
Brak.
"When did you leave Haven?" Brak asked.
"I was fourteen. The life of a woodcutter didn't particularly appeal
to me so I ran away to Testra. That's when I discovered that knowing
how to live off the land in no way prepared one for living in a city. I
was caught stealing food by a Defender lieutenant. He gave me the
choice to join up or be sent to the Grimfield. So I joined the
Defenders. The lieutenant put in a good word for me and I was accepted
into the Cadets. I've not been back to Haven since."
"You were lucky to meet someone so generous," Brak remarked.
Garet nodded. "I was. And I still owe him. His name was Palin
Jenga."
R'shiel's eyes opened wide. "Then you have a debt to pay, as well as
vengeance to seek."
He nodded. "Which is why I insist on both my demands being met. I
don't intend to let your hidden agenda ruin mine. I will never have
another chance at this. Do we have a deal?"
R'shiel glanced up at Brak who was standing behind her. The Harshini
nodded slightly and she turned back to him.
"Yes, Garet. We have a deal."
CHAPTER 37
Garet Warner arranged a meeting with those officers
who were with him in his desire to overthrow both the Kariens and the
Sisters of the Blade. R'shiel was surprised when she saw them. There
were quite a few familiar faces - classmates of Tarja's and
other
senior officers who she would never have expected to harbour such
treasonous ambitions. She was certain every Defender in the Citadel
wanted to be free of Karien occupation, but it was a little disturbing
to learn how many of these men were willing to destroy the Sisterhood.
They met in a room at the back of the Grey Widow Inn in Tavern
Street, slipping in one at a time to avoid raising the suspicions of
the Karien soldiers who now frequented the place. The windows were
covered against the night with shabby woven curtains and the lanterns
that flickered in their yellow glass flutes gave the room an air of
conspiracy. When they were finally assembled, Garet locked the door and
turned to face them. There were fifteen Defenders present, every one of
them an officer and not one ranked below captain. Brak and R'shiel were
the only civilians.
"I'm not going to bother with introductions," he began. "If
you
don't know each other's names, then it's probably better that it stays
that way. The only people who need introduction are these two. Most of
you know R'shiel. Her friend is called Brak."
"Can we trust them?" an officer asked, one R'shiel did not
know.
"They wouldn't be here otherwise."
The Defender nodded and made no further comment.
"I take it this meeting means that we've decided to make our
move,"
another man remarked.
Garet nodded. "We begin at dawn on Restday."
"That doesn't give us much time," someone else pointed out.
R'shiel
knew the voice, but could not put a face to it.
"That's the whole point," Garet replied. "Once we leave this
room
tonight, we will have to take others into our confidence. Every
additional person who learns of this plot increases our chances of
discovery. The less time between now and when we strike the
better."
"I know we've discussed this before," a young man near the
back of
the room commented, "but even if we can take the Citadel, that still
leaves the Karien army camped outside our gates."
"And there's the priests to contend with, too," his
companion added
with concern. "I don't believe in their tales of magic, but I was on
the northern border when their army attacked. I know what I saw
there."
"Take them hostage," R'shiel suggested.
They all looked at her in surprise, including Brak.
"If you plan it right," she continued, "once you take the
Citadel
you'll have every duke in Karien as a hostage and their priests with
them. If you can't negotiate a settlement with Jasnoff, using his
entire Council of Dukes as your bargaining chip, you're not going to do
it with anything else. It's quite simple, really. You kill them one at
a time until he gives in. Start with the priests and work your way up.
You shouldn't have to dispose of too many before King Jasnoff gets the
message."
Brak grabbed her by the arm and pulled her close so only she could
hear him. "What in the gods' name are you up to now?" he hissed
in her
ear.
"Trust me, Brak." She pulled free of his grasp and rubbed
her arm.
"Not this time, R'shiel. I won't stand by while you slaughter
innocent men just so you can get even with your mother."
She let out an impatient, exasperated sigh. Why did he always assume
the worst about her? "I'd hardly call the Karien dukes and their
priests innocent. Besides, we're not really going to destroy anyone,
Brak; we're just going to threaten it. We're just giving them a reason
to go home."
Brak's faded eyes were burning with suspicion, but he had no chance
to question her further.
"You don't seriously expect us to kill hostages in cold
blood?" The
man who spoke was Rylan, the Citadel's Master of Horse. R'shiel had
known him since she was a small child. "That's not the way we do things
in the Defenders."
"You coped well enough murdering your own people during the Purge,
Commandant," she replied. "I should think a few enemy heads
posted over
the main gate would make a nice change."
The room exploded in a rush of objection. Garet glared at her
angrily. "You're treading on very thin ice, R'shiel."
"I'm merely stating facts, Garet. The Defenders have much to atone
for."
"The biggest mistake we made was not ensuring we had completely
eradicated the Harshini," someone called out pointedly.
R'shiel turned on the officer who had spoken. "You'll make an even
bigger mistake if you think you can do this and remain on your high
moral ground. Look at you! Hiding in the back room of a tavern,
plotting the overthrow of your government while you profess to abhor
unnecessary bloodshed. Your precious Defender's honour didn't stop
Mahina being killed. It hasn't stopped the Kariens taking control of
Medalon and it won't help you get it back. You're fighting fanatics,
Captain, not men who think like you do. If you expect to win, you have
to play by their rules, not hope they'll play by yours."
Garet glanced at Brak warningly. "Shut her up, or leave."
Brak stepped up behind R'shiel and placed a strong, restraining hand
on her shoulder. "You aren't helping, R'shiel."
"We can't go ahead with this!" Rylan insisted. "Jasnoff
won't
negotiate. He doesn't need to. What does it matter if we control the
Citadel? With that army camped outside our walls, we could be under
siege for years. There is no army waiting over the next rise to come to
our rescue. And even if there were, what army on the continent could
rival the number of Kariens out there? It's too dangerous. We should
find another way."
Garet held up his hands to quell the hubbub of agreement that
followed the Horse Master's words, then looked at R'shiel and Brak
speculatively.
"Rylan has raised a valid point. If this strategy fails and we can't
disperse the Karien host, we will be caught in a siege that will be
long, painful and ultimately futile."
"What if you had a chance of being relieved?" Brak asked.
R'shiel
glanced over her shoulder at him. Then she smiled in understanding.
"Damin."
"Who?" someone asked from the back of the room.
"Damin Wolfblade, the High Prince of Hythria. Tarja was taking the
men he gathered south to meet him. He has already promised Medalon
aid."
"For that matter," R'shiel added thoughtfully, "we could
probably
get Hablet to join in the fray. And then there are the Defenders who
fled to Hythria."
"How many Defenders?" someone asked. "A thousand? Maybe two?
They'll
not be much use against that horde outside."
"And you seriously think the Hythrun and the Fardohnyans will come
to our aid?" Rylan scoffed.
"Damin will come," R'shiel replied confidently.
"R'shiel's right," Brak agreed. "Hythria and Fardohnya will
come if
she asks for their help."
"Things must have changed in the south quite dramatically in recent
months," Rylan remarked sourly. "Last I heard, Hablet was
planning to
invade us, not come to our rescue. And since when did you hold any sway
with the kings and princes of our southern neighbours?"
Garet studied her for a moment then turned to Rylan. He had been on
the northern border with them and knew she was acquainted with the
Hythrun Prince. "Actually, in this I think she may be right. Wolfblade
might come if R'shiel asks him. But are you sure you can trust
him?"
"I'd trust Damin with my life."
"It's not just your life you're trusting him with, R'shiel, but the
lives of every man, woman and child in the Citadel."
Garet studied them both for a moment, weighing the advisability of
placing his faith in their assurances. Eventually he shrugged and
turned to face his men. "As I see it, we go now, or we abandon the idea
altogether. Every day the Kariens reside in Medalon makes it all the
harder to dislodge them. I'm willing to believe R'shiel if she says she
can bring help. I say we do it and then settle down and wait for the
Hythrun to relieve us."
A low murmur ran through the room as the Defenders indicated their
cautious agreement. Garet nodded. "Good. Then let's get down to
details."
There wasn't much R'shiel or Brak could contribute after that. These
men had been planning this since the day Joyhinia signed Medalon's
surrender. Everything had been worked out: each key position they would
take, every weapon they would need and every man they would need to do
it. This meeting was simply to sort out the minor details and
accommodate any last-minute changes to their plans.
They based their coup on the assumption that every Defender in the
Citadel would follow them when the time came, and R'shiel was quite
sure their confidence was justified. There was not a Defender who would
willingly subjugate himself to the Kariens - with the possible
exception of Wain Loclon, and she intended to take care of him
personally.
The task of rescuing the Lord Defender and Tarja fell to a young
captain whom R'shiel vaguely remembered being a lieutenant when she had
been a Probate. He was, she recalled with mild surprise, the young man
who had whisked Kilene away to dance, on the night Davydd Tailorson had
taken her to meet Tarja in the caverns under the amphitheatre. That
night stuck in her memory like the jagged edge of a bottomless abyss,
down which she seemed to have been helplessly tumbling ever since,
towards a destiny she had never wanted or envisaged. Symin accepted his
orders with a serious expression, but she could sense the suppressed
excitement that he struggled to hold in check. He worried her a little.
This was not an adventure.
It was the early hours of the morning before Garet glanced around
the room with a nod of satisfaction. "Well, that's about it. You all
know what you have to do. Any questions?"
"We've not mentioned how we're going to get a message to the
Hythrun," Rylan pointed out.
"R'shiel?" Garet asked, turning to her.
"We'll take care of that."
"How?" Rylan asked. "We'll be trapped in the Citadel. How
will you
get a message out? How will you get past the Kariens? We have no birds
here trained to fly to Hythria."
It was Garet who answered for her. "I think in this case, we can
leave that up to Brak and R'shiel. They have . . . er
. . . resources . . . that we don't need to know
about. I don't think we need fear on that point."
R'shiel glanced at Brak who smiled briefly at Garet's cautious
acknowledgment of their power.
"Well, if there are no more questions, I think we're finished here.
Good luck, gentlemen."
The Defenders gathered up their maps and plans and began to leave
the room, one at a time, slipping out as the young lieutenant, who was
surreptitiously guarding the door outside, gave the signal that it was
clear. R'shiel and Brak were among the last to leave.
"I'm placing an awful lot of faith in you two, and based on your
past history, that's not very encouraging," Garet said as they
waited. "Can you really get Wolfblade and the Fardohnyans here in time
to help?"
"I think so."
"R'shiel, I'd be a lot happier if you sounded more certain."
She shrugged. "It depends on a few things. I have to talk to some of
the gods."
Garet's brow furrowed in concern. "I can't believe I'm even
discussing this, let alone pinning our whole strategy on it."
He
stopped and nodded in acknowledgment of a salute from two captains,
then waited until they were alone before he continued. "There's
something else I want you to keep in mind. If we kill too many priests
and dukes, Jasnoff will seek our destruction out of spite."
"You won't have to kill more than a few, Garet."
"That's easy for you to say. It's not you who will be holding the
sword to their throats. Or were you planning to do this
personally?"
"I couldn't, even if I wanted to. If I caused that much destruction,
it would devastate the Harshini, who are linked to the same power
source as me." She glanced at Brak, a little offended by his
startled
expression. "You didn't think I knew that, did you? I remember what
Shananara said to me about the night that I tried to kill Loclon. If
wanting to kill one person could hurt the Harshini that much, killing
dozens would destroy them."
"Then bear something else in mind," Garet reminded her. "A
hundred
thousand rampaging Kariens fleeing through Medalon will be just as
destructive as making them die here."
"Don't worry, Garet. I know what I'm doing."
He shook his head ruefully. "I seriously doubt that, R'shiel, and
the look of doubt on Brak's face does little to encourage me."
"Then why are you doing this?"
"Because we have to," he replied simply.
The Great Hall of the Citadel was now known as
Francil's Hall, however R'shiel refused to acknowledge the new name.
Joyhinia Tenragan had purchased the name at the cost of a woman's
honour, and R'shiel would not give such a base and lowly act any
credence by admitting to it. The huge hall was deserted when they
slipped inside, cringing as the massive doors boomed shut behind them.
It was just on dawn and the hall was shrouded in shadows as the first
faint rays of light painted the dancing dust motes pink. The walls
below the gallery were just beginning to lighten with the Brightening.
Brak stepped into the hall and looked around. His eyes were full of
unspeakable sadness.
"The ceiling used to have a painting on it that depicted all the
Primal Gods," he said, looking up at the stark, whitewashed
roof. His
voice seemed dangerously loud in the silent, cavernous building. "It
took the Harshini nearly half a century to complete it. You could stare
at it for a lifetime and still not find everything there was to
see."
"There was a mural in my room like that," she told him. "It
was so
full of detail I never tired of looking at it."
He did not appear to notice she had spoken. "Along the gallery up
there was a mural dedicated to the Incidental Gods. Their followers
would come to the Temple of the Gods and add to the mural as part of
their acknowledgment of their gods' existence. Parts of it were
magnificent, particularly the panels devoted to the God of Artists.
There were sonnets covering the walls devoted to the God of Poets, too.
You see the marble balustrade? If you look closely, you'll find each
pillar is drilled with holes. Open the windows in the arches at either
end of the Hall on a windy day and the whole hall will sing to the God
of Music."
R'shiel wasn't sure what to say, or even if she should say anything.
Brak seemed lost in the past. He walked further into the hall, his
boots loud on the marble floor.
"See these twenty pillars supporting the gallery? They used to have
alcoves set in each one, but they're filled in now. Each pillar was a
shrine to one of the Primal Gods." He frowned at some distant
memory
and glanced at her. "The Seeing Stone used to sit up there on the
podium. It seemed bigger then, but I guess I remember it through the
eyes of a younger man."
"It must have been spectacular."
"It was," he agreed, with a frown at the stark walls. The
wall at
the back of the podium had been plastered over and whitewashed. R'shiel
recalled the impressive Stone in the Temple in Greenharbour and tried
to envisage a similar Stone taking pride of place in this Temple, but
she could not imagine it. The Hall was filled with too much of the
Sisterhood's history for her to really grasp what Brak could see.
"Do you know how much mischief Korandellan and I used to find as
children, with the God of Thieves and the God of Chance for
playmates?"
"You played with the gods?"
"It was a different world then, R'shiel. There were no Sisters of
the Blade. No Overlord. Not much violence at all, to speak of, except
in Hythria, but that was the God of War's province and it rarely
impinged on our lives." He shook his head and looked around
with
regret. "The Sisterhood has done much to be despised for, but I think
this is the worst desecration of all."
She stared at the stark, empty hall for a moment. She had seen
Sanctuary and been overcome by the beauty of it, but she had a feeling
it was a pale reflection of what the Citadel had once been.
Brak visibly shook off his nostalgic melancholy. "Come on. If we're
going to do this, we'd better get it over with. The city will be awake
soon."
"Won't the priests feel us?"
"Not in here."
"You neglected to mention that before."
"No, I quite deliberately omitted mentioning it," he told
her. "I
didn't want you getting ideas."
"But they found me here the last time I drew on my power."
"Only once they were inside with you."
She scowled at him. "How many other little snippets of vital
information like that have you deliberately omitted?"
"Quite a few. Now get a move on. We haven't got all day."
This was the Temple of the Gods. To name a god here was to summon
him. She hesitated for a moment, wondering if after all this time, the
gods would still come to the temple if she called. She glanced at Brak
and then shrugged.
There was really only one way to find out.
CHAPTER 38
Initially, Tarja survived his captivity because
nobody recognised him. When he regained consciousness with a pounding
headache, eyes glued shut by the blood that had leaked from the wound
on his forehead, he found himself in a crowded cell with a score of
other men rounded up by the Kariens. He was blue from cold and
shivering uncontrollably in his damp clothes, but otherwise unharmed,
which surprised him a little. Of Ulran and the others there was no
sign. They had either escaped or were being held in a different
location.
Tarja's anonymity was aided considerably by the fact that the
Kariens had not thought to establish the identity of their prisoners.
That was a job for scribes, and they did not consider scribes a
necessary part of an advance war party.
The main Karien army arrived in Cauthside the day after he cut loose
the ferry. According to his cellmates, who had witnessed the aftermath,
the ferry had been destroyed by the river, which had thrown it against
the bank like a piece of driftwood. It was now good for nothing more
than kindling. The news gave Tarja some small measure of satisfaction.
For the time being, the Kariens were stalled.
His good fortune did not last long. A week after he was captured he
was reunited with Ulran, who spied him on the other side of the crowded
cellar where they were being held and called out to him gleefully, loud
enough for every Karien in Cauthside to hear.
Within an hour, Tarja found himself, chained hand and foot, facing
Lord Roache and Lord Wherland.
With the discovery of the notorious Tarja Tenragan in their custody,
the Kariens obviously felt that the Overlord had answered their
prayers. He became the focus of everything that had gone wrong in their
campaign: Cratyn's death, Lord Terbolt's death, the fact that their
army was facing starvation because there were not enough farms or
cities in northern Medalon they could ransack for supplies, that the
Defenders had surrendered yet refused to be cowed - even that
they
still needed the Defenders to maintain control of the civilian
population. They blamed him for the squads of roving deserters who
harried their flanks and slunk away into the night before they could be
captured, and they blamed him for the fact that they were immobilised
on the wrong side of the river, a responsibility which Tarja didn't
mind shouldering at all, considering he actually was accountable for
that.
Everything became Tarja's fault and they intended to see that he
paid for it.
The Karien dukes wore the frazzled air that surrounds men whose
success comes at a very high price. Lord Roache did not accuse him
openly of single-handedly hampering the Karien occupation of Medalon,
but he came close. He had spared Tarja a contemptuous glance, then
consulted the parchment in front of him.
"You murdered Lord Pieter, Lord Terbolt and His Royal Highness,
Cratyn, the Crown Prince of Karien. You also murdered the priest
Elfron. You are responsible for countless acts of sabotage, up to and
including the destruction of the Cauthside Ferry. You are responsible
for the kidnapping of Her Royal Highness, Adrina, Crown Princess of
Karien, and for handing her over to the custody of the barbarian
Hythrun, where she remains a hostage. You have consorted with demons
and pagans and have actively assisted Harshini sorcerers. Do you have
anything to say?"
"I think you left out the bit about eating babies," he had
said with
the reckless abandon of a man who knows he is condemned and that
nothing he said could make the situation worse than it already was.
"You will hang, Captain. Your crimes allow no other course of
action."
"Could you do it sooner, rather than later?" he quipped,
enjoying
the effect his insolence was having on the Karien duke. "The food in
the cells is terrible."
"You mock me at your peril, Captain."
"I say we dispose of him now!" Wherland declared. He was a
big man
with a big voice and very little patience.
Roache shook his head. "These Medalonians need to see that even the
mighty Tarja Tenragan cannot escape our vengeance. If we hang him here,
in this isolated country village, the people will refuse to believe it.
He has to die as publicly as possible. We will wait until we reach the
Citadel. I want as many witnesses as I can get."
"Then a little public humiliation will have to do. We'll put him in
the stocks."
"No. The risk of his accomplices trying to free him would be too
great. He'll be confined in the camp. I intend to make an example of
him that the Medalonians will not forget."
They spoke Karien, perhaps not aware that Tarja understood them. He
did not react to their words, preferring them to remain ignorant of the
fact that he spoke their language fluently. If anything, Roache's
determination to hang him in the Citadel gave him heart. It would be a
month or more before they could get across the river. A lot could
happen in a month.
Roache turned back to Tarja and addressed him in heavily accented
Medalonian.
"You will be confined here and transferred to the Citadel at the
earliest opportunity. If you wish to prolong your life, you will
provide us with the names of your conspirators and the location of your
rebel headquarters."
"You don't seriously expect me to tell you anything, do you?"
The Duke shrugged. "One is never sure what a Medalonian considers
honourable, Captain. You might be willing to barter your friends to
save your own neck."
"A word of advice, my Lord. If you expect to hold onto Medalon, you
would do well to learn what we consider honourable."
"Looking at the list of your crimes, Captain, I'm surprised you have
the word in your vocabulary."
While hardly luxurious, Tarja's accommodation
proved better than he expected. He was confined to a tent in the centre
of the Karien camp, guarded on all four sides by knights who held their
loyalty to Karien and the Overlord above even their own mothers, Tarja
suspected. They were taciturn to begin with, but as the days merged
into weeks, they relented a little and from them Tarja learnt what was
happening in the outside world.
The knights told him when the news arrived that Princess Adrina was
now in Hythria and married to the Hythrun High Prince. Tarja appeared
suitably surprised, not wanting to spoil their outrage by informing
them that he had known about her marriage for some time. The news that
Damin was the High Prince worried him a little. He wondered if R'shiel
had had a hand in it. She had killed twice that he knew of and never
shown a moment's remorse over either man. Had she acquired a taste
for murder? Was the blood of the old High Prince on her hands now?
The thoughts ate at him, added to the other memories of her that
continued to haunt him. Memories that could not be real. Memories he
had no reason to doubt.
Although he had no idea of the fate of Mandah and the rest of his
squad, he learnt soon enough what had happened to the Fardohnyans they
had found in the abandoned boathouse. When Paval informed the remnants
of Adrina's Guard that the Kariens had arrived, instead of fleeing
south, which would have been the sensible thing to do, Filip and his
men rode straight into Cauthside in a futile attempt to aid the
Medalonians. By the time they arrived, there were enough Kariens in the
town to outnumber them considerably. The fight had been short and
bloody. A number were killed in the skirmish, including Filip and
Paval. The remainder were summarily tried and hanged as deserters the
following day.
Tarja saw their rotting bodies swinging from a temporary gallows the
Kariens had constructed in the town square when he was escorted to his
new quarters in the Karien camp. He felt a pang of guilt and wondered
why the Fardohnyans had risked such a fate when they could have gotten
clean away. In the end he decided it was some incomprehensible idea of
Fardohnyan honour that made them turn back. He had seen the look in
Filip's eyes when he had offered their surrender to Damin on the
border. Perhaps it was easier to die attempting something heroic
against ridiculous odds than return home to Talabar to face the King.
The Princess' Guard had not only deserted a battlefield, but had
abandoned the Princess they'd been sent north to protect. That Adrina
had ordered them to do both would not matter to Hablet. Tarja realised
that the same fate probably awaited these men at home. All they had
done was hasten the inevitable.
Tarja spent almost a month in the Karien camp before the rafts were
completed and he was transferred across the Glass River to the Citadel
under heavy guard. He saw nothing of the journey or the Citadel when
the Kariens entered it in triumph. Lord Roache had commandeered a
closed carriage in Cauthside, and Tarja was confined to it, night and
day, for the entire trip, allowed out only once each morning and
evening to relieve himself. He was transferred to a cell in the
Defenders' headquarters under cover of darkness, and there he remained,
completely cut off from news of what was happening in the outside world.
Tarja did not know if the Citadel had surrendered quietly, or if
there had been a pitched battle for it. He did not know if the
Defenders still existed, or if Roache had disbanded them. The guards on
his cell in the Citadel spoke no Medalonian and he did not want to
reveal that he spoke their language, so there was no conversation
between them. If they discussed the events of the day as they whiled
away the hours on duty, they were too far from his cell for him to
overhear them.
As he lost track of the days, Tarja found the isolation beginning to
wear on him. He had spent enough time behind bars recently to grow
accustomed to incarceration - a circumstance that bothered him
more
than he cared to admit - but he had always had something to
occupy his
mind. The torturers who had tried to extract the identity of his fellow
rebels from him with batons and hot iron pokers had given him some
purpose, even if it was merely to resist them. But here, so isolated
that he had not seen another soul for days, he began to appreciate the
need for human company. He saw no one. Even his meals were delivered
anonymously through a hatch in the metal door.
At first he tried to occupy his mind with plans of escape, but with
no tools to break out and no contact with anybody who could provide
them, he was helpless. He wondered if feigning illness would bring his
guards running into the cell, but he had banged on the door until his
knuckles were raw and his voice grew hoarse from calling out to no
avail. Tarja began to wonder if his isolation was a form of torture in
itself. There were worse things than pain, worse than humiliation or
defeat. To be forgotten; to be so inconsequential that it mattered to
nobody if you lived or died - that was proving to be the
bitterest pill
of all.
With escape, or even the hope of it denied him, Tarja turned his
thoughts inward. Introspection proved a dangerous game. His mind was
filled with a past that horrified him, yet he was coming to accept it
as real. For some reason - perhaps, as Mandah suggested, on the
whim of
a god - he had fallen hopelessly in love with R'shiel. He could
remember it all, every thought, every longing, every kiss, every
embrace, every moment of intimacy, every time he slept with her curled
in his arms. What puzzled him was why it had not bothered him at the
time - and why it bothered him so much now. He knew, on an
intellectual
level, that R'shiel was not his sister, but a lifetime of thinking of
her as his own flesh and blood was not so easily swept aside. Yet he
had loved her, seemingly without regret, until he woke in that wagon on
the way to Testra and discovered his world completely changed and no
memory or inkling of what had changed it.
When the door to his cell finally opened, Tarja
leaped to his feet with pathetic eagerness. The man who opened it was a
knight with dark hair and the disillusioned look of a young man who has
discovered that war is not nearly as romantic or heroic as he imagined.
His tabard was decorated with three stylised pines against a red
background.
Kirkland, Tarja thought. He comes from the same
province as young Mikel. What happened to him, I wonder? Did he live
through this or is he yet another victim of R'shiel's destiny?
"My name is Sir Andony," the Karien said in broken
Medalonian. "You
come with me."
Tarja looked down, aware of how bad he smelled. He was unshaved and
filthy and his cell reeked, the bucket in the corner long since filled
to overflowing.
"Where are we going?"
"Must be clean. You hang tomorrow. Lord Roache say you must look
like Defender."
So, they were finally going to hang him. Roache had said he wanted
as many witnesses as possible and he obviously wanted to remind the
citizens of Medalon that he was hanging an Officer of the Defenders.
The desperate, unwholesome creature he must appear at the moment would
threaten no one. Tarja debated resisting for an instant then rejected
the idea. There might be some hope of escape once he was out of his
cell, although looking at the men arrayed behind Andony it was unlikely.
Tarja followed Andony and resolutely refused to give up hope. He had
escaped this fate before. He had eluded death so many times in the past
that he had wondered if, like the magical Harshini, he were immortal.
As the Karien guards fell in around him, he warned himself not to be so
foolish.
He was not invincible. Even the Harshini were not immortal. Barring
some unforeseen miracle, in less than a day all his previous narrow
escapes would finally catch up with him.
CHAPTER 39
Dawn broke over the Citadel on Restday to the ring
of hammers pounding on wood as the gallows slowly took shape. The sandy
floor of the arena was littered with construction debris as the workmen
hurried to finish their task before the crowd arrived. Joyhinia
Tenragan stepped down through the gate in the white painted barricade
and surveyed the progress with a frown as she crossed the arena floor,
tugging her cloak closed against the crisp breeze.
"How much longer?"
The foreman turned at her voice and dropped his hammer. He bowed
hastily. "It will be done on time, First Sister."
Joyhinia nodded with satisfaction. The hanging was scheduled for
noon. "You've done well."
"I've no need to be doing this at all," the man complained
as he
picked up his hammer. "There's a perfectly good gallows behind the
Defenders' headquarters."
"You don't approve of public hangings?" Joyhinia asked
curiously.
She probably should have reprimanded him for being so impudent, but she
was in a rare mood today.
"It's not my idea of entertainment, no," the foreman agreed
cautiously, perhaps realising the folly of being so outspoken.
"I see. It's not that you harbour sympathies for the criminal,
then?"
"No, your Grace!"
"I thought not. Carry on."
Joyhinia turned away from the workmen with a sour smile. That
should take the lead out of their boots. A few words from the
First Sister and men quivered where they stood. Even the threat of her
presence was enough to unman some. It was the headiest feeling. Better
than wine. Better than sex. Better even, than watching someone in pain
. . .
The First Sister strolled back towards her office in a fine mood.
The day was cool but clear, and it would see the last of Tarja
Tenragan. That her vengeance had taken so long did not concern the
First Sister. If anything, it tasted all the sweeter for the wait.
At the thought of her other enemies who were still at large, the
First Sister frowned. She had expected some news by now, but no word
had come about R'shiel. She had last been seen in Fardohnya, according
to Squire Mathen, claiming to be the Harshini demon child. The news did
not overly concern her.
Tarja would draw R'shiel like a water diviner to an underground
spring. Joyhinia had made certain that the hanging had been well
publicised, surprising even the Kariens with her vehement insistence
that Tarja's execution be delayed until the news had reached every
corner of Medalon.
R'shiel had to come. All this power, all that Loclon
currently enjoyed in the guise of the First Sister would be meaningless
if she continued to live.
Squire Mathen was waiting when the First Sister returned. He was a
thin man with curling black hair, long thin features and a dour
disposition. He also had little patience with Joyhinia and it was only
the knowledge that this man held the key to the room where Loclon's
body lay, empty and alive at Mathen's whim while his mind resided in
Joyhinia's body, that kept the First Sister from defying him.
"Where have you been?"
The man was sitting behind the First Sister's desk, going through
her papers. Joyhinia bit back her annoyance.
"I was checking on the progress of the gallows. I wanted to be sure
everything would be ready."
"It should be quite an event," Mathen remarked without
looking up. "Not often one gets to see an Officer of the Defenders
hanged. I
imagine you would have to hang someone as important as the First Sister
to get a bigger crowd."
Even Joyhinia could not miss the veiled threat.
"Tarja Tenragan is a deserter and a miserable traitor."
Mathen looked up with cold narrow eyes and stared at her. Joyhinia
fidgeted under his scrutiny. "Then it will do the citizens good to see
what happens to traitors."
"And it will bring those who oppose us out of the woodwork,"
Joyhinia added.
Mathen finished reading the letter he was holding before he
answered. "Or drive them underground."
"No, I know these people. Someone will try to rescue him. And when
they do, we'll be ready for them."
"If it was up to me, I wouldn't try to rescue him," Mathen
shrugged. "If I wanted to ferment rebellion, I would let you hang him
unopposed
and use his death as a rallying cry for every malcontent in
Medalon."
The implied criticism was clear. "If you think this is such a bad
idea, why are you letting it go ahead?"
"Because Lord Roache wishes it, and even as a martyr, Tarja Tenragan
will be less trouble dead than alive. Where is the speech I wrote for
you?"
"I gave it to my secretary."
"Fetch it. I have a few changes I wish to make."
Joyhinia knew better than to argue with the man. She turned on her
heel and crossed the large office, jerking open the door angrily.
"Suelen? Give me that speech I gave you yesterday!"
Suelen jumped to obey. Joyhinia snatched the rolled parchment from
her outstretched hand and slammed the door in the young woman's face.
"There!" she said, slapping it on the desk.
Squire Mathen looked up. He seemed amused. "Temper, temper, First
Sister."
Although it had been the Karien priests who had worked the spell
that had put his mind in Joyhinia's body, secretly, the First Sister
was no happier about the Karien occupation of the Citadel than any
other Medalonian. It had nothing to do with patriotism, however. Loclon
simply wanted to be left alone to run things as he saw fit and Mathen's
presence was a constant reminder of the limits to his power.
From a purely political point of view, Loclon begrudgingly admired
the Duke of Setenton's wisdom in placing Squire Mathen in charge. Even
Lord Roache seemed content to let him take care of the day-to-day
running of the Citadel. It must have been tempting for the Kariens
simply to demand instant conversion of their new subjects to the
Overlord; to forbid practices that had been part of Medalonian society
for centuries. Mathen was too clever to stir up resistance in such a
manner. There had been enough trouble when they threw open the gates of
the Citadel to welcome the Karien occupation force. He wasn't going to
make Medalon ungovernable by ordering them to change their views on the
gods overnight.
With no Quorum to answer to any longer, the First Sister could issue
decrees as she wished, although they were written under Mathen's
careful guidance. On the surface, the decrees seemed quite reasonable.
One had to look closely to realise they were the first insidious steps
down the road of Xaphista's worship. Mathen had all but outlawed
prostitution, which the Sisterhood had legalised two centuries ago.
There were other laws too, which had been enacted in the past months.
It was now an offence to wager on anything; a decree that had been met
with a great deal of grumbling, but little open resistance. Loclon
wasn't a gambler himself, unless he had fixed it so he knew he would
win, but he knew enough about the religion of the Kariens to know that
this was another of their strict mores that they wished to impose on
Medalon.
Illegitimacy was the next target, Loclon knew, but he doubted Mathen
would be quite so lucky getting that one accepted. In Medalon,
legitimacy was determined by the maternal line - a law set down
by the
Sisterhood long ago - and one that meant perhaps two thirds of
the
population had been born out of the Karien definition of wedlock. They
would not be pleased to suddenly find themselves considered bastards.
Had he tried to disband the Defenders, Mathen would have had a
bloodbath on his hands, so he had wisely made no attempt to disarm
them, and had, against Loclon's advice, left Garet Warner in charge, as
the senior officer in the Citadel. Loclon didn't trust Garet Warner,
although the man gave every indication of accepting the surrender. To
Loclon, even wearing the body of the First Sister, the commandant's
cooperation reeked of duplicity. Mathen, however, seemed unconcerned.
He considered Garet a pragmatist, and while he obeyed orders, he was
content to leave him be.
As for the Lord Defender, nobody, from Lord Roache down, was
prepared to trust him. He had accepted the surrender unwillingly and
actively abetted the deserters who now plagued them with acts of
sabotage. There were even rumours that he had dispatched a large force
to Hythria, which was massing to attack in the spring. Jenga was locked
in the cells behind the Defenders' headquarters and there he would stay
until Roache decided what to do with him. The Karien duke was reluctant
to kill him out of hand. He may yet prove useful.
They were interrupted by a knock on the door. Mathen looked up and
called permission to enter. Garet Warner stepped into the office,
saluting Mathen and the First Sister politely when he stopped in front
of the desk.
"Good morning, Squire. First Sister."
"What is it, Commandant? Trouble over the execution today?"
"That's why I'm here. I thought perhaps it might be wise to post
extra guards around the Citadel, in case things get out of
hand."
"That's probably a good idea. I'll send out to the camp for some
extra men."
"I was hoping to use the Defenders," Garet said calmly.
Joyhinia
watched him with misgiving. Neither Loclon nor Joyhinia had ever liked
Garet Warner. He was too clever by half.
"Why?" Mathen asked suspiciously.
"You're going to hang a Defender today, Squire. I'd prefer to have
them kept busy. If you leave them off duty, they'll be in the stands as
spectators."
"Then they will learn a salutary lesson."
"Or they might decide to object."
Mathen thought on it for a moment, then nodded. "Very well. Use all
the men you need. Preferably away from the amphitheatre."
"I've made a list of strategic locations that would be at risk if
anything were to happen. I'll see my men are sent to all those
positions. They'll not think it strange, and as you say, it will keep
them away from the amphitheatre."
"Very good. Is that all?"
"There was one other thing," Garet added, almost as an
afterthought. "They're having trouble with the main gate. One of the
pulleys has
seized and they can't get it open. I've got the engineers working on
it. It should be fixed some time this morning."
Mathen looked annoyed. "A convenient day for that to happen. Are you
sure it was an accident?"
The Commandant nodded. "It's not been tampered with, if that's what
you mean. I checked on it myself this morning when I heard they were
having trouble with it. You can inspect the problem yourself if you
wish."
"Just get the damned thing open," Mathen snapped impatiently.
"As you wish, Squire." Garet saluted smartly and turned
towards the
door. "I've taken the liberty of posting some men outside," he
added as
he reached it. Then he looked over his shoulder at Joyhinia and smiled.
"And I've arranged a special bodyguard for you too, your Grace. We
don't want any incidents."
Something about Garet Warner's manner screamed a warning to Loclon.
He was much too calm, much too accepting of Tarja's hanging. Mathen
returned his attention to the speech as Garet closed the door behind
him.
"I changed the part here about traitorous deeds. It now reads:
'Captain Tenragan is a blight on the honour of the Defenders.
His
callow and cowardly deeds have shamed every citizen in
Medalon'. . . and so on, and so on. It sounds better, don't
you think? Calling him a traitor outright might stir up a few passions.
Technically, he didn't betray Medalon, only Karien, and that wouldn't
bother your people one whit, I suspect. We need to paint him as a
coward, a criminal not worth . . . Are you listening to
me?"
"He's up to something," Joyhinia warned.
"Who? Tarja Tenragan?"
"Garet Warner."
Mathen shrugged. "Undoubtedly."
"Well, don't just sit there! We have to stop him!"
"I've taken precautions."
"What precautions? You moved Jenga, that's all! I'm sure they're
quaking in their boots!"
"Jenga is far more dangerous than Tarja Tenragan. The Lord Defender
is a symbol of honour to every soldier in the Corps. I don't really
care if they try to free Tarja. As you pointed out, this hanging will
bring the troublemakers out of the woodwork. Let Warner try something.
I've a hundred thousand men on the other side of that gate."
"The gate is closed, you fool!"
Mathen looked at her for a moment and then swore viciously. He
jumped to his feet and ran for the door, jerking it open. Suelen was
gone. The anteroom was full of Defenders.
A sword pressing into his vest encouraged him to back up. The
Defender holding the blade was a captain with the look of a man who
wanted nothing more than to plunge his blade right through Mathen's
chest.
"You idiot!" Joyhinia screamed at him. "I warned
you!"
"Shut up, Joyhinia!" Mathen moved back far enough that the
blade no
longer touched him. For a tense moment he watched the Defenders who
filed into the office with weapons drawn then addressed their captain.
"You cannot succeed, you know that, don't you?"
"No, actually I didn't know that," the captain replied
pleasantly. "Thank you for telling me."
"Even if you manage to take the Citadel, you can't get past our
army."
"We'll see."
The captain was infuriatingly confident. Loclon had been a Defender
and he knew that stupidity was not one of their traits. Nor was Garet
Warner a man for taking unnecessary risks. If this man believed they
could win, it was because they had something up their sleeve. Something
Mathen had not anticipated.
"They've done something!" Joyhinia said with a panicked edge
to her
voice. "Look at him! He doesn't care about your army! They've poisoned
the water or the food or something."
"Nothing so crude, First Sister," Garet Warner remarked as
he
stepped back into the office. He glanced around and then nodded to the
captain. "Take Mathen down and put him with the others. Quietly.
Commandant Foren should have control of the administration building by
now. Once you've secured the Squire, get over to the guest quarters and
see if Cadon needs any help rounding up the priests."
"What about me?" Joyhinia demanded.
"Ah, now you we have special plans for, your Grace,"
Garet
told her in that calm, annoying and soft-spoken voice that even as a
Defender Loclon had always loathed. "There's someone who is rather keen
to deal with you personally."
"Who?"
Garet smiled knowingly but didn't answer. With a sudden wave of
nausea, Loclon guessed who it was. It accounted for the captain's
confidence. It accounted for Garet's smug expression. Loclon knew she
would come. It couldn't be anybody else. Not today. Not with Tarja's
life in danger.
"R'shiel." Joyhinia breathed the name fearfully, as
though
saying it aloud might cause her to suddenly materialise out of thin air.
"She's not here," Mathen scoffed. "We've had priests
watching for
her. There's no way the demon child could have slipped into the Citadel
without us knowing about it."
"I think you'll be disappointed to learn your confidence in the
priesthood is somewhat misplaced, Squire," R'shiel told him,
stepping
into the room. Loclon felt the First Sister's knees give way as she
turned to him. Behind her was another man he did not know. He had no
time to wonder who it was.
He had envisaged her return so often that it did not seem real. She
was not bound and helpless. She was not begging for mercy. She was
standing there, staring at him with utter contempt. There was not a
trace of fear in her eyes, only a quiet confidence that she finally and
unequivocally, had him under her control.
"Get the Squire out of here, Captain."
Mathen was bundled from the room, leaving R'shiel, Garet, the tall
stranger and three other Defenders to deal with Joyhinia. She watched
them warily. She knew what would happen next. They would tie the First
Sister hand and foot and make her grovel before that Harshini bitch,
who would take her vengeance as slowly and painfully as possible.
Loclon knew it was over. His reign as First Sister was done. He had
no idea how the Defenders planned to deal with the Karien host, but men
like Garet Warner didn't undertake suicide missions. They knew they
could win.
The First Sister would die. And R'shiel was standing there, staring
at him like she had been planning his suffering almost as long as
Loclon had been planning hers.
But Loclon wasn't done yet. His mind occupied the body of the First
Sister, but his own body lay empty and waiting in a room in the First
Sister's apartments. That was far from this room and probably not
worthy of the attention of the Defenders who were taking up arms
throughout the Citadel and turning on their Karien masters.
Loclon didn't stop to think about it. With a wordless cry, Joyhinia
charged at the nearest Defender. The startled soldier raised his blade
in surprise as she threw herself onto it, welcoming the pain as it tore
through her body - the old woman's body that Loclon was
suddenly
desperate to be free of.
"No!" he heard R'shiel scream in anger, realising
what he was
doing.
But he was too quick for her warning, and perhaps only she truly
understood what was happening. The Defender jerked his sword clear and
she collapsed on the ground with a smile of intense satisfaction.
"Brak! Help me! Don't let her die!" R'shiel cried, rushing
to the
First Sister's side. She dropped to her knees beside the body of her
foster-mother, her eyes glistening with furious, unshed tears.
Joyhinia didn't die immediately. The old bitch may have been
witless, but her body clung tenaciously to life. For a moment Loclon
was afraid that the wound had not been fatal. That would have been the
ultimate irony - to survive, trapped in an old and ruined body
racked
with pain. R'shiel grabbed at her shoulders and shook the limp body in
fury, but she was fading fast - too fast for R'shiel to stop
it; too
fast for her to call on her power to save Joyhinia's broken body.
Through a red wall of pain Loclon saw her, saw the look of anger and
frustration in her eyes as he robbed her of the one pleasure she wanted
more than anything else in this life - his death. It made
everything
worthwhile.
Then he felt a sudden jerk, as if he was being ripped apart - as if
some giant hand had reached inside of him and turned his body inside
out. Darkness smothered him and he let out a wordless cry of triumph.
Joyhinia Tenragan was dead.
CHAPTER 40
Tarja slept surprisingly well the night before his
hanging. Perhaps it was because he was clean for the first time in
weeks. Or perhaps it was just that his fate seemed so inevitable he had
given up worrying about it.
Whatever the reason, he woke at dawn feeling remarkably refreshed
and far too healthy to dwell on the fact that he would most likely be
dead in a few hours. As the small square of sky he could see through
the cell's only window changed from pink to blue, he dressed in the
uniform Andony had left for him and sat down to wait, feeling nothing
but a serene sense of fatalistic calm.
It did not last long. Voices sounded in the hall outside, followed
by the sounds of fighting, then the door to his cell flew open. The
young man who opened it was wearing a captain's uniform, panting
heavily and grinning like a fool.
"Captain Tenragan, sir! Commandant Warner sends his compliments and
wondered if you'd like to forgo your hanging for a good fight, sir? Oh,
and R'shiel said to say hello, too."
Tarja stared at the young captain. He was beyond being surprised. He
had ceased being amazed by his ability to escape certain death some
time ago - about the time he had gone to sleep a broken man and
woken
completely healed in this same cellblock more than a year ago. And he
was long past being astonished at R'shiel's ability to appear when he
least expected it. She got him out of trouble almost as often as she
landed him in it. But he was relieved that she was not the one who had
found him. He had been ready to face death, but he wasn't sure he was
ready to face R'shiel.
"Find me a sword."
The captain laughed and tossed Tarja his own blade. He was obviously
having the time of his life. Tarja snatched it out of the air and
followed him into the hall.
Sir Andony and his men were lined up with their faces pressed
against the wall as a score of Defenders expertly disarmed them. The
young Karien knight looked stunned. He saw Tarja emerge from the cell
and made to turn, but the Defender who stood behind him pushed him back
against the wall.
"How far you think you get?" he snarled over his shoulder.
"Far enough," Tarja replied with a grin, catching the mood
of the
Defenders around him. Every one of them looked delighted. These men
were not trained to deal with defeat and the last few weeks with the
Kariens in control of the Citadel had been eating away at them like
slow burning acid. Now that they were finally doing something about it,
there wasn't a Defender in the room who could hide his glee.
"What are you going to do with them, Captain . . .
?"
"Throw them into the cells for the time being," the young
man
replied. "And the name's Symin. You probably don't remember me. I was a
Lieutenant when you . . ."
"When I deserted? It's all right, Symin, you can say it."
"Well, I just didn't want it to sound as if . . . you know
. . ."
Tarja smiled at the young man's discomfort. "Yes. I know."
"You not get away with this!" Andony insisted in his broken
Medalonian. Tarja looked at him and shook his head.
"Sir Andony, why don't you just shut the hell up," he said
in
Karien, "before I decide to shut you up myself."
"Kill me if you want," Andony declared angrily in his own
language,
lacking the words in Medalonian to express how he felt. "I will be
welcomed into the House of the Overlord! You, on the other hand, will
perish and freeze in the Sea of Despair! Don't you think we were
expecting something like this? By now the Citadel is swarming with
Karien troops. You won't get past the front door."
"Well, that's our problem, isn't it?" He turned to Symin.
"You do have
a plan for getting past the front door, don't you?" he asked in
Medalonian.
"We're taking back the Citadel," Symin told him happily.
"The gates
are locked and by now we should have control of every key position in
the city. Now we've got you out, we have to free Lord Jenga."
"Where's he being held?"
"We thought he was here with you, but he must have been
moved."
Tarja's brow furrowed. He kicked an overturned stool out of the way,
grabbed Andony by the shoulder and turned him around.
"Where have they taken the Lord Defender?"
"Go to hell, you atheist pig!"
Tarja hadn't really expected any other response. Andony tensed,
obviously expecting Tarja to hit him. It would have been a waste of
time. Andony wanted to suffer for the Overlord. Dying simply
meant granting his wish by sending him to meet his god sooner. But if
Tarja couldn't threaten his life, he could threaten his soul, and that,
he suspected, would frighten him more than any promise of physical
violence.
"Symin, did you say R'shiel was here?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then perhaps we should ask the demon child to have a word with Sir
Andony," he said in Karien to be certain the knight understood
him. "How long do you think it will take her to corrupt his
soul?"
Symin looked at him blankly, but Andony paled.
"I cannot be turned from the Overlord by any Harshini witch!"
"This isn't just any Harshini witch, Andony," he
said in a
low, threatening voice. "This is the demon child. She is evil
incarnate. She can turn you from the Overlord just by looking at you.
If she touches you, your soul will belong to her forever. You cannot
fight her. Even Xaphista fears her. One look from the demon child and you
will drown in the Sea of Despair for an eternity." He watched
as
Andony's eyes widened with fear. A part of Tarja could not believe that
a grown man could be so gullible, while another part of him silently
thanked the Overlord for making his followers so vulnerable. "Do you
really care that much about the Lord Defender?"
Andony hesitated. Tarja met his eye and saw the defiance there. He
shrugged and turned to Symin.
"Fetch the demon child."
"No!" Andony cried in horror.
"Where is the Lord Defender?"
The young knight was torn between duty and his immortal soul. The
decision was a terrible one. Finally his shoulders slumped and he
looked at the floor in shame. "He's in the caverns under the
amphitheatre. They moved him there last night in case there was an
attack on the cells."
"The caverns," Tarja translated for the benefit of his
comrades.
"What did you say to him?" Symin asked curiously.
"I threatened his soul."
"Clever," he said with an approving nod, although he clearly
had no
idea what Tarja was talking about. "Sergeant Donel! Let's get these
Kariens into the cells. The Lord Defender is waiting for us!"
It was not far from the Defenders' headquarters to
the amphitheatre. As they ran through the deserted streets the
occasional sound of metal against metal echoed between the buildings. A
shout of alarm, in Karien, reached them from the direction of the
armoury, then suddenly it was silenced. Tarja didn't know if the
civilians in the Citadel had been warned of the coup, but they must
have instinctively known something was afoot. They did not see another
soul on their journey. Even Tavern Street was deserted.
When they reached the tunnel that led into the caverns, Tarja held
up his hand to halt the troop. Symin didn't seem to mind that he had
automatically assumed command. He studied the entrance for a moment
then waved his men forward. The tunnel entrance was deserted, as was
the tunnel itself. They moved into the darkness cautiously, listening
with every sense they possessed.
The silence of the caverns pressed on Tarja like an invisible
weight. They had once been stables, according to legend; carved out of
the natural hill to house the legendary Harshini horses. Reaching far
into the darkness, they stretched endlessly in a circle under the
amphitheatre like a giant rabbit warren.
Jenga could be anywhere.
He glanced at Symin and silently signalled to him. The young captain
nodded in understanding and headed towards the caverns on the left,
taking half the troop with him. The other half followed Tarja into the
caverns on the right.
Torches mounted in brackets at uneven intervals pierced the darkness
with puddles of flickering light. They moved swiftly and silently,
checking the caverns as they went. Memories caught Tarja unawares as
they inspected the caves. He smiled as the sergeant signalled the
all-clear on the cavern where he had stolen his first kiss with a
Novice whose name he could no longer remember; frowned as he passed the
cavern where he'd broken the news to R'shiel about her true parentage.
He knew these rooms well - he'd played here as a child with
Georj. It
was the best place in the Citadel to hide from Joyhinia. The best place
to imagine they were heroes fighting off some implacable foe. They came
here to practise their swordcraft, too, away from the critical eye of
the Master at Arms. He could remember thinking he was quite a swordsman
when he managed to slip his blunted blade through Georj's guard, while
R'shiel, barely old enough to keep up with them, had demanded she be
allowed to try, even though their practice swords were taller than she
was.
"Captain!"
Tarja turned at the whispered call. Symin's sergeant, Donel, pointed
ahead. A pool of light beckoned, brighter than the surrounding caverns.
They were almost in the centre of the ring. If Symin and his men had
moved at much the same pace, they would be approaching from the other
side.
Tarja nodded and signalled the order to move on. They crept like
thieves through the darkness. Straining to listen, the silence bothered
Tarja. He expected to hear something - the guards talking among
themselves, the creak of leather or the scratch of metal armour as the
Kariens moved about in the central cavern. But there was nothing. No
sound disturbed the silence save for the hissing torches and the sound
of his own breathing. He halted the men and waited. Listening intently.
There was nothing to be heard, but Tarja could smell something in
the air, something faint, and sweet, and disturbingly familiar. It took
him a few moments to identify it. When he realised what it was, he
dropped all pretence of stealth and broke into a run. He saw Symin
coming from the other direction, apparently having reached the same
terrible conclusion. Tarja skidded to a halt as he reached the cavern
and let out a wordless cry of despair as the others rushed in behind
him.
It was blood he could smell. Fresh blood. The cavern was painted
with it. It splattered the walls and pooled on the floor beneath their
boots. Jenga lay in the centre of the carnage, his head almost severed
from his body. He must have put up quite a fight. Squatting down, Tarja
ran his finger through the bloody puddle at his feet. It was still
faintly warm. Whoever had done this had done it recently. So recently
that they were more than likely still down here in the caverns
somewhere. He turned at the sound of someone retching.
"Why?" Symin managed to ask in a voice strangled with
emotion.
Tarja didn't answer him, although he knew the reason. This was the
Kariens' punishment for their temerity. It was the act of a spoiled
child who had lost the game then spitefully broken the winner's
favourite toy so that nobody else could play with it. For a moment, he
couldn't speak. The rage he felt robbed him of any facility other than
the desire to seek vengeance for the death of the only truly honourable
man he had ever known. Donel looked at him with concern and touched his
shoulder to get his attention.
Tarja flinched and stood up so quickly the sergeant drew back from
him in fear.
"Spread out. Search the caverns. Whoever did this is still down
here."
Nobody questioned him. The Defenders dispersed quickly, swords at
the ready, and began searching again. Tarja stared at the gruesome
carnage for a moment then turned away. Symin stood behind him,
immobilised by shock. He looked as if he'd suddenly lost his innocence;
as if he had only just realised this was not a game.
"Why?"
"Because they could," Tarja told him. "Because Jenga
personified the
Defenders. Because they knew they'd lost the Citadel and they wanted to
make a point. Take your pick."
"Captain!"
Tarja and Symin both turned at the cry. Donel and two of the
Defenders were returning. Between them they dragged a struggling man,
but it was not a Karien they had caught. It was a Defender. His uniform
was sprayed with a dark pattern of blood. Disbelief warred with a sort
of resigned acceptance of the inevitable as Tarja realised who it was.
"Gawn."
The man stared at him with the wild eyes of a fanatic. Tarja had
known him on the southern border and thought him a poor example of the
Defenders then. He could not imagine what had brought him to this. Nor
did he particularly care. He carefully and deliberately handed his
sword to Symin, then as Donel held him, he backhanded the younger
captain across the face. All the rage he could not voice was behind the
blow.
Gawn's head snapped back and he slumped in the arms of the sergeant,
but when he focused his eyes on Tarja again, he was smiling. "That's
your answer to everything, isn't it Tarja? Every time I get one up on
you, you have to hit something."
Tarja flew at him, determined to kill Gawn with his bare hands. It
took Symin and two other men to pull him off. Donel hauled Gawn to his
feet as the captain wiped away the blood from his nose. Symin flung
himself between Tarja and Gawn, forcibly holding Tarja back.
"I know how you feel, Tarja," Symin said urgently, as he
strained to
keep them apart. "But don't let him get to you. He'll hang for this.
Justice will be served."
Tarja took a deep, deliberate breath and relaxed. He shook off the
men around him, took a step backwards and held up his hands in a
gesture of peace. Satisfied that he had averted cold-blooded murder,
Symin nodded with relief and turned to issue his orders.
As soon as his back was turned, Tarja snatched his sword from the
young captain's grasp and with one fluid movement he swung it in a wide
arc. Nobody had time to stop him, or even cry out in protest. He sliced
Gawn's head from his shoulders, barely missing Donel as the sergeant
ducked under the blow. Blood sprayed the room in a fountain of death as
Gawn's head landed with a sickening thump and rolled to a stop at
Symin's feet.
Donel threw the headless body away from him in disgust and stood
there, drenched in blood, staring at it in stunned disbelief. The other
Defenders did not move, frozen in shock. Symin wore a look of absolute
incredulity.
Tarja threw the sword atop Gawn's headless, twitching body.
"Justice has been served," he said.
Without waiting for an answer, Tarja turned and walked back into the
darkness of the caverns.
CHAPTER 41
R'shiel reluctantly let go of Joyhinia's limp body
as the full repercussions of her death hit. She slumped against the
body and closed her eyes. Every muscle trembled and she was sweating
profusely in the stuffy room. Brak squatted beside her.
"Are you all right?"
"No."
She waited, expecting some snide remark, but he said nothing. She
opened her eyes and looked at him curiously. "What's this? No
reprimand?"
"There was nothing you could have done."
"At least we won't have to worry about deposing the First
Sister,"
Garet remarked, as he looked down dispassionately at the body and the
spreading stain on the rug.
"It's far from over, Garet," R'shiel warned.
"It is for the First Sister," he shrugged. "Now, if you will
excuse
me, we have some rather angry Karien dukes to take care of. Lieutenant,
see that the body is removed and get that rug out of here,
too." He
stepped back as the Defenders hastened to obey.
Brak stood up and held his hand out to her. "There's nothing more
you can do here, R'shiel."
With a last look at Joyhinia's body, R'shiel took his hand as he
pulled her to her feet. Garet led the way out of the First Sister's
office and down the broad staircase into the street. When they emerged
into the sunlight, they discovered that pandemonium had broken loose in
the city. The streets were crowded with people being held back by a
line of red-coated Defenders who strained against the surging mob.
Garet Warner walked into the centre of the small clearing that his men
had forced, to confront the six dukes of Karien who had invaded the
Citadel. Their faces were pale, their eyes glazed with shock. The crowd
was shouting at them. R'shiel could only make out some of the words but
their mood was ugly. There were quite a few Sisters of the Blade among
them who were stirring up the passions of the mob. Through the raucous
melee she heard the words "Karien pigs!" "Murderers!"
and a few other
insults that shocked her with their crudeness.
She glanced at Brak who shrugged with resignation. "You can't really
blame them. The Defenders may have taken back the Citadel, but there's
still a Karien army camped outside and a lot of people have lost a
great deal since Medalon surrendered."
A captain stepped forward to report to Garet. He spared R'shiel and
Brak a curious glance then turned to the commandant.
"So it worked then?" Garet ask. There was no need to be
specific.
"Yes, it worked," the captain told him. "Almost everything
went
according to plan."
"Almost?" Brak asked with a raised brow.
"I'll explain later."
Garet nodded and stepped forward to address the Karien dukes.
"What do you hope to achieve, Commandant?" one of them
yelled before
Garet could utter a word. "You cannot hold out against our
army."
The man who shouted the question was a slender knight standing at
the front of the Kariens with a canny look in his eyes. He seemed a
little less overawed than his companions.
"Who's that?" she asked Garet.
"I am Lord Roache," the duke announced, in answer to
R'shiel's
question. "And you cannot imagine the destruction you have brought down
on Medalon by your actions."
"The Overlord will protect us!" another duke blustered, but
his
words lacked conviction. He was a large man, but he carried more flab
than muscle on his big-boned frame. He looked ridiculous standing in
the street in a long flowing red nightgown. The Defenders must have
dragged him from his bed.
"I hope for your sake your King is as keen to keep you alive as you
seem to think your god is," Garet remarked. Then he turned to
the
captain in charge of the squad guarding the dukes. "Put them in with
the others for now."
The officer saluted as R'shiel turned away from them, too tired and
stunned by Joyhinia's death to care much about what became of the
Karien dukes. She looked around for Brak and found him standing near
the edge of the crowd, waiting for someone to push through to the
front. For a moment the line of Defenders broke to let another officer
through. R'shiel's disappointment fell away from her as she realised
who it was.
"Tarja!"
She ran to him, but stopped short when she saw the expression on his
face. He was splattered with blood and his eyes were haunted. He showed
no evident pleasure at the sight of her.
"R'shiel."
"Tarja, I . . ." She could not think of anything
to say.
He was whole, and unharmed, despite the blood which she guessed was not
his, but there was nothing welcoming in his demeanour.
"You killed Joyhinia, I hear."
"She killed herself," Garet corrected, coming up behind
them. "That's not your blood, I hope, Captain."
"No."
"Good. Then let's get these streets cleared." He turned to
another
officer and began issuing orders to push the mob back. It was a futile
gesture. There were too many people and not enough Defenders.
R'shiel watched their useless efforts as the crowd shouted
obscenities at the Kariens. Someone hurled something at Lord Roache. He
ducked instinctively as a piece of rotting melon landed harmlessly
against the steps. Hurt from Tarja's cold reception and distressed
beyond belief by the fact that Loclon had eluded her, she felt her ire
rising. Impatiently she grabbed at the power and turned on the crowd.
"Go back to your homes!" she shouted, using the power
to
amplify her voice. "Leave now, before I show you what the Harshini
are really capable of!"
The crowd was stunned into silence. Faced with her Harshini black
eyes that blazed with rage, the citizens of the Citadel had a sudden
change of heart. With barely a muttered protest, they began to melt
away. The Defenders took advantage of the impetus she had provided to
push the rest back. Her eyes still fiercely burning, she turned to
Tarja and Garet. Tarja took an involuntary step backwards as if she
repelled him.
She could not believe how much that one small step hurt.
Perhaps Brak sensed something of her pain, or perhaps it was because
he was linked to the same power. He stepped in front of her, blocking
her view of Tarja.
"Let it go, R'shiel," he said softly. "There's no need for
it."
Reluctantly, she did as he bid. He smiled at her. "Good
girl."
"Don't treat me like a child, Brak."
"Then don't behave like one."
She glared at him for a moment, then nodded. "It's all right. I'll
be fine."
"Are you sure?"
Taking a deep breath, she squared her shoulders. "Yes. I'm
sure."
He waited until he was satisfied that she had her emotions -
and
more importantly, her power - under control, then stepped back.
Tarja
was talking to Garet Warner. He seemed determined not to look at her.
Garet turned as they approached, his expression concerned for the first
time since they had begun this coup.
"What's wrong?" Brak asked.
"As the captain said, almost everything went according to
plan. The Sisters are demanding they take control, but we can deal with
them. Unfortunately, Jenga's dead."
"And what about Loclon?" R'shiel demanded. "Did they find
him?"
"I told you days ago that no one has seen him since the last
Gathering. He's a deserter. He's probably halfway to Fardohnya by
now."
"No! You don't understand!" She turned to Brak desperately.
Only he
could fully appreciate what she feared.
"We have to find him," Brak agreed.
"I've got a lot more to worry about than one miserable deserter,
R'shiel. This," he pointed out with a wave of his arm that
encompassed
the chaotic street before them, "is just the beginning."
"Then I'll find him on my own!"
"I can't allow that."
"I don't recall asking your permission."
"Let her go, Garet," Tarja said. His voice was dull, as if
the life
had gone out of him. "She needs to do this and there's nothing at
present that requires her help."
"Very well, go look for Loclon, if you must. We've more important
things to take care of. If you tire of such a fruitless task and you
wish to join us later, we'll be in the First Sister's office."
Garet turned away in annoyance. Tarja followed him without looking
back. R'shiel wasn't sure if he'd spoken up because he supported her,
or was simply trying to be rid of her.
At that moment, she didn't care. Joyhinia was dead, which meant
Loclon was free to return to his own body. Somewhere in the Citadel, he
was on the loose. She was determined that he would not escape her this
time. Not if she had to tear the Citadel apart stone by stone to find
him.
CHAPTER 42
Tarja leaned his head tiredly against the cool pane
of glass on the long windows of the First Sister's office. They would
have to think of another name for it soon, he thought idly. The
position of First Sister no longer existed.
The Citadel was quiet. A light rain blurred the view and trickled
down the small panes of glass, distorting the world outside. He could
see nothing in the darkness but squares of yellow light from the
windows of the library building across the street. There were Defenders
on guard there tonight to prevent the Sisters of the Blade gaining
entrance and destroying documents they did not want to fall into the
hands of the Defenders.
Harith had already been to see them, demanding that Garet hand over
the Citadel, now that the Defenders had control. She had been shocked
beyond words when he refused. It had been a fairly ugly confrontation,
and although they had won this round, Tarja knew the Sisters of the
Blade would not fade into oblivion quietly. In a way, they were liable
to be more trouble than the Kariens.
He heard the door open but did not turn to see who entered. Garet
could deal with them. The commandant was good at that sort of thing.
"We've moved all the Kariens we rounded up into the amphitheatre,
sir," the officer reported.
It was Symin, the young captain who had rescued him - when?
Only
this morning?
"I've assigned enough men to see they don't escape, but we're pretty
thin on the ground elsewhere because of it. The priests have been
separated from the others. We're holding them in the caverns."
"What did you do with their staves?"
"We piled them up in one of the caverns. I posted a guard on them.
They look pretty valuable."
"A priest doesn't like being separated from his staff,"
Tarja
remarked, still staring thoughtfully out of the dark windows.
"That's true enough," Symin agreed. "They made quite a fuss
when we
confiscated them. But the rest of the Kariens are docile enough. I
think the weather has dampened their spirits somewhat. I told them
they'll be released in the morning if they want to go home."
"Who's in command there now?"
"Captain Grannon."
"Then go and get some sleep, Captain. You've earnt it."
"Thank you, sir. Goodnight. Goodnight, Tarja."
"Goodnight Symin," he said.
The captain saluted without meeting Tarja's eye and left the office.
Tarja watched him go with a frown.
"He doesn't know whether to worship you or run like hell,"
Garet
remarked.
"I'm glad you think it's funny."
The commandant leaned back in the First Sister's chair and stretched
wearily. "Stop feeling so bloody remorseful, Tarja. Gawn deserved to
die. I'd have done the same thing in your place. No . . .
actually, that's not true. I'd have tortured the miserable little
bastard for a month or two before I killed him. That's the difference
between you and me. You prefer pure, uncomplicated justice. I'm more of
'the end justifies the means' ilk. And I'm very patient. I can
wait a
very long time before I get my vengeance."
"Time is one thing we don't have," Tarja reminded him. "The
Kariens
outside will attack as soon as they realise what's happened, and then
we're going to be facing an even bigger problem."
"That's where your Harshini friends come in," Garet mused.
"I hope
R'shiel remembered to get a message to Hythria before she went chasing
off on her damned fool quest to find Loclon."
There was no point trying to explain to Garet why R'shiel thought
finding Loclon was so important, so Tarja let the matter drop. He moved
away from the window and took one of the deep leather chairs on the
other side of the desk, stretching his feet out. He rubbed eyes that
were gritty with exhaustion and looked at Garet questioningly.
"So, what happens now? With Jenga gone, we've no one to take command
- unless you fancy the job."
The commandant shook his head. "Not me. I have neither the ability
nor the presence to hold Medalon together. We need someone the people
know. I've made a career of keeping a low profile. If you issued a
decree in my name, the entire population would stare at you blankly and
say 'Garet who?'"
"Then who else is there?"
"There's you."
"That is not even remotely amusing, Garet."
"I wasn't joking."
"Nobody would follow me, even if I wanted the job, which I
don't."
"You underestimate yourself, my friend. You are the most notorious
Defender that has ever lived and your reputation is that of a fearless
-"
"Don't be absurd!"
"Hear me out, Tarja. You deserted the Defenders because you refused
to serve under Joyhinia, and she turned out to be the most savage,
uncompromising bitch that ever put on the First Sister's mantle. You
publicly defied her. You helped the rebels who challenged her. You got
caught. You escaped. You fought the Kariens and then led the resistance
against them, too. Every ill-advised, impetuous, accidental thing
you've done since you refused to swear that oath to Joyhinia has made
you a hero, like it or not."
"That's ridiculous!"
"As a matter of fact, it is, but it doesn't make it any less real.
You are the only man in Medalon the Defenders, the people and the pagan
rebels will follow. You count the High Prince of Hythria as a friend
and we're going to need him. He'll come to our aid because you
asked him. I'm damn sure he wouldn't come if I did." Garet
smiled then
and added, "Even half the damned Sisterhood will fall in behind you -
at least the younger ones who devoted a good part of their Novitiate to
trying to catch your eye."
Even Tarja allowed himself a smile over that. As a Cadet, Garet
Warner had once called him in to his office to inform him that he and
Georj were no longer permitted to study in the library when the Novices
were in class, as Sister Mahina considered their presence
"disruptive".
His smile faded and he shook his head.
"I don't want to rule Medalon, Garet. Not even temporarily."
"I know. That's why I'm offering you the job. If I thought for a
moment that you had your eye on the post, I would never have mentioned
it. We need someone who cares about setting things right. I've had
enough of people who hunger after power for its own sake. That's the
whole point of getting rid of the Sisterhood."
"You can't make me do it."
"Fine. Then give me a name. Find me one man in the whole of Medalon
that can do what you can do, and I'll never bring the subject up
again."
Tarja sighed. "Let me think about it."
"We don't have time. Tomorrow morning, when the Citadel wakes up,
we'd better be damned sure we know what we're doing or Harith will have
the Sisters of the Blade back in charge so fast your feet won't even
touch the ground between here and the nearest gallows."
Before he could answer, the door banged open and R'shiel stormed
into the office with Brak on her heels. She barely even glanced at him,
for which Tarja was grateful. The inevitable confrontation between them
had once more been delayed. Her quest to find Loclon had kept her out
of his way all day.
"How nice of you to join us, demon child," Garet remarked.
R'shiel did not seem to notice the sarcasm. "I just spoke to Symin.
He said you're going to release the Kariens tomorrow."
"That's always been our plan."
"You can't open the gate. I haven't found Loclon yet."
"I'm not going to hold two thousand Kariens prisoner on your whim,
R'shiel. The priests and the dukes will be enough."
"This is not a whim. He's more dangerous than you know. We have to
find him."
"Then I'll post extra men on the gate to see that he doesn't slip
through, but the Kariens are going, R'shiel, and that's final."
She looked over her shoulder at Brak, seeking his support. She did
not look at Tarja.
"I can appreciate your desire to get the Kariens out of the Citadel,
Commandant," Brak agreed reasonably. "But R'shiel is right.
Loclon
poses a danger that you would be unwise to ignore."
"A danger to whom, exactly?" Garet asked. "He's your enemy,
not
mine."
"Don't you understand?" R'shiel cried in
frustration. "Loclon was the one controlling Joyhinia's body! It was
Loclon who was
aiding the Kariens ever since we tried to remove Joyhinia at the
Gathering. Founders, Garet, he's the single, most heinous traitor ever
to draw breath in Medalon!"
Suddenly she turned on Tarja. "Tell him, Tarja! Tell him I speak the
truth!"
The pain in her eyes almost broke his heart. She needed his support.
But finding Loclon in the Citadel would be like sifting through a pile
of sand looking for one particular grain.
"She's right," he admitted. "He's a traitor, and if we can
find him,
we should." R'shiel smiled at him gratefully, which made him
feel even
worse, knowing what he was going to say next. "But we can't afford to
hold those Kariens. We don't have the men to guard them, or the
resources to feed them. Until we're relieved, every mouthful of food in
the Citadel is going to be rationed. I'm sorry, R'shiel. I know what
this means to you and I want to see Loclon brought to justice as much
as you do, but I agree with Garet. We open the gates tomorrow."
She stared at him, stunned by his response. Brak stepped forward and
placed his hand on her shoulder, as if preparing to restrain her. Tarja
wondered for a moment about the half-breed Harshini. For all his
laconic scepticism, he seemed to truly care for R'shiel. There was a
time when Tarja thought Brak loathed her.
"There! You have it from the Lord Defender, himself. The Kariens
leave first thing tomorrow."
"From who?" R'shiel demanded, shaking Brak off.
"The Lord Defender," Garet repeated calmly.
"Tarja is the Lord Defender? When did that
happen?"
"Just now. The position became available, and as the ranking officer
in the Citadel, I decided to appoint him."
"You're going to let Loclon get away with everything he's done to
you, to me, to Medalon, just so you can be the Lord Defender?"
She was
trembling with suppressed rage. Her violet eyes glistened with unshed
tears.
"It's not like that, R'shiel."
"Isn't it?" she asked bitterly. "You've been marked as the
next Lord
Defender since the day you joined the Cadets, Tarja. Everybody in the
whole damned Citadel knew you'd eventually get the job. Well, I hope
the title makes you happy. I never thought you would stoop so low to
take it."
She turned and fled the room. Tarja expected Brak to follow her, but
he did not move.
"Sort this out now, Tarja," he advised. "It'll only get
worse if you
don't."
Tarja stared at him for a moment then swore softly as he rose to his
feet to follow her.
"R'shiel!" he called as she ran down the
wide
marble staircase leading to the dark deserted foyer. "Damn it, R'shiel!
Wait!"
She turned to look up at him. The torches set high in the wall
sconces cast deceptive shadows over her face. He stopped several steps
above her, panting from the chase.
"I didn't mean to hurt you, R'shiel. I'm sorry."
"No, you're not."
"Then what do you want me to say? Don't you think I want Loclon as
much as you do? But Garet's right, and you damned well know it. We
can't hold the Kariens here."
"There was a time when you would have done anything for me."
He found he couldn't answer her. Memories flooded through him,
reminding him that she spoke an awful truth he was not prepared to
face. She studied his face, reading the conflict, the confusion, and
even the self-loathing that had plagued him since he recovered from the
wound he received trying to save her from the Kariens.
"That time is past, now, isn't it?" she said softly,
bitterly. She
knew about the geas, he realised. And that he was no longer bound by it.
"R'shiel . . ." he murmured helplessly. He had no
idea
what to say. No words to express what he felt.
She nodded, as if accepting the inevitable. "The irony is, I saved
your life because I couldn't bear the thought of being parted from you
and I ended up losing you, anyway. Did you ever truly love me,
Tarja?"
For a long, dreadful moment, he did not answer her. In the end, he
settled for the truth. "I don't know."
She looked away for a moment, perhaps to prevent him seeing her
pain. When she turned back to him, her eyes were cold.
"Free the Kariens if you must, Tarja. I'll just have to keep a watch
on the gate for Loclon myself."
"We'll find him, R'shiel," he promised.
She shook her head sadly. "No, Tarja, we won't be doing
anything together any more. I'll find Loclon and deal with him on my
own. You're the Lord Defender now. You have Medalon to rule."
Like a man donning chain mail before a battle, she had surrounded
herself with an impenetrable shell, constructed of bitterness and pain.
Relief warred with a sense of inexplicable loss as he watched the
transformation. He knew then that the R'shiel he had known was gone
forever. In her place was a hard, determined and powerful young woman
who would never let anyone close to her again.
As she turned and slowly walked down the stairs away from him, Tarja
felt he was staring at a stranger.
CHAPTER 43
For a long time, R'shiel walked blindly through the
deserted streets of the Citadel, paying no attention to where she was
going. She was calm - even serene - uncaring of the
light rain that
fell softly on the glistening cobblestones. Her mind did not seethe
with grief for her loss, or rail at the tragedy of unrequited love. She
was numb; totally devoid of any human emotion that could rise up and
cause her anguish.
R'shiel wondered if this was what it felt like to be fully Harshini.
After a while, she discovered that her wandering had led her to the
Lesser Hall of the Citadel. Without any conscious decision, she climbed
the steps and pulled open the massive bronze door, letting it swing
shut behind her with a hollow boom that echoed through the empty
darkness. Night was trapped within its walls, the whitewashed ceiling
lost in the shadows. She tried to recall the picture Brak had painted
in her mind of the Great Hall, the Temple of the Gods, when it had
dazzled the world with its glory and wondered if this smaller temple
once dedicated to the Goddess of Love had been just as impressive. She
could not do it. The Lesser Hall was nothing more than a big, cavernous
room with no life or beauty to recommend it.
"Why, Kalianah?" she asked the darkness.
A pillar of light pierced the shadows as she named the goddess.
Assuming the form of a child, the Goddess of Love crossed her arms and
glared at her. R'shiel stared at the goddess, oblivious to the aura of
adoration that surrounded the pale little girl whose feet hovered just
above the ground.
"Why?"
"Don't you know that it's extremely ill mannered to summon the gods
as if they were -"
"Why did you make Tarja fall in love with me?"
"Oh!" the Goddess said with the guilty air of a child caught
playing
with something she was forbidden to touch. "That."
"Yes, that! Why did you do it? What gives you the right to
interfere in my life?"
"I was only trying to help."
"You're supposed to be the Goddess of Love. How can you cause such
pain?"
"Well, whose fault is that?" the Goddess asked
petulantly. "You
destroyed the geas, not me."
"How?"
"You asked the demons to substitute for Tarja's blood. How was I
supposed to know what you were planning?"
"You sent Dace with a message, reminding me I could use the demons
to heal him."
"Yes, but I didn't expect you to use them like that! Any Harshini
could have told you something like that would break my geas."
"Perhaps they would have, if they'd known about it."
"Well, Brak certainly knew. He was there when I did it. Why don't
you ask him why he didn't say anything?"
The news surprised her. He had never warned her, never even hinted
that something was amiss.
"I want your promise, Kalianah, that you will never, ever,
do anything like this to me again. Or to Tarja."
"You can have that!" she sniffed indignantly. "If this is
what you
call gratitude, I'll never even think of trying to help you again. Then
you'll see how hard it is to love anybody without my blessing!"
"I don't want to love anybody, Kalianah, so I don't mind at
all."
Kalianah's eyes narrowed and she began to change form. A tall,
fair-haired young woman suddenly took the place of the little girl.
"You can live without love?" the goddess asked. "Is that
what you
think? You might be able to tame the God of War with your meddling,
R'shiel, but my power is beyond your reach."
"What makes you think I'm trying to tame the God of War?"
"I am not blind, demon child. Hythria and Fardohnya are united for
the first time in centuries. Zegarnald already grows weaker. But don't
think that by hardening your heart you can do the same to the Goddess
of Love. Humans prosper without war. They will shrivel and die without
me."
"Do you personally take a hand in every romance? Do you make every
mother love her child, every man love his brother?"
"Of course not!"
"Then why do they need you?"
"They need the hope I represent."
"What hope?" she demanded. "You're a spoiled, petulant child
who
helps or hinders the course of love on nothing more than impulse. You
interfere because you can, Kalianah, not because some human petitioned
you for aid and you found his cause worthy."
Kalianah was incapable of real anger, but she was as close to it as
her essence allowed. "Your task is to destroy Xaphista, demon child,
not impose your own atheist bigotry on the rest of us. Do what you are
destined for and leave the Primal Gods to do what we are meant
for."
"And once I've destroyed Xaphista, what then?"
The goddess looked away, unable to meet her eye. "That is not for me
to decide."
"You decide who will love me easily enough."
"It is not for me to decide," Kalianah insisted stubbornly.
"And you
should not waste time dwelling on such things. You must turn your
attention to Xaphista. If you devoted as much time to defeating him as
you do to making things difficult for the Primal Gods, he'd be as weak
as a newborn pup by now."
"Xaphista will weaken."
"Not in your lifetime," Kalianah scoffed. "You have to
tackle the
core of his power, not nibble at the edges like a terrier trying to
chew up a mountain. If you don't, then the moment Xaphista realises
what you're doing, he will fight back with every iota of power at his
disposal."
"Then what do you suggest I do, Divine One?"
"If I knew that, demon child, I would have done something about
Xaphista myself!"
Kalianah vanished, plunging the hall back into darkness. R'shiel
stood unmoving, staring at the space where she had been. Something
Kalianah said bothered her, but the thought was too elusive to grasp.
Something about tackling the core of Xaphista's power . . .
With a flash of inspiration, R'shiel knew what she had to do. Kalan
had given her the first inkling in Greenharbour. She had no idea
exactly how she was going to do it, but the secret of bringing
Xaphista to his knees was suddenly so obvious that she could not
believe she had taken until now to realise it.
R'shiel pounded on Brak's door until he opened it.
"What is it? Have you found Loclon?"
"There's something I need to ask you."
"Do you have any idea what time it is, R'shiel?"
"What do you care?" she asked, pushing past him into the
apartment
that Garet had allocated him. "You're Harshini. You don't need to
sleep."
He closed the door and turned to look at her with a frown. "We don't
need as much sleep as humans, R'shiel. That doesn't mean we don't need
to sleep at all. A point you would do well to remember. When was the
last time you slept?"
"I can't remember."
"Well, I can. It was four days ago. I'm seven hundred years old. I
need my rest."
She smiled at him. He was fully dressed and alert and every candle
in the room was alight. The fire was crackling cheerfully and an open
book lay on the table beside the large chair near the hearth. He had
not been sleeping.
"Well, demon child, what is so damned important that it can't wait
until morning?"
"I have to destroy Xaphista."
"Really?" he asked with wide-eyed astonishment. "And it's
taken you
exactly how long to come to this startling conclusion?"
"Don't make fun of me, Brak. You know what I mean."
"Yes, I do, but I can't understand why it's so important at this
hour of the night."
"I think I've figured out a way to do it."
"How?" he asked, with no trace of mockery.
"I was just talking to Kalianah. She said I had to tackle the core
of his power, not nibble at the edges like a terrier trying to chew up
a mountain."
Brak smiled. "That sounds like Kali. What else were you two
discussing?"
"We had words," R'shiel admitted, "about what she did to
Tarja."
"That must have been interesting."
"She said you knew about it," she accused.
He nodded and moved away from the door. R'shiel followed him with
her eyes, but he was impossible to read when he didn't want her to know
what he was feeling.
"Why didn't you tell me?"
"It wouldn't have made a difference."
"How do you know?"
"Because I've seen it before. A geas is no small thing R'shiel.
Tarja was smitten and there was nothing to be done about it."
"What about me?"
"You were never under Kalianah's geas. Not even the Goddess of Love
would have risked such a thing for the demon child."
"But I loved him," she said, afraid her voice had allowed
some hint
of the pain she was trying so hard to deny.
"You didn't need Kalianah for that R'shiel. You grew up worshipping
the ground Tarja walked on."
"If she hadn't interfered, would he . . . ?"
"Would he have truly loved you in return?" Brak finished for
her
with a shrug. "I don't know."
"He despises me now."
"No, he doesn't. He just doesn't know how to cope with what's
happened. The fact that he doesn't actually believe in the gods who did
this to him won't make it any easier on him, either." He poured
two
cups of wine and crossed the room, holding one of them out to her.
"He'll get over it eventually. Drink up. Lost love always looks better
through the bottom of a glass."
"I don't want a drink."
"Well I do, and it's bad form to drink alone. Humour me."
She took the cup and sipped the wine sullenly, letting its warmth
spread through her. Despite Brak's assurances, it made absolutely no
difference to how she felt. Brak resumed his seat by the fire and took
a long swig from his glass.
"So, are you going to tell me what this brilliant idea is, or do we
have to keep rehashing the story about poor old Tarja for a few more
hours?"
"Why do you take such delight in ridiculing my pain?"
"Because you're a lot tougher than you realise, demon child. I know
you're hurting, but deep down you knew this would happen. As soon as
Xaphista told you about the geas, you knew that Tarja didn't love you
willingly. For all your human failings, you have an innate sense of
what is right. It's part of being Harshini. You might lament losing
him, but you know, in your heart, that it's better this way. The sooner
you admit it openly, then the sooner you'll get over it."
"Better?" she asked bitterly. "How could it be
better?"
"Tarja was the chink in your armour, R'shiel. Xaphista would have
exploited that weakness to its fullest. Don't you remember what you
told me about Xaphista when he tried to seduce you into joining him? He
used Tarja then, and you almost gave in."
R'shiel had no wish to be reminded of that dreadful journey through
Medalon, but she could not deny the truth of what Brak told her. She
sank into the chair on the other side of the fire and stared at the
flames, not wanting to give him the satisfaction of seeing that she
knew he was right. She need not have bothered. Brak knew her too well.
"A moment ago you were bursting to tell me how you could bring
Xaphista down. Do we really have time for you to sulk?"
She hurled the goblet at him. He ducked it easily and the glass
shattered harmlessly against the far wall.
He smiled. "Feel better now?"
"I hate you."
"No, you don't. You just hate the fact that I'm right."
"It's the same thing."
Brak sighed, as if his patience was wearing thin. "Ask me what you
came to ask, R'shiel. I really do intend to get some sleep in what's
left of this night."
"I have to attack the core of Xaphista's power," she told
him with
considerably less enthusiasm than she had had when she burst into his
room earlier.
"So you said before."
"We have to go after his priests."
Brak frowned. "You won't turn a single Karien priest, R'shiel. Even
if you managed to win their minds to your cause, Xaphista owns their
souls. Each priest is linked to the Overlord through his staff."
"Then that is their weakness. If I can use that link, I can reach
every priest in Karien and cripple Xaphista overnight."
"In theory, yes, but how are you going to do it?"
"Kalan had an idea that set me thinking. I have to get a close look
at a staff, though. I want to see how it works."
"I'll tell you how it works, R'shiel. Very, very well. Don't you
recall what happened the last time you had a close encounter with a
Staff of Xaphista?"
"I'm never likely to forget. But you told me the staff destroys
magic. Well, if it can do that, then the staff has to use
magic, too. And if it can use magic, maybe I can do something to change
its purpose."
Brak sighed and climbed to his feet. "Come on then."
"Where are we going?"
"You want to take a look at a Staff of Xaphista? Garet Warner has
more than a hundred of them piled up in a cavern under the
amphitheatre."
She jumped to her feet in astonishment. "You think it'll
work?"
"No. I think it's the most misguided excuse for a plan that you've
ever come up with, but I know you won't let it go until you've
discovered that for yourself."
She hugged him impulsively. "I knew you'd help me."
He pushed her away gruffly. "Don't get too excited, R'shiel. I'm
doing this to prove you wrong."
"I'm not wrong. I know this will work."
He picked up his cloak from the back of the chair where he had
discarded it earlier and looked at her sceptically. "A few more burns
from touching those staffs might convince you otherwise, demon
child."
Two determined-looking Defenders barred the
entrance into the tunnel that led into the caverns under the
amphitheatre. R'shiel demanded entry to no avail, but the ruckus
brought out the officer in charge to see what all the fuss was about.
He recognised R'shiel and frowned. Shorter than the average Defender
and prematurely grey, he was renowned for his organisational abilities,
rather than his fighting skills. He was also an old friend of Tarja's.
"You can't see the prisoners, R'shiel."
"We don't want to see the Kariens, Captain Grannon. We just want to
have a look at the staffs you took from the priests."
He frowned, but could see no harm in her request. As far as Grannon
was concerned, the staffs were just useless, if rather valuable,
religious frippery.
"Very well. Go with them, Charal. And stay with them," he
added with
a disturbing lack of trust.
The sergeant took a torch from the wall and led them through the
tunnel into the caverns on the left. The staffs were piled in a
careless heap in a room near the entrance. There were another two
Defenders posted outside, who stood aside to let them enter. Charal
went in first and held the torch high. The flames reflected off the
staff heads like myriad tiny jewels. R'shiel and Brak stared at the
pile, careful not to get too close.
"Can you pick one up for me?" she asked Charal.
"Captain Grannon didn't say you weren't allowed to touch
them."
"We can't touch them." Brak explained. "They're specifically
designed to harm anyone with Harshini blood."
Charal looked sceptical, but he turned to the wall and dropped the
torch into a metal bracket before bending down and picking up a staff
at random. He thrust it at R'shiel, who took an involuntary step
backwards.
"Careful!"
Swallowing a sudden lump of fear, R'shiel stepped closer and studied
the hated symbol of Xaphista's power. The shaft had been treated with
something that stained it black and made the metal suck in the light
around it. The head of the staff was made of gold; shaped like a
five-pointed star and intersected by a lightning bolt crafted of
silver. Each point of the star was set with crystal and in the centre
of the star was a larger gem of the same stone.
Charal looked at the staff curiously, his eyes alight with greed.
"Are they real diamonds, do you think?"
"No," Brak said. "They're crystals of some sort."
"They look like the Seeing Stone."
Brak stared at her. "What?"
"I said they look like the Seeing Stone. You know, the big crystal
they have in the Temple at Greenharbour?"
"I know what the Seeing Stone is. Bring it closer to the
light."
Charal moved the staff until it caught the flames of the torch.
R'shiel stepped closer, studied it for a moment, and then tentatively
reached out towards the staff head.
"What are you doing?" Brak cried in horror.
"Putting a theory to the test."
She lightly brushed her fingertip over the centre crystal. No bolt
of agony shot through her, not even a whisper of pain.
"How . . . ?" he gasped in astonishment.
"I didn't touch the staff, just the crystal. Try it
yourself."
Reluctantly, Brak reached out to touch the sparkling jewel, jerking
his hand back instinctively in anticipation of the torture he was
certain awaited him. When nothing happened, he gingerly laid his finger
on the stone and looked at R'shiel in wonder.
"I don't understand."
"Watch," she commanded. He stepped back as she reached for
the staff
once more, this time with her eyes blackened by the power she drew. She
placed her finger on the centre crystal and the room flared with light
as every stone in every staff on the floor began to glow in response to
her touch. Charal dropped the staff with a cry of alarm. Brak jumped
clear of it as the room was plunged back into relative darkness as soon
as her contact with the crystal was severed.
"But how . . . ?" Brak asked, looking at the now
quiescent
pile of staffs that lay on the floor beside them.
"I think they're chips off one of the missing Seeing Stones."
"I hate to admit it, R'shiel, but you may have been right, after
all."
"I can use the staffs to influence the priests, can't I?"
He glanced at the pile. "That's what you came to ask me? I suppose.
Provided you can access a Seeing Stone to control them."
"The Citadel's Seeing Stone is lost," she reminded him,
glancing at
the pile of staffs. "But Kalan said it couldn't be destroyed. It has to
be somewhere."
He did not seem to share her optimism. "I suppose, although where
you would hide something as large as a Seeing Stone is beyond me. And
have you considered the possibility that these crystals might be all
that's left of the Citadel's Stone?"
"I'm guessing if a Seeing Stone was broken down into smaller stones,
it's the one from Talabar. The Sisterhood would only care about
destroying it or hiding it. Only the Fardohnyans would think of selling
it."
Brak nodded thoughtfully. "Which would explain Hablet's
determination to keep the Harshini out of Fardohnya. He wouldn't want
us to realise what had happened to it."
"And only a god would have the power to break the Stone up. It makes
sense, I suppose, although it must have cost Karien a fortune. I always
wondered how Fardohnya got so rich so quickly. But what about
Loclon?"
"We'll look for him, but without help we're not going to find
him."
Her expression hardened. "The new Lord Defender has other
priorities."
Brak studied her determined expression and shrugged. "All right
then, that just leaves one rather pertinent question to be
answered."
"What's that?"
"Where does one hide several tons of magic crystal?"
CHAPTER 44
Loclon jerked back to consciousness with a start,
and for a long time could not decide where he was. His mind was filled
with so many images, so much pain, that he could not gather his
thoughts into anything remotely resembling coherent thought. He stared
at the strange room, at the heavy drapes over the bed and the softly
glowing walls, trying to recall how he came to be there. His head was
weighted down with pain and he could not move his limbs. He could not
even remember who he was.
It came to him, after a time, although how long was impossible to
judge. He gradually remembered being Joyhinia Tenragan. He remembered
the power he had wielded in her name. He remembered R'shiel standing
over him, demanding that he live.
And he remembered dying.
The feeling stayed with him like a shadow looming over his soul. The
pain seemed almost irrelevant when compared with the overwhelming
terror he experienced when he recalled throwing himself on some
nameless Defender's sword in the First Sister's office to escape the
fury in R'shiel's eyes.
In hindsight, it was the most courageous thing he'd ever done -
perhaps the only courageous thing he'd ever done.
He did not lament the death of Joyhinia, and his grief was inspired
more by annoyance than guilt. He had lost the only true taste of power
he was ever likely to have. Now he was nothing more than a fugitive.
As that thought occurred to him, he experienced a moment of blind
panic. A fugitive was exactly what he was and he knew that R'shiel
would not rest until he had been found. He had to get out of here, out
of this room, out of the Citadel.
Loclon tried lifting his head and was appalled to find the task
almost beyond him. His body had lain dormant for months and the muscles
had wasted almost to the point of atrophy. He had no strength, no
control, not even the ability to push himself off the bed.
It had never occurred to Loclon that his body might be wasting away
in his absence. He knew it was alive - and as long as his body
lived,
so did he. Mathen had assured him the priests were taking care of it,
but he had never been permitted to view the body himself, the priests
claiming such a confrontation would undo whatever magic they had worked
to transfer his mind into Joyhinia's body. To awaken, in this thin,
emaciated body, with barely enough strength to lift his head from the
pillow, seemed the ultimate irony.
R'shiel could not have planned it better if she tried.
A sense of urgency overwhelmed him, for a moment swamping even his
despair at finding his body so useless. R'shiel was looking for him.
She would not rest until she had him in her power.
Anger warred with fear as he thought of R'shiel. She had no right to
come back, he decided, even though, as Joyhinia, he had done everything
in his power to ensure that she would. If the Kariens had done as they
promised she would have been dead by now - burned at the stake
in
Yarnarrow for the Harshini sorcerer she was. But not even the Karien
god could hold her, and Loclon was not so foolish as to think that if
she possessed the strength of purpose to face down a god that he could
escape her wrath.
That thought finally spurred him to action. With a panic-driven
burst of strength, he threw himself off the bed, landing heavily on the
floor. He lay panting, exhausted by even that small effort. He could
see the door, a mere five paces from where he had fallen. The distance
stretched before him like a vast canyon.
For a long time, he simply lay there, gathering what little strength
he had to cross the gap. He did not think of anything but the urgency
of his mission. He had died once already today. He did not intend to
let it happen again.
Loclon pushed himself up onto his elbows and began the painstaking
task of dragging his useless body towards the door. He had barely moved
a pace across the floor when he heard footsteps in the hall outside.
Terror lent him another burst of strength. He slithered painfully over
the polished floorboards, filled with an unnamed dread. His arm slipped
out from under him and he banged his chin, making black lights dance
before his eyes. The door loomed in the distance, seemingly no closer,
despite his desperate efforts. The footsteps drew closer, louder. Sweat
beaded his brow and left clammy handprints on the floor as he clawed
his way painstakingly forward.
He collapsed in exhaustion, his breathing ragged. Tears of fear and
frustration blurred his vision. The door might as well be on the other
side of Medalon. He would never make it. Any moment now it would open
and R'shiel would be standing there, ready to even the score for every
insult, real or imagined, that he had inflicted on her. He sobbed with
terror and stared at the panelled door; watched it open with a feeling
akin to having hot lead poured into his stomach. The door slammed
against the wall. Loclon let out an unintelligible cry for mercy;
tasted the acrid smell of urine as his bladder let go.
"Oh, for the gods' sake, stop blubbering!" Mistress Heaner
declared
impatiently. "Pick him up, Lork."
The old woman looked down on him, staring at the spreading stain on
the front of his loincloth in disgust. As usual, she was dressed in
black, clutching an expensive cape around her shoulders. Her small eyes
set amid the folds of her thin, leathery face were filled with
distaste. Lork stepped forward and scooped Loclon up from the floor.
Even he screwed up his nose.
"You should be grateful, Captain. They're turning the Citadel inside
out looking for you."
Loclon did not reply. He was too relieved by his rescue and too
frightened by its source. Owing Mistress Heaner anything was dangerous
in the extreme. She demanded a finger for an unpaid gambling debt.
Loclon was afraid to think of what she would charge for his life.
Bathed and fed, Loclon began to feel better now he
knew he was safely within the walls of Mistress Heaner's house. His
only care was to hide until he could escape the Citadel.
Later that evening, Mistress Heaner came to his room. When she
opened the door Loclon noted, with some alarm, that Lork was on guard
outside, standing there with that implacable, witless expression that
seemed to respond only to Mistress Heaner. There was a boy of about
twelve with her, with sandy hair and a sly, but beautifully innocent
face. Loclon remembered him as one of Mistress Heaner's more exotic
playthings. Lork closed the door behind them and the boy carried the
tray he was holding to the small table beside the bed. The tempting
smell of roasted meat escaped from under the domed cover on the plate.
"The Defenders have control of the Citadel," she told him as
she lit
the lamp. "They've imposed a curfew until tomorrow at sunrise. You can
go now, Alladan."
"Who's the new First Sister?" he asked with a twinge of
professional
jealousy as the boy slipped silently from the room.
"There isn't one," the old woman shrugged. "Nor will there
be, if
you believe the rumours."
"You mean the Defenders have taken over the Citadel? Without the
Sisterhood?"
"So it would seem. I hear Garet Warner masterminded the whole thing.
That's not surprising. He's a slimy little bastard. Jenga's dead
though," she added, with no more emotion than she might tell
him of a
change in the weather.
Loclon felt no remorse over the loss of the Lord Defender. "So
Warner's in charge?"
"He'll probably name himself Lord Defender in the morning."
"I have to get out of the Citadel."
Mistress Heaner nodded. "Squire Mathen left instructions in case
something like this happened. You're to be taken to Karien."
Loclon's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Why?"
"Because you were the First Sister. You have information the Kariens
will need to take back the Citadel."
"There's a hundred thousand men outside the walls. They don't need
me."
"The Defenders are holding all the dukes hostage. There is an army
out there, certainly, but no one to lead them."
She spoke matter-of-factly; as if she were repeating some idle
gossip about a neighbour, not telling him that his entire world was
falling apart.
"Then she's still here?"
"Who? R'shiel? Oh yes, she's still in the Citadel."
"She wants to kill me."
"So would every Defender in the Corps, if he knew what you'd
done,"
Mistress Heaner pointed out with infuriating smugness. "Fortunately for
you, your brothers-in-arms don't believe in magic, therefore they're
not likely to seek vengeance for an act they cannot conceive."
"Can you get me out of here?"
She smiled. It was a cold, calculating smile. It made him shudder.
"For a price."
"How much?"
"It's bad manners to discuss such things over a meal," she
replied,
glancing around to ensure everything was to her satisfaction. She had
put him in the Blue Room. The hint was not lost on Loclon. This was
where he had killed that whore . . . what was her name? Peny?
This was the room where Mistress Heaner found the leverage she needed
to turn him into a traitor. "We'll talk about it later."
"How am I going to get out of the Citadel?" he asked,
lifting the
cover off the platter and nodding appreciatively. He was starving.
"Through the gate, how else?"
"But isn't it closed against the Kariens?"
"For the moment. They're opening it in the morning to let the
Kariens go."
Loclon looked up from the plate with astonishment. "They're
letting them go?"
"They seem to think we're going to be under siege for quite some
time," Mistress Heaner shrugged. "They've told the Kariens they
can
leave and anyone else who would prefer to go with them. I doubt they're
planning on releasing the dukes, but they want to be rid of the rest of
the Kariens. Clever thing to do, actually. A lot less mouths to
feed."
"R'shiel will be there," Loclon predicted with dread
certainty.
"Probably."
"She'll recognise me."
"Don't worry, Captain, we'll give the demon child something else to
think about." She walked back to the door and knocked on it
twice. Lork
opened it with a key. He was a prisoner, he realised with despair, but
a prisoner with some value at least.
The question was: how much was Mistress Heaner going to charge?
CHAPTER 45
Tarja assigned a squad of Defenders to aid R'shiel
in her search for Loclon. He even made a point of picking men who knew
Loclon on sight. It was a thoughtful gesture, but not enough for
R'shiel to forgive him for opening the gate. Particularly when she
learnt he had ordered the men to look for Loclon, but not hinder the
Karien exodus. R'shiel wanted to stop every man leaving the Citadel.
She wanted to examine each soldier and knight closely, search every
wagon, every sack, and every woman's purse, to ensure that Loclon did
not get past her. When the officer in charge of the squad repeated his
orders, R'shiel turned on her heel furiously and made her way straight
to the First Sister's office.
Tarja met her rage with silent fortitude. He was wearing a new red
jacket bearing the sword and shield insignia of the Lord Defender.
Despite the fact that it was before sunrise, the First Sister's office
was full of Defenders. They cleared a path for her warily and avoided
her gaze. None of the Defenders in the office appeared concerned that
Tarja had been promoted over them to the Lord Defender. They acted like
men who were glad that the ultimate responsibility for their fates had
been shifted to someone else. A small part of her understood how they
felt. This coup was still very new, and although they controlled the
Citadel, Medalon was a long way from being secure. If it fell apart on
them, Tarja would bear the brunt of any reprisals.
"Garet said we could check everyone leaving the Citadel!"
"Actually, he said that we'd post extra men on the gate to see that
Loclon doesn't slip past. There was never any suggestion that we would
allow you to stop and search every single person trying to get through
the gate."
"There are thousands of people down there! We'll never find
him!"
"Then I'm sorry, R'shiel. I've given you all the men I can
spare."
His tone was implacable. It was as if he had assumed some of Jenga's
dignified gravity along with his rank.
"And if I find Loclon? Your men do have orders to arrest
him, don't they, my Lord Defender? Or did you want me to just give him
a friendly pat on the back and wish him a safe journey?"
He frowned, impatient with her sarcasm. "Take the men I gave you, or
not, R'shiel. I've neither the time nor the inclination to argue about
it."
"Is this your idea of helping me?"
"Would you care to discover what not helping you feels
like?"
They glared at each other for a tense moment.
"If he gets away from me, I'll never forgive you, you know that,
don't you?"
"It's getting light out there," he said, turning his
attention to
his men. "If you want to be at the main gate when it opens, I suggest
you get a move on."
The wind was biting when she emerged into the
light on the broad ledge that circled the towering white walls of the
Citadel. R'shiel had not been up here since she was a child, when Tarja
had brought her to the walls to show her the rare spectacle of the high
plains covered in snow. She was only five or six years old at the time
and snow on the plains, while not unheard of, was unusual enough that
she had cried out with delight at the sight of it. That Joyhinia had
beaten her afterwards for sneaking out with Tarja had not lessened the
thrill, and she had held on to the memory as she sobbed in her room,
hungry and cold, her legs throbbing from the cane. She could remember
thinking that it had all been worth every savage blow. It didn't matter
that she had been sent to bed without dinner. She didn't even care when
Joyhinia had declared that as she seemed to like the cold so much, she
could get a taste of what it really felt like in the snow and had the
fire in her room extinguished and the blankets removed. It didn't
matter that her legs were black and blue. She had stood on the
wall-walk in the still, cold air and looked out over the countryside
blanketed in white, the shallow Saran River frozen with a thin coating
of ice, and thought she was standing on top of the world.
A trace of the same feeling came back to her as she looked down, but
this time no peaceful layer of snow softened the view. The plain
crawled with humanity as far as the eye could see, even as far away as
the small village of Kordale, whose smoking chimneys R'shiel could just
make out in the distance. From this high up it was impossible to make
out individual details, rather the ground below rippled like some
strange, poisonous ocean that lapped at the walls of the Citadel.
"Are you all right?" Brak asked with concern.
"Why wouldn't I be?"
He did not answer for a moment. He was sitting with his back to the
wall with his booted feet stretched out in front of him on the ledge,
cleaning his fingernails with the tip of his dagger. Scattered clouds
left over from the rain during the night hung motionlessly in a sky
tinted the colour of washed-out blood.
"If you happen to find Loclon, just be careful, will you?"
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that if you're planning to use your power to restrain him,
try to do it as quickly as possible. You'll be drawing on the same
power as Korandellan. He'll have to fight you for his share of
it."
Brak did not need to add that if she drew too much, Korandellan's
ability to hold Sanctuary safely out of time would be compromised. She
had seen his weary face in the Seeing Stone in Greenharbour. R'shiel
knew how close to exhaustion he was.
"You make it sound as if I actually have control over it."
She
closed her eyes, letting the chill air clear her mind then looked down
from the wall-walk over the mass of humanity swarming to be let out of
the Citadel. "This is hopeless!"
"You knew that before you came here," Brak pointed out.
"Aren't you going to help?"
"What do you want me to do?"
She muttered something unintelligible and looked back over the
crowd. The Defenders were pushing the people back to clear a path for
the gates to open. On the other side of the wall, the plain was
littered with the Karien army. There was a sizeable gathering outside
the gate, waiting for their comrades inside the Citadel to be released.
A truce had been arranged the previous day, although with their
leaders now hostages in the Citadel, it had taken some time to sort out
the Karien chain of command and find someone capable of making a
decision. The wall-walk was lined with archers to discourage the
Kariens from attempting to break the truce. The Defenders could not
hope to fend off a well co-ordinated attack, but they were enough to
deter the disorganised and bewildered Kariens from trying anything
stupid. They seemed incapable of understanding that the Citadel was
lost to them, or that their leaders had been taken prisoner. The
Overlord would not allow such a thing.
"Isn't there something magic we can do?" she asked, turning
her back
to the Kariens.
He raised a brow at her. "Something magic?"
"You know what I mean."
Brak sighed with long-suffering patience. "You still have no idea
what you're dealing with, do you?"
"I don't want a lecture, Brak. I just want to know if there is
anything we can do to find Loclon more easily."
"You could make every person leaving tell the truth then ask their
names as they pass through the gate," he suggested.
"That won't work. Tarja won't let us stop them." She was
scanning
the crowd and did not see Brak's smile.
"I was joking, R'shiel."
"I'm beside myself with mirth. Do you have any other brilliant
suggestions?"
"No."
"Good."
Brak sheathed his dagger then climbed to his feet and came to stand
beside her. The gates swung open ponderously as the Defenders shouted
orders to the crowd. The first to leave were the troopers that had been
posted around the city, and they made up the bulk of the occupation
force. They looked cold and miserable, having spent a night in the damp
weather confined to the amphitheatre. Most of them were simple peasants
dragged into this war because their masters owed a fealty to the Karien
King. They were at the mercy of their god, their King and their dukes.
"They don't look very happy, do they?" Brak remarked.
"Can you blame them?"
"You're not feeling sorry for them, are you?"
"A little bit. Most of them would much rather be at home getting
ready for the spring planting, I think. Not stranded here in a foreign
country fighting a war they probably don't even understand."
"Well, if you think the peasants are unhappy, imagine what that lot
must be feeling." Brak pointed up the street.
The next group waiting to be let through was the knights. Tarja had
permitted them their mounts, but other than that, they were leaving
empty handed. Their faces were cold and haughty, as if they were
leaving of their own free will, not being forced out like beggars who
couldn't pay the rent. Sir Andony sat at the head of the small column.
R'shiel could not make out the others from this height. She watched
them curiously, wondering what they were thinking. Were they
plotting revenge? Were they already planning to return?
"My Lady! My Lady R'shiel!"
R'shiel glanced down at the street and discovered an urchin waving
up at her. She did not know the child, but he was panting heavily, as
if he had run all the way to the gate.
"What is it?" she called.
"That man you're looking for? The one with the scars? I saw
him!"
"Wait here!" she told Brak, heading for the stairs that led
down
into the gatehouse at a run. When she reached the street, she had to
push through the crowd to find the child. The boy was waiting for her
by the gatehouse wall. He had the most beautiful face R'shiel had ever
seen on a child.
"Who are you? Where did you see Loclon?" she demanded.
"My name is Alladan. I work for Mistress Heaner."
"Who is Mistress Heaner?"
"She's . . . she's . . . my employer,"
the boy
said, a little uncertainly. "But I saw the man you're looking for. He
was at Mistress Heaner's last night."
"Is he still there?"
Alladan nodded. "I think so. Did you want me to show you?"
She glanced up at the wall-walk where Brak was looking down at her
and debated calling him. Although she was certain he was telling the
truth, the child might be wrong, and she could not risk letting Loclon
slip past her. She waved reassuringly to Brak then turned back to
Alladan.
"Show me."
As she pushed through the crowd behind the boy, she faintly heard
Brak calling her back, but she ignored him. The idea that she might
have found Loclon consumed her, swamping caution and common sense. They
broke through the crowd after a great deal of pushing and shoving,
turning towards the warehouse district. The boy ran ahead, looking back
over his shoulder occasionally to ensure that she was still with him.
When the boy finally reached his destination, it proved to be a
narrow gate with a small hatchway at eye level, jammed between two
dilapidated warehouses. He stopped and waited for her to catch up and
then jerked his head in the direction of the door.
"He's in there."
"Are you sure?"
"He was this morning."
"How did you know I was looking for him?"
Alladan shrugged innocently. "The whole Citadel knows, my
Lady."
Then he grinned and added, "Is there some sort of reward for finding
him?"
She smiled at the boy's expression. "We'll see."
"I was . . . well, I was hoping I could get it
now," he
said. "I mean, you never know what's going to happen
. . ."
"Go back to the gate and ask for Lord Brakandaran. He'll see you're
rewarded."
Alladan looked a little disappointed, but he did not press the
point. He ran off without another word. R'shiel watched him leave with
a shake of her head. He certainly was an enterprising lad.
Turning back to study the small gate, R'shiel carefully drew on her
power and pushed at the gate with a thought. It creaked open to reveal
a lane strewn with litter. She could not sense anyone in the lane, so
she stepped through cautiously, gagging on the smell. She stepped
silently over the rubbish towards another doorway at the end of the
alley. It stood open and inviting. When she entered the room beyond she
gasped with astonishment.
It was sumptuous - decorated with no thought to expense, or
good
taste. There were velvet-upholstered couches scattered about the room,
each one sectioned off by diaphanous sheer curtains. The carpet was as
thick as the grass in the garden behind the infirmary. Fardohnyan
crystal chandeliers hung unlit from the ceiling. There was a smell
about the place, too, something she could not identify, although it was
annoyingly familiar. R'shiel looked around her wide-eyed, wondering
what such a place was doing hidden down here in the warehouse district
- and who would frequent it.
The answer came to her as she checked the deserted rooms along a
narrow passage leading off the main room. The first was innocent enough
- simply a room with a large double bed, decorated in blue to
match the
colour of the door. But as she opened each door along the hall, the
purpose of the rooms became clear enough. There was one room sporting a
huge tub, another with a bed big enough for six and then another
containing nothing more than two velvet-lined, metal cuffs hanging from
the ceiling by chains and enough instruments of torture to make the
Defenders' interrogation chamber look positively inadequate. Feeling a
little queasy at the thought of what might go on in this place, R'shiel
wondered about Alladan. Was he part of the entertainment? The
idea made her sick.
At the end of the hall was a smaller door, which opened at a touch
and led down into the darkness. Stepping through, R'shiel called up a
finger of flame to light her way, rather pleased with herself. When
Brak had tried to teach her how to call fire one evening on their
journey here from Vanahiem, she'd almost consumed them both in a ball
of flame. The short steps opened into a cellar with an earthen floor.
She made the flame brighter and stared at the altar by the far wall,
letting out a yell of outrage as the star and lightning bolt of
Xaphista stared back at her.
With a sudden thump, the cellar door slammed shut behind her. She
ran to the door and pounded on it, but it was shut fast, locked from
the other side. Furiously, she called on her power and blasted the door
out of her way, only to discover her way blocked by a wall of fire. She
remembered now, what that smell was. Oil. Whoever had set this trap had
soaked the building in it, hoping to send her to a fiery death.
R'shiel took a step back from the roaring flames. If this fire
spread, here in the warehouse district, it would destroy the city. Even
if it only spread a little way, all their supplies, all the food they
had stored to see them through the coming siege would be destroyed.
Without thinking, she drew even deeper on the Harshini power, pulling
as much as she could handle and sent it outwards from the cellar. The
blast of air shook the surrounding buildings and almost brought the
roof of the cellar down on top of her. But the flames were blown out
like candles in a strong draft.
Panting with the effort of her exertions, she clambered through the
debris until she reached the ground floor. The building was flattened,
its roof gone, the walls blown out and laying flat on the ground. The
warehouses on either side were in no better shape, and beyond them she
could see the broken windows and fractured walls of the other buildings
that had been in range. There were shouts in the distance and voices
yelling orders. The Defenders come to investigate the source of the
explosion, no doubt. She looked around at the devastation she had
caused with a sigh. She had simply meant to blow out the flames. She
hadn't expected to level everything in sight.
It was Brak who reached the scene first. She was still standing
there, dazed and bewildered as he leapt over the rubble to get to her.
When he reached her, Brak helped her sit down, his expression a
mixture of anger and concern. "What, in the name of the gods, do you
think you're doing?"
"It was a trap," she told him dully.
"No kidding."
"I didn't mean to . . ." she said, looking around
her at
what was left of the warehouse district.
"You never do, R'shiel. That's what makes you so bloody
dangerous."
"You're mad at me, aren't you?"
"Yes."
R'shiel took a deep breath and held out her hand to see if it had
stopped trembling, then looked up and smiled wanly at Brak.
"I'm sorry."
"You and I need to have a little talk about restraint," he
said with
a frown. "You can't go drawing on that much power every time you want
to do something. There is such a thing as overkill, you know."
"But I had to put out the fire. I didn't know how much it would
take." For that matter, even if she had known, she still lacked
the
finesse to limit what she drew on, but she decided not to remind Brak
of that.
"I feel exhausted, but somehow more aware. Isn't that odd?"
"What do you mean?"
"I'm not sure. It's as if I can feel everything more clearly. I can
even feel Sanctuary like it was right here."
"That will be with you wherever you go, R'shiel."
"I know. I've felt it ever since I left the place, but this is
different. It's stronger somehow . . . I don't know
. . . clearer . . . Brak?"
She blanched at the expression on his face. Suddenly, he wasn't
listening to her. He rose to his feet slowly and turned to stare
blankly towards the west, reaching out with his senses, rather than his
eyes. R'shiel struggled to her feet and stood beside him, following his
gaze, seeing nothing but the flattened buildings and the Defenders
coming towards them, demanding to know what had happened.
"What is it? What's wrong?"
"I can feel it too."
"Sanctuary?"
He nodded.
"But why is it so strong? Normally it's just like a vague impression
in the back of my mind that I hardly even notice any more."
"That's because normally, Sanctuary is hidden out of time."
"Then it's back? Why would Korandellan do that?"
"He wouldn't. Not willingly."
He glanced at her grimly and she suddenly realised what he meant.
Korandellan had brought Sanctuary into real time because he was no
longer capable of holding it back. R'shiel stared around her with
horror. She had drawn on the magic of the Harshini with no thought to
the amount that she was consuming.
It was her fault the Harshini were no longer hidden.
"Oh Founders, Brak," she said with quiet desperation. "What
have I
done?"
By mid morning the last of the Kariens, as well as
the civilians who did not want to stay in the Citadel, had filed
through the gates and they were closed against the army outside. The
Defenders had dutifully searched the crowd for Loclon's familiar face,
but they paid no attention to the huge, simple-looking man hauling a
handcart through the gate piled with old blankets, or notice the thin,
sharp-eyed old woman who walked beside him. Nor did they inspect the
cart. The rugs smelled old and the woman openly wore the symbol of
Xaphista on a chain around her neck. Another fanatic leaving and good
riddance to all of them, they decided. The Defenders turned their
attention to the crowd, scanning the faces for Loclon's distinctive
scar.
The huge man with his handcart, the beautiful young boy and the old
woman left the Citadel unmolested.
CHAPTER 46
"What happened at the warehouse district?"
Tarja
asked as soon as R'shiel appeared in the doorway of the First Sister's
office. He was alone with Garet Warner and a young woman that she did
not recognise at first. The woman had long blonde hair and was dressed
in homespun trousers and a rough linen shirt, with a Defender's cloak,
of all things, thrown carelessly back over one shoulder. The fire
burned brightly in the hearth and the room was almost uncomfortably
warm. For a fleeting, gut-wrenching moment, R'shiel remembered this
office, so hot and stuffy, when Joyhinia had ruled here. She shook off
the feeling impatiently. Joyhinia was dead.
"There was a bit of an altercation," she shrugged as she
stepped
into the office with Brak on her heels. The woman with Tarja turned as
she spoke and studied R'shiel curiously.
"Hello, R'shiel. Hello, Brak."
"Mandah!"
"You sound surprised to see me, demon child."
"Don't call me that," she snapped automatically. "What are
you doing
here?"
"What I've been doing since long before I met you, R'shiel. Helping
my people."
Her people, R'shiel knew, were the pagan rebels. "I didn't expect to
see you here. You were supposed to be heading into Hythria with the
Defenders."
"I chose to stay and help Tarja," Mandah told her with a
smile in
Tarja's direction. R'shiel recognised the look and felt an unexpected
spear of jealousy pierce her chest.
"How convenient for you that the new Lord Defender is someone
sympathetic to your cause."
"There's nothing convenient about it, R'shiel," Garet
remarked,
looking up from the map spread out over the desk. "It's one of the
reasons Tarja got the job. What exactly do you mean by an altercation?"
"Someone tried to set fire to the warehouses. I . . .
caused a bit of damage, but the fire is out."
"Did you find Loclon?" Tarja asked.
"No. And I don't think we will. But that's not why I'm here. We have
another problem."
"What now?" Garet asked, folding his arms across his chest.
"The Harshini are in danger."
"The Harshini have been in danger for the past two
centuries."
"This is more than just the threat of discovery, Garet. Sanctuary is
no longer hidden. The Kariens can find them now."
"I'm heartbroken," the commandant told her
unsympathetically,
returning his attention to the map.
Tarja frowned at Garet. He appeared a little more sympathetic. "How
long have they got?"
Brak shrugged. "Before the Karien priests locate Sanctuary? They've
probably pinpointed it already. It will take them some time to get
there, though. A few weeks, maybe." He noticed Garet's
sceptical look
and continued his explanation looking straight at the commandant. "The
reason the Sisterhood could never completely eradicate the Harshini was
because Sanctuary was taken out of time. I won't try explaining how -
you probably wouldn't believe me, anyway. Suffice to say that the
strain of keeping it hidden has finally taken its toll on King
Korandellan. Sanctuary is back in real time and the Kariens will be at
its gates within weeks."
"That would be convenient," Garet remarked. "It might get
them away
from ours."
"But can't the Harshini simply hide Sanctuary again?" Mandah
asked,
with a glare at Garet. She was a pagan and worshipped the Harshini
along with their gods. R'shiel found herself with an unexpected ally.
Brak shook his head. "If Korandellan let it return, then he's
exhausted. Keeping Sanctuary out of time takes a lot less effort than
actually sending it there."
"I can't spare the men to go trekking off into the wilderness, or
wherever Sanctuary is to help them, R'shiel," Tarja told her.
"Even if
we could get past the Kariens."
"Then we have to bring the Harshini here. To the Citadel."
They all turned and looked at her.
"What?" Garet demanded in horror.
"The Harshini can't be killed here. The Citadel won't permit
it."
"And you think we're going to let you bring the Harshini into the
Citadel? Absolutely not!" Garet snapped before anyone could say
a word.
"But you must!" Mandah cried. "The Harshini will be
slaughtered if
you deny them shelter."
"Young woman, every Defender in Medalon has been trained to hunt the
Harshini down and kill them on sight. And you expect us to let them
back into the Citadel?"
"Tarja?" Mandah begged, her green eyes moist. R'shiel
watched her
with interest, and more importantly, Tarja's reaction. He seemed
decidedly uncomfortable. Was Mandah the reason Tarja found it so easy
to deny the geas? She forced the thought from her mind. She had other,
more important things to deal with.
"Even if I agree, what makes you think the Harshini will want to
come?" Tarja asked.
"It's that or die in Sanctuary. They can't willingly take their own
lives and staying at Sanctuary would be tantamount to doing that, if
there was a chance they could return here to safety."
"What about Loclon?"
"He'll keep."
"You were burning with vengeance a couple of hours ago."
"A couple of hours ago I hadn't inadvertently put several hundred
innocent lives in danger."
"You bring the Harshini back in here and we'll be neck deep in pagan
rituals within days," Garet warned.
"We have a common enemy, Garet," Tarja pointed out. "I'm
inclined to
let them come, simply to frustrate the Kariens."
"If you don't let them come, you'll have the blood of the Harshini
on your hands," R'shiel added.
Garet laughed sourly. "Do you know how many Harshini the Defenders
have killed in the last two hundred years, R'shiel? There's plenty of
blood on our hands already. A bit more won't make that much
difference."
"Then it is time to undo some of the damage," Mandah
declared. "You
must let them back, Tarja! If you want the pagans to follow you, you
can do nothing else."
"It didn't take you long to learn the art of political blackmail,
did it?" Garet snapped at Mandah, and then turned to Tarja.
"It's your
decision. You're the Lord Defender now. Just so long as you understand
the trouble you're bringing down on us if you agree."
Tarja nodded, but did not answer. Instead, he turned to Brak. "Where
is Sanctuary, exactly?"
"In the Sanctuary Mountains."
Tarja glared at him.
"It's north-west of Testra," Brak added. "That's about as
specific
as I'm willing to get."
"Then how are you going to get them out of there? I wasn't kidding
when I said I don't have the men to spare, and it's too early in the
spring for the passes to be cleared of snow, in any case. Even if we
didn't have half of Karien camped around our walls, I have a list as
long as my arm of Sisters we need to arrest before they can get
organised against us. I don't know that I can help you, even if I was
inclined to."
"They can fly," R'shiel said. "On dragons."
"Oh, well that should reassure the population," Garet
remarked
sourly. "A few hundred dragons landing in the Citadel loaded with a
race we've spent two centuries convincing them we've
eradicated."
"Tarja, please," R'shiel asked, ignoring Garet's sarcasm.
She needed
him to agree. She needed the Harshini safe. Her conscience would not
permit anything else.
"I don't suppose there is any way you can do this
discreetly?" he
asked.
"You mean try to avoid a few hundred dragons landing in the Citadel
loaded with a race that you've spent two centuries convincing your
people you eradicated?" Brak asked drily.
"That would be a good start."
R'shiel glanced at Brak, who thought for a moment then shook her
head. "Not with the Kariens blocking their path."
"Even if you can get them here in one piece," Garet pointed
out, "chances are they'll be attacked on sight, once our people see
them."
"Then you'd best make sure they're protected," R'shiel
warned. "You
claim you want a different world from the one the Sisterhood left you.
Learning to live with the original inhabitants of Medalon seems like a
good place to start. You never know, Garet, you may even learn
something from them."
"I'm learning where your loyalties lie pretty quickly," he
accused.
"My loyalty is to Medalon."
"You've an interesting way of showing it."
"Enough, Garet," Tarja sighed. "Arguing will get us nowhere.
The
Harshini can return, R'shiel, but only if you can promise me that they
will not try to reclaim the Citadel or cause any more trouble than they
have to."
"Interesting that you suspect the Harshini of trying to reclaim the
Citadel," Brak said with a smile. "Have you considered what
will happen
if the Citadel tries to reclaim the Harshini?"
"What do you mean by that?" Garet asked suspiciously.
"He doesn't mean anything," R'shiel cut in, before Brak
could say
anything further. "Do I have your word on this, Tarja?"
He nodded, but he did not seem very pleased with the decision.
"Then I'll summon Dranymire and the demons."
"Will you send the Divine Ones a message?" Mandah asked. Her
eyes
were alight at the prospect of seeing a real demon and of meeting the
fabled race that she so admired.
"No. I'm going to have to return to Sanctuary myself to convince the
Harshini that any asylum they are offered in the Citadel is
genuine."
"Can't Brak go alone?" Tarja asked.
He shook his head. "I'm not the one who brought this on, nor I am
going to be the one to convince Korandellan and his people that you
have opened up the Citadel to the Harshini. It will have to come from
R'shiel."
She nodded and looked at Brak. "Will you come with me?"
"Don't I always?" he said.
"R'shiel!"
She stopped and turned, waiting for Mandah to catch up with her. The
young rebel closed the door of the First Sister's office and hurried
towards them along the carpeted hall.
"What is it, Mandah?"
"Could I speak with you?"
R'shiel shrugged. "I suppose."
"About Tarja."
"What about him?"
Mandah stopped before her, taking a deep breath, as if preparing
herself mentally for what she planned to say. Brak walked on ahead,
leaving them some semblance of privacy. "You know what happened, don't
you? About the geas?"
"Yes, but how did you know about it?"
"You forget that I'm a pagan, R'shiel. I know more about the gods
and the Harshini than you do."
"That's not difficult," she agreed with a wan smile.
"It's just . . . well, I wanted to know
. . ."
"What? If I still have some claim on him?"
"I didn't mean it like that."
"No, but I've seen the way you look at him. You've done it since we
first met. Remember that night in the stables in Reddingdale, when you
helped us escape the Defenders? You could have found a dozen other ways
to hide Tarja, but you had to throw yourself down on top of him and
start kissing him." R'shiel smiled suddenly. "He's yours if you
want
him, Mandah. He certainly doesn't want me any more."
"R'shiel, I don't want you to think that . . . well, that
I'm benefiting from your misfortune."
"Don't worry, Mandah. Tarja is yours if you can hold him. He's not
mine. He never really was."
Mandah studied her for a moment, as if trying to detect some glimmer
of falsehood in R'shiel's assurance.
"You've changed, R'shiel. There was a time when you would have
denied me out of spite."
"There was a time I would have done a lot of things,
Mandah," she
said. "But I know when I'm beaten. I won't stand in your way."
"Then I have your blessing?"
"I wouldn't go that far."
Mandah impulsively hugged R'shiel and then ran back towards the
First Sister's office. And Tarja. R'shiel watched her disappear inside
and turned to find Brak leaning on the banister at the top of the
stairs, staring at her thoughtfully.
"What?"
"That was very noble of you."
"You shouldn't have been listening."
"Are you kidding? I wouldn't have missed that for the world."
She stalked past him in annoyance. "Are you coming?"
"Of course, demon child," he replied mockingly, as he
followed her
down the stairs. "Although, I have to say, you were wrong about one
thing."
R'shiel stopped and glared over her shoulder at him. "What was I
wrong about?"
"You do not know when you're beaten, R'shiel."
PART 4
DESTINY
CHAPTER 47
Damin's coronation as High Prince was a subdued
affair, for which he was grateful. He had no wish to indulge in the
orgy of excess that normally accompanied such an event. Greenharbour
was still getting over the siege and the battle that had raged through
the city streets. There were thousands of homeless and some foods were
still being rationed. It would have been asking for trouble if he had
sanctioned such indiscriminate waste. Adrina had agreed with him,
although Marla had been rather put out. She had spent her life
imagining the day when her son would finally be crowned High Prince and
was rather annoyed that her grandiose dreams were to be so easily
dismissed.
Kalan had placed the crown on Damin's head with a wink that only he
could see, then placed the High Princess' crown on Adrina's dark hair
with only the faintest hint of reluctance. There had not been a High
Princess in Hythria for more than fifty years and the last one had been
a small, timid girl who had struggled through two pregnancies and then
finally given up on life when she delivered a healthy girl. She had not
lived long enough to learn that the baby had been named Marla. In fact,
since the death of one of her twin boys she had delivered the year
before, she had not paid much attention to anything. Damin glanced at
Marla and wondered what she was thinking as her mother's crown was
placed on his Fardohnyan wife's head. Her expression was unreadable.
Following the coronation, they retired to the banquet hall for a
moderately extravagant feast, at which all the Warlords of Hythria
lined up to pay their respects and renew their allegiance to the House
of Wolfblade.
The four Warlords who had supported him during the civil war
approached the high table one by one, and repeated their oaths without
hesitation. Tejay Lionsclaw was jovial, Rogan Bearbow grave and
respectful. Narvell could barely contain his glee. Only Toren Foxtalon
appeared a little wary, no doubt still thanking the gods that he had
changed sides before it was too late.
Once the oaths were out of the way, Damin stood up and silence fell
over the gathering. The hall was full, crowded with the Hythrun
nobility he could not afford to offend, his new Fardohnyan allies and
the Defenders who had arrived in time to save them all. He cast his
gaze over them, wondering if ever a High Prince had addressed such an
oddly assorted gathering before.
He raised his cup. "To Hythria!"
"Hythria!" the guests responded dutifully.
"It is customary, when a new High Prince takes the throne, to reward
those who deserve it, and to punish those who deserve it also. I think
we can dispense with the latter. Most of the punishments that needed
meting out were taken care of before the coronation."
A smattering of laughter wafted through the hall. Damin had been
ruthlessly efficient in dealing with his enemies. He had no intention
of bringing his child into a court riddled with potential assassins. If
there were any souls left who wished him harm they were keeping very
quiet about it.
"It now falls to me to name the Warlords of the provinces that find
themselves without a ruling lord. The first province I wish to award is
Krakandar, and I gift it to the man who deserves it better than I did.
Step forward Lord Almodavar Krakenshield."
Almodavar had been warned, of course. One did not hand out entire
provinces on a whim and the Convocation already had ratified in secret
every decision he would announce tonight. But Almodavar still looked
stunned. He had worn the same look of blank surprise since Damin had
told him about this three days ago.
The condition for Almodavar's acceptance had been that he take the
name Krakenshield, so that Laran's name might live on. Almodavar had
been his father's closest friend and had not objected to the condition.
No one but he and Almodavar knew of the other condition that Damin had
imposed. It made him smile with immature, vengeful delight -
his only
regret that he would not be there to see the look on Starros' face when
Almodavar finally acknowledged him as his son and informed the head of
the Thieves' Guild that he was now the heir to Krakandar.
Almodavar had guarded Krakandar as if it were his own since before
Damin was born, and if his son could manage an organisation as volatile
as the Thieves' Guild, ruling an entire province should prove easy by
comparison. He had given Almodavar a message for Starros, which his old
captain had promised to deliver when he returned home.
"Tell Starros he did not beat me. I let him win."
"Is that it?" Almodavar had asked curiously.
"He'll know what I mean."
Almodavar stepped forward and swore his oath of allegiance with
pride and then moved to the empty seat on the high table with the other
Warlords. Applause followed him to his seat. Nobody present doubted
either Almodavar or his ability to rule Krakandar. More than a few
mothers eyed him speculatively, aware that he was unmarried. More than
a few young women present saw the look in their mothers' eyes and
cringed - Almodavar might be capable, but he was old.
"The next province I wish to award is Dregian."
The crowd stilled, wondering who would win the province of the man
who had led the coup against the Damin. Many eyes turned on Garina
Eaglespike and her three-year-old son Tav, who had been invited to
attend. Her elder daughter Bayla sat next to Valorian Lionsclaw with a
look of quiet terror in her eyes. If Damin took it into his head to
destroy the Eaglespikes completely, she had only her marriage to
Valorian to protect her, and Tejay was notoriously intolerant of her
daughter-in law. Damin had it in his power to ruin her and there were
many wondering why he had allowed her brother and mother to live.
"I grant Dregian Province to Tav Eaglespike, to be held in trust for
him by Lord Bearbow. Tav is to be fostered with his sister at the court
of Lady Lionsclaw until he comes of age. Lady Eaglespike may continue
to reside in Dregian Province at Lord Bearbow's pleasure. She may see
her son and daughter at Lady Lionsclaw's pleasure."
The decision met with a relieved round of applause. Damin had
avoided future trouble by leaving the province in the hands of the
Eaglespike family, which had held it since time began, but with Tav
raised under Tejay's watchful eye, he would grow up far differently
from the way he would with an embittered mother to poison his mind. Nor
would Dregian suffer until the child came of age. Rogan Bearbow's
province was close enough to Dregian that he could easily administer
both. Garina had accepted the decision with mixed feelings. She had
lost her home and her son, but she would be permitted to keep her life
and her position, such as it was. It was more than she could have hoped
for and more than most people thought she deserved.
"That just leaves Greenharbour," Damin announced as the
applause
dwindled away to nothing. He glanced across the table at Tejay
Lionsclaw. Although she knew what he was about to do, and had even
voted for it in the end, she wasn't particularly happy with the idea
when he first proposed it. There were no heirs to the Falconlance name.
Conin had risen from the ranks and been awarded the province on the
death of the previous Warlord. There were no cousins to placate and no
heirs to object to his decision. Adrina sat beside him, unsuspectingly.
"I grant Greenharbour Province to my brother-in-law, Gaffen of
Fardohnya on the condition that he renounces his Fardohnyan citizenship
and swears his loyalty to Hythria. He must also renounce any claim to
the Fardohnyan throne, and chose a Hythrun name for his House."
Stunned silence met his announcement. Adrina stared up at him in
astonishment, understanding immediately what his declaration meant. By
adopting a Hythrun name and renouncing his Fardohnyan ties, Damin was
removing Gaffen from the line of Fardohnyan succession, even
indirectly. If Hablet followed tradition and had his bastard sons
murdered once he had a legitimate heir, her half-brother would be
spared.
"Thank you," she mouthed silently, a wealth of emotion in
her eyes.
Damin smiled at her briefly then turned back to face the gathering.
They were still staring at him silently. It was Tejay who broke the
tension, leaping to her feet as she banged her tankard on the table.
"Damn it! If I can live with this, the rest of you can!" she
declared. "Here's to Gaffen! None of you would be sitting here if it
wasn't for him and the Defenders who came to our rescue and thank the
gods no more of us got killed or we'd have had to appoint a few
Medalonian Warlords, too!"
Someone laughed. Then someone else started clapping and then the
whole room joined in. Gaffen stepped forward and swore the oath, just
as conscious of its ramifications as his sister.
He took his place beside Tejay, who appeared to have had something
of a change of heart about the big blond Fardohnyan since the
Convocation. She was probably ten years his senior, but Tejay liked big
men and Gaffen was endowed with a great deal of his court'esa
mother's charm when he wanted to be disarming. Damin shook his head
with a smile and resumed his seat.
"Why didn't you tell me?" Adrina asked.
"I wanted to surprise you."
"My father is going to be furious."
"I know," he replied with a grin.
"You're really enjoying this, aren't you?"
"I'm starting to," he admitted. "Provided I can keep my head
on my
shoulders and stop having to go to war every time I turn around, I
think I might actually get to like being High Prince."
"I thought you liked going to war?"
"I like a nice clean fight, Adrina. If I never see another siege as
long as I live, it will be far too soon."
It was too soon, he learnt later that evening,
when Glenanaran strode purposefully through the hall to stand before
the high table, his black eyes filled with concern. The Harshini bowed
before the High Prince and spoke in a voice laden with regret.
"I am sorry to disturb your celebrations, Your Highness, but I have
a message for you from the demon child and I'm afraid it cannot
wait."
Glenanaran said nothing further until they had gathered in the
throne room. Everyone had scrambled to follow when Damin left the
banquet hall, but in the end he had restricted the meeting to include
only the Warlords, the two Defender captains, Denjon and Linst, Adrina,
Marla and Kalan.
"R'shiel is at the Citadel," Glenanaran informed them, when
they
were finally gathered. "At least she was when I spoke to her
demons."
"I thought she was in Fardohnya?" Tejay remarked. "She
certainly
gets around, this demon child."
"What makes you think she's not there now?" Adrina asked.
"King Korandellan has collapsed. Sanctuary is back in real time. She
may have gone there to render what aid she can."
Damin glanced around at the others, certain his own face was just as
concerned as the other Warlords were.
"What's the situation at the Citadel?" Denjon demanded
impatiently.
"The Defenders have taken back the Citadel, Captain, and are holding
the Karien dukes and a number of priests as hostages, but the Karien
host still surrounds the city. I believe you call such a situation a
. . . stand-off?" Glenanaran turned to Damin then,
his
expression grave. "The demon child asks that you gather up the
Defenders and whatever Hythrun you can muster and come to their aid. I
have already dispatched Joranara to Fardohnya to request King Hablet's
aid."
"You think he'll come?" Tejay scoffed sceptically.
"He'll come," Gaffen assured her. "When he heard what
happened to
Tristan and his Guard, he was ready to attack Karien the next
day."
"How many men do the Kariens have surrounding the Citadel?" Another
siege, Damin thought. Damn, how I hate siege warfare!
"At least a hundred thousand, I'm led to believe."
The High Prince swore under his breath then looked around at his
Warlords. "Counting the Fardohnyans, how many can we put in the
field?"
"Fifty thousand, perhaps, maybe sixty, if Hablet is
serious," Rogan
replied. "But it will take months. The logistics of moving such a force
are unthinkable."
"How long can the Citadel hold out, Divine One?"
Glenanaran shrugged. "The demon child did not say, Your Highness.
But she did say that the gods have agreed to expedite your
journey."
"What does that mean?" The question came from Linst, the
other
Defender. He looked singularly unimpressed by the assurance.
"It means that if Hablet sails up the Glass River, he'll have fair
winds all the way," Glenanaran explained. "Sickness will not
plague
you, nor lack of fresh water. The bounty of the land will be at your
disposal."
"That doesn't help us much," Toren Foxtalon complained. "The
gods
can't make the roads any shorter, or make our troops eat any
less."
"Pity we can't sail to Medalon, too," Almodavar remarked.
"I'm not sure the gods had rearranging the geography of the entire
continent in mind when they offered their help, my Lord," the
Harshini
told him with a thin smile.
"Then how do we get there?" Gaffen asked. "I'll take every
man I
have, but it won't do them much good if we can't get to the Citadel
before next winter."
Damin studied Glenanaran's serene expression for a moment then
turned to Gaffen. "We'll get there the same way I got to Medalon the
last time."
The Harshini smiled. "I see you understand, Your Highness."
"Well, I'm glad he understands, because I certainly don't,"
Tejay
grumbled.
"When his Highness crossed into Medalon to aid the demon child at
Lord Brakandaran's request, we called on the power of the gods to
expedite our journey," the Harshini explained unhelpfully.
"That tells me nothing."
"Don't worry about it, Tejay. Just get your Raiders
mustered."
"And what happens to my borders while we go chasing off to
Medalon?"
"I will send Farandelan to Sunrise Province and she will see that
your Fardohnyan neighbours do not try to take advantage of your
absence."
"I appreciate the offer, Divine One, but Farandelan cannot
kill."
"There is no need to kill, my Lady. Her presence will be enough. She
will not permit any killing at all. That is how it was in the past and
how it will be again."
"And assuming we manage to get to the Citadel before it
falls?"
Denjon asked. "What then? We're still outnumbered two to one."
"The demon child was of the opinion that your numbers would be
sufficient, Captain. I can tell you no more than that."
"And we all know what a tactical genius R'shiel is," Linst
muttered
sarcastically.
"Captain, I cannot ease your mind or tell you what I do not know.
All I can do is ask that you heed the demon child's request and gather
your forces as quickly as possible. Other Harshini will join you to aid
your journey north."
"Other Harshini?" Kalan asked.
"With Sanctuary no longer hidden, our people will be safer with your
forces than they will be at home. We will do what we can to help, High
Arrion."
"I guess that settles it then," Damin said, looking around
at the
others. "We're going to Medalon."
CHAPTER 48
Mikel helped Adrina pack for the journey to
Medalon, quite certain that he would have to unpack it all again once
Damin Wolfblade discovered she was planning to join him. Her condition
was plainly visible now, although it did not seem to bother her. The
fatigue that had plagued her previously had passed. Her skin glowed
with health; her emerald eyes were bright as jewels and her dark hair
shone with lustre. Having spent much of the early months of her
pregnancy in the saddle, she carried little extra weight other than the
child. She was full of restless energy and had been, for the past few
weeks at least, quite easy to get along with. Mikel had even overheard
Princess Marla complain that a woman had no right to look so damned
healthy in her condition.
Mikel had fallen back into the role as her page after R'shiel
vanished. With Tamylan gone, Adrina had worked her way through a score
of slaves since then, none of them meeting her exacting standards. The
latest had fled in tears this morning when Adrina accused her of being
a fumble-fingered half-wit. Mikel didn't blame his Princess, and had
his suspicions about the slaves sent to wait on her. Marla hand-picked
them and he suspected that the Dowager Princess was not going out of
her way to be accommodating. For some reason, perhaps because of their
previous history, Adrina found Mikel to her liking. Although his
earlier innocent worship of her had been replaced by something a little
more realistic, he still admired her and was happy to be of service.
"Is it cold in Medalon, Mikel?"
He dumped the pile of clothes he was carrying on the bed and looked
at the Princess. She was holding a fur cloak in front of her, studying
her reflection in the mirror.
"I don't know, Your Highness. It will be nearly summer by the time
we get there."
"Maybe just the woollen cloak then. I want to travel light."
Mikel cast an eye over the mammoth pile that Adrina had already
labelled her "essentials" and frowned. "Your Highness, I'm not
sure
that Prince Damin will consider that 'travelling
light'."
She looked at the heap of clothes and sighed. "You're right. I'm
lost without Tam. I wish she were here."
He didn't know how to answer that. He had liked the Fardohnyan
slave, but was not so attached to her that he could empathise with
Adrina's grief. His earlier guilt about her fate had faded with the
passage of time. He was saved from answering by the appearance of Damin
Wolfblade, who stopped at the door and looked around suspiciously.
"What's all this?"
"I'm trying to decide what to pack," Adrina told him. "I
wish Tam
were here. She was so much better than me at this sort of
thing."
"What happened to the slave Marla sent you?"
"She was an idiot. I sent her away."
Damin stepped into the room and examined the chaos scattered around
the room more closely. "Why are you packing?"
"For Medalon, of course."
He stared at her as if his hearing had suddenly failed him. "You're what?"
"Packing for Medalon. Do you think I'll need the fur?"
"No, Adrina, you won't need the fur. Or anything else, for that
matter. You're staying here."
She looked at him in astonishment. "Of course I'm not staying here!
I'm coming with you."
"In case it's escaped your notice, Adrina, you're having a
baby."
"I'm only pregnant, Damin, not terminally ill."
"I'm not going to risk you or our child by taking you into a
battle."
"Oh for the gods' sake, Damin. If I was a peasant I'd be working in
the fields until I dropped the brat and then I'd be back in the fields
the very next day."
"That brat, as you so eloquently put it, is the heir to
Hythria."
"Then travel will be good for him. It will broaden his
horizons."
"Neither are you a peasant," he added, not at all impressed
by her
attempt at levity. "I forbid you to come."
"I don't recall asking your permission."
"That's because you knew damned well I wouldn't give it."
Adrina threw down the fur cloak and put her hands on her hips. Mikel
shrank back a little, having seen Adrina in a similar mood before. Her
eyes glittered dangerously.
"Damin, I think we need to settle something. I am your wife. I am
not your court'esa, or your lackey, your slave or your
possession. I am going with you. If you refuse me, I'll simply find my
own way there, but one way or another, I will go to
Medalon."
Then she smiled suddenly, as if making her declaration had settled the
matter. "Besides, you need me."
"Why do I need you?"
"Because my father will be leading the Fardohnyans and you really
don't want to confront him without me there to calm him down."
"I can manage."
"Don't be too sure about that," she warned. "You don't know
my
father."
Damin took a deep breath. He did that a lot when he argued with
Adrina, Mikel noticed. "Adrina, even if I conceded the point about your
father, the fact is, the Hythrun heir must be born on Hythrun soil. If
you come to Medalon with me, you will deliver the child before we can
get back."
"Is that your only objection? Mikel, come here!"
Damin turned to stare at him as he edged his way around the High
Prince to reach his mistress. Although Damin rarely paid him any
attention, he was still more than a little afraid of the Hythrun Prince.
"Your Highness?"
"I have a job for you, Mikel." She marched over to the bed
and
pulled one of the pillows from it, shaking it out of its silk cover.
She handed Mikel the pillowcase. "Take this out to the gardeners and
ask them to fill it."
"With what, Your Highness?"
"With Hythrun soil, of course." She looked up at Damin and
smiled
triumphantly. "If it's Hythrun soil you want so badly, Damin, then I'll
simply take some with me. Off you go, Mikel! There's a good
lad."
Damin shook his head. "There's no way I can talk you out of this, I
suppose?"
"No."
They stared at each other, debating who was likely to give in first.
Damin Wolfblade finally threw up his hands in defeat. He wasn't happy
with the idea, but he seemed to admire her spirit. Cratyn would have
hit her, Mikel thought with a twinge of guilt.
"Go on then, Mikel. Get us a sack of Hythrun soil. And guard it with
your life, boy. We may need it in a hurry."
Although the fighting had not reached this far,
Gaffen's Fardohnyans had used the palace gardens as a shortcut from the
dock below the palace and trampled everything in sight in their haste
to join in the fray. The statuary was pushed over, the shrubbery bent
and shredded, and even the large fountain in the centre was broken, its
water dragons cavorting in a dry pool with snapped-off noses and
missing fins. Mikel wandered through the vast gardens for quite a
while, looking for someone to fill the pillowcase with soil. The
gardeners were nowhere in sight.
"A sad sight indeed, don't you think?"
Mikel glanced across the broken fountain and discovered the old man
sitting on the edge of the pool. He had not seen him for a while, but
he seemed to pop up in the strangest places. Although he looked a lot
like the old man he had seen in the stables in Roan Vale, Mikel had
convinced himself it could not be the same person. This man roamed the
Hythrun palace at will. He was, so Mikel figured, a retired slave or
old family retainer, who had been given the freedom of the palace in
return for a lifetime of service. Mikel often bumped into him in quiet,
out-of-the-way places, and had come to think of the old man as a
friend, although if pressed, Mikel wasn't sure he even knew the old
man's name.
"They'll fix it eventually, I suppose. They're too busy rebuilding
the houses to think about fountains."
"Ah, yes, the ever practical Hythrun," the old man chuckled.
"They
were always like that. One of the reasons I could never get much sense
out of them."
"What do you mean?"
"Nothing. So, are you off to Medalon with the others, then?"
He nodded and walked around the fountain to sit beside the old man.
"I'm going with Princess Adrina. I'm her page now."
"That's wonderful!" the old man cried, patting Mikel on the
back. "You must be very proud. Imagine the things you will do, the
places you
will see, the important people you will meet."
"I suppose. I'll probably meet the King of Fardohnya. He's going to
Medalon, too."
"Is he now? Won't he have trouble getting there in time?"
"The Harshini Glenanaran said the gods are going to help."
The old man's expression grew fierce for a moment, as if some
uncontrollable anger had suddenly consumed him. Then it was gone; so
quickly that Mikel thought he had imagined it.
"Well, he should be fine then. And what of you, my young friend?
Will you see the demon child again, do you think?"
"I suppose so."
"That is excellent news. I shall have to give you a message for
her."
"Do you know the demon child?"
"Very well," the old man said. "Very well, indeed."
Mikel looked at him curiously, not sure what it was about the old
man's tone that unsettled him. "What did you want me to tell
her?"
"Ah, I shall have to compose my message most carefully. I will see
you before you leave. I'll let you know then. Now, what are you
doing strolling the gardens of the palace clutching an empty
pillowcase, my lad?"
He glanced down at the pillowcase and shrugged. "Princess Adrina
wants me to fill it with Hythrun soil in case she has her baby in
Medalon."
The old man laughed. "A wise precaution. Well, don't let me keep you
from such an important task, Mikel. We'll meet again, never fear. And I
will give you my message for the demon child."
Mikel stood up and turned to say goodbye, but the old man was
already gone.
CHAPTER 49
Sanctuary glittered in the dawn as R'shiel and Brak
flew over the mountains, sitting proudly atop the ranges where for so
long it had remained hidden. Brak watched it draw closer through eyes
that watered from the cold wind, feeling as if he had stepped back in
time, rather than Sanctuary coming into real time to meet him.
It was almost two hundred years since he had ridden on the back of a
dragon towards Sanctuary. The last time it had been to warn Lorandranek
that he must hide the settlement or risk the Sisterhood finding it - a
mission the Sisters of the Blade had pursued for decades after the
First Purge. Lorandranek had conceived the idea of hiding the
settlement out of time, a burden that he found trying, but not
unbearable. In those days he had shared the task with his nephew, the
young Korandellan, and between the two of them, Sanctuary had been able
to appear and disappear at will, safe from the Sisterhood, the Karien
priests and the odd marauder who stumbled into the mountains trying to
escape justice.
But since the madness and death of Lorandranek and the arrival of
the demon child, that luxury had been denied them. Sanctuary had stayed
hidden as Xaphista grew stronger and more desperate to find his
nemesis. Korandellan had carried the burden alone, although why
Shananara had not taken up some of the load concerned Brak. She was
just as much a te Ortyn as the King, and just as capable
as her brother
of wielding the power such a feat required. He planned to ask that of
the Princess when he saw her. His relationship with Shananara te Ortyn
was such that he had no qualms about demanding an answer. They had been
lovers once, in a distant past.
Brak glanced across at R'shiel, smiling at her awe-struck
expression. She had never seen Sanctuary like this before and it
obviously left her breathless. Or perhaps it was the altitude, he
thought cynically. R'shiel wasn't impressed by much these days.
Without any prompting from Brak, his dragon began to bank to the
right, circling over the slender towers of the Harshini settlement with
Dranymire and R'shiel close behind. With surprising gentleness, the
dragons beat their massive wings and lowered themselves down onto a
high terrace circled by a balustrade that appeared dipped in silver in
the soft dawn light. A solitary figure waited for them, dressed in the
customary long white robes of the Harshini.
Brak jumped down from the dragon and squinted into the rising sun as
the figure approached. As soon as he was clear of the dragon, the meld
crumbled and the demons spilled over the terrace, delighted to be home.
"You're a bit late, Brakandaran," Shananara said,
sidestepping
demons as she approached. "And you've brought the demon child."
"Hello, Shananara."
The Princess glanced over Brak then turned her attention to R'shiel.
"You're still alive, I see. Amazing."
"We felt Sanctuary return."
"That's hardly surprising. Every god, every sorcerer, every priest
and every village charlatan on the continent probably felt it. You'd
better come with me. Korandellan wants to see you." She turned
on her
heel and walked towards the tall doors that opened off the tower,
expecting them to follow.
"What's the matter with her?" R'shiel asked as they followed.
"She's angry."
"I thought the Harshini couldn't get angry?"
"They can't."
"She's doing a pretty good imitation."
Brak shook his head and said nothing. He understood what Shananara
was going through. Denied the human outlet of anger or fear or
recrimination, she was boiling inside with emotions she did not have
the luxury of being able to voice.
They followed the Princess through the halls of Sanctuary, past a
subdued and cautious population, to the King's chambers. When they
finally reached the broad white doors, Shananara waved them open then
looked at R'shiel.
"You must speak with the King. Alone."
R'shiel glanced at Brak, as if she wanted him to confirm the
instruction. He nodded imperceptibly, and he watched as she took a deep
breath, visibly bracing herself for what she would find within. He
watched her walk through the tall doors, watched Shananara wave them
shut behind her.
"What happened?" he asked, as soon as the doors were
completely
closed.
"Not here," the Princess replied, with a glance around the
empty
hall. "Let's go to my chambers."
He did not try to hide his surprise. This was Sanctuary. There were
no secrets here. But he followed her wordlessly down to the next level
where she lived. Stepping across the threshold, Brak decided that her
rooms had not changed at all since he had last been here. They were
still large and airy and filled with the clutter of her many forays
into the human world. She closed the doors by hand and stood leaning
against them, watching him as he looked around the room.
"Why did you bring her here?"
"R'shiel? She has a plan to save the Harshini," he said,
picking a
small statue from the table near the hearth. It was a small horse,
exquisitely carved in jade. It looked Fardohnyan.
"If it's anything like her plan to deal with Xaphista, we'd be
better off without her help."
Brak replaced the tiny statue and smiled at her. "Cynicism does not
become you, Shananara. Actually, you sound ridiculous. You need a bit
of human blood in you to make it really effective."
"The demon child should thank the gods I don't have any
human blood. If you could see Korandellan . . ."
"How bad is he?"
"Bad enough." She moved away from the door and walked to the
tall
open window. The rising sun touched her dark red hair with flecks of
gold and lined her perfect Harshini features in crimson. She crossed
her arms, as if she was cold, although the temperature in Sanctuary was
constant and always pleasant. "He's dying, Brak."
"How . . . ?" he asked, too stunned to ask more.
"How do you think? The demon child draws on our power like it has no
end. She threatens, she cajoles, she coerces, and she contemplates
violence with every breath she takes. Korandellan has been linked to
the power without a break since R'shiel was born, and may the gods help
me, I taught her to tap into it. Do you know what it's done to him? Can
you imagine what it must have been like for him to try to hold
Sanctuary out of time while the demon child is on the loose, throwing
her anger around without a care for anything or anybody? It has
destroyed him."
"Can't Cheltaran help him?"
"It's the power of the gods that has hurt him, Brak. More of it will
simply make him worse."
"But Cheltaran has helped others in the past who've drawn too much.
He did it not so long ago in Greenharbour."
"Glenanaran and the others drew too much of one strand of the power.
Cheltaran could heal them because he was using a part of it they had
not touched. Korandellan has been drawing on all of it. If the gods
intervened, any one of them could kill him."
"Then why didn't you help? You could have taken some of the load off
him."
"You think I didn't try? I've begged him, Brak, time and again. But
he believed R'shiel would prevail and that she would do it before he
faltered. An idle wish, as it turns out."
"He's not dead yet, Shananara, and the Harshini are still safe. At
least until Xaphista's minions can find a way into the mountains. There
is time yet."
"Time for what, Brak? For Korandellan to die? And you know what will
happen if he dies, don't you? R'shiel is Lorandranek's daughter. She is
the rightful heir."
Brak stared at the Princess, aghast at the mere suggestion. "You're
not seriously considering letting R'shiel take the throne? That's
insane! Doesn't Korandellan have a child?"
"There are no children, Brak."
"Then it must be you."
"I cannot step forward unless R'shiel refuses the crown."
"Then I'll make damned sure she does refuse it," he
promised. The
idea of R'shiel ruling the gentle Harshini was too bizarre, too
horrible to contemplate.
Shananara smiled at him fondly. "I believe you would, Brakandaran.
But it is not my decision, or yours. It is between Korandellan and the
demon child."
"She won't do it."
"Perhaps. But the crown is hers for the taking should she ask for
it."
"She won't ask for it. R'shiel is driven by anger, not power for its
own sake."
"Your opinion of her has improved somewhat, I notice."
"She's learning."
"Yes, but what exactly have you been teaching her?"
He shrugged. "Only what I have to. But she's a quick study. She sees
a thing once and remembers it."
Shananara nodded. "Her tutors here said much the same thing.
Unfortunately, she lacks wisdom and wisdom is something gained through
experience, not learnt by rote, no matter how well meaning the
teacher."
R'shiel was gone for hours, leaving Brak little
choice but to impatiently pace Shananara's chambers, waiting for news.
Samaranan came to visit for a while, delighted to see her half-human
sibling, but even his sister's smiling presence had a fragile edge to
it. They spoke of inconsequential things, both of them avoiding the
real reason Brak was here. The Harshini were averse to violence, but
they were not blind to the consequences of Korandellan's collapse. They
knew the demon child had returned and that Xaphista was as strong as
ever. Their future was bleak and for a race unable to imagine such
desolation, it was a trying time indeed.
Eventually, Dranymire materialised in the apartment, startling Brak
with his sudden appearance.
"Lord Brakandaran. Your Highness. The King wishes to see you
both."
They hurried upstairs to Korandellan's chambers and found the doors
open and waiting for them. Brak entered the room hesitantly, afraid of
what he would find. R'shiel was waiting for them by the door to
Korandellan's bedroom. She looked pale and rather chastened. Without a
word she stood back to let them enter, and then followed them inside,
closing the door behind her.
Brak was shocked by the King's appearance. Korandellan lay on the
bed, his golden skin sallow and almost as pale as the sheets beneath
him. He was as thin as a man who had not eaten for a month and his once
bright eyes were dull and lifeless.
"Thank you, Brakandaran, for bringing the demon child home."
His
voice, once so vibrant and resonant, was barely more than a hoarse
whisper.
"It was her idea, Your Majesty. I merely showed her the way."
The King smiled weakly. "It is good that you did . . .
Shananara?"
"I'm here, Koran," the Princess said, moving to her
brother's side.
Brak stepped back to let her pass. R'shiel had not moved from the door.
"R'shiel has come to lead our people home."
"We are home, brother."
"No. Sanctuary has been our prison these last two hundred years. The
Citadel is our true home."
"The Citadel?" Shananara's eyes flew to R'shiel in
astonishment, then she looked back at the King. "You don't mean you
want us to return to the Citadel?"
"We cannot be harmed there. The Citadel will protect us."
"But what of the Sisterhood and their Defender henchmen?"
"There is no more Sisterhood," R'shiel said from the door.
"The
Defenders are in charge. Tarja is the new Lord Defender. I have his
word that the Harshini may return unmolested."
Shananara glanced at her in disbelief then sat down beside
Korandellan on the bed, taking his clammy hand in hers. "Don't worry
about it now, Koran. We can discuss this when you've recovered."
"I'll not recover, Shanan. You know that as well as I do. Take our
people home. I charge you with their welfare." Korandellan
closed his
eyes, as if the effort of so much conversation had exhausted him.
"Are you mad?" she asked R'shiel, softly. "How can you come
here and
offer him such false hope?"
"It's not a false hope, Shananara. The Harshini may safely return to
the Citadel."
She turned to Brak. "Is this true?"
He nodded. "I told you she had a plan."
"You might have warned me what it was!"
The King's eyes opened again and he smiled at his sister. "You were
always the practical one, Shanan. Do this thing for me. Our people need
you."
"They don't need me, Koran. The demon child will be their Queen once
you are gone."
"I've already told Korandellan I don't want the job,"
R'shiel said.
"You see, sister, the demon child is wiser than you think."
Korandellan smiled wanly and held out his hand to R'shiel. She crossed
the room and took it in hers. Brak was astonished to see that her eyes
were filled with tears. "Do not regret what you have done, demon child.
Think only on the good you will do in the future. You have what you
need to defeat Xaphista, so remember what I have told you about the
Seeing Stones. Do what you are destined for and be at peace with
yourself."
R'shiel nodded wordlessly then looked across at Brak. The King
looked at him too, his dull eyes filled with forgiveness. "I give you
the same advice, Brakandaran. Do not regret what you have done.
Everything is as it should be. You have more than made amends for your
mistakes. Face Death secure in that knowledge that your sacrifice was
not in vain."
"I will."
"And you, Shananara. You are the last of the te Ortyn.
It is up to
you to see that we continue. Once you have returned to the Citadel, you
should speak with Glenanaran. It is time you two had a child."
Shananara smiled fondly at her brother. "If I wanted a child, what
makes you think I would pick Glenanaran?"
"I know you too well, my dear."
"That you do, brother. That you do."
Brak looked up suddenly, as he felt a presence in the room. Although
he could see nothing yet, he knew who it was. With a sharp glance at
R'shiel, he waved her away from the bed. She could feel it too, but did
not recognise it. Shananara leaned over and kissed Korandellan on the
forehead, and then stepped back.
"What . . . ?" R'shiel began to ask, but Shananara
glared
at her so fiercely that she fell silent.
Death materialised slowly at the foot of the King's bed. He had
chosen the benign aspect of the Harshini to welcome the King into his
realm, although his robes were translucent and his black eyes hollow
orbs, rather than the bright eyes of the Harshini. Korandellan smiled
when he saw him, unafraid.
"You will sup with me this night, Your Majesty." Death's
lips did
not move, but each of them could hear him, as if his voice spoke
directly to their souls.
"You do me a great honour, my Lord, to escort me personally."
"You do me the honour, sire. It is not often I am able to
welcome one of your people into my home." Death turned then and
stared
at R'shiel, who took a step back from him in fear. "There is no need to
be anxious, demon child. You and I will not meet again for quite some
time." R'shiel did not answer him. She appeared frozen in
shock. Death
swivelled his head to stare at Brak. "But you and I will meet,
Brakandaran, and soon, I suspect. Our bargain is almost
fulfilled."
"Well, don't get too excited," Brak warned disrespectfully.
"It's
not done with yet."
"I will be waiting, Brakandaran."
"I never doubted that for a moment, my Lord."
The spectre turned his attention back to Korandellan. "Are you
ready, Your Majesty?"
"I am ready."
Death raised his arm and pointed at Korandellan. As he did so, the
King appeared to change. He began to fill out and his colour returned.
His aura glowed with strength, pure and unmarked by fear or pain. This
was Korandellan in his prime. His eyes brightened and he assumed such
an aura of wellbeing that Brak expected him to leap off the bed.
Instead, he rose slowly until he was standing, his weight making no
impression on the down-filled mattress.
Then with a smile of serene happiness Korandellan walked into the
arms of Death and they both disappeared from the room.
CHAPTER 50
"I don't understand."
"That's not unusual for you." Brak smiled at R'shiel's scowl.
She waved her arm to indicate the gathered Harshini who were busily
preparing to depart. Demon-melded dragons could be seen on every
terrace, although some apparently preferred to travel by large and
improbable birds who beat their vast wings slowly, as if warming them
up for flight, and hissed impatiently at the dragons. The dragons
varied in size and colouring. Some were massive, like Dranymire and his
brethren; others more delicate, their metallic scales touched with fire
as the sun set over the mountains.
"Why are they so damned happy?"
The whole atmosphere in Sanctuary had changed since Korandellan's
death and Shananara's announcement that they were to return to the
Citadel. The fragile cheerfulness that had permeated the fortress had
been replaced by a sense of optimistic anticipation. The Harshini
preparing to leave were so buoyant, R'shiel was surprised they didn't
whistle while they worked. Some of them were heading for the Citadel;
others for Fardohnya and Hythria. Shananara had also called for
volunteers to fly to the aid of the relieving army that was heading for
Medalon.
"They're going home."
"To the Citadel? I didn't realise it meant so much to them."
"The Citadel is part of the Harshini, R'shiel. It's been very trying
on them being away from it for so long."
"Don't they realise what's waiting for them there? The Defenders
. . . the Kariens . . ."
"Of course they do. But you've assured them they'll be safe and they
trust Tarja to keep his word."
She noticed his smile and narrowed her eyes suspiciously. "Why are
you smiling like that?"
"You remember what I said about the Citadel reclaiming the
Harshini?"
"Yes."
He laughed softly. "I can't wait to see what happens when they
arrive."
"Is this another one of those vital details you neglected to
mention?"
"The Citadel has been hibernating for two hundred years, R'shiel.
He's liable to wake up when the Harshini come home."
"What do you mean?"
"I'm not certain myself," he told her with a grin. "But it's
bound
to be interesting."
Annoyed with Brak's smirking, R'shiel turned her attention back to
the departing Harshini. They were sitting on the balustrade of the same
terrace they had landed on, watching the demons melding. Dranymire and
a dozen other prime demons were fighting for space on the crowded
terrace, trying to pull their brethren into their melds. Occasional
squabbles broke out among the younger demons, but they were put down
swiftly and sharply by the older ones. They reminded R'shiel of unruly
children.
"Look at them!" she scoffed. "Their King just died and
they're being
kicked out of their homes. You'd think they'd spare a thought for poor
Korandellan, at least."
"Grief is a human emotion. Besides, the Harshini are delighted.
Korandellan didn't die. Death came for him personally."
"Oh? You mean there's a difference?"
"Of course there's a difference. Death took Korandellan body and
soul. That's a rare honour."
"He's still dead, Brak."
"Yes, but you saw him before he vanished. Death restored him. And
there's always the chance that he'll come back."
"What?" she said, turning to him, her eyes wide.
"It's happened before."
"When?" she demanded sceptically.
"Well, it's a theoretical possibility." He smiled at her
doubtful
expression. "Put it this way: if you die, and Death only takes your
soul, then that's the end. You're gone. It's the reason your people
cremate their dead, did you know that? Pagans believe in burial, so
that Death can still claim the body if he has a mind to."
"But if you burn the body, then there's no hope of
resurrection?"
she asked, nodding in understanding. She had never wondered why
Medalonians practised cremation, or really cared why the pagans
preferred to be buried, but it made sense now she knew the reason.
"That's right. If your soul ever comes back, it'll have to be in
another body. But if Death takes your soul and your body, then
he can send you back again, if the mood takes him."
"And does it?"
"Not often. He doesn't like to disturb the natural balance of
things. He's a real stickler for the rules."
"He seemed to know you pretty well."
"We've had dealings in the past," Brak said abruptly. She
could tell
he did not want to elaborate.
"What did he mean about -"
"Here comes our new Queen," Brak cut in, before R'shiel
could frame
the question she was certain he did not wish to answer. There was an
inexplicable edge in his voice. "We'd best say goodbye."
Shananara approached them, dressed in dragon-rider's leathers, her
long-legged stride and easy grace marking her as Harshini, even more
than her totally black eyes. She smiled as she neared them, then
glanced over her shoulder to check on Dranymire and the demon-meld
before turning to R'shiel.
"As soon as we have reached the Citadel, I will send Dranymire and
Elanymire back for you both. Do you know what to do?"
R'shiel nodded. Although the Harshini were abandoning Sanctuary,
they had no intention of leaving it empty to be pawed over by the
Kariens and defiled in the same way the Citadel had been defiled by its
new tenants. Shananara had shown R'shiel how to remove it from time,
but on this occasion there would be nobody inside to suffer from it.
The fortress would be completely empty of life. Every animal had fled.
Every Harshini was preparing to leave. Even the insects had been
advised to move out. Once the Harshini were gone, she would send
Sanctuary so far out of time that only she or Shananara would have any
hope of retrieving it.
"Then let the Kariens come. There will be nothing here for them to
find."
"I hope I do it right," R'shiel said, suffering a momentary
pang of
uncertainty.
"You will," Shananara assured her. "Korandellan was right
about you,
you know. You are not nearly as unreliable as I first thought."
"Thank you . . . I think."
"Things are as they should be, R'shiel."
"Even though Korandellan is dead?"
"My brother was honoured by Death. There is no greater reward for a
lifetime of service. Now, I must bid you farewell. I will try to ensure
that our return does not wreak too much havoc on the residents of the
Citadel."
Shananara and Brak exchanged a look that was full of amusement.
"You both keep saying that! What are you talking about?"
"You'll see," Shananara replied with a cryptic smile. "Will
I see
you again, Brak?"
"Yes. It's not over yet."
"Then there is no need for goodbyes. I will see you both at the
Citadel. Hopefully, Tarja will be a little more reasonable than the
last time we met."
"He wasn't unreasonable, Shanan. He was under a geas."
Suddenly serious, Shananara nodded. "I know. And now the geas is
gone. It's strange, but when we sat around that fire beside the Glass
River trying to coax the demon child home, I never imagined that a
couple of years later I would be returning to the Citadel as the
Harshini Queen and Tarja would be the Lord Defender. Even destiny can
play tricks on us at times."
"Go easy on him, Shanan," Brak advised. "He's had a rough
time
lately."
"Never fear, Brak. I know how to handle humans, even testy
ones."
She turned to R'shiel and hugged her briefly. "As for you, little
cousin. Do this thing for us then return to the Citadel to fulfil your
destiny. I will help you locate the Seeing Stone."
"Why not use the Stone here?" Brak asked. "Now that
Sanctuary is
back in real time, does it matter?"
"Korandellan told me that only the Seeing Stone of the Citadel is
capable of what I need. I must find that or find another way, I'm
afraid."
"We'll find it, R'shiel. The High Arrion was right. No human could
have destroyed it. If it's still in the Citadel, we'll locate it
eventually."
Shananara then turned on her heel and walked back towards her
dragon. She leapt aboard with practised ease and the dragon lifted into
the sky with a powerful beat of his massive wings. Her departure was
the signal for the other Harshini to take off, and within minutes the
sky was dotted with dragons climbing towards the red-tinted clouds.
There were too many for R'shiel to count. She watched them dwindle into
the distance until they were little more than specks in the sky. The
sight both cheered and saddened her. The Harshini were abroad once
more, but they were facing a world they had been removed from for
centuries and it was radically different from the one they had left
behind.
"Will they be all right, Brak?"
"Yes. Shananara is right, you know. Things are as they
should be."
She turned to look at him, puzzled by the sadness in his voice.
"Korandellan was a good King, but he never stepped foot outside
Sanctuary. Shanan has been walking among humans since she was a child.
She'll rule the Harshini much more effectively now that they have gone
back among humans than Koran ever could."
"But you still grieve for Korandellan, don't you?"
He nodded. "He was a good friend."
"How many good friends have you lost for me, Brak?"
"More than you will ever know."
She had no answer for that and darkness was falling rapidly over the
deserted fortress.
Brak jumped down from the balustrade and held out his hand to her.
"We'd better make sure this place is empty before you send it
away."
She took his hand and jumped down beside him and together they
walked back into the silent, empty halls.
CHAPTER 51
The last room they checked was Brak's. R'shiel
looked about in fascination, seeing a side of him she never suspected.
There was an easel by the window with a half-completed landscape
resting on it. Leaning against the wall near the bed was a beautifully
crafted lyre, and beside it a thick pile of music. She picked the lyre
up and strummed the strings thoughtfully. Brak looked up from papers he
was sorting through on the table on the other side of the room and
frowned.
"Please don't touch anything, R'shiel."
"I didn't know you played."
"I used to."
"I didn't know you painted, either."
"There's a lot you don't know about me."
She replaced the lyre carefully and sat on the bed. "Why did Death
say he would meet you again soon?"
Brak shrugged. "He's a sociable sort of fellow."
"I noticed," she said with a smile, hoping to lighten his
mood. He
had grown ever more morose the longer they spent in Sanctuary's
echoing, silent rooms. "Korandellan told you to face Death secure in
that knowledge that your sacrifice is not in vain. Shananara asked if
she would see you again, too. Why would she say that?"
"Ask her."
Brak was shifting papers across the table without purpose. She had
angered him and couldn't understand why.
"Did I say something wrong?"
"No . . . look, why don't you go and see if there's any
other rooms on this level we haven't checked? I'll meet you on the
terrace when I'm finished here."
She rose to her feet, a little hurt that he was dismissing her so
coldly. "Can't I help?"
"No."
"Brak . . ."
"Out!"
R'shiel jumped at the anger in his voice. "What did I do to deserve
that?"
"Right now, you're breathing!" he retorted. "That's
enough."
"What's gotten into you, Brak? This isn't my fault, you
know."
"Actually, R'shiel, it is your fault. Now, if you don't mind, I'd
like to be alone while I sort out my things. I'm not likely to get
another chance."
"Fine!" she declared. "Take all the time you want. I'm not
going
anywhere!"
R'shiel stormed from the room and ran down the long hall, her
footsteps loud and discordant in the dark, silent halls. She stopped
when she reached the balcony overlooking the valley, angry and hurt by
Brak's sudden rejection. The waterfall tinkled musically down the rock
face on the other side of the valley, although the perpetual rainbow
had been swallowed by the half-light that passed for night here. The
sound soothed her. She had done nothing to deserve Brak's anger that
she could recall. No more than usual, at any rate.
His sudden intolerance mystified her. She tried to recall everything
that had happened since they arrived at Sanctuary. Nothing sprang to
mind that would make him turn on her like that. Except when she
questioned him about Death. He'd been rather touchy about that up on
the terrace, too. And why, in the name of the Founders, did he
suddenly decide to sort his papers out? Anyone would think
. . .
With the thought only half completed, R'shiel ran back to Brak's
room and threw open the door. She glared at him accusingly, tears
blurring her vision, anger and grief battling each other for dominance.
"It's you!"
"What?"
"It's you, isn't it? The life you traded for mine? 'A life
of equal
value,' that's what you said. You told me you traded someone's life for
mine when Joyhinia almost killed me. You bargained with Death and
offered your life to save mine, didn't you? That's why Death said your
deal was almost done. It's why Shananara asked if she would ever see
you again. You damned, sentimental, self-sacrificing, half-breed,
bastard idiot!"
Brak stared at her for a moment and then looked away. His anger had
faded. He looked simply resigned. "It doesn't matter."
She crossed the room and grabbed his shoulder, forcing him to look
at her. "How could you?"
"How could I not?" he asked her softly.
She wiped away her tears angrily and punched his arm. "You can't do
this to me! You can't do it to yourself. I don't deserve it. Founders,
Brak, what am I supposed to do? Spend the rest of my life - all
ten
thousand years of it - knowing I'm alive because you squandered
your
life on me?"
She tried to hit him again but Brak pulled her close and held her
while she sobbed. She could not believe what he had done, or the guilt
such knowledge had burdened her with.
"There, there," he said, as if he was comforting a small
child. "It's too late to do anything about it now."
"Why did you do it?" she cried, her face buried in his chest.
"I only had one life to bargain with, R'shiel. To offer another life
would have been murder."
"You could have let him take me."
Brak kissed the top of her head and lifted her chin with the tip of
his finger. With his thumb he gently wiped away a tear. "No. That I
couldn't do."
For a timeless moment he looked at her. Then he kissed her, lightly,
his lips just brushing hers, as if he expected her to pull away from
him. It sent an unexpected shiver down her spine. There was a world of
promise behind his kiss, so different from Tarja's artificially imposed
desire that it left her unable to breathe. R'shiel stared at him in
wonder, suddenly understanding the source of her anger, the reason for
her grief. This moment had been long in the making, she realised,
simmering at the back of their often-volatile, strangely dependent
relationship, waiting for an opportunity to catch them unawares.
R'shiel reached up, running her fingers through his dark hair and
pulled his head down towards hers, with the certain knowledge that no
god had interfered in his desire, no geas had imposed feelings for her
that he did not want to own. He pulled her even closer, the slow
burning heat of his desire searing away her doubts. He kissed her neck,
her ear and then her mouth again, then broke away from her embrace
suddenly and took her face in his hands.
"Look at me."
She met his gaze evenly, unafraid, wishing he would stop talking.
"You know this changes nothing, don't you?"
She shook her head wordlessly, wanting to deny him, not trusting
herself to speak.
"Nothing can be altered, R'shiel. Whatever happens, if you succeed
or fail, I cannot alter the bargain I made."
"But -"
"There are no buts. No loopholes. No way out. Do you understand
that?"
R'shiel felt fresh tears prick her eyes as she nodded her reluctant
agreement.
"Then understand this, too. You are part-human, R'shiel, but you are
also part-Harshini. There is so much you don't understand. So much you
have yet to learn. You can't send Sanctuary out of time until sunrise.
We have one night. I can show you a part of being Harshini that you
cannot possibly imagine. But I'm not doing this for payment and I don't
want you doing it out of guilt, or to get even with Tarja. Tomorrow,
you will still be the demon child, he will still be the Lord Defender,
and I will still be the half-breed who will die as soon as you succeed.
There is no future. There is only now. The choice is yours."
His eyes
bored into her, demanding an answer. Then he added huskily, "Stay, or
stay out of my way until morning."
The decision was harder than she imagined. But tomorrow was a
lifetime away, and deep down, despite everything she had seen,
everything she had done, R'shiel was still not convinced that she was
ruled by her destiny.
"I want to stay."
He searched her face, looking for some sign that she was uncertain.
When he found none, he smiled briefly and his eyes began to darken as
he kissed her again, harder, and more hungrily. R'shiel followed his
lead and kissed him back, opening her mouth to his and her mind to the
power. Her eyes blackened until they were orbs of glittering ebony as
the intoxicating sweetness filled her. Brak reached for her, not with
his hands but with his mind. The space between them blurred as he wove
an enchantment around them that left no room for anything but a sweet,
seductive desire that had no parallel in the human world.
This was what the legends spoke of. This was the gift of the
Harshini that ruined humans for any other lover. She'd heard stories
about it. The Novices had whispered about it in the dormitories late at
night, fascinated and repelled by it. The Sisterhood had tried to
destroy the Harshini for fear of it. All the violence they could not
contemplate, all the conflict they could not confront was transformed
into this offering, this all-consuming, passionate inferno that
consumed every thought, every fibre of one's being in the pursuit of
mutual pleasure. It was the ultimate expression of the Harshini quest
for happiness.
R'shiel lost all sense of time; could not separate reality from
fantasy. She did not know how they got to the bed or how long the night
lasted. She could not distinguish touch from desire, or pleasure from
pain. Nothing she had experienced in the past had prepared her for this
and nothing would ever come close to it in the future.
It was the first time she truly understood the meaning of magic.
Brak shook her awake at sunrise. She turned in his
arms, a little surprised that she was still holding onto the power. It
filled her with a heavy, languid weariness.
"Time to get up and do your good deed for the day, demon
child," he
reminded her with a smile.
"Brak, I . . ."
"No," he said, placing a finger on her lips to silence her.
"Don't
say it."
She smiled and nodded. "I was going to ask if there's anything to
eat. I'm starving."
"I'll find something while you're getting dressed."
By the time Brak returned with a platter of impossibly perfect
fruit, grown here in Sanctuary where even the grubs were considerate of
others, R'shiel was dressed and ready to leave. They ate as they walked
through the silent halls. Brak made no attempt at conversation and
R'shiel didn't try to engage him. There was nothing to be said. He had
laid down the conditions of their one night together and they bound
her, despite what it would cost her in the future. There was nothing to
be gained by talking about it.
The sun was almost over the peaks as they stepped through the
Gateway and out into the chill, snow-covered mountains. They walked
some distance from the fortress before R'shiel stopped and turned to
look back at Sanctuary.
"I wonder how long it will have to remain hidden?"
"Not as long as the last time, I hope."
She frowned. "If I get this wrong, we may never be able to find it
again."
"Then don't get it wrong," he suggested dryly.
She hesitated a moment, framing her next question carefully. "Can I
ask you something, Brak, about last night?" When he did not
answer, she
chose to take his silence as permission. "When we . . . well,
could the other Harshini feel it?"
"Yes."
She felt her face redden with embarrassment, but that was not what
she wanted to know. "What about the demons?"
"If they were paying attention."
"And the gods?"
"Certainly."
"So Kalianah would know?"
"Oh, yes, Kalianah would know."
"Would Xaphista have felt it?"
"Undoubtedly."
She tossed her apple core to a curious squirrel come to investigate
them. "Good."
He stared at her curiously.
"I want that bastard to know I was having a good
time."
"If it's any consolation, he was probably squirming the whole night.
When he rose to power the first thing he did was forbid his people to
indulge in anything so wantonly pleasurable. They call all sex a sin
now in Karien, but his original intention was to stop his people
consorting with the Harshini. He had that in common with the
Sisterhood. They too were afraid of the effect it had on humans. It's
like a drug, in some ways. As the only way to get more of it is to have
a relationship with a Harshini who can't abide violence, the end result
was a fairly peaceful and very happy community - back in the
days
before Xaphista and the Sisters of the Blade."
"And a lot of half-breeds," she added with a grin.
"That too."
"So Xaphista despises pleasure."
"He's afraid that it will distract his people from him."
R'shiel nodded, filing the information away for future reference.
Then, unable to delay what she was planning any longer, she drew even
more of the power she was still channelling and turned her attention to
Sanctuary. The fortress glittered in the sunrise, as if it had put on
its best face to bid them farewell.
With infinite care, R'shiel wove the glamour Shananara had taught
her, sending the threads of power over and around Sanctuary. In the
background, she could feel Brak linked to her, guiding her hand. He had
the training to help her envelop Sanctuary, but only she and Shananara
had the strength to fling it beyond the reach of mortals.
When she was certain she had wrapped every part of the settlement in
her magical cocoon, she hesitated. She felt Brak sever the link that
joined them as he let go of his power. What she was about to do would
destroy him if he stayed coupled to her.
She glanced at him, saw his eyes had returned to their usual faded
blue and then gathered her strength. With a mighty push, she flung
every ounce of power she was holding towards Sanctuary. It shimmered
for a moment, almost as if it was fighting to stay put, and then, with
a boom that rolled over the mountains like a distant thunderstorm,
Sanctuary disappeared from sight.
R'shiel was sagging from the effort, but Brak caught her before she
could fall. She let go of the power with relief.
"Did I do it right?"
"I guess we won't know that until you try to bring it back."
She smiled wanly. "You're a real comfort."
"I do my best."
Suddenly she laughed. Whether from relief or amusement she did not
know. There was a lightness in her that came from more than just the
knowledge that she had successfully hidden Sanctuary. It came from
somewhere inside her. It was as if she had stepped over an invisible
wall that she had not known was holding her back.
"What's so funny?"
"I know this is going to sound crazy, but I think that for the first
time in my life, I'm actually happy to be alive."
Brak smiled slowly. "So am I."
Sitting close together for warmth, they settled down with their
backs to a large pine tree and waited in companionable silence for the
dragons to return.
CHAPTER 52
"Oh Tarja, they're beautiful!" Mandah
breathed
reverently.
He glanced at her and smiled. She was staring up at the sky as
though seeing something from her dreams. He had allowed her to come to
greet their new guests because he could think of no way to stop her.
And besides, of all the people in the Citadel, Mandah was the least
likely to offend the Harshini when they arrived.
Tarja watched the dragons settling on the sandy floor of the
amphitheatre, almost as awestruck as Mandah and the Defenders who stood
behind him. He hadn't expected there to be so many of them. Or so many
dragons. Garet Warner studied the swarming sky with a frown, then
turned to him with a shake of his head.
"I hope you know what you're doing, Tarja," he murmured.
"My Lord! Sir!"
Tarja turned towards the urgent voice. A cadet was running towards
him across the sand. Garet had pulled all the Cadets out of training
and was using them as messengers and for minor administrative tasks to
free up as many Defenders as possible. The lad was no more than
fourteen and seemed torn between fear and pride that he had been chosen
for such an important task as he skidded to a halt in front of the Lord
Defender.
"What's wrong?" Tarja asked.
"It's the Kariens, sir. Captain Symin sent me to fetch you."
"What are they up to now?" Garet asked.
"It's the dragons, sir. Ever since they appeared the Kariens have
been going wild. Some of them are even fleeing the field."
Garet glanced at Tarja in surprise. "Well, that's an unexpected
bonus. I'll check out what's happening at the gate. You'd better stay
here and keep your new friends under control."
Garet followed the boy back to the tunnel entrance, as a tall
Harshini with dark red hair slid gracefully from the back of the dragon
that looked like the one who had accosted Tarja at the vineyard near
Testra. He walked forward to greet her, pushing back a momentary wave
of apprehension. She looked so much like R'shiel.
"Hello, Tarja."
"Shananara."
"Thank you for letting us come home."
"You may not thank me in a few days. We're under siege, and you're
not exactly welcome here. This isn't going to be easy."
"I know." She noticed Mandah, who had followed Tarja
cautiously, and
smiled at the young woman. "Aren't you going to introduce me to your
friend?"
"Of course. Shananara, this is Mandah Rodak. Mandah, this is Her
Highness, Princess Shananara te Ortyn."
"I'm Queen Shananara now, but we can talk about that later.
The gods' blessing on you, Mandah."
"Your Majesty. Divine One," she gushed, falling to her knees
in the
sand. The young pagan woman looked set to faint with happiness.
Shananara smiled indulgently. "Arise, child. We have no time to
stand on ceremony." She looked at Tarja then, and her smile
broadened
mischievously. "I fear I have an apology to make, my Lord Defender.
Childish and petty as it may seem, I'm afraid I could not resist
taunting your besiegers. We strafed the fields surrounding the Citadel
on our approach. I fear I've caused something of a panic among the
Kariens."
Tarja tried without success to hide his amusement. "I'm sure I can
find it in myself to forgive you."
"I thought you might."
He glanced over her shoulder at the other Harshini, who were
climbing down from their dragons and looking about them with
expressions ranging from happiness to rapture. There were no children
among them, which surprised him a little.
"I've made arrangements for you to be accommodated in the
dormitories. As we've no Sisterhood any longer, there didn't seem any
point keeping the Novices and the Probates."
"What did you do with them?" Shananara asked with a hint of
concern.
He was tempted to tell her he'd murdered them all in their beds,
just to see what her reaction would be, but thought better of it. "We
sent them home."
"May we visit the Temple of the Gods?" When Tarja looked at
her
blankly, she smiled. "I believe you call it your Great Hall."
"Tomorrow, perhaps, and I'd prefer you did it in small groups.
Hundreds of Harshini marching through the streets of the Citadel might
cause a riot."
"We shall be discreet, my Lord."
"Thank you. Mandah will act as liaison between us. She's a pagan,
and a number of her people are here. I thought you might be more
comfortable dealing with them, rather than the Defenders."
"Your consideration of our feelings is both unexpected and
appreciated, Tarja," she told him with a slight bow. "It seems
R'shiel
was correct when she said you could be trusted."
"She's not with you?"
"She and Brak had something else to take care of, but they should be
back by nightfall. Which brings me to a rather delicate matter. I
cannot ask the demons to stay melded in dragon form, and you have
nowhere to accommodate them in any case. But if I dissolve them, I
cannot guarantee their good behaviour."
Tarja groaned silently. He hadn't thought about that when he'd told
R'shiel the Harshini could return. On the other hand, she had
conveniently neglected to mention that the demons were a part of the
deal.
"Can't you just . . . disappear them, or
something?"
Shananara laughed. "A demon you can't see is likely to cause a lot
more trouble than one you can keep an eye on, Tarja. I'll do what I
can, but I really should dissolve the melds."
"Just try to keep them out of trouble."
"I will. And now, if you would be so kind as to let us find our
accommodation, we'd like to settle in. It has been a long
night."
"Mandah will show you the way."
Shananara looked at him with a sad little smile. "We know the way,
Tarja."
Tarja refused to acknowledge the unspoken accusation. "These men
will escort you."
"Are we prisoners?"
"They are for your protection, Shananara. I'm not worried about what
you'll do to the citizens of the Citadel; I'm worried about what
they'll do to you."
"Then once again I thank you for your consideration. Will we meet
again later? There are things we need to discuss."
"Of course."
Shananara bowed and returned to her people, who had patiently
gathered behind her, waiting for their Queen to finish her discussion.
Mandah followed her, still wearing that same look of awe that she had
acquired when the dragons first appeared over the Citadel this morning.
Tarja called over the lieutenant in command of the escort, gave him his
orders and then headed for the tunnel.
As he entered the cool darkness he felt the ground tremble faintly
under his feet. He stopped, curious, waiting for it to happen again,
but when no further tremors eventuated, he shrugged and kept on
walking, certain that he must have imagined it.
"The Kariens are frantic," Garet informed
him
later that day.
"Shananara did more than just fly over them, Garet," Tarja
told him
with a grin. "She strafed them. They must be having quite a crisis of
faith at the moment. How many priests do you think they have left out
there?"
"Not many. The priests liked their creature comforts. Most of them
were billeted in the Citadel."
"Then they lack spiritual guidance as well as leadership. How many
fled?"
"A few thousand at least," Garet informed him. "Any word
from King
Jasnoff yet?" Their demands had been sent in a carefully worded
message
to the Karien King. They'd dispatched a dozen birds carrying the same
message, to ensure that at least one got through.
Tarja shook his head. "It's far too early to expect a response. The
birds we sent may not have reached Yarnarrow yet."
"What about our relief forces?"
"Maybe R'shiel will be able to tell us something when she gets
back."
Garet nodded and took a seat on the other side of the desk. Tarja
was too restless to sit. There was too much to be done.
"I've had the lads check the stores. We've enough here to hold out
for years. Mathen was looting the countryside, but he was rather
considerately storing it all here in the Citadel. He was expecting to
use it for the troops outside."
"Which means they'll get hungry soon."
"That'll thin their numbers some more. Desertions are always a
problem when your army isn't being fed."
"Well, between the Harshini scaring the wits out of them and their
bellies grumbling, hopefully, by the time help arrives they'll be down
to a manageable number. Has there been any trouble in the city?"
"No more than usual. Once again, thanks to Squire Mathen, the people
are getting quite used to living under martial law. And we reopened the
court'esa houses, so that's eased the tension,
somewhat." Garet
smiled faintly. "I did it in your name, of course. You're very popular
at the moment."
"I wonder how long that will last?"
The walls trembled faintly again before Garet could answer. The
tremor he had felt in the tunnel under the amphitheatre had not been
his imagination. They had been going on all day, growing steadily
stronger and more frequent. He frowned and glanced at Garet, who looked
just as concerned.
"That's all we need," he muttered. "First a siege, then the
Harshini, and now a bloody earthquake."
"It's not an earthquake, Tarja," Shananara informed him,
stepping
into the office as Mandah opened the door for her. "It is the Citadel
awakening from his slumber."
"You talk as if the Citadel is alive."
"The Citadel may not be 'alive', by your definition, Tarja.
But it
is sentient by ours."
"This is where I leave," Garet announced, rising to his
feet. "You
can sit here and swap pagan fairytales with the Harshini, Tarja. I have
better things to do."
Shananara turned her regal gaze on the commandant. "You are Garet
Warner?"
"You've heard of me?"
"Brakandaran speaks quite highly of you, sir. For a human."
"Does he now?"
Tarja recognised the dangerous edge to Garet's soft-spoken reply and
inwardly cringed. This could get very ugly if he didn't head it off,
and quickly.
"Are your people settled in, Your Majesty?"
"Yes, thank you, although we took the liberty of removing the
tapestries and other . . . impediments, that you have used to
disguise the Citadel's origins. I hope you don't mind. It looks almost
like home again, now."
As far as Tarja was aware, most of the dormitories had been
whitewashed to conceal the Harshini frescoes that had once decorated
the walls. He sighed; they had been here barely more than a few hours
and already they were redecorating.
"You didn't do any structural damage, I hope?"
"The Citadel is not that easy to harm, my Lord."
He wasn't sure what she meant by that and decided he really didn't
want to know. "Garet was just telling me that your rather dramatic
entrance this morning has caused quite a stir among the
Kariens."
She shrugged. "We cannot fight with you, my Lord, but we help where
we can. Xaphista's believers either deny our existence or consider us
the essence of pure evil. Either way, they do not know how to react
when they see us."
"We deny your existence, too," Garet pointed out. "Yet our
people
aren't panicking."
"No, Commandant, you have never denied our existence. You tried to
eradicate us and thought you had succeeded. There's a distinct
difference."
Garet glared at her, but made no further comment. The building
trembled again, hard enough that Tarja clutched at the desk for
support. Shananara looked around the room thoughtfully for a moment
then turned to Tarja.
"I really should do something about that, I suppose."
"Exactly what did you have in mind?"
"I need to speak to the Citadel. It can feel our presence, but the
humans here are disturbing it. Once I've reassured it that you mean us
no harm, things should settle down."
Garet muttered something that sounded suspiciously like a curse.
"How can you speak to . . . it . . . him
. . . whatever the hell it is?"
"It will have to be in the Temple of the Gods. The Citadel's
presence is strongest there."
"I'll have someone escort you."
"Founders, Tarja! You don't seriously think sending this woman down
to talk to a building is going to stop an earthquake, do you?"
Shananara turned to Garet with a serene smile. "Perhaps you and the
Lord Defender would like to accompany me, Commandant?"
"Why? So we can watch you talking to the walls?"
"No, Commandant," the Harshini Queen replied with solemn
dignity. "You should come because you and your people have occupied our
home for
two hundred years. You have vandalised and defiled it, with no thought
to the consequences. It is time you understood what you have
done."
CHAPTER 53
Like R'shiel, Tarja had never been able to refer to
the Great Hall as Francil's Hall without choking on the words. At least
now he could change that, if nothing else. The Great Hall would be
known as the Great Hall once again, although, as he escorted Shananara
up the broad steps with Garet, he wondered how long it would be before
the Harshini convinced everyone to refer to it by its original name:
the Temple of the Gods. If they were as determined to do that as they
were to return the dormitories to their original condition, he figured
it would only be a matter of days.
It was almost sunset and the chill of the coming evening was
settling rapidly over the Citadel. A score of Defenders stood on guard
outside the Hall, causing Tarja to glance questioningly at Garet. He'd
ordered no detail to guard the Great Hall, and there was no need he
knew of to protect it. Shananara strode on ahead, anxious to do
whatever it was she was planning. The ground trembled under their feet.
"Why the guards?" he asked the commandant curiously.
"We've confined the priests in there. Couldn't think of anywhere
else to put them."
Tarja cursed softly and hurried after the Harshini Queen. The guards
on the doors, seeing the Lord Defender and Commandant Warner were
escorting the Harshini, made no effort to prevent her from entering.
She disappeared inside before Tarja could stop her.
He pushed open the door to find Shananara frozen in shock. She was
as pale as the whitewashed walls and looked as if she had forgotten how
to breathe. More Defenders lined the walls, watching the Karien priests
warily. The hall itself was littered with bedrolls and the milling
priests who had been confined within. They were still dressed in their
dull brown cassocks and all but a few had stubbled heads and the
beginnings of scraggly beards.
Nobody was foolish enough to give these men a razor.
Robbed of their staffs and their dignity, they were a sorry lot. The
priests turned at the sound of the doors opening, showing no interest
in the new arrivals, until someone noticed Shananara's eyes.
And then all hell broke loose.
The priests began shouting hysterically. Some of them rushed towards
the Harshini Queen while others backed away in fear. The building
trembled, as if in outrage. Shananara cried out, but it was a cry of
despair, rather than a scream. The Defenders reacted immediately,
calling for the guards outside to reinforce their numbers as they drove
the priests back. Tarja drew his sword and stepped in between Shananara
and the oncoming priests, whose eyes burned with fanatical hatred.
He felt, rather than saw, Garet take a stand beside him, just as
ready to carve a few priests up as he was. The priests who had thought
to attack the Harshini backed off sullenly, as wary of the dangerous
look in Tarja's eyes as they were of the blades he and Garet wielded.
Once the other Defenders were inside the Hall, the ruckus was put
down quickly. The Kariens were no match for the armed Defenders,
particularly men who were itching for any excuse to cause them harm.
Garet Warner issued his orders with a few hand signals and the priests
were herded into a loose circle in the centre of the Hall, surrounded
by the Defenders. Tarja studied them warily for a moment then slowly
sheathed his blade before turning to face Shananara. She was shaking
all over, and although he had no ability to detect it, he had a strong
feeling that she was channelling her power. For a moment he was very
glad it was not R'shiel standing there. The priests would be splattered
all over the walls if it had been Shananara's half-breed cousin under
attack.
"I'm sorry, Your Majesty. I didn't know they were being held in
here. I'll have them removed at once."
Shananara shook her head. "No. Leave them. Just keep them out of my
way."
"Are you sure?" He studied her warily. He knew the Harshini
were
incapable of doing harm, but right at that moment he wasn't that
certain Shananara could be trusted.
The Queen nodded then took a deep breath and walked past Tarja
towards the centre of the Hall. The Defenders cleared a path for her,
pushing the priests back, being none too gentle about it.
Shananara looked about her, ignoring the priests and the Defenders,
then she closed her eyes and the Citadel began to tremble in earnest.
Silence descended, fractured only by a whimper
that came from one of the priests as the Harshini Queen stood in the
centre of the Hall, her head thrown back, her eyes closed in
concentration. Certain he was imagining it, he thought he saw a faint
glimmer of light surrounding her in a soft, white nimbus. Small white
flakes began to fall from the whitewashed ceiling.
The Citadel rumbled beneath his feet.
It was only a few at first, and Tarja thought them simply the result
of the building's movement. But soon the flakes of whitewash began to
fall faster, until he felt as if he was caught in a snowstorm. A sudden
popping made him jump as a plug of plaster burst out of a small alcove
in the pillar on his right. It was followed by a dozen or more tiny
explosions as the plastered-over niches spat out their fillings, which
shattered into powder as they hit the floor.
The Hall shook so hard it rattled his teeth.
The paint on the ceiling was coming away in strips now, and he could
just make out the first signs of the paintings underneath. The walls
blistered and their whitewash began to fall off, too. He was powdered
in flaking whitewash and plaster as he glanced at Garet, who looked as
if he'd been dipped in flour. The commandant's eyes were dark sockets
of incomprehensible horror set in a bone-white face. The priests began
to wail in terror as the building shuddered so hard that Tarja could
barely stand upright.
Shananara did not move.
Then a splintering sound echoed loudly through the hall. Tarja
looked in the direction of the sound through the swirling white storm
and noticed a large crack had appeared on the wall at the back of the
podium. Another crack appeared and then another, sundering the painted
symbol of the Sisters of the Blade that decorated the far wall.
Shananara had claimed the Citadel was not easily harmed, but she
appeared to be bringing the building down on top of them. The wall
cracked even further and began to crumble, but amazingly, the
half-cupola over the podium held fast.
As the wall tumbled down in a shower of plaster and white dust,
taking with it the last vestige of the Sisterhood's imprint on the
place, Tarja saw the reason why. The wall had been nothing more than a
false front, concealing the rest of the podium behind it. Red light
from the setting sun flooded the circular alcove, turning the falling
white dust into glittering motes of fire. The cupola was tiled in an
intricate pattern, resting on a curved wall that was painted with a
glorious fresco, although from where he was standing, he could not make
out the detail.
But it was not the fresco, or the gilded dome that made him stare in
wonder. In the centre of the podium was a massive crystal, taller than
a man, mounted on a block of polished black marble. He had no idea what
it was, or what its purpose might be, but it obviously held pride of
place in the Temple of the Gods. He realised then why the wall had been
built to hide it. Too massive to move and probably indestructible,
there would have been no way to get rid of the Stone when the Sisters
of the Blade had tried to remove all vestiges of the Harshini from
their new home.
They had done the next best thing and hidden it.
The shuddering slowly trembled to stillness and Tarja looked about
him in awe. Shananara had restored the Hall to what it had been during
the reign of the Harshini. Although it was almost nightfall, the
pillars shone as bright as day. The ceiling had a painting on it that
depicted the Primal Gods. Along the gallery was a mural dedicated to
even more gods. It looked as if a hundred - maybe a thousand -
different craftsmen had added to it over the years. The parts of it he
could see were magnificent. There was writing - songs perhaps -
covering some of the walls, too. The pillars supporting the gallery now
had alcoves set in the side of each one and he wondered for a moment at
their purpose.
Then he noticed the priests and forgot all about the Hall.
To a man, they were on their knees. Some were sobbing like
broken-hearted children. A few others were tearing at their robes,
howling with despair. One man was clawing at his own face until the
blood flowed. Then a shattering scream pierced the sudden silence as
one of the priests leaped to his feet and ran blindly towards him.
Tarja felt his stomach churn and had to forcibly stop himself from
vomiting. Where the priest's eyes had been was nothing but two bloody
sockets. In his hands he held his own eyeballs. The fool had clawed his
own eyes out rather than witness the return of the Harshini.
Tarja caught the man and wrestled him to the ground. The man was
howling in pain and outrage. Tarja looked up angrily at Shananara, who
had finally lowered her head and opened her eyes. If she was distressed
by what the priests were doing to themselves, she gave no indication.
Garet helped Tarja hold the hysterical priest down as Shananara
approached. The commandant looked as pale as the powdered paint that
coated him.
"Is this your idea of doing no harm?" he snarled at
the
Queen.
Shananara looked down at the blind priest for a moment before she
answered. "This is Xaphista's work, not mine, Commandant. To heal him
would mean forcing him to break his faith and he holds that more dearly
than his eyes. Even if I could restore his sight and remove his pain,
he would just claw his eyes out again as soon as your back was
turned."
There was a strange twisted logic in what she said. A Karien priest
would rather suffer and die than acknowledge the existence of the
Harshini or the God of Healing. Tarja had no doubt that she could heal
him - he had seen the Harshini ability. He also had no doubt
that she
was right when she claimed the man would simply try to harm himself as
soon as they let him out of their sight. They were a sick breed, these
priests. The sooner R'shiel did something about Xaphista the better.
"Get him to the infirmary," Tarja ordered, standing back to
let two
of the guards pick up the struggling, howling priest.
Tarja looked at the other priests, who had been stunned into silence
by the courageous action of their brother. They wore the look of men
who thought he had done something to be proud of. How many more of
them were contemplating the same thing? Suffering for Xaphista was
more than just a hopeful wish for these men; it was damned near a job
requirement. He had to put a stop to it. Now.
"The next one of you that tries to harm himself," he
announced
loudly, "will be delivered to the Harshini for healing. And he'll stay
there until he denounces Xaphista and swears allegiance to the Primal
Gods."
Shananara looked at him in surprise then nodded approvingly as she
realised what his threat would mean to these men.
"How long is that going to last?" Garet asked, ineffectively
brushing the white dust from his jacket.
"Tarja's threat is very real to these men, Commandant. They will
avoid stubbing a toe rather than risk being touched by one of my
people."
Garet stared at her coldly then looked around the Hall. "Did you
make this much mess redecorating the dormitories?"
"Not quite."
"And what the hell is that thing?" he asked, pointing at the
crystal
on the podium.
"It is the Seeing Stone."
Garet stopped trying to clean his jacket and stared at the crystal
with a thoughtful expression. "I thought that was in
Greenharbour?"
"There is also a Stone in Greenharbour. This one belongs
here."
"What does it do?"
"It channels the power of the gods, among other things."
Garet absorbed that piece of information silently and then looked at
the priests. "I suppose we'd better get them out of here. I'll move
them to the Lesser Hall." He looked at Shananara and added
frigidly, "Unless of course, you're planning to do this to every
building you
walk into, Your Majesty?"
"I will not disturb your prisoners again, Commandant," she
assured
him.
Garet obviously doubted her word, but did not voice his scepticism.
He looked at Tarja and shook his head. "Look at this place, Tarja. They
haven't been here a day yet."
"I'll get everything sorted out," Tarja promised, not at all
certain
he believed his own words.
"Well, you can start by making the Harshini clean up this mess.
After all, she caused it." With a pointed and very unfriendly
glare in
Shananara's direction, Garet Warner moved off to organise moving the
Karien priests from the Great Hall.
"I'm sorry, Tarja," Shananara said as soon as Garet was out
of
earshot. "I thought only to help by calming the Citadel."
The Harshini could not lie, so legend claimed, but he wondered if
she was bending the truth a little. She must have known what making the
priests witness her power would do to them. Or perhaps she really
didn't understand. If she couldn't contemplate the thought of violence,
how could she imagine a man willing to put his own eyes out?
"The damage is done now. At least the tremors have stopped."
"That's because the Citadel is awake."
"Is that going to cause problems?"
She smiled suddenly. "Come and see."
Grabbing his hand she pulled him towards the doors. He noticed that
the bronze sheathing had peeled away and they were now carved with
unbelievably intricate knot-work designs that chased themselves across
the doors in a complex pattern.
They stepped out of the Hall into a street that was crammed with
people. The sun had set, but it was as bright as day. The walls of the
Citadel had brightened and dimmed with metronomic precision for two
centuries, but now, when they should have faded to darkness, they were
burning with vibrant light. Every building he could see was ablaze,
banishing the night.
"Founders!" he murmured in awe.
His sentiments were reflected in every face he saw. Although
crowded, the street below the Great Hall was strangely silent as the
people tried to make sense of what they were witnessing.
Then he heard the noise, like a distant wail of despair, coming from
the distance, from the other side of the walls. The Kariens.
"Come with me," he ordered abruptly, running down the steps.
Shananara followed him as he pushed through the crowd. It took a while
and a great deal of elbow work to get to the main gate, and he didn't
stop when he reached it, or bother to check if Shananara was still with
him. He bolted into the gatehouse and up the stairs to the wall-walk to
look down over the plain.
The plain below was in chaos. The Kariens seemed to have moved from
their earlier panic to utter desperation. Some cried out in horror at
the sight that transfixed them. Others were fleeing in terror. Tarja
glanced back over his shoulder at the tall towers and then looked down
at the walls.
The whole Citadel was glowing like a beacon in the darkness, casting
its benign light as far as the bridges over the Saran.
CHAPTER 54
Without consulting him, or giving him a reason,
R'shiel announced that rather than return directly to the Citadel, she
wanted to check on the progress of Damin and Hablet and the armies they
were bringing to relieve the Citadel. He wondered at her decision but
did not question it, suspecting that it had much to do with the night
they had spent in Sanctuary. She did not want to face Tarja so soon, he
guessed, or the Harshini who would know what they had done.
He wanted to explain to her that the unique Harshini way of sharing
pleasure was not riddled with the same emotion-laden guilt that humans
insisted on attaching to sex. For the Harshini it was a celebration of
life; simply another way to express their joy for living. Harshini did
not marry and the concept of jealousy was unknown to them. They shared
their bodies and their irresistible, magical gift with no thought to
the consequences, or any real understanding of the importance humans
attached to it. Among them, it was never a problem. For the Harshini
there was no need to explain and nothing to justify.
But when they shared that gift with humans, things got complicated.
He had told R'shiel that life had been peaceful and happy before the
Sisters of the Blade, but it was jealousy of that peace and happiness
that had given rise to the Sisterhood. Their whole sick cult had grown
out of the fear of a handful of human women afraid they could not
compete with the impossibly perfect, magically gifted Harshini. The
original First Sister, Param, had been a bitter old woman whose younger
husband had had a fling with a Harshini woman and never recovered from
the experience. Param never understood that what had driven her husband
away was not the loss of love, but the fact that no human coupling
could ever compare with the magic a Harshini could weave.
Only Brak knew that the Harshini woman who had so thoughtlessly
shared her body and her gift with the handsome young human who took her
fancy was actually Shananara te Ortyn.
She had told him about it a few days after it happened, afraid that
she might have conceived, aware that any half-human child of hers would
be a demon child. He understood her predicament a little better than
her full-blooded kin. She was fearful of explaining what she had done
to her uncle, Lorandranek - or worse, the gods, who, back then,
would
never have contemplated such a child being allowed to exist. Xaphista
wasn't as strong then and the other gods paid him little mind. When her
moontime came and went a few weeks later, Shananara swore off humans,
claiming they weren't as satisfying as Harshini in any case, and
thought nothing more of it. None of them had.
Until Param and her Sisterhood overran the Citadel and set about
destroying the Harshini.
He glanced across at R'shiel as the dragons flew southward,
following the silver ribbon of the Glass River, and decided not to tell
her. She had too much going on inside that head of hers already. She
would cope with what had happened in her own way, and if he had done
nothing else, he had freed her from the last vestiges of her grief over
Tarja. Although she did not realise it, her Harshini heritage was
strong. Her conversation with Mandah in the hall outside the First
Sister's office sprang to mind. Letting Tarja go like that, being so
willing to stand back and let Mandah have a clear field, was probably
the most Harshini thing he had ever seen her do.
They were a few hours north of Bordertown when they spied the
Fardohnyan fleet. Brak was amazed they had come so far so quickly, even
with Harshini help. The ships were strung out in a line, their oars
dipping and rising in perfect unison.
Maera, the Goddess of the Glass River, and Brehn, the God of Storms,
were assisting their passage. While Maera hadn't gone so far as to make
the river flow backwards, the strong currents that characterised the
river were now so mild that the oarsmen could keep up their steady pace
for hours. Between Maera's help, the winds that Brehn provided (which
conveniently changed direction with every bend in the river) and the
Harshini, who had flown south to join them, the Fardohnyans were likely
to be in Brodenvale within a couple of weeks.
Satisfied that the Fardohnyans were on their way, they did nothing
more than swoop down over the fleet and wave before turning south-east
towards Hythria.
It took them nearly a week to find Damin. His call
to arms had been answered, but the same problem that had plagued Damin
when Greenharbour was under attack was still causing trouble. The
Warlords' armies were scattered throughout Hythria and it was taking a
mammoth effort, both logistical and magical, to gather them all in one
place.
They found him eventually, still in Hythria, but close enough to the
border that he would be over it in a few days. They landed on the edge
of Damin's camp at sunset. The High Prince was waiting to greet them,
with Adrina at his side. She was noticeably pregnant, but was glowing
with good health. Brak frowned when he saw her. Damin should have had
more sense than to let a woman in her condition ride into battle. Then
again, when it came to Adrina, he guessed Damin probably didn't have
much say in the matter.
"Nice of you to drop in, demon child," Damin said as he
stepped
forward to greet them. His good mood no doubt had as much to do with
the fact that he was off to war again, as it did with his pleasure at
their arrival. Brak had always liked Damin, but he was a warrior at
heart. The responsibilities of a High Prince, a wife and a child on the
way weren't likely to change him.
R'shiel smiled, just as pleased to see her friends as they were to
see her. She eyed Adrina with a slight frown and shook her head.
"Adrina, what are you doing here?"
"Not much, if the truth be known. Damin won't let me do a damned
thing."
"He shouldn't have let you come at all."
"As if I had any say in the matter," Damin complained.
"Hello, Brak.
How was Fardohnya?"
"Interesting."
Damin laughed. "I want to hear all about it. We're waiting for Rogan
and his Raiders to catch up with us at the moment so we've a day or so
to spare before we get moving again. Are you here to stay?"
"No," R'shiel answered for him. "We have to get back to the
Citadel."
"Well, we might as well enjoy the evening, then. Will the dragons be
all right out here?"
"They'll be fine. Is Glenanaran with you?"
"He's resting at the moment. It's taken a lot out of him to get us
this far so quickly."
"Did the others arrive safely?" He wasn't sure who among the
Harshini had volunteered to join the Hythrun, or even how many there
were.
Adrina nodded. "They arrived a couple of days ago. I've never seen
so many Harshini before."
"Neither has anyone else," R'shiel agreed. Then she caught
sight of
a small figure half hidden behind Adrina. "Mikel! What are you doing
hiding back there?"
The Karien boy stepped forward with a hesitant smile. "My
Lady."
"Look at you, Mikel! You've shot up like a weed! What are you
feeding him, Adrina?"
"Hythrun army rations," Adrina told her with a grimace. "I'm
glad
they have such a beneficial effect on small boys. They do absolutely
nothing for my taste buds."
"Always complaining," Damin sighed, but he was smiling at
Adrina,
who glanced back at him warmly. The change in them was astounding.
Adrina had never looked better, and Damin, who had always been a
cheerful sort of fellow, appeared ready to burst with happiness. "Come
on then. Let's go sample the culinary delights of Hythrun army rations,
and you can tell me how the hell you managed to get Hablet to send his
fleet to our rescue."
R'shiel slipped her arm through Damin's and the three of them turned
back towards the tents, as R'shiel began to relate how she had blown
the doors off Hablet's palace in Talabar.
Damin's tent proved to be more luxurious than he
normally preferred - no doubt a concession to Adrina, who made
no
secret of her desire for life's creature comforts. Despite the dire
warnings about Hythrun army rations, dinner was delicious, the wine
excellent and the company entertaining.
The High Prince and his Princess sat close together on the low
scattered cushions and once Mikel cleared the remains of dinner away
from the low table, Adrina leaned against Damin unselfconsciously as
they shared their news from the past weeks. Damin draped an arm over
her shoulder in a gesture that seemed as much possessive as
affectionate. They still argued a lot, but it lacked the vicious edge
of their earlier encounters - although Adrina's caustic wit had
not
dulled, and neither had Damin learnt to take anything seriously.
Watching Adrina and Damin together, Brak wondered if Kalianah had
taken a hand in their romance. He decided she hadn't. They were too
well suited to each other. Kalianah's interference was required only
when a couple would never fall in love unless she stepped in. She took
a perverse pleasure in doing that, too. It gave her a sense of power.
But the Hythrun High Prince and the daughter of the Fardohnyan King
were obviously kindred spirits. He wondered idly whether if Damin had
not been so keen to avoid Adrina earlier, their obvious attraction -
which, according to what he'd heard in the Defender's camp in Medalon,
was apparent from the moment they laid eyes on each other -
would have
caused trouble sooner.
It might be a very different world if it had.
Damin was relating the tale of Greenharbour's dramatic rescue by the
unexpected appearance of the Defenders when Brak caught sight of Mikel
out of the corner of his eye. He turned and watched as the child
approached R'shiel. He was holding a goblet - a plain, metal
cup with
nothing to distinguish it from any other in the tent - but he
held it
reverently, as if it was an offering to the gods.
"So, there we were," Damin was saying, "ready to burn
Greenharbour
to the ground and I hear trumpets in the distance. I thought I was
going mad."
"But why did the Defenders head for Greenharbour?" R'shiel
asked. "I
thought the plan was to muster them in Krakandar."
"It was," Damin agreed. "But somehow the messages got mixed
up and
the Defenders thought I'd left orders for them to move south. The irony
of it all," he added with a laugh, "was the reason they got
there so
damned quickly. Denjon and Linst were so furious that I'd left such
high-handed orders, they pushed their men south as fast as they could
move, just so they could tell me off."
R'shiel laughed and glanced up at Mikel. She accepted the cup and
turned back to Damin and Adrina. "I wish I could have seen the look on
your face when you realised the Defenders had come to your rescue. How
did the rest of your Warlords take it? It must have irked them no
end."
"By the time the Defenders arrived, I think they would have accepted
help from just about anybody," Adrina told her with a smile.
"They'd
already had to swallow their pride and accept my brother's help, but
grateful though they seemed, I think the Defenders were like rubbing
salt into an open wound."
R'shiel chuckled and lifted the cup to her lips. Mikel had remained
standing behind her. His eyes were wide, his body tense.
"R'shiel! No!"
Brak threw himself across the low table, knocking the cup from her
hand before she could take a swallow. Adrina screamed. R'shiel was
thrown backwards by the force of his sudden weight and struggled to
push him away, more startled than frightened. Damin was on his feet,
his sword in his hand before Brak had rolled clear. Mikel froze with
panic for a moment then ran for the entrance. Still on his hands and
knees, Brak reached out and snatched at the boy's ankle, bringing the
child down. Mikel cried out in protest, but Brak's vice-like grip
allowed him no escape. Damin stepped over the cushions and picked up
the discarded cup, sniffing it suspiciously.
"Jarabane," he said. "It's poisoned." He hurled the
cup to the
ground then he turned his attention to the boy.
Mikel was stretched out face-down on the floor of the tent, trying
to kick his way free, but unable to escape while Brak held him.
Damin nodded to Brak, who released him as Damin grabbed the child by
his shirt and hauled him to his feet. He pressed the point of his sword
into Mikel's neck.
"Damin! No!" Adrina cried, reading the murderous look in her
husband's eyes. "He's a child!"
"He's an assassin," Damin corrected.
Brak climbed to his feet, offering R'shiel his hand to help her up,
and they exchanged a worried glance. There was no trace of humour left
in the High Prince, and no trace of mercy.
"Damin, Brak and I need to take care of this," R'shiel said.
She
sounded calm and reasonable, just as aware as Brak that at that moment,
Damin was dangerously close to - and more than capable of -
cold-blooded murder.
"This child is a member of my household. He tried to kill a guest
under my roof. Even if you weren't the demon child, R'shiel, the
penalty for such a crime is death."
Mikel had not uttered a sound. He was paralysed with fear. A small
trickle of blood oozed from his neck where Damin held the point of his
sword with his right hand, his left gripping the boy by his shoulder.
"If you kill him, Damin, we won't be able to question him."
"What's to question? The child is Karien. He obviously follows the
Overlord. What more do you need to know?"
R'shiel turned to Brak, her eyes silently begging him to reason with
him.
"We need to know why he turned from Dacendaran," Brak added.
"The
God of Thieves took a personal interest in this boy, and somehow he's
been subverted. I don't want to interfere with your idea of justice,
Damin, but if you harm that boy before we have a chance to talk with
him, you'll regret it."
Damin glared at Brak. "Are you threatening me?"
"Yes, Damin," he replied softly. "That's exactly what I'm
doing."
For a moment, Brak wondered if that had been a wise thing to do. He
may have just said the one thing guaranteed to push Damin beyond
reason. For a long, tense moment, the High Prince stared at Brak
defiantly, then he lowered the sword and thrust Mikel at Brak.
"You have an hour, Brak. Ask him what you want, do what you want.
But in one hour that child dies for what he's done. R'shiel, I hope you
will forgive this grievous insult." He sheathed his sword as
Brak
caught the boy who was shaking so badly he could barely stand. "Oh, and
by the way, don't think to leave this camp with him," he added
with an
icy glare at Brak. "If you do, I will simply turn around and go home.
I'll call off my Warlords, and the Medalonians can face the Kariens on
their own and to hell with them."
Damin strode out of the tent without another word. Brak pushed Mikel
down onto the cushions and looked over at Adrina.
"Can you talk him out of this?"
She shrugged helplessly. "I don't know. I've never seen him so
angry."
"You've got an hour, Adrina," R'shiel pointed out coldly.
The Princess nodded. "I'll do what I can, but he may not listen to
me. I was the one who brought Mikel here."
"Then you'd better do something about keeping him alive, hadn't
you?" the demon child said unsympathetically.
CHAPTER 55
The God of Thieves appeared at R'shiel's summons,
although he looked rather put out by the call. R'shiel had told Brak
that Kalianah thought Dace was sulking about something and he wondered
if the reason had been Mikel.
The child was a study in abject despair. He sat huddled on the
cushions, his knees drawn up under his chin, tears streaming silently
down his face. He had said nothing. In the warm glow of the candlelight
he was an island of misery and dejection.
"What do you want, demon child?" Dacendaran asked sullenly
as he
materialised behind R'shiel.
"What's the matter with you?" she demanded as she spun
around to
face him. Although she knew he was a god, R'shiel had known Dace as a
simple thief in the Grimfield first, and she often made the mistake of
still thinking of him that way. Brak wished she were a little more
cautious. He might look cute and adorable and wear an air of guileless
innocence, but Dacendaran was still a god, and a powerful one at that.
"I'm busy," Dace muttered, scuffing the rug with a boot that
did not
match the other he wore.
"I want to know what happened to Mikel."
"You stole him from me," Dace accused with a petulant scowl.
"I stole him from you? Don't be ridiculous! I'm not a god!
How could I steal him?"
"You gave him to Gimlorie."
"Oh," R'shiel said, suddenly looking guilty. "That."
Brak glanced at R'shiel for a moment and then looked at Mikel. "Why
did you give him to the God of Music?"
"I needed to make sure the Kariens would leave, so I asked Gimlorie
to help."
"What exactly did you do, R'shiel?" Brak asked
suspiciously.
"I asked him to teach Mikel a song that would instil an irresistible
longing for home in the Kariens. I knew it might be a little bit
. . . dangerous . . . so I asked Gimlorie to make
his brother Jaymes his Guardian. That way, if he got lost in the song,
Jaymes would be there to pull him back."
Brak muttered a curse. "R'shiel, have you any idea what you've done?
A Guardian is only effective if he's in touch with his ward. Once
Jaymes left his side Mikel was vulnerable to this sort of
manipulation."
"Hey, how come suddenly this is all my fault? He tried to
kill me!"
Neither Brak nor Dace answered her.
"I needed to turn them back," she added defensively. "It
seemed like
a really good idea at the time."
"Gimlorie's songs are dangerous, R'shiel. They can twist men's souls
around. You should never have taught one to this boy."
"I didn't teach it to him. Gimlorie did. He didn't seem to mind when
I asked him."
"Of course he wouldn't mind. Every soul who hears it hungers for
him. But it's what it has done to Mikel that you should be concerned
about."
"Are you saying Gimlorie is the one who turned Mikel into an
assassin?"
"No," Dacendaran said. "Gimlorie wouldn't do that. But what
you did
do was leave Mikel vulnerable to Xaphista."
"Humans need faith to believe in the gods, R'shiel," Brak
added in a
lecturing tone. "What you did was take away Mikel's freedom to believe
or not believe. You destroyed his free will and made him a creature of
the gods. Any god."
R'shiel turned to the boy and stared down at him impatiently. "Is
that what happened, Mikel? Did you go back to worshipping the
Overlord?"
Mikel shook his head silently, too distraught to speak.
"Then why? Who told you to do this thing?"
"The old man," the child replied in a voice so low even
Dacendaran
had to strain to hear him.
"What old man?" Brak asked.
"The one in Hythria. At the palace. He told me to give the demon
child a gift. He said it would help her see the truth."
"What old man is he talking about?" R'shiel asked Brak.
"It was probably Xaphista himself," Dace shrugged.
"Can he do that?"
The God of Thieves gave the demon child a withering look.
"Oh, well, I suppose if you can do it, so can he." She
turned and
studied the miserable figure hunched on the cushions for a moment then
turned to Brak. "Why Mikel?"
"Because he's young, he's impressionable, he's feeling guilty for
turning away from his god in the first place, and," he added
with a
frown, "you left him wide open to manipulation when you opened his mind
to Gimlorie's song."
"Well, how was I supposed to know it would do that? The Harshini
sang it all the time in Sanctuary. It didn't seem to bother
them."
"The Harshini are already a part of the gods, R'shiel. But even they
will only share it among themselves. No Harshini would ever share the
song with a human."
"So what do we do with him?"
"I don't know, but we've got about half an hour to make up our
minds," he reminded her grimly.
"Dace? Can't the gods do something?"
The god shook his head. "You can't unteach him, R'shiel, and
he's done the Overlord's bidding. None of the gods has any interest in
saving this child."
"But he was your friend, Dace!"
The god stared at her. His smile faded and for a moment he let
R'shiel see the true essence of his being. The lovable rogue was gone
and there was simply Dacendaran, the God of Thieves, powerful,
implacable and concerned only with his own divinity. Brak had seen it
before and the knowledge of what the gods were truly capable of was at
the core of his distrust of them. But R'shiel had never been confronted
with it until now and it stunned her.
She took a step back from Dacendaran in fear.
"Do what you want with the child," Dacendaran said in a
voice that
chilled Brak to the bone. "His fate is of no concern to the Primal
Gods."
Dace vanished, leaving them alone in the tent. R'shiel appeared to
be having trouble breathing. Mikel had still not moved, resigned to his
fate - perhaps even welcoming it. He would soon be dining at
the
Overlord's table.
Damin Wolfblade would see to that.
They came for him on the hour, three heavily armed
Raiders who were there to stop them from trying anything heroic, Brak
suspected, rather than any real need to escort an eleven-year-old to
his execution. They did not try to prevent the men from taking the boy,
even with magic. It would simply have angered the High Prince. The bind
that Damin Wolfblade had placed them in was untenable: go to the rescue
of those in the Citadel or stand back and watch a child put to death
for the crime of being easily manipulated.
Adrina was waiting outside with Damin. Her eyes were swollen and she
had obviously been fighting with him. Damin's eyes were bleak and
unforgiving. Behind Adrina were the Harshini who had come to aid the
Hythrun in their quest to relieve the Citadel. Glenanaran stood at the
front of the small gathering of Dragon Riders. Brak could feel their
pain from the other side of the clearing. This was a vicious way to
reintroduce them to the world of humans.
One look at Damin and Brak knew that Adrina had not changed his mind.
"You can't order this, Damin," R'shiel told him as Mikel was
escorted across the clearing to stand before the High Prince of
Hythria. "You can't ask a man to execute a child!"
He looked at her. "I don't ask anything of my men I wouldn't do
myself."
"Damin, no!" Adrina cried in horror. She ran forward
and
grabbed his arm, but he shook her off impatiently.
"You don't have to watch, Adrina. Nor do you, Divine Ones,"
he
added, looking over his shoulder at the horrified Harshini. "This is
none of your concern."
"Damn it, Damin, be reasonable!" R'shiel yelled angrily as
he began
to walk away with Mikel and the guards in his wake.
Damin stopped and turned to her, then he walked back to confront
her, his eyes blazing in the torchlit clearing among the tents.
"Reasonable?" he snarled. "Define 'reasonable',
demon child. Is it
reasonable that I let this child live so he can turn on you again? It
is reasonable that I let an assassin reside in the heart of my family?
Suppose Adrina had taken that cup? Suppose Brak hadn't noticed
something was wrong? What the hell do you expect me to do?"
"You cannot murder an eleven-year-old boy for something that wasn't
his fault. He's a child, Damin, a tool. If anyone is to blame, it's
me."
Her calming tone did nothing to deter him. "R'shiel, I have lived
with assassins all my life. I grew up afraid of the dark, because for
me, the darkness was likely to conceal danger. I will not have my
child raised the same way. I will not have him sleep with armed guards
standing over him. I want him to grow up playing with children his own
age, not learning how to take down men twice his size in case he's
attacked. I want the whole damned world to know what I'm capable of if
they dare to threaten me or mine. This ends now."
"He didn't threaten you, Damin, or your wife and child. He
was trying to kill me."
"You're my friend, R'shiel, and he did it under my roof. It amounts
to the same thing."
"Do this thing and we won't be friends any longer, Damin."
Brak watched him hesitate for a moment, but the implacable rage that
consumed the Warlord was not something so easily swayed. Even faced
with the horror of what he was about to do, Brak found himself
sympathising with Damin. He'd been alive for seven hundred years and
seen worse things done for lesser reasons. He did not know how many men
had tried to kill Damin as a boy, but he could see now the scars that
it had left on him. He was willing to do anything, literally, to save
his unborn heir from the fear he must have lived through as a child,
not realising that in order to slay the monster, he would become a
monster himself.
Brak saw the look of horror in Adrina's eyes and the pain of this
confrontation emanating from the Harshini like waves of desperation.
And he could see in Damin's eyes the weight of the decision he had been
forced to make. For Damin it boiled down to a simple decision: the life
of a Karien child or the life of his own child.
"I'll do it," Brak said, stepping forward into the
torchlight.
R'shiel rounded on him in horror. "Brak!"
"I'm sorry, R'shiel, but Damin has a point. If he doesn't deal with
this, he'll never put an end to it. The child needs to die. He has to
make an example of him."
Damin looked stunned to find such an unexpected ally. "I cannot ask
a Harshini to do this. I won't even ask it of my own men."
"I'm a half-breed, Damin, and it won't be the worst thing I've
done." He turned to the Harshini and met Glenanaran's black
eyes
evenly. "Take the others away from here, Glenanaran. Just pray to the
gods that watch over this child that Death comes quickly for
him."
The Harshini stared at him for a moment, while Brak silently willed
him to understand. Then Glenanaran nodded solemnly. "We will pray for
the child."
Then do it quickly, Brak urged silently.
The Harshini turned and vanished into the darkness. R'shiel watched
him with dismay as he walked across the clearing and took Mikel by the
hand. Damin stood beside her, surprised and a little suspicious of
Brak's willingness to kill.
"How do I know this isn't a trick?"
"This is no trick, Damin."
He grabbed Mikel by the arm and pulled him clear of the guards, then
drew the dagger from his belt. He turned it for a moment in his hand as
if testing the weight, then he glared at Damin.
"Are you planning to watch?"
"Yes."
"You're a sick son of a bitch, aren't you?"
"No, just a distrustful one. I don't believe you'll do it."
He's calling my bluff. But he could not draw on his power
to create an illusion. Damin would notice what he was up to as soon as
he saw his eyes darken. R'shiel stood with Damin and made no move to
stop him, either. She too was calling his bluff.
He looked into the eyes of the confused child. Mikel had moved
beyond fear and stepped over into paralytic terror.
"Are you ready to meet Death, Mikel?" he asked softly,
almost
gently. Adrina choked back a sob in the background and the torches were
hissing loudly in the unnatural silence.
Almost as soon as the words left his mouth, he felt the presence of
a god and almost sagged with relief. All around them, the air was
suddenly filled with unnatural, crystalline music as the figure of
Death appeared in the clearing. He wore a long hooded cloak, blacker
than the night surrounding them. His face was a pale skull, his hollow
eyes radiated light and he actually carried a scythe in his left hand.
Theatrical bastard, Brak thought sourly.
"This is the child you wish me to take?" the spectre asked
in a
musical voice that boomed through the clearing.
"Yes, my Lord."
"You presume a great deal, Brakandaran."
"This is necessary, my Lord."
The being glanced around the clearing until his eyes alighted on
R'shiel. Brak noticed, with some relief, that she was more suspicious
than frightened. She was a smart girl. She would work out what was
going on sooner or later. He just hoped that when she did figure it
out, she kept her mouth shut.
"Demon child," he said, with a slight bow in her direction.
"Divine One."
The creature swivelled his fearsome head towards Mikel then and held
out a skeletal arm to the child. "Come."
As if in a trance, the Karien boy walked towards the spectre
unresistingly. There was no fear in his eyes now, only quiet
acceptance. Death took the child by the hand, cast a withering gaze
over the stunned humans and disappeared, taking Mikel with him.
The silence that followed was chilling. Adrina screamed.
The sound broke Damin out of his trance and he ran to her, but she
pushed him away and turned on Brak savagely.
"Get out! Get away from here! You murderous, cold-blooded
bastard!"
"Adrina . . ." Damin said, trying to take her in
his arms.
"Don't touch me! This was your idea and now look what you've done.
Leave me alone!" She fled from the clearing sobbing loudly.
Damin
spared Brak a helpless look and followed after her.
Brak turned to find R'shiel standing alone in the clearing, her arms
crossed, staring at him disapprovingly.
"Why?"
He shrugged. "Less blood this way."
She crossed the space between them in three strides and punched him
painfully in the shoulder. "What the hell was all that about?"
"Damin was going to kill him, R'shiel, make no mistake about that.
It might have seemed like a good idea now, but I suspect it would have
had long-term consequences he hadn't thought about. Don't worry about
the boy. Gimlorie will keep him out of harm's way for the time
being."
She looked ready to hit him again. "You got Glenanaran to call
Gimlorie, didn't you? That's why the Harshini didn't object."
"Clever girl."
"But why pretend he was Death?"
"Damin had to believe Mikel was dead, or he would have finished the
job himself. Actually, I thought Gimlorie did a fair imitation of Death
myself, although the scythe was a bit over the top."
"Is Mikel dead?"
"He's residing with the gods, temporarily."
"Will you stop being so bloody cryptic!"
He smiled at her anger, which did nothing to help. "I'll explain
later. In the meantime, I think we should get out of here before Adrina
decides to have me hung, drawn and quartered."
"Where are we going to go at this time of night?"
"Back to the Citadel. I'm getting a little fed up with Xaphista. I
think it's about time you fulfilled your destiny, demon child."
CHAPTER 56
R'shiel was surprised by the number of Kariens
camped around the Citadel as they flew towards it. The invading army
had now pulled back behind the shallow Saran River. They had blocked
the bridges with overturned wagons and there was clear ground between
the Citadel and the Karien troops. There seemed to be fewer Kariens,
although they still numbered in the tens of thousands. The combination
of dwindling supplies, no spiritual or military leadership and, she
learnt later that day, the news that the Harshini had returned, had
played havoc with the siege army.
She had no time to dwell on it, though, as she noticed the Citadel.
It was just on dusk, and she had expected to see the Dimming begin as
the walls paled and lost their radiance with the coming night. But the
Citadel shone like a lantern in the gathering gloom, casting its soft
light out towards the Saran. It made sense, then, why the Kariens had
pulled back behind the water. They were hiding in the darkness where
the Citadel's illumination could not touch them.
The dragons settled on the sandy floor of the amphitheatre as the
sun set completely, but even here the night was banished by the
radiance. A Defender R'shiel did not know came out to greet them,
casting his eyes over the dragons with the world-weary air of a man who
had seen it all before, and informed them that the Lord Defender was
expecting them, and required their presence immediately.
"Where have you been?" Tarja demanded as
soon as
they appeared in the doorway. "We expected you back days ago."
"We were checking on Damin and the Fardohnyans."
"How close are they?" Garet asked. He and Shananara were
sitting in
the heavy leather chairs facing the desk. Tarja paced behind it like a
restless cat.
"The Fardohnyans should reach Brodenvale late next week. Damin's not
far behind them. Another few days I suppose."
"That's impossible!" Garet exclaimed. "There is no way they
could
have covered that much distance in such a short time."
"You forget the Harshini and the gods are actively helping them,
Commandant," Shananara reminded him.
"I don't care who's helping them, Your Majesty. It is simply not
possible to sail upriver so quickly, even in oared warships. Or march
an army through anywhere at that speed." He turned to Brak and
R'shiel,
shaking his head. "You must be mistaken."
"We're not mistaken, Garet. Believe it, or don't believe it. It
makes no difference to us." R'shiel stepped into the office,
took the
seat beside Shananara and turned her gaze on Tarja. He looked tired.
"The Defender who met us in the amphitheatre said you wanted to speak
to us."
"We got a reply from King Jasnoff."
"What did he say?"
"It was pretty long-winded, but the essence was, 'Kill my
dukes and
I'll turn Medalon into a graveyard'."
"What are you going to do now?" R'shiel asked.
"That's what we were just discussing," Garet informed them.
"Tarja
wants to wait until the relief forces arrive, and then attack the
Kariens outside. I think we should stick to our original plan: kill one
of the dukes and send Jasnoff his head to prove we're not bluffing. Her
Majesty here wants us to lay down our arms, put flowers in our hair,
and swear eternal peace and brotherhood with our enemies."
R'shiel smiled, not at all sure that Garet was joking. "Well, I
happen to like Shananara's idea better."
Tarja frowned at her. "This is no joking matter, R'shiel. Do you
have anything constructive to offer? If not, we don't need you
here."
"Actually, I do. I want you to give the priests back their staffs
and let them go."
Even Shananara baulked at that suggestion. "You can't be
serious."
"She's serious," Tarja said, studying her intently. "It was
your
idea to take them hostage, so I'm told. Now you want to let them go.
You have a reason, I suppose?"
"We need them outside, where they can influence their
troops."
"I was under the impression that the whole purpose of confining them
here was to stop them influencing their troops," Garet
remarked. Oddly, he had not objected to the suggestion. R'shiel thought
his would be the loudest voice raised in protest.
"That was before I figured out how to influence the
priests."
"So, we let a hundred fanatical priests loose among the currently
leaderless and uncoordinated troops outside, who outnumber us about
seven to one, on the off chance that you can make them act the way you
want?" Garet asked. He nodded thoughtfully. "That sounds
reasonable.
Perhaps we could just throw all the people in the Citadel off the
walls, too, so our enemies won't have to go to the bother of putting
them to the sword."
"Your wit is exceeded only by your blindness, Garet,"
R'shiel
retorted impatiently.
"At least I have my wits. You seem to have lost
yours."
"Garet . . ." Tarja said warningly, in an attempt
to head
off the argument. He turned to R'shiel with an expression that left
little doubt of his reaction if she continued to bait the commandant.
"How can you influence the priests?"
"Their staffs are made up of pieces of the missing Seeing Stones.
They're like a conduit. If I can find the Seeing Stone here in the
Citadel, I can use it to channel whatever I want through it to the
priests."
"But how is that possible?" Shananara said.
"Well, if you don't know, that hardly fills me with
confidence," Garet muttered.
"My guess," Brak interjected, understanding what Shananara
was
asking, "is that either the Fardohnyans or the Sisterhood sold their
Stone to the Kariens and they broke it up. They're the only two that
are missing."
"Well, it wasn't the Sisterhood," Tarja informed them.
"We've found
the Citadel's Seeing Stone."
"You found it? Where?"
"In the Great Hall. There was a false wall at the back of
. . . R'shiel!"
She did not answer him or even hear what else he had to say.
R'shiel was on her feet, out of the office and barrelling down the
stairs with Brak on her heels before anyone could stop them.
"What happened here?"
R'shiel's voice echoed through the Great Hall, although it seemed
strange referring to it by that name. This was the Temple of the Gods
in all its majestic glory. This was the place that Brak had described
to her with such melancholy longing. She understood now, what he had
been trying to tell her.
"My guess is Shananara," Brak said, his voice filled with
awe. "If
the Citadel needed placating, she would have done it here."
"It's fantastic! Look!" She walked the length of the Hall to
the
podium. The Seeing Stone stood before them, twice the size of the one
R'shiel had used in Greenharbour. It reflected the radiant pillars with
a soft light that filled the hall, banishing the shadows, highlighting
the exquisite artwork. "Oh, Brak, why did they ever try to hide
this?"
"Because they were human, and humans have a tendency to destroy
anything they don't understand."
R'shiel reached up and ran her hands over the cool surface of the
Stone, then turned to him doubtfully. "Do you think this will
work?"
"It's theoretically possible."
"That's what you said about coming back from the dead."
He shrugged. "Well, that relies on the whim of Death, so it's not
that cut and dried. This, however," he said pointing at the
Stone, "is
a lot more straightforward. The problem is not if it's possible,
though."
"Then what is the problem?"
"R'shiel, you have raw power to burn. You threw Sanctuary into
hiding like it was a child's toy. But that required brute force, not
finesse. What you want to do to these priests is going to call for a
delicate touch that you are a century away from achieving."
"Then perhaps I should wait? That gives you another hundred years to
live."
He smiled at her. "I doubt the Primal Gods would be so patient.
Besides, you'd be pretty sick of me in a hundred years,
R'shiel."
"How do you know?"
"Even the Harshini don't stay together that long. It's why they
don't get married. There's only so much you can take living with
another person before they start to wear on you."
"Will I be as cynical as you when I'm seven hundred years
old?"
"You're worse than me already."
She smiled and sat down on the steps of the podium. He sat beside
her for a moment in silence as she took in the monumental Temple. All
of this was her legacy, her inheritance. She laid her head on Brak's
shoulder, trying not to let the knowledge of his impending death
distract her.
For a moment, she closed her eyes and let the silence and the
memories of Sanctuary overwhelm her. She wished Brak had not put
conditions on it - wished he would wrap them in that
unbelievable
cocoon of magic again and transport her to that other plane where
pleasure and indulgence were the only things that mattered
. . .
"Founders!" She sat bolt upright and stared at him
wonderingly.
"What?"
"I don't need finesse, Brak."
"You don't?"
"No! I need pleasure!"
"Here? Now? A bit public, don't you think?"
"Don't be an ass!" she said, leaping to her feet, giddy with
the
knowledge that she knew, with absolute certainty, how to bring Xaphista
undone. "Don't you see? The other night the Harshini could feel us. You
said even Xaphista could feel it. You said he made his people turn away
from pleasure because it distracts them from him."
Brak looked at her askance. "What are you suggesting we do, demon
child? Have an orgy here in the Temple of the Gods and channel it
through to the priests via the Seeing Stone?"
She laughed. "You'd be surprised how close you are to the truth,
Brak. Come on!"
She grabbed his hand and pulled him to his feet then headed down the
Hall, dragging him in her wake.
"R'shiel!"
"What?"
"Where are you going?"
"You'll see," she said with a laugh.
He stopped and pulled her back. "Enough! I'm not taking another step
until you tell me what you're up to this time."
"Don't you trust me?"
"Not in the slightest."
She sighed heavily. "Brak, I'm going to distract the Kariens. I'm
going to take their minds off Xaphista for a while."
"Is that all?"
She nodded. "That's all I have to do, Brak."
She saw the dawning light of comprehension in his eyes and smiled.
Brak shook his head ruefully. "You're a sneaky little thing, aren't
you? I'm glad you're on our side."
"It'll work, won't it," she said. It was a statement, not a
question.
He nodded slowly. "Yes. It should work."
"Then let's go see Tarja."
"Gods, you're not going to tell him what you're planning, are
you?"
"Of course not. I'm going to ask him to throw a party."
CHAPTER 57
The following day, Tarja relented and agreed to let
the priests go. Garet objected vehemently, but once she had spoken to
Shananara and had her support, his advice was overruled. Tarja doubted
her, she could tell that from the way he looked at her and the edge of
scepticism in his voice. But with the knowledge that the Fardohnyans
were close, and Damin Wolfblade not far behind, he seemed to think that
she couldn't do their cause much harm and was prepared to indulge her.
Up to a point.
The priests were herded from the Lesser Hall towards the gate at
dawn the next day. Two of them led another priest whose eyes were
bandaged, although R'shiel did not know what had happened to him.
Parked near the entrance to the gatehouse was a covered wagon, inside
which were the confiscated staffs. Once she'd talked her way around
Tarja's objections, and the Defenders realised the stones were mere
crystals rather than diamonds, avarice gave way to apathy. But she was
not so foolish as to stand in range of a priest wielding his staff,
which was the reason she had chosen this vantage on the wall-walk, high
above the main gate.
As they neared the wagon, a Defender threw back the tarpaulin. The
tonsured men swarmed over it, grasping for the security of the symbols
of their rank. One of the priests glanced up, caught sight of her and
shook his staff, mouthing some insult she could not hear. Others
followed his gaze as they reclaimed their sacred sceptres. An uneasy
prickle of apprehension washed over R'shiel as she watched them.
"Brak, was it such a good idea to let so many of them gather like
this armed with their staffs?"
"You can't influence the Overlord's priests through their staffs if
they don't have them," he shrugged. "Don't worry. I don't think
they
can -"
His words were cut off by a loud explosion, as the merlon near
R'shiel shattered into a shower of flying pebbles. R'shiel ducked for
cover as another explosion buffeted her with flying debris. Screams of
terror, and the Defenders' cries of alarm, suddenly filled the street
below.
"You don't think they can what?" she shouted over
the
commotion.
Brak saw her eyes darken and laid an urgently restraining hand on
her arm. "They destroy magic, R'shiel. You're not linked through the
Seeing Stone here. Don't try to fight them."
"Watch me," she snarled angrily.
R'shiel stood up and looked down over the street. Defenders were
rushing heedlessly to fight an enemy they could not comprehend, while
the citizens who had come to watch the priests being released milled
about in panic, looking for a way to flee the sudden carnage, too
afraid to approach the gate. All other escape routes were blocked by
the Defenders.
She spied the cause of the trouble quickly enough. Three tonsured
priests held their staffs above their heads, chanting in unison as they
called on the power of the Overlord to strike down the demon child. The
other priests were not yet organised enough to join in the Watching
Coven, but it would not take them long. Three priests she could handle.
She knew that from experience. Any more and she could not predict the
outcome.
Turning her attention to the first priest, she hurled a burst of raw
power at the staff, understanding now what she had done by accident on
the northern plains of Medalon. Whatever spell made the staff drain
magic, its focus was the small chip of Seeing Stone at its core. The
power she threw at it overloaded the crystal and the conflict between
the force at its centre and the staff's ability to absorb magic created
an explosion that threw the priest to the ground with bleeding
eardrums. She repeated her effort at the next man, and then the one
beside him, careless of the power she was drawing.
Several others defiantly held up their only protection against her,
only to find themselves lying prostrate on the ground, their staffs
shattered, the gold star and silver lightning bolt fused into a glob of
worthless metal. R'shiel could feel rather than see Brak beside her. He
shouted something at her that she could not understand. Something about
using restraint, but all he could do was stand at her side, ready to
catch her if she fell.
It took a dozen or more explosions for the priests to be dissuaded
from any further attempts to destroy the demon child; much longer for
the Defenders to restore some semblance of order. R'shiel clung to the
power, standing over the gateway, her eyes burning black as she dared
them to try her again. She was trembling and exhausted and felt Brak's
arm slide around her waist gratefully. If she appeared to be a tower of
strength to the Kariens below, then let them think that. There was no
need for them to know that he was holding her up.
"You've come this far. Don't give up now, demon child," Brak
whispered as she slumped against him.
"I think I'm going to faint."
"No you're not," he told her sternly. "You're going to stand
up here
and watch every last one of them leave."
"Don't let me go, Brak."
"I won't."
She stood there for a long time, leaning into Brak's solid strength
as the Kariens picked up their staffs and filed through the gate
beneath her. Towards the end of the line, another small commotion broke
out as the three priests left discovered they did not have a staff they
could claim.
"Seems someone decided to collect a few souvenirs," Brak
remarked.
"Looks like it," she agreed distantly.
R'shiel watched the last of the priests leave. She heard the gate
close behind them, then turned to watch as they ran towards their
forces on the other side of the Saran. She did not let go of the power
until they had crossed the bridges and put the shallow river between
them and the Citadel.
The celebration that was organised to mark the
departure of the priests had been harder to arrange. R'shiel had
eventually convinced Tarja that it would be good for morale, but more
than that, it would annoy the Sisterhood. Even Garet didn't mind
annoying the Sisterhood, and with the strict rationing the Defenders
had imposed, they were in no danger of running out of food. A bit of
largesse would go a long way to easing the minds of the population, she
pointed out reasonably, and there were still a lot of Sisters of the
Blade in the Citadel, looking for any excuse to stir up trouble. She
had listed all her reasons calmly and didn't even try to pick a fight
with Garet Warner. Tarja eventually agreed and had given Captain
Grannon the task of organising such a mammoth affair. All R'shiel had
to do now was convince the Harshini to do their part.
The dormitories where the Harshini were quartered were nothing like
those R'shiel remembered living in. The whole building glowed with
light and colour. She walked the corridors with her mouth agape at what
had been hidden under the whitewash, until she reached the place
Shananara was using as a dayroom. It had been the Mistress of the
Sisterhood's office until recently.
"I hear there was some trouble at the gate," Shananara
remarked as
R'shiel knocked on the open door.
"The priests took exception to my presence," R'shiel told
her with a
shrug. "But I discouraged them from doing anything about it."
"I know," the Harshini Queen replied with a grimace. "I have
the
headache to prove it. I really wish you would learn some restraint,
R'shiel. You can be very exhausting at times."
"I'm sorry."
Shananara smiled and indicated that R'shiel should sit. The heavy
furniture seemed out of place now. With the walls restored to their
former glory, these rooms needed light, airy pieces, not the cumbersome
dark furniture the Sisterhood favoured.
"Brak tells me you have a plan."
"I need your help," she said, taking the seat opposite the
Queen.
"We cannot help you destroy Xaphista, R'shiel. For that matter, I
could not help you if you wanted to step on a bug."
"I know that. And I won't ask anything of the Harshini that goes
against their nature - but I need to distract his believers for
a
while."
"Distract them? How?" Shananara asked suspiciously.
R'shiel explained what she had in mind. The Queen listened to her,
nodding occasionally, then finally laughing delightedly. "And you
honestly think this ploy will work?"
"Brak seems to think it will."
"Yes, well Brak is half-human. It would probably appeal to his
rather skewed sense of humour."
"Then you'll help me?"
"Yes, demon child, the Harshini will help you."
"Even knowing it may result in the destruction of a god?"
"I don't know that will happen for certain, R'shiel. For all I know,
this will do nothing but annoy him."
R'shiel nodded, aware that the Queen was right. Brak thought it
might work, but none of them could be sure. "I have another favour to
ask."
"I'll grant it if I can."
"I need you in the Temple of the Gods with me. I don't have the
skill to do this alone."
"I cannot take a direct hand in this, R'shiel."
"No, but you can show me what I have to do."
"Very well," Shananara agreed with some reluctance. "But
don't count
on my help. I don't mean to sound like I'm threatening you, but I
simply cannot do anything that goes against the nature of the Harshini.
I will do what I can, but you may find, at the point where you need my
help the most, I will be useless to you."
"I'm prepared to risk that."
"Then I will be there, demon child. And may the gods guide our
hands."
R'shiel had one other task to perform before she
was ready, and when she left Shananara, she hurried through the streets
to the Defenders' blacksmith shop. They had finished the job she had
asked them to do and she examined their handiwork closely, careful not
to brush against it, until she was satisfied that it was exactly what
she had asked for. The sergeant in charge of the forge smiled as she
looked over it.
"You can touch it, lass. It doesn't bite, you know." He was
shouting
to be heard over the ringing of hammers on metal. The smiths and the
fletchers had been working non-stop for days, turning out weapons and
arrows to be stockpiled in case of a Karien attack.
"Actually, Joulen, it does bite." She straightened up and
nodded in
satisfaction. "Can you get one of your men to take it over to the Great
Hall for me? Ask them to put it near the Seeing Stone."
"Aye, if that's what you want."
"It is, thank you."
It was late afternoon when R'shiel left the blacksmith's forge,
satisfied she had done all that she could for the time being. All that
was needed now was for Xaphista to walk into her trap.
CHAPTER 58
Music from the amphitheatre drifted on the night as
musicians warmed up their instruments. The Citadel blazed softly under
a cloudless, blue-velvet sky. R'shiel looked down over the Karien camp
from the wall-walk at the scattered fires that pierced the plain like
dollops of hot blood in the darkness. The fires stretched as far as she
could see. She had done everything she could think of, covered every
contingency.
There was nothing left to do now but wait.
"It's been pretty quiet down there since we let the priests
go."
She glanced at Tarja, aware that he was rather uncomfortable. This
was the first time they had been alone since her return. She had
brought him here to talk to him undisturbed. That was never going to
happen in his office. There were things she needed to say to him, for
her own peace of mind, if nothing else.
"They're probably down there plotting our downfall," she
remarked,
trying to sound lighthearted.
"I'd say that was almost a certainty."
She glanced at him, but he was staring down at the plain with
determination. His profile was guarded. "Tarja."
"Yes?"
"I'm sorry."
He turned to look at her. "For what?"
"For what Kalianah did to you. For all of it, I suppose."
Tarja shrugged, not comfortable with either the subject or her
apology. "R'shiel, there's really no need . . ."
"Yes there is, Tarja. At the very least, it eases my guilt a
bit."
"In that case, apology accepted," he said, smiling faintly
to assure
her of his sincerity.
There were ten thousand other things that R'shiel wanted to say to
him, but Tarja seemed satisfied that the subject was painlessly closed.
He turned back to watching the plain in silence. R'shiel sighed and
decided to let the matter drop. There was nothing to be gained from
opening old wounds. Tarja had obviously been at pains to put the past
behind him.
R'shiel's thoughts turned to the coming confrontation. She tried to
calculate how much longer she had to wait. It was the evening of
Fifthday. Tomorrow was Restday and, at dawn, every Karien would be
crammed into the village churches, every city dweller would be crowded
into the nearest temple. Even the soldiers below would turn their backs
on the Citadel to listen to their priests. And that's when she would
make her move. When every Karien voice would be raised in worship of
their god.
It was when Xaphista would be at his most powerful.
It was also when he was most vulnerable.
"If this works," she said, breaking the silence, "all Damin
and
Hablet are going to have to do is mop up."
"Mopping up tens of thousands of Kariens and getting them back
across the border will be a job in itself, R'shiel. And don't forget
that we still have to gain control over the rest of Medalon. The
Sisters of the Blade here in the Citadel might appear to be toeing the
line, but I suspect it's only because of the siege. They're happy to
let us fight their battles for them, but the moment we're rid of the
Kariens, they'll start trying to regain their position. We've a very
long road ahead of us."
"You'll make a good Lord Defender, Tarja."
He shrugged. "I never wanted to be Lord Defender, you know, not even
when I was a Cadet. I knew what people were saying about me. I knew
everyone thought I was being groomed for the job and the idea terrified
me. The responsibility terrified me. It still does. I was much happier
as a simple captain on the southern border fighting Damin Wolfblade.
Life was a lot less complicated back then."
"I think Damin would agree with you. He's finding some of the
decisions required of a High Prince a bit more than he bargained
for."
For a moment she recalled Damin's unforgiving eyes as he sentenced
Mikel to death. Tarja would be confronted with similar dilemmas, she
was certain. She envied neither of them. Then she smiled, as something
else occurred to her. "He has Adrina with him."
"Oh, wonderful," he groaned.
"Don't worry, Tarja," she assured him, laughing softly at
the
expression on his face. "You'll be safe. She only has eyes for Damin,
these days. Besides, she's due to give birth soon. You never know
. . . she might have the child here in the Citadel and decide
to name it after you. But I think you'll find her too preoccupied to
worry about flirting with you."
He looked very relieved. "I like Adrina, but she can be very
. . . trying."
With a sympathetic smile, R'shiel turned her back on the Kariens and
leaned against the softly glowing wall. She folded her arms across her
body and studied the pattern in the stonework beneath her feet for a
moment, working up the courage to say what she had brought him up here
tell him.
"Tarja, when this is over, I'm leaving."
He looked at her in surprise. "Where are you going?"
"I have some things to take care of. Loclon is still out there
somewhere, for one thing. I won't rest until I've dealt with
him."
"I'm sorry we didn't find him. No, worse than that, I'm sorry I
didn't kill him. You were right. You warned me years ago that I should
have put an end to him that evening in the arena when he killed Georj.
Do you know how often I wish I had?"
"Probably nearly as often as I do."
For a moment, he could not meet her eyes. The memory of what Loclon
had done to her was too dreadful to confront. He glanced back over the
plain before he answered.
"We didn't see any sign of him when we let the Kariens out. He may
still be in the Citadel."
"No, Tarja. He's long gone. But it doesn't matter. I'm half
Harshini. I have several lifetimes to fill. I don't mind using one of
them to find Loclon."
He nodded silently, needing no further explanation.
"I have to get Mikel back, too."
"Mikel? That Karien boy who crossed the border with Adrina? What
happened to him?"
"The God of Music is minding him for a time. I have to go and get
him back."
"A god is minding him?" Tarja repeated doubtfully.
"I don't
really want to know what that means, do I?"
She laughed softly. "No."
"Will you come back when you've finished?"
"I don't know," she shrugged. "There's something else I have
to do,
but I don't think it's going to be that easy, and I don't know how long
it will take. You can keep a lantern burning for me, Tarja, but don't
wait up."
He smiled then, perhaps even a little relieved that she would not be
around to remind him of a past he thought better forgotten. Kalianah's
geas was not yet a distant memory. Time would make the past easier to
come to terms with. He was no longer her brother and would never again
be her lover, but she could count him a friend.
"I'll miss you."
"No you won't. You'll be glad to see the back of me. So will Garet.
And Mandah." He turned from her, and it took R'shiel a moment
to
realise that it wasn't anger that turned him away, but embarrassment.
"Oh, Tarja, don't be so foolish. I know I've never been friendly with
her, but Mandah adores you. I worked that out when we first met in
Reddingdale. I suppose that's why I never liked her. That, and the fact
that she's so insufferably nice. She's probably one of those Novices
who grew up in the Citadel lusting after you and Georj. It doesn't
bother me, and you shouldn't let it bother you."
Tarja suddenly grinned at his own foolishness. "That's very noble of
you, R'shiel."
"Actually, Brak said the same thing."
Tarja's grin faded at the mention of Brak. There was still a degree
of residual distrust between them, R'shiel knew. Brak had done a great
deal that Tarja found hard to forgive. "Is he going with you when you
leave?"
She shook her head sadly. "No, Tarja. Where Brak is going, I can't
follow."
He was silent for a moment then looked at her strangely. "Do you
love him, R'shiel?"
"Not in the way you think. It's something else. You wouldn't
understand. The Harshini would."
"The Harshini," he sighed heavily. "I don't suppose there's
any
chance the Harshini will want to leave the Citadel too, once this is
all over and done with?"
"Not much," she agreed with a grin.
He shook his head ruefully. "Well, wherever you go and whatever you
do, R'shiel, spare a thought for me every now and then. Things are
going to get a lot worse before they get better, I fear."
R'shiel smiled sympathetically, but did not answer him. They stayed
on top of the wall for a while longer, until the discordant notes of
the distant musicians ceased. Then the air was filled with the strains
of a cheerful melody as the party in the amphitheatre got under way. By
unspoken agreement, they turned and walked back down the spiral
staircase in the gatehouse to the street and headed towards the music.
CHAPTER 59
R'shiel had feared that allowing the Harshini to
mingle with the people of the Citadel in the amphitheatre would be
inviting trouble, but she need not have worried. Although the
Medalonians had spent two hundred years reviling their race, when
confronted with one in person, the Harshini were almost impossible to
dislike. They did not share the human frailties of shyness or
self-doubt, and assumed everyone was as happy to meet them as they were
to meet others. Their wide-eyed joy at being invited to share the
celebration was infectious. After a moment's awkward silence when the
Harshini first arrived, the party settled down again and the citizens
of the Citadel set about enjoying themselves as if the Karien army
outside did not exist.
"Isn't it amazing what a bit of free food and alcohol will do for a
city's morale," Brak remarked as he found R'shiel sitting high
up in
the tiered seating of the amphitheatre watching the party.
"You think that's going to help morale? Just wait till they
find out that the court'esa have been laid on free of charge
for the evening."
"How did you get Tarja to agree to that?"
"Ah, well . . . come to think of it, I didn't actually
mention it to him. He's pretty busy at the moment. I didn't want to
burden him with details."
"I'm sure he'll appreciate your consideration when the court'esa
houses send him their bills for this evening's entertainment."
"He'll get over it."
"You spoke to him, then?"
"Yes."
"And?"
"And what? There's nothing much to tell, Brak."
"No more guilt? No more pain?" he asked gently.
"No."
"Then all that is left to do is wait, demon child."
She nodded silently. Brak slipped his arm around her shoulder
against the cold and she leaned against him as they watched the party
in silence, waiting for the dawn.
The party was still well under way when R'shiel
and Brak rose from their seats high in the amphitheatre and made their
way to the Temple of the Gods. The sky was still dark, but R'shiel
could feel the morning approaching. The Citadel was ablaze with light,
adding its own unique essence to the celebrations. They walked through
the almost-deserted streets in silence, aware that the overwhelming
atmosphere in the Citadel was not one of fear or tension, but -
temporarily at least - one of joy.
Shananara was waiting for them in the Temple of the Gods, her
expression serene and hopeful. She smiled as they walked across the
echoing floor to greet her.
"For the first time since I've been back, the Citadel almost feels
like it used to," she remarked.
"Let's hope it lasts," R'shiel said, suddenly plagued with
doubt.
"Have faith, demon child."
R'shiel did not bother to answer that. Faith was something she had
been raised to scorn. Instead, she looked at Brak and Shananara
questioningly. "What time is it?"
"Almost dawn."
"Then there's no point in putting this off any longer."
She turned to face the Seeing Stone and opened her mind to the
power. Drinking in the intoxicating sweetness, she let it fill her
until her eyes burned black and she trembled with the raw force of it.
She could feel Shananara reach for it too, and then Brak. His eyes
darkened until they were as black as ebony. The torrent that she and
Shananara could channel was vast compared to the mere stream he had
access to, but his touch was that of the maestro next to her ham-fisted
grasp. At the edge of her awareness, she felt him call to the Citadel.
The mammoth awareness was slow to respond. But Brak knew the Citadel
and the Citadel knew Brak. It was a relationship that was centuries old
and beyond her comprehension.
In the distance, inside the Citadel, she heard shouts of alarm and
the sound of a woman screaming. The walls began to pulse with light.
They throbbed as the Citadel responded to Brak's call. R'shiel felt him
stir. She felt the Citadel's touch and it almost brought her to her
knees. Once before he had reached out to welcome her. She realised now
that the last time he had merely glanced over her with mild interest.
R'shiel turned her attention to the Temple of the Gods and called
out silently for Brehn, the God of Storms. He was waiting for her.
Clouds began to gather over the fortress with unnatural speed, blotting
out the rising sun and casting a pall of fear over the army outside.
She called out to the other gods. Jagged lightning split the
awakening sky as Dacendaran appeared beside her in his motley garb, and
beside him Jondalup, the God of Chance materialised. Further along the
hall Kalianah appeared, but for this occasion she chose to appear as a
young woman, rather than the child she normally preferred. She stood
there in all her radiant glory, blinding any man foolish enough to look
upon her. One by one, the other Primal Gods appeared, many of whom
R'shiel could not even name. But every one of them she had summoned had
answered her call. They could not help it. She was drawing on so much
of their essence that even they were under her compulsion for a time.
Finally Zegarnald appeared, curiously smaller than normal, although he
still stood as high as the gallery.
Through the link she shared with Shananara she had no need for
words. By mutual agreement they reached out to embrace the Citadel.
Every thought, every mood, every happy laugh, every bawdy song and
dancing couple, every lover's caress was drawn into their net. R'shiel
drew it to her, relying on Shananara's skill to filter out the odd
discordant thought - a fight between two drunken Defenders over
an
insult from their Cadet days. Two women squabbling over whose baby was
the prettier. A lover's quarrel. All of it swirled through the net they
wove, and with the skill of a master, Shananara refined it and filtered
it until it was almost a concentrated essence of joy and happiness and
pleasure.
But mixed in with the joy was more than just simple human pleasure.
The Harshini were here and they willingly lent their essence to the
emotions R'shiel and Shananara were distilling. Passion, pleasure and a
hint of the wonder R'shiel had experienced in Sanctuary with Brak were
added to the potent blend. The feel of it was enough to make R'shiel's
spine tingle, and she had to concentrate hard to avoid losing herself
in the sheer ecstasy of it.
R'shiel had no concept of time, no idea if it was fully dawn yet, or
if a whole day had passed. She opened her eyes, seeing nothing but the
crystal that loomed in front of her, and placed her hands on the Seeing
Stone.
Taking a deep breath, R'shiel hurled everything she had gathered at
the Stone, not attempting subtlety or finesse. She had only her
strength to rely on, and the knowledge that every Seeing Stone would
respond to her sending. Every Seeing Stone and every part of one.
Every staff that contained chips of the broken Stone absorbed the
elixir of joy that she threw at it greedily. Every drop of pleasure
that she could wring from the Citadel she hurled at them, then sent her
mind out to follow.
She had unleashed chaos.
The Seeing Stone in Greenharbour pulsated with light, and she caught
a glimpse of Kalan, standing before the Stone, her face alight with
rapture as she tried to fathom its unaccountable behaviour. With a
blurring, gut-wrenching twist, R'shiel found herself looking down over
another Stone in a dank cave, surrounded by tonsured priests, who
wailed with despair as the pleasure emanating from the Stone began to
draw them from their god. In the back of her mind she felt the Stone in
Sanctuary, hidden far out of time, trying to answer the call. She
gathered her thoughts that were rapidly being torn apart by the
maelstrom and threw her mind northward towards Karien.
She reached for any part of any Seeing Stone that she could touch,
and the chips of crystal responded immediately. She saw a large temple
with a ceiling covered in mother-of-pearl tiles, a priest in glorious
robes gripping his staff with wide, terrified eyes as his congregation
fell under the spell she was weaving. Another place, another temple.
Another terrified priest. Another congregation caught in the thrall. An
orgy of rapturous pleasure. Everywhere she cast her mind the response
was the same. Her own savage joy suddenly swelled the link and she
turned from the Stone.
It didn't matter now. The damage was done. The power flowed through
the Seeing Stone like a dam that had broken under the weight of too
much rain. All the pleasure, all the joy, all the sin denied to his
believers hit the Overlord's people like a wave of bliss that made them
forget everything for a brief moment in time . . . including
their god.
She felt a surge of power from the Citadel as it reached out to
embrace her, to bolster her resistance - and not a moment too
soon. She
had barely taken her hand from the Stone when Xaphista appeared,
striding through the other gods, his eyes burning with anger.
"Stop this abomination!"
Although she well knew the seductive touch of his spirit, R'shiel
had never seen Xaphista in material form. She found the sight a little
disappointing. He chose to appear as an old man, with long white hair
that flowed around his broad shoulders, although the physique he
affected belonged to a much younger man. His dark cassock rippled in
the breeze of his passing and in his hand he carried a staff that
almost brushed the ceiling, topped by a small sun that radiated beams
of blinding light through the Temple.
"How dare you! These are my people!"
The ground trembled with his wrath.
"I'm just reminding them of what you've made them forget!"
Xaphista's answer was to hurl a blast of rage at her that almost
knocked her off her feet. But the Citadel surged to meet it, adding his
implacable will to her own, so it merely buffeted her like a sudden
gust of magical wind.
The Primal Gods did nothing. There was nothing they could do but
grant her open access to their power. Xaphista was stronger than them
combined. That was the danger of him. It was the reason they created
the demon child, and the reason they could do little but rail
helplessly against him. Individually, they did not have the strength to
fight him, and their own, inviolable laws did not permit them to kill
him. The demon child was their only hope.
"You defy me at your peril, demon child!"
"You threaten me at yours!"
And then, like a tap suddenly turned off, she felt Shananara let go
of her power. R'shiel felt it go, and staggered under the weight of
Xaphista's wrath, but the Harshini Queen could not hold her power
against the might of the God's anger. But as the torrent through the
Seeing Stone dwindled to nothing, Xaphista let out a cry of
unimaginable pain. Although she wasn't certain, R'shiel guessed that
across the length and breadth of Karien, the thrall was slowly being
shaken by his followers. In the aftermath of R'shiel's storm of
pleasure and joy, one overriding, overwhelming feeling now consumed the
hearts of his believers.
Doubt.
"It's over, Xaphista. The Kariens have begun to doubt you. How long
will they belong to you once Kalianah or Zegarnald walk among your
followers? They are yours no longer!"
"You will never be strong enough to defeat me, demon
child."
"I'm not trying to defeat you, Xaphista. I just want your people to
doubt you."
The Overlord looked down on her with blazing eyes. "You cannot
take my people from me!"
"You think not? You've spent centuries convincing them the others
gods don't exist. Every time a Karien turns round now, there will be a
Primal God waiting for them. I'll flood the world with miracles. I will
have Jondalup turn every human who games into a winner. I will have
Dacendaran turn every person into a thief. Cheltaran will heal every
wound, every sick child, every dying old woman. I'll make the Primal
Gods answer every single prayer your people utter. You'll be so deep in
divine intervention that there won't be a Karien left who can deny the
presence of the Primal Gods within a month."
"Such recklessness would destroy the natural balance of the
universe."
"I don't care."
She truly didn't, and Xaphista knew she wasn't lying. R'shiel had
not been raised among the Harshini. Despite everything they had tried
to teach her at Sanctuary, despite everything Brak had explained to her
since, she still did not quite understand the place the gods held in
the scheme of things. It was her ignorance that lent her threat its
power. No full-blooded Harshini could have contemplated such a course
of action. R'shiel did not appreciate the consequences of her
behaviour. She was a child who had accidentally stumbled over a weapon
of mass destruction and wanted to use it to get her own way, totally
oblivious to the fact that it would destroy her along with her foes.
The Overlord glared at the other gods, who had remained silent for
the entire exchange.
"You cannot hide behind this child. Each one of you will fade
into nothing as I grow in strength."
"You cannot destroy us, Xaphista," Zegarnald boomed,
unable
to contain his anger. "Look at you! Already the doubt begins to take
its toll."
Zegarnald was right. In the short time Xaphista had been in the
Hall, he had visibly diminished. R'shiel was not sure how long she had
before his priests restored order. Not sure how long the doubt and
uncertainty of his believers would last, or how long the pleasure she
had swamped them with would distract them from their god.
"We will have an accounting for this, demon child."
The
statement was as close to an admission of defeat as Xaphista was likely
to get. He was not conceding victory and he wasn't going to quit
without a fight. He turned on the God of War savagely, even as he
dwindled a little more. "I have no need to destroy you, Zegarnald.
When the whole world lies prostrate at my feet there will be no wars
and you will be obsolete . . . Each of you represents a vice
that my believers eschew. You, Kalianah, and you, Dacendaran -
when every human believes it is a sin to love or steal, there will be
no need for you, no need for any of you . . . Enjoy your
dying moments, Primal Gods. Before long you will be nothing more than
sad, forgotten legends."
Xaphista's defiant words were at odds with his stature. He was no
taller than Brak now, and he no longer had the power to assume the form
he chose. A demon stood before them, larger than normal, but still
raging defiantly. It was not a smooth transition. He surged up in size
every now and then as pockets of his followers denied what they had
seen and felt, but he was dwindling fast. But how much longer did they
have before doubt gave way to habit? Before wonder gave way to fear?
Before his people shrugged off what they felt, or worse, attributed it
to the Overlord and their belief in him came surging back, like the
backdraft after a savage explosion?
Not long, R'shiel knew. Not very long at all.
"Go!" she cried to the Primal Gods. "Go out among his
people! Now!
While you have the chance!"
Most of the gods vanished abruptly and R'shiel became aware of the
noise. A wailing arose that seemed to be coming from everywhere at
once. She discovered she was rigid with tension. The Citadel and the
plain surrounding it were filled with incredulous, panicked shouting.
She turned to Xaphista, looking down at him as he shrank back to a
demon no larger than Dranymire.
And then she felt it.
On the very edge of her awareness.
The backlash.
"Brak!" There was more than a little panic in her
voice as
she cried out to him. She did not have the skill, or even the energy,
to do what was needed now. Brak did, however. The crude iron cage built
by the Defenders flew through the air, guided by Brak's mind, rather
than his hands. He could no more touch it than R'shiel could. It landed
with a clatter over the cringing demon that had once been a god - and
would be a god again, as soon as the racing wave of belief hit them.
Xaphista howled his outrage and then his pain as he snatched at the
bars of the cage. The three staff heads welded to the bars absorbed his
power as easily as they had tortured the little demon caught by his
priests when R'shiel had tried to fool the Quorum into believing that a
demon meld was really the First Sister.
And then it hit her.
R'shiel fell hard, only vaguely aware of Brak calling out to her,
only dimly seeing Shananara as she collapsed beside her. Xaphista leapt
at the bars of his cage, but the force of the backlash hit her and she
plunged into unconsciousness before she could discover if her trap was
sufficient to contain him.
CHAPTER 60
When R'shiel finally awoke, it was to find Death
standing over her.
The Hall was quiet; even the gods were gone. Daylight, splintered by
the stained glass windows, striped the floor in coloured light. Her
head was pounding, her body wrung out and weak. R'shiel felt like she
had been hit by a falling building.
"Am I going to die now?"
Death looked down at her and shook his head. He was once again in
the form of a Harshini, the same benign form he had assumed to escort
Korandellan into the Underworld.
With a start, R'shiel realised what that meant and pushed herself up
painfully. Brak lay not far from her, his skin pallid. He wasn't
breathing. She scrambled on her hands and knees to his side and shook
him, but he showed no sign of life.
"You've taken him already!" she accused, tears spilling down
her
face.
"It was the backlash, demon child. It affected all the
Harshini."
She glanced over at Shananara, who also lay unconscious on the floor
of the Hall. "Are the other Harshini dead?"
"No. The Citadel will not permit a Harshini to die within his walls.
They were protected. The Harshini outside the Citadel would have been
too far out of range to suffer more than the edges of it."
"What about the humans?"
"The backlash would not have affected them. Not physically. Only a
half-breed would be in danger."
"Then I killed Brak," she said dully. Her emotions were numb
from
exhaustion.
"Brak offered his life in exchange for yours some time ago, demon
child. He did not die unwillingly."
She stared down at Brak, unwilling, even now, to accept it. He did
not deserve to die for her. "Have you come to take him?"
"That was my intention, demon child. But you sent his soul on its
way without the body."
"But you can take his body now, can't you?"
Death stared at her but did not answer. R'shiel was suddenly
frightened that the answer would be one she didn't want to hear. She
leaned forward and gently placed a kiss on Brak's rapidly cooling
forehead, then climbed slowly to her feet and staggered past Death,
falling on her knees near the cage that held Xaphista.
The trap had held. Xaphista cowered in the centre of the cage,
trying to stay clear of the magically charged bars. He was whimpering.
The magic of the staff heads had shielded him from the blast but his
own magic had prevented him from drawing strength from the backlash
when he needed it most. She had been afraid the trap would not hold.
But the power that had washed over the cage was unfocused. There was no
Seeing Stone to direct it, no determined will behind it. Xaphista the
God was vanquished. All that remained in his place was Xaphista the
demon. And he was a small and rather pathetic looking demon at that.
"I have come for this one too," Death told her, gliding to
her side. "He will cause less trouble in my keeping."
"Just his soul," R'shiel said, glancing up at Death. "Not
the body.
I don't want you getting bored one day and deciding to send him
back."
"You presume much, demon child."
She glanced around the Hall at Brak's body and Shananara's prone
form, then looked back at Death. "I've earnt it, don't you
think?"
"Perhaps."
"And you have to take Brak's body. All of him."
"His soul has already fled, demon child."
"You're Death. You can reunite them."
"To what purpose?"
"Because the gods owe me that much."
"Was there anything else?" Had she not been so exhausted,
she might
have detected a slight note of impatience in his tone.
"Is there any way I can get Brak back?"
"I am Death, demon child. I do not run an inn. Lives do not come and
go as they please through my realm."
Significantly, Death hadn't said no. R'shiel climbed to her feet and
faced him, willing for the moment to let the matter drop. "Then can I
ask you a question before you go?"
"You may."
"How many hells are there?"
If he was surprised by her question, he gave no outward sign. "As
many as there are creatures to imagine them, demon child. I do not
create them. Each soul creates its own hell. Whether they suffer the
afterlife or enjoy it is entirely up to them."
"So if I want someone to suffer, how do I make sure?"
"Evil is its own reward, demon child."
She nodded, thinking she understood what he meant. Death turned away
from her and looked at Xaphista. The demon trembled under his scrutiny
and then suddenly slumped against the bars. The withered grey body no
longer cared about the shielded cage. Its soul was gone. Death turned
then and opened his arms. R'shiel watched silently as Brak's lifeless
body floated across the Hall until it was resting in Death's embrace.
Then, without another word, Death vanished, leaving R'shiel standing
alone in the cavernous, empty Hall. She heard Shananara stirring and
went to help the Harshini Queen, wrapped in a cocoon of numbness and
grief that kept the pain at bay.
They stumbled out into bright sunlight. The
Citadel was in chaos. The streets were crowded, and the sounds of
shouted orders overlaid the general panic. They stood at the top of the
steps, looking down over the confusion. R'shiel had her arm around
Shananara, but she wasn't really certain who was holding up whom.
"You certainly know how to create a riot, cousin," Shananara
said
with a wan smile.
She helped Shananara down the steps and they pushed their way
against the panicked crowd towards the dormitories. R'shiel had to push
them flat against the walls on several occasions as troops of mounted
Defenders galloped by. The last troop to pass them stopped as their
officer called a sudden halt. He flew from his saddle and ran to them.
It was Tarja.
"What happened?" he demanded as R'shiel collapsed against
him.
"Xaphista is dead," she told him weakly.
Tarja looked at her in concern then waved his men forward. A
lieutenant jumped down from his mount and caught Shananara before she
fell.
"Get her back to the dormitories," Tarja ordered the man
holding the
Queen. "Get her own people to help her. And take an escort."
The young officer saluted with his free hand and scooped up the
Harshini Queen into his arms. He lifted Shananara up into his saddle,
swung up behind her, and then, waving a few of the troopers forward,
pushed his way through the throng and headed back towards the
dormitories. Once Shanan was safely out of harm's way, R'shiel sagged
with relief. Now she only had herself to worry about.
"Can you stand?" Tarja asked.
"I think so."
"Where's Brak?"
"He's dead."
"I'm sorry." Tarja sounded like he meant it, but R'shiel
knew he
would not grieve his death for long. Not like she would. "Let's get you
out of here."
"Is everyone all right?"
He glanced over his shoulder for a moment at the chaos in the
streets and smiled. "You mean this?"
She nodded.
"Oh, yes, everyone is fine, as far as we can tell. Just after dawn
there was some sort of . . . well, I don't know what it was,
but it knocked most of the Harshini unconscious and everybody else just
seemed to go berserk for a while. We're getting it under control, but
it's taking time, and now the Kariens are attacking."
"Attacking?"
"Don't worry, it's nothing serious. They're fighting amongst
themselves as much as they're aiming at us, but we still have to do
something to put it down. Sergeant!" A Defender hurried forward
and
saluted. "See that she gets back to her rooms and post a guard. I don't
want anybody disturbing Lady R'shiel while she's resting, is that
clear?"
"Yes, my Lord."
"Tarja, I don't need -"
"Shut up, R'shiel. You can hardly stand. Sergeant, once the Lady
R'shiel is in her rooms, find Mandah Rodak and send her to keep the
lady company."
"Tarja!"
Tarja grinned at her, knowing full well what his order meant. Mandah
would not let her budge until she was convinced she was fully
recovered. Worse than that, Mandah would insist on calling her "Divine
One". He thrust her into the arms of the waiting sergeant and
ran for
his horse, yelling orders as he leapt into the saddle and resumed his
push to the main gate. R'shiel watched him leave with a furious snarl,
but she was too tired to resist and let the Defender lift her onto his
mount and take her away from the bedlam that filled the streets of the
Citadel.
CHAPTER 61
The Defenders beat back the attack on the Citadel
with little effort. The Kariens were too disorganised to mount a
serious campaign, despite their numerical superiority. By mid-morning
they had withdrawn to the other side of the Saran. A significant number
withdrew even further. Desertions were decimating the ranks of the
Karien army on a regular basis. Garet estimated there were less than
seventy thousand left.
By the time Tarja returned to his office to confront the remainder
of the aftermath of whatever it was that R'shiel had unleashed, he was
exhausted. He had not been immune to the party atmosphere last night
and had consumed far too much wine. When all hell broke loose at dawn
he had woken with a head as thick as a door, his bed a tangle of sheets
and Mandah curled in his arms, her thick blonde hair spilling across
the pillow and tickling his nose. He had pushed her away impatiently,
annoyed at himself. He had not intended to get caught up in the
celebrations. He had certainly not intended to take Mandah to his bed,
and he couldn't shake the feeling that he had done so because R'shiel
had given him her blessing. Damn her. Damn all Harshini.
Seeing that she was wounded by his rejection, Tarja had kissed
Mandah soundly, promised to see her later and fled the room, getting
dressed on the run. He was hopping on one foot, pulling his boot onto
the other when Garet knocked on the door and opened it without waiting
for an answer.
"We appear to be under attack, my Lord," Garet said calmly.
He
looked over Tarja's shoulder towards the bedroom door. Mandah stood
there wrapped in nothing but a sheet, yawning sleepily. "Good morning,
Mandah."
"Commandant."
Tarja glared at Garet, waiting for him to say something, anything,
about finding the young pagan woman in his room. He was in a foul
enough mood to react rather badly if Garet even looked at him askance.
But the commandant's composure did not waver for an instant. "Oh,
and the population appears to be rioting, too."
"What the hell happened?"
"I assume it has something to do with R'shiel, but I can't be
certain. I suggest you get a move on, my Lord. We've a busy day ahead
of us."
That had proved to be a vast understatement. Tarja yearned for a day
that was merely busy. The Kariens had been pushed back and the
population in the Citadel would calm down eventually. Already many had
returned to their homes with sore heads and puzzled looks. But there
was still more to be done.
There was always more to be done.
When he finally pushed open the door to his office, he found several
Harshini waiting for him. Three were dressed in the long white robes
they favoured. The other two were dressed in Dragon Riders' leathers.
All five of them bowed solemnly as he entered the office and walked
cautiously to his desk.
"My Lord Defender."
"How is Shan . . . your Queen?"
"She is recovering, my Lord," one of the white-robed
Harshini
informed him. "We are most grateful for your assistance this
morning."
"And the rest of your people?"
"They are well, my Lord. Thank you for your concern."
The Harshini's constant thanks were starting to wear on him. "Is
there something I can do for you?"
"We are here to do something for you, my Lord." The Harshini
who
spoke was one of the Dragon Riders. She stepped forward with a smile.
"I am Pilarena and this is Jalerana. I have been honoured to aid Prince
Damin in his journey north and my companion has been with King Hablet
and his navy. We have come to coordinate your forces, my Lord."
Tarja slumped back in his chair in astonishment. "Coordinate my
forces?"
"We will relay messages, my Lord," the other Dragon Rider
explained. "If they are verbal, then we will carry messages of
goodwill. If you
want to communicate anything . . . else, then we must ask
that the messages are written and sealed and that we are not advised of
their contents."
Tarja nodded in understanding. The Harshini could do nothing to aid
their attack. If they knew the messages they carried were likely to
cause death, they would not deliver them. He smiled faintly, thinking
that they were very easy to underestimate. This race had survived for
thousands of years without being able to lift a finger in their own
defence. He was beginning to understand how they had managed it.
"Can you show me where they are now?" he asked, indicating
the map
laid out on his desk. He and Garet had been poring over it yesterday,
trying to guess where Damin might be.
Jalerana nodded and stepped forward. "The High Prince is here, my
Lord. He has with him approximately forty thousand men. The King of
Fardohnya is here and has another ten thousand. His Majesty asked that
I pass on his apologies that he could not bring a larger force. In the
time available it was all he could gather, and there are only so many
ships he could carry them in."
"Then we have fifty thousand men ready to attack?"
"You have fifty thousand men, my Lord. What you do with them
is not our concern," Pilarena remarked sternly.
"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend you."
She bowed slightly. "You are forgiven, my Lord."
"How did Damin get here so fast? With an army that big?"
"With the aid of the gods," Jalerana told him serenely.
Tarja shook his head, deciding he would be better off if he didn't
know the details. "I'd like to send a message to both Hablet and Damin.
Written messages. How soon before you can leave?"
"We will be ready when your dispatches are completed,"
Jalerana
assured him.
"Then if you would excuse me, Divine Ones, I have a lot of work to
do."
Four hours later, Tarja sealed the letters he had
written to Damin Wolfblade and King Hablet. Garet watched him pressing
the Lord Defender's seal into the warm wax and frowned.
"You know, those letters could cause us a lot of grief if they fell
into the wrong hands."
"The Harshini will deliver them safely."
"Suppose they decide to deliver them into the wrong
hands?"
Tarja shook his head at Garet's suspicions. "Haven't you seen enough
yet to know that they're on our side?"
"They're not on our side, Tarja. They are on their own side.
And you would do well not to forget it. Just because their Queen is
stunning and they smile a lot, it doesn't make them harmless."
Tarja grinned at the commandant. "Shall I tell Shananara you think
she's stunning?"
"Not if you want to see the sun come up tomorrow," Garet
warned with
a faint smile. "Any news on R'shiel?"
"Mandah says she's sleeping like the dead."
"Any idea what she actually did in that Hall?"
"No, and I don't want to know."
"Neither do I." Garet rose from his seat and walked to the
map,
frowning as he noted where the troop placements were marked. He still
thought the Harshini were lying about how far they had come. "Speaking
of Mandah . . ."
"It's none of your business, Garet."
"You're the Lord Defender, and she's a pagan."
"Then you've got nothing to complain about. A few months ago I was
sleeping with a Harshini. If I keep going at this rate, I'll have
worked my way up to a Quorum Member by next spring."
"This is no joking matter, Tarja. Once we clear out the Kariens, we
still have the rest of Medalon to secure. As it is, we've got half the
damned Sisterhood confined to their quarters. It's not going to help
our cause with you flaunting a pagan lover."
"You were the one who claimed I was the only one the pagans would
follow."
"Yes, but I didn't expect them to follow you into the
bedroom."
Tarja leaned back in his chair and studied Garet. "Is that your only
concern?"
"Yes."
"Then mind your own damned business."
Garet shook his head and bowed mockingly. "As you command, my Lord.
It's your neck."
"Garet, you wanted change. You wanted the Sisterhood gone. You can't
have just the bits you like and discard the rest."
"True," the commandant conceded reluctantly. "But you can't
blame me
for hoping."
They were interrupted by a knock on the door. Tarja called
permission to enter and Jalerana and Pilarena entered the office. They
bowed politely and accepted the letters Tarja handed them, not even
glancing at the packets they held.
"Do you have any other messages, my Lord?"
"Just tell Prince Damin and King Hablet that we anxiously await
their arrival. With joy, of course."
Jalerana smiled. "Of course, my Lord."
Garet watched them suspiciously as they left the office then shook
his head. "You're too trusting, Tarja."
"They can't knowingly cause harm, Garet."
"Perhaps not, but they can do a hell of a lot of damage unknowingly.
Besides, I never trust anybody who is always so damned happy."
CHAPTER 62
Damin Wolfblade and his army arrived at the Citadel
within an hour of the appearance of the first of King Hablet's
Fardohnyans. The constant flow of messages delivered by the Dragon
Riders between the Citadel, Hablet's ships and Damin's Warlords had
allowed an unprecedented level of coordination. Their forces were in
place, their strategy worked out to the finest detail, their victory
almost a foregone conclusion long before the Citadel came into view.
The only thing that irked Damin as he rode out to meet his
father-in-law was that Hablet had got here first.
Hablet proved to be a short, heavy-set man with a greying beard and
a scowl that was reserved for the man who had run off with his
daughter. Adrina had been left back at the camp, despite her protests.
The Harshini had stepped in to aid him in restraining her, no more
willing to let a pregnant woman near a battlefield than he was.
Hablet waited on a small rise overlooking the Karien army. The enemy
was aware of their presence. One could hardly move an army this size in
secret, but they were milling about aimlessly. The Karien dukes were
still hostages in the Citadel and their forces lacked any sound
leadership.
Damin frowned as he saw Hablet sitting astride a magnificent black
stallion, waiting for the High Prince to approach. It was deliberate,
Damin was certain. Hablet wanted him to be the supplicant. With a quick
glance at Narvell, who rode on his left, Damin bit back his annoyance
and galloped forward.
"Your Majesty," Damin said, with a slight bow as he reined
in beside
the King. His own stallion sidestepped nervously as he caught the scent
of the King's mount. The irony was not lost on Damin as he fought to
keep the beast under control. Two territorial stallions, indeed.
"You're Wolfblade, I suppose?"
"That's very observant of you, Your Majesty."
"Where's my daughter?"
"She's safe."
"Married to you? That's debateable."
Damin suddenly grinned at the Fardohnyan King as he realised Hablet
was more afraid of meeting him than he was of meeting Hablet. This man
had tried to have him assassinated any number of times, and had been
planning to invade his country until recently. It would not be
unreasonable for Damin to have called him out for it the moment he laid
eyes on him.
"Your Majesty, I'm sure you've a lot to say to Adrina and I know
she has quite a bit to say to you. But let's put aside our differences
for the time being and do something about these Kariens, shall
we?" He
didn't wait for Hablet to answer. "This is Narvell Hawksword, the
Warlord of Elasapine. He'll act as my liaison. Once the battle is
engaged the Harshini will be forced to withdraw, so I thought it might
be easier this way. As my force is four times the size of yours, and
includes a couple of thousand Defenders, we'll be bearing the brunt of
the attack, but any advice you offer will be welcome. If you wish to
join us in the command tent, just let Lord Hawksword know, and he'll
have someone show you the way."
Hablet sputtered something in Fardohnyan at Damin's high-handed
manner, but he didn't wait to find out what it was. He wheeled his
stallion around and galloped back towards his own lines, laughing at
the look on the King of Fardohnya's face.
Once the attack was sounded from the walls of the
Citadel the gates opened, and rank upon rank of depressingly
well-disciplined troops marched forth, followed by the Defender
cavalry. As they formed up in front of the walls on the other side of
the Saran River, Damin gave the signal to move forward. His advance
forces were mostly mounted, and they moved onto the plain like a wall
of impending death. He gave another signal and the Fardohnyan infantry
moved in from the west.
And then they waited.
Shananara had insisted that the Kariens be given the opportunity to
surrender. It was a condition of using her people to relay their
messages back and forth between the Citadel and the armies coming to
relieve them.
Damin took out his looking glass and focused on the Citadel as Tarja
emerged through the main gate. Mounted beside him was a bearded Karien,
one of Jasnoff's dukes, no doubt. Tarja let him take a long look at the
forces arrayed against his men. The two men spoke at some length, the
Karien gesticulating angrily, and then the duke wheeled his mount
around and returned to the Citadel. Damin swung the looking glass up to
the flagpole mounted over the gate. The white flag of truce was hastily
pulled down and battle colours were raised in their place. A whoop of
glee sounded along the Hythrun lines.
"It appears the Kariens aren't planning to surrender, my
Lord,"
Damin remarked to Almodavar with a grin.
"What a shame, Your Highness," Almodavar said insincerely.
"Then I suppose we'd better go and kill them all."
"That would seem to be the only option left open to us, Your
Highness."
Damin glanced over his shoulder. "Have the Harshini
withdrawn?"
"They're clear of the field, Your Highness. They withdrew as soon as
they saw the battle flags being raised."
Damin nodded and passed his looking glass to an aide and unsheathed
his sword. The sound of the Defender trumpets reached him faintly on
the breeze and he raised his arm to lead his troops into battle.
The battle, once it got under way, was almost as
bad as the one on the northern border. The Kariens were not acting
under a coercion, but they were demoralised, hungry and leaderless.
Their god was dead, their leaders held hostage in the enemy fortress.
They put up a fight, certainly, but there was no need for strategy. It
reminded Damin of quelling the riot that had stormed the gates of
Greenharbour during the siege. All they did - all they needed
to do -
was draw inexorably closer, pulling an ever-tighter circle of steel
around the Kariens until there was no escape and no quarter given.
The knights put up the best fight. Their code of honour would allow
them no other course of action, but even they fell eventually to the
unstoppable advance. By the time Damin thought to look up, bloodied and
exhausted, he was surprised to discover the sun high overhead. The
ground behind him was littered with more bodies than he could count,
and in the distance the Saran River ran red as the Defenders splashed
through its shallow waters to meet their foes.
Looking about him and realising there was nobody left to fight,
Damin rested his sword across his saddle and looked up at the Citadel.
The fortress seemed to glow, even in the bright sunlight. The archers
on the walls had stopped loosing their arrows, as the only men within
reach now were their own troops.
Then he heard another trumpet blare out and saw the battle colours
come down, replaced with the plain blue flag that they had agreed they
would hoist in the case of victory.
A cheer rose from the field, muted but heartfelt. Damin surveyed the
battlefield, feeling strangely let down. Like the battle on the
northern border it had been as much a cattle cull as it was a decent
war. The only enemy worth fighting these days, he realised, were
probably the Defenders, and he'd allied himself with them. Maybe he
should have stayed at home, or planned to invade Medalon. Then at least
he would have been guaranteed a decent fight.
"Your Highness? Prince Damin?"
He turned in his saddle to find a Defender riding towards him. "I'm
Damin Wolfblade."
The Defender saluted sharply. "Your Highness, the Lord Defender
sends his compliments and requests that you join him in the
Citadel."
"Very well."
"Would you happen to know where I could find the King of Fardohnya,
sir?"
"Back that way," Damin said, waving in the general direction
of the
command post some leagues distant. He was in no hurry to have Hablet
join them in the Citadel. He wanted to speak to Tarja first. "He's in
the command tent."
"Thank you, sir."
"Oh, Lieutenant!"
"Your Highness?"
"Once you've delivered your message to King Hablet, could you ask
Lord Hawksword to fetch my wife and bring her to the Citadel,
too?"
"Of course, Your Highness."
The Defender galloped off towards the command tent and Damin turned
his stallion towards the Citadel.
"You look like hell," Tarja announced by
way of
greeting.
Damin smiled wearily as he dismounted, handing his reins to a
waiting cadet. The boy led the stallion away cautiously. "Well, some of
us have been out fighting, you know, not sitting here in the Citadel
playing Lord Defender. How in the name of the gods did they talk you
into accepting that job?"
Tarja grimaced. "It's a long story. You're wounded."
Damin glanced down at his blood-soaked sleeve and poked at it
curiously, then shrugged when he felt no pain. "Must be someone else's
blood. Any chance you can find me a clean shirt before Adrina gets
here? I will be wounded if she sees me like this. I promised
her I wouldn't get involved in the fighting."
"She didn't really expect you to stay out of it, did she?"
"Who knows with Adrina," he shrugged.
He followed Tarja up a broad set of sweeping steps to the front of
an impressive building that looked vaguely like one of the temples in
Greenharbour. Tarja pushed open the massive door and Damin stepped
inside, gaping in wonder.
"The Temple of the Gods," he whispered in awe.
"We prefer to call it the Great Hall," Tarja said with a
thin smile.
"I can't believe you left it so untouched."
"We didn't. The Harshini Queen rearranged things a bit when she got
here."
Damin grinned at Tarja. "That must have been hard for your poor
little atheist heart to cope with. Will you introduce me to the
Queen?"
"Of course. She should be here soon."
"And the demon child? I half expected her to be standing on the
walls hurling lightning bolts into the enemy."
Tarja's face clouded. "R'shiel has been asleep for days now."
"Asleep?"
"She says she destroyed Xaphista."
"Yes, well that would take it out of you, wouldn't it?" He
slapped
Tarja's shoulder to remind him he was joking. "You said she was asleep?
Not unconscious? What do the Harshini say about her?"
"They don't seem to be worried."
"Then neither should you."
They walked the length of the Temple to where a long polished table
had been set up in the shadow of the massive Seeing Stone. It would
dwarf the one in Greenharbour. For a moment Damin wished he'd brought
Kalan with him. She would have been awestruck to stand here in the
fabled Harshini Temple of the Gods facing the Citadel's Seeing Stone.
As they approached the table, the Defenders on guard snapped to
attention. Tarja sent one of them to find Damin a clean shirt as he
pulled at the laces on his leather breastplate and lifted it over his
head.
"Have you got anything to drink, or is this going to be one of those
long, boring dry affairs?"
Tarja smiled and ordered a Defender to bring wine. He came back with
a carafe, two goblets and the clean shirt he'd requested. Damin drank
the first one down without taking a breath, changed his shirt and then
poured another drink down his throat, before collapsing into one of the
high-backed chairs around the table.
"So, I take it we're having this little chat in here to intimidate
the Karien dukes?" he inquired as he poured himself another
drink.
"That thought did cross my mind, yes."
"Good idea. Where are they?"
"I want to wait until Hablet and Shananara get here before I let
them in."
Damin nodded approvingly. "You're getting very good at this, aren't
you?"
"I suppose. How do you like being a High Prince?"
"I loathe it. I had to kill that Karien child a few weeks ago. He
tried to poison R'shiel. I've never had to make a worse decision in my
life."
"R'shiel never mentioned it."
"She wouldn't. Not after Brak stepped in. Where is he, by the way?
Watching over the demon child?"
"He's dead."
The news surprised Damin almost as much as Tarja's obvious lack of
remorse. "Well, that will make Adrina happy. She was planning to kill
him herself."
The doors opened at the far end of the Hall and a woman stepped
through. At first, Damin thought it was R'shiel. As she drew closer and
he saw her black eyes and her air of serene calm he knew it could only
be the Harshini Queen. He jumped to his feet and bowed low as she
approached.
"Your Majesty."
"High Prince," she replied graciously, then turned to Tarja.
"I hope
you don't mind, Tarja, but I have sent my people out to help the
wounded."
"Of course I don't mind, but won't they be distressed roaming a
battlefield?"
"We abhor violence, my Lord, but we abhor suffering even more. Don't
fear for my people. They are not as fragile as you think."
"Tarja!"
The man who called out from the entrance of the Hall was Garet
Warner, the commandant the Sisterhood had sent to investigate the
goings on when they were on the northern border. Tarja excused himself
and hurried to speak to him and then walked back to the table. His
expression was thoughtful.
"What's wrong?"
"We've just received a bird from Yarnarrow. Jasnoff is dead. He
killed himself the same day R'shiel claims she killed Xaphista."
Shananara took the news stoically. "He ruled Karien by divine
mandate. With Xaphista gone, so is his crown."
"So who's in charge now?"
"With Cratyn dead, the next in line is someone called Drendyn. He's
Jasnoff's nephew. Apparently, we're holding him here. He's one of the
dukes."
"Drendyn?" Damin asked with a laugh. "Oh, Tarja, are
you in
for an interesting time! He's a boy. And I can promise you he wasn't
raised to rule a nation the size of Karien."
"Well, we'd better break it to him gently. I'm not sure how he's
going to take the news that he's now their King."
"If you want my advice, talk to him alone and leave the other dukes
out of it. They'll just try to manipulate him. Maybe, with a bit of
guidance, we can mould him into a half-decent King."
"It is not for you to manipulate other nations to suit your own
purposes, Your Highness," Shananara scolded.
"Actually it is, Your Majesty. We've just spent thousands of lives
out there for no good reason. If we can take this boy and turn him into
a King, one who thinks before he attacks, we'll all benefit."
The Harshini Queen suddenly smiled. "Perhaps we should consider
returning to the old custom of Harshini advisers at court, Your
Highness. You saw how effective it can be when scattered parties can
communicate quickly with each other."
"And that would include my court, I suppose?" he asked,
admiring her
quick mind - and her own blatant manipulation.
"We would not want to be seen playing favourites, Your
Highness,"
she replied ingenuously.
"Of course not," he agreed with a wry smile and then turned
to
Tarja. "It's not a bad idea, you know. With Xaphista gone, the
Collective will move in to Karien. But with a Harshini looking over his
shoulder, we should be able to keep young Drendyn out of trouble while
he grows into his crown."
"The plan has merit," Tarja agreed hesitantly.
"I do have one condition, though, Your Majesty," Damin
added,
turning to the Queen.
"And what is that, Your Highness?"
"I want to be there when you break the news to Hablet," he
said with
a malicious grin.
CHAPTER 63
R'shiel was awake for some time before she opened
her eyes. She waited, feigning sleep until she heard Mandah leave the
room. Once she was certain she was alone, she swung her feet to the
floor and rubbed her eyes. The remains of what must have been a mammoth
headache lingered behind her eyes, but other than that she bore no
obvious evidence of her battle with Xaphista.
Climbing out of the bed, she padded barefoot to the door and opened
it a crack. Mandah was talking to Tarja. She could not make out what
they were saying, but when he was finished telling her what he had come
to say he kissed her, hard and hungrily, before letting her go. Mandah
shut the door behind him with a smile and headed back towards the
bedroom. R'shiel raced back to the bed and pulled the covers over
herself, closing her eyes and forcing her breathing into a deep rhythm.
She heard Mandah cross the room, felt a cool hand on her forehead and
then heard the door open and close, followed by the fainter sound of
the apartment door closing.
So Mandah had gone; perhaps to join Tarja. It hopefully meant they
were going to be occupied for a while. She hunted around the room for
her clothes, finally finding them pressed and folded in a drawer under
the window. Typical, she thought with a frown. Not only was Mandah
insufferably nice, but she was neat as well. She shook out her clothes
and dressed quickly, throwing the nightgown onto the floor.
There was a hairbrush on the dresser and she picked it up, running
it through her tangled hair. She glanced in the mirror and froze
mid-stroke. An alien reflection stared back at her. She was not drawing
on her power, yet her eyes were Harshini black. The whites of her eyes
were gone and her skin was as golden as a full-blooded Harshini.
Whatever she had done in the Temple of the Gods had left an indelible
mark on her. R'shiel slowly replaced the brush, aware that she would
never be counted as human again. For some reason the thought did not
bother her as much as she thought it would. Along with the change in
her eyes came a sense of rightness, a sense that she was somehow
complete.
She was Harshini.
R'shiel glanced around the room and realised there was nothing here
that belonged to her. Nothing she need take. Her life was headed in a
different direction and nothing here in the Citadel offered her any
sense of ownership. Feeling suddenly cast adrift into an unknown
future, she turned her back on the mirror and headed into the next room.
When she reached the outer door she pressed her ear against it and
heard faint male voices in the hall. Tarja's guards - there to
see that
she wasn't disturbed. R'shiel reached inside herself cautiously and
drew on her power. She surprised herself with the control she now had.
Perhaps being linked so closely with Shananara she had absorbed some of
her cousin's skill and knowledge. It was how the demons learnt from
each other.
With a skill she hadn't known she possessed, she drew a glamour
around herself and opened the door a fraction. The guard in the hall
turned towards the sound, studied the door curiously for a moment
before opening it wide. When he found no one, he shrugged and pulled it
closed.
R'shiel ran down the corridor, still wrapped in the glamour that hid
her from the notice of anyone who happened to pass her. She didn't
remember learning how to do it so easily, but she seemed to know
instinctively how to hold it in place. The last time she had tried such
a thing, when she and Damin rescued Adrina from Dregian Castle, it had
taken all her concentration.
R'shiel took the stairs to the ground floor and walked out into the
street, amazed to find the city going about its business as if nothing
was wrong. Wagons trundled down the street laden with produce and the
roads were crowded with soldiers - but they wore Hythrun and
Fardohnyan
colours and looked more like tourists than warriors.
So the siege is over, she thought, beginning to wonder, a
little uneasily, how long she had been asleep. If there had been time
for the siege to be lifted and the city to regain some semblance of
normalcy, it must have been quite a while. She walked down to the end
of the street and out onto the main thoroughfare. It was even more
crowded here, and there were Harshini on the streets, too. She wondered
if they would notice her, or even feel the minimal power that she was
drawing amidst the sights and sounds and smells of the city.
Crossing the road, R'shiel headed for the Temple of the Gods. She
stopped on the corner as she saw Damin and a heavily pregnant Adrina
climbing the steps. Behind them walked Tarja and Garet Warner,
Shananara and a young Karien that R'shiel recognised but could not
immediately name. On their heels strode a richly dressed man with a
barrel chest and a greying beard. Hablet of Fardohnya.
R'shiel followed them into the Temple of the Gods, still wrapped in
the glamour, and watched curiously as they took their places around the
conference table.
Shananara remained standing as the others took their seats. She held
a scroll in her hands and studied the others carefully for a moment
before she spoke. Then she looked up, stared straight at R'shiel and
smiled. Shananara knew she was watching, but she did not reveal her
presence. She acknowledged R'shiel with a faint nod and turned her
attention back to the table.
"It has taken quite some time, but I have here the treaty that you
have all agreed to sign. If one of you breaks it, they must face the
other three."
R'shiel looked around the table curiously. Tarja and Garet looked
satisfied. Adrina was positively smirking. Damin appeared relieved and
a little smug. Whatever the treaty contained, it obviously hadn't done
Hythria any harm. Hablet wore a look of wounded resignation. The young
Karien, who R'shiel realised was the knight who had travelled with
Cratyn to hunt down Adrina, looked caught somewhere between terror and
relief.
"I won't go into details, but it boils down to this: all of you will
withdraw your troops to the borders as they were set down prior to the
Karien invasion of Medalon. No nation has gained territory and no
nation has lost it. You, King Drendyn, will open your borders to the
Sorcerers' Collective. Your god is dead and your people will suffer if
they are not given an opportunity to find another god to believe in.
King Hablet, you will also grant free access to the Collective, as will
Medalon. No more arrests. No more gaols. No more persecution."
Hablet muttered something inaudible, but he did not openly react to
the rebuke. Tarja appeared unconcerned by the condition.
"Each monarch, and whatever government Medalon finally decides to
adopt, will accept a Harshini adviser in their court,"
Shananara
continued. "The Harshini will act as final arbiters in case of disputes
between the nations.
"The succession in each nation will remain as it is now, with two
exceptions. In the event that King Hablet dies before his unborn son
reaches maturity, then High Princess Adrina of Hythria will assume the
role of Regent until he comes of age. The other change also concerns
the Fardohnyan throne. The condition that requires a Wolfblade heir in
the absence of a legitimate male heir is no longer valid. In the
absence of a legitimate male heir to the Fardohnyan throne, it will
fall to the eldest legitimate female."
"Now, wait on!" Hablet objected. "I never agreed to that. If
I die,
Adrina only has to kill my son and she gets to be Queen."
"Just because you don't think twice about eliminating
members of your family, Father," Adrina retorted frostily,
"doesn't
mean I share your sentiments. I give you my word; I will not
kill my brother. Any of them."
"It makes no difference in any case, Your Majesty,"
Shananara
explained. "Adrina is excluded from the succession by virtue of her
position as Regent. If anything should happen to your son, the throne
would fall to your next eldest daughter."
"Cassandra?" Hablet laughed. "Gods preserve us from such a
fate!
Well, at least I know that Adrina will fight to keep her brother alive.
I'm sure she'd rather die than see Cassie sitting on the
throne."
Peace.
R'shiel moved away from the pillar she was leaning against with a
frown, as it dawned on her how superfluous she had become. Zegarnald
would not die; he was a Primal God and truly immortal. But he would not
walk into Karien and step into the vacuum left by Xaphista, either. He
had wanted her tempered so that she was strong enough to face Xaphista.
Well, he had what he wanted, but she had also gained a measure of
revenge for the suffering he had condoned. The gods would rise and
fall, gain strength and weaken as life rolled on, but the God of War
would not have the strength to bully the other gods into doing his
bidding. The balance had been restored.
There was no need for the demon child now. No destiny awaited her.
No nation needed her counsel. That they had done all this while she
slept left her feeling so inconsequential that it actually hurt.
Inkwells were being brought out, along with a number of quills, for
the formal signing of the treaty. She left them to it.
There was nothing more to be done.
R'shiel slipped through the doors and out into the sunlight,
realising that for the first time, she had nobody to please but
herself. No destiny loomed over her like a shadow. She was beholden to
no one - human, Harshini or god.
The glamour still wrapped around her protectively, R'shiel turned
towards the Main Gate. She walked through it unseen by the Defenders on
duty and out onto the busy road. The battlefield was still being
cleared and troops were piling bodies into mass graves dug by the
countless Karien prisoners that had been taken after the battle, but
the Saran ran clear, its shallow waters tripping happily over the rocks
beneath the surface. It was a bit grand calling it a river, actually.
It was not much more than a wide stream. She stopped on the bridge and
glanced back at the shining Citadel. It had been her home and her
prison. Her ruin and her salvation.
Impulsively, she sent out a thought to the massive fort, a farewell
of sorts. She did not know when, or even if, she would be back. She had
to find Loclon. And she had an appointment with Gimlorie. Maybe she
could find a way to convince Death to release Brak, too.
The Citadel responded with a benevolent wave of of affection that
washed over her gently. Smiling to herself, R'shiel glanced down and
discovered she was not alone. The little demon she had last seen with
Mikel in Greenharbour was sitting on the ground at her feet, looking at
her with its huge black eyes.
"Where have you been?" she asked, squatting down.
The creature chittered something incomprehensible and jumped into
her arms.
"Is that your way of saying sorry about Mikel?" she
chuckled. "It
wasn't your fault, little one. You'll be a few hundred older before you
can protect someone from the likes of Xaphista."
Mention of the dead god's name set the demon off again. R'shiel
stood up with the demon's skinny arms wrapped thightly around her neck.
With a final glance at the Citadel, she released the glamour and
crossed the bridge.
"I suppose," she said to the demon, as she walked away
without
looking back, "we'd better do something about finding you a
name."
CHAPTER 64
Loclon tossed and turned on the hard ground as the
nightmare took him again. It haunted him in his dreams and he lived it
in his waking moments. It never left him. It never gave him a moment's
respite.
It had begun as they left the Citadel. He was expecting to be
smuggled into the Karien camp and treated like a hero - until
they took
the fortress and slaughtered everyone in it. But Mistress Heaner, her
thug Lork and the chillingly beautiful boy Alladan had kept on going.
They had not stopped until they reached Brodenvale, and then they had
bundled him onto a small river boat and sailed downriver to Bordertown.
When they reached the port town they stayed only long enough to arrange
another boat, and before he could raise an objection, he found himself
heading for the Isle of Slarn.
It hadn't been too bad at first. The island was dank and miserable,
and the priests were a strange bunch, but they tended his malnourished
body and helped him regain his strength and even began talking of
letting him travel to Yarnarrow.
He had done the Overlord a great service, the priests assured him,
and his reward was waiting for him.
For a time, he had foolishly believed their promises - until
he
remembered that for the followers of the Overlord, the rewards for
service were not to be found in this life, but the next.
His first escape attempt had been treated as an unfortunate
misunderstanding. His second earnt him a savage whipping. His third and
last attempt had almost succeeded. It would have, had not the island
begun to tremble as if in the grip of an earthquake, and the priests
suddenly gone mad.
Something drastic had happened.
Loclon had been at the back of the Karien chapel for the Restday
dawn service, waiting for the chance to slip out the door, when the
staff belonging to the priest conducting the service had flared with
light, and a wave of intense pleasure had washed over the congregation
like a warm breeze. It took hold of him for an instant and held him in
a thrall. There was a promise of so much in that wave. A hint of joy. A
breath of sexual fantasy. A promise of paradise. Even a glimpse of the
other gods. It had taken his breath away.
It had almost destroyed the priests.
They had fled the chapel and run towards the cavern where their
sacred rock was hidden, howling with terror at whatever it was that it
was doing. It only lasted for a few moments, then the feeling had faded
abruptly and Loclon shook his head to clear it and bolted for the door.
His original plan had been to head for the small dock near the keep,
but with the priests running everywhere like lunatics, he discovered
that route no longer open to him. So he ran the other way, pulled
himself over the wall that faced the leeward side of the island,
cursing as he fell down the long drop on the other side, and ran until
he collapsed onto the boggy ground. He was terrified, and at the limit
of his endurance, expecting to hear the priests coming after him, not
really believing he had succeeded in getting clear of them.
It was then that the nightmare truly began.
They found him that evening, shivering and
exhausted, and in the darkness he could not make out their faces. They
were not priests. All he knew was that someone wrapped a blanket around
him and someone else thrust a cup of cool water in his hands. He drank
it greedily and grasped at the mouldy bread they offered him. They led
him through the darkness to a rough hut so close to the shore that he
could hear the waves crashing below him as he fell into a fitful sleep.
At some time during the night he woke to find a body pressed against
his, warm and young and unmistakably female. He smiled to himself,
thinking that before he left this place, he might have some fun. If he
was careful, and didn't leave any marks, they would not know he had
hurt her until after he had gone. With a smile and a contented sigh,
Loclon pulled the girl closer and went back to sleep.
With daylight came the horror.
He had opened his eyes slowly, enjoying the feel of the naked body
pressed against him. He ran his hand over her small breasts and her
slender hips and then over her belly, reaching down between her thighs
to pull her legs apart. He felt something sticky against his hand and
cursed. He pulled his hand away and held it up to the light.
It was not blood on his fingers - it was pus.
He screamed, leaping from the rough pallet as the girl turned over.
She was grotesque. Her face was ruined, half of it eaten away by the
disease that devoured a person from the inside out. Her whole left side
was covered with open sores that wept pus, and a clear sticky fluid
that stained the rough sheets beneath her.
"Please . . ." the girl cried, tears streaming
from her
one good eye. Her pathetic cries made him want to vomit; the idea that
he had touched her made him want to die.
He had leapt the wall into the colony of Malik's Curse sufferers.
Loclon screamed again, and he kept on screaming until a big man with
a huge fist and half his face eaten away by the Curse burst into the
hut and knocked him out cold.
He had been in hiding ever since. He avoided the
small settlement and its disgusting inhabitants, sneaking in at night
to find whatever scraps of food he could scavenge. The others knew he
was out there, and the grotesque girl from the hut sometimes left
scraps for him, perhaps in an attempt to coax him back into her bed.
She had been quite pretty once, he supposed, but now she was just a
husk that was being slowly consumed by a disease that had no cure. A
disease that ate at the extremities and left the body covered in
ulcers, and ate through one's internal organs until there was nothing
left and the victim died an agonisingly painful death.
He peeled off his ragged clothes and checked his body every day,
looking for some sign that he had contracted the disease, but so far he
showed no symptoms. All he could do was prowl the island looking for a
way off.
There was none.
It was the reason the victims of Malik's Curse were confined here.
He made one attempt to get back into the Karien compound, but the
wall, which had been so easy to clamber over from the inside, was much
steeper on the leeward side. A deep, empty moat surrounded it that made
it impossible to climb without a rope. There was no rope to be had. So
he had returned to his prowling, scavenging existence and gone back to
trying to find another way off the island.
Loclon tossed restlessly and then sat up, unsure
what had wakened him. He looked around in the darkness but could see
nothing, so he scrambled on his hands and knees to the entrance of the
small cave where he sheltered and looked out over the rocky beach. He
saw a figure standing in the moonlight on the beach and scuttled out to
get a closer look. Whoever it was, it appeared to be a woman, but he
could not make out her identity from this distance. A bubble of
excitement began to build in him.
The figure saw him stumbling across the beach and began to walk
towards him. He raised his hand in greeting, certain that he had been
rescued. The woman was tall and walked with an easy grace that showed
no hint of the wasting disease. She was not one of them.
"Hello, Loclon."
He froze at the sound of her voice as she stepped closer.
"R'shiel!"
"You sound surprised, Captain. You should have known I'd come for
you."
He studied her warily. She must have been drawing on her power - her
eyes burned black as the night surrounding them. Her hair had grown out
and was almost on her shoulders, ruffled gently by the sea breeze. It
took him a while to work out what else was different about her. It
wasn't her quiet air of confidence, or the power that radiated from her.
It was her lack of fear.
Loclon cautiously took a step back from her. "You've come for
me?"
"Did you doubt that I would?"
Hope flared in him as he realised rescue was at hand. She would take
him from this place. He would probably be dragged back to the Citadel
in chains, but that was better than being here. Better than a slow,
lingering death while he was eaten alive by his own body. He could
escape eventually. Either along the way or once they got to the
Citadel. It didn't really matter.
He nodded and held out his hands to her. "I'll come quietly. I won't
resist."
R'shiel studied him for a moment and then smiled. It chilled him to
the core.
"Death told me once that evil is its own reward, Loclon. I
understand what he meant now."
"What are you talking about? I'm surrendering to you. Take
me!"
"I don't want your surrender."
"Then what do you want?" he screamed desperately.
"Vengeance," she said softly.
"Then take it! Take me away from here! Take me back to the Citadel!
Put me on trial! I'll confess. I'll tell them everything I did to you.
They'll hang me R'shiel, you know that. Rape is a capital offence. You
can stand there and watch me swing! You can gloat over my corpse! Take
me back! GET ME OUT OF HERE!" He was blubbering and
didn't care.
"No, I don't think so, Loclon."
She turned away from him and began to walk back along the shore. The
waves shone with phosphorescence as they slapped at the pebbly beach.
He fell to his knees, sobbing with despair.
"You can't leave me here! Have mercy!"
She stopped and looked over her shoulder, her black eyes reflecting
the shimmering waves. "Mercy?"
"Please, R'shiel. Take me back with you. I'll do whatever you want.
I'll suffer as much as you want. Just get me off this damned island
before the disease gets me!"
R'shiel stood there watching him on his knees, begging her for
mercy. She had done this to him before. She had made him grovel like
this at the Grimfield and once they were gone from this place, he would
make her pay for that insult, too. But for now . . .
She was wavering. He could tell. She walked back towards him. Hope
burned bright in his eyes. She was part Harshini, wasn't she? They were
supposed to be unable to kill. Deep down, she didn't have what it took
to make the killing stroke. That he was alive at all was proof of that.
She'd been raised by the Sisterhood. She believed all that stuff about
law and honour. She would not be able to turn her back on him.
But when he saw her face, he realised how wrong he was. There was no
mercy in those alien black eyes. No pity. No compassion.
Nothing but cold, unrelenting contempt.
"I came here to send you to hell," she said. "But I don't
have to,
do I? You're already there."
He wasn't sure how to answer her; he wasn't even sure what she
meant. She just stood there, staring at him with those alien black eyes
. . .
Then the itching started. It was barely noticeable at first. He was
too consumed by his fear of her to pay attention to it. It began in his
fingertips, a niggling, annoying sensation that barely even distracted
him. He rubbed his hands against his tattered trousers to relieve it,
but it simply made the itching worse.
R'shiel didn't move.
The itching spread up his left arm. He scratched at it with his
right hand and discovered his arm covered in small hard lumps. He tore
his eyes from R'shiel and glanced down. The lumps were growing larger.
As he watched, one of the lumps on his forearm began to develop a
puss-filled head. The itching progressed beyond annoying into true
pain. The lumps were spreading. He could feel them forming on his back
and across his belly. His trousers chaffed as the sores began to form
in his groin. His face was swelling with them, too. He tore at his
clothing as another sore erupted, the burning itching growing more and
more relentless; his breath came in gasps as he realised what was
happening to him. The sores kept spreading.
"No!" he panted, as he tore at his own flesh in a futile
attempt to
relieve the burning. "No! No! . . . Noooo!"
R'shiel stood there watching him.
"What have you done to me?" he wailed. "Make it stop! Don't
do this
to me! Not this! Kill me if you must, R'shiel, but not like this! Let
me die like a man!"
That evoked a reaction from her. She laughed.
"Like a man, Loclon?"
"Stop it, R'shiel! Please. I beg you!"
"It takes years to die from Malik's Curse, did you know
that?" she
asked in a conversational tone. "Of course, a few years being slowly
devoured by your own body doesn't seem sufficient to repay all you've
done, but it will have to do, I suppose."
"I'll . . . kill myself before . . . I let this
thing . . . eat me alive," he gasped, unable to stop
scratching at the spreading sores.
"No, Loclon, you won't kill yourself. For one thing, you're too big
a coward, and for another, I won't let you."
"How are you . . . going to . . . stop
me?"
"Magic."
R'shiel turned and walked away, until eventually she was swallowed
by the darkness. She didn't look back.
I'll kill myself, he decided silently. I won't die this
way. He staggered to his feet and turned towards the ocean. That's
all it will take. Just wade into the water and let the sea take me.
The salt water stung the sores on his legs as he splashed into the
foam. He plunged into the sea until it was waist high, then suddenly
found he could go no further. He wanted to live, he realised with
despair. Even though he had consciously made the decision to die, there
was another voice in his mind that wouldn't let him. He found himself
unable to take another step.
Loclon staggered back to the beach and threw himself down on the
sand, rubbing against the grains to ease the itching, but the sand
merely aggravated his already inflamed skin. He was sobbing with
frustration. He couldn't relieve the itching. He couldn't stop the
pain. He couldn't even die . . .
A hand reached for him and hope flared bright for a fleeting moment!
He knew she couldn't walk away from him! She had to come back! This was
just a game, she was just tormenting him for revenge . . .
"Mister?" the voice said gently. "It's all right, Mister.
The
itching goes away after a few days . . ."
He looked up to find the girl from the settlement with her pathetic
smile and her ruined face staring down at him, her eyes filled with
pity.
Loclon's howl of despair echoed across the empty beach.
Then he forced himself up and looked around urgently, but it was as
if R'shiel had never even been here. There was no sign of her.
Not even footprints in the sand.
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.
ZAC-Prisoner in the Grimfield.
Harshini
BRAK-Lord Brakandaran te Carn. Only
other living half-breed Harshini.
DRANYMIRE-Prime Demon bonded to
the
house of te Ortyn.
GLENANARAN-Harshini sorcerer
who leaves
Sanctuary to help Brak.
KORANDELLAN TÉ ORTYN-King
of the Harshini. Nephew of Lorandranek and brother of Shananara.
LORANDRANEK TÉ ORTYN-Deceased.
Former king of the Harshini, driven mad by the task laid on him by the
gods.
SHANANARA-Her Royal Highness,
Shananara te Ortyn. Daughter of Rorandelan. Sister of Korandellan.
The Gods
BREHN-God of Storms.
CHELTARAN-God of Healing.
DACENDARAN-God of Thieves.
GIMLORIE-God of Music.
JASHIA-God of Fire.
JAKERLON-God of Liars.
JELANNA-Goddess of Fertility.
JONDALUP-God of Chance.
KAELARN-God of the Oceans.
KALIANAH-Goddess of Love.
LEYLANAN-Goddess of the
Ironbrook River.
MAERA-Goddess of the Glass
River.
PATANAN-God of Good Fortune.
VODEN-God of Green Life.
ZEGARNALD-God of War.
Hythria
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.
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
STEPHANIE PUI-MUN LAW
DEMON
DEMONS MOLDING INTO DRAGON
DRAGON IN FLIGHT
DETAIL FROM COVER: LEAVING SANCTUARY
DETAIL FROM COVER: SANCTUARY
COVER DETAIL OF SANCTUARY
COVER DETAIL: R'SHIEL AND DEMONS
DETAIL FROM COVER: R'SHIEL AND DEMONS
SKETCH FOR DEMON
SKETCH FOR DEMON
INTERVIEW WITH
JENNIFER FALLON
Author of The Demon Child Trilogy:
Medalon, Treason Keep and Harshini
By Stephanie Smith,
Editor of The Demon Child Trilogy
1. Was Medalon your first
manuscript or do you still have some in the "bottom drawer"?
The first book I wrote was when I was 14. It was an
outback murder mystery and it's long gone, which is probably a good
thing. The next piece I wrote was a short story about a girl in a
mental institution. I still have that one. I wrote a Mills and Boon
when I was 20, which was duly rejected (thank God!) and then I started
another four or five novels before writing my first full sci-fi/fantasy
effort. I submitted none of them for publication until I wrote Medalon,
which was the first novel I felt confident was worth trying to get
published.
2. Are your characters based on
any specific people in your life? Do your family and friends think that
you have based characters on them? Does this make your relationships
different from when you had not published any books?
Not really, although some people tell me that they can
see certain characteristics in some of the characters. I frequently
borrow people's names and they are usually delighted to be included.
Mostly I get requests for them to be tall dashing heroes, or gorgeous
princesses . . . one friend of my son's specifically asked if
he could "get the girl" when I asked if I could I borrow his
name.
Being published has made little difference to my relationships. Most
people I know seemed to be much more confident than I ever was that I
would get published.
3. Where did you go to school? Did
any of your teachers influence you as a writer? Do you think the
overall "philosophy" of the school had an influence on your
later
career decisions?
I went to a number of schools but did all my high
schooling at Catholic Girls High in Braddon, in the Australian Capital
Territory. I had a terrible time at school. I was a loner with few
friends and have no happy memories of school at all. At my first
primary school I was beaten savagely by a nun, and my second, I was
bullied unmercifully, and the others just blur into misery. I remember
returning to school the day after my mother died, when I was 13, being
confident that at least on that day, the sympathy vote would mean the
others would leave me alone.
4. Medalon sets the scene with the
Sisterhood, ruled by R'shiel's mother, as a rigid bureaucratic
religion. Do you think a religion run by women would be like this, or
is any religion likely to become rigidly controlling?
I have issues with most organised religions. I think
they have all lost the plot. Generally, I think any organisation
arrogant enough to claim it knows the mind of God is bound to run into
trouble sooner or later.
5. Tarja and Damin are, of course,
favourites of your female fans. I am sure they would like to know if
you know any "real" Tarjas and Damins! (Sorry, just had to ask
this
one!)
I wish! No, they are total fantasies . . . if
I knew any guys like that, I wouldn't spend all my time in front of a
computer imagining them!
6. Tarja and R'shiel have a
complex relationship. They have been brought up by their mother as
brother and sister. Then they discover that R'shiel is from a totally
different family. Tarja is unsure who his father is, although his
mother is still the same person. Then, because of interference from the
gods, they begin to fall in love. Because of Tarja's near-death
experience when R'shiel saved him by using demons, Tarja then begins to
hate her. Are human relationships quite so complex, in your experience?
Absolutely. I think there is no such thing as a
"simple"
human relationship and that all of us go through different phases which
alter how we react to other people. The effect is extreme in Tarja and
R'shiel's case, but by no means is it unique.
7. The politics of Medalon,
Karien, Fardohnya, etc, are also quite complex. Did you base any
particular country on your knowledge of this world?
Yes and no. I have always been interested in politics so
I just sort of played a bit of political "what if" based around
a few
different premises, i.e., ruled by women, by warlords, kings, etc
. . .
8. Did you fully realise the
landscape politically, emotionally and socially before beginning to
write the trilogy?
I had a pretty good idea of the overall scene, but a lot
of the detail evolved as I wrote.
9. Do you think of your world as a
parallel world, a future world or an alien land? Or something else
entirely?
Probably a parallel world, although in the very
beginning, Medalon was a world colonised by humans far in the future.
10. Did you have characters act in
certain ways in the first book that you would have wanted to change
when you began to write the second book? Did you wish you had begun
certain plotlines earlier?
I was fortunate in that I was writing Book Three before
Book One went to print, so I was able to sneak a few things in at the
last minute that gave the series a much more coherent feel than it
would have had I started Book Three any later. Generally, though, I'm
happy with the way it resolved itself.
11. Change through the three books is by
individual action, military might and political dealing and chicanery.
Is this how you see world politics and change in our societies in the
present day?
Absolutely! I believe politics is a far more powerful
force than war, which is why my character only have two major battles,
neither of which are particularly glorious. I think much more is
achieved (and destroyed) through politics than by any other form of
manipulation.
12. What are you writing next?
I am working on a new trilogy called Second Sons. It is
much darker than The Demon Child Trilogy and follows the story of a
young man who must prove that a goddess doesn't exist, in order to save
his world. It is very complex and I am (at the time of writing) working
on the final draft of Book One.
13. Who are you reading at the moment?
What are your favourite books?
I'm reading Betrayal by Fiona McIntosh. Have
just finished The Magicians' Guild by another first-time
author, Trudi Canavan.
14. Why do you think fantasy is one of
the fastest-growing genres in the world today? Do you think there are
more males than females reading the genre, or vice versa
. . . or is it about an even split?
I think the more complex our world gets, the more we
yearn for a simpler world, where problems are solved through the
courage and resources of people, rather than relying on technology. As
for the gender bias, I'm not really sure. I seem to have a fair
smattering of both male and female readers.
15. Has fantasy or science-fiction been
your favourite reading through your life? Do you have any books in
either of these genres that you feel helped to change your life in any
particular direction?
I have always been a devoted sci-fi fan. I re-read the
Lensmen series so many times I wore it out. I discovered fantasy a lot
later, but find that I love losing myself in places other than the
world I live in - no doubt a hangover from my childhood.
16. Do you have any advice for readers
who might want to ask how to begin writing, and how to get published?
Write!!!!! I meet so many people who tell me they have a
great idea for a book, but they never get around to putting it on
paper. In my opinion, the writers who will eventually get published are
those for whom writing is an obsession. These are the writers who NEVER
give up. Other than that, my advice is to get an agent, and develop a
very thick hide!
Visit www.voyageronline.com.au where
Jennifer Fallon answers more questions from the multimedia department
of HarperCollinsPublishers, Australia.
READING NOTES
1. Tarja wakes to find the geas that made him love R'shiel no longer
in place. Why is his reaction so ambivalent?
2. R'shiel realises she cannot face Xaphista head on, but must find
a more subtle way of breaking his power? What does she use and why is
it so effective?
3. Damin decides to let the son of his enemy live, to be raised in
the house of Tejat Lionsclaw. Why does he do this?
4. Why is it so important to Brak that Damin Wolfblade believes
Mikel is dead, and why does he go to such trouble to prevent Damin from
striking the killing blow?
5. Discuss the changes likely to happen in the Citadel with the
return of the Harshini.
6. With the disbursement of the Sisterhood, Garet Warner wishes to
give Medalon a democratic government. Discuss some of the problems
likely to arise during this period.
7. In the end, R'shiel chooses not to kill Loclon, but to let him
live on the Isle of Slarn. Is this a fitting punishment?
8. Shananara offers to place Harshini advisors in the courts of each
ruler, to prevent further war. How would this affect each nation?
9. When the story ends, R'shiel plans to retrieve Mikel from the God
of Music. What do you think the boy's reaction would be to all that has
happened to him?
10. Will Death release Brak?
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. Book Two, Treason Keep, was released in September 2001.
Visit her
website at www.jenniferfallon.com.
Harshini
HARSHINI
The Demon Child Trilogy: Book Three
Jennifer Fallon
![](cover.jpg)
Also by Jennifer Fallon:
Medalon (The
Demon Child Trilogy:
Book One)
Treason Keep (The
Demon Child Trilogy:
Book Two)
For Harshini Bhoola
and, as always, Adele Robinson
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Map
PART
1
RETREAT INTO DANGER
Chapters
01 - 10
PART
2
THE MEN WHO WOULD BE KINGS
Chapters
11 - 34
PART
3
HOMECOMING
Chapters
35 - 46
PART
4
DESTINY
Chapters
47 - 64
Glossary
Illustrations
by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
Interview
with Jennifer Fallon by Stephanie Smith
Reading
Notes
About
the Author
Acknowledgments
Once again, I have quite a few people I'd like to
thank for their help and support. Lyn Tranter from Australian Literary
Management, Stephanie and everyone at HarperCollins Publishers
Australia, Sarah Endacott from Edit or Die for editing and advice and
patience.
I would also like to thank Debra Rae-Smith and Fiona McLennan, the
whiz-kids of cyberspace at HarperCollins and Voyager Online, who have
given me a great deal of support, and quite a few emailed suggestions,
particularly in relation to Tarja's fate, all of which I happily
ignored . . .
I must again thank the awesomely talented Stephanie Pui-Mun Law for
her wonderful covers, and the remarkable character sketches that she
has provided for this series.
A special thank you, too, must go to Elle, Stephanie, Woody, Alison
and Ryan, the gang from Whitley College, for their input, their
friendship and their all-night proofreading session.
To my children, Amanda, Tracey (TJ) and David, my thanks for their
support, their faith, the inspiration they have provided, and for
making me feel that I haven't completely failed as a mother.
And finally, to my good friend Harshini Bhoola: it's been a long
time coming, but this one's for you.
PART 1
RETREAT INTO
DANGER
CHAPTER 1
Korandellan te Ortyn, the last King of
the
Harshini, waited until the end of the concert before he left the
natural amphitheatre in the centre of Sanctuary to return to his
apartment. But first, he congratulated the performers. He admired the
clever scenery they had devised, which used a mixture of magic and
everyday objects, and graciously thanked them for their efforts. He
moved among them, smiling and waving, as the glimmering twilight, that
was as close to night as it came in this magical place, descended over
the valley. Sanctuary's tall, elegant white spires towered over the
hidden city, touched with silver as evening closed in. The people were
trying so desperately hard to be happy. He did his best to seem happy
for them in return.
There was a brittle edge to the serenity of Sanctuary these days. An
edge that Korandellan, more than any other Harshini, could feel. The
happiness here was fragile; the cheerfulness an illusion. The Harshini
were running out of time. Quite literally. Only Korandellan knew how
close they were to the end.
Perhaps Shananara suspected. She fell in beside him, dressed in the
long loose robes that most of the Harshini favoured, which surprised
him a little. Shananara had been in and out of Sanctuary a great deal
of late, and he was more used to seeing her in Dragon Rider's leathers.
His sister had always been more interested in the comings and goings of
the human population than he. With the demon child abroad, and the
whole world affected by her presence, Shananara was anxious to know
what was happening. Slipping her arm companionably through his, she
walked with him back to his quarters, waiting until the doors swung
silently shut behind them before she spoke.
"Let me help, Koran."
The King sighed, letting his shoulders slump and his
façade of
vitality crumble in her presence. He looked haggard.
"No. You cannot help, Shanan," he told her, lowering his
tall frame
into a delicately carved chair near the open doors that led to the
balcony. The tinkling sound of the waterfall drifted through the open
windows. The evening, as usual, was balmy and clear. "I need your
strength for other matters."
"There won't be any other matters if you falter,"
she
warned. "Let me carry some of the load. Or do you enjoy being a
martyr?"
He smiled at her wearily. She had been out visiting the humans
again. Her manner of speech always reflected her journeys among the
mortals. "No, I do not enjoy being a martyr, sister. But if I fail, our
people will need you to guide them. If you help me now, you will
certainly ease my burden, but it will weaken you at a time when one of
us needs to be strong. Only the demon child can lift the burden from my
shoulders completely."
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."
"You shouldn't speak of her so harshly, my dear. R'shiel will do
what she must."
"She will do what suits her, Koran, and not a damned thing more. I
doubt if even the gods know if it will be what she was destined
for."
"Yet it is on her we must rely."
"Then let me bring her back."
"Here? To Sanctuary? For what purpose?"
"If you won't let me ease your burden, then let R'shiel do
it. The gods know she's strong enough. Let me bring her back, Koran.
Let her carry the load for a time, enough to let you recover, at least.
Then you can take up the burden again and R'shiel can do what she has
to."
The King shook his head. "Events unfold as they should, Shananara.
We cannot interfere."
"What events?" she scoffed. "Where is it written that you
should
destroy yourself holding Sanctuary out of time, while the demon child
sits on her hands trying to decide if she even believes that we exist
or not?"
"You did not speak to R'shiel before she left us. She has learnt
much."
"She doesn't know a fraction of what she needs to know. And who is
there to teach her? Brak?"
"I thought you were fond of him."
"I am, but he's hardly the one I would have chosen as the demon
child's mentor. He doesn't even like her. And he certainly doesn't
trust her."
"She will learn what she needs to know in Hythria."
"But does R'shiel know that? She's just as liable to head in the
other direction."
"You worry too much, Shanan. These things have a way of working
themselves out. R'shiel will come to accept her destiny and will learn
what she needs in due course."
"Before or after the Harshini are destroyed, brother?"
Leaning
forward, she studied him intently, as if she could see through his skin
and into his soul. "Xaphista's minions have control of Medalon. The
Defenders have surrendered to Karien. Hythria is on the brink of civil
war and Fardohnya is arming for invasion. And you are beginning to
weaken. I can see it in your eyes. You tremble constantly and cannot
control it. Your eyes burn. Your aura is streaked with black. A
flicker, a slight wavering in your hold on the spell that holds
Sanctuary out of time, and Xaphista's priests will know where we are.
Once that happens, you will be able to count the days on the fingers of
one hand before the Kariens are standing at our gates."
"R'shiel will deal with Xaphista before that happens," he
assured
her.
"I wish I shared your faith in her. But how long do we have, Koran?
How long can you keep draining yourself?"
"As long as I need to."
She leaned back with a defeated sigh. "Then I can only pray to the
gods that it will be long enough."
"The demon child will do what she must."
Shananara did not look convinced. "You place far too much faith in
that uncontrollable half-breed."
The Harshini King nodded tiredly. "I'm aware of that, Shananara, but
unfortunately that uncontrollable half-breed is our only hope."
CHAPTER 2
The marriage of Damin Wolfblade, Warlord of
Krakandar, to Her Serene Highness, Princess Adrina of Fardohnya, took
place on a small, windswept knoll in the middle of northern Medalon on
a bitterly cold afternoon. It was little more than two weeks since the
bride had unexpectedly become a widow.
The sky was overcast and low, the sullen clouds defying the brisk,
chilly wind by staying determinedly in place. The somewhat
less-than-radiant bride was dressed in a borrowed white shirt and dark
woollen trousers. The groom looked just as uncomfortable in his
battle-worn leathers. The assorted guests appeared either bemused or
amused, depending on their country of origin.
Officiating over the ceremony was a tall, serious looking Defender,
who wore the insignia of a captain and quoted the stiff, practical and
very unromantic Medalonian wedding vows that were carried away by the
wind almost as soon as he uttered the words. This wedding was taking
place because the demon child had demanded it, and a quick ceremony -
enough to make it legal - was all R'shiel cared about. She had
neither
the time nor the patience for any pomp or ceremony.
"This is probably a waste of time, you know," Brak muttered
as he
watched the ceremony with a frown.
"Why?" R'shiel asked softly, not taking her eyes from the
bride and
groom, as if they would somehow manage to escape their fate if she
looked away.
"This marriage will only hold up if you can get the High Arrion to
accept the legality of a Medalonian ceremony as soon as you get to
Greenharbour," he explained.
"The leader of the Sorcerers' Collective?"
"The High Arrion is Damin's half-sister."
"She's not going to be very happy about this, is she?"
"Even if she wasn't concerned about her brother, as the High
Prince's heir, he's doing a very dangerous thing."
"But worth it, Brak. In the end, it will be the best thing that
could have happened. This will force peace between Hythria and
Fardohnya. Nothing else we can do will achieve that."
Brak looked unconvinced. "There's an awful lot that can go wrong,
R'shiel."
"It'll work."
He stared at her.
"Trust me, it'll work!"
"I'm surprised Zegarnald is letting you get away with this."
"I have the God of War's solemn promise that he won't interfere.
Besides, he'll think this is likely to cause a war."
"That's because it is likely to cause a war,
R'shiel," Brak
pointed out.
"Only in the short term."
He shook his head at her folly and turned his attention back to the
ceremony. It was almost over. Denjon was calling on the gods to bless
the union - Kalianah to bless it with love, Jelanna to bless it
with
children. He sounded very uncomfortable, but R'shiel had insisted on
acknowledging the gods, even in some small measure. Personally, she
didn't think it would make much difference, but Damin and Adrina were
both pagans and it was what they believed that counted. One or
both of them might try to wheedle out of it if she left them a loophole.
Denjon declared the union sealed, to the scattered applause of the
gathered Defenders and Hythrun who had come to watch. The newlyweds
turned to face the crowd and smiled with the insincere ease of those
trained from childhood to perform in public. They stepped down from the
knoll and began to walk towards R'shiel and Brak. R'shiel shivered,
although it was not from the cold.
"Just how much power do the Sorcerers' Collective have,
anyway?"
"Politically or magically?"
"Both, I suppose."
"The magic they wield shouldn't bother you. They tap into the same
power we do, but it's the result of years of study, not innate ability.
It's done with incantations and spells and a bit of co-operation from
the gods. Politically, however, they're one of the strongest forces in
Hythria."
"So if the High Arrion publicly sanctions this union, the Warlords
will accept it?"
"They won't openly object, but don't count on acceptance."
"Then we need the Sorcerers' Collective on our side."
"Most definitely."
R'shiel nodded, her mind already working through how to get the High
Arrion on side. And the King of Fardohnya. Brak could deal with him. In
fact, she had a sneaking suspicion he was going to enjoy it. Her mind
churned with possibilities, as she pondered the problem. The scheming
came to her as naturally as breathing - one of the legacies of
being
raised by the Sisters of the Blade.
"Well, it's done now," Damin remarked as he and Adrina
reached them.
"A true romantic, isn't he," Adrina complained. "Do we have
to stand
around here chatting? I'm freezing. Every time I get married, I seem to
be freezing."
"We should head back to the camp. Denjon had the cooks prepare a
wedding feast for you."
"What a culinary experience that's going to be,"
Adrina
grumbled.
"You're not planning to make this easy, are you?" R'shiel
asked.
The Princess conceded the point reluctantly. "Very well, I shall
endeavour to be appreciative of the efforts of my hosts."
"That should be a new experience for you," Damin remarked
blandly.
The Warlord enjoyed living dangerously, R'shiel decided, noticing
the look Adrina gave him. She made her excuses, leaving the bride and
groom with Brak, and slipped away to speak with Denjon.
"Thank you, Captain."
"I'm sure I've broken a score of laws here today, R'shiel. Are you
sure this was necessary?"
"Positive. It'll keep Hythria and Fardohnya off our backs while we
deal with the Kariens."
"I hope you're right. I'm not sure the marriage of a Hythrun Warlord
to a Fardohnyan will help Medalon much. Particularly the Warlord who's
spent most of the past decade trying to steal every head of cattle on
our side on the border."
"This Warlord is on our side now, Denjon."
"I'll have to take your word for that. Although he seems reasonable
enough."
She smiled, wondering what Damin would think of such a backhanded
compliment. "Never fear. Events will strike a balance
eventually."
"I hope you're right, demon child."
R'shiel had no chance to chide the captain for calling her by that
hated name. A commotion ahead of them distracted her as a Defender ran
towards them from the line of tents ahead, calling her name.
"What's wrong?" she demanded as the man pushed through the
wedding
party to reach her.
"It's Tarja," the young man panted. "He's awake."
R'shiel beat everyone else to the infirmary tent.
She pushed her way through the flap and ran to the pallet where Tarja
lay at the far end of the large tent, straining uselessly against the
ropes that held him.
"Tarja?"
He turned at the sound of her voice, but there was no recognition in
his eyes. His colour had improved but he had a wild look, as if a
battle raged inside him. His dark hair was damp and his brow beaded
with sweat. The rough, grey, army-issue blankets that covered him were
a twisted tangle.
"Tarja? It's me, R'shiel . . ."
His only response was to tug even harder at the ropes. Already his
wrists were burned from his efforts. With a cry of dismay, she reached
for them, to ease his suffering.
"R'shiel! No!"
Brak hurried to her side and looked down on Tarja with concern.
Damin and Adrina were close on his heels.
"Look what he's doing to himself, Brak! You can't just leave him
there, tied up like a wild animal."
"If you let him go, he's liable to do a lot worse damage to
himself," Brak warned. "Until the demons leave him, he's better
off
restrained."
"Demons?" Adrina gasped in horror. "You mean he's
possessed?"
"In a manner of speaking," the Harshini shrugged.
"That can't be good for him."
"It's the only thing keeping him alive," R'shiel retorted,
suddenly
in no mood for Adrina's tactlessness. "How much longer, Brak?"
"It shouldn't be long now," he said. "He's awake. That's a
good
sign."
"How will the demons know when to leave?"
"Dranymire should sense when they're no longer needed. With luck,
when the meld dissolves, all the brethren will follow."
"With luck?" Damin repeated dubiously. "You mean
there's no
guarantee they'll all leave?" He stared at Tarja for a moment
then
turned to Adrina. "For future reference, my dear, if I ever take a
fatal wound in battle and the Harshini offer to heal me by having me
possessed by demons, let me die."
"Never fear on that score, Damin. If you ever take a fatal wound in
battle, I'll be more than happy to let you die."
"Stop it!" R'shiel cried impatiently. "I'm sick of you both!
Go
away!"
The pair of them looked quite startled at her outburst. "I'm sorry,
R'shiel . . ."
"Just leave."
Without any further comment the Warlord and his bride beat a hasty
retreat from the infirmary. R'shiel turned her attention back to Tarja,
who seemed to have lapsed into unconsciousness again.
"I have to tell you, R'shiel," Brak remarked as he watched
them
leave, "if the fate of Hythria and Fardohnya rests in the hands of
those two, we're in big trouble."
"They need to grow up," R'shiel agreed impatiently. She had
no time
for the peculiarities of her friends at this point. She was more
concerned about Tarja. "Isn't there anything we can do for him?"
"Not while the demons still substitute for the blood he's
lost,"
Brak told her.
"How much longer?"
"There's no way of knowing. But he's strong. If anyone can survive
this, Tarja can."
She watched for a moment, as Tarja's chest rose and fell in even,
measured breaths. "Every day, I keep hoping . . . We've
already been here too long. We have to leave. I can't keep putting it
off."
"We have a wedding feast to attend first."
"Don't remind me." She pulled the blanket up and smoothed
it, then
looked at Brak. "I just hope those two behave, tonight. If not, I'll
strangle the pair of them."
"Don't worry, they won't dare cross the demon child."
"Are you making fun of me, Brak?"
He smiled. "Just a little bit."
She returned his smile wanly. "Don't you ever get sick of watching
over me?"
"Constantly. But it's a task I'll be doing for some time
yet," he
replied as his smile faded.
"What do you mean?"
"You've chosen which side you're on, demon child. You don't think
Xaphista is just going to stand back and watch while you set about
destroying him, do you?"
"You think he'll send more priests after me?"
"You should be so lucky," he told her. "A priest you can
see. No,
I'm afraid he'll be a bit subtler this time. He'll probably try to turn
someone close to you against you. Someone you trust. Someone who can
get near you."
R'shiel studied Brak for a long moment then glanced down at Tarja.
"You think he'll turn Tarja against me, don't you?"
"Tarja, Damin, Adrina, one of the Defenders, who knows? Any one of
them could become your enemy and you won't know a thing about it until
they're pulling the knife from your back."
R'shiel stroked Tarja's brow gently before she answered. "Tarja
would never betray me."
"Perhaps not. But trust no one, R'shiel."
"Not even you?"
Brak smiled thinly. "Xaphista can't turn me to his cause, or any
Harshini for that matter. He began as a demon and he was never bonded
to my clan or yours. The Harshini you can trust."
"But nobody else?"
"Nobody else."
She stood up, frowning at the idea that everybody she knew was a
potential traitor. "Brak, I really don't like being the demon
child, you know that, don't you?"
Brak shrugged. "We all have a destiny we can't avoid,
R'shiel."
"I don't believe in destiny."
"I know. That's why the Primal Gods are so worried."
That thought actually cheered her a little. "The Primal
Gods are worried?"
"They're worried," he agreed.
"Good," she declared petulantly. "They damned well should
be."
CHAPTER 3
R'shiel escaped the mess tent and the wedding feast
as soon as she could slip away without being rude. She had arranged
this wedding and felt that the least she could do was make some attempt
to be sociable, although Brak's warning about Xaphista worried her more
than she cared to admit. She had found herself studying faces in the
candlelight, wondering who the Overlord would suborn. Which familiar
face was really her enemy? Whose eyes hid treachery and whose were
genuine in their friendship? She escaped the tent with relief, glad
finally to be alone. Brak seemed to sense what bothered her and made no
attempt to follow.
She paced the large Defender camp, too restless to seek her bed.
Since returning from Sanctuary, R'shiel found she didn't need sleep the
way she once had. While a useful trait at times, in the darkest hours
of the night, when the human spirit was at its lowest ebb, she felt the
burden of her destiny keenly. With Brak's caution about potential
enemies ringing in her ears, tonight it seemed harder than usual.
But she was not unhappy. In fact, it was frightening to discover how
much she was enjoying herself. She had told Brak she did not believe in
destiny, but Joyhinia had unwittingly raised her for this. Every lesson
she learnt at Joyhinia's knee was aimed at educating her in the art of
survival in the cutthroat politics of the Sisters of the Blade.
R'shiel had rebelled against it as a child. Now she found it not
only useful, but almost exhilarating. She frequently told Brak that she
hated being the demon child, but there were times when it was
intoxicating to have princes and princesses deferring to her. Even the
Defenders, who had never treated her as much more than the annoying
little sister of one of their officers, now treated her with cautious
awe.
For the first time in her life she understood the attraction of
power, but was still idealistic enough to hope that it would not
corrupt her. R'shiel had not yet reached the point where she was
willing to sacrifice anything to achieve her goals. But she was
prepared to do a great deal. As Brak had said, she had chosen which
side she would be on. All that remained now was for her to do what the
Primal Gods had created her for - a destiny she had absolutely
no idea
how she was going to fulfil.
Her thoughts turned to Hythria, and the reason she had agreed to
accompany Damin and Adrina south. Originally, she agreed to go with
them to aid Damin's cause and to avert potential trouble now that he
was married to the daughter of Hythria's most despised enemy. But in
the past few days R'shiel had realised she had to go south
because that was where the Sorcerers' Collective was located. If
anybody left alive in this world had the knowledge of how to kill a
god, the last human practitioners of magic would. R'shiel had already
tasted Xaphista's lure and although she would never admit it to Brak,
she doubted she could hold out against him a second time. She needed
knowledge that even the Harshini did not possess. They had no idea how
to kill a god. They couldn't even squash a flea.
Several turns around the large camp in the chilly starlight did
nothing to ease her turmoil, so she decided to sit with Tarja for a
time. In the darkness of the infirmary tent, the smell of lye soap
sharp in her nose, she cooled his fevered forehead with a damp rag as
he literally fought the demons that possessed him. Tarja drifted in and
out of consciousness, but he never displayed even a hint of
recognition. He would lie quietly at times, and then jerk against the
bonds that restrained him so hard R'shiel wondered that the pallet did
not break under the pressure. There was nothing she could do for him
but hope. She did not have enough faith in the gods to waste her time
praying.
As she watched him, she wondered if Xaphista would choose Tarja as
the instrument of her destruction. It would be the cruellest jest he
could play on her. She loved him; had loved him since she was a child.
But Kalianah, the Goddess of Love, had imposed Tarja's love for her on
him. Xaphista had told her that and she had no reason to doubt him.
Tarja loved her because the gods willed it. He had been given no say in
the matter, nor was he aware that the choice had not been his.
If Tarja ever learns of the geas, Xaphista will have no need to
seduce him, R'shiel thought unhappily. Tarja's wrath would be
enough. She knew that, as surely as she knew nothing she could do,
nothing she could say would lessen his fury, should he ever discover
what had been done to him.
As dawn slowly lightened the sky over the camp, R'shiel abandoned
her depressing line of thought. No closer to finding a solution to the
troubles that plagued her, she left the tent to find some breakfast and
clean up before her meeting with Denjon and the other captains.
"We have a problem," Denjon announced by
way of
greeting when she entered the mess tent. It had, by default, become
their meeting place over the past two weeks. Brak and Captain Dorak
were already there, sitting at one of the long tables nursing steaming
mugs. The tables had been cleared from last night's party and the tent
was empty other than for Brak and the Defenders. Captain Linst was
sitting at the end of the table, the remains of his breakfast in front
of him. None of the men rose as she entered. She had finally cured them
of that, at least.
"Only one problem? When did things improve?"
Denjon treated her to a weary smile. He was a tall, rangy man, who
had been a classmate of Tarja's when they were cadets. He had dark hair
and the competent manner R'shiel associated with the Defenders. His
proficiency was a credit to Jenga rather than a positive reflection on
the Sisters of the Blade who commanded the Defenders.
"Perhaps I should re-phrase that. We have an urgent problem. The
rest can wait an hour or two."
"Where's Damin?"
"Still enjoying his wedding night, I suppose," Dorak
suggested with
a grin.
"We can't wait for him," Denjon shrugged. "We need to decide
what
we're going to do with the Karien prisoners. We've sat here far too
long and the scouts have just brought news of another troop of Kariens
coming in from the north, no doubt looking for their Prince."
"We have to move out," Linst added. "We can't take the
Karien
prisoners with us and we can hardly leave them here to announce what
we're up to when the search party finds them."
The problem of what to do with the Karien knights who had
accompanied Prince Cratyn on his quest to find Adrina was one R'shiel
had been hoping she would not have to face. When Denjon calmly
announced he could "take care of a couple of hundred Kariens",
she had
callously hoped they would simply die in battle, saving her the problem
of what to do with them afterwards. The Defenders, however, were far
too efficient to indulge in such needless bloodshed. They had rounded
up the Kariens and taken them prisoner with only a handful of Karien
casualties and none at all from their own ranks.
The prisoners had done nothing but drain their resources since that
day. The young knight in command, Drendyn, the Earl of Tyler's Pass,
was a noisy, inexperienced fellow who seemed stunned and heartbroken
when he learnt that Adrina was also in the camp and obviously allied
with his captors. For a fleeting moment, R'shiel wished she could do
what Joyhinia had tried to do to the rebels. Simply put them to the
sword and be done with them.
She had no more chance of getting the Defenders to follow that order
than Joyhinia had in Testra.
"What do you suggest, Denjon?"
"I was hoping you'd have a suggestion," he told her with a
shrug. "You seem to have an answer for everything else these
days."
R'shiel frowned. "You think I can just wave my arm and solve all
your problems for you?"
"That's what the Harshini do, isn't it?"
"That is your prejudice speaking, Captain," Brak warned. "It
does
not help your cause to let it get in the way."
Denjon turned on the Harshini but R'shiel intervened before things
could escalate into a full-blown argument.
"Why can't we just release them?"
"Because they'll be on our trail within hours."
"No, they won't. Their Crown Prince and their Duke are dead. They'll
have to go home to return the bodies to Karien, at least. They may send
out a party to hunt us down later, but it won't be this lot."
Denjon looked thoughtful. "You may be right, R'shiel, but I'm not
sure I want to risk finding out the hard way that you're wrong."
"What if I can guarantee that they'll head home?"
"What are you thinking of doing?" Brak asked suspiciously.
"Coercing
them?"
"No, of course not!"
"Then how do you plan to make nearly four hundred Karien knights
turn on their tails and slink home?" Dorak asked. "And they
have the
three priests with them who were accompanying Lord Setenton. They'll
demand retribution, out of spite if nothing else."
"Don't you see? As soon as the search party realises that Cratyn is
dead, they will turn around and head straight back to Karien for
guidance from the Overlord, dragging Drendyn, his knights and their
priests behind them."
"It's a nice thought, R'shiel," Brak agreed. "But the
captain is
right. You won't dissuade the priests so easily. You'd be better off
just killing them outright."
"How long do we have, Denjon, before the Kariens get here?"
"A day at the most, if we want to be gone before they arrive. Two
days if we plan to make a fight of it. I would advise against that. The
end result will just be more damned Karien prisoners we have to worry
about when the next search party comes looking for them."
She nodded slowly. "Brak, can Tarja be moved?"
The Harshini frowned. "I wouldn't advise it, but it won't threaten
his life, if that's what concerns you."
"I don't think we have much choice in the matter," she
announced,
figuring that if she sounded decisive, nobody would guess how uncertain
she was. "You should leave for Fardohnya, anyway. Can you get there on
your own?"
Brak was watching her closely. If anyone suspected her uncertainty,
it would be him. "Don't worry about me, R'shiel. The demons will see me
safely to Talabar."
"Good. Denjon, you might as well give the order to break camp. Now
that Damin and Adrina are married, we need to get to Hythria."
"And the Kariens?" Denjon asked.
"I'll deal with them." She glanced at Denjon and frowned.
"Do you
have any questions?"
"I have one," Linst replied. "Who put you in charge of the
Defenders?"
R'shiel turned on him impatiently. "What Defenders, Linst? You
ceased being Defenders the moment you stood back and did nothing when I
killed Cratyn. You have defied your orders and taken two hundred
Kariens prisoner. If you want to go back to being a lackey for
Medalon's new masters, there's another couple of hundred heading this
way. Perhaps you'd like to surrender?"
Linst glared at her. "Just remember, R'shiel, we are following the
Lord Defender's orders. He was the one who wanted us to fight the
Kariens. I'll take orders from him, but I'll be damned if I'm going to
sit back and let you order us around for some heathen purpose."
"My heathen purpose is to throw the Kariens out of Medalon,
Captain."
"There's no point arguing among ourselves," Denjon
interceded. "We've no choice, in any case. We have to move on. We can
sort out the
details once Tarja wakes up."
"If he wakes up," Linst added pointedly.
"He will wake up," R'shiel insisted. "And when he
does,
perhaps you'll decide you have a backbone, after all, Linst."
She did not wait to hear his answer. She stormed from the tent, a
part of her simmering with anger; another part of her grateful for the
excuse to leave. On the way out she collided with young Mikel, the boy
who had followed Adrina from Karien. He squealed in fright at her
sudden appearance, landing on his backside in a puddle of icy mud,
dropping the tray he carried. He seemed to do that a lot, she recalled,
but was too preoccupied to do more than mutter an apology as she strode
past the child.
Brak caught up with her near the infirmary.
"Don't you start on me," she warned, before he could say a
word.
"I wasn't going to. I'm on your side, remember?"
R'shiel slowed her pace a little and looked at him. "I'm sorry. They
just make me so angry sometimes."
"I noticed."
"I shouldn't let them get to me like that, should I?"
"Of course not, but you don't need me to tell you that. What I'd
really like to know is what you're planning to do about those
priests."
She shrugged. "I destroyed their staffs. How much trouble can they
be?"
"A lot. They may not be able to threaten you any longer,
but they still hold a great deal of sway over their people."
R'shiel
did not answer him. His faded blue eyes darkened for a moment and he
shook his head. "You're not going to kill them, are you?"
"No. I'll think of something else." She resumed her angry
pace and
continued on towards the infirmary. An icy wind blew across the plain,
stirring dust eddies on the scuffed ground and making her ears ache.
She missed her long hair.
"Well, you'd better come up with something quickly," Brak
called
after her. "It'll take a miracle to turn that lot and time is of the
essence."
Suddenly she stopped and turned. "That's it! Brak, you're a
genius!"
He stared at her in confusion. The solution suddenly clear, she ran
back, kissed his cheek and hugged him briefly. "You're right! It's
going to take a miracle!"
"What are you talking about?"
"I haven't time to explain," she said, relief making her
giddy.
"What are you thinking of doing, R'shiel?" Brak demanded,
grabbing
her arm to prevent her escaping.
"I'm going to work a miracle."
"They won't fall for anything so transparent. Any miracle you
conjure up will be dismissed as Harshini magic. You won't fool anyone,
not even a bunch of knights as inexperienced as Drendyn and his
friends."
"Then I'll find someone they will believe in," she
said,
pulling her arm free of him.
"Who? Adrina?"
"Of course not! I'll use . . . someone else
. . . someone they'll trust . . ."
"Who?" Brak repeated suspiciously.
R'shiel glanced around, more to avoid meeting Brak's suspicious gaze
than in any real hope of finding an answer to her dilemma. Her eyes
alighted on the Karien boy, muttering miserably to himself as he picked
up the shards of broken dishes that had fallen from his tray when
R'shiel bumped into him.
"I'll use him," she declared, pointing at Mikel.
CHAPTER 4
Adrina's first thought on waking the morning after
she married Damin Wolfblade was: Gods, what have I done?
She had thought the same thing on waking in Yarnarrow the morning
after she married the late, unlamented, Crown Prince of Karien, too. There
is a disturbing pattern emerging here, she decided.
"Good morning."
Adrina turned towards the voice. Damin was already up and dressed
and pulling on his high leather boots. She was extremely suspicious of
anybody who could be so alert, so early in the morning.
"What's so good about it?"
Damin grinned. It was one of his more annoying habits. He seemed to
find most of what she said amusing. In Fardohnya, her moods affected
the whole palace. Lords and Ladies tiptoed around her. Even in Karien,
they had trod warily to avoid incurring her wrath.
"Are you always so unpleasant first thing in the morning?"
he
inquired.
She sat up on the pallet, drawing the blankets up to hide her
nakedness. "Why, in the name of the gods, did I marry you?"
Damin stamped his feet into his boots and reached for his
sword-belt. "Because the demon child ordered you to. And you are a
grasping, conniving little bitch," he added pleasantly.
"And your motives are so much more honourable," she
retorted.
"Naturally," he agreed. "I just want to stay alive long
enough to be
High Prince of Hythria, one day."
"Pardon me, Your Highness."
He laughed, which annoyed her even more, and walked to the tent
flap. He stopped and turned before he left. "I sent your little Karien
friend to fetch you some breakfast. He should be back soon."
"Where are you going?"
"I'm supposed to be meeting with R'shiel and the Defenders and I'm
already late."
"Well don't try blaming your tardiness on me."
"I wouldn't dream of it, my dear."
"And stop calling me that! I am not your dear."
His only answer was more laughter as he ducked through the entrance.
Adrina flopped back onto the pallet angrily. When she left Cratyn, she
swore she would never allow herself to be forced into marriage again;
swore she would never allow a man that much control over her. She had
made that promise to herself last autumn.
The winter wasn't even over and she had broken it already.
* * *
When there was still no sign of Mikel or Tamylan
an hour later, Adrina gave up waiting and dressed herself, determined
to give both her slave and her page a piece of her mind. Did they think
that now she was married, that absolved them of their duties?
There was going to have to be a few things cleared up before too
much longer, she decided. Her status, for one thing. She was a Princess
in her own right, more royal than Damin in fact, who was merely the
nephew of a Prince. Her father was a King. Of course, being a
woman was something of a hindrance to her claim to the throne, although
there were many who would be anxious to lay claim to any son that she
might bear.
Except R'shiel. The demon child was impatient and had been raised in
a society where women ruled. She had no time for Adrina to bear a son
and raise him to manhood. She wanted to unite Hythria and Fardohnya and
she wanted to do it now. She did not care about the patriarchal
traditions of Fardohnya, any more than she cared whether or not Adrina
wanted to marry Damin. Their union would force peace on the two
southern nations and that was the only thing the demon child cared
about. It did not seem to concern her that more than likely, when they
reached Greenharbour, the other Warlords would hire assassins to kill
either Adrina, or Damin, or both of them.
Hablet's rage on learning of her marriage did not bear thinking
about.
On the other hand, if the demon child's ambitious plan succeeded,
Adrina would know more power than she had ever imagined. As she thought
about that possibility, Adrina began to wonder if she was going about
this the wrong way. Damin seemed, if not exactly fond of her, then at
least anxious to share her bed. And even Adrina was willing to admit
that after a lifetime of paid court'esa and the pathetic
attempts of her last husband to consummate their marriage, Damin was a
pleasant change. Too pleasant, in fact. Once they reached
Hythria, she would insist on her own quarters and make sure they could
be locked, she decided firmly. If she couldn't keep him out of her bed
by willpower alone, then perhaps a physical barrier would help.
That raised another uncomfortable thought. She had fled Karien with
little more than the clothes on her back. The herbs she kept hidden in
her trunk were still back in Karien and she had fallen into bed with
Damin Wolfblade in a moment of blind and foolish weakness. She had done
nothing since then to prevent conception and in the confusion of their
escape, had lost track of the days since her last moon-time.
She would have to speak to Tamylan. Regardless of what the demon
child wanted, Adrina had no intention of bringing a child into this
world who could be used as a political pawn.
When Adrina finally emerged from her tent it was
to discover the whole camp in turmoil. Everywhere she looked the
Defenders were pulling down tents and hurrying to and fro, shouting
orders and packing up their gear, obviously determined to demolish
their campsite as quickly as possible. The Defenders ignored her in the
confusion as she wandered through the camp, sidestepping men and piled
up equipment. When she finally reached the officers' mess tent, one of
the few not in danger of imminent destruction, she poked her head
inside. The cooks were busy preparing lunch and paid her no attention
until she addressed them directly. Even then, she had to ask twice.
"Where is Lord Wolfblade?"
The closest cook looked up and shrugged. The man beside him jerked
his head in a generally northward direction. "He went off with the
heathens. One of them is leaving, I think."
The heathens, presumably, were Brak and R'shiel. She did not bother
to thank the man, but followed his directions until she reached the
edge of the camp. She spied Damin with Brak, then R'shiel and young
Mikel, of all people, some fifty paces away. She had opened her mouth
to call out to them when a remarkable thing happened.
One minute they were standing there talking, the next they were
surrounded by little grey demons who seemed to pop out of thin air.
There were too many to count and they clustered around Brak, vying for
his attention like small children visiting with a favoured uncle. Mikel
backed away from them warily, but the adults did not seem in the least
concerned. Brak squatted down and spoke to one of the demons, who
listened intently with big, liquid black eyes. The little creature
nodded, then waddled a small distance away. Without any signal that
Adrina could see, the other demons suddenly turned and ran to join the
one Brak had spoken to.
Adrina blinked as the demons clustered around their leader and began
to dissolve. That was the only word Adrina could think of to describe
what was happening. They seemed to become fluid, as one by one they
flowed together until the towering form of a dragon took shape, with
metallic green scales and delicate, silver-tipped wings that glittered
under the sullen sky.
When the dragon was complete, Brak reached up and scratched the bony
ridge over its plate-sized eyes. With a final word to R'shiel he
climbed onto the back of the magnificent beast. With a couple of
powerful beats of its massive wings, the dragon was airborne, banking
slowly to the left as it headed south.
Damin turned then and saw her.
"Brak asked me to say goodbye," he told her when he reached
the
place where she was standing, open-mouthed, as she watched the dragon
dwindle into the distance.
"That was . . . astonishing . . ." she
managed
to say.
"Well, let's hope your father is just as impressed," R'shiel
added
as she and Mikel came up beside them.
"A dragon landing in the courtyard of the Summer Palace should get
his attention," Adrina agreed with a faint smile. Then she
turned to
Mikel. Even the sight of the stunning demon-melded dragon had not made
her forget the boy had been lax in his duties. "Where have you been,
child? Lord Wolfblade sent you to get my breakfast."
"I -" Mikel began, but R'shiel came to his defence.
"I asked him to help me with something," she explained. "You
might
have to find yourself another page for a while, Adrina."
R'shiel took Mikel's hand and walked back towards the camp, leaving
Adrina wide-eyed and more than a little put out.
"Did you have a hand in this?" she demanded of Damin.
He shrugged and looked almost as puzzled as she was. "It's the first
I've heard of it. But it's not a bad idea. I'm going to have enough
trouble explaining away a Fardohnyan bride when we get to Hythria,
without having a Karien page to worry about."
"I can't just abandon the child!" she protested.
"Isn't that what you were planning to do with him when you first
crossed the border?"
She glared at him, annoyed that he was right, even more annoyed that
he had guessed her intentions. "It's not the same thing."
"Of course not," he agreed drily.
"Don't you dare take that tone with me!"
"Then don't treat me like a fool," he retorted. "Are you
still
hungry? You've missed breakfast, but I'm sure we could prevail upon the
cooks for an early lunch."
"I will not be patronised like a small child!"
"Stop looking for a fight, Adrina. Did you want to eat or
not?"
Adrina was about to explode with fury when her stomach rumbled
complainingly. Damin heard it clearly and laughed at her. "I'll take
that as a yes. Come on, you'll fight better on a full stomach."
"This is intolerable! I am not going to spend the rest of my life
having you laugh at me."
Damin's amusement faded and he looked at her closely. "Then drop
this spoiled Princess act. There doesn't seem much point any
more."
"It's not an act!"
"The hell it isn't."
"You don't know the first thing about me."
"Don't I?"
"No!"
"Shall I tell you what I do know about you, Adrina?" he
asked,
suddenly more serious than she had ever seen him. "You were smart
enough to keep the Karien Crown Prince out of your bed so you couldn't
conceive an heir. You ordered your troops to surrender rather than see
them slaughtered. You rode as hard as I ever pushed my own men without
a complaint, because you knew your life depended on it.
"You are not who you pretend to be, Adrina, and it defies logic that
you keep on pretending you are a fool. You're an intelligent woman, yet
you insist on hiding it behind tantrums and childish, idiotic demands.
I don't know why you do it. Perhaps it's because you grew up in a court
where a smart woman was a dangerous one. The truth is, I don't really
care. But if you want to survive as High Princess of Hythria, then
you'd better learn to use that brain of yours for something other than
causing mischief."
His words stunned her into silence. She had no answer, could think
of nothing to say. Never for a moment had she suspected that Damin's
suspicion and mistrust was based on how clever he thought she was.
He waited for a moment, expecting her to retort with some sarcastic
rejoinder. If her silence amused him, he did not let it show.
"Come on," he said finally. "I missed breakfast too."
CHAPTER 5
Mikel had to run to keep up with R'shiel's
long-legged stride. Although she had him by the hand, she paid him no
further attention as they wound through the chaotic camp. With his free
hand he wiped his nose, which was tingling in the brisk wind. He was
still too much in awe of the demon-melded dragon he had just witnessed
to be concerned where R'shiel might be taking him.
The order to break camp had only been issued a few hours ago, but
already most of the tents were packed, only the larger infirmary and
mess tents and those belonging to the senior officers remained
standing. The Defenders were keen to be gone from this place and
anxious to avoid the approaching Kariens. Mikel had seen enough to
understand that it was not fear of the Kariens that prompted the
Medalonians' haste, but that they wanted to avoid the inconvenience of
taking even more prisoners.
Mikel's entire system of beliefs had been stretched beyond credulity
in the past few weeks. First Princess Adrina had betrayed the Prince.
Then Prince Cratyn had proved to be as callous and vicious as any other
man in his desire to murder his wife for her treachery. His own brother
Jaymes had joined the Hythrun and his best friend Dace had turned out
to be the God of Thieves. Then, with hardly any objections, Adrina had
married Lord Wolfblade.
And now the fabled demon child had commandeered his services. This
tall, impatient young woman whom demons followed around like puppies
and whom everyone treated with a great deal of trepidation.
"My Lady?"
"Yes?"
"What did you want me to do?"
R'shiel stopped suddenly and smiled down at him. "I want you to help
me with something, Mikel. Something magic."
"Is it going to get me into trouble?"
The demon child laughed softly. "I have to convince the Kariens they
want to go home, and that means turning even the priests from the
Overlord's path for a time. Are you afraid?"
Mikel frowned. "I don't think so. I've turned from my God. I let you
kill my Prince. I've honoured the God of Thieves. I don't think I'm
much of anything, any more."
R'shiel placed a comforting hand on his shoulder. "Mikel, I think
you'll find that you are far more worthy than you imagine."
Mikel wanted to believe her. She was the demon child, after all.
Perhaps she knew things he did not. But it seemed unlikely.
"If you say so, my Lady."
R'shiel smiled again but did not answer for a time.
When she spoke again, her question took him completely by surprise.
"Mikel, who did the Kariens follow before Xaphista came along?"
"The priests said they worshipped false gods," he told her,
"just as
Hythria and Fardohnya still do."
"Yes, but there must have been one that was predominant. Zegarnald
has a pretty firm grip on Hythria and Jelanna seems to be the most
popular goddess in Fardohnya."
"The only one I ever heard of was Leylanan," Mikel replied
after a
moment's thought.
"What is he the god of?"
"She, not he. Leylanan was the Goddess of the River."
"I thought that was Maera?" R'shiel said.
"Leylanan was the Goddess of the Ironbrook River. Maybe Maera is the
Goddess of the Glass River."
R'shiel was silent for a moment then shook her head. "No, she won't
do. I need someone else."
Mikel wasn't sure he understood, or even if R'shiel was addressing
him. She sounded as if she was simply thinking aloud.
"Do you really think you can turn the priests from the Overlord, my
Lady?"
"I have to."
Mikel had the impression that once set on an idea, R'shiel was
determined to make it happen. He had no idea what she was planning, and
certainly no idea what his role would be.
"Lord Laetho used to say that you've more chance of making a Karien
dance a heathen jig naked in the moonlight than you have of turning him
from his God," he offered helpfully.
"Maybe I should call on the God of Music, then," R'shiel
grumbled,
obviously not pleased that things were not going according to plan.
"Do the Harshini have a God of Music?" he asked
curiously.
"Gimlorie is the God of Music, Mikel, and he is as insubstantial and
ephemeral as music itself. When I was in Sanctuary, the Harshini would
call on him sometimes. His song is the most beautiful thing I have ever
heard. It touches men's souls . . ."
Mikel stared at R'shiel as a slow, devious smile crept over her
face. "Music of any kind is frowned upon in Karien, my Lady. It's a
sin," Mikel added.
R'shiel looked down at him and smiled. "Not any more, it
isn't."
She grabbed his hand suddenly and led him away from the direction of
the infirmary tent, leaving him even more confused.
"My Lady?" he ventured, as he hurried along beside her
through the
organised chaos that was all that was left of the Defenders' camp. It
seemed as if most of it had vanished into the supply wagons while they
were talking.
"You don't have to keep calling me that, Mikel. My name is
R'shiel."
"It wouldn't be proper, my Lady. Where are we going?"
"We're going to summon the God of Music, Mikel."
"Why?"
R'shiel looked down at him and smiled reassuringly. "He's going to
teach you how to sing."
Mikel didn't know whether to be frightened by R'shiel or not. She
had never done him any harm; in fact she had virtually ignored him up
until this morning, when she suddenly decided she needed him for some
yet-to-be-revealed task. She was all but dragging him towards the tents
where the Hythrun Raiders were accommodated.
"Almodavar!"
The savage-looking Hythrun turned at the sound of her voice.
"Divine One?"
"Please don't call me that. Where is Mikel's brother?"
"Young Jaymes? Down with the horses helping Nercher if he knows
what's good for him," the captain replied. "Has he done
something I
should know about?"
"No. But I'd like to see him. Can you send him to me?"
The captain nodded and turned to give the order to fetch Jaymes.
Mikel glanced at R'shiel curiously.
"What do you want with Jaymes, my Lady?"
"You're going to learn a song, Mikel. Jaymes is going to be there to
make sure you don't get lost in it."
"I see," Mikel said, nodding sagely, although in truth he
understood
nothing at all.
CHAPTER 6
By early afternoon, the Defenders were ready to
move out. That morning, the camp had been the size of a small town. Now
there was nothing left but a large area of trampled grass to mark their
passing. He knew they had been setting up and pulling down the camp
each day while they travelled north from the Citadel. The late Lord
Setenton enjoyed his creature comforts and would have it no other way,
but in the two weeks they had spent camped on the plain they had
settled in so comfortably, Damin found it hard to believe they could
dismantle it all with such speed.
His own Raiders took less time to organise, but they were fewer and
had been travelling much more lightly than the Defenders. Almodavar had
had them ready to leave hours ago. What kept them here now were the
Kariens.
His men formed a mounted ring around the captured knights, bows
strung, arrows at the ready, waiting for one of them to break. Damin
didn't know why they were holding the Kariens here while the Defenders
went on ahead, and a part of him was afraid to ask. He knew as well as
anyone the dilemma these prisoners posed. That the Defenders were
leaving them behind did not augur well for their future.
Karien they might be, but Damin held no personal grudge against
them. They all seemed woefully young and inexperienced to him. The
oldest of them could not have been more than twenty. He prayed
fervently that R'shiel did not expect him to slaughter these children
in cold blood.
"What are we waiting for?"
Adrina rode up beside him with her slave close behind. She was
wrapped in a warm cloak against the cold and looked anxious to get
moving. She had been remarkably quiet since their conversation on the
edge of the camp this morning. That worried Damin a little. She was
undoubtedly plotting something and it probably involved him and a lot
of blood. He should have kept his big mouth shut.
"We're waiting for R'shiel, I think. And for the Defenders to move
out."
"Where is the demon child, anyway?"
Damin shrugged. "Nobody's seen her for hours."
Adrina looked at the nervous Kariens. They had been pushed into a
tight cluster, ringed by the Raiders and to a man they wore expressions
of uncertainty. Damin could imagine what was going through their minds.
"What's going to happen to them?"
"I don't know."
"You're not going to . . ."
"Kill them? I wish I knew." He turned in the saddle at the
sound of
hoofs and found Denjon and Linst riding towards them at a canter. The
red-coated Defenders reined in when they reached them.
"We're ready to move out," Denjon informed them.
"How's Tarja?"
"Much the same. He's in one of the wagons with a medic. We'll be
setting a hard pace, I'm afraid, but it can't be avoided."
"How long will it take you to reach the border?"
"About six weeks," the captain replied. "We could get there
sooner
if we dumped the supply wagons, but I'm loath to do that, for obvious
reasons. We'll only resort to that if we're being pursued." The
captain
glanced meaningfully at the Karien prisoners. "I hope this
works."
"You hope what works?" Adrina asked.
"R'shiel's grandiose plan for turning the Kariens back," he
said.
"And what is that, exactly?"
"We don't know and I'm not sure we want to," Linst remarked.
"She
asked that we be gone before she does it, so we can only assume it's
some heathen ritual that she'd rather we didn't witness."
"Heathen ritual or not, I can't say I'll mind missing it,"
Denjon
said. Then he reached forward and offered Damin his hand. "I wish you
luck, Lord Wolfblade."
"You'll need it more than I," Damin said, accepting the
handshake. "With all your troops and the Kariens concentrated in the
north,
weather permitting I'll have a clear run down to Hythria. You're the
ones taking the long road."
"I was thinking more of what happens when you get to
Hythria," Denjon said with a grin.
"I'll worry about that when I get there."
"Then I'll look forward to meeting you again on your side of the
border. For all our sakes I hope it goes well for you, my Lord. And for
you too, Your Highness."
"Thank you, Captain."
Damin glanced at Adrina curiously. Her thanks sounded genuine. There
was no hint of her usual sarcastic tone. Something was seriously wrong
with her.
Denjon and Linst wheeled their mounts around and cantered back
towards the long line of red-coated Defenders. They watched them leave
in silence, watched Denjon ride to the head of the column, and heard
the faint sound of the trumpet signalling their advance as it was
whipped away on the icy wind.
"So what happens now?" Adrina asked after a while.
Damin shrugged. "We wait for the demon child."
When R'shiel arrived more than an hour later, she
was on foot and the two Karien boys were with her. Damin and Adrina
both dismounted when they caught sight of her. She was chatting to
Mikel and Jaymes as they walked across the trampled grass towards them,
the three of them apparently in a fine mood and the best of friends.
When she reached them, she was smiling broadly.
"The Defenders got away all right then?" she asked.
"About an hour ago," Damin informed her. "Where have you
been?"
"Communing with the gods," she told him with a grin. "Let's
do
something about these Kariens, shall we?"
Damin grabbed her arm as she turned towards the prisoners. "What are
you going to do, R'shiel?"
"You'll see."
Without waiting for his reaction she pulled her arm free and taking
Mikel's hand, walked towards the Kariens. Jaymes followed after them.
The lad had filled out since he had been training with the Hythrun. At
fifteen he was the size of a full-grown man. Any animosity that had
existed between the brothers seemed to have been put to rest. That odd
turn of events bothered Damin almost as much as what R'shiel might be
planning.
Almodavar turned and dismounted at R'shiel's approach. Damin and
Adrina threw their reins to Tamylan and hurried after her on foot. The
Kariens, sensing something was about to happen, began to grow restless.
Those who had tired of standing and were sitting on the cold ground
climbed to their feet. The priests pushed to the front of the group,
tracing the star of the Overlord on their foreheads as they regarded
the demon child with intense suspicion.
"Where is Lord Drendyn?" R'shiel called to the Kariens as
she
stopped before them. The knight in question pushed his way through the
crowd and stepped in front of her belligerently. He was sandy haired
and sweating, despite the cold, and looked hardly older than Jaymes.
"I demand you release us immediately and hand over the Crown
Princess Adrina so that she may be returned to Karien."
Damin suspected the young knight's bravado was inspired by fear. His
Raiders, with their loaded bows and fearsome reputation, still ringed
the Kariens. He had only to raise his arm and there would be a massacre.
"As you wish," R'shiel replied. "Lord Wolfblade, be so kind
as to
ask your men to withdraw. Tell them to muster over that way, upwind
from us."
At a nod from Damin, Almodavar gave the order. The Raiders lowered
their weapons, replaced arrows in their quivers and wheeled their
mounts around. Drendyn looked stunned by her sudden capitulation.
"Is this some sort of trick?"
"Not at all, my Lord, you are free to go. There is a party of Karien
knights headed this way. They should be here in a day or two. The
Defenders have confiscated your horses, unfortunately, but they have
left you sufficient food and water to last until you're
rescued."
"And our Princess?"
"Ah, now that's a different matter. She's not actually your Princess
any longer. Adrina is now a Princess of Hythria."
Drendyn's eyes widened in horror. "Your Highness? Is this
true?"
Damin glanced at Adrina, who looked very uncomfortable. "I'm sorry,
Drendyn . . ." Adrina said with a helpless shrug. To
Damin's
surprise, she appeared genuinely upset that she had hurt the young man.
"And you can give your King a message from me, too," he
added,
turning to the distraught young earl. "Any attempt to return the
Princess to Karien will be taken as an act of war."
"But they murdered Prince Cratyn!" Drendyn cried to Adrina
then
turned on Damin furiously, taking a step towards him, ready to fight
for his Princess' honour. "What have you done to her?"
"That's far enough, my Lord," Almodavar cut in, his sword
pressing
into the young earl's tabard. Drendyn halted abruptly, looked down at
the blade aimed squarely at his heart and wisely took a step backward.
"Hythria will pay for the life of my Prince. And my
Princess!" he
shouted, albeit from a safer distance.
"Perhaps," Damin agreed. "But not today, my young
friend."
"Enough of this," R'shiel declared impatiently. "Damin, I
suggest
you move back. I have something I wish to do before we leave."
"Something you don't want us to see?"
"Not at all. You can watch if you like, but I'd rather you didn't
hear it."
"The Overlord will protect us from your evil, demon child,"
the
priest Garanus warned.
Captivity had not been kind to the priest. His shaven head was
covered in black stubble and his cassock was rumpled and dusty. The
priests who stood behind him had fared no better. Damin considered his
threat rather hollow. Without their staves the priests were simply
ordinary men.
"The Overlord has abandoned you, Garanus. Why else would he let you
fall prisoner?"
"We will not listen to your blasphemy!"
"Suit yourself," R'shiel said with a shrug. "Damin, you
should leave
now."
"What about Mikel and Jaymes?" Adrina asked, almost as wary
as Damin
about what the demon child was planning.
"They'll be fine with me."
Damin still had no idea what she was up to. With some reluctance, he
did as she asked. Taking Adrina's hand he headed back to where Tamylan
was waiting with the horses. Almodavar mounted and followed them at a
walk. Damin swung into the saddle and turned to watch as R'shiel stood
facing the Kariens.
"What is she going to do?" Adrina asked as she settled into
her
saddle and gathered up her reins.
"You know as much as I do."
"Drendyn was the only person in Karien who treated me like a human
being," she added, staring at the gathering with concern.
That explained her apology to the young knight.
"If she was planning to kill them, she would have done it by
now."
It was a hollow reassurance at best. For all he knew that was exactly
what R'shiel was planning.
"Or she would wait until there were no witnesses," Almodavar
pointed
out.
"She said something about not listening," Adrina said. "What
could
she possibly say to them -"
As if in answer to her question a voice reached them. It was high,
pure and perfect and the song it sang touched the very core of Damin's
soul. It took him a moment to realise that it was Mikel singing. He
could not hear the words; the wind tore them away before he could make
them out, but he sat there, rigid, as the lilting notes washed over him
in haunting snatches. The song was both enticing and entrancing. It
slithered into his brain like sweet wine being poured into an empty
cup. It warmed and chilled him at the same time. Visions of a land he
did not know filled his mind and he found himself yearning for it with
a passion that took him by surprise. The song made him want to laugh
and cry simultaneously. He wanted to hear more. It was fear and comfort
on the same breath. Love and hatred intermingled. He never wanted it to
end.
"Damin! We have to move! Now!"
It was Adrina who jerked him back to reality. He glanced at the
prisoners and realised that whatever remarkable effect the song had on
him, the effect it was having on the Kariens was a hundred times more
powerful. As he turned his mount and urged him into a gallop, wisps of
the song followed him with tantalising fingers.
Then the tenor of the music changed and no longer did he wish to
drown in the beauty of the song. Now it was much more strident, its
beauty marred by dark, shadowy images that chased him until they were
far enough away that the music no longer reached them.
Once they were safely out of range, they turned and looked back at
the Kariens. R'shiel stood before the captive knights, but they could
not make out her expression from this distance. Mikel stood beside her,
singing to the Kariens in that glorious, unnatural voice that seduced
and tormented at once.
Jaymes seemed unaffected, his hand resting on his brother's
shoulder, as if he was holding him down against the wind, but the rest
of the Kariens were transfixed. Some men were weeping, some were frozen
to the spot. The priest Garanus was on his knees, his hands over his
ears. The young knight Drendyn was staring at the boy as if he was
experiencing some sort of religious ecstasy. All around him, his men
seemed to be in the throes of either torment or rapture.
"What was that? What is she doing?" Damin asked.
"The Song of Gimlorie," Adrina told him, her eyes fixed on
the
Kariens, her voice filled with awe.
"That's simply a legend," Almodavar scoffed.
"No. It's real enough. My father tried to get some of the
priestesses to perform it in Talabar once. He thought it would
guarantee him a legitimate son. None of the temples would even consider
the idea, and he offered them a fortune in gold to do it. They all
claimed it was too dangerous."
"So how did Mikel learn it?"
"R'shiel obviously had a hand in that." Adrina turned to him
then,
her expression thoughtful. "You know, if the legends are correct, he
who sings the Song of Gimlorie is a channel for the gods."
"I can well believe it," Damin agreed, thinking of the
effect that
even catching part of the song had on him.
They waited in silence after that, until R'shiel ordered Mikel to
stop singing. Mikel sagged, as if the song had drained him completely.
His brother gently gathered the unconscious child up in his arms and
together with R'shiel walked back across the plain towards them.
CHAPTER 7
Despite Adrina's confident assurance that landing
in the main courtyard of the Summer Palace was bound to get Hablet's
attention, Brak chose to make a less dramatic entrance into Talabar. He
landed his demon-melded dragon some distance north of the capital on a
warm, muggy afternoon three days after he left Medalon, and set out for
the city on foot.
He was not well prepared for the journey, though he wasn't worried
about his lack of resources. Once he shed his winter layers of
clothing, he turned onto the road and began heading south towards the
sprawling pink metropolis, secure in the knowledge that several hundred
years of living on his wits left him well equipped to handle anything a
Fardohnyan could throw at him.
Brak had eschewed his Harshini heritage for many years, but he was
not averse to using a little magic when it was for a good cause. As his
only cause these days seemed to be aiding the demon child, he
felt justified in taking a few liberties with his power that would have
horrified his full-blooded cousins.
Since he had no local currency and was not looking forward to
walking all the way to Talabar, he prevailed upon the Lady Elanymire to
meld herself into a large uncut ruby. He then traded the ruby to a
merchant from a passing caravan, whose eyes lit up with greed when Brak
offered him the gem for a horse, a saddle, some basic supplies, and a
small bag of coin.
Any guilt Brak may have felt over the transaction vanished when he
saw the state of the merchant's slaves. They were underfed and
miserable, their bare feet blistered from trudging the gravelled road
in the heat. Even the richly dressed court'esa who sat on the
seat of the gaily-covered lead wagon wore a look of abject misery.
Brak rode away on his newly purchased horse content that the
merchant deserved everything that was coming to him. The following
morning, Lady Elanymire popped into existence on the pommel of his
saddle, laughing delightedly at the expression on the avaricious
merchant's face when he discovered his prized ruby had vanished.
Fardohnya had a timeless quality about it. The people were still
dusky, smiling, dark-haired souls who seemed, if not content, then
accepting of their lot in life. It always struck him as odd that the
Fardohnyans were so cheerful. Perhaps it was because their King, while
grasping, devious and deceitful, at least understood that a happy
population was a quiet one. Hablet wisely confined his more outrageous
excesses to his court and Fardohnya's neighbours.
Slaves waved to him as he passed them in fields of rich black loam
as they planted carefully tended green shoots of altaer and filganar
before the onset of the spring rains. The grains were native to
Fardohnya and the staple diet of much of the population. In Brak's
experience, they would grow anywhere there was enough heat and water.
Famine was unheard of in Fardohnya; another reason the people didn't
seem to mind what their King was up to. It is easy to be forgiving with
a full belly.
Talabar came into sight the third day after Brak had traded his
demon-melded ruby. Built from the pale pink stone of the neighbouring
cliffs, it glittered in the afternoon sun, hugging the harbour like a
woman curled into the back of her sleeping lover. Flat-roofed houses
terraced the hills surrounding the bay, interspersed with palm-shaded
emerald green parks and the tall edifices of the many temples that
dotted the city. It was a beautiful city, not so stark and white as
Greenharbour, or so grey and depressing as Yarnarrow. Only the Citadel
in its heyday could rival its splendour.
It had been many years since Brak had been here. The last time he'd
travelled incognito, another faceless soul in a vast city that thought
his race extinct. The time before that was when Hablet's
great-grandfather was King. He had been known as Lord Brakandaran in
those days - feared and respected by kings and slaves alike. He
hadn't
much liked being known as Brakandaran the Half-Breed, but it was a
useful persona at times and, he hoped, in certain circles at least, it
had not been forgotten.
Brak rode through the gates of the city without
being questioned. The guards were more interested in those bringing
wagons, which the soldiers searched with varying degrees of enthusiasm,
depending on the wealth of the merchant and the size of the bribe they
would collect to turn a blind eye. Corruption was something of an
institution in Fardohnya. No self-respecting merchant expected to do
business without paying somebody something.
He rode through the crowded streets and let the feel of the city
wash over him. One could learn much from the atmosphere of a crowded
market place, a boisterous tavern or a bustling smithy. He picked his
way past the glassworks, where furnaces glowed red in the dark,
cavernous workshops; past the noisy meatworks where the butchers sang
their thanks to the Goddess of Plenty before slashing the throats of
their hapless victims with an expert flick of their wickedly sharp
knives.
Talabar felt much the same as it always had. He could detect nothing
out of the ordinary.
His horse shied from the smell of fresh blood that drained from the
slaughterhouses into Talabar's complex underground drains. From there
it ran into the sea to feed vast schools of fish, who gorged themselves
on the unexpected bounty, only to head lazily back out to sea where the
fishermen waited with their long hemp nets.
The streets widened as he entered the clothing district, although
the traffic did not thin noticeably. The clackety-clack of the looms in
the busy workhouses filled the air like a pulse. A few streets later he
was forced to dismount. He smiled as he led his gelding past a heated
argument between a merchant, whose wagonload of baled wool had
overturned and spilled across the street, and a very large, irate
seamstress who was denouncing the poor fellow and his drunken habits
loud enough to be heard back in Medalon.
Brak swung back into the saddle and soon entered a relatively quiet
residential area. The streets were paved and the houses, although built
close together, were those of prosperous merchants. They were not quite
wealthy enough to own estates close to the harbour, and preferred to
live near their places of business in any case. Their houses were in
good repair, and many of them had slaves sweeping the pavement in front
of the houses, or beating rugs from wide balconies that looked out over
the street, and were shaded by potted palms and climbing bougainvillea.
By mid-morning he reached the most salubrious part of Talabar,
closest to the harbour and the Summer Palace. A hundred generations of
Fardohnyan kings, anxious to curry favour with the gods, had dedicated
themselves to building ever more impressive temples in this city.
Jelanna was Hablet's personal favourite, so her temple had received the
bulk of the King's largesse. It had been faced with marble since Brak
saw it last and an impressive pair of fluted columns now supported an
elaborate portico carved with cavorting demons at the entrance. It had
done him little good, Brak knew. Despite almost thirty years of trying,
he had yet to produce a legitimate son, although he had sired enough
bastards to fill a small town.
Finally, Brak turned into a discreet, single-storey inn that
sheltered almost directly under the high pink wall surrounding the
Summer Palace. A slave hurried forward to take his mount in the shaded
courtyard and he tipped the lad generously. There were slaves that
owned more wealth than their masters in Fardohnya, and one could, if
one chose to, purchase one's freedom. Many did not. There was a degree
of job security in being a slave that was hard to beat in the uncertain
world of the free man.
The interior of the inn was dim and cool, the entrance separated by
a whitewashed trellis from the low hum of conversation emanating from
the taproom. The owner hurried forward, took in Brak's travel-stained
appearance, noticed the jingling purse tucked in his belt, did a quick
mental calculation, then bowed obsequiously.
"My Lord."
Brak was quite certain he looked nothing like a nobleman in his
current state, but the innkeeper was covering himself against the
possibility that this new arrival was a gentleman of means.
"I require rooms," he announced.
"Certainly, my Lord. I have a vacancy in the north wing. It is
closest to the palace walls. One can hear the joyous laughter of the
princesses at play, if one listens closely."
Brak thought that highly unlikely. "I also need to contact someone
from the Assassins' Guild."
"Did you want anyone in particular?"
"I need to speak with the Raven."
The little man's eyes narrowed. "The head of the Assassins' Guild
does not meet with just anybody, my Lord."
"He'll meet with me," Brak assured him confidently.
"You know him then?"
"That's none of your business." Actually, Brak had no idea
who now
held the post, and did not particularly care. The Assassins' Guild was
simply the best source of intelligence in Fardohnya.
"Of course not, my Lord!" he gushed, wringing his hands.
Only the
wealthiest of noblemen could afford to deal with the Assassins' Guild.
Brak had just gone up considerably in the innkeeper's estimation.
"Forgive me for being so forward. I will show you to your rooms at
once. If there is anything I can do . . ."
"You could be quiet, for a start," Brak remarked coldly,
already
annoyed by the man.
"Of course, my Lord! What was I thinking? Be quiet . . .
Oh . . ." The innkeeper clamped his lips together
when he
noticed the look on Brak's face.
"That's better. Now, if you could show me the room? I want a bath
too. And some lunch."
The man nodded, wisely saying nothing further. With a snap of his
fingers another slave hurried forward to show Brak to his rooms.
Much to Brak's surprise, the contact from the
Assassins' Guild was a woman. Fardohnya was notoriously patriarchal and
it was rare for a woman to hold any position of note. He was not even
aware that they had changed the rules to admit women to the Guild. She
was small and slender, the long, pale-green robe she wore concealing
what Brak was certain would be a body in superb physical condition. It
was hard to judge her age; she might have been twenty, or perhaps
forty. Brak suspected the latter. Her eyes were too knowing, too
cautious and too world-weary for her to be in the first bloom of youth.
She came to his rooms after dinner, knocking softly on the
whitewashed door. He opened it cautiously and looked her up and down.
On the middle finger of her left hand she wore the small gold raven
ring of the Guild. While he privately considered it the height of
arrogant stupidity to announce one's profession so openly, particularly
for an assassin, that he recognised the ring and admitted her without
question went a long way to establishing his credentials. He'd had a
discussion once, with a previous Raven, about the foolishness of
wearing something so obvious, but humans liked their symbols and
apparently the custom was as strong as ever. Foolish humans.
"What do you want with the Raven?" the woman asked, without
preamble, looking around the room.
"I wish to speak to him."
"The Raven doesn't speak to anyone."
"He'll speak to me."
She finished her inspection of the room and turned to look at him.
"So Gernard said."
"Gernard?"
"The innkeeper."
"Ah . . . can I offer you some wine?"
"No."
She walked across the room and threw open the doors that led to the
gardens, taking a deep breath of the fragrant air from the riot of
flowering greenery. Brak was sure she was more interested in making
certain they were not overheard, than she was in botany.
"So, tell me," she demanded, turning back to him as she
stepped away
from the open doorway, "what is so special about you that the Raven
would grant you an audience?"
"I am Brakandaran."
She studied him for a moment in the twilight then laughed.
"Brakandaran the Half-Breed? I doubt that."
"You require proof?"
"Oh, I'm certain you have proof," she chuckled. "Some
mirrors and
wires rigged to convince me of your magical powers. You have, however,
neglected one minor point."
"And what is that?"
"Brakandaran, if he was still alive, would be in his dotage now.
It's been what . . . fifty years since he was here last? You
can't be more than thirty-five. Forty at the most."
"I'm half-Harshini," he pointed out. "I don't age like a
human."
She smiled. "Very good! You even have an answer for that one. I
still don't believe you, but I do appreciate attention to
detail."
Brak found himself warming to the woman. She was sharp and not at
all unattractive. But he was going to have to convince her, and
probably the hard way.
"Very well, then," he shrugged. "You name the proof.
Something I
cannot possibly have anticipated. We can even go somewhere else, so
that you can be assured I'm not using - what did you call them -
mirrors and wires?"
"I really don't see why I should bother."
"Can you afford to be wrong?"
She thought on that for a moment, then shook her head. She turned
away from him, as if in thought, reaching into her robe. "Proof, you
say? Something unexpected?" She spun around, raising her arm.
"Try
this!"
The quarrel from the small crossbow took Brak by surprise. He had
guessed she was up to something, but had no time to react. Elanymire
saved him. She popped into existence in front of him and snatched the
missile from the air, chittering angrily at the woman.
The assassin dropped the weapon in surprise at the appearance of the
little demon. "How . . . ?"
"The demons live to protect the Harshini," he pointed out
with a
shrug. He bent down and picked the demon up, stroking her leathery
skin, trying to calm her. She took a very dim view of anyone trying to
hurt a member of her clan and was all for vaporising the woman where
she stood.
The assassin stared at him for a moment, as he stood there soothing
the angry demon and then dropped to one knee. "Divine One."
Brak rolled his eyes. "Oh, get up! I am not divine. But I do
want to see the Raven. Now that we've established who I am, do you
think we could arrange it?"
She stood up and met his eyes.
"See her," she corrected. "The Raven is a woman. Her
name is
Teriahna."
"Fine," Brak agreed impatiently. "Let's go see her,
then."
"You have seen her already, my Lord. I am Teriahna. I am the
Raven."
CHAPTER 8
The first thing Tarja remembered on waking was that
R'shiel was in danger. The thought hit him like a body blow and he
jerked upright, only to discover he was tied to the wagon bed on which
he lay. He could not understand how he came to be there. Nor did it
make any sense that he was obviously moving. The wagon jolted beneath
him, hitting a bump in the road and he cried out as his head slammed
into the wagon bed.
"I think he's awake."
Tarja was confronted by the odd spectre of a strange bearded face he
did not recognise, which stared at him from the wagon seat. He
struggled to sit up, but the ropes hampered his movement. The wagon
halted and the man swung his legs around and squatted down beside
Tarja, staring at him with concern.
"Captain? Sir? Do you know where you are?"
"Of course I don't know where I am," Tarja croaked. All he
could see
was a leaden sky, the sides of the wagon and the face of the Defender
bending over him. His voice was hoarse and he was thirsty enough to
drink a well dry. "Water. Get me water."
The trooper hurried to fetch a water skin. Tarja coughed as cold
water spilled down his parched throat.
"Am I a prisoner?" he asked.
"Not that they've told me, sir."
"Then why the ropes?"
"Oh! Them? That was to stop you hurting yourself, sir. Soon as Cap'n
Denjon gets here, we can untie you."
"Denjon? Denjon is here?"
"Yes, he's here." Tarja turned to the new voice and peered
at the
familiar face studying him over the side of the wagon. Denjon grinned
at him. "Welcome back."
"What's happened? Where are we? Where's -"
"Slow down, Tarja," Denjon cut in. "Untie him,
Corporal."
The trooper did as he was ordered and quickly released the ropes
that bound him. Tarja tried to sit up, appalled at the effort it took.
He glanced around and was astonished to discover himself in the midst
of a Defender column that snaked in front and behind the wagon as far
as he could see. He did not recognise the countryside around him. They
were no longer on the undulating grasslands of the north, but advancing
through the lightly wooded plateau of central Medalon. The Sanctuary
Mountains loomed too close to the west. Tarja shook his head in
confusion.
"How are you feeling?"
"Weak as a kitten," Tarja confessed. "And completely lost.
What's
happened?"
"I'll explain what I can, but one thing at a time. We're about to
make camp for the night. I'll fill you in over dinner."
"Where's R'shiel?"
Denjon shrugged. "On her way to Hythria, as are we, my friend. Which
reminds me. She gave me this before she left." He reached into
his red
jacket and withdrew a sealed letter. "She said I should give it to you
when you woke up. It might explain a few things."
He handed the letter to Tarja and remounted his horse, shouting an
order to make camp as he cantered off. Tarja broke the seal on the
letter anxiously, hoping the contents would throw some light on the
confusion that was threatening to overwhelm him. He vaguely remembered
a battle. He must have dreamt he had taken a sword in the belly, but
nothing explained what he was doing tied to a wagon under an open sky,
surrounded by Defenders.
The letter was written in R'shiel's impatient scrawl.
Tarja, it began without preamble. If you are reading
this, it means you survived. You were wounded trying to help me, and I
tried to save your life. The Harshini part of me helped heal your
wound, and the demons should do the rest. Brak says they'll leave you
when you're well.
He read the paragraph twice. Most of what she had written made no
sense. He had been wounded, it seemed, and she had used her magic to
heal him. He could not understand the part about the demons, though.
Shaking his head, he read on.
I have gone on ahead to Hythria with Damin and Adrina. I want
their marriage to bring peace to the south, but I must support Damin in
Hythria. I might learn about my destiny there, too. I'll explain why
it's so important when I see you. Founders, how I hate being the demon
child! I wish I could have stayed with you . . .
I sent Brak to Fardohnya to tell King Hablet that his daughter
is now the future High Princess of Hythria. That might stop him
invading Hythria through Medalon come spring.
Tarja smiled. Damin and Adrina were married. He wondered what
R'shiel had threatened them with to make that happen.
You must know by now that I killed the Karien Prince and Lord
Terbolt the morning after you tried to rescue me, so the Kariens will
probably want my head even more now.
We've arranged to meet you all in Krakandar. From Damin's side
of the border you'll be able to plan retaking Medalon. The thousand men
you have now is too few to do anything but annoy the Kariens, but with
Hythrun help, we'll make those Karien bastards pay for invading Medalon.
Denjon is on our side, but be careful of Linst.
R'shiel
R'shiel had killed the Karien Crown Prince? Had she learnt nothing
since their days in the rebellion? He read the letter again, wishing he
could recall something - anything - of the past weeks.
But Tarja's
memories stopped abruptly at the point where he had fallen in battle
and there was nothing in the intervening period but a black,
featureless abyss.
Sitting around a small fire later that evening,
Tarja got the rest of the story from Denjon and Linst. His head was
reeling by the time they finished telling him of R'shiel's
confrontation with the Karien priests, of her abrupt decision to accept
the legacy of her Harshini blood and everything else that had happened
since then.
They told him of the wound that almost killed him but could not
explain either the absence of any evidence of the wound, or why he had
lain unconscious for so long, other than they had instructions from
R'shiel to restrain him for his own protection. Denjon spoke with awe
of the demon-melded dragon that had taken Brak south, and of his
uneasiness over the unknown fate of the Karien prisoners they had left
behind.
"So that's about all there is to tell," Denjon concluded
with a
shrug. "When Lord Wolfblade told us that Lord Jenga had ordered you to
mount a resistance against the Kariens, and with Lord Terbolt and the
Karien Prince dead, it seemed prudent to follow the Lord Defender's
orders."
Tarja studied Denjon in the firelight. "I'm not sure he planned for
us to flee to Hythria."
"We're risking our necks for you, Tarja. A bit of gratitude wouldn't
go astray," Linst grumbled.
"You don't sound very happy about this, Linst."
"Happy? Of course I'm not happy about it. But I'm
even less happy about taking orders from those Karien bastards, so here
I am, ready to fight alongside a thousand other deserters. You know,
Tarja, until you came along, nobody even thought of breaking their
Defenders' oath. Now it's a bloody epidemic." He threw the
remains of
his stew onto the fire and stood up. "I have to check the sentries,
although why we cling to Defender discipline is beyond me. It's not as
if we're ever likely to be welcomed back into the Corps, is it?"
He stalked off into the darkness, leaving Tarja and Denjon staring
after him.
"He always was a stickler for the rules," Denjon remarked in
the
uncomfortable silence that followed.
"How many of the others feel like him?"
"Quite a few," Denjon replied. "He's right about one thing,
though.
It isn't easy for a Defender to walk away from his oath."
"I never asked you to follow me, Denjon."
The captain laughed humourlessly. "No, you didn't. But
R'shiel set half the camp on fire just by waving her arm around, then
turned on us, bursting with Harshini power and asked us what we were
planning to do. Taking your side seemed the prudent thing to do at the
time."
He frowned. Something else bothered him about R'shiel, some feeling
or emotion he could not place. A vague uneasiness that lingered on the
edge of his mind, just out of reach.
"So, how far are we from Testra? That is where you're planning to
cross the river, isn't it?"
Denjon nodded. "Less than a week. Now you're up and about, we can
make better time. Do you think you can sit on a horse?"
"I'm damned if I'm going to spend any more time in that wagon. I can
ride."
"Good. We've picked up quite a few of the Defenders you left the
border with along the way. We number close to thirteen hundred
now."
"Thirteen hundred against the Karien host isn't many."
"I know," Denjon agreed. "But that's where your Hythrun
friends come
in. With their help, we might have a chance."
Sleep eluded Tarja for a long time that night. Waking from weeks of
unconsciousness to find everything so radically changed was extremely
disconcerting. He tossed and turned on the cold ground as the stars
dwindled into dawn, trying to pin down the uneasiness that niggled at
him like a tiny burr. Everything Denjon had told him, he reviewed over
and over in his mind. But what bothered him came from another source.
Something else was wrong . . . or different. Something that
he could not define.
All he knew for certain was that it centred on R'shiel.
After a full day in the saddle, Tarja realised how
weak he was, but he was consumed by a restless energy that made it
impossible for him to take the rest he needed. He could not understand
the reason for his restive mood and the blank, dark hole in his memory
unsettled him more than he was willing to admit.
All he could think of was getting to Hythria. His mind raced, making
plans and rejecting them as he tried to figure the best way to hamper
the Karien occupation force. The fact that he had no idea what sort of
assistance they would receive from the Hythrun once they crossed the
border made his task almost impossible. Damin might only be able to
spare him a few centuries of Raiders, or he might be able to bring the
full weight of the massive Hythrun war machine to his aid. There was
simply no way to tell.
He drove Denjon mad when the other captain gave the order to make
camp each evening, insisting they had at least another hour of
daylight. Denjon was amused the first night, patient the second, and
told him bluntly to mind his own business the third.
But Tarja's recovery seemed to bolster the morale of the men. He had
been a popular officer once, known as a promising officer, a fair man
and tipped to be the next Lord Defender. To see him back among them,
wearing his red jacket and brimming with nervous energy, revived the
spirits of men who up until then had had little more to do than
contemplate their new status as outlaws.
Five days after Tarja woke, they were within sight
of Testra. Tarja suggested sending an advance party forward to
reconnoitre in the town, while the bulk of their force waited out of
sight to avoid drawing attention to their number, although Denjon
seemed certain that news of their desertion could not have reached this
far south yet.
"We can't risk riding into Testra in force," Tarja insisted.
"Yesterday you were all for riding through the night to get here.
Now you want to add another day to the trip while you go
sightseeing,"
Linst complained.
"I don't want to wait," Tarja corrected. "I just
think it
would be stupid to reveal ourselves until we know we're in the clear.
Besides, there's still a garrison in Testra. If they've heard of the
surrender, they might want to join us."
"Reluctant as I am to spend another day on this side of the
river,"
Denjon said, "I'm afraid I agree with Tarja."
Linst glared at both of them for a moment then shrugged. "As you
wish."
When he left them, Denjon turned to Tarja. "Do you think he's having
second thoughts?"
"You can count on it," Tarja agreed. "Who's in command in
Testra?"
"Antwon, I think."
"I know him. He won't like the idea of surrender."
"Not liking the idea of surrender is not the same as being willing
to desert," Denjon pointed out.
"Still, it's worth sounding him out. Every Defender we get out of
Medalon now is another man we can put into the field later on."
"Aye. And you'd best get some rest. You look ready to drop."
"I'm fine."
The practised lie came easily to him now. It was much simpler than
trying to explain that he couldn't sleep, couldn't stop his mind from
running around in circles, or prevent the confused images that flashed
in front of his eyes, catching him unawares.
Something had happened to him. Something to do with R'shiel and her
damned Harshini healing. But whenever he thought of R'shiel, a myriad
conflicting and seemingly impossible memories surfaced. Some of them
were real memories, he was certain of that. Others were like a
nightmare. They were the ones where he imagined R'shiel in his arms.
The ones where he loved her - not like the sister he had grown
up
believing her to be - but as her lover.
The absolute certainty that he would never feel that way towards his
sister was the only thing that kept him sane.
CHAPTER 9
"The main wharf looks new."
Teriahna chuckled softly at Brak's comment. They were walking along
the waterfront of Talabar amidst the morning bustle of the busy port,
for no better reason than the privacy such a public place offered. The
sun beat down on them and the wharves were crowded with
frazzled-looking merchants and bare-chested, sweat-sheened sailors
shouting boisterously at each other as they unloaded their cargoes.
"Ah, now there's a story behind that," she told him as they
sidestepped a gilded litter carried by four muscular slaves. "The
Princess Adrina tried her hand at sailing Hablet's flagship, the Wave
Warrior, so the story goes, and ended up ramming the dock. If you
believe the rumours that's why Hablet packed her off to Karien."
"And if you don't believe the rumours?"
"Then he married her to Cratyn because Adrina, more than any of his
children, is cast in the same mould as her father. If he was up to
something nasty and needed an ally in Karien, Adrina would be the one
for the job."
Brak did not offer any further comment on Adrina. He had not told
Teriahna the news he carried from Medalon. As far as anyone in
Fardohnya knew, Adrina was still in the north. That Cratyn was dead,
Adrina now married to Lord Wolfblade and that Hablet's eldest baseborn
son was a casualty of the Karien€“ Medalonian war, was news he
would
prefer not to break until Adrina was safely across the border into
Hythria, where Damin could protect her from her father's wrath.
"So, what do you know to be fact about Hablet's treaty with
Karien?"
"Not much more than anyone else, I'm afraid," she admitted.
"He gave
them the Isle of Slarn, we know that for certain, and there's been no
shortage of timber for shipbuilding since the Princess left. According
to the treaty, he's supposed to attack Medalon from the south come the
northern spring, and he's certainly mustering his army for an
invasion."
"But?" Brak asked, sensing there was more she had not told
him.
"But he's got his officers studying Hythria, not Medalon."
"You think he seriously intends to invade Hythria?"
"He's never likely to have a better chance. He can't go over the
Sunrise Mountains - Tejay Lionsclaw makes certain of that. The
Hythrun
defend their ports too well to risk a naval invasion, and until the
Kariens declared war on their neighbour, Medalon had the Defenders to
deter him from taking that route. But with the Defenders tied up on
their northern border, and the Warlord of Krakandar up there with them,
Hythria is wide open."
Brak nodded. Adrina had said almost the same thing.
"Why is Hablet so determined to invade Hythria?" Brak asked.
"It
can't just be greed. He's richer than any man alive."
Teriahna seemed amused by the question. "Don't you know? It isn't
wealth that drives Hablet, it's fear."
"Of what?"
"He doesn't have a legitimate heir."
"That's not a reason to invade Hythria."
"It is if you're afraid that your next heir is likely to be
Hythrun."
Brak stopped and stared at her, afraid she had already heard about
Damin and Adrina, but then he realised that even if she had, Hablet had
been planning this invasion long before the two of them met. "How could
that be?"
"Hythria and Fardohnya have not always been separate nations, Brak.
You should know that."
"Fardohnya split from Hythria before I was born," Brak
pointed out. "And believe me, I was born a very long time ago."
"They formally became separate nations during the reign of Greneth
the Older Twin," she reminded him. "That was about twelve
hundred years
ago."
Brak nodded. "Greneth was the twin brother of Doranda Wolfblade, as
I recall."
"Ah, you do know your history then. Well, the split was quite
amicable by all accounts. Greater Fardohnya, as it was known then, was
a huge country; much too vast to govern effectively. Hythria was the
largest province, governed by the Wolfblade family. Greneth married his
sister Doranda to Jaycon Wolfblade, gave them Hythria to rule as the
High Prince and Princess."
Brak found himself impressed by Teriahna's knowledge, but no closer
to the knowledge he sought. "I still don't see . . ."
"Then let me finish," she chided. "As part of the agreement
to
separate the two nations, Greneth signed a pledge that in the absence
of a male heir to the Fardohnyan throne, the eldest living Wolfblade
would automatically inherit the crown. The agreement has never been
revoked."
"I've never heard of it before."
"Well, until now, there's been no need to worry about it. Hablet is
the first Fardohnyan King in twelve hundred years who's failed to get a
son."
"How many others know about it?"
"Enough that Hablet is worried. When your King keeps producing
daughters, people start going through the archives. We only stumbled
across it recently ourselves. Like you, we were curious about Hablet's
obvious obsession with Hythria."
"I'm still not certain I understand what he hopes to achieve by
invading Hythria."
"He needs to destroy the Wolfblade line. If there is no living
Wolfblade, there is no heir. If there is no heir he can legitimise one
of his bastards."
"Wouldn't it be simpler, not to mention cheaper, to hire one of your
assassins?"
"Are you kidding? Do you have any idea what we charge for
assassinating a High Prince? Trust me, an invasion, even a prolonged
one, would be cheaper."
Brak smiled, not entirely certain she was joking.
"Anyway," Teriahna continued, "he tried that, and we
refused. Call
it professional ethics, but we draw the line at kings and princes. The
death of a ruling monarch tends to create unrest and draws unnecessary
attention to the Guild and that's bad for business. We are strictly
apolitical."
"What a comforting thought," he remarked wryly.
She smiled. "I forget you are Harshini, sometimes, my Lord. Does all
this talk of killing distress you?"
"Not as much as it should," he admitted. "So how long has
Hablet
known about this forgotten law?"
"A long time, I think. He made Lernen Wolfblade an offer for his
sister Princess Marla when he first took the throne. You can imagine
Lernen's reaction. He refused the offer then married Marla to some
rustic Warlord from the north of Hythria, just to add to the insult.
Hablet has never forgiven him for that either."
"So, for the sake of a forgotten law and a thirty-five-year-old
insult, Hablet is going to invade Hythria?"
"That's about the strength of it," she agreed. "If Damin
Wolfblade
and Narvell Hawksword are killed protecting Hythria, which is a real
possibility, and Lernen dies, which is also likely to happen sooner
rather than later, according to my sources, there are no more male
Wolfblades and Greneth's pledge is void."
"Marla has other sons."
"Stepsons," Teriahna corrected. "She has only two
natural-born sons
and neither of them has an heir. If they die, the Wolfblade line is at
an end."
"And if her daughters have sons?"
"Then they'd have as much claim as Hablet's daughters, no more. The
pledge specifies a Wolfblade male and even Narvell's claim is tenuous,
because he took his father's name when he became the Warlord of
Elasapine."
"You seem remarkably well informed on the matter of Hythrun
bloodlines."
"It's my job. Besides, I've been looking into the matter lately. The
Guild might be apolitical, but we are hardly politically naive. The
machinations of kings and princes affect us closely. We have a vested
interest in keeping things stable."
"Hence your reluctance to assassinate them."
"I see you understand our position."
Brak nodded, wondering how much he should tell Teriahna. For that
matter, it would not be long before she learnt of it anyway. Once Damin
reached Hythria, the news would spread like a grass fire.
They had reached the end of the wharf and took the carved stone
steps up to the paved road that circled the harbour. Brak glanced over
his shoulder, surprised at the distance they had covered. He had been
so engrossed in the conversation he had not noticed.
"Are you hungry? There's a tavern not far from here that serves the
best oysters in Fardohnya."
Brak nodded his agreement distractedly. The Raven led the way a
little further up the road to a small tavern with an arched entrance,
over which was carved the words "The Pearl of Talabar". The
tavern was
cramped, but clean and cool and Teriahna was obviously well known. The
owner hurried forward to greet them and showed them to a private booth
in the back that gave them a clear view of the rest of the room.
"Now," she said decisively, once they were seated. "I have
answered
your questions. I think it's time you answered a few of mine."
"If I can."
"What are you doing in Talabar?"
"I don't suppose you'd believe me if I said I was
sightseeing?" he
asked with a faint smile.
"No, I don't suppose I would. Nor do I think you sought out the
Guild to kill someone for you. So there has to be another
reason."
"There is."
She let out an exasperated sigh. "Well? Do I have to drag it from
you?"
He smiled. "I've come from Medalon."
"Medalon? That's an odd place for a Harshini to be."
"Not really. The Harshini who survived the Sisterhood's purges still
live in Medalon."
"Everyone believes the Harshini are extinct. Except you, of course.
You are thought to be the last. And we all thought you long
dead."
"The Harshini are not dead."
"So where are they?"
"I like you, Teriahna, but I don't trust you that much."
She nodded, her eyes glittering mischievously in the gloom. "I
didn't seriously think you'd tell me, but it was worth a try."
The conversation stopped as the tavern keeper arrived with two
platters of chilled oysters. Teriahna tucked into her meal with gusto,
slurping the oysters from their shells with obvious relish. The tavern
keeper left with a small, indulgent smile at the Raven. She caught his
look and smiled.
"I grew up around here. Mornt is an old friend," she
explained,
wiping her chin.
Brak picked up a shell and tipped the juicy contents down his
throat. Teriahna was right. Seasoned with something he could not
identify, it was delicious.
"Rumour has it the taste is the result of the oyster beds being in a
direct line of Talabar's sewage outlet."
Brak almost choked on the oyster as she burst out laughing.
"I'm kidding, Brak. Mornt has a secret recipe that he guards with
his life. We've been offered a small fortune to torture the information
out of him. We refused, naturally, and let Mornt learn of our refusal.
Now we eat here for free."
"A small price to pay for your life. I never realised the tavern
business was so cutthroat."
"You'd be surprised what we get asked to do."
"No doubt."
She swallowed another oyster. "So, you come from Medalon and the
first thing you do is seek out the Assassins' Guild. Why?"
"You're the best source of intelligence in Talabar."
"Flattery is not an answer. Just where were you in Medalon
exactly?"
"The northern border."
"So how goes the war? Are the Defenders winning? They ought to. They
deserve their reputation, by all accounts."
"Medalon has surrendered, Teriahna."
She made no attempt to hide her shock. "What? Why would they
surrender?"
"It's a long story, and one I have no intention of trying to
explain. But the fact is, Medalon has surrendered and is now in the
hands of the Kariens."
"Gods!" she muttered with concern. "I knew I should have
kept some
people in the north. Hablet's not going to be happy when he learns of
this. He was hoping the Kariens would keep the Defenders occupied for
years."
"I've other news that's going to please him even less. Tristan is
dead. He was killed in the only major confrontation between the two
armies."
She shook her head. "Now that's bad news. He would have made a good
King if Hablet could have found a way to legitimise him."
"It's not the worst of it," he warned.
"You mean there's more? I can't think of anything that would upset
Hablet more."
"Prince Cratyn is dead too."
"I doubt he'll lose much sleep over that news." Then
she
frowned. "So Adrina is a widow now?"
"Not exactly."
"Gods, Brak! Getting anything out of you is like pulling teeth! What
do you mean, not exactly?"
"She's remarried," he said, keeping his voice deliberately
emotionless. "To Damin Wolfblade."
Teriahna laughed. "Is this your idea of getting even for that
comment about the sewage pipes?"
He did not answer. The silence was heavy as Teriahna realised that
he was serious.
"Dear gods! How did that come about?"
"The demon child ordered it."
"The demon child? Now I know you're joking."
Once again, he let the silence speak for him. The Raven studied him
closely for a moment, then pushed her platter away. "This is no joke,
is it? There really is a demon child? Who is he?"
"She. Her name is R'shiel."
"That's a Medalonian name."
"That's right."
"The demon child is Medalonian? Gods! That's a strange turn
of events - an atheist who's descended from the gods. So, what
gives
the demon child the right to interfere in something that is likely to
destabilise every nation on the continent?"
"She's on a mission from the gods - quite literally. I
believe her
eventual plan is to bring peace to every nation on the continent, not
destabilise them."
"Then she has an odd way of going about it."
"You think so? If what you've told me is true, it seems the perfect
solution. Hablet has no son, which makes a Wolfblade his heir. That
heir is now married to his eldest daughter."
"Oh, I agree, it's a solution none of us would have imagined, but
how do you think Hablet is going to take the news? He wants to
obliterate the Wolfblade line, not welcome their favourite son into his
family."
"Well, he's going to have to get used to the idea. Can you get me
into the palace to see him?"
"Probably, although I don't suggest you use your real name. Hablet
is no more likely to believe Brakandaran the Half-Breed still lives
than I did." Her expression grew serious as she leaned forward
and
lowered her voice. "You have to understand, Brak: it suits a lot of
people to believe the Harshini are gone. They represented a way of life
that is long past, and while kings publicly lament their passing,
privately they are rather pleased the Harshini aren't around to act as
their conscience any more. Especially kings like Hablet."
"Then perhaps," Brak suggested ominously as he finished the
last of
his oysters, "it's time Hablet acquired a conscience."
CHAPTER 10
The storm was loud outside, battering against the
walls of the tavern where Mikel and Jaymes were staying with R'shiel.
Although the low-ceilinged taproom was warm, the fire smoked badly.
Their new Medalonian mistress did not seem to notice the choking haze,
the bad food, or the watery ale. She was deep in conversation with
another young woman she had arranged to meet here, who she had
introduced earlier as Mandah. The two of them had their heads close
together as they talked, although Mikel sensed there was little
friendship between the women. Mandah was a year or two older than
R'shiel, with long blonde hair, pretty eyes and an air of calm serenity
about her that Mikel had never encountered before.
They had been on the road for weeks now, pushing hard to cross the
Hythrun border before word of their flight reached the Citadel - or
worse, the Kariens. This night, in a run-down tavern in the small, poor
village of Roan Vale, was the first break in their relentless journey.
R'shiel had come here to meet with Mandah, to organise the remainder of
the pagan rebels to join them in Krakandar. At least, that's what he'd
heard her telling Lord Wolfblade. The rest of their party was camped
several leagues from the town, sheltering around an isolated farmhouse
they had commandeered.
"My Lady?"
R'shiel looked up from the mug of ale she was nursing. "Yes,
Jaymes?"
"The innkeeper says your rooms are ready. Shall I take your
saddlebags up?"
"If you like."
Jaymes glanced across at Mikel, then picked up R'shiel's bags and
headed for the staircase at the back of the room. Mikel ate the
strange-looking stew the inn provided, and listened as one of Mandah's
men came in to report.
"The road to Bordertown is blocked by a rockslide," the man
said. "You can either winter here in Roan Vale, or attempt to go
further
east, through Lodanville, and cross the border there."
"Winter here? I don't think so. How long will it take if we go
through Lodanville?" R'shiel asked with a frown.
"It will add at least a week, my Lady."
"It can't be helped, I suppose. I'll have to speak with Lord
Wolfblade, but I think we'll have no choice but to turn east in the
morning."
The rebel bowed and crossed to a table on the other side of the
room, where he joined his companions and gave them the news. They did
not look happy. One of them complained that the demon child was going
to lead them through every village in Medalon before they reached the
border. But it was a half-hearted complaint. They knew as well as
anyone that the weather was to blame for their delay.
Mikel swallowed the last of his stew and moved around to the other
side of the hearth, where the smoke seemed less suffocating, wondering
why these rebels seemed so ambivalent. He always imagined that the
Medalonians were like the Kariens - united under one purpose.
In
reality, there were more factions than he could count. There were the
Defenders, and the Sisterhood, and the pacifist pagans, and the pagan
rebels . . . and somewhere in amongst all that was the rest
of the population, caught in the middle of the power struggle.
"Psst!"
Mikel jumped at the sound and looked behind him. In the darkness
beside the hearth, under the woodpile, two large, liquid black eyes
stared out at him.
"What are you doing here?" he hissed. "Go away!"
The demon blinked, but did not move.
"Begone!" Mikel commanded in a firm whisper. That was what
R'shiel
said when she wanted the demons to leave. It must have something to do
with her being Harshini. It had absolutely no effect when Mikel tried
it. The demon simply cocked its head to one side with a look of blank
incomprehension on its leathery face.
Mikel looked around nervously. Although the tavern was full of pagan
rebels, Mikel did not know them well enough to trust their reaction if
they spied the creature. "You have to leave!" he insisted, this
time
speaking Medalonian, hoping the demon might understand that language.
"Go back to R'shiel!"
At the mention of R'shiel, the demon began to chitter excitedly.
"Be quiet!"
"Who are you talking to, Mikel?"
Mikel spun around guiltily. "No one, my Lady. I - I thought
I heard
something in the woodpile."
"Probably rats," R'shiel murmured. "Have you eaten?"
"Yes, my Lady."
"Then go and get some sleep, Mikel. We're leaving at first
light."
He climbed to his feet without looking back at the woodpile and
crossed the room until he was standing before R'shiel. "Do you mind if
I check the horses first, my Lady?"
R'shiel smiled at him distractedly. "If you like."
Mikel let himself out into the battering rain and ran the short
distance to the stables. Lightning streaked the sky as the rain
hammered down. He was shivering and soaked to the skin by the time he
pushed the large wooden stable door shut behind him.
"It's a sour night to be out and about, lad."
Mikel started at the voice and spun around, squinting in the
darkness. The voice belonged to an old man sitting on a haybale. He was
wrapped in a tattered dark cloak, smoking a long pipe that gave off a
sweet-smelling and vaguely familiar scent. Mikel studied him
suspiciously. He looked like some sort of vagabond who had taken
shelter from the storm, too poor to afford the inn.
"Who are you?"
"A friend."
"I don't know you."
"Oh, yes, you know me, Mikel."
"How do you know my name?"
The old man smiled and rose to his feet with a grace that belied his
age. He stepped closer to Mikel, his long white hair flowing over his
shoulders like a silken waterfall. His eyes were piercingly bright in
the gloomy stable.
"No matter, lad. I merely wanted to see that you are well."
"Why would you care?"
"I care about all my people," the old man said with a smile.
Despite his suspicions, Mikel found himself drawn to the man. There
was something about him, some seductive quality he could not define,
which made him want to throw himself into the old man's arms and lose
himself to the security and warmth of his presence.
"What do you want?"
"Nothing," the old man shrugged. "A moment of your time
perhaps. A
chance to talk. You travel with the demon child, I see."
"Who told you that?" Mikel demanded.
He smiled. "Nobody told me, Mikel. I can feel her presence. You are
very privileged to be counted among her friends."
Mikel's chest swelled a little at the compliment. "R'shiel trusts
me."
"I'm sure she does. It is a rare honour indeed. But don't you worry
that she is leading you into danger?"
"R'shiel is just trying to . . ." His voice
trailed off,
as he realised that he actually had no idea what R'shiel was trying to
do.
Smiling, the old man sucked on his pipe for a moment.
"She's helping her people," Mikel said with determination.
"She is trying to destroy your God."
"Which god?"
The old man sighed. "It is a sad world indeed if you have to ask
that question, Mikel. R'shiel is trying to destroy the Overlord. She
was created for that purpose."
"Why would she want to do that?"
"That is not important," the old man shrugged. "Merely that
you are
aiding her. Don't you worry for your eternal soul?"
"But the other gods said -"
"Ah, yes. The other gods. Well, who am I to deny what the other gods
have said? All I can do is warn you, I suppose."
"Warn me about what?"
"You are aiding the demon child. When the time for retribution
comes, your God will remember that you turned on him."
Mikel opened his mouth to object, but the words would not come. He had
turned on his God. He had honoured Dacendaran, the God of Thieves, and
was personally acquainted with Kalianah, the Goddess of Love. And
Gimlorie, the God of Music, had taught him how to sing.
"I didn't mean to," Mikel said in a small voice that was
almost
drowned out by the storm.
The old man smiled and opened his arms wide. "Xaphista forgives you,
my son."
Mikel ran to him, sobbing. Wrapped in the warm embrace of the old
man, he felt such an overwhelming love for his God that everything he
had done in the past seemed insignificant. The Overlord was the one
true God - the only God. He could not understand how he had
ever lost
sight of that fact.
After a long while, his tears ran out and he looked up into the eyes
of the old man.
"What must I do?" he asked.
Mikel returned to the tavern in a state of
elation. His whole being was filled with love for his God, his mind
focused only on the task before him. The rain had eased as he let
himself into the smoky taproom, and his small hand clutched his dagger.
He was filled with purpose and the secure knowledge that this was right.
R'shiel still sat at the table talking with Mandah, although they
had been joined by another man. He could hear what they were saying,
but the voices were muffled as if he was listening through a waterfall.
"The Defenders are planning to cross the Glass River at
Testra,"
R'shiel was telling them. "If you meet them on this side at Vanahiem,
you can tell them which way we went. Hopefully, by the time they cross
the river, the roads will be clear and they can get straight through to
Hythria."
The innkeeper must have overheard them. He hurried forward, pushed
Mikel out of the way and bowed to R'shiel, his expression horrified.
"Forgive me, my Lady, if I misunderstood you, but surely you're not
planning to bring these men through here?"
"Why not?"
"But the Kariens will be pursuing them! We'll be slaughtered if they
think we were harbouring traitors."
Mandah looked up at the overwrought tavern keeper with a smile.
"Woran, you've been harbouring rebels here since before I was
born."
"That's not true! This is a respectable establishment."
"This is a flea-ridden, rat-infested hovel," the man at the
table
laughed.
"But if the Karien priests should hear of it . . . And
what of the other people here in Roan Vale? Can't you send the
Defenders by another route?"
"It will be all right, Woran," Mandah assured him.
Mikel moved closer to the table. The dagger felt warm and comforting
in his hand. Mandah spied him and frowned. "Look at you, child, you're
drenched!"
R'shiel looked up at him with a shake of her head. "Go stand by the
fire, Mikel. You'll catch your death if you sleep in those wet
clothes."
Mikel did not answer. He stared at the demon child, seeing nothing
but the woman who was destined to destroy his God.
"Mikel? What happened to you?"
He turned slightly to find Jaymes standing behind him. His brother
seemed a stranger. Everyone in the room seemed to be a stranger.
"Come on," Jaymes said. "Let's go dry you out."
Mikel let Jaymes lead him to the fire without resisting. He looked
over his shoulder at R'shiel, but she had resumed her conversation with
Mandah and the other rebel. The dagger burned with unfulfilled longing
in his grasp.
"What were you thinking?" Jaymes asked as he peeled Mikel's
sodden
cloak from his shoulder. "Look at you! You're blue with cold and stiff
as a board."
The demon who had been hiding in the woodpile chittered at him in
concern as Jaymes shook out his dripping cloak. Mikel stared at the
creature for a moment in confusion. Its appearance made him lose his
train of thought and he suddenly began to notice how cold and wet he
was. He moved closer to the fire and glanced across the room at
R'shiel. She caught sight of him out of the corner of her eye and
smiled.
He smiled back with the odd feeling that he had meant to do
something important, but could not for the life of him remember what it
was. He realised then that his hand was still clutched around the hilt
of his dagger, his grip so tight that his fingers were cramping.
Mikel let it go, wondering why he was holding it.
PART 2
THE MEN WHO
WOULD BE KINGS
CHAPTER 11
Krakandar turned out to be nothing like Adrina
imagined. She had somehow developed the impression that Damin's home
was some sort of isolated, rustic abode with minimal amenities and
barely literate servants, all scurrying about in rat-infested,
thatch-covered huts. Well, perhaps that was an exaggeration,
but she was unprepared for the large, walled city that confronted her
some six weeks after she fled the border with Damin and Tarja.
Krakandar's population numbered close to twenty thousand. The city
had been carefully planned and was laid out in a series of concentric
rings. Not only that, but it was, even to the untrained eye,
impregnable. There were three rings, each one protected by
progressively more complex defences. The inner ring housed the palace
and most of the government buildings, including a huge store, which was
filled as insurance against a siege each year at harvest time. Just
prior to the harvest, the past year's grain was distributed to the
poor, and come harvest, Damin explained, the warehouses were filled
again for the following year. The central ring was mostly housing, the
residences progressively more imposing the closer one got to the inner
ring. The vast outer ring was the home to the markets and industries of
the city.
Built on a small hill, the palace commanded a view of the entire
city, which sprawled across the surrounding slopes with geometric
precision. The city was well maintained and constructed of the local
dark-red granite, which they quarried not far from the city and formed
one of Krakandar's major exports.
Damin told her this as they rode towards the city, the pride in his
voice taking her by surprise. He obviously loved his home, and as they
rode under the massive portcullis that protected the main gate, it was
apparent the citizens of Krakandar loved their Warlord in return.
Almodavar had sent word ahead that they were coming and for entirely
selfish reasons, Adrina was looking forward to finally reaching their
destination. More than a month in the saddle, living off trail rations
and what meat they had been able to hunt along the way, had left her
tanned and fit - but desperate for the trappings of
civilisation. She
had even managed to put on a bit of weight, she thought with despair.
When Krakandar came into view, all she could think of was a hot bath,
clean hair and the smell of something else besides leather and horses.
As word spread through the city that the Warlord had returned the
citizens of Krakandar lined the streets to catch a glimpse of him. It
was only a few at first but as the news ran ahead of them, the crowd
grew larger. The people stopped working and pushed forward to see him,
waving and calling out to Damin, who returned their greetings with a
grin, obviously delighted by the warmth of this welcome. Adrina rode
behind him, with R'shiel at her side, unaccountably put out by his
popularity. The demon child was looking about her with wide-eyed
wonder. She could be utterly ruthless when the need arose, but she
still showed traces of the young girl underneath when it was least
expected.
"Well, the peasants seem fond of him," Adrina remarked
sourly.
R'shiel laughed. "You really are determined to make this as
difficult as possible, aren't you?"
"I'm making things difficult? Don't try blaming me, R'shiel.
This was your idea, not mine."
"He adores you, you know."
Adrina looked at Damin's back and scowled. He was waving to the
people, calling out a greeting to a familiar face in the crowd. "Damin
loves himself, R'shiel," she retorted. "And his horse. He would
probably be upset if anything happened to Almodavar, but that's about
as far as it goes. He likes you because you are the demon child and
your friendship will help him claim his throne. His only interest in me
is political."
R'shiel raised her brow with a quizzical expression. "Is that what
those noises coming from your tent were? Political
negotiations?"
Adrina frowned, trying to think of some cutting rejoinder. Then the
silliness of the conversation struck her and she smiled reluctantly.
"All right, I admit I've been . . . negotiating
. . . more than is wise, but there wasn't much else to do for
entertainment, was there?"
"I'm sure you could have found something a little less dangerous if
you wanted to, Your Highness. Honestly, you're as bad as Damin. I
should wave my arm and do something Harshini to make you both see
sense."
"Why don't you?" she said aloud, but she had wondered before
why the
demon child had not simply called on her power to bend them to her will.
"Just between you and me, I don't know how."
"But you're the demon child! Doesn't that make you
omnipotent?"
"Omnipotent, maybe, but it doesn't mean I know very much about my
powers. Brak says I lack finesse."
"R'shiel, can I give you some advice?"
"If you think it will do any good."
"When you've turned someone's life upside-down, killed their
husband, ordered them to marry an enemy Prince and told them to risk
their life by announcing the fact to the entire world, please don't
tell them you don't know what you're doing. It's very
unsettling."
R'shiel smiled, but did not answer as they rode under the portcullis
of the second ring.
The ride through the central ring took even
longer. The crowd had grown so large that troops had been sent out from
the palace to hold the crowd back so that Damin's party could have a
clear path. The palace guards surprised Adrina. Unlike the Raiders
Damin had with him on the border, these men were uniformed in dark-red
leather breastplates embossed with a large hawk.
"Captain?" she asked, looking back over her shoulder at
Almodavar. "Why is the palace guard wearing a hawk? I thought Damin's
emblem was a
wolf?"
"It is, Your Highness. The hawk is the emblem of Elasapine. They are
Lord Hawksword's men."
R'shiel laughed aloud when she heard. "I don't believe it! Zegarnald
actually did what I told him!"
"You told the God of War what to do?"
R'shiel nodded, looking inordinately pleased with herself. "I wasn't
really sure that he would. I asked him to turn Damin's brother back, in
case we didn't make it here before your father tried invading
Hythria."
"His brother? Dear gods, you mean there's more of them?"
"It's his half-brother. Don't worry, Adrina. If Damin dies, I won't
make you marry him."
"I'll hold you to that," Adrina promised.
As they rode on towards the inner wall, Adrina looked around,
surprised at the affluence of the city and the people. Even the beggars
in the streets of the outer ring had looked quite healthy under their
rags and their professional air of misery. Here in the residential
district, mothers held up their babies for Damin's blessing, plump
slaves fanned their masters and mistresses as they leaned over their
balconies, and more than a few young ladies, noblewomen, peasants and court'esa
alike, called out quite preposterous proposals, which Damin
acknowledged with a laugh. One woman standing on the balcony of a very
elegant, red-brick house, bared her breast and called out a suggestion
that made even Adrina blush. Somewhat to her chagrin, Damin actually
responded with a promise to take her up on her offer some other time.
"The man has no morals," she muttered.
"That's a bit rich, coming from you," R'shiel remarked with
a grin.
"You'd never catch me making a public spectacle of myself like
that."
"Of course not. You prefer to negotiate, don't you."
Adrina was feeling sufficiently put out that she did not deign to
answer as they rode through the massive iron-reinforced gates into the
inner city.
The noise of the crowd behind them faded as they rode forward, the
clatter of the horses' hoofs loud on the cobbled pavement. The road
opened out into a vast courtyard, surrounded on three sides by
impressive buildings. To the left and right of the square were the
government buildings, three storeys high, gracefully symmetrical and
uniform. In front of them lay the sweeping steps of the palace itself,
lined with troops wearing the silver tabard-and-diamond symbol of the
Sorcerers' Collective.
Damin slowed his horse and glanced around, taking in the troops
lining the steps and then looking up at the walls, which were lined
with as many men wearing the hawk emblem of Elasapine as there were the
wolf of Krakandar.
"R'shiel."
The demon child rode up beside him. "Is something wrong?"
"I don't know. Are you ready to be the demon child? I have a feeling
I might need her."
"No, but don't let that stop you."
He treated her to a faint smile then turned to Adrina. "How about
you? Are you ready to face the High Arrion?"
"The High Arrion!"
"Her guard wouldn't be here without her," Damin pointed out.
"If
we're going to do this, we might as well make it look
plausible."
Adrina opened her mouth to make some sarcastic comment, then
suddenly thought better of it. Damin considered her intelligent.
Perhaps his sister, arguably the most powerful woman in Hythria, would
think the same thing. It would be a nice change.
"I'm ready."
She urged her horse forward until she rode on his left. R'shiel
unconsciously sat a little taller in the saddle on Damin's right, as if
the girl who had gaped at the sights of Krakandar a short while ago had
been put aside, and the demon child had taken over. It was interesting,
Adrina thought, and more than a little disturbing, the way she did that.
Three figures appeared at the top of the palace steps as they
approached. Adrina knew the woman on the left. They had met before, on
her only other visit to Hythria. Dressed in black, the diamond-shaped
symbol of her office winking in the sunlight, Adrina recognised her as
Kalan, High Arrion of the Sorcerers' Collective, Damin's half-sister.
The man on the left looked sufficiently like Kalan to be her twin, so
she guessed this was Narvell Hawksword, the Warlord of Elasapine,
although his gold-chased breastplate, with its swooping hawk, would
have given away his identity.
She did not recognise the woman in the middle. She was shorter than
the man and woman who flanked her, but carried herself as if the world
lay at her feet, waiting for her command. Adrina envied her poise,
while wondering who she was. Her fair hair was flecked with silver but
her skin was unlined. She studied Damin and the two women who rode
beside him with dark, watchful eyes.
Damin dismounted at the foot of the steps and, without waiting for
Adrina or R'shiel, took them two at a time until he reached the top. He
swept the older woman up and hugged her.
"Mother!"
Adrina hesitated and glanced at R'shiel, but the demon child had
obviously not heard of the fearsome reputation of Princess Marla of
Hythria.
"Put me down, Damin! You smell like a horse!"
Damin laughed and turned to Kalan, who took a step backward. "Don't
you dare touch me! I agree with mother, I can smell you from
here!"
"Fine greeting I get! Months away from home and all you can do is
complain about how I smell."
"Don't worry, brother. Within a day they'll have you drowned in
perfume and then it'll be your men complaining about the
stench,"
Narvell chuckled.
Damin embraced his half-brother warmly then held him at arm's length
for a moment. "It's good to see you, Narvell. I don't know what you're
doing here, but you're a welcome sight. I damned near fell off my horse
when I saw your troops marching out of the palace gates to hold back
the crowd. Did you get greedy while I was gone and invade me?"
"We can discuss what he's doing here later," Princess Marla
announced abruptly, then turned her piercing gaze on Adrina and
R'shiel. "In the meantime, you can introduce me to your
companions."
Damin knew better than to argue with her. He turned and beckoned
R'shiel forward. "Princess Marla, Lady Kalan, Lord Hawksword, may I
introduce Her Royal Highness, Princess R'shiel te
Ortyn."
Adrina wasn't sure who was more surprised at the declaration of her
full title, R'shiel or the trio on the steps. Kalan's jaw dropped.
Narvell looked puzzled. Marla stared at her openly then arched her brow
elegantly. "te Ortyn, did you say? I only know of one te Ortyn family."
"Then you understand the importance of our guest," Damin
replied
meaningfully with a glance at the troops who lined the steps and could
hear every word they said.
Marla's eyes narrowed. She understood exactly. "Of course. Forgive
me. You are most welcome, Your Highness."
"Thank you," R'shiel replied, looking rather uncomfortable.
Damin
would receive a tongue-lashing later, Adrina suspected. R'shiel was not
fond of her status as the demon child - and was even less keen
to be
reminded that her father had been a Harshini King. A few months among
the Harshini had not completely eradicated a lifetime of prejudice
instilled in her by the Sisters of the Blade.
"And this," Damin announced, holding his hand out to Adrina,
"is my
wife."
"Your wife?" Kalan gasped. It was plain she
recognised
Adrina.
She accepted his hand and stepped up beside him. "Adrina, I'd like
you to meet my mother, Princess Marla; my brother, Narvell; and I
believe you already know my sister, Kalan."
"Adrina?" Marla remarked, looking Adrina over coldly.
"That's a
Fardohnyan name and I only know of one Fardohnyan Adrina. Please tell
me this is not the one I've heard of?"
"Perhaps we could continue this discussion in private?"
Damin
suggested, before his mother could get too worked up. Adrina was a
little taken aback by her reaction. She was hardly expecting a warm
welcome, but Princess Marla seemed quite appalled. She wisely remained
silent, letting Damin deal with his mother.
"I think we'd better," Narvell agreed. He waved his arm and
men
rushed forward to take their horses. Almodavar dismissed his men and
they were led inside to the marble-floored foyer of the palace. Tamylan
and the two Karien boys looked a little lost until Almodavar took them
under his command and ushered them away.
Marla led the way into the palace, her slippers silent on the highly
polished floor. Eventually they reached a pair of ornately carved doors
at the far end of the main hall. She threw them open and marched
inside, turning as soon as Narvell closed the doors behind them.
"So, you are Adrina of Fardohnya?" she accused without
preamble.
"Yes, Your Highness, I -"
"I thought you were married to Cratyn of Karien?"
"I was, but -"
"How in the name of the gods did you happen to marry my son?"
"I -"
"Mother!"
"Have you lost your mind, Damin!" Marla demanded, turning on
him. "Whatever she did to trap you into this marriage, it must be
undone
immediately! I will not jeopardise everything we have worked for, just
because you were taken in by some Fardohnyan whore!"
"If you would let me explain . . ."
"Explain? You think you can offer any explanation that will
satisfy me? And while you're at it, you might like to think of what
you're planning to tell your uncle and the Warlords! Lernen will have a
fit when he hears of this. I can't begin to think of what the Warlords
are going to say!"
"Mother -"
"All my life I have done nothing but try to secure your throne. It
was bad enough your abandoning your province to go chasing off to
Medalon. Your unauthorised and ill-timed treaty with the Defenders had
the Warlords howling for your blood. And now, after I spend months
trying to win them over on your behalf, you throw it all away for the
sake of a woman. And a foreigner at that!" She turned suddenly
and
glared at Adrina. "No, not just any foreigner! You had to go and marry
the most notorious harlot on the whole continent!"
Adrina looked to Damin for support. He sat on the edge of the
gold-inlaid desk, listening to his mother's rage with barely concealed
amusement. It annoyed her intensely that instead of defending her he
thought it was funny.
"Are you finished yet?" R'shiel asked quietly, from the back
of the
room. She had been studying the books in the bookcases that lined the
walls of the study, but now she turned to them, the command in her
voice impossible to deny.
Marla glared at her. She was not used to having her authority
challenged.
"And who are you to tell me what to do?"
"I am R'shiel te Ortyn."
"So you claim!" the Princess scoffed. "You're no Harshini!
What
right do you have to use the name of the Harshini royal family?"
"Lorandranek was my father."
"That's absurd!" Kalan declared. "You're human. If
Lorandranek was
your father, that would make you the . . ." Her
voiced
trailed off as she realised what she was about to say.
"Yes?" R'shiel prompted.
"It's not possible!"
"You of all people, should know that it is
possible," Damin
pointed out.
"What are you talking about, Damin?" Narvell asked.
"Tell him, Kalan."
Kalan glanced at her twin and shrugged. "If this young woman is
really who she claims to be, then she is . . . the demon
child."
Narvell looked impressed by the news, but Marla was not so easily
persuaded. "This girl? The demon child? Damin, they must have
fed you something in the north that affected your reason. You surely
don't believe it, do you?"
"R'shiel is the demon child, mother. She was placed in my
care by Zegarnald himself."
Kalan stared at him with astonishment. "You spoke to the God of
War?"
"In the flesh."
"He spoke to me, too," Narvell admitted. "It's why I turned
back."
"This is unprecedented."
"Everything about me is unprecedented," R'shiel remarked.
"So, if
we're through with the histrionics, perhaps we can start again.
Princess Marla, I think you owe your daughter-in-law an apology. She's
really not that bad. As for you, High Arrion, you and I need to have a
talk. Damin, can you do something about rooms for us? Your mother was
right about that much at least - we all stink like horses.
Perhaps once
everyone has had a chance to clean up and calm down, we can sort this
out like rational human beings."
Princess Marla stared at R'shiel with undisguised horror, although
whether it was because she found herself face-to-face with a legend, or
simply R'shiel's high-handed manner, Adrina could not tell.
CHAPTER 12
Damin knocked on the door of the rooms adjacent to
his that his Chief Steward had allocated to Adrina and opened it
without waiting for an answer, a little surprised to find it unlocked.
The room had been his mother's once, on the rare occasions she had
lived at Krakandar when he was a child. It was furnished in her
impeccable taste: the rooms airy and light; the rugs imported from
Karien; the crystal made in Fardohnya; the red granite floors polished
to perfection. Not a piece of the whitewood furniture was out of place;
not a vase or lamp did not belong here.
He followed the sound of voices through the sitting room and into
the dressing room beyond. Adrina was standing before the full-length
mirror, examining herself critically. She was dressed in a long,
sleeveless robe that fell softly to the floor in a cascade of emerald
silk. Her slave was moving about in the next room, tidying up after her
mistress' bath. She turned sharply as she caught sight of her husband
in the mirror.
"Damin!"
"I didn't mean to startle you."
"Don't you know how to knock?"
"I did knock."
"Oh . . ." She straightened her gown and studied
him for a
moment. "There's something different about you . . . I know
what it is. I've never seen you so clean. You almost look
civilised."
Damin had not given much thought to what he wore. A white silk
shirt, trousers and polished boots hardly seemed to warrant such
admiration. But compliments, even backhanded ones, were a rare thing
from Adrina, so he chose not to make an issue of it.
"Do you have everything you need?"
"Yes, thank you. Your sister sent along the dress. I don't know who
it belonged to before me, but it's an adequate fit."
"Well, if you need anything, just ask Orleon, my Chief Steward.
He'll see that you get it."
"Thank you."
"I'll have a seamstress sent to you tomorrow. You're going to need a
suitable wardrobe."
An uncomfortable silence settled on them as Damin wondered how to
broach the subject he'd come here to speak about. Adrina was a volatile
and unpredictable woman. He had no way of knowing how she would react
to what he had to say.
"I'm sorry about my mother. She shouldn't have spoken the way she
did."
"We both knew this wasn't going to be easy, Damin. Her reaction was
nothing less than I expected." She smiled suddenly, her eyes
glinting. "I will console myself with the thought of my father's
reaction when he
hears about it. I imagine your mother will seem quite reasonable by
comparison."
"That's true," he agreed, relieved things were going so
well. "But,
I do have a favour to ask."
"A favour?"
"We caught Marla off-guard today. You may not have heard the worst
of it. It would be . . . easier . . ."
"If I bite my tongue and let her insult me?" Adrina finished
for him.
"Something like that."
He expected her to explode at that point, but to his astonishment,
she nodded her agreement. "Don't worry, I'll behave."
"You will?"
"Don't sound so surprised. I plan to survive this farcical
arrangement, Damin, and to do that, I'll need your mother on my side.
You'd be surprised how charming I can be when the mood takes
me."
Actually, Damin wouldn't have been surprised at all. She could be
very disarming when she wanted something. "Well, if you can win Marla
over, you'll have the whole of Hythria at your feet."
"That's the plan," she agreed. "And in the meantime?"
"In the meantime, you should be safe enough here in the palace. I'll
have Almodavar hand-pick your bodyguards. You have to promise you won't
try leaving the palace without them."
Adrina scowled, but nodded. "I suppose."
"I've already arranged for a message to go to the Assassins'
Guild,"
he added. "I plan to hire them before someone else thinks of it. They
are very loyal employees."
"You mean they stay bought."
"It's the same thing in the end."
She sighed, as if the realisation that life would be difficult for
some time to come had just dawned on her. Damin could not fathom her
mood.
"Well, if you've everything you need, I'll see you at dinner. I'll
have Orleon send someone to show you the way."
"Damin," she called as he turned to leave. "Why are your
mother and
the High Arrion here in Krakandar? I know R'shiel arranged for
Zegarnald to turn Narvell back, but that doesn't explain the other
two."
"I don't know," he admitted, a little surprised that she'd
asked. He
reminded himself, yet again, not to underestimate his wife.
"Well, I suggest you find out. I may not be an expert on Hythrun
politics, but I do know the High Arrion doesn't do anything without a
good reason, and I suspect your mother hasn't made an impulsive move in
her entire life."
It was a remarkably accurate assessment, considering her short
acquaintance with his family. Damin wished for a moment that he could
trust her. She would make a daunting High Princess - if she
didn't try
to murder him first.
"We'll find out what's behind their presence soon enough. Once Marla
has gotten over the news about you."
"Well, if she doesn't like the idea, tell her to take it up with the
demon child," she told him, picking up a silver-backed
hairbrush. She
turned her back to him and began brushing out her long dark hair.
He had been dismissed.
* * *
Damin let himself out of Adrina's rooms, thinking
on what she had said about his mother and sister. She wasn't far off
the mark. Marla did nothing without thinking it through. As for Kalan,
Adrina was right about her too. The High Arrion would not leave
Greenharbour without a very good reason. His unease at finding his
palace steps lined with silver-uniformed soldiers from the Sorcerers'
Collective still lingered.
"My Lord?"
Damin turned to find Orleon coming towards him at his usual,
unhurried pace. The old man was as much a part of Krakandar Palace as
the stones in the walls. He never aged noticeably that Damin could see.
He still seemed the same, grey-haired, eagle-eyed watchdog that he'd
been when Damin was a child.
"Yes, Orleon?"
"You have a visitor, my Lord."
From the slight tone of reproach, Damin could guess who it was.
"Where is he?"
"In the Morning Room, my Lord. I suggest you go there now, while we
still have the silverware."
Damin grinned at Orleon's expression and changed the direction he
was headed. The Morning Room was on the ground floor, and he took the
broad marble steps two at a time, anxious to see his visitor. When he
threw open the door, the man in question was holding up a small statue
to the light, examining it with the critical eye of an expert.
"It's not worth your attention," Damin told him, as he
closed the
door behind him. "You'd get more for the candelabra."
The fair-haired man slowly replaced the statue on the mantle before
he turned to Damin.
"Perhaps. But that's inscribed with the Krakenshield crest. Too easy
to trace it back to its source."
"When has that ever bothered you?"
The man smiled and crossed the room, catching Damin in a crushing
bear hug, before holding him at arm's length to look at him closely.
Older by two years, but of a much slighter build, his clothes were
expertly cut of expensive silk and he wore them with the cavalier air
of a nobleman. His blue eyes were bright with intelligence and a level
of animal cunning that Damin had often envied as a child. He looked
prosperous and happy. Business must be good, Damin thought, not
altogether pleased by the thought.
"Welcome home, Damin. It's good to see you."
"It's good to see you too, Starros. How's business?"
"It'll be better now that you're home."
Damin moved to the sidetable, shaking his head. "I'm sure you mean
it as a compliment, old friend, but telling me that my return is going
to favour Krakandar's criminal element, really doesn't thrill
me."
He pulled the stopper from the decanter and poured two cups of wine,
handing one to Starros with a smile. The thief frowned as he accepted
the wine.
"You know what I mean, Damin. All these troops from the Sorcerers'
Collective and Elasapine filling up our streets is no good for my
people."
"Maybe I should invite them to stay."
"Maybe you should invite them to leave," Starros corrected.
Damin looked at him curiously. "Perhaps you'd better fill me
in."
They settled into the heavily padded chairs on either side of the
hearth. The fire burned low - more glowing coals than flame - but it
gave off enough heat to take the chill out of the air. Damin carried
the decanter with him, certain he would need another drink before
Starros was through.
"The Collective troops arrived about a month ago. Kalan made quite
an impressive entrance, and then declared the city under the
Collective's protection. Your mother arrived before her by a few days,
and Narvell and his henchmen got here last week."
"Why did Kalan place the city under the Collective's protection?
That only happens when a Warlord dies without an heir."
"You'll have to ask Kalan, I'm afraid. I tried to get in to see her,
but she doesn't entertain the likes of me since she became High
Arrion."
Damin frowned, wondering what was really going on. He'd had no
chance to speak to Kalan alone since he arrived, and she had not sought
him out. Even more worrying was Kalan's refusal to see Starros. The
leader of the Thieves' Guild was - so rumour claimed -
Almodavar's
bastard son. He had grown up here in the palace with them and was
counted among their closest friends. Even if she could not acknowledge
her friendship with Starros openly, she had never refused to see him
before.
"What else has been happening since I left?"
"Not much. Things were pretty quiet until your mother got here. But
then things always get sticky once she turns up."
Damin smiled in fond remembrance. "You remember that time she
arrived from Elasapine and we'd gone fishing in the woods?"
"The time she found me beating the stuffing out of you in that
bog?"
Starros laughed. "I remember. Gods, we must have looked a sight. All
mud and blood and black eyes."
"You were not beating me," Damin corrected. "I was
letting
you win."
"You were bawling your eyes out like a baby!"
"I was not!"
"You were so! And I'll never let you forget it, either. It was the
only time I ever beat you in a fair fight, Damin Wolfblade."
Starros
finished his wine and held out his cup for a refill. Damin shook his
head and smiled. It wasn't really worth arguing about. He leaned over
and filled the cup without getting out of his chair. Starros sipped the
wine appreciatively. "So, I hear you've taken a bride."
"That's right."
"A Fardohnyan?"
"That's right."
"Well, you always did like to live dangerously. Is she
pretty?"
"Very."
"Worth the trouble?"
Damin grinned. "I haven't decided yet."
Starros chuckled softly. "And the rumour that you have brought the
demon child to Hythria? Is that true?"
Damin lowered the cup from his lips and stared at Starros. "Where
did you hear that?"
"I have my sources," the thief told him smugly.
"I'm serious, Starros. How did you hear about it so soon?"
"Soon? Hell, we've known about it for weeks!" He looked at
Damin,
his smile fading.
"Who told you?"
"It's really bothering you, isn't it? Nobody told me, not in the way
you're thinking. It was a bit odd, actually. About six or seven weeks
ago, an old man appeared in the city. Didn't bother anyone at first,
just roamed the streets trying to convince the working court'esa
that their eternal souls were in danger if they didn't renounce their
way of life. He stood on a few street corners and gave speeches that
nobody listened to. You know the type. We average about one prophet a
month in a good year, so we paid him little attention."
"But -" Damin prompted, certain there was more to
the story.
"Do you remember Limik the Leopard?" Starros asked.
"Tall fellow? Scarred hands?"
Starros nodded. "He burned them as a child."
"Didn't I have him flogged once for beating his wife?"
"That's the one. Hard case through and through."
"I remember him," Damin said. "What's he got to do with the
old man?"
"I'm getting to that. I sent Limik out on a job . . . oh,
about three weeks ago, I think. A certain merchant in Felt Street had a
bad habit of leaving his wife's jewellery laying about the house. In
our profession, that sort of carelessness can't be allowed to go
unpunished."
"Of course not," Damin agreed wryly.
"Anyway, Limik's an old hand at that sort of thing, so I sent him
out to teach our merchant friend a lesson. He did the job and was on
his way back to the Guild when he bumped into the old man."
"What happened?"
"Limik went back to the house, confessed his crime to the merchant -
who didn't even realise he'd been robbed - and from that day
on, he
followed the old man around like a puppy, telling anyone who'd listen
that he'd denounced Dacendaran, and was now a follower of another
god."
"Which other god?"
"He didn't say. But he used the word 'sin' a lot."
Damin frowned. "That sounds like Xaphista."
"Not even Limik, in the throes of religious ecstasy, is stupid
enough to use that name out loud in the streets of Krakandar,"
Starros
said. "But after that day, the old man changed his tune. He started
talking about you. Said you'd allied yourself with the godless ones - I
guess he meant the Medalonians - and that you were consorting
with the
demon child. Next thing you know, Kalan turns up with her troops and
places the city under the Collective's protection."
"Where is this old man now?"
"Gone," Starros shrugged. "As soon as I got word you were on
your
way home, I sent my people out to find him. He's dropped out of sight.
Vanished as if he was never here."
"And Limik?"
"The day after the old man vanished, Limik robbed three houses and a
tavern. He claims he can't remember a thing. Threatened to knife me for
even suggesting he'd ever confess to any crime, let alone turn away
from Dacendaran."
Damin stared into his wine for a moment. "So, what's your
theory?"
"I don't have one, Damin. Strange old men and inexplicable religious
experiences are not my line of business. That's what we have a High
Arrion for."
Damin nodded, more than a little concerned. "I'll mention it to
Kalan."
"You might want to mention it to the demon child, too."
"Why?"
"Because along with reforming thieves and prostitutes, the old man
was trying to find someone willing to kill her."
CHAPTER 13
"Damin!"
Still brooding over Starros' disturbing news, Damin was startled out
of his reverie by R'shiel. He turned as she ran the length of the broad
hall, skidding on the polished floor as she neared him.
"What's wrong?"
"Nothing. I need to see Kalan, and Orleon told me she's in the
Solar. As I have no idea what a Solar is or how to find it in this
rabbit warren you call a palace, I was hoping you could show me the
way."
"Of course," he said, offering his arm. She took it lightly
and fell
into step beside him. Her hair was damp from her bath, but she still
wore the Harshini leathers she favoured so much. At least he thought
they were made of leather. They never seemed to get dirty the way
other, ordinary clothes did.
"So, have you spoken to Adrina?"
"Yes. She's being remarkably cooperative. It has me worried."
R'shiel laughed. "Enjoy it while it lasts, Damin."
"You know, the annoying thing is, she's actually very smart
underneath that obnoxious attitude of hers. But I still don't trust
her."
"You should. She does love you, you know."
"Adrina? Don't be absurd. She loves flirting with danger. And power.
And herself."
"She said much the same thing about you."
Damin looked at R'shiel, shaking his head. "Stop trying to create
romance where there is none, R'shiel. You wanted us to marry and we
did, but don't think you can ease your own guilt by inventing some
relationship between us that doesn't exist."
She studied him thoughtfully for a moment then shrugged. "As you
wish."
They walked in silence after that, through the long, wide halls of
the palace, each of them certain that the other was wrong.
Kalan greeted them as they stepped into the Solar.
"Demon child; Damin."
"My name is R'shiel."
"It would be improper of me to address you so informally, Divine
One."
R'shiel sighed. "Whatever."
The room had been added to the palace by Damin's paternal
grandmother and was roofed in clear glass tiles. The far wall was also
glassed, and opened out into the palace gardens, which were looking
rather forlorn, Damin noted with a frown. The furniture here had been
cleverly wrought from iron, brightly coloured cushions relieving its
convoluted lines. Damin never used the room much. As children they had
avoided it. It was too easy for some passing palace courtier to see
inside and discover what mischief they were up to.
"There are a few things I need to ask you," R'shiel
explained.
"Then I'll leave you two in private," Damin said. Getting
caught
between the High Arrion and the demon child was not something he
relished.
"I think you should stay, Damin," Kalan suggested. "I
imagine this
concerns you as much as anyone."
"I don't think . . ."
"Stay, Damin," R'shiel ordered. "There's nothing I need to
ask the
High Arrion that you don't already know about."
"Before I answer your questions, Divine One, perhaps you'd like to
start by telling me what absurd Harshini plot you've cooked up that
required my brother to betray his country by marrying that Fardohnyan
harlot."
"While we're all so busy with explanations, you can tell me what you're
doing here with an occupation force," he retorted. For some
reason,
Kalan's insistence on referring to Adrina as "that Fardohnyan
harlot"
was starting to aggravate him.
"Damin, calm down," R'shiel advised then turned to the High
Arrion. "Don't judge Adrina too harshly, Kalan. She has a good head on
her
shoulders and your brother loves her."
"Not that I noticed."
"Then you're not as observant as I thought," R'shiel
shrugged. "Please sit down. This could take a while so we might as well
be
comfortable."
"If you're planning to convince me this is a good idea, then we
could be here all night," Kalan remarked as she sat down on the
chaise
near the fireplace. The clouds moving in front of the sun shadowed the
room. It made her expression hard to read.
"There was a time when the Hythrun did not question the
Harshini."
"That time is long past, demon child. The Harshini abandoned us and
we learnt to survive on our own. Nothing personal, mind you -
the
Harshini presence in Greenharbour has been most welcome these past few
months - but why should we submit to your people again?"
"Because without the Harshini all Hythria will continue to be is a
pack of squabbling Warlords, each trying to kill the others to gain
more territory," Damin said. "Hythria is better than
that."
"That's very noble of you, Damin. You hope to appeal to my
patriotism in lieu of my political instincts, is that it?"
Kalan
smiled, as if the very idea was laughable.
"No, it's your political instincts we're relying on."
Kalan turned to R'shiel. "What do you mean?"
"I have to destroy Xaphista, Kalan. I'm hoping you can tell me
how."
"You think the Sorcerers' Collective is privy to such
secrets?"
"It's hardly something I can ask the Harshini."
Kalan smiled faintly. "I suppose not, but don't get your hopes up,
Divine One. There may be something in the archives that I'm not aware
of, but even in ancient times, the gods weren't renowned for
documenting the instructions for their own demise and leaving them
lying about where a mortal could find them. And even if we have the
knowledge you seek, with Hythria on the brink of civil war, I've
neither the time nor the inclination to aid you in such an
undertaking."
"On the brink of civil war?" Damin scoffed. "Aren't you
exaggerating
just a little, Kalan?"
"You don't know the half of it, brother," she scowled. "You
wanted
to know what I was doing here? Well, I'll tell you. I'm here because
the Warlord of Dregian Province tried to have you declared dead and
your province gifted to his younger brother. Krakandar is currently
under the protection of the Sorcerers' Collective. I occupied your city
because without me, you wouldn't have a city."
"Cyrus tried to have me removed?" The idea was laughable.
"It's worse than that. He's publicly calling you a traitor."
"Let him! Who would believe him anyhow?"
"A lot of people. You left Krakandar all but unguarded, and even the
lowliest beggar in the street has heard the rumours that Fardohnya is
planning to invade us. You made a treaty with Medalon without
consulting anyone. You sent Narvell to Bordertown to help the
Defenders. It might have been different if you'd sent him to guard your
border, but you didn't. You sent him into Medalon. And now you return
home like nothing is wrong, bringing with you the daughter of our worst
enemy as your bride. The wonder is not that Cyrus has accused you,
Damin. It's that nobody has acted on it until now."
"I have to get to Greenharbour," he said, thinking of
several rather
painful and exotic things that he would like to do to the Warlord of
Dregian Province. "I'll put that obnoxious little upstart in his place.
What's Lernen been doing while all this is going on?"
"Fretting," Kalan told him. "He's not been well lately and
Cyrus has
his ear. He knows what Lernen likes and, more importantly, what he
fears. You've no idea the damage he's done in your absence."
R'shiel was looking at him with concern. He did not realise how
dangerous his expression was until he caught a glimpse of himself in
the glass.
"Don't do anything hasty, Damin."
"What I plan to do to Cyrus will be very, very slow,
R'shiel."
"I don't have time for you to start a war, Damin."
He smiled coldly. "Don't worry. It'll be a nasty little war, but a
short one."
"How long ago did all this happen?" R'shiel asked Kalan,
sparing
Damin an exasperated look.
"Over a month ago. I've been here since the Feast of Jonadalup.
Mother came here as soon as she realised Krakandar was under threat.
Narvell arrived six days ago."
"But now that he's back, you can release Krakandar and return to
Greenharbour, right?"
"No. We'll have to go back to Greenharbour so Damin can petition the
Convocation of Warlords for the return of his province."
"Petition the Warlords!" Damin exploded angrily. "The hell I
will!"
R'shiel shrugged philosophically. "Then we'll go to
Greenharbour."
"R'shiel -"
"Damin, we have to get this sorted out quickly. Medalon is under
Karien control and I can't do anything about it until I've found out
how to deal with Xaphista. If that means sorting out your damned
Warlords, then that's what we'll do."
"What's the hurry?" Kalan asked suspiciously. "Xaphista has
been the
dominant power in the north for centuries. A few more months one way or
the other won't make much difference."
"It's not just the Overlord. I promised to help the Defenders retake
Medalon. There's a thousand Defenders headed this way," Damin
told her.
"You're bringing Defenders onto Hythrun soil? Damin, how could
you?" she cried in horror.
"They come as allies," R'shiel reminded her.
"There is no such thing, as far as the Warlords are concerned. If
those Defenders step one foot into Hythria before this is resolved,
there will be nothing I can do to save you, Damin. You will lose
Krakandar, the High Prince's throne and probably your life."
The High
Arrion turned to R'shiel, her eyes burning with anger. "You are
responsible for this too, I suppose?"
"Sort of," R'shiel admitted.
"And how does this fit into your grand plan to destroy
Xaphista?"
"If we don't turn the Kariens back from Medalon, Hythria is next,
Kalan. I can hardly destroy him if he's getting stronger, rather than
weaker. We need the Defenders and every man the Hythrun can muster.
Only then can we restore the Primal Gods to millions of people who now
worship Xaphista."
"What do you mean, you're going to weaken Xaphista by restoring the
Primal Gods to Karien?"
"What did you think I was going to do? Hunt Xaphista down and then
throw fireballs and lightning bolts at him? Unless you've got some
handy little scroll with precise instructions on how to do that tucked
away in your archives, the only way I can seriously threaten the
Overlord is to shake the faith of his believers. And I can't do that
while he's rampaging through the continent, conquering everything in
sight. The Defenders must be helped. Medalon must be freed."
"And how do you plan to restore the Primal Gods?"
"That's where you come in."
Kalan stared at her, wide-eyed. "I fail to see
. . ."
"The Sorcerers' Collective is the closest thing to an organised
religion that I have to work with," R'shiel explained, a little
impatiently. "The Kariens are used to being organised. It's how
Xaphista maintains control. I can't just destroy his Church. I have to replace
it."
"Since the withdrawal of the Harshini our power has been eroded
considerably."
"I know. But Brak told me that the Sorcerers' Collective once sent
out their emissaries to every corner of the continent. He said they
could travel through a war zone with impunity."
Kalan nodded. "They were protected by their black robes, their
diamond-shaped pendant and the deep respect the people had for our
fellowship."
"Those days are long past," Damin warned. "Anyone caught
wearing the
diamond pendant in Fardohnya these days is imprisoned as a Hythrun spy.
In Medalon they're liable for deportation. In Karien, they're burned at
the stake."
"I can change that. We can change it. But I need your help,
Kalan. I need access to your archives. I need Hythria united and at
peace with Fardohnya, and we need Hythrun help to push the Kariens
back. And I need the Collective. Only then can I face the Overlord with
a chance."
Kalan nodded as the ramifications dawned on her. "Assuming we can
save Damin's province and bring our troops to aid Medalon, how do you
propose to convert the Kariens?"
"I don't wish to tip my hand by revealing that."
Damin glanced at her askance, wondering if her reticence was
deliberate or she simply didn't have a clue.
Kalan's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Yet you demand my
cooperation?"
"I'm asking for it, Kalan. If I wanted to demand it, I would
ask one of the gods to appear and make it a divine edict."
"Then let me see if I understand you. You want me to return to
Greenharbour and announce that the Collective sanctions the marriage of
the Hythrun heir to Hablet's daughter. You then, I assume, want me to
issue some sort of dire threat to the Warlords who oppose this union,
to make them toe the line. And while you're scrabbling through my
archives looking for something that probably doesn't exist, you want me
to get them to release Krakandar back to Damin and convince them that a
thousand or more Defenders pouring over our border is an act of
friendship, not war."
"That would help," R'shiel agreed.
"And you? Having dragged half the world to the brink of war, what
will you do, exactly?"
"Hand you and your Collective more power than they've known for
centuries," the demon child told her.
Kalan sat, silent and thoughtful for a moment. "You make a powerful
and tempting offer, demon child."
"You're not likely to get another like it."
Kalan looked down at her hands again before meeting R'shiel's eye.
"You may, of course, have access to our archives. They are as much the
property of the Harshini as they are ours. As for the rest of it
. . . I cannot give you an answer now. I must think on this.
What you ask is unprecedented. And I wish to speak with my
mother." She
glanced up at Damin. "You are aware of this plan, I assume?"
He nodded. "So is Adrina."
"Well that explains this absurd marriage, at any rate."
Kalan rose to her feet and brushed an imaginary speck of dust from
her long black robe. Her fair hair fell forward and when she looked up
for a moment she appeared much younger and more innocent than she truly
was.
"I will give you my answer when I have come to a decision. Damin;
demon child." She bowed politely and left the Solar.
Damin turned to R'shiel, shaking his head. She met his look, puzzled
by his expression. "What?"
"I was just thinking how well you manipulate people,
R'shiel."
"You sound like you don't approve."
"I never said I didn't approve. I just can't handle never knowing
what you're going to do next."
"You might find it's better that way," she suggested with
the ghost
of a smile.
Damin doubted that, but decided against pursuing the matter.
"R'shiel, do you see Dacendaran much?"
"I haven't seen him since we left the Karien border."
"Can you speak to him?"
"I suppose."
"Can you ask him if anyone has been interfering in his
followers?"
"If you want. Why?"
"I'm not sure. I just heard something that bothers me a bit, that's
all."
"I'll ask him if you think it's important."
"That's just it," he admitted. "I don't really know if it
is, or
not."
CHAPTER 14
R'shiel would have liked to explore Krakandar, but
her status as the demon child was a significant obstacle. She had
naively hoped that her identity could be kept secret until they reached
Greenharbour. She'd had a vague notion that she would confront the
Council of Warlords, tell them to behave because she, the demon child,
commanded it, find the secret to destroying Xaphista in the
Collective's archives, then return to Medalon with a Hythrun army at
her back. The chances of that happening now seemed remote. It had not
occurred to her just how much the legend of the demon child meant to
these pagans, or how much Damin planned to exploit it. The news had
spread and a crowd had gathered outside the gates of the inner city,
hoping to catch a glimpse of her.
Although raised as the daughter of a Quorum Member, R'shiel had
never been the subject of public speculation before and she found it
extremely disconcerting. Her status as a Novice, and later a Probate in
the Sisterhood, had meant she had led a fairly normal life, such that
it was, until circumstances and her own rebellion had conspired to
forever change its course. She was not trained to deal with being a
public figure, at least not on this scale.
It was Adrina who came to her rescue. Born and bred to be in the
public eye, she seemed to know what to do without thinking about it. In
fact, she seemed quite determined to teach R'shiel everything she could
- as if it gave her a purpose in life, other than avoiding her
mother-in-law.
Thinking of Adrina made R'shiel think of Damin. Now that she had met
his mother and sister, she understood what fascinated Damin about
Adrina. He had grown up surrounded by intelligent, powerful women, and
Adrina was everything he admired. Of course, he was too dense to
realise it, just as Adrina was too stubborn to admit how she felt about
Damin. The pair of them made R'shiel want to scream with frustration.
But at least they were doing what was required of them, and if they
were too pig-headed to work out how they felt about each other, that
was their problem, not hers.
A knock at the door was a welcome diversion from her woes. She
called out a command to enter and was startled to find that her visitor
was Princess Marla. R'shiel leapt out of her chair as the Princess
swept into the room.
"You are comfortable here?" Marla asked, glancing around the
room to
ensure that everything was as it should be.
"Very comfortable, thank you, Your Highness."
"We must talk, demon child. I have many questions for you."
R'shiel nodded, unsurprised. She'd been expecting this ever since
she had spoken to Kalan.
"Of course. Won't you have a seat? I can order some refreshments if
you wish. Mikel!"
The boy appeared from the next room at her command. "My
Lady?"
"Fetch us some wine, Mikel."
The boy bowed awkwardly and hurried from the room. R'shiel turned
back to the Princess who was staring at her suspiciously.
"I won't be drinking wine with you, my girl," she announced.
"I plan
to keep my wits about me."
"Water, then?"
"That will do."
Marla seated herself beside the fire as R'shiel poured water from a
silver pitcher into a matching cup for the Princess.
Winter in Krakandar was much milder than in Medalon, so the fire was
banked low, more for the convenience of not having to light it later
than from any real need for warmth. She handed the cup to Marla and
took the chair opposite.
"So, what is it you wanted to ask me?"
"You are very blunt."
"I was raised to speak my mind."
"By the Sisterhood, Damin informs me."
"That's correct."
Marla did not look pleased to have her information confirmed. "So
it's true then that you are Joyhinia Tenragan's daughter?"
"She fostered me. My real mother died giving birth to me."
"I cannot understand how the Harshini allowed Lorandranek's child to
be raised by their mortal enemies."
"The Harshini didn't know of my existence until recently. When they
did learn of it, they sent Brak to find me. I can see you're concerned,
Your Highness, but imagine how I feel. I was raised to despise the
Harshini. Nobody was more shocked than I was to discover the
truth."
"Yet you appear to have adapted well."
"Out of necessity. Not by choice, I can assure you."
Marla took another sip of water, studying R'shiel over the rim of
her cup. "And so, having accepted who you are, you have decided to
meddle in the internal affairs of every nation on the
continent."
"There's no point in being half-hearted about this," R'shiel
pointed
out with a faint smile. "I'm supposed to destroy Xaphista. I can't do
that without affecting anyone else."
"And this marriage? How did you get Damin to agree to it? Did you
ensorcel him? Did that Fardohnyan woman?"
"Damin might be under Adrina's spell, Your Highness, but it has
nothing to do with magic."
"It's obvious he's under some sort of spell!" Marla snapped.
"He is
beyond reason where she is concerned. I have never seen him so
intransigent over a woman. He insists that she will one day be the High
Princess of Hythria."
"And so she shall."
"The Warlords will never accept a Fardohnyan."
"They will, in time."
"We may not have time," Marla told her. "My brother
is
dying, demon child. It is only a matter of time before he succumbs to
the diseases that consume him. One cannot indulge in the type of
activities in which he finds pleasure without eventually paying the
price. We do not have years, or even months, for the Warlords to grow
accustomed to the idea of a Fardohnyan High Princess. We may only have
weeks, and that is simply not enough time."
"Then you will have to use your considerable powers of persuasion,
won't you?"
Marla scowled. "You haven't persuaded me yet."
"I don't need to. It is done."
"I will have it annulled."
"I will have it ratified by the Harshini. I will have the gods put
in an appearance if necessary. You can't fight me on this, Your
Highness. I have considerably more resources than you when it comes to
divine intervention."
The Princess did not look pleased. "Even if I agreed to this absurd
arrangement, one cannot trust a Fardohnyan, particularly one of
Hablet's brood."
"You don't think Adrina wants peace?"
"I think that young woman wants her father's throne, and that's the
only reason she married my son. Have you any idea of the power you have
handed her?"
"I'm quite sure Adrina knows a son of hers is likely to be
King."
"I'm not talking of that!" Marla said impatiently. "This has
nothing
to do with any child she might bear. Hablet has no legitimate sons.
Under ancient law, that makes Damin his heir. My son would have had the
Fardohnyan throne in any case, and now you have interfered and that
grasping little harlot will become Queen. Just how long do you think my
son will survive after that?"
R'shiel leaned back in her chair, stunned by the news. "I didn't
know."
"Of course you didn't know. But you can bet Adrina knows. Why else
would she marry Damin with barely a word of protest?"
"Has it occurred to you that she might love him?"
"Don't be ridiculous! She wouldn't know the meaning of the
word."
"I think you're wrong, Your Highness. I don't think Adrina knows
anything about Damin being the heir to her father's throne."
"Then you are as blind as my son."
R'shiel thought back over her conversations with Adrina. Nothing she
had done or said would seem to indicate that she knew of any law that
would make Damin the heir to the Fardohnyan throne. Even Kalan had
given no hint that she knew of such a law. But that did raise another
interesting question.
"Does Damin know about this law?"
"He does now! It's a tragedy he didn't learn of it sooner."
"Why didn't you tell him sooner?"
"I only learnt of it recently, myself. My youngest stepson is a
member of the Assassins' Guild. The Guild was approached by one of
Hablet's lackeys to murder my sons, Damin and Narvell. They refused the
contract, but decided to look into the reasons behind Hablet's
obsession with the destruction of the Wolfblade line."
"Then I don't see the problem. Damin is still heir to the Hythrun
and Fardohnyan thrones. With Adrina at his side, won't that just make
his claim to the Fardohnyan throne that much stronger?"
"Of course it does, that's my point. There will be no stopping
Adrina now. With Damin at her side, she can claim her father's throne.
Once she's done that, all she needs to do is dispose of my son and she
will rule Fardohnya and Hythria. If the child she is carrying
turns out to be Cratyn's, then she can lay claim to the Karien throne
as well!"
"Child? What child?"
Marla shook her head in despair. "You don't know? By the gods, it's
as plain as the nose on her face. Adrina is with child, R'shiel. Surely
you noticed! I for one would be very interested to learn whose child it
is."
R'shiel really had no idea. She wondered if Adrina knew, or even
suspected. It was possible, of course. She and Damin had been lovers
for several months. The child could only be his. If she had been
pregnant when she left Karien, her condition would have been patently
obvious before now.
"If what you say is true, then the child is Damin's. I can promise
you that."
"Bah! Who knows with a woman like that? It could be Almodavar's, if
she was bored enough. I just pray Damin doesn't learn of her condition
before I can prove the truth of the child's parentage."
"You've not told him about it, then?"
"And have him lose what little sense he has left regarding that
woman? I don't think so. And I would appreciate it if you said nothing
to him either. At least until I can find the evidence I need to
convince him how foolish he's being."
"I'll not say anything about Adrina's condition," she
agreed, in an
effort to appear cooperative, "but only because I think you're on a
fool's errand. The only thing you are likely to prove is that Damin is
the child's father."
"My son? Get a child on that Fardohnyan whore? Never!"
Marla's blind prejudice where Adrina was concerned was beginning to
wear on R'shiel. "Your Highness, I really think you should reconsider
your attitude towards Adrina. She is married to your son and if you're
right about her condition, she carries your grandchild. Don't you think
life would be a lot easier if you made an effort to get along with
her?"
"I don't trust her," Marla replied stubbornly.
"You've hardly given her a chance."
"I see no reason why I should."
"You should, because I say you should," R'shiel declared.
"I'm not going to be ordered around by a slip of a girl who thinks
she can bend the world to her will . . ."
Marla's voice tapered off as R'shiel reached for her power. She
didn't do anything with it, she simply let it fill her until her eyes
darkened and turned completely black. She stared at Marla unblinkingly,
her black eyes like orbs of burning onyx, her silence a threat in
itself. There wasn't much point in being the demon child if you
couldn't lay down the law every now and then, especially when being
reasonable wasn't getting her anywhere.
Marla fell to her knees. "I am sorry, Divine One. I did not mean to
doubt you."
"Then you will do as I say," R'shiel commanded, borrowing
just
enough power to fill her voice with an irresistible compulsion. It was
not a coercion, but it was enough to scare the wits out of the
Princess. "You will treat Adrina in a manner befitting her status as
your daughter-in-law and you will give this marriage your full support.
If not, you will answer to the gods."
"It shall be as you command, Divine One."
"Then be gone from my presence," she added dramatically,
"while I am
still in the mood to indulge you. And do not speak to me of this
again."
Marla scrambled to her feet rather inelegantly and was gone from the
room in a matter of moments. R'shiel let go of the power and laughed.
The look on Marla's face alone had been worth it. All she could do now
was hope that she had frightened the Princess sufficiently for her to
toe the line.
"Was that Marla I just saw running out of here?"
R'shiel looked up as Adrina slipped into the room. She studied the
Princess closely, but if her belly was swollen, it was impossible to
tell in the long loose gown she was wearing.
"It was. I'm afraid I indulged in what Brak would call a 'tasteless
and theatrical display of power' to get my point across."
Adrina frowned. "Well, I hoped it worked. That woman really doesn't
like me."
"I think you'll find her a little more cooperative from now on. How
are you feeling?"
"Fine," Adrina replied with a puzzled look. "Why do you
ask?"
"Are you pregnant, Adrina?"
The Princess paled and took the seat so recently vacated by her
mother-in-law. "What do you mean?"
"I mean, are you pregnant? It's a simple enough
question."
"I'm not sure."
"How can you not be sure?"
"Very well, I have my suspicions, but as I don't want to be
pregnant, I've done nothing to confirm them."
R'shiel smiled. "You mean you hoped it would go away if you didn't
think about it?"
Adrina glared at her for a moment, then shrugged. "It's stupid, I
know."
"Marla thinks you are."
"Wonderful! That's all I need."
"Does Damin have any idea?"
"Of course not! He's a man. They never notice that sort of thing.
And it doesn't really show yet."
"Don't you think you should break the news to him before someone
else does?"
"And give him the idea he has some sort of claim over me? I don't
think so!"
"Adrina, it's his child too. And you are married to
him."
"That's beside the point."
"That is the point."
"R'shiel, don't you understand what will happen when I tell him? The
first thing he's going to do is surround me with so many bodyguards
I'll be lucky if I can see daylight through them. Then he's going to
lock me away somewhere 'for my safety' so that the child will
be
protected. Then he'll strut around crowing like a rooster because he's
proved his manhood."
R'shiel laughed. "So what are you going to do, Adrina? Carry on as
if nothing is amiss while your belly swells to the size of a large
melon?"
"I don't know what I'm going to do, I . . ." She
stopped
mid-sentence, interrupted as Mikel slipped through the door.
"What is it, Mikel?" R'shiel asked, puzzled by the
expression on the
child's face.
"The High Prince requests your presence in the Great Hall, my Lady.
You too, Your Highness."
"The High Prince?" Adrina asked curiously. "You mean
Prince
Lernen is here?"
"No, Your Highness, it's Lord Wolfblade. He requests you attend him.
The news has just come from Greenharbour. High Prince Lernen is
dead."
Adrina turned to R'shiel, her eyes wide with shock.
"Long live the High Prince Damin," R'shiel murmured softly.
CHAPTER 15
"We have to move from here and the roads are still
blocked," Tarja announced, leaning over the map that Denjon had
spread
out on the table in the cold, dank cellar of the tavern in Roan Vale.
"Move? We only just got here," Linst pointed out testily,
shifting
the lantern on the table so he could study the map more easily. The
ventilation was poor in the crowded cellar and the lantern smoked
badly. Tarja squinted through the stinging haze and scowled at the
other captain.
"Take a look outside, Linst. Between your men, those who joined us
in Testra and the men I got away from the border, there's close on two
thousand men out there now. We're too big a target. We can march some
of the men across the border, the rest we have to break into smaller
groups - less than twenty men to a squad. Each squad can
operate
independently, their only orders to get to Hythria. We can muster them
at Krakandar. Damin may even appreciate the fact that we didn't march
over his border like an invading army. And we have to do something
about stopping the Kariens crossing the river."
"Let them loose in squads? How do you expect to maintain
discipline?" Denjon asked.
"I don't. We're going to have to rely on their training."
"What about provisions?"
"We'll split up what we have here, after that they'll be on their
own. You'd be surprised how helpful a sympathetic population can
be."
"Is that how you survived in the rebellion?" Linst asked.
There was
an edge of reproval in his tone that Tarja didn't much care for.
Tarja nodded. "It's the reason you could never really break us. Each
squad operated on its own. It didn't know where the rest of the squads
were, what they're planning, or who was in them. It's like a serpent
with a hundred heads. Cut off one and the others will continue to
function. If they're captured, they can't betray anyone but their own
small group."
"No Defender would betray his comrades," Linst objected.
"Any man can break under torture. The trick is minimising what each
man knows, to protect the rest of the force."
"I still say we should fight them head on. This sneaking around,
running away to Hythria, it reeks of dishonour."
"Fight them head on? Our pitiful force of two thousand men? Do odds
of five hundred to one appeal to your honour that much?"
"I would rather die an honourable death."
"Well, I wouldn't," Denjon laughed, trying to ease the
tension. "I'd
rather live, if it's all right with you."
Tarja smiled briefly then turned to Linst. "You need to make up your
mind, Linst. You can't have it both ways. Either you're with us, or
you're against us."
"Us? Don't you mean you, Tarja? Isn't that what all this is
really about? You've gone pagan, haven't you? And you expect us to
fight to save the damned Harshini from the Kariens."
Tarja straightened and turned to Linst. "Who said anything about the
Harshini?"
"Who said anything? Your damned sister, or whatever she is
these days, is one of them! Don't think me a fool. How long have you
known they were in hiding? How long have you been protecting
them?"
"You have no idea what you're talking about."
"Then enlighten me, Captain. Tell me how you came to be in the
company of two Harshini, one of whom we always considered your sister.
Tell me how you survived a wound that would have killed any other man.
Tell me why we are risking our necks. Is it really to save Medalon? Or
is it because you know the Kariens will ensure the Harshini are
eradicated completely this time?"
Tarja fought down the urge to throttle Linst where he stood. He was
not the only Defender who felt that way. He was merely giving voice to
a sentiment that was rapidly spreading through their forces, a
situation not helped by the pagan rebels who had flocked to their
banner. Tarja swallowed his annoyance and took a deep breath. This
problem had to be dealt with, and the sooner the better.
"What I think about the Harshini is irrelevant, Linst. So is what
the Kariens plan for them. My only concern at the moment is to get
across the border so we can mount a counter-attack. There are no
Harshini here and I'm not expecting any. But there is a Karien
army marching on the Citadel, and a First Sister who is issuing their
orders. We can decide what to do about the Harshini when we've gotten
rid of the Kariens. Until then, I don't intend to waste my time arguing
with you about it."
Before Linst could answer, the cellar door opened and Mandah
entered, followed by a civilian dressed in rough farmer's clothing. The
man looked at the Defenders with barely disguised suspicion then turned
to Tarja.
"Good to see you again, Cap'n," he said, revealing a mouth
full of
broken teeth.
"You too, Seth. What news do you have?"
Seth had been a rebel long before Tarja had joined their cause.
Tarja knew him for a reliable and steady man, not prone to flights of
fancy the way the younger men were.
"The Kariens moved south from the border 'bout two weeks
ago.
They're headin' straight for the Citadel by the looks of
things."
"And the Citadel? Any news from there?"
"Aye. There's been a stack of new laws issued. Not bad ones, mind
you, but odd, if you know what I mean."
"Odd, how?" Denjon asked.
Seth glared at the officer, but did not answer.
"You can trust him, Seth," Tarja assured the rebel.
Seth hesitated for a moment longer before he spoke. "There's a
Karien advising the First Sister. Squire Mathen, they call him. Word
has it he's the one issuing the laws. The First Sister is just a
puppet."
"More than you know," Tarja murmured, thinking of what Brak
had told
him about the spell cast by the Karien priests and whose mind now
occupied Joyhinia's body. "What sort of laws is he issuing?"
"He's started a program to 'redeem' the court'esa and
made
it an offence for any man or woman with children to spend their wages
in the 'houses of exploitation' as he calls 'em."
"He's outlawed the court'esa?" Denjon asked in
surprise. "The Sisterhood legalised them two centuries ago."
"Not outlawed 'em exactly. The First Sister now reckons
there are
too many children going hungry 'cause their parents spend all
their
money on 'pleasures of the flesh', rather than food for their
kin. The
law was passed with barely a murmur of protest."
"Why issue a law like that?" Linst asked.
"It's the first step to outlawing prostitution completely,"
Tarja
said. "In Karien it's an offence punishable by stoning. Our people
wouldn't accept the Church of Xaphista being imposed on them, but if
they make new laws that sound reasonable enough, before you know it,
they'll be building churches in every damned village in
Medalon."
"Aye, you're right, Cap'n. All the laws seem good on the surface,
but they're only a step away from worshippin' the Overlord."
"That's the danger of them," Tarja agreed. "Is there any
other news?"
Seth nodded grimly. "They're gonna hang Sister Mahina."
"When?" Tarja asked.
"Restday next, I think."
"Then we still have time to rescue her!" Denjon declared.
"Don't be an idiot," Linst said. "That's exactly what
they'll be
expecting. Even if you could get to the Citadel in time, which is
unlikely, Garet Warner will have the city locked up so tight, you won't
be able to sneak a table knife through the main gate, let alone a squad
of armed men."
"Tarja? What do you think? Mahina was a friend of yours, as well as
the only decent First Sister we've had in a century."
Tarja did not answer for a moment. "Linst is right, Denjon. We'd be
walking into a trap."
"So you're just going to let them hang her?"
"We have two thousand men here that we need to disperse and the
Karien army moving through Medalon. Mahina knew the risk she was taking
when she returned to the Citadel, and she'd be the first to tell us not
to throw everything away trying to be heroic. I'm sorry, Denjon. Nobody
wants to save her more than I do, but we simply can't risk it."
Denjon shook his head, but he could not deny Tarja's cold
practicality.
"Then we shall have to settle for avenging her death
instead."
"And avenge it we will," Tarja promised. "Every damned day
until the
Kariens are gone from Medalon."
Tarja looked down at the map, rubbing his eyes,
which felt as if they'd had handfuls of sand thrown in them. Denjon and
Linst were gone and he was alone in the smoky cellar, going over the
plans they had made, looking for faults and finding none. It was a
useless exercise, but it was better than trying to sleep.
"Tarja?"
He looked up as Mandah entered the cellar carrying a tray. She
hadn't changed much in the year since he'd last seen her. She was still
as calm as her brother Ghari was fierce, still as thoughtful, and still
as infuriatingly devout in her belief that the gods would take care of
everything. Her fair hair was tied back in a loose braid and she was
wearing an apron over her homespun trousers. She had been waiting for
them, here in Roan Vale, and had appointed herself housekeeper to the
senior officers and none of them had objected. Mandah was the sort of
woman who could make herself indispensable with remarkable ease. Denjon
was quite taken with her.
"You didn't eat at dinner, so I brought you something."
"Thanks. Just put it there on the table. I'll eat it later."
She put down the tray but made no move to leave. Tarja looked up at
her. "Was there something else?"
"I thought you might like to talk."
"Some other time, Mandah. I'm busy."
"You're always busy. You don't eat. You don't sleep. What's
wrong?"
He laughed humourlessly. "What's wrong? Have you looked
outside lately?"
"That's not what's bothering you, Tarja. You could organise those
men out there in your sleep. If you ever did sleep, that is. Is it
Mahina?"
He had forgotten she was there when they spoke with Seth. "That's a
part of it."
"And what about the rest of it?"
"I don't want to talk about it, Mandah."
"You'll have to get it off your chest sooner or later, Tarja. It's
eating you up." She hesitated for a moment and then added in a
small
voice, "Is it R'shiel?"
He looked up sharply. "Why do you ask?"
"Because you haven't mentioned her once."
"Is that such a surprise? I've had quite a bit to do lately, in case
you hadn't noticed. Besides, what do you care? You never liked her,
anyway." He didn't mean to sound so harsh, but she had cut too
close to
the truth for comfort.
"It doesn't matter if I like her, Tarja. She is the demon
child."
"So everyone keeps telling me."
Mandah walked around the table to stand beside him. She placed a
tentative hand on his shoulder. "Do you want to talk about it?"
"No," he said bluntly, shaking off her arm.
"You'll have to eventually, Tarja." Her eyes were full of
pain at
his rejection. "You can't keep on like this. You're on the brink of
exhaustion. How much use will you be to any of us if you can't think
straight?"
He pushed aside his annoyance and made an effort to be civil. His
mood was hardly Mandah's fault. "Look, I appreciate your concern,
Mandah, but there is really nothing to tell. Thanks for the food, and I
promise I'll eat it later."
He smiled at her, hoping it didn't look nearly as false as it felt,
and turned back to the map. Mandah did not move. Tarja studied the
terrain with great concentration, wondering what it would take to get
her to leave.
"Ghari told me you and R'shiel were lovers," she said after
a long
moment of strained silence.
Tarja slammed his palms down onto the table so hard, the tray
jumped. Mandah leaned away from him, her eyes suddenly fearful.
"Ghari had no reason to lie, Tarja."
"Damn it, Mandah, it's none of your business!"
"Is that what's bothering you?"
He took a deep, calming breath before he turned to her. "You
wouldn't understand."
"Then explain it to me."
Tarja looked at her for a moment then shrugged. She was not going to
be put off easily. "How much did he tell you?"
"Enough."
"Then I don't need to explain anything."
"Tarja, if you really love her . . ."
"Ah, now that's the problem, you see. I remember loving R'shiel as
if there were no other woman in the world. But it's like the memories
belong to someone else. I don't feel like that now, and I can't ever
imagine feeling like that, yet I can remember it, clear as day."
"Can you remember when you first felt that you loved her?"
"Almost to the instant," he told her. "It happened at the
vineyard
near Testra. One moment I wanted to strangle her, the next moment I was
kissing her."
"And do you remember when you stopped feeling that way about
her?"
"I only remember waking up in a wagon with a head full of memories I
thought were simply nightmares, at first."
"It sounds like a geas," she said thoughtfully.
"A what?"
"A geas. A spell, if you like."
"Magic? Oh, well that's just bloody wonderful!" he snarled.
"Look, I'm no expert, but it seems the only logical
explanation."
"Mandah, where I come from you don't use the words magic and
logic in the same sentence."
"The two are not mutually exclusive, Tarja."
"I'm sorry, Mandah, but I don't hold with your belief in the powers
of the gods. You'll have to come up with a better explanation if you're
trying to make me feel better."
"I would have thought you'd seen enough to believe in their power by
now, Tarja. Your determination to ignore what you've witnessed with
your own eyes is just as illogical as you pretend my faith in the gods
is."
Tarja had a bad feeling he was stepping onto dangerous ground
discussing theology with Mandah. "Look, even if I conceded that such a
thing was possible, why would they bother? And why, if they did put a
. . . what did you call it . . . a geas, on me,
would they take it off again?"
Mandah thought for a moment before answering. "Do you know how
R'shiel healed you, Tarja?"
"She used her Harshini magic."
"That's true. The same magic you claim you don't believe in. But you
may not know the whole of it. You were possessed by demons. They melded
to form the blood you lost while you recovered."
"Demons? Founders! I had a demon-meld inside me? How do you
know that?"
"R'shiel told me. She wasn't sure what it would do to you. I think
it destroyed the geas."
He shook his head and stared back at the map. This was too
incredible, too fantastic to be real.
"That's what it sounds like to me," Mandah persisted. "The
gods
sometimes put a geas on a person, to make them act the way they want.
The demon-meld might have broken it, which is why you woke up thinking
you could never have felt that way about R'shiel. And why you never
questioned how you felt about her while the geas was on you."
"Why would anybody, god or man, put a spell on me to make me love
R'shiel?"
Mandah shrugged. "Who can guess the mind of a god? But think about
what has happened since then. Would you have rescued her from the
Grimfield? Or from the Kariens? Would you have done half of what you
did, if you were not driven to keep her by your side? Perhaps it was
the gods' way of protecting R'shiel."
"I am getting pretty bloody sick of your gods, Mandah."
She smiled. "You have served them remarkably well for an
atheist."
"I wasn't planning to serve them at all."
"One cannot avoid one's destiny, Tarja, and like it or not, you are
tied to the demon child." She smiled comfortingly. "Try not to
let it
bother you. If it was a geas, then you're not responsible for how you
felt about her. You shouldn't feel guilty for feeling that way, or that
you don't feel that way any longer." She placed a hand on his
shoulder. "Let it go, Tarja. And get some sleep."
"Later," he promised, turning back to the map.
Mandah hesitated for a moment, perhaps hoping he would confide in
her further, but he had already said more than he intended. After a
while he heard the door snick shut behind her as she let herself out of
the cellar.
Once she was gone, Tarja swore softly under his breath for a time,
cursing every pagan god he could name.
CHAPTER 16
In the days that followed the news of the death of
High Prince Lernen, all of Krakandar seemed to be in turmoil. The
streets were draped with black and the gongs in the temples rang almost
constantly, tolling the death of the High Prince. At night the city was
a blaze of light as the citizens placed candles and lanterns at their
doors to show Lernen's soul the way to the underworld, should he
stumble into their street on his journey there. After three houses
caught fire in the Beggars' Quarter, Damin declared the official
mourning period at an end. He understood his subjects' need to follow
tradition, but he didn't want his city burned to the ground for the
sake of a man that very few genuinely lamented.
Rogan Bearbow, the Warlord of Izcomdar, had delivered the news. His
province bordered Damin's to the south and although the two had never
been close, he was politically astute enough to ride north to Krakandar
to see if Damin was in residence, before choosing which side he would
take. That he would eventually have to choose a side, Damin was
certain. Along with the news that Lernen had been dead for close on a
month came the news that Cyrus Eaglespike, the Warlord of Dregian
Province, had laid claim to the High Prince's crown. Apparently his
ambitions had grown from merely removing Damin from Krakandar.
Marla was livid when she heard the news, but Narvell was
unsurprised. Cyrus was a distant cousin and had often remarked in the
past that should anything happen to Damin or Narvell, he was next in
line for the throne. It seemed now that he hadn't been joking. Damin
was less worried than he might have been otherwise, knowing that
regardless of Cyrus' tenuous claim to the High Prince's mantle, he
had the demon child on his side.
Just how useful an ally she was became evident the first time she
met Rogan Bearbow. Older by several years than Damin, he was a tall,
aloof man, who ran his province with harsh efficiency and kept the
other Warlords at bay by lining his highways with the crucified bodies
of any enemy Raiders foolish enough to cross his borders.
R'shiel had entered the Great Hall with Adrina at her side. Amidst
the courtiers crowded into the hall standing in small clusters
discussing the implications of the High Prince's death, her skin-tight
leathers looked out of place. R'shiel did not seem to care. She strode
purposefully towards Damin, leaving Adrina to follow at a more
dignified pace.
"Is it true?" she asked, interrupting his conversation with
Rogan.
Damin nodded. "Rogan had a messenger bird from Greenharbour nearly
ten days ago."
R'shiel turned on the Warlord. "Why did you take so long to send
word?"
"Excuse me, young woman, but who are you to question me?"
"I'm sorry, Rogan, I forget my manners," Damin said
distractedly. He
was watching Adrina out of the corner of his eye as she approached
them, terrified she might do or say something that would embarrass, or
worse, endanger them all. "Rogan Bearbow, Warlord of Izcomdar, allow me
to introduce Her Royal Highness, R'shiel te Ortyn, the
demon child."
"The demon child? This is some sort of jest, yes?"
"This is some sort of jest, no," R'shiel retorted. "What's
happening, Damin?"
Before he could answer, Adrina reached them. To his astonishment,
she curtsied solemnly before him. "My condolences on the loss of your
uncle, Your Highness, and my congratulations on your elevation."
Damin stared at her in surprise. There was not a trace of sarcasm in
her tone, nor a hint of irony. She stood up and met his gaze, her
expression grave.
"And who is this delightful creature?" Rogan asked, quite
impressed
by her regal bearing.
"This, Lord Bearbow, is my wife, the Princess Adrina."
Adrina smiled demurely at the Warlord and offered him her hand. He
bowed and kissed her palm in the traditional manner, studying her
closely.
"You are not Hythrun, I judge, Your Highness."
"And you are very astute, my Lord. I am not Hythrun, I am
Fardohnyan."
Rogan looked at Damin frowning. "You have taken a Fardohnyan
bride?"
"I -" Damin began, but R'shiel cut in before he
could answer.
"He has taken the bride I chose for him, Lord Bearbow. If you wish
to object, I can arrange for you to discuss the matter with the gods.
Did you have a particular favourite, or will any one of them
do?"
Rogan stared at her, his eyes wide, as it dawned on him that she
truly was the demon child. R'shiel's impatient bearing, her
entire dismissive attitude that discounted titles and bloodlines, was a
sharp reminder that she was not an ordinary mortal. The fact that her
bearing had more to do with being raised among the Sisters of the Blade
than with her status as the living embodiment of a pagan legend was
something that Damin found rather ironic.
Rogan dropped to one knee in front of R'shiel. "Divine One."
R'shiel rolled her eyes, but fortunately, Rogan's head was bowed and
he did not see it. When she spoke, her voice betrayed nothing about how
she truly felt.
"Arise, Lord Bearbow. I have no need of your worship."
"We may have need of your sword, though," Damin remarked as
the
Warlord climbed to his feet.
"Is there trouble?" Adrina asked.
"My cousin, Cyrus Eaglespike, has claimed the throne."
"Then we must make all possible haste to Greenharbour and take it
from him, Your Highness."
Rogan smiled grimly at her words. "This Fardohnyan wench has teeth,
I see."
Damin grimaced as Adrina looked him up and down, her green eyes
cold. "I am not a 'wench', my Lord, I am a Fardohnyan Princess
of the
Blood Royal. Your loyalty to your High Prince does not entitle you to
insult me."
"I'm sorry, Your Highness," Rogan mumbled, quite taken back
by her
reprimand. "I meant no offence."
"Then I shall forgive you on this occasion, my Lord. My husband has
need of loyal Hythrun such as you. I would not weaken his hand by
insisting you be put to death for something so trivial. Not this
time."
Damin held his breath, waiting for Rogan to explode. Did she have any
idea of what she was doing? Damin knew he could count on Narvell, and
probably Tejay Lionsclaw from Sunrise Province bordering Fardohnya, but
Rogan could go either way. Threatening to hang him for insulting his
wife was hardly the way to win him over. But the expected explosion did
not eventuate. If anything, Rogan looked shamefaced.
"I thank you for your forbearance, Your Highness," he
replied with a
bow. "And now, if you will excuse me, I must pay my respects to
Princess Marla and offer her my condolences."
They stood back to let him leave. As soon as he was out of earshot,
Damin turned on his wife.
"What in the name of the gods are you doing?" he
hissed.
Adrina seemed unfazed by his anger. "Securing your throne."
"By threatening him?"
"Rogan's a barbarian," she said with a shrug. "He
understands open
threats. Subtlety would be wasted on him."
"And you worked that out after how long?"
"Not here, Damin," R'shiel warned, glancing around the hall.
"Besides, I think Adrina's right. Rogan appreciates strength. She may
have done you a favour."
Damin realised at that moment that he was in serious trouble. Adrina
was bad enough. R'shiel, when the mood took her, was even worse.
Together, they were impossible.
Princess Marla set the whole palace in motion to
prepare for the journey south to Greenharbour. Kalan left Krakandar the
day after Rogan arrived, anxious to return to the capital and gain a
measure of control over the situation. No High Prince could be crowned
without her approval.
She was furious that Cyrus Eaglespike would attempt to claim a
throne he knew well was not his while she was out of the city. He was a
cousin, certainly, but the kinship was distant. Kalan considered him
less a threat than an ambitious fool.
Damin was not so sure. Cyrus would not have claimed the title unless
he thought he could hold it, which meant the Warlords of Pentamor and
Greenharbour were probably supporting him. With Narvell and Rogan both
here in Krakandar, that only left Tejay Lionsclaw, who might not even
be aware of the death of the High Prince. Damin had dispatched several
birds and two human messengers to inform her, hoping that her constant
battles with the Fardohnyan bandits in the Sunrise Mountains did not
mean she was out of touch. He needed her in Greenharbour.
Damin was almost as certain of her support as he was of Narvell's.
He had sided with Tejay when her husband died and left her with four
small sons, a province to rule and an heir that was only five years
old. She was Warlord of Sunrise Province because, against all the
objections of the other Warlords, Damin had prevailed upon Lernen to
grant her the title, rather than hand it to some ambitious young stud
who had little thought for the strategic importance of the province.
That had been ten years ago, and the first time he had challenged the
Convocation of Warlords. Although tactically sound, his interference
had proved politically unwise. He had tipped his hand too early and
warned the Warlords what sort of man was heir to the throne. He'd been
dodging assassins since he was a small child, but after that day the
only place he'd felt truly safe was here in Krakandar. And Medalon,
oddly enough.
"Damin?"
He turned from the window as Adrina entered the study, almost
welcoming the distraction. Adrina had been in an odd mood lately,
although he could not fault her behaviour. Rogan was quite enchanted by
her, which Damin found amazing. Adrina was a much better judge of
character than he had given her credit for. It would have been so much
easier if he could trust her.
"Adrina."
"Your mother seems determined to pack the entire palace."
"You're not fighting with her again, are you?"
"No. We just avoid each other. It's easier that way."
"Is there anything you need?"
She crossed the room and came to stand beside him, looking out over
the winter-browned gardens. "We need to talk."
"Then unlock your door tonight."
She had locked it every night since they had been in Krakandar,
offering no reason for her sudden desire to sleep alone. It disturbed
him to discover how much that bothered him.
"I'm not going to talk to you in bed, Damin. I want to see your face
in the cold light of day."
"This sounds serious."
"It is, and for once in your life, I need you to be
serious."
He nodded, careful to keep his expression solemn. "Very well. What
did you want to talk about?"
"I want to know how long you've known that if my father has no
legitimate male heir, his throne falls to you."
"Ah," he said uncomfortably. "You've been talking to
R'shiel."
"How long, Damin?"
"I could ask you the same question."
"I asked first."
"The truth? I learnt of it the day after we arrived in Krakandar.
Marla told me."
"You didn't know before then?"
"I swear I had no idea."
She searched his face for some hint that he was lying. "I believe
you, I suppose."
"You're too kind, Your Highness."
Adrina scowled at him. "Don't start, Damin."
"I'm sorry. Was that all you wanted? I really should be meeting with
Almodavar and Narvell. It's not that I doubt Brak, but I'm not
convinced your father won't attack come spring and I have to make
arrangements for the arrival of the Defenders, assuming they get here.
It won't do our alliance any good if my people start loosing arrows at
them the moment they cross the border."
"No, that's not all. I have something to tell you."
"Let me guess. You want a divorce?" he asked with a grin.
Her eyes blazed dangerously. "By the gods, I wish I'd never agreed
to this marriage. You are a child, Damin Wolfblade, in the guise of a
man. You are incapable of taking anything seriously! How in the gods'
name you expect to rule Hythria, I have no idea!"
He was surprised by her vehemence, and a little guilty. It wasn't
often that she spoke to him like this. It was foolish to deny her the
opportunity now.
"I'm sorry, Adrina. That was uncalled for. You've been keeping up
your end of the bargain, and I do appreciate it. You've got Rogan
wrapped around your little finger and Narvell would probably throw
himself on his sword if you asked him. Even Kalan was forced to admit
that once they meet you, the other Warlords might eventually come
around."
"You didn't mention your mother."
He shrugged. "The best you're ever likely to get from Marla is
begrudging acceptance."
"I could live with that if I thought you trusted me."
The comment puzzled him. "Trust you?"
"You treat every word I utter with suspicion. You have done since
the day we first met."
"Not without just cause," he pointed out. "You lied to me
then. For
all I know you're lying to me now. How long have you been aware
of the law that made me heir to Hablet's crown?"
"What are suggesting?"
"For all I know, you could have been planning this for years. You
managed to manipulate Cratyn into taking you to the border. You
betrayed him, fled to Medalon and gave your real name to the first
Defender you met, almost guaranteeing I would come after you. All you
had to do was get rid of Cratyn, marry me, wait till your father dies
and I take his throne, then have me killed. You'd rule Hythria and
Fardohnya."
"That's preposterous! I didn't kill Cratyn."
"No, that was the demon child. The same demon child who decided we
should be married."
"You think R'shiel is part of some twisted plan I have to
rule the world? You're insane!"
She turned away angrily and began to walk towards the door, but he
caught her arm and pulled her back. He couldn't hide his grin.
"You can be so gullible sometimes, Adrina."
She punched his chest angrily. "Dammit, Damin! Can't you ever stop
fooling around? Have you any idea what's going on around you? You're
about to ride into Greenharbour to claim your crown from a usurper.
You're likely to have assassins dogging your heels and a civil war on
your hands and all you can do is play stupid, childish games!"
"I know what's going on, Adrina," he assured her, suddenly
serious. "I've had assassins dogging my heels since I was born. I was
twelve
years old before it was judged safe enough to let me sleep without an
armed guard at the foot of my bed and that was only because Almodavar
was convinced I was skilled enough to kill a full grown man. But I can
live with the threat of assassination and the gods know I can deal with
war well enough, but I'll tell you something that might surprise you. I
wish I could trust you. I wish I knew what you were really
after. I wish there was some simple way I could be sure about
you."
"You've never given me a chance, Damin," she accused.
He was still holding her arm and when he pulled her to him, she did
not object. She looked so open, so honest, so ingenuous, he almost
believed her, and he truly wanted to believe her. But if he was wrong,
it might cost him his life, although at that moment, holding her so
near, her lips so close he could feel her breath on his, the prospect
didn't bother him nearly as much as it should have.
"Sire, Lord Hawksword asks that when you . . . Oh, I do
beg your pardon, Your Highness!" Almodavar stood at the door,
clearly
embarrassed to find them in such an intimate embrace.
Adrina stepped away from him with a fleeting look of regret, then
turned to the captain. "It's all right, Almodavar. I was just leaving.
I'll speak to you later, Damin. When you have more time."
"Adrina?"
She hesitated at the door. "Yes?"
"What did you want to tell me?"
"It's not important. Some other time perhaps."
"I'll see you later, then?"
She nodded. "If you wish."
When she was gone, Damin turned his attention back to the
organisation of Krakandar's defences, unable to shake the feeling that
Adrina had left something very important unsaid.
CHAPTER 17
Teriahna was waiting for Brak in his room when he
returned from his evening meal. He was quite partial to the spicy fare
of Fardohnya, and had lingered over his dinner, enjoying the feeling of
repletion that comes with a good meal accompanied by an excellent wine.
For a fleeting moment he regretted his indulgence, but even had she
searched his room, there was nothing for her to find here.
He did not bother to ask how she had got past the locks. Those
skills were taught to apprentice assassins. Besides, he was expecting
her. She had promised to arrange to get him into the palace in the
guise of a visiting lord from southern Fardohnya, come to court to find
a royal bride. Brak had been surprised by her choice of disguise, but
she had assured him that with so many daughters to dispose of, Hablet
would see any man willing to take one of them off his hands,
particularly if he was an insignificant, powerless lord who lived far,
far from Talabar.
"Any luck?" he asked as he closed the door behind him. She
was
sitting near the window, staring out over the gardens. The heady scent
of frangipani filled the room, as it did every night once the sun went
down. The room was shrouded in shadows and she did not turn when he
spoke.
"Lernen Wolfblade is dead." She looked at him then, her eyes
curious
in the gloom. "Does this alter your plans?"
"I'm not sure. What happened?" He lit the lantern on the
table and
dragged the only other chair in the room to the window beside her.
"He died of the pox, by all accounts. But that is neither unexpected
nor surprising. What is interesting is that it happened nearly
a month ago."
"And you've only just heard of it? Who kept it quiet? The Sorcerers'
Collective should have been tolling the bells of every temple in
Hythria from the moment they heard the news."
"The High Arrion isn't in Greenharbour. She's in Krakandar. There
was a great deal of unrest because of Damin Wolfblade's alliance with
Medalon. She went north after Princess Marla to sort it out."
"So Marla was out of the capital when it happened, too? That's not
good."
"Not good for Damin Wolfblade, perhaps, but it proved a stroke of
good fortune for Cyrus Eaglespike. He's named himself High
Prince."
"Without the sanction of the High Arrion? How long does he think
that can last?"
"He's got the Warlords of Greenharbour and Pentamor on his side.
It's a foregone conclusion that Narvell Hawksword will support Damin's
claim, but there is still Rogan Bearbow and Tejay Lionsclaw to
consider."
Brak nodded thoughtfully. He had been away from the politics of the
southern nations too long. There was a time when he didn't need the
Assassins' Guild to provide his intelligence.
"Why has it taken the news so long to reach you? I would have
thought you'd have heard about this within a day of it
happening."
"Normally, I would expect to," she agreed. "However, in this
case,
someone went to a great deal of trouble to stop the news getting
out."
"Cyrus Eaglespike?"
"Or his cronies. This isn't the act of an opportunistic man. This
has been very well thought out. I'd say they've been planning it for
some time."
"Perhaps. Has King Jasnoff heard about Cratyn's death yet?"
"I don't think so. It's possible the news hasn't even reached
Yarnarrow yet. It's winter in Karien, and travel will be
difficult."
"They could have sent a bird."
"Even carrier pigeons fall prone to bad weather, Brak."
"And your spies in Krakandar? What do they tell you?"
She smiled innocently. "What makes you think I have spies in
Krakandar?"
"If you don't, it would be the only place in the south that you have
none."
"You know far too much about us for an outsider, my Lord."
"And you seem to be avoiding the question."
Teriahna shrugged. "I don't mean to. In truth, there's not much to
tell. Damin Wolfblade arrived in Krakandar, he stayed a week or more,
learnt his uncle was dead and left for Greenharbour a few days later.
Adrina is with him, certainly, and so is your demon child. The news of her
presence set the city talking, I'm told, so much so that it somewhat
overshadowed the news that Damin had taken a bride. Between the demon
child and the death of the High Prince, she's managed to keep a fairly
low profile. The news is out, but it's a poor third to the other
rumours currently on offer. Oh, there was one thing I neglected to
mention. Damin Wolfblade contacted the Guild in Hythria."
"Who does he want them to kill?"
"Nobody. He sent a message saying that whatever price we were
offered to kill either him or Adrina, he would double it if we refused
the job."
"I always thought he was a smart lad. Can you get me in to see
Hablet? This is becoming urgent."
"If he's finished mourning."
"Hablet is mourning Lernen Wolfblade?" Brak asked
sceptically.
The Raven laughed. "In public. He's probably locked himself in his
rooms and is throwing a party. But he is a King, and one has to be seen
to do the right thing."
Brak fell silent, wondering how the death of the Hythrun High Prince
would affect R'shiel's plans. It was a singular waste of time, as he
actually had no real idea of R'shiel's ultimate plans. He was here on
trust, and that was not an emotion that came easily when dealing with
the demon child.
"May I offer you some advice before your audience with our esteemed
monarch, Brak?"
"Of course."
"Hablet is a very devout man in his own way, but he despises the
Harshini. He has no wish to learn they still exist and no desire to
welcome them back into his court. He finds he gets along very nicely
without them."
"Glenanaran and the others have been in Greenharbour for months.
It's no longer a secret that the Harshini survive."
"True, but neither is it common knowledge. Oh, people have heard the
rumours, and some even believe them, but their belief is based on faith
not fact. You won't get a very warm reception when Hablet realises who
you are. He'll see your presence as the thin edge of the wedge. When
you deliver your news about his daughter, he'll take it as a sign that
the Harshini are already interfering in Fardohnya. Be very
careful."
"I can take care of myself."
"I've no doubt of that," she said. "But it is better to be
warned."
"I appreciate your concern, my Lady."
Teriahna leaned forward, studied him closely for a moment, then
smiled. "Do you, Brak?"
There was something in the way she spoke; something in the shift of
her body that set warning bells ringing in Brak's head. She placed her
hand gently on his thigh. Then she abruptly shed any pretence of
subtlety and the invitation in her eyes was so blatant she might as
well have cried it aloud.
"Do you really appreciate me, Brak?" she asked softly.
Brak smiled ruefully and lifted her hand from his thigh, placing it
quite deliberately on the arm of her chair.
"Yes, I really do appreciate the help you've given me,
Teriahna," he
said.
"I see," the Raven replied, nodding her head thoughtfully.
"There's
someone else, isn't there?"
"What do you mean?"
She laughed softly. "Do you know how I came to join the Assassins'
Guild, Brak? I was a court'esa, and a damned good one, too. I
was recruited by the Guild for a very special job. The rest, as they
say, is history. But just because I've changed careers, it doesn't mean
I've lost the skills I started out with.
"There is someone else. I can see it in your face, plain as
day. Who is it? Some impossibly perfect Harshini back in Sanctuary?
Some lucky farm girl in Medalon?"
Her assumption took Brak completely by surprise. He had taken no
lovers since L'rin in the Grimfield, back when R'shiel was a prisoner
there. Since then he had been so consumed by his task of protecting the
demon child, he'd had no time to think of his own pleasure.
"There's no one else, Teriahna."
"Perhaps you're not even aware of it yourself," she shrugged.
Brak laughed at the very idea. "You think that after several hundred
years I wouldn't notice if I'd fallen in love?"
"I think after several hundred years, you're so used to not
being loved, you wouldn't know what it felt like if it ran up to you
and hit you on the head."
"You think so?"
"Yes, I do," she chuckled. "But don't let it bother you. I'm
sure it
will work itself out. As for me? Well, I like to try new things.
Sometimes I succeed, other times I don't."
"New things?"
"I'm sorry. I've offended you, haven't I?"
"No. I just don't find myself referred to as a thing too
often."
Teriahna's smiled faded. "You should try a stint as a court'esa
some time, Brak. Then you'd truly know the meaning of the
word." She
looked away, suddenly uncomfortable that she had spoken so freely.
Rising hastily to her feet, she pushed the chair back along the
polished floor with a scrape of wood against wood. "I really should be
going. I've spent far too much time away from my other duties. I'll
bring your audience clothes around in the morning."
Brak remained seated, guessing that she would prefer it that way.
Teriahna walked to the door, stopping with her hand on the latch.
"There was one other thing I meant to tell you," she said,
turning
back to look at him. Her manner had reverted to its usual professional
mien. "I had a message from Starros, the head of the Thieves' Guild in
Krakandar. He said there was an old man there who was stirring up the
population against the demon child. I don't know if it's important, but
I thought you'd like to know."
"Why would Starros send you a message about some old man in
Krakandar?"
"He thought it might have been one of our people on a contracted
hit. It's not inconceivable that someone might want the demon child
eliminated and that they would be prepared to pay handsomely for the
job. And it wasn't a message so much as a reprimand. He was rather put
out that I might have sent someone into his city without advising him
first out of professional courtesy."
"Did he say anything else?"
"No. Just that the old man had been preaching on street corners,
subverting his people and making a general nuisance of himself. Starros
thought our plan was to incite a riot of some sort and for the demon
child to be killed in the ensuing chaos."
"That doesn't sound like your style."
"It's not. Crowds are much too hard to control. Particularly when
you've worked them up into a brainless mob. Whoever the old man was, he
certainly isn't one of ours."
"It's probably nothing to be concerned about."
"I agree, but I thought I should let you be the judge. I'll see you
later, then?" She turned her back to him and opened the door.
"Teriahna? Just out of curiosity, if someone did contract you to
kill the demon child, would you take the job?"
She closed the door again and turned to him with a sly smile. "That
would depend on how much they offered me."
"What price would you set on the demon child's life, my Lady
Raven?"
"What would you pay for it?" she retorted.
He laughed humourlessly. "The ultimate price."
"You'd pay with your life?"
"I already have."
She nodded thoughtfully. "Then I have the answer to my question,
Brak. There is someone else. It is the demon child."
CHAPTER 18
Tarja knew exactly how he planned to strike his
first blow against Medalon's new masters, a plan as simple as it was
fraught with danger. He also knew it would meet considerable
opposition, so he kept silent until they were ready to leave Roan Vale,
hugging his idea to himself as he pulled his cloak against the chill
wind.
They waited in the small village for the remainder of their troops
and the rest of the rebels to catch up with them. His meeting in Testra
had gone well, and although Antwon could not bring himself to desert,
he gave any Defender under his command who wished to flee the advancing
Kariens leave to follow Tarja. Consequently, the force Tarja now had
gathered to cross the border into Hythria numbered over two thousand.
It still wasn't enough to take on the Kariens, but it was a start.
"We should be ready to move at first light," Denjon reported
that
evening, as Tarja stood poring over the map in the cellar. It was a
singular waste of time. He had studied the map so often these past few
days that every line and contour was burned into his brain.
"Now if only this damnable rain would stop, so we could get through
to Hythria."
"Aye. My scouts tell me there's not a navigable road for miles.
They're either flooded or so boggy we're going to have to walk most of
the way."
"And every day the Kariens are getting closer to the
Citadel."
"Well, look on the bright side," Denjon shrugged. "The Glass
River's
so full they'll not be able to cross it for a while."
"I'd prefer it if they couldn't cross it at all," Tarja said.
Denjon's eyes narrowed. "That sounds suspiciously like a
suggestion."
"Actually, it was. Where are the others?"
"Linst is organising the supply wagons. Dorak is trying to beat some
sense into your rebel friends. They're not being very
cooperative."
"That's because they don't like taking anything from the
Defenders,"
Mandah explained as she closed the cellar door behind her. "Least of
all orders."
Tarja nodded, satisfied that they would not be disturbed for some
time. He stabbed his finger at the map and looked at Denjon and Mandah.
"We have to stop the Kariens crossing the Glass River."
"You said that already," Denjon said, folding his arms
across his
chest.
"There's only three ways they can cross," Tarja continued.
"They can
build rafts and float themselves across, which is far too time
consuming and dangerous. They can commandeer what trading vessels and
river boats they can find, or they can use the ferries at Testra and
Cauthside."
"They won't find many river boats," Mandah said. "Most of
them have
sailed south for the Gulf. They know what's coming."
"Then that just leaves the ferries," Denjon agreed. "How do
you plan
to stop the Kariens using them? We don't have enough men to fight them
off."
"We're going to have to sink them."
Mandah gasped. "Sink the ferries? But that would cut Medalon in
half."
"I'm aware of that," Tarja replied evenly.
"It would stop the Kariens in their tracks, though," Denjon
mused.
Tarja nodded. "With the ferries gone, the worst they can do is turn
south-west and attack Testra. The heart of Medalon is the Citadel, and
until they occupy that, theirs will be a hollow victory indeed."
"It won't be easy, Tarja," Denjon warned. "Even if the
Kariens don't
try to stop you, our own people will. You'll destroy their livelihood
along with those ferries."
"I know, which is why I'm only taking a few men. We'll backtrack to
Vanahiem, cross over to Testra, and then make our way overland to
Cauthside. Hopefully we can take out the Cauthside Ferry before the
Kariens reach it."
"Then take the Testra Ferry out on your way back?" Mandah
asked.
Tarja nodded and glanced at Denjon.
"That will take you weeks," the captain said with a shake of
his
head. "The Kariens will be in Cauthside long before you."
"The logistics of moving an army the size of the Karien host are
considerable," Tarja reminded him. "They can only move a few
leagues a
day, or be forced to break their army up into smaller units. The latter
is unlikely. They'll stay together, thinking their impressive size will
cow the Medalonians into submission."
"That's a bit optimistic," Mandah remarked with a thin
smile. "The
vast majority of Medalonians live south of the Glass River."
"You'll be cutting it fine," Denjon said with a frown.
"I'll hand-pick the men who accompany me. We've some good men out
there and none of them come from the river towns or have family whose
livelihood depends directly on trade across the river. It'll ruin the
merchants and families who depend on it for their wages and I don't
want any second thoughts when it comes to the crunch."
"And the Hythrun? What do you want me to tell them?"
"I'll leave that to you," Tarja shrugged. "Once you get to
Hythria,
you and Damin can start planning the conquest of Medalon. There's not
much we can do until we find out how many men he can spare us, at any
rate. I'll join you as soon as I can. In the meantime, you can send out
some other squads with orders to do whatever they must -
cajole,
threaten or destroy - to stop the river boats from docking on
the
western bank. I want every boat on the river - even those
moored on
this side too - safely out of reach of the Kariens."
"You know, given enough time, the Kariens will find a way across.
They've engineers and boat builders aplenty and there's more than
enough timber on the other side of the river to build rafts to move
their troops across."
"I'm counting on the change of seasons. By the time the Kariens have
constructed their own transport, the Glass River will be even more
swollen than it is now with the spring melt from the Jagged Mountains.
It'll be far too dangerous to attempt a crossing until the flood waters
have subsided."
"I'll come with you," Mandah announced abruptly.
"Don't be stupid," Tarja retorted without thinking.
"But I was a Novice once," she explained. "I know how to
behave like
a Sister of the Blade. Disguised as a Sister I can commandeer the ferry
and once aboard you can take it out into the middle of the river, set
fire to it, then swim ashore once it's well and truly ablaze."
"That may even work," Denjon said thoughtfully.
"It's too dangerous."
Mandah laughed softly. "Dangerous? Tarja, I was fighting in the
rebellion long before you came along and nothing much has changed that
I can see. Why is it too dangerous for me and not for you?"
Tarja was unable to answer her. He could hardly admit his bravery
had more to do with his desire to escape his own thoughts than it did
from any innate sense of honour. Turning back to face the Kariens meant
not having to continue south. It meant not having to face R'shiel for a
little while longer. He was afraid to admit how much that thought
relieved him.
"She has a point, Tarja. You'll raise less suspicion travelling with
a Sister than you would if you travel alone."
"Then it's settled. I'm going with you," Mandah declared.
"Are you really so anxious to throw your life away?" he
asked her
with a frown.
"I don't plan to throw my life away, Tarja, and I wasn't aware that
this was a suicide mission." Her eyes challenged him to deny
her
accusation.
Tarja looked away first. "No, I'm not planning a suicide mission.
You can come if you wish. We'll be riding hard though. It won't be
easy."
"If I'd wanted 'easy', Tarja, I would have stayed with the
Sisterhood."
Later that evening, Tarja sat in the taproom of
the Roan Vale tavern finishing his meal, wondering why Mandah had
accused him of planning a suicide mission. He didn't feel suicidal. But
neither did the prospect of dying unduly concern him. As he pondered
the matter, he realised that the only thing he felt about death, when
he consciously thought about it at all, was apathy. He did not hunger
for death. He did not particularly hunger for life. He simply didn't
care.
"Do you mind if I join you?"
Tarja looked up at the old man who had spoken and glanced around the
room. The taproom was filled to capacity and the only spare seat was
the empty bench opposite him. He wondered for a moment if the others
were avoiding him.
"Suit yourself," he replied with a shrug.
The man sat down with his foaming tankard and smiled at Tarja. He
had long white hair and a disturbingly familiar air about him that
Tarja couldn't quite place.
"You look troubled, my son."
"These are troubling times."
"And you bear a heavier burden than most, I suspect."
Tarja shrugged but did not offer a reply. He had no wish to fall
into conversation with this old man, whoever he was.
"I hear you flee Medalon to join the demon child?"
Tarja looked up sharply. "Where did you hear that?"
"The rumours are everywhere," the old man told him. "There's
not a
Defender here who isn't whispering the news to his comrades."
That's true enough, he thought. Too many of these men
were there when R'shiel revealed her power. It's long past the point of
being a secret.
"Well," the old man continued, taking a sip of his ale, "one
can
hardly blame you for being worried."
"Who says I'm worried?"
"Every line on your face proclaims it, Captain."
"Thanks for your concern, but you needn't be worried on my behalf.
We have everything under control."
"I'm sure you do," the old man agreed solemnly. "But nothing
will
ever be certain while the demon child lives."
Tarja studied the old man suspiciously. He was not so full of his
own troubles that he did not recognise a threat to R'shiel when he
heard it.
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"I mean nothing," he shrugged. "It just seems to me that the
Kariens
would be much more amenable if they weren't facing the threat of the
demon child. Isn't she supposed to destroy their God? How would you
feel if you thought someone was trying to destroy everything that you
held dear? One doesn't have to be on their side to understand what
drives them. I just think it odd that the Defenders are going to such
pains to protect the very one whose presence caused this conflict in
the first place."
"R'shiel didn't start this war."
"Didn't she? Isn't her existence what prompted the Kariens to act?
You killed their Envoy because he was trying to take R'shiel to Karien,
didn't you? Why do you defend her? If Medalon means so much to you, why
not simply hand her over and be done with it? She's your greatest
bargaining chip, yet you refuse to play it. Is she so important to you
that you are willing to risk your entire nation to protect her?"
"You don't know what you're talking about, old man," Tarja
scoffed,
unwilling to admit that his logic made frightening sense. Could it
really be that simple? Could they end this conflict now by trading
R'shiel to the Kariens? Would their enemy withdraw for something so
easily arranged? Tarja shook his head, unable to believe that he could
even consider betraying her.
The old man looked at him closely, as if he could read Tarja's
internal conflict. Then he smiled and shrugged and took another swallow
of his ale.
"You must forgive me, Captain. I let my mouth run away with me at
times. I'm just an old man who sees things a little differently from
younger men. What would I know? I wish you luck in your quest."
"Luck has nothing to do with it," Tarja replied, pushing
away the
remains of his stew. For some reason he had lost his appetite.
"I just hope the demon child appreciates the sacrifice you have made
for her, Captain."
The old man downed the rest of his ale and climbed to his feet.
Tarja watched him as he threaded his way through the crowd to the door,
disturbed to discover how easily the seeds of doubt and treachery
planted by the old man had found fertile ground inside his troubled
mind.
CHAPTER 19
Slaves lined the walls of the Main Hall of the
Summer Palace, moving the languid air about with large rattan fans,
although at this time of year the temperature was quite bearable. It
was an impressive chamber, crowded with courtiers and supplicants
awaiting the chance for an audience with their King. The potted palms
provided the perfect backdrop for the clusters of schemers and
sycophants who always seemed to find their way into any royal court,
regardless of where it was or who was in power. Hablet held open court
here each morning when he was in residence, and made a point of putting
in an appearance, even if he never actually heard a petition.
Brak moved among the jewelled and pampered crowd, dressed in the
garish yellow silk trousers and embroidered vest Teriahna had provided
for him. She had claimed, with a perfectly straight face, that it gave
him an air of "rustic nobility". He assumed she meant he looked
like
the provincial lord he was pretending to be. He privately suspected he
looked like an idiot.
Eventually he spied the man he was searching for and pushed his way
through the courtiers to confront him. Hablet had yet to arrive and his
Chamberlain, Lecter Turon, was busy openly collecting the bribes that
would ensure one a place at the head of the queue. Brak had no
intention of parting with a single coin to see Hablet. He had far
better currency to deal with.
"My Lord Chamberlain?"
The eunuch turned to Brak and looked him over with a practised eye,
taking in his air of "rustic nobility" and dismissing him as
inconsequential with a single glance.
"Can I be of assistance, my Lord?" he asked rather
impatiently.
"I wish to see the King."
"As does every other man here," the eunuch sighed.
"I was told you could arrange it."
"Ah, now that can be difficult. The King is a very busy man."
"I could make it worth your while."
Lecter's eyes narrowed greedily. "Such a consideration would be
expensive, my Lord."
"Then the Raven was mistaken when she said you could help
me."
Lecter paled, his bald head shining with sweat. "The Raven?"
"Did I forget to mention that she recommended you? The Raven seems
to know quite a lot about you, actually, Chamberlain Turon. I wonder
why that is?"
The Chamberlain looked decidedly uncomfortable with the notion that
the head of the Assassins' Guild was taking a personal interest in him.
"I will do what I can, my Lord, but as you may have heard, the King is
in mourning for his cousin, the High Prince of Hythria."
"I'm sure he's devastated," Brak agreed wryly. "But I won't
need
more than a moment of his time."
"May I inquire as to the nature of your business with the
King?"
"I have news for him that would be best delivered in
private."
"Please wait here, my Lord. I will see what I can do."
It was not long before Turon returned and beckoned Brak forward.
Brak followed him through the curious and envious stares to the
delicately carved doors at the end of the hall. He knocked once and
entered without waiting for an answer.
"Your Majesty! Allow me to introduce Lord . . . what was
your name?"
"Brakandaran."
"Lord Brakandaran! From . . ." Lecter looked at
him
questioningly.
"I come from Sanctuary," Brak said.
Up until that point, the King had been sitting behind his elaborate
gilt desk, reading from a parchment scroll in front of him, utterly
uninterested in his guest. At the mention of Sanctuary his head jerked
up and he stared at Brak with bright, birdlike eyes.
"Where did you say?"
"Sanctuary."
"Which one?"
"There is only one, Your Majesty."
"Lecter! Leave us!"
Hablet's tone left no room for argument. The Chamberlain hurried to
do as he was bid. As the door closed, Brak stepped further into the
room and looked around with interest. The doors to the balcony were
open and he could hear faint childish voices from the lush gardens
below. The King's private chamber had barely changed since he last
stood here confronting Hablet's great-grandfather.
"You look human," Hablet accused as soon as they were alone.
His
voice was anything but friendly, but at least he made no pretence of
not understanding who Brak was.
"I'm only half Harshini. It's an advantage at times."
"Brakandaran, did you say your name was? Not Brakandaran the
Half-Breed, surely? I thought you'd be long dead by now."
"As you can see, I'm not dead."
"What do you want? If you're here to petition my court for a place
for one of your damned sorcerers, you're wasting your time. I'll not
have the Harshini spying on my every move for that degenerate in
Hythria."
"That degenerate in Hythria is dead," Brak pointed out. "I
was led
to believe you were mourning him."
"Ha! Dancing on his grave, more like it. Is that why you're here?
Now that Lernen is dead, you've decided to come to me for protection?
You should have come here first, in any case. It was a grave insult to
Fardohnya, the Harshini King sending his people to Lernen's court
without coming here first."
"You just said you didn't want any Harshini in your court."
"That's not the point. You should have offered. I have served the
gods faithfully. I deserve it."
Brak knew it was hopeless trying to argue with such a man. "Your
Majesty, the decision to allow the Harshini to return to the Sorcerers'
Collective was not mine to make. I might point out, however, that if
you hadn't rounded up every member of the Sorcerers' Collective and had
them thrown in gaol when you assumed the throne, my King might
have considered sending someone to Fardohnya. As it is, you've a lot of
explaining to do."
Hablet tugged on his beard unhappily. "They were Hythrun
spies."
"And the others you killed when you inherited the crown? What was
their crime?"
"You've been around long enough to know what happens in Fardohnya
when a new King takes the throne. Why quibble about it now?"
"Your barbaric practices don't concern me, Hablet. Interesting
though, that they were never practised when there were Harshini in the
Fardohnyan court."
"That's because the Harshini are so damned squeamish. Now, did you
want something in particular, or are you just going to stand there and
chide me for things I did thirty years ago?"
Brak's eyes darkened and he waved his arm, drawing a chair from the
side of the room across the polished floor with an uncomfortable
screech. When the chair magically arrived at his side, he sat down and
leaned back, smiling at the Fardohnyan King.
"Thank you, Your Majesty. I will have a seat."
Hablet's eyes widened. He had never been confronted with true
Harshini power before. His day-to-day dealings with the gods involved
bribing the temples and praying for a legitimate son.
"What do you want?"
"You and I need to have a talk about your heir."
"I'll name my heir when I'm good and ready," Hablet
declared. "And
no black-eyed bastard from Sanctuary is going to make me appoint
someone I don't want."
"I wouldn't dream of it, Your Majesty, however circumstances have
arisen of which you are not aware, and they will radically affect your
choice."
Hablet squinted at him "What circumstances? Ah! I have it! You've
discovered that stupid law about leaving my crown to a Wolfblade,
haven't you? Well you can go back to Sanctuary and tell Lorandranek, or
whoever the hell sent you here, that Talabar harbour will freeze in
high summer before I let a Wolfblade set foot in Fardohnya, let alone
sit on my throne."
"I wasn't sent by Lorandranek, Your Majesty. He's been dead for over
twenty years. Korandellan is the King of the Harshini now."
"I don't care if the damned First Sister of Medalon is King!"
"I was sent here by the demon child."
"The demon child? Are you drunk? The demon child is a legend made up
to frighten children. Lorandranek never sired a half-human
child."
"Perhaps if you hadn't been so hasty throwing the Sorcerers'
Collective out of Fardohnya, you might know that he did."
"Who is he then? Where is he?"
"Her name is R'shiel."
"A girl?" Hablet laughed with genuine amusement. "Why would
the gods
invest such power in a female?"
"Perhaps they don't share your prejudice."
"Perhaps they're not as smart as they think they are," the
King
scoffed.
"I don't suggest you say that in Jelanna's hearing," Brak
warned. "Maybe that's why the Goddess of Fertility has denied you a
legitimate
son. She must know what you think of women."
"Don't you threaten me with my beliefs," the King warned. "I
am a
faithful servant of the Goddess."
"So I've heard," Brak agreed with a wry smile.
"So, this demon child . . . this girl
. . . sent you here to tell me who to name as my
heir?"
Hablet laughed scornfully. "I don't know what's funnier - that
she
thinks she can dictate to me, or that you actually thought I would
listen to you."
"You'd better listen to me, Hablet," Brak warned. "There
will be no
legitimate son for you. Your heir will be as the law decrees -
it will
be Damin Wolfblade."
"Over my dead body!"
"Exactly," Brak pointed out simply.
"I'd rather give my crown to that simpering Karien idiot Adrina
married than name that Hythrun barbarian my heir."
"That might prove difficult," Brak murmured, but Hablet
wasn't
listening to him.
"Anyway, you're mad if you think the people of Fardohnya would ever
accept a Hythrun King!"
"They would accept a Fardohnyan Queen."
"Oh! So now you want him to marry one of my daughters, I
suppose!"
"No need," Brak said, with a smug smile. "The demon child
has
already taken care of that minor detail."
Hablet stilled warily. "What do you mean by that?"
"Ah, now those would be the circumstances I spoke of," Brak
said,
brushing a fleck of dust from his yellow silk trousers as he
deliberately drew out the silence.
"What circumstances?" Hablet demanded.
"Cratyn is dead, Your Majesty. Your daughter has remarried."
"Remarried? Who?"
"Perhaps you'd like to hazard a guess?" he suggested. He was
rather
enjoying Hablet's discomfort.
"No!" the King cried, leaping to his feet, his face
almost as
crimson as the silk-panelled walls. "I'll not tolerate this! I'll
disown her! Damn it, I'll invade Hythria and bring her back!"
"Your House is now united with the House of Wolfblade. You will
honour the peace between your Houses and do no such thing. As the
Wolfblade House is the ruling House in Hythria, it is now beyond your
reach. You can't invade them and you can't make war on them."
"This is intolerable!"
Brak smiled serenely. "I'm sure you'll learn to live with
it."
"Get out! Get out of my palace! Get out of my country, for that
matter! Take your damned Harshini manipulations and your demon child
and get the hell out of Fardohnya!"
Brak drew on enough power to blacken his eyes again, rose to his
feet and loomed over the Fardohnyan King.
"You will abide by the law. You will name Damin
Wolfblade your heir and you will give your blessing to his
marriage to Adrina."
"Never!"
"Then be prepared for the consequences, Your Majesty," Brak
warned. "You defy the demon child at your peril."
CHAPTER 20
It was obvious that Cyrus Eaglespike and his
cronies were in control of Greenharbour. The streets, while not exactly
deserted, were unnaturally free of the normal bustle of commerce that
one would expect in the greatest trading port in the south. There were
no soldiers from the Sorcerers' Collective in evidence and no sign of
the Palace Guard either. Although the guards made no move to prevent
Damin and his force entering the sparkling white city, their
breastplates were embossed with a soaring eagle.
R'shiel looked around with interest. She rode at Damin's side at the
head of a column made up of three centuries of Krakandar Raiders.
Narvell Hawksword followed Damin's men with three hundred Elasapine
Raiders, while further back, Rogan Bearbow rode at the head of his own
entourage. Between them they had brought close to a thousand men south
to claim the High Prince's throne. Adrina was riding in the coach a
little further back in the column with Princess Marla. She had refused
to ride since Krakandar, although she declined to give a reason. Damin
was convinced it was simply to make things more difficult for him.
R'shiel knew the reason but figured it wasn't her place to say.
Besides, she had promised Marla she would say nothing yet. No doubt
Adrina was being subjected to her mother-in-law's intense scrutiny as
they travelled together. R'shiel wondered with a faint smile just who
would emerge the victor from that small, but important, skirmish.
"This doesn't look promising," Damin murmured.
"Who normally guards the city?" R'shiel asked with a glance
over her
shoulder at the wary guards who fingered their sheathed blades with
itching fingers as they passed through the city gates.
"The Collective."
The further they rode into the city, the more deserted the streets
became. News of the arrival of the Warlords of Krakandar, Elasapine and
Izcomdar ran before them like flame on a line of lamp oil and the
citizens of Greenharbour wisely kept to their homes, out of the way of
a confrontation that was likely to get very ugly.
"Damin, I may not be a tactical genius, but is this a good idea?
Riding openly through Greenharbour when you know your cousin has
claimed the throne?"
He shrugged. "Greenharbour is neutral territory."
"Nine hundred Raiders isn't very many."
"That's all I'm permitted to bring into the city. Three centuries
for every Warlord, no more. It's the law."
"The law didn't stop your cousin claiming the throne. What makes you
think it's going to stop him breaking the rules about the number of
troops he can muster in the city?"
"I can't risk marching into Greenharbour openly flaunting the law.
It would be playing right into Cyrus' hands. Besides, you won't let
anything happen to me."
"You're relying on my power to save you? Adrina was right,
you do enjoy living dangerously, don't you?"
"Adrina said that, did she?"
"Yes."
"What else did she say?"
R'shiel rolled her eyes impatiently. "Why don't you ask her?"
"I'm asking you."
"You're a damned fool, Damin Wolfblade."
He did not answer her; did not have a chance to. She stilled
suddenly, her whole body tensing as the familiar prickle of magic ran
over her skin like a million tiny ants wearing hobnailed boots.
"What's wrong?" Damin asked, watching her curiously.
"Someone is drawing power. A lot of it." Her face was a mask
of
concentration as she tried to pinpoint the source. Finally she stood in
her stirrups, looking out over the white, flat-roofed houses and then
pointed towards the harbour. "It's coming from that direction."
"The harbour?"
"No. I don't think so. But close to it."
"Then it's probably the Sorcerers' Collective you sense. Perhaps
it's some of the sorcerers -"
"No!" she declared emphatically. "What I can feel isn't
someone
chanting spells. This is Harshini."
Damin shrugged. "That would mean it was one of the Harshini who
returned to the Collective last winter. I doubt it's anything to be
concerned about. If it's Harshini magic you can sense, then they're
bound to be on our side."
She sat down again and looked at him. "How do you figure
that?"
"You are the demon child. You ride with me."
"You don't understand, Damin. This isn't one Harshini drawing their
power that I can feel. It's several of them and they are drawing every
drop they can handle."
"Then it could mean trouble."
"Founders, Damin! Do you practise being so dense?"
He grinned sheepishly. "I'm sorry. Explain it to me."
"I think the Harshini are under attack. It's the only
explanation."
Damin reined in his stallion and brought the column to a halt. His
grin faded and was replaced by a look of consternation. "Someone is attacking
the Harshini? That's inconceivable. This is Hythria, not Medalon or
Karien. We honour the . . . R'shiel!"
She wasn't listening to him. Instead she spurred her horse forward
to the end of the paved street where the rise of the land enabled her
to look out over the rest of the city. What she saw made her gasp with
astonishment.
Greenharbour lay before her, a sea of whitewashed buildings glaring
under a sky of sapphire silk.
The city curved around the crescent-shaped bay. To the left was the
forest of tall masts that marked the vast wharves of the city. To her
right was a magnificent white palace, its domed spires gilded and
almost too bright to look upon. Above the palace was a glittering dome
of radiant, shimmering light enveloping the temples and palaces that
R'shiel thought must be the Sorcerers' Collective. She could just make
out the outlines of the buildings inside the dome as it waxed and waned
with the fading strength of the Harshini who held it in place.
Legend held that two centuries ago, the Harshini who defended the
Citadel from the Sisters of the Blade had done the same thing. But if
several hundred Harshini had not been able to hold a protective dome in
place long enough to save the Citadel, there was little chance the few
Harshini in Greenharbour could hold this one longer than a few more
minutes.
"What in the name of the gods is that?" Damin gasped
as he
reined in beside her.
"The Harshini trying to protect themselves," she explained.
"Look
down there."
Damin looked in the direction of her pointing finger. The streets
surrounding the dome of light were crowded with soldiers. Although they
were too far away to make out their individual escutcheons, R'shiel
could easily guess whose troops they were. They were massing in the
main avenues leading to the Collective, simply waiting for the strength
of the Harshini who protected it to fade. She glanced over her shoulder
at the men Damin, Narvell and Rogan had brought into the city. They
were easily outnumbered three to one. The other two Warlords were
riding up the street towards the head of the column. R'shiel left Damin
to deal with them and turned her attention back to the dome of light.
Even in the short time she had been watching it had faded somewhat.
"What's going on?" she heard Rogan Bearbow demand of Damin
behind
her. She did not wait to hear his answer. Spurring her horse forward,
she headed for the harbour at a canter. Whatever politics were involved
in the battle for the High Prince's throne, the Hythrun had no right to
endanger the peaceful Harshini.
R'shiel had no plan in mind. Her only thought was that the dome was
fading and the Harshini trapped inside were in danger. She could not
reach the Harshini through the impenetrable barrier, but when it
collapsed the soldiers massed in the streets surrounding the Collective
would overrun them. She smiled grimly to herself as she rode, wondering
how life could change so drastically in such a short time. Two years
ago, had she heard there were Harshini under attack, she would have
applauded the forces ranged against her despised enemies. Now she was
riding to their rescue, heedless of any danger she might be placing
herself in.
That thought had a sobering effect, and she slowed her horse to a
walk. What am I doing? I can't just ride up to the gates of the
Collective and demand the enemy disperse.
R'shiel looked around and discovered she had ridden into an area of
the city that was filled with government buildings. At least she
guessed that's what they were. They had an aura of bureaucracy that
R'shiel knew well. The buildings were several storeys high and a number
had impressive entrances flanked by fluted marble columns. They
surrounded a broad circular plaza dominated by a fountain that spewed
forth its cascade from the mouth of a beautifully sculpted water
dragon. R'shiel studied the creature curiously for a moment. She had
heard of the remarkable beasts that populated the warm waters of the
Dregian Ocean, but she had never seen anything like the creature in the
fountain. It had a large dorsal fin, wide-set eyes and a long, elegant
tail that ended in a broad, flipper-like paddle.
She had little time to admire the artistry of the fountain, however,
as the sound of horses moving towards her caught her attention. At the
far end of the paved plaza a number of mounted Raiders appeared, a
tall, middle-aged man riding at their head. His blond beard was neatly
trimmed, his leather armour gilded. The soaring eagle of his House was
picked out in precious stones that glinted in the sunlight falling
across the plaza.
Behind her, R'shiel could hear Damin and his party forming up. She
sat alone and exposed astride her horse in the centre of the plaza as
the opposing forces arrayed themselves on either side. An unnatural
silence descended, only the splashing of the fountain and the creaking
of leather harness disturbing the morning.
"Cousin!" Cyrus Eaglespike called loudly, moving forward at
a walk. "I never thought to see you alive again!"
"That's pretty bloody obvious!" Damin called back as he rode
out to
meet the pretender flanked by Narvell and Rogan.
R'shiel watched them approaching with a frown. She didn't have time
for this. The dome of light flickered in the distance.
"It warms my heart to see that the reports of your death were
. . . overstated, cousin," Cyrus declared with vast
insincerity as he neared the fountain.
Damin, Narvell and Rogan reined in on the other side of the
fountain. "I'm sure it does, cousin. That would explain what you're
doing here with so many troops."
"We acted to contain the potential civil unrest brought on by the
news of our uncle's death."
"Lernen was my uncle, not yours, Cyrus. Your relationship to the
Wolfblade family is so tenuous it barely exists."
"Actually, it's not as tenuous as you might think, cousin. Once
Kalan ratifies my claim . . ."
"The High Arrion? Ratify you?" Rogan Bearbow
declared hotly.
The mere thought obviously offended him.
"Is that why you're attacking the Harshini?" R'shiel
demanded.
Cyrus seemed to notice R'shiel for the first time. He smiled
patronisingly. "Who is this, Damin? Some piece of Medalonian
entertainment you picked up north of the border? Or is this the wife
that we've been hearing about?"
R'shiel's eyes darkened with anger as she drew on her power. Cyrus'
eyes passed over her contemptuously for a moment, then suddenly locked
on her face as he saw her eyes blacken.
"Mother of the gods!" he cried. His horse reared, the
gelding
reacting to the proximity of a Harshini drawing on her power. Even the
mounts that Damin, Rogan and Narvell rode began to toss their heads
nervously, although they knew her scent well enough not to fear the
unfamiliar but instinctive urge they felt to respond. Her own horse was
not concerned, having been with her long enough now to recognise and
welcome the touch of the magic that it had been born to serve. R'shiel
suddenly understood why the majority of the troops surrounding the
Collective were infantry. With the Harshini inside the Collective
drawing so much power, the Hythrun sorcerer-bred cavalry mounts would
be uncontrollable.
"Cyrus, call off your troops. Now."
Damin spoke with quiet assurance, as if he had no doubt as to the
outcome, should the Warlord refuse.
"Who are you?" Cyrus demanded of R'shiel.
"I'm the last thing you will ever lay eyes on if you don't
withdraw," she informed the startled Warlord. The power filled
her,
hungering for release. Cyrus' mount was becoming increasingly restive
and he was fighting to maintain his dignity and his seat at the same
time.
The pretender turned on Damin angrily. "What sort of trickery is
this?"
"This isn't trickery, my Lord, this is the demon child. I suggest
you do as she says. She's not noted for her patience."
If Cyrus had heard that Damin was married, then he certainly must
have heard that the demon child rode with him. The Warlord debated the
issue for a long, tension-filled moment, then angrily waved his arm. A
rider broke from the ranks at the entrance to the plaza and cantered
forward.
"Take a message to Lord Foxtalon and Lord Falconlance,"
Cyrus
ordered through clenched teeth. "Tell them to order the troops to
withdraw."
"Sir?"
"You heard me!"
With a puzzled look, the captain nodded and wheeled his mount
around. Cyrus turned back to R'shiel, his expression a mixture of
contempt and fear.
"Satisfied?"
"For now," R'shiel agreed, although she did not let go of
the power.
The dome was fading fast, its light failing as fatigue consumed the
Harshini holding it in place. Now she was drawing on her own power, she
was even more aware of the drain on the Harshini inside. A few more
minutes and they would have to let it go completely. She bit her bottom
lip in frustration, wishing she knew how to lend them her strength.
Brak and her tutors at Sanctuary had never taught her how. Perhaps they
had not thought she would ever need a reason to link her power to
another Harshini. Or maybe she couldn't link with a Harshini unless
they were a te Ortyn like her . . . Maybe it was
too
dangerous . . . She shook her head to clear it of the useless
thoughts and turned her attention back to the matter at hand. What she
could and couldn't do with her power was a problem for some other time.
Right now it was enough that Cyrus believed she knew what she was
doing. "Aren't you supposed to have some sort of election to confirm
the new High Prince?"
"The Convocation would already be under way, but for the
interference of the Harshini, who prevented us entering the Sorcerers'
Palace."
"You can't hold a Convocation without all seven Warlords,"
Damin
pointed out.
"Actually, cousin, I merely need a majority."
"Which you don't have," Narvell reminded him.
"A situation that will be remedied as soon as Tejay Lionsclaw
arrives." Cyrus looked to Rogan with a frown. "I see you have
chosen
whose bed to lie in, Lord Bearbow. I'll remember your choice when I'm
High Prince."
"That's an empty threat, Lord Eaglespike. You don't have the
numbers."
Cyrus smiled with oily contempt. "You might be surprised, my
Lord."
The two men glared at each other like lions facing each other over a
recent kill. R'shiel sighed impatiently.
"Founders! I've had enough of this! Damin, how soon can we hold this
Convocation?"
Damin didn't answer her. He was glaring at Cyrus with such venom
that R'shiel was afraid he was going to call his cousin out, right here
in the plaza. Despite how satisfying it would be to witness him beat
the arrogance out of Cyrus, she knew this had to be resolved legally.
Damin could vent his anger later, once he was High Prince.
"Damin!"
"What?"
"I said, how soon can we hold this Convocation?"
"As soon as Lady Lionsclaw arrives."
"Fine. Send someone to fetch her. In the meantime, I want every
Raider off the streets. The Collective can go back to guarding the
city. I assume you all have sufficient control over your men that you
can keep them out of trouble until this is sorted out?"
Cyrus opened his mouth to object then decided against it as R'shiel
turned her black-eyed gaze on him.
"Very well, we have a truce until the Convocation," he
agreed
reluctantly. "But don't think this has changed anything!"
"Damin?"
"A truce," he agreed, almost as reluctantly as Cyrus.
"Fine, that's settled then. Now get rid of these soldiers!"
"This is not finished, demon child!" Cyrus hauled his reins
around
sharply, taking his anger out on his horse as he rode at a brisk canter
back to his men. Behind him, the dome of light wavered and shimmered
brightly for a moment, as if sprinkled with a billion tiny stars, then
it faded away to nothing as the Harshini finally succumbed to
exhaustion.
"That was close," Narvell muttered.
"We'll sort him out soon enough, brother," Damin promised
savagely.
"Aye," Rogan agreed. "And the more painfully the
better."
R'shiel glared at them impatiently. "You're all as bad as each
other," she snapped, then turned her horse and continued
towards the
Sorcerers' Collective - and hopefully the answers she sought.
CHAPTER 21
The weather was bitterly cold as Tarja and his
squad rode north as hard as they could push their horses without them
foundering. The small band of saboteurs made good time retracing their
journey of a few weeks ago, staying close to the Glass River, camping
at night under whatever meagre shelter they could find. Their good
fortune lasted until a day south of Cauthside, when a savage
thunderstorm forced them to take shelter in an abandoned boathouse next
to the remains of a small dock jutting precariously into the swift
flowing water.
When they arrived, Tarja found a surprise for which he was
completely unprepared. The boathouse was already occupied by a score or
more Fardohnyans; the remnants of Adrina's Guard who had fled the
border with them. Damin had given them supplies and maps, and ordered
the Guard to make for Fardohnya weeks ago. What they were doing here,
this far north, when they should have been almost home by now,
completely baffled Tarja. Getting the story out of them proved
something of a trial too, as none of the Fardohnyans spoke Medalonian,
and nobody in his troop had more than a passing acquaintance with their
native language. In the end, they conversed in Karien, as it proved the
only language they had in common.
Second Lanceman Filip, the young man who had surrendered the Guard
to Damin on the northern border, told the story. They had taken Damin's
advice and headed for Cauthside and the ferry there, only to discover
the town crammed with refugees. Not only could they not converse with
anyone in the town, their mere presence had caused no end of trouble,
some people mistaking them for Kariens. Explaining they were
Fardohnyan, not Karien, had done little to help their cause. The
townsfolk had turned on them. They'd been forced to fight their way
clear of the town rather than risk the remainder of their small band in
a civil riot. Filip and his men were now hiding in the boathouse while
they waited for their wounded to recover sufficiently so they could
continue south to Testra and attempt to cross the river there. They had
lost three men getting out of Cauthside.
Tarja allowed the men to light a fire with what dry fuel they could
find, satisfied that the weather offered them adequate protection from
accidental discovery. The fire cheered the troop considerably. Even the
Fardohnyans seemed a little more spirited. They sat around the small
blaze, his own men discussing tactics and speculating on what their
captain had in mind, the Fardohnyans talking softly among themselves.
Tarja stood by the small window looking out over the dark water,
uncaring of the rain that splattered his face. He could hear the low
murmur of conversation over the storm outside and knew he would have to
decide quickly what to do with the Fardohnyans. It was also time to
tell his troop what he was planning.
Mandah was still the only person in his small squad who knew exactly
what he had in mind. She was right when she claimed that she knew how
to behave with the careless arrogance of a Sister of the Blade.
Disguised as a Blue Sister she had commandeered the ferry in Vanahiem
with remarkable ease. He hoped she could do the same in Cauthside with
as little effort.
Before he acquired an additional twenty-four Fardohnyans, the plan
had been to burn the ferry then swim to safety. If the rain kept up
like this, they would have no chance of burning anything. Nor would
they be able to risk swimming the river.
"Tarja?"
He turned as Mandah walked up beside him, hugging a borrowed
Defender's cloak around her against the cold. She reeked of damp wool,
her fair hair hanging limp and wet against her head, yet her eyes were
bright with the excitement of the adventure.
"You should stay near the fire and dry off," he told her.
"I'll be all right. I've been checking the Fardohnyan wounded. The
one in the corner with the belly wound, I'll be surprised if he makes
it through the night. The others should be fine to travel when we leave
tomorrow."
"So you think we should bring them with us?"
"They've a better chance of getting home eventually if we
do."
He shook his head but did not answer, thinking she would have said
the same if they were stray cats.
"Is something wrong?"
"No. I was just thinking about tomorrow. It won't be easy if this
weather keeps up."
"Is there anything I can do to help?"
"Can you stop it raining?"
"I could pray to Brehn, the God of Storms, but I'm not sure he would
listen to me. You need the demon child if you wish to speak directly to
the gods."
"Well the demon child isn't here, is she?"
"Is that such a bad thing?"
He looked at her for a moment then shrugged. "No, it's not such a
bad thing, I suppose."
Mandah laid a gloved hand on his arm and smiled encouragingly.
"You're far too hard on yourself, Tarja. Come to the fire and get warm.
You won't stop the rain by staring at it."
She was trying so hard to cheer him. He did not have the heart to
deny her. Mandah could not bear to see any creature in pain, human or
beast. He thought of R'shiel: of her temper, her anger and her
willingness to manipulate others to get her own way. There was no
comparing the two women and it hardened his suspicion that the memories
that haunted him could not possibly be real. The old man in the tavern
had summed it up neatly. They were doing this for R'shiel. He was still
trying hard to convince himself she was worth it.
"Pity I can't stop the rain by staring at it," he
replied,
making an attempt to sound light-hearted. Then he glanced over his
shoulder at the men around the fire. "It's time I told the men what our
mission is, anyway."
Mandah took his arm as they approached the fire. The others moved
aside a little to make room for them. The Fardohnyans withdrew to the
corner of the boathouse, sensing that this did not involve them. Tarja
squatted down and glanced around the circle, satisfied he had picked
the right men. There were few Defenders in his squad. Those he had left
to Denjon and Linst. The men he had chosen were rebels for the most
part, men he had fought with before; men who understood how to
frustrate a numerically superior enemy without confronting them head on.
"We're going to burn the Cauthside Ferry," he announced as
they
looked at him expectantly. "If we're not back in Testra within a month,
the commander of the Testra garrison will destroy that ferry, too. If
all goes well here, we'll destroy it ourselves, once we've completed
our mission and are back on the other side of the river."
"You think that will stop the Kariens getting to the
Citadel?" Ghari
asked.
"No. But it will delay them for a time."
The rebels looked anxiously at each other. Ulran, a small, dark-eyed
man from Bordertown, and the best knife-fighter Tarja had ever met
glanced around the gathering, gauging the mood of his companions before
he spoke.
"That's going to hurt more than the Kariens, Tarja. There's a lot of
people who depend on those ferries."
"How much trade do you think there's going to be once the Kariens
get across the river?" Torlin asked. The same age as Mandah's
brother
Ghari, he was one of the rebels captured in Testra who had followed
Tarja to the northern border. Slender and surprisingly quick-witted, he
would have made a good Defender.
"Torlin's right," Rylan agreed. He was one of the few
Defenders in
the squad - solid and dependable. "The Kariens are foraging
their way
south. They'll strip Medalon clean. There won't be anything left
to trade by the time they've passed through."
Ulran nodded his reluctant agreement. "I suppose. It just seems a
pity to destroy a perfectly good ferry, that's all."
"Well, if you're feeling so noble, Ulran, you can come back and
build them a new one after the war," Harben suggested with a
grin.
Harben worried Tarja a little. His enthusiasm for destruction was
matched only by his refusal to take anything seriously. He reminded
Tarja a little of Damin Wolfblade.
"I've a feeling we'll all be in our dotage before that day
comes,"
Ulran retorted, then turned back to Tarja. "So, we burn the ferry.
How?"
As if in answer to his question, the night was lit by jagged
lightning, accompanied by the rattle of thunder. The rain began to fall
even more heavily, pounding on the battered shingles of the boathouse
so hard that Tarja could barely hear himself think. He looked up, shook
his head and looked back at his men.
"I was hoping one of you would have a bright idea."
The wounded Fardohnyan that Mandah was so
concerned for died not long after midnight. By dawn the following day
the rain had not let up, but Tarja could not afford to delay, so they
hastily buried the dead soldier in the soft ground, packed up their
makeshift camp and rode on. After a lengthy conversation with Filip in
Karien, it was decided that the Guard would wait on the south side of
the town while Tarja and his men sank the ferry. The Fardohnyans would
offer cover in case of pursuit and together they would head back to
Testra and the ferry there once the job was done. Tarja's men had
shaved and now wore Defender uniforms and Mandah sat astride her mare
in Sisterhood blue. They were stiff with the cold and soaked to the
skin by the time they split from the Fardohnyans and turned towards the
northern river town.
Cauthside was normally a quiet town, but now it was filled with
refugees fleeing the advancing Kariens. When Tarja had last seen it
over two years ago, he was with the late Lord Pieter and his entourage.
That fateful journey had led to most of the trouble he now found
himself in, he thought sourly. The town had been preparing for the
Founders' Day Parade. Streets he remembered decked out with blue
bunting were now crowded with lost souls, waiting a chance at the ferry
to get to relative safety on the other side of the river.
"Tarja, what will happen to these people?" Mandah asked as
they
dismounted and led their horses towards the landing through the press
of bodies. "They'll be stranded once we've . . . you
know."
"It can't be helped," he told her. "Better a few stranded
souls on
this side than the Kariens in control of the Citadel."
"There's more than a few people here, Tarja. There must be thousands
of them."
Tarja nodded, but found himself rather unsympathetic to their
plight. These were the camp followers who had ridden on the heels of
the Defenders hoping for a profit from the war. He did not intend to
feel guilty because things had not turned out as they planned.
"You can't help them, Mandah."
She nodded reluctantly as a child of about eight or nine with large,
sad grey eyes ran up alongside them, tugging hopefully on Mandah's blue
sleeve. She was clutching a bedraggled, tan-coloured puppy to her chest
and both of them were shivering.
"Are you here to save us, Sister?"
Mandah looked down and shook her head. "I'm sorry, child. I'll -"
Tarja grabbed her arm and pulled her away before she could say
anything else, or offer to adopt the puppy, which was the sort of thing
Mandah was liable to do when left to her own devices.
"You're supposed to be a Sister of the Blade."
"That doesn't mean I have no compassion."
"No, but it does mean you keep your damned head down," he
reminded
her. "We've a job to do, Mandah. You've already adopted a score of lost
Fardohnyans. You'll have to save orphans and stray dogs some other
time."
"But -" she protested indignantly.
"That's an order," he told her harshly as he shouldered his
way
through the crowd. "Now do as I say. Keep your head down and don't make
eye contact with anyone . . . or anything."
"You're a heartless fiend, Tarja," she hissed as she
followed the
path he cut through the throng. "How can you just stand by and watch -"
"Mandah!" Ghari warned from behind, saving Tarja the need to
scold
her further. He glanced back at his men to make sure they were still
behind him. The young woman glared at him but said nothing, obviously
offended. They pushed on through the crowded streets and into the small
town square, which had the look of a refugee camp. There were hundreds
of tents set up, crowded close together, their pegs driven into the
gaps in the cobblestones.
"This is madness," he muttered, mostly to himself, as he
surveyed
the square. A drizzling rain had begun to fall again and the air was
biting, even through his Defenders' cloak. He glanced over his shoulder
and beckoned Ghari forward. The young rebel threw his reins to the man
beside him and pushed his way between the horses to Tarja's side.
"What's wrong?"
"I don't know yet. You and the others stay here. Mandah and I will
make our way down to the river and see what's happening. We'll never
lead the horses through this."
Ghari nodded and took their reins. Tarja took Mandah's arm and led
her through the chaos, stepping over guy ropes, small children, washing
lines and smoking cook fires that hissed defiantly at the rain that
threatened to extinguish them. The landing was not far, but the closer
they got, the thicker the crowd grew, until they reached a wall of
densely packed bodies that no amount of pushing and shoving could
penetrate.
Being taller than average, Tarja could see over the heads of the
crowd. What he saw did not please him. The ferry was halfway across the
river, loaded almost beyond capacity with passengers, sluggishly making
its way against the current to the other side.
"What do you see?" Mandah asked, her view blocked by a solid
wall of
bodies.
"The ferry is making a crossing. It'll be hours before it returns
and even then we'll have no hope of getting near it."
"What are we going to do?"
"We'll have to fall back on my other plan."
"What's your other plan?"
"I'll tell you as soon as I think of it," he said with a
frown.
By mid-afternoon the ferry had returned to
Cauthside. Tarja waited with growing impatience as the barge made its
way laboriously across the rain-swollen river under a sky as dark as
tarnished silver. The crowd grew restless as it neared the bank,
surging forward as the refugees tried to push to the front of the line.
Short of taking to the crowd with swords and cutting their way through
(and even then he wasn't certain that would work), there was no way
they could get near the landing.
More frustrated than angry, Tarja pushed his way through the mob and
walked back to where Mandah and the others waited under the eaves of
the local inn. His expression told them what they wanted to know, even
before he got close enough to speak.
"So, how do we get near the ferry?" Ghari asked.
"We don't. We'll have to think of something else."
"If we had a ballista, we could set it alight with burning
pitch,"
Rylan suggested.
"A ballista?" Harben asked. "And to think I had one
in my
pocket and left it behind because I didn't think we'd need it!"
Tarja frowned at the young man's flippancy. "If you can't offer
anything useful, Harben, be quiet."
Harben had the sense to look contrite. Tarja called the men to him
and they huddled together under the thin shelter of the inn, suggesting
and rejecting ideas as they tried to think of a way to get close enough
to the landing and the ferry. In the end it was Harben who suggested
the solution, and he acted on it before Tarja could stop him. The young
rebel pushed his way into the crowd in his red Defenders uniform and
began shouting.
"They're coming! They're coming! The Kariens are here! Flee! Run for
your lives! The Kariens are here! The Kariens are here!"
It was not long before the mob took up his cry. The effect was
instantaneous and disastrous. Those at the back of the crowd broke away
and began to run from the landing back towards the square. Those
closest to the landing lunged forward, pushing the front ranks into the
icy river. Everyone was shouting, pushing, shoving to get clear.
"Stop him, Tarja!" Mandah gasped. "Someone will be
killed!"
But it was too late to stop the panic Harben's reckless cries had
triggered. Instinct quickly replaced common sense. Fear replaced
reason. The crowd became a heedless mob. Tarja was pushed back against
the wall of the inn as the crowd spilled into the square, trampling
tents, cook fires and anything else that got in their way. Their cries
echoed through the town, panicked and desperate.
"The Kariens are coming! The Kariens are coming!"
"The Kariens!" Mandah shouted, echoing the hysterical cries
of the
mob. Tarja grunted as a sharp elbow jabbed him in the ribs and he
turned to chide her for contributing to the chaos. But she wasn't
looking at him. Her eyes were fixed on the entrance to the square. "Oh
gods, Tarja, they're here!"
Tarja turned to look in the direction of Mandah's pointing finger.
At the entrance to the square a column of armoured knights was
ploughing into the chaos, their pennons flapping wetly in the damp air.
Whether the knights had intended to run down the people before them, or
simply had not had time to stop their heavy warhorses, Tarja couldn't
tell. In any case, the effect was the same. Harben's cries of impending
doom had proved horribly prophetic.
"Back this way!" he yelled, as he pulled Mandah along the
wall to
the corner of the inn. The narrow lane behind the tavern was cluttered
with debris and fleeing refugees. Tarja pushed his way through, using
his size and height to shove less motivated souls out of his way.
"I was right!" Harben chortled gleefully as he leapt over a
pile of
garbage and raced ahead. "The Kariens are here!"
"Get to the horses!" Tarja shouted after him. Harben waved
to
indicate he had heard the order and ran on. Tarja glanced over his
shoulder to assure himself the others were following. Mandah stumbled
beside him, her long skirts hampering her steps. Once past the inn he
dragged Mandah into a small lane between the Heart and Hearth inn, and
the livery next door.
"Get rid of the jackets," he ordered as the others followed
them
into the lane. He tore off his own distinctive red jacket and stuffed
it behind a barrel full of rainwater placed to catch the run-off from
the roof of the inn. The air was icy, but it was vastly preferable to
being identified as a member of the defeated Medalonian army.
"We'll never get past them," Ghari predicted as he shoved
his jacket
down beside Tarja's.
"We're not going to try. But sinking that ferry just changed from a
good idea to an imperative." The others nodded their agreement.
With
the Kariens quite literally on their heels, all objections were
forgotten. "Mandah, you and Ghari follow Harben and get the horses
ready. Borus, you and Torlin scout the north side of town. Find out if
this is just an advance party, or if we really do have the Karien host
just over the next hill. Paval, you ride back and warn the Fardohnyans
that when we leave here, we'll be running and we might have half the
damned Karien army on our heels."
The men nodded and slipped away. Mandah looked as if she might
object, but Ghari gave her no chance. He grabbed her arm and headed
back out into the lane behind the inn in the direction Harben had gone.
"And the rest of us?" Rylan asked.
"We're going back to the ferry. Kariens or not, it still has to
dock. If we're ever going to have a chance at it, it will be in the
next few minutes, before the Kariens take control of the town. We need
to sink that ferry and get out of Cauthside before the Kariens arrive
in force, or it's going to be a very long war."
They retraced their steps back to the square and turned towards the
landing, pushing against the flow of the crowd, which had thinned
considerably since the appearance of the Karien knights. The square was
a shambles of flattened tents, distraught mothers and screaming men
trampled by the fleeing mob. Then there were the dozen or so knights
who had ridden through them, milling about in the centre of the square,
almost as confused about what had happened as the refugees.
The ferrymen waited a little offshore, afraid to land, yet unable to
hold for long against the current. They pulled on a rope as thick as a
man's thigh that stretched from one side of the river to the other,
clinging to it grimly to hold the boat steady. Tarja judged the
distance between the ferry and the riverbank and realised it was too
far to jump. He glanced up as a crack of thunder rumbled over the
river. The sky was so low he felt he could almost touch it. Back in the
square the Kariens were still too disorganised to even notice the
ferry, let alone realise its strategic importance.
"They can't hold the ferry in that current much longer,"
Cyril noted.
"It's going to rain again any moment," Tarja added. "At
least we'll
have that small measure for cover."
"Aye," Cyril agreed as thunder shook the ground. Jagged
lightning
brightened the dull afternoon for an instant. "Those knights will rust
if they don't get indoors."
Tarja glanced at the older man, wondering if he was trying to be
humorous, but his expression was grim. "If we can't destroy the ferry,
we may have to settle for cutting it adrift."
The rope that secured the ferry on this side of the river was tied
to a massive pylon sunk deep into the ground about ten paces from the
landing. To cut through it would be time consuming and dangerous. The
rope was wet and they had only their swords, which, although
razor-sharp, were not designed for such a task. Even if they could
attempt it unnoticed, it would take several long, exposed minutes to
sever the rope, and the ferrymen who waited anxiously to haul the barge
ashore were unlikely to let them attempt such a feat without objection.
Surrender or not, the river was their livelihood. Crouched by the edge
of a small warehouse, Tarja debated the issue for a moment then turned
to his squad.
"Lavyn, take Byl and Seffin and go pick a fight with the ferrymen. I
want them too busy to notice what we're up to. Cyril, you stay here
with the others and keep an eye on those knights. If they pay us no
attention, stay out of their way. If they look like going anywhere near
that ferry, call them out. Insult their mothers, if you have to.
Whatever it takes to keep them off our backs.
"And remember," Ulran added with a grin, "if you truly want
to
insult a Karien, make sure you mention his god, his mother and at least
one dog."
Tarja shook his head at the knife-fighter, but allowed himself a
small smile. "Ulran, you're with me."
The small man grinned and produced a wicked, serrated dagger from
the side of his boot. The blade was nearly as long as his forearm. "You
think this might do the trick?"
Tarja nodded, more relieved than surprised to find Ulran carrying
such a vicious weapon. His sword would have been as blunt as a butter
knife after hacking through so much wet hemp.
"Let's move!" he ordered. The men slipped away to their
assigned
positions and Tarja followed Ulran down the slight slope towards the
landing. The three men he sent to distract the ferrymen were ahead of
them, shouting aggressively at the unsuspecting river-folk as they
approached. Their words were drowned out by another bellow of thunder
as Tarja drew his sword and turned his back to Ulran to protect him
while he cut through the massive line.
Lightning split the clouds for a moment and then icy rain began
sheeting down, blurring Tarja's vision and soaking him in seconds. He
glanced over his shoulder at Ulran, who was sawing the rope, wiping the
rain from his eyes as he worked. A strand unravelled and then another
as he hacked at the rope, the weight of the ferry pulling it as taut as
a harp string one moment, slackening the next, as the ferry rocked
against the current. Somewhere over the rain he could hear angry
shouting, but if it was the men on the ferry, the boatmen Tarja had
sent the others to distract, or the Karien knights, he could not tell.
He couldn't see more than a few paces in front of him. All he could do
was stand on the balls of his feet, his sword at the ready, hoping that
if they were attacked, he would see it coming.
Ulran sawed frantically at the rope as time slowed to a crawl. Tarja
risked another look over his shoulder. Half the rope was severed now,
but it was taking much too long.
"Hurry, Ulran!"
"You think you can do this any faster?" the rebel shouted
over the
downpour as another strand unravelled. He was panting heavily with the
effort of sawing through the wet hemp, his muscles bunched under his
wet shirt, his lips blue with the cold.
The shouting seemed closer and Tarja turned back in time to see a
Karien knight riding down on them. Cyril had fallen near the edge of
the square, the puddle he lay in red with blood. He could not make out
the rest of his men through the sheeting rain, but the spectre of a
massive Karien warhorse loomed over him as one of the knights, suddenly
realising what they were attempting, rode straight at them.
"Out of the way!" Tarja shouted.
Ulran slipped and fell as he scrambled to get clear. Tarja swung his
sword like an axe and struck the taut rope with every ounce of strength
he could muster. The Karien was almost on him, the sound of hoofs on
the cobbles almost louder than the rain. He swung again, wincing as the
blow jarred his arms to the shoulder. The Karien was only a heartbeat
away and still the rope held. Tarja swung one last time and the rope
finally gave way under the strain of the ferry pulling against it. Rain
swallowed the shouts of the panicked ferrymen as it whipped free; the
barge suddenly swinging into the current, at the mercy of the hungry
river.
Tarja barely had time to turn as the Karien rode him down. He had no
time to recover his fighting stance or bring his sword around. He saw
the blow coming, saw the flat of the Karien's blade aimed at his head
and knew there was nothing he could do to stop it.
Pain blinded him.
Then there was blackness as unconsciousness swallowed him whole.
CHAPTER 22
There had been some dissension over whether or not
Damin should be allowed to take up residence in the High Prince's
Palace, his opponents fearing that his possession of it might imply
their tacit agreement to his claim. Marla had put an end to the
argument by pointing out that the palace actually belonged to the
Wolfblade family, therefore she had a perfect right to be there and
invite whoever she wished to guest with her.
That had been yesterday. Cyrus Eaglespike was evicted as the
Wolfblades reclaimed their palace. Adrina had been shown to her
apartments, the same quarters she had used when she visited
Greenharbour for Lernen's birthday almost three years ago, and seen
nobody since.
She paced the sumptuous rooms impatiently, striding past tall,
diamond-paned doors that opened out onto a balcony overlooking the
harbour. They allowed what little cooling breeze there was to sigh
through the room, gently billowing the sheer curtains that screened the
windows against insects. The screeching gulls circling the fishing
boats grated on her nerves. The air was humid, worse even than Talabar.
Adrina hated not knowing what was going on. She knew there had been
some sort of confrontation with Cyrus Eaglespike, and that R'shiel had
somehow temporarily defused the situation, but other than that she was
completely in the dark.
The door opened and Tamylan slipped into the room, bearing a tray
with a silver jug beaded with condensation. She placed the tray on the
gilded table by the door, then turned to her mistress.
"You should be resting, Your Highness. You look exhausted and there
is more than yourself to consider now."
"I can't rest," she declared, stifling a yawn. "What
news?"
"Not much, I fear. The city seems quiet. R'shiel has gone to the
Sorcerers' Collective to meet with the High Arrion and the
Harshini."
"Where's Damin?"
"With Lord Bearbow and Lord Hawksword. I believe Princess Marla is
with them also."
"So I'm to be excluded from their council, am I? Where are they
meeting?"
"Adrina, I really don't think you should -"
"I don't recall asking what you thought, Tam. Where are they
meeting?"
"Downstairs in the throne room."
"Then I think I shall join them," she announced. Squaring
her
shoulders, she marched to the door and flung it open, only to have her
way blocked by two heavily armed Raiders wearing Damin's wolf's head
crest. "Out of my way!"
"I'm sorry, Your Highness," the taller guard said. "Lord
Wolfblade
said you weren't to leave this chamber."
"Don't be absurd! I'm his wife, not a prisoner! Stand aside!"
"Lord Wolfblade was very specific in his orders, Your
Highness."
"Actually, I told them to tie you down, if necessary."
Adrina turned to find Damin coming towards her, his boots clicking
on the mosaic floor. He was unshaved and still dressed in the same
clothes she had seen him wearing yesterday. He had probably been up all
night. Damin looked almost as tired as she felt. She quashed a
momentary pang of sympathy for him, preferring anger to compassion.
"How dare you treat me like a prisoner!"
"It's for your own protection, Adrina. Until I'm certain the palace
is secure, I don't want you wandering around."
"You don't want me to know what's going on, more like it."
The guards stood back to let Damin enter, tactfully closing the door
behind him. Tamylan curtsied to him and he nodded absently in
acknowledgment.
"Can I get you anything, my Lord?"
"Something to eat, Tam," Damin replied wearily. "And
something cold
to drink. Have it sent up here."
Tamylan curtsied again and let herself out of the room before Adrina
could countermand the order.
"You seem to be getting very familiar with my slave."
"I believe Tamylan has finally decided that I may not be an ogre,
after all."
"You haven't convinced me yet."
He smiled tiredly. "Are you all right?"
"What harm can come to me here, locked away like a bird in a cage?
Of course, I might die from boredom, but don't let that bother
you."
She resumed her pacing as Damin flopped onto the chaise near the open
balcony doors.
"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to give the impression you were a
prisoner."
"Ah . . . now let me think . . . I'm stuck in
this room. There are guards on the door. I'm not allowed to leave. How
silly of me to think all that meant I was a prisoner."
"My uncle has been dead for nearly two months now, Adrina. That's
two months that Cyrus Eaglespike has had access to this palace. We've
already discovered at least three rooms that were rigged with
assassination devices."
She stopped pacing and turned to him. "But you said the Assassins'
Guild was on our side."
"They are. That's how we found the devices. Cyrus hasn't got access
to the Guild, but there are some gifted amateurs out there. This is a
big palace. It will take days before we're certain they've found every
nasty little surprise Lord Eaglespike has left for us."
Adrina found herself regretting her outburst. Perhaps he really was
concerned for her welfare. On the other hand, he may simply be using it
as an excuse to exclude her.
"You didn't invite me to your council," she accused with a
bad
feeling she sounded like a petulant child.
"That was Marla's idea, not mine."
"You're a Warlord and a High Prince. Don't you think it's time you
stopped listening to your mother?"
"If I listened to my mother, Adrina, you would be a
prisoner."
She did not doubt he spoke the truth. "What's going on, Damin? I've
a right to know."
He nodded. "That you have. How much have you heard?"
"Only that you confronted your cousin and that R'shiel did something
to him."
"Actually, it was more the threat of what she could do that
encouraged Cyrus to see reason. When Kalan returned to Greenharbour
ahead of us, Cyrus tried to get her to ratify his claim to the throne
and sanction the Convocation, even though he had only three Warlords to
attend. Kalan refused naturally, so he tried to storm the Sorcerers'
Palace. He didn't count on the Harshini. They threw up some sort of
protective dome that he couldn't penetrate. They'd been under siege for
days. R'shiel says we arrived just in time."
"And what is the demon child doing now?"
"I don't know for certain. As soon as we took possession of the
palace, she left for the Sorcerers' Collective. I haven't seen her
since."
"Has something happened?"
Damin shrugged. "Who knows? R'shiel has all of us dancing on strings
like puppets in a show that only she can see."
"Yet we all dance willingly enough," Adrina said with a
frown. "So
what happens now?"
"We wait for Tejay Lionsclaw. Until she arrives, we can't hold the
Convocation."
"Is she on her way?"
"She should be."
"You sound uncertain. Isn't she on your side?"
"I would have said yes a few days ago, but that was before I learnt
that Cyrus Eaglespike married his daughter Bayla to Tejay's eldest son
last spring, while I was in Medalon."
"So the person who holds the casting vote is tied to your opponent
by marriage. That's not a very comfortable position to be in."
"Decidedly uncomfortable," Damin agreed.
"How are you going to ensure that she remains in your camp?"
"I haven't worked that out yet. Any suggestions?"
The question took Adrina by surprise. That Damin actually wanted her
opinion was flattering. In fact, that he had bothered to come here at
all, to acquaint her with the situation and ask her advice was the last
thing she expected.
"You need to discover the quality Tejay Lionsclaw admires most in a
leader and make sure you have more of it than your cousin," she
advised. "That, or give her something she wants. Something that nobody
else can give her."
He laughed sourly. "That's easy! All I have to do is give her the
secret of the explosive powders your damned Fardohnyan bandits use
against her in the Sunrise Mountains. If I could do that, she'd swear
the allegiance of her House to mine for an eternity."
"My father guards that secret more closely than his
treasury."
"I know. We've tried everything we could think of for years to
discover it."
Adrina hesitated before she spoke again, aware that her next words
would mean she was taking an irrevocable step in a direction she had
not planned to go. But she was tired, mentally and physically. Her
surrender seemed inevitable and the energy it took to sustain her
defiance was needed elsewhere.
"You haven't tried asking me."
Damin looked up at her in astonishment. "What?"
"I said, you haven't tried asking me."
"I heard what you said, Adrina," he told her, rising to his
feet. He
stood too close. She wished he had stayed seated. She didn't like
looking up at him. "Are you telling me that you know the secret of the
explosives?"
She could not tell if he was angry or just surprised.
"That's exactly what I'm telling you."
"Why didn't you tell me this before?"
She took a step back from him. "You didn't ask."
He turned away from her and walked to the open doors. The set of his
shoulders was stiff and angry. He was silent for a time then he turned
back to her.
"Why tell me now? Why the sudden change of heart?"
"You always suspect me of having an ulterior motive, don't
you?"
"That's because you usually do have an ulterior motive,
Adrina."
She was honest enough to not deny the charge. "Our fates are bound,
Damin, whether we like it or not. I cannot go on fighting you
forever."
"You seem to be doing just fine, so far."
The door opened and Tamylan returned before Adrina could respond to
the charge. Her slave did not seem to notice the tension in the room.
She curtsied hurriedly then turned to Damin. "My Lord, Princess Marla
requires your presence urgently. She has news of Lady
Lionsclaw."
Damin nodded then turned to Adrina. "We'll finish this discussion
later."
He strode from the room, angry and annoyed, before she had a chance
to answer.
Tamylan closed the door behind Damin and leaned against it, staring
at Adrina suspiciously. "Did you tell him?"
"No."
"Adrina . . ."
"I keep planning to, Tam, but the timing never seems right."
"You can't keep it a secret much longer."
"I know," she sighed.
Tamylan crossed the room and took her arm gently, leading her to the
chaise.
"Well, I suppose there's no point in worrying about it now. Why
don't you lie down? You need your rest and he said he'd be back. You
can tell him then."
Adrina nodded, aware that she was almost swaying on her feet with
fatigue.
"He's mad at me again."
"He'll get over it."
"I told him about the gunpowder."
"Was that wise?"
"I thought . . . oh, hell! I don't know what I thought. He
makes me so angry!"
"No angrier than you make him," Tamylan pointed out with a
shrug. "Now stop fretting and come and lie down."
Adrina sighed wearily. "What would I do without you Tam?"
"I'm sure I don't know, Your Highness."
Adrina smiled and lay back on the couch. She would tell Damin when
he returned - about the gunpowder and the child.
"Tam, did Marla say what the news was? About Lady Lionsclaw?"
"No, but she seemed excited rather than upset, so I suppose the news
is good."
Adrina closed her eyes for a moment then opened them again, looking
at Tamylan with concern. "If I go to sleep, you'll wake me when he
comes, won't you?"
"Of course."
"You seem to like him now. You used to think he was a
barbarian."
"I still do," the slave told her. "But I've decided the
demon child
is right about one thing. I think he really cares about you, Adrina.
That rather improves my opinion of him."
Adrina closed her eyes again. The humidity and the strain of the
past few weeks caught up with her in a wave of fatigue. "Do you think
he'll be happy when he learns I'm with child?"
"He'd better be," Tam replied sternly.
"You're going to make a wonderful nurse, Tam."
"Rest, Your Highness."
Adrina didn't answer. By the time Tamylan had gently closed the door
behind her, she had let the torpor overtake her and drifted off to
sleep.
CHAPTER 23
When Adrina woke, it was dark. She experienced a
sharp pang of bitter disappointment when she realised Damin had not
come back. Well, what did you expect? she asked herself
grumpily. It's not as if he actually wants to spend time in
your company. Tam had not lit the candles yet and the room was
full of dancing shadows. Moonlight reflecting off the still waters of
the harbour painted flickering patterns on the ceiling. She lay still
for a moment, wondering what had woken her, then heard the noise again
in the corridor outside her room.
Curiously, she climbed to her feet and crossed to the door, placing
her ear against the warm wood. The noise grew louder, the unmistakable
sound of shouting and the clang of metal on metal. She stepped away
from the door in puzzlement. It sounded like a fight. Was the palace
under attack?
The door burst open suddenly and the light from the passage outside
momentarily blinded her. She screamed as the room filled with armed
men. Arms grabbed at her and a mailed hand was clamped over her mouth,
stifling her cries. She struggled against the man who held her then
suddenly relaxed as she remembered the child she carried. If she
struggled too hard she might cause it harm.
"Are you sure that's her?" one of them asked.
"Aye."
"Then let's get out of here. Make certain they're all dead out
there," he added, jerking his head towards the corridor.
A Raider slipped through the door, his sword drawn. Adrina cringed
as a high-pitched and unmistakably female scream followed a few seconds
later. She twisted her head around and caught sight of a blue skirt
puddled on the tiles near the door, the familiar slippers stained with
the blood that pooled around them.
Tamylan!
"Get her to the balcony," the man in charge ordered. "The
boat is
waiting."
Adrina struggled as they dragged her across the room, her heart
beating so hard she thought it might burst through her chest. She
turned her head, trying to keep Tam in her line of sight, willing the
feet to move, to give some indication that she was still alive. The man
sent out to finish off the guards slipped back into the room and closed
the door behind him, cutting off her view. Adrina sobbed into the
mailed hand still covering her mouth.
Tamylan!
They dragged her through the open door and out onto the balcony. A
Raider was lowering a rope over the edge, down to the dark waters of
the harbour below. His leather breastplate was embossed with a soaring
eagle. The Raider who seemed to be giving the orders checked the rope
was secure then turned to Adrina.
"Sorry about this, Your Highness."
The man holding her suddenly released his hand from her mouth, but
before she could scream a mailed fist hit her in the jaw. The pain
blinded her for a moment and she struggled to stay upright.
The second blow was more effective. By the time she realised she had
been struck again she was unconscious.
The next thing Adrina knew, she was tied hand and
foot, lying in a puddle of icy water in the bottom of a small boat. The
sea churned beneath them, and the motion of the boat made her ill, but
she was determined not to vomit. She held down the contents of her
heaving stomach by sheer force of will. Spitting out a mouthful of sour
blood and stale salty water, she lifted her head to see where she was.
In the darkness she could make out little but the bare feet of the
sailors who pulled on the oars, and the booted feet of the Raiders who
had kidnapped her.
One of them looked down and noticed she was conscious. He bent over
and pulled her into a sitting position, squinting at her in the
moonlight.
"Awake, then, are you?"
"You have a gift for stating the blindingly obvious, my man."
"I ain't your man, missy," the Raider replied. "I'm one of
Lord
Eaglespike's men."
"Again, you state the obvious," she remarked, glancing at
his
breastplate, proudly embossed with the soaring eagle of Dregian
Province. "Where are you taking me?"
"Somewhere safe."
"That's a rather relative term under the circumstances. Untie me at
once!"
"Can't do that, Your Highness."
"Why not? Are you afraid I'll escape? With all these big, nasty
sailors surrounding me? I'm flattered."
"Lord Eaglespike said . . ."
"Ah! Lord Eaglespike! Did he give orders that I was to be treated
like some galley slave you snatched for a bit of sport? Untie me this
instant!"
Her tone almost had him convinced. He was reaching for the ropes
when another man stopped him, looking down at her with contempt.
"Leave her be, Avrid," the other man ordered. "Don't let her
trick
you."
Avrid lowered his hands, almost apologetically. Adrina glared at the
Raider with all the regal scorn she could muster while sitting in such
an inelegant position.
"I promise I will personally see to it that you all die a very slow
and painful death. I will supervise your torture and execution myself.
I enjoy watching my enemies suffer long, excruciating punishments. I'm
Fardohnyan, you know. We have ways of making a man live in agony for
weeks without killing him."
"Shut up!" the Raider ordered, noticing the looks on the
faces of
the men who could hear her.
Adrina smiled coldly. "Then, there's always a chance I won't get to
do a thing to you myself. Once the demon child hears of this, your days
left in this world will be so few even you could count them. Did I
mention that the demon child is a friend of mine?"
"I told you to shut up!" The Raider's voice had an edge of
panic to
it. "Don't say another word!"
"Am I scaring you?" she asked cheerfully.
The Raider punched her in the face rather than answer her question.
Just before dawn, they reached their destination,
a small stone jetty that jutted out into a small churning bay in the
shadow of a massive white tower that seemed to grow out of the
cliff-face. Adrina was hauled from the boat by another pair of Dregian
Raiders and dragged along the slimy dock to a narrow staircase that
wound upwards towards a square of yellow light. Shivering in her damp
clothes, she shook off the man who was holding her and climbed the
steps without assistance, despite the effort it cost her. She was cold
and stiff and aching in places she didn't know existed until now. Her
head ached, her stomach was queasy and her face felt as if it had
swollen to three times its normal size.
At the top of the stairs was a small guardroom where more Raiders
waited for her with another man dressed in gold-chased armour. He
studied Adrina with concern then turned to the Raider who had hit her
in the boat.
"Lord Eaglespike said not to harm her, you fool!"
"She's not hurt bad," the man replied defensively.
"Nothing's
broken. But she's got a mouth on her."
The young lord turned to Adrina apologetically. "I'm sorry, Your
Highness. You were not meant to be injured."
"That's a fairly hollow apology, don't you think?"
"We've brought you here for . . . political
reasons," the
young man explained uncomfortably.
"Is that what you call it? Where I come from, we don't usually start
our political negotiations with criminal acts."
"If you'd stayed where you belong and Damin Wolfblade had heeded our
warnings, we wouldn't need to commit criminal acts, Your
Highness," he
shrugged. "I am Serrin Eaglespike, Lord Cyrus' brother."
"Bully for you," Adrina replied, unimpressed.
"Lord Eaglespike will be here later. He may wish to speak with you
then, or he may wait until Wolfblade has met his demands. In the
meantime, you may consider yourself . . . our guest."
He stood back as Adrina was pushed forward from the small guardroom
to a long, narrow corridor. The walls were made of rusted iron bars,
each one revealing a damp cell beyond. Most of them were empty, and the
occupants of the few that weren't looked up disinterestedly as she
passed.
About halfway up the corridor, her escort stopped and unlocked the
cell on her left. They pushed her through the door with little ceremony
and locked it behind her.
Serrin followed the guards and stood outside the bars, watching her
as she took in the small high window, the damp, salt-pitted floor and
the mouldy straw that served as a bed. A guard untied the ropes that
bound her wrists and she rubbed at the raw skin absently as she looked
around.
"Not exactly what you're used to, I imagine?"
"If you want to use your imagination for something
fruitful," she
suggested frostily, "use it to imagine what I'm going to do to you when
I get out of here. Have you any idea how long we Fardohnyans can hold a
grudge? Do you have any concept of the lengths we are prepared to go to
for revenge? Perhaps you've heard of the ancient Fardohnyan tradition
of mort'eda?"
Rather than looking fearful, Serrin actually smiled. "You don't
think the threats of a woman frighten me, do you?"
"Then what does frighten you, my Lord? You'll go to war over this,
you know that, don't you?"
"Know it? We're counting on it! Damin Wolfblade will gather up the
thousand men he has in Greenharbour and come storming over our border
as soon as he hears you are missing."
"Then why aren't you out there getting ready to face him?"
"We are ready to face him, Your Highness. We have ten
thousand men waiting. He'll fly right into our trap like a fox on the
scent of fresh chicken blood. If there's one thing you can always count
on, it's Damin Wolfblade's reaction to anything that he perceives as a
threat to something he loves. He'd rather fight than eat."
Adrina burst out laughing, despite how much it hurt her split lip.
"This is your grand plan? There's a fatal flaw in your logic, I'm
afraid."
"What flaw?"
"You're assuming Damin loves me."
"Well, doesn't he?" Serrin asked, a little confused.
"I hate to disappoint you, Serrin," she said, holding her
sides
against the bitter laughter that shook her. "But you've not provoked
Damin, you've played right into his hands. He won't care if you send me
back to him in little pieces. You've kidnapped the one thing he wants
to be rid of!"
Serrin glared at her in disbelief. "You're just saying that."
Adrina's laughter had almost reached the point of hysteria. She
could not believe they had actually kidnapped her for such a mistaken
reason.
"You poor, misguided fools!" she cried, sobbing with mirth.
"Love
me? Dear gods, he despises me!"
Serrin turned away and left her alone, his footsteps echoing angrily
along the passage. Still crying with laughter, Adrina sank down onto
the floor of her cell and hugged her knees. Her mirth abated slowly but
the tears did not as the harsh truth of her predicament hit her with
full force.
Damin would not risk a civil war for her. She knew that. Even if he
wanted to, Marla would prevent him from taking action, or worse, she
would convince him to go to war, but not until after her despised
daughter-in-law had been conveniently disposed of. There was a chance
that R'shiel might come to her rescue, but with everything else that
was going on, saving Adrina was probably far down on her list of
priorities and the demon child could be as ruthless as Marla when the
mood took her.
The worst of her predicament was the dreadful realisation that at
that moment, she wanted nothing more than to be warm and dry and safe
in Damin's arms somewhere far from this place.
And Tamylan - dear, sweet, loyal Tamylan - had died
for her.
She cried anew for her slave, realising now, when it was too late to
do anything about it, that Tam had been her one true friend. The
loneliness that settled on her seemed worse than her small cell, worse
than her bruised and battered face, worse even than the bitter
knowledge that she had fallen for Damin Wolfblade and she would
probably never get the chance to tell him.
Damin would not come for her. She was certain of that.
He didn't even know that she carried his child.
CHAPTER 24
The Seeing Stone in the Temple of the Gods loomed
over R'shiel, a solid lump of crystal as tall as a man, mounted on a
black marble base. Candles set in solid silver sconces lit the altar,
reflecting off the Stone with flickering rainbow light. She studied it
for some time, hoping to learn its secret.
"It concerns me that the demon child knows so little of the ways of
the Harshini."
R'shiel turned. Kalan was striding towards her down the centre of
the echoing temple. Kalan had ordered it cleared whenever R'shiel
wished to use it - apparently she thought the demon child
needed
solitude during her worship.
R'shiel did not correct the High Arrion's assumptions. It was
convenient that the Sorcerers' Collective thought of her as Harshini.
It wouldn't do at all to remind them she was a Medalonian half-breed
raised to despise the gods and everything they represented.
"Concerns you? It scares the hell out of me."
Kalan frowned. "I wish you were joking."
"So do I."
The High Arrion climbed the steps to the altar and stopped beside
her, studying the crystal for a moment. "You sent for me?"
"I need to contact Sanctuary."
"And you want to know how to use the Stone?"
R'shiel nodded. "Glenanaran and the others are still unconscious.
I'm not sure how to help."
"We owe them a great deal," Kalan agreed.
"So, what's the trick with this thing?"
Kalan shook her head in despair. "This thing? Divine One,
you have a bad habit of blaspheming every time you open your mouth. I
hope the gods are forgiving."
"I'd settle for them just minding their own business."
Kalan sighed eloquently but made no further comment. She stepped up
to the Stone and laid her hand on it, as if she drew strength from its
solid presence, then turned to R'shiel.
"In the old days, before the Sisterhood conquered Medalon, the
Seeing Stone was our main link with the Harshini. In those days we had
scores of Harshini roaming through Hythria and Fardohnya. Medalon was
their home but their teachers were spread out even as far as Karien,
before the Overlord came to power. There were five Seeing Stones back
then."
"Five? What happened to them? Where are they now?"
"The Stone in Yarnarrow was taken to the Isle of Slarn, when
Xaphista came to power in Karien. The Sisterhood somehow disposed of
the Stone at the Citadel. The Stone in Talabar is gone too, but nobody
is certain where."
"And the fifth Stone is in Sanctuary."
Kalan nodded. "This Stone was silent for almost two hundred years,
after the Harshini left us. Then Korandellan appeared about three years
ago, seeking Lord Brakandaran."
"He sent him to look for me."
"And now here you are, seeking to use the Stone to speak with
Korandellan. Strange how things turn out."
R'shiel wasn't sure how to answer that. Kalan had been in a strange
mood since they arrived in Greenharbour. Perhaps it was because of the
attack on the Collective.
"Can you use the Stone?"
Kalan nodded. "In theory, although I've never tried. We lost a great
deal of knowledge when the Harshini departed. We have the texts that
describe the skills, but without Harshini tutors to explain the nuances
of the techniques, many things proved impossible. I cannot use the
Stone as you can. All you need do is place your hands upon it, draw on
your power and think of whoever you wish to contact."
"That's all?"
"So I'm led to believe."
"But you don't know for certain?"
"I am not Harshini, Divine One. I do not have access to the power
that you control."
Control might be a bit optimistic, R'shiel thought
irreverently, although she did not voice her uncertainty. It was better
that the High Arrion thought her omnipotent. She stepped closer to the
Stone.
"The staffs that Xaphista's priests use. They have crystals in them
too. Are they like the Seeing Stones?"
Kalan looked thoughtful. "I don't really know. The Overlord uses
them to link with the priests, so I suppose they work on the same
principle. I've never seen one up close." She smiled faintly.
"As you
can imagine, there is little communication between the Collective and
the Overlord's minions."
"The shaft is black," R'shiel told her, her voice hardening
in
remembrance, "and made of metal. The head of the staff is gold, shaped
like a five-pointed star, intersected by a lightning bolt crafted of
silver. Each point of the star is set with crystal and in the centre of
the star, is a larger gem of the same stone."
"You speak as if you've seen one."
"I've had the dubious pleasure of being on the receiving
end," she
explained.
"That raises some interesting possibilities," Kalan said
thoughtfully.
"What do you mean?"
"I wonder if the crystals you describe are pieces of the missing
Stones? I don't know how they could be, but it's possible, I
suppose."
"If they are, could I use them too?"
The High Arrion shrugged, but she did not dismiss the idea out of
hand. "For what?"
"I don't know, exactly. I'm just curious, I guess."
"Even if the crystals really are pieces of Seeing Stone, you
couldn't really do anything with a staff unless you could get past the
pain."
"Yes, well that does present something of a problem," she
agreed,
pushing away the painful memory of Xaphista and the pain his staff
could inflict. She had beaten the collar though, and that had been
worse than the staff. Perhaps, if she had to, she could do it again.
But not easily; and certainly not by choice.
"I suppose you could get around having to touch the staff itself by
using another Seeing Stone," Kalan added thoughtfully.
"Why another Seeing Stone?"
"The Seeing Stones are channels, Divine One. They focus the power of
the gods and allow it to be used in a specific manner. The size of the
Stone determines its power. Legend has it that the Stone at the Citadel
was three times the size of this one."
"So, what are you saying? That even if the staffs contain pieces of
Seeing Stone, they're too small to do anything with?"
"I'm saying they couldn't be used like this one. You couldn't use
them to talk to the priests. They would convey nothing more than
. . . I don't know, really . . . emotions, maybe
. . . vague impressions, at best. And that's assuming you can
access a Stone capable of communicating with the chips of crystal in
the staffs."
"What about this Seeing Stone? Or the one at Sanctuary?"
She shook her head. "The Stone in here is only good for contacting
Sanctuary - the Harshini made sure of that before they
withdrew, and
you can't use the Stone in Sanctuary, because for something requiring
that much power, Korandellan would have to bring Sanctuary back into
real time. If they are chips from the missing Stones then the Stone
that controls those jewels is probably the one on Slarn."
R'shiel frowned. "I'm not sure I want to risk Malik's Curse just to
satisfy my curiosity." She'd seen a man with the wasting
disease once,
on his way from the Citadel to the colony on Slarn. It still gave her
nightmares.
"The disease would be the least of your problems," Kalan
pointed
out. "Just getting there would be trouble enough. You couldn't use the
demons. The priests would sense you coming from the other side of the
Fardohnyan Gulf."
"Pity the Seeing Stone at the Citadel is lost," she sighed,
glancing
at the lump of crystal behind her. "Do you think the Sisterhood
destroyed it?"
"No human possesses the power to destroy a Seeing Stone, Divine One.
It's missing, certainly, but I doubt it was destroyed."
"Then it might be still in the Citadel? Hidden somewhere?"
The High Arrion did not seem to share her optimism. "I suppose,
although where you would hide something as large as a Seeing Stone is
beyond me."
"I wonder if there are any records in the Citadel's library? The
Founding Sisters documented everything. There are even reports on the
number of sacks of grain they confiscated when they took over the
Citadel."
"It's worth a try, I suppose, and if it is still there, it
would be a lot safer than trying to get near the one on Slarn. But the
Citadel is under Karien control. How are you going to get inside? And,
more importantly, what does it have to do with your quest to destroy
Xaphista? Do you have the time to waste answering questions that have
no relevance to the task at hand?"
"I suppose not." She glanced up at the Stone again with a
sigh. For
a moment, it had seemed like such a good idea, too.
R'shiel had the librarians scouring the archives of the Collective
looking for something, anything, to help her cause, but so far
they had come up with nothing. Dikorian, the Collective's Chief
Librarian, was not hopeful either. He knew his archives like he knew
his own reflection and had never heard of anything in them that gave
even a hint about how to destroy a god. Maybe, with a bit more time
. . . she shook her head impatiently, reminding herself of
why she had come here this evening. Time was something she didn't have
to waste at the moment. "Right now I have to help Glenaranan and his
friends. Will you see that I am not disturbed?"
Kalan nodded. "Of course."
The High Arrion stepped down from the altar and began the long walk
through the temple across the gorgeously mosaic-tiled floor. Every
building R'shiel had entered in Greenharbour had floors like it, their
intricate geometrical patterns sometimes so complex they made her dizzy.
She waited until Kalan was lost in the shadows before turning back
to the Stone. Pushing away stray thoughts of Seeing Stones and chips of
crystal, R'shiel swallowed a lump of apprehension and reached out,
placing her palms upon it, then opened herself to the power. She felt
her eyes darken, felt the familiar, intoxicatingly sweet energy surge
through every cell in her body, and then thought of Korandellan.
Demon child.
R'shiel jumped in fright. It seemed hours since she had laid her
hands on the Stone. The power filled her and she opened her eyes, which
now burned black. Korandellan's image appeared in the crystal against a
milky backdrop. He looked haggard.
"Korandellan!"
You should not sound so surprised, demon child. You are the one
who called for me.
"I . . . I know . . . I just wasn't sure if it
would work."
You should not doubt yourself, R'shiel. You are capable of so
much more than you realise.
"I'm glad you think so."
The King smiled indulgently. How can I help you, child?
"Glenanaran, Farandelan and Joranara are unconscious. The Collective
was attacked and they built a dome of light to protect it. They
collapsed just before I got here and we can't wake them. They don't
seem injured at all - they just won't wake up."
His face clouded with concern. It was unwise of them to draw on
so much power. The gods always exact a price for such excess.
"The gods? You mean they're like this as some sort of
punishment?"
She could feel her ire rising and fought it down. Linked mentally with
Korandellan, it would distress him greatly to be exposed to her anger.
"So what can I do?"
You must appeal to Cheltaran directly, I fear.
"The God of Healing? I don't know him."
But he knows you, demon child. I'm certain he will heed your
summons.
The image flickered for a moment and R'shiel realised that
Korandellan was weakening. The idea alarmed her. Korandellan was as
strong in the power as she, and certainly far more skilled. The effort
it took to link through the Stone was minimal. It should not be having
that effect on him. "Are you all right?"
I am tired, that is all.
"How can you be tired? You're the King of the
Harshini."
Your faith in me is encouraging, R'shiel. Korandellan
could not lie, but he could avoid giving her a direct answer.
"What's wrong?"
He sighed, obviously reluctant to share his burden. The strain
of holding Sanctuary out of time is telling on me.
"Why don't you just let it go? Nobody knows where Sanctuary
is."
Xaphista's priests would find us easily, if we were back in
normal time. I cannot risk it.
"But if your hold weakens, they'll find it anyway."
Then I must rely on you to remove the threat of the Kariens,
and trust you are able to achieve it before I falter.
Korandellan was not trying to pressure her - it was not in
his
nature to do anything so blatantly human, but R'shiel felt it,
nonetheless. It simply wasn't fair. She never asked to be the demon
child. She certainly did not want to feel responsible for the survival
of the Harshini.
The King smiled. I fear I have made the burden of your destiny
heavier. Do not concern yourself, R'shiel. Things will turn out as the
gods will them.
Which isn't saying much, she thought irreverently. "Is there
anything I can do?"
If you are following a path that leads to breaking the power of
the Overlord, you are doing all you can, my dear.
"Well, I'll try to do it a bit faster," she offered with a
wan smile.
Korandellan nodded wearily. You will prevail.
The strain of maintaining the link was telling visibly on the King's
face. She took her hands from the Stone and it cleared almost
instantly, the milky backdrop returning to the crystalline clarity that
characterised the magical talisman. R'shiel sank down onto the floor,
sitting with her back to the marble base, her knees drawn up to her
chin. She let the power go with some reluctance.
So, I have to call Cheltaran, she told herself. That would
take care of the wounded Harshini. Then, if Dikorian can't help me
. . . maybe the answers I need are at the Citadel. But I'm
running out of time.
That the Harshini might be imperilled had never occurred to her
until now. In fact, she had never really felt that she was working to a
timetable. She knew that at some distant point in the future she would
finally have to confront Xaphista, but she had always thought the one
thing on her side was time. Perhaps she could sneak away after this
damned election. Damin was a smart boy, Adrina even smarter. Surely,
between the two of them, they can figure out how to secure his throne
without my help?
She climbed to her feet and glanced around the temple. What
makes it holy? she wondered idly. The gods - or
the
people who worship them?
"Cheltaran!" Her voice echoed through the cavernous chamber,
but no
divine being answered her call.
"Cheltaran!" Was there some sort of ritual she should
perform to
summon him? Zegarnald came when she called, as did Gimlorie. Dacendaran
and Kalianah seemed to come and go as they pleased. She had never tried
summoning another god.
"Hey! Cheltaran! I need you!"
"Never have I been summoned quite so . . . eloquently,
demon child."
She started at the voice and spun around to find the god standing
behind her, leaning against the Seeing Stone, his arms folded across
his chest. They did that a lot, she noticed. You called them and they
popped up where you least expected them.
"Cheltaran?"
He smiled serenely. In solid form he looked like an older version of
Dace, but without the motley clothes or cheeky grin. He wore a long
white robe, similar to those worn by the healers of Hythria, but she
had expected someone older. A fairly ridiculous expectation in
hindsight - these beings were immortal. If they appeared old,
it was
simply because they wished to.
"Is there some reason you called me? You appear quite well."
"There are Harshini here who need you."
"Ah yes. The Harshini who overextended themselves."
"You know about them?"
"Naturally. I am the God of Healing. All sickness and injury is
known to me."
"Then why haven't you done something about it?" she demanded
impatiently.
"Healing is part of every living being, just as, sometimes, allowing
nature to take its course is also a part of life. Things happen as they
must, R'shiel. I do not interfere without good cause."
"Well you have a good cause now. I need them up and about."
"You need them? Am I to interrupt the natural order of things
at your whim, demon child?"
R'shiel thought about that for a moment, then decided she didn't
have time to argue. She nodded. "That's about the strength of
it."
"I have interfered more since you came along than I have in the past
millennium," the god told her with a frown.
"Then a bit more won't make much difference, will it?"
Cheltaran sighed. "Very well, demon child. I will do as you ask. But
be warned. There will be a reckoning. Nature requires a certain
balance. Each time you call on us to disturb that balance, the day of
reckoning draws nearer."
There was something vaguely threatening in his tone that worried
R'shiel.
"I don't mean to."
"I know you don't. But you are the demon child. You are a force of
nature in your own right."
Cheltaran vanished abruptly, before R'shiel could say anything more.
She was puzzled by his sudden disappearance, but the reason became
clear a moment later, when the doors to the temple flew open and the
sound of booted feet pounding on the tiles echoed through the place.
She turned as the interlopers emerged into the light. It was Almodavar,
Damin's captain, and a squad of his Raiders.
"My Lady! Lord Wolfblade demands you return to the palace at
once!"
"He demands, does he?" she asked with faint
annoyance as she
descended the steps from the altar. "What's the matter now?"
"The palace was attacked. They've taken Adrina."
R'shiel swore under her breath.
By the time she reached Almodavar, she was running.
CHAPTER 25
R'shiel was shocked by the devastation when she
reached the palace. There was blood on the white marble steps and
smeared across the tiled floor of the main hall. The diamond-paned
windows that led out onto the balcony and overlooked the harbour were
shattered into a carpet of glittering shards that crunched underfoot as
she followed Almodavar at a run. There were several bodies lined up
near the doors, with shrouds thrown hastily over them. How many had
died, she wondered? And for what?
Almodavar led her to a small passage off the main hall that ended in
a door inlaid in gold with the crest of the Wolfblade family. Someone
had driven a dagger through the eye of the wolf and it remained
embedded in the wood like a silent warning. Almodavar opened the door
without glancing at the knife and stood back to let R'shiel enter. The
Raiders who had escorted them from the Collective stayed on guard
outside.
"What happened?"
Damin looked up at the sound of her voice, obviously relieved to see
her. But his eyes were hard and she could read the tension in the set
of his shoulders. The other men in the room, whom she guessed were
Damin and Narvell's lieutenants, wore expressions of concern -
and
perhaps a little excitement - at the prospect of seeing some
action.
The only woman present was Marla, who paced the floor impatiently as
her sons plotted their revenge. There were maps scattered across the
large oval table, anchored at their corners by anything heavy enough to
act as a paperweight.
"We received a message that Tejay Lionsclaw had arrived and wanted
to meet with us before she entered the city," Damin told her.
"As it
turns out, it was false. The palace was attacked while we were gone.
We're still counting the dead."
"And Adrina?"
"We think they took her by boat," Narvell added. "We found a
rope
tied to the balcony in her apartments."
"She could have simply used the confusion to run away,"
Marla
suggested tartly. "I've never trusted that woman."
Damin glared at his mother. "I've no time for your bitching, Marla.
Adrina did not run away."
R'shiel silently applauded Damin. It was about time someone put Her
Royal Highness in her place. She glanced around the room that Damin had
turned into his command post to avoid meeting Marla's eye. It must have
been Lernen's private sanctuary. The walls were rather distractingly
painted with explicit murals that depicted a variety of sexual
positions, some of which R'shiel was certain were physically
impossible. It seemed odd, this bustling war council being held amidst
such decadent artwork.
"Where would they take her?"
"Dregian Castle lies along the coast here," Damin said,
pointing to
the map laid out on the table before him. "It's a few hours away by
boat, but easily navigated."
"They'll have her there before we can mount a
counter-attack,"
Narvell added.
"So what are you going to do?"
"Get her back," Damin announced matter-of-factly. His
outward air of
control worried R'shiel a little. The Damin she knew should have been
raging like a wounded bull. It was not like him to be so level headed.
He glanced at Narvell, not waiting for R'shiel's reaction. "Have you
heard from Rogan yet?"
"No."
"Damn! I'll need his troops."
"You're going to attack Cyrus?"
Damin turned to her impatiently. "Of course I'm going to attack
him!"
"You're an idiot."
The whole room stilled as Damin slowly straightened. His eyes were
terrible, his whole being radiating fury. This was the Damin she knew.
The rage, the grief, the debilitating fear for Adrina was perilously
close to the surface. R'shiel realised she had about a heartbeat to
explain herself before Damin lost control completely.
"Don't you see? That's why they took Adrina. They want you
to attack. Or to be more specific, they want your troops - and
Narvell's and Rogan's - out of the city."
Damin's shoulders relaxed a little. R'shiel breathed a sigh of
relief. He was quietly murderous, but not beyond reason.
"You don't know that for certain."
"No, but they've been rather obvious about it, don't you think? I
mean, leaving the rope hanging from her balcony where you can find it?
They might as well have hung out a sign. It's a trap, Damin. Cyrus
wants you out of the city. Worse than that, he wants you on his
territory."
"Then I plan to see that he gets what he wants," Damin
growled.
R'shiel sighed with frustration, wishing she could make him see what
was so obvious to her. "Even if you took every man you have here in
Greenharbour, and Narvell's and Rogan's with them, you've got less than
a thousand men. How many has Cyrus got waiting for you?"
"It won't matter."
"The hell it won't!" she scoffed. "I don't mean to dent your
precious male pride, Damin, but even you can be outnumbered. I
don't care how good you think you are."
"If you don't plan to help me, R'shiel, then get out of my
way."
"I'll help you to rescue Adrina, Damin. I'm not going to help you
commit suicide."
"What are you talking about?"
"If you attack Dregian Province, you will be invading Cyrus'
province, whatever the provocation. Cyrus will defeat you, and hang
your head on his walls and he'll have the full force of the law
on his side, if I'm not mistaken. I imagine Adrina will live long
enough to see your head fall off the block, before she joins
you."
Damin sank down in the chair behind him as the logic of what she was
saying finally began to sink in.
Marla looked at R'shiel in surprise. "You have an excellent grasp of
politics, demon child."
"I had very good teachers, Your Highness."
"The benefit of an education by the Sisterhood," Damin
remarked
sourly. "You see treachery where others think only of honour. So, demon
child, what do you suggest? That I leave Adrina to the mercy of my
enemies?"
"Certainly not! We'll go and get her back. But we won't do it with
an army at our heels."
Damin met her eye for a moment and then nodded in understanding.
"I'll organise a ship. It'll take three days by land to reach Dregian
Province, and the gods know what he'll have done to her by
then."
"Then we won't go by land, or by sea, for that matter. But don't
worry about Adrina being hurt. Cyrus won't harm her and she's worth
nothing to him dead." She turned to Marla. "Your Highness, can
you keep
up the illusion that Damin is in the palace?"
"To what purpose?"
"Cyrus undoubtedly has spies everywhere. They'll be waiting for him
to move. Narvell, I suggest you and Rogan continue to muster your
troops, but take your time about it. While Cyrus thinks Damin is still
in Greenharbour preparing to fight, he won't be on his guard."
"How many men should we take?" Damin asked.
"Two. You and me."
"You can't attack Dregian Castle single-handed," Narvell
declared,
aghast at her suggestion.
"I'm not going to. We shall retrieve Adrina, by stealth rather than
force, before Cyrus Eaglespike knows anything about it. We shall then
wait for Tejay Lionsclaw to arrive and hold the Convocation as
planned."
"And when Cyrus tries to play his hand, he will find it has slipped
through his fingers," Marla added, with undisguised admiration.
"Damin,
you should have married this one."
Damin frowned at his mother but did not bother to answer her.
Instead he turned to R'shiel. "How do we get out of the palace without
being seen?"
"You leave that to me."
"You worry me when you say things like that."
She shrugged. "When shall we leave?"
Damin smiled savagely, his mood improving noticeably with the
prospect of doing something useful. "Now is as good a time as any.
Unless you have something better to do." He jumped to his feet,
wearing
the same stupid grin he always wore when he was about to fight. It was
a male thing, R'shiel reasoned. Tarja did the same thing. "Narvell,
keep an eye on things while I'm gone. And don't let mother bully
you."
Marla looked as if she might protest, but Damin and R'shiel did not
wait around to find out.
CHAPTER 26
"Can we get to the roof?" R'shiel asked as
she
stepped into the hall. Damin closed the door behind them and looked at
the dagger embedded in the door. He jerked the blade free and hurled it
to the floor angrily.
"Why do you want to go up on the roof?"
"Because we want to sneak out of the palace Damin, and it might be a
little bit obvious if I summon a dragon in the middle of the main
courtyard."
"A dragon? You are going to summon a dragon?"
"If Dranymire agrees to it."
"I don't know about the roof in this part of the palace, but there
is a roof garden attached to the guest quarters in the west wing. Will
that do?"
"I suppose."
She followed Damin as he hurried through the debris of the attack.
They were still clearing out the bodies of the guards who had died
defending the palace. As they climbed the sweeping marble staircase
that led to the guest apartments, they met two Raiders carrying a
stretcher between them, coming down the stairs. A sheet covered the
body on the stretcher, but it did not conceal the blue skirts and
bloodstained slippers underneath.
"Damin!"
He glanced at the stretcher and ordered the men to halt. With some
trepidation, he peeled back the cover. R'shiel let out a small cry of
anguish as she saw who lay beneath it.
"Gods," Damin muttered. "Tamylan never deserved such a
fate."
"Tam was Adrina's best friend."
"She was just a slave, R'shiel," Damin corrected, gently
replacing
the sheet and waving the men on.
"She was still Adrina's best friend."
Damin nodded grimly. "Come. We have another reason now to deal with
Lord Eaglespike."
When they reached the second landing, R'shiel discovered Mikel
sitting on the stairs, tears streaming down his face. R'shiel knelt
down beside him, ignoring Damin's impatient sigh.
"Mikel? Are you hurt?"
He shook his head. "I'm sorry, my Lady . . ."
"Sorry? For what? This wasn't your fault."
"We heard them . . . me and Tamylan . . . we
were bringing the Princess her dinner. We saw the men in the hall and
Tamylan ran at them. She told me to hide. So I did."
"Then you've nothing to be ashamed of, Mikel."
"But Tamylan's dead and all I did was hide!" he wailed. "Now
all
these people are dead . . . and I don't where Jaymes is
. . ."
R'shiel glanced up at Damin helplessly. She had no idea what to say
to the child.
Although she could tell Damin was consumed with impatience, he
squatted down beside the boy. "Mikel! Look at me!"
Unable to ignore Damin's commanding tone, Mikel wiped his eyes and
turned to the Warlord. "Every man under my command knows how to follow
orders, even when they don't like them. I don't expect to find them
sitting about crying over it afterwards, either."
"No, sir," Mikel replied weakly.
"As for your brother, he's alive and well. He was with the party I
took to meet Lady Lionsclaw."
Mikel brightened considerably at the news. "He was?"
"Yes, he was. Now, pull yourself together, lad, and get your arse
down to Captain Almodavar and tell him I said to find you something
useful to do. We need every man we've got at the moment and I don't
have time for you to sit here bawling like a baby."
"No, sir." Mikel squared his shoulders and smiled
tentatively at
Damin. "Are you going to rescue the Princess, my Lord?"
"If I don't keep getting distracted," he agreed, with an
impatient
glance at R'shiel.
She smiled at Mikel, then on impulse she summoned the little demon
who seemed so fond of getting Mikel into trouble. He started as the
creature popped into existence beside him.
"The demon will stay with you, Mikel, until we get back. But you
mustn't tell anybody that we've gone."
Mikel stared at it for a moment then turned to R'shiel. The demon
chittered at him unhappily, sensing the child's misery. "What's his
name?"
"She doesn't have a name yet. Maybe you can help her think of
one."
He nodded and sniffed back the last of his tears.
"Off you go, boy," Damin ordered. He was chafing at the
delay.
Mikel fled without another word, the little grey demon tumbling down
the stairs in his wake. R'shiel watched them go and then turned to
Damin with a smile.
"You handled him very well."
"You gave him a pet demon."
She shrugged. "It'll keep him company."
He stared at her for a moment and then shook his head. "Come on. And
I don't care what we find on the next landing, we're not
stopping."
The roof garden was a riot of greenery,
intricately laid out paths and fountains that filled the night with
their musical splashing. Damin led her to the paved clearing in the
centre of the garden and glanced up at the starlit sky.
"Another few weeks and the rains will start."
"A pity they aren't here now. We could do with a bit of cloud
cover."
"Can't you make us invisible?"
"I'm not even sure how to ride a dragon, Damin."
"But you said -"
"I know what I said. I wish Brak were here."
Damin glanced at her for a moment then shook his head. "You really
are a bit of a fraud, aren't you?"
"I'm the biggest fraud in the whole world. I have no idea what I'm
doing and only the vaguest idea of what I'm supposed to be
doing. I just have to hope that if I keep pretending long enough, I'll
figure out what's going on." She frowned then, turning to look
at him. "I have to leave soon, Damin. You don't need me to take your
throne for
you. You have Adrina. She's actually a lot better at politics than I
am."
"You seem to get by," he noted with a faint grin.
"I've Joyhinia to thank for that."
Damin wasn't sure how to answer that, so he turned and looked up at
the sky again. "Summon your demons, demon child. I'm sure the gods will
watch over us."
She frowned, wondering if she should mention that his assurance gave
her little comfort. Then another thought occurred to her -
something
that should have been dealt with, long before this.
"Damin, there's something you should probably know. About
Adrina."
"What about her?"
"She's pregnant."
"I know."
"You know? Who told you? Marla?"
He smiled smugly. "I am neither blind nor stupid R'shiel. And I can
count."
"Why didn't you say something?"
"It was more fun watching Adrina trying to work up the courage to
tell me herself."
"You can be a real bastard, Damin Wolfblade. You don't deserve
her."
He sighed, suddenly serious. "No, I think we actually deserve each
other."
"Then you admit you feel something for her?"
"When I heard she'd been kidnapped, I thought I would die,
R'shiel,"
he admitted, albeit with some reluctance. "I've never felt that way
about anyone before."
"Not even your horse?" she asked.
"My horse?"
"It's something Adrina said once. That the only thing you truly
cared about was your horse."
Damin thought for a moment and then smiled. "No, I think I actually
care about her more."
"Well make sure you tell her when we get her back. I'm sick to death
of you two. Everyone's life would be considerably easier if you devoted
all that effort to making peace instead of war."
Dranymire responded almost instantly to her
summons, although he seemed unimpressed when she explained what she
wanted of him.
"Riding a dragon is a skill that takes a great deal of time to
learn, R'shiel," he warned in his deep voice. "You can't just
hop on
and hope for the best."
"But we need to get to Dregian Castle. Tonight. It's three days by
road and they'll see us coming from leagues away if we take a
ship."
"Getting there late is better than not getting there at all."
"Please, Dranymire."
The little demon cast his liquid eyes over Damin and frowned. "I
suppose you want us to carry him, too?"
"Yes."
"When next you are at Sanctuary, Your Highness, you and I need to
have a long discussion regarding the nature of the relationship between
demons and the Harshini. Specifically, the wanton use of demon
melds."
"And I promise I'll listen to every word. But right now, I need a
dragon."
"You need some discipline," the demon corrected loftily.
"However, I
am in the mood to indulge you, and there are a number of my brethren
who will benefit from the experience."
"Thank you," she said with relief, bending down to kiss his
wrinkled
grey forehead. "I won't forget this."
"Neither will I," the demon promised, somewhat ominously.
They stepped back as more demons began to materialise and gather
around Dranymire. R'shiel quickly lost count of them. The demons bonded
to the te Ortyn family were among the oldest and most
numerous of all
the brethren, which accounted for the size and stature of the dragon
they could form. She watched in fascination as the meld began, demons
flowing into each other almost too fast for the eye to take in.
The dragon grew before her until its wings blocked out the stars.
"Climb on, Your Highness, and try not to fall off."
R'shiel used the dragon's leg as a step and pulled herself up,
surprised at how warm the metallic scales felt under her hands. Damin
clambered up and settled himself behind her, his arms around her waist.
R'shiel tried to find something to hold onto, but there was nothing.
"You must grip with your thighs," Dranymire informed her.
"Riding a
dragon is simply a question of balance."
"Balance," she repeated dubiously, seriously doubting her
wisdom in
deciding to use a dragon to rescue Adrina. She glanced over her
shoulder at Damin. "You ready?"
"I suppose."
Dranymire must have heard him. A gust of warm wind rushed over them
as the dragon beat its powerful wings and lifted them into the darkness.
CHAPTER 27
Dregian Castle grew out of a promontory that jutted
into the ocean like an upright sword buried hilt-down in the white
chalk cliffs. It was a tall, narrow structure, more tower than keep,
its white stone pitted and yellowed by years of being assaulted by the
corrosive sea air. Unlike Krakandar, the main city of Dregian Province
was some distance away from the castle, crowded around a small bay
eight leagues to the east of the keep.
Dranymire landed near the woods that ringed a vast open field of
cleared ground surrounding the fortress, just as dawn was feeling its
way over the horizon.
R'shiel climbed down stiffly from the dragon, her thighs aching from
the effort of keeping her seat. Damin appeared to have fared no better
than she as he stumbled to the ground. The two of them hobbled about
for a few moments, trying to work out the knots in their muscles.
Dranymire seemed highly amused by their plight.
"As I said, Your Highness, riding a dragon is a skill that takes
years to acquire."
"I didn't fall off. Give me some credit."
The dragon lowered its head and studied her with his plate-sized
eyes. "Yes. You managed that much. Did you want me to wait for
you?"
"For me, yes. Damin's probably going to have to return to
Greenharbour by more conventional means once we've found
Adrina."
"I shall await your summons, Your Highness."
Looking rather relieved that he would not have to repeat the
journey, Damin caught up with R'shiel as she stumbled down the small
slope to the open ground below.
"What are you doing?"
"I'm off to rescue your wife."
"What are you going to do? March up to the drawbridge and
knock?"
"Pretty much."
"R'shiel!"
She stopped and turned back to him. "What?"
"You can't do that!"
"Why not?" She smiled at his expression. "Stop thinking with
your
sword, Damin. We can't storm the place, so we have to get them to let
us in. Once we're inside, I can deal with any opposition."
"You're not even armed."
"There you go, thinking with your sword again." She resumed
walking,
pleased to discover the exercise was beginning to loosen the stiffness
from her thighs. Damin ran to catch up with her.
"So what are you planning to do?" he demanded,
falling into
step beside her.
"Two people walking across a field are no threat to the castle. Even
if you're recognised, they'll be so surprised you came alone, that they
won't do anything straight away. At worst they'll send for
Cyrus."
"And what do you think he's going to do?"
"Nothing. By the time we're inside, it won't make a
difference."
"You're going to use magic then?" he asked, rather
sceptically.
"Of course."
"But you don't know what you're doing. You admitted as much before
we left Greenharbour. You might accidentally harm Adrina."
"I did learn something at Sanctuary, Damin."
"Not nearly enough, from what I've seen so far."
"Trust me."
"I hate people who say that."
She grinned at him. "Stop worrying about me and start thinking about
how you're going to apologise to Adrina."
"Apologise? Why should I apologise?"
"Because she deserves one. And besides, an apology is always a good
way to make a woman listen to you."
"And when did you become such an expert on affairs of the heart?
You're a child. And a spoiled one, at that."
"I'm the demon child. I'm omnipotent."
"I hope you never actually begin to believe that, R'shiel."
She glanced at him, her grin fading. "So do I."
The castle was just beginning to waken as they
reached it. With an ear-piercing squeal, the gates swung open and they
hastily stepped back to let a troop of Raiders thunder past them,
heavily armed and armoured. They were too intent on their own business
to notice the couple standing in the shadow of the castle wall. Damin
watched them leave, his brow furrowed.
"They're getting ready to fight."
"What did I tell you? Cyrus has probably got his borders lined five
deep in Raiders, waiting for you to attack."
"I hate people who say, 'I told you so', almost as much as
people
who say 'trust me'."
She smiled. "Come on. Let's get inside before they close the gates
again."
R'shiel carefully opened herself up to the power as they entered the
cool dimness of the short tunnel that led to the iron-studded gates.
She had seen Brak attempt this once and hoped she remembered how it was
done. She wove the glamour clumsily as they moved forward, but somewhat
to her astonishment, the guards on duty paid them no attention as they
walked boldly into the small yard that surrounded the tall white tower.
Damin glanced at her in surprise when they were not challenged, nodding
in understanding when he noticed her black eyes.
"So we're inside," he whispered. "What now?"
"There's no need for whispering, Damin. They cannot see us or hear
us."
"Are you sure?"
"Almost."
Unconvinced, Damin glanced up at the tower. "She'll be in there, I
suppose."
"Great deductive reasoning, Lord Wolfblade. Where else would she
be?" R'shiel ignored the look he gave her and looked up with a
frown. "How much do you want to bet she's right at the top and we're
going to
have to climb about a million steps to get there?"
They let themselves into the tower through the main hall, which was
littered with the remnants of the previous evening's festivities. The
slaves were starting to stir from their places near the cooking
hearths, rubbing bleary eyes as they yawned themselves into
wakefulness. A few of the more alert slaves were already up and about,
righting overturned stools and clearing away dishes stained with
congealed fat and limp vegetable remains.
"Looks like it was quite a party," R'shiel remarked.
"Cyrus would have feasted his troops before he sent them
out."
She glanced around the hall, at the low, vaulted ceiling and the
rough stone floor. "This place is pretty old, isn't it?"
"It's one of the oldest structures in Hythria," he agreed.
"It
predates Greenharbour, I think."
"Then it probably has dungeons."
"I suppose."
"Then we'll check them first."
"Cyrus wouldn't dare throw Adrina in a dungeon."
"No, you wouldn't dare. Cyrus doesn't care about Adrina, one
way or the other. Besides, I've spent all night clinging to a dragon
with my thighs. My legs are killing me. I really don't want to climb
all the way to the top of this place, just to find out she's a few
steps below us. We check the dungeons first."
Damin nodded his agreement, probably just as sore and stiff as she
was. He pointed to a door that led off the hall by the second hearth.
R'shiel followed him, stepping over a number of sleeping bodies along
the way. She looked about her, unable to entirely believe that the
glamour she had drawn around them was actually working.
They made their way down a narrow corridor that curved around the
tower and led to another door at the end, this one reinforced with
bands of iron. Damin pushed it open slowly, wincing as the hinges
squealed in protest.
"They might not hear us," Damin hissed. "But they're
bound
to hear that."
"Keep going. If they come to investigate, they'll just think the
door hadn't been latched properly."
Damin obviously did not share her confidence, but he led the way
forward, down a set of damp, narrow steps that reached into the
darkness. R'shiel kept her hand on the wall, making her way by feel
more than sight. The stone was slimy under her fingers, and in the
distance she could hear the faint rush of the ocean as it pounded
against the castle's foundations.
She bumped into Damin when he stopped abruptly, pointing to a spill
of yellow light coming from the bottom of the stairs. She nodded
silently, falling victim to Damin's desire for stealth, even though,
protected by the glamour, there was no need for it. They reached the
bottom and stepped into another narrow passage, this one lined by
barred cells and lit by fitfully sputtering torches. There were guards
at the other end of the passage, squatting on the floor, engrossed in
their game. The air was surprisingly fresh, heavy with the smell of the
ocean and the waves crashing against the cliffs seemed even louder. A
faint breeze whispered past them and R'shiel realised that there must
be an opening down here that led to the sea. If they had brought Adrina
here by boat, then there was a good chance this was the way she had
come. With luck, they hadn't bothered to take her any further.
"You check the cells on the left," Damin told her. "I'll
take the
right."
R'shiel nodded and moved to the first cell, which proved empty. The
next housed a sleeping man wearing a shirt tattered by the lash. The
third cell she checked also contained a sleeping prisoner, but whether
male or female, R'shiel could not tell from the rags piled on the damp
floor.
"Adrina!"
Damin's cry made her jump, and she looked at the guards nervously,
reminding herself that they could not hear him. She hurried to his
side. Adrina was sitting on the floor of the fourth cell on the right,
her knees drawn up under her chin, rocking backward and forward on the
damp, cold floor, as tears streamed silently down her face. There was a
nasty bruise on her jaw and her lip was puffy and split. Her silken
gown was muddied and torn, her hair in disarray. Her wounds appeared
superficial, though, and the tears were more likely to be for Tamylan
than herself. Adrina was not the self-pitying type. But R'shiel had
never seen anyone looking quite so miserable.
"Adrina!" Damin called again, grabbing at the bars in
anguish.
"She can't hear you, Damin."
"Where are the keys?"
"The guards have them, I imagine."
"I'll get them," he announced, reaching for his sword.
"No, you stay here. I'll get them."
She walked to the end of the passage and watched the guards for a
moment as they wagered on the fall of two crudely carved die. There
were three men, all of them lacking the spit and polish of fighting
troops. The guard nearest the wall carried a bunch of keys on his belt.
She frowned. They may not be able to see her, but they would notice the
keys detaching themselves and floating up the hall.
R'shiel did not want to kill the guards. Doing so would alert Cyrus
to their presence. It was possible that the Lord of Dregian Province
would have no need to check on Adrina until he thought Damin was ready
to attack. With luck, Adrina's escape might go unnoticed for the rest
of the day, even longer, if the guards paid little attention to their
charges. But whatever she did, she would have to let go of the glamour.
Strong she might be, but she was not accomplished enough to do two
things at once.
"R'shiel! Hurry!"
She ignored Damin's impatient plea and stepped into the shadows.
With infinite care she let the glamour that made them invisible slip
from her grasp. As it left her, she concentrated on the gaming
soldiers, willing them to sleep. They fell so quickly, she was afraid
she had killed them.
Not sure how long unconsciousness would hold the men, she hurriedly
removed the keys from the belt of the snoring guard. She ran back to
Damin and began trying the keys in the lock.
Adrina glanced up at the sound, able to see them now the glamour was
gone, although it took a moment for her to realise who was standing at
the door to her cell.
"Damin?"
"Adrina!" he cried anxiously, then turned to R'shiel. "Hurry
up!"
"I am hurrying," she snapped as the lock turned on the
fourth key
she tried. Damin pushed roughly past her into the cell as soon as the
lock snicked open. Adrina flew into his arms, sobbing. He held her so
tightly, he lifted her clear off the ground. Then he was kissing her
forehead, her neck, her eyes, anywhere he could reach. When he kissed
her mouth she cried out in pain and pushed him away.
"Founders, Damin! She's been punched in the mouth." R'shiel
glared
at him as he let Adrina go. She examined the wound for a moment,
deciding it could wait before she healed it. That way, Damin might show
a little self-control. "Any other injuries we can't see?"
Adrina shook her head, wiping her eyes.
"What about the baby?" Adrina's eyes widened and she stared
at Damin
in horror. "Don't worry about him. He knows. Is the baby all
right?"
The Princess nodded mutely.
"Fine, then let's get out of here."
R'shiel led the way from the cell then turned impatiently to find
they weren't following her. Instead, they stood in the centre of the
dim dungeon, locked in an embrace that was as touching as it was
inconvenient.
"We don't have time for this!" R'shiel warned as one of the
guards
began to stir.
Damin reluctantly let Adrina go. R'shiel let out an exasperated
curse and turned towards the stairs. The sound of footsteps changed her
mind and she hurriedly turned the other way, pushing Damin and Adrina
ahead of her, past the sleeping guards. An archway on the far side of
the guardroom proved to be the source of the chill ocean breeze.
R'shiel pointed to it urgently.
"Down there! I'll follow in a minute."
They needed no further urging. R'shiel ran back to Adrina's empty
cell and locked the door, then returned the keys to the belt of the
sleeping guard, smiling to herself. Let them figure that one out.
The footsteps drew closer on the stairs and the guard stirred again
as she stepped away from him. She glanced around, satisfied that there
was no other evidence of their passage and disappeared into the
darkness of the archway.
Adrina and Damin were waiting for her. As she suspected, the stairs
finished at a small dock, carved into the living rock at the base of
the castle. Unfortunately, the dock was empty.
"Now what?" Damin asked, holding Adrina close.
"We need a boat."
"Great deductive reasoning, demon child."
She loftily ignored the jibe and turned her attention to the
thrashing sea. Even if they had a boat, she didn't like their chances
of navigating their way clear of the rocks.
"What's the name of the God of the Oceans?"
"Kaelarn," Damin told her. "Why?"
"I think we're going to need his help."
"You are going to summon a god and you don't even know his
name?"
"Got any better ideas?" When neither of them answered her
she turned
back to face the thrashing ocean. "Kaelarn!"
The ocean surged below them. Cold spray showered them as the waves
swelled. Out of the steely depths a figure appeared, vaguely human in
form, but shaped from the sea itself. It rose out of the surf until it
loomed over them. R'shiel had to strain her neck to look up at him.
"So the demon child has need of me," Kaelarn boomed wetly.
He had
the most unpleasant voice R'shiel had ever heard. It was like someone
talking through a bucket of water. She fervently hoped nobody else
could hear him.
"We need to get away from this place. We need a boat."
"A boat? You have demons to meld boats for you, demon child."
R'shiel glanced over her shoulder as shouts drifted down from the
guardroom. The sleeping guards had been discovered. It was only a
matter of time before Adrina's absence was noted.
"A meld will take too long."
"You wish to aid these humans, I presume?" he asked,
pointing a
watery arm at Damin and Adrina.
"Yes."
"Is this part of your task to defeat Xaphista, or merely a
whim?"
"It is most definitely part of my task."
"Then I shall aid you, demon child. However, I cannot conjure up a
boat. Perhaps this will suffice."
With a tremendous splash, Kaelarn returned to the ocean. The sea
churned and boiled as the god vanished. R'shiel looked about her in
frustration. Kaelarn had disappeared and the sea was still facing them,
churning savagely as it ate at the rock beneath the castle.
"Well, he was a big help," she muttered in annoyance.
"R'shiel! Look!" Adrina suddenly cried in delight.
Out of the foaming waves, three red-grey creatures approached, their
large dorsal fins slicing through the water. Just like the creature in
the fountain in Greenharbour, they had long, elegant tails ending in
broad, flipper-like paddles. Their wide-set intelligent eyes looked
straight at them as they surfed towards the dock. R'shiel had grown up
in landlocked Medalon. She had never seen anything like them before.
"What are they?"
"Water dragons!"
"Are they dangerous?"
Damin laughed at her expression. "No. They're called the
'fisherman's friends'. We can ride them."
"Ride them?"
The water dragons edged their way to the dock as the shouting in the
guardroom grew louder. Without hesitating, Damin and Adrina slipped
into the water and climbed aboard the creatures, grabbing hold of their
dorsal fins.
"I can't swim, Damin."
"Come on! You don't baulk at riding dragons."
With another glance over her shoulder at the stairs to the
guardroom, R'shiel decided she didn't have time to be squeamish. She
slipped into the water, gasping as the chill salty ocean filled her
mouth. She began to panic as the waves crashed over her, then a warm,
solid body pushed her clear of the foam. She grabbed for the beast's
fin and pulled herself upright as it plunged through the waves in the
wake of the creatures carrying Adrina and Damin.
R'shiel clung to the beast in terror as the castle dwindled in the
distance, determined never, as long as she lived, to ask another god
for his help again.
CHAPTER 28
Just on sunset, at R'shiel's insistence, the water
dragons left them on a small beach not far from Greenharbour. It was
partly because she wanted to give Adrina a chance to recover from her
ordeal, and partly because she wanted to get out of the water and back
on dry land where she felt she had some control over things. Damin had
built a small fire and dried out their clothes and had gone in search
of fresh water.
R'shiel healed Adrina's split lip with a touch and watched the
bruise on her jaw fade before placing her hand on Adrina's stomach. She
could feel the life there, strong and resilient.
"Can you tell if it's a boy or a girl?" Adrina asked
hopefully.
"I'm the demon child, Adrina, not a prophet."
"With my luck it will be a girl."
R'shiel looked at her curiously, as she let go of her power. "What's
so bad about that?"
"You have to be born Fardohnyan to understand."
"Your child will be the heir to Hythria, Adrina. They don't suffer
the same prejudice against women."
"Maybe not, but it irks me to think I was never worthy of my
father's throne, simply because I had the misfortune to be born a
girl."
"Is that why you're so annoyed that the throne will fall to
Damin?"
She smiled wanly. "No. That just annoys me on principle."
"He was ready to go to war over you, Adrina. In fact, he may still
have to."
Adrina sighed forlornly. "I didn't really think he'd come for me,
you know. Or if he did, he'd come charging over Cyrus' borders like
some avenging god and play right into his enemies' hands. I suppose I
have you to thank for the fact that he didn't."
R'shiel sat back on her heels, but she did not confirm or deny
Adrina's suspicions.
"You told him about the baby, didn't you? That explains why he came
for me."
"He already knew about it, Adrina. And I don't think it made the
slightest bit of difference. Damin would have come for you, no matter
what."
The Princess shook her head, as if she didn't believe it was
possible. R'shiel felt like slapping her.
"There's a spring not far from here," Damin called, striding
across
the white sand towards them. "I'm afraid I've nothing to carry the
water in, though."
R'shiel glared at him. "Use Adrina's head. It's hollow
enough!"
Damin stared at her in shock. "What?"
Adrina climbed to her feet, brushing the sand from her tattered
skirts. "R'shiel is angry with me. And you too, I think. That's just
her way of expressing it."
"What did I do?" Damin asked, full of wounded innocence.
R'shiel
felt like screaming.
"Nothing!" she snapped. "Nothing at all! That's the whole
point."
"Look, if I did something to make you angry, don't take it out on
Adrina."
"I don't need you to stand up for me, Damin Wolfblade,"
Adrina
interjected. "I can take care of myself, thank you."
"Why shouldn't I take it out on Adrina?" R'shiel asked,
ignoring the
Princess as if she wasn't there. "It's not as if you
care."
"What are you talking about? You know damned well I care what
happens to her! What's the matter with you?"
"Since when did you give a damn about me?" Adrina demanded,
turning
on Damin.
"Since when did you give a damn about me?" Damin
retorted,
forgetting R'shiel momentarily.
"How can you say that?" Adrina cried angrily. "I've done
everything
you asked of me and more!"
"What have you ever done besides flaunt your royal
superiority?"
"What have you ever done for me? You held me
prisoner! You accused me of trying to murder your uncle. You kept me
collared like a slave just for the sheer hell of it! And then you took
advantage of me!"
R'shiel knew of Adrina's impressive temper, but it was the first
time she had seen it in full flight since the morning Cratyn had tried
to kill her. She stepped back from the couple with a faint smile and
sat down on the cool white sand to watch the show. They had forgotten
she existed.
"I took advantage of you?" Damin gasped in
disbelief. "You devious little bitch. You came over the border dressed
as a court'esa
and spent the whole time acting like one! Ask Tarja if you don't
believe me. You were all over him like a wet blanket any time he got
within five paces of you."
R'shiel hadn't known about that, but she found herself more amused
than jealous at the idea. Poor Tarja. Fancy having to fight off
Adrina when she was determined to seduce him.
"At least he treated me like a Princess! You treated me like a court'esa!
You kept me collared and bound as if I was bought and paid for."
"Oh, I've paid for you, Adrina," Damin said with feeling.
"You think so? I've suffered the insults of your wretched mother.
I've entertained your brutish Warlords. I've been kidnapped and beaten
and locked in a dungeon. Even my slave was killed because of your
damned throne. I've given up my whole life for you, you ungrateful
bastard!"
"You manage to act in a civilised manner at a few dinner parties and
that's supposed to justify the fact that I'm facing a damned civil war
because of you?"
"I didn't cause your measly little war! The miracle is that you
haven't gone and gotten yourself killed before now!"
"Well, maybe you'll get lucky again, Adrina, and I will be killed.
Then you can go and find some other poor unsuspecting sod to marry you
and give you a crown."
The crack as Adrina slapped Damin's face echoed along the deserted
beach with startling clarity. The argument stopped abruptly as Damin
stared at her in shock. Even Adrina looked stunned that she had hit him.
For a long moment they stared at each other, not saying a word
"I'm sorry," the Princess said finally, drawing herself up
with
regal poise. "I shouldn't have done that."
Damin hesitated for a moment then shrugged, rubbing the handprint
that stood out against his tan in the twilight. "No. You don't owe me
an apology, Adrina. I shouldn't have said what I did."
"I still shouldn't have hit you," she insisted.
"It could have been worse," Damin replied, with a hint of a
grin. "You might have been armed."
Adrina's eyes blazed dangerously for a few seconds, then she took a
deep breath, visibly bringing her anger under control. "You're lucky I
wasn't," she agreed. Then, with a tentative smile, she added,
"I really
don't want to be a widow again so soon."
"No?"
"No."
They said nothing for a time, the silence loaded with unspoken
tension. R'shiel waited expectantly, then rolled her eyes. "Oh, for
Founders' sake!"
They both turned to stare at her in horror.
"Do you mind?" Adrina asked, quite put out that she had
witnessed
their altercation. "This is private."
"Actually, they could probably hear you back in Greenharbour. But
don't let me interrupt you. You appear to be enjoying yourselves
immensely."
"R'shiel, do you think you could maybe . . . go away for a
while?" Damin asked, a little more cautiously.
"Are you going to stop shouting at each other? I might as well stay
here if I can still hear you anywhere in a five-league radius."
Adrina looked at Damin searchingly then turned to R'shiel. "I think
I've done all the shouting I need to for the time being. Would you
mind, R'shiel? I think we have a few things to sort out."
"That's something of an understatement," she agreed.
"Why don't we go and find that spring?" Damin suggested. "I
could do
with something to drink."
"You go on ahead," R'shiel told them. "I'll see you
later."
Damin offered Adrina his hand and she took it willingly. With barely
a backward glance they walked away, hand in hand.
"They make such a nice couple, don't they?"
R'shiel jumped at the unexpected voice and turned to find Kalianah
sitting on the sand beside her.
"I wish you wouldn't just appear like that! Can't you warn me
first?"
"What would you prefer? A fanfare?" The Goddess of Love was
in her
favourite form: a little girl. The slight breeze stirred her fair hair
and she was smiling wistfully as she watched Damin and Adrina walk
along the shoreline.
"Did you have anything to do with that?" R'shiel asked
suspiciously.
"Much as I would like to have interfered, demon child, Damin
Wolfblade belongs to Zegarnald. He takes a very dim view of other gods
meddling with his followers. They did that all on their own. I'm afraid
I can't claim any credit at all."
Her words reminded R'shiel of something that she had forgotten until
now. "Kali, have you seen Dace lately?"
"No. He's sulking, I think."
"Why?"
"I don't know. Why do you ask? You're not thinking of becoming one
of his followers, are you?"
R'shiel laughed at the mere suggestion that she would ever worship
any of the creatures that the Harshini called gods. "Hardly. It's just
something Damin mentioned a while back. He wanted to know if anyone had
been stealing his followers."
"With Dacendaran, it's usually the other way around,"
Kalianah
chuckled. "I can ask him if you like. Is it important?"
"I don't really know. Who would want to steal his people
anyway?"
"All of us," the goddess told her. "It's sort of a game,
really.
Particularly for gods like Dacendaran and Zegarnald."
"What do you mean?"
Kalianah looked surprised that she had to explain it. "Life can't
exist without love, which is why the others tolerate me more than most.
But you can be human and not be a thief or a warrior. So gods like Dace
and Zeggi have to work a bit harder to keep their people."
"What would happen if nobody believed in the gods any more?"
"I don't know. I guess we'd fade away into the background. You can't
kill a Primal God. To kill me, you would have to stop love. While ever
there's a fox trying to steal eggs from a nest, or two rams willing to
fight over a ewe, Dacendaran and Zegarnald will survive. But the
Incidental Gods need humans. They need someone to acknowledge their
existence, or they cease to exist."
"So all I have to do to defeat Xaphista is make a few million
Kariens deny his existence?"
"Basically," Kalianah agreed. "How are you going to do
that?"
"I have no idea," the demon child admitted with a shrug.
CHAPTER 29
Once Damin and Adrina were out of sight, Kalianah
lost interest in them and vanished without warning. With an impatient
sigh, R'shiel scrambled up the sandy bank behind her and made her way
through the trees, following her instincts rather than any set path.
The night was bright, but even without the moonlight she would have
found what she was looking for. Before long she came to a large
clearing where Dranymire and the demon-meld rested, still in dragon
form. He opened his eyes at her approach and studied her quizzically.
"You said you would call for me."
"Things got a bit out of hand. I had to call on Kaelarn."
The dragon shook its massive head. "That is beginning to develop
into a dangerous habit, Your Highness."
"Don't worry, after being dragged through the ocean on the back of a
water dragon, I'll think twice before I call on the gods
again," she
assured him.
"Your mission was successful, then?"
"Very. Now I need your help again."
"I live to serve, Your Highness."
R'shiel frowned at the dragon, certain he was mocking her.
"Can you get a message back to Greenharbour? To Kalan?"
"The High Arrion? Not directly. But we can speak to Glenanaran, and
he can pass on your message."
"Tell her where Damin and Adrina are. Ask her to send a carriage.
Preferably one that's closed, so that they can return to the city
without being seen."
"And you?"
"I don't think the answers I need are here in Hythria, so I want to
get back to Medalon, and the only way I can do that is make sure
Damin's throne is secure. I'm going to find the elusive Tejay
Lionsclaw."
The dragon closed its enormous eyes for a moment, then opened them
again. "Your message is being delivered as we speak, Your Highness. If
you would like to climb on, we can be on our way."
"How can you have sent the message already?"
"Not all the te Ortyn demons are part of the dragon
meld. I have
sent Polanymire to Greenharbour on my behalf. Did you expect me to
deliver your message personally?"
"No, it's just . . . I thought . . ."
"You thought what?"
"Nothing . . . I just haven't worked out this demon-meld
thing yet, I think. Do you suppose Brak has had any luck with Hablet in
Fardohnya?"
"The demons say not."
"Damn," she muttered impatiently. "This is what I get for
thinking
everything was starting to go according to plan."
"You actually have a plan then?" the dragon asked.
He was definitely mocking her now. "As a matter of fact, I do. But
first I need Damin confirmed as High Prince. And I need to make sure
Hythria is allied with Fardohnya. After we've tracked down the Warlord
of Sunrise Province, I suppose we'll have to go to Fardohnya. Anyway,
I've a feeling I'll need Brak's help once I get to the Citadel."
"Then that is what we shall do."
"But what about Damin and Adrina?"
"Staying with them now will serve no purpose if they do not get the
aid they need, Your Highness."
She nodded, aware that he was right, but feeling a little guilty for
abandoning them, nonetheless.
"Can you send a demon to check on them? To see if they're all
right?"
"They are in no danger here. But I suppose we can ascertain that
they haven't killed each other."
"That's very big of you, Dranymire."
The demon did not appreciate her tone. "I could just as easily not
send one of the brethren to check on them, demon child."
"I'm sorry."
"As you should be. Now, unless you plan to spend the night in this
insect-infested swamp, I suggest you climb aboard and we shall find
your lost Warlord."
With some misgiving, R'shiel pulled herself up and settled herself
between the dragon's massive wings. As Dranymire and the meld lifted
into the sky, she wondered if she should have told Damin and Adrina
that she was leaving. She decided it wouldn't matter. Help was on the
way, and Dranymire's demon would keep an eye on them until it arrived.
Besides, they probably wouldn't even notice she was missing.
She found Tejay Lionsclaw just on dawn. From her
vantage on the dragon's back, R'shiel could make out the dying fires of
her campsite. Her column was camped for the night on a plain some
thirty leagues from Greenharbour. Dranymire saw them and swooped
downward so swiftly that R'shiel almost lost her seat.
The dragon landed in the middle of the camp, scattering cook fires
and startled Raiders with equal contempt. Tejay Lionsclaw emerged from
her tent, clutching a sword that R'shiel doubted she could even lift.
Tall and well muscled, with thick blonde hair, the Warlord of Sunrise
Province was a handsome woman. Behind her emerged a boy of about
fifteen, clutching the hand of an even younger girl, who was rubbing
her eyes sleepily.
"Who are you?" Tejay demanded belligerently.
"I am R'shiel te Ortyn. I am the demon child."
Tejay studied her for a moment then held up her hand to halt the
suddenly nervous troops who were advancing on them.
"The demon child? That's a legend we tell to frighten
children."
"It works pretty well on grown men, too," R'shiel noted,
glancing
around at the men who were staring with undisguised terror at the
dragon.
Tejay planted the sword on the ground in front of her and stared at
R'shiel for a moment before glancing up at the dragon. "I suppose I
must believe you, considering you arrived on the back of a
dragon."
"I thought it might save a lot of explanations."
"Then you are sadly mistaken, demon child. Nobody lands in my camp
in such a fashion without providing an explanation."
"I come on behalf of Damin Wolfblade. Cyrus Eaglespike has laid
claim to the High Prince's throne."
"That doesn't surprise me, somehow. I've had a great deal of
correspondence from him lately." Suddenly the Warlord smiled
and
sheathed her sword. "I've so many of his damned pigeons in my roosts
that I was tempted to throw them into the cooking pot. Come, let's talk
inside."
She led the way to her tent, where the boy and girl stood wide-eyed
at the entrance, staring at R'shiel's dragon. Dranymire was quite
enjoying the effect he was having, R'shiel decided, although she wasn't
sure if his smug expression was real, or if she was simply imagining it.
"Divine One, this is my son Valorian and his wife Bayla."
R'shiel thought the pair too young to be out alone at night, let
alone married. She looked at Bayla curiously, but could see nothing of
her father, Cyrus Eaglespike, in her. The youngsters bowed hastily as
she passed them, following Tejay into the tent.
"Can I offer you refreshment, Divine One?" the Warlord
asked,
indicating with a wave of her arm that R'shiel should sit. She sank
down onto the scattered silk cushions gratefully, her thighs still
quivering from riding the dragon.
"Thank you. And you don't have to call me Divine One, my Lady. My
name is R'shiel."
"Very well, R'shiel. You may call me Tejay. Bayla!"
Her daughter-in-law's face appeared meekly through the embroidered
hangings on the tent. "My Lady?"
"Make yourself useful for once and fetch us some breakfast."
When
Bayla disappeared behind the curtain, Tejay sat down opposite R'shiel
with a sigh. "If there is one thing I cannot abide, it is simpering
females. And that girl has it down to a fine art."
"Then why did you let her marry your son?"
"Because she came with a dowry that not even I could ignore. In
hindsight, I suppose it had more to do with Cyrus Eaglespike's plans
for the throne, than any great love for his daughter."
"He expects you to support him."
"Then he has badly misjudged me. I am not so easily bought. I owe
Damin Wolfblade for my province and for saving me from the necessity of
marrying a man I did not love. That means more to me than a large dowry
and an insipid daughter-in-law."
R'shiel smiled. Perhaps things were still going according to
plan.
"Does Cyrus know how you feel?"
"I'm not given to artfulness, R'shiel. I have made no secret of
where my loyalties lie."
"Then you need to be aware of what has happened over the past few
days. Cyrus used your name to lure Damin out of Greenharbour, then
kidnapped his wife."
"The Fardohnyan?"
"Princess Adrina."
"It was unwise of him to take a Fardohnyan wife," the
Warlord said
with a frown. "It gave me pause for a time. In fact it came close to
costing Damin my loyalty. Fardohnyans killed my husband and I cannot
count the people I have lost to them since."
"His marriage to Adrina will bring peace."
"Then the peace had better be accompanied by substantial
reparation," Tejay warned. "So, where do things stand now? Is
Damin
preparing to attack Cyrus?"
"No. We managed to retrieve his wife by . . . other means.
They'll be back in Greenharbour by now."
"And what of Lords Foxtalon, Bearbow and Falconlance? I've no doubt
Narvell Hawksword stands with his half-brother."
"Rogan Bearbow is on Damin's side. Foxtalon and Falconlance are
still allied with Cyrus."
"Then with my vote, Damin has a majority. Foxtalon will change sides
as soon as he realises he's backed a loser, but Eaglespike and
Falconlance will not give up so easily. And they have the advantage.
Their provinces make up most of the south. We outnumber them in theory,
but it will be months before we can muster an army sufficient to defeat
them. Our troops are spread out all over Hythria."
"Cyrus is already prepared for war."
"You can bet Falconlance is too. The city of Greenharbour might be
neutral territory, but it is surrounded by Greenharbour Province - and that
is owned, lock, stock and barrel, by Conin Falconlance."
"Then Greenharbour is likely to fall under siege?"
"You can wager on it."
R'shiel thought for a moment, trying to think of a way to get the
scattered armies of Krakandar, Sunrise, Elasapine, Izcomdar and
Pentamor (assuming Tejay was right about Lord Foxtalon) mustered. With
a sigh, R'shiel decided Tejay was correct in her assessment. It would
take far too long.
Damn it! I don't have time for this! R'shiel fought back
the feeling that this entire trip to Hythria had been a waste of time.
She was no closer to finding a way to defeat Xaphista, and was certain
now of only one thing: if the solution she sought wasn't at Sanctuary,
and the Sorcerers' Collective in Greenharbour was unable to help her,
that left the Citadel. It had been the heart of Harshini power and was
the only place left she could think to look for an answer. She was also
sure that the Sisters of the Blade would have kept every book, every
scroll, every scrap of parchment they had taken when they overran the
Citadel. They might despise the Harshini and do whatever they could to
obliterate all traces of their existence, but they were too methodical,
too pragmatic, and far too sensible to destroy the only documents that
might hold the key to the destruction of their enemies. But with Damin
likely to encounter an invading force, and Fardohnya poised to attack
. . .
R'shiel heartily wished she had kept her nose out of the whole messy
situation. And she wished she had never conceived the absurd idea that
Damin should marry Adrina to force the ruling Houses of Hythria and
Fardohnya into a truce. It had seemed like such a good idea at the time
. . . If she was honest with herself, she was willing to
admit that her plans had as much to do with annoying the God of War as
they did with her ultimate desire to defeat Xaphista. Two nations that
had been fighting each other sporadically for two centuries suddenly
united would be a serious blow to Zegarnald's mammoth ego. Perhaps she
was drunk on her own power. Whatever the reason, it didn't help her at
present. Her desire to bring peace had actually caused another war.
Brak had warned her that it would. She should have listened to him.
Now she had to do something to end it, preferably before it got started.
"What if you had another ally? One who could be in Greenharbour in a
matter of weeks with an army that outnumbers your enemies?"
suggested
R'shiel.
"Who are you thinking of?"
"Fardohnya."
Tejay laughed contemptuously. "You think Hablet would send his
troops into Hythria for a reason other than conquest?"
"He would if the demon child told him to."
"I hope your abilities match your confidence, my dear. Besides, the
Fardohnyans are even further from Greenharbour than our own
troops."
"But they can sail from Talabar and be in Greenharbour faster than
you can get your armies together overland."
The Warlord nodded, but she was decidedly unhappy about the idea.
And sceptical. "So, you plan to ride your dragon into Talabar and make
Hablet send his troops to our rescue."
"If necessary."
"I will believe it when I see it."
They were interrupted by Bayla, who backed into the tent carrying a
platter of bread and freshly roasted meat. R'shiel realised how hungry
she was as the smell reached her. She had not eaten since before she
spoke to Korandellan, and that had been two days ago. Bayla placed the
tray on the small table in front of them and managed to bow half a
dozen times on the way out. Tejay watched her leave with a look of
exasperation.
"The gods alone know what it will take to get some spirit into that
girl."
"She's very young."
"Which is a blessing. Valorian is quite smitten with her
helplessness at present, but it won't last. The novelty will wear off
soon enough and then they'll both be unhappy."
"If it's strong women you admire, Tejay, then you and the Princess
Adrina should become fast friends."
"Me? Befriend a Fardohnyan? I find that prospect even more unlikely
than the idea that Hablet would help us for a reason other than
territorial gain."
"You might be surprised, Tejay."
The Warlord helped herself to a shank of meat and smiled at R'shiel.
"My dear, if I find myself friends with a Fardohnyan Princess, and one
of Hablet's brood at that, 'surprised' won't even begin to
describe it."
CHAPTER 30
From Tejay's camp, R'shiel flew northward towards
Fardohnya. Now that she was assured of the Warlord's support and it
seemed that Damin and Adrina were finally fighting on the same side,
she figured she could leave the rest of it up to them. Tejay was
confident that Cyrus Eaglespike and Conin Falconlance would not attack
until after the Convocation, on the slim chance she would support them
and give Cyrus the majority he needed to claim the High Prince's throne.
With Tejay's promise to stall things as long as possible, R'shiel
calculated that she had a couple of weeks at most before Greenharbour
fell under siege. Two weeks in which she must get to Fardohnya and
convince King Hablet to gather his fleet and send his army to rescue
his daughter and her husband, as their ally, not their conqueror.
All this when I want to be in the Citadel, she silently
lamented.
But it wasn't just the situation in Hythria that lent her mission
urgency. Time was running out on more than one front. Korandellan was
weakening and she was worried sick about Tarja. She had received no
word of him since crossing into Hythria, and she had no idea of how
things stood in Medalon.
Dranymire sensed her urgency and did not complain when she told him
their destination. He suggested warning Brak of their imminent arrival,
and R'shiel gladly agreed. She was surprised how much she missed Brak,
or at least his counsel, and was hopeful he would be able to ease her
mind about Tarja. He might even know what was happening in Medalon. And
she was certain that she would need his help in getting to the Citadel.
The journey north took four days, and by the time the pink walls of
Talabar appeared in the distance, R'shiel felt almost confident that
she had mastered the skill of dragon riding. She still ached for hours
when she climbed off the beast, but she no longer clung with grim
determination to the dragon's back for fear of plunging to her death.
As Dranymire had explained, it was simply a question of balance.
Besides, after riding a water dragon through the foaming waves of the
Dregian Ocean, R'shiel decided that airborne dragons were a vastly
preferable method of transport. At least you could talk to them. They
didn't just smile at you with stupid, fixed grins, then drag you down
under several tons of cold water, just for the sheer joy of it.
Dranymire began to lose altitude while they were still several
leagues from the harbour. He headed for a clearing that appeared in the
vast canopy of trees passing beneath them in a green blur east of the
city. Brak had arranged to meet them here, and her heart quickened a
little at the thought of seeing him again. The reason was quite simple
and more than a little disturbing. Brak was the only person, Harshini
or demon, god or human, who she trusted implicitly. Including, she
realised with a frown, both Tarja and Damin.
Her reason for distrusting Damin was fairly straightforward. He had
a bad habit of acting first and worrying about the consequences later.
If he let her down, it would not be lack of honour, but lack of
forethought, that betrayed her. Tarja was a little more complicated.
His love for her was imposed on him. It might vanish as abruptly as it
had appeared and his anger when he realised how he'd been manipulated
could easily turn that love to hatred. She wished she knew where he
was, and that he was safe. She desperately wanted to know what he was
thinking.
Brak was waiting for them in the clearing when they landed. The
humid jungle was alive with the sounds of insects and other creatures
she could not see, and the trees shook as the unseen beasts leapt from
tree to tree. Whatever they were, they seemed unafraid of the dragons
and not too bothered by the presence of the Harshini.
R'shiel slithered off the dragon's back, and collapsed inelegantly
as she hit the ground. Brak smiled and stepped forward to help her up.
"Not as easy as it looks, is it?"
"I'm getting the hang of the riding. It's the walking around
afterwards I'm still having trouble with." She looked up at him
smiling
as she climbed unsteadily to her feet. "I'm so glad to see you, Brak.
Do you think we could just sit for a moment?"
"I think you'd better," he agreed, helping her across the
clearing
to a fallen log that was slowly being consumed by the jungle around it.
She sat down gratefully as Brak turned and bowed respectfully to the
dragon.
"Lord Dranymire."
"Lord Brakandaran."
"I thank you for delivering the demon child safely."
"Luck and a modicum of natural ability is the only reason she
survives, my Lord. I can claim no credit."
Brak smiled. "I thank you all the same, my Lord."
"Will you be long discussing your plans? We have been in this meld
for days now, and I wish to allow my brethren an opportunity to
rest."
"Dissolve the meld, my Lord. We shall call on you later, should your
services be required."
The dragon bowed its huge head towards Brak. "You may wish to take
this opportunity to teach the demon child some manners regarding the
brethren, Lord Brakandaran. She is sorely in need of education."
As soon as he finished speaking, the meld began to dissolve and the
dragon disintegrated into a writhing mass of little grey demons that
vanished almost as soon as they were free of the meld. Within moments
Brak and R'shiel were alone in the clearing.
"What did you do to upset Dranymire?"
"Who knows? As he said, I'm sadly lacking in demon
etiquette." She
flexed her knees stiffly and looked up at him. "You seem pretty good at
it."
"I've had several hundred years of practice."
"Are you really that old?"
"Don't I look it?"
"Actually, you don't look a day over thirty-five."
"My family always did carry their age well," he agreed with
a grin,
then he sat beside her, his smile fading. "What are you doing here,
R'shiel? I thought you were wreaking havoc in Hythria?"
"I was."
Brak laughed.
"I don't mean that the way it sounds, Brak! Everything was going
along fine until High Prince Lernen up and died on me. Then Damin's
cousin claimed the throne and then when we got to Greenharbour,
Glenanaran and the others were half dead from trying to protect the
Sorcerers' Collective. And then Adrina was kidnapped -
she's
pregnant, by the way - so I had to go and rescue her, and stop
Damin
launching a suicidal attack on his cousin to defend her honour. If that
isn't enough, Korandellan's about to fall over from exhaustion because
he's been holding Sanctuary out of time for too long." She took
a deep
breath and looked at him expectantly.
"You've been busy. When did you speak to Korandellan?"
"A few days ago. I used the Seeing Stone."
"My, we have come a long way, haven't we?"
"Don't patronise me, Brak."
"I didn't mean to. But the news about Sanctuary concerns me."
"I know. And there's nothing I can do about it until I sort out
Hythria and Fardohnya."
"Why? Does it really make that much difference? Why not leave them
to their bickering and do something about Xaphista? Do something about
the situation in Medalon?"
"I am doing something about Xaphista! At least, I thought I
was. That's why I went to Hythria in the first place. As for Medalon,
that's where I'm headed next. Tarja will need my help and -"
"Tarja's been captured, R'shiel."
She swallowed hard as her heart relocated itself in her throat.
"When? How?"
"It happened about a month ago. He sank the ferry at Cauthside but
didn't get away quickly enough. The Kariens have been waiting for the
flood waters to subside, but they've not been idle. They'll be ready to
cross the Glass River any day now. Tarja is being taken to the Citadel
for trial."
"I'm surprised they didn't kill him," she remarked
tonelessly.
"He's too important. Publicly hanging Tarja in the Citadel will be
the Kariens' final and unequivocal declaration of mastery over Medalon.
His death will tear the heart out of the resistance."
"It'll tear the heart out of more than the resistance," she
said
softly, then buried her face in her hands, wishing the whole world
would just stop for a while and let her catch her breath.
"I'm sorry, R'shiel."
"I almost wish you hadn't told me." She straightened
suddenly,
looking at him curiously. "How do you know all this, anyway?"
"I have a new friend. She keeps me informed."
"She?"
"The head of the Assassins' Guild is a woman."
"How nice for you, Brak."
"Now who's being patronising? And you still haven't answered my
question. What are you doing in Fardohnya?"
"Trying to undo the damage I caused. Once the Convocation is held,
and Cyrus loses the election, Greenharbour will be under siege within a
matter of hours. Damin doesn't have the troops to hold out for long,
even with the other Warlords on his side. Their armies are scattered
all over Hythria."
"I hope you don't expect Hablet to help. He's being very
uncooperative. He ordered me out of Fardohnya, actually."
"Did you try reasoning with him?"
"One doesn't use the words 'reason' and 'Hablet' in
the same breath.
Not when it comes to the Harshini. Or the delicate matter of his heir.
Which reminds me, did you know that if he doesn't get a legitimate son,
the Fardohnyan throne falls to Damin?"
She nodded. "Princess Marla told me."
"How did Adrina take the news?"
"As you'd expect."
Brak frowned. "And you left them alone in Hythria?"
"That was the one good thing to come out of all this. Damin and
Adrina have finally worked out what everyone else has known for months.
Sometimes humans don't know what they've got until they've almost lost
it."
He smiled. "That sounds very Harshini, R'shiel."
She rolled her eyes but did not deny the accusation.
"So, what do you want to do about Hablet?"
"Well, if reason won't work, perhaps a show of force will."
"I don't like the sound of this."
"Brak, I need Hablet's army to set sail for Greenharbour within the
week. And I need them to go to Damin's aid, not use it as an excuse to
invade Hythria. If Hablet won't listen to reason, then I'll scare him
into it, but either way, I have to stop the civil war in Hythria before
it gets out of hand."
"Why?"
She did not answer immediately.
"R'shiel? Your silence is scaring me. Just exactly what are you
cooking up in that devious little mind of yours?"
She fidgeted uncomfortably under his scrutiny. "I don't intend to
let Zegarnald - or any other god - profit from my
mistakes."
Brak was silent for a moment. "Zegarnald wants you to destroy
Xaphista, R'shiel. Aren't you overstepping yourself just a tad?"
"Zegarnald wanted me 'tempered', remember?" she
reminded him
bitterly. "Well, he's only got himself to blame if he forged a
two-edged sword."
Shaking his head, Brak stood up and held out his hand to her. "One
day, when we get the time, along with respect for the demons, I think I
need to teach you the concept of leaving well enough alone."
R'shiel and Brak made no attempt to conceal their
presence as they flew towards Talabar. Brak rode his metallic green
dragon, which Lady Elanymire and her brethren had formed at his
request, while R'shiel rode beside him on Dranymire's golden meld. They
made an impressive sight swooping down over the city - two
creatures
from legend and their Harshini dragon riders flying out of the sun to
land in the courtyard of the Summer Palace. By the time they had
scattered the startled palace guards and the dragons settled to the
ground, the city was in an uproar.
R'shiel climbed down from Dranymire, pleased to discover the short
ride had left her capable of walking. "I hope Hablet is in. We're going
to look pretty damned foolish making such an impressive entrance if
he's not home."
"He's home," Brak assured her, pointing to flags flying
proudly over
the main entrance to the palace. A tubby, bald-headed man in gloriously
expensive silks hurried towards them. His expression was caught
somewhere between shock and outrage.
"What is the meaning of this?" he screeched, panting heavily
as he
tried to block their path. "You can't enter the palace like this! Who
are you? What do you want?"
"Who is this, Brak?" she asked. Both were drawing on their
power and
their eyes burned black. Although the courtyard was full of guards, the
dragons kept any potential trouble at bay, simply by being dragons.
"Lector Turon, Your Highness, King Hablet's Chamberlain,"
Brak
replied in a superior tone.
Brak was quite an actor when the occasion called for it, R'shiel
thought. She bit back a grin at his manner and turned her ebony eyes on
the eunuch. "You will take me to the King."
"The King cannot be disturbed!"
"Come, Lord Brakandaran," she declared dramatically. "This
underling
is of no use to us. We shall find the King ourselves."
She pushed Lector Turon out of the way and began walking across the
paved courtyard with Brak at her side. Lector scurried past them,
yelling at the top of his voice.
"Bar the doors! Shut them! Quickly! Protect your King!"
The guards were quick to respond. The doors boomed shut before
R'shiel and Brak reached the steps and shook as the locking bar was
dropped into place.
"He's an annoying little toad, isn't he?"
"Immensely," Brak agreed. "What are you going to do about
the doors?"
"What doors?"
She kept walking as the massive, bronze-plated doors blew outward
off their hinges. Everyone but Brak and R'shiel dived for cover.
"Impressive."
"Actually, I wasn't sure that would work," she admitted, in
a voice
meant only for Brak. "Shall we go and find the King?"
"You're enjoying this, aren't you?"
"Aren't you?"
He allowed a small smile to flicker over his lips, before he turned
back to stare at what was left of the entrance to Hablet's Summer
Palace. "I hate to admit it, but yes, I am enjoying it."
"Good. I like to see people happy in their work."
He followed her up the steps to the entrance, stepping over the
debris from the explosion. The dazed guards made no attempt to stop
them as they strode past.
R'shiel glanced around, wondering where Hablet would be hiding - if
he was hiding. He might just have the spine to confront her. He
was Adrina's father, after all, and she certainly never shied from
anything.
Courtiers, slaves and guards stepped out of their path as they
strode through the palace. When they reached the throne room, R'shiel
resisted the temptation to blast those doors off their hinges, too. She
settled for blowing them open, instead. The long narrow hall was
crowded with people clinging to each other fearfully, their silks and
jewels quivering as they stared aghast at the sight of two black-eyed
and obviously annoyed Harshini striding through their midst.
They stopped several paces from the foot of the raised dais where
Hablet sat, clutching the gilt arms of his throne with white-knuckled
terror. It was the only outward sign of his fear. His expression was
one of carefully contrived contempt, rather than dread.
"Who are you?"
"I am the demon child."
"Well, I don't care who you are, young lady, you'll pay for the
damage to my palace." He turned his royal gaze on Brak with a
frown. "I
thought I told you to leave Fardohnya?"
"I answer to a higher power than you, Your Majesty."
"Well, I don't!" the King declared petulantly. He reminded
R'shiel
of Adrina when she was in high dudgeon.
"You will answer to the gods, Hablet," R'shiel warned,
sincerely
hoping she would not have to involve them. She wasn't entirely sure
they would back her in this.
"The gods will not betray me!"
"Perhaps, Your Majesty, but they will do what I ask of
them."
Hablet stared at her for a moment, weighing up the advisability of
defying someone who spoke directly to the gods. He sagged visibly and
turned to the Captain of the Guard.
"Clear the hall."
"Sire?"
"Clear the hall! Everybody out! Now!"
The captain hurried to do as his King ordered. Within minutes they
were alone, the doors slamming shut behind the fearful courtiers as
they scurried from the throne room.
"What do you want?" Hablet asked once he was certain they
were alone.
"I want you to set sail for Hythria, Your Majesty."
"Hythria? Your friend here was warning me to stay out of Hythria a
few weeks ago, and now you want me to invade it."
"You're not going to invade Hythria, Hablet. You're going to relieve
the siege at Greenharbour."
"What siege?"
"Your daughter is now the High Princess of Hythria, and her capital
is under siege, or at least it will be, by the time you get
there."
"Adrina? That traitorous little ingrate? Why should I do anything to
aid her? She betrayed me and married my worst enemy!"
"She married the heir to your throne."
"I'll die before I let Damin Wolfblade inherit my crown!"
"That's the whole idea, isn't it?"
Hablet glared at her. "What do I get out of it?"
"You leave this room alive, for a start," R'shiel warned him
in a
voice so dangerous that even Brak looked at her askance.
"You can't kill me," he scoffed. "You're Harshini."
"I am the demon child, Hablet. I'm only half-Harshini, and believe
me, the human part of me has no qualms about removing people who stand
in my way."
Hablet rubbed his beard thoughtfully then his eyes narrowed. "If I
send my fleet to relieve this siege of Adrina's, I want something in
return."
"You're hardly in a position to negotiate, Your Majesty."
"You think so? Try getting my fleet to move past the end of the
docks without my help."
Reluctantly, R'shiel had to concede that he had a point. "What do
you want?"
"I want a son. I want a legitimate son."
"I can't grant you that."
"Oh, so there are limits to what you can do? Well, in that case,
Adrina and her damned barbarian can rot in Greenharbour and you can
kill me now. It won't make much difference either way. If I'm dead,
Wolfblade gets my throne, but he won't be in a position to claim it,
will he?" Hablet chuckled nastily, daring her to do her worst.
R'shiel considered the matter. If she acceded to his demand -
assuming Jelanna agreed to cooperate - then she would lose her
ability
to unite Fardohnya and Hythria on Hablet's death. On the other hand,
all she really wanted to do was get to the Citadel. It didn't really
matter who ruled Fardohnya, just so long as they weren't at war with
Damin. He couldn't spare any troops to aid Tarja in ridding Medalon of
the Kariens if he was embroiled in a war with either his cousin or his
father-in-law. Time was of the essence and she didn't have any spare to
waste arguing with Hablet.
"Very well. I will speak to Jelanna. That's the best I can do. But
the first hint that you are exceeding your mandate, Your Majesty, and I
will personally see to it that your son withers and dies in the
womb."
Hablet nodded. If he believed her threat, he did not appear bothered
by it. All he wanted was finally getting the heir he craved. He beamed
at her happily. "I find myself suddenly warming to you, demon child. I
shall issue the orders today and we shall set sail for Greenharbour by
week's end. I shall place Gaffen in command. He was always fond of
Adrina."
"Gaffen?"
"The second eldest of my baseborn sons. He and Tristan were always
finding trouble with Adrina. Speaking of which, you've not mentioned
him. I cannot believe he stood idly by while Adrina ran off with a
Hythrun Warlord."
R'shiel glanced at Brak warily before she answered the King.
"Tristan is dead, Your Majesty, as is most of the Guard you sent
north with Adrina. They were killed fighting the Medalonians."
The King paled. His voice was like ice when he finally spoke. "What
were they doing fighting the Medalonians?"
"I believe it was on Prince Cratyn's orders. It was following their
death that Adrina fled Karien."
Hablet was silent for a long time. His anger was a palpable thing.
"Once the situation in Hythria is resolved, you will be confronting the
Kariens, yes?"
"They need to be pushed out of Medalon, certainly."
"Then you have found yourself an ally, demon child. No child of
mine, baseborn or otherwise, dies in such a manner without a
reckoning."
CHAPTER 31
The Convocation of the Warlords to elect the High
Prince of Hythria finally took place four days after Damin and Adrina
returned to Greenharbour. Tejay Lionsclaw had arrived, bearing news
that she had met the demon child, and that when last heard of, R'shiel
was heading for Fardohnya to speak with King Hablet.
The news did little to ease Damin's mind. It was bad enough that she
had vanished without warning, but to learn that she was heading for
Fardohnya made things even worse. He knew as well as anyone what was
likely to happen should he win the election. Inviting Hablet to come to
his rescue, the man who had spent the past thirty years trying to
figure out how to invade his country, the man who had tried to hire
assassins to have him killed, did not strike Damin as a particularly
prudent move.
"You look very . . ."
"What?" he snapped as Adrina walked into his dressing room.
"Foolish?"
"I was going to say dashing, but foolish will do, if you
prefer."
Actually, he felt like an idiot. One of the reasons he had spent as
little time at court as possible was his dislike of dressing in such
cumbersome finery. He wore white, the traditional colour reserved for
the High Prince, from his knee-high calf leather boots to his
gloriously embroidered jacket and short cape that was heavy and
uncomfortable and totally unsuited to Greenharbour's humid climate. The
gold coronet around his forehead was uncomfortably tight and the
ceremonial sword he wore owed more of its weight to its gem-encrusted
scabbard than it did to its blade. In a fight it would be as useful as
a knitting needle. It was Adrina who insisted he dress the part of High
Prince for the Convocation, and she had found a surprising ally in
Princess Marla.
She smiled and stepped forward to adjust the coronet, which eased
the pressure a little, then she smoothed his fair hair down. "You look
every bit the High Prince."
"Looking the part won't win me the title."
"You'd be surprised."
"Gods, how I hate all this pomp and ceremony!"
"Well, you'd better get used to it, my love."
The endearment caught him by surprise. "My love?"
"Well, I can't go on calling you the Evil Barbarian Bastard forever,
can I?"
He laughed. "No. I suppose not."
Adrina sat down on the small settee and curled her legs up under her
to watch him finish dressing. Since their return from Dregian Castle,
and their argument on the beach, she had been a different person. Or
perhaps he was seeing a side of her that she had never shown him
before. The change in her scared him, not because of what she had
become, but because he was afraid it wouldn't last. The new Adrina was
everything he could have wished for in a consort. She was intelligent,
charming and determined to secure his throne, whatever the cost. How
much of that was because she cared for him, and how much was simply her
desire to see Cyrus Eaglespike brought down, he did not dare ask.
"Explain something to me, Damin. Why do you have an election for the
High Prince? Isn't it a hereditary title?"
"Yes, but there's frequently been more than one contender. Twins are
fairly common in my family, and the first born is not always the most
suitable for the job."
"Twins? Gods, you're not telling me I'm likely to have twins, are
you?"
He smiled at her alarmed expression. "Kalan and Narvell are twins.
Even Lernen was a twin, although his brother died in infancy."
"But didn't Lernen name you as his heir? Surely, in that case, there
would be no need for an election?"
"The Convocation is a formality, more often than not," he
agreed. "It makes the Warlords feel they have a say in things. In this
case,
however, there are two contenders."
"How can Cyrus seriously think he's a contender if Lernen named you
his heir? I can understand him jumping in when he thought you'd
vanished into Medalon, but now that you're back, you'd think he'd just
bow out gracefully."
"Cyrus doesn't do anything gracefully, least of all admitting he was
wrong. No, he will fight this to the bitter end. He's come too far to
give up now."
"I wish I could come with you. There are a few things I'd like to
say to Lord Eaglespike."
"Which is why it's a good thing you're not coming with
me."
She smiled. The old Adrina probably would have thrown something at
him. "Just be careful what you say, Damin."
"I won't let him get to me."
"I don't care if he gets to you. Just don't let him win."
He reached for her and pulled her gently to her feet. She did not
resist. He drew her close and kissed her, still amazed how good it felt
to be able to do that without fear of having her slide a knife between
his ribs. She laid her head on his chest and he held her for a moment.
"You'd better come back in one piece," she warned, looking
up at
him. Her emerald eyes were glistening with unshed tears.
"I'll do my best, Your Highness." He kissed her again and
put his
arm around her shoulder as they walked back out into the main chamber
of his apartments. Or rather their apartments now -
Adrina had
moved in the day they arrived back in Greenharbour. Almodavar was
waiting for them, dressed in full battle gear. Adrina frowned when she
saw him.
"Almodavar! Aren't you ready yet?"
"He's not coming with me," Damin explained. "I'm leaving him
here to
protect the palace."
"But you need a Guard of Honour!"
"And I have one. But if things don't go his way, Cyrus may make his
move before we leave the Sorcerers' Collective. I don't intend to make
the same mistake I made the last time. Almodavar is staying here to
ensure your safety."
"You need him more than I do," she insisted.
"The matter isn't open for negotiation, Adrina." He kissed
the top
of her head and let her go. "I'll see you later. When it's all
over."
She nodded but did not answer him. Almodavar opened the door for him
and he stepped into the hall without looking back.
"Damin!"
He stopped and turned to her. "Yes?"
She hesitated for a moment, opened her mouth to say something,
closed it again, then shrugged helplessly. "Be careful."
He wondered what she had really wanted to say. Whatever it was, she
had obviously changed her mind. He smiled mockingly and bowed to her
with all the flair of a court dandy. "As her Highness commands."
She frowned at him then turned to his captain. "Get him out of here,
Almodavar. That coronet is obviously stopping the blood flow to his
brain."
Even Almodavar grinned, which had the unfortunate effect of making
him look fiercer than normal. "This way, my Lord."
Damin straightened up and met her eye. She smiled at him. It was a
genuine smile, without guile or artifice. Suddenly it didn't seem to
matter what else the day might bring.
* * *
The Hall of Convocation in the Sorcerers' Palace
was a room used for the election of the High Prince and the
confirmation of Warlords. It was a windowless, nine-sided room, not
particularly large, but lavishly decorated. Seven of the wall panels
depicted the crests of the Warlords of Hythria in mosaic tiles of gold,
silver and semiprecious stones. The doors broke the eighth panel, but
when closed, they formed the diamond symbol of the Sorcerers'
Collective. The panel opposite the door was fashioned from a sheet of
solid gold and was embossed with the snarling wolf's head of the
Wolfblade House. A massive candelabra suspended from the ceiling, which
took two acolytes almost an hour to light, provided the only
illumination.
In the centre of the room was a nine-sided table, with nine gilt
stools arranged around it. Like the walls, the table was split into
panels that were inlaid with the colours of the seven provinces, the
Royal House and the Collective. Marla had brought him here for the
first time on his tenth birthday to impress upon him the importance of
his heritage.
Damin took his seat - not under the Wolfblade crest, but
under
Krakandar Province, represented by the rampant kraken of his late
father, Laran Krakenshield. Although he had never known his father,
Damin still mourned his loss at times. By all accounts Laran had been a
strong and ruthless man. He could do with such an ally today. He
realised that he would need to find a suitable replacement for himself
in Krakandar. If he secured the title of High Prince, the province
would need a new Warlord.
The other Warlords took their places, all dressed in finery to rival
Damin's. In fact, next to Toren Foxtalon's gem-encrusted armour, Damin
felt quite ordinary. Cyrus, who was also dressed in white, avoided
meeting his eye, as did Conin Falconlance. Rogan simply nodded in his
direction. Tejay smiled at him and Narvell didn't look at him at all,
too busy scanning the faces of the other Warlords with a threatening
scowl. Damin felt a rush of affection for his younger half-brother. It
was odd to think that Narvell was feeling protective of him, rather
than the other way around.
Kalan was the last to arrive. She was dressed in a simple black
robe, her only adornment the diamond-shaped pendant of her office. As
soon as she entered, the doors swung shut behind her without any
visible effort on her part. Wordlessly, the Warlords took their places.
The High Arrion placed her hands on the table in front of her and
closed her eyes.
"We meet to elect a new High Prince. May the gods grant us
wisdom."
"May the gods grant us wisdom," the Warlords echoed with
varying
degrees of enthusiasm.
Kalan opened her eyes and sat down, then studied the gathering for a
moment before continuing. "According to the will of the late High
Prince, Damin Wolfblade is his legal heir, by right of blood. Are there
any other candidates?"
Although the statement was one of tradition, all eyes turned
expectantly to Cyrus. He nodded slowly and rose to his feet.
"Lord Eaglespike?"
"I offer myself as a candidate, my Lady."
"On what grounds?"
"By right of blood."
"Your great-great-grandmother was a Wolfblade, Lord Eaglespike. By
right of blood, Lord Wolfblade has the stronger claim."
"I merely mention my blood tie to validate my claim, my Lady. My
reason for offering my candidacy however, is because I believe Lord
Wolfblade has committed treason."
Terse silence met Cyrus' startling claim.
"That is a serious accusation, my Lord."
"No more serious than the actions of Lord Wolfblade."
"Can you substantiate your claims?" Narvell demanded,
leaping to his
feet "If not, I suggest you sit down before I decide to -"
"Narvell, shut up," Kalan snapped, for a moment addressing
her twin,
rather than the High Arrion addressing a Warlord.
"Kalan!" he objected. She was the older twin by a mere
twenty
minutes, but she had always been the dominant one.
"Sit down, Hawksword," Rogan added. "Cyrus will dig his own
grave
without any help from you."
Narvell reluctantly sat as Cyrus turned to Rogan. "Are you
threatening me, my Lord?"
"No, Eaglespike, I'm not threatening you. You'll know about it if I
do."
"As I was saying, before I was interrupted," Cyrus
continued,
looking pointedly at Narvell, "Damin Wolfblade has committed treason.
He cannot, therefore, be allowed to take the throne, regardless of the
will of the late High Prince."
"Would you care to elaborate, my Lord?"
"He made an unauthorised alliance with a foreign power and then he
married a Fardohnyan."
"At least he married," Tejay remarked with a chuckle. "Which
is more
than you can say for poor old Lernen."
Cyrus did not appreciate her levity. "This is a serious matter, my
Lady. You would do well to treat it as such."
"I'm trying to take this seriously, Cyrus, and I would, if
this wasn't such a joke." She turned to Damin. "What say you,
Lord
Wolfblade? Is Cyrus right? Did you make an unauthorised alliance with a
foreign power? I think we all know by now that you married a
Fardohnyan."
"Guilty on both counts," Damin replied calmly.
Cyrus stared at him, making no attempt to hide his surprise. "You
admit to your crimes?"
"I don't know that I'd call them 'crimes', cousin, but I
certainly
did make an alliance with Medalon and I believe you've already met my
wife." Cyrus still had enough honour left in him to squirm a
little
under Damin's scrutiny. Damin wondered if he had figured out yet how
she had escaped. "I plead mitigating circumstances."
"What mitigating circumstances?" Conin Falconlance scoffed.
"What
could possibly justify such actions?"
"I was asked to aid Medalon. I was ordered to marry Adrina."
"By whom?"
"In the former case, Lord Brakandaran of the Harshini asked for my
aid. In the latter it was the demon child. As she had been placed in my
care by Zegarnald himself, I could hardly refuse, could I?"
Cyrus laughed sceptically. "You expect us to believe the God of War
singled you out and asked you to aid the demon child?"
"Yes."
"That's preposterous! What proof have you?"
"Call Glenanaran, if my word isn't good enough. You'll take the word
of a Harshini, won't you? He was with us when we crossed into Medalon
and I'm sure he wouldn't mind calling up the God of War so you can
cross-examine him."
Only Kalan and Narvell knew that he had spoken with Zegarnald. With
the exception of Cyrus, the other Warlords seemed quite overawed by the
revelation. Lord Eaglespike glanced around the table, shaking his head.
"Am I the only one here who finds this fantastic tale
unbelievable?"
"No, you're the only one here with a vested interest in having us
deny it," Tejay pointed out. "I believe Damin, and when it
comes down
to it, I'd rather have a High Prince who speaks to the gods than one
who uses my name to perpetrate mischief."
Cyrus was looking decidedly uncomfortable. He obviously had not
expected Tejay to learn of his deception, just as he expected to come
to this meeting with Adrina as a hostage.
"Well, Lord Eaglespike?" Kalan asked. "Shall I call on the
Harshini
to bear witness to Lord Wolfblade's defence?"
Cyrus shook his head. "That won't be necessary, my Lady. Lord
Wolfblade is a man of honour."
"An honourable traitor? You flatter me, my Lord."
The Warlord ignored the comment and remained standing. "There is
still the issue of his marriage to that Fardohnyan. He may have married
her on the orders of the demon child, but that doesn't make the
situation any less intolerable."
"What's your objection, Cyrus?" Tejay asked cheerfully.
"That she's
Fardohnyan, or that you can't seem to keep her in your dungeons for
more than a few hours without losing her?"
Cyrus kept his temper with admirable restraint. "Anything I have
done, my Lady, I have done for the good of Hythria."
"Then we are of one purpose, my Lord," Damin replied. "I,
too, have
only the interests of Hythria at heart."
"If you only care about Hythria, how can you possibly expect us to
tolerate that woman? She is a viper! When she was here in Greenharbour
the last time, you claimed she tried to kill Lernen!"
"I was wrong."
"Wrong? Or simply thinking with your balls?" He glanced
around at
the others with a knowing smirk. "I hear she's court'esa
trained."
Damin called on every ounce of self-control he owned to stop him
leaping over the table and taking Cyrus Eaglespike by the throat.
"You will speak with respect when referring to your High
Princess,"
he managed to say, despite the effort it cost him to remain outwardly
calm.
"She is not my High Princess, and will never be!"
"Whether or not Princess Adrina is the High Princess is yet to be
decided," Kalan reminded them, raising her voice slightly.
"Lord
Eaglespike, do you have a specific objection to the Princess, or is it
simply her nationality that disturbs you?"
"I'd settle for just one good reason why we should accept
that foreign whore," Conin Falconlance interjected.
Damin gripped the side of his stool until his knuckles were white,
but gave no other indication of his anger. "One reason?
Gunpowder."
That got their attention.
"Gunpowder?" Tejay gasped. "Gods, Damin, if you took all
of
his daughters off his hands, Hablet still wouldn't part with that
secret."
"I'm aware of that and so is Adrina. When Hablet signed the treaty
with the Kariens, which included sharing the secret of gunpowder, it
was sealed by her marriage to Cratyn. She knew he was never likely to
live up to his end of the bargain. She was understandably fearful that
his refusal might result in the Kariens taking reprisals and the most
obvious target would have been her. So she made a point of learning the
secret before she left Fardohnya."
"And she told the Kariens the secret?" Toren Foxtalon asked.
It was
the first time he had spoken. He had been sitting so quietly Damin
thought him asleep, but this news had seemingly woken him from his
torpor.
"No. The only person she has shared it with is me."
"What makes you so special?" Cyrus laughed
disparagingly.
Damin turned to him and smiled with languid smugness. "I, too, am court'esa
trained, my Lord."
Tejay clapped her hands and laughed delightedly. "Ha! You deserved
that, Cyrus! I say let's finish with this pointless argument. We all
know how we plan to vote and I doubt that anything said here today has
changed any of our opinions. It certainly hasn't changed mine. Order
the vote, Kalan!"
Cyrus glanced around the table, calculating his position. He had
lost Tejay - that was obvious - and Foxtalon was quite
taken with the
idea of learning the secret of gunpowder. Narvell had never been in his
camp and it was clear where Rogan's loyalties lay. He threw his hands
up and sat down heavily.
"Have your damned vote then. This is a farce!"
"Then I will take your votes, my Lords," Kalan agreed with a
frown
at Cyrus for disparaging the validity of the Convocation. "Lord
Bearbow, how does Izcomdar vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lady Lionsclaw? How does Sunrise vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lord Falconlance? How does Greenharbour vote?"
"Eaglespike."
"Lord Hawksword? How does Elasapine vote?"
"Wolfblade."
"Lord Foxtalon? How does Pentamor vote?"
Toren fidgeted uncomfortably, staring determinedly at the table in
front of him. "Wolfblade."
Damin breathed a sigh of relief. With five of the seven Warlords on
his side he had more than he could have hoped for a few days ago.
"Lord Eaglespike? How does Dregian vote?"
"Eaglespike," he snapped angrily. "For all the good it
does."
"Lord Wolfblade? How does Krakandar vote?"
"Wolfblade." He didn't need to say anything else.
"Then I declare Damin Wolfblade is the High Prince of Hythria. Long
live High Prince Damin!"
"Long live High Prince Damin!" the others echoed, with the
notable
exception of Cyrus and Conin.
Cyrus pushed his stool back and rose to his feet. "This is a sad day
for Hythria, my Lords. You have just handed our nation over to a man
who is under the thrall of a Fardohnyan whore. You will live to regret
this decision. Come, Conin, let us together commiserate on the death of
our nation's independence."
Lord Falconlance stood and followed Cyrus wordlessly. The doors
swung open as they approached, and swung shut behind them when they
left the room. The tension flowed out of the room with the departure of
the Warlords.
"Anyone care to wager that Cyrus' idea of commiseration involves a
civil war?" Rogan asked of no one in particular.
"I don't think I care for the odds, Rogan," Tejay said.
"Kalan, as High Prince, I want command of the troops belonging to
the Sorcerers' Collective."
The High Arrion did not even hesitate. "They are yours, Damin, along
with anything else you need."
Rogan smiled. "You see, there's an advantage to keeping things all
in the family. How long do we have, do you think?"
"Until sunrise, is my guess," Damin replied. "I suspect
they'll be
waiting for us when we open the city gates in the morning."
"Then we won't be opening the city gates," Narvell predicted
grimly.
"What about the harbour?" Tejay asked. "Cyrus and Conin have
enough
ships to blockade it."
"I issued a warning to the fishing fleet this morning before I left
the palace. Any boats that want to leave will be gone by now. As for
the rest, if the demon child is to be believed, help is on the way. We
won't have to hold out for much longer than a couple of weeks."
"Help? What help?" Foxtalon asked suspiciously.
"The Fardohnyans."
"The Fardohnyans! You can't trust them!"
"And I don't," Damin told him. "But I do trust the demon
child."
"I hope your trust is warranted, Wolfblade," Rogan warned.
"We are
placing a lot of faith in that slip of a girl."
He smiled at the description. "That 'slip of a girl' has the
power
to destroy a god, Rogan."
"She also has the power to destroy us," Kalan reminded him
ominously.
CHAPTER 32
The siege did not bother the citizens of
Greenharbour at first. If anything, they considered it something of a
novelty, a variation from the normal humdrum of their everyday lives.
Crowds gathered at the walls each day, hoping for a chance to climb up
to the ramparts and see the armies of Greenharbour and Dregian massed
below. A few enterprising souls even began charging admission, after
doing a deal with the guards on the walls, and they did a roaring trade
until Damin got wind of it and had the entrepreneurs thrown in gaol.
By the second week the shortages began, and then the novelty quickly
wore off. There was fresh water aplenty, but Greenharbour was a large
city and it wasn't possible to store enough to keep the population fed
for long. The city housed almost fifty thousand people, and relied on
the bounty of the sea, as well as the numerous farms outside the city,
for produce. With the harbour blockaded, there was no daily catch, and
with the gates closed against the armies of Lord Eaglespike and Lord
Falconlance there was no produce getting through. Damin heard reports
of a loaf of bread costing a hundred times its normal value.
They fared no better in the palace though, because Damin had
distributed most of the palace stores quite publicly on the seventh day
of the siege, in the hopes of avoiding a hungry population storming the
palace in the belief that food inside was being hoarded for the High
Prince and his family.
Cyrus and Conin were carrying out typical siege tactics, he knew.
They made no effort to attack the city. They didn't have to. It wasn't
the threat outside the walls that would undo them, but the
internal unrest. Damin had stationed troops to defend the walls of the
city, but the bulk of his forces were employed simply keeping the
peace. As the siege dragged on, he grew less and less tolerant of the
opportunists and malcontents. He had begun by throwing them in gaol.
This morning he had ordered three men beheaded for hoarding grain and
then selling it at inflated prices. He did not regret their passing. As
their heads dropped into the baskets beneath the executioner's block
his only thought was, That's three less mouths to feed.
He had fifteen hundred Raiders in the city, comprising the three
hundred men each Warlord was permitted. The Guards of the Sorcerers'
Collective, although competent, had no combat experience to speak of.
He had placed the Raiders on the walls and kept the Collective Guards
for civil matters. They were well suited to the task. They knew the
city and the people knew them. In total, he had two and a half thousand
men, but no idea when, or if, help would arrive. There were close to
ten thousand camped outside his walls.
A knock at the door disturbed him, and he looked up in annoyance.
The elegantly carved desk in front of him was littered with parchment.
Lernen never seemed to have to deal with this much work. He was
beginning to wonder how his uncle had found time to indulge his wide
variety of perversions. Damin had barely found time to eat or sleep
since becoming High Prince.
"What?" he called angrily.
The door opened a fraction and Adrina's head appeared. "Do you have
a moment, Damin?"
"No," he replied unhappily.
She opened the door all the way and entered the study with the
Harshini, Glenanaran, at her side.
Damin rose to his feet with a frown. "What is it now, Adrina? Are
the peasants storming the Sorcerers' Collective?"
Glenanaran smiled, which was the usual Harshini reaction to anything
one said in their presence. He was very tall and slender, with long,
fair hair held back by a simple leather band. His height was emphasised
by the long white robe he wore. His totally black eyes were wide with
an innocence and hopefulness that no human could ever hope to emulate.
"No, Your Highness. But it grieves me to see you so
overwrought."
"The administration of a city under siege is proving to be worse
than I could possibly have imagined, Divine One. Being overwrought
seems the only appropriate reaction."
"Don't listen to him, Glenanaran. Damin enjoys feeling sorry for
himself." Adrina smiled at him. She was looking suspiciously
pleased.
"What are you up to, Adrina?"
"We have an idea."
"Actually, the idea belongs to the High Princess, Your Highness. I
am merely the instrument of her desire."
"Aren't we all," Damin muttered as he sat down. "All right.
Tell me
this grand idea of yours, Adrina. The day can't get much worse."
"You have to order the fishing boats to put to sea."
"In case you haven't noticed, Adrina, the harbour is
blockaded."
"I know. The boats can't get past the blockade, but the fish
can."
"What are you talking about?"
"Fish, Damin. You know, those little silver wiggly things that
people eat?"
He smiled, in spite of himself.
"What the High Princess means is that we can call the fish into the
harbour and your fishing boats can net them without trying to get past
the blockade."
Damin leaned back in his chair and studied Adrina in amazement.
"That is the most brilliant idea I've ever heard."
"I thought so."
"And you can do this, Divine One? Doesn't it conflict with your
aversion to killing? Those fish will go straight into the cooking pots
of Greenharbour."
"We cannot abide violence, Your Highness, but we understand the laws
of nature. Death is an inevitable part of life. All creatures serve to
nourish and feed other creatures. Even humans, when they return to the
soil, feed the creatures of the earth, who in turn feed other animals.
I cannot say it will make me happy, but neither can I stand idly by
while the people of Greenharbour starve."
"Then I'll order the boats to sea immediately. And get some troops
down to the harbour to avoid a riot when the catch comes in. I cannot
thank you enough, Glenanaran. This may mean the difference between life
and death."
The Harshini bowed solemnly. "I am aware of that, Your Highness. And
now, if I may be excused, I will return to the Collective to speak with
Farandelan and Joranara. I will need their help for this task."
"Of course," Damin agreed. "And again, I thank you."
As soon as he was gone, Adrina walked around the desk and pushed a
stack of rolled parchment out of the way, so she could sit on it. Her
expression was insufferably smug.
"So, how do you like my first official act as High Princess?"
"Not bad."
"Not bad! It was a stroke of genius!"
"Yes, it was. But you already know that. I'm not going to inflate
that ego of yours any more than it already is by admitting it,
though."
Adrina laughed. Despite the siege, despite Tamylan's death and
everything else that had happened to her recently, Damin had never seen
her happier. She was finally in her element, he realised. She had power
and respect and the ability to use that awesome intellect for something
other than causing trouble. Hablet had been a fool not to recognise
what he had in his daughter. Then again, he might have actually seen
her potential and banished her to Karien where he thought she could not
threaten him.
Her laughter faded after a while and she became serious. "It's only
a temporary measure, Damin. We can't ask the Harshini to call fish into
the harbour indefinitely."
"I know. But every day we hold out is a day closer to help
arriving."
"You still believe R'shiel will be able to convince my father to
send help?"
"If anybody can, R'shiel can. It's simply a question of how long it
takes. She knows the urgency of the situation."
"Personally, I don't see why she couldn't just stay here and throw a
few fireballs around like she did in the Defender's camp in Medalon.
That would have softened Eaglespike's spine quick enough."
"She wants peace, Adrina," he reminded her. "Besides,
throwing
fireballs around might cow Cyrus into submission, but it would more
than likely burn my city to the ground."
"And you think a running battle through the streets of Greenharbour
is going to be any less damaging?"
"No. But I've some control over the way a battle goes. R'shiel has no
control over where her magic lands."
"Do you think she'll ever be ready to face Xaphista?" she
asked.
"I hope so."
"If she fails," Adrina warned, "we'll spend the rest of our
lives at
war. I've lived with the Kariens, Damin. I've heard what they preach.
Xaphista won't be content until the whole world is on its knees before
him."
Following the Harshini summons, the fish netted in
the harbour kept the city fed for another few days, but that problem
was quickly replaced by another, more urgent dilemma, one that even
outweighed the threat of imminent starvation. To make matters worse, it
was an enemy Damin had no idea how to fight: garbage.
Normally, an army of slaves was employed to remove the refuse of the
city and dump it outside in a vast old quarry several leagues away that
had been disused for decades. But the garbage wagons were full and
there was nowhere to go. Damin refused to let them dump it in the
harbour and had ordered the rubbish burned instead. That would have
worked if the refuse was dry, but in the humidity of Greenharbour,
nothing ever dried completely and the burning could not keep pace. So
the garbage piled higher in the streets and ten days after the siege
began, Kalan came to him with the first reports of disease spreading
through the poorer quarters of the city.
He ordered the affected areas quarantined, but it only served to
slow the spread of the disease, not stop it. The Harshini, who were
naturally immune to human ailments, worked tirelessly healing the sick,
but there were only three of them - not enough to keep pace
with the
plague. Sorcerers from the Collective worked beside them until they
either dropped from exhaustion or succumbed to disease themselves. He
had seen Kalan only twice since the outbreak, and both times she had
been haggard with fatigue.
He'd had a blazing row with Adrina when she decided that she should
go out and help, claiming it would enhance his position as High Prince
no end if his wife were seen to be caring for the sick. Her pregnancy
was just beginning to show and even if he hadn't been terrified at the
thought of her catching something, he was not going to let her endanger
their unborn child. She had reluctantly given in, and only then when he
reminded her of the danger to their baby. The atmosphere had not been
pleasant since. Adrina was like a caged leopard, prowling around the
palace, feeling useless and frustrated. But he did not resent her mood
- he felt exactly the same way.
On the fifteenth day of the siege, Cyrus sent a
message under a flag of truce. The messenger was let in through the
postern gate, and proved to be Serrin Eaglespike, the Warlord of
Dregian's younger brother. He was escorted to the palace followed by
the curious stares of a population weary of the siege and hopeful that
the young lord's presence heralded the end of their ordeal.
"My brother offers leniency, my Lords," Serrin informed them
as he
stood before Damin, Narvell, Rogan, Tejay, Toren, Adrina and Princess
Marla in the main hall. He handed Damin a parchment sealed with the
Eaglespike crest - Cyrus' formal terms for surrender. Damin
didn't even
bother to open it.
"In return for what?" Rogan demanded.
"Lord Wolfblade must surrender the city, abdicate the throne, and
agree to exile in the country of his choice. You, my Lords," he
added,
addressing the other Warlords, "may retain your provinces, provided you
agree to swear allegiance to Lord Eaglespike immediately."
"Cyrus must think we're bored," Tejay remarked. "He
obviously sent
Serrin here for a bit of light entertainment."
"This is not a jest, my Lady."
"It is from where I'm standing," Tejay laughed. "Send him
back to
his big brother, Damin. Preferably a piece at a time."
"Tempting though the idea is, Lady Lionsclaw, he's here under a flag
of truce," Damin reminded her. "If you want to cut him into
little
pieces, you'll just have to wait until he comes over the wall."
Serrin glared at them in disbelief. "Don't any of you take this
seriously? You are surrounded and starving and yet you make jokes! You
cannot hope to hold out for much longer."
"What we hope for is not your concern," Damin told the young
man.
"And that is your answer to our terms?"
"This is your answer." Damin tore the unread document to
shreds and
threw the scraps at Serrin. "Go back and tell your treacherous brother
and his allies that we do not deal with traitors. Instead of wasting
his time figuring out the terms of my surrender, he'd be more gainfully
employed putting his own affairs in order. I hear that's the wisest
thing to do when one knows that their death is imminent."
"You will regret this, Wolfblade," Serrin warned.
"Not nearly as much as Cyrus will," Damin predicted.
The following day, the bombardment began.
Greenharbour's walls were more decorative than
defensive, and the only thing that had kept the enemy at bay thus far
was Cyrus' willingness to wait. Once the war engines were rolled into
place, however, Damin knew it was simply a matter of time before the
walls were breached and the armies of Dregian and Greenharbour poured
into the city.
But Cyrus did not attack the walls immediately. The boulders and
burning pitch he lobbed into the city landed at random, killing any
soul unfortunate enough to be in their destructive path. At first,
Damin thought they were merely testing their range, but after two days
he realised it was a deliberate attempt to further demoralise the
people. The bombardment went on relentlessly, day and night, and the
death toll mounted.
They had their own catapults mounted on the walls, but they were
much smaller than the weapons Cyrus could bring to bear, and he kept
his forces well clear of their range. By the end of the second day
under the gruelling attack, the gates were stormed - not by
Cyrus, but
by a riotous mob desperate to flee a city that was rapidly becoming a
death trap. The Raiders were forced to beat back their own people. A
dozen or more died in the fracas; some trampled, others killed by the
Raiders defending the gates from the mob. Damin ordered a curfew and
threatened execution for anyone caught out on the streets without good
cause.
It was later that night that he returned to his rooms, hoping to
snatch a few hours' sleep before dawn and the next crop of crises
emerged. Adrina was asleep when he arrived, and he stood in the moonlit
chamber watching her through the flimsy curtain draped over the bed
against insects. He'd not seen much of her lately and was a little
surprised at how much he missed her. Pregnancy agreed with her, he
thought. It was as if the budding life inside her had imbued her with
some indefinable inner peace. She had always been beautiful, but now
she was stunning. With a faint smile, he thought of the constant stream
of potential brides that Marla had paraded before him over the years,
glad now that he had held out for something truly worth fighting for.
Although he had made no sound, some instinct of self-preservation
must have warned Adrina that she was not alone. Her eyes opened and she
started a little, only relaxing when she realised who it was that stood
in the doorway.
"I didn't mean to wake you."
"I wasn't really asleep," she replied, stretching languidly.
"What
time is it?"
"Late. Very late."
"Then you should get some sleep. We'll still be under siege come
morning."
"I knew I could rely on you to cheer me up."
She pulled back the curtain so she could see him more clearly. "You
look tired."
"Really? I only feel exhausted."
"Was it that bad today?"
He nodded wearily as he crossed the room and sat on the edge of the
bed. Part of him wondered if it was worth taking his boots off. In a
few hours the sun would be up and he'd only have to put them on again.
Another part of him was trying not to recall the trampled bodies he had
seen at the gate.
"I'm beginning to wonder if I should have accepted Cyrus'
offer."
"Surrender? Damin, you can't mean that!"
"I could save a lot of lives."
"You'd be ending ours."
"Cyrus offered us exile."
"And you believe him?"
He saw the look of fierce determination in her eyes and smiled
wearily. "No, I don't believe him. And don't worry, I haven't given up
yet."
"And if you do, it won't be Cyrus you have to fear," she
declared. "I'll run you through myself!"
He didn't doubt that she meant it. With a yawn he lay down beside
her, fully clothed, as she moved across the bed to make room for him.
As soon as his head hit the pillow, he felt fatigue wash over him. He
closed his eyes with relief.
"Damin, if you're coming to bed, you could at least take your boots
off."
"I haven't got time to sleep," he murmured. "I'm just going
to rest
my eyes for a moment."
She moved into the circle of his arms and laid her head on his
chest. He could smell the fresh scent of her hair and feel the slight
bulge of her belly against his hip.
It was the last thing he remembered until Almodavar burst into the
bedchamber next morning to inform him that Cyrus was breaking down the
walls.
CHAPTER 33
Cracks appeared with the first hits. The walls were
made of fragile chalkstone and had never been designed to withstand a
serious attack. When Damin heard the news, he rode out to see the
damage for himself. He was no engineer, but even he could tell that
they would not last long.
"Call up the Collective Guards," he ordered Almodavar. "Have
them
reinforce the troops on the walls."
"You want me to take them off riot duty?"
"Riots are going to be the least of our problems shortly,"
he said,
as the crash of a boulder striking the wall made their horses rear in
fright. The crack he had been examining widened alarmingly. A few more
direct hits and it would be large enough for a man to walk through.
He turned his horse and cantered back through the streets to the
palace, distressed by the devastation the bombardment had caused. There
were blackened buildings everywhere he looked; others had crumpled
under the weight of the boulders dropped from the sky. He avoided
looking at the people. It was too hard to confront the fear in their
eyes, the agony of their grief. Cursing himself for a fool, he wondered
if he should have attacked sooner - tried to break out of the
city and
take the battle to Cyrus on open ground, where he at least would have
had some freedom of movement.
He should never have put so much faith in R'shiel.
Another boom sounded, and his horse reared again, but this was a
different sound to the solid cracking of stone against stone. The noise
came again and he looked at Almodavar with a puzzled expression.
"That didn't come from the walls."
"It sounded as if it came from the harbour."
Another boom rolled over them as Damin spurred his horse forward.
The sounds became more frequent, like a constant wave of thunder. As he
neared the palace, the faint smell of smoke was drifting on the still
air. But it wasn't ordinary smoke. It had a flavour he did not
recognise. He flew from the saddle and ran up the steps into the palace
and through the main hall to the balcony overlooking the harbour,
gripping the balustrade in astonishment.
The sight that greeted him left him speechless. Three of the ships
that had been blocking the harbour entrance were in flames. Behind them
were a dozen or more warships. Fardohnyan warships. The booming
sounded again as flames shot out from the nearest ship, and another of
the blockaders fell victim to the Fardohnyan cannon. The ship in the
lead headed for the gap in the sinking blockade line and sailed
majestically through, her oars dipping and rising in a flawless rhythm.
"The Fardohnyans," Almodavar remarked unnecessarily.
"They believe in cutting things a bit fine," Damin agreed,
finally
finding his voice. The relief he felt was so intense he felt faint with
it. "Where's Adrina?"
"I'm here, Damin," she said, stepping out onto the balcony.
She was
smiling fondly as she pointed to the ship in the lead. "That's the Wave
Warrior."
"Your father's flagship?"
"R'shiel has outdone herself."
"Does that mean Hablet has come?" Almodavar asked.
"Gods, I hope not," Adrina muttered, stepping up to the
balustrade. "Do you have a looking glass?"
Almodavar produced one from a pouch on his belt and handed it to
her. She placed the tube to her eye and trained it on the ship. Then
she laughed and lowered the glass.
"What?" Damin asked impatiently. "Is it your father?"
"No. It's better than that. He's sent my half-brother,
Gaffen."
Damin refrained from telling her how relieved he was that he would
not have to confront her father. They watched the ship sail forward,
heading for the dock below the palace. As it neared the wharf the oars
banked sharply, turning the ship into the dock.
"Come on. Let's go and greet our new allies. We've about an hour
before Cyrus breaks through the walls."
"That'll make Gaffen happy. He'd be dreadfully disappointed to come
all this way and not have someone to fight."
* * *
By the time they reached the dock, the ship was
secured and a long gangplank was being shoved out from the tall deck of
the Fardohnyan warship. The first man off the ship was a tall, blond
fellow who strode purposefully up the dock and swept Adrina up in a
massive bear hug. She squealed as her feet left the ground. He put her
down then held her at arm's length for a moment.
"You're getting fat," was the first thing he said.
"I'm having a baby, Gaffen. I'm allowed to get fat."
Gaffen looked startled at the news. He turned to Damin and eyed him
up and down. "You'd be Wolfblade, I'm guessing. Where's the
fight?"
"You guessed correctly. And the fight is just about to start, my
Lord. They are breaking down the walls as we speak."
"Then what are we standing around here for?" The Fardohnyan
spun on
his heel and marched back towards his ship, yelling orders for his
troops to disembark as he went. Damin turned to Adrina, looking rather
bemused.
She smiled. "Don't worry. He likes you."
"How can you tell?"
"He didn't try to kill you. That's always a good start with
Gaffen."
Before he could answer, a messenger came running down the dock
towards them, calling for him. The man skidded to a halt and bowed
hastily before delivering his news.
"Lady Lionsclaw said to tell you they've broken through, Your
Highness."
"Where?"
"On the north wall. Near the weaving district."
"Tell her I said to hold on. I'll be there with reinforcements
shortly."
The courier glanced at the Fardohnyans pouring off the Wave
Warrior and saluted sharply, suddenly grinning from ear to ear. He
ran back the way he came, whooping with delight.
"Seems your brother's arrival has somebody happy today,"
Damin
murmured as he watched the young man's departure. Then he turned to
Adrina. "I want you to go back to the palace and stay there."
"Yes, dear."
"I mean it, Adrina. You're not to stick your nose outside the palace
until this is over. With your brother's troops, we could have Cyrus on
the run soon enough, but I don't intend to spend the next few hours
worrying about what you're getting up to."
"Don't pussyfoot around, man!" Gaffen declared, coming up
behind
them. "Tell her to stay put, or you'll beat her senseless. It's the
only thing that works with Adrina."
"Gaffen, shut up!"
He grinned at his sister then turned to Damin. "Come on, Wolfblade!
Let's go slaughter your enemies. Adrina, get back to the palace now, or
I'll throw you over my shoulder and carry you screaming all the way
back, and lock you up."
Adrina glared at her brother, but to Damin's astonishment she turned
and strode haughtily back towards the palace without another word.
Gaffen noticed Damin's expression and laughed.
"I can see you and I need to have a talk about Adrina when this
business is done with, Your Highness."
"If I had threatened her with that, she would have killed
me."
"Probably," Gaffen agreed cheerfully. "Can you organise
someone to
get the rest of my ships docked? I've a feeling we'll need every man
before the day is out."
"How many did you bring?" he asked.
"Three thousand. Do you think that will be enough?"
He'd been hoping for twice that many. Cyrus had ten thousand men
outside the walls. Between Gaffen's reinforcements and the troops he
had in the city they were still outnumbered, but at least the odds were
a little better
"It's going to have to be enough," Damin said, trying not to
sound
disappointed.
The breach in the wall near the weaving district
was contained easily enough, but it was followed by more reports of
breaks in the walls from all over the city. By mid-morning, Cyrus had
broken through and Damin gave up trying to plug the gaps. He pulled his
troops back from the walls and the battle for Greenharbour was well and
truly under way.
They fought for the city, street by street, falling back when they
had to, surging forward to repel the invaders when they could, but
slowly, a street at the time, they were pushed back towards the
harbour. The Fardohnyan forces were still not completely disembarked.
There simply weren't enough berths to get them all ashore quickly
enough.
Gaffen ranted at his commanders to unload the troops faster, but
there was little he could do to speed up the process. All they could do
was hold out as long as possible, throwing Gaffen's fresh troops into
the fray wherever the lines weakened. But they were coming off the
ships at irregular intervals. A few of the Fardohnyans had gone
charging into the battle without waiting for orders, bolstering lines
that didn't need them, while Cyrus' men broke through in other places
that were desperate for reinforcements. Another troop had ploughed into
the fray and accidentally turned on Rogan Bearbow's men, not realising
that they were not the enemy.
By mid-afternoon, Damin was seriously considering evacuating the
palace. Cyrus had pushed so far into the city he was almost ready to
admit they were losing the battle. Gaffen's troops were disembarked,
but they were too little, too late. If he'd had them earlier, before
Cyrus first breached the walls, he might have had a chance. As it was,
they only filled the gaps. He didn't have the men to take the battle to
Cyrus.
Rubbing his temples wearily, he glanced across the room at Adrina's
brother, who wore a look of wounded pride as much as anything. Gaffen
wasn't used to defeat.
"Perhaps if we turn my ships broadside to the city, we could turn
the cannon on them," he suggested hopefully.
Damin shook his head. "You'll kill as many of our people as you will
theirs."
"Then we fire the city."
Damin nodded reluctantly. He had been hoping to avoid it, despite
the fact that he'd had Almodavar quietly distributing barrels of pitch
throughout the city for days prior to the battle. Setting fire to
Greenharbour would stop Cyrus surely enough, but it was likely to
destroy much of the city in the process.
"I was hoping to use that as a last resort."
"Aye," Gaffen agreed heavily. "But that moment is
approaching
rapidly."
The battle continued without pause as the day wore
on. The reports kept coming in, each progressively worse than the last.
The sun was resting on the horizon when Damin's stomach rumbled, and he
realised the day was almost over. He'd been too busy directing the
fighting to eat. Damin hated combat like this. He was a warrior at
heart, not a tactician. He would much rather be in the thick of battle,
not directing others to do his fighting for him. Tarja was good at that
sort of thing. Damin spared his friend a thought for a moment,
wondering what had become of him. Was he waiting in Krakandar for aid
that would never come? Or had he done something stupid and got himself
killed by the Kariens?
Damin doubted he would ever learn the truth. Cyrus was all but
knocking on the doors of the palace. It was little more than three
hours after Gaffen suggested it that he was forced to concede that they
had no other option but to fire the city in the hope of driving the
enemy off.
"Gaffen, I want you to take Adrina and whoever else you can find in
the palace and get them out of here."
The Fardohnyan looked at him for a moment and then nodded in
understanding. "And what of you, Your Highness?"
"I can't order anybody else to do this. If Greenharbour burns, then
it will be by my hand."
Gaffen hesitated for a moment, then called in one of his captains
and began giving the orders to evacuate the palace. When he was done,
he snatched up his sword from the table where he had been using it to
hold down a map of the city.
"Let's go, then!"
"What are you doing?"
"You don't think I'm going to run away with the women and the
children, do you?"
"This isn't your fight any longer, Gaffen. I'm not going out to do
anything particularly heroic. I'm going to set fire to the
city."
"Well, someone has to watch your back. Besides, you're married to my
sister. That makes you family."
Damin took one look at the expression on Gaffen's face and decided
not to argue. In truth, he didn't mind the idea of the big Fardohnyan
watching his back for him. Gaffen was the sort of man who looked as if
he could stop an avalanche if he stood in front of it.
"Let's do it, then," Damin said, pushing away all thoughts
of the
consequences of what he was about to do. He strode from the command
post with an air of grim determination and ordered the horses brought
out. He didn't know how far he could get, but the further from the
harbour he set the fires, the more people might have a chance to escape.
The sounds of the battle could be clearly heard as he and Gaffen
rode out. The streets this close to the harbour were already clogged
with people fleeing the advancing horde. They pushed through the crowds
for several streets until they broke through into a reasonably deserted
street. The fighting had not yet reached this part of the city and it
looked oddly peaceful, like a calm oasis in the middle of a raging
sandstorm.
That's when he heard the trumpets.
"What was that?" Gaffen asked curiously, his head cocked at
the
unusual sound.
"I don't know."
The trumpets came again, drifting on the early evening breeze. Damin
listened with a feeling of total bewilderment until he recognised the
sound. He last heard it on the northern plains of Medalon and had
never, in his wildest imaginings, expected to hear it in Greenharbour.
"Well, I'll be damned."
He flew from his saddle and headed for the tallest building in
sight, which was a gracious, four-storey residence belonging to some
prosperous merchant. Gaffen followed him at a run. Damin kicked in the
door, ignoring the screams from the merchant and his family sheltering
within. He took the stairs two at a time with Gaffen on his heels, and
finally burst onto the roof. He ran to the northern edge of the
building and looked out over the devastated city.
The sound of the trumpets reached him again, clearly this time.
Panting beside him, Gaffen stared at the scene before him with a
puzzled look.
"What is that?"
Wordlessly, Damin pointed north, at the perfectly formed ranks of
red coats preparing to march on the city, too stunned and relieved to
speak.
There were two thousand of them at least.
Two thousand fresh, disciplined and well-trained Medalonian
Defenders.
CHAPTER 34
The battle for Greenharbour was ugly, but blessedly
short once the Defenders joined the fray. Cyrus' army broke and ran
just after sundown. Conin Falconlance and Serrin Eaglespike died during
the battle, but Cyrus survived and fled back to Dregian Province with
the remainder of his scattered forces to make a last stand.
Damin sent Narvell after him, with Gaffen and a force of
Fardohnyans. It wasn't that he thought Narvell needed the help so much
as his desire to separate Adrina's half-brother and Tejay Lionsclaw,
who would rather have perished in battle than accept help from her
despised enemies. She made no secret of her distrust of their new
allies, so Damin thought it prudent to put as much distance between
Gaffen and Tejay as possible until things calmed down a bit. Gaining
entrance to the castle by the same hidden passage that he, Adrina and
R'shiel had escaped through, Narvell and Gaffen took Dregian Keep with
barely a man lost in the fight.
Conveniently, Cyrus threw himself on his sword rather than face the
consequences of his actions. Damin was privately glad that he had. It
was always messy, following a civil war, to decide what to do with the
miscreants. If he had executed Cyrus, there would always be a small
core of resentment among the people that could be fanned into life in
the future. If he left him alive, he left him free to plan further
mischief. It was better this way. Cyrus' widow and three-year-old son
were back in Greenharbour as prisoners, but Damin was inclined to be
generous towards them. It was hardly their fault that Cyrus had let his
ambitions run away with him, and anyway, he doubted he could bring
himself to order the execution of a child, no matter how sound the
logic behind the decision.
There were other issues to be resolved, too. Dregian, Greenharbour
and Krakandar now needed Warlords, and everyone from Tejay Lionsclaw to
the palace gardeners had an opinion on who should be awarded the
positions. Although there were numerous candidates among the nobility,
it was not uncommon for a Warlord to be appointed from the lower
classes. Talent still counted more than bloodlines in Hythria, and
Damin was seriously considering looking further afield for the new
Warlords. He'd had enough of bored noblemen with delusions of grandeur.
A few young bucks who were more interested in holding onto their own
provinces than eyeing off his throne would let him rest much easier at
night.
Then there was the problem of the Defenders.
Tarja was not with his men, which worried Damin a great deal. Denjon
had told him what Tarja had planned to do, but the fact that he had not
returned from his mission to sink the ferries on the Glass River was a
bad sign. Damin felt he owed the Defenders an enormous debt. With Tarja
missing, and with an administrative and political nightmare ahead of
him, he was tempted to drop everything, gather up his forces, head for
Medalon and leave Adrina to sort out the details here at home. He
smiled grimly at the idea. Trusting Adrina was still very new to him.
He could not bring himself to tempt fate by handing her that much power.
It was five days since the battle and his hope that things would
improve had proved optimistic in the extreme. Although gradually being
brought under control, disease still raged throughout the city. There
were thousands of homeless, as many wounded, and another five thousand
Fardohnyans and Medalonians to feed.
Cyrus had stripped the countryside of what food there was close to
the city. Damin had a vast number of his men out scouring the land for
grain to tide them over until supplies could be brought in from the
outlying provinces. The fishing fleet had put to sea again, which
prevented the situation from becoming desperate, but he was so heartily
sick of fish for every meal, that he was certain he would never be able
to face it again once this crisis was over.
The door to his study suddenly flew open and slammed against the
wall. Adrina stormed into the room. The candles wavered in the breeze
caused by her anger. She was shaking with fury.
"Do you know what she's done?"
"Tell me who 'she' is, and I might be able to answer
you," he
replied calmly. Adrina's tantrum was a welcome distraction.
"R'shiel!"
"She sent your brother and three thousand men to save our
necks?" he
suggested.
Adrina actually stamped her foot at him. He fought very hard not to
smile.
"Don't be so bloody obtuse, Damin! She promised Hablet a
son!"
"I know. Gaffen told me."
"You knew about this? Why didn't you tell me?"
"I have been rather busy lately."
"Then what are you doing about it?"
"Nothing."
"You can't do nothing! She has just cost you the throne of
Fardohnya!"
"Well, as I never actually wanted the damned thing in the first
place, it hardly seems worth getting upset over the fact that I've lost
it."
"How could you not want it?" she asked, genuinely puzzled by
his
lack of ambition.
"Not everybody shares your desire to wear a crown, Adrina,"
he told
her. "Anyway, you were furious at me for being the heir to the throne.
Now you're angry because I'm not. Make up your mind."
She glared at him for a moment then flopped inelegantly into the
chair on the other side of the desk. "I'm in no mood to be reasonable,
Damin. Fight with me."
"I will," he promised, "when the occasion warrants it. But
in this
case, it's not worth it. I've got my hands full holding onto to
Hythria. I don't need your father's kingdom as well. The whole idea of
splitting Fardohnya and Hythria in the first place was because they
were impossible to govern as one nation."
"We could have done it," she grumbled.
"We? Ah, so that's what this is all about. If I don't become
the King of Fardohnya, you don't get to be Queen. I'm sorry, but you'll
just have to settle for being the High Princess of Hythria."
She smiled faintly, as if she understood how childishly she was
behaving. "You have no idea how good it would have felt to return to
Fardohnya as her Queen. My father sold me like a side of beef to the
Kariens because that's all I was worth to him. And for no better reason
than I was born a girl. It didn't matter how clever, or well educated,
or politically astute I was."
"Personally, I think your political acumen had a lot to do with
it,"
he suggested. "You are far too clever for a disinherited Princess. If I
was in your father's position, I'd have shipped you off to a temple
somewhere when you were five."
"I think he wishes he had," she agreed. "But there's more to
this
than me losing my chance to revenge myself on my father, Damin. Do you
know what's going to happen once this child is born?"
He shrugged. "You mean other than a very big party?"
"Once my father has an heir, he will remove any threat to the
child's claim on the throne."
"But there are no other claimants to the throne."
"I have thirteen living baseborn brothers, Damin. Hablet was quite
prepared to legitimise one of them if he couldn't get a son. Each of
them is a potential threat."
Damin looked at her aghast. "Are you telling me he'll kill his own
children?"
"He'll kill them and not lose a moment's sleep over it. This may be
hard for you to understand - Hablet loves every one of his
bastards -
but they know as well as he does what fate will befall them should he
produce a legitimate heir."
"You're right. I don't understand."
"It's tradition. When Hablet was born, his father had seventeen
baseborn children and his three unmarried daughters put to death. When my
father took the throne, every pregnant concubine and court'esa
in the harem was executed. His own sister committed suicide as proof of
her love for him. She was hailed as a heroine."
"And you call me a barbarian."
She shrugged, helpless to make him understand. "It's the Fardohnyan
way."
"Then I'm glad I won't ever have to sit on a throne that is soaked
in so much innocent blood."
"Don't you see the irony? You would never have countenanced such
slaughter. I think that irks me more than anything else does. We could
have put an end to that dreadful custom." She rose to her feet
and
smiled at him sadly. "I'm sorry to burden you with this, now. I know
you have a lot to do. Is Gaffen back yet?"
Damin nodded. "He arrived back with Narvell this morning."
"Then I'll go find him and leave you in peace. As soon as I've
slapped him around a few times for being such a pig to me when he
arrived, I shall endeavour to make the most of what little time we have
left together."
Adrina walked to the door, leaving Damin staring at her back. It
wasn't learning of the fate awaiting her siblings that disturbed him as
much as her quiet acceptance of its inevitability.
"Adrina, wait!"
She turned and looked at him questioningly.
"If you can't be Queen, would you settle for Regent?"
"Regent of Fardohnya? How?"
"Your father's how old? Sixty? Sixty-five?" he asked,
suddenly
excited as the idea formed in his mind. "He'll live another ten years,
perhaps, less if we're lucky. His son won't be old enough to take the
throne when he dies."
"He would never appoint me Regent."
"He will if we make him an offer he can't refuse."
"Like what?" she asked suspiciously.
"I'll renounce the Wolfblade claim on the Fardohnyan throne. I'll
remove forever the threat of Fardohnya having a Hythrun King."
She nodded thoughtfully. "And in return, he appoints me Regent? You
know, that may actually work. But what of your plans for unity between
Fardohnya and Hythria?"
"That will be up to you. This child will be as much your brother as
Gaffen is. If you manage to get along with him half as well as you do
with your bastard siblings, there'll be no danger of war between us.
For that matter, he'll only be a few months younger than our child. If
we're smart about this, they'll grow up the best of friends."
"And you'd do this? You'd renounce a throne for me?" She
appeared to
be putting a rather romantic slant on something he considered a coldly
rational and practical course of action. But he didn't correct her.
"Yes. I'd renounce a throne for you, Adrina."
With a sob, she ran to him, threw her arms around his neck and
buried her head in his shoulder. He could feel the slight swell of her
belly pressing against him.
"Gods, you're not crying, are you?"
Adrina sniffed and looked up at him with glistening eyes.
"No."
He gently wiped a tear from her cheek. "If I'd known this was going
to reduce you to tears, I wouldn't have suggested it."
"Nobody ever loved me enough to renounce a throne for me,
Damin."
"That probably has more to do with lack of opportunity, rather than
you being unloved," he told her with a smile.
"Can't you be serious? Even when I'm trying to be nice to
you?"
"I'm sorry. You bring out the worst in me."
She kissed him then leaned back in his arms with a sigh. "I don't
like admitting it, but I suppose I must feel something for you, Damin
Wolfblade."
"Well, I won't tell if you don't," Damin promised with a
smile.
PART 3
HOMECOMING
CHAPTER 35
The high plains of Medalon were a riot of colour,
caught in the burgeoning grip of spring. R'shiel reined in her horse
and studied the scattered clouds that dotted the pale blue sky.
Wildflowers carpeted the plains, and the day was so mild she had shed
her cloak some leagues back. As the tall white towers of the Citadel
appeared in the distance an odd feeling came over her and she found
herself strangely reluctant to go on.
"What's the matter?"
She shrugged and leaned forward to pat the neck of her gelding. He
was a sturdy, deep-chested grey they had purchased in Vanahiem. R'shiel
missed the magnificent speed and stamina of the Hythrun horses she had
grown accustomed to riding, but he had been a reliable mount, if more
stolid than spirited.
"I'm scared, I think," she admitted, thoughtfully. "I wasn't
expecting that."
"You're only half-Harshini, R'shiel," Brak reminded her.
"You'll
find your human emotions have a nasty habit of jumping out and biting
you at the most inopportune moments. What were you expecting to
feel?"
"I'm not sure. Some overpowering sense of righteousness, I
suppose."
Brak laughed sourly. "You have a lot to learn, demon child."
"I wish you'd stop calling me that. You know how much I hate
it."
"I thought you were growing quite enamoured of the title. You
certainly threw it around enough in Fardohnya."
"In Fardohnya I wasn't likely to be hanged for it."
He nodded silently. They both knew the risk they ran by returning so
openly to Medalon. In fact, even more than the mediocrity of their
mounts, it was the need to travel through Medalon by conventional means
that had taken them so long to reach their destination. Had they been
willing to risk using their power, R'shiel and Brak could have been at
the Citadel weeks ago, but they were too deep into Karien-occupied
territory to tempt fate by openly using demons.
Hablet had provided them with a ship, which had delivered them to
Bordertown. Then they had taken passage on a river boat as far as
Vanahiem. With news that the Testa ferry had been destroyed and the
river boat captains understandably nervous about approaching the
Citadel, it proved quicker and easier to complete their journey on
horseback.
R'shiel turned in her saddle at the sound of other horses
approaching. Brak followed her gaze and muttered a curse. The road they
travelled from Brodenvale was almost deserted this late in the
afternoon. Earlier, it had been crowded with refugees fleeing the
Citadel and the occasional Karien patrol.
"We'd best get off the road."
"Founders! They're everywhere!"
Brak urged his horse into the long grass on the shoulder of the
road. R'shiel followed him as the approaching patrol drew closer. She
gripped the reins until her knuckles turned white as she watched them.
The troop of Kariens passed by without sparing them a glance, pennons
snapping from the tips of their lances, the armoured knights claiming
the road with the arrogant assurance of conquerors who have nothing to
fear from their vanquished foes. It was the third Karien troop they had
seen in the last few hours. Southern Medalon was still relatively free
of them, but the closer they got to the Citadel the more they saw.
"There are no priests with them."
"They'll be at the Citadel. Mathen probably doesn't want to scare
the population into thinking they're going to be forced to worship the
Overlord," Brak speculated.
"But isn't that exactly what they're planning?"
"Undoubtedly, but Squire Mathen is too smart to do it
openly."
"Squire Mathen?"
"Don't you remember him? Terbolt left him in charge of the
Citadel."
"I don't remember much of anything from the last time I was at the
Citadel," she admitted with a frown. "Except Loclon."
"Mathen's not a nobleman," Brak told her as the Kariens
moved slowly
past them. Behind the knights trundled several wagons carrying loot
from some outlying village that had been the victim of their foray out
of the Citadel. "That in itself is a bit odd for the Kariens. But he
appears to be a very astute politician."
"I think I'd prefer a good old fashioned noble-born moron,"
she
said, noticing the grain-filled wagons, but she decided against saying
or doing anything that would bring them to the attention of the
knights. She had learnt that much restraint over the past few months.
"One has to work with what one is given, I'm afraid. Still, we won't
have to worry about him too much."
"Why not?"
"As I said, Mathen's not a nobleman. Terbolt placed him in charge,
but I can't see Lord Roache and his ilk tolerating a commoner calling
the shots for very long, and unless he's advocating mass conversion,
the priesthood won't like him much either. They have no care for
Medalonian sensibilities."
The last of the wagons rumbled by. They waited until the Kariens
were some way up the road before they urged their horses back onto the
road and followed them at a walk.
"Speaking of the priests," Brak added. "You remember what I
told
you?"
"About them being able to detect us if we call on our power? Yes,
Brak, I remember."
"I mean it, R'shiel," he warned. "Don't underestimate
them."
"I dealt with those priests in the Defenders' camp."
"You faced three of them and caught them by surprise," he
reminded
her. "Once we get to the Citadel, there will be scores of them, and
they know the demon child is abroad. I wouldn't be surprised if they
have a Watching Coven posted, just waiting for you to slip up."
"What's a Watching Coven?"
"A group of priests who link through their staves, sometimes up to
twenty or thirty of them. A Coven's power could give either of us a run
for our money."
"How can they be so strong? They don't have access to Harshini
power."
"No, they have access to a god who doesn't mind bending the
rules."
"The gods!" she muttered in annoyance. "It always comes back
to
them, doesn't it?"
"In the end, yes."
She smiled grimly. "Don't worry, Brak. I'll watch myself. Squire
Mathen isn't the only one who can get what he wants by subtle
means."
"Oh? You have a plan then?" There was an edge of scepticism
in his
voice that she didn't much care for.
"I'm going to take a leaf out of your book, actually. I'm going to
go straight to the best source of intelligence in Medalon."
"Garet Warner?" he asked with amusement. "I thought the
first thing
you'd want to do when you saw him again would be to run a blade through
him."
"No. Garet helped me as much as he could, I think. I'm not going to
kill him. Unless he doesn't want to help us."
Brak didn't answer her and she could not tell if he approved or
condemned her intentions.
* * *
They reached the Citadel just on sundown, halting
on the slight rise in the road to stare at the scene before them in
horrified awe. A blanket of humanity covered the plains surrounding the
Citadel: the Karien army camped about the fortress of their newest
subject nation. R'shiel could not begin to guess their number, but as
far as she could see, the grasslands were thick with tents and men and
the panoply of war. Both sides of the shallow Saran River were crowded
with them. The bridges curved gracefully out of the plain, the only
part of it not swarming with the enemy. A pall of smoke from the
countless cooking fires lay over the whole scene, touched with ruddy
light by the dying sun, making it look like a painting of some
nightmarish vision of a pagan hell.
"Founders!" she swore softly. "I didn't think there'd be so
many of
them."
"Having second thoughts?"
She glanced at him, then smiled. "No. I figure between you and me,
we have them outnumbered, Brak."
He returned her smile briefly. "I think I preferred it when you were
scared."
They urged their horses on and rode down through the Karien host
that was camped right up to the edge of the road. For the most part,
the soldiers ignored them, too engrossed in their own business to care
about two unarmed travellers on the main thoroughfare into the Citadel.
She avoided meeting their eyes while despair threatened to overwhelm
her.
As they crossed the bridge over the Saran River she looked up at the
high white walls. Bile rose in her throat. There was a head, or the
remains of one, mounted on a pike over the gateway. It had been there
for some time. The eyes were empty sockets picked clean by the ravens
and the skin of its face hung in strips of desiccated flesh. The hair,
or what was left of it, was grey and straggling, but long enough to
identify the hapless skull as once having been a woman. With sickening
dread, R'shiel wondered who it had been, afraid that she knew. Unless
the Kariens had murdered Joyhinia, there was only one woman in Medalon
likely to incur such wrath and she had never deserved such a fate.
"Brak," she said softly.
He followed the direction of her gaze then shook his head sadly.
"Gods!"
"I think it's Mahina."
He studied it more closely then shrugged. "There's no way to tell,
R'shiel."
"Loclon is going to die very, very slowly," she said with
frightening intensity.
R'shiel had feared the Defenders on the gate might
recognise her, but she need not have worried. There were no Defenders
guarding the Citadel. There was, however, a large contingent of Kariens
and they were interrogating anybody seeking entrance to the city.
"Let me handle this," Brak said.
"What are you going to do?" she asked suspiciously.
"Cause a fuss," he told her as he kicked his horse forward.
"Hey
you! Do you speak Medalonian?"
R'shiel cringed as he called out to the guards, wondering what in
the name of the Founders he was up to. This was hardly her idea of
sneaking into the Citadel.
"Halt!" a Karien trooper called out in Medalonian -
probably the
only word he knew.
"Halt yourself!" Brak retorted. "I demand to see whoever is
in
charge!"
The guard looked at him blankly.
"Where is your superior, young man? I demand to see him at
once!"
"Halt!" the guard repeated.
"What's the problem?" The man who spoke was a Defender. He
emerged
from the gatehouse with another Karien, this one wearing knight's
armour. He was very young, just out of the Cadets, R'shiel guessed. She
did not recognise him and that hopefully meant he would not recognise
her.
"Ah! Someone who understands me!" Brak declared. "Young man,
I
demand to be taken to whoever is in charge of this . . .
invasion, or whatever you call it, at once!"
The Defender translated Brak's words for the benefit of the Kariens,
which explained his posting on the gate. His Karien was quite fluent
but he wore a sullen expression. She could imagine how this duty must
irk him. The Karien knight said something to the Defender, who then
turned back to Brak.
"Why do you want to see Lord Roache?"
"Lord Roache? Is that who's in charge?"
"Yes."
"What happened to the First Sister?"
"The First Sister is assisting Lord Roache and Squire
Mathen," the young Defender informed him in a voice loaded with
scorn.
"Well then, I wish to see this Lord Roache, young man, to lodge a
formal complaint against the behaviour of these . . . these
. . . hooligans who have invaded our country. Do you know
what they've done? Do you?"
"I can guess," the Defender muttered. "What have they
done?"
"What have they done? My shop is in ruins! My wife and I are
homeless! My servants have all fled in fear and I am on the verge of
destitution! I intend to see this Karien fellow and demand
compensation."
The Defender appeared genuinely amused at the idea. "Good luck, my
friend, but I don't like your chances."
"Well!" Brak declared indignantly. "We shall have to see
about that!
Come, Gerterina! Let us go find this Lord Roache person and set him
straight on a few things!"
Brak urged his horse through the gate, with R'shiel following close
behind. The Defender and the Kariens stood back to let them pass. As
the young man explained what they were doing in the Citadel the Kariens
roared with laughter, which followed them down the street.
"Gerterina?"
He shrugged apologetically. "It was all I could think of."
"And that was your plan? Make such a fuss at the gate that
they'll never forget us?"
"Sometimes it's easier to hide out in the open, R'shiel. People
trying to sneak into the Citadel don't start by demanding to see
whoever is in charge. We were barely questioned and they didn't even
look at you twice."
She had to admit he was right. "Brak, why is it that when you do
things like that, you're being clever, but when I do them, I'm being
reckless?"
"Because I'm older than you. A lot older."
"Well, Old One, what are we going to do now?"
They rode at a walk down the cobbled main road that led past the
Great Hall to the amphitheatre. The tension in the air was almost solid
enough to touch. R'shiel realised that the awful spectre nailed over
the main gate was more than just a gloating gesture of barbaric
triumph. It was a warning, and one the citizens of the Citadel appeared
to have taken to heart. The streets appeared almost as deserted as
Greenharbour had been, when she arrived with Damin.
"We need to find an inn and a meal and perhaps some company for the
evening."
"Company?"
"We need to find out what's happening here. The next best source of
information in any city, after the assassins and the thieves, are the
prostitutes."
"That's the best excuse I've heard for a long time," she
said with a
scowl.
"We all have our own methods, R'shiel."
"Funny how all your methods involve consorting with
criminals."
He glanced at her and then smiled. "Considering you are probably the
most wanted criminal in all of Karien and Medalon, I find your attitude
rather strange."
She ignored the jibe. "I still think Garet is the better
option."
"And I agree, but I want to know that when we confront him he's
telling us the truth, not what he thinks we want to hear."
"You're not a very trusting person, are you?"
"I don't happen to like the idea of having my head decorating the
main gate next to poor old Mahina's. If you plan to live long enough to
fulfil your destiny, R'shiel, you would be wise to adopt the same
outlook."
After that they rode without speaking through streets that were
slowly darkening with the coming night. Squares of yellow light
appeared in the windows of the houses that lined the streets, but the
silence was heavy and R'shiel could not feel the welcoming touch of the
Citadel as she had when she arrived the last time.
It was as if the massive spirit of the Citadel had shrivelled and
died - or perhaps he had simply retreated into hiding in the
face of
the Karien blight that swarmed through him like flies over a dying
carcass.
CHAPTER 36
Garet Warner opened the door to the Lord Defender's
office and was greeted by a blast of warm air. Someone must have
thought to light the fire, he thought, although he was a little
surprised. With the Lord Defender in "protective confinement"
as the
Kariens euphemistically referred to his incarceration, Garet used the
office rarely, and he had told nobody of his intention to come here
this morning.
He pushed the door shut and glanced around, but other than the
blazing fire in the small hearth, the room was unchanged since his last
visit. The heavy carved desk took up a great deal of space, and the
comfortable chair behind it smelled faintly of the saddle soap used to
keep the leather supple. The array of Fardohnyan and Hythrun weapons
Jenga had collected over the years still hung over the mantle. The aura
of the man permeated the room. It was as if he had just stepped out a
moment ago and was due back any minute.
But perhaps it was not completely unchanged; the pile of unattended
paperwork had grown considerably. Garet groaned as he looked at it. He
had his own work to do. He did not need the added responsibility of the
Lord Defender's administrative tasks.
Most of the papers would be fairly straightforward. Requests for
transfers, for leave, for permission to marry, for a score of other
mundane, everyday matters that required the Lord Defender's approval.
But there would be the odd report that needed investigation,
disciplinary matters that could not be settled with a mere stroke of a
pen - most of them a direct result of the conflicts that arose
frequently between the Defenders and the Karien invaders.
There would be orders from the First Sister, too.
Garet was well aware that even though signed by Joyhinia Tenragan,
the orders were no more from her than they had been when she was on the
northern border, a babbling idiot who would sign anything put in front
of her. These orders came from Squire Mathen, and if he couched them in
a manner easily digestible to the Medalonians, they were no less the
orders of his Karien masters.
He moved towards the desk and then froze as the feeling he was no
longer alone in the room suddenly overwhelmed him.
"Garet."
He started and turned at the voice. R'shiel stood close behind him.
She looked much better than when he'd last seen her. He was glad to see
her hair had grown out a little and now framed her face in dark red
curls. But there was something else different about her: a confidence
that he had not seen before. He wondered how she had escaped the
Kariens, and why, having managed that remarkable feat, she had so
foolishly returned to the Citadel. Standing behind her, wearing an air
of lethal calm, was the Harshini half-breed, Brakandaran.
"R'shiel! Brak! How did the two of you . . . ? Never mind,
I'd rather not know."
He composed himself and walked around Lord Jenga's desk before he
looked at them again. They were wearing the close fitting and supple
Harshini leathers, which outlined their statuesque bodies, giving a
hint of the natural grace and athletic ability that was part of their
alien heritage.
"What are you doing here?"
"We have come to put things right," R'shiel told him.
"And how do you plan to do that?"
"With your help."
Her declaration did not surprise him. "I suppose you think I owe you
something, for not supporting you at the Gathering?"
"You don't owe me anything, Garet. But as you said when you slipped
me your knife, you can't help Medalon from a prison cell."
"I'm not in a prison cell."
"I used your knife to kill the Karien Crown Prince. I imagine a
prison cell will be the least of your worries if the Kariens learn
that."
Garet was too experienced to let his apprehension show. "You
killed the Karien Crown Prince? Founders, R'shiel, when you set out to
cause trouble, you don't mess about, do you?"
A small smile flickered over her lips. "Wait until you hear the rest
of it."
He shook his head. "Thanks, but I'd rather not
. . ."
"No!" she cut in. "That is not an option any longer, Garet.
You must
decide. You are with us or against us. There is no more sitting on the
fence."
Garet sank down into the Lord Defender's chair - more to
give
himself time to think than through any real need to take the weight off
his feet. He knew about R'shiel. Knew of her Harshini parentage and her
status as their long awaited demon child, but until this moment it had
never truly occurred to him that she might actually be as powerful as
the pagans believed.
"And if I choose not to follow you?" he asked, wondering how
determined she was.
"Then I will remove you from the equation."
"You'd kill me?"
"I killed a Karien Prince. You don't think a mere Defender is going
to cause me any grief?"
He placed his hands palm down on the desk and looked at her closely.
Her whole being radiated a kind of leashed power, straining to be set
free.
"So that's it? Join you or die?"
"Pretty much," she agreed with a shrug.
"You leave me little choice."
"Then your answer is yes?"
He nodded cautiously.
In two steps she was across the room. She slammed her hands down
over his on the desk and glared at him. "Then swear it!"
Garet opened his mouth to say what she wanted to hear, but the words
would not come. She was doing something to him, something that would
not permit him to lie. With a sudden and terrifying flash of clarity,
he knew that if he took this oath he would belong to her, body and
soul, until he died, and perhaps even after, if one believed the pagans.
"Swear it, Garet," she whispered. Her face was close to his,
her
eyes boring through him as though she could read every dark, unsavoury
secret he kept hidden in the furthermost recesses of his mind. She
wasn't using magic on him, her eyes had not turned black, but whatever
it was, he found her impossible to deny.
"I'm yours, R'shiel."
She studied him for a moment and then stood back. As soon as she
released him, Garet slumped back in his chair, light-headed. He closed
his eyes for a moment, hoping that when he opened them again, the room
would have stopped spinning.
"Sorry, Garet, but I had to be sure."
He looked up at her, wondering what he had done. It took a moment
for him to recover enough to speak.
"So, now what?"
"First, we have to stop the Kariens from hanging Tarja,"
Brak
remarked, as if it was no more trouble than squashing a flea.
"You know they're blaming him for killing Cratyn, don't you?"
"Well, they can hardly admit the demon child did it. When is his
trial?"
"Trial? What trial? The Kariens aren't big on the natural course of
justice, Brak. Tarja's scheduled to be hanged next Restday. In the
amphitheatre so everyone can come and watch."
"Then we have to put a stop to it," R'shiel declared.
"Where's
Jenga? Have they killed him too?"
"Not yet. Actually, they haven't interfered too much with the
Defenders. Most of their people don't speak a word of Medalonian so
they need us. There'd be a mutiny if they tried to kill the Lord
Defender and they know it. He's under arrest. They're holding him in
the cells behind the Headquarters Building, and it's the Kariens who
are guarding him, not our people."
"Then we have to release him, too."
"How? Your last attempt at breaking somebody out of the Citadel was
spectacularly unsuccessful, as I recall."
R'shiel frowned at the reminder. "I intend to plan this a little
better. If we're going to do something about the Kariens, the first
thing we have to do is get rid of Joyhinia, and replace her with a
First Sister who is on Medalon's side, rather than her own, then
. . ."
"Who are you planning to put in power? Mahina's dead."
"I know. I saw the head over the gate."
"Whose idea was that?" Brak asked.
"The First Sister's."
"Somehow that doesn't surprise me." R'shiel's eyes hardened
as she
spoke, something he did not think was possible. Then she shook off
whatever it was that caused such hatred to flare in her and shrugged.
"I was thinking of Harith."
Garet shrugged. Harith was not popular. But she was, of all the
Quorum members, perhaps the one who cared most about Medalon.
"Assuming you manage that, then what?"
"I need to find the Harshini archives. And I'm going to kill
Loclon."
"Loclon? What's he got to do with this? Besides, he's listed as a
deserter. Nobody has seen him since the night of the last
Gathering."
R'shiel pulled the wooden chair on the other side of the desk across
the rug and sat down facing him. "Joyhinia didn't recover, Garet. The
Karien priests simply borrowed another mind and put it in her body.
That's not Joyhinia issuing the Kariens orders. It's Loclon."
The whole idea was too bizarre for Garet to take in. "That's absurd
. . . it's not possible . . ."
"Of course it's possible," Brak said. "You're dealing with
powers
you refuse to acknowledge, Commandant, but that doesn't make them any
less real. Or powerful."
"Perhaps she simply recovered . . ."
"Tarja destroyed her wit. There is no way Joyhinia could have
returned."
"But Loclon? How did he . . . ?"
"It doesn't matter," R'shiel insisted. "All that matters is
that we
do something about it, about everything - Loclon, the Kariens,
all of
it. I can't do anything about finding the answers I need until they've
been taken care of."
"Did you ride in here with your eyes shut, R'shiel?"
"I never said I thought it was going to be easy, Garet," she
said. "But it is necessary."
The commandant nodded slowly. "Very well. But if you want me to
cooperate, then I ask . . . no I demand . . . two
things."
"You're not in a position to demand anything, Garet."
"Nevertheless, I will demand them. If you don't wish to heed me,
then I'll just throw myself on my sword now, and save the Kariens the
trouble of hanging me."
R'shiel obviously meant to object, but Brak cut in before she could
say anything. "What do you want, Commandant?"
"First, I want your promise that you will listen to me. I haven't
been sitting here idly while the Kariens overrun Medalon. I have the
men we need in the places we need them and the authority to mobilise
them. But if we're to do this successfully, then timing is critical. I
don't want anyone - specifically you, R'shiel - going
off on a tangent
because of some noble pagan purpose I don't give a damn about and
ruining it for the rest of us. I don't care about your destiny, the
Harshini or the rebels. I don't even want to know what you're looking
for in the archives. Is that clear?"
"I think that's fair. And the second thing?" Brak asked
before
R'shiel could get a word in.
"I want to disband the Sisterhood."
They both stared at him.
"Disband the Sisterhood? Why?"
"I'm surprised you of all people have to ask, R'shiel. It's a
corrupt and destructive form of government. They may have started out
with the right intentions, but what drives them now is nothing more
than the quest for personal power. The Sisters of the Blade that led us
into this mess. When we take the Citadel, we take the power out of the
hands of the Sisterhood and place it with the Defenders."
"So you want to replace one form of oppressive rule with
another?"
Brak asked wryly.
"No. Eventually, we'll hold elections. The people of Medalon should
be allowed to vote for who they want to lead them, not leave the choice
to a handful of women who are trained from childhood to believe they
are better than everybody else. We'll put Jenga in charge until we've
cleared out the Kariens and we can organise a vote. He has enough
honour to see that it's done properly."
R'shiel gazed at him suspiciously. "How long have you been planning
this, Garet?"
"The destruction of the Sisterhood? Since the day I learnt of the
burning of a small village in the Sanctuary Mountains called
Haven," he
told her.
For a moment she said nothing.
"You come from Haven." It was more a statement of fact than
a
question; a sudden acceptance of his motives, an understanding of what
drove him. He felt as if, on some unconscious level, she had forgiven
him.
"Your real family was killed in that raid, R'shiel. So were
mine."
"I never knew you were Mountain Folk."
"Why should you? I've been a Defender for as long as you've known
me."
"Then you've known all along who I really was?"
He shook his head. "You were born long after I left Haven. But I
knew your mother, J'nel. And B'thrim, her sister."
"What were they like?"
He smiled, partly in remembrance, and partly because of the
expression on R'shiel's face. For all her deeds, for all her awesome
power, there was still a part of the child she had been lurking deep
inside her, desperate for reassurance.
"B'thrim I remember as being a rather large, over-protective woman
who would chase us with a skinning knife if ever she caught us robbing
her traps in the woods. J'nel was the complete opposite. She was small
and fragile and wild. We used to call her the Snow Child. She was never
happier than when she was lost in the woods. As a boy, I was part of
more than one search party sent to find her. She was the sort of person
who could coax wild rabbits to sit on her lap. I never knew anyone like
her. It doesn't surprise me in the least that she caught the eye of a
Harshini King."
R'shiel closed her eyes for a moment and he exchanged a look with
Brak.
"When did you leave Haven?" Brak asked.
"I was fourteen. The life of a woodcutter didn't particularly appeal
to me so I ran away to Testra. That's when I discovered that knowing
how to live off the land in no way prepared one for living in a city. I
was caught stealing food by a Defender lieutenant. He gave me the
choice to join up or be sent to the Grimfield. So I joined the
Defenders. The lieutenant put in a good word for me and I was accepted
into the Cadets. I've not been back to Haven since."
"You were lucky to meet someone so generous," Brak remarked.
Garet nodded. "I was. And I still owe him. His name was Palin
Jenga."
R'shiel's eyes opened wide. "Then you have a debt to pay, as well as
vengeance to seek."
He nodded. "Which is why I insist on both my demands being met. I
don't intend to let your hidden agenda ruin mine. I will never have
another chance at this. Do we have a deal?"
R'shiel glanced up at Brak who was standing behind her. The Harshini
nodded slightly and she turned back to him.
"Yes, Garet. We have a deal."
CHAPTER 37
Garet Warner arranged a meeting with those officers
who were with him in his desire to overthrow both the Kariens and the
Sisters of the Blade. R'shiel was surprised when she saw them. There
were quite a few familiar faces - classmates of Tarja's and
other
senior officers who she would never have expected to harbour such
treasonous ambitions. She was certain every Defender in the Citadel
wanted to be free of Karien occupation, but it was a little disturbing
to learn how many of these men were willing to destroy the Sisterhood.
They met in a room at the back of the Grey Widow Inn in Tavern
Street, slipping in one at a time to avoid raising the suspicions of
the Karien soldiers who now frequented the place. The windows were
covered against the night with shabby woven curtains and the lanterns
that flickered in their yellow glass flutes gave the room an air of
conspiracy. When they were finally assembled, Garet locked the door and
turned to face them. There were fifteen Defenders present, every one of
them an officer and not one ranked below captain. Brak and R'shiel were
the only civilians.
"I'm not going to bother with introductions," he began. "If
you
don't know each other's names, then it's probably better that it stays
that way. The only people who need introduction are these two. Most of
you know R'shiel. Her friend is called Brak."
"Can we trust them?" an officer asked, one R'shiel did not
know.
"They wouldn't be here otherwise."
The Defender nodded and made no further comment.
"I take it this meeting means that we've decided to make our
move,"
another man remarked.
Garet nodded. "We begin at dawn on Restday."
"That doesn't give us much time," someone else pointed out.
R'shiel
knew the voice, but could not put a face to it.
"That's the whole point," Garet replied. "Once we leave this
room
tonight, we will have to take others into our confidence. Every
additional person who learns of this plot increases our chances of
discovery. The less time between now and when we strike the
better."
"I know we've discussed this before," a young man near the
back of
the room commented, "but even if we can take the Citadel, that still
leaves the Karien army camped outside our gates."
"And there's the priests to contend with, too," his
companion added
with concern. "I don't believe in their tales of magic, but I was on
the northern border when their army attacked. I know what I saw
there."
"Take them hostage," R'shiel suggested.
They all looked at her in surprise, including Brak.
"If you plan it right," she continued, "once you take the
Citadel
you'll have every duke in Karien as a hostage and their priests with
them. If you can't negotiate a settlement with Jasnoff, using his
entire Council of Dukes as your bargaining chip, you're not going to do
it with anything else. It's quite simple, really. You kill them one at
a time until he gives in. Start with the priests and work your way up.
You shouldn't have to dispose of too many before King Jasnoff gets the
message."
Brak grabbed her by the arm and pulled her close so only she could
hear him. "What in the gods' name are you up to now?" he hissed
in her
ear.
"Trust me, Brak." She pulled free of his grasp and rubbed
her arm.
"Not this time, R'shiel. I won't stand by while you slaughter
innocent men just so you can get even with your mother."
She let out an impatient, exasperated sigh. Why did he always assume
the worst about her? "I'd hardly call the Karien dukes and their
priests innocent. Besides, we're not really going to destroy anyone,
Brak; we're just going to threaten it. We're just giving them a reason
to go home."
Brak's faded eyes were burning with suspicion, but he had no chance
to question her further.
"You don't seriously expect us to kill hostages in cold
blood?" The
man who spoke was Rylan, the Citadel's Master of Horse. R'shiel had
known him since she was a small child. "That's not the way we do things
in the Defenders."
"You coped well enough murdering your own people during the Purge,
Commandant," she replied. "I should think a few enemy heads
posted over
the main gate would make a nice change."
The room exploded in a rush of objection. Garet glared at her
angrily. "You're treading on very thin ice, R'shiel."
"I'm merely stating facts, Garet. The Defenders have much to atone
for."
"The biggest mistake we made was not ensuring we had completely
eradicated the Harshini," someone called out pointedly.
R'shiel turned on the officer who had spoken. "You'll make an even
bigger mistake if you think you can do this and remain on your high
moral ground. Look at you! Hiding in the back room of a tavern,
plotting the overthrow of your government while you profess to abhor
unnecessary bloodshed. Your precious Defender's honour didn't stop
Mahina being killed. It hasn't stopped the Kariens taking control of
Medalon and it won't help you get it back. You're fighting fanatics,
Captain, not men who think like you do. If you expect to win, you have
to play by their rules, not hope they'll play by yours."
Garet glanced at Brak warningly. "Shut her up, or leave."
Brak stepped up behind R'shiel and placed a strong, restraining hand
on her shoulder. "You aren't helping, R'shiel."
"We can't go ahead with this!" Rylan insisted. "Jasnoff
won't
negotiate. He doesn't need to. What does it matter if we control the
Citadel? With that army camped outside our walls, we could be under
siege for years. There is no army waiting over the next rise to come to
our rescue. And even if there were, what army on the continent could
rival the number of Kariens out there? It's too dangerous. We should
find another way."
Garet held up his hands to quell the hubbub of agreement that
followed the Horse Master's words, then looked at R'shiel and Brak
speculatively.
"Rylan has raised a valid point. If this strategy fails and we can't
disperse the Karien host, we will be caught in a siege that will be
long, painful and ultimately futile."
"What if you had a chance of being relieved?" Brak asked.
R'shiel
glanced over her shoulder at him. Then she smiled in understanding.
"Damin."
"Who?" someone asked from the back of the room.
"Damin Wolfblade, the High Prince of Hythria. Tarja was taking the
men he gathered south to meet him. He has already promised Medalon
aid."
"For that matter," R'shiel added thoughtfully, "we could
probably
get Hablet to join in the fray. And then there are the Defenders who
fled to Hythria."
"How many Defenders?" someone asked. "A thousand? Maybe two?
They'll
not be much use against that horde outside."
"And you seriously think the Hythrun and the Fardohnyans will come
to our aid?" Rylan scoffed.
"Damin will come," R'shiel replied confidently.
"R'shiel's right," Brak agreed. "Hythria and Fardohnya will
come if
she asks for their help."
"Things must have changed in the south quite dramatically in recent
months," Rylan remarked sourly. "Last I heard, Hablet was
planning to
invade us, not come to our rescue. And since when did you hold any sway
with the kings and princes of our southern neighbours?"
Garet studied her for a moment then turned to Rylan. He had been on
the northern border with them and knew she was acquainted with the
Hythrun Prince. "Actually, in this I think she may be right. Wolfblade
might come if R'shiel asks him. But are you sure you can trust
him?"
"I'd trust Damin with my life."
"It's not just your life you're trusting him with, R'shiel, but the
lives of every man, woman and child in the Citadel."
Garet studied them both for a moment, weighing the advisability of
placing his faith in their assurances. Eventually he shrugged and
turned to face his men. "As I see it, we go now, or we abandon the idea
altogether. Every day the Kariens reside in Medalon makes it all the
harder to dislodge them. I'm willing to believe R'shiel if she says she
can bring help. I say we do it and then settle down and wait for the
Hythrun to relieve us."
A low murmur ran through the room as the Defenders indicated their
cautious agreement. Garet nodded. "Good. Then let's get down to
details."
There wasn't much R'shiel or Brak could contribute after that. These
men had been planning this since the day Joyhinia signed Medalon's
surrender. Everything had been worked out: each key position they would
take, every weapon they would need and every man they would need to do
it. This meeting was simply to sort out the minor details and
accommodate any last-minute changes to their plans.
They based their coup on the assumption that every Defender in the
Citadel would follow them when the time came, and R'shiel was quite
sure their confidence was justified. There was not a Defender who would
willingly subjugate himself to the Kariens - with the possible
exception of Wain Loclon, and she intended to take care of him
personally.
The task of rescuing the Lord Defender and Tarja fell to a young
captain whom R'shiel vaguely remembered being a lieutenant when she had
been a Probate. He was, she recalled with mild surprise, the young man
who had whisked Kilene away to dance, on the night Davydd Tailorson had
taken her to meet Tarja in the caverns under the amphitheatre. That
night stuck in her memory like the jagged edge of a bottomless abyss,
down which she seemed to have been helplessly tumbling ever since,
towards a destiny she had never wanted or envisaged. Symin accepted his
orders with a serious expression, but she could sense the suppressed
excitement that he struggled to hold in check. He worried her a little.
This was not an adventure.
It was the early hours of the morning before Garet glanced around
the room with a nod of satisfaction. "Well, that's about it. You all
know what you have to do. Any questions?"
"We've not mentioned how we're going to get a message to the
Hythrun," Rylan pointed out.
"R'shiel?" Garet asked, turning to her.
"We'll take care of that."
"How?" Rylan asked. "We'll be trapped in the Citadel. How
will you
get a message out? How will you get past the Kariens? We have no birds
here trained to fly to Hythria."
It was Garet who answered for her. "I think in this case, we can
leave that up to Brak and R'shiel. They have . . . er
. . . resources . . . that we don't need to know
about. I don't think we need fear on that point."
R'shiel glanced at Brak who smiled briefly at Garet's cautious
acknowledgment of their power.
"Well, if there are no more questions, I think we're finished here.
Good luck, gentlemen."
The Defenders gathered up their maps and plans and began to leave
the room, one at a time, slipping out as the young lieutenant, who was
surreptitiously guarding the door outside, gave the signal that it was
clear. R'shiel and Brak were among the last to leave.
"I'm placing an awful lot of faith in you two, and based on your
past history, that's not very encouraging," Garet said as they
waited. "Can you really get Wolfblade and the Fardohnyans here in time
to help?"
"I think so."
"R'shiel, I'd be a lot happier if you sounded more certain."
She shrugged. "It depends on a few things. I have to talk to some of
the gods."
Garet's brow furrowed in concern. "I can't believe I'm even
discussing this, let alone pinning our whole strategy on it."
He
stopped and nodded in acknowledgment of a salute from two captains,
then waited until they were alone before he continued. "There's
something else I want you to keep in mind. If we kill too many priests
and dukes, Jasnoff will seek our destruction out of spite."
"You won't have to kill more than a few, Garet."
"That's easy for you to say. It's not you who will be holding the
sword to their throats. Or were you planning to do this
personally?"
"I couldn't, even if I wanted to. If I caused that much destruction,
it would devastate the Harshini, who are linked to the same power
source as me." She glanced at Brak, a little offended by his
startled
expression. "You didn't think I knew that, did you? I remember what
Shananara said to me about the night that I tried to kill Loclon. If
wanting to kill one person could hurt the Harshini that much, killing
dozens would destroy them."
"Then bear something else in mind," Garet reminded her. "A
hundred
thousand rampaging Kariens fleeing through Medalon will be just as
destructive as making them die here."
"Don't worry, Garet. I know what I'm doing."
He shook his head ruefully. "I seriously doubt that, R'shiel, and
the look of doubt on Brak's face does little to encourage me."
"Then why are you doing this?"
"Because we have to," he replied simply.
The Great Hall of the Citadel was now known as
Francil's Hall, however R'shiel refused to acknowledge the new name.
Joyhinia Tenragan had purchased the name at the cost of a woman's
honour, and R'shiel would not give such a base and lowly act any
credence by admitting to it. The huge hall was deserted when they
slipped inside, cringing as the massive doors boomed shut behind them.
It was just on dawn and the hall was shrouded in shadows as the first
faint rays of light painted the dancing dust motes pink. The walls
below the gallery were just beginning to lighten with the Brightening.
Brak stepped into the hall and looked around. His eyes were full of
unspeakable sadness.
"The ceiling used to have a painting on it that depicted all the
Primal Gods," he said, looking up at the stark, whitewashed
roof. His
voice seemed dangerously loud in the silent, cavernous building. "It
took the Harshini nearly half a century to complete it. You could stare
at it for a lifetime and still not find everything there was to
see."
"There was a mural in my room like that," she told him. "It
was so
full of detail I never tired of looking at it."
He did not appear to notice she had spoken. "Along the gallery up
there was a mural dedicated to the Incidental Gods. Their followers
would come to the Temple of the Gods and add to the mural as part of
their acknowledgment of their gods' existence. Parts of it were
magnificent, particularly the panels devoted to the God of Artists.
There were sonnets covering the walls devoted to the God of Poets, too.
You see the marble balustrade? If you look closely, you'll find each
pillar is drilled with holes. Open the windows in the arches at either
end of the Hall on a windy day and the whole hall will sing to the God
of Music."
R'shiel wasn't sure what to say, or even if she should say anything.
Brak seemed lost in the past. He walked further into the hall, his
boots loud on the marble floor.
"See these twenty pillars supporting the gallery? They used to have
alcoves set in each one, but they're filled in now. Each pillar was a
shrine to one of the Primal Gods." He frowned at some distant
memory
and glanced at her. "The Seeing Stone used to sit up there on the
podium. It seemed bigger then, but I guess I remember it through the
eyes of a younger man."
"It must have been spectacular."
"It was," he agreed, with a frown at the stark walls. The
wall at
the back of the podium had been plastered over and whitewashed. R'shiel
recalled the impressive Stone in the Temple in Greenharbour and tried
to envisage a similar Stone taking pride of place in this Temple, but
she could not imagine it. The Hall was filled with too much of the
Sisterhood's history for her to really grasp what Brak could see.
"Do you know how much mischief Korandellan and I used to find as
children, with the God of Thieves and the God of Chance for
playmates?"
"You played with the gods?"
"It was a different world then, R'shiel. There were no Sisters of
the Blade. No Overlord. Not much violence at all, to speak of, except
in Hythria, but that was the God of War's province and it rarely
impinged on our lives." He shook his head and looked around
with
regret. "The Sisterhood has done much to be despised for, but I think
this is the worst desecration of all."
She stared at the stark, empty hall for a moment. She had seen
Sanctuary and been overcome by the beauty of it, but she had a feeling
it was a pale reflection of what the Citadel had once been.
Brak visibly shook off his nostalgic melancholy. "Come on. If we're
going to do this, we'd better get it over with. The city will be awake
soon."
"Won't the priests feel us?"
"Not in here."
"You neglected to mention that before."
"No, I quite deliberately omitted mentioning it," he told
her. "I
didn't want you getting ideas."
"But they found me here the last time I drew on my power."
"Only once they were inside with you."
She scowled at him. "How many other little snippets of vital
information like that have you deliberately omitted?"
"Quite a few. Now get a move on. We haven't got all day."
This was the Temple of the Gods. To name a god here was to summon
him. She hesitated for a moment, wondering if after all this time, the
gods would still come to the temple if she called. She glanced at Brak
and then shrugged.
There was really only one way to find out.
CHAPTER 38
Initially, Tarja survived his captivity because
nobody recognised him. When he regained consciousness with a pounding
headache, eyes glued shut by the blood that had leaked from the wound
on his forehead, he found himself in a crowded cell with a score of
other men rounded up by the Kariens. He was blue from cold and
shivering uncontrollably in his damp clothes, but otherwise unharmed,
which surprised him a little. Of Ulran and the others there was no
sign. They had either escaped or were being held in a different
location.
Tarja's anonymity was aided considerably by the fact that the
Kariens had not thought to establish the identity of their prisoners.
That was a job for scribes, and they did not consider scribes a
necessary part of an advance war party.
The main Karien army arrived in Cauthside the day after he cut loose
the ferry. According to his cellmates, who had witnessed the aftermath,
the ferry had been destroyed by the river, which had thrown it against
the bank like a piece of driftwood. It was now good for nothing more
than kindling. The news gave Tarja some small measure of satisfaction.
For the time being, the Kariens were stalled.
His good fortune did not last long. A week after he was captured he
was reunited with Ulran, who spied him on the other side of the crowded
cellar where they were being held and called out to him gleefully, loud
enough for every Karien in Cauthside to hear.
Within an hour, Tarja found himself, chained hand and foot, facing
Lord Roache and Lord Wherland.
With the discovery of the notorious Tarja Tenragan in their custody,
the Kariens obviously felt that the Overlord had answered their
prayers. He became the focus of everything that had gone wrong in their
campaign: Cratyn's death, Lord Terbolt's death, the fact that their
army was facing starvation because there were not enough farms or
cities in northern Medalon they could ransack for supplies, that the
Defenders had surrendered yet refused to be cowed - even that
they
still needed the Defenders to maintain control of the civilian
population. They blamed him for the squads of roving deserters who
harried their flanks and slunk away into the night before they could be
captured, and they blamed him for the fact that they were immobilised
on the wrong side of the river, a responsibility which Tarja didn't
mind shouldering at all, considering he actually was accountable for
that.
Everything became Tarja's fault and they intended to see that he
paid for it.
The Karien dukes wore the frazzled air that surrounds men whose
success comes at a very high price. Lord Roache did not accuse him
openly of single-handedly hampering the Karien occupation of Medalon,
but he came close. He had spared Tarja a contemptuous glance, then
consulted the parchment in front of him.
"You murdered Lord Pieter, Lord Terbolt and His Royal Highness,
Cratyn, the Crown Prince of Karien. You also murdered the priest
Elfron. You are responsible for countless acts of sabotage, up to and
including the destruction of the Cauthside Ferry. You are responsible
for the kidnapping of Her Royal Highness, Adrina, Crown Princess of
Karien, and for handing her over to the custody of the barbarian
Hythrun, where she remains a hostage. You have consorted with demons
and pagans and have actively assisted Harshini sorcerers. Do you have
anything to say?"
"I think you left out the bit about eating babies," he had
said with
the reckless abandon of a man who knows he is condemned and that
nothing he said could make the situation worse than it already was.
"You will hang, Captain. Your crimes allow no other course of
action."
"Could you do it sooner, rather than later?" he quipped,
enjoying
the effect his insolence was having on the Karien duke. "The food in
the cells is terrible."
"You mock me at your peril, Captain."
"I say we dispose of him now!" Wherland declared. He was a
big man
with a big voice and very little patience.
Roache shook his head. "These Medalonians need to see that even the
mighty Tarja Tenragan cannot escape our vengeance. If we hang him here,
in this isolated country village, the people will refuse to believe it.
He has to die as publicly as possible. We will wait until we reach the
Citadel. I want as many witnesses as I can get."
"Then a little public humiliation will have to do. We'll put him in
the stocks."
"No. The risk of his accomplices trying to free him would be too
great. He'll be confined in the camp. I intend to make an example of
him that the Medalonians will not forget."
They spoke Karien, perhaps not aware that Tarja understood them. He
did not react to their words, preferring them to remain ignorant of the
fact that he spoke their language fluently. If anything, Roache's
determination to hang him in the Citadel gave him heart. It would be a
month or more before they could get across the river. A lot could
happen in a month.
Roache turned back to Tarja and addressed him in heavily accented
Medalonian.
"You will be confined here and transferred to the Citadel at the
earliest opportunity. If you wish to prolong your life, you will
provide us with the names of your conspirators and the location of your
rebel headquarters."
"You don't seriously expect me to tell you anything, do you?"
The Duke shrugged. "One is never sure what a Medalonian considers
honourable, Captain. You might be willing to barter your friends to
save your own neck."
"A word of advice, my Lord. If you expect to hold onto Medalon, you
would do well to learn what we consider honourable."
"Looking at the list of your crimes, Captain, I'm surprised you have
the word in your vocabulary."
While hardly luxurious, Tarja's accommodation
proved better than he expected. He was confined to a tent in the centre
of the Karien camp, guarded on all four sides by knights who held their
loyalty to Karien and the Overlord above even their own mothers, Tarja
suspected. They were taciturn to begin with, but as the days merged
into weeks, they relented a little and from them Tarja learnt what was
happening in the outside world.
The knights told him when the news arrived that Princess Adrina was
now in Hythria and married to the Hythrun High Prince. Tarja appeared
suitably surprised, not wanting to spoil their outrage by informing
them that he had known about her marriage for some time. The news that
Damin was the High Prince worried him a little. He wondered if R'shiel
had had a hand in it. She had killed twice that he knew of and never
shown a moment's remorse over either man. Had she acquired a taste
for murder? Was the blood of the old High Prince on her hands now?
The thoughts ate at him, added to the other memories of her that
continued to haunt him. Memories that could not be real. Memories he
had no reason to doubt.
Although he had no idea of the fate of Mandah and the rest of his
squad, he learnt soon enough what had happened to the Fardohnyans they
had found in the abandoned boathouse. When Paval informed the remnants
of Adrina's Guard that the Kariens had arrived, instead of fleeing
south, which would have been the sensible thing to do, Filip and his
men rode straight into Cauthside in a futile attempt to aid the
Medalonians. By the time they arrived, there were enough Kariens in the
town to outnumber them considerably. The fight had been short and
bloody. A number were killed in the skirmish, including Filip and
Paval. The remainder were summarily tried and hanged as deserters the
following day.
Tarja saw their rotting bodies swinging from a temporary gallows the
Kariens had constructed in the town square when he was escorted to his
new quarters in the Karien camp. He felt a pang of guilt and wondered
why the Fardohnyans had risked such a fate when they could have gotten
clean away. In the end he decided it was some incomprehensible idea of
Fardohnyan honour that made them turn back. He had seen the look in
Filip's eyes when he had offered their surrender to Damin on the
border. Perhaps it was easier to die attempting something heroic
against ridiculous odds than return home to Talabar to face the King.
The Princess' Guard had not only deserted a battlefield, but had
abandoned the Princess they'd been sent north to protect. That Adrina
had ordered them to do both would not matter to Hablet. Tarja realised
that the same fate probably awaited these men at home. All they had
done was hasten the inevitable.
Tarja spent almost a month in the Karien camp before the rafts were
completed and he was transferred across the Glass River to the Citadel
under heavy guard. He saw nothing of the journey or the Citadel when
the Kariens entered it in triumph. Lord Roache had commandeered a
closed carriage in Cauthside, and Tarja was confined to it, night and
day, for the entire trip, allowed out only once each morning and
evening to relieve himself. He was transferred to a cell in the
Defenders' headquarters under cover of darkness, and there he remained,
completely cut off from news of what was happening in the outside world.
Tarja did not know if the Citadel had surrendered quietly, or if
there had been a pitched battle for it. He did not know if the
Defenders still existed, or if Roache had disbanded them. The guards on
his cell in the Citadel spoke no Medalonian and he did not want to
reveal that he spoke their language, so there was no conversation
between them. If they discussed the events of the day as they whiled
away the hours on duty, they were too far from his cell for him to
overhear them.
As he lost track of the days, Tarja found the isolation beginning to
wear on him. He had spent enough time behind bars recently to grow
accustomed to incarceration - a circumstance that bothered him
more
than he cared to admit - but he had always had something to
occupy his
mind. The torturers who had tried to extract the identity of his fellow
rebels from him with batons and hot iron pokers had given him some
purpose, even if it was merely to resist them. But here, so isolated
that he had not seen another soul for days, he began to appreciate the
need for human company. He saw no one. Even his meals were delivered
anonymously through a hatch in the metal door.
At first he tried to occupy his mind with plans of escape, but with
no tools to break out and no contact with anybody who could provide
them, he was helpless. He wondered if feigning illness would bring his
guards running into the cell, but he had banged on the door until his
knuckles were raw and his voice grew hoarse from calling out to no
avail. Tarja began to wonder if his isolation was a form of torture in
itself. There were worse things than pain, worse than humiliation or
defeat. To be forgotten; to be so inconsequential that it mattered to
nobody if you lived or died - that was proving to be the
bitterest pill
of all.
With escape, or even the hope of it denied him, Tarja turned his
thoughts inward. Introspection proved a dangerous game. His mind was
filled with a past that horrified him, yet he was coming to accept it
as real. For some reason - perhaps, as Mandah suggested, on the
whim of
a god - he had fallen hopelessly in love with R'shiel. He could
remember it all, every thought, every longing, every kiss, every
embrace, every moment of intimacy, every time he slept with her curled
in his arms. What puzzled him was why it had not bothered him at the
time - and why it bothered him so much now. He knew, on an
intellectual
level, that R'shiel was not his sister, but a lifetime of thinking of
her as his own flesh and blood was not so easily swept aside. Yet he
had loved her, seemingly without regret, until he woke in that wagon on
the way to Testra and discovered his world completely changed and no
memory or inkling of what had changed it.
When the door to his cell finally opened, Tarja
leaped to his feet with pathetic eagerness. The man who opened it was a
knight with dark hair and the disillusioned look of a young man who has
discovered that war is not nearly as romantic or heroic as he imagined.
His tabard was decorated with three stylised pines against a red
background.
Kirkland, Tarja thought. He comes from the same
province as young Mikel. What happened to him, I wonder? Did he live
through this or is he yet another victim of R'shiel's destiny?
"My name is Sir Andony," the Karien said in broken
Medalonian. "You
come with me."
Tarja looked down, aware of how bad he smelled. He was unshaved and
filthy and his cell reeked, the bucket in the corner long since filled
to overflowing.
"Where are we going?"
"Must be clean. You hang tomorrow. Lord Roache say you must look
like Defender."
So, they were finally going to hang him. Roache had said he wanted
as many witnesses as possible and he obviously wanted to remind the
citizens of Medalon that he was hanging an Officer of the Defenders.
The desperate, unwholesome creature he must appear at the moment would
threaten no one. Tarja debated resisting for an instant then rejected
the idea. There might be some hope of escape once he was out of his
cell, although looking at the men arrayed behind Andony it was unlikely.
Tarja followed Andony and resolutely refused to give up hope. He had
escaped this fate before. He had eluded death so many times in the past
that he had wondered if, like the magical Harshini, he were immortal.
As the Karien guards fell in around him, he warned himself not to be so
foolish.
He was not invincible. Even the Harshini were not immortal. Barring
some unforeseen miracle, in less than a day all his previous narrow
escapes would finally catch up with him.
CHAPTER 39
Dawn broke over the Citadel on Restday to the ring
of hammers pounding on wood as the gallows slowly took shape. The sandy
floor of the arena was littered with construction debris as the workmen
hurried to finish their task before the crowd arrived. Joyhinia
Tenragan stepped down through the gate in the white painted barricade
and surveyed the progress with a frown as she crossed the arena floor,
tugging her cloak closed against the crisp breeze.
"How much longer?"
The foreman turned at her voice and dropped his hammer. He bowed
hastily. "It will be done on time, First Sister."
Joyhinia nodded with satisfaction. The hanging was scheduled for
noon. "You've done well."
"I've no need to be doing this at all," the man complained
as he
picked up his hammer. "There's a perfectly good gallows behind the
Defenders' headquarters."
"You don't approve of public hangings?" Joyhinia asked
curiously.
She probably should have reprimanded him for being so impudent, but she
was in a rare mood today.
"It's not my idea of entertainment, no," the foreman agreed
cautiously, perhaps realising the folly of being so outspoken.
"I see. It's not that you harbour sympathies for the criminal,
then?"
"No, your Grace!"
"I thought not. Carry on."
Joyhinia turned away from the workmen with a sour smile. That
should take the lead out of their boots. A few words from the
First Sister and men quivered where they stood. Even the threat of her
presence was enough to unman some. It was the headiest feeling. Better
than wine. Better than sex. Better even, than watching someone in pain
. . .
The First Sister strolled back towards her office in a fine mood.
The day was cool but clear, and it would see the last of Tarja
Tenragan. That her vengeance had taken so long did not concern the
First Sister. If anything, it tasted all the sweeter for the wait.
At the thought of her other enemies who were still at large, the
First Sister frowned. She had expected some news by now, but no word
had come about R'shiel. She had last been seen in Fardohnya, according
to Squire Mathen, claiming to be the Harshini demon child. The news did
not overly concern her.
Tarja would draw R'shiel like a water diviner to an underground
spring. Joyhinia had made certain that the hanging had been well
publicised, surprising even the Kariens with her vehement insistence
that Tarja's execution be delayed until the news had reached every
corner of Medalon.
R'shiel had to come. All this power, all that Loclon
currently enjoyed in the guise of the First Sister would be meaningless
if she continued to live.
Squire Mathen was waiting when the First Sister returned. He was a
thin man with curling black hair, long thin features and a dour
disposition. He also had little patience with Joyhinia and it was only
the knowledge that this man held the key to the room where Loclon's
body lay, empty and alive at Mathen's whim while his mind resided in
Joyhinia's body, that kept the First Sister from defying him.
"Where have you been?"
The man was sitting behind the First Sister's desk, going through
her papers. Joyhinia bit back her annoyance.
"I was checking on the progress of the gallows. I wanted to be sure
everything would be ready."
"It should be quite an event," Mathen remarked without
looking up. "Not often one gets to see an Officer of the Defenders
hanged. I
imagine you would have to hang someone as important as the First Sister
to get a bigger crowd."
Even Joyhinia could not miss the veiled threat.
"Tarja Tenragan is a deserter and a miserable traitor."
Mathen looked up with cold narrow eyes and stared at her. Joyhinia
fidgeted under his scrutiny. "Then it will do the citizens good to see
what happens to traitors."
"And it will bring those who oppose us out of the woodwork,"
Joyhinia added.
Mathen finished reading the letter he was holding before he
answered. "Or drive them underground."
"No, I know these people. Someone will try to rescue him. And when
they do, we'll be ready for them."
"If it was up to me, I wouldn't try to rescue him," Mathen
shrugged. "If I wanted to ferment rebellion, I would let you hang him
unopposed
and use his death as a rallying cry for every malcontent in
Medalon."
The implied criticism was clear. "If you think this is such a bad
idea, why are you letting it go ahead?"
"Because Lord Roache wishes it, and even as a martyr, Tarja Tenragan
will be less trouble dead than alive. Where is the speech I wrote for
you?"
"I gave it to my secretary."
"Fetch it. I have a few changes I wish to make."
Joyhinia knew better than to argue with the man. She turned on her
heel and crossed the large office, jerking open the door angrily.
"Suelen? Give me that speech I gave you yesterday!"
Suelen jumped to obey. Joyhinia snatched the rolled parchment from
her outstretched hand and slammed the door in the young woman's face.
"There!" she said, slapping it on the desk.
Squire Mathen looked up. He seemed amused. "Temper, temper, First
Sister."
Although it had been the Karien priests who had worked the spell
that had put his mind in Joyhinia's body, secretly, the First Sister
was no happier about the Karien occupation of the Citadel than any
other Medalonian. It had nothing to do with patriotism, however. Loclon
simply wanted to be left alone to run things as he saw fit and Mathen's
presence was a constant reminder of the limits to his power.
From a purely political point of view, Loclon begrudgingly admired
the Duke of Setenton's wisdom in placing Squire Mathen in charge. Even
Lord Roache seemed content to let him take care of the day-to-day
running of the Citadel. It must have been tempting for the Kariens
simply to demand instant conversion of their new subjects to the
Overlord; to forbid practices that had been part of Medalonian society
for centuries. Mathen was too clever to stir up resistance in such a
manner. There had been enough trouble when they threw open the gates of
the Citadel to welcome the Karien occupation force. He wasn't going to
make Medalon ungovernable by ordering them to change their views on the
gods overnight.
With no Quorum to answer to any longer, the First Sister could issue
decrees as she wished, although they were written under Mathen's
careful guidance. On the surface, the decrees seemed quite reasonable.
One had to look closely to realise they were the first insidious steps
down the road of Xaphista's worship. Mathen had all but outlawed
prostitution, which the Sisterhood had legalised two centuries ago.
There were other laws too, which had been enacted in the past months.
It was now an offence to wager on anything; a decree that had been met
with a great deal of grumbling, but little open resistance. Loclon
wasn't a gambler himself, unless he had fixed it so he knew he would
win, but he knew enough about the religion of the Kariens to know that
this was another of their strict mores that they wished to impose on
Medalon.
Illegitimacy was the next target, Loclon knew, but he doubted Mathen
would be quite so lucky getting that one accepted. In Medalon,
legitimacy was determined by the maternal line - a law set down
by the
Sisterhood long ago - and one that meant perhaps two thirds of
the
population had been born out of the Karien definition of wedlock. They
would not be pleased to suddenly find themselves considered bastards.
Had he tried to disband the Defenders, Mathen would have had a
bloodbath on his hands, so he had wisely made no attempt to disarm
them, and had, against Loclon's advice, left Garet Warner in charge, as
the senior officer in the Citadel. Loclon didn't trust Garet Warner,
although the man gave every indication of accepting the surrender. To
Loclon, even wearing the body of the First Sister, the commandant's
cooperation reeked of duplicity. Mathen, however, seemed unconcerned.
He considered Garet a pragmatist, and while he obeyed orders, he was
content to leave him be.
As for the Lord Defender, nobody, from Lord Roache down, was
prepared to trust him. He had accepted the surrender unwillingly and
actively abetted the deserters who now plagued them with acts of
sabotage. There were even rumours that he had dispatched a large force
to Hythria, which was massing to attack in the spring. Jenga was locked
in the cells behind the Defenders' headquarters and there he would stay
until Roache decided what to do with him. The Karien duke was reluctant
to kill him out of hand. He may yet prove useful.
They were interrupted by a knock on the door. Mathen looked up and
called permission to enter. Garet Warner stepped into the office,
saluting Mathen and the First Sister politely when he stopped in front
of the desk.
"Good morning, Squire. First Sister."
"What is it, Commandant? Trouble over the execution today?"
"That's why I'm here. I thought perhaps it might be wise to post
extra guards around the Citadel, in case things get out of
hand."
"That's probably a good idea. I'll send out to the camp for some
extra men."
"I was hoping to use the Defenders," Garet said calmly.
Joyhinia
watched him with misgiving. Neither Loclon nor Joyhinia had ever liked
Garet Warner. He was too clever by half.
"Why?" Mathen asked suspiciously.
"You're going to hang a Defender today, Squire. I'd prefer to have
them kept busy. If you leave them off duty, they'll be in the stands as
spectators."
"Then they will learn a salutary lesson."
"Or they might decide to object."
Mathen thought on it for a moment, then nodded. "Very well. Use all
the men you need. Preferably away from the amphitheatre."
"I've made a list of strategic locations that would be at risk if
anything were to happen. I'll see my men are sent to all those
positions. They'll not think it strange, and as you say, it will keep
them away from the amphitheatre."
"Very good. Is that all?"
"There was one other thing," Garet added, almost as an
afterthought. "They're having trouble with the main gate. One of the
pulleys has
seized and they can't get it open. I've got the engineers working on
it. It should be fixed some time this morning."
Mathen looked annoyed. "A convenient day for that to happen. Are you
sure it was an accident?"
The Commandant nodded. "It's not been tampered with, if that's what
you mean. I checked on it myself this morning when I heard they were
having trouble with it. You can inspect the problem yourself if you
wish."
"Just get the damned thing open," Mathen snapped impatiently.
"As you wish, Squire." Garet saluted smartly and turned
towards the
door. "I've taken the liberty of posting some men outside," he
added as
he reached it. Then he looked over his shoulder at Joyhinia and smiled.
"And I've arranged a special bodyguard for you too, your Grace. We
don't want any incidents."
Something about Garet Warner's manner screamed a warning to Loclon.
He was much too calm, much too accepting of Tarja's hanging. Mathen
returned his attention to the speech as Garet closed the door behind
him.
"I changed the part here about traitorous deeds. It now reads:
'Captain Tenragan is a blight on the honour of the Defenders.
His
callow and cowardly deeds have shamed every citizen in
Medalon'. . . and so on, and so on. It sounds better, don't
you think? Calling him a traitor outright might stir up a few passions.
Technically, he didn't betray Medalon, only Karien, and that wouldn't
bother your people one whit, I suspect. We need to paint him as a
coward, a criminal not worth . . . Are you listening to
me?"
"He's up to something," Joyhinia warned.
"Who? Tarja Tenragan?"
"Garet Warner."
Mathen shrugged. "Undoubtedly."
"Well, don't just sit there! We have to stop him!"
"I've taken precautions."
"What precautions? You moved Jenga, that's all! I'm sure they're
quaking in their boots!"
"Jenga is far more dangerous than Tarja Tenragan. The Lord Defender
is a symbol of honour to every soldier in the Corps. I don't really
care if they try to free Tarja. As you pointed out, this hanging will
bring the troublemakers out of the woodwork. Let Warner try something.
I've a hundred thousand men on the other side of that gate."
"The gate is closed, you fool!"
Mathen looked at her for a moment and then swore viciously. He
jumped to his feet and ran for the door, jerking it open. Suelen was
gone. The anteroom was full of Defenders.
A sword pressing into his vest encouraged him to back up. The
Defender holding the blade was a captain with the look of a man who
wanted nothing more than to plunge his blade right through Mathen's
chest.
"You idiot!" Joyhinia screamed at him. "I warned
you!"
"Shut up, Joyhinia!" Mathen moved back far enough that the
blade no
longer touched him. For a tense moment he watched the Defenders who
filed into the office with weapons drawn then addressed their captain.
"You cannot succeed, you know that, don't you?"
"No, actually I didn't know that," the captain replied
pleasantly. "Thank you for telling me."
"Even if you manage to take the Citadel, you can't get past our
army."
"We'll see."
The captain was infuriatingly confident. Loclon had been a Defender
and he knew that stupidity was not one of their traits. Nor was Garet
Warner a man for taking unnecessary risks. If this man believed they
could win, it was because they had something up their sleeve. Something
Mathen had not anticipated.
"They've done something!" Joyhinia said with a panicked edge
to her
voice. "Look at him! He doesn't care about your army! They've poisoned
the water or the food or something."
"Nothing so crude, First Sister," Garet Warner remarked as
he
stepped back into the office. He glanced around and then nodded to the
captain. "Take Mathen down and put him with the others. Quietly.
Commandant Foren should have control of the administration building by
now. Once you've secured the Squire, get over to the guest quarters and
see if Cadon needs any help rounding up the priests."
"What about me?" Joyhinia demanded.
"Ah, now you we have special plans for, your Grace,"
Garet
told her in that calm, annoying and soft-spoken voice that even as a
Defender Loclon had always loathed. "There's someone who is rather keen
to deal with you personally."
"Who?"
Garet smiled knowingly but didn't answer. With a sudden wave of
nausea, Loclon guessed who it was. It accounted for the captain's
confidence. It accounted for Garet's smug expression. Loclon knew she
would come. It couldn't be anybody else. Not today. Not with Tarja's
life in danger.
"R'shiel." Joyhinia breathed the name fearfully, as
though
saying it aloud might cause her to suddenly materialise out of thin air.
"She's not here," Mathen scoffed. "We've had priests
watching for
her. There's no way the demon child could have slipped into the Citadel
without us knowing about it."
"I think you'll be disappointed to learn your confidence in the
priesthood is somewhat misplaced, Squire," R'shiel told him,
stepping
into the room. Loclon felt the First Sister's knees give way as she
turned to him. Behind her was another man he did not know. He had no
time to wonder who it was.
He had envisaged her return so often that it did not seem real. She
was not bound and helpless. She was not begging for mercy. She was
standing there, staring at him with utter contempt. There was not a
trace of fear in her eyes, only a quiet confidence that she finally and
unequivocally, had him under her control.
"Get the Squire out of here, Captain."
Mathen was bundled from the room, leaving R'shiel, Garet, the tall
stranger and three other Defenders to deal with Joyhinia. She watched
them warily. She knew what would happen next. They would tie the First
Sister hand and foot and make her grovel before that Harshini bitch,
who would take her vengeance as slowly and painfully as possible.
Loclon knew it was over. His reign as First Sister was done. He had
no idea how the Defenders planned to deal with the Karien host, but men
like Garet Warner didn't undertake suicide missions. They knew they
could win.
The First Sister would die. And R'shiel was standing there, staring
at him like she had been planning his suffering almost as long as
Loclon had been planning hers.
But Loclon wasn't done yet. His mind occupied the body of the First
Sister, but his own body lay empty and waiting in a room in the First
Sister's apartments. That was far from this room and probably not
worthy of the attention of the Defenders who were taking up arms
throughout the Citadel and turning on their Karien masters.
Loclon didn't stop to think about it. With a wordless cry, Joyhinia
charged at the nearest Defender. The startled soldier raised his blade
in surprise as she threw herself onto it, welcoming the pain as it tore
through her body - the old woman's body that Loclon was
suddenly
desperate to be free of.
"No!" he heard R'shiel scream in anger, realising
what he was
doing.
But he was too quick for her warning, and perhaps only she truly
understood what was happening. The Defender jerked his sword clear and
she collapsed on the ground with a smile of intense satisfaction.
"Brak! Help me! Don't let her die!" R'shiel cried, rushing
to the
First Sister's side. She dropped to her knees beside the body of her
foster-mother, her eyes glistening with furious, unshed tears.
Joyhinia didn't die immediately. The old bitch may have been
witless, but her body clung tenaciously to life. For a moment Loclon
was afraid that the wound had not been fatal. That would have been the
ultimate irony - to survive, trapped in an old and ruined body
racked
with pain. R'shiel grabbed at her shoulders and shook the limp body in
fury, but she was fading fast - too fast for R'shiel to stop
it; too
fast for her to call on her power to save Joyhinia's broken body.
Through a red wall of pain Loclon saw her, saw the look of anger and
frustration in her eyes as he robbed her of the one pleasure she wanted
more than anything else in this life - his death. It made
everything
worthwhile.
Then he felt a sudden jerk, as if he was being ripped apart - as if
some giant hand had reached inside of him and turned his body inside
out. Darkness smothered him and he let out a wordless cry of triumph.
Joyhinia Tenragan was dead.
CHAPTER 40
Tarja slept surprisingly well the night before his
hanging. Perhaps it was because he was clean for the first time in
weeks. Or perhaps it was just that his fate seemed so inevitable he had
given up worrying about it.
Whatever the reason, he woke at dawn feeling remarkably refreshed
and far too healthy to dwell on the fact that he would most likely be
dead in a few hours. As the small square of sky he could see through
the cell's only window changed from pink to blue, he dressed in the
uniform Andony had left for him and sat down to wait, feeling nothing
but a serene sense of fatalistic calm.
It did not last long. Voices sounded in the hall outside, followed
by the sounds of fighting, then the door to his cell flew open. The
young man who opened it was wearing a captain's uniform, panting
heavily and grinning like a fool.
"Captain Tenragan, sir! Commandant Warner sends his compliments and
wondered if you'd like to forgo your hanging for a good fight, sir? Oh,
and R'shiel said to say hello, too."
Tarja stared at the young captain. He was beyond being surprised. He
had ceased being amazed by his ability to escape certain death some
time ago - about the time he had gone to sleep a broken man and
woken
completely healed in this same cellblock more than a year ago. And he
was long past being astonished at R'shiel's ability to appear when he
least expected it. She got him out of trouble almost as often as she
landed him in it. But he was relieved that she was not the one who had
found him. He had been ready to face death, but he wasn't sure he was
ready to face R'shiel.
"Find me a sword."
The captain laughed and tossed Tarja his own blade. He was obviously
having the time of his life. Tarja snatched it out of the air and
followed him into the hall.
Sir Andony and his men were lined up with their faces pressed
against the wall as a score of Defenders expertly disarmed them. The
young Karien knight looked stunned. He saw Tarja emerge from the cell
and made to turn, but the Defender who stood behind him pushed him back
against the wall.
"How far you think you get?" he snarled over his shoulder.
"Far enough," Tarja replied with a grin, catching the mood
of the
Defenders around him. Every one of them looked delighted. These men
were not trained to deal with defeat and the last few weeks with the
Kariens in control of the Citadel had been eating away at them like
slow burning acid. Now that they were finally doing something about it,
there wasn't a Defender in the room who could hide his glee.
"What are you going to do with them, Captain . . .
?"
"Throw them into the cells for the time being," the young
man
replied. "And the name's Symin. You probably don't remember me. I was a
Lieutenant when you . . ."
"When I deserted? It's all right, Symin, you can say it."
"Well, I just didn't want it to sound as if . . . you know
. . ."
Tarja smiled at the young man's discomfort. "Yes. I know."
"You not get away with this!" Andony insisted in his broken
Medalonian. Tarja looked at him and shook his head.
"Sir Andony, why don't you just shut the hell up," he said
in
Karien, "before I decide to shut you up myself."
"Kill me if you want," Andony declared angrily in his own
language,
lacking the words in Medalonian to express how he felt. "I will be
welcomed into the House of the Overlord! You, on the other hand, will
perish and freeze in the Sea of Despair! Don't you think we were
expecting something like this? By now the Citadel is swarming with
Karien troops. You won't get past the front door."
"Well, that's our problem, isn't it?" He turned to Symin.
"You do have
a plan for getting past the front door, don't you?" he asked in
Medalonian.
"We're taking back the Citadel," Symin told him happily.
"The gates
are locked and by now we should have control of every key position in
the city. Now we've got you out, we have to free Lord Jenga."
"Where's he being held?"
"We thought he was here with you, but he must have been
moved."
Tarja's brow furrowed. He kicked an overturned stool out of the way,
grabbed Andony by the shoulder and turned him around.
"Where have they taken the Lord Defender?"
"Go to hell, you atheist pig!"
Tarja hadn't really expected any other response. Andony tensed,
obviously expecting Tarja to hit him. It would have been a waste of
time. Andony wanted to suffer for the Overlord. Dying simply
meant granting his wish by sending him to meet his god sooner. But if
Tarja couldn't threaten his life, he could threaten his soul, and that,
he suspected, would frighten him more than any promise of physical
violence.
"Symin, did you say R'shiel was here?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then perhaps we should ask the demon child to have a word with Sir
Andony," he said in Karien to be certain the knight understood
him. "How long do you think it will take her to corrupt his
soul?"
Symin looked at him blankly, but Andony paled.
"I cannot be turned from the Overlord by any Harshini witch!"
"This isn't just any Harshini witch, Andony," he
said in a
low, threatening voice. "This is the demon child. She is evil
incarnate. She can turn you from the Overlord just by looking at you.
If she touches you, your soul will belong to her forever. You cannot
fight her. Even Xaphista fears her. One look from the demon child and you
will drown in the Sea of Despair for an eternity." He watched
as
Andony's eyes widened with fear. A part of Tarja could not believe that
a grown man could be so gullible, while another part of him silently
thanked the Overlord for making his followers so vulnerable. "Do you
really care that much about the Lord Defender?"
Andony hesitated. Tarja met his eye and saw the defiance there. He
shrugged and turned to Symin.
"Fetch the demon child."
"No!" Andony cried in horror.
"Where is the Lord Defender?"
The young knight was torn between duty and his immortal soul. The
decision was a terrible one. Finally his shoulders slumped and he
looked at the floor in shame. "He's in the caverns under the
amphitheatre. They moved him there last night in case there was an
attack on the cells."
"The caverns," Tarja translated for the benefit of his
comrades.
"What did you say to him?" Symin asked curiously.
"I threatened his soul."
"Clever," he said with an approving nod, although he clearly
had no
idea what Tarja was talking about. "Sergeant Donel! Let's get these
Kariens into the cells. The Lord Defender is waiting for us!"
It was not far from the Defenders' headquarters to
the amphitheatre. As they ran through the deserted streets the
occasional sound of metal against metal echoed between the buildings. A
shout of alarm, in Karien, reached them from the direction of the
armoury, then suddenly it was silenced. Tarja didn't know if the
civilians in the Citadel had been warned of the coup, but they must
have instinctively known something was afoot. They did not see another
soul on their journey. Even Tavern Street was deserted.
When they reached the tunnel that led into the caverns, Tarja held
up his hand to halt the troop. Symin didn't seem to mind that he had
automatically assumed command. He studied the entrance for a moment
then waved his men forward. The tunnel entrance was deserted, as was
the tunnel itself. They moved into the darkness cautiously, listening
with every sense they possessed.
The silence of the caverns pressed on Tarja like an invisible
weight. They had once been stables, according to legend; carved out of
the natural hill to house the legendary Harshini horses. Reaching far
into the darkness, they stretched endlessly in a circle under the
amphitheatre like a giant rabbit warren.
Jenga could be anywhere.
He glanced at Symin and silently signalled to him. The young captain
nodded in understanding and headed towards the caverns on the left,
taking half the troop with him. The other half followed Tarja into the
caverns on the right.
Torches mounted in brackets at uneven intervals pierced the darkness
with puddles of flickering light. They moved swiftly and silently,
checking the caverns as they went. Memories caught Tarja unawares as
they inspected the caves. He smiled as the sergeant signalled the
all-clear on the cavern where he had stolen his first kiss with a
Novice whose name he could no longer remember; frowned as he passed the
cavern where he'd broken the news to R'shiel about her true parentage.
He knew these rooms well - he'd played here as a child with
Georj. It
was the best place in the Citadel to hide from Joyhinia. The best place
to imagine they were heroes fighting off some implacable foe. They came
here to practise their swordcraft, too, away from the critical eye of
the Master at Arms. He could remember thinking he was quite a swordsman
when he managed to slip his blunted blade through Georj's guard, while
R'shiel, barely old enough to keep up with them, had demanded she be
allowed to try, even though their practice swords were taller than she
was.
"Captain!"
Tarja turned at the whispered call. Symin's sergeant, Donel, pointed
ahead. A pool of light beckoned, brighter than the surrounding caverns.
They were almost in the centre of the ring. If Symin and his men had
moved at much the same pace, they would be approaching from the other
side.
Tarja nodded and signalled the order to move on. They crept like
thieves through the darkness. Straining to listen, the silence bothered
Tarja. He expected to hear something - the guards talking among
themselves, the creak of leather or the scratch of metal armour as the
Kariens moved about in the central cavern. But there was nothing. No
sound disturbed the silence save for the hissing torches and the sound
of his own breathing. He halted the men and waited. Listening intently.
There was nothing to be heard, but Tarja could smell something in
the air, something faint, and sweet, and disturbingly familiar. It took
him a few moments to identify it. When he realised what it was, he
dropped all pretence of stealth and broke into a run. He saw Symin
coming from the other direction, apparently having reached the same
terrible conclusion. Tarja skidded to a halt as he reached the cavern
and let out a wordless cry of despair as the others rushed in behind
him.
It was blood he could smell. Fresh blood. The cavern was painted
with it. It splattered the walls and pooled on the floor beneath their
boots. Jenga lay in the centre of the carnage, his head almost severed
from his body. He must have put up quite a fight. Squatting down, Tarja
ran his finger through the bloody puddle at his feet. It was still
faintly warm. Whoever had done this had done it recently. So recently
that they were more than likely still down here in the caverns
somewhere. He turned at the sound of someone retching.
"Why?" Symin managed to ask in a voice strangled with
emotion.
Tarja didn't answer him, although he knew the reason. This was the
Kariens' punishment for their temerity. It was the act of a spoiled
child who had lost the game then spitefully broken the winner's
favourite toy so that nobody else could play with it. For a moment, he
couldn't speak. The rage he felt robbed him of any facility other than
the desire to seek vengeance for the death of the only truly honourable
man he had ever known. Donel looked at him with concern and touched his
shoulder to get his attention.
Tarja flinched and stood up so quickly the sergeant drew back from
him in fear.
"Spread out. Search the caverns. Whoever did this is still down
here."
Nobody questioned him. The Defenders dispersed quickly, swords at
the ready, and began searching again. Tarja stared at the gruesome
carnage for a moment then turned away. Symin stood behind him,
immobilised by shock. He looked as if he'd suddenly lost his innocence;
as if he had only just realised this was not a game.
"Why?"
"Because they could," Tarja told him. "Because Jenga
personified the
Defenders. Because they knew they'd lost the Citadel and they wanted to
make a point. Take your pick."
"Captain!"
Tarja and Symin both turned at the cry. Donel and two of the
Defenders were returning. Between them they dragged a struggling man,
but it was not a Karien they had caught. It was a Defender. His uniform
was sprayed with a dark pattern of blood. Disbelief warred with a sort
of resigned acceptance of the inevitable as Tarja realised who it was.
"Gawn."
The man stared at him with the wild eyes of a fanatic. Tarja had
known him on the southern border and thought him a poor example of the
Defenders then. He could not imagine what had brought him to this. Nor
did he particularly care. He carefully and deliberately handed his
sword to Symin, then as Donel held him, he backhanded the younger
captain across the face. All the rage he could not voice was behind the
blow.
Gawn's head snapped back and he slumped in the arms of the sergeant,
but when he focused his eyes on Tarja again, he was smiling. "That's
your answer to everything, isn't it Tarja? Every time I get one up on
you, you have to hit something."
Tarja flew at him, determined to kill Gawn with his bare hands. It
took Symin and two other men to pull him off. Donel hauled Gawn to his
feet as the captain wiped away the blood from his nose. Symin flung
himself between Tarja and Gawn, forcibly holding Tarja back.
"I know how you feel, Tarja," Symin said urgently, as he
strained to
keep them apart. "But don't let him get to you. He'll hang for this.
Justice will be served."
Tarja took a deep, deliberate breath and relaxed. He shook off the
men around him, took a step backwards and held up his hands in a
gesture of peace. Satisfied that he had averted cold-blooded murder,
Symin nodded with relief and turned to issue his orders.
As soon as his back was turned, Tarja snatched his sword from the
young captain's grasp and with one fluid movement he swung it in a wide
arc. Nobody had time to stop him, or even cry out in protest. He sliced
Gawn's head from his shoulders, barely missing Donel as the sergeant
ducked under the blow. Blood sprayed the room in a fountain of death as
Gawn's head landed with a sickening thump and rolled to a stop at
Symin's feet.
Donel threw the headless body away from him in disgust and stood
there, drenched in blood, staring at it in stunned disbelief. The other
Defenders did not move, frozen in shock. Symin wore a look of absolute
incredulity.
Tarja threw the sword atop Gawn's headless, twitching body.
"Justice has been served," he said.
Without waiting for an answer, Tarja turned and walked back into the
darkness of the caverns.
CHAPTER 41
R'shiel reluctantly let go of Joyhinia's limp body
as the full repercussions of her death hit. She slumped against the
body and closed her eyes. Every muscle trembled and she was sweating
profusely in the stuffy room. Brak squatted beside her.
"Are you all right?"
"No."
She waited, expecting some snide remark, but he said nothing. She
opened her eyes and looked at him curiously. "What's this? No
reprimand?"
"There was nothing you could have done."
"At least we won't have to worry about deposing the First
Sister,"
Garet remarked, as he looked down dispassionately at the body and the
spreading stain on the rug.
"It's far from over, Garet," R'shiel warned.
"It is for the First Sister," he shrugged. "Now, if you will
excuse
me, we have some rather angry Karien dukes to take care of. Lieutenant,
see that the body is removed and get that rug out of here,
too." He
stepped back as the Defenders hastened to obey.
Brak stood up and held his hand out to her. "There's nothing more
you can do here, R'shiel."
With a last look at Joyhinia's body, R'shiel took his hand as he
pulled her to her feet. Garet led the way out of the First Sister's
office and down the broad staircase into the street. When they emerged
into the sunlight, they discovered that pandemonium had broken loose in
the city. The streets were crowded with people being held back by a
line of red-coated Defenders who strained against the surging mob.
Garet Warner walked into the centre of the small clearing that his men
had forced, to confront the six dukes of Karien who had invaded the
Citadel. Their faces were pale, their eyes glazed with shock. The crowd
was shouting at them. R'shiel could only make out some of the words but
their mood was ugly. There were quite a few Sisters of the Blade among
them who were stirring up the passions of the mob. Through the raucous
melee she heard the words "Karien pigs!" "Murderers!"
and a few other
insults that shocked her with their crudeness.
She glanced at Brak who shrugged with resignation. "You can't really
blame them. The Defenders may have taken back the Citadel, but there's
still a Karien army camped outside and a lot of people have lost a
great deal since Medalon surrendered."
A captain stepped forward to report to Garet. He spared R'shiel and
Brak a curious glance then turned to the commandant.
"So it worked then?" Garet ask. There was no need to be
specific.
"Yes, it worked," the captain told him. "Almost everything
went
according to plan."
"Almost?" Brak asked with a raised brow.
"I'll explain later."
Garet nodded and stepped forward to address the Karien dukes.
"What do you hope to achieve, Commandant?" one of them
yelled before
Garet could utter a word. "You cannot hold out against our
army."
The man who shouted the question was a slender knight standing at
the front of the Kariens with a canny look in his eyes. He seemed a
little less overawed than his companions.
"Who's that?" she asked Garet.
"I am Lord Roache," the duke announced, in answer to
R'shiel's
question. "And you cannot imagine the destruction you have brought down
on Medalon by your actions."
"The Overlord will protect us!" another duke blustered, but
his
words lacked conviction. He was a large man, but he carried more flab
than muscle on his big-boned frame. He looked ridiculous standing in
the street in a long flowing red nightgown. The Defenders must have
dragged him from his bed.
"I hope for your sake your King is as keen to keep you alive as you
seem to think your god is," Garet remarked. Then he turned to
the
captain in charge of the squad guarding the dukes. "Put them in with
the others for now."
The officer saluted as R'shiel turned away from them, too tired and
stunned by Joyhinia's death to care much about what became of the
Karien dukes. She looked around for Brak and found him standing near
the edge of the crowd, waiting for someone to push through to the
front. For a moment the line of Defenders broke to let another officer
through. R'shiel's disappointment fell away from her as she realised
who it was.
"Tarja!"
She ran to him, but stopped short when she saw the expression on his
face. He was splattered with blood and his eyes were haunted. He showed
no evident pleasure at the sight of her.
"R'shiel."
"Tarja, I . . ." She could not think of anything
to say.
He was whole, and unharmed, despite the blood which she guessed was not
his, but there was nothing welcoming in his demeanour.
"You killed Joyhinia, I hear."
"She killed herself," Garet corrected, coming up behind
them. "That's not your blood, I hope, Captain."
"No."
"Good. Then let's get these streets cleared." He turned to
another
officer and began issuing orders to push the mob back. It was a futile
gesture. There were too many people and not enough Defenders.
R'shiel watched their useless efforts as the crowd shouted
obscenities at the Kariens. Someone hurled something at Lord Roache. He
ducked instinctively as a piece of rotting melon landed harmlessly
against the steps. Hurt from Tarja's cold reception and distressed
beyond belief by the fact that Loclon had eluded her, she felt her ire
rising. Impatiently she grabbed at the power and turned on the crowd.
"Go back to your homes!" she shouted, using the power
to
amplify her voice. "Leave now, before I show you what the Harshini
are really capable of!"
The crowd was stunned into silence. Faced with her Harshini black
eyes that blazed with rage, the citizens of the Citadel had a sudden
change of heart. With barely a muttered protest, they began to melt
away. The Defenders took advantage of the impetus she had provided to
push the rest back. Her eyes still fiercely burning, she turned to
Tarja and Garet. Tarja took an involuntary step backwards as if she
repelled him.
She could not believe how much that one small step hurt.
Perhaps Brak sensed something of her pain, or perhaps it was because
he was linked to the same power. He stepped in front of her, blocking
her view of Tarja.
"Let it go, R'shiel," he said softly. "There's no need for
it."
Reluctantly, she did as he bid. He smiled at her. "Good
girl."
"Don't treat me like a child, Brak."
"Then don't behave like one."
She glared at him for a moment, then nodded. "It's all right. I'll
be fine."
"Are you sure?"
Taking a deep breath, she squared her shoulders. "Yes. I'm
sure."
He waited until he was satisfied that she had her emotions -
and
more importantly, her power - under control, then stepped back.
Tarja
was talking to Garet Warner. He seemed determined not to look at her.
Garet turned as they approached, his expression concerned for the first
time since they had begun this coup.
"What's wrong?" Brak asked.
"As the captain said, almost everything went according to
plan. The Sisters are demanding they take control, but we can deal with
them. Unfortunately, Jenga's dead."
"And what about Loclon?" R'shiel demanded. "Did they find
him?"
"I told you days ago that no one has seen him since the last
Gathering. He's a deserter. He's probably halfway to Fardohnya by
now."
"No! You don't understand!" She turned to Brak desperately.
Only he
could fully appreciate what she feared.
"We have to find him," Brak agreed.
"I've got a lot more to worry about than one miserable deserter,
R'shiel. This," he pointed out with a wave of his arm that
encompassed
the chaotic street before them, "is just the beginning."
"Then I'll find him on my own!"
"I can't allow that."
"I don't recall asking your permission."
"Let her go, Garet," Tarja said. His voice was dull, as if
the life
had gone out of him. "She needs to do this and there's nothing at
present that requires her help."
"Very well, go look for Loclon, if you must. We've more important
things to take care of. If you tire of such a fruitless task and you
wish to join us later, we'll be in the First Sister's office."
Garet turned away in annoyance. Tarja followed him without looking
back. R'shiel wasn't sure if he'd spoken up because he supported her,
or was simply trying to be rid of her.
At that moment, she didn't care. Joyhinia was dead, which meant
Loclon was free to return to his own body. Somewhere in the Citadel, he
was on the loose. She was determined that he would not escape her this
time. Not if she had to tear the Citadel apart stone by stone to find
him.
CHAPTER 42
Tarja leaned his head tiredly against the cool pane
of glass on the long windows of the First Sister's office. They would
have to think of another name for it soon, he thought idly. The
position of First Sister no longer existed.
The Citadel was quiet. A light rain blurred the view and trickled
down the small panes of glass, distorting the world outside. He could
see nothing in the darkness but squares of yellow light from the
windows of the library building across the street. There were Defenders
on guard there tonight to prevent the Sisters of the Blade gaining
entrance and destroying documents they did not want to fall into the
hands of the Defenders.
Harith had already been to see them, demanding that Garet hand over
the Citadel, now that the Defenders had control. She had been shocked
beyond words when he refused. It had been a fairly ugly confrontation,
and although they had won this round, Tarja knew the Sisters of the
Blade would not fade into oblivion quietly. In a way, they were liable
to be more trouble than the Kariens.
He heard the door open but did not turn to see who entered. Garet
could deal with them. The commandant was good at that sort of thing.
"We've moved all the Kariens we rounded up into the amphitheatre,
sir," the officer reported.
It was Symin, the young captain who had rescued him - when?
Only
this morning?
"I've assigned enough men to see they don't escape, but we're pretty
thin on the ground elsewhere because of it. The priests have been
separated from the others. We're holding them in the caverns."
"What did you do with their staves?"
"We piled them up in one of the caverns. I posted a guard on them.
They look pretty valuable."
"A priest doesn't like being separated from his staff,"
Tarja
remarked, still staring thoughtfully out of the dark windows.
"That's true enough," Symin agreed. "They made quite a fuss
when we
confiscated them. But the rest of the Kariens are docile enough. I
think the weather has dampened their spirits somewhat. I told them
they'll be released in the morning if they want to go home."
"Who's in command there now?"
"Captain Grannon."
"Then go and get some sleep, Captain. You've earnt it."
"Thank you, sir. Goodnight. Goodnight, Tarja."
"Goodnight Symin," he said.
The captain saluted without meeting Tarja's eye and left the office.
Tarja watched him go with a frown.
"He doesn't know whether to worship you or run like hell,"
Garet
remarked.
"I'm glad you think it's funny."
The commandant leaned back in the First Sister's chair and stretched
wearily. "Stop feeling so bloody remorseful, Tarja. Gawn deserved to
die. I'd have done the same thing in your place. No . . .
actually, that's not true. I'd have tortured the miserable little
bastard for a month or two before I killed him. That's the difference
between you and me. You prefer pure, uncomplicated justice. I'm more of
'the end justifies the means' ilk. And I'm very patient. I can
wait a
very long time before I get my vengeance."
"Time is one thing we don't have," Tarja reminded him. "The
Kariens
outside will attack as soon as they realise what's happened, and then
we're going to be facing an even bigger problem."
"That's where your Harshini friends come in," Garet mused.
"I hope
R'shiel remembered to get a message to Hythria before she went chasing
off on her damned fool quest to find Loclon."
There was no point trying to explain to Garet why R'shiel thought
finding Loclon was so important, so Tarja let the matter drop. He moved
away from the window and took one of the deep leather chairs on the
other side of the desk, stretching his feet out. He rubbed eyes that
were gritty with exhaustion and looked at Garet questioningly.
"So, what happens now? With Jenga gone, we've no one to take command
- unless you fancy the job."
The commandant shook his head. "Not me. I have neither the ability
nor the presence to hold Medalon together. We need someone the people
know. I've made a career of keeping a low profile. If you issued a
decree in my name, the entire population would stare at you blankly and
say 'Garet who?'"
"Then who else is there?"
"There's you."
"That is not even remotely amusing, Garet."
"I wasn't joking."
"Nobody would follow me, even if I wanted the job, which I
don't."
"You underestimate yourself, my friend. You are the most notorious
Defender that has ever lived and your reputation is that of a fearless
-"
"Don't be absurd!"
"Hear me out, Tarja. You deserted the Defenders because you refused
to serve under Joyhinia, and she turned out to be the most savage,
uncompromising bitch that ever put on the First Sister's mantle. You
publicly defied her. You helped the rebels who challenged her. You got
caught. You escaped. You fought the Kariens and then led the resistance
against them, too. Every ill-advised, impetuous, accidental thing
you've done since you refused to swear that oath to Joyhinia has made
you a hero, like it or not."
"That's ridiculous!"
"As a matter of fact, it is, but it doesn't make it any less real.
You are the only man in Medalon the Defenders, the people and the pagan
rebels will follow. You count the High Prince of Hythria as a friend
and we're going to need him. He'll come to our aid because you
asked him. I'm damn sure he wouldn't come if I did." Garet
smiled then
and added, "Even half the damned Sisterhood will fall in behind you -
at least the younger ones who devoted a good part of their Novitiate to
trying to catch your eye."
Even Tarja allowed himself a smile over that. As a Cadet, Garet
Warner had once called him in to his office to inform him that he and
Georj were no longer permitted to study in the library when the Novices
were in class, as Sister Mahina considered their presence
"disruptive".
His smile faded and he shook his head.
"I don't want to rule Medalon, Garet. Not even temporarily."
"I know. That's why I'm offering you the job. If I thought for a
moment that you had your eye on the post, I would never have mentioned
it. We need someone who cares about setting things right. I've had
enough of people who hunger after power for its own sake. That's the
whole point of getting rid of the Sisterhood."
"You can't make me do it."
"Fine. Then give me a name. Find me one man in the whole of Medalon
that can do what you can do, and I'll never bring the subject up
again."
Tarja sighed. "Let me think about it."
"We don't have time. Tomorrow morning, when the Citadel wakes up,
we'd better be damned sure we know what we're doing or Harith will have
the Sisters of the Blade back in charge so fast your feet won't even
touch the ground between here and the nearest gallows."
Before he could answer, the door banged open and R'shiel stormed
into the office with Brak on her heels. She barely even glanced at him,
for which Tarja was grateful. The inevitable confrontation between them
had once more been delayed. Her quest to find Loclon had kept her out
of his way all day.
"How nice of you to join us, demon child," Garet remarked.
R'shiel did not seem to notice the sarcasm. "I just spoke to Symin.
He said you're going to release the Kariens tomorrow."
"That's always been our plan."
"You can't open the gate. I haven't found Loclon yet."
"I'm not going to hold two thousand Kariens prisoner on your whim,
R'shiel. The priests and the dukes will be enough."
"This is not a whim. He's more dangerous than you know. We have to
find him."
"Then I'll post extra men on the gate to see that he doesn't slip
through, but the Kariens are going, R'shiel, and that's final."
She looked over her shoulder at Brak, seeking his support. She did
not look at Tarja.
"I can appreciate your desire to get the Kariens out of the Citadel,
Commandant," Brak agreed reasonably. "But R'shiel is right.
Loclon
poses a danger that you would be unwise to ignore."
"A danger to whom, exactly?" Garet asked. "He's your enemy,
not
mine."
"Don't you understand?" R'shiel cried in
frustration. "Loclon was the one controlling Joyhinia's body! It was
Loclon who was
aiding the Kariens ever since we tried to remove Joyhinia at the
Gathering. Founders, Garet, he's the single, most heinous traitor ever
to draw breath in Medalon!"
Suddenly she turned on Tarja. "Tell him, Tarja! Tell him I speak the
truth!"
The pain in her eyes almost broke his heart. She needed his support.
But finding Loclon in the Citadel would be like sifting through a pile
of sand looking for one particular grain.
"She's right," he admitted. "He's a traitor, and if we can
find him,
we should." R'shiel smiled at him gratefully, which made him
feel even
worse, knowing what he was going to say next. "But we can't afford to
hold those Kariens. We don't have the men to guard them, or the
resources to feed them. Until we're relieved, every mouthful of food in
the Citadel is going to be rationed. I'm sorry, R'shiel. I know what
this means to you and I want to see Loclon brought to justice as much
as you do, but I agree with Garet. We open the gates tomorrow."
She stared at him, stunned by his response. Brak stepped forward and
placed his hand on her shoulder, as if preparing to restrain her. Tarja
wondered for a moment about the half-breed Harshini. For all his
laconic scepticism, he seemed to truly care for R'shiel. There was a
time when Tarja thought Brak loathed her.
"There! You have it from the Lord Defender, himself. The Kariens
leave first thing tomorrow."
"From who?" R'shiel demanded, shaking Brak off.
"The Lord Defender," Garet repeated calmly.
"Tarja is the Lord Defender? When did that
happen?"
"Just now. The position became available, and as the ranking officer
in the Citadel, I decided to appoint him."
"You're going to let Loclon get away with everything he's done to
you, to me, to Medalon, just so you can be the Lord Defender?"
She was
trembling with suppressed rage. Her violet eyes glistened with unshed
tears.
"It's not like that, R'shiel."
"Isn't it?" she asked bitterly. "You've been marked as the
next Lord
Defender since the day you joined the Cadets, Tarja. Everybody in the
whole damned Citadel knew you'd eventually get the job. Well, I hope
the title makes you happy. I never thought you would stoop so low to
take it."
She turned and fled the room. Tarja expected Brak to follow her, but
he did not move.
"Sort this out now, Tarja," he advised. "It'll only get
worse if you
don't."
Tarja stared at him for a moment then swore softly as he rose to his
feet to follow her.
"R'shiel!" he called as she ran down the
wide
marble staircase leading to the dark deserted foyer. "Damn it, R'shiel!
Wait!"
She turned to look up at him. The torches set high in the wall
sconces cast deceptive shadows over her face. He stopped several steps
above her, panting from the chase.
"I didn't mean to hurt you, R'shiel. I'm sorry."
"No, you're not."
"Then what do you want me to say? Don't you think I want Loclon as
much as you do? But Garet's right, and you damned well know it. We
can't hold the Kariens here."
"There was a time when you would have done anything for me."
He found he couldn't answer her. Memories flooded through him,
reminding him that she spoke an awful truth he was not prepared to
face. She studied his face, reading the conflict, the confusion, and
even the self-loathing that had plagued him since he recovered from the
wound he received trying to save her from the Kariens.
"That time is past, now, isn't it?" she said softly,
bitterly. She
knew about the geas, he realised. And that he was no longer bound by it.
"R'shiel . . ." he murmured helplessly. He had no
idea
what to say. No words to express what he felt.
She nodded, as if accepting the inevitable. "The irony is, I saved
your life because I couldn't bear the thought of being parted from you
and I ended up losing you, anyway. Did you ever truly love me,
Tarja?"
For a long, dreadful moment, he did not answer her. In the end, he
settled for the truth. "I don't know."
She looked away for a moment, perhaps to prevent him seeing her
pain. When she turned back to him, her eyes were cold.
"Free the Kariens if you must, Tarja. I'll just have to keep a watch
on the gate for Loclon myself."
"We'll find him, R'shiel," he promised.
She shook her head sadly. "No, Tarja, we won't be doing
anything together any more. I'll find Loclon and deal with him on my
own. You're the Lord Defender now. You have Medalon to rule."
Like a man donning chain mail before a battle, she had surrounded
herself with an impenetrable shell, constructed of bitterness and pain.
Relief warred with a sense of inexplicable loss as he watched the
transformation. He knew then that the R'shiel he had known was gone
forever. In her place was a hard, determined and powerful young woman
who would never let anyone close to her again.
As she turned and slowly walked down the stairs away from him, Tarja
felt he was staring at a stranger.
CHAPTER 43
For a long time, R'shiel walked blindly through the
deserted streets of the Citadel, paying no attention to where she was
going. She was calm - even serene - uncaring of the
light rain that
fell softly on the glistening cobblestones. Her mind did not seethe
with grief for her loss, or rail at the tragedy of unrequited love. She
was numb; totally devoid of any human emotion that could rise up and
cause her anguish.
R'shiel wondered if this was what it felt like to be fully Harshini.
After a while, she discovered that her wandering had led her to the
Lesser Hall of the Citadel. Without any conscious decision, she climbed
the steps and pulled open the massive bronze door, letting it swing
shut behind her with a hollow boom that echoed through the empty
darkness. Night was trapped within its walls, the whitewashed ceiling
lost in the shadows. She tried to recall the picture Brak had painted
in her mind of the Great Hall, the Temple of the Gods, when it had
dazzled the world with its glory and wondered if this smaller temple
once dedicated to the Goddess of Love had been just as impressive. She
could not do it. The Lesser Hall was nothing more than a big, cavernous
room with no life or beauty to recommend it.
"Why, Kalianah?" she asked the darkness.
A pillar of light pierced the shadows as she named the goddess.
Assuming the form of a child, the Goddess of Love crossed her arms and
glared at her. R'shiel stared at the goddess, oblivious to the aura of
adoration that surrounded the pale little girl whose feet hovered just
above the ground.
"Why?"
"Don't you know that it's extremely ill mannered to summon the gods
as if they were -"
"Why did you make Tarja fall in love with me?"
"Oh!" the Goddess said with the guilty air of a child caught
playing
with something she was forbidden to touch. "That."
"Yes, that! Why did you do it? What gives you the right to
interfere in my life?"
"I was only trying to help."
"You're supposed to be the Goddess of Love. How can you cause such
pain?"
"Well, whose fault is that?" the Goddess asked
petulantly. "You
destroyed the geas, not me."
"How?"
"You asked the demons to substitute for Tarja's blood. How was I
supposed to know what you were planning?"
"You sent Dace with a message, reminding me I could use the demons
to heal him."
"Yes, but I didn't expect you to use them like that! Any Harshini
could have told you something like that would break my geas."
"Perhaps they would have, if they'd known about it."
"Well, Brak certainly knew. He was there when I did it. Why don't
you ask him why he didn't say anything?"
The news surprised her. He had never warned her, never even hinted
that something was amiss.
"I want your promise, Kalianah, that you will never, ever,
do anything like this to me again. Or to Tarja."
"You can have that!" she sniffed indignantly. "If this is
what you
call gratitude, I'll never even think of trying to help you again. Then
you'll see how hard it is to love anybody without my blessing!"
"I don't want to love anybody, Kalianah, so I don't mind at
all."
Kalianah's eyes narrowed and she began to change form. A tall,
fair-haired young woman suddenly took the place of the little girl.
"You can live without love?" the goddess asked. "Is that
what you
think? You might be able to tame the God of War with your meddling,
R'shiel, but my power is beyond your reach."
"What makes you think I'm trying to tame the God of War?"
"I am not blind, demon child. Hythria and Fardohnya are united for
the first time in centuries. Zegarnald already grows weaker. But don't
think that by hardening your heart you can do the same to the Goddess
of Love. Humans prosper without war. They will shrivel and die without
me."
"Do you personally take a hand in every romance? Do you make every
mother love her child, every man love his brother?"
"Of course not!"
"Then why do they need you?"
"They need the hope I represent."
"What hope?" she demanded. "You're a spoiled, petulant child
who
helps or hinders the course of love on nothing more than impulse. You
interfere because you can, Kalianah, not because some human petitioned
you for aid and you found his cause worthy."
Kalianah was incapable of real anger, but she was as close to it as
her essence allowed. "Your task is to destroy Xaphista, demon child,
not impose your own atheist bigotry on the rest of us. Do what you are
destined for and leave the Primal Gods to do what we are meant
for."
"And once I've destroyed Xaphista, what then?"
The goddess looked away, unable to meet her eye. "That is not for me
to decide."
"You decide who will love me easily enough."
"It is not for me to decide," Kalianah insisted stubbornly.
"And you
should not waste time dwelling on such things. You must turn your
attention to Xaphista. If you devoted as much time to defeating him as
you do to making things difficult for the Primal Gods, he'd be as weak
as a newborn pup by now."
"Xaphista will weaken."
"Not in your lifetime," Kalianah scoffed. "You have to
tackle the
core of his power, not nibble at the edges like a terrier trying to
chew up a mountain. If you don't, then the moment Xaphista realises
what you're doing, he will fight back with every iota of power at his
disposal."
"Then what do you suggest I do, Divine One?"
"If I knew that, demon child, I would have done something about
Xaphista myself!"
Kalianah vanished, plunging the hall back into darkness. R'shiel
stood unmoving, staring at the space where she had been. Something
Kalianah said bothered her, but the thought was too elusive to grasp.
Something about tackling the core of Xaphista's power . . .
With a flash of inspiration, R'shiel knew what she had to do. Kalan
had given her the first inkling in Greenharbour. She had no idea
exactly how she was going to do it, but the secret of bringing
Xaphista to his knees was suddenly so obvious that she could not
believe she had taken until now to realise it.
R'shiel pounded on Brak's door until he opened it.
"What is it? Have you found Loclon?"
"There's something I need to ask you."
"Do you have any idea what time it is, R'shiel?"
"What do you care?" she asked, pushing past him into the
apartment
that Garet had allocated him. "You're Harshini. You don't need to
sleep."
He closed the door and turned to look at her with a frown. "We don't
need as much sleep as humans, R'shiel. That doesn't mean we don't need
to sleep at all. A point you would do well to remember. When was the
last time you slept?"
"I can't remember."
"Well, I can. It was four days ago. I'm seven hundred years old. I
need my rest."
She smiled at him. He was fully dressed and alert and every candle
in the room was alight. The fire was crackling cheerfully and an open
book lay on the table beside the large chair near the hearth. He had
not been sleeping.
"Well, demon child, what is so damned important that it can't wait
until morning?"
"I have to destroy Xaphista."
"Really?" he asked with wide-eyed astonishment. "And it's
taken you
exactly how long to come to this startling conclusion?"
"Don't make fun of me, Brak. You know what I mean."
"Yes, I do, but I can't understand why it's so important at this
hour of the night."
"I think I've figured out a way to do it."
"How?" he asked, with no trace of mockery.
"I was just talking to Kalianah. She said I had to tackle the core
of his power, not nibble at the edges like a terrier trying to chew up
a mountain."
Brak smiled. "That sounds like Kali. What else were you two
discussing?"
"We had words," R'shiel admitted, "about what she did to
Tarja."
"That must have been interesting."
"She said you knew about it," she accused.
He nodded and moved away from the door. R'shiel followed him with
her eyes, but he was impossible to read when he didn't want her to know
what he was feeling.
"Why didn't you tell me?"
"It wouldn't have made a difference."
"How do you know?"
"Because I've seen it before. A geas is no small thing R'shiel.
Tarja was smitten and there was nothing to be done about it."
"What about me?"
"You were never under Kalianah's geas. Not even the Goddess of Love
would have risked such a thing for the demon child."
"But I loved him," she said, afraid her voice had allowed
some hint
of the pain she was trying so hard to deny.
"You didn't need Kalianah for that R'shiel. You grew up worshipping
the ground Tarja walked on."
"If she hadn't interfered, would he . . . ?"
"Would he have truly loved you in return?" Brak finished for
her
with a shrug. "I don't know."
"He despises me now."
"No, he doesn't. He just doesn't know how to cope with what's
happened. The fact that he doesn't actually believe in the gods who did
this to him won't make it any easier on him, either." He poured
two
cups of wine and crossed the room, holding one of them out to her.
"He'll get over it eventually. Drink up. Lost love always looks better
through the bottom of a glass."
"I don't want a drink."
"Well I do, and it's bad form to drink alone. Humour me."
She took the cup and sipped the wine sullenly, letting its warmth
spread through her. Despite Brak's assurances, it made absolutely no
difference to how she felt. Brak resumed his seat by the fire and took
a long swig from his glass.
"So, are you going to tell me what this brilliant idea is, or do we
have to keep rehashing the story about poor old Tarja for a few more
hours?"
"Why do you take such delight in ridiculing my pain?"
"Because you're a lot tougher than you realise, demon child. I know
you're hurting, but deep down you knew this would happen. As soon as
Xaphista told you about the geas, you knew that Tarja didn't love you
willingly. For all your human failings, you have an innate sense of
what is right. It's part of being Harshini. You might lament losing
him, but you know, in your heart, that it's better this way. The sooner
you admit it openly, then the sooner you'll get over it."
"Better?" she asked bitterly. "How could it be
better?"
"Tarja was the chink in your armour, R'shiel. Xaphista would have
exploited that weakness to its fullest. Don't you remember what you
told me about Xaphista when he tried to seduce you into joining him? He
used Tarja then, and you almost gave in."
R'shiel had no wish to be reminded of that dreadful journey through
Medalon, but she could not deny the truth of what Brak told her. She
sank into the chair on the other side of the fire and stared at the
flames, not wanting to give him the satisfaction of seeing that she
knew he was right. She need not have bothered. Brak knew her too well.
"A moment ago you were bursting to tell me how you could bring
Xaphista down. Do we really have time for you to sulk?"
She hurled the goblet at him. He ducked it easily and the glass
shattered harmlessly against the far wall.
He smiled. "Feel better now?"
"I hate you."
"No, you don't. You just hate the fact that I'm right."
"It's the same thing."
Brak sighed, as if his patience was wearing thin. "Ask me what you
came to ask, R'shiel. I really do intend to get some sleep in what's
left of this night."
"I have to attack the core of Xaphista's power," she told
him with
considerably less enthusiasm than she had had when she burst into his
room earlier.
"So you said before."
"We have to go after his priests."
Brak frowned. "You won't turn a single Karien priest, R'shiel. Even
if you managed to win their minds to your cause, Xaphista owns their
souls. Each priest is linked to the Overlord through his staff."
"Then that is their weakness. If I can use that link, I can reach
every priest in Karien and cripple Xaphista overnight."
"In theory, yes, but how are you going to do it?"
"Kalan had an idea that set me thinking. I have to get a close look
at a staff, though. I want to see how it works."
"I'll tell you how it works, R'shiel. Very, very well. Don't you
recall what happened the last time you had a close encounter with a
Staff of Xaphista?"
"I'm never likely to forget. But you told me the staff destroys
magic. Well, if it can do that, then the staff has to use
magic, too. And if it can use magic, maybe I can do something to change
its purpose."
Brak sighed and climbed to his feet. "Come on then."
"Where are we going?"
"You want to take a look at a Staff of Xaphista? Garet Warner has
more than a hundred of them piled up in a cavern under the
amphitheatre."
She jumped to her feet in astonishment. "You think it'll
work?"
"No. I think it's the most misguided excuse for a plan that you've
ever come up with, but I know you won't let it go until you've
discovered that for yourself."
She hugged him impulsively. "I knew you'd help me."
He pushed her away gruffly. "Don't get too excited, R'shiel. I'm
doing this to prove you wrong."
"I'm not wrong. I know this will work."
He picked up his cloak from the back of the chair where he had
discarded it earlier and looked at her sceptically. "A few more burns
from touching those staffs might convince you otherwise, demon
child."
Two determined-looking Defenders barred the
entrance into the tunnel that led into the caverns under the
amphitheatre. R'shiel demanded entry to no avail, but the ruckus
brought out the officer in charge to see what all the fuss was about.
He recognised R'shiel and frowned. Shorter than the average Defender
and prematurely grey, he was renowned for his organisational abilities,
rather than his fighting skills. He was also an old friend of Tarja's.
"You can't see the prisoners, R'shiel."
"We don't want to see the Kariens, Captain Grannon. We just want to
have a look at the staffs you took from the priests."
He frowned, but could see no harm in her request. As far as Grannon
was concerned, the staffs were just useless, if rather valuable,
religious frippery.
"Very well. Go with them, Charal. And stay with them," he
added with
a disturbing lack of trust.
The sergeant took a torch from the wall and led them through the
tunnel into the caverns on the left. The staffs were piled in a
careless heap in a room near the entrance. There were another two
Defenders posted outside, who stood aside to let them enter. Charal
went in first and held the torch high. The flames reflected off the
staff heads like myriad tiny jewels. R'shiel and Brak stared at the
pile, careful not to get too close.
"Can you pick one up for me?" she asked Charal.
"Captain Grannon didn't say you weren't allowed to touch
them."
"We can't touch them." Brak explained. "They're specifically
designed to harm anyone with Harshini blood."
Charal looked sceptical, but he turned to the wall and dropped the
torch into a metal bracket before bending down and picking up a staff
at random. He thrust it at R'shiel, who took an involuntary step
backwards.
"Careful!"
Swallowing a sudden lump of fear, R'shiel stepped closer and studied
the hated symbol of Xaphista's power. The shaft had been treated with
something that stained it black and made the metal suck in the light
around it. The head of the staff was made of gold; shaped like a
five-pointed star and intersected by a lightning bolt crafted of
silver. Each point of the star was set with crystal and in the centre
of the star was a larger gem of the same stone.
Charal looked at the staff curiously, his eyes alight with greed.
"Are they real diamonds, do you think?"
"No," Brak said. "They're crystals of some sort."
"They look like the Seeing Stone."
Brak stared at her. "What?"
"I said they look like the Seeing Stone. You know, the big crystal
they have in the Temple at Greenharbour?"
"I know what the Seeing Stone is. Bring it closer to the
light."
Charal moved the staff until it caught the flames of the torch.
R'shiel stepped closer, studied it for a moment, and then tentatively
reached out towards the staff head.
"What are you doing?" Brak cried in horror.
"Putting a theory to the test."
She lightly brushed her fingertip over the centre crystal. No bolt
of agony shot through her, not even a whisper of pain.
"How . . . ?" he gasped in astonishment.
"I didn't touch the staff, just the crystal. Try it
yourself."
Reluctantly, Brak reached out to touch the sparkling jewel, jerking
his hand back instinctively in anticipation of the torture he was
certain awaited him. When nothing happened, he gingerly laid his finger
on the stone and looked at R'shiel in wonder.
"I don't understand."
"Watch," she commanded. He stepped back as she reached for
the staff
once more, this time with her eyes blackened by the power she drew. She
placed her finger on the centre crystal and the room flared with light
as every stone in every staff on the floor began to glow in response to
her touch. Charal dropped the staff with a cry of alarm. Brak jumped
clear of it as the room was plunged back into relative darkness as soon
as her contact with the crystal was severed.
"But how . . . ?" Brak asked, looking at the now
quiescent
pile of staffs that lay on the floor beside them.
"I think they're chips off one of the missing Seeing Stones."
"I hate to admit it, R'shiel, but you may have been right, after
all."
"I can use the staffs to influence the priests, can't I?"
He glanced at the pile. "That's what you came to ask me? I suppose.
Provided you can access a Seeing Stone to control them."
"The Citadel's Seeing Stone is lost," she reminded him,
glancing at
the pile of staffs. "But Kalan said it couldn't be destroyed. It has to
be somewhere."
He did not seem to share her optimism. "I suppose, although where
you would hide something as large as a Seeing Stone is beyond me. And
have you considered the possibility that these crystals might be all
that's left of the Citadel's Stone?"
"I'm guessing if a Seeing Stone was broken down into smaller stones,
it's the one from Talabar. The Sisterhood would only care about
destroying it or hiding it. Only the Fardohnyans would think of selling
it."
Brak nodded thoughtfully. "Which would explain Hablet's
determination to keep the Harshini out of Fardohnya. He wouldn't want
us to realise what had happened to it."
"And only a god would have the power to break the Stone up. It makes
sense, I suppose, although it must have cost Karien a fortune. I always
wondered how Fardohnya got so rich so quickly. But what about
Loclon?"
"We'll look for him, but without help we're not going to find
him."
Her expression hardened. "The new Lord Defender has other
priorities."
Brak studied her determined expression and shrugged. "All right
then, that just leaves one rather pertinent question to be
answered."
"What's that?"
"Where does one hide several tons of magic crystal?"
CHAPTER 44
Loclon jerked back to consciousness with a start,
and for a long time could not decide where he was. His mind was filled
with so many images, so much pain, that he could not gather his
thoughts into anything remotely resembling coherent thought. He stared
at the strange room, at the heavy drapes over the bed and the softly
glowing walls, trying to recall how he came to be there. His head was
weighted down with pain and he could not move his limbs. He could not
even remember who he was.
It came to him, after a time, although how long was impossible to
judge. He gradually remembered being Joyhinia Tenragan. He remembered
the power he had wielded in her name. He remembered R'shiel standing
over him, demanding that he live.
And he remembered dying.
The feeling stayed with him like a shadow looming over his soul. The
pain seemed almost irrelevant when compared with the overwhelming
terror he experienced when he recalled throwing himself on some
nameless Defender's sword in the First Sister's office to escape the
fury in R'shiel's eyes.
In hindsight, it was the most courageous thing he'd ever done -
perhaps the only courageous thing he'd ever done.
He did not lament the death of Joyhinia, and his grief was inspired
more by annoyance than guilt. He had lost the only true taste of power
he was ever likely to have. Now he was nothing more than a fugitive.
As that thought occurred to him, he experienced a moment of blind
panic. A fugitive was exactly what he was and he knew that R'shiel
would not rest until he had been found. He had to get out of here, out
of this room, out of the Citadel.
Loclon tried lifting his head and was appalled to find the task
almost beyond him. His body had lain dormant for months and the muscles
had wasted almost to the point of atrophy. He had no strength, no
control, not even the ability to push himself off the bed.
It had never occurred to Loclon that his body might be wasting away
in his absence. He knew it was alive - and as long as his body
lived,
so did he. Mathen had assured him the priests were taking care of it,
but he had never been permitted to view the body himself, the priests
claiming such a confrontation would undo whatever magic they had worked
to transfer his mind into Joyhinia's body. To awaken, in this thin,
emaciated body, with barely enough strength to lift his head from the
pillow, seemed the ultimate irony.
R'shiel could not have planned it better if she tried.
A sense of urgency overwhelmed him, for a moment swamping even his
despair at finding his body so useless. R'shiel was looking for him.
She would not rest until she had him in her power.
Anger warred with fear as he thought of R'shiel. She had no right to
come back, he decided, even though, as Joyhinia, he had done everything
in his power to ensure that she would. If the Kariens had done as they
promised she would have been dead by now - burned at the stake
in
Yarnarrow for the Harshini sorcerer she was. But not even the Karien
god could hold her, and Loclon was not so foolish as to think that if
she possessed the strength of purpose to face down a god that he could
escape her wrath.
That thought finally spurred him to action. With a panic-driven
burst of strength, he threw himself off the bed, landing heavily on the
floor. He lay panting, exhausted by even that small effort. He could
see the door, a mere five paces from where he had fallen. The distance
stretched before him like a vast canyon.
For a long time, he simply lay there, gathering what little strength
he had to cross the gap. He did not think of anything but the urgency
of his mission. He had died once already today. He did not intend to
let it happen again.
Loclon pushed himself up onto his elbows and began the painstaking
task of dragging his useless body towards the door. He had barely moved
a pace across the floor when he heard footsteps in the hall outside.
Terror lent him another burst of strength. He slithered painfully over
the polished floorboards, filled with an unnamed dread. His arm slipped
out from under him and he banged his chin, making black lights dance
before his eyes. The door loomed in the distance, seemingly no closer,
despite his desperate efforts. The footsteps drew closer, louder. Sweat
beaded his brow and left clammy handprints on the floor as he clawed
his way painstakingly forward.
He collapsed in exhaustion, his breathing ragged. Tears of fear and
frustration blurred his vision. The door might as well be on the other
side of Medalon. He would never make it. Any moment now it would open
and R'shiel would be standing there, ready to even the score for every
insult, real or imagined, that he had inflicted on her. He sobbed with
terror and stared at the panelled door; watched it open with a feeling
akin to having hot lead poured into his stomach. The door slammed
against the wall. Loclon let out an unintelligible cry for mercy;
tasted the acrid smell of urine as his bladder let go.
"Oh, for the gods' sake, stop blubbering!" Mistress Heaner
declared
impatiently. "Pick him up, Lork."
The old woman looked down on him, staring at the spreading stain on
the front of his loincloth in disgust. As usual, she was dressed in
black, clutching an expensive cape around her shoulders. Her small eyes
set amid the folds of her thin, leathery face were filled with
distaste. Lork stepped forward and scooped Loclon up from the floor.
Even he screwed up his nose.
"You should be grateful, Captain. They're turning the Citadel inside
out looking for you."
Loclon did not reply. He was too relieved by his rescue and too
frightened by its source. Owing Mistress Heaner anything was dangerous
in the extreme. She demanded a finger for an unpaid gambling debt.
Loclon was afraid to think of what she would charge for his life.
Bathed and fed, Loclon began to feel better now he
knew he was safely within the walls of Mistress Heaner's house. His
only care was to hide until he could escape the Citadel.
Later that evening, Mistress Heaner came to his room. When she
opened the door Loclon noted, with some alarm, that Lork was on guard
outside, standing there with that implacable, witless expression that
seemed to respond only to Mistress Heaner. There was a boy of about
twelve with her, with sandy hair and a sly, but beautifully innocent
face. Loclon remembered him as one of Mistress Heaner's more exotic
playthings. Lork closed the door behind them and the boy carried the
tray he was holding to the small table beside the bed. The tempting
smell of roasted meat escaped from under the domed cover on the plate.
"The Defenders have control of the Citadel," she told him as
she lit
the lamp. "They've imposed a curfew until tomorrow at sunrise. You can
go now, Alladan."
"Who's the new First Sister?" he asked with a twinge of
professional
jealousy as the boy slipped silently from the room.
"There isn't one," the old woman shrugged. "Nor will there
be, if
you believe the rumours."
"You mean the Defenders have taken over the Citadel? Without the
Sisterhood?"
"So it would seem. I hear Garet Warner masterminded the whole thing.
That's not surprising. He's a slimy little bastard. Jenga's dead
though," she added, with no more emotion than she might tell
him of a
change in the weather.
Loclon felt no remorse over the loss of the Lord Defender. "So
Warner's in charge?"
"He'll probably name himself Lord Defender in the morning."
"I have to get out of the Citadel."
Mistress Heaner nodded. "Squire Mathen left instructions in case
something like this happened. You're to be taken to Karien."
Loclon's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Why?"
"Because you were the First Sister. You have information the Kariens
will need to take back the Citadel."
"There's a hundred thousand men outside the walls. They don't need
me."
"The Defenders are holding all the dukes hostage. There is an army
out there, certainly, but no one to lead them."
She spoke matter-of-factly; as if she were repeating some idle
gossip about a neighbour, not telling him that his entire world was
falling apart.
"Then she's still here?"
"Who? R'shiel? Oh yes, she's still in the Citadel."
"She wants to kill me."
"So would every Defender in the Corps, if he knew what you'd
done,"
Mistress Heaner pointed out with infuriating smugness. "Fortunately for
you, your brothers-in-arms don't believe in magic, therefore they're
not likely to seek vengeance for an act they cannot conceive."
"Can you get me out of here?"
She smiled. It was a cold, calculating smile. It made him shudder.
"For a price."
"How much?"
"It's bad manners to discuss such things over a meal," she
replied,
glancing around to ensure everything was to her satisfaction. She had
put him in the Blue Room. The hint was not lost on Loclon. This was
where he had killed that whore . . . what was her name? Peny?
This was the room where Mistress Heaner found the leverage she needed
to turn him into a traitor. "We'll talk about it later."
"How am I going to get out of the Citadel?" he asked,
lifting the
cover off the platter and nodding appreciatively. He was starving.
"Through the gate, how else?"
"But isn't it closed against the Kariens?"
"For the moment. They're opening it in the morning to let the
Kariens go."
Loclon looked up from the plate with astonishment. "They're
letting them go?"
"They seem to think we're going to be under siege for quite some
time," Mistress Heaner shrugged. "They've told the Kariens they
can
leave and anyone else who would prefer to go with them. I doubt they're
planning on releasing the dukes, but they want to be rid of the rest of
the Kariens. Clever thing to do, actually. A lot less mouths to
feed."
"R'shiel will be there," Loclon predicted with dread
certainty.
"Probably."
"She'll recognise me."
"Don't worry, Captain, we'll give the demon child something else to
think about." She walked back to the door and knocked on it
twice. Lork
opened it with a key. He was a prisoner, he realised with despair, but
a prisoner with some value at least.
The question was: how much was Mistress Heaner going to charge?
CHAPTER 45
Tarja assigned a squad of Defenders to aid R'shiel
in her search for Loclon. He even made a point of picking men who knew
Loclon on sight. It was a thoughtful gesture, but not enough for
R'shiel to forgive him for opening the gate. Particularly when she
learnt he had ordered the men to look for Loclon, but not hinder the
Karien exodus. R'shiel wanted to stop every man leaving the Citadel.
She wanted to examine each soldier and knight closely, search every
wagon, every sack, and every woman's purse, to ensure that Loclon did
not get past her. When the officer in charge of the squad repeated his
orders, R'shiel turned on her heel furiously and made her way straight
to the First Sister's office.
Tarja met her rage with silent fortitude. He was wearing a new red
jacket bearing the sword and shield insignia of the Lord Defender.
Despite the fact that it was before sunrise, the First Sister's office
was full of Defenders. They cleared a path for her warily and avoided
her gaze. None of the Defenders in the office appeared concerned that
Tarja had been promoted over them to the Lord Defender. They acted like
men who were glad that the ultimate responsibility for their fates had
been shifted to someone else. A small part of her understood how they
felt. This coup was still very new, and although they controlled the
Citadel, Medalon was a long way from being secure. If it fell apart on
them, Tarja would bear the brunt of any reprisals.
"Garet said we could check everyone leaving the Citadel!"
"Actually, he said that we'd post extra men on the gate to see that
Loclon doesn't slip past. There was never any suggestion that we would
allow you to stop and search every single person trying to get through
the gate."
"There are thousands of people down there! We'll never find
him!"
"Then I'm sorry, R'shiel. I've given you all the men I can
spare."
His tone was implacable. It was as if he had assumed some of Jenga's
dignified gravity along with his rank.
"And if I find Loclon? Your men do have orders to arrest
him, don't they, my Lord Defender? Or did you want me to just give him
a friendly pat on the back and wish him a safe journey?"
He frowned, impatient with her sarcasm. "Take the men I gave you, or
not, R'shiel. I've neither the time nor the inclination to argue about
it."
"Is this your idea of helping me?"
"Would you care to discover what not helping you feels
like?"
They glared at each other for a tense moment.
"If he gets away from me, I'll never forgive you, you know that,
don't you?"
"It's getting light out there," he said, turning his
attention to
his men. "If you want to be at the main gate when it opens, I suggest
you get a move on."
The wind was biting when she emerged into the
light on the broad ledge that circled the towering white walls of the
Citadel. R'shiel had not been up here since she was a child, when Tarja
had brought her to the walls to show her the rare spectacle of the high
plains covered in snow. She was only five or six years old at the time
and snow on the plains, while not unheard of, was unusual enough that
she had cried out with delight at the sight of it. That Joyhinia had
beaten her afterwards for sneaking out with Tarja had not lessened the
thrill, and she had held on to the memory as she sobbed in her room,
hungry and cold, her legs throbbing from the cane. She could remember
thinking that it had all been worth every savage blow. It didn't matter
that she had been sent to bed without dinner. She didn't even care when
Joyhinia had declared that as she seemed to like the cold so much, she
could get a taste of what it really felt like in the snow and had the
fire in her room extinguished and the blankets removed. It didn't
matter that her legs were black and blue. She had stood on the
wall-walk in the still, cold air and looked out over the countryside
blanketed in white, the shallow Saran River frozen with a thin coating
of ice, and thought she was standing on top of the world.
A trace of the same feeling came back to her as she looked down, but
this time no peaceful layer of snow softened the view. The plain
crawled with humanity as far as the eye could see, even as far away as
the small village of Kordale, whose smoking chimneys R'shiel could just
make out in the distance. From this high up it was impossible to make
out individual details, rather the ground below rippled like some
strange, poisonous ocean that lapped at the walls of the Citadel.
"Are you all right?" Brak asked with concern.
"Why wouldn't I be?"
He did not answer for a moment. He was sitting with his back to the
wall with his booted feet stretched out in front of him on the ledge,
cleaning his fingernails with the tip of his dagger. Scattered clouds
left over from the rain during the night hung motionlessly in a sky
tinted the colour of washed-out blood.
"If you happen to find Loclon, just be careful, will you?"
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that if you're planning to use your power to restrain him,
try to do it as quickly as possible. You'll be drawing on the same
power as Korandellan. He'll have to fight you for his share of
it."
Brak did not need to add that if she drew too much, Korandellan's
ability to hold Sanctuary safely out of time would be compromised. She
had seen his weary face in the Seeing Stone in Greenharbour. R'shiel
knew how close to exhaustion he was.
"You make it sound as if I actually have control over it."
She
closed her eyes, letting the chill air clear her mind then looked down
from the wall-walk over the mass of humanity swarming to be let out of
the Citadel. "This is hopeless!"
"You knew that before you came here," Brak pointed out.
"Aren't you going to help?"
"What do you want me to do?"
She muttered something unintelligible and looked back over the
crowd. The Defenders were pushing the people back to clear a path for
the gates to open. On the other side of the wall, the plain was
littered with the Karien army. There was a sizeable gathering outside
the gate, waiting for their comrades inside the Citadel to be released.
A truce had been arranged the previous day, although with their
leaders now hostages in the Citadel, it had taken some time to sort out
the Karien chain of command and find someone capable of making a
decision. The wall-walk was lined with archers to discourage the
Kariens from attempting to break the truce. The Defenders could not
hope to fend off a well co-ordinated attack, but they were enough to
deter the disorganised and bewildered Kariens from trying anything
stupid. They seemed incapable of understanding that the Citadel was
lost to them, or that their leaders had been taken prisoner. The
Overlord would not allow such a thing.
"Isn't there something magic we can do?" she asked, turning
her back
to the Kariens.
He raised a brow at her. "Something magic?"
"You know what I mean."
Brak sighed with long-suffering patience. "You still have no idea
what you're dealing with, do you?"
"I don't want a lecture, Brak. I just want to know if there is
anything we can do to find Loclon more easily."
"You could make every person leaving tell the truth then ask their
names as they pass through the gate," he suggested.
"That won't work. Tarja won't let us stop them." She was
scanning
the crowd and did not see Brak's smile.
"I was joking, R'shiel."
"I'm beside myself with mirth. Do you have any other brilliant
suggestions?"
"No."
"Good."
Brak sheathed his dagger then climbed to his feet and came to stand
beside her. The gates swung open ponderously as the Defenders shouted
orders to the crowd. The first to leave were the troopers that had been
posted around the city, and they made up the bulk of the occupation
force. They looked cold and miserable, having spent a night in the damp
weather confined to the amphitheatre. Most of them were simple peasants
dragged into this war because their masters owed a fealty to the Karien
King. They were at the mercy of their god, their King and their dukes.
"They don't look very happy, do they?" Brak remarked.
"Can you blame them?"
"You're not feeling sorry for them, are you?"
"A little bit. Most of them would much rather be at home getting
ready for the spring planting, I think. Not stranded here in a foreign
country fighting a war they probably don't even understand."
"Well, if you think the peasants are unhappy, imagine what that lot
must be feeling." Brak pointed up the street.
The next group waiting to be let through was the knights. Tarja had
permitted them their mounts, but other than that, they were leaving
empty handed. Their faces were cold and haughty, as if they were
leaving of their own free will, not being forced out like beggars who
couldn't pay the rent. Sir Andony sat at the head of the small column.
R'shiel could not make out the others from this height. She watched
them curiously, wondering what they were thinking. Were they
plotting revenge? Were they already planning to return?
"My Lady! My Lady R'shiel!"
R'shiel glanced down at the street and discovered an urchin waving
up at her. She did not know the child, but he was panting heavily, as
if he had run all the way to the gate.
"What is it?" she called.
"That man you're looking for? The one with the scars? I saw
him!"
"Wait here!" she told Brak, heading for the stairs that led
down
into the gatehouse at a run. When she reached the street, she had to
push through the crowd to find the child. The boy was waiting for her
by the gatehouse wall. He had the most beautiful face R'shiel had ever
seen on a child.
"Who are you? Where did you see Loclon?" she demanded.
"My name is Alladan. I work for Mistress Heaner."
"Who is Mistress Heaner?"
"She's . . . she's . . . my employer,"
the boy
said, a little uncertainly. "But I saw the man you're looking for. He
was at Mistress Heaner's last night."
"Is he still there?"
Alladan nodded. "I think so. Did you want me to show you?"
She glanced up at the wall-walk where Brak was looking down at her
and debated calling him. Although she was certain he was telling the
truth, the child might be wrong, and she could not risk letting Loclon
slip past her. She waved reassuringly to Brak then turned back to
Alladan.
"Show me."
As she pushed through the crowd behind the boy, she faintly heard
Brak calling her back, but she ignored him. The idea that she might
have found Loclon consumed her, swamping caution and common sense. They
broke through the crowd after a great deal of pushing and shoving,
turning towards the warehouse district. The boy ran ahead, looking back
over his shoulder occasionally to ensure that she was still with him.
When the boy finally reached his destination, it proved to be a
narrow gate with a small hatchway at eye level, jammed between two
dilapidated warehouses. He stopped and waited for her to catch up and
then jerked his head in the direction of the door.
"He's in there."
"Are you sure?"
"He was this morning."
"How did you know I was looking for him?"
Alladan shrugged innocently. "The whole Citadel knows, my
Lady."
Then he grinned and added, "Is there some sort of reward for finding
him?"
She smiled at the boy's expression. "We'll see."
"I was . . . well, I was hoping I could get it
now," he
said. "I mean, you never know what's going to happen
. . ."
"Go back to the gate and ask for Lord Brakandaran. He'll see you're
rewarded."
Alladan looked a little disappointed, but he did not press the
point. He ran off without another word. R'shiel watched him leave with
a shake of her head. He certainly was an enterprising lad.
Turning back to study the small gate, R'shiel carefully drew on her
power and pushed at the gate with a thought. It creaked open to reveal
a lane strewn with litter. She could not sense anyone in the lane, so
she stepped through cautiously, gagging on the smell. She stepped
silently over the rubbish towards another doorway at the end of the
alley. It stood open and inviting. When she entered the room beyond she
gasped with astonishment.
It was sumptuous - decorated with no thought to expense, or
good
taste. There were velvet-upholstered couches scattered about the room,
each one sectioned off by diaphanous sheer curtains. The carpet was as
thick as the grass in the garden behind the infirmary. Fardohnyan
crystal chandeliers hung unlit from the ceiling. There was a smell
about the place, too, something she could not identify, although it was
annoyingly familiar. R'shiel looked around her wide-eyed, wondering
what such a place was doing hidden down here in the warehouse district
- and who would frequent it.
The answer came to her as she checked the deserted rooms along a
narrow passage leading off the main room. The first was innocent enough
- simply a room with a large double bed, decorated in blue to
match the
colour of the door. But as she opened each door along the hall, the
purpose of the rooms became clear enough. There was one room sporting a
huge tub, another with a bed big enough for six and then another
containing nothing more than two velvet-lined, metal cuffs hanging from
the ceiling by chains and enough instruments of torture to make the
Defenders' interrogation chamber look positively inadequate. Feeling a
little queasy at the thought of what might go on in this place, R'shiel
wondered about Alladan. Was he part of the entertainment? The
idea made her sick.
At the end of the hall was a smaller door, which opened at a touch
and led down into the darkness. Stepping through, R'shiel called up a
finger of flame to light her way, rather pleased with herself. When
Brak had tried to teach her how to call fire one evening on their
journey here from Vanahiem, she'd almost consumed them both in a ball
of flame. The short steps opened into a cellar with an earthen floor.
She made the flame brighter and stared at the altar by the far wall,
letting out a yell of outrage as the star and lightning bolt of
Xaphista stared back at her.
With a sudden thump, the cellar door slammed shut behind her. She
ran to the door and pounded on it, but it was shut fast, locked from
the other side. Furiously, she called on her power and blasted the door
out of her way, only to discover her way blocked by a wall of fire. She
remembered now, what that smell was. Oil. Whoever had set this trap had
soaked the building in it, hoping to send her to a fiery death.
R'shiel took a step back from the roaring flames. If this fire
spread, here in the warehouse district, it would destroy the city. Even
if it only spread a little way, all their supplies, all the food they
had stored to see them through the coming siege would be destroyed.
Without thinking, she drew even deeper on the Harshini power, pulling
as much as she could handle and sent it outwards from the cellar. The
blast of air shook the surrounding buildings and almost brought the
roof of the cellar down on top of her. But the flames were blown out
like candles in a strong draft.
Panting with the effort of her exertions, she clambered through the
debris until she reached the ground floor. The building was flattened,
its roof gone, the walls blown out and laying flat on the ground. The
warehouses on either side were in no better shape, and beyond them she
could see the broken windows and fractured walls of the other buildings
that had been in range. There were shouts in the distance and voices
yelling orders. The Defenders come to investigate the source of the
explosion, no doubt. She looked around at the devastation she had
caused with a sigh. She had simply meant to blow out the flames. She
hadn't expected to level everything in sight.
It was Brak who reached the scene first. She was still standing
there, dazed and bewildered as he leapt over the rubble to get to her.
When he reached her, Brak helped her sit down, his expression a
mixture of anger and concern. "What, in the name of the gods, do you
think you're doing?"
"It was a trap," she told him dully.
"No kidding."
"I didn't mean to . . ." she said, looking around
her at
what was left of the warehouse district.
"You never do, R'shiel. That's what makes you so bloody
dangerous."
"You're mad at me, aren't you?"
"Yes."
R'shiel took a deep breath and held out her hand to see if it had
stopped trembling, then looked up and smiled wanly at Brak.
"I'm sorry."
"You and I need to have a little talk about restraint," he
said with
a frown. "You can't go drawing on that much power every time you want
to do something. There is such a thing as overkill, you know."
"But I had to put out the fire. I didn't know how much it would
take." For that matter, even if she had known, she still lacked
the
finesse to limit what she drew on, but she decided not to remind Brak
of that.
"I feel exhausted, but somehow more aware. Isn't that odd?"
"What do you mean?"
"I'm not sure. It's as if I can feel everything more clearly. I can
even feel Sanctuary like it was right here."
"That will be with you wherever you go, R'shiel."
"I know. I've felt it ever since I left the place, but this is
different. It's stronger somehow . . . I don't know
. . . clearer . . . Brak?"
She blanched at the expression on his face. Suddenly, he wasn't
listening to her. He rose to his feet slowly and turned to stare
blankly towards the west, reaching out with his senses, rather than his
eyes. R'shiel struggled to her feet and stood beside him, following his
gaze, seeing nothing but the flattened buildings and the Defenders
coming towards them, demanding to know what had happened.
"What is it? What's wrong?"
"I can feel it too."
"Sanctuary?"
He nodded.
"But why is it so strong? Normally it's just like a vague impression
in the back of my mind that I hardly even notice any more."
"That's because normally, Sanctuary is hidden out of time."
"Then it's back? Why would Korandellan do that?"
"He wouldn't. Not willingly."
He glanced at her grimly and she suddenly realised what he meant.
Korandellan had brought Sanctuary into real time because he was no
longer capable of holding it back. R'shiel stared around her with
horror. She had drawn on the magic of the Harshini with no thought to
the amount that she was consuming.
It was her fault the Harshini were no longer hidden.
"Oh Founders, Brak," she said with quiet desperation. "What
have I
done?"
By mid morning the last of the Kariens, as well as
the civilians who did not want to stay in the Citadel, had filed
through the gates and they were closed against the army outside. The
Defenders had dutifully searched the crowd for Loclon's familiar face,
but they paid no attention to the huge, simple-looking man hauling a
handcart through the gate piled with old blankets, or notice the thin,
sharp-eyed old woman who walked beside him. Nor did they inspect the
cart. The rugs smelled old and the woman openly wore the symbol of
Xaphista on a chain around her neck. Another fanatic leaving and good
riddance to all of them, they decided. The Defenders turned their
attention to the crowd, scanning the faces for Loclon's distinctive
scar.
The huge man with his handcart, the beautiful young boy and the old
woman left the Citadel unmolested.
CHAPTER 46
"What happened at the warehouse district?"
Tarja
asked as soon as R'shiel appeared in the doorway of the First Sister's
office. He was alone with Garet Warner and a young woman that she did
not recognise at first. The woman had long blonde hair and was dressed
in homespun trousers and a rough linen shirt, with a Defender's cloak,
of all things, thrown carelessly back over one shoulder. The fire
burned brightly in the hearth and the room was almost uncomfortably
warm. For a fleeting, gut-wrenching moment, R'shiel remembered this
office, so hot and stuffy, when Joyhinia had ruled here. She shook off
the feeling impatiently. Joyhinia was dead.
"There was a bit of an altercation," she shrugged as she
stepped
into the office with Brak on her heels. The woman with Tarja turned as
she spoke and studied R'shiel curiously.
"Hello, R'shiel. Hello, Brak."
"Mandah!"
"You sound surprised to see me, demon child."
"Don't call me that," she snapped automatically. "What are
you doing
here?"
"What I've been doing since long before I met you, R'shiel. Helping
my people."
Her people, R'shiel knew, were the pagan rebels. "I didn't expect to
see you here. You were supposed to be heading into Hythria with the
Defenders."
"I chose to stay and help Tarja," Mandah told her with a
smile in
Tarja's direction. R'shiel recognised the look and felt an unexpected
spear of jealousy pierce her chest.
"How convenient for you that the new Lord Defender is someone
sympathetic to your cause."
"There's nothing convenient about it, R'shiel," Garet
remarked,
looking up from the map spread out over the desk. "It's one of the
reasons Tarja got the job. What exactly do you mean by an altercation?"
"Someone tried to set fire to the warehouses. I . . .
caused a bit of damage, but the fire is out."
"Did you find Loclon?" Tarja asked.
"No. And I don't think we will. But that's not why I'm here. We have
another problem."
"What now?" Garet asked, folding his arms across his chest.
"The Harshini are in danger."
"The Harshini have been in danger for the past two
centuries."
"This is more than just the threat of discovery, Garet. Sanctuary is
no longer hidden. The Kariens can find them now."
"I'm heartbroken," the commandant told her
unsympathetically,
returning his attention to the map.
Tarja frowned at Garet. He appeared a little more sympathetic. "How
long have they got?"
Brak shrugged. "Before the Karien priests locate Sanctuary? They've
probably pinpointed it already. It will take them some time to get
there, though. A few weeks, maybe." He noticed Garet's
sceptical look
and continued his explanation looking straight at the commandant. "The
reason the Sisterhood could never completely eradicate the Harshini was
because Sanctuary was taken out of time. I won't try explaining how -
you probably wouldn't believe me, anyway. Suffice to say that the
strain of keeping it hidden has finally taken its toll on King
Korandellan. Sanctuary is back in real time and the Kariens will be at
its gates within weeks."
"That would be convenient," Garet remarked. "It might get
them away
from ours."
"But can't the Harshini simply hide Sanctuary again?" Mandah
asked,
with a glare at Garet. She was a pagan and worshipped the Harshini
along with their gods. R'shiel found herself with an unexpected ally.
Brak shook his head. "If Korandellan let it return, then he's
exhausted. Keeping Sanctuary out of time takes a lot less effort than
actually sending it there."
"I can't spare the men to go trekking off into the wilderness, or
wherever Sanctuary is to help them, R'shiel," Tarja told her.
"Even if
we could get past the Kariens."
"Then we have to bring the Harshini here. To the Citadel."
They all turned and looked at her.
"What?" Garet demanded in horror.
"The Harshini can't be killed here. The Citadel won't permit
it."
"And you think we're going to let you bring the Harshini into the
Citadel? Absolutely not!" Garet snapped before anyone could say
a word.
"But you must!" Mandah cried. "The Harshini will be
slaughtered if
you deny them shelter."
"Young woman, every Defender in Medalon has been trained to hunt the
Harshini down and kill them on sight. And you expect us to let them
back into the Citadel?"
"Tarja?" Mandah begged, her green eyes moist. R'shiel
watched her
with interest, and more importantly, Tarja's reaction. He seemed
decidedly uncomfortable. Was Mandah the reason Tarja found it so easy
to deny the geas? She forced the thought from her mind. She had other,
more important things to deal with.
"Even if I agree, what makes you think the Harshini will want to
come?" Tarja asked.
"It's that or die in Sanctuary. They can't willingly take their own
lives and staying at Sanctuary would be tantamount to doing that, if
there was a chance they could return here to safety."
"What about Loclon?"
"He'll keep."
"You were burning with vengeance a couple of hours ago."
"A couple of hours ago I hadn't inadvertently put several hundred
innocent lives in danger."
"You bring the Harshini back in here and we'll be neck deep in pagan
rituals within days," Garet warned.
"We have a common enemy, Garet," Tarja pointed out. "I'm
inclined to
let them come, simply to frustrate the Kariens."
"If you don't let them come, you'll have the blood of the Harshini
on your hands," R'shiel added.
Garet laughed sourly. "Do you know how many Harshini the Defenders
have killed in the last two hundred years, R'shiel? There's plenty of
blood on our hands already. A bit more won't make that much
difference."
"Then it is time to undo some of the damage," Mandah
declared. "You
must let them back, Tarja! If you want the pagans to follow you, you
can do nothing else."
"It didn't take you long to learn the art of political blackmail,
did it?" Garet snapped at Mandah, and then turned to Tarja.
"It's your
decision. You're the Lord Defender now. Just so long as you understand
the trouble you're bringing down on us if you agree."
Tarja nodded, but did not answer. Instead, he turned to Brak. "Where
is Sanctuary, exactly?"
"In the Sanctuary Mountains."
Tarja glared at him.
"It's north-west of Testra," Brak added. "That's about as
specific
as I'm willing to get."
"Then how are you going to get them out of there? I wasn't kidding
when I said I don't have the men to spare, and it's too early in the
spring for the passes to be cleared of snow, in any case. Even if we
didn't have half of Karien camped around our walls, I have a list as
long as my arm of Sisters we need to arrest before they can get
organised against us. I don't know that I can help you, even if I was
inclined to."
"They can fly," R'shiel said. "On dragons."
"Oh, well that should reassure the population," Garet
remarked
sourly. "A few hundred dragons landing in the Citadel loaded with a
race we've spent two centuries convincing them we've
eradicated."
"Tarja, please," R'shiel asked, ignoring Garet's sarcasm.
She needed
him to agree. She needed the Harshini safe. Her conscience would not
permit anything else.
"I don't suppose there is any way you can do this
discreetly?" he
asked.
"You mean try to avoid a few hundred dragons landing in the Citadel
loaded with a race that you've spent two centuries convincing your
people you eradicated?" Brak asked drily.
"That would be a good start."
R'shiel glanced at Brak, who thought for a moment then shook her
head. "Not with the Kariens blocking their path."
"Even if you can get them here in one piece," Garet pointed
out, "chances are they'll be attacked on sight, once our people see
them."
"Then you'd best make sure they're protected," R'shiel
warned. "You
claim you want a different world from the one the Sisterhood left you.
Learning to live with the original inhabitants of Medalon seems like a
good place to start. You never know, Garet, you may even learn
something from them."
"I'm learning where your loyalties lie pretty quickly," he
accused.
"My loyalty is to Medalon."
"You've an interesting way of showing it."
"Enough, Garet," Tarja sighed. "Arguing will get us nowhere.
The
Harshini can return, R'shiel, but only if you can promise me that they
will not try to reclaim the Citadel or cause any more trouble than they
have to."
"Interesting that you suspect the Harshini of trying to reclaim the
Citadel," Brak said with a smile. "Have you considered what
will happen
if the Citadel tries to reclaim the Harshini?"
"What do you mean by that?" Garet asked suspiciously.
"He doesn't mean anything," R'shiel cut in, before Brak
could say
anything further. "Do I have your word on this, Tarja?"
He nodded, but he did not seem very pleased with the decision.
"Then I'll summon Dranymire and the demons."
"Will you send the Divine Ones a message?" Mandah asked. Her
eyes
were alight at the prospect of seeing a real demon and of meeting the
fabled race that she so admired.
"No. I'm going to have to return to Sanctuary myself to convince the
Harshini that any asylum they are offered in the Citadel is
genuine."
"Can't Brak go alone?" Tarja asked.
He shook his head. "I'm not the one who brought this on, nor I am
going to be the one to convince Korandellan and his people that you
have opened up the Citadel to the Harshini. It will have to come from
R'shiel."
She nodded and looked at Brak. "Will you come with me?"
"Don't I always?" he said.
"R'shiel!"
She stopped and turned, waiting for Mandah to catch up with her. The
young rebel closed the door of the First Sister's office and hurried
towards them along the carpeted hall.
"What is it, Mandah?"
"Could I speak with you?"
R'shiel shrugged. "I suppose."
"About Tarja."
"What about him?"
Mandah stopped before her, taking a deep breath, as if preparing
herself mentally for what she planned to say. Brak walked on ahead,
leaving them some semblance of privacy. "You know what happened, don't
you? About the geas?"
"Yes, but how did you know about it?"
"You forget that I'm a pagan, R'shiel. I know more about the gods
and the Harshini than you do."
"That's not difficult," she agreed with a wan smile.
"It's just . . . well, I wanted to know
. . ."
"What? If I still have some claim on him?"
"I didn't mean it like that."
"No, but I've seen the way you look at him. You've done it since we
first met. Remember that night in the stables in Reddingdale, when you
helped us escape the Defenders? You could have found a dozen other ways
to hide Tarja, but you had to throw yourself down on top of him and
start kissing him." R'shiel smiled suddenly. "He's yours if you
want
him, Mandah. He certainly doesn't want me any more."
"R'shiel, I don't want you to think that . . . well, that
I'm benefiting from your misfortune."
"Don't worry, Mandah. Tarja is yours if you can hold him. He's not
mine. He never really was."
Mandah studied her for a moment, as if trying to detect some glimmer
of falsehood in R'shiel's assurance.
"You've changed, R'shiel. There was a time when you would have
denied me out of spite."
"There was a time I would have done a lot of things,
Mandah," she
said. "But I know when I'm beaten. I won't stand in your way."
"Then I have your blessing?"
"I wouldn't go that far."
Mandah impulsively hugged R'shiel and then ran back towards the
First Sister's office. And Tarja. R'shiel watched her disappear inside
and turned to find Brak leaning on the banister at the top of the
stairs, staring at her thoughtfully.
"What?"
"That was very noble of you."
"You shouldn't have been listening."
"Are you kidding? I wouldn't have missed that for the world."
She stalked past him in annoyance. "Are you coming?"
"Of course, demon child," he replied mockingly, as he
followed her
down the stairs. "Although, I have to say, you were wrong about one
thing."
R'shiel stopped and glared over her shoulder at him. "What was I
wrong about?"
"You do not know when you're beaten, R'shiel."
PART 4
DESTINY
CHAPTER 47
Damin's coronation as High Prince was a subdued
affair, for which he was grateful. He had no wish to indulge in the
orgy of excess that normally accompanied such an event. Greenharbour
was still getting over the siege and the battle that had raged through
the city streets. There were thousands of homeless and some foods were
still being rationed. It would have been asking for trouble if he had
sanctioned such indiscriminate waste. Adrina had agreed with him,
although Marla had been rather put out. She had spent her life
imagining the day when her son would finally be crowned High Prince and
was rather annoyed that her grandiose dreams were to be so easily
dismissed.
Kalan had placed the crown on Damin's head with a wink that only he
could see, then placed the High Princess' crown on Adrina's dark hair
with only the faintest hint of reluctance. There had not been a High
Princess in Hythria for more than fifty years and the last one had been
a small, timid girl who had struggled through two pregnancies and then
finally given up on life when she delivered a healthy girl. She had not
lived long enough to learn that the baby had been named Marla. In fact,
since the death of one of her twin boys she had delivered the year
before, she had not paid much attention to anything. Damin glanced at
Marla and wondered what she was thinking as her mother's crown was
placed on his Fardohnyan wife's head. Her expression was unreadable.
Following the coronation, they retired to the banquet hall for a
moderately extravagant feast, at which all the Warlords of Hythria
lined up to pay their respects and renew their allegiance to the House
of Wolfblade.
The four Warlords who had supported him during the civil war
approached the high table one by one, and repeated their oaths without
hesitation. Tejay Lionsclaw was jovial, Rogan Bearbow grave and
respectful. Narvell could barely contain his glee. Only Toren Foxtalon
appeared a little wary, no doubt still thanking the gods that he had
changed sides before it was too late.
Once the oaths were out of the way, Damin stood up and silence fell
over the gathering. The hall was full, crowded with the Hythrun
nobility he could not afford to offend, his new Fardohnyan allies and
the Defenders who had arrived in time to save them all. He cast his
gaze over them, wondering if ever a High Prince had addressed such an
oddly assorted gathering before.
He raised his cup. "To Hythria!"
"Hythria!" the guests responded dutifully.
"It is customary, when a new High Prince takes the throne, to reward
those who deserve it, and to punish those who deserve it also. I think
we can dispense with the latter. Most of the punishments that needed
meting out were taken care of before the coronation."
A smattering of laughter wafted through the hall. Damin had been
ruthlessly efficient in dealing with his enemies. He had no intention
of bringing his child into a court riddled with potential assassins. If
there were any souls left who wished him harm they were keeping very
quiet about it.
"It now falls to me to name the Warlords of the provinces that find
themselves without a ruling lord. The first province I wish to award is
Krakandar, and I gift it to the man who deserves it better than I did.
Step forward Lord Almodavar Krakenshield."
Almodavar had been warned, of course. One did not hand out entire
provinces on a whim and the Convocation already had ratified in secret
every decision he would announce tonight. But Almodavar still looked
stunned. He had worn the same look of blank surprise since Damin had
told him about this three days ago.
The condition for Almodavar's acceptance had been that he take the
name Krakenshield, so that Laran's name might live on. Almodavar had
been his father's closest friend and had not objected to the condition.
No one but he and Almodavar knew of the other condition that Damin had
imposed. It made him smile with immature, vengeful delight -
his only
regret that he would not be there to see the look on Starros' face when
Almodavar finally acknowledged him as his son and informed the head of
the Thieves' Guild that he was now the heir to Krakandar.
Almodavar had guarded Krakandar as if it were his own since before
Damin was born, and if his son could manage an organisation as volatile
as the Thieves' Guild, ruling an entire province should prove easy by
comparison. He had given Almodavar a message for Starros, which his old
captain had promised to deliver when he returned home.
"Tell Starros he did not beat me. I let him win."
"Is that it?" Almodavar had asked curiously.
"He'll know what I mean."
Almodavar stepped forward and swore his oath of allegiance with
pride and then moved to the empty seat on the high table with the other
Warlords. Applause followed him to his seat. Nobody present doubted
either Almodavar or his ability to rule Krakandar. More than a few
mothers eyed him speculatively, aware that he was unmarried. More than
a few young women present saw the look in their mothers' eyes and
cringed - Almodavar might be capable, but he was old.
"The next province I wish to award is Dregian."
The crowd stilled, wondering who would win the province of the man
who had led the coup against the Damin. Many eyes turned on Garina
Eaglespike and her three-year-old son Tav, who had been invited to
attend. Her elder daughter Bayla sat next to Valorian Lionsclaw with a
look of quiet terror in her eyes. If Damin took it into his head to
destroy the Eaglespikes completely, she had only her marriage to
Valorian to protect her, and Tejay was notoriously intolerant of her
daughter-in law. Damin had it in his power to ruin her and there were
many wondering why he had allowed her brother and mother to live.
"I grant Dregian Province to Tav Eaglespike, to be held in trust for
him by Lord Bearbow. Tav is to be fostered with his sister at the court
of Lady Lionsclaw until he comes of age. Lady Eaglespike may continue
to reside in Dregian Province at Lord Bearbow's pleasure. She may see
her son and daughter at Lady Lionsclaw's pleasure."
The decision met with a relieved round of applause. Damin had
avoided future trouble by leaving the province in the hands of the
Eaglespike family, which had held it since time began, but with Tav
raised under Tejay's watchful eye, he would grow up far differently
from the way he would with an embittered mother to poison his mind. Nor
would Dregian suffer until the child came of age. Rogan Bearbow's
province was close enough to Dregian that he could easily administer
both. Garina had accepted the decision with mixed feelings. She had
lost her home and her son, but she would be permitted to keep her life
and her position, such as it was. It was more than she could have hoped
for and more than most people thought she deserved.
"That just leaves Greenharbour," Damin announced as the
applause
dwindled away to nothing. He glanced across the table at Tejay
Lionsclaw. Although she knew what he was about to do, and had even
voted for it in the end, she wasn't particularly happy with the idea
when he first proposed it. There were no heirs to the Falconlance name.
Conin had risen from the ranks and been awarded the province on the
death of the previous Warlord. There were no cousins to placate and no
heirs to object to his decision. Adrina sat beside him, unsuspectingly.
"I grant Greenharbour Province to my brother-in-law, Gaffen of
Fardohnya on the condition that he renounces his Fardohnyan citizenship
and swears his loyalty to Hythria. He must also renounce any claim to
the Fardohnyan throne, and chose a Hythrun name for his House."
Stunned silence met his announcement. Adrina stared up at him in
astonishment, understanding immediately what his declaration meant. By
adopting a Hythrun name and renouncing his Fardohnyan ties, Damin was
removing Gaffen from the line of Fardohnyan succession, even
indirectly. If Hablet followed tradition and had his bastard sons
murdered once he had a legitimate heir, her half-brother would be
spared.
"Thank you," she mouthed silently, a wealth of emotion in
her eyes.
Damin smiled at her briefly then turned back to face the gathering.
They were still staring at him silently. It was Tejay who broke the
tension, leaping to her feet as she banged her tankard on the table.
"Damn it! If I can live with this, the rest of you can!" she
declared. "Here's to Gaffen! None of you would be sitting here if it
wasn't for him and the Defenders who came to our rescue and thank the
gods no more of us got killed or we'd have had to appoint a few
Medalonian Warlords, too!"
Someone laughed. Then someone else started clapping and then the
whole room joined in. Gaffen stepped forward and swore the oath, just
as conscious of its ramifications as his sister.
He took his place beside Tejay, who appeared to have had something
of a change of heart about the big blond Fardohnyan since the
Convocation. She was probably ten years his senior, but Tejay liked big
men and Gaffen was endowed with a great deal of his court'esa
mother's charm when he wanted to be disarming. Damin shook his head
with a smile and resumed his seat.
"Why didn't you tell me?" Adrina asked.
"I wanted to surprise you."
"My father is going to be furious."
"I know," he replied with a grin.
"You're really enjoying this, aren't you?"
"I'm starting to," he admitted. "Provided I can keep my head
on my
shoulders and stop having to go to war every time I turn around, I
think I might actually get to like being High Prince."
"I thought you liked going to war?"
"I like a nice clean fight, Adrina. If I never see another siege as
long as I live, it will be far too soon."
It was too soon, he learnt later that evening,
when Glenanaran strode purposefully through the hall to stand before
the high table, his black eyes filled with concern. The Harshini bowed
before the High Prince and spoke in a voice laden with regret.
"I am sorry to disturb your celebrations, Your Highness, but I have
a message for you from the demon child and I'm afraid it cannot
wait."
Glenanaran said nothing further until they had gathered in the
throne room. Everyone had scrambled to follow when Damin left the
banquet hall, but in the end he had restricted the meeting to include
only the Warlords, the two Defender captains, Denjon and Linst, Adrina,
Marla and Kalan.
"R'shiel is at the Citadel," Glenanaran informed them, when
they
were finally gathered. "At least she was when I spoke to her
demons."
"I thought she was in Fardohnya?" Tejay remarked. "She
certainly
gets around, this demon child."
"What makes you think she's not there now?" Adrina asked.
"King Korandellan has collapsed. Sanctuary is back in real time. She
may have gone there to render what aid she can."
Damin glanced around at the others, certain his own face was just as
concerned as the other Warlords were.
"What's the situation at the Citadel?" Denjon demanded
impatiently.
"The Defenders have taken back the Citadel, Captain, and are holding
the Karien dukes and a number of priests as hostages, but the Karien
host still surrounds the city. I believe you call such a situation a
. . . stand-off?" Glenanaran turned to Damin then,
his
expression grave. "The demon child asks that you gather up the
Defenders and whatever Hythrun you can muster and come to their aid. I
have already dispatched Joranara to Fardohnya to request King Hablet's
aid."
"You think he'll come?" Tejay scoffed sceptically.
"He'll come," Gaffen assured her. "When he heard what
happened to
Tristan and his Guard, he was ready to attack Karien the next
day."
"How many men do the Kariens have surrounding the Citadel?" Another
siege, Damin thought. Damn, how I hate siege warfare!
"At least a hundred thousand, I'm led to believe."
The High Prince swore under his breath then looked around at his
Warlords. "Counting the Fardohnyans, how many can we put in the
field?"
"Fifty thousand, perhaps, maybe sixty, if Hablet is
serious," Rogan
replied. "But it will take months. The logistics of moving such a force
are unthinkable."
"How long can the Citadel hold out, Divine One?"
Glenanaran shrugged. "The demon child did not say, Your Highness.
But she did say that the gods have agreed to expedite your
journey."
"What does that mean?" The question came from Linst, the
other
Defender. He looked singularly unimpressed by the assurance.
"It means that if Hablet sails up the Glass River, he'll have fair
winds all the way," Glenanaran explained. "Sickness will not
plague
you, nor lack of fresh water. The bounty of the land will be at your
disposal."
"That doesn't help us much," Toren Foxtalon complained. "The
gods
can't make the roads any shorter, or make our troops eat any
less."
"Pity we can't sail to Medalon, too," Almodavar remarked.
"I'm not sure the gods had rearranging the geography of the entire
continent in mind when they offered their help, my Lord," the
Harshini
told him with a thin smile.
"Then how do we get there?" Gaffen asked. "I'll take every
man I
have, but it won't do them much good if we can't get to the Citadel
before next winter."
Damin studied Glenanaran's serene expression for a moment then
turned to Gaffen. "We'll get there the same way I got to Medalon the
last time."
The Harshini smiled. "I see you understand, Your Highness."
"Well, I'm glad he understands, because I certainly don't,"
Tejay
grumbled.
"When his Highness crossed into Medalon to aid the demon child at
Lord Brakandaran's request, we called on the power of the gods to
expedite our journey," the Harshini explained unhelpfully.
"That tells me nothing."
"Don't worry about it, Tejay. Just get your Raiders
mustered."
"And what happens to my borders while we go chasing off to
Medalon?"
"I will send Farandelan to Sunrise Province and she will see that
your Fardohnyan neighbours do not try to take advantage of your
absence."
"I appreciate the offer, Divine One, but Farandelan cannot
kill."
"There is no need to kill, my Lady. Her presence will be enough. She
will not permit any killing at all. That is how it was in the past and
how it will be again."
"And assuming we manage to get to the Citadel before it
falls?"
Denjon asked. "What then? We're still outnumbered two to one."
"The demon child was of the opinion that your numbers would be
sufficient, Captain. I can tell you no more than that."
"And we all know what a tactical genius R'shiel is," Linst
muttered
sarcastically.
"Captain, I cannot ease your mind or tell you what I do not know.
All I can do is ask that you heed the demon child's request and gather
your forces as quickly as possible. Other Harshini will join you to aid
your journey north."
"Other Harshini?" Kalan asked.
"With Sanctuary no longer hidden, our people will be safer with your
forces than they will be at home. We will do what we can to help, High
Arrion."
"I guess that settles it then," Damin said, looking around
at the
others. "We're going to Medalon."
CHAPTER 48
Mikel helped Adrina pack for the journey to
Medalon, quite certain that he would have to unpack it all again once
Damin Wolfblade discovered she was planning to join him. Her condition
was plainly visible now, although it did not seem to bother her. The
fatigue that had plagued her previously had passed. Her skin glowed
with health; her emerald eyes were bright as jewels and her dark hair
shone with lustre. Having spent much of the early months of her
pregnancy in the saddle, she carried little extra weight other than the
child. She was full of restless energy and had been, for the past few
weeks at least, quite easy to get along with. Mikel had even overheard
Princess Marla complain that a woman had no right to look so damned
healthy in her condition.
Mikel had fallen back into the role as her page after R'shiel
vanished. With Tamylan gone, Adrina had worked her way through a score
of slaves since then, none of them meeting her exacting standards. The
latest had fled in tears this morning when Adrina accused her of being
a fumble-fingered half-wit. Mikel didn't blame his Princess, and had
his suspicions about the slaves sent to wait on her. Marla hand-picked
them and he suspected that the Dowager Princess was not going out of
her way to be accommodating. For some reason, perhaps because of their
previous history, Adrina found Mikel to her liking. Although his
earlier innocent worship of her had been replaced by something a little
more realistic, he still admired her and was happy to be of service.
"Is it cold in Medalon, Mikel?"
He dumped the pile of clothes he was carrying on the bed and looked
at the Princess. She was holding a fur cloak in front of her, studying
her reflection in the mirror.
"I don't know, Your Highness. It will be nearly summer by the time
we get there."
"Maybe just the woollen cloak then. I want to travel light."
Mikel cast an eye over the mammoth pile that Adrina had already
labelled her "essentials" and frowned. "Your Highness, I'm not
sure
that Prince Damin will consider that 'travelling
light'."
She looked at the heap of clothes and sighed. "You're right. I'm
lost without Tam. I wish she were here."
He didn't know how to answer that. He had liked the Fardohnyan
slave, but was not so attached to her that he could empathise with
Adrina's grief. His earlier guilt about her fate had faded with the
passage of time. He was saved from answering by the appearance of Damin
Wolfblade, who stopped at the door and looked around suspiciously.
"What's all this?"
"I'm trying to decide what to pack," Adrina told him. "I
wish Tam
were here. She was so much better than me at this sort of
thing."
"What happened to the slave Marla sent you?"
"She was an idiot. I sent her away."
Damin stepped into the room and examined the chaos scattered around
the room more closely. "Why are you packing?"
"For Medalon, of course."
He stared at her as if his hearing had suddenly failed him. "You're what?"
"Packing for Medalon. Do you think I'll need the fur?"
"No, Adrina, you won't need the fur. Or anything else, for that
matter. You're staying here."
She looked at him in astonishment. "Of course I'm not staying here!
I'm coming with you."
"In case it's escaped your notice, Adrina, you're having a
baby."
"I'm only pregnant, Damin, not terminally ill."
"I'm not going to risk you or our child by taking you into a
battle."
"Oh for the gods' sake, Damin. If I was a peasant I'd be working in
the fields until I dropped the brat and then I'd be back in the fields
the very next day."
"That brat, as you so eloquently put it, is the heir to
Hythria."
"Then travel will be good for him. It will broaden his
horizons."
"Neither are you a peasant," he added, not at all impressed
by her
attempt at levity. "I forbid you to come."
"I don't recall asking your permission."
"That's because you knew damned well I wouldn't give it."
Adrina threw down the fur cloak and put her hands on her hips. Mikel
shrank back a little, having seen Adrina in a similar mood before. Her
eyes glittered dangerously.
"Damin, I think we need to settle something. I am your wife. I am
not your court'esa, or your lackey, your slave or your
possession. I am going with you. If you refuse me, I'll simply find my
own way there, but one way or another, I will go to
Medalon."
Then she smiled suddenly, as if making her declaration had settled the
matter. "Besides, you need me."
"Why do I need you?"
"Because my father will be leading the Fardohnyans and you really
don't want to confront him without me there to calm him down."
"I can manage."
"Don't be too sure about that," she warned. "You don't know
my
father."
Damin took a deep breath. He did that a lot when he argued with
Adrina, Mikel noticed. "Adrina, even if I conceded the point about your
father, the fact is, the Hythrun heir must be born on Hythrun soil. If
you come to Medalon with me, you will deliver the child before we can
get back."
"Is that your only objection? Mikel, come here!"
Damin turned to stare at him as he edged his way around the High
Prince to reach his mistress. Although Damin rarely paid him any
attention, he was still more than a little afraid of the Hythrun Prince.
"Your Highness?"
"I have a job for you, Mikel." She marched over to the bed
and
pulled one of the pillows from it, shaking it out of its silk cover.
She handed Mikel the pillowcase. "Take this out to the gardeners and
ask them to fill it."
"With what, Your Highness?"
"With Hythrun soil, of course." She looked up at Damin and
smiled
triumphantly. "If it's Hythrun soil you want so badly, Damin, then I'll
simply take some with me. Off you go, Mikel! There's a good
lad."
Damin shook his head. "There's no way I can talk you out of this, I
suppose?"
"No."
They stared at each other, debating who was likely to give in first.
Damin Wolfblade finally threw up his hands in defeat. He wasn't happy
with the idea, but he seemed to admire her spirit. Cratyn would have
hit her, Mikel thought with a twinge of guilt.
"Go on then, Mikel. Get us a sack of Hythrun soil. And guard it with
your life, boy. We may need it in a hurry."
Although the fighting had not reached this far,
Gaffen's Fardohnyans had used the palace gardens as a shortcut from the
dock below the palace and trampled everything in sight in their haste
to join in the fray. The statuary was pushed over, the shrubbery bent
and shredded, and even the large fountain in the centre was broken, its
water dragons cavorting in a dry pool with snapped-off noses and
missing fins. Mikel wandered through the vast gardens for quite a
while, looking for someone to fill the pillowcase with soil. The
gardeners were nowhere in sight.
"A sad sight indeed, don't you think?"
Mikel glanced across the broken fountain and discovered the old man
sitting on the edge of the pool. He had not seen him for a while, but
he seemed to pop up in the strangest places. Although he looked a lot
like the old man he had seen in the stables in Roan Vale, Mikel had
convinced himself it could not be the same person. This man roamed the
Hythrun palace at will. He was, so Mikel figured, a retired slave or
old family retainer, who had been given the freedom of the palace in
return for a lifetime of service. Mikel often bumped into him in quiet,
out-of-the-way places, and had come to think of the old man as a
friend, although if pressed, Mikel wasn't sure he even knew the old
man's name.
"They'll fix it eventually, I suppose. They're too busy rebuilding
the houses to think about fountains."
"Ah, yes, the ever practical Hythrun," the old man chuckled.
"They
were always like that. One of the reasons I could never get much sense
out of them."
"What do you mean?"
"Nothing. So, are you off to Medalon with the others, then?"
He nodded and walked around the fountain to sit beside the old man.
"I'm going with Princess Adrina. I'm her page now."
"That's wonderful!" the old man cried, patting Mikel on the
back. "You must be very proud. Imagine the things you will do, the
places you
will see, the important people you will meet."
"I suppose. I'll probably meet the King of Fardohnya. He's going to
Medalon, too."
"Is he now? Won't he have trouble getting there in time?"
"The Harshini Glenanaran said the gods are going to help."
The old man's expression grew fierce for a moment, as if some
uncontrollable anger had suddenly consumed him. Then it was gone; so
quickly that Mikel thought he had imagined it.
"Well, he should be fine then. And what of you, my young friend?
Will you see the demon child again, do you think?"
"I suppose so."
"That is excellent news. I shall have to give you a message for
her."
"Do you know the demon child?"
"Very well," the old man said. "Very well, indeed."
Mikel looked at him curiously, not sure what it was about the old
man's tone that unsettled him. "What did you want me to tell
her?"
"Ah, I shall have to compose my message most carefully. I will see
you before you leave. I'll let you know then. Now, what are you
doing strolling the gardens of the palace clutching an empty
pillowcase, my lad?"
He glanced down at the pillowcase and shrugged. "Princess Adrina
wants me to fill it with Hythrun soil in case she has her baby in
Medalon."
The old man laughed. "A wise precaution. Well, don't let me keep you
from such an important task, Mikel. We'll meet again, never fear. And I
will give you my message for the demon child."
Mikel stood up and turned to say goodbye, but the old man was
already gone.
CHAPTER 49
Sanctuary glittered in the dawn as R'shiel and Brak
flew over the mountains, sitting proudly atop the ranges where for so
long it had remained hidden. Brak watched it draw closer through eyes
that watered from the cold wind, feeling as if he had stepped back in
time, rather than Sanctuary coming into real time to meet him.
It was almost two hundred years since he had ridden on the back of a
dragon towards Sanctuary. The last time it had been to warn Lorandranek
that he must hide the settlement or risk the Sisterhood finding it - a
mission the Sisters of the Blade had pursued for decades after the
First Purge. Lorandranek had conceived the idea of hiding the
settlement out of time, a burden that he found trying, but not
unbearable. In those days he had shared the task with his nephew, the
young Korandellan, and between the two of them, Sanctuary had been able
to appear and disappear at will, safe from the Sisterhood, the Karien
priests and the odd marauder who stumbled into the mountains trying to
escape justice.
But since the madness and death of Lorandranek and the arrival of
the demon child, that luxury had been denied them. Sanctuary had stayed
hidden as Xaphista grew stronger and more desperate to find his
nemesis. Korandellan had carried the burden alone, although why
Shananara had not taken up some of the load concerned Brak. She was
just as much a te Ortyn as the King, and just as capable
as her brother
of wielding the power such a feat required. He planned to ask that of
the Princess when he saw her. His relationship with Shananara te Ortyn
was such that he had no qualms about demanding an answer. They had been
lovers once, in a distant past.
Brak glanced across at R'shiel, smiling at her awe-struck
expression. She had never seen Sanctuary like this before and it
obviously left her breathless. Or perhaps it was the altitude, he
thought cynically. R'shiel wasn't impressed by much these days.
Without any prompting from Brak, his dragon began to bank to the
right, circling over the slender towers of the Harshini settlement with
Dranymire and R'shiel close behind. With surprising gentleness, the
dragons beat their massive wings and lowered themselves down onto a
high terrace circled by a balustrade that appeared dipped in silver in
the soft dawn light. A solitary figure waited for them, dressed in the
customary long white robes of the Harshini.
Brak jumped down from the dragon and squinted into the rising sun as
the figure approached. As soon as he was clear of the dragon, the meld
crumbled and the demons spilled over the terrace, delighted to be home.
"You're a bit late, Brakandaran," Shananara said,
sidestepping
demons as she approached. "And you've brought the demon child."
"Hello, Shananara."
The Princess glanced over Brak then turned her attention to R'shiel.
"You're still alive, I see. Amazing."
"We felt Sanctuary return."
"That's hardly surprising. Every god, every sorcerer, every priest
and every village charlatan on the continent probably felt it. You'd
better come with me. Korandellan wants to see you." She turned
on her
heel and walked towards the tall doors that opened off the tower,
expecting them to follow.
"What's the matter with her?" R'shiel asked as they followed.
"She's angry."
"I thought the Harshini couldn't get angry?"
"They can't."
"She's doing a pretty good imitation."
Brak shook his head and said nothing. He understood what Shananara
was going through. Denied the human outlet of anger or fear or
recrimination, she was boiling inside with emotions she did not have
the luxury of being able to voice.
They followed the Princess through the halls of Sanctuary, past a
subdued and cautious population, to the King's chambers. When they
finally reached the broad white doors, Shananara waved them open then
looked at R'shiel.
"You must speak with the King. Alone."
R'shiel glanced at Brak, as if she wanted him to confirm the
instruction. He nodded imperceptibly, and he watched as she took a deep
breath, visibly bracing herself for what she would find within. He
watched her walk through the tall doors, watched Shananara wave them
shut behind her.
"What happened?" he asked, as soon as the doors were
completely
closed.
"Not here," the Princess replied, with a glance around the
empty
hall. "Let's go to my chambers."
He did not try to hide his surprise. This was Sanctuary. There were
no secrets here. But he followed her wordlessly down to the next level
where she lived. Stepping across the threshold, Brak decided that her
rooms had not changed at all since he had last been here. They were
still large and airy and filled with the clutter of her many forays
into the human world. She closed the doors by hand and stood leaning
against them, watching him as he looked around the room.
"Why did you bring her here?"
"R'shiel? She has a plan to save the Harshini," he said,
picking a
small statue from the table near the hearth. It was a small horse,
exquisitely carved in jade. It looked Fardohnyan.
"If it's anything like her plan to deal with Xaphista, we'd be
better off without her help."
Brak replaced the tiny statue and smiled at her. "Cynicism does not
become you, Shananara. Actually, you sound ridiculous. You need a bit
of human blood in you to make it really effective."
"The demon child should thank the gods I don't have any
human blood. If you could see Korandellan . . ."
"How bad is he?"
"Bad enough." She moved away from the door and walked to the
tall
open window. The rising sun touched her dark red hair with flecks of
gold and lined her perfect Harshini features in crimson. She crossed
her arms, as if she was cold, although the temperature in Sanctuary was
constant and always pleasant. "He's dying, Brak."
"How . . . ?" he asked, too stunned to ask more.
"How do you think? The demon child draws on our power like it has no
end. She threatens, she cajoles, she coerces, and she contemplates
violence with every breath she takes. Korandellan has been linked to
the power without a break since R'shiel was born, and may the gods help
me, I taught her to tap into it. Do you know what it's done to him? Can
you imagine what it must have been like for him to try to hold
Sanctuary out of time while the demon child is on the loose, throwing
her anger around without a care for anything or anybody? It has
destroyed him."
"Can't Cheltaran help him?"
"It's the power of the gods that has hurt him, Brak. More of it will
simply make him worse."
"But Cheltaran has helped others in the past who've drawn too much.
He did it not so long ago in Greenharbour."
"Glenanaran and the others drew too much of one strand of the power.
Cheltaran could heal them because he was using a part of it they had
not touched. Korandellan has been drawing on all of it. If the gods
intervened, any one of them could kill him."
"Then why didn't you help? You could have taken some of the load off
him."
"You think I didn't try? I've begged him, Brak, time and again. But
he believed R'shiel would prevail and that she would do it before he
faltered. An idle wish, as it turns out."
"He's not dead yet, Shananara, and the Harshini are still safe. At
least until Xaphista's minions can find a way into the mountains. There
is time yet."
"Time for what, Brak? For Korandellan to die? And you know what will
happen if he dies, don't you? R'shiel is Lorandranek's daughter. She is
the rightful heir."
Brak stared at the Princess, aghast at the mere suggestion. "You're
not seriously considering letting R'shiel take the throne? That's
insane! Doesn't Korandellan have a child?"
"There are no children, Brak."
"Then it must be you."
"I cannot step forward unless R'shiel refuses the crown."
"Then I'll make damned sure she does refuse it," he
promised. The
idea of R'shiel ruling the gentle Harshini was too bizarre, too
horrible to contemplate.
Shananara smiled at him fondly. "I believe you would, Brakandaran.
But it is not my decision, or yours. It is between Korandellan and the
demon child."
"She won't do it."
"Perhaps. But the crown is hers for the taking should she ask for
it."
"She won't ask for it. R'shiel is driven by anger, not power for its
own sake."
"Your opinion of her has improved somewhat, I notice."
"She's learning."
"Yes, but what exactly have you been teaching her?"
He shrugged. "Only what I have to. But she's a quick study. She sees
a thing once and remembers it."
Shananara nodded. "Her tutors here said much the same thing.
Unfortunately, she lacks wisdom and wisdom is something gained through
experience, not learnt by rote, no matter how well meaning the
teacher."
R'shiel was gone for hours, leaving Brak little
choice but to impatiently pace Shananara's chambers, waiting for news.
Samaranan came to visit for a while, delighted to see her half-human
sibling, but even his sister's smiling presence had a fragile edge to
it. They spoke of inconsequential things, both of them avoiding the
real reason Brak was here. The Harshini were averse to violence, but
they were not blind to the consequences of Korandellan's collapse. They
knew the demon child had returned and that Xaphista was as strong as
ever. Their future was bleak and for a race unable to imagine such
desolation, it was a trying time indeed.
Eventually, Dranymire materialised in the apartment, startling Brak
with his sudden appearance.
"Lord Brakandaran. Your Highness. The King wishes to see you
both."
They hurried upstairs to Korandellan's chambers and found the doors
open and waiting for them. Brak entered the room hesitantly, afraid of
what he would find. R'shiel was waiting for them by the door to
Korandellan's bedroom. She looked pale and rather chastened. Without a
word she stood back to let them enter, and then followed them inside,
closing the door behind her.
Brak was shocked by the King's appearance. Korandellan lay on the
bed, his golden skin sallow and almost as pale as the sheets beneath
him. He was as thin as a man who had not eaten for a month and his once
bright eyes were dull and lifeless.
"Thank you, Brakandaran, for bringing the demon child home."
His
voice, once so vibrant and resonant, was barely more than a hoarse
whisper.
"It was her idea, Your Majesty. I merely showed her the way."
The King smiled weakly. "It is good that you did . . .
Shananara?"
"I'm here, Koran," the Princess said, moving to her
brother's side.
Brak stepped back to let her pass. R'shiel had not moved from the door.
"R'shiel has come to lead our people home."
"We are home, brother."
"No. Sanctuary has been our prison these last two hundred years. The
Citadel is our true home."
"The Citadel?" Shananara's eyes flew to R'shiel in
astonishment, then she looked back at the King. "You don't mean you
want us to return to the Citadel?"
"We cannot be harmed there. The Citadel will protect us."
"But what of the Sisterhood and their Defender henchmen?"
"There is no more Sisterhood," R'shiel said from the door.
"The
Defenders are in charge. Tarja is the new Lord Defender. I have his
word that the Harshini may return unmolested."
Shananara glanced at her in disbelief then sat down beside
Korandellan on the bed, taking his clammy hand in hers. "Don't worry
about it now, Koran. We can discuss this when you've recovered."
"I'll not recover, Shanan. You know that as well as I do. Take our
people home. I charge you with their welfare." Korandellan
closed his
eyes, as if the effort of so much conversation had exhausted him.
"Are you mad?" she asked R'shiel, softly. "How can you come
here and
offer him such false hope?"
"It's not a false hope, Shananara. The Harshini may safely return to
the Citadel."
She turned to Brak. "Is this true?"
He nodded. "I told you she had a plan."
"You might have warned me what it was!"
The King's eyes opened again and he smiled at his sister. "You were
always the practical one, Shanan. Do this thing for me. Our people need
you."
"They don't need me, Koran. The demon child will be their Queen once
you are gone."
"I've already told Korandellan I don't want the job,"
R'shiel said.
"You see, sister, the demon child is wiser than you think."
Korandellan smiled wanly and held out his hand to R'shiel. She crossed
the room and took it in hers. Brak was astonished to see that her eyes
were filled with tears. "Do not regret what you have done, demon child.
Think only on the good you will do in the future. You have what you
need to defeat Xaphista, so remember what I have told you about the
Seeing Stones. Do what you are destined for and be at peace with
yourself."
R'shiel nodded wordlessly then looked across at Brak. The King
looked at him too, his dull eyes filled with forgiveness. "I give you
the same advice, Brakandaran. Do not regret what you have done.
Everything is as it should be. You have more than made amends for your
mistakes. Face Death secure in that knowledge that your sacrifice was
not in vain."
"I will."
"And you, Shananara. You are the last of the te Ortyn.
It is up to
you to see that we continue. Once you have returned to the Citadel, you
should speak with Glenanaran. It is time you two had a child."
Shananara smiled fondly at her brother. "If I wanted a child, what
makes you think I would pick Glenanaran?"
"I know you too well, my dear."
"That you do, brother. That you do."
Brak looked up suddenly, as he felt a presence in the room. Although
he could see nothing yet, he knew who it was. With a sharp glance at
R'shiel, he waved her away from the bed. She could feel it too, but did
not recognise it. Shananara leaned over and kissed Korandellan on the
forehead, and then stepped back.
"What . . . ?" R'shiel began to ask, but Shananara
glared
at her so fiercely that she fell silent.
Death materialised slowly at the foot of the King's bed. He had
chosen the benign aspect of the Harshini to welcome the King into his
realm, although his robes were translucent and his black eyes hollow
orbs, rather than the bright eyes of the Harshini. Korandellan smiled
when he saw him, unafraid.
"You will sup with me this night, Your Majesty." Death's
lips did
not move, but each of them could hear him, as if his voice spoke
directly to their souls.
"You do me a great honour, my Lord, to escort me personally."
"You do me the honour, sire. It is not often I am able to
welcome one of your people into my home." Death turned then and
stared
at R'shiel, who took a step back from him in fear. "There is no need to
be anxious, demon child. You and I will not meet again for quite some
time." R'shiel did not answer him. She appeared frozen in
shock. Death
swivelled his head to stare at Brak. "But you and I will meet,
Brakandaran, and soon, I suspect. Our bargain is almost
fulfilled."
"Well, don't get too excited," Brak warned disrespectfully.
"It's
not done with yet."
"I will be waiting, Brakandaran."
"I never doubted that for a moment, my Lord."
The spectre turned his attention back to Korandellan. "Are you
ready, Your Majesty?"
"I am ready."
Death raised his arm and pointed at Korandellan. As he did so, the
King appeared to change. He began to fill out and his colour returned.
His aura glowed with strength, pure and unmarked by fear or pain. This
was Korandellan in his prime. His eyes brightened and he assumed such
an aura of wellbeing that Brak expected him to leap off the bed.
Instead, he rose slowly until he was standing, his weight making no
impression on the down-filled mattress.
Then with a smile of serene happiness Korandellan walked into the
arms of Death and they both disappeared from the room.
CHAPTER 50
"I don't understand."
"That's not unusual for you." Brak smiled at R'shiel's scowl.
She waved her arm to indicate the gathered Harshini who were busily
preparing to depart. Demon-melded dragons could be seen on every
terrace, although some apparently preferred to travel by large and
improbable birds who beat their vast wings slowly, as if warming them
up for flight, and hissed impatiently at the dragons. The dragons
varied in size and colouring. Some were massive, like Dranymire and his
brethren; others more delicate, their metallic scales touched with fire
as the sun set over the mountains.
"Why are they so damned happy?"
The whole atmosphere in Sanctuary had changed since Korandellan's
death and Shananara's announcement that they were to return to the
Citadel. The fragile cheerfulness that had permeated the fortress had
been replaced by a sense of optimistic anticipation. The Harshini
preparing to leave were so buoyant, R'shiel was surprised they didn't
whistle while they worked. Some of them were heading for the Citadel;
others for Fardohnya and Hythria. Shananara had also called for
volunteers to fly to the aid of the relieving army that was heading for
Medalon.
"They're going home."
"To the Citadel? I didn't realise it meant so much to them."
"The Citadel is part of the Harshini, R'shiel. It's been very trying
on them being away from it for so long."
"Don't they realise what's waiting for them there? The Defenders
. . . the Kariens . . ."
"Of course they do. But you've assured them they'll be safe and they
trust Tarja to keep his word."
She noticed his smile and narrowed her eyes suspiciously. "Why are
you smiling like that?"
"You remember what I said about the Citadel reclaiming the
Harshini?"
"Yes."
He laughed softly. "I can't wait to see what happens when they
arrive."
"Is this another one of those vital details you neglected to
mention?"
"The Citadel has been hibernating for two hundred years, R'shiel.
He's liable to wake up when the Harshini come home."
"What do you mean?"
"I'm not certain myself," he told her with a grin. "But it's
bound
to be interesting."
Annoyed with Brak's smirking, R'shiel turned her attention back to
the departing Harshini. They were sitting on the balustrade of the same
terrace they had landed on, watching the demons melding. Dranymire and
a dozen other prime demons were fighting for space on the crowded
terrace, trying to pull their brethren into their melds. Occasional
squabbles broke out among the younger demons, but they were put down
swiftly and sharply by the older ones. They reminded R'shiel of unruly
children.
"Look at them!" she scoffed. "Their King just died and
they're being
kicked out of their homes. You'd think they'd spare a thought for poor
Korandellan, at least."
"Grief is a human emotion. Besides, the Harshini are delighted.
Korandellan didn't die. Death came for him personally."
"Oh? You mean there's a difference?"
"Of course there's a difference. Death took Korandellan body and
soul. That's a rare honour."
"He's still dead, Brak."
"Yes, but you saw him before he vanished. Death restored him. And
there's always the chance that he'll come back."
"What?" she said, turning to him, her eyes wide.
"It's happened before."
"When?" she demanded sceptically.
"Well, it's a theoretical possibility." He smiled at her
doubtful
expression. "Put it this way: if you die, and Death only takes your
soul, then that's the end. You're gone. It's the reason your people
cremate their dead, did you know that? Pagans believe in burial, so
that Death can still claim the body if he has a mind to."
"But if you burn the body, then there's no hope of
resurrection?"
she asked, nodding in understanding. She had never wondered why
Medalonians practised cremation, or really cared why the pagans
preferred to be buried, but it made sense now she knew the reason.
"That's right. If your soul ever comes back, it'll have to be in
another body. But if Death takes your soul and your body, then
he can send you back again, if the mood takes him."
"And does it?"
"Not often. He doesn't like to disturb the natural balance of
things. He's a real stickler for the rules."
"He seemed to know you pretty well."
"We've had dealings in the past," Brak said abruptly. She
could tell
he did not want to elaborate.
"What did he mean about -"
"Here comes our new Queen," Brak cut in, before R'shiel
could frame
the question she was certain he did not wish to answer. There was an
inexplicable edge in his voice. "We'd best say goodbye."
Shananara approached them, dressed in dragon-rider's leathers, her
long-legged stride and easy grace marking her as Harshini, even more
than her totally black eyes. She smiled as she neared them, then
glanced over her shoulder to check on Dranymire and the demon-meld
before turning to R'shiel.
"As soon as we have reached the Citadel, I will send Dranymire and
Elanymire back for you both. Do you know what to do?"
R'shiel nodded. Although the Harshini were abandoning Sanctuary,
they had no intention of leaving it empty to be pawed over by the
Kariens and defiled in the same way the Citadel had been defiled by its
new tenants. Shananara had shown R'shiel how to remove it from time,
but on this occasion there would be nobody inside to suffer from it.
The fortress would be completely empty of life. Every animal had fled.
Every Harshini was preparing to leave. Even the insects had been
advised to move out. Once the Harshini were gone, she would send
Sanctuary so far out of time that only she or Shananara would have any
hope of retrieving it.
"Then let the Kariens come. There will be nothing here for them to
find."
"I hope I do it right," R'shiel said, suffering a momentary
pang of
uncertainty.
"You will," Shananara assured her. "Korandellan was right
about you,
you know. You are not nearly as unreliable as I first thought."
"Thank you . . . I think."
"Things are as they should be, R'shiel."
"Even though Korandellan is dead?"
"My brother was honoured by Death. There is no greater reward for a
lifetime of service. Now, I must bid you farewell. I will try to ensure
that our return does not wreak too much havoc on the residents of the
Citadel."
Shananara and Brak exchanged a look that was full of amusement.
"You both keep saying that! What are you talking about?"
"You'll see," Shananara replied with a cryptic smile. "Will
I see
you again, Brak?"
"Yes. It's not over yet."
"Then there is no need for goodbyes. I will see you both at the
Citadel. Hopefully, Tarja will be a little more reasonable than the
last time we met."
"He wasn't unreasonable, Shanan. He was under a geas."
Suddenly serious, Shananara nodded. "I know. And now the geas is
gone. It's strange, but when we sat around that fire beside the Glass
River trying to coax the demon child home, I never imagined that a
couple of years later I would be returning to the Citadel as the
Harshini Queen and Tarja would be the Lord Defender. Even destiny can
play tricks on us at times."
"Go easy on him, Shanan," Brak advised. "He's had a rough
time
lately."
"Never fear, Brak. I know how to handle humans, even testy
ones."
She turned to R'shiel and hugged her briefly. "As for you, little
cousin. Do this thing for us then return to the Citadel to fulfil your
destiny. I will help you locate the Seeing Stone."
"Why not use the Stone here?" Brak asked. "Now that
Sanctuary is
back in real time, does it matter?"
"Korandellan told me that only the Seeing Stone of the Citadel is
capable of what I need. I must find that or find another way, I'm
afraid."
"We'll find it, R'shiel. The High Arrion was right. No human could
have destroyed it. If it's still in the Citadel, we'll locate it
eventually."
Shananara then turned on her heel and walked back towards her
dragon. She leapt aboard with practised ease and the dragon lifted into
the sky with a powerful beat of his massive wings. Her departure was
the signal for the other Harshini to take off, and within minutes the
sky was dotted with dragons climbing towards the red-tinted clouds.
There were too many for R'shiel to count. She watched them dwindle into
the distance until they were little more than specks in the sky. The
sight both cheered and saddened her. The Harshini were abroad once
more, but they were facing a world they had been removed from for
centuries and it was radically different from the one they had left
behind.
"Will they be all right, Brak?"
"Yes. Shananara is right, you know. Things are as they
should be."
She turned to look at him, puzzled by the sadness in his voice.
"Korandellan was a good King, but he never stepped foot outside
Sanctuary. Shanan has been walking among humans since she was a child.
She'll rule the Harshini much more effectively now that they have gone
back among humans than Koran ever could."
"But you still grieve for Korandellan, don't you?"
He nodded. "He was a good friend."
"How many good friends have you lost for me, Brak?"
"More than you will ever know."
She had no answer for that and darkness was falling rapidly over the
deserted fortress.
Brak jumped down from the balustrade and held out his hand to her.
"We'd better make sure this place is empty before you send it
away."
She took his hand and jumped down beside him and together they
walked back into the silent, empty halls.
CHAPTER 51
The last room they checked was Brak's. R'shiel
looked about in fascination, seeing a side of him she never suspected.
There was an easel by the window with a half-completed landscape
resting on it. Leaning against the wall near the bed was a beautifully
crafted lyre, and beside it a thick pile of music. She picked the lyre
up and strummed the strings thoughtfully. Brak looked up from papers he
was sorting through on the table on the other side of the room and
frowned.
"Please don't touch anything, R'shiel."
"I didn't know you played."
"I used to."
"I didn't know you painted, either."
"There's a lot you don't know about me."
She replaced the lyre carefully and sat on the bed. "Why did Death
say he would meet you again soon?"
Brak shrugged. "He's a sociable sort of fellow."
"I noticed," she said with a smile, hoping to lighten his
mood. He
had grown ever more morose the longer they spent in Sanctuary's
echoing, silent rooms. "Korandellan told you to face Death secure in
that knowledge that your sacrifice is not in vain. Shananara asked if
she would see you again, too. Why would she say that?"
"Ask her."
Brak was shifting papers across the table without purpose. She had
angered him and couldn't understand why.
"Did I say something wrong?"
"No . . . look, why don't you go and see if there's any
other rooms on this level we haven't checked? I'll meet you on the
terrace when I'm finished here."
She rose to her feet, a little hurt that he was dismissing her so
coldly. "Can't I help?"
"No."
"Brak . . ."
"Out!"
R'shiel jumped at the anger in his voice. "What did I do to deserve
that?"
"Right now, you're breathing!" he retorted. "That's
enough."
"What's gotten into you, Brak? This isn't my fault, you
know."
"Actually, R'shiel, it is your fault. Now, if you don't mind, I'd
like to be alone while I sort out my things. I'm not likely to get
another chance."
"Fine!" she declared. "Take all the time you want. I'm not
going
anywhere!"
R'shiel stormed from the room and ran down the long hall, her
footsteps loud and discordant in the dark, silent halls. She stopped
when she reached the balcony overlooking the valley, angry and hurt by
Brak's sudden rejection. The waterfall tinkled musically down the rock
face on the other side of the valley, although the perpetual rainbow
had been swallowed by the half-light that passed for night here. The
sound soothed her. She had done nothing to deserve Brak's anger that
she could recall. No more than usual, at any rate.
His sudden intolerance mystified her. She tried to recall everything
that had happened since they arrived at Sanctuary. Nothing sprang to
mind that would make him turn on her like that. Except when she
questioned him about Death. He'd been rather touchy about that up on
the terrace, too. And why, in the name of the Founders, did he
suddenly decide to sort his papers out? Anyone would think
. . .
With the thought only half completed, R'shiel ran back to Brak's
room and threw open the door. She glared at him accusingly, tears
blurring her vision, anger and grief battling each other for dominance.
"It's you!"
"What?"
"It's you, isn't it? The life you traded for mine? 'A life
of equal
value,' that's what you said. You told me you traded someone's life for
mine when Joyhinia almost killed me. You bargained with Death and
offered your life to save mine, didn't you? That's why Death said your
deal was almost done. It's why Shananara asked if she would ever see
you again. You damned, sentimental, self-sacrificing, half-breed,
bastard idiot!"
Brak stared at her for a moment and then looked away. His anger had
faded. He looked simply resigned. "It doesn't matter."
She crossed the room and grabbed his shoulder, forcing him to look
at her. "How could you?"
"How could I not?" he asked her softly.
She wiped away her tears angrily and punched his arm. "You can't do
this to me! You can't do it to yourself. I don't deserve it. Founders,
Brak, what am I supposed to do? Spend the rest of my life - all
ten
thousand years of it - knowing I'm alive because you squandered
your
life on me?"
She tried to hit him again but Brak pulled her close and held her
while she sobbed. She could not believe what he had done, or the guilt
such knowledge had burdened her with.
"There, there," he said, as if he was comforting a small
child. "It's too late to do anything about it now."
"Why did you do it?" she cried, her face buried in his chest.
"I only had one life to bargain with, R'shiel. To offer another life
would have been murder."
"You could have let him take me."
Brak kissed the top of her head and lifted her chin with the tip of
his finger. With his thumb he gently wiped away a tear. "No. That I
couldn't do."
For a timeless moment he looked at her. Then he kissed her, lightly,
his lips just brushing hers, as if he expected her to pull away from
him. It sent an unexpected shiver down her spine. There was a world of
promise behind his kiss, so different from Tarja's artificially imposed
desire that it left her unable to breathe. R'shiel stared at him in
wonder, suddenly understanding the source of her anger, the reason for
her grief. This moment had been long in the making, she realised,
simmering at the back of their often-volatile, strangely dependent
relationship, waiting for an opportunity to catch them unawares.
R'shiel reached up, running her fingers through his dark hair and
pulled his head down towards hers, with the certain knowledge that no
god had interfered in his desire, no geas had imposed feelings for her
that he did not want to own. He pulled her even closer, the slow
burning heat of his desire searing away her doubts. He kissed her neck,
her ear and then her mouth again, then broke away from her embrace
suddenly and took her face in his hands.
"Look at me."
She met his gaze evenly, unafraid, wishing he would stop talking.
"You know this changes nothing, don't you?"
She shook her head wordlessly, wanting to deny him, not trusting
herself to speak.
"Nothing can be altered, R'shiel. Whatever happens, if you succeed
or fail, I cannot alter the bargain I made."
"But -"
"There are no buts. No loopholes. No way out. Do you understand
that?"
R'shiel felt fresh tears prick her eyes as she nodded her reluctant
agreement.
"Then understand this, too. You are part-human, R'shiel, but you are
also part-Harshini. There is so much you don't understand. So much you
have yet to learn. You can't send Sanctuary out of time until sunrise.
We have one night. I can show you a part of being Harshini that you
cannot possibly imagine. But I'm not doing this for payment and I don't
want you doing it out of guilt, or to get even with Tarja. Tomorrow,
you will still be the demon child, he will still be the Lord Defender,
and I will still be the half-breed who will die as soon as you succeed.
There is no future. There is only now. The choice is yours."
His eyes
bored into her, demanding an answer. Then he added huskily, "Stay, or
stay out of my way until morning."
The decision was harder than she imagined. But tomorrow was a
lifetime away, and deep down, despite everything she had seen,
everything she had done, R'shiel was still not convinced that she was
ruled by her destiny.
"I want to stay."
He searched her face, looking for some sign that she was uncertain.
When he found none, he smiled briefly and his eyes began to darken as
he kissed her again, harder, and more hungrily. R'shiel followed his
lead and kissed him back, opening her mouth to his and her mind to the
power. Her eyes blackened until they were orbs of glittering ebony as
the intoxicating sweetness filled her. Brak reached for her, not with
his hands but with his mind. The space between them blurred as he wove
an enchantment around them that left no room for anything but a sweet,
seductive desire that had no parallel in the human world.
This was what the legends spoke of. This was the gift of the
Harshini that ruined humans for any other lover. She'd heard stories
about it. The Novices had whispered about it in the dormitories late at
night, fascinated and repelled by it. The Sisterhood had tried to
destroy the Harshini for fear of it. All the violence they could not
contemplate, all the conflict they could not confront was transformed
into this offering, this all-consuming, passionate inferno that
consumed every thought, every fibre of one's being in the pursuit of
mutual pleasure. It was the ultimate expression of the Harshini quest
for happiness.
R'shiel lost all sense of time; could not separate reality from
fantasy. She did not know how they got to the bed or how long the night
lasted. She could not distinguish touch from desire, or pleasure from
pain. Nothing she had experienced in the past had prepared her for this
and nothing would ever come close to it in the future.
It was the first time she truly understood the meaning of magic.
Brak shook her awake at sunrise. She turned in his
arms, a little surprised that she was still holding onto the power. It
filled her with a heavy, languid weariness.
"Time to get up and do your good deed for the day, demon
child," he
reminded her with a smile.
"Brak, I . . ."
"No," he said, placing a finger on her lips to silence her.
"Don't
say it."
She smiled and nodded. "I was going to ask if there's anything to
eat. I'm starving."
"I'll find something while you're getting dressed."
By the time Brak returned with a platter of impossibly perfect
fruit, grown here in Sanctuary where even the grubs were considerate of
others, R'shiel was dressed and ready to leave. They ate as they walked
through the silent halls. Brak made no attempt at conversation and
R'shiel didn't try to engage him. There was nothing to be said. He had
laid down the conditions of their one night together and they bound
her, despite what it would cost her in the future. There was nothing to
be gained by talking about it.
The sun was almost over the peaks as they stepped through the
Gateway and out into the chill, snow-covered mountains. They walked
some distance from the fortress before R'shiel stopped and turned to
look back at Sanctuary.
"I wonder how long it will have to remain hidden?"
"Not as long as the last time, I hope."
She frowned. "If I get this wrong, we may never be able to find it
again."
"Then don't get it wrong," he suggested dryly.
She hesitated a moment, framing her next question carefully. "Can I
ask you something, Brak, about last night?" When he did not
answer, she
chose to take his silence as permission. "When we . . . well,
could the other Harshini feel it?"
"Yes."
She felt her face redden with embarrassment, but that was not what
she wanted to know. "What about the demons?"
"If they were paying attention."
"And the gods?"
"Certainly."
"So Kalianah would know?"
"Oh, yes, Kalianah would know."
"Would Xaphista have felt it?"
"Undoubtedly."
She tossed her apple core to a curious squirrel come to investigate
them. "Good."
He stared at her curiously.
"I want that bastard to know I was having a good
time."
"If it's any consolation, he was probably squirming the whole night.
When he rose to power the first thing he did was forbid his people to
indulge in anything so wantonly pleasurable. They call all sex a sin
now in Karien, but his original intention was to stop his people
consorting with the Harshini. He had that in common with the
Sisterhood. They too were afraid of the effect it had on humans. It's
like a drug, in some ways. As the only way to get more of it is to have
a relationship with a Harshini who can't abide violence, the end result
was a fairly peaceful and very happy community - back in the
days
before Xaphista and the Sisters of the Blade."
"And a lot of half-breeds," she added with a grin.
"That too."
"So Xaphista despises pleasure."
"He's afraid that it will distract his people from him."
R'shiel nodded, filing the information away for future reference.
Then, unable to delay what she was planning any longer, she drew even
more of the power she was still channelling and turned her attention to
Sanctuary. The fortress glittered in the sunrise, as if it had put on
its best face to bid them farewell.
With infinite care, R'shiel wove the glamour Shananara had taught
her, sending the threads of power over and around Sanctuary. In the
background, she could feel Brak linked to her, guiding her hand. He had
the training to help her envelop Sanctuary, but only she and Shananara
had the strength to fling it beyond the reach of mortals.
When she was certain she had wrapped every part of the settlement in
her magical cocoon, she hesitated. She felt Brak sever the link that
joined them as he let go of his power. What she was about to do would
destroy him if he stayed coupled to her.
She glanced at him, saw his eyes had returned to their usual faded
blue and then gathered her strength. With a mighty push, she flung
every ounce of power she was holding towards Sanctuary. It shimmered
for a moment, almost as if it was fighting to stay put, and then, with
a boom that rolled over the mountains like a distant thunderstorm,
Sanctuary disappeared from sight.
R'shiel was sagging from the effort, but Brak caught her before she
could fall. She let go of the power with relief.
"Did I do it right?"
"I guess we won't know that until you try to bring it back."
She smiled wanly. "You're a real comfort."
"I do my best."
Suddenly she laughed. Whether from relief or amusement she did not
know. There was a lightness in her that came from more than just the
knowledge that she had successfully hidden Sanctuary. It came from
somewhere inside her. It was as if she had stepped over an invisible
wall that she had not known was holding her back.
"What's so funny?"
"I know this is going to sound crazy, but I think that for the first
time in my life, I'm actually happy to be alive."
Brak smiled slowly. "So am I."
Sitting close together for warmth, they settled down with their
backs to a large pine tree and waited in companionable silence for the
dragons to return.
CHAPTER 52
"Oh Tarja, they're beautiful!" Mandah
breathed
reverently.
He glanced at her and smiled. She was staring up at the sky as
though seeing something from her dreams. He had allowed her to come to
greet their new guests because he could think of no way to stop her.
And besides, of all the people in the Citadel, Mandah was the least
likely to offend the Harshini when they arrived.
Tarja watched the dragons settling on the sandy floor of the
amphitheatre, almost as awestruck as Mandah and the Defenders who stood
behind him. He hadn't expected there to be so many of them. Or so many
dragons. Garet Warner studied the swarming sky with a frown, then
turned to him with a shake of his head.
"I hope you know what you're doing, Tarja," he murmured.
"My Lord! Sir!"
Tarja turned towards the urgent voice. A cadet was running towards
him across the sand. Garet had pulled all the Cadets out of training
and was using them as messengers and for minor administrative tasks to
free up as many Defenders as possible. The lad was no more than
fourteen and seemed torn between fear and pride that he had been chosen
for such an important task as he skidded to a halt in front of the Lord
Defender.
"What's wrong?" Tarja asked.
"It's the Kariens, sir. Captain Symin sent me to fetch you."
"What are they up to now?" Garet asked.
"It's the dragons, sir. Ever since they appeared the Kariens have
been going wild. Some of them are even fleeing the field."
Garet glanced at Tarja in surprise. "Well, that's an unexpected
bonus. I'll check out what's happening at the gate. You'd better stay
here and keep your new friends under control."
Garet followed the boy back to the tunnel entrance, as a tall
Harshini with dark red hair slid gracefully from the back of the dragon
that looked like the one who had accosted Tarja at the vineyard near
Testra. He walked forward to greet her, pushing back a momentary wave
of apprehension. She looked so much like R'shiel.
"Hello, Tarja."
"Shananara."
"Thank you for letting us come home."
"You may not thank me in a few days. We're under siege, and you're
not exactly welcome here. This isn't going to be easy."
"I know." She noticed Mandah, who had followed Tarja
cautiously, and
smiled at the young woman. "Aren't you going to introduce me to your
friend?"
"Of course. Shananara, this is Mandah Rodak. Mandah, this is Her
Highness, Princess Shananara te Ortyn."
"I'm Queen Shananara now, but we can talk about that later.
The gods' blessing on you, Mandah."
"Your Majesty. Divine One," she gushed, falling to her knees
in the
sand. The young pagan woman looked set to faint with happiness.
Shananara smiled indulgently. "Arise, child. We have no time to
stand on ceremony." She looked at Tarja then, and her smile
broadened
mischievously. "I fear I have an apology to make, my Lord Defender.
Childish and petty as it may seem, I'm afraid I could not resist
taunting your besiegers. We strafed the fields surrounding the Citadel
on our approach. I fear I've caused something of a panic among the
Kariens."
Tarja tried without success to hide his amusement. "I'm sure I can
find it in myself to forgive you."
"I thought you might."
He glanced over her shoulder at the other Harshini, who were
climbing down from their dragons and looking about them with
expressions ranging from happiness to rapture. There were no children
among them, which surprised him a little.
"I've made arrangements for you to be accommodated in the
dormitories. As we've no Sisterhood any longer, there didn't seem any
point keeping the Novices and the Probates."
"What did you do with them?" Shananara asked with a hint of
concern.
He was tempted to tell her he'd murdered them all in their beds,
just to see what her reaction would be, but thought better of it. "We
sent them home."
"May we visit the Temple of the Gods?" When Tarja looked at
her
blankly, she smiled. "I believe you call it your Great Hall."
"Tomorrow, perhaps, and I'd prefer you did it in small groups.
Hundreds of Harshini marching through the streets of the Citadel might
cause a riot."
"We shall be discreet, my Lord."
"Thank you. Mandah will act as liaison between us. She's a pagan,
and a number of her people are here. I thought you might be more
comfortable dealing with them, rather than the Defenders."
"Your consideration of our feelings is both unexpected and
appreciated, Tarja," she told him with a slight bow. "It seems
R'shiel
was correct when she said you could be trusted."
"She's not with you?"
"She and Brak had something else to take care of, but they should be
back by nightfall. Which brings me to a rather delicate matter. I
cannot ask the demons to stay melded in dragon form, and you have
nowhere to accommodate them in any case. But if I dissolve them, I
cannot guarantee their good behaviour."
Tarja groaned silently. He hadn't thought about that when he'd told
R'shiel the Harshini could return. On the other hand, she had
conveniently neglected to mention that the demons were a part of the
deal.
"Can't you just . . . disappear them, or
something?"
Shananara laughed. "A demon you can't see is likely to cause a lot
more trouble than one you can keep an eye on, Tarja. I'll do what I
can, but I really should dissolve the melds."
"Just try to keep them out of trouble."
"I will. And now, if you would be so kind as to let us find our
accommodation, we'd like to settle in. It has been a long
night."
"Mandah will show you the way."
Shananara looked at him with a sad little smile. "We know the way,
Tarja."
Tarja refused to acknowledge the unspoken accusation. "These men
will escort you."
"Are we prisoners?"
"They are for your protection, Shananara. I'm not worried about what
you'll do to the citizens of the Citadel; I'm worried about what
they'll do to you."
"Then once again I thank you for your consideration. Will we meet
again later? There are things we need to discuss."
"Of course."
Shananara bowed and returned to her people, who had patiently
gathered behind her, waiting for their Queen to finish her discussion.
Mandah followed her, still wearing that same look of awe that she had
acquired when the dragons first appeared over the Citadel this morning.
Tarja called over the lieutenant in command of the escort, gave him his
orders and then headed for the tunnel.
As he entered the cool darkness he felt the ground tremble faintly
under his feet. He stopped, curious, waiting for it to happen again,
but when no further tremors eventuated, he shrugged and kept on
walking, certain that he must have imagined it.
"The Kariens are frantic," Garet informed
him
later that day.
"Shananara did more than just fly over them, Garet," Tarja
told him
with a grin. "She strafed them. They must be having quite a crisis of
faith at the moment. How many priests do you think they have left out
there?"
"Not many. The priests liked their creature comforts. Most of them
were billeted in the Citadel."
"Then they lack spiritual guidance as well as leadership. How many
fled?"
"A few thousand at least," Garet informed him. "Any word
from King
Jasnoff yet?" Their demands had been sent in a carefully worded
message
to the Karien King. They'd dispatched a dozen birds carrying the same
message, to ensure that at least one got through.
Tarja shook his head. "It's far too early to expect a response. The
birds we sent may not have reached Yarnarrow yet."
"What about our relief forces?"
"Maybe R'shiel will be able to tell us something when she gets
back."
Garet nodded and took a seat on the other side of the desk. Tarja
was too restless to sit. There was too much to be done.
"I've had the lads check the stores. We've enough here to hold out
for years. Mathen was looting the countryside, but he was rather
considerately storing it all here in the Citadel. He was expecting to
use it for the troops outside."
"Which means they'll get hungry soon."
"That'll thin their numbers some more. Desertions are always a
problem when your army isn't being fed."
"Well, between the Harshini scaring the wits out of them and their
bellies grumbling, hopefully, by the time help arrives they'll be down
to a manageable number. Has there been any trouble in the city?"
"No more than usual. Once again, thanks to Squire Mathen, the people
are getting quite used to living under martial law. And we reopened the
court'esa houses, so that's eased the tension,
somewhat." Garet
smiled faintly. "I did it in your name, of course. You're very popular
at the moment."
"I wonder how long that will last?"
The walls trembled faintly again before Garet could answer. The
tremor he had felt in the tunnel under the amphitheatre had not been
his imagination. They had been going on all day, growing steadily
stronger and more frequent. He frowned and glanced at Garet, who looked
just as concerned.
"That's all we need," he muttered. "First a siege, then the
Harshini, and now a bloody earthquake."
"It's not an earthquake, Tarja," Shananara informed him,
stepping
into the office as Mandah opened the door for her. "It is the Citadel
awakening from his slumber."
"You talk as if the Citadel is alive."
"The Citadel may not be 'alive', by your definition, Tarja.
But it
is sentient by ours."
"This is where I leave," Garet announced, rising to his
feet. "You
can sit here and swap pagan fairytales with the Harshini, Tarja. I have
better things to do."
Shananara turned her regal gaze on the commandant. "You are Garet
Warner?"
"You've heard of me?"
"Brakandaran speaks quite highly of you, sir. For a human."
"Does he now?"
Tarja recognised the dangerous edge to Garet's soft-spoken reply and
inwardly cringed. This could get very ugly if he didn't head it off,
and quickly.
"Are your people settled in, Your Majesty?"
"Yes, thank you, although we took the liberty of removing the
tapestries and other . . . impediments, that you have used to
disguise the Citadel's origins. I hope you don't mind. It looks almost
like home again, now."
As far as Tarja was aware, most of the dormitories had been
whitewashed to conceal the Harshini frescoes that had once decorated
the walls. He sighed; they had been here barely more than a few hours
and already they were redecorating.
"You didn't do any structural damage, I hope?"
"The Citadel is not that easy to harm, my Lord."
He wasn't sure what she meant by that and decided he really didn't
want to know. "Garet was just telling me that your rather dramatic
entrance this morning has caused quite a stir among the
Kariens."
She shrugged. "We cannot fight with you, my Lord, but we help where
we can. Xaphista's believers either deny our existence or consider us
the essence of pure evil. Either way, they do not know how to react
when they see us."
"We deny your existence, too," Garet pointed out. "Yet our
people
aren't panicking."
"No, Commandant, you have never denied our existence. You tried to
eradicate us and thought you had succeeded. There's a distinct
difference."
Garet glared at her, but made no further comment. The building
trembled again, hard enough that Tarja clutched at the desk for
support. Shananara looked around the room thoughtfully for a moment
then turned to Tarja.
"I really should do something about that, I suppose."
"Exactly what did you have in mind?"
"I need to speak to the Citadel. It can feel our presence, but the
humans here are disturbing it. Once I've reassured it that you mean us
no harm, things should settle down."
Garet muttered something that sounded suspiciously like a curse.
"How can you speak to . . . it . . . him
. . . whatever the hell it is?"
"It will have to be in the Temple of the Gods. The Citadel's
presence is strongest there."
"I'll have someone escort you."
"Founders, Tarja! You don't seriously think sending this woman down
to talk to a building is going to stop an earthquake, do you?"
Shananara turned to Garet with a serene smile. "Perhaps you and the
Lord Defender would like to accompany me, Commandant?"
"Why? So we can watch you talking to the walls?"
"No, Commandant," the Harshini Queen replied with solemn
dignity. "You should come because you and your people have occupied our
home for
two hundred years. You have vandalised and defiled it, with no thought
to the consequences. It is time you understood what you have
done."
CHAPTER 53
Like R'shiel, Tarja had never been able to refer to
the Great Hall as Francil's Hall without choking on the words. At least
now he could change that, if nothing else. The Great Hall would be
known as the Great Hall once again, although, as he escorted Shananara
up the broad steps with Garet, he wondered how long it would be before
the Harshini convinced everyone to refer to it by its original name:
the Temple of the Gods. If they were as determined to do that as they
were to return the dormitories to their original condition, he figured
it would only be a matter of days.
It was almost sunset and the chill of the coming evening was
settling rapidly over the Citadel. A score of Defenders stood on guard
outside the Hall, causing Tarja to glance questioningly at Garet. He'd
ordered no detail to guard the Great Hall, and there was no need he
knew of to protect it. Shananara strode on ahead, anxious to do
whatever it was she was planning. The ground trembled under their feet.
"Why the guards?" he asked the commandant curiously.
"We've confined the priests in there. Couldn't think of anywhere
else to put them."
Tarja cursed softly and hurried after the Harshini Queen. The guards
on the doors, seeing the Lord Defender and Commandant Warner were
escorting the Harshini, made no effort to prevent her from entering.
She disappeared inside before Tarja could stop her.
He pushed open the door to find Shananara frozen in shock. She was
as pale as the whitewashed walls and looked as if she had forgotten how
to breathe. More Defenders lined the walls, watching the Karien priests
warily. The hall itself was littered with bedrolls and the milling
priests who had been confined within. They were still dressed in their
dull brown cassocks and all but a few had stubbled heads and the
beginnings of scraggly beards.
Nobody was foolish enough to give these men a razor.
Robbed of their staffs and their dignity, they were a sorry lot. The
priests turned at the sound of the doors opening, showing no interest
in the new arrivals, until someone noticed Shananara's eyes.
And then all hell broke loose.
The priests began shouting hysterically. Some of them rushed towards
the Harshini Queen while others backed away in fear. The building
trembled, as if in outrage. Shananara cried out, but it was a cry of
despair, rather than a scream. The Defenders reacted immediately,
calling for the guards outside to reinforce their numbers as they drove
the priests back. Tarja drew his sword and stepped in between Shananara
and the oncoming priests, whose eyes burned with fanatical hatred.
He felt, rather than saw, Garet take a stand beside him, just as
ready to carve a few priests up as he was. The priests who had thought
to attack the Harshini backed off sullenly, as wary of the dangerous
look in Tarja's eyes as they were of the blades he and Garet wielded.
Once the other Defenders were inside the Hall, the ruckus was put
down quickly. The Kariens were no match for the armed Defenders,
particularly men who were itching for any excuse to cause them harm.
Garet Warner issued his orders with a few hand signals and the priests
were herded into a loose circle in the centre of the Hall, surrounded
by the Defenders. Tarja studied them warily for a moment then slowly
sheathed his blade before turning to face Shananara. She was shaking
all over, and although he had no ability to detect it, he had a strong
feeling that she was channelling her power. For a moment he was very
glad it was not R'shiel standing there. The priests would be splattered
all over the walls if it had been Shananara's half-breed cousin under
attack.
"I'm sorry, Your Majesty. I didn't know they were being held in
here. I'll have them removed at once."
Shananara shook her head. "No. Leave them. Just keep them out of my
way."
"Are you sure?" He studied her warily. He knew the Harshini
were
incapable of doing harm, but right at that moment he wasn't that
certain Shananara could be trusted.
The Queen nodded then took a deep breath and walked past Tarja
towards the centre of the Hall. The Defenders cleared a path for her,
pushing the priests back, being none too gentle about it.
Shananara looked about her, ignoring the priests and the Defenders,
then she closed her eyes and the Citadel began to tremble in earnest.
Silence descended, fractured only by a whimper
that came from one of the priests as the Harshini Queen stood in the
centre of the Hall, her head thrown back, her eyes closed in
concentration. Certain he was imagining it, he thought he saw a faint
glimmer of light surrounding her in a soft, white nimbus. Small white
flakes began to fall from the whitewashed ceiling.
The Citadel rumbled beneath his feet.
It was only a few at first, and Tarja thought them simply the result
of the building's movement. But soon the flakes of whitewash began to
fall faster, until he felt as if he was caught in a snowstorm. A sudden
popping made him jump as a plug of plaster burst out of a small alcove
in the pillar on his right. It was followed by a dozen or more tiny
explosions as the plastered-over niches spat out their fillings, which
shattered into powder as they hit the floor.
The Hall shook so hard it rattled his teeth.
The paint on the ceiling was coming away in strips now, and he could
just make out the first signs of the paintings underneath. The walls
blistered and their whitewash began to fall off, too. He was powdered
in flaking whitewash and plaster as he glanced at Garet, who looked as
if he'd been dipped in flour. The commandant's eyes were dark sockets
of incomprehensible horror set in a bone-white face. The priests began
to wail in terror as the building shuddered so hard that Tarja could
barely stand upright.
Shananara did not move.
Then a splintering sound echoed loudly through the hall. Tarja
looked in the direction of the sound through the swirling white storm
and noticed a large crack had appeared on the wall at the back of the
podium. Another crack appeared and then another, sundering the painted
symbol of the Sisters of the Blade that decorated the far wall.
Shananara had claimed the Citadel was not easily harmed, but she
appeared to be bringing the building down on top of them. The wall
cracked even further and began to crumble, but amazingly, the
half-cupola over the podium held fast.
As the wall tumbled down in a shower of plaster and white dust,
taking with it the last vestige of the Sisterhood's imprint on the
place, Tarja saw the reason why. The wall had been nothing more than a
false front, concealing the rest of the podium behind it. Red light
from the setting sun flooded the circular alcove, turning the falling
white dust into glittering motes of fire. The cupola was tiled in an
intricate pattern, resting on a curved wall that was painted with a
glorious fresco, although from where he was standing, he could not make
out the detail.
But it was not the fresco, or the gilded dome that made him stare in
wonder. In the centre of the podium was a massive crystal, taller than
a man, mounted on a block of polished black marble. He had no idea what
it was, or what its purpose might be, but it obviously held pride of
place in the Temple of the Gods. He realised then why the wall had been
built to hide it. Too massive to move and probably indestructible,
there would have been no way to get rid of the Stone when the Sisters
of the Blade had tried to remove all vestiges of the Harshini from
their new home.
They had done the next best thing and hidden it.
The shuddering slowly trembled to stillness and Tarja looked about
him in awe. Shananara had restored the Hall to what it had been during
the reign of the Harshini. Although it was almost nightfall, the
pillars shone as bright as day. The ceiling had a painting on it that
depicted the Primal Gods. Along the gallery was a mural dedicated to
even more gods. It looked as if a hundred - maybe a thousand -
different craftsmen had added to it over the years. The parts of it he
could see were magnificent. There was writing - songs perhaps -
covering some of the walls, too. The pillars supporting the gallery now
had alcoves set in the side of each one and he wondered for a moment at
their purpose.
Then he noticed the priests and forgot all about the Hall.
To a man, they were on their knees. Some were sobbing like
broken-hearted children. A few others were tearing at their robes,
howling with despair. One man was clawing at his own face until the
blood flowed. Then a shattering scream pierced the sudden silence as
one of the priests leaped to his feet and ran blindly towards him.
Tarja felt his stomach churn and had to forcibly stop himself from
vomiting. Where the priest's eyes had been was nothing but two bloody
sockets. In his hands he held his own eyeballs. The fool had clawed his
own eyes out rather than witness the return of the Harshini.
Tarja caught the man and wrestled him to the ground. The man was
howling in pain and outrage. Tarja looked up angrily at Shananara, who
had finally lowered her head and opened her eyes. If she was distressed
by what the priests were doing to themselves, she gave no indication.
Garet helped Tarja hold the hysterical priest down as Shananara
approached. The commandant looked as pale as the powdered paint that
coated him.
"Is this your idea of doing no harm?" he snarled at
the
Queen.
Shananara looked down at the blind priest for a moment before she
answered. "This is Xaphista's work, not mine, Commandant. To heal him
would mean forcing him to break his faith and he holds that more dearly
than his eyes. Even if I could restore his sight and remove his pain,
he would just claw his eyes out again as soon as your back was
turned."
There was a strange twisted logic in what she said. A Karien priest
would rather suffer and die than acknowledge the existence of the
Harshini or the God of Healing. Tarja had no doubt that she could heal
him - he had seen the Harshini ability. He also had no doubt
that she
was right when she claimed the man would simply try to harm himself as
soon as they let him out of their sight. They were a sick breed, these
priests. The sooner R'shiel did something about Xaphista the better.
"Get him to the infirmary," Tarja ordered, standing back to
let two
of the guards pick up the struggling, howling priest.
Tarja looked at the other priests, who had been stunned into silence
by the courageous action of their brother. They wore the look of men
who thought he had done something to be proud of. How many more of
them were contemplating the same thing? Suffering for Xaphista was
more than just a hopeful wish for these men; it was damned near a job
requirement. He had to put a stop to it. Now.
"The next one of you that tries to harm himself," he
announced
loudly, "will be delivered to the Harshini for healing. And he'll stay
there until he denounces Xaphista and swears allegiance to the Primal
Gods."
Shananara looked at him in surprise then nodded approvingly as she
realised what his threat would mean to these men.
"How long is that going to last?" Garet asked, ineffectively
brushing the white dust from his jacket.
"Tarja's threat is very real to these men, Commandant. They will
avoid stubbing a toe rather than risk being touched by one of my
people."
Garet stared at her coldly then looked around the Hall. "Did you
make this much mess redecorating the dormitories?"
"Not quite."
"And what the hell is that thing?" he asked, pointing at the
crystal
on the podium.
"It is the Seeing Stone."
Garet stopped trying to clean his jacket and stared at the crystal
with a thoughtful expression. "I thought that was in
Greenharbour?"
"There is also a Stone in Greenharbour. This one belongs
here."
"What does it do?"
"It channels the power of the gods, among other things."
Garet absorbed that piece of information silently and then looked at
the priests. "I suppose we'd better get them out of here. I'll move
them to the Lesser Hall." He looked at Shananara and added
frigidly, "Unless of course, you're planning to do this to every
building you
walk into, Your Majesty?"
"I will not disturb your prisoners again, Commandant," she
assured
him.
Garet obviously doubted her word, but did not voice his scepticism.
He looked at Tarja and shook his head. "Look at this place, Tarja. They
haven't been here a day yet."
"I'll get everything sorted out," Tarja promised, not at all
certain
he believed his own words.
"Well, you can start by making the Harshini clean up this mess.
After all, she caused it." With a pointed and very unfriendly
glare in
Shananara's direction, Garet Warner moved off to organise moving the
Karien priests from the Great Hall.
"I'm sorry, Tarja," Shananara said as soon as Garet was out
of
earshot. "I thought only to help by calming the Citadel."
The Harshini could not lie, so legend claimed, but he wondered if
she was bending the truth a little. She must have known what making the
priests witness her power would do to them. Or perhaps she really
didn't understand. If she couldn't contemplate the thought of violence,
how could she imagine a man willing to put his own eyes out?
"The damage is done now. At least the tremors have stopped."
"That's because the Citadel is awake."
"Is that going to cause problems?"
She smiled suddenly. "Come and see."
Grabbing his hand she pulled him towards the doors. He noticed that
the bronze sheathing had peeled away and they were now carved with
unbelievably intricate knot-work designs that chased themselves across
the doors in a complex pattern.
They stepped out of the Hall into a street that was crammed with
people. The sun had set, but it was as bright as day. The walls of the
Citadel had brightened and dimmed with metronomic precision for two
centuries, but now, when they should have faded to darkness, they were
burning with vibrant light. Every building he could see was ablaze,
banishing the night.
"Founders!" he murmured in awe.
His sentiments were reflected in every face he saw. Although
crowded, the street below the Great Hall was strangely silent as the
people tried to make sense of what they were witnessing.
Then he heard the noise, like a distant wail of despair, coming from
the distance, from the other side of the walls. The Kariens.
"Come with me," he ordered abruptly, running down the steps.
Shananara followed him as he pushed through the crowd. It took a while
and a great deal of elbow work to get to the main gate, and he didn't
stop when he reached it, or bother to check if Shananara was still with
him. He bolted into the gatehouse and up the stairs to the wall-walk to
look down over the plain.
The plain below was in chaos. The Kariens seemed to have moved from
their earlier panic to utter desperation. Some cried out in horror at
the sight that transfixed them. Others were fleeing in terror. Tarja
glanced back over his shoulder at the tall towers and then looked down
at the walls.
The whole Citadel was glowing like a beacon in the darkness, casting
its benign light as far as the bridges over the Saran.
CHAPTER 54
Without consulting him, or giving him a reason,
R'shiel announced that rather than return directly to the Citadel, she
wanted to check on the progress of Damin and Hablet and the armies they
were bringing to relieve the Citadel. He wondered at her decision but
did not question it, suspecting that it had much to do with the night
they had spent in Sanctuary. She did not want to face Tarja so soon, he
guessed, or the Harshini who would know what they had done.
He wanted to explain to her that the unique Harshini way of sharing
pleasure was not riddled with the same emotion-laden guilt that humans
insisted on attaching to sex. For the Harshini it was a celebration of
life; simply another way to express their joy for living. Harshini did
not marry and the concept of jealousy was unknown to them. They shared
their bodies and their irresistible, magical gift with no thought to
the consequences, or any real understanding of the importance humans
attached to it. Among them, it was never a problem. For the Harshini
there was no need to explain and nothing to justify.
But when they shared that gift with humans, things got complicated.
He had told R'shiel that life had been peaceful and happy before the
Sisters of the Blade, but it was jealousy of that peace and happiness
that had given rise to the Sisterhood. Their whole sick cult had grown
out of the fear of a handful of human women afraid they could not
compete with the impossibly perfect, magically gifted Harshini. The
original First Sister, Param, had been a bitter old woman whose younger
husband had had a fling with a Harshini woman and never recovered from
the experience. Param never understood that what had driven her husband
away was not the loss of love, but the fact that no human coupling
could ever compare with the magic a Harshini could weave.
Only Brak knew that the Harshini woman who had so thoughtlessly
shared her body and her gift with the handsome young human who took her
fancy was actually Shananara te Ortyn.
She had told him about it a few days after it happened, afraid that
she might have conceived, aware that any half-human child of hers would
be a demon child. He understood her predicament a little better than
her full-blooded kin. She was fearful of explaining what she had done
to her uncle, Lorandranek - or worse, the gods, who, back then,
would
never have contemplated such a child being allowed to exist. Xaphista
wasn't as strong then and the other gods paid him little mind. When her
moontime came and went a few weeks later, Shananara swore off humans,
claiming they weren't as satisfying as Harshini in any case, and
thought nothing more of it. None of them had.
Until Param and her Sisterhood overran the Citadel and set about
destroying the Harshini.
He glanced across at R'shiel as the dragons flew southward,
following the silver ribbon of the Glass River, and decided not to tell
her. She had too much going on inside that head of hers already. She
would cope with what had happened in her own way, and if he had done
nothing else, he had freed her from the last vestiges of her grief over
Tarja. Although she did not realise it, her Harshini heritage was
strong. Her conversation with Mandah in the hall outside the First
Sister's office sprang to mind. Letting Tarja go like that, being so
willing to stand back and let Mandah have a clear field, was probably
the most Harshini thing he had ever seen her do.
They were a few hours north of Bordertown when they spied the
Fardohnyan fleet. Brak was amazed they had come so far so quickly, even
with Harshini help. The ships were strung out in a line, their oars
dipping and rising in perfect unison.
Maera, the Goddess of the Glass River, and Brehn, the God of Storms,
were assisting their passage. While Maera hadn't gone so far as to make
the river flow backwards, the strong currents that characterised the
river were now so mild that the oarsmen could keep up their steady pace
for hours. Between Maera's help, the winds that Brehn provided (which
conveniently changed direction with every bend in the river) and the
Harshini, who had flown south to join them, the Fardohnyans were likely
to be in Brodenvale within a couple of weeks.
Satisfied that the Fardohnyans were on their way, they did nothing
more than swoop down over the fleet and wave before turning south-east
towards Hythria.
It took them nearly a week to find Damin. His call
to arms had been answered, but the same problem that had plagued Damin
when Greenharbour was under attack was still causing trouble. The
Warlords' armies were scattered throughout Hythria and it was taking a
mammoth effort, both logistical and magical, to gather them all in one
place.
They found him eventually, still in Hythria, but close enough to the
border that he would be over it in a few days. They landed on the edge
of Damin's camp at sunset. The High Prince was waiting to greet them,
with Adrina at his side. She was noticeably pregnant, but was glowing
with good health. Brak frowned when he saw her. Damin should have had
more sense than to let a woman in her condition ride into battle. Then
again, when it came to Adrina, he guessed Damin probably didn't have
much say in the matter.
"Nice of you to drop in, demon child," Damin said as he
stepped
forward to greet them. His good mood no doubt had as much to do with
the fact that he was off to war again, as it did with his pleasure at
their arrival. Brak had always liked Damin, but he was a warrior at
heart. The responsibilities of a High Prince, a wife and a child on the
way weren't likely to change him.
R'shiel smiled, just as pleased to see her friends as they were to
see her. She eyed Adrina with a slight frown and shook her head.
"Adrina, what are you doing here?"
"Not much, if the truth be known. Damin won't let me do a damned
thing."
"He shouldn't have let you come at all."
"As if I had any say in the matter," Damin complained.
"Hello, Brak.
How was Fardohnya?"
"Interesting."
Damin laughed. "I want to hear all about it. We're waiting for Rogan
and his Raiders to catch up with us at the moment so we've a day or so
to spare before we get moving again. Are you here to stay?"
"No," R'shiel answered for him. "We have to get back to the
Citadel."
"Well, we might as well enjoy the evening, then. Will the dragons be
all right out here?"
"They'll be fine. Is Glenanaran with you?"
"He's resting at the moment. It's taken a lot out of him to get us
this far so quickly."
"Did the others arrive safely?" He wasn't sure who among the
Harshini had volunteered to join the Hythrun, or even how many there
were.
Adrina nodded. "They arrived a couple of days ago. I've never seen
so many Harshini before."
"Neither has anyone else," R'shiel agreed. Then she caught
sight of
a small figure half hidden behind Adrina. "Mikel! What are you doing
hiding back there?"
The Karien boy stepped forward with a hesitant smile. "My
Lady."
"Look at you, Mikel! You've shot up like a weed! What are you
feeding him, Adrina?"
"Hythrun army rations," Adrina told her with a grimace. "I'm
glad
they have such a beneficial effect on small boys. They do absolutely
nothing for my taste buds."
"Always complaining," Damin sighed, but he was smiling at
Adrina,
who glanced back at him warmly. The change in them was astounding.
Adrina had never looked better, and Damin, who had always been a
cheerful sort of fellow, appeared ready to burst with happiness. "Come
on then. Let's go sample the culinary delights of Hythrun army rations,
and you can tell me how the hell you managed to get Hablet to send his
fleet to our rescue."
R'shiel slipped her arm through Damin's and the three of them turned
back towards the tents, as R'shiel began to relate how she had blown
the doors off Hablet's palace in Talabar.
Damin's tent proved to be more luxurious than he
normally preferred - no doubt a concession to Adrina, who made
no
secret of her desire for life's creature comforts. Despite the dire
warnings about Hythrun army rations, dinner was delicious, the wine
excellent and the company entertaining.
The High Prince and his Princess sat close together on the low
scattered cushions and once Mikel cleared the remains of dinner away
from the low table, Adrina leaned against Damin unselfconsciously as
they shared their news from the past weeks. Damin draped an arm over
her shoulder in a gesture that seemed as much possessive as
affectionate. They still argued a lot, but it lacked the vicious edge
of their earlier encounters - although Adrina's caustic wit had
not
dulled, and neither had Damin learnt to take anything seriously.
Watching Adrina and Damin together, Brak wondered if Kalianah had
taken a hand in their romance. He decided she hadn't. They were too
well suited to each other. Kalianah's interference was required only
when a couple would never fall in love unless she stepped in. She took
a perverse pleasure in doing that, too. It gave her a sense of power.
But the Hythrun High Prince and the daughter of the Fardohnyan King
were obviously kindred spirits. He wondered idly whether if Damin had
not been so keen to avoid Adrina earlier, their obvious attraction -
which, according to what he'd heard in the Defender's camp in Medalon,
was apparent from the moment they laid eyes on each other -
would have
caused trouble sooner.
It might be a very different world if it had.
Damin was relating the tale of Greenharbour's dramatic rescue by the
unexpected appearance of the Defenders when Brak caught sight of Mikel
out of the corner of his eye. He turned and watched as the child
approached R'shiel. He was holding a goblet - a plain, metal
cup with
nothing to distinguish it from any other in the tent - but he
held it
reverently, as if it was an offering to the gods.
"So, there we were," Damin was saying, "ready to burn
Greenharbour
to the ground and I hear trumpets in the distance. I thought I was
going mad."
"But why did the Defenders head for Greenharbour?" R'shiel
asked. "I
thought the plan was to muster them in Krakandar."
"It was," Damin agreed. "But somehow the messages got mixed
up and
the Defenders thought I'd left orders for them to move south. The irony
of it all," he added with a laugh, "was the reason they got
there so
damned quickly. Denjon and Linst were so furious that I'd left such
high-handed orders, they pushed their men south as fast as they could
move, just so they could tell me off."
R'shiel laughed and glanced up at Mikel. She accepted the cup and
turned back to Damin and Adrina. "I wish I could have seen the look on
your face when you realised the Defenders had come to your rescue. How
did the rest of your Warlords take it? It must have irked them no
end."
"By the time the Defenders arrived, I think they would have accepted
help from just about anybody," Adrina told her with a smile.
"They'd
already had to swallow their pride and accept my brother's help, but
grateful though they seemed, I think the Defenders were like rubbing
salt into an open wound."
R'shiel chuckled and lifted the cup to her lips. Mikel had remained
standing behind her. His eyes were wide, his body tense.
"R'shiel! No!"
Brak threw himself across the low table, knocking the cup from her
hand before she could take a swallow. Adrina screamed. R'shiel was
thrown backwards by the force of his sudden weight and struggled to
push him away, more startled than frightened. Damin was on his feet,
his sword in his hand before Brak had rolled clear. Mikel froze with
panic for a moment then ran for the entrance. Still on his hands and
knees, Brak reached out and snatched at the boy's ankle, bringing the
child down. Mikel cried out in protest, but Brak's vice-like grip
allowed him no escape. Damin stepped over the cushions and picked up
the discarded cup, sniffing it suspiciously.
"Jarabane," he said. "It's poisoned." He hurled the
cup to the
ground then he turned his attention to the boy.
Mikel was stretched out face-down on the floor of the tent, trying
to kick his way free, but unable to escape while Brak held him.
Damin nodded to Brak, who released him as Damin grabbed the child by
his shirt and hauled him to his feet. He pressed the point of his sword
into Mikel's neck.
"Damin! No!" Adrina cried, reading the murderous look in her
husband's eyes. "He's a child!"
"He's an assassin," Damin corrected.
Brak climbed to his feet, offering R'shiel his hand to help her up,
and they exchanged a worried glance. There was no trace of humour left
in the High Prince, and no trace of mercy.
"Damin, Brak and I need to take care of this," R'shiel said.
She
sounded calm and reasonable, just as aware as Brak that at that moment,
Damin was dangerously close to - and more than capable of -
cold-blooded murder.
"This child is a member of my household. He tried to kill a guest
under my roof. Even if you weren't the demon child, R'shiel, the
penalty for such a crime is death."
Mikel had not uttered a sound. He was paralysed with fear. A small
trickle of blood oozed from his neck where Damin held the point of his
sword with his right hand, his left gripping the boy by his shoulder.
"If you kill him, Damin, we won't be able to question him."
"What's to question? The child is Karien. He obviously follows the
Overlord. What more do you need to know?"
R'shiel turned to Brak, her eyes silently begging him to reason with
him.
"We need to know why he turned from Dacendaran," Brak added.
"The
God of Thieves took a personal interest in this boy, and somehow he's
been subverted. I don't want to interfere with your idea of justice,
Damin, but if you harm that boy before we have a chance to talk with
him, you'll regret it."
Damin glared at Brak. "Are you threatening me?"
"Yes, Damin," he replied softly. "That's exactly what I'm
doing."
For a moment, Brak wondered if that had been a wise thing to do. He
may have just said the one thing guaranteed to push Damin beyond
reason. For a long, tense moment, the High Prince stared at Brak
defiantly, then he lowered the sword and thrust Mikel at Brak.
"You have an hour, Brak. Ask him what you want, do what you want.
But in one hour that child dies for what he's done. R'shiel, I hope you
will forgive this grievous insult." He sheathed his sword as
Brak
caught the boy who was shaking so badly he could barely stand. "Oh, and
by the way, don't think to leave this camp with him," he added
with an
icy glare at Brak. "If you do, I will simply turn around and go home.
I'll call off my Warlords, and the Medalonians can face the Kariens on
their own and to hell with them."
Damin strode out of the tent without another word. Brak pushed Mikel
down onto the cushions and looked over at Adrina.
"Can you talk him out of this?"
She shrugged helplessly. "I don't know. I've never seen him so
angry."
"You've got an hour, Adrina," R'shiel pointed out coldly.
The Princess nodded. "I'll do what I can, but he may not listen to
me. I was the one who brought Mikel here."
"Then you'd better do something about keeping him alive, hadn't
you?" the demon child said unsympathetically.
CHAPTER 55
The God of Thieves appeared at R'shiel's summons,
although he looked rather put out by the call. R'shiel had told Brak
that Kalianah thought Dace was sulking about something and he wondered
if the reason had been Mikel.
The child was a study in abject despair. He sat huddled on the
cushions, his knees drawn up under his chin, tears streaming silently
down his face. He had said nothing. In the warm glow of the candlelight
he was an island of misery and dejection.
"What do you want, demon child?" Dacendaran asked sullenly
as he
materialised behind R'shiel.
"What's the matter with you?" she demanded as she spun
around to
face him. Although she knew he was a god, R'shiel had known Dace as a
simple thief in the Grimfield first, and she often made the mistake of
still thinking of him that way. Brak wished she were a little more
cautious. He might look cute and adorable and wear an air of guileless
innocence, but Dacendaran was still a god, and a powerful one at that.
"I'm busy," Dace muttered, scuffing the rug with a boot that
did not
match the other he wore.
"I want to know what happened to Mikel."
"You stole him from me," Dace accused with a petulant scowl.
"I stole him from you? Don't be ridiculous! I'm not a god!
How could I steal him?"
"You gave him to Gimlorie."
"Oh," R'shiel said, suddenly looking guilty. "That."
Brak glanced at R'shiel for a moment and then looked at Mikel. "Why
did you give him to the God of Music?"
"I needed to make sure the Kariens would leave, so I asked Gimlorie
to help."
"What exactly did you do, R'shiel?" Brak asked
suspiciously.
"I asked him to teach Mikel a song that would instil an irresistible
longing for home in the Kariens. I knew it might be a little bit
. . . dangerous . . . so I asked Gimlorie to make
his brother Jaymes his Guardian. That way, if he got lost in the song,
Jaymes would be there to pull him back."
Brak muttered a curse. "R'shiel, have you any idea what you've done?
A Guardian is only effective if he's in touch with his ward. Once
Jaymes left his side Mikel was vulnerable to this sort of
manipulation."
"Hey, how come suddenly this is all my fault? He tried to
kill me!"
Neither Brak nor Dace answered her.
"I needed to turn them back," she added defensively. "It
seemed like
a really good idea at the time."
"Gimlorie's songs are dangerous, R'shiel. They can twist men's souls
around. You should never have taught one to this boy."
"I didn't teach it to him. Gimlorie did. He didn't seem to mind when
I asked him."
"Of course he wouldn't mind. Every soul who hears it hungers for
him. But it's what it has done to Mikel that you should be concerned
about."
"Are you saying Gimlorie is the one who turned Mikel into an
assassin?"
"No," Dacendaran said. "Gimlorie wouldn't do that. But what
you did
do was leave Mikel vulnerable to Xaphista."
"Humans need faith to believe in the gods, R'shiel," Brak
added in a
lecturing tone. "What you did was take away Mikel's freedom to believe
or not believe. You destroyed his free will and made him a creature of
the gods. Any god."
R'shiel turned to the boy and stared down at him impatiently. "Is
that what happened, Mikel? Did you go back to worshipping the
Overlord?"
Mikel shook his head silently, too distraught to speak.
"Then why? Who told you to do this thing?"
"The old man," the child replied in a voice so low even
Dacendaran
had to strain to hear him.
"What old man?" Brak asked.
"The one in Hythria. At the palace. He told me to give the demon
child a gift. He said it would help her see the truth."
"What old man is he talking about?" R'shiel asked Brak.
"It was probably Xaphista himself," Dace shrugged.
"Can he do that?"
The God of Thieves gave the demon child a withering look.
"Oh, well, I suppose if you can do it, so can he." She
turned and
studied the miserable figure hunched on the cushions for a moment then
turned to Brak. "Why Mikel?"
"Because he's young, he's impressionable, he's feeling guilty for
turning away from his god in the first place, and," he added
with a
frown, "you left him wide open to manipulation when you opened his mind
to Gimlorie's song."
"Well, how was I supposed to know it would do that? The Harshini
sang it all the time in Sanctuary. It didn't seem to bother
them."
"The Harshini are already a part of the gods, R'shiel. But even they
will only share it among themselves. No Harshini would ever share the
song with a human."
"So what do we do with him?"
"I don't know, but we've got about half an hour to make up our
minds," he reminded her grimly.
"Dace? Can't the gods do something?"
The god shook his head. "You can't unteach him, R'shiel, and
he's done the Overlord's bidding. None of the gods has any interest in
saving this child."
"But he was your friend, Dace!"
The god stared at her. His smile faded and for a moment he let
R'shiel see the true essence of his being. The lovable rogue was gone
and there was simply Dacendaran, the God of Thieves, powerful,
implacable and concerned only with his own divinity. Brak had seen it
before and the knowledge of what the gods were truly capable of was at
the core of his distrust of them. But R'shiel had never been confronted
with it until now and it stunned her.
She took a step back from Dacendaran in fear.
"Do what you want with the child," Dacendaran said in a
voice that
chilled Brak to the bone. "His fate is of no concern to the Primal
Gods."
Dace vanished, leaving them alone in the tent. R'shiel appeared to
be having trouble breathing. Mikel had still not moved, resigned to his
fate - perhaps even welcoming it. He would soon be dining at
the
Overlord's table.
Damin Wolfblade would see to that.
They came for him on the hour, three heavily armed
Raiders who were there to stop them from trying anything heroic, Brak
suspected, rather than any real need to escort an eleven-year-old to
his execution. They did not try to prevent the men from taking the boy,
even with magic. It would simply have angered the High Prince. The bind
that Damin Wolfblade had placed them in was untenable: go to the rescue
of those in the Citadel or stand back and watch a child put to death
for the crime of being easily manipulated.
Adrina was waiting outside with Damin. Her eyes were swollen and she
had obviously been fighting with him. Damin's eyes were bleak and
unforgiving. Behind Adrina were the Harshini who had come to aid the
Hythrun in their quest to relieve the Citadel. Glenanaran stood at the
front of the small gathering of Dragon Riders. Brak could feel their
pain from the other side of the clearing. This was a vicious way to
reintroduce them to the world of humans.
One look at Damin and Brak knew that Adrina had not changed his mind.
"You can't order this, Damin," R'shiel told him as Mikel was
escorted across the clearing to stand before the High Prince of
Hythria. "You can't ask a man to execute a child!"
He looked at her. "I don't ask anything of my men I wouldn't do
myself."
"Damin, no!" Adrina cried in horror. She ran forward
and
grabbed his arm, but he shook her off impatiently.
"You don't have to watch, Adrina. Nor do you, Divine Ones,"
he
added, looking over his shoulder at the horrified Harshini. "This is
none of your concern."
"Damn it, Damin, be reasonable!" R'shiel yelled angrily as
he began
to walk away with Mikel and the guards in his wake.
Damin stopped and turned to her, then he walked back to confront
her, his eyes blazing in the torchlit clearing among the tents.
"Reasonable?" he snarled. "Define 'reasonable',
demon child. Is it
reasonable that I let this child live so he can turn on you again? It
is reasonable that I let an assassin reside in the heart of my family?
Suppose Adrina had taken that cup? Suppose Brak hadn't noticed
something was wrong? What the hell do you expect me to do?"
"You cannot murder an eleven-year-old boy for something that wasn't
his fault. He's a child, Damin, a tool. If anyone is to blame, it's
me."
Her calming tone did nothing to deter him. "R'shiel, I have lived
with assassins all my life. I grew up afraid of the dark, because for
me, the darkness was likely to conceal danger. I will not have my
child raised the same way. I will not have him sleep with armed guards
standing over him. I want him to grow up playing with children his own
age, not learning how to take down men twice his size in case he's
attacked. I want the whole damned world to know what I'm capable of if
they dare to threaten me or mine. This ends now."
"He didn't threaten you, Damin, or your wife and child. He
was trying to kill me."
"You're my friend, R'shiel, and he did it under my roof. It amounts
to the same thing."
"Do this thing and we won't be friends any longer, Damin."
Brak watched him hesitate for a moment, but the implacable rage that
consumed the Warlord was not something so easily swayed. Even faced
with the horror of what he was about to do, Brak found himself
sympathising with Damin. He'd been alive for seven hundred years and
seen worse things done for lesser reasons. He did not know how many men
had tried to kill Damin as a boy, but he could see now the scars that
it had left on him. He was willing to do anything, literally, to save
his unborn heir from the fear he must have lived through as a child,
not realising that in order to slay the monster, he would become a
monster himself.
Brak saw the look of horror in Adrina's eyes and the pain of this
confrontation emanating from the Harshini like waves of desperation.
And he could see in Damin's eyes the weight of the decision he had been
forced to make. For Damin it boiled down to a simple decision: the life
of a Karien child or the life of his own child.
"I'll do it," Brak said, stepping forward into the
torchlight.
R'shiel rounded on him in horror. "Brak!"
"I'm sorry, R'shiel, but Damin has a point. If he doesn't deal with
this, he'll never put an end to it. The child needs to die. He has to
make an example of him."
Damin looked stunned to find such an unexpected ally. "I cannot ask
a Harshini to do this. I won't even ask it of my own men."
"I'm a half-breed, Damin, and it won't be the worst thing I've
done." He turned to the Harshini and met Glenanaran's black
eyes
evenly. "Take the others away from here, Glenanaran. Just pray to the
gods that watch over this child that Death comes quickly for
him."
The Harshini stared at him for a moment, while Brak silently willed
him to understand. Then Glenanaran nodded solemnly. "We will pray for
the child."
Then do it quickly, Brak urged silently.
The Harshini turned and vanished into the darkness. R'shiel watched
him with dismay as he walked across the clearing and took Mikel by the
hand. Damin stood beside her, surprised and a little suspicious of
Brak's willingness to kill.
"How do I know this isn't a trick?"
"This is no trick, Damin."
He grabbed Mikel by the arm and pulled him clear of the guards, then
drew the dagger from his belt. He turned it for a moment in his hand as
if testing the weight, then he glared at Damin.
"Are you planning to watch?"
"Yes."
"You're a sick son of a bitch, aren't you?"
"No, just a distrustful one. I don't believe you'll do it."
He's calling my bluff. But he could not draw on his power
to create an illusion. Damin would notice what he was up to as soon as
he saw his eyes darken. R'shiel stood with Damin and made no move to
stop him, either. She too was calling his bluff.
He looked into the eyes of the confused child. Mikel had moved
beyond fear and stepped over into paralytic terror.
"Are you ready to meet Death, Mikel?" he asked softly,
almost
gently. Adrina choked back a sob in the background and the torches were
hissing loudly in the unnatural silence.
Almost as soon as the words left his mouth, he felt the presence of
a god and almost sagged with relief. All around them, the air was
suddenly filled with unnatural, crystalline music as the figure of
Death appeared in the clearing. He wore a long hooded cloak, blacker
than the night surrounding them. His face was a pale skull, his hollow
eyes radiated light and he actually carried a scythe in his left hand.
Theatrical bastard, Brak thought sourly.
"This is the child you wish me to take?" the spectre asked
in a
musical voice that boomed through the clearing.
"Yes, my Lord."
"You presume a great deal, Brakandaran."
"This is necessary, my Lord."
The being glanced around the clearing until his eyes alighted on
R'shiel. Brak noticed, with some relief, that she was more suspicious
than frightened. She was a smart girl. She would work out what was
going on sooner or later. He just hoped that when she did figure it
out, she kept her mouth shut.
"Demon child," he said, with a slight bow in her direction.
"Divine One."
The creature swivelled his fearsome head towards Mikel then and held
out a skeletal arm to the child. "Come."
As if in a trance, the Karien boy walked towards the spectre
unresistingly. There was no fear in his eyes now, only quiet
acceptance. Death took the child by the hand, cast a withering gaze
over the stunned humans and disappeared, taking Mikel with him.
The silence that followed was chilling. Adrina screamed.
The sound broke Damin out of his trance and he ran to her, but she
pushed him away and turned on Brak savagely.
"Get out! Get away from here! You murderous, cold-blooded
bastard!"
"Adrina . . ." Damin said, trying to take her in
his arms.
"Don't touch me! This was your idea and now look what you've done.
Leave me alone!" She fled from the clearing sobbing loudly.
Damin
spared Brak a helpless look and followed after her.
Brak turned to find R'shiel standing alone in the clearing, her arms
crossed, staring at him disapprovingly.
"Why?"
He shrugged. "Less blood this way."
She crossed the space between them in three strides and punched him
painfully in the shoulder. "What the hell was all that about?"
"Damin was going to kill him, R'shiel, make no mistake about that.
It might have seemed like a good idea now, but I suspect it would have
had long-term consequences he hadn't thought about. Don't worry about
the boy. Gimlorie will keep him out of harm's way for the time
being."
She looked ready to hit him again. "You got Glenanaran to call
Gimlorie, didn't you? That's why the Harshini didn't object."
"Clever girl."
"But why pretend he was Death?"
"Damin had to believe Mikel was dead, or he would have finished the
job himself. Actually, I thought Gimlorie did a fair imitation of Death
myself, although the scythe was a bit over the top."
"Is Mikel dead?"
"He's residing with the gods, temporarily."
"Will you stop being so bloody cryptic!"
He smiled at her anger, which did nothing to help. "I'll explain
later. In the meantime, I think we should get out of here before Adrina
decides to have me hung, drawn and quartered."
"Where are we going to go at this time of night?"
"Back to the Citadel. I'm getting a little fed up with Xaphista. I
think it's about time you fulfilled your destiny, demon child."
CHAPTER 56
R'shiel was surprised by the number of Kariens
camped around the Citadel as they flew towards it. The invading army
had now pulled back behind the shallow Saran River. They had blocked
the bridges with overturned wagons and there was clear ground between
the Citadel and the Karien troops. There seemed to be fewer Kariens,
although they still numbered in the tens of thousands. The combination
of dwindling supplies, no spiritual or military leadership and, she
learnt later that day, the news that the Harshini had returned, had
played havoc with the siege army.
She had no time to dwell on it, though, as she noticed the Citadel.
It was just on dusk, and she had expected to see the Dimming begin as
the walls paled and lost their radiance with the coming night. But the
Citadel shone like a lantern in the gathering gloom, casting its soft
light out towards the Saran. It made sense, then, why the Kariens had
pulled back behind the water. They were hiding in the darkness where
the Citadel's illumination could not touch them.
The dragons settled on the sandy floor of the amphitheatre as the
sun set completely, but even here the night was banished by the
radiance. A Defender R'shiel did not know came out to greet them,
casting his eyes over the dragons with the world-weary air of a man who
had seen it all before, and informed them that the Lord Defender was
expecting them, and required their presence immediately.
"Where have you been?" Tarja demanded as
soon as
they appeared in the doorway. "We expected you back days ago."
"We were checking on Damin and the Fardohnyans."
"How close are they?" Garet asked. He and Shananara were
sitting in
the heavy leather chairs facing the desk. Tarja paced behind it like a
restless cat.
"The Fardohnyans should reach Brodenvale late next week. Damin's not
far behind them. Another few days I suppose."
"That's impossible!" Garet exclaimed. "There is no way they
could
have covered that much distance in such a short time."
"You forget the Harshini and the gods are actively helping them,
Commandant," Shananara reminded him.
"I don't care who's helping them, Your Majesty. It is simply not
possible to sail upriver so quickly, even in oared warships. Or march
an army through anywhere at that speed." He turned to Brak and
R'shiel,
shaking his head. "You must be mistaken."
"We're not mistaken, Garet. Believe it, or don't believe it. It
makes no difference to us." R'shiel stepped into the office,
took the
seat beside Shananara and turned her gaze on Tarja. He looked tired.
"The Defender who met us in the amphitheatre said you wanted to speak
to us."
"We got a reply from King Jasnoff."
"What did he say?"
"It was pretty long-winded, but the essence was, 'Kill my
dukes and
I'll turn Medalon into a graveyard'."
"What are you going to do now?" R'shiel asked.
"That's what we were just discussing," Garet informed them.
"Tarja
wants to wait until the relief forces arrive, and then attack the
Kariens outside. I think we should stick to our original plan: kill one
of the dukes and send Jasnoff his head to prove we're not bluffing. Her
Majesty here wants us to lay down our arms, put flowers in our hair,
and swear eternal peace and brotherhood with our enemies."
R'shiel smiled, not at all sure that Garet was joking. "Well, I
happen to like Shananara's idea better."
Tarja frowned at her. "This is no joking matter, R'shiel. Do you
have anything constructive to offer? If not, we don't need you
here."
"Actually, I do. I want you to give the priests back their staffs
and let them go."
Even Shananara baulked at that suggestion. "You can't be
serious."
"She's serious," Tarja said, studying her intently. "It was
your
idea to take them hostage, so I'm told. Now you want to let them go.
You have a reason, I suppose?"
"We need them outside, where they can influence their
troops."
"I was under the impression that the whole purpose of confining them
here was to stop them influencing their troops," Garet
remarked. Oddly, he had not objected to the suggestion. R'shiel thought
his would be the loudest voice raised in protest.
"That was before I figured out how to influence the
priests."
"So, we let a hundred fanatical priests loose among the currently
leaderless and uncoordinated troops outside, who outnumber us about
seven to one, on the off chance that you can make them act the way you
want?" Garet asked. He nodded thoughtfully. "That sounds
reasonable.
Perhaps we could just throw all the people in the Citadel off the
walls, too, so our enemies won't have to go to the bother of putting
them to the sword."
"Your wit is exceeded only by your blindness, Garet,"
R'shiel
retorted impatiently.
"At least I have my wits. You seem to have lost
yours."
"Garet . . ." Tarja said warningly, in an attempt
to head
off the argument. He turned to R'shiel with an expression that left
little doubt of his reaction if she continued to bait the commandant.
"How can you influence the priests?"
"Their staffs are made up of pieces of the missing Seeing Stones.
They're like a conduit. If I can find the Seeing Stone here in the
Citadel, I can use it to channel whatever I want through it to the
priests."
"But how is that possible?" Shananara said.
"Well, if you don't know, that hardly fills me with
confidence," Garet muttered.
"My guess," Brak interjected, understanding what Shananara
was
asking, "is that either the Fardohnyans or the Sisterhood sold their
Stone to the Kariens and they broke it up. They're the only two that
are missing."
"Well, it wasn't the Sisterhood," Tarja informed them.
"We've found
the Citadel's Seeing Stone."
"You found it? Where?"
"In the Great Hall. There was a false wall at the back of
. . . R'shiel!"
She did not answer him or even hear what else he had to say.
R'shiel was on her feet, out of the office and barrelling down the
stairs with Brak on her heels before anyone could stop them.
"What happened here?"
R'shiel's voice echoed through the Great Hall, although it seemed
strange referring to it by that name. This was the Temple of the Gods
in all its majestic glory. This was the place that Brak had described
to her with such melancholy longing. She understood now, what he had
been trying to tell her.
"My guess is Shananara," Brak said, his voice filled with
awe. "If
the Citadel needed placating, she would have done it here."
"It's fantastic! Look!" She walked the length of the Hall to
the
podium. The Seeing Stone stood before them, twice the size of the one
R'shiel had used in Greenharbour. It reflected the radiant pillars with
a soft light that filled the hall, banishing the shadows, highlighting
the exquisite artwork. "Oh, Brak, why did they ever try to hide
this?"
"Because they were human, and humans have a tendency to destroy
anything they don't understand."
R'shiel reached up and ran her hands over the cool surface of the
Stone, then turned to him doubtfully. "Do you think this will
work?"
"It's theoretically possible."
"That's what you said about coming back from the dead."
He shrugged. "Well, that relies on the whim of Death, so it's not
that cut and dried. This, however," he said pointing at the
Stone, "is
a lot more straightforward. The problem is not if it's possible,
though."
"Then what is the problem?"
"R'shiel, you have raw power to burn. You threw Sanctuary into
hiding like it was a child's toy. But that required brute force, not
finesse. What you want to do to these priests is going to call for a
delicate touch that you are a century away from achieving."
"Then perhaps I should wait? That gives you another hundred years to
live."
He smiled at her. "I doubt the Primal Gods would be so patient.
Besides, you'd be pretty sick of me in a hundred years,
R'shiel."
"How do you know?"
"Even the Harshini don't stay together that long. It's why they
don't get married. There's only so much you can take living with
another person before they start to wear on you."
"Will I be as cynical as you when I'm seven hundred years
old?"
"You're worse than me already."
She smiled and sat down on the steps of the podium. He sat beside
her for a moment in silence as she took in the monumental Temple. All
of this was her legacy, her inheritance. She laid her head on Brak's
shoulder, trying not to let the knowledge of his impending death
distract her.
For a moment, she closed her eyes and let the silence and the
memories of Sanctuary overwhelm her. She wished Brak had not put
conditions on it - wished he would wrap them in that
unbelievable
cocoon of magic again and transport her to that other plane where
pleasure and indulgence were the only things that mattered
. . .
"Founders!" She sat bolt upright and stared at him
wonderingly.
"What?"
"I don't need finesse, Brak."
"You don't?"
"No! I need pleasure!"
"Here? Now? A bit public, don't you think?"
"Don't be an ass!" she said, leaping to her feet, giddy with
the
knowledge that she knew, with absolute certainty, how to bring Xaphista
undone. "Don't you see? The other night the Harshini could feel us. You
said even Xaphista could feel it. You said he made his people turn away
from pleasure because it distracts them from him."
Brak looked at her askance. "What are you suggesting we do, demon
child? Have an orgy here in the Temple of the Gods and channel it
through to the priests via the Seeing Stone?"
She laughed. "You'd be surprised how close you are to the truth,
Brak. Come on!"
She grabbed his hand and pulled him to his feet then headed down the
Hall, dragging him in her wake.
"R'shiel!"
"What?"
"Where are you going?"
"You'll see," she said with a laugh.
He stopped and pulled her back. "Enough! I'm not taking another step
until you tell me what you're up to this time."
"Don't you trust me?"
"Not in the slightest."
She sighed heavily. "Brak, I'm going to distract the Kariens. I'm
going to take their minds off Xaphista for a while."
"Is that all?"
She nodded. "That's all I have to do, Brak."
She saw the dawning light of comprehension in his eyes and smiled.
Brak shook his head ruefully. "You're a sneaky little thing, aren't
you? I'm glad you're on our side."
"It'll work, won't it," she said. It was a statement, not a
question.
He nodded slowly. "Yes. It should work."
"Then let's go see Tarja."
"Gods, you're not going to tell him what you're planning, are
you?"
"Of course not. I'm going to ask him to throw a party."
CHAPTER 57
The following day, Tarja relented and agreed to let
the priests go. Garet objected vehemently, but once she had spoken to
Shananara and had her support, his advice was overruled. Tarja doubted
her, she could tell that from the way he looked at her and the edge of
scepticism in his voice. But with the knowledge that the Fardohnyans
were close, and Damin Wolfblade not far behind, he seemed to think that
she couldn't do their cause much harm and was prepared to indulge her.
Up to a point.
The priests were herded from the Lesser Hall towards the gate at
dawn the next day. Two of them led another priest whose eyes were
bandaged, although R'shiel did not know what had happened to him.
Parked near the entrance to the gatehouse was a covered wagon, inside
which were the confiscated staffs. Once she'd talked her way around
Tarja's objections, and the Defenders realised the stones were mere
crystals rather than diamonds, avarice gave way to apathy. But she was
not so foolish as to stand in range of a priest wielding his staff,
which was the reason she had chosen this vantage on the wall-walk, high
above the main gate.
As they neared the wagon, a Defender threw back the tarpaulin. The
tonsured men swarmed over it, grasping for the security of the symbols
of their rank. One of the priests glanced up, caught sight of her and
shook his staff, mouthing some insult she could not hear. Others
followed his gaze as they reclaimed their sacred sceptres. An uneasy
prickle of apprehension washed over R'shiel as she watched them.
"Brak, was it such a good idea to let so many of them gather like
this armed with their staffs?"
"You can't influence the Overlord's priests through their staffs if
they don't have them," he shrugged. "Don't worry. I don't think
they
can -"
His words were cut off by a loud explosion, as the merlon near
R'shiel shattered into a shower of flying pebbles. R'shiel ducked for
cover as another explosion buffeted her with flying debris. Screams of
terror, and the Defenders' cries of alarm, suddenly filled the street
below.
"You don't think they can what?" she shouted over
the
commotion.
Brak saw her eyes darken and laid an urgently restraining hand on
her arm. "They destroy magic, R'shiel. You're not linked through the
Seeing Stone here. Don't try to fight them."
"Watch me," she snarled angrily.
R'shiel stood up and looked down over the street. Defenders were
rushing heedlessly to fight an enemy they could not comprehend, while
the citizens who had come to watch the priests being released milled
about in panic, looking for a way to flee the sudden carnage, too
afraid to approach the gate. All other escape routes were blocked by
the Defenders.
She spied the cause of the trouble quickly enough. Three tonsured
priests held their staffs above their heads, chanting in unison as they
called on the power of the Overlord to strike down the demon child. The
other priests were not yet organised enough to join in the Watching
Coven, but it would not take them long. Three priests she could handle.
She knew that from experience. Any more and she could not predict the
outcome.
Turning her attention to the first priest, she hurled a burst of raw
power at the staff, understanding now what she had done by accident on
the northern plains of Medalon. Whatever spell made the staff drain
magic, its focus was the small chip of Seeing Stone at its core. The
power she threw at it overloaded the crystal and the conflict between
the force at its centre and the staff's ability to absorb magic created
an explosion that threw the priest to the ground with bleeding
eardrums. She repeated her effort at the next man, and then the one
beside him, careless of the power she was drawing.
Several others defiantly held up their only protection against her,
only to find themselves lying prostrate on the ground, their staffs
shattered, the gold star and silver lightning bolt fused into a glob of
worthless metal. R'shiel could feel rather than see Brak beside her. He
shouted something at her that she could not understand. Something about
using restraint, but all he could do was stand at her side, ready to
catch her if she fell.
It took a dozen or more explosions for the priests to be dissuaded
from any further attempts to destroy the demon child; much longer for
the Defenders to restore some semblance of order. R'shiel clung to the
power, standing over the gateway, her eyes burning black as she dared
them to try her again. She was trembling and exhausted and felt Brak's
arm slide around her waist gratefully. If she appeared to be a tower of
strength to the Kariens below, then let them think that. There was no
need for them to know that he was holding her up.
"You've come this far. Don't give up now, demon child," Brak
whispered as she slumped against him.
"I think I'm going to faint."
"No you're not," he told her sternly. "You're going to stand
up here
and watch every last one of them leave."
"Don't let me go, Brak."
"I won't."
She stood there for a long time, leaning into Brak's solid strength
as the Kariens picked up their staffs and filed through the gate
beneath her. Towards the end of the line, another small commotion broke
out as the three priests left discovered they did not have a staff they
could claim.
"Seems someone decided to collect a few souvenirs," Brak
remarked.
"Looks like it," she agreed distantly.
R'shiel watched the last of the priests leave. She heard the gate
close behind them, then turned to watch as they ran towards their
forces on the other side of the Saran. She did not let go of the power
until they had crossed the bridges and put the shallow river between
them and the Citadel.
The celebration that was organised to mark the
departure of the priests had been harder to arrange. R'shiel had
eventually convinced Tarja that it would be good for morale, but more
than that, it would annoy the Sisterhood. Even Garet didn't mind
annoying the Sisterhood, and with the strict rationing the Defenders
had imposed, they were in no danger of running out of food. A bit of
largesse would go a long way to easing the minds of the population, she
pointed out reasonably, and there were still a lot of Sisters of the
Blade in the Citadel, looking for any excuse to stir up trouble. She
had listed all her reasons calmly and didn't even try to pick a fight
with Garet Warner. Tarja eventually agreed and had given Captain
Grannon the task of organising such a mammoth affair. All R'shiel had
to do now was convince the Harshini to do their part.
The dormitories where the Harshini were quartered were nothing like
those R'shiel remembered living in. The whole building glowed with
light and colour. She walked the corridors with her mouth agape at what
had been hidden under the whitewash, until she reached the place
Shananara was using as a dayroom. It had been the Mistress of the
Sisterhood's office until recently.
"I hear there was some trouble at the gate," Shananara
remarked as
R'shiel knocked on the open door.
"The priests took exception to my presence," R'shiel told
her with a
shrug. "But I discouraged them from doing anything about it."
"I know," the Harshini Queen replied with a grimace. "I have
the
headache to prove it. I really wish you would learn some restraint,
R'shiel. You can be very exhausting at times."
"I'm sorry."
Shananara smiled and indicated that R'shiel should sit. The heavy
furniture seemed out of place now. With the walls restored to their
former glory, these rooms needed light, airy pieces, not the cumbersome
dark furniture the Sisterhood favoured.
"Brak tells me you have a plan."
"I need your help," she said, taking the seat opposite the
Queen.
"We cannot help you destroy Xaphista, R'shiel. For that matter, I
could not help you if you wanted to step on a bug."
"I know that. And I won't ask anything of the Harshini that goes
against their nature - but I need to distract his believers for
a
while."
"Distract them? How?" Shananara asked suspiciously.
R'shiel explained what she had in mind. The Queen listened to her,
nodding occasionally, then finally laughing delightedly. "And you
honestly think this ploy will work?"
"Brak seems to think it will."
"Yes, well Brak is half-human. It would probably appeal to his
rather skewed sense of humour."
"Then you'll help me?"
"Yes, demon child, the Harshini will help you."
"Even knowing it may result in the destruction of a god?"
"I don't know that will happen for certain, R'shiel. For all I know,
this will do nothing but annoy him."
R'shiel nodded, aware that the Queen was right. Brak thought it
might work, but none of them could be sure. "I have another favour to
ask."
"I'll grant it if I can."
"I need you in the Temple of the Gods with me. I don't have the
skill to do this alone."
"I cannot take a direct hand in this, R'shiel."
"No, but you can show me what I have to do."
"Very well," Shananara agreed with some reluctance. "But
don't count
on my help. I don't mean to sound like I'm threatening you, but I
simply cannot do anything that goes against the nature of the Harshini.
I will do what I can, but you may find, at the point where you need my
help the most, I will be useless to you."
"I'm prepared to risk that."
"Then I will be there, demon child. And may the gods guide our
hands."
R'shiel had one other task to perform before she
was ready, and when she left Shananara, she hurried through the streets
to the Defenders' blacksmith shop. They had finished the job she had
asked them to do and she examined their handiwork closely, careful not
to brush against it, until she was satisfied that it was exactly what
she had asked for. The sergeant in charge of the forge smiled as she
looked over it.
"You can touch it, lass. It doesn't bite, you know." He was
shouting
to be heard over the ringing of hammers on metal. The smiths and the
fletchers had been working non-stop for days, turning out weapons and
arrows to be stockpiled in case of a Karien attack.
"Actually, Joulen, it does bite." She straightened up and
nodded in
satisfaction. "Can you get one of your men to take it over to the Great
Hall for me? Ask them to put it near the Seeing Stone."
"Aye, if that's what you want."
"It is, thank you."
It was late afternoon when R'shiel left the blacksmith's forge,
satisfied she had done all that she could for the time being. All that
was needed now was for Xaphista to walk into her trap.
CHAPTER 58
Music from the amphitheatre drifted on the night as
musicians warmed up their instruments. The Citadel blazed softly under
a cloudless, blue-velvet sky. R'shiel looked down over the Karien camp
from the wall-walk at the scattered fires that pierced the plain like
dollops of hot blood in the darkness. The fires stretched as far as she
could see. She had done everything she could think of, covered every
contingency.
There was nothing left to do now but wait.
"It's been pretty quiet down there since we let the priests
go."
She glanced at Tarja, aware that he was rather uncomfortable. This
was the first time they had been alone since her return. She had
brought him here to talk to him undisturbed. That was never going to
happen in his office. There were things she needed to say to him, for
her own peace of mind, if nothing else.
"They're probably down there plotting our downfall," she
remarked,
trying to sound lighthearted.
"I'd say that was almost a certainty."
She glanced at him, but he was staring down at the plain with
determination. His profile was guarded. "Tarja."
"Yes?"
"I'm sorry."
He turned to look at her. "For what?"
"For what Kalianah did to you. For all of it, I suppose."
Tarja shrugged, not comfortable with either the subject or her
apology. "R'shiel, there's really no need . . ."
"Yes there is, Tarja. At the very least, it eases my guilt a
bit."
"In that case, apology accepted," he said, smiling faintly
to assure
her of his sincerity.
There were ten thousand other things that R'shiel wanted to say to
him, but Tarja seemed satisfied that the subject was painlessly closed.
He turned back to watching the plain in silence. R'shiel sighed and
decided to let the matter drop. There was nothing to be gained from
opening old wounds. Tarja had obviously been at pains to put the past
behind him.
R'shiel's thoughts turned to the coming confrontation. She tried to
calculate how much longer she had to wait. It was the evening of
Fifthday. Tomorrow was Restday and, at dawn, every Karien would be
crammed into the village churches, every city dweller would be crowded
into the nearest temple. Even the soldiers below would turn their backs
on the Citadel to listen to their priests. And that's when she would
make her move. When every Karien voice would be raised in worship of
their god.
It was when Xaphista would be at his most powerful.
It was also when he was most vulnerable.
"If this works," she said, breaking the silence, "all Damin
and
Hablet are going to have to do is mop up."
"Mopping up tens of thousands of Kariens and getting them back
across the border will be a job in itself, R'shiel. And don't forget
that we still have to gain control over the rest of Medalon. The
Sisters of the Blade here in the Citadel might appear to be toeing the
line, but I suspect it's only because of the siege. They're happy to
let us fight their battles for them, but the moment we're rid of the
Kariens, they'll start trying to regain their position. We've a very
long road ahead of us."
"You'll make a good Lord Defender, Tarja."
He shrugged. "I never wanted to be Lord Defender, you know, not even
when I was a Cadet. I knew what people were saying about me. I knew
everyone thought I was being groomed for the job and the idea terrified
me. The responsibility terrified me. It still does. I was much happier
as a simple captain on the southern border fighting Damin Wolfblade.
Life was a lot less complicated back then."
"I think Damin would agree with you. He's finding some of the
decisions required of a High Prince a bit more than he bargained
for."
For a moment she recalled Damin's unforgiving eyes as he sentenced
Mikel to death. Tarja would be confronted with similar dilemmas, she
was certain. She envied neither of them. Then she smiled, as something
else occurred to her. "He has Adrina with him."
"Oh, wonderful," he groaned.
"Don't worry, Tarja," she assured him, laughing softly at
the
expression on his face. "You'll be safe. She only has eyes for Damin,
these days. Besides, she's due to give birth soon. You never know
. . . she might have the child here in the Citadel and decide
to name it after you. But I think you'll find her too preoccupied to
worry about flirting with you."
He looked very relieved. "I like Adrina, but she can be very
. . . trying."
With a sympathetic smile, R'shiel turned her back on the Kariens and
leaned against the softly glowing wall. She folded her arms across her
body and studied the pattern in the stonework beneath her feet for a
moment, working up the courage to say what she had brought him up here
tell him.
"Tarja, when this is over, I'm leaving."
He looked at her in surprise. "Where are you going?"
"I have some things to take care of. Loclon is still out there
somewhere, for one thing. I won't rest until I've dealt with
him."
"I'm sorry we didn't find him. No, worse than that, I'm sorry I
didn't kill him. You were right. You warned me years ago that I should
have put an end to him that evening in the arena when he killed Georj.
Do you know how often I wish I had?"
"Probably nearly as often as I do."
For a moment, he could not meet her eyes. The memory of what Loclon
had done to her was too dreadful to confront. He glanced back over the
plain before he answered.
"We didn't see any sign of him when we let the Kariens out. He may
still be in the Citadel."
"No, Tarja. He's long gone. But it doesn't matter. I'm half
Harshini. I have several lifetimes to fill. I don't mind using one of
them to find Loclon."
He nodded silently, needing no further explanation.
"I have to get Mikel back, too."
"Mikel? That Karien boy who crossed the border with Adrina? What
happened to him?"
"The God of Music is minding him for a time. I have to go and get
him back."
"A god is minding him?" Tarja repeated doubtfully.
"I don't
really want to know what that means, do I?"
She laughed softly. "No."
"Will you come back when you've finished?"
"I don't know," she shrugged. "There's something else I have
to do,
but I don't think it's going to be that easy, and I don't know how long
it will take. You can keep a lantern burning for me, Tarja, but don't
wait up."
He smiled then, perhaps even a little relieved that she would not be
around to remind him of a past he thought better forgotten. Kalianah's
geas was not yet a distant memory. Time would make the past easier to
come to terms with. He was no longer her brother and would never again
be her lover, but she could count him a friend.
"I'll miss you."
"No you won't. You'll be glad to see the back of me. So will Garet.
And Mandah." He turned from her, and it took R'shiel a moment
to
realise that it wasn't anger that turned him away, but embarrassment.
"Oh, Tarja, don't be so foolish. I know I've never been friendly with
her, but Mandah adores you. I worked that out when we first met in
Reddingdale. I suppose that's why I never liked her. That, and the fact
that she's so insufferably nice. She's probably one of those Novices
who grew up in the Citadel lusting after you and Georj. It doesn't
bother me, and you shouldn't let it bother you."
Tarja suddenly grinned at his own foolishness. "That's very noble of
you, R'shiel."
"Actually, Brak said the same thing."
Tarja's grin faded at the mention of Brak. There was still a degree
of residual distrust between them, R'shiel knew. Brak had done a great
deal that Tarja found hard to forgive. "Is he going with you when you
leave?"
She shook her head sadly. "No, Tarja. Where Brak is going, I can't
follow."
He was silent for a moment then looked at her strangely. "Do you
love him, R'shiel?"
"Not in the way you think. It's something else. You wouldn't
understand. The Harshini would."
"The Harshini," he sighed heavily. "I don't suppose there's
any
chance the Harshini will want to leave the Citadel too, once this is
all over and done with?"
"Not much," she agreed with a grin.
He shook his head ruefully. "Well, wherever you go and whatever you
do, R'shiel, spare a thought for me every now and then. Things are
going to get a lot worse before they get better, I fear."
R'shiel smiled sympathetically, but did not answer him. They stayed
on top of the wall for a while longer, until the discordant notes of
the distant musicians ceased. Then the air was filled with the strains
of a cheerful melody as the party in the amphitheatre got under way. By
unspoken agreement, they turned and walked back down the spiral
staircase in the gatehouse to the street and headed towards the music.
CHAPTER 59
R'shiel had feared that allowing the Harshini to
mingle with the people of the Citadel in the amphitheatre would be
inviting trouble, but she need not have worried. Although the
Medalonians had spent two hundred years reviling their race, when
confronted with one in person, the Harshini were almost impossible to
dislike. They did not share the human frailties of shyness or
self-doubt, and assumed everyone was as happy to meet them as they were
to meet others. Their wide-eyed joy at being invited to share the
celebration was infectious. After a moment's awkward silence when the
Harshini first arrived, the party settled down again and the citizens
of the Citadel set about enjoying themselves as if the Karien army
outside did not exist.
"Isn't it amazing what a bit of free food and alcohol will do for a
city's morale," Brak remarked as he found R'shiel sitting high
up in
the tiered seating of the amphitheatre watching the party.
"You think that's going to help morale? Just wait till they
find out that the court'esa have been laid on free of charge
for the evening."
"How did you get Tarja to agree to that?"
"Ah, well . . . come to think of it, I didn't actually
mention it to him. He's pretty busy at the moment. I didn't want to
burden him with details."
"I'm sure he'll appreciate your consideration when the court'esa
houses send him their bills for this evening's entertainment."
"He'll get over it."
"You spoke to him, then?"
"Yes."
"And?"
"And what? There's nothing much to tell, Brak."
"No more guilt? No more pain?" he asked gently.
"No."
"Then all that is left to do is wait, demon child."
She nodded silently. Brak slipped his arm around her shoulder
against the cold and she leaned against him as they watched the party
in silence, waiting for the dawn.
The party was still well under way when R'shiel
and Brak rose from their seats high in the amphitheatre and made their
way to the Temple of the Gods. The sky was still dark, but R'shiel
could feel the morning approaching. The Citadel was ablaze with light,
adding its own unique essence to the celebrations. They walked through
the almost-deserted streets in silence, aware that the overwhelming
atmosphere in the Citadel was not one of fear or tension, but -
temporarily at least - one of joy.
Shananara was waiting for them in the Temple of the Gods, her
expression serene and hopeful. She smiled as they walked across the
echoing floor to greet her.
"For the first time since I've been back, the Citadel almost feels
like it used to," she remarked.
"Let's hope it lasts," R'shiel said, suddenly plagued with
doubt.
"Have faith, demon child."
R'shiel did not bother to answer that. Faith was something she had
been raised to scorn. Instead, she looked at Brak and Shananara
questioningly. "What time is it?"
"Almost dawn."
"Then there's no point in putting this off any longer."
She turned to face the Seeing Stone and opened her mind to the
power. Drinking in the intoxicating sweetness, she let it fill her
until her eyes burned black and she trembled with the raw force of it.
She could feel Shananara reach for it too, and then Brak. His eyes
darkened until they were as black as ebony. The torrent that she and
Shananara could channel was vast compared to the mere stream he had
access to, but his touch was that of the maestro next to her ham-fisted
grasp. At the edge of her awareness, she felt him call to the Citadel.
The mammoth awareness was slow to respond. But Brak knew the Citadel
and the Citadel knew Brak. It was a relationship that was centuries old
and beyond her comprehension.
In the distance, inside the Citadel, she heard shouts of alarm and
the sound of a woman screaming. The walls began to pulse with light.
They throbbed as the Citadel responded to Brak's call. R'shiel felt him
stir. She felt the Citadel's touch and it almost brought her to her
knees. Once before he had reached out to welcome her. She realised now
that the last time he had merely glanced over her with mild interest.
R'shiel turned her attention to the Temple of the Gods and called
out silently for Brehn, the God of Storms. He was waiting for her.
Clouds began to gather over the fortress with unnatural speed, blotting
out the rising sun and casting a pall of fear over the army outside.
She called out to the other gods. Jagged lightning split the
awakening sky as Dacendaran appeared beside her in his motley garb, and
beside him Jondalup, the God of Chance materialised. Further along the
hall Kalianah appeared, but for this occasion she chose to appear as a
young woman, rather than the child she normally preferred. She stood
there in all her radiant glory, blinding any man foolish enough to look
upon her. One by one, the other Primal Gods appeared, many of whom
R'shiel could not even name. But every one of them she had summoned had
answered her call. They could not help it. She was drawing on so much
of their essence that even they were under her compulsion for a time.
Finally Zegarnald appeared, curiously smaller than normal, although he
still stood as high as the gallery.
Through the link she shared with Shananara she had no need for
words. By mutual agreement they reached out to embrace the Citadel.
Every thought, every mood, every happy laugh, every bawdy song and
dancing couple, every lover's caress was drawn into their net. R'shiel
drew it to her, relying on Shananara's skill to filter out the odd
discordant thought - a fight between two drunken Defenders over
an
insult from their Cadet days. Two women squabbling over whose baby was
the prettier. A lover's quarrel. All of it swirled through the net they
wove, and with the skill of a master, Shananara refined it and filtered
it until it was almost a concentrated essence of joy and happiness and
pleasure.
But mixed in with the joy was more than just simple human pleasure.
The Harshini were here and they willingly lent their essence to the
emotions R'shiel and Shananara were distilling. Passion, pleasure and a
hint of the wonder R'shiel had experienced in Sanctuary with Brak were
added to the potent blend. The feel of it was enough to make R'shiel's
spine tingle, and she had to concentrate hard to avoid losing herself
in the sheer ecstasy of it.
R'shiel had no concept of time, no idea if it was fully dawn yet, or
if a whole day had passed. She opened her eyes, seeing nothing but the
crystal that loomed in front of her, and placed her hands on the Seeing
Stone.
Taking a deep breath, R'shiel hurled everything she had gathered at
the Stone, not attempting subtlety or finesse. She had only her
strength to rely on, and the knowledge that every Seeing Stone would
respond to her sending. Every Seeing Stone and every part of one.
Every staff that contained chips of the broken Stone absorbed the
elixir of joy that she threw at it greedily. Every drop of pleasure
that she could wring from the Citadel she hurled at them, then sent her
mind out to follow.
She had unleashed chaos.
The Seeing Stone in Greenharbour pulsated with light, and she caught
a glimpse of Kalan, standing before the Stone, her face alight with
rapture as she tried to fathom its unaccountable behaviour. With a
blurring, gut-wrenching twist, R'shiel found herself looking down over
another Stone in a dank cave, surrounded by tonsured priests, who
wailed with despair as the pleasure emanating from the Stone began to
draw them from their god. In the back of her mind she felt the Stone in
Sanctuary, hidden far out of time, trying to answer the call. She
gathered her thoughts that were rapidly being torn apart by the
maelstrom and threw her mind northward towards Karien.
She reached for any part of any Seeing Stone that she could touch,
and the chips of crystal responded immediately. She saw a large temple
with a ceiling covered in mother-of-pearl tiles, a priest in glorious
robes gripping his staff with wide, terrified eyes as his congregation
fell under the spell she was weaving. Another place, another temple.
Another terrified priest. Another congregation caught in the thrall. An
orgy of rapturous pleasure. Everywhere she cast her mind the response
was the same. Her own savage joy suddenly swelled the link and she
turned from the Stone.
It didn't matter now. The damage was done. The power flowed through
the Seeing Stone like a dam that had broken under the weight of too
much rain. All the pleasure, all the joy, all the sin denied to his
believers hit the Overlord's people like a wave of bliss that made them
forget everything for a brief moment in time . . . including
their god.
She felt a surge of power from the Citadel as it reached out to
embrace her, to bolster her resistance - and not a moment too
soon. She
had barely taken her hand from the Stone when Xaphista appeared,
striding through the other gods, his eyes burning with anger.
"Stop this abomination!"
Although she well knew the seductive touch of his spirit, R'shiel
had never seen Xaphista in material form. She found the sight a little
disappointing. He chose to appear as an old man, with long white hair
that flowed around his broad shoulders, although the physique he
affected belonged to a much younger man. His dark cassock rippled in
the breeze of his passing and in his hand he carried a staff that
almost brushed the ceiling, topped by a small sun that radiated beams
of blinding light through the Temple.
"How dare you! These are my people!"
The ground trembled with his wrath.
"I'm just reminding them of what you've made them forget!"
Xaphista's answer was to hurl a blast of rage at her that almost
knocked her off her feet. But the Citadel surged to meet it, adding his
implacable will to her own, so it merely buffeted her like a sudden
gust of magical wind.
The Primal Gods did nothing. There was nothing they could do but
grant her open access to their power. Xaphista was stronger than them
combined. That was the danger of him. It was the reason they created
the demon child, and the reason they could do little but rail
helplessly against him. Individually, they did not have the strength to
fight him, and their own, inviolable laws did not permit them to kill
him. The demon child was their only hope.
"You defy me at your peril, demon child!"
"You threaten me at yours!"
And then, like a tap suddenly turned off, she felt Shananara let go
of her power. R'shiel felt it go, and staggered under the weight of
Xaphista's wrath, but the Harshini Queen could not hold her power
against the might of the God's anger. But as the torrent through the
Seeing Stone dwindled to nothing, Xaphista let out a cry of
unimaginable pain. Although she wasn't certain, R'shiel guessed that
across the length and breadth of Karien, the thrall was slowly being
shaken by his followers. In the aftermath of R'shiel's storm of
pleasure and joy, one overriding, overwhelming feeling now consumed the
hearts of his believers.
Doubt.
"It's over, Xaphista. The Kariens have begun to doubt you. How long
will they belong to you once Kalianah or Zegarnald walk among your
followers? They are yours no longer!"
"You will never be strong enough to defeat me, demon
child."
"I'm not trying to defeat you, Xaphista. I just want your people to
doubt you."
The Overlord looked down on her with blazing eyes. "You cannot
take my people from me!"
"You think not? You've spent centuries convincing them the others
gods don't exist. Every time a Karien turns round now, there will be a
Primal God waiting for them. I'll flood the world with miracles. I will
have Jondalup turn every human who games into a winner. I will have
Dacendaran turn every person into a thief. Cheltaran will heal every
wound, every sick child, every dying old woman. I'll make the Primal
Gods answer every single prayer your people utter. You'll be so deep in
divine intervention that there won't be a Karien left who can deny the
presence of the Primal Gods within a month."
"Such recklessness would destroy the natural balance of the
universe."
"I don't care."
She truly didn't, and Xaphista knew she wasn't lying. R'shiel had
not been raised among the Harshini. Despite everything they had tried
to teach her at Sanctuary, despite everything Brak had explained to her
since, she still did not quite understand the place the gods held in
the scheme of things. It was her ignorance that lent her threat its
power. No full-blooded Harshini could have contemplated such a course
of action. R'shiel did not appreciate the consequences of her
behaviour. She was a child who had accidentally stumbled over a weapon
of mass destruction and wanted to use it to get her own way, totally
oblivious to the fact that it would destroy her along with her foes.
The Overlord glared at the other gods, who had remained silent for
the entire exchange.
"You cannot hide behind this child. Each one of you will fade
into nothing as I grow in strength."
"You cannot destroy us, Xaphista," Zegarnald boomed,
unable
to contain his anger. "Look at you! Already the doubt begins to take
its toll."
Zegarnald was right. In the short time Xaphista had been in the
Hall, he had visibly diminished. R'shiel was not sure how long she had
before his priests restored order. Not sure how long the doubt and
uncertainty of his believers would last, or how long the pleasure she
had swamped them with would distract them from their god.
"We will have an accounting for this, demon child."
The
statement was as close to an admission of defeat as Xaphista was likely
to get. He was not conceding victory and he wasn't going to quit
without a fight. He turned on the God of War savagely, even as he
dwindled a little more. "I have no need to destroy you, Zegarnald.
When the whole world lies prostrate at my feet there will be no wars
and you will be obsolete . . . Each of you represents a vice
that my believers eschew. You, Kalianah, and you, Dacendaran -
when every human believes it is a sin to love or steal, there will be
no need for you, no need for any of you . . . Enjoy your
dying moments, Primal Gods. Before long you will be nothing more than
sad, forgotten legends."
Xaphista's defiant words were at odds with his stature. He was no
taller than Brak now, and he no longer had the power to assume the form
he chose. A demon stood before them, larger than normal, but still
raging defiantly. It was not a smooth transition. He surged up in size
every now and then as pockets of his followers denied what they had
seen and felt, but he was dwindling fast. But how much longer did they
have before doubt gave way to habit? Before wonder gave way to fear?
Before his people shrugged off what they felt, or worse, attributed it
to the Overlord and their belief in him came surging back, like the
backdraft after a savage explosion?
Not long, R'shiel knew. Not very long at all.
"Go!" she cried to the Primal Gods. "Go out among his
people! Now!
While you have the chance!"
Most of the gods vanished abruptly and R'shiel became aware of the
noise. A wailing arose that seemed to be coming from everywhere at
once. She discovered she was rigid with tension. The Citadel and the
plain surrounding it were filled with incredulous, panicked shouting.
She turned to Xaphista, looking down at him as he shrank back to a
demon no larger than Dranymire.
And then she felt it.
On the very edge of her awareness.
The backlash.
"Brak!" There was more than a little panic in her
voice as
she cried out to him. She did not have the skill, or even the energy,
to do what was needed now. Brak did, however. The crude iron cage built
by the Defenders flew through the air, guided by Brak's mind, rather
than his hands. He could no more touch it than R'shiel could. It landed
with a clatter over the cringing demon that had once been a god - and
would be a god again, as soon as the racing wave of belief hit them.
Xaphista howled his outrage and then his pain as he snatched at the
bars of the cage. The three staff heads welded to the bars absorbed his
power as easily as they had tortured the little demon caught by his
priests when R'shiel had tried to fool the Quorum into believing that a
demon meld was really the First Sister.
And then it hit her.
R'shiel fell hard, only vaguely aware of Brak calling out to her,
only dimly seeing Shananara as she collapsed beside her. Xaphista leapt
at the bars of his cage, but the force of the backlash hit her and she
plunged into unconsciousness before she could discover if her trap was
sufficient to contain him.
CHAPTER 60
When R'shiel finally awoke, it was to find Death
standing over her.
The Hall was quiet; even the gods were gone. Daylight, splintered by
the stained glass windows, striped the floor in coloured light. Her
head was pounding, her body wrung out and weak. R'shiel felt like she
had been hit by a falling building.
"Am I going to die now?"
Death looked down at her and shook his head. He was once again in
the form of a Harshini, the same benign form he had assumed to escort
Korandellan into the Underworld.
With a start, R'shiel realised what that meant and pushed herself up
painfully. Brak lay not far from her, his skin pallid. He wasn't
breathing. She scrambled on her hands and knees to his side and shook
him, but he showed no sign of life.
"You've taken him already!" she accused, tears spilling down
her
face.
"It was the backlash, demon child. It affected all the
Harshini."
She glanced over at Shananara, who also lay unconscious on the floor
of the Hall. "Are the other Harshini dead?"
"No. The Citadel will not permit a Harshini to die within his walls.
They were protected. The Harshini outside the Citadel would have been
too far out of range to suffer more than the edges of it."
"What about the humans?"
"The backlash would not have affected them. Not physically. Only a
half-breed would be in danger."
"Then I killed Brak," she said dully. Her emotions were numb
from
exhaustion.
"Brak offered his life in exchange for yours some time ago, demon
child. He did not die unwillingly."
She stared down at Brak, unwilling, even now, to accept it. He did
not deserve to die for her. "Have you come to take him?"
"That was my intention, demon child. But you sent his soul on its
way without the body."
"But you can take his body now, can't you?"
Death stared at her but did not answer. R'shiel was suddenly
frightened that the answer would be one she didn't want to hear. She
leaned forward and gently placed a kiss on Brak's rapidly cooling
forehead, then climbed slowly to her feet and staggered past Death,
falling on her knees near the cage that held Xaphista.
The trap had held. Xaphista cowered in the centre of the cage,
trying to stay clear of the magically charged bars. He was whimpering.
The magic of the staff heads had shielded him from the blast but his
own magic had prevented him from drawing strength from the backlash
when he needed it most. She had been afraid the trap would not hold.
But the power that had washed over the cage was unfocused. There was no
Seeing Stone to direct it, no determined will behind it. Xaphista the
God was vanquished. All that remained in his place was Xaphista the
demon. And he was a small and rather pathetic looking demon at that.
"I have come for this one too," Death told her, gliding to
her side. "He will cause less trouble in my keeping."
"Just his soul," R'shiel said, glancing up at Death. "Not
the body.
I don't want you getting bored one day and deciding to send him
back."
"You presume much, demon child."
She glanced around the Hall at Brak's body and Shananara's prone
form, then looked back at Death. "I've earnt it, don't you
think?"
"Perhaps."
"And you have to take Brak's body. All of him."
"His soul has already fled, demon child."
"You're Death. You can reunite them."
"To what purpose?"
"Because the gods owe me that much."
"Was there anything else?" Had she not been so exhausted,
she might
have detected a slight note of impatience in his tone.
"Is there any way I can get Brak back?"
"I am Death, demon child. I do not run an inn. Lives do not come and
go as they please through my realm."
Significantly, Death hadn't said no. R'shiel climbed to her feet and
faced him, willing for the moment to let the matter drop. "Then can I
ask you a question before you go?"
"You may."
"How many hells are there?"
If he was surprised by her question, he gave no outward sign. "As
many as there are creatures to imagine them, demon child. I do not
create them. Each soul creates its own hell. Whether they suffer the
afterlife or enjoy it is entirely up to them."
"So if I want someone to suffer, how do I make sure?"
"Evil is its own reward, demon child."
She nodded, thinking she understood what he meant. Death turned away
from her and looked at Xaphista. The demon trembled under his scrutiny
and then suddenly slumped against the bars. The withered grey body no
longer cared about the shielded cage. Its soul was gone. Death turned
then and opened his arms. R'shiel watched silently as Brak's lifeless
body floated across the Hall until it was resting in Death's embrace.
Then, without another word, Death vanished, leaving R'shiel standing
alone in the cavernous, empty Hall. She heard Shananara stirring and
went to help the Harshini Queen, wrapped in a cocoon of numbness and
grief that kept the pain at bay.
They stumbled out into bright sunlight. The
Citadel was in chaos. The streets were crowded, and the sounds of
shouted orders overlaid the general panic. They stood at the top of the
steps, looking down over the confusion. R'shiel had her arm around
Shananara, but she wasn't really certain who was holding up whom.
"You certainly know how to create a riot, cousin," Shananara
said
with a wan smile.
She helped Shananara down the steps and they pushed their way
against the panicked crowd towards the dormitories. R'shiel had to push
them flat against the walls on several occasions as troops of mounted
Defenders galloped by. The last troop to pass them stopped as their
officer called a sudden halt. He flew from his saddle and ran to them.
It was Tarja.
"What happened?" he demanded as R'shiel collapsed against
him.
"Xaphista is dead," she told him weakly.
Tarja looked at her in concern then waved his men forward. A
lieutenant jumped down from his mount and caught Shananara before she
fell.
"Get her back to the dormitories," Tarja ordered the man
holding the
Queen. "Get her own people to help her. And take an escort."
The young officer saluted with his free hand and scooped up the
Harshini Queen into his arms. He lifted Shananara up into his saddle,
swung up behind her, and then, waving a few of the troopers forward,
pushed his way through the throng and headed back towards the
dormitories. Once Shanan was safely out of harm's way, R'shiel sagged
with relief. Now she only had herself to worry about.
"Can you stand?" Tarja asked.
"I think so."
"Where's Brak?"
"He's dead."
"I'm sorry." Tarja sounded like he meant it, but R'shiel
knew he
would not grieve his death for long. Not like she would. "Let's get you
out of here."
"Is everyone all right?"
He glanced over his shoulder for a moment at the chaos in the
streets and smiled. "You mean this?"
She nodded.
"Oh, yes, everyone is fine, as far as we can tell. Just after dawn
there was some sort of . . . well, I don't know what it was,
but it knocked most of the Harshini unconscious and everybody else just
seemed to go berserk for a while. We're getting it under control, but
it's taking time, and now the Kariens are attacking."
"Attacking?"
"Don't worry, it's nothing serious. They're fighting amongst
themselves as much as they're aiming at us, but we still have to do
something to put it down. Sergeant!" A Defender hurried forward
and
saluted. "See that she gets back to her rooms and post a guard. I don't
want anybody disturbing Lady R'shiel while she's resting, is that
clear?"
"Yes, my Lord."
"Tarja, I don't need -"
"Shut up, R'shiel. You can hardly stand. Sergeant, once the Lady
R'shiel is in her rooms, find Mandah Rodak and send her to keep the
lady company."
"Tarja!"
Tarja grinned at her, knowing full well what his order meant. Mandah
would not let her budge until she was convinced she was fully
recovered. Worse than that, Mandah would insist on calling her "Divine
One". He thrust her into the arms of the waiting sergeant and
ran for
his horse, yelling orders as he leapt into the saddle and resumed his
push to the main gate. R'shiel watched him leave with a furious snarl,
but she was too tired to resist and let the Defender lift her onto his
mount and take her away from the bedlam that filled the streets of the
Citadel.
CHAPTER 61
The Defenders beat back the attack on the Citadel
with little effort. The Kariens were too disorganised to mount a
serious campaign, despite their numerical superiority. By mid-morning
they had withdrawn to the other side of the Saran. A significant number
withdrew even further. Desertions were decimating the ranks of the
Karien army on a regular basis. Garet estimated there were less than
seventy thousand left.
By the time Tarja returned to his office to confront the remainder
of the aftermath of whatever it was that R'shiel had unleashed, he was
exhausted. He had not been immune to the party atmosphere last night
and had consumed far too much wine. When all hell broke loose at dawn
he had woken with a head as thick as a door, his bed a tangle of sheets
and Mandah curled in his arms, her thick blonde hair spilling across
the pillow and tickling his nose. He had pushed her away impatiently,
annoyed at himself. He had not intended to get caught up in the
celebrations. He had certainly not intended to take Mandah to his bed,
and he couldn't shake the feeling that he had done so because R'shiel
had given him her blessing. Damn her. Damn all Harshini.
Seeing that she was wounded by his rejection, Tarja had kissed
Mandah soundly, promised to see her later and fled the room, getting
dressed on the run. He was hopping on one foot, pulling his boot onto
the other when Garet knocked on the door and opened it without waiting
for an answer.
"We appear to be under attack, my Lord," Garet said calmly.
He
looked over Tarja's shoulder towards the bedroom door. Mandah stood
there wrapped in nothing but a sheet, yawning sleepily. "Good morning,
Mandah."
"Commandant."
Tarja glared at Garet, waiting for him to say something, anything,
about finding the young pagan woman in his room. He was in a foul
enough mood to react rather badly if Garet even looked at him askance.
But the commandant's composure did not waver for an instant. "Oh,
and the population appears to be rioting, too."
"What the hell happened?"
"I assume it has something to do with R'shiel, but I can't be
certain. I suggest you get a move on, my Lord. We've a busy day ahead
of us."
That had proved to be a vast understatement. Tarja yearned for a day
that was merely busy. The Kariens had been pushed back and the
population in the Citadel would calm down eventually. Already many had
returned to their homes with sore heads and puzzled looks. But there
was still more to be done.
There was always more to be done.
When he finally pushed open the door to his office, he found several
Harshini waiting for him. Three were dressed in the long white robes
they favoured. The other two were dressed in Dragon Riders' leathers.
All five of them bowed solemnly as he entered the office and walked
cautiously to his desk.
"My Lord Defender."
"How is Shan . . . your Queen?"
"She is recovering, my Lord," one of the white-robed
Harshini
informed him. "We are most grateful for your assistance this
morning."
"And the rest of your people?"
"They are well, my Lord. Thank you for your concern."
The Harshini's constant thanks were starting to wear on him. "Is
there something I can do for you?"
"We are here to do something for you, my Lord." The Harshini
who
spoke was one of the Dragon Riders. She stepped forward with a smile.
"I am Pilarena and this is Jalerana. I have been honoured to aid Prince
Damin in his journey north and my companion has been with King Hablet
and his navy. We have come to coordinate your forces, my Lord."
Tarja slumped back in his chair in astonishment. "Coordinate my
forces?"
"We will relay messages, my Lord," the other Dragon Rider
explained. "If they are verbal, then we will carry messages of
goodwill. If you
want to communicate anything . . . else, then we must ask
that the messages are written and sealed and that we are not advised of
their contents."
Tarja nodded in understanding. The Harshini could do nothing to aid
their attack. If they knew the messages they carried were likely to
cause death, they would not deliver them. He smiled faintly, thinking
that they were very easy to underestimate. This race had survived for
thousands of years without being able to lift a finger in their own
defence. He was beginning to understand how they had managed it.
"Can you show me where they are now?" he asked, indicating
the map
laid out on his desk. He and Garet had been poring over it yesterday,
trying to guess where Damin might be.
Jalerana nodded and stepped forward. "The High Prince is here, my
Lord. He has with him approximately forty thousand men. The King of
Fardohnya is here and has another ten thousand. His Majesty asked that
I pass on his apologies that he could not bring a larger force. In the
time available it was all he could gather, and there are only so many
ships he could carry them in."
"Then we have fifty thousand men ready to attack?"
"You have fifty thousand men, my Lord. What you do with them
is not our concern," Pilarena remarked sternly.
"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend you."
She bowed slightly. "You are forgiven, my Lord."
"How did Damin get here so fast? With an army that big?"
"With the aid of the gods," Jalerana told him serenely.
Tarja shook his head, deciding he would be better off if he didn't
know the details. "I'd like to send a message to both Hablet and Damin.
Written messages. How soon before you can leave?"
"We will be ready when your dispatches are completed,"
Jalerana
assured him.
"Then if you would excuse me, Divine Ones, I have a lot of work to
do."
Four hours later, Tarja sealed the letters he had
written to Damin Wolfblade and King Hablet. Garet watched him pressing
the Lord Defender's seal into the warm wax and frowned.
"You know, those letters could cause us a lot of grief if they fell
into the wrong hands."
"The Harshini will deliver them safely."
"Suppose they decide to deliver them into the wrong
hands?"
Tarja shook his head at Garet's suspicions. "Haven't you seen enough
yet to know that they're on our side?"
"They're not on our side, Tarja. They are on their own side.
And you would do well not to forget it. Just because their Queen is
stunning and they smile a lot, it doesn't make them harmless."
Tarja grinned at the commandant. "Shall I tell Shananara you think
she's stunning?"
"Not if you want to see the sun come up tomorrow," Garet
warned with
a faint smile. "Any news on R'shiel?"
"Mandah says she's sleeping like the dead."
"Any idea what she actually did in that Hall?"
"No, and I don't want to know."
"Neither do I." Garet rose from his seat and walked to the
map,
frowning as he noted where the troop placements were marked. He still
thought the Harshini were lying about how far they had come. "Speaking
of Mandah . . ."
"It's none of your business, Garet."
"You're the Lord Defender, and she's a pagan."
"Then you've got nothing to complain about. A few months ago I was
sleeping with a Harshini. If I keep going at this rate, I'll have
worked my way up to a Quorum Member by next spring."
"This is no joking matter, Tarja. Once we clear out the Kariens, we
still have the rest of Medalon to secure. As it is, we've got half the
damned Sisterhood confined to their quarters. It's not going to help
our cause with you flaunting a pagan lover."
"You were the one who claimed I was the only one the pagans would
follow."
"Yes, but I didn't expect them to follow you into the
bedroom."
Tarja leaned back in his chair and studied Garet. "Is that your only
concern?"
"Yes."
"Then mind your own damned business."
Garet shook his head and bowed mockingly. "As you command, my Lord.
It's your neck."
"Garet, you wanted change. You wanted the Sisterhood gone. You can't
have just the bits you like and discard the rest."
"True," the commandant conceded reluctantly. "But you can't
blame me
for hoping."
They were interrupted by a knock on the door. Tarja called
permission to enter and Jalerana and Pilarena entered the office. They
bowed politely and accepted the letters Tarja handed them, not even
glancing at the packets they held.
"Do you have any other messages, my Lord?"
"Just tell Prince Damin and King Hablet that we anxiously await
their arrival. With joy, of course."
Jalerana smiled. "Of course, my Lord."
Garet watched them suspiciously as they left the office then shook
his head. "You're too trusting, Tarja."
"They can't knowingly cause harm, Garet."
"Perhaps not, but they can do a hell of a lot of damage unknowingly.
Besides, I never trust anybody who is always so damned happy."
CHAPTER 62
Damin Wolfblade and his army arrived at the Citadel
within an hour of the appearance of the first of King Hablet's
Fardohnyans. The constant flow of messages delivered by the Dragon
Riders between the Citadel, Hablet's ships and Damin's Warlords had
allowed an unprecedented level of coordination. Their forces were in
place, their strategy worked out to the finest detail, their victory
almost a foregone conclusion long before the Citadel came into view.
The only thing that irked Damin as he rode out to meet his
father-in-law was that Hablet had got here first.
Hablet proved to be a short, heavy-set man with a greying beard and
a scowl that was reserved for the man who had run off with his
daughter. Adrina had been left back at the camp, despite her protests.
The Harshini had stepped in to aid him in restraining her, no more
willing to let a pregnant woman near a battlefield than he was.
Hablet waited on a small rise overlooking the Karien army. The enemy
was aware of their presence. One could hardly move an army this size in
secret, but they were milling about aimlessly. The Karien dukes were
still hostages in the Citadel and their forces lacked any sound
leadership.
Damin frowned as he saw Hablet sitting astride a magnificent black
stallion, waiting for the High Prince to approach. It was deliberate,
Damin was certain. Hablet wanted him to be the supplicant. With a quick
glance at Narvell, who rode on his left, Damin bit back his annoyance
and galloped forward.
"Your Majesty," Damin said, with a slight bow as he reined
in beside
the King. His own stallion sidestepped nervously as he caught the scent
of the King's mount. The irony was not lost on Damin as he fought to
keep the beast under control. Two territorial stallions, indeed.
"You're Wolfblade, I suppose?"
"That's very observant of you, Your Majesty."
"Where's my daughter?"
"She's safe."
"Married to you? That's debateable."
Damin suddenly grinned at the Fardohnyan King as he realised Hablet
was more afraid of meeting him than he was of meeting Hablet. This man
had tried to have him assassinated any number of times, and had been
planning to invade his country until recently. It would not be
unreasonable for Damin to have called him out for it the moment he laid
eyes on him.
"Your Majesty, I'm sure you've a lot to say to Adrina and I know
she has quite a bit to say to you. But let's put aside our differences
for the time being and do something about these Kariens, shall
we?" He
didn't wait for Hablet to answer. "This is Narvell Hawksword, the
Warlord of Elasapine. He'll act as my liaison. Once the battle is
engaged the Harshini will be forced to withdraw, so I thought it might
be easier this way. As my force is four times the size of yours, and
includes a couple of thousand Defenders, we'll be bearing the brunt of
the attack, but any advice you offer will be welcome. If you wish to
join us in the command tent, just let Lord Hawksword know, and he'll
have someone show you the way."
Hablet sputtered something in Fardohnyan at Damin's high-handed
manner, but he didn't wait to find out what it was. He wheeled his
stallion around and galloped back towards his own lines, laughing at
the look on the King of Fardohnya's face.
Once the attack was sounded from the walls of the
Citadel the gates opened, and rank upon rank of depressingly
well-disciplined troops marched forth, followed by the Defender
cavalry. As they formed up in front of the walls on the other side of
the Saran River, Damin gave the signal to move forward. His advance
forces were mostly mounted, and they moved onto the plain like a wall
of impending death. He gave another signal and the Fardohnyan infantry
moved in from the west.
And then they waited.
Shananara had insisted that the Kariens be given the opportunity to
surrender. It was a condition of using her people to relay their
messages back and forth between the Citadel and the armies coming to
relieve them.
Damin took out his looking glass and focused on the Citadel as Tarja
emerged through the main gate. Mounted beside him was a bearded Karien,
one of Jasnoff's dukes, no doubt. Tarja let him take a long look at the
forces arrayed against his men. The two men spoke at some length, the
Karien gesticulating angrily, and then the duke wheeled his mount
around and returned to the Citadel. Damin swung the looking glass up to
the flagpole mounted over the gate. The white flag of truce was hastily
pulled down and battle colours were raised in their place. A whoop of
glee sounded along the Hythrun lines.
"It appears the Kariens aren't planning to surrender, my
Lord,"
Damin remarked to Almodavar with a grin.
"What a shame, Your Highness," Almodavar said insincerely.
"Then I suppose we'd better go and kill them all."
"That would seem to be the only option left open to us, Your
Highness."
Damin glanced over his shoulder. "Have the Harshini
withdrawn?"
"They're clear of the field, Your Highness. They withdrew as soon as
they saw the battle flags being raised."
Damin nodded and passed his looking glass to an aide and unsheathed
his sword. The sound of the Defender trumpets reached him faintly on
the breeze and he raised his arm to lead his troops into battle.
The battle, once it got under way, was almost as
bad as the one on the northern border. The Kariens were not acting
under a coercion, but they were demoralised, hungry and leaderless.
Their god was dead, their leaders held hostage in the enemy fortress.
They put up a fight, certainly, but there was no need for strategy. It
reminded Damin of quelling the riot that had stormed the gates of
Greenharbour during the siege. All they did - all they needed
to do -
was draw inexorably closer, pulling an ever-tighter circle of steel
around the Kariens until there was no escape and no quarter given.
The knights put up the best fight. Their code of honour would allow
them no other course of action, but even they fell eventually to the
unstoppable advance. By the time Damin thought to look up, bloodied and
exhausted, he was surprised to discover the sun high overhead. The
ground behind him was littered with more bodies than he could count,
and in the distance the Saran River ran red as the Defenders splashed
through its shallow waters to meet their foes.
Looking about him and realising there was nobody left to fight,
Damin rested his sword across his saddle and looked up at the Citadel.
The fortress seemed to glow, even in the bright sunlight. The archers
on the walls had stopped loosing their arrows, as the only men within
reach now were their own troops.
Then he heard another trumpet blare out and saw the battle colours
come down, replaced with the plain blue flag that they had agreed they
would hoist in the case of victory.
A cheer rose from the field, muted but heartfelt. Damin surveyed the
battlefield, feeling strangely let down. Like the battle on the
northern border it had been as much a cattle cull as it was a decent
war. The only enemy worth fighting these days, he realised, were
probably the Defenders, and he'd allied himself with them. Maybe he
should have stayed at home, or planned to invade Medalon. Then at least
he would have been guaranteed a decent fight.
"Your Highness? Prince Damin?"
He turned in his saddle to find a Defender riding towards him. "I'm
Damin Wolfblade."
The Defender saluted sharply. "Your Highness, the Lord Defender
sends his compliments and requests that you join him in the
Citadel."
"Very well."
"Would you happen to know where I could find the King of Fardohnya,
sir?"
"Back that way," Damin said, waving in the general direction
of the
command post some leagues distant. He was in no hurry to have Hablet
join them in the Citadel. He wanted to speak to Tarja first. "He's in
the command tent."
"Thank you, sir."
"Oh, Lieutenant!"
"Your Highness?"
"Once you've delivered your message to King Hablet, could you ask
Lord Hawksword to fetch my wife and bring her to the Citadel,
too?"
"Of course, Your Highness."
The Defender galloped off towards the command tent and Damin turned
his stallion towards the Citadel.
"You look like hell," Tarja announced by
way of
greeting.
Damin smiled wearily as he dismounted, handing his reins to a
waiting cadet. The boy led the stallion away cautiously. "Well, some of
us have been out fighting, you know, not sitting here in the Citadel
playing Lord Defender. How in the name of the gods did they talk you
into accepting that job?"
Tarja grimaced. "It's a long story. You're wounded."
Damin glanced down at his blood-soaked sleeve and poked at it
curiously, then shrugged when he felt no pain. "Must be someone else's
blood. Any chance you can find me a clean shirt before Adrina gets
here? I will be wounded if she sees me like this. I promised
her I wouldn't get involved in the fighting."
"She didn't really expect you to stay out of it, did she?"
"Who knows with Adrina," he shrugged.
He followed Tarja up a broad set of sweeping steps to the front of
an impressive building that looked vaguely like one of the temples in
Greenharbour. Tarja pushed open the massive door and Damin stepped
inside, gaping in wonder.
"The Temple of the Gods," he whispered in awe.
"We prefer to call it the Great Hall," Tarja said with a
thin smile.
"I can't believe you left it so untouched."
"We didn't. The Harshini Queen rearranged things a bit when she got
here."
Damin grinned at Tarja. "That must have been hard for your poor
little atheist heart to cope with. Will you introduce me to the
Queen?"
"Of course. She should be here soon."
"And the demon child? I half expected her to be standing on the
walls hurling lightning bolts into the enemy."
Tarja's face clouded. "R'shiel has been asleep for days now."
"Asleep?"
"She says she destroyed Xaphista."
"Yes, well that would take it out of you, wouldn't it?" He
slapped
Tarja's shoulder to remind him he was joking. "You said she was asleep?
Not unconscious? What do the Harshini say about her?"
"They don't seem to be worried."
"Then neither should you."
They walked the length of the Temple to where a long polished table
had been set up in the shadow of the massive Seeing Stone. It would
dwarf the one in Greenharbour. For a moment Damin wished he'd brought
Kalan with him. She would have been awestruck to stand here in the
fabled Harshini Temple of the Gods facing the Citadel's Seeing Stone.
As they approached the table, the Defenders on guard snapped to
attention. Tarja sent one of them to find Damin a clean shirt as he
pulled at the laces on his leather breastplate and lifted it over his
head.
"Have you got anything to drink, or is this going to be one of those
long, boring dry affairs?"
Tarja smiled and ordered a Defender to bring wine. He came back with
a carafe, two goblets and the clean shirt he'd requested. Damin drank
the first one down without taking a breath, changed his shirt and then
poured another drink down his throat, before collapsing into one of the
high-backed chairs around the table.
"So, I take it we're having this little chat in here to intimidate
the Karien dukes?" he inquired as he poured himself another
drink.
"That thought did cross my mind, yes."
"Good idea. Where are they?"
"I want to wait until Hablet and Shananara get here before I let
them in."
Damin nodded approvingly. "You're getting very good at this, aren't
you?"
"I suppose. How do you like being a High Prince?"
"I loathe it. I had to kill that Karien child a few weeks ago. He
tried to poison R'shiel. I've never had to make a worse decision in my
life."
"R'shiel never mentioned it."
"She wouldn't. Not after Brak stepped in. Where is he, by the way?
Watching over the demon child?"
"He's dead."
The news surprised Damin almost as much as Tarja's obvious lack of
remorse. "Well, that will make Adrina happy. She was planning to kill
him herself."
The doors opened at the far end of the Hall and a woman stepped
through. At first, Damin thought it was R'shiel. As she drew closer and
he saw her black eyes and her air of serene calm he knew it could only
be the Harshini Queen. He jumped to his feet and bowed low as she
approached.
"Your Majesty."
"High Prince," she replied graciously, then turned to Tarja.
"I hope
you don't mind, Tarja, but I have sent my people out to help the
wounded."
"Of course I don't mind, but won't they be distressed roaming a
battlefield?"
"We abhor violence, my Lord, but we abhor suffering even more. Don't
fear for my people. They are not as fragile as you think."
"Tarja!"
The man who called out from the entrance of the Hall was Garet
Warner, the commandant the Sisterhood had sent to investigate the
goings on when they were on the northern border. Tarja excused himself
and hurried to speak to him and then walked back to the table. His
expression was thoughtful.
"What's wrong?"
"We've just received a bird from Yarnarrow. Jasnoff is dead. He
killed himself the same day R'shiel claims she killed Xaphista."
Shananara took the news stoically. "He ruled Karien by divine
mandate. With Xaphista gone, so is his crown."
"So who's in charge now?"
"With Cratyn dead, the next in line is someone called Drendyn. He's
Jasnoff's nephew. Apparently, we're holding him here. He's one of the
dukes."
"Drendyn?" Damin asked with a laugh. "Oh, Tarja, are
you in
for an interesting time! He's a boy. And I can promise you he wasn't
raised to rule a nation the size of Karien."
"Well, we'd better break it to him gently. I'm not sure how he's
going to take the news that he's now their King."
"If you want my advice, talk to him alone and leave the other dukes
out of it. They'll just try to manipulate him. Maybe, with a bit of
guidance, we can mould him into a half-decent King."
"It is not for you to manipulate other nations to suit your own
purposes, Your Highness," Shananara scolded.
"Actually it is, Your Majesty. We've just spent thousands of lives
out there for no good reason. If we can take this boy and turn him into
a King, one who thinks before he attacks, we'll all benefit."
The Harshini Queen suddenly smiled. "Perhaps we should consider
returning to the old custom of Harshini advisers at court, Your
Highness. You saw how effective it can be when scattered parties can
communicate quickly with each other."
"And that would include my court, I suppose?" he asked,
admiring her
quick mind - and her own blatant manipulation.
"We would not want to be seen playing favourites, Your
Highness,"
she replied ingenuously.
"Of course not," he agreed with a wry smile and then turned
to
Tarja. "It's not a bad idea, you know. With Xaphista gone, the
Collective will move in to Karien. But with a Harshini looking over his
shoulder, we should be able to keep young Drendyn out of trouble while
he grows into his crown."
"The plan has merit," Tarja agreed hesitantly.
"I do have one condition, though, Your Majesty," Damin
added,
turning to the Queen.
"And what is that, Your Highness?"
"I want to be there when you break the news to Hablet," he
said with
a malicious grin.
CHAPTER 63
R'shiel was awake for some time before she opened
her eyes. She waited, feigning sleep until she heard Mandah leave the
room. Once she was certain she was alone, she swung her feet to the
floor and rubbed her eyes. The remains of what must have been a mammoth
headache lingered behind her eyes, but other than that she bore no
obvious evidence of her battle with Xaphista.
Climbing out of the bed, she padded barefoot to the door and opened
it a crack. Mandah was talking to Tarja. She could not make out what
they were saying, but when he was finished telling her what he had come
to say he kissed her, hard and hungrily, before letting her go. Mandah
shut the door behind him with a smile and headed back towards the
bedroom. R'shiel raced back to the bed and pulled the covers over
herself, closing her eyes and forcing her breathing into a deep rhythm.
She heard Mandah cross the room, felt a cool hand on her forehead and
then heard the door open and close, followed by the fainter sound of
the apartment door closing.
So Mandah had gone; perhaps to join Tarja. It hopefully meant they
were going to be occupied for a while. She hunted around the room for
her clothes, finally finding them pressed and folded in a drawer under
the window. Typical, she thought with a frown. Not only was Mandah
insufferably nice, but she was neat as well. She shook out her clothes
and dressed quickly, throwing the nightgown onto the floor.
There was a hairbrush on the dresser and she picked it up, running
it through her tangled hair. She glanced in the mirror and froze
mid-stroke. An alien reflection stared back at her. She was not drawing
on her power, yet her eyes were Harshini black. The whites of her eyes
were gone and her skin was as golden as a full-blooded Harshini.
Whatever she had done in the Temple of the Gods had left an indelible
mark on her. R'shiel slowly replaced the brush, aware that she would
never be counted as human again. For some reason the thought did not
bother her as much as she thought it would. Along with the change in
her eyes came a sense of rightness, a sense that she was somehow
complete.
She was Harshini.
R'shiel glanced around the room and realised there was nothing here
that belonged to her. Nothing she need take. Her life was headed in a
different direction and nothing here in the Citadel offered her any
sense of ownership. Feeling suddenly cast adrift into an unknown
future, she turned her back on the mirror and headed into the next room.
When she reached the outer door she pressed her ear against it and
heard faint male voices in the hall. Tarja's guards - there to
see that
she wasn't disturbed. R'shiel reached inside herself cautiously and
drew on her power. She surprised herself with the control she now had.
Perhaps being linked so closely with Shananara she had absorbed some of
her cousin's skill and knowledge. It was how the demons learnt from
each other.
With a skill she hadn't known she possessed, she drew a glamour
around herself and opened the door a fraction. The guard in the hall
turned towards the sound, studied the door curiously for a moment
before opening it wide. When he found no one, he shrugged and pulled it
closed.
R'shiel ran down the corridor, still wrapped in the glamour that hid
her from the notice of anyone who happened to pass her. She didn't
remember learning how to do it so easily, but she seemed to know
instinctively how to hold it in place. The last time she had tried such
a thing, when she and Damin rescued Adrina from Dregian Castle, it had
taken all her concentration.
R'shiel took the stairs to the ground floor and walked out into the
street, amazed to find the city going about its business as if nothing
was wrong. Wagons trundled down the street laden with produce and the
roads were crowded with soldiers - but they wore Hythrun and
Fardohnyan
colours and looked more like tourists than warriors.
So the siege is over, she thought, beginning to wonder, a
little uneasily, how long she had been asleep. If there had been time
for the siege to be lifted and the city to regain some semblance of
normalcy, it must have been quite a while. She walked down to the end
of the street and out onto the main thoroughfare. It was even more
crowded here, and there were Harshini on the streets, too. She wondered
if they would notice her, or even feel the minimal power that she was
drawing amidst the sights and sounds and smells of the city.
Crossing the road, R'shiel headed for the Temple of the Gods. She
stopped on the corner as she saw Damin and a heavily pregnant Adrina
climbing the steps. Behind them walked Tarja and Garet Warner,
Shananara and a young Karien that R'shiel recognised but could not
immediately name. On their heels strode a richly dressed man with a
barrel chest and a greying beard. Hablet of Fardohnya.
R'shiel followed them into the Temple of the Gods, still wrapped in
the glamour, and watched curiously as they took their places around the
conference table.
Shananara remained standing as the others took their seats. She held
a scroll in her hands and studied the others carefully for a moment
before she spoke. Then she looked up, stared straight at R'shiel and
smiled. Shananara knew she was watching, but she did not reveal her
presence. She acknowledged R'shiel with a faint nod and turned her
attention back to the table.
"It has taken quite some time, but I have here the treaty that you
have all agreed to sign. If one of you breaks it, they must face the
other three."
R'shiel looked around the table curiously. Tarja and Garet looked
satisfied. Adrina was positively smirking. Damin appeared relieved and
a little smug. Whatever the treaty contained, it obviously hadn't done
Hythria any harm. Hablet wore a look of wounded resignation. The young
Karien, who R'shiel realised was the knight who had travelled with
Cratyn to hunt down Adrina, looked caught somewhere between terror and
relief.
"I won't go into details, but it boils down to this: all of you will
withdraw your troops to the borders as they were set down prior to the
Karien invasion of Medalon. No nation has gained territory and no
nation has lost it. You, King Drendyn, will open your borders to the
Sorcerers' Collective. Your god is dead and your people will suffer if
they are not given an opportunity to find another god to believe in.
King Hablet, you will also grant free access to the Collective, as will
Medalon. No more arrests. No more gaols. No more persecution."
Hablet muttered something inaudible, but he did not openly react to
the rebuke. Tarja appeared unconcerned by the condition.
"Each monarch, and whatever government Medalon finally decides to
adopt, will accept a Harshini adviser in their court,"
Shananara
continued. "The Harshini will act as final arbiters in case of disputes
between the nations.
"The succession in each nation will remain as it is now, with two
exceptions. In the event that King Hablet dies before his unborn son
reaches maturity, then High Princess Adrina of Hythria will assume the
role of Regent until he comes of age. The other change also concerns
the Fardohnyan throne. The condition that requires a Wolfblade heir in
the absence of a legitimate male heir is no longer valid. In the
absence of a legitimate male heir to the Fardohnyan throne, it will
fall to the eldest legitimate female."
"Now, wait on!" Hablet objected. "I never agreed to that. If
I die,
Adrina only has to kill my son and she gets to be Queen."
"Just because you don't think twice about eliminating
members of your family, Father," Adrina retorted frostily,
"doesn't
mean I share your sentiments. I give you my word; I will not
kill my brother. Any of them."
"It makes no difference in any case, Your Majesty,"
Shananara
explained. "Adrina is excluded from the succession by virtue of her
position as Regent. If anything should happen to your son, the throne
would fall to your next eldest daughter."
"Cassandra?" Hablet laughed. "Gods preserve us from such a
fate!
Well, at least I know that Adrina will fight to keep her brother alive.
I'm sure she'd rather die than see Cassie sitting on the
throne."
Peace.
R'shiel moved away from the pillar she was leaning against with a
frown, as it dawned on her how superfluous she had become. Zegarnald
would not die; he was a Primal God and truly immortal. But he would not
walk into Karien and step into the vacuum left by Xaphista, either. He
had wanted her tempered so that she was strong enough to face Xaphista.
Well, he had what he wanted, but she had also gained a measure of
revenge for the suffering he had condoned. The gods would rise and
fall, gain strength and weaken as life rolled on, but the God of War
would not have the strength to bully the other gods into doing his
bidding. The balance had been restored.
There was no need for the demon child now. No destiny awaited her.
No nation needed her counsel. That they had done all this while she
slept left her feeling so inconsequential that it actually hurt.
Inkwells were being brought out, along with a number of quills, for
the formal signing of the treaty. She left them to it.
There was nothing more to be done.
R'shiel slipped through the doors and out into the sunlight,
realising that for the first time, she had nobody to please but
herself. No destiny loomed over her like a shadow. She was beholden to
no one - human, Harshini or god.
The glamour still wrapped around her protectively, R'shiel turned
towards the Main Gate. She walked through it unseen by the Defenders on
duty and out onto the busy road. The battlefield was still being
cleared and troops were piling bodies into mass graves dug by the
countless Karien prisoners that had been taken after the battle, but
the Saran ran clear, its shallow waters tripping happily over the rocks
beneath the surface. It was a bit grand calling it a river, actually.
It was not much more than a wide stream. She stopped on the bridge and
glanced back at the shining Citadel. It had been her home and her
prison. Her ruin and her salvation.
Impulsively, she sent out a thought to the massive fort, a farewell
of sorts. She did not know when, or even if, she would be back. She had
to find Loclon. And she had an appointment with Gimlorie. Maybe she
could find a way to convince Death to release Brak, too.
The Citadel responded with a benevolent wave of of affection that
washed over her gently. Smiling to herself, R'shiel glanced down and
discovered she was not alone. The little demon she had last seen with
Mikel in Greenharbour was sitting on the ground at her feet, looking at
her with its huge black eyes.
"Where have you been?" she asked, squatting down.
The creature chittered something incomprehensible and jumped into
her arms.
"Is that your way of saying sorry about Mikel?" she
chuckled. "It
wasn't your fault, little one. You'll be a few hundred older before you
can protect someone from the likes of Xaphista."
Mention of the dead god's name set the demon off again. R'shiel
stood up with the demon's skinny arms wrapped thightly around her neck.
With a final glance at the Citadel, she released the glamour and
crossed the bridge.
"I suppose," she said to the demon, as she walked away
without
looking back, "we'd better do something about finding you a
name."
CHAPTER 64
Loclon tossed and turned on the hard ground as the
nightmare took him again. It haunted him in his dreams and he lived it
in his waking moments. It never left him. It never gave him a moment's
respite.
It had begun as they left the Citadel. He was expecting to be
smuggled into the Karien camp and treated like a hero - until
they took
the fortress and slaughtered everyone in it. But Mistress Heaner, her
thug Lork and the chillingly beautiful boy Alladan had kept on going.
They had not stopped until they reached Brodenvale, and then they had
bundled him onto a small river boat and sailed downriver to Bordertown.
When they reached the port town they stayed only long enough to arrange
another boat, and before he could raise an objection, he found himself
heading for the Isle of Slarn.
It hadn't been too bad at first. The island was dank and miserable,
and the priests were a strange bunch, but they tended his malnourished
body and helped him regain his strength and even began talking of
letting him travel to Yarnarrow.
He had done the Overlord a great service, the priests assured him,
and his reward was waiting for him.
For a time, he had foolishly believed their promises - until
he
remembered that for the followers of the Overlord, the rewards for
service were not to be found in this life, but the next.
His first escape attempt had been treated as an unfortunate
misunderstanding. His second earnt him a savage whipping. His third and
last attempt had almost succeeded. It would have, had not the island
begun to tremble as if in the grip of an earthquake, and the priests
suddenly gone mad.
Something drastic had happened.
Loclon had been at the back of the Karien chapel for the Restday
dawn service, waiting for the chance to slip out the door, when the
staff belonging to the priest conducting the service had flared with
light, and a wave of intense pleasure had washed over the congregation
like a warm breeze. It took hold of him for an instant and held him in
a thrall. There was a promise of so much in that wave. A hint of joy. A
breath of sexual fantasy. A promise of paradise. Even a glimpse of the
other gods. It had taken his breath away.
It had almost destroyed the priests.
They had fled the chapel and run towards the cavern where their
sacred rock was hidden, howling with terror at whatever it was that it
was doing. It only lasted for a few moments, then the feeling had faded
abruptly and Loclon shook his head to clear it and bolted for the door.
His original plan had been to head for the small dock near the keep,
but with the priests running everywhere like lunatics, he discovered
that route no longer open to him. So he ran the other way, pulled
himself over the wall that faced the leeward side of the island,
cursing as he fell down the long drop on the other side, and ran until
he collapsed onto the boggy ground. He was terrified, and at the limit
of his endurance, expecting to hear the priests coming after him, not
really believing he had succeeded in getting clear of them.
It was then that the nightmare truly began.
They found him that evening, shivering and
exhausted, and in the darkness he could not make out their faces. They
were not priests. All he knew was that someone wrapped a blanket around
him and someone else thrust a cup of cool water in his hands. He drank
it greedily and grasped at the mouldy bread they offered him. They led
him through the darkness to a rough hut so close to the shore that he
could hear the waves crashing below him as he fell into a fitful sleep.
At some time during the night he woke to find a body pressed against
his, warm and young and unmistakably female. He smiled to himself,
thinking that before he left this place, he might have some fun. If he
was careful, and didn't leave any marks, they would not know he had
hurt her until after he had gone. With a smile and a contented sigh,
Loclon pulled the girl closer and went back to sleep.
With daylight came the horror.
He had opened his eyes slowly, enjoying the feel of the naked body
pressed against him. He ran his hand over her small breasts and her
slender hips and then over her belly, reaching down between her thighs
to pull her legs apart. He felt something sticky against his hand and
cursed. He pulled his hand away and held it up to the light.
It was not blood on his fingers - it was pus.
He screamed, leaping from the rough pallet as the girl turned over.
She was grotesque. Her face was ruined, half of it eaten away by the
disease that devoured a person from the inside out. Her whole left side
was covered with open sores that wept pus, and a clear sticky fluid
that stained the rough sheets beneath her.
"Please . . ." the girl cried, tears streaming
from her
one good eye. Her pathetic cries made him want to vomit; the idea that
he had touched her made him want to die.
He had leapt the wall into the colony of Malik's Curse sufferers.
Loclon screamed again, and he kept on screaming until a big man with
a huge fist and half his face eaten away by the Curse burst into the
hut and knocked him out cold.
He had been in hiding ever since. He avoided the
small settlement and its disgusting inhabitants, sneaking in at night
to find whatever scraps of food he could scavenge. The others knew he
was out there, and the grotesque girl from the hut sometimes left
scraps for him, perhaps in an attempt to coax him back into her bed.
She had been quite pretty once, he supposed, but now she was just a
husk that was being slowly consumed by a disease that had no cure. A
disease that ate at the extremities and left the body covered in
ulcers, and ate through one's internal organs until there was nothing
left and the victim died an agonisingly painful death.
He peeled off his ragged clothes and checked his body every day,
looking for some sign that he had contracted the disease, but so far he
showed no symptoms. All he could do was prowl the island looking for a
way off.
There was none.
It was the reason the victims of Malik's Curse were confined here.
He made one attempt to get back into the Karien compound, but the
wall, which had been so easy to clamber over from the inside, was much
steeper on the leeward side. A deep, empty moat surrounded it that made
it impossible to climb without a rope. There was no rope to be had. So
he had returned to his prowling, scavenging existence and gone back to
trying to find another way off the island.
Loclon tossed restlessly and then sat up, unsure
what had wakened him. He looked around in the darkness but could see
nothing, so he scrambled on his hands and knees to the entrance of the
small cave where he sheltered and looked out over the rocky beach. He
saw a figure standing in the moonlight on the beach and scuttled out to
get a closer look. Whoever it was, it appeared to be a woman, but he
could not make out her identity from this distance. A bubble of
excitement began to build in him.
The figure saw him stumbling across the beach and began to walk
towards him. He raised his hand in greeting, certain that he had been
rescued. The woman was tall and walked with an easy grace that showed
no hint of the wasting disease. She was not one of them.
"Hello, Loclon."
He froze at the sound of her voice as she stepped closer.
"R'shiel!"
"You sound surprised, Captain. You should have known I'd come for
you."
He studied her warily. She must have been drawing on her power - her
eyes burned black as the night surrounding them. Her hair had grown out
and was almost on her shoulders, ruffled gently by the sea breeze. It
took him a while to work out what else was different about her. It
wasn't her quiet air of confidence, or the power that radiated from her.
It was her lack of fear.
Loclon cautiously took a step back from her. "You've come for
me?"
"Did you doubt that I would?"
Hope flared in him as he realised rescue was at hand. She would take
him from this place. He would probably be dragged back to the Citadel
in chains, but that was better than being here. Better than a slow,
lingering death while he was eaten alive by his own body. He could
escape eventually. Either along the way or once they got to the
Citadel. It didn't really matter.
He nodded and held out his hands to her. "I'll come quietly. I won't
resist."
R'shiel studied him for a moment and then smiled. It chilled him to
the core.
"Death told me once that evil is its own reward, Loclon. I
understand what he meant now."
"What are you talking about? I'm surrendering to you. Take
me!"
"I don't want your surrender."
"Then what do you want?" he screamed desperately.
"Vengeance," she said softly.
"Then take it! Take me away from here! Take me back to the Citadel!
Put me on trial! I'll confess. I'll tell them everything I did to you.
They'll hang me R'shiel, you know that. Rape is a capital offence. You
can stand there and watch me swing! You can gloat over my corpse! Take
me back! GET ME OUT OF HERE!" He was blubbering and
didn't care.
"No, I don't think so, Loclon."
She turned away from him and began to walk back along the shore. The
waves shone with phosphorescence as they slapped at the pebbly beach.
He fell to his knees, sobbing with despair.
"You can't leave me here! Have mercy!"
She stopped and looked over her shoulder, her black eyes reflecting
the shimmering waves. "Mercy?"
"Please, R'shiel. Take me back with you. I'll do whatever you want.
I'll suffer as much as you want. Just get me off this damned island
before the disease gets me!"
R'shiel stood there watching him on his knees, begging her for
mercy. She had done this to him before. She had made him grovel like
this at the Grimfield and once they were gone from this place, he would
make her pay for that insult, too. But for now . . .
She was wavering. He could tell. She walked back towards him. Hope
burned bright in his eyes. She was part Harshini, wasn't she? They were
supposed to be unable to kill. Deep down, she didn't have what it took
to make the killing stroke. That he was alive at all was proof of that.
She'd been raised by the Sisterhood. She believed all that stuff about
law and honour. She would not be able to turn her back on him.
But when he saw her face, he realised how wrong he was. There was no
mercy in those alien black eyes. No pity. No compassion.
Nothing but cold, unrelenting contempt.
"I came here to send you to hell," she said. "But I don't
have to,
do I? You're already there."
He wasn't sure how to answer her; he wasn't even sure what she
meant. She just stood there, staring at him with those alien black eyes
. . .
Then the itching started. It was barely noticeable at first. He was
too consumed by his fear of her to pay attention to it. It began in his
fingertips, a niggling, annoying sensation that barely even distracted
him. He rubbed his hands against his tattered trousers to relieve it,
but it simply made the itching worse.
R'shiel didn't move.
The itching spread up his left arm. He scratched at it with his
right hand and discovered his arm covered in small hard lumps. He tore
his eyes from R'shiel and glanced down. The lumps were growing larger.
As he watched, one of the lumps on his forearm began to develop a
puss-filled head. The itching progressed beyond annoying into true
pain. The lumps were spreading. He could feel them forming on his back
and across his belly. His trousers chaffed as the sores began to form
in his groin. His face was swelling with them, too. He tore at his
clothing as another sore erupted, the burning itching growing more and
more relentless; his breath came in gasps as he realised what was
happening to him. The sores kept spreading.
"No!" he panted, as he tore at his own flesh in a futile
attempt to
relieve the burning. "No! No! . . . Noooo!"
R'shiel stood there watching him.
"What have you done to me?" he wailed. "Make it stop! Don't
do this
to me! Not this! Kill me if you must, R'shiel, but not like this! Let
me die like a man!"
That evoked a reaction from her. She laughed.
"Like a man, Loclon?"
"Stop it, R'shiel! Please. I beg you!"
"It takes years to die from Malik's Curse, did you know
that?" she
asked in a conversational tone. "Of course, a few years being slowly
devoured by your own body doesn't seem sufficient to repay all you've
done, but it will have to do, I suppose."
"I'll . . . kill myself before . . . I let this
thing . . . eat me alive," he gasped, unable to stop
scratching at the spreading sores.
"No, Loclon, you won't kill yourself. For one thing, you're too big
a coward, and for another, I won't let you."
"How are you . . . going to . . . stop
me?"
"Magic."
R'shiel turned and walked away, until eventually she was swallowed
by the darkness. She didn't look back.
I'll kill myself, he decided silently. I won't die this
way. He staggered to his feet and turned towards the ocean. That's
all it will take. Just wade into the water and let the sea take me.
The salt water stung the sores on his legs as he splashed into the
foam. He plunged into the sea until it was waist high, then suddenly
found he could go no further. He wanted to live, he realised with
despair. Even though he had consciously made the decision to die, there
was another voice in his mind that wouldn't let him. He found himself
unable to take another step.
Loclon staggered back to the beach and threw himself down on the
sand, rubbing against the grains to ease the itching, but the sand
merely aggravated his already inflamed skin. He was sobbing with
frustration. He couldn't relieve the itching. He couldn't stop the
pain. He couldn't even die . . .
A hand reached for him and hope flared bright for a fleeting moment!
He knew she couldn't walk away from him! She had to come back! This was
just a game, she was just tormenting him for revenge . . .
"Mister?" the voice said gently. "It's all right, Mister.
The
itching goes away after a few days . . ."
He looked up to find the girl from the settlement with her pathetic
smile and her ruined face staring down at him, her eyes filled with
pity.
Loclon's howl of despair echoed across the empty beach.
Then he forced himself up and looked around urgently, but it was as
if R'shiel had never even been here. There was no sign of her.
Not even footprints in the sand.
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.
ZAC-Prisoner in the Grimfield.
Harshini
BRAK-Lord Brakandaran te Carn. Only
other living half-breed Harshini.
DRANYMIRE-Prime Demon bonded to
the
house of te Ortyn.
GLENANARAN-Harshini sorcerer
who leaves
Sanctuary to help Brak.
KORANDELLAN TÉ ORTYN-King
of the Harshini. Nephew of Lorandranek and brother of Shananara.
LORANDRANEK TÉ ORTYN-Deceased.
Former king of the Harshini, driven mad by the task laid on him by the
gods.
SHANANARA-Her Royal Highness,
Shananara te Ortyn. Daughter of Rorandelan. Sister of Korandellan.
The Gods
BREHN-God of Storms.
CHELTARAN-God of Healing.
DACENDARAN-God of Thieves.
GIMLORIE-God of Music.
JASHIA-God of Fire.
JAKERLON-God of Liars.
JELANNA-Goddess of Fertility.
JONDALUP-God of Chance.
KAELARN-God of the Oceans.
KALIANAH-Goddess of Love.
LEYLANAN-Goddess of the
Ironbrook River.
MAERA-Goddess of the Glass
River.
PATANAN-God of Good Fortune.
VODEN-God of Green Life.
ZEGARNALD-God of War.
Hythria
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.
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
STEPHANIE PUI-MUN LAW
DEMON
DEMONS MOLDING INTO DRAGON
DRAGON IN FLIGHT
DETAIL FROM COVER: LEAVING SANCTUARY
DETAIL FROM COVER: SANCTUARY
COVER DETAIL OF SANCTUARY
COVER DETAIL: R'SHIEL AND DEMONS
DETAIL FROM COVER: R'SHIEL AND DEMONS
SKETCH FOR DEMON
SKETCH FOR DEMON
INTERVIEW WITH
JENNIFER FALLON
Author of The Demon Child Trilogy:
Medalon, Treason Keep and Harshini
By Stephanie Smith,
Editor of The Demon Child Trilogy
1. Was Medalon your first
manuscript or do you still have some in the "bottom drawer"?
The first book I wrote was when I was 14. It was an
outback murder mystery and it's long gone, which is probably a good
thing. The next piece I wrote was a short story about a girl in a
mental institution. I still have that one. I wrote a Mills and Boon
when I was 20, which was duly rejected (thank God!) and then I started
another four or five novels before writing my first full sci-fi/fantasy
effort. I submitted none of them for publication until I wrote Medalon,
which was the first novel I felt confident was worth trying to get
published.
2. Are your characters based on
any specific people in your life? Do your family and friends think that
you have based characters on them? Does this make your relationships
different from when you had not published any books?
Not really, although some people tell me that they can
see certain characteristics in some of the characters. I frequently
borrow people's names and they are usually delighted to be included.
Mostly I get requests for them to be tall dashing heroes, or gorgeous
princesses . . . one friend of my son's specifically asked if
he could "get the girl" when I asked if I could I borrow his
name.
Being published has made little difference to my relationships. Most
people I know seemed to be much more confident than I ever was that I
would get published.
3. Where did you go to school? Did
any of your teachers influence you as a writer? Do you think the
overall "philosophy" of the school had an influence on your
later
career decisions?
I went to a number of schools but did all my high
schooling at Catholic Girls High in Braddon, in the Australian Capital
Territory. I had a terrible time at school. I was a loner with few
friends and have no happy memories of school at all. At my first
primary school I was beaten savagely by a nun, and my second, I was
bullied unmercifully, and the others just blur into misery. I remember
returning to school the day after my mother died, when I was 13, being
confident that at least on that day, the sympathy vote would mean the
others would leave me alone.
4. Medalon sets the scene with the
Sisterhood, ruled by R'shiel's mother, as a rigid bureaucratic
religion. Do you think a religion run by women would be like this, or
is any religion likely to become rigidly controlling?
I have issues with most organised religions. I think
they have all lost the plot. Generally, I think any organisation
arrogant enough to claim it knows the mind of God is bound to run into
trouble sooner or later.
5. Tarja and Damin are, of course,
favourites of your female fans. I am sure they would like to know if
you know any "real" Tarjas and Damins! (Sorry, just had to ask
this
one!)
I wish! No, they are total fantasies . . . if
I knew any guys like that, I wouldn't spend all my time in front of a
computer imagining them!
6. Tarja and R'shiel have a
complex relationship. They have been brought up by their mother as
brother and sister. Then they discover that R'shiel is from a totally
different family. Tarja is unsure who his father is, although his
mother is still the same person. Then, because of interference from the
gods, they begin to fall in love. Because of Tarja's near-death
experience when R'shiel saved him by using demons, Tarja then begins to
hate her. Are human relationships quite so complex, in your experience?
Absolutely. I think there is no such thing as a
"simple"
human relationship and that all of us go through different phases which
alter how we react to other people. The effect is extreme in Tarja and
R'shiel's case, but by no means is it unique.
7. The politics of Medalon,
Karien, Fardohnya, etc, are also quite complex. Did you base any
particular country on your knowledge of this world?
Yes and no. I have always been interested in politics so
I just sort of played a bit of political "what if" based around
a few
different premises, i.e., ruled by women, by warlords, kings, etc
. . .
8. Did you fully realise the
landscape politically, emotionally and socially before beginning to
write the trilogy?
I had a pretty good idea of the overall scene, but a lot
of the detail evolved as I wrote.
9. Do you think of your world as a
parallel world, a future world or an alien land? Or something else
entirely?
Probably a parallel world, although in the very
beginning, Medalon was a world colonised by humans far in the future.
10. Did you have characters act in
certain ways in the first book that you would have wanted to change
when you began to write the second book? Did you wish you had begun
certain plotlines earlier?
I was fortunate in that I was writing Book Three before
Book One went to print, so I was able to sneak a few things in at the
last minute that gave the series a much more coherent feel than it
would have had I started Book Three any later. Generally, though, I'm
happy with the way it resolved itself.
11. Change through the three books is by
individual action, military might and political dealing and chicanery.
Is this how you see world politics and change in our societies in the
present day?
Absolutely! I believe politics is a far more powerful
force than war, which is why my character only have two major battles,
neither of which are particularly glorious. I think much more is
achieved (and destroyed) through politics than by any other form of
manipulation.
12. What are you writing next?
I am working on a new trilogy called Second Sons. It is
much darker than The Demon Child Trilogy and follows the story of a
young man who must prove that a goddess doesn't exist, in order to save
his world. It is very complex and I am (at the time of writing) working
on the final draft of Book One.
13. Who are you reading at the moment?
What are your favourite books?
I'm reading Betrayal by Fiona McIntosh. Have
just finished The Magicians' Guild by another first-time
author, Trudi Canavan.
14. Why do you think fantasy is one of
the fastest-growing genres in the world today? Do you think there are
more males than females reading the genre, or vice versa
. . . or is it about an even split?
I think the more complex our world gets, the more we
yearn for a simpler world, where problems are solved through the
courage and resources of people, rather than relying on technology. As
for the gender bias, I'm not really sure. I seem to have a fair
smattering of both male and female readers.
15. Has fantasy or science-fiction been
your favourite reading through your life? Do you have any books in
either of these genres that you feel helped to change your life in any
particular direction?
I have always been a devoted sci-fi fan. I re-read the
Lensmen series so many times I wore it out. I discovered fantasy a lot
later, but find that I love losing myself in places other than the
world I live in - no doubt a hangover from my childhood.
16. Do you have any advice for readers
who might want to ask how to begin writing, and how to get published?
Write!!!!! I meet so many people who tell me they have a
great idea for a book, but they never get around to putting it on
paper. In my opinion, the writers who will eventually get published are
those for whom writing is an obsession. These are the writers who NEVER
give up. Other than that, my advice is to get an agent, and develop a
very thick hide!
Visit www.voyageronline.com.au where
Jennifer Fallon answers more questions from the multimedia department
of HarperCollinsPublishers, Australia.
READING NOTES
1. Tarja wakes to find the geas that made him love R'shiel no longer
in place. Why is his reaction so ambivalent?
2. R'shiel realises she cannot face Xaphista head on, but must find
a more subtle way of breaking his power? What does she use and why is
it so effective?
3. Damin decides to let the son of his enemy live, to be raised in
the house of Tejat Lionsclaw. Why does he do this?
4. Why is it so important to Brak that Damin Wolfblade believes
Mikel is dead, and why does he go to such trouble to prevent Damin from
striking the killing blow?
5. Discuss the changes likely to happen in the Citadel with the
return of the Harshini.
6. With the disbursement of the Sisterhood, Garet Warner wishes to
give Medalon a democratic government. Discuss some of the problems
likely to arise during this period.
7. In the end, R'shiel chooses not to kill Loclon, but to let him
live on the Isle of Slarn. Is this a fitting punishment?
8. Shananara offers to place Harshini advisors in the courts of each
ruler, to prevent further war. How would this affect each nation?
9. When the story ends, R'shiel plans to retrieve Mikel from the God
of Music. What do you think the boy's reaction would be to all that has
happened to him?
10. Will Death release Brak?
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. Book Two, Treason Keep, was released in September 2001.
Visit her
website at www.jenniferfallon.com.